In the Interests of the Jewish Pe^vle Kntfri'U us StcomJ-Clru f£ I'OBI o Illce nl Oniohit. Ne
Dedicated to the Ideals of Judaism
: mrter the Act of March 3. 1878
GOODB ELECT BEAD
Refuses Oath on Saturday.... Jailed
Warsaw.—(J. T. A.)—Jacob Kafman, a beadle in one of the local synagogues, was given two days jail and fined three hundred and fifty zloty when he refused to take an on being hailed to court as a Local Lad Made Grand President oath witness on Saturday. ..••'. of International , The trial was originally scheduled Order for a previous Saturday. When Kar- Hyman ., Goodbinder,._ representing man failed to appear he was, there'file Mother chapter No. 1, was elect- upon fined two hundred .zloty and •. ;ed grand; president of the interna- ordered to appear the following Sat• tional • order of Aleph Zadik Aleph urday. This" time he complied but (Junior B'nai Brith) at the annual refused to take the oath. Karman convention held in Winnipeg this was arrested • as he descended. from the witness stand and carried off- to week. . . • ; ' . . ; ' " jail in his sabbath-garments. ^ Goodbinder, who is president of "Omaha "chapter No. 1, is a past presi-
FELT BY ZIONISTS OVER CONVENTION Details of Conclave of Zionist Organization of America
-Hyman Goodbinder . dent .of .the Missouri Valley Alephs association. He was chairman of the District.* Organizations committee. ' The 1933 international convention will be held in Omaha, the conclave decided.; . -_,'-• Other Omahans who attended the convention were Sam'.Beber, president of the supreme advisory* council of the order; Philip ;Klutzn1ckrexecutivesecretary; Julius Bisnp, assistant executive secretary; Joseph Solomonow, representing A. Z. A. No. 7 of Council Bluffsj.William Wolfe, represent; ing A. Z. A. No. 100; and Ralph Noggy alternate. ' x ':<• Details of the Convention will^be given ' in next week's issue of the Press.
DR. ADLER AGAIN SCORES CALLING OF CONFERENCE New York.—(J. T. A.)—Dr. Cyrus Adler, president of the American Jewish Committee, in a second statement, scores the American Jewish Congress for proceeding with its plans^to^ hol<l=a world-Jewish-Confer-^ ence in Geneva to discuss the advisability' of a world: Jewish Congress, and expresses the hope that the leaders of the Congress "may yet have an interlude of sanity" and abandon this "rash and dangerous undertaking." Dr. Adler openly questions the sincerity behind the invitations extended to the American Jewish Committee to participate in the conference, before and since the controversy on the question in the public press. The president of the' American Jewish Committee reiterates in detail the assertions made in his first statement on June 17th that the Jewries of Europe do not desire such a conference and that its convening is dangerous to their welfare. • Dr. Adler emphasizes again that such a conference as , .contemplated will-be; seized upon by the enemies of the Jews. He says the effect of the conference from a practical viewpoint will be to create a sort of Wailing Wall at Geneva. He denies that the American Jewish Committee is proceeding in an autocratic fashion and points out that it has consulted with Jewish leader: and organizations the world over. Replying to the assertion made in the answer of the Administrative Committee of. the American Jewish Congress to his first statement to the effect that the Congress would have given serious consideration to a plan for postponement of the conference in the interests of unity had it been made, Dr. Adler asserts such a postponement was asked "and summarily rejected within twelve hoursl" Refuses New Controversy The American Jewish Congress, replying- through its Administrative Committee to the second statement is sued by Dr. Cyrus Adler, calling for the abandoning of the world Jewish conference scheduled to be held in • Geneva on August l4H ,j refuses W be i • drawn into ja! he* controversy with ' the president of the American Jewish ; 'C"rnraittee. >
Philadelphia.—(J. T. A.) — Widespread satisfaction has been voiced by the press and Zionist leaders throughout .the country over the.outcome of the thirty-fifth annual convention of the Zionist Organization of America, held at Philadelphia last week. The unanimous election of Morris Rothenberg, chairman of the Administrative Committee of the Auerican section of the Jewish Agency, as its President, revision of the membership dues with a determination to increase this membership during the coming year to possibly fifty thousand; approving the convening of a World Conference in Geneva to consider the advisability of creating a world Jewish Congress, and the. adoption of resolutions affecting the future Palestine activity in this country—these were the outstanding features. The office of president which was terminated two years ago, with the retirement of Louis Lipsky, president of the organization for nine years, following factional strife, was restored with the election of Rothenberg. Resolutions were adopted approving the convening of a world Jewish Congress,and the selection of 8 delegates to represent the Zionist organization; approving the revision of membership dues to ?3 and $6 with a determination to increase the membership during the coming year to a total of possibly fifty thousand. The incoming administration was called upon to do all in its power to bring about the union of all Palestine funds during campaigns in order to eliminate duplication and competition, without however, affecting the integrity of each of these groups. Praise Weizmann. A resolution adopted with wide acclaim praised the services to the Zionist movement of Dr. Chains Weizmann, former president of the World Zionist Organization and the Jewish Agency for Palestine- and, expressed the hope that he would shortly come to this country in the interests of Palestine. A feature of the convention was the amount of time devoted to a consideration of the practical problems confronting the rebuilding of the Jewish National Home. Significant, too, was the geographic distribution of the five hundred delegates representing virtually every section of the country. Determination' to carry on despite the economic depression and the marvelous achievements in Palestine were the keynotes of the convention speeches.
Virtual Boycott Prague.—A resolution, tantamount to -an - open boycott .against - Jewish merchants and Jewish, products was adopted by the-Prague Municipality.
OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, JULY 15,1932
Self-Defense Call for Return of NONSKY GETS Jewish Organization Being Cordova Synagogrue Summer Play School at Formed in Austria PLEDGES FOR Center to Start Monday WMSCOPE Omahans Are Honored at Last Week's District B'nai Brith Conclave.
Vienna.—(J. T. A.)—An impartial Jewish Self-Defense Organization is being organized throughout Austria. The Self-Defense is receiving the moral and material support of all Jewish groups. and parties. The creation of a self-defense is considered as vital in view of the extensive development of Nazi terrorization tactics throughout the country and particularly in Vienna. The Jewish self-defense organization is to be strictly disciplined and will be called out for defensive purposes only, it is stated. Jewish self-defense is functioning successfully in Vienna, Eisenstadt and Mattersdorf where the Jewish districts have been protected during clashes , between -the Nazis and the Social Democrats^' '
1 Omahans played a prominent role in the convention of District Grand Lodge No. 6 of the B'nai Brith, held in Milwaukee last week, resulting in the election of Sam Beber. to the presidency of the District, the youngest Ben Brith to ever be so honored. ' . Henry Monsky, who nominated Beber and who himself-is a former district president, .was an outstanding figure in the convention spotlight. • • . - ' . • '"•• Monsky rendered his . annual report a& this district's member of the executive committee .of the international order. It was under his supervision, also, that the district undertook t t raise $40,000 for the Wider Scope activities of the B'nai Brith during, the year 1932-33. He presided over an entire afternoon- session of five hours, and when Outlook Is None Too Bright as Agitation Conit had been completed the _ various delegates had already pledged more tinues than 50 per cent of the total amount on behalf of their respective lodges Berlin.—(J. T. A.)—The fate of and communities. This is exclusive the Jews in Germany depends upon of the Chicago and Detroit lodges whether or not the cabinet will be and one or two other federated com- in a position to withstand the presmunities. •'•.'sure of Adolph Hitler, but there is The. Wider Scope includes the as yet no ground for panic, leaders B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation activ- of the Central Union of German ities, the A. Z. A., the Anti-Defam- Citizens of the Jewish Faith emphaation League and other similar ac- sized in a press conference. tivities. ~ Thus far, the Central Union is not President-elect Beber made the disappointed in the cabinet of Chanprincipal address at a special A. Z. cellor von Papen, it was stated. A. evening function at Milwaukee. The spokesman for the Central Dr. A. Greenberg was re-elected a Union pointed out, however, that the member of the general committee of boycott agitation against the Jews is the district grand' lodge. Monsky, assuming greater proportions, while by virtue of being an officer of the the number of anti-Semitic placards Constitutional Grand Lodge, is au- is showing a wider distribution in tomatically an ex-officio member of the provinces. s the general committee of the disThe Central Union* it was revealed, trict. ;-'• ' • [ has thus, far won- fifty court deWilliam Sultan . of , Chicago was cisions in suits it |ias brought in re-elected to succeed .himself. as a connectioir'With-tfri trustee of the. Cleveland - Orphan The Central Union of German CitiHome, which, is under the district's zens of the Jewish Faith is organsupervision. Judge Irvin Stalmaster izing" an election campaign, the slogis also a trustee of the Cleveland an of which is "Elect'None of the Orphan Home, his term not having Members of the Anti-Semitic expired yet. : Parties." The convention approved of OmaAH Jewish Property Confiscation , ha as the site of the 1933 convenNazi Aim tion. This is, of course, subject to Berlin.—All - property owned by the general committee's action. There is one man from each dis- Jews, regardless of the date of their trict who is a member of the inter- arrival in Germany, will be confisnational order's executive commit- cated by the. Nazis, should they tee. Monsky, representing District prove victorious in the forthcoming No. 6, is one of the seven in the elections, it is disclosed by the "Welt am Montag." United States so elected.. In Monsky's plea, he said, in part Berlin.—Whether or not the Nazis "Food for the hungry, clothing for the unclad and shelter for the home- win an absolute majority in the less, to be sure, may be our first forthcoming Reichstag elections or responsibility, but the responsibility whether they enter a coalition, the of a civilized society does not *.nd rights of the Jews are certain to here. The body must be preserved, be diminished, the Central Union of but of what value is it to feed the German citizens of the Jewish Faith body if we starve tha soul? The explains. hope of the future of society, the Should the TJazis win an absolute hope of the future of Judaism is majority, they will deprive the Jews inseparably intertwined with the ef- of their rights by legal enactment, fort we now exert to cultivate, pro- the Central Union says. mote and perpetuate spiritual and Should the Nazis join a coalition, cultural values. they will attain the same goal by "Relief is, of course, most essen- administrative methods. tial. Our greatest contribution to Non-Jews to Aid Jewish Firms posterity is, however, made through Berlin.—A special committee to the character of such agencies as protect Jewish firms suffering as a our Wider Scope committee sup- result of the boycott movement was ports." formed by the non-Jewish Association He outlined for the delegates the of merchants and industrialists. accomplishments of the past year, and exhorted them to greater efforts, that the work of the B'nai Brith continue in ever-increasing potency.
GERMAN mm
PREPARING TO BATTLE NAZIS
London. — The British Government is making inquiries to discover whether or not the - Prussian confiscation law will.affect East European Jews who are British citizens. •
Anti-Semitism Condemned By "Iron Manof Italy*' Berlin.—(J. A. T.) — "Mussolini's Conversations with Emil Ludwig," a new book to be published shortly in Berlin and Vienna, contains several passages. in which the Italian Prime Minister discusses the question of anti-Semitism which the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. has received permission to quote. Herr Emil Ludwig asked Signor Mussolini whether he believed that there were any pure races in Europe, as is claimed by certain authorities. . "Of course," Signor Mussolini replied, "there are no longer any pure races. Not even the Jews have remained unmixed. Very often it is fortunate crossings that have given a nation" strength and beauty. j "Race is sentiment; not a reality. NinetyKfive per cent ?is ^sentiment. .'I shall never ;believe that; any race-is Able to nrove itself biologically pure.
Vol. IX—No. 24
"By some queer prank of fate the champions of a Germanic race are none of them Germans. Gobineau was -a Frenchman; Chamberlain an Englishman; Woltmann a Jew, and Lapouge again a Frenchman." "Anti-Semitism does not exist in Italy," Signor Mussolini stated. "Jewish Italians have always been good citizens and brave soldiers. They occupy the most important positions in the universities, in the army, in the banks. There are a large number of Jews who are generals. The Commandant of Sardinia, General Modena, is a general of artillery." "Whenever things have gone bad with Germany, the Jews have always been blamed for it," Emil Ludwig remarked, "and now things are very; tod in Germany." : j *'Yes, the scapegoats," Signor Mussolini said
Madrid.—(J. T. A.—A motion was submitted to the Cortes calling for the returning to the Sephardic organization of the ancient synagogue in Cordova.' ' The Cortes, accepting the proposal, has recommended the motion to the Parliamentary Commission of Public Instruction with the request that the restoration be carried out. Cordova, birthplace of Moses Maimonides, was the seat of a Jewish community as early as the eighth century.
REVOLT BY FOREIGN JEWS EN ROUTE TO SOVIET BIRA BIDJAN Moscow.—(J. T. A.)—A revolt of foreign Jews from Germany and the Argentine seeking settlement in Bira Bidjan, the- Far Eastern region which is ultimately to become a Jewish autonomous unit, is reported by the "Ernes." The paper says that when these foreign workers arrived in Moscow they revolted at the Yaroslav Station, refusing to proceed unless train accommodations and food provisions were improved. Remarking that the new arrivals think "they are foreign tourists who must" enjoy the best accommodations," the "Emes" rebukes foreign organizations for sending elements who display discontentment immediately upon their.arrival. "If they revolt in Moscow where they are comparatively well accommodated, what will they say when they reach Bira Bidjan where the accommodation facilities are really difficult," asks the "Emes."
EMIGRANT JEWS IN SHARP DECLINE PAST TWO YEARS New Drop Is Expected in 1932, Hicem Reports —•— Show Paris.—(J. T. A.)—The number of emigrant Jews has dropped from 45,000 in 1929 to 23,000 in 1931 and a further decrease- is to be expected in 1932, according to the reports delivered at a meeting of the Administrative Council and the Executive Committee of the Association for Emigration Hias-Ica-Emigdirect held here. Compared with non-Jewish emigration movements, the drop-in the Jewish percentage is not so large, stated the speakers. In 1932, while the Jewish emigration from Poland dropped 50 per cent as compared with 1930, the non-Jewish emigration during the same period showed a fall of 75 per cent. During the first four months of 1932, 2600 emigrant Jews left Poland, Roumania and Lithuania. These figures show a decrease of 26 per cent as compared with the migration during the same pefTocTbT iyST." " The reports emphasized the special attention paid by the Hicem to France which has become a very important centre for continental Jewish emigration. This continental emigration has become so excessive that it became necessary to regulate it, the reports stated. Upon the initiative of the Hicem a meeting held in Luxemberg in March united the representatives of Jewish organizations of Central and Eastern Europe which protect continental migrants.
Yousem Brothers Join Swartz, Rushall in New Service Station Open Kilby Place Ben and Phil Yousem and Ray Churchwell have joined hands in opening a new, up-to-date service station at 1911 Douglas street. Specializing in auto reconditioning and brake service, they offer the motoring public one of the best equipped establishments in the middle west. The Yousems built up a reputation for efficient and economical service during their twelve years at Twenty-second street and St. Mary's avenue. They have brought with them their complete brake service and wheel aligning outfit, to which has also been added new equipment to have axles and frames straightened cold. Both are well known to the readers of the Jewish Press. "Ray" has also had years of experience, having done business for fourteen years at Twenty-eighth and Cuming streets as the Ray Auto Top and Body company.
Contributory Causes Berlin.—The German cabinet, in response to representations made by a spokesman for a Jewish organization of prominence, has "declared that it is opposed to anti-Semitism, but stipulated that its statement in ihis connection is not to be made public under any circumstances, the \Velt <"n Montag: asseits, -
For Children Between 5 and 13
Bob Swartz has opened the Kilby Place Furnace and Sheet Metal Works at 109 North Fortieth street, in conjunction with Leo Rushall. Swartz is experienced in this line of work, having been associated with his father, I. Swartz, in the furnace and sheet metal " - . business for the f"™" """ *"~~" past ten years. \ * He also studied J .. \ sheet metal t '' work and h e a t - ! ' . , - - • - • ' •' ing engineering I ; at the St. Louis : , Technical Insti- \ '"". f tute. Rushall t -, • . j, has had experi- j •i J, ence in New f . . . '... -..: York. Bob Swartz Operating on an economy basis, they feel confident that they can effect distinct savings without sacrificing service or materials. The Kilby Place carries a complete stock of repairs for all makes of furnaces. Skillful, scientific methods are employed in repairing furnaces, guttering, spouting and all other metal work. Estimates a r e '• furnished on request. •-. In : their ifurnace -work,- they usethe products of- th« Nesbit Standard Furnace Co.
Miss Sophie Rosens tein Director of Play School
FRIEDMAN NAMES COMMITTEES FOR HEBREW CLUB New Officers Prepare for Activities of the Coining Season
The fourth annual Summer Play School of the Community Center, a headliner on the J. C. C. summer program, will start next Monday morning at 9 a. m., under the direction of Miss Sophie Rosenstein. Registration is now open at the Jewish Community Center for all children betv/een the ages of five and. thirteen. The volunteer teaching staff, which will instruct the children, includes the following: Dave Chesnau, Hy Goodbinder, the Mesdames Frank Ackerman, J. Brookstein, Sidney Katleman, S. Katzman, I. Levin and the Misses Ruth Bordy, Dora Dolgoff, Evelyn Epstein, La Verne Feblowitz, Ruth Frisch, A n n Goodbinder, Janet Graetz, Frances Green, Harriett Greenblatt, Gertrude Oruch, Gertrude Rothkop, Louise Rothkop, Ann Ruback, R u t h Shapiro, Bertha Slutzky, Geraldine Strauss and Edith Sussman. All children are urged to enroll at once. The registration fee for the entire period is only one dollar, and an enjoyable time is arranged for all the children. The Play School will continue for four weeks. Classes will be held five mornings per week, from y a. m. to 12 noon. An interesting and varied program has been arranged, including games, dramatics, dancing, sewing, toymaking, handcraft, swimming, sports, orchestra and soapsculptoring. There will be an assembly on each day's program, with a special program. Milk and crackers will be served the children. At the close of the Play School an exhibition will be given of the work done and the articles made. "The purpose of the Play School," stated Miss Rosenstein, "is to provide a happy and constructive vacation period for the children during the summer because we realize that during the time of release from school desks children need to enrich their lives through a program of joyous activity,"
J. J. Friedman, newly-elected president of the Omaha Hebrew Club, in preparing an active program for the organization, has announced the chairmen and members of the various committees. Other officers elected are: Hyman Shrier, vice-president; Sol Rosenberg, secretary; John Feldman, treasurer; Dr. A. A. Steinberg, Max Fromkin and Sam Altshuler, trustees. Elected members of the executive committee include Irvin. Levin, Mendel-Blank and -Nathan YafFe. Following are the committees as announced by President Friedman: Executive and budget committee— The officers, consisting of the president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer, < the three trustees and the three elected members of the executive committee. Committee on Visiting and Reporting on the Sick—Hyman Shrier, chairman; Jarohm Kulakofsky, Sam Altshuler, J. Fried, Jacob Riklin,] A. Richards, D. Oruch, D. Swartz,! Allan Cohen, Mark Lorig and H. Dworsky. Initiation Committee—Max Fromkin, chairman; Ben Handler, I. Morgenstern, Barney Feltman and Albert Kaplan. Resolutions committee—Louis Lipp, Receipts for Meshulochim to Be Allan Cohen, Fred White, Sam BeReady in a Few ber, Marks Lorig and Sam Klaver. Davs Intellectual advancement and entertainment committee — H y m a n _JThe Vaad XrOehr, or Union of STirier, chairman; Dr. J. "MV iSrmanV Orthodox Synagogues of Omaha, is Judah Wolfsan, Dr. O. S. Belzer, preparing for a season of activity Jake Crounse, I. Eadinofsky, Albert on behalf of orthodoxy. H. Marcus, Kaplan, John Feldman, M. Bran- president of the Vaad, has andeis, J. Tretiak and M. Potash. nounced the following committees: Membership committee—Dr. J. M. Schochtim and butchers commitErman, chairman; M. Polonsky, Har- tee—N. Levinson, chairman; A. ry Dworsky, Louis Lipp, Philip Cohn, I. Goldstein, I. Kulakofsky, Garelick, Wm. Bishoff, Allan Cohn, j M. Mittleman, S. Eavitz. M. Eercovici, R. Dorinson, M. Meshulochim committee—Rabbi N. Braude, J. Tretiak and Dr. A. A. Feldman, chairman; A. Cohn, S. Steinberg. Katleman, M. Venger. Publicity committee—Allan Cohen, Educational committee—I. MorDavid Blacker and Irvin Levin. genstern, chairman; S. H. Katz, R. Talmud Torah committee—H. Mar- Lackow, N. Levinson, M. Mittleman, cus and John Feldman. Dr. P. Sher, E. Weinberg, A. G. House committee—A. Richards, S. Weinstein, Nathan YafFe. Monowitz, J. Lintzman, D. Swartz, Rabbinical committee—S. RaviOs, Abraham Cohen and E. Weinberg. chairman; Mendel Blank, Louis, Judiciary committee—Joe Tretiak, Blotckey, I. Goldstein, J. Katleman, H. Marcus, M. Blank, D. Swartz, Joe Kirshenbaum, I. Kulakofsky, N. Hyman Shrier, Dr. A. A. Steinberg. Levinson, William Milder, M. MitVigilance committee—Wm. Holz- tleman, Dr. A. Romm, A. G. Weinraan, Harry Wolf, Henry Monsky, stein. • Dr. A. Greenberg, Marks Lorig, Sam Financial committee—H. Weiner, Beber, Irvin Stalmaster, Philip chairman; Louis Blotckey, n . DworIGutznick, Fred White, Hyman sky, I. Goldstein, Max Kirshenbaum, Shrier, Max Fromkin and Goodman Ben Llndenbaum, William Milder, I. Meyerson. Morgenstern, H. Steinberg, Joe Tretiak. Publicity committee—Nathan Yaffe, chairman; I. Goldstein, Ben Kazlowsky, N. Levinson, I. Morgenstern. The official Vaad receipts will be A bazaar for the benefit of the Labor Lyceum building will be held ready in a few days. These will be by the Labor Lyceum Association on given to each meshuloeh after an Saturday evening, Sunday and Mon- investigation, so that only those day, July 23, 24 and 25, at the Ly- meshvilochim who are worthy will ceum building, Twenty-second and have the Vaad's sanction to canvass the community. The Vaad has again Clark. A. committee of the Ladies' Labor asked the Omaha Jewish community Lyceum club will assist the board of to donate to only those showing credirectors of the Lyceum in sponsor- dentials signed by the Vaad officials. ing the affair.
LOCAL MARCUS
Plan" Benefit Bazaar for Lyceum Bulletin
Lubin Honored
Ussishkin Honorary Citizen of Tel Aviv
San Francisco.—Simon J. Lubin of Sacramento, prominent Jewish businessman and social welfare leader, was named chairman of the State Department of Commerce by Governor Rolph.
Tel Aviv.—The municipality of Tel-Aviv, the all Jewish city of Palestine, elected Menachin M. Ussishkin, president of the Jewish National Fund, an honorary citizen of TelAviv. :
PAGE 2—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1932 dow of the hall and bade the peasYedinez, from his sick bed in the ant look out. "See that giant strucCzernowitz Hospital and signed by' ture' that stands opposite," said the Dim. The complete affidavit has just Commissar, pointing-to a huge buildreached this country*ing across the way. The statement by Bronstein conPublished every Friday at Omaha, Nebraska, by firms that he was arrested on May "Yes*" said the;peasant. "Well," 7th, and states that the torture lairtTHE JEWISH PRESS PUBLISHING COMPANY continued .the Commissar, "under the ted for twelve hours and that twelve tempo of the old regime^ ihat build$2.50 Subscription Price, o n eyear - - - - - - - - more hours elapsed before the gening took twenty-five years to condarmes permitted him to be removed •••.."• Advertising rates furnished o n application struct, but under our tempo it only ish conference in Geneva, on August to a hospital. Office: 490 Brandeis Theater Building takes two. Now you Understand what Old Clothes to 14th, to discuss the advisability and Hardoon Decision Russia Now r Telephone: ATlantic 1450 tempo means?" the feasibility of constituting a world Moscow.—- Great relief possibilities Sioux City Office—Jewish Community Center Shanghai,—The British Consular "Yes," replied the peasant dele- for Jews residing in Soviet Russia are Jewish congress. Court of the First Instance ruled; DAVID BLACKER - - - - Business and Managing Editor gate. The Executive voted against partiseen here' as a result of a new decree PRANK K. ACKERMAN - - Editor The. peasant delegate returned to issued by the Soviet Government per- cipating in the conference on the against the contestants for a share FANNIE KATELMAN - - Council Bluffs, Iowa, Correspondent his native town all exuberant with mitting the import of old clothes par- ground that the Jewish position in in the estate of the late Elias Har* CANN PILL - - - - - - Sioux City, Iowa, Correspondent the ballyhoo that had been implanted cels from relatives abroad, subject most difficult in any case and a Con- doou, Jewish multi-millionaire. The validity of the will, which in him about the Five-Year Plan. only to the payment of duty. gress will only have an adverse efleft the entire estate, estimated at When he arrived, the Soviet peasfect and will make the Jewish position The "Torgpredstwo" organizations ants of his -town naturally gathered abroad, have been instructed to sup- less tenable in various countries of $100,000,000, to his Chinese widow, The thirty-fifth annual convention of the Zionist Organiza- to was recognized by the court. hear his report. the Diaspora. The relatives of Hardoon, who tion of America, held last week in Philadelphia, was marked by The peasant delegate of course de- ervise the sending of three parcels into Soviet Russia. Filene Honored b y sought to have the will set aside on another change in leadership. The conclave, dominated by Lip- livered a harangue. And it, too, was the ground that the marriage of Czechoslovakia Mrs. Schiff Passes Away skyfe-followers and their pro-Weizmann policy, virtually repudi- full of the word "tempo." Hardoon to his Chinese wife was not Boston.—Edward A. Filene, promNew York.—Funeral services were Well, to make a short story just a legal, inasmuch as it was not in ated the Brandeis-Mack forces which assumed the reins two years little inent merchant of Boston, was awardheld Sunday for Mrs. Adele G. Schiff, longer, after the peasant finwith Jewish orthodox ago. No bitter controversies, however, marred the serenity of ished one of the audience came up widow of Mortimer I. Schiff, Jewish ed the Order of the Lion by the gov- accordance law, were required to pay the costs ernment of Czechoslovakia, according banker and philanthropist, who sucthe convention, because the so-called Brandeis-Mack group put to him and said: of the suit. what's this word 'tem- cumbed at the age of 53 at her home to a dispatch just received from forth no opposition. j po'"Taverisch, in Oyster Bay. Prague, The presentation was made that you are always using:—what Many leaders throughout the country are hailing the "peace' does it mean?" Mrs. Schiff, it is stated, never re- by President Masaryk, at Prague, in covered rom the shock of the sudden the presence of a distinguished gathpact" of the convention with unmitigated joy. We too are earnest "Come with me, and 111 explain," death of her husband on June 4,1931, ering. One out of every three replied the speaker, and he led his fpjends of the Zionist movement, willing to do our very utmost to questioner to the window. "Look out while she was in Paris where he was The Order of the Lion was founded Electris in 1920, and is awarded only to for- t* a General advance the creativeness and vitality of our Homeland. But that of the window," said the peasant to join her. eigners who have merited recognition is no reason to hide our real feelings behind a mask of insincerity. delegate. The questioner looked out Immigration Decline in Past from the Czechoslovakian Republic in and saw the great big cemetery of Three Years We naturally rejoice that the convention wasted little time over the field of civil activities. the town. Washington.—-Immigration in May petty trivialities. We are also pleased that the "leaders" did not "You see that. Well, under the totaled 2,479, while the number of Attack Averted throw barrages of verbal "brick bats" at each other. But we fear old tempo, it took us twenty-five aliens leaving the cduntry to live per- Warsaw.—Serious attacks upon the fnat in the Zionist Organization of America altogether too much years to make that, hut under the manently in foreign countries was Jews of Thorn, Pomerania, has been averted at the last moment, accord8,577. stress has been laid upon "leadership." What good is the most present tempo, only two." Immigration as a whole declined ing to information just received by MIKE AND ABE sagacious general if he has no army to lead? The true strength for the Pulitzer punning prize 90.3 per cent since three years ago the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, when of the Zionist movement lies in the masses. They must form the of And the recent Zionist convention, 1 when the influx from all sources ex- one of those involved in the plot refoundation upon which we must build upward. It is deplorable nominate the remark made by Abe cept Mexico was practically normal. vealed details of the plans to a Jewproportionate decrease was larg- ish merchant of the local community. that reports estimate the membership of the Zionist Organiza- Goldberg, as he rose to address the. The er in some areas, particularly for the Members of the local Endek organbut could not adjust himtion in this country in the neighborhood of only seven thousand. convention, self to the . position of the ""Mike" Irish Free State, Scandinavia, Ger- ization were behind the plans laid for many and Great Britain, while that the attack on tiie entire Jewish comThe rank and file—that is where we should focus our attention. placed in the halL Italy was 68.5 per cent, and for munity. The Zionist Organization lives for the upbuilding of Pales- "It i s a battle," remarked Gold- for Asia only 50.2 per cent. Bronstein Signs Affidavit tine. But the Jewish pioneers, in the Holy Land, facing insur- berg, "between Mike and Abe Gold- Agudath Israel Turns New York.—An affidavit, accusing berg." mountable difficulties and enduring unbelievable hardships, have Captain Panisoara of the gendarme Down Conference not succumbed to the spirit of defeatism which is ours in the CONVENTION SCHMOOS Vienna.—The World Executive of post in Yedinez, Bessarabia of inAbe Goldberg: "Dr. Wise, not the Agudath Israel, meeting here, de- stituting the torture proceedings Diaspora. Theirs is the example we must follow—revitalization every politician is a statesman, but clined to accept the invitation of the against him was dictated to the Jewand re-creation, not a deadening, unenervating program of defeat- every great statesman i s a politi- American Jewish Congress to parti- ish Deputy, Dr. Manfred Reifer, by ism. Morris Rothenberg as president of the Zionist Organization cian. 0 cipate in the forthcoming world Jew- Samson Bronstein, Zionist leader of Wise: "Hear! hear!" of America does not have to contend with enemies within the Dr. Goldberg: "Thomas Jefferson was ranks. He is an able leader with admirable qualities and splen- a politician. Lincoln was a politician. did potentialities. Under him the Zionist Organization in this You cant be a great statesman withbeing a politician, but of course country must throw off its lethargy—must assume power and out while all great statesmen are poliinitiative in tremendously increasing the membership of the Zion- ticians, all politicians are not statesists, in introducing Hebrew cultural activities, and in strengthen- men." ing Palestinian achievements. The Zionist Organization of Amer- Dr. Wise: "Splendid observation, Goldberg, splendid observation." ica must avert spiritual bankruptcy by inaugurating' a new era tTurning to wife) "Mark that down, in American Jewry's traditional ambition to play a leading role Louise."
THE JEWISH PRESS
WORLD-WIDE
EVER FORWARD
in the future of world Jewry's National Homeland. When the HEARD IN THE Zionists have successfully carried out such a program, then will CORRIDORS . _.. . America's contribution to Zionism assume the proportions that Judge Wm. VM.: Lewis speaking: "You see some strange signs in Palshould be ours. estine. One Jewish butcher there, had a sign in three languages—He-! the Commissar's explanation of the brew, Yiddish and English—about the Five-Year Plan. freshness of Ms meat." ^The Yiddish sign was *Ich shecht Tempo! Such a funny •word! He had never heard of i t before. What alein yeder tag.' Underneath he had By DAVID SCHWARTZ translated it: 1 kill myself every did it mean? Well, when the speaking was over, day.'" the peasant gathered up enough cour- SPEAKING OF GIRLS CARMEL HAS THE FLOOR age to* approach the Commissar. "As I was saying," remarked SigBrother Carmel of Cleveland told "Taverisch Commissar," he said, mund Thau, lamp manufacturer and one at the Zionist conclave. "you made a very fine speech. I well known Zionist who has just reIt appears that some of the peas- was deeply moved, but all my life turned from Palestine, "in Palestine, ant representatives of Russia were have I been, you might say, one of you can always recognize the giris." gathered in an official conclave at the sons of the wild jackasses. You "Now, here, I have difficulty in Moscow, where the various commis- will pardon my ignorance, but what doing that. In the morning, the sars appeared before them to fill does the word tempo mean, whick American girl appears with one them with patriotic Soviet ballyhoo. you use so frequently?" shade of complexioin, with another One of the peasants who came tc "Surely, surely, 111 tell you what shade of lip, and another eye-brow the conclave was particularly struck tempo means," replied the Commis- color. When I: see a girl one day, by the Commissar's frequent use of sar. "Come with me." And the Com-the next time, I see her, I need an the word "tempo," in connection with missar led the peasant to the win-introduction. I • can't recognize her for the same girl. Now in Palestine1 once you know a girl you know her ever afterwards. The Palestine girls .don't -use powder and paint" 'But Mr. Thau," we interpose. "Isn't that because at present, Palestine i s in its more or less beginning stages? In time, we should imagine they will paint up quite as much as all femininity." Consider Isiah's lambasting of the girls of Palestine in his day. They seemed to know a few tricks of the art of make-up that even modernity of the jazz age would prize, if we may. believe a prophet.
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SPEAK HEBREW, PLEASE Thau i s terrifically enthusiastic about Palestine. "What thing about Palestine, Mr. Thau, impressed you most—her orange groves, University, Dead Sea?" "Palestine's best crop," replied Thau, "is her youth." "They are raising a crop of young Jews that surpass the best Jews in the world. Fearless young men—they are raising in Palestine." "And hearty, devoted young women. Palestine Maude Mullers. Young women driving ploughs over the fields. Great sight. I came up to one and started a conversation. Later I learned, she was a college graduate and knew six or seven languages. But when I commenced to speak to her in Yiddish, she replied: "Dabar Ivrit" and would not speak any other language but Hebrew." tfunkist Flour is the flour of perfect purity. It is milled from the highest -quality wheat by the most modern equipment to make it pure and snow white. Try Sunkist Flour the next time you order from your, grocer. .
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PAGE S-r-THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 15,1932 inel Vwas formerly Elgutier. '
JCss Xatherine Elaine and Howard,. have returned .'"', /x:.;" "•"':••' from a visit in Cleveland.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rosenberg and daughter, Helen of Minneapolis, are visiting here with Mrs. Rosenberg's parents, Mr. and Mrs. JS. FjiedeL Mr. Rosenberg will leave ,^iext week to • motor -east bn a business trip. Mrs., Rosenberg will remain here for the
SBICHAKDS-RIEKES ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED t Mr. and Mrs. S. Riekes announce t h e engagement of . their daughter, 3£uth, to Morton A. Richards, son of Mr.' and Mrs. A. Perimeter. • Both are ^popular members of the younger set. . Miss Riekes attended the University of Omaha. Mr. Richards is a graduate of the University Jof Nebraska. | The -wedding will" take place in the |ear]y fall. .
Mrs. H. Marx, Dr. and Mrs. Louis Marx, Miss Cele Marx, Paul Marx, Messrs. Philip and Buck Stein, and MJV Sam Snyder. Mr. Louis D. Snader of Norfolk, Nebr., also attended the wedding. •'. After an extended wedding trip io the mountains and to Yellowstone National Park, the young couple will make their home a t the Cornhusker Hotel, Lincoln, after August 1.
BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kaiman announce the birth of a son, July 7, ITBLLMAN-GREEN .: ' - "'•"• ENGAGEMENT ;•• ; -: \ . ' . • .• ', ' at the Nebraska Methodist hospital. Mrs. Meyer Green h a s announced MrsL Kaiman was formerly Miss e engagement of h e r daughter, Elizabeth Katz. ..* nces, to Dr.- Leon E. Fellman, : eon of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fellman. VISITORS Mr. Morris Weiner, formerly of IARX-HELLERSTEIN Omaha,' but a resident of Los AnOf special interest to Omaha and geles the past three years, visited Lincoln friends is the marriage of his aunt and uncle, Mr- and Mrs. Ess Lottie Hellerstein, daughter of William Weiner, last week e n i Ir. and Mrs. Louis Hellerstein, of Mr. Weiner continued on to New penver, to Mr. Jay J. Marx, son of York, -where he will sail for a r. and Mrs. H. Marx of Lincoln, month's vacation in /Europe, where |hich took place July 10 in Denver. he will, visit h i s mother. Many out of town guests attendthe large -wedding. Among OmaMiss Fannie Lazinger of Sioux who attended a r e : Mrs. R. City is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. ader, Mrs. Julius Newman an4 Simon Gorelick. feughter, Harriet Rosalie, and Mrs. Tarry Snader and son, Robert Miles, Mrs. Walter Schimmel of St. Louis aests of Mrs. Newman. arrived Wednesday to visit her motht Those from Lincoln were Mr. and er, Mrs. Dollie Elgutter. Mrs. Schim-
s u m m e r .
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BRIDGE PARTY The Cee Que club honored Miss Fannie Lazinger of Sioux City _at a , bridge party given a t the home of Miss Bertha Cohn. First prize was won by Miss Betty Goldberg.
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SORORITY DANCE ' A n informal dance will be given Mrs. Irwin Osheroff of •Chicago by; the Iota Tau sorority this evespent the past week ; visiting ;with ning a t Paul Spoils Little club. No her parents, Mr. and' Mra. P . H. outside bids were issued. . Fine."
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BIRTHDAY PARTY The Misses Sadie and iktta. Tatelman will be hostesses a t a party for their cousin, Miss E t t a Camel, on the occasion of her sixteenth birthday on Saturday, July 16. Twenty guests have been invited.
TO RETURN TO THIS COUNTRY
Mr. and Mrs. David H. Harding have received -word from their son, Joseph, famed violinist, that he is planning to return to this country -very shortly. Mr. Harding spent five years in Paris preparing for a concert career. Since his debut two years ago, he SOCIAL NOTES has been concertizing, throughout Miss Lillian Leiben of Lincoln, France, winning lavish praise from formerly of Omaha, has returned to audiences and foreign critics. • her home after a ten-day stay with Miss Irene Fishberg. She was ex- WINS SCHOLARSHIP CUP tensively entertained while there. Nathan E. Gilinsky of Council 31uffs, who recently. graduated from Mrs. Ben Levensky h a s left for the Creighton Law school cum laude, Duluth, Minn., to spend the summer was awarded the Philip. M. Klutznick with her niece. scholarship cup, awarded annually to the member of Phi Beta Epsilon, Mrs. L. Ackerman has "been visit- ireighton social fraternity, who during the past month with her sister, ing the year achieves the highest Mrs. B. Firsht, in Detroit, Mich. scholastic average. • Honorable mention was given to Mr. and Mrs. Abe Cohen have jost the following members of the frareturned after vacationing in Chi- ternity who received ' an average cago, I1L, and Madison, Wis. above -ninety: Abe FelVman and Morris Blacker, medicine; Julius Bisno, Miss Fannie Katzman left for Aaron PerEs "and William Resnick, Bangpr, Mich., where she wfll visit Arts, and Dr. Leon FeUman, dentiswith friends and'relatives, during the try. William Resnick was awarded summer months. - .• the freshman medal for the highest average among the freshmen. Mr. and Mrs. Simon Gorelick vacationed last week at Lake Okoboji. SORORITY INSTALLATION Miss Lillian Jonisch was installed Miss Ann Gitnick left Saturday, as president of the Pi Tan Phi sorJuly 9, for a two-weeks visit in ority a t the organization's formal Philadelphia and Atlantic City. She installation held a t the home of Miss. will return July 25. Minette Louis. Other officers installed were Miss Rose Colick, secreMrs. Edward Lincoln and children, tary-treasurer; Miss Mildred Lefit55> Barbara Jean and Alden, and Mrs. reporter, and Miss Dorothy MarH. StoBer and children, Lorraine and golin, sergeant-at-arms. Leonard, left June 29 for Manitou, Colo. They plan to spend the summer a t Manitou. The Hazomir Singing Society will Messrs. Lou Riklin and Norman stage an aH-day outing and picnic Green left l a s t week for a tour t>f at L&oma Beach next Sunday, July the east They will return before 15. David Slobodinsky is chairman of arrangements, assisted by Shirthe holidays. ley Platt. The entire organization!will start Mrs. Louis ;, Gitlin. and Bbn, Paul, have treturned • from a trip e t o -the pxtt together early in the morning. Black-Hills and Huron, S. Efc, where The program includes games, races, they Iwere' the guests of Mr. and bridge and checker tournaments and other entertainment. Prizes will be Mrs. Hy Garbei and son-r awarded to the winners,;" It Miss Lo&ie tSp1sg^OTgtiter->f Ulr* and Mis. Sam Rips, left -for 'Tarkio, Mo., to visit with her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs.~A. L. Cohen, and cousin, Floyd. She will be gone a month.'
Daughters of Israel Aid
Junior Hadassah Picnic
Incitement Alarming Bucharjest.—The anti-Jewish incitem e n t in the villages of Moldavia has reached such an alarming state that the government is warned by the Liberal organ, "Victorul," that the situation' may soon grow out of hands, if the incitement is permitted to continue.
SJ/J/iik greai pleasure
we announce
thai we
are now
Jtke
of
KATHLEEN MARX Q preparations Jor lite care of the slci OR many years the genius of this famous Beauty Stylist has solved the intricate problems of feminine loveliness. t The same preparations -which have long had such incredible success in Miss Quinlan's New York Salon are now available to you in her new series of short, effective treatments for home care of the skin. They •will be shown you at our Toilet Goods Department.^
F
Entrance
Floor _.
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Miss Blanche 5Kmman has returned from California. Mrs. Harry Snader and Email son, Robert Miles, of Fondulac, Wis^ are visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Julius Newman. Mrs.
Leo Seblaifer and children,
Mrs. Barney Markovite of Council Bluffs, accompanied by her daughter, Mrs. Julius Barron and son, Herman, of Shenandoah, Iowa, left Sunday; evening for Denver, Colorado, for a month's visit. . j New York.—Political and economic conditions are contributroy causes to the status of the Jews in Germany, Roumania, Poland, Lithuania a n d Latvia, which is distressing, declared David Schweitzer, assistant director! of the European activities of t h e American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee.
jHealthful Heatj
Mrs. John Baird Quigley and two small daughters, Joan and Ruth, of Hutchinson, Kansas, who have been spending the past two months here visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M, L. Marks, were joined here last Thursday by Mr. Quigley. They all returned to Hutchinson on Tuesday,
We Can't All Go To The Seashore But we can sit in the cool, breezy atmosphere of the Jack and JiH, eat deliciously prepared foods, and chat with our fjiends^—away from the heat—at a pleasant, electrically-cooled sandless seashore.
and
Hazomir Picnic
J
Council Bluffs News
A regular meeting of the Daughters of Israel Aid Society will be BTF.R.E. held on Tuesday afternoon, July 19, a t the Old People's Home, 2504 Charles, a t 2 p . in. Please attend. The Chevra B'nai Yisroel SynaA board meeting at 1:30 p. m. gogue at 618 Mynster street was the will precede t h e regular meeting. scene of two Bar Mitzvahs last Saturday morning, July Dth, when Joe Wolfson of Council Bluffs and Frank Pirsch of Omaha became Bar Mitsvah. The Junior Hadassah will give a Picnic Breakfast next Sunday mornThe Council Bluffs Agudas Achim ing, July 17, a t 16:30 o'clock a t Elmwood park.. Miss Rose Sacks is Society will hold a meeting next chairman of this affair, and is being Thursday evening, July 21st, at the assisted by the following committee: Eagies halL Misses Sadie Tatehnan, Celia Stoller, Dr. Harry Goodson of Sacramento, Iibby.Abramson, Sally Cohen, Minnie Frohm and Sophie Oland. AH mem- California, who spent the past week bers who wish to attend should call here visiting at the home of his brothMiss Sacks promptly to make reser- er-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Krasne, left Sunday for his vations. home.
accompanied back by Mrs. Quigley's sister, Miss Flora Marks, who urill spend the remainder of the month in. Hutchinson..
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Kitchen Ghats Mm. Darid* M.- Newman _- i, - Blarney-Stones •— Use 1 cup" sugar, 4 eggs (separate), 2 cupjs flour, whites of eggs, 1-4 teaspoon salt,, 1 cup boiling water,-1 teaspoon vanilla, 4 teaspoons oaking powder. , - jCream, sugar and yolks, add .flour, baking- powder,. salt, vanilla, water and "last whites beaten stiff. Bake in long pan! for 35- minutes in moderate oven.' Cut in squares while hot and frost with 1 cup butter and enough powdered sugar to make the Tight consistency to spread, and roll, in ground peanuts. Very delicious. Date Podding One package dates, 1 cup nut meats chopped, 1-2 cup sugar, 1-2 cup flour, 1 teaspoon haking powder, 1-3 cup milk, 2 eggs. Mix 'together, sifting flour and sugar together first, add the beaten whites last. Bake 40 minutes and serve with whipped cream.
SUNKIST FLOUR GIVES PRIZES OVER RADIO Sunkist Flour, milled by theManey Milling company of Omaha, offers a Sunbeam Electric Mixmaster each week to the winner of its recipe contest over radio station KOIL. These broadcasts are scheduled each Tuesday and Friday morning at 10:30 o'clock. '• This week's contest is on ice box cookies. If you have an ice box cookie recipe, ask your grocer for a Sunkist recipe blank and send it to KOIL before 6 p. m. Saturday. You will be eligible for this grand prize. The Maney Milling company, which has been one of the largest exporters of fine flour in the United States, is very proud of its fine Sunkist Flour. I t has experimented for more than twenty years in giving the public the finest flour on the market and its experts have succeeded. Sunkist Flour is recommeaQe^ by th.e leading groceries.
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Jt t \ i AT MOMENTOUS CONGRESS IN INDIA—Mahatma Gandhi, world-famed Indian Nationalist leader, and some of his outstanding supporters are pictured at the Nationalist congress in Calcutta. Left to right, J. M. Sen Gupta, former mayor of Calcutta; Gandhi; Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya, and Subash Chancier Bose, present mayor of Calcutta.
HOOT AND HIS BRIDE—It took a long time before Hoot Gibson and bride, Sally Eilers, could free themselves from picture duties and take a honeymoon—but here they are, bound from Los Angeles to
\ WINS DIVORCE—Having effected a property settlement out of court whereby she receives $110,- ! 000 in property, Mrs. Ruby Porter Brown wins a divorce in Los Angeles from Nacio Herb Brown, composer of "Singing in the Rain," and other song3. Mrs. Brown was given custody of the V couple's ten-year-old son.
A TRUE KING OP SPORT—AT 73—Although King GustaT V of Sweden will be 73 in June, he still is an ardent tennis enthusiast. He i s shown here on the courts daring a visit to Paris.
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THREE FUTURE PRESIDENTS?—These husky triplets are the children of Mr. and Mrs. Nels Nielson of Salt Lake City. Miss Mildred Prandsen, above, of the hospital staff, calls them "Peter, James and John."
THESE GIRLS KNOW HOW TO MAKE BEDS IN A HURRY—Contestants are seen in action at annual Vista del Arroyo Chambermaids' Bedmaking championships, Pasadena, Cal. Miss Blanche Scott is declared winner, her official time being three minutes five seconds.
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COLORFUL WEDDING—Count Bela Hadik and hia bride, the for-, mer Countess Alice Szechenyi, are shown returning to the Hun-' in New legation in Washington, following their wedding. The bride THAR SHE BLOWST-This modem whaling vessel, top. the Sir James Clark Ross, is shown York harbor at the dose of a successful hunt in Arctic waters. Hundreds of the huge " e « " u * \ 3 who are prominent in the capital's diplomatic c i r c l e . / " ~ ~ " pulled aboard the ship through a port entrance, an innovation in vessels of this type. Photo below snows k few of the hundreds of whales harnooned or shot during the seven-xnonth journey. ^
BRING ON YOUR POLE!—These Alaskan huskies are the offspring of Maggie, one of the sledge dogs which accompanied Admiral Byrd £ £^^£^^^^^ Byrd's ship, was visiting Washington. Photo shows Maggie and bee .. - _ £*„$_ ^ joto B ,.- - - s * ^ v
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PAGE 5—THE JEWISH
An X-
of the Mind Social Thinker By Max Lerner
Through the courtesy of the Yale University Press, we present an fllcminating essay by the assistant jnsviaging editor of the Encyclopedia of Social Science on the Social Thought of Justice Brandeis. This article will De part of a book, soon to appear, under the title 'Mr. Justice Brandeis."—The Editor.
ing the mind of Mr. Justice Brandeis —and perhaps therefore the deepest and least eradi cable—-was a strain of romantic liberalism whose essence was a gallant and optimistic struggle for certain supposedly primal human rights. It was a liberalism compulsive enough in its emotional force to lead his parents to emigrate to America from Bohemia after the The earliest influence in fashion- unsuccessful revolutions of 1848.
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I EN o'clock on a cold winter night—a l>aby choking. Alone but for his mother— and a telephone. It is a simple rtory this mother tells • . . how her frantic cry for help over the telephone brought a doctor in time to save "Baby's" life. But there is a world of feeling back of the words that makes you realize something of what the telephone was worth in this moment of need.
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193? the stress he laid npoa^ social inven- prets, more closely even "than, was ] tion be was closely related to the thje administrative conEtrnctiveness teresny Bentham whom Wallas .inter- which theT Webbs were seeking to effect, in London. , Yet even twenty years of.;/anger, mitting effort in this direction wpirid! probably not have; sufficed to rescue REV. A, DIAMOND His name from .the comparative of Council Bluffs oblivion of those who fight heroically in a hopeless case. To say this is Well Known in This Vicinity not to do injustice to either * the as a seriousness or the effectiveness of PRACTICAL MOHEL Mr. Brandeis' career before 1916. THRIFTY SERVICE 29 No. 7th St. Phone 1059 Whatvere else happened, his position 6cLb. in the amazing history of these two Ja. 0243 C B. 5192 decades of American life would have been distinctive and secure. Nor is this the place to enter upon an extended critique of the causes with which he was allied. From the vantRABBI L L. SHAPIRO age ground of the present it seems miimiiiiiiiiiiiuHmuiinmiHiHiiiiHinniBHiHtimimiiwinn has been a clear that the cards were stacked against him. The forces they were Mohel Specialist Chas. R. Docherty fighting were too integrally part of a for 20 years capitalist-industrialist society — part Commercial Artist* Attends witb utmost care of the logic of its development and Photo Engravers part of its psychological context— 1724 No. 24th St. WE. 3817 to be severed from it for separate destruction. None of them was either willing or ready to attack the foundations of the society itself. And to save the body while striking at the excrescences required a more subtle diagnosis of historic and econ607 So. 12 Street HAKPEK METHOD SHOP omic forces and a more mature grapATlantie 1192 pling with the complexities of the Specializing in problem than the resources of those Scalp Treatment = decades could command. If Mr. uuiuiHiiiiimiuiiHiuuiiiimiuiiiHwiimmtimiKinittiiiiim MISSES KAKLI Brandeis stands out as a unique and 632 World-Herald Building heroic figure in the populist thought ATUntic 0344 of that period, it is not for the raking fire of his analysis of the Money Trust, not even for that stubborn command of facts and figures which made men call him the mathematician of the movement. It is rather because of the stress we find Mm laving, even in those days, upon the necessity for the continuous application of social intelligence to social problems and upon the inadequacy of any solution which did not have behind it the creative will of the The Sign of people. Good Workmamship
corruptly allied with them, a pitiless campaign of investigation and publicity. It was amidst this planetary crash and turmoil that Mr. Justice Brandeis' world took definite shape. It was in a sense inevitable that he should have been caught up in the swirl of forces. For it is of the essence of his mind to be receptive to the aspirations and conflicts of the world he lives in, and to desire participation in them. .Possessing little of Mr. Justice Holmes' transcendence of any specific period, it is rather his genius to be immersed These revolutions*, aptly character- in his time. After the critical strugized by Trevelyari'-'as ?the- taming gle to establish a legal practice point at which modern history failed was won, his mind, whose Hebraic to turn," were in spirit,- constitutional, sense of righteousness had been rehumanitarian, idealistic. "They repre- inforced by his background of Consented a renewal of continental soil tinental liberalism, turned more and of - the equalitarian ideals of the more to issues of social justice. He American and French revolutions. found in the dominant temper of his Carried back to the • United States populist muckraking period that eshy the emigrant groups of the mid- sential continuity 'with his own past century they imparted a new fresh- •without •which no individual enters ness and vigor to the American tra- upon a revolution in his thinking. dition of civil and political liberties. He found room in his new philosophy Freedom and justice and democracy for the ideals he had learned as a which as home-grown varieties had boy; room also for the individualism •wilted a bit in the hot climate of that had dominated his youth. What American experience, became when this period added, in his case as in transplanted hither from Europe vig- the case of other liberals, was a orous and even beautiful growths. new perception of the changes that They were terms that still had a the coming of industrial society had genuine and simple content for these wrought in the conditions of Amerinaive newcomers. Mr. Justice Bran- can liberty and American individualdeis grew up in an atmosphere of ism. It was clear that the old ideals what might be called primitive could no longer be pursued in the Americanism. old way. That the ideals themselves were worth while and needed no reThis Americanism took the char- placement formed part of those first acteristic form, in the semi-frontier principles which the liberals of that Kentucky society in which the Bran- day did not question. deises lived, of a deeply felt indiIn Louis D. Brandeis, the able Bosvidualism. The complexion of such an individualism was as varied as ton lawyer, the forces of liberalism were the sources of the sense of gained no mean ally. I say ally, release from which it sprung. To because a common unquestioning solbe allowed finally to do what one in dier he could never be; stern inEurope had always dreamed of do- dividualist, who cared more about ing and what one had regarded as the integrity of his personality than the inarks of a freeman, to talk or about anything else, he had to fight criticize or worship as one pleased, in his own fashion. He threw into to see an immediacy of relation be- the struggle all the resources of his tween; economic effort and economic mind—Ms amazing legal acumen, his reward, Te-enforced one's sense of persuasiveness, his mastery of the the dignity; and sovereign import- details and refinements of corporaance of the Individual, There were tion finance, his unwavering sense -values, bis-emiBefatiy precise-and slaves "Mr symbols to sum up for a border- constructive imagination. Equipped state abolitionist group what it with every weapon; of information meant to lack the liberties of an one had reckoned one's own, he was individual. Mr. Justice Brandeis re- a terrifying opponent to encounter. calls, how violent his reaction was But if he spared no one else, he when, during a brief sojourn in Ger- was most ruthless with himself. He many as a young man, he was repri- worked indefatigably. He sacrificed manded by the authorities for whistl- his obvious interests. He dedicated ing at night. The reprimand was himself with a monastic fervor to more than a personal reproof; it was what he conceived to be the service an insult to a complete and cher- of the public He came to be called ished way of life. "the People's Counsel," and if there was a touch of asperity in the way One does not become easily dis- the name was applied to him by opengaged from a way of life thus ponents, he himself took it with a deeply learned. The whole early py Ugh seriousness. career of Mr. Justice Brandeis, with of citizenship was Periits hard work and study and success, His ideal but he pursued it with A reruns in the best tradition of Ameri- dean, can individualism. In fact, all the ligious intensity that was medieval. He was effective. Of that there events of his first forty years had convinced to make him an idealistic can be no doubt. The minutes of yet successful liberal and civic lead- legislative hearings and investigaer, whose conspicuous ability con- tions, the records of lawsuits in which doned his excess of zeal, and whose groups of citizens, organized as a mastery of the hard facts of busi- "league" of some sort or other, apness showed that his somewhat tire- plied for court action against an some sermonizing was not to be tak- encroaching corporation, the newsen overseribusly. It is true he papers that reported his speeches showed at times a disquieting curios- and activities and the journalists who ity about matters into which a Bos- commented on them, all attest to his ton gentleman pried; as when in the effectiveness. There was room in eighties he began to talk with labor that struggle for every sort of talent leaders, and to regard the labor —for a Bryan, a La Follette, a struggle from the worker's point of Roosevelt, a Steffens, a Hapgood, a view. And be showed also a some- Wilson. But when most of the brilwhat unusual tendency to interpret liant legal ability of the country the lawyer's function as more than enrolled m the service mere advocacy and to set himself up was of thebeing corporations, the talents of a now as judge and now as arbitrator. first-rate legal and statistical mind But all his offenses stayed within were worth more than the talents of all the politicians and journalists. the limits of tolerance. The genuinely formative years of Mr. Brandeis found himself at home Mr. Justice Brandeis' mind fell in with tie sort of problems that bad the "social justice" period of Ameri- now to be mastered. His career, can history, in the latter part of the winding its way from one set of finineties and the first decade of the nancial and political intricacies to antwentieth century. They were years other, takes on something of the which witnessed on the one hand fiber of the period. the rise of powerful vested inter- In two important respects he stand ests and the expropriation of Ameri- out from the group of turn-of-thecan resources by capital acting under century liberals with whom his nam a laissez faire philosophy of gov- is associated. He had a passion for ernment, and on the other hand such detail and concreteness where most movements as populism, muckraking, of them dealt in invective and gentrust-busting and the "new free- eralities. And he had a capacity for dom." The vigor of individual en- constructive achievement in the field terprise •which had opened a con- of social legislation and social intinent had grown barbaric and pi- vention. An exposure of insurance ratical in the exploiting of it, and companies was accompanied by a the pure metaphysical passion -which plan for reorganizing the industry had driven successive waves of mi- and by a new form of savings bank gration to America was now trans- insurance; an attack on the railroads ferred and transformed into an in- gave him a chance to launch on its tense desire for purifying the body career the principle of scientifi polite. To minds educated in the management; a call to arbitrate a dialectic of liberalism it seemed ob- labor dispute resulted in the "procvious that the situation could be tocol" and the "preferential open best explained in terms of a dualism shop." And he knew not only how of conflicting forces. It seemed to create and state these ideas and clear that the captains of industry plans; he knew also the technique of and the masters of capital, in the publicity and persuasion without exultation of success, would sweep which in the apathy of modern life every landmark on the terrain of they would have been ignored. But American;. liberty. And 4t seemed perhaps most important of all -was clear also that the only recourse for the will to "follow through" an idaa liberals lay; p a militant j attack qn until it was functioning, and the inaU fronts-ran attack cri bankers, finite capacity for pains which saw on corporations and on 'Doliticians to the details of organization. In
Illuminating Essay Concerning Justice Louis Dembitz Brandeis
,
3, FRIIiAY,
JA. 1614
FRADENBCRG, STAUUASTKR £ BEBER OSCAR T. DOEBR VH1LJP M. KLUTXMCK 650 Omaha National Bank Bnildlng.
Offices Brandeis Theatre OMAHA
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF THE ARBBiA, INC. Notice ia hereby given that at a meeting; of tbe stockholders of The Arena, IHC, a corporation, held on March 10, 1030, in Omaha, Nebraska, it was inianimonsly voted to dissolve saiS corporation Jit once. J. J. ISAACSON, President. BOX PELTMAN, Secretary. 7-8-3-4t
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FEADENBCKC, BTALHASTER * BEBER, Attorneys. 650 Omaha National Bank Building NOTICE OF AMENDMENT OF ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION OF •CASH SYSTEM FCKNITKKK STORES, INC." Notice is hereby Riven that at a special meeting of the stockholders of the "Cash System Furniture Stores, Inc.' held on the 28th day of JHJW, 1832, at 10 A. M., in the office of Irvin Stalmnstcr, 6HO Omaha Nntional Bank; BuDdinc. Omaha, Nebraska, Article I of the Articles of Incorporation of B.iid company was duly amended to read as foiioirg: "Article I. The name of thiB corporation shall be "Kendis Furniture Company, Inc." T. M. KIAJTZN1CK, R. J. HOJJDSBERG. 7-8-32-4t
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'PAGE e^-THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1932 FKADENDDRO, STAUUASTER * IJEBER 030 Omuha Nnt'l Ban I; Bide- '
i
Miss ANNA
tfOTICK OF A3IKND31ENT OV ARTICLES OF INCOKrORATlON OF THE VESEUAL STATKST IXSVItAJsCTE COKPO RATION. Home Office, Oinnhn, Nebraska. Notice is hereby given thnt nt a iwetinj; of Ihe stockholders of thi? Uuilernl States Insurnneu Corporation held on the 28th daj- of Btiiy,-1032; Articlu 5 of the Articles of Inrorporallou was amended to read as follows: •• • Article .1
PILL, Correspondent
DEATH CLAIMS MORRIS BEGUN, SIOUX CrTYAN
SHOTW151L, MO.NSKV, GROUINSKX & VANCE und HARICY B. COHEN Attorneys. "S7 Omaha National Bank Bids. NOTICE BY PUBLICATION ON PETITION FOR SETTLEMENT OF FINAL ADMINISTRATION ACCOUNT. Iu the County Court of Douglas County, Nebraska.
In the Matter ot the Estate of Jake Fell-
inajt, Dtfea scd. . All persons interested in said matter are hereby notitie:! that on the 1st diiy of July. 1032 ttrindel Fellman filed a petition
also was graduated from the Uni- The authorized capital stock of I his cor- ill said County Court, praying that her administration account filed herein poration shall he One Hundred Thousand final versity of Michigan. (?ll!0.OUO.C0) Uoll.-irs. ilirlditl into teu thou- he. settled ami allowed, and that she be sand (10.000) shares with a par value of Ten ($10 IX)) . Oollnrs each, nil of which stock shall he common and shall he fully
Mr. and Mrs. J. Kuntz, 714 25th street, announce the engagement of paid fop and nou-assossnblu when issued. Morris Begun, 42 years old, '116their daughter, Sarah, to Charles Snid stock may l>e Issued for cash, real or personal property, good will, personal serfourteenth street, a resident of Margolis, son of Mr. and Mrs. H.vices, or anything of any value, and the values of any of gairt items shall lie deSioux City 20 years, died Saturday Margolis, of St. Paul, Minn. The termined i>y the Board of Directors of fhia sold corporation, and when said value Is so in a hospital at Rochester, Minn., date for the wedding has not been flrcl. it shall tx> final. set. following an operation. UKNEKAI, STATES. IXSUKANCK COItr O KA AT TIIX . Funeral services were held from By C. O. T.YLMAGK. President. Miss Fern Wolfson, daughter of ..;-. J. It. ItUAINi SK., the- residence of the family last Sun- Mr. and Mrs. J. Wolfson, 1029 South ' Secretary-Treasurer. day- afternoon. Mr. Begun was oneNewton street, is the entry of the Witness: I>, W. Tamer. tt-S0-4t of the owners of the B. and M. Debrah sorority for the Junior Chamclcftfrrng * store. " ber of "Commerce Patroness "dance, IRVIN C. IJ5VIN, Attornejr. , SOI Electric Ballding. Surviving are his widow, Sarah, which-^will be held Saturdays evetwo daughters, Esther and Edith, ning at Shore Acre.Gardens. •...-.. ;-; '•--: NOTICE OK 'CHATTEL MOKTGAGE and two brothers who .are living in Miss.Rose Shiloff, daughter of Mr. ;Notice Is hereby • given that on the 8th ol Atisxist, 3SI32, at ten o'clock A, M;, Russia. . and. Mrs. M.. ShOoff, 2415 Pierce fin}jrt 2110-So.-35th Street, ;Otanlin, Nebraska, the umliTslgneil will sell nt public auction street, is the entry of the Iota Tau to the hJghe.st bhlder for c a s h : ' Sorority, , for . the . honor of. official One Itenilnston, National Cash Itestster.
discharged from her trust as executrix nnd that a hearing will be had on said petition
BEN E. KAZLOW8KY, Attorney at Xaw 431 Initurancc Building NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION" Notice is hereby Riven that a meeting of the stockholders held on the 3rd day of June, 1932, nt which nil the stockholders of said corporation were present In person, a resolution was unanimously adopted dissolving said corporntioii ns of June 3, 1!I32. anil thnt since that dnte snid corporntioii has censed to exist ns a Nebraska corporation. • UNITED CLOTHING STORKS; INC. By LOUIS GUEEN'BEIK!, 6-"0-32-4t
•
President. ADE M. KAZLOWSKY, '
Secret nry.
ntADENBFKO, STAI..MASTI5K••« BEBEB rBADENBlRO. BTAUIABTEB A BEBKB OSCAIl T. »OERR OSCAR T. DOKRK rHILII' M. KLl'TZMCK • PHILIP JJI. KLVTZMCK ; Attornrys at Lnw i Attorney* nt Law 6S0. Omaha National IJimk Building. 630' Omnha National Bank' Building:. - ' NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF HOTEL "• 8. RIKKKS & SON, INC. INVESTMENT COMPANY Notice is hereby given thnt nt a meetNotice is hereby given that nt a meet- ing of the stockholders of S. Kiekea ft Ing of the stockholders of Hotel Invest- Soii. Inc.. n corporal ion. held on June 27th, ment Compnny, n corporation, held on 1932, In Omnhn, Nebrnskn, it Wns unanimJune 27, 1032, in Omnha, Nebraskn, It wns ously; voted to dissolve said corporation Unanimously voted to dissolve said cor- nt once. 'poration nt once. • K. ItlRKES. President. ETHEL 1UEKES KLUTZN1CK. IZZT KIKDI.EK. President. Secretary. BEKT1IA FIKDMiU. Njcretary. 7-8-3-4t•-.•.,7-R-3-4t.
ueforo. said Court on the 30th day of July. l'.KTJ, and that if you f.iil to appear before
s.ii«l Court on the said 30th day of Jiilv, VXV2, at 9 o'clock A. M., and contest said petition the Court may grant the prayer of said petition, enter a decree of heirship, and make such other and further orders, allowances nnd decrees, as «o this Court may seem proper, to the end that al! matters pertaining to said estate may be finally settled and determined. 7-S-32-3t.
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BUYCK CUAWFOIUV '. . County Judge.
FfiADENIHTRG. STALMASTEtt Se _- •• • BE HE It, Attorneys. 03O Omaha National Bank Building NOTICE OF INCORPORATION • "HAIOSY BLKCTUIC"
OF
' Noifce is hereby given that the undersigned have associated themselves together to form a corporation tuider the laws of HIP state of Nebraska. The name of the
corporation is . "Hancy Electric" and the principal place of transacting its business is in Omaha. r»oiia:liis County. Nebraskn. Tho general' nnfuiv of the business to :l>e covered- l>>" chattel; mortgage in fcivor of transacted is <o <Snrry on :in electric busihostess. -.-.:. '•.'•': C."-12.-Hiiiiv signed--by-Aiitou y_ Turnquist ness and such other business as in the hud Hilda.: K. . Vnni<|tiist, said niortRaRe' judgment of the corporation shall" be being; dated the IMh day of March. JH32. deemed- ndvnntapeons or desirable nnd to The Epsilon Phi sorority spent the and having iieen fded in the office of the hold real nnd persona! property for the last week end at Crystal lake: Twelve Connty t ' l e r t o t JUOiiglas County. XebrHS- purpose of carrying on said.business. The : Articles of incorporation for the of the members spent Saturday'night ka, on. the 21st day i.f March. 1!>32. Said mitlinrizod capital stock of the oorporntloiv wIlL'bu for the purpose of fort-clositiR shall • be Two Thousand Dollars which .Federation Buildh.g Fund; created to at a cottage, at Saunders ;Beaeh, sale sajd niortgaffp,' for costs vt sale 'ami ail shrill be-divided inro two hundred shares finance the construction of a Jewish while the rest of the members and accruing costs and for the purpose of sat- of par value of:Ten Dollars each. This corisfying the amount" now thereon to-wit: poration shall lie managed by a board of Community Center, and to carry on several guesto,. joined: them Sunday. &M.O0. that uo< suit: or other proceedings three; directors* who shall- be elected at the work of the Jewish social serv- The time was spent at tennis and at law have been instituted to recover tin' annual meeting from among the stockholders. The officers shall consist of a .- ice here, are on file with Miss Kath- swimming on Saunders .and. Liku- said' debt- or any part theri-of. president, vicc-prestdent. secretary and •C H. HAIN, Mortgagee. treasurer. Any two of said offices may l>e erine Stewart, county recorder." wanta beaches. • Wednesday evening 7 1 3 S 2 3 t held by nny one person, except the office Mr. A. M. Davis is president; the sorority met a t the home of of president nnd vice-president. The nnnnal meeting of the stockholders shall be Barney Baron, vice president; Mike Miss Fannie Cohen. V- ; . V • IRVIN C; t K T l N , Attorney. held on'the first Monday in' January of ;aoi;.Electric. Bnlldln K . Skalovsky, recording secretary; Max each year at two i.VIock IV M. Special meetings may be called by the president Brpdkey, financial secretary; E. N. NOTICE OF CHATTEL" MOKTGAGE nt any time or by a majority of Ihe board Doris Rosenstock is spending Grueskin, treasurer, and Max E. theMiss AU of directors.. The .highest- amount- of *n' 8th.dehteduess week with, a gr^rap of girls' at Notice Is hereby given that on the which thin corporation shall at Freidman, second vice president. of AuKiist, 1U32, at teu o'clock-- a;-m., any time contract shall not exceed twoLake Okoboji. 1; :.;,, flay the undersigned will sell at public auc- thirds of Its capital stock. The properly tion to the highest bidder for cash at of th«. stockholders and officers of this Cumins Street, Omaha, Nebraska, corporation shall nt nil times be exempt Mrs.- Harry Glatstein has returned 1900 kuowu as Shames Uody & ltadiator Com- from liability for the.corporate debts, and to her home in- Muscatine,-Iowa, pany, the following: ' " no stockholder or officer shnll tie held or One. Oldsmobile t'onch, motor nnmber deemed liable for Trtiy debt, contract, liaafter visiting for several vreeks at 3SH00O-3 bility or tort of the corporation. The corand serial number J7193, being a the home of her parents, . Mr.,. and 392S model covered by chattel mortgage - in poration shall iH'jrin buslsiesa ns soon as favor of Shames Uody &• l'adlator Com- the Articles of Incorporation are filed with • Cantor A. Pliskin. will conduct the M r s . J . H a r k o w a y . ••'.-. • "~•• - • pany, signed by M. A. IMlgrira m i d I.u- the Secretary of Slate of the State of Neservices at the Tephereth Israel cilte Pilgrim, s.iirt mortgnge being dated braskn. and shall continue for a period 24th tlay of Slarch. 1032. and having of fifty years unless dissolved by the Synagogue, West Sixth and- Sioux Mrs. Harry Rosenfetein o£ Gaines- the been filed in the office of- the County stockholders or by operation of low. The streets, on Saturday morning, July ville, Texas, visited :• this week. • at Clerk of Douglas County, Nebraska, on Hoard of Directors may make hy-Inws for 2Sth day of March. 1932. Said sale will the government and control of the cor16*-. He will chant the regular Sab- the home of her brother and sister- the be for the purpose of foreclosing said poration or Its officers as they may Aeom bath morning service. in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Emil Rosen- mortgage, for costs of sale and nil accru- proper and mny alter, repenl or amend the ing Vosls and for the purpose of sat isfv- same upon -vote of a majority of the board On Sunday evening, July 17, Can-s t o c k . '•• • • • " • . y " • • - ••. '• ••' • •• iug the amount now due thereon $<B).isO onof directors. These-articles of Incorporator Pliskin will chant the Minchn said mortgage and the sum of $24.00 on a tion mny lx> nmendml nt nny regular .or lien for repairs and work completed addi- special meeting of tbe^islockholders upon service at the Tephereth Israel Mrs. H. Fishgall and- daughters, tional to the consideration of said mort- ten days' written notice having l>eeii (tlven. FRANK K, MANGY, Synagogue. Following this service Carolyn and Marion; are visiting gage and that no suit or other proceedI.OTT1K HANKY.": • ings • at have, been instituted to rehe will present a concert, which with the former's mother,.Mrs. H. cover saidlaw I.ITCY SKA KKA. debt or any part thereof.
FEDERATION BUILDING FUND INCORPORATED
•' •'
_
To Present Concert on Sunday Evening
:
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Right now you car-owners are "sitting pretty.**... You can buy more safe, comfortable, tfbublefree mileage for a dollar than in any previous
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JiODY & -KADIATOK CO. will be open to the public. Sampter, in Fremont, Nebraska. •• ; SHAMES •By MAX SHAMES, Proprietor. Cantor Pliskin is affiliated with 7'15-32-3t. • the Shaare Zion Synagogue, where Miss Bluma Merlin, of Omaha, is he chants the services during . the in the city, spending the summer GINSBDRG * GlKSBCRG, Attorney!. ,* ' .i' .' J 413 Federal Trnst: Bide. ; with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. '.• . "- "'•' year. Lincoln, S>br. Merlin/ 1915 Pierce street. . . NOTICE o^iscoRPonATioN Ice Cream Social Mrs. Nick Sherman, of Wessington, Notice i« hereby given of the incorporaof Missouri Valley Automotive JobDakota, is visiting at. the home tloti bers Association with its principal place Is Well Attended ofSouth her mother, Mrs. S. Greenstone, of. business at Omaha, Douglns County, Tlie general nature of the busi. . • : Nebraska. ness to lie transacted by said corporation ' A- large • number of people attend- Williams apartments. is to maintain and operate a credit bureau, ed the annual Ice Cream Social, assist in the collection of accounts, to Mrs. Joe Oxman has returned home to assist in the promotion of the business of given Sunday afternoon and evening its members, to nssist in the interchanging from St. Paul, Minn., where she visby members of the Ladies Auxiliary of scientific and business information beof Shaare Zion Synagogue, on the isted with friends and relatives. . tween its members, ami. for the purpose aforesaid, to acquire, lease, hold, control, lawn of the Synagogue. *' dispose, encuml)or and in any and every Honoring their sister, Miss Rose way deal in and with real and personal Mrs. Robert Sacks and Mrs. Morey property ot every nature and description. Lipshutz were in charge of the ar- Feldman, who is visiting here from Said corporation shall have no capital and the business of said corporation rangements. Proceeds will be used New York City,•.- Misses Ruth • and stock shall not b^ carried on for profit: but the towards the upkeep of the synagogue. [da Feldman gave_a dinner bridge in Board of Directors shall, from time to the Martin hotel, Tuesday evening. time, assess annual membership fees against- the members for the purpose of Covers • were laid for sixteen guests. carrying on the business of the corporar
Internes in Omaha
A. Z. A.
Dr. Louis J. Dimsdale, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dimsdale, has departed At their meeting Wednesday evefor Omaha, Nebraska, where he will ning the members of' the A.' Z. A. interne at the. Creighton hospital. chapter completed plans for a novelty Dr. Dimsdale graduated from the program, to be given following a School of Medicine at the Iowa Uni- dinner for the members of the Seville versity, this June. He is a graduate Cafe. of Central High school. During his Mr. Marvin Klass, newly elected school work at both the high school president, presided at the meeting. and the university, Dr. Dimsdale was affiliated with the Journalist Recovering from Accident societies and a member of the staff Mrs. Sam Passman, 2407 Court of the school papers. street, who was seriously injured in an auto accident several weeks ago, is reported to be well on the road No Meetings Held to recovery, by the St. Joseph hoswhere she is a patient. She During Summer pital, will undoubtedly be able to return The Ladies' Auxiliary of the to her home early next week. Mr. Workmen's Circle have discontinued Passman, who suffered injuries also, their meetings during the summer is recuperating in his home. months. They will resume meetings FRADENBCHG. STALMASTEU & DEREK early in September. C50 Omaha National Bank Uldg. The members of the Auxiliary are NOTICE OF INCORPORATION OF assisting the Workmen's Circle in the "K4IMAS INSURANCE AGENCY, I N C plans for' their summer picnic/ which KNOW ALL. MEN BY THKSK I'ltliSE! EN'JL'y, tb:it tbe undersigned bare formed is scheduled for July 24.; • ; a corporation under the laws of the State
tion, which said membership fees shall never exceed the sum of ?300.00 per year. Said corporation shall commence on May 2, 1932, and shall terminate on. May 1. 198i Said corporation shall not contract any indebtedness iu excess of two-thirds of the t-alue of its property. The business and affairs of said corporation shall be managed and conducted by n President and a Secretary and an Executive Council, of not less then three nor more than six members: said executive council and said officers shall constitute the Board of Directors of said corporation and have charge of the management and affairs thereof. MISSOURI VAIVLRY ACTOMOTIVB JOBBEKS ASSOCIATION. By HEKMAN GIXSBUItG". 0-24-32-it. Its Attorney. FRADENBCRG. STALMASTER * BEBER C30 Omaha National Bank Bldgr.
NOTICE OF INCORPORATION OF "CASH SYSTEM FURNITURE STORES, INC." • Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned have associated themselves together to form a corporation under the laws of the State of Nebraska. The name of the corporation is "Cash System Furniture Stores, Inc." and the principal place of transacting its business is in Omaha, Donglas Connty. Nebraskn. The general nature of the business to be transacted Is to deal, purchase, sell and distribute, wholesale or retail, every kind nnd description of furniture, furnishings nnd all accessories usually handled in a furniture store or in the furniture business, and all Incidental businesses which are usually and customarily attendant upon the doing of the aforementioned things. The authorized of Nebraska. The mime of this corjjorn- capital stock is $5,000.00 dvided into 100 tiou shall -be "Knimnn Insurance Agency, shares of the par value of ?Ti0.00 each, nil Inc." with Us principal place of business of which is common stock and when issued at Omaha. Nebraska. The general nature shall be fully pnid up and non-assessable. of the business to IH» transacted nnd the The corporation shall commence business object and pnrpose for which this corpora- upon the filing of Its articles of incorporation is organized nnd established, shall be tion in the office of the County Clerk nnd to act as general or special ngent for in- continue for a period of 50 years. The surance companies of all kinds; to adjnst highest amount of indebtedness or liabilw^iss- Margaret Kozberg, daughter and appraise losses; to net ns agent, brok- ity to which the corporation shai lat any er or trustee for any corporation, organi- time subject itself shall not exceed twoof Mrs. H. Kozberg, 1507 Jones zation or person; to transact a general in? thirds of Its capital stock. The affairs of street/became the bride of Jack Lon- surance, loan, real estate, lnvcslment nnd this corporation shall be conducted by a insurance brokerage business, nnd to do Board of Directors of not less than two don, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack any and nil things incidental or in any members nor more than five who shall be way pertaining to any of the aforemen- chosen from among the stockholders nt London, 3331 Virginia street, last tioned powers. The authorized capital their annual meeting, which meeting shall Sunday- afternoon, at the home of stock shall be 50,000.00, all of which shall be held.on the first Monday in January of be common and of par value Of $100.00 each year These articles of incorporation her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs per share, nnd nil tbe of said stock shall be may. be amended by the affirmative votp Sam Kozberg, at St. Paul, Minn. fully paid-up and nori-nssessnblc. Said of 2/3 of the capital stock nt any regular stock may be issued for cash; real or per- or.Special meeting of the stockholders. A number of Sioux City relative; sonal property, good will, P. M. KIJTTZNICK, personal services and friends of Mr. and Mrs; Lon-or anyihing_of vnlue. The corporation R. J. HOLDSBEKG,
Society News
don motored to St. Paul, Sunday, to attend the wedding. After a trip through the lake regions of Northern Minnesota and Michigan, the couple will reside at Brookings, South Dakota. Mrs. London is a graduate of-Central High School, and a member of the Phi Epsilon Tau Sorority. Mr London, a Central high graduate
"We feed the multitude? With Tasty Foods
shnll commence doing business upon (be In the presence of flllug of its articles with tbe County Clerk IKVIN STAI.MASTER of Douglas County. Nebrnskn, nnd shnll continue for a period of fifty years from said date. Tbe highest amount of indebtedness to which this corporation shnll subPreserve and Modernize ject itself sbnll not exceed two-thirds of its capital stoat. The affairs of this.corporation shall be managed by n Board of Directors consisting' of not' less than two nor more than five members. The annual meeting of the corporntioii shall be held on the first Monday In Jnnunry of each year nt which meeting the stockholders shall elect a Board of Directors, nnd thereupon 6547 Pacific St. tbe Board shall elect a President, VicePresident, Secretary and Treasurer. Any two of said officers may be held by one and the same•.person. These articles may be amended or ndded to by a vote of twothirds of nil the outstanding stock at nny regular or special meeting of the"6tock-
summer. You don't have to put
up with second-choice
In the presence of Jos. E. 1'radenburjt. 785tN4t> '
tires for reasons of economy;
FRADENBURG. STALMASTER * BEAER ' 050 First Natfonnl Bank Building ;
because jSrer-cfcoice tires cost
NOTICE OF AMENDMENT TO THE ARTICI.KS OF INCORPORATION OF TOE FmUIilTY OLD LINE INSURANCE
you no more! . . . Goodyear
C O M P A N Y .
••-•'-•
Notice Is hereby'given that nt a sperinl meeting of the stockholders of the Fidelity Old I.iue Insurnnc3-)Company, held on the 27th day of May, 1932, pursuant to due nnd proper notice as provided in and by the Articles of Incorporation and by taw, the approval of the Botird of Directors of the said Fidelity Old Tiiue Insurance Company having been given thereto, nnd the npproval of the Department of Trade and Commerce, Bureau of Insurance, of • the State of Nebraska, to such proposed amendment having first been obtained, the following resolution was unanimously adopted: "RESOLVED by the stockholders of the Fidelity Old Line Insurance Company, in special meeting assembled, that the Articles of Incorporation of the said Fidelity Old Line Insurance Company l>e and the same are hereby amended in the following particular, to-wit: Amend Article II by striking out all of said Article and inserting in lieu thereof the following:
The corporation shall have the power to sell service contracts for funeral supplies
nnd supplies for other transactions relating to burial benefits, such certificates may provide cash l>eneiits during the life of the certificate, and it may also issue certificates of participation which, under the terms thereof, will provide funeral lventfits In mouey, services, discounts, funeral supplies or services, including services of undertakers or embalmers, nil as is provided in Senate File No .170 of the Compiled Statutes of Nebraska for 1929, as enacted by the 1931 session of the legislature. It shnll have the power to purchase, acquire, take, hold, sell, nssigu, transfer, pledge, mortgage or deal In all. either ns principal or factor, capital stocks of insurance companies, mortgages, debentures, investments, scripts, stocks, bonds, securities and obligations of every kind nnd nature; to issue and to underwrite shares of stocks, bonds, securities, contracts and nil manner of obligations, including certilicates of participation, collateral trust certificates, income contracts, investment contracts, inr stallment investment contracts; to undertake and carry out the formation, consolidatnoi, organization, reorganization, administration, . liquidation, or financing of insurance companies, or that of any corporation, business or enterprise, and to transact any business necessary, convenient or Incident thereto. Atneml Article IX by striking out nil of said article nnd inserting in lieu thereof the following: The company, in addition to the powers herein conferred, shall he entitled, to, enjoy nnd exercise nil the privileges and powers accorded like corporations organized under the laws of the State of Nebraskn. It shall have the right, power and authority to issue certificates or contracts approved insofar ns such approval mny be required, ns to form nnd substance, from time to time, by the Securities Department of the Department of Trade nnd Commerce of the State of Nebraska," redeemable in,-or convertible into, cash and stock, In proportions, ns stipulated In such certificates or contracts: nnd through its authorized officers to do and perform nil ana every lawful net expedient or necessary, incident to the ownership of real and personal property, and the transaction of business connected therewith: and to do and perform through its authorized officers all nnd every Inwful act required or deemed expedient for the maintenance, perpetuitj and prosperity of the company. IN WITNESS WHEKEOF, I have hereunto set my official signature at the Home Office of the Company, Omaha. Nebraska, on this 27th day of May. 1032 (Signed) H. P. FARBr.U, C-30-32-4t Secretary.
Jfcst-choiceliere, throughout the
state, throughout the
nation, by more than 2 to 1! * . . . They outsell all others not
because of any trick
ducements, or special deals, but simply because they give
Guaranteed
GOODYEAR .
S f» E E D W A Y j
Supertwist Cord Tires CASH PRICES 4-se-sx
# Single £ 4 . 3 *
j
Eorfi
Single
Slnflle t S . 1 4
Slnftle 65.2Z
Single $ 5 - 3 ©
Single $ 5 . 4 9
Other Sizes
Expertly, Mounted Free
Proportion
people the biggest money's worth; and people know it! • . . Don't be argued out of the
TfiT of the nix layers of cord J fabric under the tread In >> | this tire, two do not run from bead to bead—they are Z a r e a J 5 y cord "breaker strips" and that's whstwecall them, although souse tire-makers call them extra plies.
benefits to be had from the -. leading tires and our service. ~
Ask for our
TRADE IN offer on your old tires' In eschangefor
Goodyear All-Weathers
Lifetime Guaranteed'
DER 4.44-21 *
Each in Pairs Each SS-5* Tube St.xe
4.5C-2S
4.5C-21
<&' in Pairs Each $5.94 Tube ei.oa
Each -fain Pairs I-ach S*-«S Tube 6C.1S
Si
4.75-19 - Each in Pair. Each 87.es Tube »».3S
5.C0-I9 h «n Pairs
Each t~..-am
Tube $i.*e
5.0C-2C
• * 7 Each in Pairs Each « 7 . « Tube 61.SS
\
Your Property by
ROAD SERVICE TILL 11 P. M. • Corner 17th and Capitol Ave.
Phones: WA. 343& or JA. 1535
\
OMAHA, NEBR.
.. P h o n e A T . 6 4 2 7 ' - . ' . .
h0 IN e r wiTNKSS WHEREOF, the parties hava hereunto subscribed their names this
*
Lifetime
S-00-JM
SWAN PAINTING & DECORATING GO.
EVELYN KAIMAN,
-•.:;•'•••.
guarantees, or phony in-
Painting and Decorating
•iifh i-liv of "June* 1932.
Single $3.98 Tube Sl.OS
Tires—the kind we sell—are
-
DAVID HOBERMAK
Hobersaan Bros., "Proprietors
BAKXEV