July 7, 1933

Page 1

In the Interests of the Jewish People

Dedicated to the Ideals of ^ Judaism

luiirivu us KLTUIK1-CVIBJ> Mail Matter on January 27, w a , at Posinttice nt (linaba, N«>hrnsta, mider the Act of March 3. 1879

COLLEGE PREXIES, SOCIAL SCIENTISTS PROTEST NAZISM

OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, JULY 7,1933

VOL. IX—No. 23

Heads of A. Z. A.

and 11

Discriminatory Tactics of Hitlerites Against Jews Contimie'-to'. Bagel

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' New York, (J.T-A.)^In a "stater meht of belief," addressed to the heads of every institution- of higher learning in Germany, 142 presidents of colleges and universities and 77 of this country's leading social scientists in every section of the United States have signed a declaration inspired by the recent political developments in Germany affecting Jewish and other minority elements, •which: is being forwarded to the German • educators by the National Conference of Jews and Christians. ' Accompanying the s t a t e m e n t , which was characterized as being "in no sense a protest but rather a scientific approach to a problem and an appeal for common sense," are indidividual expressions of opinion from a number of the signers, as well as a declaration from Newton D. Baker, co-chairman of the National Conference. " I t looks now as though attention had turned away from the Jews to the Catholics. After . a while, it will be against some other group until those who are generating the hatreds will be in a minority. Then all of the victims will get together, constitute a majority, and the episode will end with the biter being bitten until he cries for mercy."

. C. C. Facilities Omaha Zionists to /Opento A.Z.A. Vote for Delegates Visitors

Hyman Goodbinder President of A. Z. A.

Sam Beber President Supreme Advisory Council

Memorial Services for FRANCOIS C O n Arlosoroffand FINED, MUST PRINT Herzl APOLOGY TO JEWS

Paris.—(J. T. A.) — A verdict against Francois Coty, millionnaire perfume manufacturer and newspaper publisher, was delivered by a French court, charging him with printing in his papers articles defaming Jewish ex-soldiers. Coty was ordered to publish the court's verdict in his newsBOYCOTT INTENSIFIED papers, L'Ami du Peuple, Figaro and Berlin, July 7.—A wild and bitter eight others, and was compelled to anti-Jewish boycott movement is once pay a fine. again raging throughout Germany, The Union of Jewish Ex-Soldier? and the spirit of the boycott is so accused Coty of stating in his L'Ami intense that it is unquestionably man- du Peuple that the veterans' organiaged and directed by Nazi officials zation- and various Jewish sports orwith typical bureaucratic thorough- ganizations here were merely disness." • ' •• . -•:,-.•. guised revolutionary bodies. : •_• ' A s was presaged in Dr. Paul Joseph There werelexdtmg;scenes i t the Goebbels' speech in H a m b u r g , l a s t , coflrt: Toom when Coty -appeased? to week, in which he stated that l i e Hit- deny that he was anti-Semitic. He ler government does not intend -to said he was opposed, only to anarch' make any compromises regarding its ists, communists and international fiJewish policies, an organized cam- nanciers, but respected conservative paign' has been started by the Nazi Jews. Jeers and cat-calls were heard press in many cities, inciting the pop- in the court room during the publishulace against Jewish merchants, who er's testimony and the presiding judge - are called "criminals." had to threaten repeatedly to clear the room unless quiet was restored. WHOLESALE DISMISSALS The case marked the first time Coty Berlin, July 7.—Sweeping dismissals of Jews from business posts was taken into court and sued for limarked the last two days in this coun- bel in connection with alleged incittry, following July 1, which was the ing articles, appearing in his newspafirst day onwhich the recently-passed pers. On June 1 the trial .started but law excluding all Jews from German was postponed due to Goty's illness. At that time his lawyers stated that labor unions was enforced. Taking advantage of the fact that the articles in Coty's papers did not Jewish employees are no longer pro- refer to the Jewish ex-soldiers, most tected by unions, numerous firms in of whom are war veterans, but to irreBerlin and the provinces summarily sponsible groups. dismissed Jewish workers.

Memorial services for Dr. Theodor Herd and Dr. Chain Arlosoroff will be held in Omaha under the auspices of the United Palestine Council on Sunday evening, July ,16. Dr. Herzl was the founder and father of Zionism, and the anniversary of his' death (on the 20th of Tammuz in 1904) has been universally observed by Zionists; Dr. Arlosoroff, brilliant labor leader of Palestine, was assassinated two weeks ago in Tel Aviv. His work for modern Zionism has been monumental and Zionist groups throughout the world have been revering his memory with memorial meetings. • - Further : details on the memorial meeting will "be given next weeki •

Omaha Zionists will vote for American delegates to the World Zionist Congress at the Jewish Community Center on Sunday, July 16. The local election will be held under the auspices of the United Palestine Council. Similar elections will be held simultaneously throughout the country. Every shekel holder will be eligible to vote. The polls will he open at the Center on July 16 from 10 a. into 8 p. m. The election board consists of Morris Friedel, chairman; Mrs. M. F. Levenson, secretary; M. Minkin, Mrs. J. Feldman, and EL Bloch.

tion-wide boycott against Germany. They will call upon all the Jewish women in the United States to boycott all German goods and services without exception, until Hitler falls and his barbaric persecution -ends. "Buy American" was adopted as a slogan.

CANTOR E B. NOUSH TO CONDUCT SERVICES AT BETH HAMEDROSfl

Frick Plan Proposes Sterilization of Jews

Louis Canar Named Head of A. Z. A. 10

Berlin.—Imprisonment for the Jewish merchant, Adolf Morgenstern, is demanded in the Nazi press because he allegedly changed his first name from Abraham to Adolf'and married an Aryan giri.

Program for niversary International Z. A. Convention : : "'

*~''

Omaha, July 9-11

ATCQNCLAYE

Milwaukee.—(J. T. A.)—The Central Conference of American Rabbis, which concluded its forty-seventh annual convention here, took a firm stand on a number of issues affecting not only the Teligious, but the social, economic and political life of the country. One of the highly interesting features of the convention was the paper on the concept of God in Jewish life and literature read by Dr. Bernard Heller of Ann Arbor, Mich. Defending the traditional Jewish concept of God, Dr. Heller criticized the school of Jewish thought which attempts to "dovetail the implied creed and implicit character of Judaism with the ideologies of modern Humanism, secular Hebraism and a non-religious or even irreligious type of nationalism.1 The Lind quartet consisting of and which claims that "allegiance to Cantor Joshua Lind and his three the Jewish people rather than to the sons, Maurrie, David and Pinchikel, Jewish religion is supreme and cardlias /been re-engaged for another ap- inal in Jewish life." pearance in Omaha due to their popThe conference went on record as ular, success last week-end. favoring recognition of Russia by They will be heard in a farewell the UnitedtheStates; commending Presiconcert at the Jewish Community dent Roosevelt's far-reaching social Center on Sunday evening, July 9, legislation program, social control of at 8:15 p. m. the profit system and other social The program will be entirely dif- measures; favoring the principle of ferent from last week's, and a fea- freedom of expression by the rabbi in ture will be a special arrangement the pulpit and in other fields; as conby Cantor Lind of "Eli, Eli." . demning sweat shop operators, particFrom here they leave for Holly- ularly Jewish employers in that catewood to fill concert and talkie en- gory as "representing an element ungagements. Their manager, J. Hy- worthy of membership in a group man, states that.this will be their which has held for thousands of years last sacred concert in Omaha. Seats the social justice ideals of Israel," as may be reserved at the box office of opposing the private manufacture of the Center. war materials, and favoring legislation to make this impossible, and for justice toward the Negro.

The Rev. M. B. Nolish, eminent. New' York cantor, will officiate at the services at: the Beth'Hamedrosh Hagodol synagogue, 19th and Burt, this evening, July 7, starting at 8 p. m., and Saturday morning, July 8, at 8:30 a. m. Cantor Nolish has won an enviable reputation among the congregations which he has visited on his present tour of the midwest states. He appeared in Omaha five weeks Berlin.—(J. T. A.)—A plan for the ago, and he is returning for his pres- sterilization of Jews in Germany as ent engagement by popular demand. a lower element of the population was announced by Wilhelm Frick, Minister of the Interior, at the first meeting of the newly-organized council on race policies for purification of the German race. The plan also provides for Louis Canar was chosen president prohibition of intermarriages. of the S>m Beber chapter No. 100 In announcing his plan, Frick of the A. Z. A. for the. snsr. :ng term at the jecent election of offi- charged that 400 Eastern European Jews had been naturalized in Berlin cers. Other officers named are: F.dwari in 1930. Reich's Minister Conti argued Rosenbaum, vice-president;; Myron Tarnoff, against consideration of the Jews as T f f ttreasurer; M Meyer K baum, ,'nlius Meyerson an inferior race, pointing out that the _ senior sergeant-rat-arras; William -official government attitude toward Rosenbaum, junior sergeant-at arms the Jews was riot as of an inferior but Joe Blumenthal, chaplain; and Na- as an alien race, intermarriage with which would only lead to race hatred. than Crounse, reporter, '•

available to the A." 2 . A. visitors during their convention in Omaha July 9, 10 and 11. Included in this are the swimming pool, handball courts, gymnasium and recreation room. Visiting Alephs are welcome to use these any time.

to Be Held in "

LIND QUARTET PLANS New York.—Over 1,200 -, women, FAREWELL CONCERT representing some 300 women's organizations, weie present • at a mass AT CENTER SUNDAY conference here and joined the na-

WOMEN TO BOYCOTT GERMANY

10th

Full Three-Day Program Arranged for J. S. Pearlstien, executive director Delegates and Visitors Repre* of the Jewish Community, Center, announces that he will snake every senting 165 Chapters recreation- facility .in" tne_ Center

Nazis Propose to Create Ghetto Union for Jews Berlin-—(J. T. A.)—In coni«<1tion with the announced prohibition against Jews as members of the new ''national labor front," a Government plan for the establishment of a purely Jewish workers' union has been announced. Such a "ghetto union" would not be likely to be of any help to Jewish workers, it is generally felt here. The workers appealed to the rest of the Jewish population for their support, pointing out that two-thirxls of the total Jewish population consists of workers and employees who will be most severely affected- •.

SATURDAY, JULY 8th 6:00p.m. to 8:30 p. m.—Registration at Jewish Center. 8:30 pan. to 11 p. m.—Pre-convention Smoker; Presentation of Judas Maccabeus Degree. SUNDAY, JULY 9th 8:00 a.m. to 9:30 a. m.—Registration at Jevsish Center. 10:00 a. m.—Opening Ceremony, First Session. 10:05 a.m.—Welcoming speeches. 11:00 a.m.—Greetings and messages. 11:15 a. m.—Grand Aleph Godol's Message. : Noon—Closing Ceremony, First Session. Noon—Sunday dinner in private homes. • './ • 2:00 p. m.—Opening Ceremony, Second Session.. > 2:00 p. m.—Appointment Convention Committees. 2:20 p.m.—Scout Round Table. 2:30 p. m.—Committee on G. A. G.'s Message. 3:00 p. m.—Rules Committee. ; 3:30 p. m.—Closing Ceremony, Second Session. 4:00 to 7:30 p. m.—Krug Park picnic. 7:30 p.m. to ?—"A Night at Krug Park." MONDAY, JULY 10th 10:00a.m.—Opening Ceremony, Third Session. 10:05 a.m.—Rituals Committee. 10:30 a. m.—Chapter Policy and Finance Committee. 10:55 a.m.—Jewish Consciousness Committee. 11:20 a. m.—Publications and Publicity Committee. 11:40 a.m.—Awards Committee. Noon—Closing Ceremony, Third Session. 12:10 p. m. to 1:10 p. m.—Luncheon at J C. C. 1:15 p. m.—Opening Ceremony, Fourth Session. 1:20 p. m.—Scholarship Loan Fund Committee. 1:50 p. m.—International Observances Committee. 2:20 p. m.—Committee on Bogen Program. 2:55 p. m.—Committee on A. Z. A. Monthly Program. 3:30 p. m.—Open Forum on Scouting. 4:00 p. m.—Closing Ceremony, Fourth Session. 9:00 p. m. to ? ? ?—Convention Dance at Peony Park. TUESDAY, JULY 11th 10:00 a. m.—Opening Ceremony, Fifth Session. 10:05 a. m.—Committee on B'nai Brith Relations. 10:25 a. m.—International Deputies Committee. 10:40 a.m.—District Organizations Committee. 11:00 a. m.—Regional Associations Committee. 11:20 a.m.—Committee on Cooperation with B'nai Brith Girls' Auxiliaries. 11:40 a. m.—Alumni Committee. Noon—Closing Ceremony, Fifth Session. 12:10 p. m. to 1:10 p. m.—Luncheon at J. C C. 1:15 p. m.—Opening Ceremony, Sixth Session. 1:20 p. m.—H. H. Lapidus Memorial Committee 1:45 p. m.—Constitution and By-Laws Committee. 2:15 p. m.—Committee on Tournaments. 2:45 p.m.—Committee on Contest Subjects. 3:15 p.m.—Tournament and Convention Bids Committee. 3:45 p.m.—Resolution Committee. 4:15 p. m.—Election of Grand Officers. 5:00 p. m.-^-Closing Ceremony, Final Session. 6:30 p. m. to 9:30 p. m.—Philip M. Klutznick testimonial banquet at J. C. C., Announcements of Awards and Contest Winners and distribution of prizes and Certificates.

Omaha, birthplace of Aleph Zadik1 spent in a picnic, games, sports, and Aleph (Junior B'nai Brith), will be dancing at Krug Park . iost to the tenth anniversary "home- j The morning session on Monday, coming" international A. Z. A. con- July, 10, will be followed by a strictly vention July 9, 10, and 11. kosher luncheon at the J. C. C. Irvin It is expected that over 400 dele- Stalmaster will be toastmaster at the gates and visitors, luncheon, and short talks will be derepresenting 16 5 livered by Henry Monsky of Omaha, chapters from every who is a member of the executive state in the Union committee of the international B'nai and various parts of Brith, and by Leo Bearman of MemCanada, will be pres- phis, a member of the Supreme Adent when Hyman visory Council of A. Z. A. Goodbinder of OmaAn afternoon session will then be ha, Grand Aleph held. Included in the business of this Godol, officially session will be an open forum on opens the conclave. scouting. Georg-e Charno, vice-presiSince the order dent of the Kansas City Boy Scout was founded here a Area, is coming to take charge of a decade ago by Sam special scout round table discussion. Beber, it has forged A. Z. A. chapters sponsor at least William Wolfe ahead rapidly until fifty Jewish troops throughout the is the most pow- country. General Chair- it erful Jewish youth In the evening the convention man of conven- movement. Members dance will be held at Peony Park., tion of this fraternity Sessions will be held in both the are between the ages of 16 and 21, morning and afternoon on the final and the fraternity is sponsored as one day of the convention, Tuesday, July of the major projects of the Wider 11. At the noon luncheon at the Jewish Community Center, Dr. A. GreenScope of B'nai Brith. Omaha has always been the local berg- will be toastmaster. Joseph center of A. Z. A. activity. The inter- • Eerbach cf Philadelphia, second vicenational headquarters are located in j president of the Supreme Advisory Sam Beber- is president of; Council will be the principal speaker. ^ p the Supreme Advisory Council of the The election, of the grand officers order. Philip M. Klutznick is execu- | for the ensuing year will be held at tive secretary, and Julius Bisno is as- the Tuesday afternoon session, startsistant executive secretary. In addi- ing at 4:15 p. m. tion to these three men, Omaha is j At 6:30 Tuesday evening the conrepresented on the Supreme Advisory || vention banquet, to be known as the |C Council by I. F. Goodman, Henry jj "Philip M. Klutznick Testimonial banMonsky and Hyman Goodbinder. quet," will be held. The banquet will A complete and interesting- social h o n o r Klutznick, who is resigning the and business program has been ar- executive secretaryship of the order having- served in that position ranged by Alephs from the Mother fafter Chapter No. 1, the Sam Beber Chap- o r s e v e n J' ears > during which he playter No. 100, and the Council Bluffs !e d a n important role in the building Chapter No. 7. Months have been! UP o f t h e A - z - A - t o l t s present spent in working out the details, and i s t r e n 5 t h . William L, Holzman will according to General Chairman Wil- b e toastmaster. liam Wolfe the excellent program will The main address will be deamply prove that neither effort nor j livered by Jacob J. Lieberman of Los Angeles, first expense were spared in the prepara-' vice - presition. \ dent of the . The Jewish Community Center has , Supreme Adbeen designated as the official head- i v'-iory Council. quarters for the convention. j The official Unofficially, the program will open! c o n v e ntion on Saturday evening, July 8, with a ' hostesses inpie-convention smoker at the J. C. C.' clude P e a r l Abner Kaiman will be master of cere- j T 5 e r n s t ein, monies. The feature of a variety pro- i Hemice Yougram will be a talk by Omaha's own f r m, D o r a Johnny Goodman, hero of amateur t r>olpoff, Milgolfdom by his winning the champion-' rired Lipsey, ship at the National Open golf tourn- ' F\ tvia Tenen' . V •-. ament recently. There will also be a ,' )>aum, Beulah presentation of the Judas Maccabeus , rSelzer, Anne degree. This presentation will be Zweiback, Harry Trustin given in ritual regalia, under the diSara Kaplan, rection of Stanlev F. Levin. In addi- j First advisor of Moth- Marjorie Kap» tion I. F. Goodman, secretary of the i er chapter. pas;t reem- Ian, Mary CutSupreme Advisory Council, will speak, i ber S. A. C. Principal ler and Louise The principal address will be deliver- j speaker at smoker, Pitch. ed by Harry Trustin, city commisThe grand officers of the A. Z. A. sioner and first advisor of the Mother are Hyman Gcodbinder, Omaha, Neb., Chapter of A. Z. A. The opening session will beg-in Sun-. grand aleph podol; Ernest Eisenberg, day morning, July 9, at 10 a. rn. Wei- | Milwaukee, Wis., grand aleph s'gan; •coming addresses will be delivered by Aaron Brenner, Memphis, Tenn., Rabbi David A. Goldstein, president grand aleph pisbor; Alfred Klein, of the Omaha lodge B'nai Brith; Ecy Salt . . Lake City, Utah, grand aleph N. Towl, mayor Omaha; Stanley F. r n a z k l r i E t f Shrager, Braddock. Pa., Levin, head of the Omaha A. Z. A . ! C T a n d a l e P h ' ' ; h o t a r e enAo]'> Hyman A l u m n i assoda- i \ ; | Jacques, Hamilton, Ont., Canada, C tion. Greetings and j * I P r a n d aleph shotare kotone; Seymour messages will be *! Sacks, Houston, Texas, grand aleph v presented to the 1 IS 0 P h e r : Frank Epstein, Los Angeles, convention assem- ^ v ' "' Calif., grand aleph kohen godol; Joe bled by Charles • ' ' " -- • •'L ^ o n s » Winnipeg, Man., Canada, and L Adriel Bryan, governor cf \ Fvica, San Francisco, Calif., SuxlioT S A C (Nebraska; William '> " ... . " " " 1L. Holzman, presi- • j Various local committees are proI dent of the Jewish f * ""Jr"** ' j "hiding housing, dates, and transportaj Community Center | " ' j tion for every aleph, Ben Brith, or and Welfare Fed- * i alumnus who attends the convention eration; William \ _I;, W i here. Wolfe, general Jchnr.y Gondnssr ! The chairmen of the committees: chairman of the National Open golf William Wolfe, general chairman! convention; I£rs.champion Speaker Erwin Wezelman, finance; Joe BlumL. Neveleff, presist Smoker enthal, housing; Dan Lintzman, dent of the Jewish Women's Welfare Peony Park dance; Art Lipp, transorganization. portation; Art Grossman, publicity; Folio-wing the business meeting, the Sam Finkel, Krug Park picnic; Krug delegates and visitors will be taken to Park dance, Harry WembeTg; Henry private homes for Sunday dinner. Mendelson, sessions; Joe Solomonow, The second session will be held luncheons; dating, Maurice Katz; early in the afternoon, and the rest Julius Bisno, hospitality; Sam Meyer| of the afternoon and evening will be son, banquet.


PAGE 2—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1933

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To Be Toastnuxsiers

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By the Way By DAVID SCHWAETZ

Z* A» on Eve of litter* I tiational By PHILIP M. Executive Secretary of Ai Z.

.•-.i* 5

IN TEN YEARS I was in the office of Emanuel Neumann, who had just returned from Palestine. I said, "Mr. Neumann, as we are sitting here, a man comes in with some drinking concoction. It looks like wine from the,vineyards of Car- Dr. A. Greenberg nieF—the" fcind' of wine that perhaps Toastmaster Tuesday luncheon David drank when he sang the psalms. It looks that way, but we take a drink and it must have some powerful pot ^ T ^ > r j t , was revealed to him tion in it, for immediately we fall that man ^s riot a part: of Nature, but asleep. . -, superior to it. ' ;.•' "And wtten we wake tip—we rub And Bow; in ; making the desert our eyes. The! sc?ne: about us..looks bl6om,Israel will but be repaying the unfamiliar. Hitlery we are told, has jage old debt to the: bleak, sterile long ago been hung, the New_ Deal sands.--;"; ""' '•'_" ? has been supplemented with a Newer THE NAZIS SALUTE Deal—in fact, as we look at the Calendar to see what day and date it is, Robert Benchley objects to the Nazi salute. It is, he says, inelegant, in we find it is 1943." "We have been asleep ten years." that it is the common sign for indi"Now, Mr. Neumann, presuming cating that you want to go out of this to have happened, and we are in the room and go— Inelegant, perhaps, but appropthe year 1934 instead of 1933 what do you think we would, see then in riate. Palestine?" ; ON THE GERMAN STAGE "Well,".began. Mr. Neumann, "I Only one Jew, says a report from should say then we would see in Pal- Germany to Variety, has been allowed estine about three quarters of a mil- to remain on the Berlin legitimate lion Jews. Yes, I don't see why there stage. He is Alexander Granach and shouldn't be that many Jews in Pal- is playing the Mephisto part in estine in ten years from now." "Faust" It is explained, says the "And," continued Mr. Neumann," same report, that Granach is not bewe should see"—but just then the be- ing bothered, because the Nazis like loved Rabbi Meyer Berlin, head of the to look at a Jew in the role of the Mizrachi, came in and the member of '; devil. The Jew is the Devil, the Nazis the the Jewish Agency Executive asked us to allow him to continue his vis- Saints, and I am the Prince of Wales. ioning some other time. TOWARDS UTOPIA *

Irvin Stalmaster Toastmaster at Monday luncheon

William L. Holzman Toastmaster at bancnet

pioneer Zionist journal. And Justice haps the next Ten Commandments Junior B'nai Brith movements. Dis: History, to my idea, is a matter of Brandeis once praised his editorship will be the Ten Equations. trict $62; 2 had_ a Junior B'nai Brith fact, but only too frequently, historof that journal. ANOTHER GERMAN which cMimed several-chapters in and ians, instead of stating the fact perA JEWISH DOCTRINE about^Denyer. iTOffiirict No. 4 boastmit themselves to become observers DISCOVERY *ed of the Covenanteers. One of the jind commentators. Too many facts Professor Millikan, according to the In Germany, I hear, some of the first duties that was.assigned me afhave taken place in the short history New York Times, has promulgated Nazis have discovered a new aspect ter my appointment as assistant secof the A. Z. A. to permit of covering another theory relating to the gov- of the economic problem which they retary to the Supreme Advisory Counin detail.'- Furthermore, since I am ernment of the Cosmos. He finds are tackling. cil, was to undertake a merger of all entirely too prejudiced as to the that God or Nature or the Creative Some of thair research men have of the junior B'nai Brith groups. Denevents of the last nine years, I do not Urge is constantly recreating the begun to believe that Brahms, the ver was proud of its record as a junchoose to write a history of A. Z. A. world. musical genius, was really of Jewish ior B'nai Brith. The West Coast had I would prefer to write a mere comWell, it seems to me that that is stock, and that the name was originala few groups of the Covenanteers, mentary. good Jewish doctrine. I still remem- ly Abrahams. primarily Seattle, which were very , The most significant question that ber from the Siddur that I used to If this were confirmed, it would be stubborn in their affiliation to their anyone could ask is: "What have been recite, without knowing the philoso- terrible, as it would mean that still local fraternity. Next to Seattle, Los the highlights of your association phical implications involved: "Ma- harder staps would be necessary for Angeles was supposed to be an imwith A. Z. A-?" My whole associachadesh betuvoh kcl yom maasah Germany to conquer the depression. pregnable spot for the A. Z. A. By tion has been a most eventful one, and vrashis." (He reneweth every day the winter of 1926, we had completed yet as pleasant as have been most of in his Goodness the events of Crea- IT ALL DEPENDS negotiations with Los Angeles and these, it is true that certain occurMr. Liveri"ht, the former publishtion.) Denver, and in Dacember and January rences overshadow others. er, tells one about a visit to England MATHMATICS AND FAITH it was my privilege to pioneer the - For instance, one of the greatest when he had Lord Dunsany out to dinWest Coast and to install Los Anbenefits of membership in the A. Z. A. But it's strange to what extent ner in some restaurant. Dunsany geles chapter, to install an Oakland is the salutory effect that it has on these physicists and mathematicians scanned the m?nu and then remarked: chapter and to organize several otheradicating provincialism. The averare penetrating into the domains of "I say, is this dinner on you or on ers. On my return trip Denver enage young man of today, like myself, morals and religion. me?" tered the fold of the A. Z. A. It was at the age of 16, is a sophisticate in "On me, of course," said Liveright, Einstein's theories have been used only a short while after that that Sebis- mind, but a provincial in fact. My "I invited you." to prove survival after death. attle came into the then truly national first trip to Omaha in July of 1924 to "Well, then waiter," said Dunsanyf And just recently, that famous junior B'nai Brith. attend the "national" convention of Philip M. Klutznick Jewish physicist of the atom, Neils A. Z. A. taught me that lesson. As I Retiring Executive Secretary of (Continued on Page Six.) One of the other highlights of A. Mr. Robert Segal, inventor of num- Bohr, has been discoursing on what A DESERT SONG remember it today, there was a total Z. A. history in my opinion was the has been called "the simultaneity of ©f 34 out of town A. Z. A. members A. Z. A. in whose honor testimonial first international A. Z. A. day. A. Z. Which reminds me that Dr. S. M. erous thingamajigs, including the Se- truth and error." And all of this is banquet will be given. gal razor, and brother of the inventor present. All four chapters were repNATIONAL A. became truly international in Melammed has also lately been dodone by mathematics. resented by nearly 100 p.er cent' of December of 1926, when the Grand ing some yisioninjf. He wants to.know of the Segal lock, was at a dinner the ACCESSORIES, Inc. It looks as if, should we have a new their membership.- My chapter, Kan- Supreme Advisory Council, the untir- Aleph Godol, Jacob Finkelstein jour- the ultimate; abojit Zionism. What is other night. ing and inspired Sam Beber, and the sas City, No. 2, sent all but- two of EVERYTHING neyed to Calgary and installed the its remoted aspects—the final goal, Turning to Miss Flatou, well known religion, it will not be the product of Its members. Lincoln left one or two methodical and effective Harry H. first chapter off the soil of the Unit- and the learned scholar-editor of Chi- Zionist worker, Mr. Segal asked if men of the desert living on the fn$t For the Auto of the locust trees, but that the pro-; at home and Des Moines with the Lapidus (Ohov O'Shoiqm) spoke for ed States. We had worked rather cago comes to^tiie conclusion*that the she had read his book, "Triopoly." 2051 Farnam AT. 5524 phet will come from a laboratory with largest delegation of them all, seven- us. In-'the dying moment of the hard on the first A. Z. A. day. Every- final goal of Zionism is the conquest ''No," said Miss Flatou. a paper messy with figures and perteen in number, was at that time the Quiennial convention of the Constitu- one of the 25 or 26 chapters had ar- of the Desert. /'"You should read it," said Mr. Se^cockiest" chapter in the 'Vorld." tion Grand Lodge, they put through ranged a program and we were to gal. "I think it will make history." The Jews, he* believes, • will fill up a resolution with the aid of their felThat convention stands out at. the crown the day with a speech over sta- Palestine prope*1 and the Trans-Jor- Later Mr. Segal confided that in peak of the highlightsof A. Z. A', his- low townsmen, Henry Monsky, and the tion XOJL,_ bgr the President, Sam dan and. then afctoch.. out to the sur- ten yeara time* the United States, tory. There were few frills and very A. Z. A; became officially the Junior B e b e r . "''''].'' ''"' '' '"" " ' r ' rounding desert. And the conquest of would adopt the economic- principles ' i Brith. Bih W k tf'ft B'nai We ttake little business. Thare was primarily B After spending several months that complete desert'will be the final outlined in his-work. good fellowship, enthusiasm, sincerity, for granted today. Very few know, or time in preparation, I-left the city on triumph. For' says Melammed, we Incidentally, Segal, besides being can appreciate the fact that it was ambition and inspiration. These five my western tour and as luck would must pay back the Desert what it has an inventor and student of economics, by a last breath, so to speak, at the virtues have remained the property of have it my itinerary placed me in given us. In the desert, he points out, a staunch Zionist. He was at one th!e A. Z. A. membership and eanvbe Atlantic City convention that the Wichita which was an investigation the Jew received his conception of is time editor, of the Maccabean, the termed the real cornerstone of its suc- sponsorship was secured. Had there point and did not then house an A. Z. cess. '•. - -•• • • •••-• -• been less persistence, and less devotion A. th2pter. I was so anxious to tune to the cause, at least five years would - I t was Omaha again which gave me have passed ; before A. Z.'A. could in dn the speech that I forced mf host to take me fretr place to place where my second inteiesting and. outstand- "have been considered again. ing A. Z. A. experience. In March radios were' av.^il-ible -in. tHe hope of Several months following the Atof 1926, some nine chapters trekked lantic City convention the Hon. Al- getting one that would reach station to the metropolis of Nebraska to wage fred M. Cohen appointed a commis- K.OIL. It was all to no avail, and the b'attle in a "national" tournament, in ion which was to meet in Omaha and first A. Z. A. clay passed without my basketball and debate. The basketconsider the matter of completing participation, as much a? a single ball teams played in whatever gyms the negotiations the affiliations of meeting or even hearing the radio were available. One evening it was a he A. Z. A. withfor ' •' •- -s the B'nai Brith. One speech of tho day. large gym and the next evening a member representing There have been innumerable exeach American Small one. I well recall that the first of the B'nai Brith was desig- periences both small! and large that evening's games was cut to twenty district i ^shadow on the history i nated. The meeting was held in Oma- havee cast y minutes instead of the regulation time s. in February iiriiwhich'Iliave ' of 1926. I was then of our order, and diin order that the tournament could be Aleph Godol, and I was in- rectly or indirectly participated or completed. In debats, the finalist de- Grand ited to attend. I dont know how else remember. It would be folly for baters had to speak three times in a ome of the other men felt who sat me to attempt to enumerate the trips single day, and for their final debate hrough the sessions of that meeting, that I have taken and the happiness they were forced to yell in the spac- >ut for some reason or another I was that has been ? miner in'the knowledge ious quarters of the city auditorium ontinuously thrilled. I had an inner that we were progressing,—the joy •which is made to house several thou- eeling that the real beginning sand and in which there was a goodly great movement was taking placeofanda that I have experienced and the crowd of several hundred. I was a I had even a1 greater feeling of joy friendships that v I have, made—the thatt * has been p e niine in • the competitor in debate. My partner and when the day was finished and a pleasure ht ^H J>een knowledge that, many of us^Hy I-were crowned champions. The Kan- "arge portion of the community of sag City basketball team pulled the Omaha met at the Hotel Fontenelle at eternallyy camented to each other through our contacts in ,Av A Z. Z A. Yes, same trick even though they didn't banquet to do honor to the Com- even a bit of the sorrow that activity have special trainers, diet, water and amission. It was at that banquet that of any sort must bring. Few can apwhat-not. Yet, under all of these dif- ;he membership When your lamp burns out just as you are in the A. Z. A. first preciate the value of life-long; friendficulties and with the experience of acknowledged itsofgreat debt of gratiship which men of the calibre that •he middle of the most interesting chapter of staging a first tournament, to my tude to its founder, Sam Baber and have graced our Supreme Advisory recollection nobody complained. your book . . . do you have to scramble atl over presented him and his wife a chime Council, or held the high offices of the house screwing and unscrewing lamps till clock. It is not an event which one - Perhaps, from the point of view of international A. Z. A. OT who have real value to the movement the great- can soon forget. It stands out in my been even the members in the ranks, you find one? Or are you among those thought* est period in the life of A. Z. A. took memory as the moment when A. Z. A. with many of whom. I have correfuJ persons who have an extra box of Edison place in Atlantic City in April of truly began to the climb to the lead- sponded and contacted throughout Mazdas on hand? 1P25. Peculiar though it may seem, ership it now holds among Jewish these years. The greatest highlights youth movements today. npt an active member of the A. Z. A. in my whole connection with the A. w(as present. Two members of the A. is the treasurer-house of friendMany a disposition has been ruined by having Forgetting the chronological order ship and the golden opportunity of for just a moment, I can hardly per- doing work that is essentially and to "rob one socket to fill another." Have «n " mit myself to write an article of this w o r t h w h i l e ; extra carton or two ready for emergencies. .-•' '/:', \ '•• .- -••;" Lv. Omaha 8:30 pm~ sort without going back to the conAr. Chicago 8:30 am vention in Kansas City, when the chapters were kind enough to honor f 25, 40, 50, 60 and 75-Watt Lamps me by election as Grand Aleph Godol. Sabn-dabtm was a "dark horse." No one exValet pected me to be elected when the conBtffei o r . . . there's vention commenced. I, least of all, felt that it would be my privilege to hold such high position in the A. Z. A. Call I confess that after the election was over, I had to rub my eyes several with dinner on the train! times over to realize that I had been AT 3100 Lv. Omaha 3 given a mandate to serve as the second Grand Aleph Godol of the A. Z. Order any n u m b e r of tnfl earBer arrival in Chicago* A. It is given to few to hold this oflamps and the lamp wagon fice. I appreciate the significance of 7:05 (Cith) will deliver them right to this fact. And, even to this day, when your door. Charge them on I think of that inspiring moment when EITHER your electric service bill. I realized the position given me, I you will enjoy cannot help but thank the powersthat-be, that fate had manipulated the advantages of matters in such a way that I could Barlington Senjct feel the thrill and privilege of servJacob J. Lieherman ing that the position of .Grand Aleph Godol provides. of Los Angeles . Few of the present active members First vice-president of Supreme <" Julius Bisno ; in the A. Z. A. will remember that in Advisory Council Assistant Executive Secretary of 1925 and 1926 there were counter « < Speaker; at banquet I '. ; A. z. A.

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PAGE 3—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1933

j The Human | Panorama.... I

By Harry JVIendelson

While at the university your columnist first came across the remark that "We're living between two worlds —one that is passing ont and the other that is as yet powerless to be born." What was at that time a meaningless expression has become a re: ality that more and more of us are beginning to be aware of. The wor'd that was then apparently'"powerless to be born" is emerging with a treniendous tempo. But because it is still in liquid form and in such. immense flux few thinkers are able to predict definitely or describe in detail the final crystallized forms of life, set of beliefs, scales of values, etc. That there will emerge a nsw philosophy of life ultimately there can be no doubt, but meanwhile it is rather difficult for those who live in the transition period.

of the line of thinking which very effectively reveals the Hamlet state of mind, "To be or not to be," in contemporary life. Aronnd the question —to spank or not to spank—has been raging a controversy since DT~. EsBY F. R. K. ther L. Richards, professor of: psychiatry . at John Hopkins University The Council Bluffs Lodge No. 688 made the f o l l o w i n g declaration: "Science has found no substitute for of the Independent Order of the B'nai the good sound spanking.". The dif- Brith will hold an important meeting ferent reactions toward the declara- next Monday evening, July 10, at tion are revealed in the opposing at- 8:30 o'clock at the Eagles Hall.- Dr. Isaac Sternhill and Louis H. Kaleltitudes shown by local mothers. man, who were delegates for the local One m o t h e'r declares, "Parents organization at the annual convention should reason with a child. It is a of the District Grand Lodge No. 6 of much more effective method than the B'nai Brith which, was held in punishing, with a spanking. I am thoroughly opposed to.spanking." . Chicago this week, will give a report of the convention. Comes another mother and-presA continued discussion will also be ents a diametrically opposite relation- held regarding the situation in Gerto heir children as expressed in these many. A report will also be given of words, "A whole day spent trying to the two committees that have been reason with' a child, will never have petitioning "circulars concerning ' the the immediate and desired; effect of Hitler movements. Both m.embers and a . good, brief spanking.' It-saves, a lot of .wasted breath also.; I spank non-members"are urged to attend this . . .'..'"'.. • with the haif brush. It is always meeting. effective." As "children of the transition" we are torn between the old set of actions and the new yet uncrystallized modus vivendi, way of life. To be or not to be, to do or not to do, to spank or not to spank, to introduce, as parents, disarmament or armament in the home, to "spare the child and spoil the rod" or to spare the rod and spoil the child, to be generous with freedom or to suppress, to be friends and pals or disciplinarians towards our children— these and many others make up the repertory of our indecisions, doubts and perplexities. Our parents certainly were not confronted with such dilemmas. Few suffered from the malady described by a junior in a local university, "I have no peace of mind. Life has been ACCOUNTANTS ruthless with my beliefs. I no longer know what to believe in." Their idols AUDITS (set of beliefs), aspirations, ambiSYSTEMS tions and cults marshalled the best INCOME TAX of their energies, gripped and inspired them and freed them from indecisions. Our children, however, immersed in the living present and freed from the tremendous problem of l i v i n g beCertified Public Aeeta. tween the twilight; of one scale of values and the dawn of a new one, 832 Brandeis Theater will find it easier to adjust themBldg. selves to the new-born and better be JA. 4811 able to bring about the sadly needed synthesis between the old and the new and more effectively graft the best of the old npon the swiftly emerging new world. AUTOMOBILES

Council Bluffs News

This is a cause of great concern to many and leads some highly learned btit easily discouraged thinkers, such as Spengler, into the camp of the pessimists who write Jeremiads on "The Decline of the West," while it drives others, more strongly endowed with the will to life, less crushed by the burdens of the hour and more determined to recover the joy of living, into the camp of the optimists who insist that our present dilemmas and problems are simply transition points to a social, economic and cultural life far superior to the present than the present is to the primitive past; that a new leadership and a new citizenry •mil come out of this present confusion and doubts. A note of hope and faith in the latent potentialities of men and •women is heard and seen in the ranks of the optimists. It may seem far-fetched to insinuate that our generation at this time faces problems similar in many respects to those that faced our immigrant parents and grandparents who left their native lands to root themselves in the soil of America. Torn from their native environment, language, culture, and folk-ways they . found themselves for some time like Korolenko's hero in his book "Without a Tongue," a torn soul, his native culture across the seas, forlorn and terrified by the new situations and finding it almost humanly impossible i to" absorb and assimilate the new culture and style of life. But "Time teaches and time heals." With the passing of time and a process of adjustment to and assimilation of the new life, the tear in the soul, Istanbul, (J.T.A.)—A monthly dethe inner conflict between two cultures disappears. The points of views of voted exclusively to" anti-Semitism, the two worlds are amalgamated, syn- and called the Inkilab, has appeared thesized, as it were, into at least a here. It described its purpose as to tolerably acceptable way of thinking combat the Jews in general and the and doing. Of course, the graft of the Turkish Jews in particular, and ac___ old upon the new or vice versa grew cuses them of being traitors during quicker and more organically in the the war, particularly along the Palessmall children and youth than in those tine front. It invites the Turks to : that came over after they had reached follow the example set by Adolf Hitler in Germany, and congratulates the maturity. We face similar problems of adjust- police for forbidding a Jewish demonment to and assimilation of what we stration against the persecutions of might call a new environment, for tha the Jews in Germany. world we knew ten or even five years The publication heatedly attacks ago has been torn from under our journalists and writers siding with very feet. At first we felt as though the Jews against the Nazis, and winds we were left suspended in the air per- up with a demand that Jews be exmanently. With the passing of the cluded from Turkish citizenship beshock we discovered that we landed cause they are members of a foreign up en a' world, with problems.- chal- race. lenges and dilemmas entirely foreign to our old ways of thinking and doing. Some were terrified, some were Paul Spor, well-known- impressano unbalanced temporarily, but here and there a few oriented themselves with of Omaha night life, has brought to the Omaha dance public one of the lightning speed to the new-born. The last few years have seen the best bands, direct from Hollywood considerable growth cf a literature of Gardens, Galveston, Texas. Ted and his men are exponents •what might be called the "literature of adjustment" to the new world of the popular dance craze, rhumbas emerging since the crash. In the his- and tangos. South has formerly been tory of the Jew such a literature is stage director with Fox, RKO, and not new at all. Is there any nation Publix, heading his own band unit. They are playing at Paul Spor's on the face of the globe whose hisnightly. Reduced prices are now in tory is so replete with the records of effect. adjustment and transition period?? From slavery to the free desert life, from nomadism to settled agricultural WHEAT. CORN. OATS life, from the autonomous tribal life For Information Call or Write to that of a united nation under the TAYLOR GRAIN CO. rule of one man, from national independence to exile in Babylonia, and so "21-7S2 Omsha firain Exchange Bide. through the ages, under the Persians, JA S40»—AT 800B Greeks, Egyptians, Romans and Arabs. Private Wire Connections With Since the dispersion by the Romans, JAS. E. DENNETT CO. Jewish history becomes the record of adjustment to and assimiliation of multifarious cultures- and folk-ways DAIJCE - COOLS of many countries both in the East OUTDOORS 0 and in the West. Paraphrasing LewisErdueed Price* II ohn's recent statement, "The Jews New Band! | | are the barometer of civilization," one Pool Spor Gardens]1) 58 at Center .L might say that Jewish history became the mirror of the .outstanding cultures of the last two millenia. Undoubtedly this need for adjustment to new conditions and problems facing multitudes of Jews through exile?, inquisitions, pogroms and discriminations accounts for the plasticity and fertility of Israel. As Lewis Browne recently put it in the American Magazine, "It wasn't enough forthe Jew to be good; he had to be clever, for he had to work and strain himself twice as hard to get half as The Sign of far." The world can learn a great Good Workmanship deal about its own problems and its JA. 1614 own soul from the long, colorful, Offices Brandeis Theatre Blag tragic but creative history of the Jew, OMAHA especially in this transition period.Just this week we had an example

Jewish Day at the Century of Progress Exposition and the Convention of the District Grand Lodge No. 6 of the Independent Order of the B'nai Brith in Chicago.this week attracted many-local tourists. Among those who attended the World's Fair this week were Dr. and Mrs. Isaac Sternhill, Dr. Julius Moskovitz, Louis H. Katelman, Ben I. Seldin, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Steinberg, Misses Dora and Tillie Markovitz, Mrs. Leo Fitch, Mr. and Mrs. Julius Barron, and Sam Sacks. "

Muny Ordinance Legislation Delayed

Abe Saltzman has returned home following a month's stay in Rochester, . Jerusalem, (J. T. A.) — The a c Minn.i where "he underwent treatment at the Mayo Clinic. nicipal ordinance projected for early in .1933, whose promulgation is preMiss - Lyl Steinberg returned home liminary to the establishment, cf a

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plemented before 1934, the Jewish tions will therefore have to be conTelegraphic Agency learns from an ducted. Mr. and Mrs. Sain Lincoln enter- authoritative source. ~ This delay will bring about a cortained the members of. their Sunday responding delay in the creation of The delay in th» pacaaga of the Night Bridge.club•-at their home last ordinance is due-to the strong op- a. Legislative" Council, it is painted Sunday night. " • position to it both frora Jewish and out. Arab sources: The Eovwrnnient" is Mrs. I. Cherniss is confined at the —Shop from our Service Guide Jennie Edmundson Hospital .-where compelled to take this opposition inshe was taken Monday for treatment for her illness. ' •• Excelsior Springs, Mo.

All items for this column should be phoned in to Miss Katelman, phone Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Frost of St. 650 or 4491, before 5 o'clock on WedPaul,, Minn., spent a few days here nesdays in order to assure publication this weak visiting Mrs. Frost's moth- for that week in the Jewish Press. er, Mrs. I. Cherniss, and Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Adler."

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tfAGE 4—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1933

THE JEWISH PRESS Published ever; Friday at Omaha, Nebraska, by

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Editorial Office: 490 Brandeis Theater Building. Print Shop Address: 1307 Howard Street Sioox City Office—Jewish Community Center DAVID BLACKER - - - - Business and Managing Editor FRANK R. ACKERMAN - - - - - Editor FANNIE KATELMAN • - Council Bluffs, Iowa, Correspondent ANN PILL . . . . . . . Sioux City, Iowa, Correspondent

Aleph Zadik Aleph

This unquestionably is due to the crisis the Jewish people are that has seen your birth and growth facing. and now welcomes back its accomplished son. Your future is a bright The question now is whether the Zionist organization is going one and I know that you will fulfill to capitalize on the psychological advantage they have. The hisall of its promise, you have done well and are doing well; ten years from toric events of the day continue to more strongly focus attention now you will be even more an accomupon Palestine as the nucleus for solving our problem. More peofact, a vital part of American ple want to enter Palestine than the authorities can care for. The On July 9th, 10th, and 11th, Omaha plished Jewish life. physical necessity for a homeland is emphasized, side by side with will have the pleasure of being host] the need for a revitalizing source of Jewish life. Upon the man- to an assembled group of young men who represent the largest Jewish ner in which Zionism answers this far-reaching problem depend youth movement existent today. The the hopes and aspirations of so many of the Jewish people. tenth anniversary convention of Aleph By M. H. Sogolow Aleph will be held in Omaha on Obviously, the first important step for a translation of the Zadik Physical Director, J. C. C. those days, and it will be a far cry Palestinian hopes into realities is numerical, strength. It is not from the small group of young men You can only get out of vacation enough for so many of us to theoretically agree that we think that who ten years ago. organized under what you put into it. A few weeks the direction of Mr. Sam Beber, now time has proven the necessity of establishing a National Jewish the president of the District B'nai away from your duties should be Homeland in Palestine. Our inner agreement, so long a& it re- Brith lodge, and president of the Su- planned -with the same ability and that have made you so mains passive, cannot inject life-blood into the movement. . . we preme Advisory Council of A. Z. Ai, foresight successful. Get away froaa everyneed to give our active support. We need more shekel-holders, we that order which in the short space thing that is familiar. The place of ten years has grown to an inter- in which you spend your vacation is need more investigation into the political imports of the various national order having over 150 chapnot as important as the mood in factions, we need more popular resopnse to the concrete mani- ters and a membership that numbers which you decide to spend it. If festations of the movement. Be more than a lip-believer, Get into the thousands. Omaha has partic- | your work is of an exacting nature ular reason to be proud and hospitable physically, rest. If your duties are your shekel and vote in the coming election. for it was Omaha that first saw the

When- the members, delegates and friends of Aleph Zadik Aleph gather on July 9,10 and 11 for their tenth anniversary convention, it is appropriate that the conclave should be a "Homecoming," should be held here in Omaha. Omaha looks upon A. Z. A. through the proud eyes of a mother. When the first chapter was formed in Omaha through the idealism and foresight of Sam Beber, the motivating force for an organization like A. Z. A. was profound. Yet, even the Omahans interested in the movement and visualizing its great need could Palestinian Prosperity Everywhere we get the encouraging flash of news that "Palnot foretell the phenonemal progress which was to be made. For, estine is prosperous." The economic doldrums experienced through though in years the order is an infant, in success it knows no suthe world have been in contradistinction to the economic progress perior in Jewish youth movements throughout the worlds The of the Holy Land. first convention was held in Omaha on July 4, 1924, with deleEven more encouraging, however, is the evaluation of that gates present from Omaha, Lincoln, Des Moines and Sioux City. prosperity as stated by Chaim Weizmann, former president of the The tenth will be held here with delegates from 165 chapters covWorld Zionist movement, who is in this country. Declares Dr. ering the United States and Canada. It was not long after its Weizmann: "Palestine is properous! Those are the magic words origin before the vast potentialities of A. Z. A. became apparent and the B'nai Brith adopted it as part of the Wider Scope move- that are cabled across continents to incredulous people suffering ment. Today A. Z. A. is also known as Junior B'nai Brith—as from the depression. But the prosperity of which Palestine knows father and son, the idealism of the parent has been a guiding is not the inflated self-delusion of which we in the western world have had too much. It is the prosperity in the sense that men and factor in the development of the child. It is small wonder that Omaha is so proud of its A. Z. A. The women feel satisfied with life and its future. Jews in Palestine all-embracing program of the order is making better men of our have found inner peace. That is the prosperity about which they Jewish youth; it is so well balanced—social, religious, athletic, cul- write and talk. It is the prosperity which they invite thousands tural, educational—that it helps fashion and develop the char- of other Jews in other lands to come and share with them. But acter of its thousands of members. Through the various chapters those who enter Palestine must not look forward to a life of luxury and conventions and tournaments a closer association of the Jew- and riches. They will find security and contentment, but they ish youth of the country is effected arid; many lasting friendships must be prepared for hard work and self-denial. There will be treasured for life are perfected. And-as Omaha looks with pride demanded of them patience and courage and exhausting physical upon the homecoming of her children, she is doubly proud of the toil." In appraising the prosperity of Palestine Weizman rightly two Omahans who have done so much for A. Z. A.—Sam Beber, founder of the order and president of the Supreme Advisory Coun- does not put any false emphasis on monetary riches. The spiritual cil, the guiding spirit and directing force of the organization; and harvest is underscored. And this should and will, we hope, be a Philip M. Klutznick, who is retiring as executive secretary after sharp reminder to those many gentlemen who have shown dehaving been for seven years in that capacity the human dynamo signs of taking advantage of the boom in Palestine to introduce speculation, such as in land speculation, into Palestine. A bubble in charting the course of progress^ blown too much will burst. Speculative bubbles in the past have The development of the A; Z. A. has been ^the development of : frequently burst with disastrous consequences. The prosperity of the Jewry of tomorrow, for our future, any people's future, lies Palestine must be built on the solid foundations of security and with, the youth. We are heartened by the dauntless spirit of the Jewish youth as exemplified through A. Z. A. and we most heart- contentment, of hard work and self-denial, withlpatience and courage and hard physical toil, not upon the treacherous, insecure ily, welcome all visitors t o t h e international coirveotion quicksand of speculation. theni accept to the fullest Omaha's heartfelt; hospitality.

SPECTATOR JUNIOR ========

TO THE VACATIONIST

GEMS of the BIBLE and TALMUD By O. O. DASHER

Whoso rewardeth evil for good, Evil shall not depart from his house. The beginning of strife is as when one letteth out water, Therefore, leave off contention, before the quarrel break out. How much better it is to ge*t wisdom than gold, Yea, to get understanding is rather to be chosen than silver. The wise in heart is called a man of discernment. And the sweetness of the lips increasing learning.

Rabbi Chisdo said: "If a man sees more sedentary, in aa office or the that troubles are coming; unto him, inception of this very fine organiza- like, be active physically. j let him search his deeds, and if he tion and it is to Omaha that A. Z. A. Pleasure and recreation come on I has investigated and found nothing looks for its present leadership and vacation from what you do. K.n3wj wrong, then let him attribute it to guidance. why you are going to the particular) neglecting the study of the Torah. It has been my pleasure to be per- place you have chosen. Fill every i mitted to familiarize myself with the minute with activity, not enforced j Mar Zutra said: "Le-th Metzo recreed of this organization, and I find idleness. Fresh air, sunshine, whole-1 fers to the necessity of living only it a most interesting document, for it some food, long hours of sleep, \7rit- j in a place where there are sanitarysets forth an idealism that not only ing, a good book, tramping, tennis, j conditions." The sages of ,Palestine is admirable in its enunciation of golf, and even manual labor may bej(upon hearing all the opinions in exworthy abstractions but also a practi- rest. plaining the above passage) remarkcal means of accomplishing those ends. Go after vacation with a purpose.; ed that Mar Zutro's opinion is the In the creed of an A. Z. A., we find Refresh your body, stimulate your! best of all. that one of their cardinal principles is a love of country and "a willing- mind, and renew your spirit. Leave ness to die for it if need be, but pri- your fears, cares and worries at Hitler Stresses Nazi too, need a rest. Feast marily to live for it." Here is no false home—they Aim of Ostracizing your eyes upon new scenes. Broaden martyrdom, no fanatical declamation. your sympathy by new contacts. The Here rather is a keen realization of most valuable thing Jews of Germany you will have one's aims and a sincere desire to ac- with you will be your health. Do complish them. With such a founda- not be careless—often when lost it Berlin, (J.T.A.)—The determination tion it is little to be wondered that is never recovered. of the Nazis to sever all connections A. Z. A. has become the powerful orof German Jewry with the rest of Are you ready for vacation? Re- the world was expressed in a stateganization that it is. member you are going to vacate— But in their "five-fold and full" vacate your mind of its worries, ment by Chancellor Adolf Hitler reprogram enunciated by the late re- your hands of their familiar tasks garding the aims of the Third Reich vered Dr. Boris D. Bogen, the casual and yourself from the daily haunts made at a conference of Nazi leaders here. observer finds the core of A. Z. A. of the year. Among the five major aims enumHere, in a program that covers the "August at a resort and Septem- erated, the second is "cutting every fields of social service, religion, culture, athletics, and social life, we find ber in the hospital" is the slogan international tie whatsoever, which a meaty effort to coalesce the young of the vacationist who makes little applies not only to Marxism, but Jewish members of a community into inquiry as to where he is going or equally to the intellectual ties of Jewry." a solid though facile body whose lives what he is going to do. Above all things, do not spend The Nazi economic union, acting on can intermingle on those universal the orders of Rudolf Hess, Hitler's questions in which all are interested. your vacation being in a hurry! Do not try to do or see too muchj personal deputy in the direction of It is through this program that the members of A. Z. A. can accomplish in such a limited time. Try to re-j the Nazi party, issued official signs their primary aim which, in the words turn recreated both mentally and for stores which are entitled to be known as "German Establishment," of their executive secretary, Juliu= physically. May your vacation bring you bet- the text of the sign. Bisno, is two-fold, "the strengthening of Jewish affiliations and the abate- ter health, renewed vigor and in- The purpose of the signs is to ment of anti-Semitism." How well creased happiness. Remember—to- make it possible t© distinguish Aryan they have done their work is evidenced morrow's health depends upon to- stores from Jewish, in order to boy| cott the latter. by their rapid growth and the fact day's prevention. that men of prominence, throughout America have-become ;vitally interested in their program and lent their aid in the furtherance of their ideals. A Conviction in France {' ; * NaziPromises But the forthcoming A. Z. A. con- j France, in opening wide her arms to the Jewish refugees from vention It has almost become trite to repeat that the obliteration of means a great deal more to | the legal decrees of the Nazis against the Jewish people is not suf- Germany, gave additional proof to the world "that the nation as Spectator Junior than merely the gathering of a group of young men ficient, that the spirit behin^ those laws mustbe^changed. The a whole was not afflicted with Judaphobia. And, if more evidence with worthy purposes. It is the fact were needed that the French are not among the anti-Semitic counlatest reports from Germany only emphasize that it would be that there exists such an organizatragic for German Jewry if the conscience of the world were lulled tries of the day, the French courts have convicted Francois Coty tion and that it is so powerful that of libel against Jewish ex-soldiers, ordering him to publish the pleases him, for such existence is into rest by the outward conciliation of the Hitlerites. prima facie evidence of the fact that Thus, 1,400 of the 3,000 Jewish lawyers in Germany were verdict in the Coty newspapers and to pay a fine. the present Jewish leaders in America Coty's articles in his papers were distinctly and virulently can retire when the time comes for permitted to resume their practice. But in the law courts are anti-Jewish. But the Jewish population, having found a new such action with the assurance that by posted placards, "Don't go to Jewish lawyers." The Bar associastrength in a new weapon, boycott, used it and Coty's products felt training and inclination there is a tion of Germany is entirely Nazi and Jews are barred. Jewish group of young men ready to take lawyers fear that if they enter a courtroom civilian Nazis will drag a sharp decline in sales and resulted in the leading French anti- their places, ready to carry on the him from the courts. The Nazis only are judges, justice is per- Semite publicly disavowing any anti-Semite statements. Then fight that they have been making for ideals of Judaism. It is to youth verted. Under such circumstances, and with lawsuits what they later came another attack. The'Jewish war veterans took the the and to these young men in particular matter to court and won a signal victory. * are, the client will choose a lawyer best equipped to win the ease— that we can turn for support. They France and Germany are neighbors across the Rhine. Yet bring' with them not only the usual and that won't be a Jewish lawyer. Thus, the Nazis could permit and vigor of youth ^ but all 3,000 Jewish attorneys to return to the profession and still ac- not even an individual with the vividest of imaginations could intensity through their excellent leadership a picture a Jewish organization convicting an anti-Semite for libel sagacity and a discretion that is rare complish Hitler's original anti-Semitic plank. The situation is as bad in the medical profession. Private against the Jews in the German courts. France too had its day in people of their years. If for once are to embrace the theory that the patients, who can choose any physician they wish/are rare in of perverted justice and anti-Semitism, recording in our history we Jews are something more than merely Germany. The vast majority of the population belong to sick-in- the famous Dreyfuss case—yet today France looks back upon that a religious sect with a particularized surance funds. And in the office of the sick-insurance fund, episodein her lif e with shame. Thefuture will reveal Germany worship and philosophy then we must present history with an even greater once and for all realize that the Jews which the member must visit to obtain! his receipts or his com-also looking back upon her are a vital unit, a people that through : '•: "••'•• ',...•". ' '" .:• ' - - ' . . j •.'•!. pensation, there hang placards: "Beware of Jewish Doctors." s h a m e . their art and culture and by their ideals are vitally alive. No nation, no These insurance-funds are all organized according to the Nazi pro^ people have ever lived but that the fire gram. "And the Christian, even the Jewish patient when he con- TheySay.-.... of vitality coursed through their veins sults a Jewish doctor is risking being deprived, of the curt treafc"Its anti-Semitism may prove the Achilles-heel of German —it is for youth to carry on this flame i»ant and his medicine. ignited by the great ones «f the past Fascism. Domestically it has little to fear; "but in the foreign —that youth's province and youth The same situation exists in private industry. As an ex- relations it will have need of a wariness and diplomatic finesse will notisfail. ample, Leiser's is a Jewish firm, Berlin's largest shoe factory with which have never distinguished German foreign policy. Internally, To these young men assembled in 52 branch stores in the city. Though they may employ Jewish discriminations against Jews may produce no disastrous results. convention in the near future in Omasalesmen, there is not a single Jewish employee. For Nazi-prop- If 600,000 unemployed "Nordics" displace 600,000 starving Jews, ha, I say, "Welcome!" to them. I bow in recognition that they have more -agandized customers refused to be waited on by Jewish clerks. the economic situation will remain pretty much in status quo. Ex- than a mere fraternal order organized The firm, in business to sell shoes, dismissed its Jewish employ- ternally the results may be ruinous. Therefore the Nazis' Jew- to cater to the social needs of its memees. And the owners judged it wiser to hand their business over baiting is not only barbarous but surprisingly stupid; and the bers; they are possessed of a vital Every Man Is Sure order, an order with a definite pur"to a new management. stupidity is the more-striking because they could have achieved pose to accomplish, and the courage of His Individual Style Here in In similar fashion, the Jews in every trade and profession the same end by cloaking their anti-Semitism."—Suzanne La Fol- and strength to try their efforts against the myriads of obstacles that white-collar men and laborers, are so hedged in by the Nazi spirit lette. beset them, not the least of which is that they are being economically exterminated. Herr Hitler can a colossal indifference on the part of inform the world that everything is legal and that there is no their elders. Of late many have taken the opporvisible outward force. The spirit and riot the law is most dangerHebrew Calendar tunity to harangue youth for its in5693 What a whale of a difference there is ous and must be eradicated. 1933 difference to the vital problems of the Fast of Tammuz in straw hats. There's a right style -.Tuesday, July 11 day. This particular form of bear baitRosh Chodesh AB ~. for you in The Nebraska's vast show_Monday, July 24 ing has been going on for centuries At the Crossroads and no one pays much attention to it. Fast of AB „ ing. GET YOURS—it's here—and be —Tuesday, Aug. 1 But singularly recently in our own The Zionists of America will vote on July 16 for this coun- Rosh Chodesh EIlul correctly hatted. -Tuesday, Aug. 22 city I have heard the accusation levtry's delegates to the World Zionist Congress next month. The 5694 eled against our own young men and 19S3 local balloting will be held that day at the Jewish Community Rosh Hashonah that they fail utterly to com—Thursday, Sept. 21 women prehend or regard with any seriousCenter, and all shekel-holders will be entitled to cast their votes Yom Kippur ....Saturday, Sept. 30 ness the problems that confront the for those who will be our emissaries to the world conclave. 1st Day Succoth _ .Thursday, Oct. 5 Jews of the world today. To those •Zionism is today at the crossroads. The necessity for con- Shemini Atzereth skeptics and scoffers I offer with my Others at $i to $7 ^ --Thursday, Oct. 12 kindest apologies to the members of stant compromises the past few years, the number of warring fac- Simehath Torah Hat*—Main Floor _Friday, Oct. 13 A. Z. A. their convention assembled tions, and the failure to obtain full co-operation have weakened Rosh Chodesh Cheshvan here this week, and urge them if only Saturday, Oct. 21 the movement as a world body politic, although sentiment among 1st Day Chanukah the enlightenment of their own J . Wednesday, Dec. 13 for minds to visit the business sessions the Jewish people for the Zionistic ideal has crystallized most en- Rosh Chodesh Tebeth Tuesday, Dec. 19 of this group that they may learn the couragingly of late. Jewish people throughout the world who be- Fast of Tebeth Thursday, Dec. 28 error of their thoughts. =CORRECT APPAREL. FOR MEN AND WOME1 fore had no interest in Palestine or a Jewish. National Homeland Once again then, welcome members of the A. Z. A. I for one, am proud have suddenly shown an avid attraction for the Palestinian idea. Mention The Jewish Press to Our Advertisers, and happy to be part of a community

NEBRASKA'S LEADING FLOUR

Omar ^ip. wonder

t lour

STRAW HATS


PAGE 5—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 7,1933

Ladies Labor Lyceum

Hostesses for Convention

The Ladies Labor Lyceum club will ijive their annual picnic at Elmwood Park on Sunday, July 9. Only members and their families are invited. The club will serve free ice cream.

Scouts Honor Dr. Adler New York.—Dr. Cyrus Adler, president of "the Jewish Theological Seminary, and president of Dropsie College, has received a message of appreciation from the Boy Scouts of America for his leadership and assistance in bringing scouting to an increasing number of Jewish boys. At a recent meeting of the National Executive -of the Boy Sconts, Dr. Adler was the recipient of the Silver Buffalo, the highest honor given annually for distinguished service in boyhood.

MARKS-BROWN ENGAGEMENT CELEBRATE BAR MTTZVAH Mr. and Mrs. Ben Eisenberg Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Brown announce the engagement of their daughter, celebrate the Bar Mitzvah of their Eansye, to Mr. Sam Maries of Tolsa, son, Hymie, on Saturday morning, Okla., son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Marks, July 8, at 9 a. m. at the Chevra B'nsri Israel Synagogue, 18th and Chicago of that city. streets. Mr. Marks is a graduate of the UniA reception in honor of their son versity of Oklahoma at Norman and is a member of the Phi Beta Delta frat- will be -given at the Eisenberg home, ernity. ' '. ••.'••.:' .-'••.•'"•':•';'•..'1728 Lake street, Sunday evening, July 9, from 7 to 9 p. m. No definite date has been set for the wedding. ANNOUNCE BIRTH TO ENTERTAIN FOR VISITORS Mrs. Aaron Rips will entertain at tea Sunday afternoon, July 9, at her home, 669 No. 58th Street, in honor of her sister, Mrs. Max Datfs, and Mrs. J. D. Kraft, of Los Angeles, CaL

Dr. and Mrs. I. Osheroff of Chicago announce the birth of a son, Sunday, July 2. Mrs. Osheroff i s the former Miss Rose Fine of this city.

Whether the pitcher strike the stone or the stone the pitcher, the pitcher suffers.—Cervantes.

The A. Z. A. convention hostesses, reading left to right: Top—Pearl Bernstein, Bernice Yousem, Dora Dohjoff, Mildred Lipsey, Sylvia Tenenbaum. Bottom—Beulah BeLzer, Anne Zweiback, Sara Kaplan, Marjorie Kaplan, Mary Cutler and Louise Fitch.

Kappa Tau

TRY OUR

THRIFTY 10 LBS., 70c £ 6 c shirts 8 c

ON VISIT Misses Ruth Slobodisky and Rose to be held in Omaha July 9, 10 and PICNIC HONORING OFFICERS Mrs. Dollie Elgutter, accompanied Mandel to take charge of the affair. 11. The annual Fall Frolic will be A picnic in honor of the newly- by Mrs. Charles Schimmel and daughThe Kappa Taa chose the followheld some time in September. elected officers was held by the Ques- ter, Miriam, left early this week for RETURNS FROM CONVENTION ing officers at the election held rea t G a m e s cently: Shirley Fiedler, president; Goodman Meyerson has returned f S t Louis, where they will visit Mr. Park, TSlkhorn, Nebraska. _and ^ Mrs. Walter Schimmel at the home from Atlantic City, N. J., where HIGHLAND COUNTRY CLUB Bernice Bordy, vice-president; Jean The officers are Lester Goldman, | Hotel The closing meeting of the season Beber, secretary; Phyllis Roddy, Tuesday, July 11, will be ladies' day there, Mrs. he attended the National Grocers' 8i the Deborah Society will be held j treasurer; Liberty Cooper, historian. at the Highland Country Club. Pro- president; Bon Theodore, secretary, Walter Convention last week. Tuesday afternoon, July 11, at 2:30' fessional George Miller will award all and James Burroughs, treasurer. Schimmel, will go to Chicago to atp. m. at the J. C. C. All members ZSISFARIMM prizes earned by the "women golfers tend tiie world's fair, and Mrs. Charles LEAVE FOR CHICAGO - : - Paironizs our advertisers - : are urged to attend. VISITING TN OMAHA during the month of June. Mrs. A. J. Jacobson and son, Milton, Schimmel and daughter will go to Mr. and Mrs. Sam Feldman of 2322 Galesbnrg, ILL, to visit Mr. and Mrs. left Saturday night for Chicago, 11L, Those to win the golf awards into spend a couple o f weeks visiting clude, the Mesdames Maurice Micklin, No. 21st Street, have as their guests Edward ScMramel. relatives and attend the World's Fair. Dave Ferer, Lester Simon, Max Holz- their daughters, Mrs. J." D. Kraft of Store Closes t t 5 P. M. Daily (Except Saturday, 5:30) man, Abe Greenberg, Manning Hand- Los Angeles, CaL, and Mrs. Ben Y. RETURNS FROM CHICAGO ler, Mickey Xatleman, and Abe Brok- Levine and daughter, Carol, of NewMrs. J. Untzman returned Wednesark, N. J. key. day from Chicago, where she was a A regular meeting of the Bikur Special nine-hole handicap play will delegate to the Zionist convention. feature: the golf program Tuesday She also attended the world's fair Cholim will be held Monday afternoon at 2:30 p. m. at the J. C C. morning, followed by luncheon and while in Chicago. Word has been received by Mr. As business of great importance bridge in the afternoon. and Mrs. M. Braude that their son, RETURNS FROM SIOUX CITY will be discussed, all members are The Highland "Monte Carlo" party Lt. Meyer A. Braude, who has gradMr. Bernard Robinson returned Sun- expected to be present. was held Monday evening. Supper "was uated from the United States Mili- day from Sioux City, where he visited served at midnight, following a pro- tary Academy at West Point, has with relatives and friends. gram of various eyents. Leslie Burk- been put in command of his company in the absence of his captain. The newly-elected officers were ] enroad was in charge. TO ST. LOUIS H e is also in command of the CMTC formally installed at a regular meetMr. and Mrs. Hyman Harris and band. In addition, he has taken ing held July 5 at the J. C. C. VISIT son, Joseph, left Saturday evening for over the duties of the post library. Plans were laid for an all-day Mrs. Duke Dloogoff and sister, Miss a ten-day visit with relatives and outing to be held the latter part of Lt. Braude is at present stationed friends in St. Louis. Goldie Zusman, visited for the past the month. All the members of the week with Mrs. Ray Novak and .fam- at Fort Brady, Mich. chapter plan to participate in the ily at Falls City, Nebraska. They also FOR KANSAS CITY international convention of A. Z. A. spent some time at the home of Mr. The Misses Sarah Epstein and Ann and Mrs. Julius Baron and Mr. and Reis will leave for Kansas City, Mo., "The King of Jazz," now playing Mrs. Ben Novak and family at Neat the World Theater, offers a new to spend a week with friends. braska City, Neb. era in sound and color entertainment. With an all-star cast of ex- TO ENTERTAIN 2 Booms and Kitchen. cellent: talent, including Paul White- TWELVE COUPLES Beautifully •furnished Phi Omega Delta sorority wDl enman and his band, Bing Crosby, John Boles, Stanley Smith, Jeanie tertain twelve couples at a weiner WE 3^27 By Lang* and hundreds of others,- this roast at Elmwood Park Saturday Mrs. David M. Newman spectacular prodtuStftm is'' seen erf- night Mrsv tirely in natural colors. On the same program with this Vnder-ihe-Sea Salad One package lime jello, one and sensational attraction the World is one-half cup boiling water, one-half offering Loretta Young and Gene ALWAYS cup peaT juice, one-fourth "teaspoon Raymond in "Zoo in Budapest." An 25c TS1 6:30 Comfortably salt, one teaspoon vinegar, two pack- exciting romance of young love enEve. 40c COOL ages Philadelphia cream cheese, one- acted against the colorful backExcept Sun. eighth teaspoon ginger, two cups ground of a zoo park, where anycanned pears diced. Dissolve jejl thing can happen and everything in boiling water, add pear juice, does. Packed with entertainment and STARTING SAT. salt and vinegar. Pour one-half inch layer into loaf pan. Chill until thrills, a, picture the -whole family firm, chill remaining jeHb mixture will enjoy. until cold and syrupy. Place in a bowl and ice "water and "whip until fluffy and thick. Cream cheese and See Him with a RavishJuly 8th will usher in two of the ginger. Fold in whipped jello mixing New Screen Sweetture gradually, then fold in pears, season's best photoplays of the year. heart as a. Philo Vance pour over, first layer of jello. Chill William Powell i n "Private Detecof the Divorce Racket! tive 62"and Ruth Chatteiton in until firm. Unmold. ' Cut in slices "Lily Turner" will be the features. on lettuce. W I L L I A M Margaret Lindsay, Iowa girl, appears opposite William Powell in Grope Fruit Salad "Private Detective 62" in which he One package lime jello, one cup appears as a discredited secret serboiling water, two grape fruit sec- vice operator who seeks a livelihood tions free ' from -membrane and cut as a-private detective. in ia pieces, two tablespoons sugar, one Ruth Chatterton i n "Idly Turner" cup grape fruit and cold water. Dis- is supported by George Brent (her solve jello in "boiling water, sprinkle husband) and an excellent cast ingrape fruit with sugar and drain cluding Guy Kibbee and Frank Mcthoroughly. Add grape fruit juice Hugh. She appears as a side show and water to jello, turn into shallow performer who is to have a child. pan, chill until firm. Cut in cubes. After a stormy career she eventually GUY KIBBEE Coabine cubes and grape fruit on meets the man she loves who proves Frank McHngh crisp lettuce. Serve with mayon- his worth 3>y winning her hand deUNDSAY naise. spite terrific handicap.

S

Deborah Society

Bikur Cholim

At Fort Brady

AT

2815

Herzbergs

A. Z. A. 100

Brings Savings of

World Theater

For Rent

Kitchen Chats

HALF and More

on Quality Apparel

The Waited, for

WELCOME A. Z. A. to Greater ORPHEUM

Coat Sacrifice!

2 Superb Features

Greater Orpheum

Entire Stock Reduced!

A SCOUNDREL YOU'LL LOVE!

tt Will Make "Frisco Jenny" Turn Pale!

Begardless of former price . . . NOW . . . no coat over $20 . . . and a choice of fine coats for as low as $5! Think of i t . . . and imrry down! Every spring and summer coat reduced. Fur trimmed coats and plain coats . . . dress coats and sports coats . . . All are priced to go quickly . • . sizes 14 to 40.

Values to $1$J5

"PRIVATE DtTtCTIVt

$

George Brent

62" t=:

Fourth Floor

-:- WELCOME ALEPH ZADIK ALEPH

COFFEE

to the

HOWARD *t 16th.

COOL ESKIMO-LAND at the

Jack & Jill Coffee Shop

There's no such thing as a finicky, hot weather appetite -when you dine at the Jack & Jill. If s cool here — A coolness that you'll enjoy. Not cold . . i just comfortably cooL Constantly changing, FRESH air —filtered and ice cooled! Drop in at lunch . . . breakfasts . . dinner. See how delicious your meals can taste these sweltering days. OPEN ALL NIGHT - A Suggestion for Any Night

Jack & JillSizzling Steak

Serrrd wbllr BH In (he priH-n.» 1 Wr\

Idaho bafcrd point*. *l!r»d

•t rooking .

It i l .

tomato, brni

Piping hot.

-•—•—•

|,ntlt.r.

rfriafc.

"THE KING OF JAZZ"

"ZOO IN BUDAPESr

with

with

PAUL

LORETTA

WHITEMAN

YOUNG

AND HIS BAND

GENE

John Boles Bing Crosby

RAYMOND Romance Amidst Jungle Ferocity

And Hundreds of Others Gorgeous Costumes Beantifnl Girls Dazzling Scenes

"Where Anything Can HappeBH-and Everything Does

AH in Natural Color

Excitement - Thrills

WHERE QUALITY MEET*

QUANTITY

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PAGE 6—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1038

To Address Conclave •if

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delible inscription, "Adomalechod." SfliiJSijBfflSSj :::; : Before them always was a symbol, iiltii ••• a star, now glowing, now dim, but ever evanescent. With their faces turned towards the illuminated Neon star that rose in graceful majesty ::: k above the gigantic stage, the singers raised their voices in a song of rejoicing. And as they sang so did the star glow more brightly until in a union of sharp clear light and joyi§ii ful song the voices of the actors proclaimed the discovery of a symbol no less important than the revolutionary signal of the burning bush. Over the heads of the singers and as Seen by the massed multitude broke forth an JUSTINE. WOLF electrical display that flickered into a strange pattern of stars and .The Romance of^a People—depict- our people passed in panoramic view, f myriad of blues, reds and whites the stripes, the flag of the Americas Joseph Herbaeh Leo Bearman The remote beginnings of the Jewish | Torah served as the focal point for ing the history of the Jewish people, of Philadelphia of Memphis Henry Monsky flew above the heads of the supplitheir sorrows and their joys, their people, the exodus into Egypt, slav- j the entire pageant . . . from it ants and they sang with great joy Second vice-president of Supreme Member of Supreme Advisory struggles and their triumphs—thrilled ery, the wilderness, the appearance < came the dramatized incidents upon on this discovery of a new land with Speaker at Monday hmdiean Council Advisory Council* A, Z. A. over 150,000 people who assembeld of the burning bush and the handing j the stage . . . from it rose the voice a glorious crashing as though the Speaker at Monday luncheon Speaker at Tuesday luncheon in Soldier's Field in Chicago to wit- down of the law, the dayd of the! of the prophets telling the glories tympannis were resoundingly struck. from Ihe ness this gigantic Biblical • spectacle Kingdom and the Prophets, the glor- of wisdom and the Lord of the wanderers broke the vision of the Lord vitiates one's Berlutr—Though paying tribute to I organization in line -with t i e present which climaxed the observance of ies and the desecration of the tem-it came the mournful wail" and chant j 'f o r t n voices in of the cantors as they sang of t h e ' Joyous celebration—a song blood, one's mind and more impor- the services rendered by Jewish worn-j regime they were compelled, in view ple at the hands of the Roman lujjJewish Day at the Century of. Proreturn to labor—a song of return j tant, one's heart. en to the German cause, delegates at} of the prevailing situation, to expel gress last Monday. Every individual j ionaires, dispersion and the hopeless tragedies that the Jews have known. of to faith;—anu banu Livnoth u lij . . . and finally from it seemed to a conference of German housewives j all German-Jewish women from their wanderings in strange lands amidst in that vast throng was visibly movBut as one stood alone in the Hibanoth. We have come into our! ed as the cast of 3,500 repeated the a strange people, the settlement in come the glorious light that filled land \ stadium when all had gone, there in ] resolved that in order to bring their | membership here. to build and rebuild. the world with hope and wisdom the new world and the light cf story of a mighty people and their the new world and the iignt t t nope; zne worm wim nope ana wisaom as- —«..— - - « - -.« ~« ' « the hush and quiet one realized that — alization tiiatithe J w s d all of t e i r wan \ _ . zion had peace. progress from the Biblical account had found found neap? peace. dawns with the realization tiiatithe Jews found in all of their wan-}. Overhead the star of David;ijnn o wwh _ . j7zion Our Advertisers Merit Your Patronage. ; h , •frninH of the creation to the vision of the that N ii h tt cc oo aa j dd cc oo m ee now and with it America offers solace and peace derings the land of promise, Amer-1 gleamed its six .pointed rich gospelS of j N h m ! after many thousands of years of ica. future in Palestine rebuilt. , V ^ ^ the%est and quiet that follows labor, nto cleared enclosure came; villages could nestle sleepily at the , The spectacle is one never to be suffering. It is this that many have As the children of Israel after] ° hlhild ld lif feet, a swelling sym-; s y m - | f o o t o f t hh e hills—children could lift forgotten. With the dimming of the come to see and it is this that has centuries of persecution turn their j a .rushing. of feet great arc lights, the busy murmur thrilled the very depths of thtir faces hopefully towards the ilium-1 P^ony as though the. waves of the: their young voices in Jjoyous song ^ were bursting .irresistibly upon J . t h e o M }J - ^ of the crowd assembled subsides, and souls as they sat quietly, expectantly, inated star that set upon the top o f j - —-1 behind m* an air of expectation is apparent as entranced under the star-studded the three-tiered shore.. From all sides came| j ^ h u m s t h e p l a i n t i v e w a i l o f h e f o re_ threetiered stage and lifted their the u uth the shrill blast of the trumpet an- ebony sky. y° Jewish boys and girls j and the angel of light softly voices in homage by utterings, "How y ° : k a n d saith> « H o w j v e l a r e nounces the feature of the evening. By far the most impressive sym- lovely are thy tabernacles, O Lord of j carrying. banners •• and singing the; • as they brought j T h y tabernacles, O Lord of hosts." Slowly, majestically, in keeping bol of the entire pageant was the Hosts" a solitary star in the north) song or their courage, their with the tenor of the performance, unrolled scroll that constantly lay! heavens gleamed the more brilliantiy; the gray-clad priests bring forth the before the eyes of the multitude. | and shed its peaceful light upon y book of the Lord, the enormous From the beginning the word of the nation that has lived long under the From afar came the voice of the; scroll from which the vast assembl- Lord has guided our people and yoke of oppression. By the courage Lord Jehovah ringing with triumph j age will read the . "Romance of a from the beginning of the spectacle | instilled into them from the start at this discovery for his children, j (Continued from Page 2.) People," and will learn the lessons at Soldier's Field the scroll lay be- ! they have developed a race, a cul- "Proclaim liberty throughout the! and wisdom of the Lord God. With fore the people inviting them to j ture, a nationalism that leaves them land to all the inhabitants thereof—' a ringing triumph a voice crashes read therein the story and romance; today with the courage and spirit to goa through the gates, clear ye the "get me a whole duck." y ;«»£••..the people—the voice of through to speak the first word of of the Jew. As each successive spec-! start anew the seeking after glory! w His wisdom: "Let there be light; tacle upon the great stage finished! and peace. And this they will find w ,? s P m K shall be heard no more. THEEH-EHMAN Mr. Barbarash of the Palestine and there was light." and dissolved into darkness the j only as their ancestors found it, by STima Israel adonai Ekhenn Adorai Echod!" Bureau of the Zionist Organization is lights about the huge scroll brightliving in the word of the Lord. Was Then, as though by magic, the massed singers, some 2,500 strong, ened and the resonant voice of the not the glcom and misery, thp opu- And so ended the pictorial repre- aorery busy man—-what, with the hunof the romance of a peo- dreds of inquiries coming to that oftake up the chant that is to ring interpreter cried forth the words of! lent stagnation cf the people lifted sentation ple.le - That it was a glorious tribute! tribute ! fice Bible. Whether intentionally or j and new life and happiness given; P fjee relating to settlement in Palesthrough the ages: "Adonai Echod," the Bible, "Adonai Echod," "Adonai Echod"— not the director of the Romance of i unto the sons of Israel when Abra-'to the Jews cf Chicago and to their I tine. until finally even these sacred words a People, Mr. Isaac Van Grove had ! ham listened to the word of the Gentile associates who aided in thej There was a Jew who came in reare mingled into an ecstasy that calls set before his audience a constant | Lord and declined to sacrifice his staging goes without saying. That cently to the office, and Barbarash for the untrammeled bursting forth symbol, a constant reminder of the child to the fire bslching rapacious it was a personal triumph in direc-} had discovered at great length and alinto emotion. unity of the Jew, that his redemp- God Moloch! How pertinently was tion for Mr. Van Grove is also in- j most to the point of exhaustion, exThen for two solid hours the tion from a life of struggle and sin the lesson of Monotheism shown in disputable. But the greatest triumph! plaining to him just what it would be massed tens of thousands sat in lay always in the word of God. In- this pageant. Invoking the aid of to- of the pageant was for those who | necessary for him to do to go to Palhushed attentiveness as the story of directly illuminated in a dashing day's knowledge and technique which lie now in distant lands quietly andjestine. can turn papier mache and electricity peacefully at the feet of their God.i Then there was a form to be filled m . ; fi to the service of spectacle, the great • To those dead.J<«ws who for cen-jout. rrujm/riwi. God Moloch was drawn out into the turies have endured the persecutions j "What is your fuH name?" faSked | , j stadium and upon the stage there to and bigotries, visited upon them, the • Barbarash. spit forth nauseous fire while be- romance of a people was dedicated, j "Eh-eh-eh- Yankel Yankelovich,"; neath him in an agony of lust and For it was they who were the real; said the man. terror danced the thousands of idol- heroes of the story of the Jews. Itj "What is your wife's name?" they who carried in their hearts i "Eh-eh-eh-eh Eivkeh," said . the atrous worshippers unknowing, un- awas seeing, robbed* *of the light of the j n d i n t h e i r minds the dictates of the i man. "When yere you born?" Lord and his word. j L o r d a n < 1 S a v e to J e w s °f a 1 1 l a n d s n d of Every historical incidenl of im-*acourage * » • « » « the indomitable "Eh, eh-eh-eh—" and strength that was their Insured Cars portance in the lives of the Jews "I'll put you down Feb. 10th," said Barbarash, interrupting the :"eh-ing." was presented in graphic reality. It binding tie. Ckrarteous, Careful Drivers But the "Romance of the People" "There's a big line o fpeople waitwas enough to be present to witness Safe for Your Family the marvelous technical detail with was much more than a tribute to which the pageant was executed. the dead or a glorification of a When the children of the Lord had great history. Nothing could have CALL ^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiitimiiiiiiii labored long and waxed sore under been more appropriate today in face the . oppression of the Egyptians of the recent persecutions visited up\ 84th Semi-Annual Statement S Publix Cars there came to one of their number on our brethren in Germany than the symbol for revolt in the figure this story of a people who have conJACKSON 7900 of the burning bush. Van Grove stantly undergone the indignities of caught the entire spirit of the move- exile and physical harm. Here in ment in the symphonic arrangement Chicago at a fair that is attracting of the dance and the songs starting visitors from all over the civilized with the .slow dirge-like chant and world a night has been set aside walk of the slaves under the vicious that genius might tell the world the New York, (J.T.A.).—Stating that lashes of -the overseers, rising in story of a people who have followed "it is inevitable that Transjordania crescendo through the mute amazed willingly in the footsteps of the Lord. will soon be opened for Jewish colonrealization of the meaning of the It its simple restraint and dignity ization", Emanual Neumann, Amer- I JULY 1. 1933 I burning bush, and finally breaking the pageant could not help but be ican member of the Executive of the 5 As Shown by Books at Opening of Business June 27, 1933 jj= • Welcome A. Z. A.'s all bounds with the joyful shouting instructive to Gentile as well as to Jewish Agency for Palestine, who arHake Peony Park your Jew. Could any more appropriate of "Proclaim Liberty, Proclaim Lib1 RESOURCES = rived here after spending a year in amusement center while In erty" as the shackles of slavery were protest be registered against Jewish Jerusalem, described his view of the E Quick Assets— Omaha. E DANCE Cash .... -. - —.$1,232,568.82 = thrown off and the Jews were free discrimination? Could any more ef- situation for Jews in the Near East. = Harpy Fisher's PEONIANS E U. S. Government Bonds 1,237,444.91 = fective a means of combating antito enter the land of milk and honey. Every Night But Monday Explaining his negotiations abroad Then once more into the lives of Semitism be invoked than this glor- with the Emir Abdullah, ruler of = SWIM Total Quick Assets 2,470,013.73 =. our people came tragedy. This time ious display of the faith of the Transjordania, Mr. Neumann assertIn Cool Artesian Fool = Every Hay and at the instigation of the Komans, children? What, after all, has been ed that "the Emir realizes the oppor- = Loans—Secured by First Mortgages on Improved Real Estate 14,682,570.54 = who by the burning of the temple the unifying tie that has bound all tunities for his country that would = PICNIC Delinquent Interest —...._.... . 11,801.60 = again rendered the Jews hopeless, Jews together' in their long years of be offered by an influx of Jewish = In I^arce Slimirii (!rn\r« = Loans on Pass-Book Security 41,986.05 = exile? Has it not been a continudesolate. \ From the ashes and the capital and Jewish undertakings. He — Loans in Foreclosure _. 507,574.35 S ruins of their temple, the stronghold ance of the lesson that Abraham is therefore in favor of a sincere E Real Estate Sold on Contract I. 64,708.30 = of their faith, came the wailing and learned when God appeared before basis of understanding and coopera- 5 Keal Estate Acquired Through Foreclosure 482,643.21 = the mourning of the priests and him and commanded him to spare tion between Jews and Arabs." = Office Building and Future Office Building Site at 18th = leaders. The Lord in his wrath had the child to be sacrificed to Moloch? = and Farnam Streets _ 359,330.55 E Mr. Neumann described how Jewvisited destruction upon them and Has it not been that constant reiter- ish refugees from Germany were = Furniture and Fixtures 1.00 E all was sombre in their hearts and, ation of "Adonai Echod" whether it nocking to Palestine. = Total $18,620,629.33 5 minds. The music cf the massed be sung in sadness or in triumph "Over two thousand Jewish refuvoices lifted into a mournful dirge! | LIABILITIES I We hope that you enjoy your stay in our fair city that filled the gigantic stadium with that has led the Jew ever onward, j gees from Germany have already = Credits to Members' Savings and Paid-Up Acc'ta $17,241,73fi.46 E the melodic minor of the man whoever watching for the gleam of the reached Palestine and are getting Remember Alephs . . . If It's ."Ideal" It's Good 34,107.35 E weeps because he has had stolen star of David? To those thousands themselves settled there. They are S Balance Held for Borrowers drawn from every stratum of soof Jews gathered in Soldier's Field from him that which was dear. Be= RESERVES— = \ -hind , me an old Jewish mother, the it was at once a lesson in faith and ciety: laborers, skilled artisans, me- = Legal Reserve _ $1,290,000.00 = chanics, professional people, manuthe stirring of glorious memories. E Delinquent Interest Reserve ~ 11,801.60 S sufferings of the ages written into Sales-on-Contract Reserve 9.483.75 = her _ sad eyes, quietly sobbed and No Jew could have witnessed that facturers, students, artists, scien- = Undivided Profits 33,500.17 = moved to and fro with the music, a great spectacle and gone away from tists, merchants. It is generally rec- = solitary, lonely figure amidst this the stadium without feeling within ognized that they constitute a most = Total Reserves 1,344,785.52 = 1803 North 20th Street seething mass of people; in her heart him the strains of Judaism and been valuable element which is bound to = Borrowed Money . _ „ NONE = she' knew the tragedy and sorrow proud of his heritage. To youth promote in a thousand ways the de| Total — $18,620,629.33 | velopment of the Jewish National gathered there to raise their young that fell to the lot of her ancestors. It was the voice of Rachel in this voices in praise of the Lord Jehovah Home and the prosperity of Palestine woman and in the stadium that wept : it was a stirring sight telling them as a whole. Their industry, thrift, E ' OUR SIX MONTHS RECORD E for her children and called for them forthe first time, perhaps, that they technical equipment, and their sou'nd — Dividends—84th consecutive dividend earned and paid. E approach to economic problems makes were of a great and mighty race and to have faith in the God that she E Reserve and Undivided Profits—$1,344,785.52. S knew was conscious of the exile and that before them lay a tremendous them an enormous asset for the E Cash and Government Bonds—$2,470,013.73. s country—far more precious than any task. To age it must have been a the pity of their state. E New Savings Accounts—839 new accopnts opened. jjj. conviction that the ideals they have amount of capital. There is every E Real Estate Loans—We made 22 Yi % in number of all real estate loans js deep in their hearts were of reason to believe that these two S recorded in Omaha. 5 And so for years the Jews wan- kept the purest and were bathed in the thousand are only the vanguard of a E Delinquent Interest—$11,801.60 isncollected of $387,414.62 earned. • = • dered throughout the civilized lands same cold, clear light as bathed the much larger number, perhaps fifty of the world, vainly trying to find law as it was handed down to Moses thousand or one hundred thousand, for themselves a home where in from Sinai. OFFICERS who will come to make their homes = peace they might bow down before E Edgar A. Baird, President. John R. Donley, Ass't Sec. in Palestine. If these expectations the God they worshipped and adored. • Dr. Chaim Weizmann in a few are realized, the Hitlerist oppression = James A. Lyons, Secretary. Clark W. Camaby, Ass't Sec. J. Herbert McMillan, Treas. Wayne C. Selby, Ass't Sec. To Spain where the tortures of the words of greeting that night said in Germany may bring in its train = inquisition only strengthened a faith ithat it was "a sense of eternity and the rapid industrialization of Palesthat was already strong; to Eastern la sense of vitality" that has kept tine, which will rapidly forge ahead | The CONSERVATIVE Europe where the tyranny of Czar the Jews together. Eternity, yes, as a great center of civilization and Douglas and King was not yet strong enough because God and his word are eternal; culture in the middle East." to erase from their hearts the in- vitality, yes, because the word and

History of the Jewish People Vividly Portrayed at Day"

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PAGE 7—THE JEWIPH PRESS, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 19S3 In appreciation for his outstanding Berlin.—Attempts by Jewish lawa. happy people. We shall have a effort in building Aleph Zadik Aleph, community that will strive to enrich yers to establish aribtration courts from an obscure and trivial fraternthe many and not the few. We for the settlement of disputes beity, into the greatest Jewish youth shall show the world that Jewish tween Jews have been checked by organization in the world, the final idealism and Jewish vision, when tie -Nazi government, which made it banquet on the program, Tuesday given full play, can bring forth a clear that all legal disputes must be night, will be known as the "Philip By Ait Grossman civilization as noble and as fructi- handlel by the regular government Klutznick Testimonial Dinner." fying as any which history, has courts. The purpose of the proposed arbitration courts was two-fold, first, "PhU" as he is known to his wide known." to avoid, under the present circumOnly two days and then the thrill circle of friends, served as the second stances, the bringing of Jewish disof witnessing what -will undoubtedly Grand Aleph Godol of the Order darJews Moving Businesses putes to the attention of the general be the most irresistible of all A. Z. A. ing the year's 1925-26 and. all ExecuAre Traitors public; and secondly, to provide some international conventions. tive Secretary of the Supreme AdBerlin.—-Jews moving their busi-; means of livelihood for Jewish lawIt is .ever a source of great en- visory Council from August, 1926, up nesses abroad are gnilty of Mgh trea- yers, since all local courts have now to May of. this year. His recent apj o y m e n t to son because "they are increasing un- informed the Jewish lawyers who repointment as Assistant City Attorney watch my felemployment in Germany and are main in practice that any attempt of Omaha is a testimony of his telllow members stimulating foreign competition, it on their part to appear and handle ing abilities. . as they, go was declared at the German Indus- cases in court will be useless. It will be a t this banquet that the a b o u t their trial and Commercial Conference. following awards wiU be made: noteworthy acStricter control by the government 1. Sam Beber Award to "the A. Z. tivities in preof the transfer of money abroad and A. boy who most clearly.carries out paring for this the refusal to issue exit visas to spethe A. Z. A. Ideals." spectacle. cialists in order not to diminish the 2. The • Boris D. Bogen Award: to Neither sparquality of German industry, were de"the A. Z. A- boy who does the most manded by t i e conference. ing time nor toward the : revival of the Hebrew effort they Can't Criticize Augusta language." _ ; j . are to be highCzernowitz, Boumania.—The liber3. The Harry H. Xapidus Award to ly commended al newspaper, the Allgemeine Zei"the A. Z. A. -i>oy who does the most for their splendid accomplishments. tong, has been prohibited by the mileffective communal work during the However, I can not help but praise itary authorities because it carried the -wonderful spirit of the various coming year." articles against the United Minori4. The Supreme Advisory Council A. Z. A. boys "who are traveling from ties Roumanian Students Front for: Award to "the AZA. boy who does The grand officers of the International A. Z. A.: Top, left to xight—Seymour Sacks, Houston, all parts of the country to attend this the most effective religious work dur- Texas, Grand Aleph Sopher; Aaron Brenner, Memphis, Tenn., Grand Aleph Gisbor; Alfred Klein, demanding a numerus nullus for Jew- ! convention. ing the coming year." Salt Lake City, Utah, Grand Aleph Mazkir; Ben Shrager, Braddock, PSL, Grand Aleph Shotare ish students and pointed out the in-j Some will drive their own cars — The winners of these awards will Godol; Frank Epstein, Los Angeles, Calif., Grand Aleph Kohen Godol; Hyman Jaequez, Hamilton, consistencies in Ukraniair and Polish minorities standing with the followsome wilt travel by train—^others will each receive an embossed certificate. walk—•hitch-hike or -what have you, They are chosen at the annual meet- Ont, Canada, Grand Aleph Shotare Kotone. Bottom, left to right—Jce Lyons, Winnipeg, Man.,ers of Professor Cuza. helps hvSLA strong bones but they will get here any- way in ing of the Supreme Advisory Council. Canada, Junior S. A. € . ; Hy Goodbinder, Omaha, Nebraska, Grand Aleph Godol; L Adriel Fried, At the same time, other newspapSan Francisco, CalifM Junior S. A. C. Ernest Elsenbsrg, Milwaukee, Wis., Grand Aleph S'gan not ers throughout the city feature an time to attend their convention. ~ Incidentally, the wards for both the in and teeth. picture. article by Cuza, leader of the antiYon have seen this spirit displayed English and Hebrew Essay contests Semitic forces in this country, proin colleges to attend football games, will also be made a t the banquet, as testing against government interferafter pep demonstrations had raised well as the winner of the Best All dinners for our visitors. This is most ence with the process of ousting the school spirit to white fever heat, Around Chapter. Last year the Moth- important. Won't you kindly fill out Jews. but can yon recall a single instance er Chapter received a beautiful silver and send in the coupons that have of -where boys would go to the ex-trophy for being second choice for the been appearing in the Jewish Press? It is still not too late. tremes to attend a convention? all-around award. Yes, this is a beautiful spirit and Help us as both of these factors *« * * plainly shows that A. Z. A. fellows Now, if you please, just a. word will lend dscidedly hospitable touches New York, (J.T.A.)—Dr. Chaim1 of their pre-conceptions to the broad Weizman, former president of the demands of a crucial period in Jewall over are heart and soul for A. Z. A. about the dates and Sunday afternoon to our convention. Welcome to Omaha World Zionist Organization and of ish history. * • * the Jewish Agency for Palestine, "If we continue to develop PalesIn closing this series of articles, I outlined a program for the colonizaBarbecued Ribs 9 Sandwiches will say as I have said before: To tion of 250,000 victims of anti-Sem- tine along those lines which we have • Soft Drinks and Ice Creara those of us who know the A. Z. A. itism in Germany and in other lands followed from the day of Theodor Herzl, we shall have reason to be there is a genuine thrill that Omaha at a public reception for him. proud of our achievement. We shall was selected to serve as the conven"Such a program would require be bringing Jews into a country tion city. But in that pride we feel « _ ^ « « — . JtOSfSKir. CBODIKSKT £ the whole-hearted cooperation of the where the dignity of human labor IAJLE KBOLOFF, Attorney Y.VNCK and HARKV B. COHEJf, Attorneys there is also the sense of obligation. Mandatory Power, which will in turn will be paramount. We shall be 916 First National Bank Bids. ! Omaha must prove worthy of that 7SJ Omaha National Bank. Bids. need the encouragement of the building a country where the worth j \y Free Delivery Service tribute which has been paid her. KOTICE OF CHATTEL MORTGAGE KOTICE IS HEKEBY GIVEN: Jackson 800f 40th and Dodge St. League of Nations and the United of the individual wOl be measured Omaha must be a generous hos•.• ; . • S A L K That the undersigned hure formed a corNotice is iereby given that on the 3lBt poration pursuant to the laws of Nebraska. tess and there must be a spirit of States," he declared. by his contribution to the creation of day of July. 1933, at 12 o'clock P . EL. at The name of the corporation is COMMON"A Tnrnimuro of $25,000,000 would the USED JfOKNIXUttE MAKKET, 2514 WEALTH THEATKES CORPORATION, welcome everywhere! lieaTenworth Street. OmutUL. .Nebraska. Ahe with Its principal place of bosiness in Omabe required, to be raised with the nndersiKneil will sell a t public auction to ha, Nebraska. The corporation shall have assistance of the Jews in the interihe hiEliESt bidder lor cash, the lolhrwlBK power and authority to o\ra, lease, operate or otherwise deal in theatres for the ex- Master of Ceremonies ested countries. irthrtes: hibition of moving pictures and/or the preOne two-piece rose plush, overstuffed sentation of shows or perform;} nee £ of any "It must also be stressed that such suite; 1 1UX12 Wilton r u g ; 5 small other character and to deal in generally throw rags; 1 Fayette S Cable Upright a large-scale program demands unand contract for jrenerally moving picture l l a n o No.KEaaa. mahogany f i n i s h ; ! films vcltb reference to the production, ainprecedented unity among the Jewish piano bench; 1 reading lamp; 1 Victor tribution or exhibition of the said mo vine console model radio; 1 four-piece reed people. Its objects might easily be picture films. The corporaton shall have saite; X fire-piece walnut breakfast: set; wrecked by the opinionated selfish1 7x0 CouKoleum r u g ; 1 footstool; 1 the power to own. lease or otherwise ac. two-piece walnut set complete, bed. quire, and to deal in generally, such real ness of that die-hard group which nnd personal property as it may require. dresser, spring and mattress; 2. runner refuses to recognize the existence of The corporation shall have the power to TORS: 1 Westinehouse electric fan No. 2099109; 1 Koyal racnum cleaner No. • borrow money and to issue evidences of inPalestine. As never before there is SVM43; 1 oak finish flat top desk; 1 debtedness therefor. The total authorised expected of all Jews a subordination capital stock is $10,000.00. alt common, par oak swivel chair,

Grand Of ficers of A, Z. A.

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Weizmaan Outlines Plan for Colonization of 250,000 Jews

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LEGAL NOTICES j

value $100.00, being fully paid -when issued covered by a chattel mortgage In faTOr of aird non-assessable. The corporation; shall the United Loan Company. Inc_ and signed commence business when the Articles are by Gleu E. and Lucille Jordan, said morland .. been filed in the office of the Const; County .^Nebraska, stock shall - have OTefl Clerk of l>»URlas County. Kebraska, on the capital for. niul shaif eonttnue 8th day of July. 3S32L Said sale will be for The highest jtroount of the purpose of foreclosing -said KOrtgasp, ~not exceed, two-thirds of its capital stock.i lor all nccrninff costs, and for the purpose The affairs of the corporation shall be adof ysatlrfring the amount now due thereon, ministered by a Board of IMrectors. conto-wit: $277.90: that no suit or other pro-. fdstinc of not less than two nor more than ceeuinKB nt law have been inittitttterJ t». re- five in number. T h e stockholders shall elect cover said debt or' any part thereof. ' Directors at the annual mwtins to be held : UNITED LOAN COMPANY. IXC, qn the second Monday in May of each year. .-. Mortgagee. Thereafter, the Directors shall elect the ofBy TALE KEOLOFF. • .- -> - ficers, viz.. President. Vice-President. Sec"Its Attorney. retary and Treasurer. With the consent in writinc or pursuant to a vote of the majority of the outstanding stock, the Directors shall have authority to sell, lease, exSHOTH1X1, SIONSKY, GBODIKSET * change, assign, transfer and convey or othVASCE and UAKEY B. COHEN, Attorneys erwise dispose of the whole of the property - • ' .737 Omaha Satloaal Bank Bid of the corporation upon such terms and conditions and for such consideration as to KOTICE IS HEREBY GIVES; ^ them may seem expedient and for the best : That the trcdersijrned have formed a cor- interests of the corporation. The Articles poration pursuant to the laws of Nelrraska. may be amended tipon the vote of 60 perThe name of the corporation It GEXEKA1/ cent of the outstanding stork at any regTHEATRES CORI'OICATION, with its ular or. special meeting.. The corporation principal place of business in Omaha, Ne- shall have a seal. braska. The corporation shall have power Dated April 25th. I9SX. and authority to own, lease, operate or HARHT TJ. rOTTES etberwise deal iu theatres for the- exhibiA. 6 K E E S B E B G tion of morine pictures and/or the presen- • • - • - . • tation Of shows cr performances of any '7-7-33-4t. other character and to deal in cenerally and contract for Kenerally mo vine picture FKADENBTTRG. STAXJffASTKB £ films with reference to'the production, flis-r -••••••• B E B E R v A t t o r n e y * triliution or exhibition of the said movinff 65ft Omaha, Kati Bask Bids. picture films. The corporation shall have the power to own, lease, or otherwise at--" NOTICE op nissox-rmosr «inire. and to deal in Renernlly. such real Kotice is hereby jrlven that Michael J . and personal property as it may require. The corporation shall have the power to Kenny and Thomas E. Shafer. doinR busiborrow money and to issue evidences of in- ness as a corpartnershin tinder the firm debtedness therefor. The total authorized name of Kenny and Shafer. have dissolved capital stock is $10,000.00. all common, pn'r their partnership, and that Michael J . talnc $100.00. beiiifr fully paid when is- Ke.nnv will continne in the business at n r d nnd non-assepsal>le. The corporation 3222 Xorth 24th Street. Omaha, Nebraska; Shall commence business when the Articles notice is further given that Michael J . are filed with the County Clerfc of Pouelas Kenny has ausnmed and ajrreed to pay all County, Nebraska, nnd when $1,000.00 of its ontstandintt indebtedness of the said partcapitnF stock shall hare been subscrihert nership of Kenny anff Snafer. Dated a t Omaha, Kcbraska, this 5th day for. nnd shall continne until May 1st. 1083. The highmt amount of indebtedness shall not exceed two-thirds of its capital stock. jUKraij T6e affairs of the corporation elm!! be odTHOS. B . SHAPKR. minisfered hy n Board of Birectors. conBistinc of not less thnn two nor more than FK\DTS3fBCFKG. STAiaiASTER 4 BEBEK five In number. The Ktookholrlors -shnll O. T. DOERB V. M. KtUTZNICK «loct Dirpctors nt the Annual meotinff to be Attorneys ••*,''• held on the second Monday in Mav-of each 630 Onuhs Jf»f.»nal Bank Bonding year. Thereafter, the Directors phall fleet the officers, viz.. President. Vice-President. NOTICE OF CHATTEL MORTGAGE Secretary nnd Treasurer. With the consent iji wrifinp or pursuant to a vote of the Notiee is hereby given thflt on the 22n.J majority of the outstanding stock, the Directors shall have anthority to sell, lease, day of Jnly. 1033; at 10 o'clock A. M., at exrhnnee. nssicn, transfer and convey or the Meeks Garage. 2362 Leavenwortt otherwise dispose of the whole of the prop- Street. Omaha. Nebraska, the undersigned erty of the corporation npon nn^h terms win«nftr«& and conditions jiud for Bn^h cons'iT^rat'ou r as to them may seem expedient anil for the Model 20-*7. Motor No. 243G.>30. Serial No. best interests of the corporation. The Arti- 231O4S5, covered by a chattel mortgace w cles mav bo nmended imon the vote of 00 favor of the United Financial Service, a per rent of th» outstfindinfr stock at any corporation, sitrned by Harry K. HoweU rwrnlar or sperial meeting. The corporation ana Margaret H o w l l ; that sni<] mortgajm is dated December 23. 1030 and is recorded Bhnll hnve n sonl.

.Dated June 22nd. IBM.

7-7-3.1-4t.

RATUT -R H. MAHQUARDT

SHOTWEEL, HONSKT. GRODIKSKX & VANCE 1S7 Omaha. National Bank Bldcr. NOTICE BY PUBLICATION ON FETT- H O f f T O R 8FTTXEMENT OF F I N A t AUMINISTRATION ACCOUNT—

in the office of the County Clexk t)f DouKlas County. Nebraska. Said sale will be for the purpose of foreclosing saia mortgage for the costs of the sale and all accruing costs, and for the Tiurpose of satirfvine the amount doe thereon, namely. 5380-18 plus interest: that no suit or other proceedings nt law have been instituted to recover said debt or any 6-30-33-3t.

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In the County Court of Douglas County, Nebraska. C. EUGENE N. BLAZER ana I n . the Matter of the Estate of Samuel XBV1N, Attorney* Babior, Deceased: SOI Electric B l l d i AH persons interested in said matter are hereby notified that on the 28th day of NOTICE OP SALE June, 1933. llnnna ISnbior filed a petition Notice 5s hereby given that on the 14th in said County Court, prnyins that her final administration account filed herein day of July, 1933. at 10 A. M. of said day. be settled and allowed, and that she be the undersigned.will «ell at public auction discharged from her trust as executrix to the highest biarter for cash at the and that a hearing will be h.-.i on said Creighton Garage. 1C2S Davenport Street, petition before sni<l Conrt on the 22nd day Omaha. Nebraska, the following: One (1> Buick Conpe, bearing -motor of Jnly, 1033. and that if you fail to appear before said Court on the said 22nd day of Ko. 2323702. model 1020, the property of IiOnis A. Dermody. and such sale July, 1933, at 9 o'clock A. 1L, nnd contest will be for the purpose of foreclosing a said petition, the Court may grant the chattel mortgage In the sum of $108.21 prayer -of said petition, enter a decree of and for costs of these proceedings. heirship. and make such other and further No suit at law or other proceedings har orders, allowances and decrees, as to this Court may seem proper, to the ena that ing been Instituted to recover said debt or all matters pertaining to said estate may y be finally settled and determined. CAE.Ii EL BRPECHERT BKTCE CBAWFORD, and CARL TTF.S'1'KR.6-30-33-3t County Judge. 0-23-33-3*

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CITY NEWS

ANN PILL Correspondent Phone 8-8453

SIOUX CITY, IOWA, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1933

LOCAL A Z. A. Hebrew Gravestones Dating to Hokka Chynik TO PARTICIPATE IN If ye olde column seems a bit hazy TwelfthCenturyAre Excavated NATIONAL CONVENTION today, blame it on the "ghost writer." Vienna, (J.T.A.).—The stones of ish history in Austria with which The Chynik Hokker just dashed in,

said "You'll have to write the column today. I've got important business to attend to." We have a sneaking suspicion that "the important business" was helping the kids in the neighborhood shoot off their fireworks, but we accepted the charge anyway. What does one write in a column? Why does one write a column ? Mostly why? Perhaps a column on "How to Keep Cool" would be appropriate this week. Rube M. wanted to keep cool by playing another 36 holes of golf, but got all burned up instead -when he couldn't persuade anyone else - that golf was cooling. There does seem to be a cult in town that thinks three rounds of golf a day keeps the doctor away or something. And speaking of golf, Frances J. told us that her golf score was 59 or something like that. We can't figure out why she should have taken offense when we asked her if she shot that 59 on the sixth or ninth hole. We noticed Loyal K. carrying a golf bag, too. Was he really going to play, or just caddy for F.? ; Others keep cool with soothing, strenuous games of tennis. Marcella K. swiped her brother's racquet and hit the ball three times during the New York, (J.TA.)—That Johann set. Why ? Zena S. was serving. Sophie Wolfgang von Goethe, the greatest E. also tried to cool off with tennis, poet Germany ever produced, was a* but good old Mr. Sol burned her up one time interested in the Yiddish instead. It took seventeen tubes of language is not commonly known. Unguentine to really cool her off. This is of peculiar interest in the And now for a choice funny story. light of the fact that Goethe is We promised not to give away the claimed by the anti-Semites as one of name of the hero of our story. He .their own. strolled up to the porch, immaculate The fact is that Goethe in his in white linens, cool as a cucumber, youth studied Yiddish with a con- the personification of dignity. We very verted Jew. In his novel in letters— graciously greeted said hero and ina kind of linguistic exercise in which vited him to be seated, indicating the •the characters carried on a corre- porch railing as a very comfortable spondence in different languages— place to sit. And he sat down! But he he devoted a section to Yiddish. got up much more quickly! We really Gosthe mentions this novel in his and truly didn't know that the kid "Dichtung und Warheit." A poem brother had just sprinkled the lawn in Yiddish, written by the seventeen- and incidentally the porch railing. And year-old genius.in celebration of the did we want'to laugh! But did we wedding of his uncle, is preserved in control ourselves admirably! Oh, docthe Frankfurt City Library. ' J tor! Goethe's . outlook on Yiddish may The Fourth of July means picnics also be seen ip his many comments to some . . . firecrackers to others en that language which are inter- . . . and swimming to still others . . » • spersed in his" works. The references but pity the poor correspondent who :1 to Yiddish include such expressions spends the day looking for news. as "The Judensprache has something News, news, who knows news.. . .. pathetic in it" and "It is the accant While looking for said elusive news* of* an unfeminine language." In a saw Sam X and Rebecca S. walking version of' the story of Joseph and hand in hand ; Sally H. with her ; his brethren, which is commonly • as- contagious smile . . . Morris K. block1 cribe'd to' Goethe," there is evident a ing traffic on the highway...... Lou i marked" familiarity with the Jewish S. sitting on the porch with a.look on : Purim Play on. .'.the sanie 'subject. his face that plainly said "I dare you Among tie ' Kiiny unfinished frag- to move me" His brother Joe ments of the' exuberant young poet, leaving the S. home Lin the S. "limouis also an" epic on "Der Ewige' Jude." sine" . . . Jack G. sprinkling his lawn Because of Goethe's interest in and Max B. supervising the job . . . ; Yiddish and his littln-known Yiddish The Rosenblum family sitting on the writings, he has bsen included in the sidewalk so they wouldn't wear out Lexicon of Yiddish Literature, edited he grass Yes, we saw all this by Zulman Eeizen. while out looking for news. Or do you prefer romance? Well, let's see . . • Sid S. has already spent Belgians Raise Protest BRUSSELS — A protest resolution three quarters of his life waiting for against the persecution of Jews in bena Q. to get out of work. You can Germany and the withdrawal of their 'ind him between Third and Pourth means of livelihood was introduced by on Pierce every night, at 5:30. Ernie wants to build a bungalow. For the Catholic leader Segers in the Senate Foreign committee. The resolution whom? His mother, he says. asserted that this matter would soon Now pity the poor clumnist! Write be brought up before the League of your news on the inside of an orange Nations and the Belgian government peel, mail it special delivery and wait will demand the adoption of measures until you see it in print. One kindto bring to an end this tragic sit- hearted soul promised to give us plenuation. ty of "dirt" for the column, and sent i _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ us two mud pies, wrapped in cello.. • -:- Patronize our advertisers -:- phane. Members of-the Sioux City chapter of the A. Z. A. will spend this week end in Omaha, attending the National AL Z. A. convention to be held in that city. Marvin Klass, former president of the chapter, has been.chosen delegate from Sioux City with Max Maron, alternate. • • . [Delegates to therdistrict convention •which will be held today in Omaha are Stanley Herzoff, Max Maron, and Siditey Bergen. f Other members of the chapter who will attend the convention are Martin Kosberg, Isadofe Mirowitz, Morris Borshevsky, Sam Sadoff, ,Sam Weiner, Norman Satin and. Jake Reznick. : At the meeting Monday evening, during which the new officers presided, plans were begun for an outing in • July. The committee in charge of the ' outing includes Milton Grueskin, Wilbur Shindler, and Ernest Epstein.

GOETHE, GERMANY'S GREATEST POET, WAS A YIDDISH SCHOLAR

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STARTING SATURDAY FAY WRAY Ralph Bellamy

the famous old Frankfurter Friedhof may now have to surrender their standing as the oldest to be found in Central Europe, and histories which have dated the Jewish community in Vienna as beginning at the. end of the twelfth century may have to correct to a century earlier. During the laying of a canal, two:. broken tombstones bearing the remains of Hebrew inscriptions- were recently found. . • Dr. Wachstein, the well-known antiquita.rian, has made a study of the inscriptions; he declared that he. believes them to date from the year 1120, and that they are therefore more than 800 years old. This startling conclusion "denotes that there are at least a hundred years of Jew- i

CITRUS IS POSSIBLE NEWIETHODS BASIS FOR JEWISH, FOR COLONIZING ARAB CO-OPERATION

The "Near East and India," a publication considered as close to the Colonial Office, which has just reached this country, carries a full page editorial entitled, "Development in Palestine," where it cites the development of the citrus and other industries, dua to Jewish initiative, as a growing basis for co-operation between Jew and Arab. The publication sees further the removal of an obstacle to Arab and Jewish co-operation when material progress in Palestine is assured permanence. The "Near East and India" states that where co-operation is hampered or prevented, the responsibility rests on the actions of the politically-minded of the two sections of the Palestine population. On the Arab side, the paper asserts, there can be no question but that those who are most vocal in their hostility to the Jews are the spokesmen of those who are the worst enemies of the fellaheen. The paper comments also upon the present meeting in London of the Economic Board for Palestine; the second annual meeting of the stockholders of Palestine Potash, Limited, the company which operates the Dead Sea concession; the interview between Sir Philip CunliiTe-Lister, secretary of state for the colonies, and Nahum Sokolow, president of the World Zionist organization; and : 'growing movement among the American Jews, as well as among the Jews of Europe, for investment and middle-class settlement in Palestine. ' "Near East and India" also verifies that there is practically no unemployment among the Jews of Palestine. : •: '•'""'.•' "Not the least satisfactory feature of the citrus industry is the opportunities it provides for co-operation between the Arabs and Jews," says the-editorial, in part, "and there can be no question of the advantages that the Arab orange growers have derived from the example set by the Jews in all that concerns the improvements . introduced into the industry-improved methods of cultivation, of packing and of marketing. The dependence of the Arabs in this respect on Jewish initiative would seem to be taken so, much for granted by them that they are usually content to see the whole duty of .investigation and research shouldered Jerusalem, (J.T.A.)—There are a by the Jews in'the hope, no doubt, total of 361 Jews on the Palestine that the bulk of the expense, if not police force, according to a recent all of it, will be borne by the latter. statistical survey. Against that fig- In other directions other speakers ure, there are 1,239 Arabs and 306 (at the meetings of the Economic native Christians. : Board) were able to give the same The survey reveals a decided de- account of the steady expansion, in crease in the. crime which these of- fruits, in vegetables, in dairy prodficers have to cope with. The num- uce and in various industries. In a ber of non-indictable offenses fell year's time, moreover, it may be supby more than 10,000 cases, while posed the output of Palestine Potash, there were 66 fewer serious crimes Limited, already several years ahead compared with the preceding year. of its contract schedule, will be making itself felt in the state exchequer."

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the world is totally unacquainted. Dr. Wachstein bases his conclusion upon a study of several Hebrew letters, •used as numerals to indicate the date, which remain clearly to be seen and which presuppose the existence of other letters. The oldest known Jewish cemetery in Vienna is the one on the Albreclitsplatz, (where now stands a monument to Goethe.) According to the dates on these stones and the known expulsion of the Jews from Vienna in 1420, it was unused after this , the stones from the tombs were stolen and made use of in the building of walls—no worse a fate than befell many of the ancient Greek and Roman statues which, irrespective of their artistic quality, often ended up by damning a sewer.

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Moscow, (J.T.A)—The question of Jewish colonization in Bira Eidj3n continues to occupy considerable attention in Soviet Russia, in the press, at meetings and special conferences of interested parties and organizations. Suggestions are being discussed to call together an All-Russian Conference of the Comset and Ozet workers with a view to considering new methods of colonization in Bira Bidjan, particularly in view of the report submitted by a special investigating commission sent by the government to Bira Bidjan. • The Commission consisted of five Jews and five non-Jews, of whom seven "were workers, two clerks, and one an- artisan. Five were Communists and five were non-party members. The ten members of the Commission . were chosen from various towns in Russia and represented a wide range of interests. The official Teport points out the growth of the town of Bira Bidjan (previously Tichorkoye), where a two-story house has -been erected to serve as a post office. There have also been built & district hospital, premises for the accommodation of the Executive Committee, and a large electrical station'is now nearing completion. Houses and "temporary shelters have been put up for all the immigrants, and workshops for the manufacture of standard houses are in full operation, the report states. At the same time the report points out a number of mistakes and failures in the work committed by various organizations with detrimental results for the immigrants. Among the immigrants from Ukraine and White Russia, the report adds, are a large number cf invalids and people incapable of physical work. Hygienic conditions at the immigrant distribution center continue to be unsatisfactory. No chairs, tables, or washing basins are available in the immigrant shelters. The married and unmarried people are compelled to sleep in the same rooms, which are unheated, without doors, and windows broken. The shop attached to the immigrant center sells powder, cream and neckties, but no, clothes, tobacco, pencils or paper. Frequently " the immigrants' luggage goes astray and is never found. A number of important districts are without any medical advice. The supply of food and building materials continues to be most unsatisfactory.

visit Mrs. Baron's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Weisberg.

Society News In the presence of the immediate members of the family, Miss Mary Kaplan became the bride of Isadore Kantrovich last Sunday afternoon. The ceremony was held in the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Kaplan. Rabbi M. Braver performed the wedding ceremony. Following a brief stay at Lake Okoboji, Mr. and Mrs. Kantrovich will make their home in Sioux City. Mrs. Julius Altaian and daughter, Marcella, have returned to their home in Omaha after spending several weeks as guests in the M. JA;. Levich home. During their "stay" here they were feted at a number of social events.-'.

..' .

v

.

-.".-. • ;

' :•

Tuesday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Marsh entertained at a bridge party in their home, honoring Mrs. Altman. A buffet supper concluded the evening,' ,"• . : • Saturdayvevening, Mr. and Mrs. J. Montrose were their hosts at an evening^ of cards." Other guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Levich included Miss Ruth Falk, who has Teturned to her home in Omaha after a three-week visit, and Jerome Rosen "of Sioux Falls, who returned home last Tuesday." Miss Freda Albert- departed for Los Angeles, California, last Tuesday, where she plans to visit with friends for several weeks. Mrs. J. Perlin of Milwaukee, a former resident of Sioux City, is a guert this week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. N. Maisel, 815 22nd Street. Miss Gertrude Wine cf Omaha spent last week-end and the Fourth of July in Sioux City with Miss Anne Woskoff. Miss Roma Wigodsky has returned home after spending the past two weeks in Omaha.

Miss Bernice Galinsky is in Chicago this week, "visiting with friends and Plans for the annual picnic of the attending the Worlds Fair. Senior Hadassah chapter have been begun, and according to those in Mr. Alva Abrams has returned charge, no efforts will be spared to home after spending a week with make the affair an outstanding one friends and visiting the Worlds Fair of the summer. in Chicago. The picnic will be held in Riverview Park, Sunday afternoon and evening, Miss Ruth White departed Saturday July 23. will be no admission by motor for Chicago and New York, charge toThere the picnic grounds. where she will visit with friends. Miss Mrs. D. L. Rodin, in charge of the White expects to be gone several picnic, announced that " the chapter months. . ' expects to see every Jewish family Miss Roslyn Silver and Miss Anne represented at the Hadassah picnic. Silver of Racine, Wis., are visiting We want to make this affair a general get-together for Sioux City Jewry." with friends in Sioux City. V Mr. and Mrs. Jack London-and son have departed for their "hdiae in Brookings, Si D., after visiting with relatives here.

Mrs. J. Victor is visiting with relatives and friends in Des Moines, this week. Miss Dorothy Merlin has departed for Chicago, where she will visit with friends and attend the World's Fair. Among the Boy Scouts who spent last week in Chicago at the World's Fair were Robert Cohen and Lewis Weinberg. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Baron and daughter Beverly, departed this week for Lake Minnetonka, where they will

Dr. Louis Dimsdale Completes Interaeship

Dr. Louis Dimsdale has completed Mr. and Mrs. Chick ChaykJn of his intemeship at St. Joseph Hospital Omaha spent" the Fourth of July with in Omaha, where he was house physician and surgeon. Before beginning relatives in Sioux City. his practice in Sioux City, Dr. Dimsdale wiil spend two weeks at the CitiMr. Carl Saltzman of Minneapolis zen's Training Camp in Fort visited - with friends in Sioux City, Reilly,Military Kansas, as medical director of while enroute to Omaha. the camp. At St. Joseph Hospital, he was awarded the Dr. Adolph Sachs Miss Sadie Schaefer is visiting with Interne Award. relatives in Omaha this week. Dr. Dimsdale is a graduate of the University of Iowa School of Medicine, where he was affiliated with the Phi Epsflon Pi fraternity.

LEBANON MERCHANTS WANT GERMAN JEWS

Jerusalem, (J.T.A.)—A delegation of notable Lebanese merchants waited upon the head of the local Jewish community, Sadlim Harrari, with the request that he influence the Jewish Agency to divert part of the Jewish emigration from Germany to Lebanon, according to the report of the Beirut correspondent of the "Dour Hayom." "We are in need of the energy and enterprise of these industrious elejnents in order to restore prosperity lo oar country," they pleaded, according to the report.

Miss Ida Linton is spending this week in Chicago where she is visiting with friends and attending the Cen- ! Havana.—Jews in the Central American: republic of Costa Rica, numtury of Progress fair. bering about three hundred souls lurve been made the targets of strong Mrs. If. A. Levich and son, Dan, are anti-Semitic propaganda inspired by in Rochester, Minn., where the former the German colony there, according is recuperating from an operation. to reports from Nathan Ginter, wellknown Havana "Jewish actor, now Miss Ruth Marx is in Chicago this touring in Central America. week, visiting with friends and attending the World's Fair. Miss Anna Marsh and Joe Marsh motored to Omaha this week to spend the Fourth of July with friends there.

No Admission Charge . to Hadassah Picnic

Dr. Lande to Sail for Europe Sunday Dr, J. M. Lande will sail for Europe Sunday, for a stay of several months. While abroad, Dr. Lande will spend the greater part of his time in Vienna, continuing his studies. He also plans to spend some time in Palestine, France, and Poland where he will visit with his sister. Vilna. — The Yiddish secondary school and the Hebrew Tarbuth gymnasium have been placed on an equal footing with • governmental high schools here and will have the right to issue university admission certificates to their students, the Ministry of Education has announced. The first institution is now the only high school in Poland where subjects are taught with Yiddish as the language of instruction, two others in Vilna having been closed only recently.

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