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-4 Complete Resume of the Past Year, 5693
Read the History of the Jews for 5693
jLuieraa us t>L'coQu-L/as» man matter on January a, vdix, at PoBfofflce nt. Oruohn, Nebraska, under the Act of March 8. 1879
V
New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
Mirror of
—The Tragic Year
head of the Palestine Federation of Labor, the Revisionists have tried to introduce "brown-shirt" philosophy in all the lands where they are organized. The emergence of the Revisionists as a powerful force in Zionist life has been synchronous with a change that has come about in the attitude toward Palestine. Formerly the Jewish homeland was the goal of poor men and women who were ready to pour their sweat and blood into the upbuilding of the country. Now, capnation to the wheels of concrete ac- italists and pseudo-capitalists, fearful of the prospects in their present lands tion. ' f Jewish life in America during: 5693 of residence, feel that Palestine should expressed itself through the German be made safe for capital and not an situation. The decline in standardized outpost for experimenting with new Jewish life, which started in 1929, has forms of Jewish social justice. The regone on. Synagogues continue to besults of this conflict between money closed. Rabbis are dismissed. Jewish and labor will determine the future educational institutions suffer from of the Jewish national home. depleted or non-existent funds. ViIn comparison with Germany, Pocious, racketeering arising out of kosh- land has been an ideal country during er food products has reached a point the past year. In the first place, Powhere in many communities the stand- lish statesmen have given their full ing of the entire Jewish population is to efforts to obtain justice for consequences as those •which have Jewish assimilationists tried to fright- confused with the thievery and vil- support Jews in Germany. In the second place, transpired during the past twelve en and outwit Jewish nationalists. lainy surrounding kashruth. Philan- the Polish government has made sinmonths. Germany has demonstrated that the thropy, not so many years ago a mark cere efforts to stamp out organized Eosh Hashanah, in the Jewish tra- Jew is still to prove his right to that of distinction on which Jews prided and hooligan anti-Semitic activities. dition, is the beginning of the period equality which the post-Napoleonic themselves, is virtually a memory, ex- The Rumanian government has made when man asks forgiveness for hisera proclaimed all men entitled to. (A cept for minor gifts (compared to the similar attempts. sins. Jews will be hard put to it this chronological review of the German munificence bestowed by Jews on But the growth of Fascism has been year to understand what enormous Jewish situation appears separately in Jewish and non-Jewish enterprises in sin weighs over their collective conyears gone by). Such great funds as the most distressing development of science that the Supreme Being should this issue.) the Joiiit.Distribution Committee and the year. Reaching even into Canada, have so ruthlessly withheld His mercy In America, as throughout the the ' American Palestine Campaign it has tried to reawaken all the latent world, the events in Germany have which should have been the recipient and moribund forces of Jew-hatred infrom them. " Germany is the keynote to any re- dominated thought and action of the of quick millions during the past year, to a virulent and active moment. The view of the year that has passed. So leadership and the rank and file. The have been plodding along on a routine menace of Hitlerite Fascism has penawesome are the reverberations of crisis should have been the occasion pace, as Jews have preferred to wring etrated England, always the least ferthat word that the sound of tragedy for co-ordination. It merely served to their hands in sympathy instead of tile ground for anti-Semitism, and has in other lands, insistent and loud in illumine the pitiful weakness of thedigging down in their pockets for sup- created a tension that has not existed for years. The problem of how to meet other years, has been muffled* almost American Jewish leadership, the dom- port. the challenge of Fascism—effectively, stilled. For what are economic,handi- inance of personal motives and fricThe most important developments tions. dignifiedly and unhysterically—is the caps in Poland, alleged religious prohibitions in Russia, isolated peasant The past year offered an unparalled in Jewish life, outside of Germany, major problem confronting those conattacks in • Rumania, fanatic royalist opportunity for the emergence of a occurred -in Palestine. Slight evi-. cerned with Jewish life in 5694. sorties in France-—compared to thesingle personality wfcoss breadth of dences of prosperity have been hailed vast funeral pyre that had been erect- vision and keenness of understanding as the sign for an influx of tens of ed in the Reich to set flame to themight have merged all forces. With ionsands of Jews. Palestine has been held out as the hope for a substantial Jewish body and soul ? the exception of Samuel Untermyer, number of t>"e Jews who must leave 1932 there was no American Jew who 1933 in Germany marks the end of Germany. B&if the outlook in PalesOttawa, August 15—Census reveals an epoch in Jewish life. It strikes a seemed to appreciate the enormity of tine has been improving, the condi- Canada has 155,000 Jews. the problem and who had the courage death blow to a century-old illusion. tions withvv the Zionist movement Boston, August 18—Lewis Goldberg Emancipation was a word with which and the intelligence to harness indig- have grown progressively worse. Stimulated b%'''^hrs^gadocio of Vladimir Jaboiinsky, their leader, the Revisionist Zionists have spent the past year attacking the Laborite Zionists. Called "Fascists" by no less devoted a Zionist than David Ben Gurion, the
T&esume of Twelve Months of Disaster ~ In Perspective A. Chronological Calendar of The Highlights Making Jewish History The Jewish world is sick of words. Interpretations a n d commentaries. Events daring the past year nave spoken so clearly that it is sufficient to list them in chronological order to obtain a bird's-eye view of Jewish life in 5693. This review embraces Jewish history during 5693 in its entirety with the exception of the German Jewish situation abroad and here. A separate review covering the developments of the German-Jewish tragedy appears following this article. Mr. Salmark's authoritative and systematic survey in calendar form is a new step in succinct and modern journalism.—THE EDITOR. We are in the midst of history in the ferment and, therefore, barely realize that when our children read their textbooks in Sunday school a generation hence, they will regard the date 5693 (1932-33) with the awe and sense of humiliation with which they, memorize the date 1492. Not in the memory of any living Jew have the events within the Jewish world been so tragic in their implications, so overwhelming in their
Chronological Table
Paris, September 2—French foreign office announces there is no need to fear anti-Semitic propaganda in Syria. Bucharest, September 2—Alexander Vaida Voivod, new Roumanian preTwo nativist anti-Semitic organ- mier, cables League to combat antiizations, the Silver Shirts and the Semitism, that he will treat Jewish Khaki Shirts, sprang into being in minority with all solicitude f*nd will the United States during the last endeavor to check anti-Semitic stuyear to give Jewry here a slight dent movement. taste of Fascism. Antwerp, September 6—Jewish merThus far neither group has made chants hard hit by anti-Semitic boymuch of an impression, but the cott. programs of both are similar in apSept. 7 —Numerous clausus peal to that of the Ku Klux Klan in Rips, University of Latvia medical school of unlamented memory, although the Silver Shirts do not agitate results in matriculation of only one Jewish student. against Catholics. Vienna, September 7 — Revisionist Congress instructs Revisionists to appointed to Massachusetts Supreme abide by Revisionist Union discipline instead of that of World Zionist OrCourt. London, August 19—Board of Gov- ganization and frees Revisionists ernors of Hebrew University votes to from rulings of Zionist Actions Comestablish school of agriculture under mittee. supervision of Dr. Chaim Weizmann. Bucharest, September 8—Ministry Geneva, August 19 — Delegates of of Education modifies ruling that World Jewish Conference agree to call would have required all Jewish offiWorld Jewish Congress in 1934. cials to have secondary school educaBuenos Aires, August 22—Minister tion. of Interior orders police protection for Denver, Colo., September 8—Find Jewish quarters to suppress roving body of Boris Schatz, famous Jewish bands of anti-Semites. artist, still awaiting burial five months Berlin, August 25—Professor Ein- after death for lack of funds. stein accepts life appointment to staff Saloniki, September 8—Government of Institute of Advanced Study at abolishes separate electoral colleges Princeton, N. J. for all but Jews who are thus barred Bucharest, August 26—Deputy Mi- from voting for general candidates chael Landau, Jewish member of the but must ballot for slate of their own. Roumanian parliament, calls on gov- Jerusalem, September 9 — Rabbinternment to abolish Bessarabian re- cal Court of Appeals receives request gime responsible for torture of Jews. from Jewish leaders of Yemenite Jerusalem, August 30—High Com- Community for right of Yemenite missioner Wauchope agrees to demand Jews to practice polygamy. of Jewish Agency to re-examine govSeptember 9—Arab attacks ernment's budget for Jewish school onTunis, Jews spreading over country with system with a view to increasing it. many Jews seriously injured. Moscow, August 30—Samuel LamNew York, September 11—Zionist port, New York philanthropist, says Organization of America to defray Jews in Soviet Russia feel safer than cost of shipping Boris Schatz's body Jews in any country of Central Eur- to Palestine. ope. Harbin, September 13—Chinese banAlbany, September 1 — Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt urges Jews to dits extort money from Jews by turn to fanning as a means of stabil(Continued on Page Z *) izing their condition.
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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH^ PR ESS—Wednesday, Sepfeinber 20, 1933
Page Two-
WarsaV, November 11—Scores it nate evils in kashruth enforcement,! of damage and a promise of a police anti-Semitic students arrested in War- regulated supervision of preparation investigation of the raiders. saw, Vilna and Cracow as police pre- and sale of all other kosher foodstuffs Detroit, December 20—A permanent will go into .effect January 1 by means injunction against the enforcement of vent new riots. Moscow, November 12 — Duty on of the stringent enforcement of a sec- the 1931 state lav; for the registration matzoth to be imported to Soviet Rus- tion of the New York State penal of all aliens was signed here by a special federal -court of three judges. — sia next Passover will be reduced code. Berlin, December 19 — E d o u a r d Prague, December 27—The governfrom $6.70 to $2.75. Jerusalem, November 16 — Settle- Bernstein, no.ted_Socialist author and ments subsidy to the Jewish religion ment of salary dispute between teach- theoretician, who formally returned to in Czechoslovakia for 1933 calls for ers and Jewish Agency effected as Judaism in his declining years, died at increase of 158,000 kronen, the total budget for Jewish affairs being 1,schools reopen after long controversy. age of 83. Paris, December 19—Leon Meyer 808,000 kronen. Budapest, November 18—Minister Education closes University of De- named minister of Marine in new New York, December 30—Charities ia University as anti-Semitic riots of breczin to halt anti-Jewish attacks as French cabinet. get $190,000 from estate of Abraham :ontinue. * . Vienna, December 19-r-A'city-wide Erlanger. secretary-of state promises prompt Vienna, 'October 31—American amcampaign of terrorization of patrons against rioters. 19 33 bassador warns Austrian authorities action of Jewish shops by anti-Semites who Washington, November 21—UnderAmerican Jewish students will leave secretary of State William Castle, Jr., have been leading a drive for an anti- Vienna, January 1 — Jewish meruniversity if/ new riots take place. letter to Dr. Cyrus Adler, expresses Jewish boycott, led to 200,000 shillings chants' associations demand protecPolish, Roumanian, and Jugoslavian in that action taken by American envoys" also protest as-injuries reach hope minister in Austria has resulted in 30; definite end of anti-Semitic student London, November 2 —^ Four/ large disorders at Vienna University. /nitMuimmuuimunimimmmiiuimuiiuiim American-Jewish >f i l m ' companies Long Beach, Cal.i November 22— withdraw advertisements from Sun- Ku Klux Klan band assaults Jewish day Express • because of anti=-Semitic tailor in his home'and beats up memexpressions-of its movie critic. bers of hi? f a m i l y . " Vienna, November 3^-American and ; New York, November 24'—Tercen-
Review of Jewish Life During 5693
injure five Jews in raid on synagogue \ during Yom Kippur services. ihreats to stir up White Russian pogBucharest, October 3—Anti-Semitic Tomists against them. deputies suspended for ten days f rorn Montreal, September 14—: Regret- parliament for assault on Deputy MiJully dismissing appeal for injunction chael Landau. •. \ Against anti-Semitic Goglu, papers, Vilna, October 5—Court of Appeals .Justice Desaulniers, declares the law censures district court for saying that leaves him no other alternative, but all Jews are foes of Christians. . ? he delivers blistering attack against Vienna, October 5 — Slatin Pasha, ijanti-Jewish agitation. converted Austrian Jew, who became, Chicago, September 14^-Local Jew- governor of Darfu, Africa, and later ish charities get $50,000 in will of inspector general of the Soudan, dies 'Aaron Younker. at the age of 75. '{. Ottawa, September 16 — Canadian New York, October 7—Statistician "post office instructed by Premier finds world Jewish population has inBennett to bar all mail defaced by creased from 3,000,000 to nearly 16,- them to seats in gallery of lecture celebrations.anti-Semitic pasters. 000,000 in the last century. h a l l . ' :••••: • - • • • • • . --• -• • • • £ ' v : ; • London,* November 24—British ComNew York, September 16—Jacob de j Paris, October 7—Arrest of forgers Cincinnati, Ohio, November- 4—LibBaas, veteran Zionist and secretary to' quashes treason charges against Jew- eral, social justice program cajling: for mittee- for World Jewish .Congress •Dr. Herzl, honored for 30: years of ish^ aviator, Paul Louis Weiler, whose changes in economic system to-curb headed by Lord' Melchett.' New Yorfc November 28 — KashZionist activity on his. 60th birthday, case verged,: on • .becoming a second greed adopted by Central Conference ruth Association of Greater New York Quebec,-September "16—-Time ripe Dreyfuss affair.^ •>:• -~v ,-;:• of American Rabbis after heated de- representing United Rabbinate of for legislative action to give courts .Budapest, October18—Julius Gorri- bate. New York, takes over complete superjurisdiction over anti-Semitic papers, boes, former Hungarian anti-Semitic Warsaw, November 4—Conference vision of all butchers selling kosher Premier • Tascherau of Quebec de- leader, becomes premier. of anti-Semitic law. students demands meat as a step in centralizing kashclares. expulsion of all Jews from Polish uni- ruth supervision. Jerusalem, October 10—High ComMorocco, September 18 — Official missioner Wauchope sets precedent by versities. * •'•••••• Lemberg, November 28—Scores of Gazette estimates Jewish population recommending Paris, November 4-r-SolomonRein- Jews injured in riots as anti-Semites government subvention Is 150,000. . for Jewish health agencies. ach, world famous philologist, archae- seek to avenge death of Polish student Paris, September 19—Jewish Socialologist and Jewish leader, dies at age killed when drunken anti-Semitic rowBudapest, October 12 — Premier of 74. ist Party established for first, time in [•'.... . . dies.; attacked Jewish pedestrians. Gomboes announces he has revised his history of French Jewry. London, November 5r—The Hibbert Lemberg, November 29 — Lemberg Jerusalem, September 20 — Jewish views on anti-Semitism and complete- Journal, famous English quarterly re- University closed as anti-Semitic riotand Arab "merchants and manufactur- ly; disavows anti-Semitic program he view, publishes retraction of a foot- ing" sweeps through the city. More •..• : ers- unite to oppose proposed income formerly advocated. note- to an article*ih ~ite - July - issue Vienna, October 17 — Anti-Semitic which declares that .modern: scholaiv than 150 Jews given medical attention Bucharest, September 22 —Jewish riots on campus of University of Vi- ship supported the charge of Jewish• after brutal attacks by hooligans seekparliamentarians protest against iden- enna cause injuries to 15 Jewish stu- ritual murder against the Jews. :; ! ing to avenge death of Jan Grotkowsld, killed in drunken brawl. tification of Zionist . Youth groups dents. Dublin, November 8—Irish parlia- Warsaw, November 30—Jews terjrith Communism. ' Jerusalem, October 17—Clash be- ment instructs its envoy to France to ror-stricken as Lemberg riots spread . !•• New York, September 24—Mr. Jac- tween Histadruth' strikers and Revi- investigate attack by anti-Semitic pa- to Cracow, Vilna Warsaw. Cen«b H. Schiff presents Boy Scouts-of- sionist workers alleged to have been per/ LeTTFlgaro, on Robert • Briscoe, sorship invoked asand mobs riad Jewish "America with §250,000 gift in memory scabbing leads to seven injuries. only Jewish member of Irish Dail. . stores arid assault Jews ia streets and of her son, Mortimer Schiff, former Jerusalem, October 17—Red M,ogen Kovno, November 8 —Officials of president of the organization.: David, -Jewish counterpart of Red University of Kovno announce they cars. ItanbuL December 1—Persia is free - Jerusalem, September 25—Sassoon Cross, founded in Palestine. > will liot tolerate any numerus clausus. of anti-Semitism, according to a stateDavid Chair of Near East Art and Jerusalem, October 18—Nine more? New York, November 8—rHerberjt ment made here by Mohammed Ali -Archaeology established at Hebrew people hurt as Revisionists and His- H: Lehman elected first Jewish gover- Figrughi Khan, Persian foreign min.University. tadruth workers, renew clash. nor^of New York. : ;; ister. Saloniki, September 26—Thre& Jews Vienna, October 19*—Postcards ilChicago, November 8—-Henry Hoir- ^Warsaw, December 1—Jew baiting «Iected to Greek parliament through lustrating alleged. ritual murder by neryswept into office as Illinois* first continued in Lemburg arid Cracow f i d by' Austrian Jews ordered confiscated .separate Jewish electoral college. Jewish governor. . j with many Jews suffering injuries at " ;- Madrid, September 28 — Spanish genarinerie. the hands of hooligans. < • Jerusalem, November 9 — Inability government grants 10,000 pesetas to Vienna, October 26—University "of Lemberg, December 2 — The mass ,restore ancient Cordova synagogue as Vienna closed as anti-Semitic student to mleji demands of teachers for pay- attacks on Jews showa^ signs of haltment of back salaries prompts Jewish monument of medieval Spain. '': rits recur and 19; Jewish students ,in-= ing but a serious anti*Sewish boycott ' W a r s a w , September 28 — "Obwie- jured^ "•'"^wiY---.:' .,-••". ^.t" r "''*'' \ National Council to refuse to take has been started here and in Warsaw over Jewish educational system from J>ol," National Democratic anti-Sem- Vienna, Octdber"27—Intervention of New York, December 4—Joint rep_itic organization in Pomerania, order- American legation in behalf of four Jewish Agency. resentations to the Polish ambassador Jerusalem, November 10—Teachers American-Jewish students hurt in ed dissolved by district governor. by the American Jewish, Congress •£• Moscow, September 30—Settlement riots leads to threat of withdrawing of Jewish Agency schools, "capture?' American Jewish Committee and Fed- I Agency Executive's Office and: refuse -^nf 300,000 new Jewish immigrants by university autonomy Sunless disturberation of -Polish Jews ^declare that i ,3.937 envisioned in second five-year ances cease; J .; ! '.'.)' to leave until they get four'monthly Polish government could end antiback pay. ! • ; • • plan for Biro Bidjan. Baltimore, October 27 — Baltimore Semitic rioting if it manifested a firm Warsaw, November 10—Anti-Sem*':'<•*. London, September 30—New Brit- board of education eliminates "Mer•ish Fascist party will not attack Jews chant of Venice" from school -curricu itic students celebrating first anni- attitude. Warsaw, December 5—Jew dies of versary of death of Stanislaw Wai4 'as such but only if they are Commu- lum. injuries suffered 'at hands of antinists, Sir Oswald Mosley announces. Budapest, October 28—Ernst Mezei lawski, killed in last year's student Semites as new attacks New York, October 2—V. J. Patel former Jewish member of Hungarian riots, injure 25 Jewish students in ex- break outininLemberg streets of Warsaw, Lemr\ mvoy of Ghandi, Invites Jews to come parliament, who led successful fight cesses in University of Warsaw. Toronto, November 10 — Chargea berg, Lubliiv suid Posen. Jewish comJfo India and make it their own land. for vindication of 15 Jews in famous issue strong protest against '.) Zurich, October 2 — Dr. Guiseppe Tisza-Eszlar blood ritual case 50 that Toronto insurance companies munities Universities remain closed. Motta, president of Switzerland, de- years ago, dies. have cancelled . fire insurance; policies pogroms: . Warsaw, December 6—Jewish parnounces efforts to introduce anti- Vienna, October 29—American Am- because their holders are "Jews"-or- liamentary club lays blame for antiSemitism in his country. bassador promises complete protection dered ..-investigated by-Premier Henry Semitic riots on district governor of Vienna, October 2—Austrian Nazis to American-Jewish students at Vien- of Ontario. Lemberg and accuses Lemberg police of failure to take adequate precautions. • Berlin, December 6—Professor Einstein threatens to cancel visit to America unless he gets visa within 24 hours. Delivers ultimatum after conI sul-general grills him on alleged Communist affiliations. Berlin, December 7 — Second week of attacks on Jews shows no let-up in assaults. Tear bombs thrown and Jews beaten up in many cities of Poland New York, December 7—American Jewish Committee, American Jewish Congress and Fede; ition of Polish Jews challenge Polish ambassador's statement that reports of attacks are exaggerated and that order has been restored. Demand Polish government work out effective means of. insuring prevention of disturbances in future. Warsaw, December 8 — Four Jews arrested in connection -with death of Polish student whose killing "started riots. London,'December 8—General Mau- I rice Cohen of Chinese army,, affirms Zionism and says China only country in world that has never persecuted Jews'!;. ...'.• ' -'.." " ."• "• : .•' . New York, December 11—Standard Oil Company-to place stamp tax on all jahrzeit lamps and wax candies sold for religious purposes with Yeshivoth and Talmud Torahs getting proceeds. ' • " : - . ; • • • • Los Angeles, December 11—Grand jury indicts 16 members of Ku Klux Klan for attack on-Long Beach Jew and his family. Havana, December 12—Two Jewish citizens of the United States arrested for alleged insult- to Cuban government. Czernowitz, Dr< ber 13—Minister of Interior orders dismissal of three police officials for part in torture of two Jews. Saloniki, December 13^—Action initiated against Makedonia Nea for anti-Semitic agitation in connection with promise of Premier Tsoldaris to abolish Jewish electoral college. Havana, December 16—Intervention of HI AS results: in release of two Ainerican Jews arrested for alleged slight to Cuban government. Warsaw, December 17 — Deputy Heinrich. Rosmarm charges Polish government ignores problems of Jews and permits anti-Semitic riots to take place under the eyes of the police. New York, December 18—To elimi(Continued from Page -1" )
Season's Greetings To All of You
From AH of
tion from government against Nazi raiders. Brussels, January 2 — Mark Soramerhausen only Jew elected to Belgian parliament. Geneva, January 3 — Charges of Jewish colonization in Palestine being responsible for dispossession of Arabs ridiculed by High Commissioner Wauchope who tells Mandates Commission that less than' 600 Arabs have been dispossessed because of Jewish immigration. New York, JanGary 3—Mrs. Henry Moskowitz, political adviser of former Governor Alfred E. Smith, dies suddenly. Moscow, January 4—Soviet Union (Continued on Page 31 >
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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PB ESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
Jerusalem, June 20—Abraham StavGeneva, June 19—A striking imboro negroes being defended by Sam- petuate their power" and intimated nel Leibowitz of New York. that exploded "Protocols of Zion" provement in Palestine's general sit- sky, Zionist Revisionist, held in conuation in the face of the world-wide nection with murder of Dn Chaim Jerusalem, April 13—$500,000 Min- were true. nie Unterxnyer Open Air Theater, New York, June 3—Mrs. Felix M. depression is reported in annual memgift of Samuel Untermyer to Hebrew Warburg gives $10.0,000 to Hebrew orandum cf Jewish Agency to Man- Arlosoroff. New York, June 23—Dr. Chaim University, dedicated. University. dates Commission. Weizmann arrived to attend Jewish New York, June 4—Plan to send unTokio, April 17—Japanese Fascist Jerusalem, June 19—World-famous Day celebration at Chicago Century charge "American-Jewish financiers" employed Jews and overflow members chazan, Cantor Josef Rosenblatt, die? are to blame for economic stress in of professions to agricultural colonies suddenly while on visit to Palestine. (Continued on Page 4T ; advanced at first conference of CenMikado's empire. Commission for Jewish ColoniMontreal, April 18—Because antiSemitic papers have suspended publi,. , _ _ , Mr T cation, Premier Tascherau withdraws, ^ a ^ m g t o n , June 5-Telegram promeasure designed to curb their agi- *?**?*, a ^ . n s t * e p r + e s e f a t l J % . ",> fa b ly give individual Jews right of reFadden's citing "Protocols of Zion" dress through injunctions. ' in Congress read into Congressional Washington, March 6—Henry Moroo c*g s^traiS Eecord by Representative Byrns . y q 0} j genthau, Jr., named director of fedMexico City, June 5—Mexican govJerusalem, April 19—Palestine goveral farm board and generalissimo of ernment appealed to for protection Bombay, April 19—A gp group of Inco-ordinated federal agricultural refrom anti-Semitic elements by Jews i h have pledged l lief agencies. dian Jews who them- in West Coast Mexican towns. New York, March 7 — U n i o n of selves to live Spartan lives and to deLondon, June 7—A notable tribute American Hebrew Congregations' sur- vote their lives to the developments to the Jewish people by Premier Ramvey finds Jews constitute 27.7. per of Palestine organize themselves into say MacDonald featured the opening cent of total New York population Zionist brotherhood. of the Anglo-Palestine Exhibition New York, April 20—Jacob Branf- here. but their birth rate is lower than the man & Sons, noted kosher provision general population. Detroit, June 10—Status of equality firm, charged with using non-kosher for Jewish education demanded JewBerlin, March 8—Baron Eduard von meat in its products. ish charity federations and •welfare Speyer, banker and philanthropist, Copenhagen, April 23—For the first funds by convention of Jewish social dies at 72. time in the history of Denmark, a New York, March 8—John D. Rock- Danish ruler attended a synagogue workers. June 14 — All VCanadian n u uae J efeller, Jr., provides funds to finance service when King Christian X parti- T iToronto, ?™ i ' f " , ~ , ^ i - """" a " _;_™^j in .•„ the 4.V.. centennial *• .-.i celebration _«i^_^-._ Jewish Conference decided to call Caextent and type of prejudice among cipated Jews, Protestants and Catholics to be service of the Copenhagen synagogue. nadian Jewish Congress in Montreal made by. Institute of Social and ReliNew York, April 24—Dr. Felix Ad- October 21New York, June 15^-Jewish charigious Research under sponsorship of ler, founder of the Society for Ethical National Conference of Jews and Culture and famous social worker, ties receive $50,000 from will of Endolph Metz and $47,000 from will of Christians. dies at age of 82. Jerusalem, April 26—High Com- Alois Lazansky. New York, March 12—Moses DykTel Aviv, June 16 —World Jewry aar, famous sculptor, commits suicide missioner Wauchope orders immigration authorities to admit immigrants shocked by assassination of Dr. Chaim because of poverty. of the artisan and professional class Arlosoroff, head of Jewish Agency'E New York, March 13—Diamond juBOB GLAZER, Mgr. who possess $1,200, a ruling which political department and Laborite bilee of Adolph S. Ochs, publisher of reduce the amount required by 50 leader who is killed by assailants as New York Times, widely observed. per cent and makes possible increased j he walked with wife along seashoreNew York, March 13—Bequests toimmigration. '. Geneva, June 17 — $12,000,000 intalling $129,000 left to philanthropy 311 SO. 16th STREET vested by Jews in Palestine in 1932, Washington, April 27 — Laurence by Mrs. Selma Rossman. Steinhardt, Jewish communal worker Jewish Agency reports to Mandates Washington, March 13 — President of New York and nephew of Samuel Commission. Roosevelt appoints Jesse L Straus, Untermyer, named United States minpresident of R. H. Macy, and nephew ister to Sweden. of late Nathan Straus, as American Rome, April 28—Premier Mussolini ambassador to France. sends his Jewish minister of finance, Bucharest, March 14 — Persecution Guido Jung, to represent him in Washof Zionists and arrest of their lead- ington at preliminary conversations ers on charge they are Communists for World Economic Conference. New York, May 1—Morris Fatman, Montreal, March 17—Indefinite suspension of publication is announced brother-in-law of Governor Herbert by Le Miroir, one of the notorious H. Lehman, leaves $40,000 to 19 institutions. . anti-Semitic sheets here. New York, May 2—Benjamin AltLondon, March 21—Prudential Assurance Company reveals it has in- schul bequeathes $40,000 to Jewish vested nearly $3,000,000 of its funds charities. New York, May 3—Rabbinical Asin Palestine industries. Warsaw, March 23—Vladimir Jabo- sembly by demand that rabbinate take tansky executes putsch by suspending steps to deal with pernicious bootlegRevisionist executive and takes over ging in American rabbinate by unordained free lances. T H E T R A D E MARK OF QUALITY personal control of party. New York, May 8 — The Gottheil Chicago, March 24—Julius RosenMADE FAMOUS BY GOOD IMPLET-ENT5 wald estate to pay out bequests of Medal of the Zeta Beta Tan fraternity to the American who did the most for more than $22,000,000. Warsaw, March 25—All of the Na- Jewry in 1932 awarded to Rev. Dr. tional Democratic anti-Semitic organ- John Haynes Holmes of Community izations and the Polish Legion are dis- Church, first non-Christian to receive solved by order of Polish government. accolade. Newark, N. J w May 13—Dr. Meyer Jerusalem, April 1 — Tranjordan government defeated in effort to block C Ellenstein" becomes first Jewish mayor in 247-year history of Newforever sale of land to Jews. Berlin, April 2—Louis Ullstein, one ark. Istanbul, May 23—First anti-Semof prominent figures of German pubitic periodical makes appearance in lishing world, dies at 70. SIDNEY, NEBR* OMAHA, NEBR. SIOUX FALLS, S. D. New York, April 2—Jews join in Turkish republic. Saloniki, May 24 —After years of celebration of Holy Year marking HASTINGS, NEBR. SIOUX CITY, IOWA opening by Pope Pius of Holy Door agitation, the Greek government finally abolishes special Jewish electorto St. Peter's at Vatican City. Trenton, N. J., April 7—Governor al college which constituted a political Moore appoints Joseph B. Perskie of ghetto. White Plains, N. Y-, May 26—Isaac Atlantic City to Supreme Court of Marks leaves $70,000 to local Jewish New Jersey. Decatur, Ala, April 9—Anti-Sem- and non-Jewish agencies. •* Berlin, May 29—James Loeb, bankitism crops out in case of nine Scottser and patron of literature and son of founder of Kuhn, Loeb & Co., dies at 65. Washington, June 1—Congressmen demand retraction from Representative McFadden of Pennsylvania who said gold clause repeal resolution was? "a bill specifically designed and written by Jewish international moneychangers themselves in order to per-
5693
(Continued from Page 2T) names Boris Stein its envoy to Finland* Vienna, January 4 — In order to maintain order at Vienna University, officials ban party uniforms and emblems and carrying of arms and entrust keeping of peace to special Student Legion. Jerusalem, J a n u a r y 6 — Jewish Agency wages fight against speculators in Palestine land and plans protection for middle-class immigrants and investors. Berlin, January 6—Revisionists suspended as separate union within World Zionist organization by court of honor for breaking Actions committee's ruling against independent political activity by separate unions. Vienna, January 7—Jews, Liberals, Socialists and Christian Socialists are barred from Student Legion at Vienna "University in order "to maintain order." Vienna, January 11—Student Legion at Vienna University fails to get recognition from minister of education because of fear Nazis may control it. Milwaukee, January 14 — Pension fund for Conservative, Orthodox and Reform rabbis created by Union of American Hebrew Organizations. Jerusalem, January 16—Hear Jewish firm has leased 55,000 dunams of land in Transjordania from Emir Abdullah on 99-year lease. Geneva, January 1 7 — M a n d a t e s Commission opposes Britain's plan for legislative council in Palestine on the gTound that country is not ready for it. Warsaw, January 17—Budget commission of Polish parliament gets demand for expulsion of Jews from Poland on plea they "rob Poles of their bread." Moscow, January 17—Persistent anti-Semite sentenced to five years in prisonNewark, N. J., January 19—Charge that Jews killed Christ is a myth disproved by history and unworthy of intelligent attention, declares Dr. S. Parkes Cadman, head of Federal Council of Churches of Christ. Salonild, January 20—Thirty-day prison term given to publisher of .Nakedonika Nea for series of antiSemitic articles. Cincinnati, Ohio, Jannary 24—Ohio Chamber of Commerce charges that ideas of jthree Jewish members of the State Commission on Unemployment are colored by their Russian origin and impairs their loyalty to American ideals of private initiative. Jerusalem, January 25—Under pressure of Palestine government and the Arab nationalists, Emir Abdullah of Transjordania cancels land lease to Jews.. New York, January 27—Acceptance of community regulation scheme of Kashruth Association of Greater New York by Master Kosher Butchers As-
sociations leads to peace in the retail kosher butcher trade. Lisbon, Jannary 29—First Zionist society formed in Portugal among redeemed Marranos. Czernowitz, January 29—Nine Jewish students who had been tortured by police go on trial for "Communist activity." Berlin, February 2—Gutav lalienthal, inventor of arched wing surface principle of aviation which opened way to development of heavier-thanair flying machines, died at 84. Bucharest, February 3—More antiJewish riots break in Jassy and Bucharest. . Moscow, February 4—Jewish workers now number 20 per cent of total as compared with two per cent before Revolution and Jewish peasants number 12 per cent as against two per cent before 1917. Jerusalem, February 6 —'• Twentyone leading Transjordanian tribe leaders petition Palestine government and Emir Abdullah for permission to sell land to Jews. Belgrade, February 7—Dr. David Alkalay, prototype of Alladin in Dr. Herzl's "Altneuland" and president of Yugoslavian Zionist organization, dies at ege of 71. London, February 9 — Sir Philip Cunliffelister, colonial secretary, tells House of Commons colonial office is considering proposed lease of Transjordan land to Jews. Warsaw, February 13 — Warsaw municipalities eliminate from its budget subsidies to many Jewish institutions. Jerusalem, February 14—Emir Abdullah again denies plan to lease part of his Transjordan land to Jews. Chicago, February 18—Jane Addams lists late Julius Rosenwald as one of ten men who "have contributed most to progress of Chicago during the first century of the city." Quebec, February 23—Law intended to give courts power to curb antiSemitic papers presented to provincial parliament by Premier Tascherau. Syracuse, February 24—Louis Marshall Memorial building dedicated at the New York State College of Forestry and Syracuse University. Jerusalem, February 25 — High Commissioner Wauchope tells Arab delegation he cannot grant their plea for ban on Jewish immigration and sale of land to Jews. New York, February 26—Mrs. Jacob H. Schiff, widow of Jacob H. Schiff and mother-in-law of Felix Warburg, dies at 78. New York, February 26 — Simon Leibovitz bequeathes $50,000 to Jewisla charities. Moscow, February 26—Jews, two per cent of Russian population, constitute three per cent of Soviet Army. Montreal, February 28 — Deputy Peter Bereovitch of provincial legislature, says Tascherau bill will not protect Jews as a group against attacks of anti-Semitic papers, but will mere-
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Page Four-
New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PR ESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1088
part of $10,000,000 loan to Palestine for public works and settlement of of Progress as guest of honor at pre- landless Arabs, Colonial Secretary ansentation of "Romance of a People" nounces. pageant. . . . . . . . . . . - New,- York,'- July • 16—James Loeb London, June 24—Qaick action by leaves §1,000,000 to German institupolice frustrate attempted raid on of- tion and $1,300,000 to American philfice of Jewish Agency by British Fas- anthropiescists. Prague, July 16—President MasaMontreal, June 27—Although pro- ryk tells Jews there is no danger of hibited in Montreal, the Labor mayor Hitlerism engulfing Czechoslovakia. of the village of Verdun grants perJerusalem, July 17—Palestine govtnit to Canadian Fascist organization, ernment announces^that 33 per cent of an anti-Semitic body, to hold Confed- public works budgets will be used on eration Day parade in his town. projects where Jewish workers will Chicago, July 3—Vast audience of be employed. ; • Jerusalem, July 17 — Agricultural 150,000 Jews, greatest Jewish gathering in history, witnesses presentation- possibilities of Palestine are extremeof huge spectacle, "Romance of a Peo- ly* limited report of Lewis French, ple" as climax of Jewish Day celebra- British government land investigator tion at Chicago Century of Progress says. exposition. Meyer W- Weisgal responNew York, July 20—Samuel Rosensible for success, hailed as foremost man appointed to Supreme Court of Jewish organizer. New York. London, July 29—Leopold PilichowSaloniki, July 3—Successful in its long fight to eliminate the separate sld, famous Jewish painter, dies at 64. London, August 2—Sir Oswald MosJewish electoral college, Greek Jewry emerges from parliamentary election Iey, head of the British Fascists, without any representation for first promises that Fascism in England will maintain the traditional British time. Chicago, July 4—Convention of Z. policy of religious and racial toleraO. A. ends with re-election of Morris tion. Dublin, August 7—The newly orRothenberg to presidency and-adoption of resolutions calling for return ganized Irish Fascists, known as the of Dr. Weizmann to Zionist leader- "Blue Shirts," admit only Irish-born ship, §8,000,000 Keren Hayesod cam- Christians because the Blue Shirts of paign over period of four years, a co- are opposed to Jews as instigators r alition World Zionist executive, and Communism, General O Duffy, Blue Shirt commander, declares. support of World Jewish Congress. Jaffa, August 10—Abraham StavVienna, July 10—The Austrian People's party, the Heimwehr and the sky and Zvi Rosenblatt, Revisionists Christian Social party, with the sup- on trial for murder of Dr. Chaim port of the government, have Iaunch- Arlosoroff, identified by Mrs. Arlos" ed a national campaign to counteract oroff as slayers of husband. New York, August 11—Israel Rokthe anti-Semitic propaganda of the Austrian Nazis. each, venerable philanthropist and Basle, July 11—Nearly 1,000 copies kosher products manufacturer, dies at of the "Protocols of Zion" were seized 92. Montreal, August 11—Canadian poby the authorities here in the meeting place of the anti-Semitic National litical parties and leaders charged Front as the first step in government with betraying Jews for failure to appoint Jews to public offices. drive against anti-Semites. Washington, Acgust 15—American New York, July 13—Fourteen Jewish charities bequeathed $150,000, by Jewish Committee and American Jewish. Congress receive public retraction Adolph Arber. London, July 15 — Lord Melchett, from Donald Richberg, general counson of the late Lord Melchett, who sel of National Recovery Administra"was broupht up as a Christian de- tion, for reflections on Jewish people spite the fact that his father was an contained in radio address he made ardent Zionist, was formally convert- on July 31. ed to Judaism. New York, August 18—Jewish EdLondon, July 15^-Jews to get no ucation Association predicts NRA will restoreobservance of Jewish Sabbath of five-day weekProtect Relics q because ^ Berlin.—Fearing that many ajr- Prague, August 17—Laborites larg.ticles of historical value to Jews may gest party with 125 delegates to the be lost in view of :the present situa- World Zionist Congress. Paris, A u g u s t 18 — Prominent tion in Germany, the Jewish Museum in -Breslau has made arrangements French non-Jews create special comto collect as many as it possibly can. mittee to fight anti-Semitism wherThe museum will keep the articles ever it appears and to defend economsafely stowed away in one place, thus ic and political rights of Jews. preventing their being spread about New Rochelle, N. Y.,«August 20— in many institutions and eventually Ezekiel Sarasohn, pioneer YiddisTv lost. newspaper editor and founder and (Continued from Page 3\.)
owner of Jewish Daily News, first Yiddish daily in America, dies. Milan, Italy, August 20—Organ of Premier Mussolini urges establishment of completely autonomous Jewish state in Palestine with Jewish population of 8,000,000. Washington, August 21—Leo Sack, Washington newspaper correspondent," appointed United States minister to Costa Rica. New York, August 21—Israel Rokeach leaves $30,000 fund to provide loans to homebuilders in Palestine.
Germany The events transpiring in Nazi Germany has affected the Jewish people too strongly and has been too momentous in Jewish history not to be treated in a separate resume. Herewith is given the Nazi Calendar far 5694, arranged by I. Burrows, a chronological table listing the outstanding events in connection with the Hitlerite campaign against the Jews. It also takes note of the steps undertaken by world Jewry in protest against the Nazi anti-Jewish policy.
Tk Nazi Calendar Based on Irrefutable, Data and Facts, this Calendar Lists Not Only Atrocities Against the Jews in Germany But Also ActioTts Undertaken By World Jewry to Save the Unfortunate German Jews.
1833 Jan 80. Adolph Hitler appointed Chancellor of the German Reich. Or. Wilhelm Frick appointed Minister of the Interior. Herman Goering appointed Minister without portfoliio and Reich's Commissioner of the Interior for Russia. • Announcement by Paul ;. Joseph Goebbels that the Jews will be expelled from employment In government offices and from the economic life of the country.; Jan 31. Several, cases of attacks on Jews by Nazi Storm Troopers reported. 500 Nazis demonstrate outside the stock exchange shouting, "Down wit U the Jews." Calming speech of leaders of the Central Union of German. Citizens of Jewish Faith. Renewed demonstrations against Professor Ernst Cohen in Breslau. Feb. 1 President von Hindenburg entrusts the power to dissolve Parliament to Hitler. Professor Conn ousted from Breslau University. Feb 2. Dissolution of G e r m a n Reichstag. Press department of the German government issues statement that the government does not- Intend to embark on any unreasonable experiments. Cafe in Berlin frequented
Let
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by Jews raided by armed Nazis, one guest injured. Anti-Semitic riots In Prussia Landtag. Feb 5k—Jewish storekeeper attacked in Berlin by uniformed Nazis. Feb. i.—Bernhardt Rust appointed Minister of Education of Prussia. Hans Johst, Nazi Playwright, a p p o i n t e d Superintendent of State Theatres, replacing Leopold Jessnes, a Jew. Feb. iw-rOonference Committee of American Jewish Women's organizations requests League of Nations to investigate German threats to the safety of Jewish citizens. Feb 6.—Serious attacks on Jews in Hamburg, Breslau, Berlin and many similar cities. One Jewish student killed. Emergency decree limiting tho freedom of the press. Newspapers abusing religious communiities or calling for violence a g a i n s t them are threatened with suppression. Feb. 10.—Memorial meeting for Jewish .student, killed in Breslau on Feb. 6, prohibited by Goering. Feb. 13—Numerous Nazi attacks on Jews, especially in Mannheim and Krefeld. Feb. 14.—German Jewry elects committee of five to represent all German. Jews. The Hamburger Beobacnter publishes an article by Wilhelm Kube, leader of the Nazi faction of the Prussian Landtag, in which he advocates the expulsion of the Jews. Serious attacks on Jews in Eisleben, Leipzig and Coburg. Feb. 23—Booklets for sale are announced with the slogan: "Buy for 10 pfennig the book which calls for the expulsion of the Jews from Germany " Minister Rust declares that it is a part of his program to bring about a erman generation at the Universities. Jewish suicides increasing. Feb 28«—Rumor that March 4th is reserved for wholesale killing of the Jews is being reported by the Reuter News Service. March 1.—London Dally Herald devotes a page to intended "Bartholomew's Massacre" of the Jews. March 1«—Central Union of German Citizens of Jewish Faith raided by police. . ' ' ,' March 4.—League for Combating Anti-Semitism in Paris issues public statement on conditions in. Germany. March (w—New election of German Reichstag gives Nazis, combined with the German Nationalists, (Hugenberg party) 52 per cent of the Reichstag's seats. March &—Numerous a t t a c k s on Jewish individuals. Organized attacks on Jewish shops & department stores in many parts of Germany begun, and continued. Many stores compelled to close. March 6.—Anglo-Jewish Association meets in London. Expresses concern 'or situation. March 8.—American Ambassador makes representations to German Foreign Office regarding attacks on Amiricans. The Americans were Nathaniel Wolf of Rochester, N. Y. and Henry Sattler of New York City. . March 9.—General attacks against Jews in prominent positions; law courts, radio companies, theatres, etc. Attack against <he Tietz Department Store in Berlin. March 10*—Organized boycott of Jewish stores grows. Protest by American and other embassies because of the attacks on foreigners m Germany. March II.—Goering declines to protect Jewish stores. Jacob Leschinsky, New York Jewish Dally Forward correspondent, arrested. March 13.—-Julius Fuhs, Edward Dahlberg, (medical .student) Louis Berman, all Americans, attacked by Nazis. Dr. Joseph Goebbels appointed new Minister of Propaganda. March 14—.Jewish journalists excluded from Press conference. Shechita prohibited in . Cologne and other cities. German ambassador to the United States resigns. Polish protests submitted to the Berlin Foreign Office enumerate great number of attacks on Polish Jews by Nazis, in Berlin. Chemnitz, Magdeburg, Plauen, during the five days from March 4th to March 10th. March 17»—^runo Walter's scheduled concert at the Berlin Philharmonic Hall prohibited by Goebbels. French pacifist organizations plan to assist refugees from Germany. March 18.—Renewed drive against Jewish lawyers. In Berlin and other cities. Driive against Jewish physicians; attack against Professor Dr. Zondeck and bis family. Serious attacks against individuals in Berlin, Munich and other cities. March 20,—Organization of American League announced for protection of Human Rights. Hoisting of Swastika over German Consulate leads to disturbances in Jerusalem. March 20.—Ort organization searched in Berlin. Office of Zionist Federation of Germany searched. Joint meeting of American Jewish Committee and B'nai B'rlth Issues .statement that they have been in touch with the American Government to make proper representations to Germany. March 22.—TJ. S. Ambassador In Berlin asked for full report on the 'German situation by the U. S. State Department . Congressman DIckstein Introduces resolution providing for admission of German refugees who have relatives In American cities. March 23.—Dr. Cyrus Adler and Alfred M. Cohen, confer with. Secretary of State Hull. * March 23.—Renewed Polish protests to Berlin Foreign Office at unabated attacks. March 2t—Several Jews murdered. Anti-Jewish agitation unabated. Numerous protests accumulate. Movement
to boycott Germfta §<&di defers" iff England. London i i*jrd filbert €eett #*= presses Indignation at events i&:§§¥many. • • March SlWJewleh war VetSfftfi* in New York parade In protest. Paris: Committee for Relief ©f Refugees formally headed by former member of Cabinet Pafnleve. March 27*—Overflow protest demonstration at Madison Square Oardett under the auspices of the American Jewish Congress. Central Union of German Jews (in Germany) and many other organizations, and more or less prominent Jewish individuals deny anti-Jewish excesses, and call them pure inventions. Anti-Jewish outbreaks in Weisbaden, and Halle. Jews attacked in various universities. Official ban of Jewish judges and attorneys in Bavaria.. Secretary Hull receives report from American Embassy in Germany of at-
teete m Jem, emtiming Mw*p*per confer with Senators Pitman, Borah f If Wife §kr=A&immmn#Bt
by Nazi
ti&f trf f&Mfag mi appeal held in i &t i*tmebr ©f German Jewry described a* twprtoal against the atHattem abroad, iteftaatar «* # * boycott fi*#d let April 1, JaMo* Streteher appointed mp^rfiuor ot reprisal campaign a§»to*t German Jew*. Some G e r m a n newspaper* want against effect* of boycott abroad Stricter censorship of German press decreed. London t Public meeting held in protest. March 80.—British House of Lords expresses sympathy with German Jewry. Numerous antt-Jewish acts throughout Germany. Rabbi Wise and Bernard 8. Deatsch
asd Wagner. Londont Question of German Jewry brought before House of Commons. March •81.—Boycott limited to one day, Berlin Jewish lawyer, (Joacnim) killed by Nazis. German Minister of Foreign Affairs asserts, facto contra rium, that no censorship is being imposed upon the transmission of news. Protests against Nazi treatment of Jews continue all over the world April L—Day of boycott. "Israelitlsche Familienblatt" suspended for three months. April Sr—Joint Distribution Commitltee meets to discuss relief of German Jewry. London: 40,000 demonstrate in Hyde Park. American Jewish Committee meets to discuss German Jewish situation. April fc—Virtual prohibition of Shechita. • (Continued on Page 5T
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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
Eage Five-
May 22.—^Urgency of Bernheim pe- from dismissal on account of their Magnus and Lowenstein, disbarred. film industry in full swing. Employtition recognized by League Council. war service records. Elimination of Jewish brokers from ment of aliens as directors, producAmerican Jewish Congress convenJune 27.—Anti-Semitic riots in stock exchange begins by publication ers, camera-men, authors and contion in. Washington discusses plight Frankfurt-am-Main. Nazi demon- ordinance. Dr. Gottfried Feder out- ductors forbidden. May 23.—Jews expelled from mar- strate, shouting, "Kill the Jews, close lines law •which deprives Jews of July 17.—Two Jewish lawyers are of German Jews. Jewish stores!" their citizenship. killed in the Dachau concentration kets in many places, especially the London: Protest m e e t i n g at Jnly 12.—Order issued to all banks camp—Oskar Strauss and Wilhelm smaller cs^es. Queen's Hall. not to make any further payments jtfr&n. Kulturbund der Deutschen May 25.—Nazi representative to Jnne 28r—200 Jewish children ar- of Jewish Helief Funds accounts. De- Juden gets permission to establish Century of Progress Exposition ar- rested at Arlosoroff Memorial meet-- partment store of Leonhard Tietz German Opera and Theater excluriving1 in New York is greeted by ing in Germany. New restrictions and Company taken away from Jew- sively for and by Jews. Farmers hostile demonstrations at pier. against Jewish physicians issued. ish management. Further list with and . peasants in several places in names of 212 dismissed Jewish law- western Bavaria forbidden to have May 27.—Several cases of assault June 29.—35 Jewish doctors and (Continued from Page 4J) April 12.—Berliner Tageblatt (own- ed from the Universitp of Dresden and on Jewish prisoners reported. H. G. yers and notaries is published. 20 Jewish dentists dismissed from ed by Jew) taken. over by Nazi gov- Universities in Baden. Wells castigates Germans at meeting the Sick Benefit Funds institution London: 70 members of Parliament ernment appointees. (Continued on Page 61) July 13.—"Purification" of the April 25.—Goebbels delivers address of P. E. N. club. in Gleiwitz, Beuthen, Upper Silesia, sign motion requesting debate on Jews before mass meeting saying: "We exApril 14.—First of many court trials in Germany. June 1.—C/puncil of League of Na- contrary to the decision of the Lea-] • * April 6.—Many suicides of Jewish against alleged atrocity stories; tale ercise the greatest mildness toward tions rejects* German objections to gue of Nations. professionals reported and attributed bearers sentenced to many months im- the Jews. They do not deserve it. formulation of Upper Silesia recomMinister of the Interior, Wilhelm; to persecutions and boycott Many prisonment Strict execution of civil The Jews are our enemies." mendations. A Munich Jewish at- Jrick, announces plan for the sterQ-r April 26.—Strict Numerus Clausus torney (Loewenfeld) severely beaten. ization of Jews as a lower element Jewish employees in lower and higher service law of April 7th followed by positions given, notice in Berlin and ousting of lawyers, notaries, judges, in high schools and colleges decreed. Jewish Telegraphic Agency repre- of the population. •J physicians, school teachers. UniverApril 27^-Steel Helmet Leader Dus-, sentative in Berlin arrested. th?Ju ghout Germany. ' American League for Defense of Paris: Minister of Interior declares sity professors, etc., etc., among them terberg ousted for being of Jewish, American N a t i o n a l Conference Jewish Rights organizes to promote descent. doors of France are open to refugees many prominent names. against race persecution in Germany boycott. London: Lionel Rothschild heads meets in Washington. April 20.—London: Joint Foreign from oppression. July 1.—In accordance with GoerBritish Committee for German Jewish June 6.—League of Nations issues Jerusalem: Palestine government Committee issues publication on per- aid. ing's address in Hamburg on June: " grants 1000 immigration certificates to secution of Xhe German Jews. decision in favor of Bernheim peti- 24, a new boycott movement against • April 29.—Jewish merchant sentenc- tion. April 22.—Wilhelm Kube, now Qber German Jews. the Jews is launched. Nazi pickets ed to three months imprisonment for Pra-esident of Brandenburg, delivers June 9.—Olympic Games Commit- are stationed by the authorities outApril 7.—Law announced regarding saying that a Jew officially announced "The Hitler Reich restoration of civil service as basis for speech stating: as a suicide had ia reality been beaten tee votes to keep Berlin as the site side Jewish shops. Pillories -erected ousting of all Jews (except very few) will last because it rejects Jewry and to death by Nazi Storm Troopers. An- of 19S6 Olympic Games after the in Quedlinburg and Wernigerode on from public offices in Reich state, there is no place for the Jews under other Jewish merchant sentenced to German delegation pledges that no •which the names of Christians who w Sent Humanity Bam ".•"••: municipalities, communities, cities, the Nazi Regime. 15 months for saying that the morgue Jewish athletes will be prevented buy from Jews are posted. Branch of the Central Union of German Jews etc. Law barring non-Aryan lawyers April 24.—Further restriction of was packed with Jewish corpses. An- from participating. 24th Street at Dodge (with some exceptions which are be- Jewish physicians leads to numerous other Jew. sentenced to 18 months for June 10.—Members of U. S. Senate is forbidden. ing overlooked as far as possible,) is dismissals to take effect in the near saying that a Rabbi died of a beating speak out against reign of terror in New law promulgated barring Arydecreed. future. Many Jewish students expell- received from Nazis. Another Jew Germany. ans Trom federal, criminal or municJune 13.—Boycott against German ipal offices in Reich if married to sentenced to 15 .months on a charge persons who are not considered one of repeating "atrocity" tales. Jews virtually resumed. June 14,—Reductions in school hundred per cent Aryans in Reich. Correspondent of New York Jewish Morning Journal arrested for filing a fees for Jewish children in • public Jnly 2.-—Numerous business firms cable with excepts from speech by schools abolished in Berlin. Two summarily dismiss Jewish workers in Goebbels. Jewish schools in Wuertemberg ex- Berlin and the provinces. May -L—Two Jews arrested in cluded from state subsidies. SubsiJuly 3.—Mass meeting in Dresden. Frankfurt-am-Main .Federation of dies to ' Jewish communities discon- Deputy Stieler announces plan of daGerman journalists bars -Jews." Sev- tinued. Minister of Education issues pTiving German Jews of their citieral professors dismissed from Halle order that Jewish students will not zenship. Nazi press attacks PresiUniversity. " \ -'•.••be permitetd to receive their diplo- dent of the Unite*i States, stating Jerusalem: All Palestine Commit- mas at any Prussian University- that ^ot even he will induce <3ertee organized for aid to German Prussia requires statement of relig- many to change her attitude toward ion for everyone registering his resi- Jews. More wholesale - dismissals of Hay 2^—Jewish organizations ex- dence with the police. Joint Distri- Jewish employees reported. Sixtycluded from renting rooms or grounds bution Co'rnmittee opens German re- one more lawyers barred in Berlin: of municipal real estate in Berlin. from practicing. lief Drive. Several professors dismissed from July 5.—Aryan lawyers prohibited June 15.—Suicide of Mr. and Mrs. Berlin University, among them Dr. Moritz Oppenheim, philanthropists in from entering into partnership with via Friedenthal, physiologist, Dr. Blumen- Germany. non-Aryans. Also sharing of offices . thal, dermatologist. Dr. Birnbaum, in Thurmgia dissolves. Nazi Press psychiatrist. Dr. Mittwoch, philologist. June 17.—Riot in Kottbus, caused calls J.' P. Morgan the "uncrowned by Nazi pickets, ends with the arDr. Schur, mathematician, 33r.Fisch.el, Jew king™ because of bis anti-Gerart _ historian, Dr. Manes, insurance rest of two Jews. Dismissal of Dr. man public statement. Jewish lawLudwig Cohn :from the Institution expert. Dr. Pringheim, chemist. Dr. yer (Spiegel) killed in Dachau «on-r Grossman, technologist, Dr. Lipman, for the Blind in Lower Silesia. June 19.—American Jewish Com- centration camp. psychologist, • Dr. Konrad Cohn, denAmerican College Presidents and mittee issues White Book on persetist •-.'.. .'. ; V ,.\.. • / Social Scientists sign protest against cution of Jews in Germany. "•'.Dismissals from Cologne: Prof. SpHJnne 20.—Law regarding loans to Hitler anti-Semitic policy. zer. Prof. Cohn-yossen,mathematician July 6.—Jews, barred from lifeand others. From Jena: .Leo Brauner, newly married couples published. botanist, and others. * From Aachen: Loans not to be extended to Jews. paving Jobs on all snores according Prof. Fuchs, Prof. Jjevy, chemist, and (Recipients must not spend money to a Breslau municipal order. Reothers. in Jewish stores). Several Jewish strictions regarding numerous claur May 3.—Importation of kosher meat relief -workers arrested and beaten sus for foreign Jewish students and (Unicn Station) . .forbidden.- Jewish lawyers barred by Nazis in'Berlin; A Jewish mer- German - Jewish students to 1 .1-2 from retribution courts; lawyers who chant, Sigbert Frankenstein, sen- per cent of - total University enrollwere readmitted -expelled in Hamburg- tenced to six months for stating that ment is made public The number I (Union Station) .. . . ....... < t w i_ Heine monument, in Frankfurt-am- 200 crippled Jews are still in the of Jewish doctors expelled from tha Main . desecrated. . -.' . hospitals as a result of Nazi beat- Sick Fund Institutions i s reported as Dismissal from. Technical High ings. Jewish merchant (Herman 1500 in Berlin and 6,000 in Germany. School, Berlin, Prof. Schlesinger; Prof. Meyer) sentenced to one month fa? Two Polish" citizens, (Jewish den"ARROW" / CHICAGO Levy, Prof. Kohn, Prof. Schlinger, and stating that reports regarding tor- tists) disappear after having- been many others. Prof. Goldschmidt, Prof. turing of Jews. are correct. Serious beaten and kidnaped by "Nazis. JewMILWAUKEE* Haber, Prot Freundlich and others mistreatment of Jews in Landau and ish lawyers driven- from court house ST. PAUL / forced to resign from. council of the Wuertemberg reported. in "Koemgsberg. Sterilization of GerCentralbodenkreditanstalt June 21.—Government issues in- man Jews'advocated in article pub' Boston r Samuel Untermeyer urges structions that German Consular Iished in the Bostock University boycott of Nazis. service is not to issue visas to for- Magazine. . May 9r—Amsterdam: Bookshops ex- eign Jews for travel in Germany. The German Association for Comhibit books to be burnt by. Nazis. Jewish firms excluded from adver- bating anti-Semitism (Verem zur 1200 signatures being gathered for tising in the Berlin telephone direc- Abwehr des Anti-T5emitismus) disprotest by Christian ministers in the solves after 42 years of existence. United States. . • tory. Jewish officials and employ- 535 members, leading Christaans, ees, among them men of world reMay 10.—Book, burning; torchlight prominent in art, science, literature,' procession in Berlin and other Ger- nown dismissed from Deutsche Che- commerce, industry,'and other fields, mische Gesellschaft. First list of disman cities (Munich). • '•• vote to liquidize organization." v g Several torturing and beatings-re- missed Jewish notaries and lawyers July 8.—_Tew list,•containing the j published: 86 notaries and 130 lawj I ported. Georing's speech against "ilnames of 210 more dismissed notar-! j j legal intervention in the management yers listed. 1 K! of commercial enterprises." Several, Students' boycott against Berlin ies, mainly from Berlin, is published. 150 lawyers (100 from Berlin) K | Jews dismissed from State Library Profsssors Fraenkel and Bielschowsky, who ate converted and exempt among them Professor Max Alsberg, K of Art in Berlin. R 100,000 join protest parade in New •fR I York, under auspices • of American -u K | Jewish Congress. Similar parades held R in other cities and countries. # Hay 13.—Boersenverein_der Deut# schen Buchhandler adopts resolution "• not to sell books written by Jews. •d j Cabaret Chief Robitscheck, who was d among those forced to sign a paeify1201-7 California St., Omaha, Nebr. jd ing statement on the conditions in d ] Germany in- April • and- who was-latef 'dlon molested. \ flees from Germany. d\ May 15.—Union of tobacco -retaild ers of Germany resolve to prohibit d retail trade by Jews in cigars and d cigarettes. d May 17—Petitions to League of A Nations nrging intervention for Upper Silesian Jews. Jews barred from buying farm land. Vice-Chancellor Fran von Pareveals. himself as a follower of gj • the anti-Semitic policy. Jndge Joffj man (notorious prosecutor i n . the [Haas case in 1926) appointed Berlin j Chief Justice. | Boycott movement being organized by Committees of Jews and nonJews in various countries. • David > Lloyd George urges that, 'question 'Of Jewish :status in Germany be brought before'League of Nations. .May 18^—More Jewish business firms taken over ! by .Nazis' terroristic methods. . Jewish • owners forced to ) flee. Jews prohibited from engaigK | 'ing in the cattle trade. Two Nazi K j newspapers accuse -: President Roose< K j velt of ^being nnder Jewish influKl-ence. -;,-. J5I May 20.—Many raids on Jewish i homes and attacks on Jews reported. Fort Dodge.Jowa—Des Moines, Iowa—Sioux City,•Jews -disappear' or "are" being-found Ipwa—Grand -Island, Nebraska—Hastings, -Nebr.-. j seriously • .injured. " Bernheitn . peti—Norfolk, Nebraska—Rapid City, South? Bakota ition regarding Upper Silesia goes to "North Platte, Nebr. i League of. Nations Council in Gen-
Review of Jewish Events any
Mrs. Leo A. Hoffman, president, and P. K. Walsh, manager, of the
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Page
New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH :PJB ESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
DOORS Review of Jewish SCHOOL WIDENING FOR Events - Germany RUSSIA JEWS
very small number indeed used Yid- were studying either medicine or the scholars expelled from Germany, pansion of the anti-Semitic movedish. law; today they turn to the tech- thus demonstrating that the attack ment. The outlook is serious for the Today there are 1,469 Jewish edu- nical faculties. Only 2,417 are now upon freedom of thought does not Roumanian Jews despite the fact that cational institutions, with a total of studying medicine as against 11,565 they have been long accustomed to 160,000 pupils. Of these, 266 are that are taking a technical training. leave the British government unanti-Semitic injustices. primary 887 elementary and 316 sec- The number of Jewish students tak- moved. The article charges that the presondary schools. As compared with ing special courses such as agricul- Another editorial in The Guardian Czarist Russia, the number of pupils ture and transport is surprisingly discusses the growth of anti-Semit- ent premier, Vaida-Voivod, is benin Jewish schools has increased five--] high. There are 1,555 taking the evolently disposed towards the antifold. During the same period the former, and 1,855 the latter. There ism in Roumania as disclosed in the Semites and predicts that if new parfull-length article from its Roumanumber of pupils in the non-Jewish are, in addition, 1,631 Jewish stuliamentary elections are held now in schools has increased three-fold. dents in the faculty of economics. nian correspondent. According to the Roumania, the anti-Semites would be In the sphere of higher education "Two Cultures" also gives some correspondent* the Roumanian Jews returned in large number to Parliathere has also been a very large in- very interesting figures on the num- are faced, with a serious situation due, ment, to advocate a policy of anticrease of Jewish students. There are ber of Jewish newspapers and books to the Nazi agitation in Roumania Semitism, similar to that adopted in nine Jewish technical high schools published in Soviet Russia, from which has resulted in the rapid ex- Germany. with 1,900 students, and 50 Jewish which it appears that there are 29 industrial and agricultural colleges Jewish papers and periodicals with with a total of 10,000 students. There a total circulation of 230,000. The are also'ten universities and colleges largest of these is the Moscow with special Jewish departments with "Ernes," with a circulation og 30,000, a total of 1,666 students. In addi- then come the Charkow - "Star" tion there are 57,439 Jewish students (-20,000) and the Minsk "October" in the general State universities, col- (15,000). There is also a children's leges and technical high schools. newspaper with a circulation of 30,Formerly most Jewish students 000. " •
dealers. Jews excluded from market Five-Fold Increase as Thousands places. Take Technical business relations with non-Aryans. Minister of Education orders disCourses July 18.—Further list of 200 dis-missal of all Jewish lecturers barred Jewish notaries and 130 law-throughout Germany for the school Moscow, (J.T.A.)—The five-fold yers published. German paper re- term 1933-34. ppr&ig that Balbo, Italian Air Min- July 27—Paassjorts are taken away increase in Jewish education in Sovister, is a converted Jew, is sus- from Berlin Jews recently natural- iet Russia is brought to Jight in a book just published here tinder the pended, and editor arrested. ized. title, "Two Cultures." July 19.—Nazi lawyers' associa- July 29.—Law is suggested withBefore the Revolution there were tions throughout Germany begin drawing German citizenship from all 429 Jewish schools in the whole of new drive against Jewish lawyers by naturalized Eastern European Jewsj Russia, -with a total of some 30,000 frightening people willing to engage this a)so would impel confiscation of pupils. In addition there were some Jewish lawyers. , properties. 2,000 elementary religious schools Association of artisans in Chem- Deutsches "Arzt Blatt" recom- with 40,000 pupils. The language Jiitz adopts a resolution to expel all mends application of sterilization law used in a large majority of these schools was Russian, though there Jewish members from artisan shops, to mixed marriages. were some Hebrew schools. Only a trades and commerce. July 31.—Streets in Berlin littered July 20^—Office of Jewish Tele- with anti-Jewish propaganda leaflets graphic Agency in Berlin closed. and pamphlets urging whole massaThree hundred Jews arrested in cres of Jews. Government announcNuernberg, badly . beaten and mal-es that a law depriving all Jews of treated. Many houses raided. citizenship is •in preparation, Jnly 21.—American student, Wal(Copyright, 1933, by Seven Arts ter Orloff, arrested as alleged comFeature Syndicate) munist. July 24.—Sixteen Jewish youths and their teacher arrested and beaten at Braunschweig. One boy beaten to death. American Jew (Zuckermann) attacked and badly hurt on street in Leipzig. July 25.—A lawyer, (Erwin Eosen- Critic Points Out That Conan ' berg) reinstated to practice because " Doyle, Edgar Wallace Are he was a war veteran, is dragged Better Treated. out from court room by uniformed Nazi Storm Troopers, and beaten up WARSAW (J. T. A.)—While a great in Berlin. deal has been written and is being July 26.—Authorities in Buetow written about Theodor Herzl, the fact (Pomerania) issue order prohibiting that he was the author of some, thirty Bale of cattle and grain to Jewish plays, a number of which were produced with considerable success at the Vienna Burg-Theater and at other thePhilologist Traces aters in European capitals, as well as in America, is generally lost sight of. Latin Prom Hebrew Among Herzl's; dramatic works there are dramas, comedies and oneRio de Janiero. (J.T.A.)—Hebrew act plays. When in 1897 Herzl was as the source of Latin, is the theme writing his literary testament, he said cf'a. new book by Dr. David Peretz, that the time had come for publishing noted Jewish Sephardic philologist of a separate edition of his dramatic creBrazil. ations. The book was written in Portu- In an article about Herzl the dramDeeper faith in the future of kin, international President of the gueses. It has been well received in atist, Joseph Frankel makes the point Israel and in the development of the Jewish National Fund, sent from intellectual circles and its author was that translations into-Hebrew of the land of Israel, through continuing Jerusalem to the Jews of America. congratulated for his development of works' of Edgar Wallace, Conan Doyle extending the land redemption Above is a picture of the veteran the theory that Hebrew influenced and Bettaner and other foreign writ- and program, is the gist of the NewZionist leader who recently observed Latin and the Romance languages— ers are constantly being made, but Year's message of Menahem Ussish- a half century of his Zionist work, thus Portugueses. that no one thinks of translating Herzl Dr. Peretz is Professor of Ro- into Hebrew: nor of producing any of mance languages at a number of col- his plays. "The New Ghetto" is the Moshowsky Is Russia's leges in the Bra2ilian capital, and isonly one of Herzl's plays that has •considered an outstanding authority been done into Hebrew. It was also Prize Parachute Leaper in his field. tranlated into Yiddish, by I. H. Brener. Moscow, (J.T.A;)"'.~ Jacob Moshkowsky, famous Russian Jewish flyer and outstanding parachute jumper, has been made head of the training school for parachute junipers here. , ' . . - , ' LONDON (J. T. A.)—Harold J. Moshkowsky has made seventy-five Laski, noted political scientist, urge? high-altitude jumps and until recent- that the British government publicly ly held the all-Soviet altituds record. denounce the German policy towards His; record of 4,000 meters was bet- the. Jews, in an article published in tered by Moshkowsky's pupil, Zabel- the" 'Manchester . Guardian, world fain, who jumped from a height of nious liberal newspaper, which edi6,400 meters. torially supported Mr. Laski's propofrom sal and suggested at the same time that an international effort be made to raise a fund to furnish relief and (Continued from Page 5:i
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Has Faith in Israel's Future
We Offer Sincere Greetings to the B Jewish People on Their New Year 5694
Why Do Hebraists Ignore Herzl Plays?
BRITISH PAPER OFINpENCE IN DENUNCIATION
Best Wishes for a Happy and Successful NJew Year
The Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia, Pa. 6
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C. Z. GOULD FliOYD R. MILLER General Agent
ROBERT J. WAGNER, Cashier Paul J . Murphy H. Biirr'Bugbee Philip J. Feldman,
H. L. FULLER District Agent -0jas, "B. Hudson
BACK OF YOUR INDEPENDENCE STANDS THE PENN MUTUAL
VIEWS ON NAHS OWN TO BRITISH BY TRADE EXPERT
Suggests London Be Patient Till New Men Take Over Nazi Machine "- London, (J.T.A.)—Advice^tha* re^ serve is the soundest attitude to adopt in dealing with Germany until the German machine is run entirely by new. men and can-show what it is able to do, is recommended by .'the commercial counselor of the British Embassy at Berlin, in an official British Government report on economic conditions in Germany. The report is issued by the Board of Trade. '-' The report, dealing, with the! period 'only up to June of this year, claims that German foreign trade moved in. conformity with the shrinkage of world trade. Reviewing the Jewish'; situation,' the report explains that, tb understand the Nazi action towards "the Jews, it is necessary to bear in mind that "when the tenets of the ;Nazi creed and economic necessities -come in conflict, the former takes precedence over the latter." The report in general retells and confirms the facts of well-known Nazi anti-Jewish acts, such as ~ the establishment of Nazi cells in companies and private businesses. The cells, although they do not possess legal power, their main duty being political, often make representations regarding Jewish directors or business relations with Jewish firms, and although legal compulsion to accede to their Wishes, is non-existe«t, the report states that "it is advisable in the interests of peace to meet them as far as possible. Jewish directors and officials, the report further confirms, have been replaced by Nazis in all chambers of commerce, stock exchanges, industrial federations, the iron and steel industries, retail and wholesale trades, et cetera. . Since the figures in the report mainly compare 1932 activities with those of previous activities, an analysis of it to reveal the effects of the Jewish anti-Nazi boycott in individual countries or branches of trade and -industry, is impossible^
Lowest Cab Rate in Omaha Insured Cabs, Courteous, Careful Drivers, Safe for Your Family—Call sitting at his desk in the Keren Kayemeth Headquarters in Jerusalem and signing a certificate of entry into the Golden Book of the Keren Kayemeth. frame plans for the settlement of refugees. The Guardian pointed out that the funds now available are rapidly diminishing and that a fresh, flood of refugees, from Germany may be expected this winter. At the same time the Manchester Guardian came out in support of Mr. Laski's suggestion that Great Britain, acting in the spirit of the Covenant of the League of Nations, make plain at the forthcoming session of the League assembly to the German rulers that their actions are a "wanton defiance of the decent opinion of yiankind." Mr. Laski further proposed that the British government contribute fifty thousand pounds to the Academic Council established in order to assist
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Page Seven
New Yearns Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20, 19S3
Eternal Fountain of Jewish Education which is again in conflict with other cities where girls' percentages range from 45 to 55 percent
Jewish Learning Is The Pulse-Beat of Our Immortality
CURRICULUM
By AARON KATZ, Principal of City Talmud Torah • ; To every great emergency, to every challenging trial, the Jewish people throughout their -history have given the same answer: more devotion to Jewish c.u...^(u a" more emphasis upon the life of the spirit. - After the destruction of the First Temple, the rrophetic schools arose in Babylon. These later developed into the Synagogue. During the days of chaos and of threatened destruction by the Homans.at the end of the Second Commonwealth, the Jews created the compulsory elementary school system under the leadership of Joshua ben Gamla, and established the great yeshivoth in Palestine and in Babylon under the leadership of ben Zakkai and other great Rabbis. The answer of the Jews and the Marranos to their exile from Spain was the Talmud Torah in Amsterdam and the communal Talmud Torahs wherever else the Jews found new homes. To the devastation which followed in. the wake of the Cossack uprisings, the Polish Jews countered with the intensification of their educational activities in the Yeshivoth of Poland^ Thus it has ever been. ..In our- own generation the Jews have been facing another major and fundamental trial: 'the need for adjusting their lives to the new conditions of the machine age, of western economy and of the scientific mood.
Not the outward blows of persecution so much as the undermining of the bases of their economic and spiritual existence, is what has been threatening the Jewish people. Can they forge again an effective weapon of the spirit with whi<jb to combat the destructive forces of their environment? Will their answer be once more in terms of Jewish education? The economic difficulties have served to bring this problem into clear focus. In America the vision hitherto was beclouded by two deluding factors: the constant addition of human resources through immigration, and the thought of unlimited financial resources supposed to be available in the days of great prosperity Replenishment of Jewish tradition and enthusiasm came from the countries of Europe; and there was enough money to be spent for everything— even for education. Now, we must rely upon our own human resources, and we must carefully think through the values of our communal life so that we might use most fruitfully our now more jealously guarded financial resources. Out of the evils of our economic confusion we may be forced into a more serious consideration of what is valuable and what is less valuable in our life as a Jewish community. Will the answer be again, as
a
According you sincere wishes for pleasant holidays and a most happy and prosperous New Year in gratitude for the good-will extended us during the past year.
throughout our past, in terms of emphasis upon Jewish, learning? Let us hope that it will. Out of this economic chaos and confusion there will emerge a strong, united Jewish community, devoted to ideals. and traditions of Israel, that will reflect : glory upon Israel's Torah. . ' : The Talmud Torah fiscal year just ended has been marked by many items of progress as well as several shortcomings. Here is a thorough analysis of it in its main aspects and requirements.
ENROLLMENT
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TEA DANCE Every Saturday Afternoon Never a Covert Charge Special Rates to Private Parties
TUITION FEES The June enrollment list shows a /prospective amount of ?429.00 to be monthly collected as tuition fees. Judging from the amounts collected for the last eight jnonths, since our buses began operating, it appears that pur net collection is about 83 percent of the face amount. Here are the various tuition fees as agreed with parents individually: 62 pupils—Free.36 pupils—Pay 1.00 per mo.—$ 36.00 7 pupils—Pay 1.50 per mo.— 10.50 39 pupils—Pay 2.00 per mo.— 78.00 9 pupils—Pay 2.50 per mo.— 22.50 53 pupils—Pay 3.00 per mo.— 159.00 2 pupils—Pay 3.50 per mo.— 7.00 9 pupils—Pay 5.00 per mo.— 36.00 16 pupils—Pay 5.00 per mo.— 80.00
On July 1, 1923, the enrollment list of the Talmud Torah consisted of 233 pupils divided into six grades and 11 classes and taught by four teachers, five days a,week. The numbers of incoming and outgoing pupils per month were as follows: •Month Enrolled Left Attend. July ..;... 5 ,. 194 August . . . . . . . . 2 5 191 September..... 4 16 179 October ... 3 21 161 November . . . . . 9 9 ... 260 December . . . . . 4 8 256 January . . . . . . . . . 4 ; 252 • February . . . . . . 3 2 253 March . . . . . . . . . . . 13 240 April 6 19 227 233 May . . . . 16 2 241 June :. .__ 5 13 233 147 103 233 The enrolled 147 new pupils fall into three divisions as follows: Nine for grade 6B or the so-called high school department, and 18 for the extensive high school department. : Thirty-one of ages 11,12 and 13 who had some private training in mechanical reading. Eight-nine beginners 6, 7, 8 and 9 years old. Of the 103 pupils, who left school, 66 are of ages 12 to 16. Eighteen pupils 10 to 11 years old, and 19 beginners 6, 7, 8 and 9 years old. The reasons given by parents for their children's leaving Talmud Torah are as follows: 22 have become Bar Mitzvah and they do not see any necessity in continuing their Jewish studies; 39 who have entered high school or the 8th grade of grade school think it too burdensome for the child for the entire summer vacation, claiming that the child needs a rest for three months; eight prefer private instruction; four who cannot afford to pay do not want to have their children on the free list; six moved out of the city; five are of ill health, and four too young to attend. Geographically, the 233 Talmud Torah pupils are divided as follows: Immediate Jewish Community Center neighborhood 9 North Side (Cuming to Lake and 15th to 28th West)......68 South Omaha . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25 West and Northwest (28th to 58th and Dodge to Lake).....95 Benson 9 Southwest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 5 Far North ........*t ...'••••••••*. 8 Southeast . . . . -............. 4 As to sexes, our. pupils are divided as follows: "^:-j . Boys . . . . . . ..^........184 Girls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Summarizing the above facts, we see that: 1. Thiee classes of beginners and the advanced class of four pupils are getting one-hour instruction, and seven classes one and one-half hours instruction five days a week. 2 . One' hundred eight pupils 7, 8 and 9 years old, or 47 percent of the entire school are in the first year of study and 59 pupils 8, 9 and" 10 years old, or 25 percent, are in. the second and third years of study. 3 - Sixty-one percent of 147 incoming pupils are young beginners. 4 . Seventy-six percent of 103 pupils that left school are of older age, which shows a surprising disagreement with the general trend in the American Hebrew school, where 80 percent of outgoing pupils are youngsters of first and second years of study. 5» Bar Mitzvah and fear of overtaxings the child are here the main factors that determine the quantity of Jewish education which is to be given to the child. 6- Th© percentage ot girls in the Talmud Torah is only 21 percent,
1
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All the eleven classes were functioning in accordance with the eurricular program laid out and adopted by the Board of Education in May, 1922, covering the course of study according to grade and its two semesters. In pursuance of this curriculum the following subjects were taught: Hebrew reading, Hebrew language, Yiddish, Chumosh, Trophets, Rashi, sketches of Mishnah and Talmud, current events, Jewish history, customs and ceremonies, and Jewish music. The numbers of pupils instructed in each of the above said subjects aje as follows: ••--.•- •'; Hebrew Reading 233 Hebrew Language .207 Yiddish . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 Chumosh . . . . . 135 Prophets -. 66 Rashi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ; . . . { 38 , Mishnab and T a l m u d . . . . . . . . 9 Current Events 180 Jewish History . . . . . . . . . . . . . 233 Customs and Ceremonies..... 233 Jewish-Music * 233 Average attendance for the year was 89%.percent.^ '"
w
The most outstanding feature in the Talmud Torah this year was the purchase of two buses which bring the children to school and transport them back home. They are directly responsible for the attendance of 72 new pupils of far distant neighborhoods who otherwise would not have been enrolled in the Talmud Torah, almany other pupils, too. These buses have not only brought a feeling of safety to many parents, who, due to the far distance would not have their chidlren ride the street car, but also have increased the amount of tuition by approximately $125.00 per month, and improved the daily attendance. The gross expediture on the buses for the period of eight months, including insurance and repairs, amounts to $141.61 and income from fares amounts to $587.40, which makes net expenditure at $874.16 or $109.27 per month. Measuring this expenditure with the achievement of getting so many new pupils from neighborhoods that would never have been sending them to us, it safely could be stated that spending $1C9.27 per month on transportation is a very sound investment, especially as the money for it we get out of additional tuition fees.
BUDGET Income for the last fiscal year, including Philanthropies subsidy and tuition fees, amounts to $10,704.72 and disbursements amount to $11,062.28. The prospective budget of the Talmud Torah for the current fiscal year is approximately the same.
OFFICERS Officers of the Talmud Torah are M. M. Barish, president; Dr. Philip Sher, honorary president; N. S. Yaffe, vice-president; S. Ravitz, honorary vice-president; Mr D. Brodlcey, treasurer; Mrs. L. . Neveleff, secretary?* Rabbi David A. Goldstein, chairman of education committee; Rabbi Uri Miller, chairman of enrollment committee; Philip Klutznick, chairman of finance; Dr. Philip Sher, Book of Life chairman. . . . . • The executive committee includes M. M. Barish, Sam Beber, Mrs. Max Fromkin, William Holzinan, Philip Klutznick, N. Leviiison, Harry Marcu3, Dr. M. Margolin, Mrs. L. Neveleff, J. S. Pearlstien, Dr. P, Sher, and N. S. Y a f f e .
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The City Talmud Torah has the facilities to give the Jewish child a complete Jewish education. Convenient hours have been arranged, and buses have been added. We must face the fact that Omaha Jewry has over 1,700 children of school age and that only 14 per cent of these are receiving a Jewish education. Let us hope that the new year 5694 will mark the beginning of a new era in the attitude of Jewish parents toward real Jewish living, one of the primary duties of which is to give the child a proper Jewish education. May we not prophesy that it will?
Modest Man Hitler wrote his biographical note in the new Reichstag "Who's Who." It reads "Born April 20, 1889, at Braunau: Catholic. Attended the public school and private secondary school. Financed studies by working as a housebuilder. From 1914 to 1920 soldier. Present German Chancellor."
Moslem Congress Pat Off Geneva.—The Congress of European Moslems, has been postponed to next year. No definite date has been set.
Compliments of the Season According you sincere wishes for pleasant holidays and a most Happy and Pros* perousNew Year, in gratitude for the good - will extended us during the past year, and in anticipation of your favors during the year to come
Omaha Family Soap MADE IN OMAHA
-
The staff Includes Aaron Katz, principal; E. Bloch, Judah Wolfson and Irving Soireff.
The importance of a Jewish educator every Jewish child cannot be overemphasized. It is the only possible hope we have that our people may survive as self-respecting Jews. Without a Jewish education, our children $439.00 will be unable to carry on Jewish traditions when they arrive at adulthood. Yearly per capita: $32.09.
Haskms Bros* & Company
T&pUEL MANY JEWISH FRIENDS We Extend Cordial Greetings and Holiday Salutations for Their New Year
5694
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Happy New Year ^ May it bring to you and your family health, happiness, peace and prosperity. May it see your hopes fulfilled and may it be rich in the successful accomplishment of your highest aims.
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New Year's Edition-r-THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
page
'Arabs Deny Right Anti-Semites Active Close to Warsaw to Negotiate Loan Jerusalem. (J.T.A.)—The right of the Palestine Government to proceed With a loan without consulting the inhabitants of the country was challenged by Abdul Hadi, leader of the extreme Arab party, who declared that the Government has no rignt to proceed with its plans l\it a proposed loan of 2,000,000 pounds, although Palestine will profit economically 'by • it. The Arab leader said that the Arabs are unable to discuss the French report with the Government since the Government does not recognize the report as official. Mention the Jewish Press to our advertisers.
Warsaw, (J.T.A.)—A panic was created among the Jewish population of Nowobrodnow, near Warsaw, when the Jews awoke to find that during the night Polish anti-Semites had painted all the Jewish shops with signs urging the Poles not to buy from Jews and to beat the Jews. In the morning rowdies distributed anti-Semitic leaflets calling for the confiscation of all Jewish property and urging a complete boycott of all Jewish business. A delegation of Jews imemdiately intervened with the local authorities and demanded full protection for the Jews.
BEST WISHES for a
Happy and Prosperous
NEW YEAR
Brandeis Workers' Quarters CHRISTIAN WOMEN in Jewish National Homeland SEND PROTEST TO LEAGUE OF NATIONS Carrie Chapman Catt Organizes Protest Committee to Aid Jews
The great silent Zionist of Washington speaks through deeds in Palestine. The above is a passing cameraman's snapshot of a corner of the Brandeis Workers' Quarter at Hedera, one of the colonies aided by the Palestine Economic Corporation,
in the Vadi Havareth region on the coastal plain in Palestine. Important Jewish National Fund possessions are located in the same region. It is known that Louis D. Brandeis is deeply interested in the Jewish National Fund, its ideals and problems.
Speaking of Hitierism
thorities on the insane, experts on the moron, to be present and let them join In a symposium. They should have dissected the insanity, and what is more-, I-believe, the assinine stupidity of the-Hitleritesi in a cold, scientific way. Then-the world would have been sure to understand just what is happening in Germany today. (Copyright by J. T. A.)
By DAVID SCHWARTZ
THE CONSERVATIVE SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION # "Worthy of Its Name" 1614 Harney Stl
SEASON'S GREETINGS from
THE FAMILY SHOE STORE We have been selling quality merchandise for 42 years. We carry a very large and complete stock. Our Boys' and Children's Shoes are purchases from the best of makers and you may expect the maximum of wear. 100% leather and priced to meet all demands. Experienced clerks.
STYLE — COMFORT — WEAR
DREXEL SHOE CCX The Home of Quality Footwear 1419 Farnam Street •m*
Greetings an Wishes to the Jewish people, for their happiness, prosperity and well-being during the coming year*
CLOVER LEAF CLUB "For Omaha's Elite"
119 South 15th Street
"60" CLUB "An Ideal Country Club" 7500 North 60th Street
FRANK B. HART, Secy-Treas.
IT WILL STAY
I do not know whether it is true, but It's a beautiful story that Arthur Garfield Hayes, the fighter for liberalism tells. That of a German Jewish storekeeper, whose shop was placarded with the sign "Jude" by the Nazis. As the Jewish shopkeeper looked on with indignation, he remarked, "111 see to it that that sign stays on after the boycott."
BADGE OF HONOR
And it se'ems to me, that something of the implication of this story has already happened-in the case of the whole German matter. They have flung "Jude" at the Jews, and it has been revealed as a badge of honor.. The Nazis in their preachings that Jews are inferior, have revealed just the opposite. It has dynamited all of their vain boasts.
THE LONDON TIMES REMARKS
It has besn revealed, that if the Naiis were to be really true to their theories, they would have to burn not' only the volumes of Toller, and Einstein and Marx, but more than half of their writings on science. Even the London Times is amazed at some of the findings. The retirement, for instance, of Professor Eritz Haber. I remember reading in a book written by the English economist, Professor Soddy, that it was the Haber process of nitrogen fixation which prevented German collapse during the war."It-is"this process which provides for the nitrates necessary for explosives. I know very little personally about nitrates or explosives, but I see the. London Times this week makes the same statement; Without the Haber process, Germany could not nave conducted the war longer than three s months, it estimates.
NEW YORK (J. T. A.)—Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, world famous pacifist and leader of the American feminists, has announced the formation of the Protest Committee of NonJe-srish Woman Against the Persecution of Jews in Germany. At the same time, Mrs. Catt revealed that in the last month over 9,000 women in all parts of the United States have signed a letter of protest which will be sent to the League of Nations and to newspapers in countries bordering Germany and which have large Germar circulation. The letter of protest outlines the history of the Hitlerite persecution of the Jews. "No event has occurred since the great war more shocking to the people of all nations than the German pogrom against the Jews," the letter said. *1t carries a Christian banner, but it is a subversion of all things Christian; it claims to stand for peace, yet violates the most fundamental of international ethics. "If the German majority is unwilling to protect the Jewish minority, it becomes the duty of the world's nations to assume the obligation." Among the well known women on the committee are Dr. Grace Abbott, Miss Jane Addams, Dr. Mary E. Woolley, Judge Florence Allen, Zona Gale and Mrs Gifford Pinchot
Collective Expels ' Sabbath Agitator DR. ADLER DECLARES Moscow. (J.T.A.)—Leiser Kabakoff, a farmer in,, the Crimean collective enterprise, Voroshilov, has been expelled from the farm by unanimous decision of the collective because he agitated among the farmers not to work on the Sabbath, reports the Emess, Yiddish Communist daily. Kabakoff told the farmers not to work on Saturday if they wanted God to prosper their harvest. The paper accuses him of being a hoarder and with spreading discontent with the purpose of sabotaging the work of the collective. This, as well as his Sabbath agitation, the Emess reports, is what influenced the collective to expel Kabakoff.
LINEUP AS "HITLER VERSUS THE WORLD"
SAN FRANCISCO (J. T. A.)—"It is Hitler versus the world; not simply Hitler versus Jews. If unchecked the outcome of that fight can only be the complete degradation of the soul of the German people." So declared Dr. Cyrus Adler of Philadelphia, president of the American Jewish Committee, on his arrival here. •That the situation is grave, that it has become worse in recent months, is apparent," he declared. "That help will come, if not by material means, then by moral means, is my sincere belief." He voiced the belief that Germany
is at war with world principles of fair play and free thought—that the fight is a far wider issue than that which concerns Jewry. "The world," said Dr. Adler, "has worshipped a theory—a theory that we were building for a finer world -better machines, higher ideals and better education. In some of these things, theory has failed and Germany, most machine-like of all, took its fall hardest. . "Germany is enslaved to mechanical ideals and her reaction to her failure in those ideals is already making her a brute. Her treatment of the Jews and others, I believe, is a result of that failure."
Talmud Wisdom Be not a friend of one who wears the cloak of a saint to cover the moral deformities of a knave. He who wishes to be forgiven muet forgive. It is sinful to hate, but noble to pardon. Ascend a step in choosing a friend. Habit strips sin of its enormity. Into the well from which thou drinkest do not cast a stone.
Sabbath Regulation Asked of Palestine Commissioner
Judge not thy neighbor until thou hast been placed in his position. JERUSALEM — A delegation of He is rich who enjoys what he posleading^Jewish citizens has called up- sesseth. on Sir Arthur Grenfell Wauchope, High Commissioner of Palestine, to Love takes no advice. urge him to publish an ordinance regulating observance of the Sabbath in The fortune of this world is like a Palestine and the daily closing of wheel with two buckets, the full beshops in Jewish localities, particular- comes empty and the empty full. ly Tel Aviv. The High Commissioner was reported sympathetic to the request. Zeno first started that doctrine that knavery is the best defense against a knave.—Plutarch. —Shop from our Service Guide
It gives us a great deal of pleasure to take this opportunity of extending to our host of Jewish friends our best wishes for a h a p p y a n d prosperous N e w Year, and to thank you for your co-operation during the year 5693.
HAMILTON CAFE Margaret Berman, Prop. 2406 FARNAM ST.
JACKSON 8278
WE WISH YOU A
Happy New Year
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HABER, A PACIFIST
Haber, it appears, did not invent this process for war purposes. He was interested in getting enough fertilizer for the German farms, and he did succeed in making Germany independent of the nitrate deposits of other countries, as far as this purpose was concerned. But it soon became apparent that the nitrates used for fertilizer could also be used for the making of gunpowder, and so the discovery of Haber, who shares the pacifistic ideas of Einstein, were turned to war ends.
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SPEAKING OF THE ATOM
Bertrand Russell once observed in a lecture on the atom, about which so much is being written today, that he is apprehensive that much of the research in that field, which seems likely to multiply almost incalculably the power resources of mankind, may also be used to make infinitely more powerful explosives. I was thinking of that the other day, when I heard that Professor Neils Bohr, the Danish Jewish scientist, is in the country—lecturing, I am told, at present at Dartmouth.
BOHR IS HERE
Bohr is probably the world's foremost authority on the atom, winning at one time the Nobel prize for his atomic research. A brother of Bohr is connected with the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. I was just wondering, when I thought of men like Haber and Bohr, whether we haven't got all this matter of the Nazis wrong. We act on the supposition that the Hitlerites are wrong-hearted. And we call protest meetings. But they really are idiots.
A SCIENTIFIC PROTEST Now just consider. If a person is an idiot, there is no use in calling" a protest meeting against him. If a man is insane or an imbecile, there is no use in passing resolutions against him, I should be in favor of big meetings, but instead of the addresses delivered, I should invite educators, au-
Accept Our Very Best Wishes
i
It is our sincere wish that the forthcoming year and the years to follow will bring you and yours a full measure of health, happiness and prosperity with the joy of a useful life well lived.
BUCK'S BOOTERIE 1503 FARNAM STREET
for a HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
Harkerf s Holsum Hamburgers Walter Harkert, Prop.
3S3me--Section
, September 20, 3S3&
:he spent S22"ior a pair of shoes. y. B e didnt start i » smoke antS didnt Snow how ~to^play t£he juaaio. lie was 2.0. "Wrttes whenever the mood seizes; xrry he cherMies, -was Charles Ham- him.'By may have jast apetumeii home ^father, unconscious inmor .^is t h e "Wfe u J all bitzer.Bfejirasent teacher, JSme. Bon- after a -party anc still attired in his tenger, i s in IParis. The iirst time ire evening slothes, he will sit down a t -&€ Gershwin 'parties. IShsms ^g*^ "to I^riB to study "IIE canw back the piano. Or he may compose weara designer of iancy ujjyert; 3or v »dtnmMul of shirte .land-ties. Dn ing pajamas,, or a bathrobe—or «ven Eri*£ shoes, owned sBveral c ^ a ihfe ilast trbp he xetnrned 'roft -a 3D naiie. nwnsd SL,fo^mTlj"*1*?"1^owned "•ish hath place and -was a B e ife -pnysically ^vsry strong. ISspeuse and iar xomedy purposes. XIE also ^entertaiBE by imitatmg M. The jfrrst tong ^isee he wer wrote cially hfe BxmB, -which «re Tpowerful. trumpet. -was tnot "The Ehapsady in Blue," but, He JE a. swell ^wrestler. amhitiQn of nis life is "to of n boy. George took nie first ^piano lessor, one called tLSath Stoeet." I t TKHB #er- HIE hrothfir 3ra wtitei- "tire iiyxfcE ters. ^They are 3Iarjorie, ^Natalie, 3£d- -when Ire -was I B . B i s hoylioBd Mote 3anreed by Hiaul "Whiteman in ~&elor hie songs. Before, Irving Caesar Scandals aof 0.921" i o r one jjerlorm- and Buddy He Bylva had t&e honor. "na, "Marilyn and Janet. Ularjorie and ance srily. Ht Tsas ^taken aai because "The Bhapsedy in Mae1" w » played jKatalie were named after relatives. The thing 3 K ~vaTngF> IHWV it was too sad. far t h e first *irae, February 12, I S ^ , 32dna, because it -was a pretty name. rphatagrapii xff ?King George at Aeolian Ball. I t took him three B e i s vsry jjarticular jabottt l a s after Marilyn of ^Tr^^lypy?! bearK Ais inscri|rtian: clothes, -which are matte to order. 3HDfer, Janet was named after t h e j 'SErom •'Bearge d» eearge.3 (Gantinuea an Tage 3.0 j) -mrrBe. Even ^when ire :maSe only i ^wlsen _After 3us fifth daughter was horn.. ame ^wit -wisecraclied: "Cantor iis drryTITS AD jsise his own JUberiina /*^Binee IT learned "to xtitfe 'feeni) ^mblished. 3Fannd "3TBU?' Dtt -was His^first jufaliahed jsuitgK, "Wtten 3Tou "Want "Them l a u -CariU aGfit 3bem iand Sot of aote -was born i n 3BrookTifa» IhnnseK iwhsn ra ^yuuIU,Tiigv?er iget , ^ p t e m n e r J26, a898,lhaB t w o >Want "Them," i e sold "to Harry Wan toothers, J r a ami Arflmr, m e sfeter. Tilier fer 3Bve dollars. 2^!nrst started his peppy style of xac- 3?rances. .As a ^youngster 3te^waB-Hue "ffottfiE canl^. Bis favorifce ing nzp stage and down tin ^Iffto i n g - champion 3B11EX -H1I«I«»T r d '^^ccasionartcr .IBB tfisxoo^s dpg a song xallefl "33ie 3Jagiime Wio- imrhooa. craps. B e once worked a s relief pian1m" -written by a, 3iew song -writer Smokes a cigar out of t h e safe -of ist rat J t e i City Theatre. Was 33rsa mamed UnnngBerim. iiis muu th snd vveurE afaigfa.hat 2Enjoys'ijoxmgTwithip£opte.iiJften;in
WAb^iature ^Mme^vi^ o^^ewr migTP^morite • Personalities •:J mm^aljmm By Sidney Skolsky
v3to^inan3niowBlBroaaway"thctter and ! "anurK liufimately rfiran Sidney iSkoMky, ^rriHiiiLiL columnist -xS. "the .New -whose thrtypes of Broad•jroay -personalities a r e of .mare iihan jpossing interest. In ids.]niniature-norttraits Skolsky mat only gives you the \ jiamplete -human iace of Broadway nut j juust skillful closeups of t h e Beroes j his nyp.mfiy -room .when in -niHif* ~visi~ ixsS. ZHazda Xane. We ihave selected for t o r gtiLeTa ifi "will :spar .willt •him. iTTp ffluE ; cross-section of Jewish Broadway "Would "IOTP ^O "ihe 3l ^Lwtnty n a n CGenrge Gersh-wm,:£amuelJliionel:Ratn-: The j^r»»gTrt xd! 3ife.'32e"^xr 3nany atfel, ilrving Berlin, IFannle Brice, .and lEddie (Cantor. years -mns t o huild Ihis own home. "While -fee 3iouHe ^was being completed, These 3iames.Tia.ve hecome .nonsene^WaS rHifri\nnfr iffrF •fff^lTng' . i t . •hold words throughout t h e country.; 33bey .are -part and -parcel of •canfcemB e ds ~B. good fausmess '»"" and 3jarary America. "Whatever you oread quick t o sense a n oppoitnnity. Wall about George Gershwin, Samuel XionStreet :hafl 3D sooneTccraShed 'fean 2ie t had • written ai book called, "Cajnjirt r .fil IRothaiel, Irving- Berlin, Tannie Short.1' iEven ;in ihis tiressmg Toom i e ' Brice and lEddie Cantor i n the nast in is business-3Ike, liavins a. secretary, a j t h e annumerahle articles t h a t .have desk and a telephone. Tieen wriLlen about them—-will appear The -first play he evei* saw ~was tto 3fuu iirrelevant chatter after ;you "The Talk of 3Jew TTotk" by George areaBBkblskyfsportraits. Skolsky gives -M. Cohen, yiMrring ^Qctor ZMoare, a t 3TQU a iffieliag' which _no other -writer the Grand Dpera Bouse, "Twem^auTd -manages "to convey. B e -makes .you Street and iaghiii Avenue. -fefilt&at tiie subjects of his biographlEDDIE 3s ifussy about 3bod- ZEats with ^an acalisketches a r e -your intimate iriends : t o calories and mixiiuw /iwho 'Confessed to ^ou their most dn- at home. Ukes t o sit .around in ^paso often, .however, 'he rfaHs -off -fee atexmost thoughts, their .most personp jamas and 3-est. wagun and goes in^EoT 21 "bEavy "kosher and t h e very tempo of their His theatrical career started BS a tesistence. .As one commentator -puts singing usher in A movie Ihouse. J&Jso meal, -which i e loves. dt: "_&. -thumbnail Boswell. JJost biog- was in Gus Edwards' "Kid Cabaret" S i s "two luvuribe Tpjames are raphers tell three per cent of -what act. Then he joined IBedini said .Arthur, 3>ang and casino.^BDe is aswell neqple waul t o know. Skolsky makes a "noted team of jugglers. IHe hrougfat ^player. jtiOO^per cent." I f you wish t o know them articles t o juggle. Xater he be- "Ths ^""gt -play i e Ever appeared Jn .all about t h e Jewish celebrities of came half of the "vaudeville team of was "Canary Cottage," written by IZEarl CarrolL 3Jn>adway -jn compact and oiasanating "Cantor and ZLee." Is always -xunmng t o 11 doctor 3nr -TmSKTrm—;read Sidney .Skolskys -por"When working before a microphone -trsit'xS. t h e Jewish Pace of Broadway. or making a .record he .feels depressed something or other. One day •a. doctor examined .hhn and said: "Tneres —-THE rbecanse an audience can't seeihis eyes. Eomething wrong •with'a gland i n ;VOUT Was once an errand boy :far t h e throat". Thafs t h e jeason ^rour 'eyes Isaac Gellis Wurst "Works. bulge. But T m .happy t o say t h a t 1 TfJF hirthday, if youire interested, is can cure yon." Cantor .looked :at t h e is iname fisht "Eddie :and lit iisnt January 31. He was born :in 1892 on doctoT "and before rasing ±rnm his of•Cantor. 3t's Hzzy iskowitch. IHeaieversaw"tiife.mother ariather. lEldridge Street, INew York. His great fice said: "Yon flont iEbs t h a t ^land. j&miough 3L Thundle :-nf inerves /.and hobby in life is t h e maintaining of 3 should pay-jrou yet t o "take away my Sid l/Th "Who, IIlivelihood. v ^ T " f^ ^ "s"n-. ^ ^ C T Tr' ^fnwrgy xm t h e stage, ".he iis very quiet camp's for boys of the Bast SFde. -No, •Goodbye.T B e -vrould Hike tj» Us tfiie dtounafir j of :ZL mew areligion. 3satiard^wiirkeronthestagfi. Wteen Ihe -was iin 'ihe llast ^Follies !he said t o a. ^friend: "*?Drop aTound^any tnne. IFm ialways "inl" : • \ Jn .his 31BW lioute .which Ifee calls, T i e Bouse That 2ieglelds Jack 3Briilt," tlie Tbaferoom jrontains svery of a shower* B e :fe able i » take. a shower standiTig, sitLiug, ilffaning JOT.; Jecliriinfr. B e ^hates ^bad -wine, 'bad -women -and i»ad songs. lEspedally 3jad songs. •' B a s a passion i o r 3iats. B i s -dressing -room iis generally xrowded ^with .special .made headwear .baiiiqfar strefit;
Cantor
Ixest wishes for a. New Y«ax. and IbesaMfci and
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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
•-' Page Ten—Section D
Iportraits of Jewish Faces on Broadway (Continued from Page 9.),
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•voice. "Hello, everybody" His favorite eating place IJ a lunch wagon. months to write it. It took him eight Once a week he spends the 'entire months to write "An American in Roxy. He averages eighteen hours a Paris." His first real popular song hit day in the theater. When asked to night rehearsing next week's show. was "Swanee." This was written for make a speech on, "What I Do With During rehearsals he is a fiery <lythe revue that opened the Capitol The- My Leisure Time," he was obliged to atre. change the subject. His favorite food is hamburger Is bashful about playing the piano at parties. He has to be coaxed. Once steak chopped very fine with onions. he starts, however, you can't stop him. His favorite delicacy is hot dogs. He says: "You see, the trouble is, He has clothes in four places. At when I don't play I don't have a good the theater, at home and at two golf time." clubs. Recently it took two men four In the volume called Great Compos- weeks to make a complete inventory ers As Children, he is the only liv- of his clothing. In the motion picture industry his ing composer listed. is unique. He is the leader of One evening the family was dis- position presentations, the originator of the cussing the new Einstein paper. atmospheric prologue. Also instituGeorge expressed his surprise at the tional movie houses, introducing compactness of the scientific vocabu- uniforms and military ushers. staff lary. He said: "Imagine working for Has a habit of putting a final twenty years and putting your results touch to a discussion by saying: "Apto three pages?" "Well," said Papa Gershwin, "it was probably very small plesauce! Bunk! Baloney!" The first move house he ever owned print." seated two hundred fifty people. The Whenever his sister Frances has an chairs were removable. Every time audition for a job, he goes along and there was a big funeral there wasn't plays the piano for her. any show. They needed the chairs. When rehearsing a new show he "ROXY Calls everybody by their first name spends hours singing his songs to the or not at all. chorus. His mascot is a black cat called namo. Scolding, unreasonable, deVictor Herbert once offered to teach "Lindy." The cat walked in from the manding tha impossible and getting it. him orchestration, but died. He studied street the day Lindbergh hopped off He always refers to the actors and . a t Columbia for two months. Then for Paris. It has been there ever since. stage crew as "My children." quit. Everything he knows about this He speaks with a lisp. Always has His ushers are put through drills he taught himself. a sob in his throat. If s a great radio by a "Devil Dog" every morning. His favorite exercise is handball. Is very proud of the fact that he plays well enough to beat Benny Leonard. The first day of the new program he sits in the last row of the balcony and watches the performance of the show he has rehearsed all night. Under his chair is coiled an elaborate affair which enables him to broadcast directions backstage. He s p e a k s through a mouthpiece. The audience is unable to hear a word. But the players onstage, the electricians, the j Leavenworth at 50th St.—WaL 1350 property room, the music library and the projection room receive instruc| NANCY M. MORRIS Omaha, Nebr. tions. _ After this he plays two-handed casino. He plays poker with his staff and loses continually. He complains they "play too close to the vest." His father and sister used to operate a movie house in Forrest City, Pennsylvania. Really believes he bears a striking resemblance to Napoleon both in character and in appearance. He has four secretaries. Yet does most of the work himself, for he beQuiet, Convenient Service Unsurpassed lieves he is the only person who can do the things that made Roxy Roxy. His business correspondence starts ith "My dear little girl." It ends with, "Yours truly, S. L. RothafeL" Is a great golf fiend.. When he has 315 So. 16th St. nothing to do in the office he shoots a paper golf ball around. CHINESE AND AMERICAN CUISINE Was once a marine, a baseball player and a bartender. He cannot read a note of music nor can he play an instrument. However, he has a wonderful memory. He can whistle the enjtire score of "Pinafore." While he is conducting the orchestra, some of the musicians will not look Our very best wishes for a most healthy, happy at the baton for fear they will make a mistake. : . • • •and prosperous New Year.
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He has a name that will live forever and bought it for a song. Came to this country at the age of 4, the youngest of eight children. In Russia his father was a cantor. Here a kosher butcher. He has yet to find a hat to fit him. He eats a lot for one of his size. Plays the piano by ear, And only in F sharp. Has a specially constructed piano with a sliding keyboard. When the music calls for another key he merely moves the lever. He is not a one-finger player. Uses all his fingers badly. Has a scar on his forehead. It was
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received on a Washington's birthday in Cherry Street, trying to start a bonfire. Thinks he is a good stud poker player. His friends say he's lucky. His pet aversions are riveters and second verses. Ran away from home at the age of 14. His first stop was Callahan's saloon. Here he sang "The Mansion of Aching Hearts" until enough coins were tossed at him to pay for a night's lodging. Later became a singing waiter at Nigger Mike's place, 12 Pell street. The barker on the trip to Chinatown bus now points out ithe place. He wrote "Alexander's Ragtime "Band," credited with starting the jazz vogue, at the age of 23. Crowds frighten him. So do certain individuals. His idea of a great achievement is writing a song that reaches the million copy mark. Maintains a home in West Fortysixth Street. But lives elsewhere. The first of every month generally finds him moving. His square monicker is Israel Baljne. For a time he went under the name of Cooney. lecame Berlin because that was the way the Bowry pronounced Baline. As a singing waiter he kicked a hoofer named George White out of the place for being a pest, and also served Al omith. Is always chewing gum. This can ba observed by merely watching the funny way his hat moves on his head. His favorite biographer is Alexander Woollcott. He composes in this fashion: First playing the song on the piano. Then singing it to Arthur Johnson, his right and left-hand man, who records upon paper what he hears. Tli-en Johnson plays the written manuscript. This is the first draft. From this Berlin works on to the final version. Often after a song has been published he changes it. His bill for flowers for the Mrs. is $1,000 a month. Of all the songs he has written, a figure exceeding four hundred, his favorite is "The Song Is Ended But the Melody Lingers On." Is very restless. Can't sit still. Always paces the floor. He walks miles in any room he is in. It is the only exercise he get. As far as playwrights go, his taste begins and ends with George S. Kaufman. As for music, he'll whistle anything by Jerome Kern, For lyrics he hands first prize to B. G. De Sylva. And if asked to name the swellest guy in the theatrical game, he'd shout Sam Harris. He has had to change his entire
working schedule since he became a father. He has never worn a diamond. The only jewelry he wears is, occasionally, a pearl tie pin. After finishing a song he sings it to the first person he meets. A bellboy at Palm Beach was the first to hear "Lazy." A Broadway taxi driver was the first to hear "All Alone." A bewildered stranger, occupation unknown, was the first to hear, "Say It With Music." He never writes anything in longhand but his signature on a check. Everything else he prints. The one thing in life he is looking forward to is walking into a restaurant with his daughter, Siary Ellen.
Fannie Brice She was born at the stroke of midnight on October 29, 1892. Her square monicker is Fannie Borach. She enjoys a good cry. Hasn't a long list of friends. But those she has she can tap for anything. She took the tag of Brice from John Brice, a next-door neighbor. He is now a watchman on the Ninth Avenue elevated. She told him that some day he'd sea his name in lights. Is a good judge of diamonds, furs and the value of real estate. There is one thing in this world she can't stand. That is cream in her coffee. It makes her sick. She is the proud mother of two children. A girl of nine and a boy of seven. Has one brother, Lew, in the theatrical business. Also has one sis-
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ter, Caroline, who believes that she would be a great actress if she didn't suffer from asthma. Her hobby is taking photographs of bedrooms. She has a picture of every bedroom she ever lived in. Made her stage debut at Keeny's | Theater in Brooklyn on amateur night. She won first prize singing, "When
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such people miss something in life. After she sang "My Man" for the first time, her salary was raised from $1,000 to S3.000 weekly. Her present husband is Billy Rose, who also writes her songs for her. Her nickname for him is "Putsy." She'd walk ten miles if she could window shop on the wav. Otherwise she wouldn't walk two blocks. Her first comedy sons was "Sadie Salome." She sang it merely to help Irving Berlin, then a newcomer, along. It started her on the road to fame and fortune. She is a card shark. When it is her turn to name the greatest actor in the world she cheers long and loud for Muni Weisenfreund. (Paul Muni.) Is never nervous on an opening night. Ten minutes before the opening curtain of "Fioretta" she was busy selling hats to chorns girls. When signing checks she spells it "Fanny." In the bright lights of Broadway she insists that it be "Fannie." She was once a soubrette in a Hur(Conttnued on Page 11.)
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You're Not Forgotten by the Girl You Can't Forget" The only instrument she can play is the piano. That is, if hunting for notes with two fingers can be called playing. Her father owned a string of saloons. He was known as "French Charlie." Her mother really ran the saloons, for "French Charlie" was always playing pinochle. When traveling she takes an electric stove with her. She'll cook for anybody who wants to eat. She once worked in a movie house on Eighty-third Street and Third Avenue. Here she sang songs, sold tickets and painted signs. Her salary was $8 per week. Is one of the best dressed women in the theater. Has her dresses designed especially for her. While in Hollywood she made dresses for Dolores Costello and Norma Talmadge. The moon makes her serious. When watching Fannie perform her mother always says to the people sitting about her: "That's my daughter. She's good, isn't she?" She dislikes people who are perfect and have everything. Believes that
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Educator Sees Chaos in Hitlerite Germany]
laxly known as Al Smith, sat' before really are it is difficult to determine, him." although 8,000 copies of/"Liberation" To "save" America from the Jews, are being sent Broadcast throughout Pelley proposes that "this nation must the country. It may be that the Nazis come to Christian democracy" which in Germany will subsidize Pelley's silLOS ANGELES (J. T. A.)—"When would mean "the incorporation of the ver-shirted anti-Semites and seek to Germany's new policies are placed in United States of America into a col- utilize this nativist movement to adossal people's corporation, in which vance their propaganda in this coun- contact with international policies all the citizens are common and pre- try. It is possible, too, that Pelley's and are found to clash, they simply ferred stockholders, with voting rights boastful declaration of a link with the must be altered," said Dr. Rufus H. as facile and effective as in any cor- Nazis is just talk. But in any event Von Kleinsmid, president of the Uniporation of the present in commercial American Jewish leaders would do versity of Southern California, who business, and where every citizen well to take steps to prevent the Sil- has just returned from an educational draws some sort of dividend accord- ver Shirts from achieving the strength tour of European countries, including ing to his capabilities and industry-" the brown shirts achieved in Germany Germany. "Woeful mistakes and costthe Jews made notorious by the Ku In order to achieve this "Christian de- while German Jewry remained inac- ly blunders are being made in GerKlux Klan and the Dearborn Indepen- mocracy" Pelley plans to "form quick- tive and silent. many," he said, "and it may be necand garnishes them with liberal ly Mid rigorously in every state in this essary eventually, it is felt by observ(Copyright, 1933, by Seven Arts whose "Aryan" philosophy and -viru- dent, doses of hijTown philosophy of "Chrisr ers there, to call on the old trained Feature Syndicate). lent anti-Semitism he has taken over tian Democracy." He revives the debauched American Union, -aaewpoand skilled statesmen of that country bag and baggage, Commander Pelleyj charges of an international Jewish litical party that shall be first of all to correct some of the errors" as he calls himself, has organized Ms 'money-bund," blames the depression a spiritual thing: a native-son, Prot- Economies Must Be Met political machine that Silver Shirts on military lines. His fol- on the Jews, and finds that they are estaxttr-Christian Dr. Von Kleinsmid also stated that FT- LAUDEEDALE, Fla.—M. H. shall f proceed to put men in office lowers, whom he calls "storm troops" plotting the ruin of Christian civiliza- who Epstein, commissioner of public safe- he found "confusion, chaos and miscannot be bought or intimidated, in Germany as well as strut about in silver shirts and blue tion. and -who shall have first of all the ty of this city, in his zeal for his work understanding extreme and other foolish policies." corduroy pants. His program is akin principles of Christ before them as to that of the Ku Klux Klan but. he President Roosevelt is held to be a the -motif ©f their statecraft, usher- has combined his post as head of the goes the Klan a few steps better and/ dupe of Jewish bankers. The Federal ing- in -a- new_day and -a new deal -for department with the duties of a com- Its First Synagogue wages bitter war against President Reserve System, Pelley shouts, "is un- this -despoiled American nation where mon, ordinary cop. PALO ALTO, Cal.—This communiRoosevelt and preaches an American- der the indirect but no less effective subversive -foreign elements, from the When economies necessitated the reseat of Stanford University, has version of the supremacy, of "Aryans."; control of men like Eugene Meyer. highest international banker to the duction of the force to only three of- ty, taken the initial step toward estabJaines Warburg and other members of Despite the fact that Pelley has the international: Jewish money-buad. lowest long-haired fanatic, are kicked ficers, Epstein assumed the additional lishment of a Jewish Community Cenheen peddling his poison for Dearly a- It was, in effect, for these gentlemen permanently and adequately into the responsibility of a patrolman. ter by dedicating its first,synagogue. year in his magazine,"Liberation," that President Roosevelt's policies middle1 of the Atlantic, to stay kicknumerically the Silver Shirts have made it criminal for the average citi- e d - " : ' ^ r ^ - ; : . v ;- ; ; ; - V ^ : : - - / .-. made no progress, perhaps because it zen-to-retain lawful money in his Apart jfrom ftes^ ;nonsejnsical. and costs ten dollars for the privilege of" strong-box." The NRA, Pelley says, is ravings, ,3PeIleyr has revealed wearing a silver shirt and blue pants. part of a Jewish conspiracy. Accord- tbigoted h a t h i s S l v e r S^kte are already orBut there can be no question that ing to "Liberation" the Jews are also ganizied in^46 that Pelley and his organization are a men- the cause of President. Roosevelt's before the iyearstetesYai^-boasts is oat "you~are going ace. popularity. In the June 24th issue this to see the Silver Shirts loom large in In a recent issue of'"Liberation" it sheet says, "Why all this manufac- the events of the United States." Thus is frankly, admitted that "on; January tured publicity and propaganda by for little or nothing has been, heard 31,1933—the/flay that-Hitler came in- Jewish Hollywood on the screen, by or seen of them hut there is no questo powers in GeraanyH-Pelley came JewisTi Baruch. and Meyer and War- tion that Pelley is a potential danger. out from under cover with his Silver burg in; finance, by Jewish Ochs and He has stated that "he counts it an Shirt;National Organization. -Having W.inchell in Jotirnaalism, to 'put Roo- honor to be in the confidence of some planned depots of his facts through- sevelt over big* with, the rank and- of the highest Hitlerites in the United out the entire United States, enlight- file of the moronistic-element who fre- States and to know something of their ened police;; and vigilant groups, se- quently mistake and applaud the forthcoming plans, against predatory 514 South Sixteenth Street cured the co-operation o f outraged wrong- hero on the silver screen." Pel- Jewry." Christian" citizens to carry on. regard- ley has gone so far as to state that the Even more significant is a passage less of. what happens to him-person-, "Jewish- money-bund" has put a dically, his' organization of Silver Shirts tator in the White House who is al- in "Liberation," which declared that is now snow-balling exactly as Hit- ready so subservient to these pred- "it is the order of things that Hitler should be doing wha the is doing. It ler's Nazis snow-balled in Germany atory Jews that you can hear him is the order of things that those wickwhen the-German people -were, at last persuaded to. the truth.- The-Silver openly designated on the streets of ed and malignant spirits who have inShirts come to Christian citizens; who Washington as "President Franklin D. carnated in certain sections of the Hewant-ACTION and say: "We will give Kosenfeld." In another number the brew race trying to bring about the it to you pressed down and overflow- Silver' Shirts' mouthpiece declares downfall of the . Christ peoples, ing. We leaders are risking our lives that "if Franklin D. Roosevelt had should meet a fearful fate in this closto write a new page in American his- not been acquiescent to German-Jew- ing of the cycle of cosmic -event. That tory. "We .do not propose to see Amer- ish alien money kings and their sat- contest is on the make and-Hitler's ica made the Tag-bag and -waste bas- raps abroad, he never •would have got- job it has been to do the advance ket for' an element that Hitler is con- ten a smell of the New York gover- work. But Hitler is not going to fina Jew, Lehman, now ish that work. The finish of it comes trolling in Germany, to have it trans- norship-^-where 1 fer its predatory tactics wholesale sits enthroned in his place, just as right here in America." Just how strong the Silver Shirts over here into the United States, run the half Jew, Alfred Schmidt, popuour institutions high, wide and handsome, and dictate to us what .we, as 1706 Douglas Street Anglo-Saxon freemen, and native sons shall do, with an economic club over us if we refuse."
An Expose of Pelley By BERTRAM JONAS The program and aims of the Silver Shirts, a new anti-Semitic and antiCatholic organization preaching the "Aryan" philosophy of the German Saris, is exposed in this review of its menacing propaganda.—THE EDITOB. American Jewry, whose attention, has been diverted from the domestic scene for more than seven months by the terror of the Nazi brown shirts in Germany, may soon be forced to turn Its eyes to the old South, which gave birth some years ago to the Ku Klux Klan. of unlamented memory, and •which has now spewn forth,the Silver Shirts,'a new nativist anti-Semitic
and anti-Catholic organization which boasts of its connection with the Hitlerite propaganda machine in the United States. Asheville, N. C, is the headquarters of the Silver Shirts of America, whose official name is the League for Liberation, itself an auxiliary 6f the Foundation for Christian Economics. The leader of the Silver Shirts is one William Dudley Pelley, a former publisher of newspapers in Massachusetts and Vermont, author of several third-rate novels, an erstwhile Y. M. C. A. official in Siberia, and more recently a resident of Hollywood, ,Cal.s ! „ - . • . •>. -.- - ,"-.-• . v . . : ; Aping the tactics of Herr Hitler,
•>*-
New Year's Greetings from
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.- .JRage Eleven—Section D
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In issue after issue of "Liberation," Pelley repeats the hoary libels against.
Neyr Year's Greetings from
Portraits of Jewish Faces on Broddwav
HAPPY NEW YEAR
(Continued irom Page-10.)"
Thomas B- Cdlerrian
tig and Seamon Burlesque show. * "Whenever she visits her mother she hears these two things: "Oh, did I DAVID LONG, Manager cook a good soup yesterday. It "was like gold." And "Fannie save your money." W E 1429 3104 No. 16th Likes to play the horfees. Once was given a false tip and Bet $400 on a horse that liad never -won a race. Through a fluke the .horse managed to totter over the line a winner. That night the bookmaker not only delivered'i the money to her, but also the horse. . , : As far as a favorite dish goes, she is torn between an acquired, taste for fried pork chops and a natural taste for kippered; herring. "The Pioneer Malt Syrup of America" No matter how hard she may try, she can't say cinema, panorama and Satisfaction Guaranteed aluminum. Either Plain or Hop Flavored She summed up the Hollywood situation better than anyone else when she said: "I was out there eight months. I worked five weeks-and' got thres years' pay." - OMAHA, NEBR. •^At her wedding to Billy Eose she had a man, Jay Brennan, serve as Labels Redeemable for Valuable Premiums—Union Made bridesmaid. Claims she never feels, better than {iiiiiiuiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiniiuiiiic when she is expecting a baby.
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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
Page Twelve—Section; D
Only 660,000 Non-Aryans in Germany And of These; 500,000 'OfficiaF Jews
A Slide of Laughter
Florida, or Californiaa, be a resort for the part which Jews have played in those "primeurs" among people as the history of Bialystok will be told well as those who like their springs in the "Bialystok Pincos," community and summers In winter. recpi'd book, the publication of which will be financed by the Bialystok Their Role Bialystok, Poland.—The story of Kehillah.
A little pleasure for youngsters who have been deprived of many of life's gifts is shown here . . . a scene from the National Home for Jewish Chilat Denver. " BERLIN (J. T. A.)—The question, foundation, in fact. In the first place, per cent of Jewish blood, as will the dren This home is one of the beneficiardescendants of Jews that were bapwhile mixed marriages have been "How many •'non-Aryans' are there es of the Omaha Jewish Philanthroactually in Germany?" is one of the very frequent in the "higher" circles, tized or left the religious community pies. before then. such as university professors, the most frequent subjects of conversation in Germany today. According to aristocracy, the land-owning classes, The total number of Jews who the Nazi definition, the term "non- the world of literature and art, and ceased to be members of the Jewish among some of the nations is already Aryan" includes all those with at even among the higher grades in the religious community in the years plain. A German bureau of propaleast one-quarter of Jewish blood in army, they have been very rare 1831-1932 is, as nearlyas can be esti- :anda, -we are told, by the newspapthem, that is, not only members of among the "lower" classes. In the sec- mated, about 24,500, the number of rs is at work in England. the Jewish faith, but also such as ond, place the great frequency of mix- mixed marriages during the same pe- I do not apprehend that the Nazi are not members of the religious com- ed marriages is only a phenomenon riod about 45,000. These figures do propagandists will have much success munity, as well as the descendants of of the last few decades. And, thirdly, not take us much further, for they do in the United States. Not that I do mixed marriages down to the second statistics show that mixed marriages not tell us how many out of this num- not realize that there is a sufficient the generation. It is almost impossible to are much less fertile than others. ber, and how many descendants of undercurrent of feeling ;against N determine this figure with any degree (The figures are an average of 0.5 theirs, are alive today. To achieve any Jew here. of exactness, since • official statistics children per mixed marriage as accurate results, we should have to But I have a feeling that the Nazis only include those Jews wh'o are ac- against 1.6 per ordinary marriage.) take into consideration the average themselves have indirectly made it imtually' members of the religious com- As has been said, an exact calcula- length of life, the average age on possible to ignite this underbrush, so munity. -This latter figure probably tion is, in the circumstances, impos- leaving the Jewish community, the to speak. When you state a thing comamounts to only about 500,000. The sible, but it is not too difficult to average frequency of marriage and pletely, unless that thing is absolutely larger, inclusive figure has been the work out a - moderately accurate- esti- finally the average number of chil- sound, it begins to reveal its empti- we'll do it for twenty-five cents." And the next day, they were there subject of much speculation, and is mate. To do this only the last hun- dren per marriage among' this class. ness. They have discharged the full commonly estimated - at between two dred years need to be considered, for This fairly complicated method gives content of the emotional bias against at the appointed time and they serthe Jew—so much so, that even Poles enaded the Jew with the odious name. and three millions. Occasionally the the descendants of mixed marriages us the following results. begin to see something good in the "That's fine," said the Jew and he apthat took place before then will prob- Number of Jews living today, figure of 8,000,000 is mentioned. plauded lustily. Jew. These figures appear to have no ably have considerably less than 2S that have left the Jewish religious community .—. 15,370 Now what, could, the Nazi propa- And the children gathered around, Descendants in the first gen- V gandists possibly say against the Jew and asked him if he would continue eration, alive today.-...——_ 72,740 in the United States that they have not to give a quarter every day they called Descendants in the second genalready been quoted in American him a bad name. eration, alive today............— 46,200 newspapers as saying. And he said that he would pay them Descendants in' the third genAH that they can do is repeat the no more. eration, alive today..—..—„.„ 26,400 same charges here—and that, Brother "Well," said the children, "we -won't EXPERT ATTENTION Hitler would find, would be regarded call you that name any more; if you Total, roughly ... .__...._—160,000 as stale stuff. You can't shoot dis- don't pay." Given to Men, Women Adding to this number roughly charged ammunition. "Alright." said the Jew, "don't" and Children 500,000 "official" Jews, we get the It seems to me there is, some sort sum total" of about 660,000 "non- PAID FOR INSULTS of moral in this story, applicable to CORRECT FITTINGS Aryans" in the Nazi definition of the You know the story of the Jewish the general question of Hitlerism. term, or, in other words, roughly 1 business man who lived in a Ku Klux QUALITY MERCHANDISE PALESTINE per; cent of the total : population of Klan territory. . ...... Germany.' If t e who can make two blades of And one morning, the children of the. town paraded in front of the Jew- grass grow where one grew before, is ish business man's store and shouted a benefactor as we used to believe in some bad name at him. And the next the old pre-depression days, then one of the greatest benefactors of the day, they repeated i t for 'So Levy gathered these children world is Dr. Sosskin, the English ABDOMINAL -•"•-•. about him and said to them: "Listen, Z i o n i s t . UPLIFT cuties, I will tell you what I will do. Some day'a book ought to be writIf you come back here tomorrow ten about this man, who is regarded Post Operative ; morning and call me that same bad as England's greatest authority on inMaternity name, Til give each of you fifty cents." tensive agriculture. I happened to be Sacro Iliac By DAYID SSCHYTABTZ The children, of course, agreed, and reading the other day one of his writDE LUXE I Sprain the next morning, they were there, ings on! Palestine agriculture, and he ELASTIC THE NEXT WORLD WAR and .they called him enthusiastically believe^ that one of Palestine's best "We:-areInformed on all-sides that that bad name. opportunities in agriculture is the deSpecial Garments Made HOSIERY we must expect another vrorld-war And Levy was beaming. "That's velopment of what' are called "priANKLETS and that shortly. The nations of the fine," he • said, and he gave each of meurs"—that is to say, Palestine with, and "world are, so to speak, merely rest- the children fifty cents. And moreover, its warm climate naturally brings to Lady Attendant KNEE CAPS ing up now, catcliihg their breatB, and he called them again and said: "Lis- ripening many vegetables and fruits making ready to go at each other's ten, children, I'll soon be in the poor- before they have ripened in colder clithroat again. house if I continue to give each of you mates. In the development of these fifty cents, although I want you to primeurs, Sqsskin sees the greatest fuLawrence Stallings has compiled photographic album of the World War, call me that bad name. But I'll tell ture for Palestine agriculture. Physicians', Nurses', Hospital and Sickroom Supplies and he has titled it, with prophetic you what I'll do—if you'll call me that Indeed, climate may prove to be the 111 So. 17th St. AT 5825-6 Medical Arts BIdg. implications, "The First World War.' tomorrow, I'll give each of you twen- strongest commercial attraction of And now comes H. G. Wells in "The ty-five cents." Palestine generally. For there is. no Shape of Things to Come" and tells And' the children said, "Alright, reason why Palestine may not, like us that the next World War will come in 1940. ' -
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But for the Jew, the most interest-, ing thing about Wells' prediction is— that the next World War will have Jewish roots. • Wells explains the breaking-out of the next World War as follows: A Pole of Jewish extraction,' who wears a dental plate, gets something between his teeth which makes it impossible for him to close his jaw. He is in a train on the station platform at Dantzig. Going to a window, he makes such terrible faces while : justing the plate that; a Nazi thinks be is being ridiculed; an altercation results, the Nazi shoots and the war of the corridor is on. Then all the other nations pi tch in, and presto —. the" world is marching. . - -
OUR VERSION
Well, wars have been occasioned for less reason than that: But personally, while I agree with Wells, that the, pre-? text of the next world war may be; Jewish, I have a'the'ory that it will be caused by a slightly different chain of circumstances. - * . It is my opinion that a Nazi soldier coming aboard a Danzig train,will see a Nazi officer and raise, his hand in Fascist-salute. The Jew on\the train, seeing the Nazi's hand uplifted, will think he wants to go out of the room, and the Jew will point to the place. The Nazi ^will thereby be terribly insulted and shoot the Polish Jew—and the war of the corridors will be on. \
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But seriously speaking, it may very well be that the Jew may be the pretext for the next world war. And that such a war is likely,-seems very probable. In the first place, wars have a ^tendency of begetting other wars. Our own Mexican war, for instance, in: the forties, bringing us the western- territories and with that the question of the determination of the status of the slaves in the new territory, was largely responsible" for the Civil War. . . : . •• And that the last World War has left plenty of the roots of trouble is plain to all. . It is my opinion that it is delayed by only: one -thing. Germany is at present almost_ completely isolated among tfie nations of the world. Now in the-old days, the Kaiser used to talk about "ich uria Goti."- but even though he .had unreasonably," I think, assured himself of God's assistance, he also depended upon some human allies. There was- Austria, there "wits Turkey, and a couple of minor countries. . . .. •-,:.,;..' • . - ' • But now Germany is alone, and as long as \i remaina-alone there will je no war. But Germany may pick up an associate here and there in the course nt the next several years. Arid'wheh it does, the war will be^here. N A Z I S - - P L A N
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That Germany will more and. more .make thls-effort - tcr, -win ; friendship"
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SIOUX CITY, IOWA—Uexr Year^ Edition
Page IS—Sedaen D
ewry
1OUX Resume of Work of Local Organizations Gives Picture of Humming Activity - The Jewish cup of suffering, again country of enforced economy, funds filled to the brim by the sorrows and have been raised for the necessary •«nfferings of their brethren in Ger- undertakings, the community has remany, has marked the year 5693 as membered its obligations toward the "one to go dovm in the history of the -Jews. Economic stress in our own upbuilding of the Jewish homeland, privileged land, has been far over- and the local institutions nave conshadowed by the burdens of the. Jew tinued to function. abroad.' If a few individuals nave taken In Sioux City, the Jewish com- advantage of economic conditions to . munity, conscious of its relationship shirk their dufies toward Jewish . to World Jewry, has been more causes, a far greater number have closely bound together as a result of realized that it is just in times like i these conditions, and the socially con- these, that the spiritual and cultural scious individuals have striven, as organizations are most vital in the never before, to retain their Jewish life of the Jew. ; culture, religion, customs, and char- Ove 20 organizations in Sioux City acteristics. carried on their regular programs A resume of activities in Sioux during 5693. The following review City during the year 5693 is an in- of their activities is assurance that dication of this renewed interest and Sioux City Jewry is "keeping pace concern over the fate of world Jewry. with its fellow communities throughEvery project undertaken by the out America. * various organizations, has been met Sioux City Jewry closes the books with enthusiasm, and co-operation. If of 5693 with a sigh and with the material results were slightly small- prayer that the New Year will bring er than in previous years, the cul- new light in days of darkness, and tural phase of the organizations' pro- the assurance that a renewed spirit grams more than made up for it. and faith will be ushered in with Despite protests throughout the 5694.
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The Federation
The Federation of Jewish Social Service and the Jewish. Community Center combine to make the clearing house and central organization for all Jewish activities in Sioux City. The work of the Federation and the Center during the past year has clearly provsn its value in Jewish communal life. Despite, depleted funds, and the Increased number of applicants for relief, through the capable supervision of Hiss Eose Iipman, the Federation superintendent, l i e relief department was able to carry a load of 160 cases, •which involved almost 700 individuals. 75 people received hospital treatment, 40 applicants were provided with ^steady- or temporary work, 625 meal tickets were issued and 26 nights lodging were provided for transients, and 18 families were dependent upon the Fedeatdon for every necessity of life. The relief department in itself, would have justified the maintenance of the -Federation and Communty Center. However, the Center activities were kept at a fewer pitch throughout the year, despite adverse -conditions which demanded the most careful planning by the Board of Directors.. Four hundred boys and girls were registered in fifteen clubs and classes, under t i e direction of thirty volunteer workers. The clubs included the Junior and Senior Maccabees, the Young Judeans, the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts* Brownies, Deborah Club, Pacemakers, Newsies Club, Little Theater Group, Business Girls, Epsflon Phi, Phi Eta Phi, Dramatic Club, Y. A. J. club. Cocoa and rolls:/were served to the Newsies every night during the winter months. A kosher kitchen and a library were -maintained, and used by sixteen outside organizations as well as the dubs that met under the direct supervision of the Center. •In addition to maintaining the Cenhe Fe3eration this year as in the past, paid its monthly allottment to the Talmud Torah, and contributed toward the Out of Town institutions. Tie high lights of the -year's activities were the Annual Meeting and Banquet, when the year's reports were made, and the Building Fund Carnival, which, was held in May for the benefit of the Building Fund. Mr. A. M. Davis served as president; E. E. Baron, honorary president; Max Lasensky, Frank Davidson, Barney Baron,1 Mrs. E . H . Emlien and Mrs. E. E. Baron, vice presidents; Mike Skalovsky, treasurer, and Max Brodkey, secretary.
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The local B'nai Brith lodge included in its membership last year over 200 members, and enjoyed a year's, activities which rounded out the cultural, spiritual, and social life of its members. Foremost in its activities the past year, was the interest shown in, and the co-operation given to the A. Z. A. chapter. The B'nai Bri& included in its regular semi-monthly • meetings, programs given by the A. Z. A. members. The lodge upheld its past record :of support for the Cleveland Orphans Home, did its share in the Wider Scope campaign, and sponsored several open meetings and forums for the benefit of the Jewish community. Leon Dobrofsky served as president; Milton Bolstein, vice-president; Mike Skalovsky, treasurer; Frank Margolin, recording secretary; Lester Davidson, corresponding secretary; Lou Chesen, warden; and Sam Reznick, guardian. Trustees were Rabbi H. R. Babinowitz, Rabbi T. N. Lewis, J. Kalin, Robert Sacks and Mike Skalovsky.
The A. Z. A. chapter during the year 5693 was an important factor in the cultural and spiritual life of Sioux City's younger men. , Bound together by a common purpose and ideal, the members have completed a year that will serve as an example for the future. , '... Aiming to stress the religious and spiritual phase of Jewish life, the chapter conducted their annual A. Z. A. sabbath at Shaare Zion Synagogue before a large congregation. Speakers included Max Maron, Marvin /Klass, and Herman "Wigodsky. Jewish cultural life, was stressed By the ' members in. their literary meetings held during the year, and their social life was rounded *rat T>y lutings, parties, and athletics. > Sioux City was "well represented at
the National A. Z. A. Convention heid in Omaha this summer. The officers for last year were Marvin Klass, Leonard Hall, Max Maron, Stanley Herzoff, Martin Knsberg, Herman Wigodsky, Ed Miller, and Morris Borshevsky. Fund raising affairs* during the year included the Annual Dance sponsored by the chapter.
Kantqr, J. Dimsdale, A. L Schfartz, N. Sadof f , Paul Kaplan, Max Lasensky, Max Friedman, B. Baron, J. Kalin, D. Prusiner, IL Lazriowich, M. Lazriowich, and Mesdames "M. Lipschntz, A. L Schwartz and William Lazere.
received a diploma for completion of has been instrumental in enriching his high school -wt»rk in the Sunday the spiritual life of Sioux City's School. Mr. Harry Horwitz "was in- Jewry. strumental in providing much of the High lights of last year's program joy of -flie Religious School sessions, in addition to the regular services inby his leadership in singing- the tra- cluded a 'Thanksgiving service, a illtional Hebrew songs and hymns Baccaleaureate Service for High during the assemblies. School graduates, an Auxiliary SabA, M. Davis is president of the bath Service, an A. Z. A. Sabbath Temple; Hyman Fishgall, vicerpresi- Service, the Junior Congregation Congregational .activities at Mount i3ent; Mese Weinberg, treasurer, and Service, the Confirmation Service, a Sinai Temple supplemented by the Mike Skalovsky, secretary. ' Mother's Day Service, and the Father and Son banquet. work of the Temple Sisterhood and The Sunday School enjoyed an enSioux City Jewry is beginning to Brotherhood, have enjoyed a unique rollment of over 100 children, and take heed of the Jewish trainmg of place in Hie calendar of Sioux City the classes were taught by Dena its children, and the local Talmud Jewry. Baron, Ida Edelman, Dorothy Gelson, Torah, though hampered by lack of Kegular Friday evening services Ida Heshelow, Evelyn Kuntz, Jessie time and indifference upon the part during the year proved a source of of parents, has enrolled in its classes spiritual comfort to the many' who With their spiritual leader, Rabbi Slutsky and Roma Wigodsky. H. E. Rabinowitz, in constant de- The Junior Congregation, which over 100 students. attended, and the Religions School mand as a speaker, and "with a year's The children are fortunate in hav- provided instruction in Hebrew, His- program of intensive activity com- met «very Saturday morning, was tory, Jewish -customs and current ing two instructors who are.not only pleted, the Shaare Zion synagogue (Continued on 14D) Hebrew scholars, but whose love f or events, for over 109 children. l i e language and for their people is Eabbi Theodore N. Lewis, spiritual an inspiration to the pupil. The leader at the Temple has been active teachers are Mr. Aaron Tabai and in the National Recovery Act work Mr. N. Eisenstat. in Sioux City as well as the Public In addition to the regular class Works Project, and through his inroom work in Hebrew literature, and tegrity and Madness has won the FROM history, each holiday is marked by esteem of the Gentile as well as Jewthe students with a special celebra- ish population in the city. tion. The Religious School was under Mr. Jack London is the president the direction of the following teachof the Talmaa Torah Board; other ers last year: Helen Cohen, Johanna HOTEL MARTIN officers include R. H. F-TTIIPTTI, treas- Weinberg, Freda Albert, Gladys urer; and M. Lazriowich, secretary. Weinberg, Anna PHI, Rosalie Sacks, An educational committee is .com- Ruth Marx and Rose PilL Compenposed of Eabbi H. B. Raibinowitz, sation for the teachers was provided Mr. Abe Stillman and Mr. Sam Iip- by the tuition paid by parents, and 'The Center of Everything' man. The board of directors includes supplemented by the Sisterhood. A class of seven children was conMessrs. N. Sterling, A. Greenberg, Dr. B. Courshon, A. W. Kaplan, W- firmed on Shebuouth and one pupil
Mount Sinai Temple
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Resume o/ Work of Sioux City's Organizations Picture of Humming Activity (Continued from 13D) led by Rabbi Rabinowitz, Mr. A. Tabai, and Mr. Eisenstat. The choir of the Synagogue not only sang the ritual with Cantor Pliskinon Friday evenings, but were in demand on other occasions by members and friends of the synagogue. The choir was composed of the following members: Ida Heshelow, Ruth Wigodsky, Goldie Cohen, Lillian Cohen, Sara Kuntz, Sonia Rich, Rose Shiloff, Tillie Shindler, Elsie Shuiman, Jessie Slotsky, Albert Herzoff, Paul Haffits, Harry Kanofsky, Jack Resnick, and Harry Shuiman. Mr. Hal Buntly and Mr. Sam Passman directed the choir. Officers of the synagogue last year were John Lansberg, president; Max . Lasensky and E. Chesen, vice-presidents; Eli Robinow, financial secretary; I. E. Kaplan, recording secretary; A. Mazie, treasurer, and Sovel Krueger, Building Fund Treasurer.
were raised by the Sisterhood to defray the expense of this undertaking. The Sisterhood helped this year in defraying the expenses for compensating the Sunday School teachers, and a standing Sisterhood committee works in co-operation with the school. Social events during the year have included a Mother and Daughter banquet, monthly luncheon meetings, and several card parties. Mrs. Louis Agranoff is the president of the or-\ ganization.
Mount Sinai Brotherhood
fulfilled, if their activities are a barometer of the good the association has donq. During the year, the club provided the necessary books and supplies for the school, as well as provide a bus to take-the children to and from the Talmud Torah. They co-operated with the Talmud Torah Board of Directors for the Annual Talmud Torah Dance, and the club worked diligently toward the success of the Annual Talmud Torah Picnic. Much of the work of the Association is directed towards fund raising for the school, and among the activities toward this end was the card party which is also an annual event. Mrs. Ben Sherman is president of the Association; Mrs. S. Greenstone, vice-president; Mrs. A. Mazie, treasurer, and Mrs. Sam Guttleman, secretary.
The Brotherhood of Mount Sinai Temple met last year for monthly meetings, which included programs of a cultural and literary nature as well as social. Outstanding on their calendar was the Father and Son Banquet, given for Temple members and their sons. They were assisted in this undertak- Despite adverse economic conditions, the local Senior Hadassah ing by the Sisterhood. Mr. Louis Goldberg served as pres- chapter enjoyed unusual success in Members of Mount Sinai Temple ident of the Brotherhood last year. their efforts to raise funds for Hadassah projects in Palestine. ImporSisterhood met every month during tant on their list of activities was the past year, and devoted their unthe Annual Pur^m Bazaar, when a tiring efforts toward the interests .of good portion of the quota assigned the Temple, as well as taking part in them was raised. other communal activities. Important on its list of projects The purpose of the Hebrew Moth The Hadassah is one of 300 chapthis year was the redecorating of er*s Association—to further the in- ters in the United States working the Temple, inside and out. Funds terests of the Talmud Torah—was for the health institutions in Palestine. The annual linen shower met with precedented success and a large amount of linen goods was sent from here to Palestine. The big event this coming year Best Wishes for a will be the Regional Convention in May, when the Sioux City Chapter HAPPY AND will be hostess to other chapters from the Mid-West Eegion. • PROSPEROUS NEW Mrs. E. H. Emlein is president of Hadassah; Mrs. Harry Wigodsky, vice-president; Mrs. D. Rodin, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Charles Raskin, treasurer, and Mrs. M. A. Marx, chairman of the Milk Fund.
Senior Hadassah
Temple Sisterhood
Hebrew Mothers' Association
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Poale Zion, and the National Workers Alliance. The group, which numbers amongst its members Sioux City's Jewish intelligentsia, is now known as the Poale Zion Chapter of the National Workers Alliance. During last year, the organization raised 40,0 for the Geverkshaften Campaign. Most of this sum was gained through the Annual Palestinian Bazaar, which was held in the Community Center. Their program also included a number of literary and musical meetings. • Officers of the organization are M. Mason, financial secretary and H. Silver, recording secretary. (Continued on 15D)
Hokka Chynik Scene I, Act I Takes place in the Martin Hotel ballroom. Sign on door says, B'nai Brith Annual Yom Kippur Dance. Admission $1.00. Leon D. is selling tickets. Jack L. is at the door taking tickets. The orchestra is tuning up. Leon: "I always have to take tickets." Jack L.: "Me too." Leon: "Huh." Jack L.: " I said, me too." Leon (not hearing): "Oh, there's Elizabeth now." Leon: "I said, me too." Lou K. and Jack C. arrive on the scene.
A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL
BARNEY BARON & SONS Sioux City, Iowa
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Lou (addressing ticket seller): "How much?" Jack L.: "One buck." Jack C : "I know but we're only going to stay a litlte whfle." Leon D.; "That's what Eddie B. just told me." Lou: "Where is he?" Leon: "I didn't believe him so he went home." Lou: "Here's our money then, but we're only staying a minute.'' Sam P, (who has been listening to the conversation): "You should live so long." \
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Leon D.: "Why is it they always make me take tickets?" Jack L.: "Say, what time is this holiday supposed to be over? I'm getting hungrier than the devil." (He blushes). Leon D.: "I guess everybody's gone. Let's go home." Jack L.: "We'd better wait. Somebody's still in there." Leon: "Did you get to dance tonite?" Jack: "Dance? I didn't even get away for my ten o'clock orange juice." Leon: "WelL here they come. We can go now." (Lou K. and Jack C. walk out). Leon: "They were only going to stay a little while." Jack L.: "1 bear there isn't going to be any more Hokka Chynik. I'll sure miss it. It was a wonderful column. Leon D.: "Yeh, the whole town is all broken up about it. (The End)
SEASON'S GREETINGS
CARL and BETTY
Greetings from
TYDOLGASOIM VEEDOL MOTOR OIL
day, plays all night, sleeps in his underwear and has pink toothbrush. The curtain slowly drops. In the background, Moe L., Bob K. and 3<ick L. are seen carrying Morrie out of the ballroom. Scene 2. Same as scene 1 (only not so crowded)'. Victor M. is talking to Ben R. and Harry H. Herman P. walks up to start a conversation. Ben R. (to Herman): "How come you weren't at Martin's Grill this ^oon?" Vic M.: "Yeh, how come?" Harry H.: "That's /what I say, we saved a place for you." Herman P.: "Why today is Yom Kippur. You know I never eat down town on Yom Kippur." (All three, getting very red): "We were just kidding. We were at services almost all day, except for a few minutes. Sam P. (who has been listening): "You should live so long." Scene III, Time 12:30 Characters same as act 1, scene 1.
Greetings
Last year saw the merging of two local groups, organized for Labor Zionist purposes. They were the
Distributors of
Mrs. S.: "It's a girl." Greenie: "No, I mean Ben." Mrs. S. (with a cold start): "Mister to you." They walk into the ball room. Mrs. S.: "Who was that?" Mr. S.: "A shill over at the crap game." Mrs. S.: "What's a shill?" Mr. S.: "Nothing dear." Mrs. S.: "Oh." Act II, Scene I Time and place same as act 1. Setting is inside of the ball room, and a large crowd is present. The orchestra is playing "Let's Call It a Day." Abe K. is standing in a corner and a large group of girls are standing about admiring him. Lester D. walks up and the girls scatter into the now dancing crowd. Lester: "Burp." Abe K.: "What?" Les: "Nothing." Abe: "What did you Bay?" Les: "Burp." Abe: "Oh." Act II, Scene II Same as scene 1. A young couple dance past. The girl is speaking. "Who is that good: looking young man over there?" The young man, (who- on turning around proves to be Abe S.} "Who, me?" Girl: "No, the one over there." Abe S.: "Oh, you mean Mickey G.?" Girl: "My Gawd no!! I mean that fellow dancing, with your little sister." Abe S.: "Oh, that's my father." "Florence H. (running up): "Oh, there you are. I've been looking all over the basement for you. Abe S.: "Why the basement?" Flo.: "WeU, that's where I found you last time." Abe S.: "You talk like I was lost that time." Flo: "Maybe you wern't lost but you looked awfully sick." (Act III, Scene I Same as act 2 (only better). Morrie M. is seen approaching a young lady seated in the corner. A silly grin and an occasional hrr-rrumph! are the only evidence of too much Blatz. Morrie: "May I have this dance?" Girl: "Oh, I'd love to but I'm so tired." Morrie: "How about the next one?" Same girl: "Gee, I've got the next four* Here comes Johnnie L..* Morrie (to Johnnie L.) "See what she wants." (Walks away.) Johnnie L. (to girl, heaving a deep sigh): "What a fool he is, works all
Scene II, Act I Time, place, and setting, same as scene 1; ' Mr. and Mrs. Ben S. walk up and are buying tickets, followed by "Big Greenie." Greenie, "Hello Minneapolis." The Junior Hadassah's co-opera- Mrs. S.: "Minnetonka to you." Greenie: "How's the big baby tion with the Senior chapter was a boy?" big feature of their program this year, and was climaxed with an unusually fine joint program with the Seniors. Over 300 women and girls NEW YEAR'S GREETINGS atetnded this meeting, which was made most interesting by the apfrom pearance of Mrs. Lee Green and Mrs. Henry Monsky, Omaha musicians, In their efforts to raise funds for the Jewish National Fund, and for the Orphan's Village in Palestine, the Junior Hadassah sponsored a successful bridge tournament last winter, and gave a dance during the month of December. They also participated in the Hadassah Bazaar, and in the various flag day and flower day collections. 817 PIERCE $ t Their program included literary and cultural meetings as well as social. Miss Elizabeth Raskin, who served as president of the chapter last year, received recognition at the Regional Convention in - Omaha last spring, when she was elected President of the Midwestern Region of Junior Hadassah. from Extensive plans are being made this fall for the convention of this region, which is scheduled to be held in Sioux City during November.. Mrs. Theodore N. Lewis is" the advisor of the group. \ : ^: ' at -
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THE BEST5 IN SIGNS Phone 87171
Davidson Bldg.
I Our Sincere Wishes for a
TO ALL!
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Wednesday, September 20, 1933
SIOUX CITY, IOWA—New Year's Edition
Page 14—Sectiofi D
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HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR
5 "
From the
GRANADA THEATRE "THE HOUSE OP HITS"
Wednesday, September 20, 19S5
Resume of Work of Sioux City's Organizations Gives Picture of Humming Activity (Continued from 14D)
fates from Omaha, Lincoln, andDes quota for the Palestinian work, asMoines attended the sessions.; Sev- signed them by the national offices. eral lecturers of national fame as Although their program was not well as a number of musicians have an intensive one, they did succeed in been brought to Sioux City as apart keeping before Sioux City Jewry the ideals of a homeland in Palestine.The Ladies Auxiliary of Shaare of the Circle's program. Officers consist of Mr. L Singer, Officers during the year were" Dx. Zion Synagogue last year carried out a program that "was most intensive financial secretary; A. Eosmofsky, B. Courshon, president; E. H. Emand ambitious. Fairly seething with recording secretary; M. Shfloff, loan lein, vice-president; M. Seff, secreenthusiasm, the membership was the secretary; J . Guttleman, loan treas- tary and William Kantor, treasurer. urer; B. Rifkin, hospitaler; and Max The. Board of directors included A. source ;of great assistance to the Greenberg, Max Lasensfcy, D. Rodin, Dervin, treasurer. synagogue.: N. Sadoff, H. Miller, M. Lazriowich, The executive committee is comHighlights in the years calendar -"were the Annual Revue, the Mother posed of B. Shiloff, A. Rosmonsky, H. Lazriowich, M. Brodkey, B.~ Shiland Daughter Banquet, the Anniver- Abe Rich, J. Shapiro, Bi BifMn, Max: off, B. Baron, Sol Falk, J. Kuntz, A. sary meeting-, -and the Sialifc Birth- Dervin, I. Singer, J. Zeligson, A. Slotsky, and Mesdames B. Baron, H. Tflevite and £ Victor. . R. Rabinowitz, J. N. Krueger, R. H. day Celebration. Emlein, T. N. Lewis. Officers of ;the Women's Auxiliary •The kosher kitchen in the synaof the Workmen's Circle are Mrs. J. .gogue -was maintained and supervised - by the committees of Auxiliary mem- Zeligson, secretary; and Mrs. J. Tesr ters, and a number of large dinners ler, presiding chairman. Their work The Sioux City Independent Faris similar to "that of the men's group. -and Affairs were catered by them. : Social-events during the year in- They also give material assistance ane was in charge of the -upkeep of cluded a, number of card parties, an to several Tuberculosis Sanitoriums the Jewish Cemetery at Graceland of the Fed- Park, last year. They were assisted ice cream social and receptions- in the and the. Building, Fund 1 eration. • •: . . . * by the Women's Auxiliary of the synagogue." ; •; _ " * Farane. Officers .for the year were. Mrs. Farane officers were I. E. Stein, iBarney- Baron, - 'president; Mrs. Eli president; M. Kantrovich, vice-presiHobinow and Mrs. D. -Maior,- vicedent; B. Kaplan, financial secretary; president; Mrs. Dave Ginsberg, treas- The local chapter of the Pioneer Max Dervin, recording secretary; and Women met last year a t regular inurer; Mrs.,;Eli Seff, financial"secretary, and • Henry Sherman, - corres- tervals, for cultural and literary Morris Hall, treasurer. meetings. Included in their work Auxiliary officers -of the Farane ponding secretary. also, were fund raising projects for •were Mrs. Max Dervin, president; J. Lefkovich, vice-presjfient; the pioneer "workers in Palestine. Mrs. I. Klass, secretary, and Funds were raised by card parties, Mrs. raffles, and concerts during the year. M. Levitsky. Officers were Mrs. D. Sperling, fiThe Workmen's Circle, No. 664, nancial .secretary; Mrs. N. Elkin, remet~during the'last year", in th~e Jew- cording secretary; and Mrs. M. A. ish . Community-. Center. Their,- work Levich, treasurer/ • ~ consisted of helping the declassed The Auxiliary of the Beth AbraJews in Russia, as well as extending ham Synagogue met the first Wedslid among their own members in the United States. The Zionist organization sponsored nesday of each month last year. A feature of the year's program several mass meetings during the last Their efforts were turned toward the was the Regional convention held year as a part of its regular pro-? upkeep of the synagogue. Officers were Mrs. J. Gorchow, here last month, at which time dele- gram. ' Lr^ddition; they raised their president; Mrs. M. Fish, vice-president; Mrs. B. Ginsburg, treasurer; Mrs. A. Franklin, secretary; and Mrs. S. Raskin, corresponding secretary.
Ladies' Auxiliary of Shaare Zion
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Beth Abraham Auxiliary
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GREETINGS!! from
Ivre Club
CHOICEST PRODUCT
The Ivre Club met bi-monthly during the year for social purposes. Officers included Lester Heegar, president; Jack Iipman, vice-prsident; Leon Dobrofsky, secretary, and John Levin, treasurer. They participated in the" Annual Ivre Conclave last May, which was held in Lincoln.
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WITH
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The Kadima Club, composed of the members of Shaare Zion Synagogue, met last year for social purposes. They sponsored a number of meetings, and .feted Qie Synagogue choir on several occasions. Officers included I. H. Levin,president; Robert Sacks, vice president, Mrs. M. Mushkin, secretary, and Eli Robinow, treasurer.
O.L BAXTER, INC,
am acceptance of its mission will be, Deutsch Warns possible. To that end we are inviting Against Unloading a group of men of affairs throughout the nation to accept membership on a German Bonds laymen's advisory committee." General Johnson Accepts NEW YORK (J. T. A.)—Cautioning Thus far three hundred men from his hearers against liqiiidating Gerforty-four states have accepted places man long-term bonds which approxion the council. One of the first to ac- mate a billion dollars in American cept was General Hugh S- Johnson, holdings, Bernard S. Deutsch, presidirector of the NBA. dent of the American Jewish ConParticular importance in the pro- gress, in an address at the Indepengroin this year, according to Mr. Bak- dent Order Brith Sholom recently, er, -will be given to a series of sem- said that a speedy sell-out of German inars and discussion meetings, com- securities "would be playing directly mencing with a seminar in New York into the hands of the Hitlerites." City during October and carrying on The German government has willacross the country into more than fully repudiated its contractual entwenty states. Leading figures in re- gagements in order to acquire its ligious, educational and lay activities, bonds, Mr. Deutsch said. He explained representing the three great faiths that sale of German bonds at this that make up the conference, will par- time would not aid the boycotts I t ticipate. would coincide with the hopes of the In connection with this program and government of Germany, he said, in for the first time in history, a Cath- helping to prolong the power of the olic priest, a rabbi and a Protestant regime. minister will, upon the invitation of the conference, travel across the counBuy what thou hast no need of, try together, and join with the regional leaders in discussions in the com- and ere long thou shalt sell thy necessaries.—Franklin. munities visited.
Wednesday, Sept. 20, 8 p. m.— Eosh Hashonah Eve. Thursday, Sept. 21, 10 a. m.— Educational (Campaign for ProFirst Day of Eosh Hashonah. moting Co-operation BeFriday, Sept. 22, 8 p. m.—Regtween Religions ular service. Friday evening, Sept. 29, Yom NEW YORK (J. T. A.)—An educaXippnr Eve—rKol Nidre service. Saturday, Sept. 30, Yom Kippur tional campaign directed against intolerance and designed to promote coDay—Morning and afternoon. operation between Catholic, Jew and in all fields t>f American Shaare Zion Synagog Protestant activity, will be launched this fall unWednesday, Sept. 20, 6:30 p. der the auspices of "the National Conm.—Rosh Hashonah Eve. ference of Jews and Christians and Thursday, Sept. 21, 7:30 a. m.— with the support of a national advisFirst Day of Bosh Hashonah. ory committee of outstanding laymen Thursday, Sept. 21, 6:30 p. m.— all over the United States, according to an announcement signed by NewFirst night of Rosh Hashonah. Friday, Sept. 22, 7:30 a. m.— ton D. Baker, Roger W. Straus and Professor Carlton J. Hayes, co-chairSecond day of Rosh Hashonah. . Friday, ^evening, Sept. 29, Yom men of the conference. Kippur Eve—Kol Nidre service. The campaign, it was announced, is ^ Saturday, Sept. 30, Yom Kippur to reach into every state of the union and is to be marked by community day—Morning and afternoon. seminars, discussion meetings, radio broadcasts and various educational acOrthodox Synagogs tivities interested civic organWE JOIN YOU ..•"•• Beth Abraham Synagogue — izations,through churches and schools. Rosh Hashonah and Yom Kippur Mr. Baker stated that in the formaservices. tion of the advisory council, "we are In greeting the dawning of this •.. Tiphereth Israel Synagogue— hopeful that by grouping around the Similar services. New Year. conference the leaders of American ' Adas Yeshuren Synagogue — life and thought, greater sympathy for Similar services. May it bring you greater happitween the members of the Synagogue c ness than ever before! Robinow, treasurer, and M. Cohen, for the benefit of the synagogue. The I. Wigodsky and H. Friedman, trus- membership has been increased to 150 persons. Each year a banquet is tees. held, and the club supervises over a kosher "kitchen and supervises all H. FEDER meals that are served there. Offi- 2 L. MOlfTKOSE cers are: Mrs. M. Lazriowich, presi- I 1406 Center Street Phone 82905 dent; Mrs. M. Levich, vice president; The daughters of the Tephereth Mrs. Ed Shafton, financial secretary; Israel was formed in 1928 for the Mrs. K. Levich, corresponding secrepurpose of promoting cooperation be- tary, and Mrs. Abe Bain, treasurer
Kadima Club
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CONFERENCE TO INITIATE DRIVE FOR TOLERANCE
Schedule of Holiday Services
Zionists
EST. 1924 Wholesale Retail 806 Pierce St. SIOUX CITY
t»age 15—-Section D
SIOUX CITY, IOWA—New Year's Edition
BOTTLED BEER Fish Bros. Dist
A newspaper made for every, member of the family—and every family.
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Orthodox Synagogs The-only refrigerator-that-bears the name "Frigidaire."
NEW YEAR'S GREETINGS
HANSEN GLASS AND PAINT GO.
Officers for the Orthodox Synagogues last year included the following: Beth Abraham: Mr. Joe Dimsdale, president, and other officers include Mr. Abe Franklin and Mr. Joe Gorchow. Tephereth Israel: Mr. H. "Lazriowich, president; Mr. J. Sperling- vicepresident; Mr. M. Lazriowidh, treasurer; Mr. Paul Kaplan, secretary,, and Mr. ML. Eeznek, corresponding secretary. The Board of Trustees consists of: Messrs. B. Herzoff, Ed Shafton, P . Rubin, K. Levich, and M. Marsh. Adas Yeshuren: M. Levich, president; M. Levitsky, vice.. president; S.
AT this dawning of
^;itv.- v
the .NEW YEAR, we
extend to you all our most sincere wishes for happiness, health and prosperity.
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WALL PAPER sioux crrx> IOWA
New Years Greetings TO OUR MANY JEWISH FRIENDS and PATRONS
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NEW YEAR GREETINGS
BEE and DIMPLES Entertaining II DINING
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GREETINGS I A\
DANCING i:
weather is always fair in the depths of a sparkling soda or a fruit studded sundae made with Fairmont ice cream. Discover for yourself how the enjoyable flavor compensates for torrid days. HOT WEATHER NOTE
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Use ice cream for dessert. Keep your cooking and baking down to • minimum for a cooler house,
FAIRMONTS ICECREAM 'MeTeakofQualify[..,
Wednesday, September -20, 1933
COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA—New Year's Edition
Page 16-rSection D
refresh an already drooping, thirsty, and one day a rival schoolmate in a were severed, and it was several portent to the other, without which flower. fit of jealousy told him that hia years before we met again. With the syrthetic whole would be incomAn escort accompanies her at in- father though posing to be otherwise Andre was a dark haired, young plete. And we begin to apprehend lady, a decidedly Semitic type whom that the world is nothing but a kind -tervals to the Orthopedic hospital for was a Jew by birth. Andre deeply resented this and he introduced, as his wife. She had of material and temporal kindergarchildren at Iowa City, where she receives the best of medical attention. was hurt to the very core. When black, languid eyes, a thin face, as- ten, where millions of bewildered During her last trip there she wrote, he summoned enough courage to re- cetic but sensual, an-d skin like iv"If you only knew how comfortable late the incident at home, his father ory. Andre Sterling had married a amateurs are trying to spell God the ambulances are here. It is a was hardly prepared for the ordeal, Jewess and she had been converted. with a different block; we suddenly treat to ride in one." Her well of Samuel Sterling heretofore had ac- They were following the Catholic begin to understand that we are all inexperienced actors performing our gratitude and appreciation is bot- tually believed that he had succeeded faith. tomless, for hers is not a mind lim- in running away from the truth. I wonder what the future will hold part on this great spinning, spiritual ited by what may be measured by a But fate played havoc with him, and for these two shifting, restless souls, stage, the universe, as we march in yardstick, or bought and sold, but a circumstances intervened only to luy and what strange gates will open in the Big Parade. First comes Youth, mind of artistic beauty, a mind full bare the deep-seated wound which j their complex lives. Will their life with its light-heartedness and arrohe Tm>ught upon himself and child. together be one of peace and har- gance, pedantic and self-assured, reof intrinsic value. By Mildred Ryth Baron, of Sioux City, la. How little it takes to make her Andre was greatly angered to think mony of a perpetual fight of mind fusing to renounce the personal sathappy, how unselfish a character, a that his, parents had misled him against instinct, of determination Each and all as a song, as In a great -ayside, the deep valley below and queen in her own realm. I saw her so, and expressed his fullest desire against fate. Religion will always isfactions which it selfishly craves} This exquisite moment the- lofty firm hills on high where for what she was, the aspirant, the to becorne acquainted with his fath- be • something beyond our comprehen- next Middle Age, more flexible and cry of -elation, -* Of pulsating relationship As in a great sob of misery or sigh, we find both good and evil, comedy dreamer, one who looks out with er's relatives whom, he previously sion, something which, is real and plastic in a half-hearted state of Here—now— and tragedy, solitude and satiation, clear, sensitive eyes upon the mys- believed to be dead. The bird, rock, flower, tree, rain, or indifference. yet waiting to be realized, something subjection surrendering to impending sorrow and happiness, where en- tery of life, one with vision and reaYou, I, all things calm, sound, heat, cold. is the ultimate ideal and the circumstances, and lastly Old Age, His. aurits were not hesitant in bechantment lies hidden arid life takes son, one who has entered into this friending him, and expressed their which To what future, to what forever. This companionship—here—now hopeless quest. As for starting a humble and shorn of vanity, submit—Theodore Dreiser. on'"'a,new.zest. It is when we cast great combat ready to enjoy every sincerest desire that he enter their new religion one might as w«ll try ing itself unfalteringly like a human With wind, sea, sun, gases, forces, away our own petty, narrow inter- ounce of joy in spite of perpetual fold, but in spite of the fact Andre to build a tree. This intregality, in variety and perplant bowed and bent, whose topfect balance, While traveling along the road in ests and explore unknown lands and adversity. felt ill at ease and inferior to them Our journey is ended. We wend most leaves turn to the ground from this whirl and maelstrom of every- the inner recesses, of other souls that Sentence of union with all Marcella will survive If her condi- who were so much more secure in our way back to "busy street" awe- which they spring. we truly live our lives to the fullest day commonplace living, let us wanFrom moment to moment, tion continues to improve, and in the their position. He was a bit scepti- inspired by what we have seen but Hour to hour, generation to genera- der for a bit by the wayside, and re- intensity. future may overcome her handicap cal as to whether he would be acto chaffer with life, realTo educate the intelligence IH la A great man once; said, "The na^ and become a virtuoso, for she has cepted socially by his Jewish cousins, powerless flect upon a few profound truths. tion. izing that each individual is like a This changing yet not changing To loiter on the main thoroughfare tural is. mightier than the superna- a soul of a truly creative individual, who traveled with a very fine ele- minute mechanism in the workings enlarge the horizon of its desires and of life forever would become hum- tural; reality is more potent than and down under the crust, the secret ment of their own and were members beauty, drum and colorless. Detours and haz- unreality; fact is stranger than fic- of beauty is innately embodied in of a sectarian fraternity at the uni- of a clock, each part essentially im- wants,—LowelL Drama, this responding, you, I, tion." Is this not a genuine sup- her, and may some day become rad- versity. Did he really belong to ards are inevitable. All static.and moving things them? Partially yes, and then It is on the winding road by the josition? In joy, pain, elations, despairs iant like an -unpretentious jewel. What, could be more monotonous Now, for our second subject let us again figuratively no. The nucleus Best Wishes for than a world whose houses are just take Andre Sterling, an impetuou3 of his trouble was not so much bealike, whose inhabitants have the neurotic sort of chap, whom I chanc- cause of the two different bloods A Happy and Prosperous New Year same complexions and - features, ed tc become acquainted with during which flowed in his veins, but due ipeak the same languages, and elab- my high school days. Andre- is a to his father's complete renunciation orate ori the same thoughts. How victim of one of the most perplexing on the one hand, and his mother's tasteless a world where all would cosmic riddles which confronts us inadequacy on the other. follow the same faith, how deplorable daily, a broken link in this heteroThis story he virtually narrated to a society, composed only of Chinese, genius chain of humanity. He was me with ar dejected expression in his Anglo-Saxons, or Indians! Perhaps born of a mother illiterate and pro- deep blue eyes, that were as frank A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL! where we so far see a confused saic of Bohemian descent, and a as the sky overhead, and I, could not clash, the -world as it is has been father educated and intelligent of help but look Upon him with, a feelE. V. GUSTAFSON, Secretary set before us as a unifying principle. Russian Jewish descent. Andre was ing of compassion for here was a It seems that each man must pull sent to a Catholic school as a child young man entangled in a sticky, Phone 187 28 Pearl Street the cart to which fate has. hitched and believed himself to be Gentile mazy, complicated web, trying to COUNCIL BLU* J?S. IOWA him, but the joy is in discovering until he reached maturity. But re find his equilibrium. Phone 669 153-157 West Broadway the ties between us. ality is alive with unexpectedness After, graduation our connections COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA So, as we turn our course from the main highway of life, let us study' mmx two distinctly realistic personalities, two unfortunates, a boy and girl NEW YEAR GREETINGS ..". , rought up under entirely diversified A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL! environments, one suffering from a biological handicap, the other from GREETINGS ! a theological handicap. Marcella Levitt shall be our first character. Marcella, only sixteen years of age, is a Victim of a strugTHE NEW AND GREATER Dry Cleaning and Dye Works Painter Knox WflHam P. Knot gle amid want and woe, one who has had a taste of both the fiery trials CHAS. CtORMAN, Manager Real Estate —Loans of disaster and bereavement, and the weariness of dry, dreary soiivTide. Insurance I met her for the firs? time while 22-24-26 No. Main Street COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA doing a bit of social service work,' 22 South Main S t Phon«162 and later was assigned to the case Phone 2814 as Big Sister. We entered the litCOUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA tle, humble cottage where she lived COUNCIL BLUFFS' DOMINANT STORE located at the top of a high bluff overlooking the muddy waters of the Missouri River. On the -whole my first impression was both of comedy and tragedy. It was simple and yet complex, joy was there and despair, NEW YEAR'S GREETINGS i there was a profound love of themother for her helpless children. One NEW YEAR'S GREETINGS! felt the beginning of life in these Tooms and yet the anchor of death. There was neither good nor bad. It was an intricate pattern of poverty. Marcella's parents have suffered S almost every blow of opposition..Her father, who was formerly a postINSURANCE OF ALL KESDS master in a small Iowa village, bePearl Street »<»• came afflicted with an active case LEO R. RITCHIE, Special Agent of tuberculosis and has since been COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOW* sent to Denver where he has been 537 West Broadway Phone 5750 given the finest of medical treatment.
A Few Musings By the Wayside
The Council Bluffs Mutual Building and Loan Association
HUGHES MOTOR CO.
Knox & Company
BLUFF CITY LAUNDRY
Beno's
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Year's Greetings*-
BINDER-ficCARGAR CO, INSURANCE
C. E. NOEL CO; COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA
BEST WISHES for a
Happy and Prosperous New Year to All Our Friends and Patrons
International Harvester Co. of AMERICA COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA
The financial reservoir dwindled and here the mother remains, thankful for that humble abode which the state has furnished her to shelter and protect herself and her eight children, striving to hold the fragile •walls of their; delapidated little cottage together/with trouble knocking at the door like the beat of violent waves against a weakening ship. She has been fighting against every rebuff that chills enthusiasm and crushes faith and hope. Marcella, too, has contracted the disease from her father, though of a different nature. To me she is like a thbrnless rose with its stem broken. Her entire torso is completely encased in a cast, and she manages to hop about .as best she can with the aid of crutches. Being temporarily disabled, she has had to content herself • with sewing and reading, and when the weather permits to visit the poor home which is directly opposite their cottage on the right or the dentention hospital, their neighbors on the left. A most depressing: atmosphere to be sure. This has been the child's only form of recreation for three long years. , But Marcella has not become morbid. She greeted us naively with a rare smile of tenderness, and upon acute observation, I noticed that there was a delicacy of finish in her fine features, a sensitive changeful^ ness in her expression, and an air of. refined'dignity about her bearing which she took from her mother. The other children bubbling with laughter arid enthusiasm appeared extremely healthy. Perhaps the seed of the treacherous disease is dormant within them never to awaken. After' speaking with Marcella we drew her out only to discover that she was passionately interested in music and was starving for an outlet of expression. We induced her to sing and she did so with remarkable appeal and clarity. Since this first meeting, she has been given vocal training and has made rapid progress. Outside of occupying her mentally, this means of expression has transcended and stimulated her to the extent where her whole physical; being is • affected. It seems to have strengthened her ivitaUy just as water would serve to enliven and
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On ftzs occasion of Rosn Hashonah I exieni to all those of Jewish faith throughout the United States cordial greetings.
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To Jewry we are indebted for many high ideals which have operated for the benefit of the nation and for the promotion of the brotherhood of man through peace and good-will. ^ * * " it" ^
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May the coming year have in store forour fellow citizens of fte Jewish faith great prosperity and happiness.
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FRASHJN D. ROOSEFELT
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Jewish Vrcss Edition 1933
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Omaha. Nebr. Sept. 10,1933
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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20, 19S3
Page 2—Section A
Built on^Matred A Powerful Indictment Against Nazism by Famed Non-Jew By HEINRICH MANN
for justice leads them to side with the oppressed. The great man bluntly calls them a "gang" of intellectuals and professors. The international renown of an Einstein or a Thomas Mann does not disturb him. Let them leave the country; henceforth the people will see no one but him, must be his alone. The Marxists themselves will yield, wilt give way under the hatred bearing down upon them•.*. . . It looked like an attempt to see how far this unnatural and incredible hatred could be inflamed by lies. And the people swallowed them all; it could not be otherwise, so impoverished were the masses,-especially from the intellectua lviewpoint.. If one asked some poor devil of a student of workingman how it-happened that he belonged to the same National-Socialist party as some Prussian prince, he could bnly shrug his shoulders. Ignorant and uncultured, he could only too easily be made to hate the republic— a task undertaken by those eager to conceal the true identity of the authors of his misfortunes. Twenty years -earlier, before disaster and want weakened them, the people would have seen through the, business.
with the question of what being Ger- ists, large land-owners and former ruling families. And it was these who But the younger generation knew man really means. paid the way for the National-Social- nothing of pre-war conditions and less One should imagine that in the two ist movement. So let us put the peo- of the doctrines of Marx, whose very thousand years that this nation has ple off the scent by declaring that name they were led to regard as a occupied its territory it could have class interests no longer exist. The bugbear. Some of them thought he settled this matter even to its own nation is one. Let us fight the Marx- was one of the Russian leaders, othsatisfaction. But no. From time to ists, who would divide it! That is just ers hoped that he would be arrested time it starts up, so to speak, and what the revolution is: the destruc- one day in the editorial office of some cries, "Now at last we have become a journal. Marxism and JudaIts authors apparently are very nation!" It is another such start tion of. the social ideal and everything Jewish ism were the same for these unsoconnected with it — labor organizaanxious that it be a revolution. Ac- which Hitler and his famous movephisticated minds; and this provided tions, parliamentary government, recording to them that of November, ment have brought about. Unquesjustification for their heredi1918, was merely ah isolated and ar- tionably, this circumstance, together publican and humanitarian intellec- further "anti-Semitism. Understanding bitrary, crime; they feel themselves with some other factors, has contrib- tualism. It is the revolution of the tary nation against the parties, and also nothing of the laws of capitalism, called upon to obliterate it by their uted largely to his success. against all who think. Clear thinking they were only too ready to lay all glorious movement for national rethe blame on the Jews, a race alien surgence. No doubt they ar* delighted This great man had to deal with is our foe—let us unite against it. their own and threatening to de•with what they have accomplished, masses which, if not imbued with the Now at last we have become a nation! to stroy if the expersecution and atrocities included. ideal of equality, were characterized Let hate be our weapon against any- istenceitsofhomogeneity—as a homogeneous German They are glad that they have evoked by a uniformity unknown in the coun- one who would prevent us from be- race had ever really been established. general disapproval, it convinces them try until very recently. These masses ing a nation at last! In the vehemence all the more that they are acting as consisted of the impoverished, those of our hatred we are revolutionary. Hatred Brought Victory true Germans. whose status had been lowered, the What Does Younger In this popular movement the true I believe that they are mistaken petty and middle-class bourgeoisie .problem of capitalism "was juggled and that the true Germany, the Ger- that had been reduced to proletarian Generation Know? out of the way and replaced by a many of the future, lies elsewhere. rank and that despised its neighbors, bizarre racialism. Given the human This is the great Hitler's discovThough I confess the difficulty of dis- the proletariat, who had occupied ery! That hatred can be not merely: a material with which it was dealing, covering it among the elements that their position much longer and were means but the sole reason d'etre of a the point was to relieve these masses make r. the country. As a matter of class-conscious of it. In addition, there powerful popular movement. True, of the trouble of thinking—a process fact, the land is inhabited by widely were workingmen whom prolonged every revolution must allow for ha- to which the leaders themselves, for dissimilar races whose civilizations unemployment had caused to lose tred, whether justified or otherwise. that matter, were unaccustomed. Not vary greatly in age—which may pro- their class-consciousness, their faith But as a rule, directed against the a moment was given to consideration vide a partial explanation of the ha- in the social ideal and all their wonted mighty and the rich, it acts as a re- of the facts in their totality, nor to tred that prevails there; and it is in- pride. The great man needed only to enforcement to claims which one can, their significance or causes; only perfluenced by divergent cultural cur- mold this soft clay. after all, understand. Here we have sons were bothered about. The crimrents that tend in two different direcStill, he had to create a revolution- nothing of the sort. Never before has inals of November, the Jews, the intions. The Germans have always had ary atmosphere. Even demoralized a people hated its equals, the insig- tellectuals— hate them! Hatred will trouble in understanding themselves. masses do not march willingly for the nificant and weak and poor, and, at save you. Hence, their constant preoccupation sake of interests opposed to their own the same time,, those isolated few who Ori the occasion of; his last public with the problem of nationality and —for a few men of wealth, industrial- do its thinking and whose inner need address Bruening, last of the republi-
' Heinrich Mann, distinguished (nonJewish); German man of letters, con~ tributes this powerful indictment against Nazi Germany. Mann draws an appalling picture of the "intellectual" background of contemporary Germany. —THE EDITOR.
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WHERE OMAHA SHOPS WITH CONFIDENCE
DS1EIN C UAPMANS Sixteenth and Farnam
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TRAINING FARM FOR GERMAN JEWISH GIRLS NEW YORK (J. T. A.)—The Pioneer Women's Organization in America announces that the Moatzath Hapoaloth (The Working Women's Council) has decided to use their training farm in Palestine as a school for
young German girls from fifteen to seventeen years old. The training farm is to be converted into an Agri-. cultural School. The farm will accommodate forty girls, thirty of who:r will be German-Jewish„ girls who are now being expelled or excluded from schools in Germany. Members of the staff of the Hebrew University -in Jerusalem and experts of the Agricultural department
of the government have promised their assistance in this new project This training farm, one of the ten girts' training farms in Palestine, has been in existence for the past ten years under the leadership of Rachael Ben Zevi. Zeno first started that doctrine that knavery is the best defense against a knave.—Plutarch.
Rosh Hashonah By WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST
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/ hope this New Year will inaugurate a new era of liberty and enlightenment throughout the world. At present the world seems plunging back into the dark ages of bigotry and cruelty, of prejudices and persecution. / ^ ^ The dutyI of America shqula^beMkee^<)urpart of the world bright with tJwtigfaofWbeirfy, cleansed of the black hatreds and evil antagonisms which breed like bats in the dark of ignorance and intolerance. Education and understanding will make us a race of brothers Irving in mutual affection and mutual appreciation. Thus may America become an example to the rest of the world, leading it back to the light and showing it not only the moral but also the material benefit of tolerance and freedom. can chancellors, assured his listeners of the erroneousness of the'belief that his concern centered about individuals, and declared that all his thoughts were devoted to' the millions of unemployed and to the social action to which they were entitled. But while his sincere natural voice was uttering these words thousands of other voices, amplified by loudspeakers, w e r e spreading hatred, and only hatred, through all of Germany. For a long time the National-Socialist agitators had been glutting this people with hate. Now they were ready to erupt; the Republic hung by a threads The high priest of hatred who one day
was to take the place of the well- hatred and cynical greed he made all meaning Bruening, that great nation- the world aware of his amazing imalist Hitler, rushed bither and yon by pudence. When he roared into the micar and by airplane, multiplied him- crophone, "I hate them! I want to reself so that he appeared in ten places place them! I want all the power!" he at once. And from his ever-foaming made it easy for his contemporaries mouth issed sounds, more Balkan to understand him—the more so bethan German, that had the power to cause too often they prefer unjustifill Germans with undying hatred of fied success -te-jsjprrying about truth otter Germans. It was hatred, sustained for years and fairness. And if this individual by the most efficient modern meth- fits into his time, then that German ods, which finally brought victory to revolution also belongs, to his centhis great man and his movement. He tury. met with little resistance, and found traitors to help him. No matter that Remove not the ancient landmaA in giving vent to Ms inexhaustible —Proverbs.
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New Year's Eriition^-THE JEWISH PRESS—'Tiwreday, September 21, 1938
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H t world moves constantly o n . \ \ ever changing . . . as the foam of the ages wipes away the footprints on the sands of time...
THE Brandeis Stores, too, have served the public through alternating periods of prosperity and depression . . . advancing and progressing ever upwards because of its steadfast prin* ciples of quality, service and incomparable values.
ROSH Hashonah, the dawn of a New Year, is an immortal symbol that though time flows ever onward, Israel endureth through the centuries .". ~. passing alternately through a golden age of toleration and an iron age of persecution . . . but ever enriching the treasurehouse of life and giving intellectual and moral stamina to a never-ending future humanity.
ON this occasion of sublime beauty—as Israel looks into the abyss of time and visions the birth of a new era of understanding and contentment—may the loyal faith and race traditions of Israel continue to endure, as shall our consecration to service, quality and values . . . and may the New Year bring a bountiful measure of individual success-and happiness.
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Portrait of Jews inihe 'New Deal'
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The Men and Women W h o Help to Carry Out the Recovery Act By BERNARD POSTAL
tunes before he became President; the members of the "brain trust"; and those who by sheer merit have found themselves drafted into the growing army of men and women helping the Roosevelt administration, in official or unofficial capacities, to instil new strength into the nation's economic life by means of the national recovery program.
New Year (greetings By HON. CHARLES W. BRYAN
Mr. Baruch into his administration as an advisor without portfolio. In assuming this position in the absence of Secretary of State Hull and the President from Washington, Mr. Baruch was regarded as the "unofficial president." Now he is closely concerned with shaping the administration's proposals on stabilization of currency and the direction of NRA.
Governor of State of Nebraska "BRAIN TRUST" BEFORE THE PRESIDENCY On the occasion of The second group of Jewish "Now Attention was first drawn to RooseDealers" is comprised of those who velt's close association with Jews long your celebration of the are members of the so-called "tmin before he became President. During trust," the body of youthful and libMr. Roosevelt's first gubernatorial dawn of the New Year, eral economists, technicians and procampaign in New York in 1928 he be- 694, 1 offer to our Jewfessors upon whose expert counsel and came acquainted with Samuel Rosenexperience the President has leaned man, then a member of the State Bill ish people sincere greetheavily and drawn freely in framing Drafting Commission. Impressed with ings and my very best the recovery projects. The Jewish Rosenman's ability in gathering cammembers of this loosely-knit "kitchen paign material, Mr. Roosevelt ap- wishes. cabinet" are James Paul Warburg, pointed Rosenman "his personal counMay this New Year be Herbert Feis, Charles W. Taussig, sel. It was in the course of this reEmanuel Goldenweiser, Mordecai Ezeas lationship that Mr. Roosevelt came to long remembered kiel, Felix Frankfurter, Nathan Marappreciate Rosenman's judgment and marking the end of the gold, Charles E. Wyzanski, Jr., and he. soon charged him with a multiHenry Morgenthau, Jr. Of the latter, plicity of confidential and responsible trouble some times we have already spoken. Of the ethers tasks. When Roosevelt elevated Rosonly Warburg, Frankfurter and Tausenman to the Supreme Court he ad- hrough which we have sig hold no official government posts. mitted he was "cutting off my right been passing. May the Warburg, a son of-the iate Paul arm." That this was not idle flattery M. Warburg, regarded as.the father is evidenced by the fact that Judge growing recognition of of the Federal Reserve System, is an Rosenman owns a photograph of As"- the interdependence of expert on finance and was financial sistant Secretary of State Raymond advisor of the American delegation to Moley,- which is inscribed "To Sam iiidividuhls and- groups Rosenman, founder and head of the bring anew spirit of neighborliness of mutual help- the World Economic Conference. His continued presence. at financial conBrain Trust." The inscription aptly ferences as an unofficial observer for summarized Rcsenman's service to fulness. . President and the frequency with Roosevelt because the now famous Your high moral standards, your industry, and the which he is consulted on fiscal mat"brain trust" came into being during Roosevelt's years as governor. Even your continued hopeful spirit in the face of discour- ters by Mr. Roosevelt have given rise to the report that he will shortly be now Judge Rosenman is frequently called to Washington to consult with aging conditions will then win for you the reward appointed Under-secretary of the Treasury, an office which is now vathe President. of happiness that such traits deserve. cant. Charles Taussig a wealtly inRosenman was not the only Jewish
furter (outside),, whose ideas influence a score of aggressive young lawyers here and there in government, service, some Jews, some not. Morgenthau, who has equivalent of a cabinet position. Straus, Warburg, Ezekiel, Wy' zanski, Frank Wolman, Sachs, Schneiderman, Hillman, etc "Do they hang together? Do they form any single co-ordinated Perhaps the most pointed contrast sphere of influence 1 -No! All.have between the lot of the Jews in Gertheir different, spheres, sometimes many and the position of their cooverlapping. Are they..-'radical'? dustrialist and sugar magnate, met adviser of Mr. Roosevelt while he was religionists in the United States is afMost of them are 'liberal,' but "the in Albany. Henry Morgenthau, '•) r. straw vote among business men to de- the President that even how he is re- Mr. Roosevelt on a train bound from forded by comparing the Hitlerite fountain source 'of the. most 'adr , •who served as State Conservation termine who would receive their sup- peatedly mentioned as a likely suc- Warm Springs, Georgia, and during a government's policy of deliberately vanced' political" philosophy, is Commissioner, was constantly, called port in the presidential election of cessor in the event of Secretary of discussion on Cuban affairs so imand ruthlessly eliminating from every rather among officials with Anin by . Governor. Roosevelt for advice 1932. "His probe revealed tremendous the Treasury Woodin's resignation. pressed the President-elect that he phase of Germany's public, economic, glo-Saxon names. Do they have and help, and during the presidential support for Roosevelt and on the basis industrial and cultural life those Jewmaterial 'influence'? No, not campaign Morgenthau did a great of this survey he sponsored an intensas an industrial expert. ish men and women of talent who much. They aren't particularly deal in mapping out the Rooseveltian ive campaign to organize Roosevelt- Wilson administration, who first came Professor Frankfurter, who has dehave labored to make Germany great strong in the party organization. appeal to the farmers and in drafting for-President clubs throughout the na- into the picture as an early Roosevelt clined & number of Important positions and respected with that of the RooseVery few of the . political-influthe Democratic party's agricultura' tion. The result is history. As one of supporter in the pre-convention days. in the Roosevelt administration, has velt administration which has selected ence lawyers of Washington are plank. After March 4th President the more liberal and advanced mer- After the election he was in frequent nevertheless had his recommendations more Jews to fill influential positions Jews. Do they have intellectual Roosevelt turned to Morgenthau as chants of the country, Mr..Straus was consultation with Mr.- Roosevelt at accepted in filling nearly half a dozen than any previous administration in influence? Yes, a lot of it.mainly the logical candidate for the chair- prominently mentioned as Mr. Roose- Hyde Park when it was predicted that of the most important legal posts in American history. In shaping the polas advisers, but so do many who manship of the Federal Farm Board velt's Secretary of Commerce- Ulti- he would be chosen as either Secre- the government, and continues to icies of the "New Deal," Jews are beare not Jews. Most have judgI a position which clothes him with mately, he became the first of the tary of State or Secretary of the function as one of the President's ing accorded an unparalleled opporment of people, and of "papular i great authority under the recovery "New Deal" diplomats and he is now Treasury. Behind the scenes, he was most trustworthy advisors and a tunity of serving their country in its mass psychology. program. Mr. Morgenthau is also the engaged in spreading the Rooseveltian the dominant economist during the link between the liberalism of the hour of need. "Significance of Jew influence generalissimo of the co-ordinated doctrines in Europe. As lieutenant- framing of the National Industrial Brandeis-La FoQette era and the new However, before we take a look at FELIX FRANKFURTER in Roosevelt Administration: We • farm relief forces and_ a member of governor during Mr. Roosevelt's two Recovery Act and his ideas were also Roosevelt liberalism. Two of bis pro"some of these^Jewish "New Dealers," A Leading Advisor terms as governor, Herbert H. Leh- embodied in the Farm Relief Act. It teges are members of the "brain see none; perhaps you can." the Roosevelt "super-cabinet." and before we appraise their contribuwas Mr. Baruch who recommended the trust," Nathan Margold, solicitor for So much for' the bogy man of the' Another pre-election associate of man was frequently acting governor appointment abroad on Jews in the new govtion to the concerted program of naof his former associates, the Department of the Interior, and and always an intimate counselor of sinister and all-controlling influence Mr. Roosevelt was Jesse I. • Straus, ernment, indicating widespread tional economic recovery, it is neceson the War Industries Board, General Charles Wyzanski, Jr., solicitor to the the governor. It was Mr. Roosevelt of Jews over the Roosevelt adminishow ambassador to France. It was whispered rumors of a 'situation.' sary to take cognizance of the grossHugh Johnson and George N. Peek, Department of Labor. Margold is a who fought to have Lehman named as tration. Mr. Straus who led the way in orFacts: More Jews occupy influenly libelous rumors that the Roosevelt as administrators of the National Rethe Democratic candidate for goverIn dealing with those Jews actively ganizing the business men of lh< nor in the face of Tammany opposi- covery Act and the Farm Relief Act, former assistant United States Distial positions in relation to the administration" is a ^"Jewish" admintrict Attorney for New York, and unparticipating in framing and carry- country behind Roosevelt's candidacy Roosevelt administration than in istration because, of the number of and intimated that he might ap- respectively. When Assistant Secre- til his recent appointment to the Ining1 out the New Deal legislation it for the presidency. After Roosevel tion, any previous administration. ExJews associated with it. In this conhim Secretary of the Treasury tary of State Moley went to London terior Department position, was legal will be simpler to separate them into was re-elected governor of New York point amples: Baruch (outside), whose nection it is therefore valuable to in the event of bis defeat in the elec- to keep an eye on the World Economic in 1930 by an overwhelming majority, three groups: Those who were promideas influence Roosevelt, Moley, quote in full two paragraphs from a tion. So close is Governor Lehman to Conference, President Roosevelt called (Continued on Page 5-A) inently identified,with Roosevelt's for- Mr. Straus launched a nation-wide lecent issue of the Kiplinger Wash- Johnson, Peek and others. FrankIn this article, Mr. Postal gives the first complete review of all the Jewish men and women who have become associated in one capacity or another with the New Deal of the Roosevelt Administration in Washington. Their number is greater than at any other time in American history. —THE EDITOR.
ington Letter of Washington, D. C, an impartial financial service which is in a position to be well informed on this very question: "Jews—We have had many inquiries from this country and
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September 20,,,1933,
JE&IS& F&L
A HAPPY NEW YIAR...* r
The dawn of the New Year heralds the birth of a noble era in human and business relationships.
The horizons of life for both the nation and its citizens are. being widened by the program of the National Recovery Act— a new triumph for Israel's age-old ideal of social justice and equality, lofty ethical truths which are re-emphasized in the High Holy day season. -~
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On the occasion of this Rosh Hashonah the Nebraska Clothing Company renews its promise to continue its traditional way of serving the public-unexcelled quality, efficient service and incomparable values with the hope that the next twelvemonth fulfills its promise of a better order, rooted in righteousness, broad-based in justice, and culminating in a system of fairness and humanity.
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.. , Jew Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PB ESS—Wednesday, September 20, 19S3 and by rightful system I do not .nec- more, the carpenters begin, erecting essarily meaii socialistic system^ For more homes, and the real estate specit stands to- reason that the more peo- ulators to lay out more plots. ple producing, the more production, and hence the more wealth. But this MR. MINSKY FOR point I know will be challenged by TRIOPOLY many. As I offer my cure in immigration, But what I believe will not be so I am in receipt of a letter from Mr. challenged is-that as long as the im- Louis Minsky, who is enthusiastic migration is taking place, there will about the cure proposed by Robsrt program; Jerome Frank, counsel for !| be prosperity, for the needs of these Segal, author of the Triopoly plan. (Continued from Page 4) the administration of the agricultural immigrants must be supplied in some Mr. Jmnsky writes: relief Tjffl, and Celeste Jedel, secre- I fashion and that means business. "We are all palpably fed up with advisor on Indian affairs of the Insti- tary to Assistant Secretary of State monopoly and class war and the sentute for Government Eesearch. He had Moley and chief archivist of the! OPEN THE DOORS TO sible ones among us have long ago also acted as the successor of the late American • delegation to the World PROSPERITY come to the conclusion that class war Louis Marshall as volunteer attorney Economic Conference. And so it is with the purest instincts is a horrid way out of the world's to the.Pueblo Indians. His familiarity More- prominent Jewish personali- of patriotism—in' the name of pros- troubles . . . What Mr. Segal has to •with Indian affairs, which are under ties are to be found on the various In- perity—that I call upon the administhe jurisdiction of the Interior De- dustrial RecoveryBbafds. Sidney Hill- trators of the New Deal to consider say is that the future lies in co-operpartment, was in part responsible for man,, president of the Amalgamated this angle, that of breaking down the ation alone, along the line of Triopoly. his selection. WyzansM, one of . the Clothing Workers Union, and a veter- locks which now close the doors of Triopoly is the opposite of monopoly. most brilliant scholars in the history an trade unionist and labor economist. this country. In fact, shatter the very It postulates a federation of capital of Harvard Law School, was secretary Rose Schneiderman, founder and doors, and make stepping-stones or and labor and consumer for the benefit of all three groups. Under this to United States Circuit Judge Learn- president of the Women's' T r a d e itepping-boards out of them. system capital will be controlled, •ed Hand before his appointment. Union-League and Dr. Leo .Wolman, And let America stretch out her wages will be stabilized and the conprofessor 'of economics at Columbia The remaining three members of arms in the good old American tradi- sumer will have something to say in the "brain trust" are veterans in the University, are members of the Labor tion, that was interrupted only after the fixing of rates and prices. These government service whose records of Advisory Board, of which Dr. Wolman the war— stretch out her arms and triopolies will be franchised by the is chairman. Louis Kirstein, Boston welcome all those who would come in. government just as the monopolies merchant and philanthropist, and I promise that immediately this is are now franchised. In other words, Gerard Swope, president of the Gen- done, the grocers will start selling the government will regulate industry, eral Electric Company, sit on the Industrial Advisory Board. Dr. Wolman, Mr. Kirstein, and "Mr: Swope are also members of the President's board of seven named to act as a superboard of mediation to consider disputes between Labor and Industry. Besides these high-minded and devoted Jewish public servants who have been privileged to serve their country by helping to realize the "clear visions of a brave new world" in which humanity is to live happily under President Roosevelt, the synagogue has joined in urging- Jewry to stand behind the President's program. A manifesto jointly signed by Rabbi Edward L. Israel, chairman of the Social Justice Commission of the Central Conference of American Rabbis, Dr. John A. Ryan, director of the social action department of the National Catholic Welfare Council, and the Rev. James Meyers of the Federal Council of Churches of Christ, declared, in part, that: HENRY .MOKGENTHAU, JR. "The National Industrial ReHead of Federal Farm Board. covery Act commands our special achievement led President Roosevelt interest because of its ethical and to include them in his personal en- .human significance, and.because tourage. The best known of this trio it has incorporated into law some is Dr. Emanuel Goldenweiser, whose of the social ideals and principles official title is director of the divi- for which our religious organizasion of research and statistics of the tions have stood for many years. Federal Reserve System. Heading a How far the act can accomplish bureau which compiles the highly the desired results remains to be. technical and confidential financial seen, but many of its provisions, statistics upon which , government particularly those relating to" the monetary policies depend, he is Preslights of labor, are so forwardident Roosevelt's chief source for malooking in their intent as to merit terial in reorganizing the federal fithe heartiest co-operation of all nances. Entering the government serin realizing the maximum social vice in 1907 as a special investigator^ justice and economic co-operation for the Immigration. Commission, he made possible under its provihas been successively a Census Bureau sions." __agent, -statistician of the bureau of farm management of the Department (Copyright, 1933, by Seven Arts of Agriculture and assistant director Feature Syndicate^) of the bureau which he-now heads. Dr. Ezekiel,' economic advisor to the Secretary i-of Agriculture, has been a •member of the Department of Agriculture's staff for more than a decBy DAVID SCHWARTZ ade, first as agricultural economist in the farm management division of the Bureau of Agricultural Economics and THE N E W DEAL AND then as assistant chief economist of AND PALESTINE The thought continually recurs to "the Federal Farm Bureau. His highly specialized talents in various technical me that perhaps the New Deal should phases of agriculture have made him send some investigators to Palestine. an invaluable member of the Roose- There, obviously, an amazing'thing is yeltian inner circle which looks to him happening. There is prosperity at a for guidance in the development of time when the world is in bed with practical methods of economic restab- the depression. Not prosperity of the iHzation of farming, a major problem best Occidental typs, but still satisfyin the recovery program. Dr. Feis, re- ing prosperity. ferred to as "the brains of the State Now, in ancient days, we might Department" by the Washington have said that someone or other raised newspaper corps, is the diplomatic ex- his hand, lifted his eyes to the skies pert of the "brain trust." An econ- and produced this. miracle. omist With both practical and peda- But nowadays, we don't have mirgogical^training, Dr. Feis was the key acles. ifaan in! the negotiations leading up to So the prosperity that Palestine is ijhe Hoover moratorium and the World having must be of a natural sort. Economic Conference, which he at- Now what is the cause of it? tended as an advisor to the American IMMIGRATION AND delegation. As economic advisor to the PROSPERITY State Department, his ability to dramThe only thing of an economic sort atize the problems of that department and his knack of simplifying its most that I can see happening in Palestine perplexing difficulties have made him is that there is immigration there. an inordinately useful member of the Can it be that this thing we have been taught to dread—immigration— 'Tritchen cabinet." causes prosperity? It appears that it does. OTHER PROMINENT Consider what made the greater PERSONALITIES prosperity of the north as compared ] The last group of Jews holding im- with the south of our own country. portant positions tinder the Roosevelt It was obviously the great influx of administration is the largest and in- immigrants in the north. It couldn't cludes a number of well-known fig- have been anything else. The land of ures as well as some who are new- the south is as fertile—its climate comers'.' on the national scene. In the more pleasant. latter -category are Robert Straus, personal assistant to General John- PAST DEPRESSIONS son; Lloyd H. Landau, a St. Louis dis- I have an idea that what made the ciple of Professor Frankfurter, who is depressions of previous decades less the general solicitor of the Public sinister than the present one is the Works'Board; Dr. Maurice Karp, dean fact that the doors of our country <Jf the ^Jewish School of Social Work, were wide open to immigrants. I have been told by people who reto whom hSs been assigned the task <if training the personnel needed to member the depression of 1893 .thai carry out the National Recovery Act; it was much milder than the present f>r. Alexander Sachs, chief of Gen- depression. Certainly, there is no receral Johnson's research division and ord of any such numbers of banks or ijhe man to whom the recovery admin- businesses generally "going busted' istration turns for facts on the vari- in that slump. ous codes; Robert Kohn, former pres- During all 4hat depression, and durident of the American Institute of ing the depression of 1873, the doors Architects, who is special advisor to of the country remained fully opened .'.>•• the Cabinet Advisol-y Board of. the to immigrants. Public Works Administration and in Perhaps the fact that these, immicomplete charge of plans and projects grants had to be fed, clothed and Submitted for loans under the Public housed, shortened and softened these Works Act; Isador Lubin, former pro- previous depressions. fessor at the Brookings Institute in ULTIMATE EFFECTS Washington, who heads the vitally im- It may be that while the immediate portant Burean of Labor Statistics /in effect of immigration is- to bring prosthe Department of Labor; David E. perity, ultimately the increase of pop.. lalienthal, former member of the Wis- ulation is harmful. consin Public Service Commission, I am not going to challenge that who is a member of and counsel to the here, to say that I personally Tennessee Valley" Authority for the do notexcept that in a rightfully ordevelopment of the Muscle Shoals ganizedbelieve economic system that is so
Portraits of Jews in the'New DeaP
Side Lights
but" will not control it."
A SHADCHEN STORY If you are conservative, I offer you for consolation the story of Jake who went to a shadchen. "What have you got in the way of brides?" he asked. "Well," said the shadchen, "I have a very rich but homely young woman from the East- and a very pretty young woman from the west coast." - "Haven't you got anything, maybe, from the middle west"," asked Jake.
Sixth Century Synagogue Is Conyerts Return Unearthed to Judaism
As a concomitant of the Nazi persecution of the German Jews, Jewry as a whole vras encouraged during the last 12 months by the spectacle of a wholesale return to Judaism of thousands of converts, the return to active participation in Jewish life of many Jews who had formerly regarded their Jewishness A RIVAL WIFE as a burden and a handicap and a A geologist or some sort of "ist" j striking decrease in the number of from Detroit sends me a note, which l| intermarriages. I have misplaced, pointing out the Perhaps, the most dramatic refact that the greatest of primitive turn was that of the yoang Lord behemoths was called the Gigantic- Melchett, who -was publicly contsauros or something of that sort. verted to the religion af his faInteresting and perhaps more in- thers. Lord Melchett has rapidly teresting is the strange derivation of become one of the outstanding leadthe Hebrew word "tsauros," meaning ers of worid Jewry. troubles, originally meant "rival He helped to create the World wife." Jewish Economic Federation, took In other words, the early Hebrews an active part In the work of the thought the climax of troubles was Maccabee organization and leads reached when you had a rival wife. the anti-German boycott movement Personally, I can conceive of great- in England. er troubles, but maybe it's because I am so innocent.
ONFIDENCE
, During the tempestuous months of depression, Herzbergs . . . deep-rooted in the faith of a discerning clientele . . . strove to merit the public's confidence by its unalterable policy of quality merchandise at reasonable prices. Our fidelity to sound business principles and belief in their ultimate victory Has been justified . . . as the veil of night lifts and the break of day promises a new era of united co-operation and fairness in human endeavors, we welcome the "new deal" of the NRA — the opening of a golden vista for material, social and spiritual advancement to all.
On this occasion of the New Year and the "New Deal," we rededicate ourselves to those merchandising tenets .which have inspired your confidence . . . and we hope and trust that the blue eagle enables you to achieve the fruits of your labors —,health, happiness and prosperity.
JERUSALEM (J. T. A.)—An ancient synagogue, dating from the sixth century A. D., was discovered by Prolessor S. Klein and Dr. A. Meisler of the archaeological section of the Palestine Jewish Exploration Society. While digging at Simonia, north ot Nahalal, on the Keren Kayeraeth land, they discovered the remnants of the synagogue, including basic pillars, a beam of the doorway and a utensil for the ritual -washing of hands. The Jewish Exploration Society plans to continue excavations on the same site.
Praises Jews Sao Paulo.—The newspaper, A Gazeta, which has several times in the past carried attacks against Jews, seems to have had a change of editorial heart. It is now printing articles praising the Jews and retracting virtually all its former adverse statements about them.
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New Year's Ec|ition--THE JEWISH PR ESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
Page, 6—Section ;A
Start Movement for Agricultural Colony
dent of Czechoslovakia. 12. Rev. Everett Clinchy, director of the National Conference of Jews and Christians. In their replies to the questionnaire of the Seven Aits Feature Sao Paula, Brazil, (J.T.A.)—A Syndicate, the editors cited the folmovement to found a Jewish agriBy ROY N. TOWL, Mayor, City of Omaha lowing reasons for regarding the cultural colony near Sao Paulo has above listed twelve Christians as outbeen started simultaneously in Sao standing friends of the Jews: A New Year ^ brings Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. Both Michael Williams groups are motivated by the desire with it a recognition and Because he took the initiative in to substitute permanent means of creating an International Emergency valuation of the shortearning a livelihood for temporary Committee for the Emigration of urban pursuits, and are cooperating German Jews and German Christians omings of the past and to bring this about. Their comof Jewish descent, made a personal a hope for greater liapbined efforts are expected to obtain investigation of the situation in Gerfrom the government such aid as is and success in the many on the basis of which he called piness usually given to all settlers. ( on Catholics and Protestants to join uture. Many people have The group has recently grown to in protesting the Hitlerite persecusuch proportions that the Chief tions, and vigorously combated in faced their New Year, Rabbi, Dr. I. Rafalovitch, who is the The Commonweal" and from the jonscious of ICA (Jewish Colonization Associamistakes lecture platform the Nazi denials tion) representative in Brazil, has made that Jews had been killed or injured that they have promised to purchase for it an estate and were being discriminated against. which have caused them near Sao Paulo, where the climate Sir Arthur Wauchope is almost European. Because he manifested a sincere and their dear ones to sufThis is the first attempt to found a Jewish colony since the failure of were selected from those whose and sympathetic understanding of fer. It is a fair tribute to the ICA colony, Quatro Hermanos, names appeared on at least 25 of the Jewish aspiration in Palestine, interwhich was named after four broquestionnaires received, while the preted government regulations with civilization that only octhers who nee owned that land. others are listed in a. supplementary the greatest possible liberality, strove casionally does one of its There are now in Brazil a number roster without regard to the number to carry out the Mandate in letter of completely automonous coloniea and spirit and co-operated generous- great families face its of votes they "received. * of various nationalities. The consensus of opinion among ly and effectively with the Jewish hope for tomorrow burdened with a sad and unefforts to rebidld Palestine. the editors of the Seven Arts memBenito Mussolini necessary experience brought about through no ber papers is that the following were Because he took deliberate plans to the twelve greatest Christian chamdemonstrate to the world that Ital- fault of its own. In these comparatively few occapions of the Jewish people: ian Fascism does not tolerate racial 1. Michael Williams, A m e r i c a n and religious persecution, advocated, sions, we find the Jewish people the most frequent Catholic layman and editor of "The through his newspaper, the creation scapegoat. Commonweal." of an autonomous Jewish state in (J. T. A.)—Nazi finanIt is not a simple matter to extend greetings cedMadrid. 2. Sir Arthur Wauchope, High Palestine and defense of Austria propaganda campaigns in Spain Commissioner of Palestine. against the Na^i menace which is to a people on their New Year when one knows that and Spanish Morocco are being 3. Premier Benito Mussolini of indirectly a defense of Austrian felt by the Jewish committheir hearts bleed for the experiences of their breth- strongly Italy. tees. Jewry. 4. Sir Eric Drummond, former Sir Eric Drummond While here in Spain the Hitlerite ren in a land not so far away. secretary-general of the League, of Because as secretary-general of propaganda has resulted only in atNations. / am confident and I know that the vast ma- tacks on Jews in the press, in Tanthe League of Nations he availed 5. Camille Chautemps, Minister of himself of his discretionary powers jority of that intelligent family in society known giers it has assumed the form of the Interior of France. periodically-recurring physical vioto ass-me responsibility for placing 6. Joseph T. Robinson, United on the agenda of the League's Coun- as the German people are not in accord with this lence. Arabs usually are the instiStates Senator. gators of these attacks against memcil a petition from a Jewish citizen 7. Dr. S. Parkes Cadman, Presi- of Upper-Silesia asking the abroga- latest virulent attempt to destroy an indestructible bers of the Jewish community. dent of the Federal Council of tion of all Hitlerite anti-Semitic laws people. All this has promoted the Jewish Churches of Christ, in Upper Silesia as a violation of the community on Tangiers to publish a Let us hope that, as you come face to face with 8. Dr. John Haynes Holmes, pas- Polish-German agreement of 1922, an statement in which it was said that tor of the New York Community action which not only brought Nazi your new prospects and new hopes on the occasion "strange elements are making efchurch. forts to provoke quarrels between anti-Semitism before the League 9. H. R. Knickerbocker, Berlin when such a hearing had been held of your New Year, the public opinion of the nations Moslems and Jews." The Jewish correspondent of the N. Y. Evening to be impossible but resulted in the of the world will have spoken so effectively that you community begged the Jewish popuin Tangiers to ignore all proPost. eventual abrogation of anti-Semitic maybe able to rejoice at the conclusion of a painful lation vocations which, it was said, were 10. Sir John Simon, Foreign restrictions in Upper-Silesia. aimed solely to spoil the existing Minister of Great Britain. episode of your history. pleasant relations. 11. Dr. Thomas Masaryk, Presi(Continued on Page 7-A)
Christian Defenders for World Jewry
New Year Greetings
Twelve Outspoken Supporters of Fairness ~* Voice of Christianity By ROBERT STONE On the basis of. replies; to a questionnaire sent to the editors of all member papers of the Seven Arts Feature Syndicate, Mr. Stone has selected 12 outstanding Christians who have been vigorous and frank supporters of Jewish rights and outspoken opponents of anti-Semitism during the past year.—THE EDITOR. In the midst of the greatest tragedy that has befallen the Jewish people in more than 400 years—the barbaric and brutal persecutions in Germany—the heartening and encouraging voice of Christendom raised in defense of Jewry has been as a beacon light in a fog to a sorely beset people. Spealdng through its statesmen, its clergy, its men of arts and letters and other world-famous personalities, the Christian world outside of Germany has been as one in giving expression- by word and deed to its sense of protest, horror and indignation at what has been going on in Germany for the last six or seven months. In a desire to accord some formal public Jewish recognition to these numerous humane and understanding Christians who have unhesitatingly rallied to the support of the Jewish people in its hour of need, the Seven Arts Feature Syndicate circularized the editors of its member papers with a questionnaire
in which they were asked to list the" names of those whom they regarded as hating been the twelve greatest Christian champions of Jewry-during the past year. The replies received from editors of 43 papers contained
TANGIER JEWS WARN AGAINST NAZI AGITATION
the names of so many notable Christian figures that the task of selecting the "twelve greatest" became exceedingly difficult. Since none of the names submitted received a un? animous vote the "twelve greatest"
t l l l d , in a manner today, to hold high your head, tomorrow;r A
Every man is the builder of his own life and his own business. Your store, your fixtures, your supplies... these constitute eloquent testimony of your character . . . these inform the public how you have chosen to build your future. A
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Let not these mute witnesses bear unfavorable evidence against you... let it not be said that you built on rock or sand. The Omaha Fixture and Supply Company can help you be a builder of beauty... adding charm to both your surroundings and your business—so that you can "Build in a manner today, to hold high your head, tomorrow!"
Fixture & Su CORNER 11TH AND DOUGLAS STS. OMAHA, NEBR.
i: i'
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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20, 193S
Christian Defense of World Jewry (Continued from Page 6-A) Because as minister of the interior he publicly announced that the doors of France -were always open to those suffering persecution in foreign lands, and his generous policy of granting an asylum to thousands of Jewish refugees from Germany. Joseph T. Robinson Because of his forthright denunciation on the floor of the United States Senate of the Hitlerite perse-
Benito Mussolini
and Christian, •worked for the elimination of the causes of anti-Jewish prejudice and helped materially to mobilize the Christians of America in a vast protest against the antiSemitic persecutions' in Germany. As was pointed out before, scores of noted Christians throughout the world have been outspoken in their protests against the anti-Semitic terror in Germany, and active urging and working for inter-religious amity, in striving to eliminate prejudice against the Jew wherever x& has arisen. • Besides the twelve listed already the following Christians received -one or more votes in the Seven Arts questionnaire because of the prominence in some pro-Jewish cause or activity or for some outstanding service to the Jewish people during the year 5693. Newton D. Baker, co-chairman of the National Conference of Jews and Christians; General John F. O*Ryan, for leading the monster protest parade in N. Y.; Dorothy Thompson, journalist; General Jan Smuts, former premier of South Africa; Edouard Herriot, former premier of France; Premier Stevens of Australia; Fiorello H. La Guardia, fusion candidate for mayor of New York; James W. Gerard, former ambassador to Germany; Lord Robert Cecil, former British representative on the Council of League of Nations; Mayor John F . O'Brien of New York; Bainbridge Colby, former secretary of state; Col. Josiah Wedgwood, member of the British Parliament; Rev. Cosmo Lang, Archbishop of Canterbury; Com. Oliver LockerSampson, for introducing a bill in British Parliament to give German^ Jewish refugees British citizenship;"
cation of the Jews in a speech which precipitated strong criticism of the •Geranan government's anti - Jewish policies by other members of the Senate. Dr. S. Parkes Cadman Because lie has striven consistently for Christian-Jewish good-will ;in. America and lias labored indefatiguably to arouse the Christians of America to an understanding and appreciation of the un-Christian brutalities of "the Nazi regime in Germany. Dr. John Haynes Holmes Because he has courageously demanded that Christianity formally disavow the centuries-old libel that ffie Jews killed Christ * stood shoulder to shoulder with Jewish leaders in warring- on economic discrimination against Jews in America and has always been in the van of the defenders of Jewish rights. H. R. Knickerbocker I Because his series of articles in the New York Evening Post writen immediately after the Nazi revolution gave the American reading public its first comprehensive picture of the true conditions in the Hitlerized Reich not only as they affected the Senator Jos. T. Robinson Jews but the peace and stability of the -whole world. Dean Inge, minister of St. Paul's Cathedral, for his outspoken protest Sir John Simon -Because as British foreign minis- against the Hitlerite terror. ter he assumed a sympathetic stand Hillaire Belloc, English author and toward the plight of the German- Catholic lay leader; Sherwood Eddy, Jewish refugees by easing immigra- lecturer and author; Sir Austen tion restrictions in Palestine and Chamberlain, former chancellor of the urging the letting down, of the bars British exchequer; Dr. Samuel Har-\ In England and Palestine to permit den Church, president of Carnegie Institute of Technology; Lady Asthe entry of such refugees. quith; Dr. Alvin Johnson, founder of Dr. Thomas Masaryk "University in Exile"; David Lloyd Because his long-standing friendship George, former British premier; Senfor the Jewish people made it pos- ator Robert Wagner, for condemnasible for thousands of Jewish exiles ,'tlon of anti-Semitism in Germany;, from the Nazi terror in Germany to [general Charles Sherill, head of AnW find a refuge in Czechoslovakia and erican Olympic Committee; Congressbis ardent public support of the work man James Beck; 'Mrs. Carrie Chapof reconstruction in Palestine. man Catt, founder of non-Jewish Rev. Everett Clinchy Women's Protest Committee Against Because as director of the Nation- Hitlerite Persecution; Congressman al Conference of Jews and Chris- Hamilton Fish; Winston Churchill, tians he furnished progressive gains former chancellor British exchequer; in mutual understanding between Jew Arturo Toscanini, musician; Congressman Edith Nourse Rogers; Archbishops of Cologne and Paderborn, Germany; Senator M. M. Neely; George Lansbury, member of Parliament; Senator Jesse H. Metcalf; Senator Royal S. Copeland; Senator David I. Walsh; Senator Henry RIO DE JANEIRO • (J. T. A.)— D. Hatfield; Senator Millard E. TyJewish immigration to Brazil has dings; Senator William King; Prebeen completely halted by the labor mier Tascherau of Quebec; Arthur department here. Brisbane, noted American journalist; This became known through a curious incident. Your correspondent Edgar Ansel Mowrer, Berlin corresucceeded in obtaining a written docu- spondent of the Chicago Daily News; ment in which the labor department James G. McDonald, chairman of the states that all Jewish applications for foreign policy association. entrance into the country are being (Copyright, 1933, by Seven Arts held up, pending a final decision by Feature Syndicate) the minister of the department regarding the matter of Jewish immigration to Brazil generally. The curious element in the case is the fact that the letter was written to a Gentile whose name is Isaac and who, because of his name, was taken to be Belgrade, (J.T.A.)—Jewish colona Jew. -The document substantiates a pre- ization in Jugoslavia is intended solevious report to the effect that Jewish ly for relief of this country's Jewish applications were not being passed by -population, which has been severely the authorities. All efforts on the part affected by the world economic crisis, of local Jewry to effect a change in and is not connected with the relief the ministry's decision have thus f-ar of Jews from Germany, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency was informed. been fruitless. Dr. Stejder, president of the BelThe worst of the matter is that no reason is given forwie jsudden__ deci- grade Jewish community, in a comsion, which has practically eliminated munication to the Jewish Telegraphic the possibility of Jews in any country Agency, -pointed out that the agrito enter Brazil and is prolonging the cultural settlement plan had been worked out to aid the Jews of Jugoseparation of many families.
slsvia, who have suffered more severely than the general population as a result of the depression because it is mainly an urban population. While the general unemployment is only 1.4 percent, he declared, that of the Jewish population is ten-fold. The Jewish colonization scheme is being worked out under the supervision of Minister of Agriculture Tomashitch. As reported by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency last week, fifty Jewish families are being put on the land immediately at at Bitolj, in the southern part of Serbia. The project is being financed by the Jews of this country with the assistance of the Joint Distribution Committee and other organizations. London.—The establishment of a commission to survey the whole problem of German refugees, administer monies to be entrusted to it, study the question of the settlement of the refugees in other countries, and to enter into communications with the interested governments, is suggested by the Manchester Guardian, world famous liberal newBpaper.
DRUG LOCKED UP IN ASYLUM Court Declared Him Incapable of Caring for Son; His Wife Declared Epileptic New York, (J.T.A.) —That Capt. Goering, president of the Prussian Council of State and president of the Reichstag, was at one time a patient in an insane hospital is proven by documentary evidence reprinted in the "Brown Book," recently published in London by Lord Morley, president of the World Committee for the Victims of National Socialist Fascism. The documentary evidence consists of two certificates, the first Capt. Goering's card as a patient in the Institute for the Cure of Nervous Diseases of Langbro, Sweden. The second is a declaration signed
Page 7—Section A"
by the legal medical expert at Stockholm that Goering is a morphinamaniac and that the former THadame Goering, nee Baroness von Rock, is an epileptic, and that, therefore, neither of their houses is c suitable home for their only son. The history of Capt. 'Goering is a favorite theme for the patriotic panegyrics of the Nazis; but the official biographers seem to leave out the most telling details. All Goering's vaunted aviation exploits were accomplished during bis morphine intoxication. This "War hero . . . who assaulted the very clouds" fled to Rome after the unsuccessful "putsch" of 1923 before the prospect of a few months in a fortress. As a minority leader he never had the courage to risk the half of what he himself imposes upon minority leaders today. In Sweden, where he worked for an aviation company (1925-26), he was shut up in the insane hospital at Langbro, removed thence to Konradsberg, and thence back to Langbro. There his fits -were so violent that
he was transferred to tire section foT dangerous madmen. Finally, the Nazi biographers fail to mention that the man to whom they have entrusted the tutelage of 60,000,000 Germans was declared, by the tribunal which gave him his divorce, incapable of caring for his own son.
M1SCHA ELMAN, NOTH) VIOLINIST,
Los Angeles, (J.T.A.) — Mischa Elman, world famous violinist who is leaving Los Angeles on a concert tour, declared in a letter to Walter S. Hilborn, chairman of the local United Jewish Appeal, that he refuses to have anything to do with Germany as long as the Hitler regime is in power. To educate the intelligence is to enMr. Elman had received a letter from his former German manager^ large tiie hori«m of its desires and asking him to give a. series of con-! wants.—Lowell.
e promise
of a new As the gossamer mists of the starless night merge into the flaming rays of the rising sun, in a burst of splendor comes . . . the promise of a new day. And even as darkness bows to the glory of the dawn, so too do the cares and sorrows of the old year fade before the bright vistas of the new year.
-SsMSSSS"
Brazil Halts AH Jewish Immigration
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Institutions as well as individuals have been tested by those cares and sorrows of the past. . . shared in the night of adversity , . . and now—with the promise of a new day—because of mutual faith we: look forward with confidence to all mankind sharing the bounties of a new era.
Jugoslavia Colonizing Unemployment Relief
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certs in Germany. The Jewish partner of this concern was dismissed by the Nazis. In his reply Mr. Elman stated: "So long as Jews continue to be humiliated by the Hitler government and deprived of the rights that every other German enjoys in his own country, I will refuse to do business with German firms or individuals. I feel that I am voicing the opinion of the entire civilized world and also of many Germans in and out of Germany." The refusal of Mr. Elman to appear in Germany follows that of many of the -most distinguished artists af the musical and theatrical world to appear in Germany, as a protest against the treatment of their German Jewish colleagues. The Nazi regime has recently made desperate efforts to induce will known artists to appear ni Germany, only to meet -with rebuffs.
OMAHA'S STYli CENTER "'-Jiac-^-.r'•>:'>*&•'•
^^g^^^t^w?^"?^" 5 ^-^'""?'-"
New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September .20, 1933
Page 8—Section A
Sir Harry Lauder has been telling reskies employed in the Department of must work long hours to keep up with Catskills?" cently. all the sinning that is done." Sins?" " "No, higher than that. I am an Commenting on the fact that the "No, quite the contrary,"' said the Ange.1.""Exactly," he said. world was hearing much about Jews "Oh, Angel, eh? Any relation," I "Well, well, Angel," I said, "I'm Angel, taking out from his inside these days, Sir Harry observed that asked, "to the Angels of Memphis. I mighty honored to meet you. How, is pocket a sheaf of papers, on which he had been associated with Jews for used to know Harry Angel down there,. the Sin 'business, nowadays?. Any- were inscribed much musical notation; twenty-five years and "they were the • a good many year3 ago. He was a way," I said, "you can't say any bus-i 'you see this, I have been so idle, whitest men he had met." Then Sir By SEN. GILBERT M. HITCHCOCK plumber." iness up in the skies is.inder erd.'| that I have turned to musical comHarry told the story of a Scotsman position, I am .writing .a grand opera." By DAVID SCHWARTZ "No," he said. "I am one of the He smiled at that. "I-guess."you who went into a bar in the corner of On the occasion of this • ''Writing a grand opera?" I asked. must be a Yiddish angel/' IT said. angels from the skies." were gathered a nuniDer of "Do they have grand opera up in "Well," I said, "that's nothing; you Jewish New Year, let me which "Well," he said, "we angels, knov/j Jews. ROSH HASHONAH know, who I am? I am nothing'less all languages, for in-Heaven there.i» Heaven?". Ordering a "pony," for which ho express the hope that it paid, AFTERNOON than President Roosevelt traveling in- neither race nor color .nor ; creed,1 ''Well,' you see, in Heaven, people the Scot commenced to laud the don!t talk. All conversation, asin cognito. If you wait a minute, I'll take neither Greek, nor Roman, nor Jew. It was after one of those heavy may mark the final abanJews loudly, saying that he had gra.nd opera, is sung." Rosh Hashonah dinners. I had eaten the incognito out of my vest pocket One day, I may be assigned to work worked for 10,000 of them, and that donment of persecution he among a Presbyterian " clientele,, an- , "Well, that's mighty nice, but tell too much. Ill 'walk- it off, I said, and and show you." wished there were 40,000 of them. sountered down the river. Who doesn't The man, however, remained im- other day to a Baptist, and another me, I.don't understand, what do you in any country of people So consistent was the Scot in his like rivers? They-seem so philosoph- passive to my mockery. I had an un- day a Catholic or Jewish!? • • '- '•-* ' .meanr you have nothing, else to do in praise the Jews, that every Jew at O7i account of race or re- the barofstood ical and soothing. canny feeling. And kept on question"So that's the way it is," I said, i ; the-. Department of Sins. Why, it him a glass of whisky, Isat down on a bench beside the ing him ,even though I was conscious Well, here was an angel, and I-had seems to-me, that I alone sin enough and when the Scot eventually stagligion. In recent centuries to^keep all the clerks in your departriver—and my eyes were attracted by of being rude. always thought that if ever I met one out all lit by the whisky bought enormous progress has gered a group of Jews standing on the "You work for the city, department of them I would have so many ques- ment busy." ' • ', • by the Jews, one of the Jews asked .:ITJiat'5 ;because _you don't under; banks. They were evidently praying— been made in this direc- the barman who was the man who had stand. Now just watch those. Jews their bodies were swaying in that mojust left. standingr-at'the; river,casting their tion familiar in the orthodox synation, and it is not too 'O," said the barman, "he is the sins in the river." . . : gogues and their lips were moving. gravedigger out in the Jewish cemmuch to hope that the reIn a moment, it came to me, they were "Yes," I. said, "that's another thing going through the New Year cerecent flareup in Germany etery." I wanted ito ask you about. : Do you * * • ; mony of Tashlich—of casting their think it's 'righ't for people to stand will be the last to disgrace Well, we have told so many stories sins into the waters. throwing their sins in the river." It at the expense of the Scotch, that must pollute the "streams. I know a I watched for a while, but that mankind. we'll forgive Sir Harry for his quid number of people .who. got typhoid heavy meal was having its way. My pro quo. from bathing in the water polluted by eyes kept insisting on closing, as my the garbage at Coney Island and not accuse themselves of sinning if you sleeping here?. Come on and join ALEXANDER HAMILTON'S •will fought to keep awake and watch Rockaway. And you mean to tell me they were not." HEBREW the scene. A moment passed, and I us in Tashlich." , ;' r that if I go into water polluted by all Johan Smertenko, in his recently was conscious of someone sitting next "Surely," I said, and I rose and fol- published life of Alexander Hamilton, those sins these Jews are throwing "Well, that comes," siad the Angel, to me. . . • • ' : • .-• . -1 •. ' declares that Hamilton used to boast into the water, that I won't be heavy "from their confusion of sin with stu- lowed. He had somethings of a strange pidity. All mortals commit innumerwith iniquity?" (Copyright 1933 by. the Jewish that at the age of four he astounded look. And in his pockets, I could see, able stupidities, which they call sins." Telegraphic Agency, Inc) •.-••' his' parents by reciting the Ten Com"You are switching the subject," •was something that looked like a pair "Oh, I see what we call sin, you in mandments in Hebrew. the Angel said. "First, let me answer Heaven of wings. He wore a uniform with the call stupidities. Well, I guess," Hamilton, we know, had a Jewish letters "D. S." inscribed on his shirt; your first question. You want to I said, "in the Department of Stupid- ITS HIS TRADE tutor in his infancy. And there has know why I have nothing to do in the ities, you would I smiled at him. "Interesting scene, Bruno Lessing, who spends his time been a great deal of speculation as to have no difficulties in Department of Sins ?" that," I said, pointing to the praying satisfying the wanderlust, tells one whether or not his father was a Jew. keeping busy?" Jews. "Cast your bread upon the "So I told you to watch those peoabout a friend of his, a Mr. Dreyfuss. We know that his mother was first •waters, and it will come back to you, ple throwing their sins into the wa- "No," he said, "that department is The story is true, Mr. Lessing vouches. married to a Jew, but later she left also very much underworked." : says the Bible." "I wonder," I added, ter." "What do you mean?" I said. "You To get to the story, this Mr. Drey- him. Yet there has been some vague "if the same thing happens if yon "Yes," I said, "I see them throwcast your sins into the water." ing their sins right into the water." admit that mortals commit innumer- fuss recently, visited Rome and there, surmising that later she also lived of course, went to see St. Peter's Ca- with her former husband for some "No, you don't," remonstrated the able stupidities?" He said nothing. I thought perhaps thedral. He was surrounded by a time. "Yes," he replied, "but Heaven does Angel. "What you see is those peothat I had gone ever his head. That Woodward and some others hold to ple making the motion of throwing not punish stupidities, as stupidities group of guides and finally selected D. S. on his clothes evidently showed their sins into the water. But do you provide their own punishment—are in the least obtrusive looking. As they the belief that there was a Jewish that he worked for the city departentered the church, the guide stopped strain in Hamilton. Personally, I have see anything coming from their fact their own punishment." ment of streets, so I wisecracked, beside a shrine and knelt for a mo- never been convinced of it, but the changing the subject. The New Generation which is being built in Palestine in the hands? Or do you see anything ac- "Well, well," I said, "this has been ment. whole paternity of the great Ameri"I guess your business is picking rebirth of the Jewish National Homeland is depicted here as the tually falling into the water?" an education. But do you mean to say can statesman is wrapped up in mysup." "No," I said, "I must admit I do there is no such thing as sin at all?" "Say," said Dreyfuss, "don't waste tery. work of art of Wilhelm WachtL time. I just want you to tell me about not." "Well," said the Angel, "I don't "No," he said, "I wouldn't say that" WHY SHE WEARS 'EM "I. have been a resident," I contin"And. the reason for that," said the know absolutely. I am still looking. the architecture. I'm a Jew, you That wasn't a bad report that Marued, "of this town for something like of streets, don't you?" I said."That's tions to ask, but now, as he faced me, Angel, "is that these people have no That's what I am down here for, but know." ten years, and I don't recall ever hav- what the D. S. is for, isn't i t ? " "So am I," replied the guide, "but lene Dietrich, she who prefers panta sins. And so they can't throw away so far, I haven't found one." I could think of little. to skirts, made when she said, that if "No," he said, "I work for the. De"But, Mr. Angel," I said, but I had this is my business." ing see you before. Are you a resident "Well," I finally said, "I guess you anything they haven't got." Hitler can wear pants, she can. partment of Sins." of these parts?" "But they must have," I said. "For not formulated the sentence before I "No," lie replied, "I come from up "Say," I said, "let me get this don't iind it difficult to keep em- they are all people of fair intelli- was conscious of someone pulling me ONE BY HARRY LAUDER We get impatient, and there crops on high." straight. Do. you mean to tell me that ployed. People, are always sinning. I gence, and if they feel they have sins, by the coat. It was my friend, Chayim. And while we're telling stories we "Say, Reb Yid," he said, "why are might tell the one that the Scotsman, out our human weakness.—Titcomb. "From the mountains, eh—from the you are one of the angels from the guess tiie men in your department they must be right Surely, they would
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EIGHT <J tEe Stars enthroned higfi m th^ fheavensfedthe children of Israel "on" Jieircwahderings, sb the light of flie Newj iYear leads us slowly from the darkness of eco<« nomic chaos into the green valley of plentitude; where viliages nestle quietfy at the foot of yer-* dant hills. J For in ffie new year Is Hope, istrengffi an3 confidence. Sttdforthat New Year the H. ?ft WoliF Company, Incorporated, pledges itself tot the cbntihudd service that for thirty years Has; gained for it the confidence of all wKo have cleaR iyvithit
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T Tage 10—Section A
New Year's Edjtion—THE JEWISH PRE^S—Wednesday, September 20,. 1333
may be realized by the end of the down. The unions are being forced place the full burden of the taxes on who removeth his neighbor's land- oughly acquainted with the pernicious first of the present century. mark"—in other words, cursed be he influence of the land speculator? into a bitter struggle. Wages are com- the land. ..." _ Our fathers arid grandfathers were ing down and hours of labor are be- . Tax the land so heavily that no who tried to get all of his neighbors Where is Dr. Soskins, who has been raised and grew up in a work-mind- ing lengthened. speculator will dare hold it out of use. to pay him rent for the land. Isaiah known for his land reformist activity ed world. Our children and certainly In other words, Zukerman seft a That will cheapen land, so that the thundered against the land speculat- even in England? And where is Mrs. our grandchildren will.from all indic- crash all around. The one faint candle settle? can buy it. Do that, and there or: "Woe unto those who join land to Fels, whose husband financed the land By HARRY MENDELSON ations, grow up in an almost work- in this world of darkness threatens will be no fat speculators, living in land and field to field." reform campaign of Lloyd George? less world (if:we take work as un- to be dimmed, at a time when its need luxury, while the settler mortgages It is a problem far more important To make a survey or give a bird's I situations exactly as individuals, that derstood inthe past). And we are was the greatest. than that of the British government— his land and the workingrnan starves. WHERE IS JABOTINSKY eyes view of the. human scene since' '/hen an. individual is confronted with the children of the transition straddThis is a gcod time, it seems to me, more important than any Arab probTHE BIBLICAL CURSE last Rosh Hashonah, "give the high an unpleasant reality there are ten ling two worlds—one that might be A SIMPLE REMEDY for oar friends the Revisionists, to getlem. How can you expect settlement lights of the world events, do justice neurotic' courses open to him—-and characterized as. that work-ridden i It is heartrending to think of this . It seems that Palestine should be busy and "holler." They are good at to take place in Palestine on any conworld of the pioneer and that of the to and encompass them within a one normal one. In the neurotic place, when the remedy is so the one land to! appreciate this. The hollering, and now is the time to hol- siderable scale with land selling, as leisure-world of, the cqming genera- taking newspaper article is almost' • as im- categories he. may: simple. . :....• Jewish.; National Fund's whole idea ler. . . ; Zukerman writes, at $400 per acre. tions. The past generations ap. possible as finding~: the proverbial T. Admit his • failure, but continue : was that there should be no private Why, within fifty miles of New York, All that really needs to be done is Furthermore, how can they keep sineedle in : the. hay-stack or solve a in his old i habits and beliefs' on the proached leisure from the point of ; Chinese puzzle blind-folded. • theory that his present failures is work—recreation being a surcease for. the Jewish communities, which, appropriation!, of :thft "unearned incre- lent at this land speculation, when the this writer knows at Iea3t one tenof his for- from toil; the future generations and like governments all over the world, ment." I. .could go back even further single tax is definitely part of the acre tract which can be bought for a I doubt if we can find any year an exception to the: rule ; we even to some extent will approach derive most of their revenues from toi .the. .Bible^-which invoked a curse Revisionist program. Where is Jabo- third of that sum. And this is Amer• in human history-,in. which life has mer successes. ' work with leisure as a starting point buildings and other improvements, to on the land speculator. "Cursed be he. tinsky, who has shown that he is thor- ica. . 2. He may embark upon a career . j moved so swiftly,: in which events h come upon men and women of hectic hedonism and attempt to —interesting occupations, creative have with - such breath-taking swiftness find solace, in the mad pursuit of and inspiring hobbies and activities being sought as surcease froni the intensity and number as in the las pleasure and diversions. many workless hours. Naturally 3. He may seek supernatural aid twelve months. \yith ; such a socia scene one. comes to feel like a"shpen to help him out of his difficulties. the education of the next generation 4. He may search for a scape-goat will be as different from ours as del aufn yam,; driftwood on the on whose unwilling back he may un- ours has been from that of the turbulent -sea. It takes almost backwoodsman. It will be an educaBuper-xnari to "grasp," in the words load, his own shortcomings. of Omar, Khayam, "to grasp the 5. He may become suddenly panic- tion for living, rather than for maksorry scene of things.". A strange stricken, forget his sense of propor- ing a living. The. "art of living'! ;»?•.' will be exalted above the "business dizziness comes over one. after trying tion, arid commit suicide. of living." G. He may develop a martyr com-. to find the .inter-relationship! between the multifarious 'world "events, per- plex, and indulge himself in an orgy sonalities arid localities, international of, self-pity, self-castigation, and and local' problems and dilemmas. self-humiliation. Still the human mind see^s to bring 7. He may attempt to propitiate <cosmos out of- apparent chaos, or- the unfriendly fates by minor acts der- out 'of the .jumble,, called the of sacrifice, without any true inmodern, scene, bring light into the sight into the nature of his situation. darkness, wholeness but of the cleav8. He may submit to the insults age, contradictions, etc., and get the of destiny because he is so burdened "zest of living" out of the^fast of with a guilt complex. living." •_..•• - '-:/"'•. • 9. He may develop, a paranoid hat- PALESTINE'S BRIGHT red for the particular situation he SPOT holds accountable for his misfortunes, The one bright ^spot in the Jewish • Some time ago an American writer and spend his energy in futile fum- world of late has been Palestine. Insized- up our age as suffering .not ing, cursing, and gnashing of teeth, deed, in a sense, it has been the one so:much from unbalanced budgets;as without actually doing anything bright spot in the whole world. The world has been suffering from ecofrom unbalanced-mental processes. about it. 'And Einstein in his article, "Why 10. He may set up a side show in nomic depression. The world, with the Civilization Will Not Crash," in a re- which frantic activity seems to dis-exception of Palestine. cent issue of Liberty declared that tract the attenion of the onlooker Writing in Harper's Monthly, Wm. Zukerman is probably right in saying mankind suffers not because it has from his own plight. failed to advance but because it Has And finally, in the category of that if what has taken place in Paladvanced too fast. I recall discuss- mature reactions, he may study his estine had occurred on a larger scale, ing contemporary civilization with a failure objectively, understand the the eyes of the world would be turned Palestinian educator and he sized up 'actors that led to his debacte, and to it, to find the way of escape from the situation in the following man- begin his training toward the pre-economic collapse. ner.: "Man's reason has created a vention of similar disasters in the,fu- For Palestine, without inflation, material civilization — instruments, ture. Needless to say, this latter without reconstruction corporations apparatus, conditions which have course is the only one consistent with and farmers' loans, and in a time of brought about an almost unbridg-l future success, sanity, and happi- international depression, has been prospering. able gap betv/een man's heart • and ness. ••"', WILL IT BE DIMMED? heed, between the emotional and the • • » ^o|ir tzoras. " • rational, between the instincts and Notwithstanding Dr. Mayo's recent Yet, hopeful as this appears to be, the emotions, which antecede. the statement that the Americans are Zukerman has abandoned hope. The -reasons by thousands if • not tens of ess sophisticated than the Europeans Palestine dream, he believes, is over, thousands of years and the intelli- one can't help but be'impressed by and principally because the land specgence, which is but a recent and late the remarkable increase of mature ulator has come in. biological phenomenon." The social reactions to the problems at hand. . Prices of land are now so high in commentator "felt that the cold reas- One might go so far as saying that Palestine by reason of the fact that oning machine of man had created America is truly, coming of age. the speculators, sgoing the rush to_j an abode far from congenial to the What might be called a literature of Palestine, are holding the land for a primitive, emotional side of man's adjustment, that is, one dealing with rise, that few of thesettlers can meet nature. the satisfying adjustments made by the terms. And when they do meet it, have little left for their work, or Einstein argues that "The very individuals who have suffered econ- they then must resort to money lendintensity of'our trouble indicates the omic upheavals in the last three else ers, charging usurious interests. determination of the social organ- years. Nevertheless we still find many; By reason, also, of the fact that the ism and of the individual to throw off the ailment. Future historians whom Kyle Crichton, associate editor land is being held for a speculative will construe the crisis that grips the of Scribner, has fittingly labelled as rise, little new land is going into use. world today as a symptom of a so- the "new quitters." These defeatists Those settlers who are coming in are cial malady brought about solely would have us turn our backs upon thus forced to compete with the exist—J by the too rapid tempo of "civiliza- machine civilization; .some would have ing laborers," arid thus the wages of tion." Isn't it another way of say- us destroy all the mechanical appar- labor in general are being forced ing, that man has been catapulted so atus and outlaw- all "the - inventors swiftly into such an unprecedently since our burning problems and" iscomplicated world that he as yet sues are concomitant results of mafinds it difficult to adjust himself to cine-production; others would have the new demands and .challenges of us desert the machines and return to the times. In short man is as yet the age of manual labor. Crichton not in tune with the spirit of the challenges these defeatists by insisttime. It's just too vast for him. ing that "We have national needs Youth finding itself more at home in which it would take us. centuries to BERLIN (J. T. A.)—Government our human universe will undoubtedly fill, if they can ever be filled, and we'measures to force Jewish retailers to find the needed orientation and equi- have a production machine that is make their purchases .from Aryan the marvel of the world. In a mood firms are . strenuously advocated in. librium we so badly need. of renunciation we are asked to junk Die Wahrheit, Nazi anti-Semitic orthis machine because we lack the gan. and brains to control as yet. The Nazi paper complains bitterly From a psychological and psychia- courage No worse confession of defeat and that Jewish shops are no longer plactric point of view life, mental and ing their orders with German induspsychic health consists not only of inaptitude can be conceived of." tries and that this" has led to a cat• * *. struggle but of adjustment; and the astrophic decrease in many industries. degree of mental health and emo- "That which times accomplishes An example is cited of a firm catertional stability are determined by the reason often fails to accomplish."' ing to Jewish that'now employs "the individual's ability to adjust and What might have appeared as Utop- two workers, shops where before the Nazi attune himself to the dilemmas and ian and far-distant to most people revolution the firm employed 50 workbut a few years ago has come sooner r- problems at hand. ers. While conflict in itself does not-al- than even the most visionary thinkers Instead of acknowledging that as a ways lead to neurosis, maladjustment conceived possible. I am referring result the boycott intimidation, the ; brings about a psychic tear within to the leisure growing out of the Jewish of retailers are simply unable to th's individual and leads either ta NRA. No longer can the challenge buy new goods, Die Wahrheit alleges • n-iuros or psychosis. So we hear of the New Leisure, the resultant that the Jews boycotting German some thinkers arguing that our civil- of unprecedented mechanization . and industries, andare placing their orders rationalization' be evaded by educaization is going to the dogs, others, with Jewish firms which are working including Secretary Ickes, that- we tors and statesmen. -What a jump o v e r t i m e . •••. are threatened with a return to bar- from the twelve and fourteen hour barism if we continue intrenchments working-day of our " fathers and Die"Wahrheit publishes a long list :: in education, and still others are ' grandfathers to the forty hour week of Jewish shops which it claims are |||S|i even asking the question: "Is our of the present moment? And this carrying on an anti-German boycott,*) not being low enough the leather demanding! vigorous measures by the civilization going crazy?" to force the Jews to conHowever, there are many others, workers hand in a code for a thirty government" placing their proiHitlerite orHHts who while declaring that our age hour weeTc and the American Federa- tinue ders with the German industriestion of Teachers present a code for a is essentially neurotic, pock-market The paper, argues that the governby contradictions, conflicts and cleav- twenty-five ho.ur week. ages, insist like Einstein, that per- Not much of a'jump to the four ment is entitled to make these dehaps that is another way of saying tour day predicted by the techno- mands of the Jews since the Jews ; that life is struggling to emerge crats whose report was so much in object to .being boycotted by Chrisfrom emotional bondages, inhibitions, vogue- shortly before the last presi- tians. i economic arid political cleavages, cul- dential elections! At the rate things t u r a l lags that are preventing the are moving it seems as though even \ full-statured emergence of t he hu- the very fantastic prophecy of Steinf wanness in man's human nature and metz, made a few years before his •of the civilizing power in man's civ- death, that with our present mechilization and that we can afford to anical and scientific set-up in Amer- Los Angeles (J. T. A.)—Declaring I peer into the future with hopeful ica all the needed tasks of the nation that there was no room in this councould be done in a two-hour work- try for a philosophy that is opposed eyes. ing day if duplication and over-lappthe American, principles of free How has the more realistic and ing e.fforts-and_waste of human en- to speech, of-discussion and • " flexible American adjusted himself-to ergy and materials were eliminated, freedom freedom for • all religions, Homer L. f ' the conditions which have come-upon Chaillauxf commander of the • depart~, - him? If we m e d i t a t e upon the *, j psycho-analysis of tHe depression ; T E t AVIV (3. T. A;)—In view of ment; of * the/ Spanish^Ame'rican War made by Beran Wolfe, author of the bad crops the High Commissioner Veterans, vigorously i denounced the "How to Be Human Though Human" officially'announced that he is can- encroachments of Hitlerism and Nazi Comunity celling 105,158 pounds of the total of influence in this country. and ddti r e c t o r off the Community "We..deem it our duty," said ComClinic in 157,505 pounds due the government .Church Church Mental Hygiene yg mander Chaillaux, "as it was in 1917, b in tithes. This follows the precedent New York, in the forum about a as lovers of American vprinciples, to established in 1932 when he cancelled year and a half ago, one is led to , i y American is li tthat h t many is tithe -debts amounting; to 173,000 rise again and oppose those forcea ' :•bbelieve many anAmerican an-Am :] :: "- -. '''..•/".—•.'".." that are^ being bro .ght to this coun\ ^ grappling with/the problems growing p o u n d s . • : " : ; ; l •[ The High * Commissioner is .also try from Germany. We will not ol'^e degression more ? soberly i l i f S s a ^ ^ a n ^ i h e n ^ . t h e / analysis considering. the -remission of tithes permit that Nazi philosophy to creep J^I'^^'raa^errfSTfiisHeading" Adlerian from the summer crops: with the ex-into this country and into American iPfechblogist^rgiie^^t nations:re- (tending of loans to the.* needy culti- life. We pledge you our support -vators--fdr-the~i»uiFehase ofseeds*----- against Hitlerism."
Tiumaii Panorama
is a
Bright Spot
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TOMORROW
We Americans are a funny lot. In times:ol prosperity we believe a tree will grow to the sky. In times of adversity we suddenly find that the tree was nothing more than a stump on which we sit, hold our heads and bemoan That's our problem now. For four long years we've been repeating the old, old question, Watchman, what of the night?" 'Watchman, what of the night?" The answer of the prophet Isaiah is the answer today: 'TRie morning Cometh, and also the night."
Jack>Jill
Wants Jews to Buy From Aryan Firms
COFFEE
In 1916 President Wilson didn't ask me how to win the war. Our country had the necessary resources and manpower. He knew what to Ho. All he asked of me was my support. It's no different now. Our country has half the tangible wealth of the world in raw materials to win this war against depression. President Roosevelt knows what to do. All he asks of me is my support.
West Coast Legion Leaders Anti-Nazis
I've joined the NRA. Don't ask me what it's all about. Fm too busy to figure it out, and besides I have risen from off the stump and am no longer bemoaning my tzoras.
And so I verily say unto you—my tzorasdika brethren—there is a tomorrow. r
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HOTEL H I L L - O M A H A
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Page 11—Section A
New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
Realm
important contribution to ethno- y inadequate and presumptuous with the possible exception of "One reviewer wnuhi be neglectful of his duties, if he did not mention "The graphy. Fascinating because of its story of middle class Jews; "Imita- More Spring." intimate and convincing descriptions tion of Life," Fannie Hurst's poorest In the non-fiction field, the follow- Jews Come to America," b> Masserof types, informative because of its novel in years, the story of a woman ing are of more or less interest: man and Biker. Of all the slushy, documentation, "Artie Village" by who was cheated of life in her con- 'Quaker Militant," Albert Mordell's synthetic, ignorant histories of the Robert Marshall is a handbook that centration on a livelihood; "A Young remarkably penetrating biography of Jews in America, this is the least can be used for many years to come Man of Fifty," an excellent novel by John Greenleaf Whittier, a wort that intelligent. A competent account of for a study of the mind of the isolat- Rose Feld. Any review of a year's is destined to revolutionize this gen- the rise to power and the aims of chological intuition, Zweig has seem- ed village. faction that failed to mention Robert eration's view of an American poet; the Nazis is provided in James Wated to make recognizable for the first Hector Bolrtho's tmimportant biograWise's electric "Swastika: the time the tragic woman whose death A swift glance at the fiction out- Nathan's "One More Spring" would phy of "Alfred Mond: the First Lord erman i Terror." The important nonbe guilty of unforgivable ignorance. marked the end of an epoch in put of the year discloses the followMelchett," "Rebels and Renegades," fiction books of the year include Nathan is this reviewer's favorite France. Zweig is the outstanding ing: "Union Suare," a Literary Guild a series of scholarly and definite "The Caulron Boils," Emil Lengyel's American novelist, who is able to example of the scholar-artist in Eu- selection by Albert Halper, which studies of revolutionaries an of their ropean letters. He yields to none was overpraised as a chronicle of life distill in his brief novels more of the associates who turned their backs study of conditions in Toland; '"The of the superficialities of such men as around Manhattan's Fourteenth St.; spirit of America and of men than upon them, by Max Nomad; "Bless- Stage Is Set," Lee Simonson's views Andre Maurois, Emfl Ludwig or John "The Pascarella Family" by Franz practically any of his contemporar- ed Spinoza," Lewis Browne's popular on the theater; "Music of Our Day," Drinkwater. When he •writes a bi- Werfel, which lost much through the ies. In addition, he possesses the but hardly significant biography of Lazare Saminsky's critical examinaography, he seems to be diagnosing author's discoursiveness;" "Young simplicity and the chiseled concise- the philosopher; "Bula Matari," Ja- tion of modem musicians; "Stalin's mankind rather than any one m a n - Woman of 1914" by Arnold Zweig, ness which is unique "with him. In- cob Wassennann's psychological ac- Ladder," Elias Tobenkin's moderate who tried to picture the pre-war asmuch as Nathan ir an author on count of the man who discovered views on Russia; "Abortion," Dr. A. or woman. generation in Germany with less the Knopf list, it should be pointed "Darkest Africa"; "Zola", a poor bi- J. Rongy's pioneer views on the neAMONG TEN BEST than complete success; "The New out that no other Jewish book is- ography by Henri Barbusse; the ex- cessity for the dissemination of birth The son of the late Louis Marshall Bridge," an extremely well done nov- sued by that house is referred to in tremely interesting account of "Wil- control information; "Insecurity," a finds himself included in a list of el by Meyer Levin, dealing with this review, for the xeason that liam Fox" "by Upton Sinclair, who study of the psychological and socithe ten most important writers of types produced by America's depres-: Knopf seems uninterested in the explains the difficulties as well as ological diseases caused by industrial the year because of his record of sion; Virginia Hersch's "Storm Jewish reading public. It may be the origin of the ex-movie .magnate. certainty, by Abraham Epstein, and eighteen months in the far North. Beach," an interesting but fragile added, however, that nothing pub- Although there is BO point in list- "The Land of Promise," Edmond His "Arctic Village," Kites without history of a Southern Jewish fam- lished 'this yeaf by Xnopf deserves ing all the bad books of the year, a Fleg'B poetic remembrances of a visit to Palestine. any pretentiousness, Is nevertheless an ily; "Main Entrance." a ridiculous- placement among the first ten books,
iterature
Critic Separates Good From Bad in Bookland authentic, typical, recognizable. Albert Cohen may be compared to his It has become traditional, at the fellow-countryman and co-religionist, end of each year, to select the ten Jean Richard-Bloch, who covered almost the same territory, though not foremost books in the fiction field •with quite as much imagination, in and a similar number in the nonS •fiction list. But only exaggerated .J~7 „ \ „ "This Pemile." People." a collection of short enthusiasm or distortion __« __ deliberate £Z.-_x--_ I "This J . 1 ..i__;_x•would make it possible to compile so stories, is not of a quality with Lewextensive a selection for the twelve- isohn's longer Jewish novels. But these novelettes, marred occasionally month period that has passed. by naivete and prudishh.?ss, approach The need for economy and deep Jewish problems, of the race and the concern with practical matters hare individual, with feeling and underrelegated literature to an even more standing. His study of the Jewish minor place in men's thoughts than Bolshevik, although written before it normally occupies. Yielding to Hitler came to power :in Germany, is the necessities of the situation, pub- a remarkable commentary on the -lishers have radically reduced the self-delusiveness of the German Jew, number of books they issue; more- even as it is a brilliant biography over, they have hesitated to experi- of the misshapen, pauperized Jew ment; the authors who sold in the who seeks salvation from his bitter past were preferred for publication obscurity in strange; political docnow. It is possible that great mas- trines. Lewisohn may have gone terpieecs languish in desk drawers, "Jewish" with a vengeance, bat when •waiting for the light of the day he treats of Jewish life he hides , when prosperity shall return. But from none of its garishness, its vulthe year 5693, as reckoned in Jewish garity or its self-destructiveness.. tradition, seems, in retrospect, quite The most important book of the foor and colorless in comparison with year, in the non-fiction field, is Josthe product of previous years. ef; Kastein's "History and Destiny But a year that saw the publica- of the Jews." Issued several years tion of so powerful and beautiful a ago in Germany, it has extraordinbook as "God's Angiy Man" is to ary timeliness in view of the revolube regarded as significant, for it tion in the Reich. One must read marks the emergence of Leonard Kastein as a Jew and not merely as Ehrlich, youthful, promising even a literary scalpelist. Kastein writes richer expression of his poetic tal- as a Jew rather than as an historian. ents.* This disturbing, violent biog- It cannot be said, however, that he raphy of John Brown and his times, has ever sacrificed historiography to enveloped in the mood of fiction, but his Jewishness. As he interprets the essentially embedded in history, is of the Jewish people, his conregarded by your commentator as record clusions are justified, inevitable. His the outstanding book of the year. It book is that of an interpreter rather has all the qualities of enduring fiction, for it ^--ats of an important than a narrator. The mere chronicle theme with understanding and com- is unimportant: passion, and yet always maintains The other five books that stand the serenity • and the craftsmanship out in the non-fiction field are: "History of the Russian Revolution" of a supeib artist. This reviewer finds it possible to (Volumes II and III) by Leon Trotselect only ten books that are worthy zky, "A World Passed By" by Marof extended comment at the end of vin Lowenthal, "The Discovery of the year. Four are fiction. Six are Europe" by Paul Portheim-Cohen, non-fiction. The enthusiasm for a 'Marie Antoinette" oy Stefan-Zweig, great many of these is unrestrained; and "Arctic Village" by Robert Mar. the others are chosen because of a shall. belief in their documentary value OTHER NON-FICTION thoujli not in their literary distinc- . T h e two concluding coltrms of tion. Trotzky's account of the origin and In addition to Ehrlich's great events of the Russian revolution conbook, the fiction list includes "Jos- stitute the most impressive account ephus" by lion Feuchtwanger; "Sol- of the overthrow the Czar. A paral" by Albert Cohen, and "This Peo- ticipant in the actual events, the former Russian War Lord has not pls by Ludwig Lewisohn. •For the past four years, the name overemphasized his share iri the proof Feuchtwanger has been included ceedings. Being an historian, he has, in any compilation of the year's best for the most part, judged the activity .books. He has scholarship and he of others objectively. No one who : commands a simplicity or style that has yet described the greatest social places him far above the majority of overturn in history compares with his numerous German-Jewish col- Trotzky in the vividness and authenleagues. "Joseplms," the first of two ticity of his account. No one can to know modern Russia bcioks dealing with the period in pretend without reading Trotzky. •which the great Jewish historian "A World Passed By" brings withlived, has done much to recreate 'an interest in the life and personalities in the covers of a book many parts of ancient Judea. The political hos- of the running narrative which Martilities, the sociological problem, the vin Lowenthal used to contribute to racial philosophies of the era are the Menorah Journal, in the days made to assume an immediate im- when he preferred anonymity under portanc comparable to the concern the cloak of Ben-Shahar. Lowenthal •which we show with developments in if. in a sense, America's Nahum our own day. There is no other Slousch. But Lowenthal has imaginJew writing in our day who makes ation and poetic gifts where Slousch Jewish history so vivid and Jewish has only the euipment of an ordinary character so important. To Lion observer. But Lowenthal's descripfeuchtwanger must go aan incal- tion of the departed Jew in Europe culable amount of credit for restor- and North Africa is more than ening to hosts of Jews a new under- tertainment; it is historically imporstanding of their past, and a new tant. Not particularly because he desire for sharing in the future of has done original research work, but their people. But Feuchtwanger can- because he has transformed the work not be dismissed as a polemist or of others into a document of endurpropagandist. He is, first, the nar- ing interest. Lowenthal's flair for rator who blends history and fiction the curious and the bizarre has enabled him to see what the casual toamake incomparable romance. tourist unfailingly overlooks. Read"SOLAL" Albert Cohen's "Solal" is another ing "A World Passed By" is no" illumination of the Jewish mind and solely an adventnre in travel; i spirit. One cannot conceive of any should become a reuirement for Jew> American delving so deeply and so ish historical research. "A World precisely into the heart of the Jew- Passed By" is "written with that easy ish" people, as exemplified in that informality which has made Marvin mjtstic adventurer, Solal, who had Lowenthal one of the very few who enquires in his grasp and relinquished write intelligibly and entertainingly them as a gesture of self-despise- on Jewish subjects. ment. It should be a matter -for ex- "In "The Discovery of Europe' tensive investigation as to why no Paul Portheim-Cohen has done for American Jewish writer has realized the Continent -what he did for "Engthe possibilities for great narrative land, the Unknown Isle." He has in .the psychological ramifications of distilled the spirit of countries and the Jewish mind. To be sure, every and digested the history of centuries. year sees the emergence of several Political institutions, literary prejunovels dealing with American Jewish dices, social manners, artistic schools life. But they are so stereotyped, BO are summarized and interpreted with suprficial as to cause embarrassment clarity and conciseness by this Austo any intelligent Jew who knows of trian Jew who was imprisoned during the War with a British interntheir existence. "Solal" is the visualisation of the ment camp and there began doing doubts within every Jew. It reveals literary work, after years of painta cross-section of the complexes and ing. the motives which dominate the ac- Stefan Zweig is too majestic a figtion of the modern Jew. Solar, the ure in-European literature and parGreek Jewish son of a patriarchal ticularly in the field of biography to rabbi, is a permanent part of litera- reuire leinterpretation with" the pubture- He is not merely an individ- lication in this country of Ms study ual, who finds his counterpart among of "Marie Antoinette." Combinins Christians as well as Jews. He is historical research with profund psy-
.. By HENRY MONTOR
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The horn of plenty is symbolic of an abundance of food . . . the "stay and staff of life." Centuries before the pure food laws of modern civilization, the ancient Hebrews recognized that cleaner, purer foods meant healthier living . . . that quality was as important as quantity. The Mosaic code dealing: with foods was a compliment to Hebraic genius. In the Middle Ages the descendants of Israel had still retained their zealous insistence upon cleanliness and purer foods . . . thus being miraculously immune from t h e B l a c k Plague which swept through the European countries. And in modern times the Jewish people still obey the injunctions for cleanliness and purity in their meals.
Hinky-Dinky takes pride in Hie knowledge that they too have fulfilled the commandment of clean, wholesome, pure foods. We feel that the public has appreciated this by their gratifying response to our food service. Quality merchandise at low prices has been and shall continue to be Hinky-Dinky's "staff of life." And on the occasion of this New Year—in the knowledge that Israel's staff of life is firmly founded in the hills of eternity—we express our sincerest wishes that the granaries of time will bring to all of you the good things in life, with an overabundance of spiritual and material nourishment.
OMAHA OWNED FOOD STORES
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New-Year's-Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
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Best Wishes for the New Year May it bring to you and family health, happipeace and jyrosperityx May it see your hopes fulfilled and may it be rich in the successful accomplishment of your highest aims.
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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20. 1933
and they shall repair the waste cities, the desolations of mamj generations"
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JSBJSS" 61* 4.
A P w » St&titm on «h« Imdb* of the Jordan near Haifa ta
past, nee more makes Jewish history in the Rebirth of a nation J
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l i k e the Nile in Egypt . . • like the Ganges in India . . . the River Jordan has played a gigantic role in the history of its country. The Jordan has been more than a river to the Holy Land . . . it has been a charac-^ ter in the drama of an age lost p a s t . . . a witness, first, to the evolution of a great nation, then to the existence of an ardent nationalism, and finally to the decline and disintegration of a once unified country. In the meantime centuries have passed by. .lAnd now, like an echo from the past, the River Jordan once more makes Jewish his-
tory in the re-birth of a nation. Zionists are planning, rebuilding, expanding. An ancient land has been modernized through the use of Elecricity. Today the River Jordan means more to Palestine than ever before, for only through its water power have the industrial and agricultural resources of the country materialized. Thanks to the pioneering work of Pinchas Rutenberg, to the Palestine Electric Corporation, and to the Jerusalem Electric and Public Service Corporation, light and
power have already been supplied Jerusalem, Jaffa, Haifa, Tel-aviv, Tiberias and rural districts. In the past five years electrical consump* tion has increased five-fold. Power has brought new life to industry; irrigation* new wealth to agriculture. No longer merely a symbol of past glories, the River Jor« dan is now the motivating force in a new? nationalism. Much more than a New Year is here foi the Jewish population of the world • „ . a New Era has arrived in the land of theil forefathers.
NEBRASKATPDWERCO A PIONEER
IN LOW ELECTRIC RATE5
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Page 2—Section B
Jewish Qenius in
PALESTINE A LAND OF HOPE STATES RABBI LEO JUNG
Yiddish and Hebrew Policemen on Duty SAO PAULO (J. T. A.)—Henceforth, a stranger approaching a policeman in the business centers of this city and asking a question in Hebrew or Yiddish will probably receive an answer in tne same language. Because of the large number of foreigners residing here, the Sao Paulo police have instituted the practice of stationing a number of poilcemen wherever large numbers of people congregate. Each policeman wears the colors of the country whose language he speaks. Yiddish and Hebrew are among the languages so favored by the civil police.
Berlin Question of Returnfor Those Baptized
New York, (J. T. A.)—Dr. Leo Jung, Rabbi of the Jewish Center, reBERLIN (J.T.A.)—There are nonturned on the Italian liner Vulcania Aryans who are also non-Jews, Aryan after a four months' trip through women who have been known to mar' Europe and the Near East, including ry Jews only for the sake of material Palestine. : : provision and once the marriage has Dr. Jung pictured. Palestine as a been consummated to leave their JewBy MORRIS R. BLACKER land of hope and a source of ish husbands. The children of such strength for the Jewish people, and Senior; Cr^ightbn University School of Medicine unions usually have as little sense of a startling contrast with the ghastly Jewishness as their mothers. The doctor is the servant of hu-. monotheistic belief of the Jew was a of the wholesale persecutions of the conditions now to seen in GerThe Juedische Rundschau of this Of fthese dark days Garrison many. inanity. His prime consideration i3 notable advancement over the poly- jews. city points out that the Nazi movesays: "The lot of Hebrew physicians "Palestine," said Dr. Jung, "may ment has made no sensible exception in prolonging life, assuaging pain, theistic beliefs of the other primitive in Europe was to be used and abused. assume a new significance as the The ancient Hebrew regardin the favor of non-Aryans who are relieving suffering; and to accom- people. ed health and diseases as emating In the tenth and eleventh centuries, melting-pot into which world Jewry also not Jews, at the same time pointplish this he pits his knowledge and from the same divine source: "I he was sort of a contraband luxury will cast its various complexes and ing out the silver lining of Nazi proresorted to by and protected by prince skill against the ever-ready talons kill, and I make alive, I wound, and its quaint super-patriotism, to emerge hibition of intermarriages in the large of mortality . . . endangering his own I heal", said the Lord through His and prelate alike, on account of his sanely and nobly self-conscious, cloud of Hitlerite oppression. superior scientific knowledge, but servant Moses. This conception was freed from the nihilisms of a decalife to save other lives. Jews, says the Rundschau, in efcountenanced for any other dent civilization, blessed by a renaisSuch a profession, noble in concep- an advancement in medicine because hardly fect, are not at all interested in enreason." Although their liberties for The Talmud relates; tion, cannot be bounded within the it naturally limited the cause of di- medical research was being stifled by sance of our old faith." couraging intermarriage, if only belimits of race, color or creed. It sease to at least one" source. In con- edicts flowing from the pens of Dr. Jung declared that the influx T the other rivers said to the cause experience has shown that the • must of necessity be international in trast to this belief the other prim- prelates and kings these same Jewish of the German Jews into Palestine Euphrates: "Why is the current of majority of children of mixed marscope, recognizing only one people— itive people attributed disease to physicians were nevertheless used to will prove a great boon to the riages are It-' * • Judaism. Am* thy water not beard at - a distance ?" non-Jews many causes, The medical historian, the human people. country. "A local sage," said Dr. who marry into the Jewish the ailments of the same perThe Euphrates .replied: "My deeds community for material reasons are' Of what interest is it, therefore, Garrison groups these causes under allay Jung, "declared that Grabski, the whether the discoverer for the cure three heads: First, they construed secutors. who do not conceal their conRulers" in all lands, even the bar- anti-Semitic Polish "linister of Fi- testify for me. Anything sown by many of syphilis was Jewish, English, Ger- the n a t u r a l as the supernatural. barous tempt for Jews. How can such as nance, caused an exodus from men at my shores will be in full tsars, when their ailments these, the Rundschau asks, be denomman or Klopstokian? Should it not Rain, storm, quakes and tidal waves were serious, Poland that led to the expansion of bloom within thirty days." consulted Jewish docinated as falling under the non-Aryan suffice to say that he was a human were to the primitive mind indubit- ;ors. Not only bishops and car- Tel Aviv. Hitler will help us build The rivers then addressed. the Ticlassification? being endowed with certain extra- able evidence of offended gods, devils, dinals the Popes themselves, in- Haifa." gris: "Why is the current of thy wat- But for those who were born Jews ordinary faculties which he utilized demons, or malevolent' spirits. Di- cludingbut most influential of all, ers heard at a distance?" for the sole purpose of alleviating sease was of course the unwelcome Innocent the and later became ba-i:>sed, return to III, religiously swallowed omen of the displeasure of these of"I must direct the attention of the the pain of his fellow-men? Judaism should be made possible drugs from the medicine-spoons Canadian Young Judeans people to me by my tumultuous rap- when and if they wish to return. "For so it was that^ as I mused fended spirits. Second, they capital- their OTTAWA, Ont.—Harry Batschaw, of Jewish heretics. In the Renaisover the names of the immortals of ized the idea of sorcery and believed such people the return to Jewish life young Montreal attorney, who recent- idity," the Tigris replied. medicine as related in the lecture that disease might be induced by a sance there were Christian kings who ly returned from a visit to Palestine, The moral: The less the merits of should be made possille. The upsethad faith only in J e w i s h practiroom in medicine school, the news- human enemy "possessed" by superwas elected president of the Young a person are, the more he will feel ting experience which recalls to the papers and magazines, I could re- natural powers. Third, they looked tioners. Francis I, during an ill- Judaea of Canada at the close of the urged to proclaim them to the pub- baptized Jew his Jewishness can be call o n l y the Germans,—Ehrlich, upon disease as a result of the dead. lic. :••.'•• made a positive social force. Many a ninth annual convention here. (Continued on Page 3) Wasserman, Henle, and Winternitz; On a c c o u n t of this confusion of the Russian, Metchnikoff; the Amer- thought, these primitive people reicans—Jacobi, Levin and Flexner. I garded disease as an entity quite could not recall one Jewish name that separate from the body and its funcplayed any part in the development tions; an entity to be treated by of medicine, not even the name of prayers, offerings, religious cereRabbi Moses Maimonides, who is de- monies, or certain medicinal herbs. scribed as "a Spanish physician of We can see by contrasting these the twelfth century." two beliefs that the ancient Hebrews This troubled me not one bit, for were at least setting off in the right I was fully agreed that medicine is direction for the understanding of. not cognizant of race or creed. But disease if not actually practicing when in the.past few months I read a higher grade of medicine than the of the physically repellent sexually- other civilizations of the then-existperverse, mentally-twisted and mor- ing world. ally-degenerate Adolph Hitler refusW t DO.OU* MJtT It was riot u n t i l the Talmudic ing to recognize certain outstanding times that the Jews really contriphysicians because of their nation- buted any concrete, tangible knowality and actually restraining their ledge to medicine. The laws of the teaching, and practicing as well as Talmud are remarkable for their persecuting them because of their pioneering in national sanitation. The Jewishness, I suddenly became, awake rules for the prevention of and supto the fact that these great "Ger- pression of epidemics, and of conman" leaders in medical science were tagious diseases such as leprosy; the Jewish. precepts regarding venereal maladies, I decided then and there to delve Ieucorrhea, sexual perversion; the a little more deeply into the contri- regulations concerning care of the butions of Jewish physicians to medi- skin, child birth, bathing, housing, cine to satisfy myself even more camps, food and rest; the admonition fully that the Nazis were indulging tto personall cleanliness and sexual in some more of their empty pratt- purity; and the rigid instructions ling when they charged that the Jews concerning isolation and segregation were parasitical and "took but would of infected persons, and disinfection not give." and incineration of infected articles are hygienic precepts of deep sigPaul Ehrlich, August Wasserman nificance, forming the earliest chapand Jacob Henle will march forth ter of preventive medicine and sanifrom the pages of history as Jews. tary science. Their flesh, their blood, their souls— The medical knowledge of the Talthe very fibers of their bodies are mudists was based upon tradition th .Jewish—and it will be our purpose dissection of human bodies, observato depict the discoverer of Salvarsan, tion of diseases, and experiments upthe developer of the Wasserman blood on animals. The sumtotal of the test and the founder of the present medical knowledge possessed by the anatomical knowledge of the human Jews of this era can not be stated body as Jewish scientists who were definitely for the reason that the incidentally or accidentally born in Talmud contains no medical treatises Germany. The same will hold true as such. Medical subjects are treated for the "Americans", "French", "Ar- only in so far as they concern or abian", "Spanish", and "Russian" elucidate some point of law. physicians. Before leaving this era we must From the paragraphs to follow it mention the contributions of the Jews will be noted that the majority of the great Jewish names in medicine to the science of pathology which were born and worked in Germany. came.as the result of the strict dietIt is coincidental therefore that the ary laws with the custmary inspec "paretic" who now holds sway over tions of the.animals slaughtered the German nation should persecute food. the brethern of those who really With the beginning of post-Talmumade Germany f a m o u s by their dic times we begin to encounter the epochal contributions to medicine. first individual Hebrew physicians This state of conditions in Germany whose names are still perpetuated in leads us to inquire whether or not the pages of medical textbooks. It this twentieth century tyrant can is fitting to state here, before 'menreally be consistent in his policy of tioning any of the great names, that persecution and total abstenance of the physician held an exalted place been employed. At the same time, with, "anything that has been blemished among the Hebrews of that age, and confidence in the future, the work of A . L L TOGETHER—uniting all forces b7 stain of non-Aryan blood". that in the majority of cases the art making necessary replacements to our healing was transferred from fato push forward to better tiffies—that is For in the presence of bacterial of property was advanced as much as ther to son. The status of the physthe spirit of today. : disease, will they not use the stain- ician can best be appreciated by practicable, thus providing additional ing technique of the Jew Weigart? q u o t i n g the words of Ben Sir a: During the last few- years, the teleIn determining the susceptibility of "Honor a physician with the honor work. All of this has helped maintain their children to diptheria, will they due unto him for the uses which you phone company, along withmost other purchasing power, benefiting not only neglect the method of Shick? In may have of him, for the Lord hath businesses, has been hard hit. Thouemployees but also those from whom cerebrospinal meningitis w i l l they sands of telephones have been taken out they buy products or services. The Lord has creathot search for the organism dis- created him ed medicines out of the earth; and and *ong distance business has fallen off covered by the :'Aryan", WeichselToday the telephone is ready—ready baum? The thousands upon thous- he that is wise will not abhor them a third. But by sacrificing earnings we to help all along the line. It is ready to ands of Germans who are afflicted . . . And he has given men skill that have carried on in a normal manner in, with syphilis will not deny them- He might be honored in His marvelserve home and business—ready to proso far-as our customers were eoncerned-*selves the benefit of the Wasserman ous work . . i My son, in thy sickvide quick voice-to-voice contacts in we have continued to provide good sertest and the treatment with Ehrlich's ness be not negligent . . . give, place to the physician; let him not go and out of town. Salvarsan. In the field of medicine vice and keep the property in repair. from thee for thou has need of him." Germany cannot posibly abstain from Through good times and bad this The outstanding name of the earAs our business fell off and there was Jews. Yet the persecutions and oplier Hebrew physicians is that of Company has but one policy—to furnish pressions against Jewish physicians less work to do, the remaining work was the best possible telephone service at the must go on. I cannot predict the Rabbi Moses Maimonides who was spread by shortening hours. Thus many result of these atrocities, but can on- court physician to the sultan, Salalowest cost to the public consistent with more employees have been retained by ' ly mention the fate of these nations din. the financial safety of the business. Born in Cordova, Spain, in 1135, he the Company than otherwise could have ' who tried these policies. • There is left his native land because of the but one obvious result—intellectual disfranchisement of the Jews and ' sterility. settled in Fustat where he wrot the immortal treatise on persona; Our story begins: hygiene (Tractus de Regiminie SaniIn covering the gamut of medicine tatis). His treatise on "Poisons" has it will best serve our purpose to been translated into French and Ger T E L E P H O N E COM PA NY . divide the historical data in four or man. The other great names in th< N O R T H W E S T E R N B E L L i' five eras. We begin with the earli- post-Talmudic, era were those of Av! est recorded knowledge of medicine— enzoar and his pupil Avenroes. Witt the Bible and Talmud. the mentioning of these names w< Medicine among the ancient Heb- have practically described all thj rews was at a low level, yet it was great names from the post-Talmudi aa distinct distinct advancement over that of times up to the last century, th th ancient ancient civilizations. civilizations The The the other It was inevitable that the-progress primary factor underlying this dif- af Jewish physicians was to be curf c e lies in the difference in re- tailed during the middle ages because Th two of
Deeds, Not Words
The Spirit of '33!
child of mixed marriage has no worse a Jew than many an unbaptized Jew who has not the faintest notion of Jewishness and who has disassociated himself from Jewish lit* completely without having actually broken the nominal tij. All these, lukewarm, unconcerned, disassociated and semi-detarhed, are being driven back i.»to the "ewish -amp. But that does not make Jews of them. It is necessary to mak them compreht d the Jewish, ' appeal to their better natures, to find an approach to their hearts, to bux. about them an educational process in order to msTre of ashamed."
Covetousness In the Talmud, the question is asked: "Why is man born with hands clinched, but has his hands wide open in death?" And the answer is: "On entering the world man desires to grasp everything, but when leaving he takes nothing away." Even as a fox who saw a fine vineyard, and lusted after its grapes, but being too fat to get through the opening there was, he fasted three days. He then got in; but, having fed, he could not get out until he had fasted three days more. "Naked man enters the world, and naked does he leave."
And Now It's Hay Fever PETOSKEY, Mich.—A new Petoskey bay fever club has been formed* by Jewish members of the Petoskey hay fever colony. Officers chosen by the organization stated that their aim is to construct a club house and to carry out a definite program of aiding needy hay fever victims.
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NewJ&ar's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September.-20, 1933
3—Section B
Jewish Genius in Realm of Medicine
(Continued from Page 2) matologists of America; Simon Flexness, requested Charles V for hisner, director of the Uockefellor In"Israelitish- physician". Upon the stitute, who is one of the foremost doctor's arrival in Paris,, the king bacteriologists and experimentalists American medicine and is especlearned, to his consternation, that he - known for Jus work on infantile had been converted to the dominant Teligion; : thereupon he sent him paralysis; Carl Landsteiher, the brilaway, and begged the Sultan for aliant winner of the. Nobel Prize, a true, original, hardened, unconverted pioneer in blood typing which has transfusions and •unconvertable Jew, f ollowing \ ^ , blood S.T* . ^ s f u s i o n s more more posw i nC o h n w h o h d whose advice he drank asses' milk,! f *'"*? P « d Pei" and recovered. ' iect the preparation of liver exGreat Jewish names begin with the 1r ^ 0 * f ° r ^f, ^ e a t m e n t °* "pernimodern industrial revolution for up ^ . a ? ? ™ " * " ; Joseph B.eDeLee, an SW n ne f
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est ex on tIus to study at the European univer-j * ^ J subject; Milton p rj w * } ,-aWes. When When they they were were again again r eJJ Wintermtz the dean of the medical r e admitted to the rights of citizenship' Medical School who is known and again given the freedom of the ; for his many contributions in his universities, an array of brilliant Jewish physicians began contribut- specialty. Other famous medical ing to medicine in a degree which names in America include that of has never been duplicated by anyRosenow, Elsberg, Riesmann, Brill, JHeltzer Loeb, Macht, Epstein, and one nationality. hosts of others too numerous to menspace. Greatest of the Jewish contributors | this brief cataloguing of a to medicine during the last century is the name of Jacob Henle—a name few of the myriad of outstanding revered wherever scien'ce nas devo- Jewish names in medical history, it tees. He is described as -the greatest is obvious that the Jewish contribuhistologist of all times. He is known tion to the profession dealing with
J j f * M *• f ? f ^ P . , s y
man to describe the epithelium of j the body^ for the rational outlook on haps their very names will be forpathology, for the germ theory on gotten, but their noble deeds for the which we have built the cornerstone bettering- of humanity will remain of modern medicine, and for the most a perpetual monument to longer life comprehensive study of the human and improved health. body that had yet appeared, including a score of structures still called by his name. • The. other famous names of Jewish contributors to medicine include "Robert Remak who was a pioneer histologist, one of the first to point out cell division and one of the pioneers of electrotherapy; Ferdinand von Hebra was the founder of the histoloric school of dermatology; Lud- Impresario Points Out That wig Traube introduced thermometers Much of Concert Proceeds into clinical medicine and was one Help Out Herr Hitler of the first experimental pathologists; Moritz Henrich Romberg was! NEW YORK (J. T. A.)—Declaring the first clinical neurologist in Ger-lthat the American public must remany and wrote the first formal alize that any German artist who treatise on nervous diseases; Julius comes to this country is directly or Cohnheim revolutionized pathology indirectly affiliated with the Hitler a with his monograph on "Inflamma- government, and that they have a a tion and Suppuration"; Gustav Val- pledged themselves to give the Hit- 3 entin was one of the foremost phys- ler regime from 25 to 40 per cent of iologists of the world; Moritz Schiff:all they earn outside of Germany and was a pioneer in the study of the, that therefore any one who patron- 3 glands of internal secretion; Carl izes German attractions is directly 3 Wcigart was the first to stain bac- supporting the Nazi terror, S. Hurok, a a teria ; Herman Cohn, the father of noted Jewish impressario, has an-a Emil Ludwig, was a. pioneer opthol- nounced that he had cancelled the mologist of: Breclau who made the contracts of the German concert artfirst statistical study of the eyes of lists who had appeared in'-the"•'United: school children ever made in the j States under his supervision, a •world; Munk and Moll were pioneers j Mr. Hurok is head of the Hurok a in work on cerebral localization; Sol-j Musical Bureau, Inc., and is respon- a a oman Strieker was the founder of jsible for having presented in this a microtomy; Edward Henoch was one country such distinguished perform- 33 of the earliest pediatricians in Ger- ers as Anna Pavlova, Isadora Dun- 3 many, 'can, Feodor Chaliapin, Egon Petri, a a With the advent of the bacterial, Mischa Elman, Luisa Tetrazzini, the a a age, a number of distinguished Jew-|Habima Players and many other well 3 ish bacteriologists came to the fore; known artists of the stage and con- 3 3 such as Fraenkel, who discovered the cert world, a causitive organism of pneumonia; Ready to Do Share. a Neisser, who discovered the gonococ"I have cancelled all the contract? a a cus; -Anton Weickselbaum, the disof the German artists who are supcoverer of the meningicoccus; Fried- porting the Hitler regime," said Mr. a lander, the discoverer of the bacillus Hurok. "As long as the 'gangster named after him; Metchikoff, the •government' in Berlin is in power, 3 discoverer of phagocytosis; Widal, that is the only thing any self- a thi first to use agglutination for the respecting Jew can do. No matter 3a diagnosis of typhoid fever; Haffkine, what the sacrifice I am prepared to 3 3 of Calcutta, who prepared a preuphold the principles and ideals of 3 ventive treatment for bubonic plague. Judaism against the inhuman brutes a a a may be cited Gottstein, Schnitzler, S t o e r c k i . ^ do my share to a and. PoHtzer-the last of whom per-| m a k > boycott against Germany 3a fected the laryngoscope. L Boas waSj h u n d r e d p ' e r c e n t effective, .ne of the earhest-gastra-enterolo-, ^ t ^ w n m the i s^ ^ gists, remembered particularly f o r j . ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ o , d e s t a b l i s h e d his test meal. Lazar,.. Una_ and Jo-'Jewish concert agencies in Germany seph, were among the mostJamous . y s b e e Q s e i z e d % t h eN a z i s > t h e i r skm specialists of Europe. Magnus-1o w n e r s M(±ed blacklisted and in Levy was known for his researches j m a n y i n s t a a c ^ s brutally beaten. Those a 3 on diabetic coma and was an author- t h a t w e r e f o r t [ m a t e e n o n g h escaped 3 3 ity on diseases of metabolism Ehr- a b r o a d ^ b e found s c a t t ered 3 lich was probably the -greatest un- a U o y e r E u r o p e helpless and pennimunologist and chemotherapist; that • l e g s Jmd i n Genaimy ^ N a z i bunch ever lived. Oppenheim was considered j g . ^ the-offices and runs the busto be without a peer m Germany as | . ^ w h i c h a r et h ep r o p e r t i e s of the a 3 a nRurologist and has given his name, utiUzing their property 3 a to several diseases^ of the n e r v - o u s a d d r e p u t a t i o n i n connection a eystem. Wertheim developed the ra^ ^ attractions. 3 dical operation for cure of cancer of the uterus. Reproves Kipnis, Leider Coming down to more modern times "Americans should also bear in we encounter such: names as Sigmind that certain artists like Frieda a mend Freud, founder of the School i Leider, of the Metropolitan Opera a of Psycho-analysis; Adler, his dis- Company and Alexander Kipnis, of a a ciple, who caused a tremendous dis-j the Chicago Opera Company, who is turbance in psychology; Jadassohn.'a naturalized American citizen, both of Berne, who is considered the fore- of them accepted an invitation to most dermatologist in Europe; Zon-'sing a t Bayreuth, despite the cour- a dek, who has just been expelled.from|:ageous action of many world famoup a a Germany, who, with Aschheim, co-' artists who refused to have anything a discovered the Aschheim-Zondek test to do with Nazi Germany. Both these for pregnancy; Hyack, who is a l artists sing in American companies, world authority on diseases of the where more than half the income a nasal accessory sinuses. comes from Jewish patrons. Neither a of these artists even had the excuse a Among the Jews prominent in Am- (of being in financial need. Other arterican medicine are Issac Hays, a n i s t s whom I know need, the money editor and founder of the American badly refused^ the invitation." Journal of Medical Science; Simon I Mr. Hurok revealed that, he had Baruch,- a pioneer hydrotherapist;'cancelled the contract of Mary WigAbraham Jacobi, ex-president of the'man, German dancer, but he refused American Medical Association and to reveal the names of the others, the "Nestor" of pediatrics in Am-'saying that some of them were inerica and founder of the American nocent and were being coerced by Journal of Obstetrics; Joseph Gold- Nazi terror and that as soon as they borger, who did much original work.escaped abroad, and "he was sure that on pellagra; Leo Buergor, a brilliant the money would not get to the Nadinician who described the disease'zis, he would reinstate their connamed after himself, and was the tracts, perfector of the systoscope; Em-j p yp; cttoiar anual Libman who is immortalized by his classic discription of "sub- » acute bacterial endocarditis" which is! WARSAW—Rabbi Michael Wierzk n o w n as *rLibmanTs. Disease'.'; blowski, world famous Jewish scholSchamberg, one of the leading der- aXf died here^ . -
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S HUROK CANCELS AGREEMENTS WITH PRO-TJAZI ARTISTS
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Ak-Sar-Ben Stock-Horse Show and Rodeo
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New Year's?Ecliti<m-—*TH£rJ£WISH PllfiSS—Wednesday! September 20,' 1933
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Rabbi BdcksFlan toSpread "Birth Control" Information NEW YORK (J. T. A.)—Rabbi Is- grasp of everyone. It is up to them rael Goldstein, of Congregation B'nai to break down the barriers which Jeshurun, •will co-operate in further- make us afraid to talk openjy about ing a program to free the country of sex." prejudice against open discussion .The Russian practice of distributabount birth control and will concen- ing to every newly-wedded couple contrate his efforts on an attempt to dis- traceptive information should be adseminate information "about the sub- opted in America, according to Dr. ject. . • •. ' • ••:.;":' Goldstein. He would have social serIn an interview with a representa- vice workers and other persons; eritive of the Jewish Telegraphic Agen- gaged'in -public welfare work, includcy, Dr. Goldstein, who is thechairman ing the civil service personnel of the of the Social Jusflce Committee of the Home^Relief:Bureau, "make it their jRabbinical Association of America, business-to gather names of_.'suffervoiced his sentiments regarding birth ing married women who need: aid. .The control, a subject of interest to him American . attitude ; on the question because of "humanitarian reasons." was called- by Dr. Goldstein • "hypoHe holds firmly to the conviction that critical," because," he said, "it closes the so-called Comstockian laws, which its eyes-to the need,, for birth control in effect prohibit sending information information as a legitimate aid in the and happy sodealing -with birth control through the building of a healthy ' f : ; mails, should be repealed. He admit- ciety." ted the possibility that opposition will be fierce against repeal, and the argument that it will lead to moral decline will be hurled. "But," Dr. Goldstein added, "it will •lead to no such thing. People who ' might be accused of moral weakness •will of course not be affected by the repeal of the Comstockian laws. Those •who seek acquaintance with contraceptive methods for unjustifiable pur- London, (J. T. A;.)—Viscountess poses can and do secure that informa- Erleigh, daughter-in-law of the Martion regardless of laws passed against quess of Readipg, has followed the it- Meanwhile," he stressed, "there are example of her brother, Lord ftlelthousands of poor women, virtually in chett, and entered the Jewish faith. starvation, who are without means or The ceremony was privately perknowledge of how-to end their mis- formed in the Liberal Syinagoguein North London, where, on July 16, ery." Lord Melchett accepted the faith of Typical Case Cited. his fathers. Dr. Goldstein cited a typical case which was encountered by the City Lady Erleigh, the former Hon. Home Relief Bureau. A woman who Eva Violet Mond, daughter of Sir "was an expectant mother had appeal- Alfred Mond, the first Lord Meled for financial assistance. Investiga- chett, was brought up in a convent. tion disclosed that she had five chil- Her marriage to Viscount Erleigh, dren who were undernourished, inade- only son and heir of > the Marquess quately clothed and living in virtual of Reading, was performed in a poverty. Their father was unem- church, although Viscount Erleigh ployed. never gave up his Judaism. "Such a woman should be taught The first Lord-Melchett, father of birth control," insisted Dr. Goldstein. "It is a pity and a disgrace that such the present bearer of the .title, spent the later part of his life in cases are permitted to exist." ardent advocacy of Zionism and was Asked for concrete measures which buried to the rites of the lie will co-operate in sponsoring in Jewish according faith, a clump of Palestinian connection with a birth control publicity drive, Dr. Goldstein said that soil being put in his coffin. Tel the first step is to overcome national Mond in Palestine is the physical symbol of the family's interest in prejudice against birth control. the Jewish national home. Churches and Press Must Aid "This must be accomplished with Both the second Lord Melchett the aid of churches and newspapers," and his sister maintained their fathlie said. "It is not up to these suffer- er's keen interest in things Jewish, ers themselves to come and ask for participating as Gentiles in many data about birth control- It is up to Palestine activities. Lord Melchett the clergy and the press to step in was instrumental in organizing the and make the subject one within the anti-Nazi boycott and in allying
Viscountess Is a Convert to Jewish Faith
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Omaha Fixture and Supply Go. Visions Better Business -i
CONGRATULATIONS I Children constitute the pulse-beat of the human family. Through them we^live on and achieve immortality. . Many a home has .been brightened during the past twelvemonth by the addition of a child. ; We rejoice with these proud parents who announced, through the columns of THE JEWISH PRESS, the birth of a^baby in 5693: Mr. and Mrs.
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Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. und Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs.
Abraham Cohen, daughter William Herzoff, daughter Julius Shapiro, daughter B. Ravitz, son Lee Bograd, son Eli Zalkin, daughter Louis Fellman, daughter Ben Passer, son David J. Chesneau, daughter JackNewberg, son Max Pirsch, son Henry M. Solig, son Ben Wnskow, son Inimanuel Yousem, son William' Alberts, son I. F. Goodman, son. J. Shyken, son A. Singer, son Edward Lincoln, sou Joe Weinberg, son Meyer Frank, daughter Joseph M. Rubin, son
Earl Siegel, daughter
A. Krantz, daughter Abe Bogdanoff, daughter H. Werner, daughter Jay Goldenberg, son Morris Jacobs, daughter Ike Feblowitz, son Irving Rosenberg, daughter A. M. Grueskin, son A. L. Frank, son Leo Konecky, daughter Aaron Kirsch, daughter Jack Lincoln, son Dave Feidman, son A. J. Goldenberg, son Joseph Linsman, daughter Arthur Rosen, son Perry- Silverman, twin daughters A. Gendler, daughter Morris A. Bloch, daughter Sam Brick, daughter J. Siegel, daughter Ben Shapiro, daughter Louis Fogel, son H. Abramson,. son
strong support for it in Great Britain. Lord Melchett and Vicountess Erleigh both, attended the Maccabbiade, Jewish sports festival, held recently at Prague, and were guests at the Eighteenth World Zionist Congress. .. Lord Melchett is honor-
Mr. and Mrs. Ben M. Minkin, son Mr. and Mrs. Allen S. Zalkin, twin daughters Mr..and Mrs. Herbert D. Shapiro, son Mr. and Mrs. Morris Linsman, daughter. ..Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Fried, daughter. Mr. and Mrs.. Izzie Stiss, son Mr. and Mrs. William Kaiman, son Mr. and Mrs. Leo Taub, daughter Mr. and Mrs. Peter Greenberg, son Mr. and Mrs. Louis Alberts, son Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Bushman, son Mr. and Mrs. Philip Ringle, daughter Mr. and Mrs. Max Trochtenberg, son. .Dr. and Mrs. Marc M. Marks, son Mr. and Mrs. Jack Friedman, daughter Mr, and Mrs. Louis Katelman, son Mr. and Mrs. Joe M. Rice, daughter : Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lipschitz, son Mr. and Mrs. H. Hirsch, daughter Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rochman, son Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Gilinsky, daughter Mr. and Mrs. David Blacker, son Mr. and Mrs. Sam L. Kaplan, son Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Giller, son Mr. and Mrs. Jack Aliber, daughter Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Forbes, daughter Mr. and Mrs. E. Sellz. son . Mr. and Mrs. Ben Lazer, daughter Dr. and Mrs. I. Osheroff, son Mr. and Mrs. Abe Handleman, son Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Solomon, daughter Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Bernstein, son Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Cohn, daughter Mr. and Mrs. Sam Weinberg, son Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Katleman, daughter Mr. and Mrs. Z. Barbokow, daughter . Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Forbes, son Mr. and Mrs. Morris Zelligson, daughter Mr. and Mrs. David Goldman, daughter Mr. and Mrs. J. Crounse, son Mr. and Mrs. L» P. Chaikin, son Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Blotcky, daughter Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Fleishman, son Mr. and Mrs. L Plotkin. daughter Mr. and Mrs. Phineas Wintroub, daughter Miss Rona Lincoln and Mr. Phil Smith
ary president of the World Maccab- itic organizations and publication; seized upon the slaying of a Pole bee organization. Ludwig Klimaszewski, by three .Jewish boys aged from eleven to four Fear Excesses teen, as a pretext to incite the Wilno, Poland.—Fear of anti-Sem- 'ation against the Jewi. itic excesses was felt, here by the Jewish community as local anti-SemImprovement is nature.—Hunt.
The beginning of a New Year is a most opportune time to initiate any relationship or to announce anything of general interest. This is, therefore, a most auspicious moment in which to announce to Omaha Jewry in general and to the Jewish merchants in particular—that we have appointed the Levinson Fruit Company as our agents for the marketing of our beer in this territory.
year bring to you { i and yours a full * measure of Health tyedlthanct Hap* ^ piness*
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Not only this page . . . but reams . . . could be filled telling you how good our beer i s . . . how long we have been in the brewing business before prohibition . . • ,how our Gesundheit Malt was one of the country's finest and best-sellers during prohibition days. However, this would not be very convincing unless our product suited your taste... and it is on pleasing that taste, that we are willing to stand or fall—all weask of you is that you try a glassful today. GESUNDHElf
SON 1010 HOWARD STREET JACKSON 2663
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Definite evidence of a substantial small ccrcintmities throughout the improvement in. business is seen by country, according- to information obCharles M. Betts, vice-president and tained by Mr. Betts. general manager of the Omaha Fix- "It has been our experience genture & Supply Company, after his re- erally ana particularly in the immecent return from Chicago, where he diate trade territory that business men succeeded in obtaining an order for are investing in new fixtures, bright$6,000,00 worth of fixtures from Mont- ening the atmosphere of their stores, and making more inviting: the shopomery Ward & Company. "The program of expansion now be- ping places of the community. This is ing carried on by the larger national all in preparation for increased bussales organization and their sizeable iness, which our company has grateinvestment in new stores and improv- fully enjoyed so far in the year 1933." ed type of fixtures," said Mr. Betts, Mr. Betts also pointed out that the shows a real confidence in the imme- greatest, improvement in business since the first of the year has come diate upward turn of business." The plans of the largest of the re- particularly in Omaha and the state tail corporations include establish- of Nebraska, generally. The fixtures now being manufacment of new stores in both large and tured for Montgomery Ward & Company are of the latest design, equipped for the greatest utility by improvement developed especially in the Brevities plant of the Omaha Fixture & Supply Company. The cell a t Landsberg P r i s o n where Hitler was confined in 1923 has just been added to the list of Nazi shrines which faithful visitors to Munich visit.
The production of the "Wandering Jew," starring Jacob Ben Ami, famous Jewish-American stage star, is under way, and will be the first of a series of talking pictures in Yiddish and English.
JEWISH AGENCIES UNDER ESPIONAGE
BERLIN (J.T. A.)—Existing Jewish relief committees in Europe are being spied upon by Nazi agents, it was revealed in Der Angriff, newspaper owned by Dr. Paul Josef Goebbels, minister of propaganda and public enlightenment. The newspaper pubThe Jewish divorce ritual was in- lished a front page review of alleged voked in New York, to free Sam Jewish activities against Germany in Hoffman, 80, this vreek, from his London, Paris, Amsterdam, Brussels, bed-ridden wife, Zissell, 72. The Zurich, Vienna, Prague and Saarhusband's reason for seeking a di- brucken. vorce was that he wished to pass Der Angriff claimed its review was his remaining years in Palestine based on inside information obtained and might want to re-wed there. directly from the various Jewish committees. To prove its assertion, it disOut in Hollywood an electrician closed its possession of copies of has been seen on the Paramount protocols, allegedly relating _ to seslots wearing a cap with the Nazi sions of Jewish committees in Brusinsignia. sels and Antwerp, where lhe paper alleged, J e w s were endeavoring to In his will, the late Edgar Samuel cause a substantial drop in the value Edgar of London, stated: "1 charge of the German mark as one of their my children to observe the day of measures for fighting Germany. Propaganda Nests. the anniversary of my death as a Solemn period, free from festivity, for Asserting that world Jewry has five years after my death." The will now encircled Germany with nests of further stipulated that the testator's propaganda in all neighboring coundaughter, Margaret, should be denied tries, Der AngrifC emphasized that her inheritance .of 26,000 pounds if Germany must fight back. In Hclshe does not wed a "born Jew still land especially, where the entire press professing the religion." If she re- was controlled by Jews, the paper mains a spinster she will receive said, a campaign to poison, the world against Germany was taking pi are only 200 pounds a year. with the full support of every editor. Der Angrig concluded by severely Never suffer youth to be an excuse criticising the Dutch government for for inadequacy nor age and fame to standing by and permitting its press be an excuse for indolence.—Haydon. to be so violently anti-German.
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Page 5—Section B
New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
Who Services Tonight to NotedDiedJewsDuring 5693 Usher in Year 5694 Although not as great as in some other years, the roster of noted Jews who died during the past year contains the names of many noted Jewish personalities of which the following are perhaps the best known: Hillel Zlatopolsky, Zionist leader; Solomon Reinach, archaeologist; Eduard Bernstein, Socialist theoretician; Mrs. Henry Moskowitz, political expert; Mrs. Jacob H. Schiff, philanthropist; Dr. Felix Adler, founder of ethical culture; Dr. Chaim Arlosoroff, Palestine leader; Josef Rosenblatt, noted chazan; Rose Pastor Stokes, social worker; Clara Zetkin, German Communist leader; Israel Rokeach, philanthropist; Ezekiel Sarasohn, publisher; Joseph Alkalay, Jugoslavian Zionist; James Loeb, art patron and banker.
The Hebraic calendar year 5694 will ing services, the Hebrew will be be ushered in at sundown this evening, chanted by Erwin Wezelman and IsWednesday, September 20. rael Bercovici, and the English ser•Among Orthodox Jews Rosh Hash- vice will be conducted by Ralph Nogg onah is observed for two days, ending and Ernie Priesman. Thursday mornat sundown Friday. Among Reform ing William Wolfe will deliver the Jews, the holydays lasts till sundown sermon, on "The Future Hope of Thursday. Youth." Friday morning Philip KlutzThe injunction to blow the trumpet nick will deliver a sermon of interest. on Rosh Hashonah was to call the Throughout the holydays the shofar poople to remembrance before the will be handled by Massie Baum. Lord. In the course of time, this ceremony of blowing the shofar became tho central feature in the elaborate Short Broadcast religious service. Tonight Over Just as the shofar called the people to remembrance before the Lord, so "KICK" also were its sounds to arouse the peoA recorded program of all-Jewish ple to their shortcomings and to their dut?es in which they may have failed. music by well-known cantors will The day is called on this account be featured in a pre-Holiday broad- of the smoker committee. There will "Yom Hazikkaron," "The Day of Mem- cast over radio station KICK this also be refreshments. evening, Wednesday, from 6:15 to Ben Kazlowsky and Rabbi Uri Milorial." ler are scheduled for talks. An imAnother idea which in time came to 6:30 p. m. The time for this broadcast is be- portant feature of the evening win be be associated with the day was that on the announcement of the Young Men's this day God weighed men's actions in ing donated by the station. Vaad activities for the 1933-1934 seathe scale of justice. For this reason son. another designation of the day is "Yom Ha'Din," "The Day of JudgGEMS of the BIBLE ment." Daughters of Zion The days intervening between New and TALMUD "Tear's Day and the Day of Atonement By O. O. DASHEB The Daughters of Zion announce are called the "Ten Days of Penithat they have raised their full quota tence," during which the opportunity of §1,000 for the year. is afforded to reflect finally on and The wise in heart will receive . A n installment of $500 has just repair the wrongs done during the comandments, but a prating fool been sent to the Jewish National year; if the repentance is sincere, shafl fall. Fund office in New York to be ap. forgiveness is gained on the culminplied on a water system being inating day of the holy season "The Day He who walketh Tiprightiy walketh stalled in Palestine, for which the of Atonement" securely, but he who forsaketh xe- local Daughters of Zion raise $1,000 The New Year holyday in the pass- proof erreth. -,':;-., annually. ing of the centuries has come to emThe picnic sponsored by the group body the great religious ideas of divThe tongue of the righteous is as ine justice and human responsibility. choice silver. The heart of the recently at Hanscom Park was a succesful affair, with the breakThroughout the city members of all wicked is little worth. -/ fast set being won by Miss Uuth branches of Judaism will observe the Magzamin. A group - picture of the New Tear with appropriate religious Talmud _... organization was taken, and all wishservices. It was written in the memorandum ing to bup pictures are asked to call of Rabbi Joshua Ben Levi: "He Mrs. M. Braude. - Reform Rabbi David H. Wice of Cincinnati who was born on the first day of the The first meeting of the fall seawill come to Omaha to assist Rabbi week will be either entirely good or son will be held at the J. C. C. on grossly bad {depending entirely on Frederick Cohn in. the High. Holyday October 18. Eabbi David A. Goldthe environment) because light and stein services at Temple Israel. will address the organization. Rabbi Wice is a native of Peters- darkness were created on the first A musical program will be given, burg, Va., and has the academic de- day. He who was born on the second and refreshments will be served. gree of master of arts from Washing- day of the week will be a quarrelton and Lee University, and Tiis Rab- some man, for on the second day of binical degree from the Hebrew Union the week the division of water took Mizrachi place (which shows disagreement). College. A special meeting of the • Mizrachi Rosh Hashonah services will start He who was born on the third day to arrange for a Succoth festival will of the week will be rich and of a this evening, Wednesday, at 8 p. m. at be held Wednesday evening, Septemthe Temple. Rabbi Cohn will speak voluptuous disposition, because all ber 27, at 8:45 p. m. at the Beth grass came forth on the third day on "The Message of the New Year." Hamedrosh Hagodol, 19th and Burt (which are abundant in number but Thursday morning, September 21 All members are urged to attend. services will start at 10 a. m. Dr. without distinction.) He who was born on the fourth day-of the week Cohn's subject will be "The Indomitwill be a scholar and a bright man, able Jew." Jr. Vaad Auxiliary because on this day the luminaries A meeting of the Junior Vaad Auxheaven. He who Conservative Synagogue were hung up in The schedule for Rosh Hashonah was born on the fifth day of the iliary will be held at the B'nai Israel services at the Conservative Syna- week will be charitable man because synagogue nest Monday evening, Sepon this day the fishes and the fowls tember 25, at 8 p. m. gogue follows: Wednesday evening, September 20— were created (the fish fall for any 8 p. m. Rabbi David A. -Goldstein's bait.) He who was born on the Habonim sermon topic is "The Tragic Destiny sixth day will be zealous in the execution of religious duties. He who A regular meeting of the Habonim of Israel." Thursday morning—8:30 a. m., ser- was born on the Sabbath day will be will be held Thursday, September 28, at 8 p . m . at the B'nai Israel syna-r mon at 10:15 a. m. on "Necessary a great and pious man. Resolutions for the New Year." gogue. This meeting is open to boys of the ages 13 to 18. An interesting Thursday evening—6:15 p. m. et Acquainted Smoker program is being arranged and new Friday morning—8:30 a. m., sermon at 10:15 a. m. on " H O T . Shall We members are being invited. 1 Pass Judgment on Others.". ____.- A "get-acquainted smoker' will be given by the Toung Men's Vaad on Vaad B'nai Sholom Tuesday, September 26, at the B'nai The New Year services will be held srael synagogue, 18th and Chicago, The congregation B'nai Sholomwill at the various synagogues affiliated it 8 p. m. All Jewish young men of hold services for the Holydays at the with the Vaad Ha'Ihr, beginning Wed- 8 to 35 are invited. Z. Odd Fellows Hall, 19th and Dodge. nesday evening at G o'clock, and will A varied entertainment of music, Tickets will be sold at the door. All be held both" Thursday and Friday talks and vaudeville acts is being ar- unable io afford a ticket will be admornings. Rabbi Uri Miller will speak anged by Henry Magzamin, chairman mitted without charge. Thursday morning at the B'nai Israel Synagogue, 18th and Chicago Sts. The subject of his sermon will be, "What Ails the Jewish People?" The sermon will take place at 10 a. m. Friday morning" Rabbi Miller will speak at the Adass Yeshurum Synagogue, 25th and Seward streets, and the subject will be "The New Year—Its Significance." Two This coming Sabbath is called "The Days Sabbath of Penitence." At the regular I/MILWAUKEE^ 8 o'clock Friday evening services held •t ST. PAUL / at the B'nai Israel Synagogue, 18th Three and Chicago streets, the subject of. : and ~z Rabbi Miller's sermon will "be "What Days Is the Greatest Sin?" The traditional "Shabbos Shuva" sermon will be held at the Beth Hamedrosh Hagodol synagogue, 19th and Burt streets, Saturday afternoon at -4 o'clock. At this time Rabbi Miller will speak on "The Significance of the Sabbath of Repentance."
The AK'SAR'BEN and the
Century of Progress Exposition N August 3rd the millionth visitor walked through the Burlington's exhibition train on the World's Fair grounds in Chicago. Today the total exceeds a million and a half.
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From the opening h o u r every morning until late at night people wait in line to go aboard the Royal Scot and the Burlington train . . . at the rate of about 1,400 per hour. It is all very interesting; a little surprising . . . and gratifying to say the least. It should be interesting, too, to Omaha people. For in fact the World's Fair train comes pretty close to being a second edition of Burlington Train No. 12, the illustrious AK-SAR-BEN.
The semi-annual mass meeting of the Vaad Ha'Ihr will take place this coming Sunday at 7:30 o'clock at the B'nai Israel Synagogue, 18th and Chicago streets. At this time reports of the activities of the United Orthodox Synagogues will be outlined and elec-' tion of members for the Board of Governors will take place. This meeting Is open to all members of the community, and members of all organizations affiliated with the Vaad, including all orthodox Synagogues, are urged to be present. Memorial services for the recentlydeceased Rabbi Israel Mayer Hacohen (The Chofetz Chaim) will be held at this meeting.
Young Peoples Synagogue
The Young Peoples Synagogue wil hold High Holyday services in' the lodge room of the J. C. C. Wednesday evening the Hebrew •will be chanted by Harry Weinberg and the English service will be conducted by Ralph Nogg and Ernie Priesman. The sermon will be deliv~ -ered by Joe Solomonow, speaking on "The Present Jewish Scene." At the Thursday and Friday morn
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the AK*S AR-BEN Lv. Omaha . 8;30 p. m. Ar. Chicago . 8:30 a. m. Matched Pullmans Roller Bearings Lounge car Salon-Club car Bedrooms (real beds) • Radio Buffet ^ • ._ Valet service •
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The engine is No. 3,000 that has made many a trip at the head of the AK-SAR-BEN. The rear car is the Omaha Club, the AK-SAR-BEN'S own lounge car—borrowed for the World's Fair train. The salon-bedroom car is an exact T duplicate of the AK-SAR-BEN'S famous Lancaster Club, and the Pullmans are of the same type as those regularly in service on that train. • What I'm driving at of course is that the World's Fair train which is attracting sensational interest and receiving such acclaim at the Century of Progress, is representative of the regular "daily diet" to which the people of O m a h a are accustomed aboard "Nebraska's Great
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Page fc~Section B
New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
FEATURE CLIPPINGS
A. Diamond of Council Bluffs will be in charge of the services.
Open Air Theatre
Sunday School The Council Bluffs Talmud Torah Sunday School opened its fall season Sunday morning at the Chevra B'nai Yisroel synagogue at 618 Mynster street. Mr. J. Z. Stadlan is principal of the Sunday School, and has announced that all children who were unabel to attend the opening classes may still come to the synagogue next Sunday morning at 10 o'clock to start Sunday School classes.
ENGLISH FASCISM In an English liberal monthly, the other day, I came across a rather curious item. - It appears that there are in England several Fascisti organizations— not unlike that of our Brother Hitler's —• though, to be sure, none of them count any great constituency. Their names are the British Union of Fascists, the Imperial Union of Fas cists (swastika brand) and the Mosleyites. The last consist of the followers of Sir Oswald Mosley, who, it •will be recalled, has gone through a variety of fluctuations. Sir Oswald Mosley, being of aristocratic antecedents himself, was first a member of the conservative group. Later, he turned reddish and joined the British Labor party, and lastly, ne decided that the country needed Fascism and a dictatorship and he announced he was willing to sacrifice himself to accept the dictatorship. But the cream of the jest comes in this-—that the other Fascist organizations in their literature bitterly .denounce Sir Oswald Mosley because they declare, his wife has Jewish blood in herrveins. *
B'nai Brith The Council Bluffs Lodge No. 688 of the Independent Order of the B'nai Brith will hold an important meeting next' Monday evening, September 25, at 8:30 o'clock at the Eagles Hall. Mr. Goldman of New York City, staff memJerusalem. ber of the Jewish Forward and the Outstanding events and celebrations HIAS of New York will be the guest are held in this huge open air theater. speaker. Plans are being made by the local B'nai Brith to be hosts to Mr. Joseph F. Grossman of Chicago, 111., at an open meeting to be held on October 9. Mr. Grossman is president of the District Grand Lodge No. 6 of the B'nai Brith. BY F. R. K.
Pictured here is the Minnie Untermyer Open Air Theater at the Hebrew University, one of the show places in
Germany was worst of all. After all, the Jew who is persecuted still has his people to fall back on. It may be that he can't get much but sympathy, but «ven that little is worth something. But, I added, how about these percentage Jews—the Christians won't have them, and they can scarcely claim to be Jews. The Jews won't accept them. "Oh, don't be silly," remonstrated BLOOD TRANSFUSIONS This business of having a little Jew- one of the circle, "the Jews will acish blood in one's veins is getting to cept them—the Jews accept anybody." And maybe he was right. be a pretty serious thing. Consider the case, for instance, of EMIL LUDWIG SAYS an invalid, who has had a transfusion Emil Ludwig persists in believing of Jewish blo-d from the veins of that Jews and Germans will reach a some Jewish donor. reconciliation and live happily, ever I have in mind in particular just afterward, because, he argues, they now, one Jewish young man who is are both peoples very much alike-— out of work and who derives what both of a highly individualistic nature. little income he has by donating his As to the individualistic nature of blood.~By now,* I presume, there must the German, I cannot speak, never be at least "forty" non-Jews who have having been in Germany, but I think Jewish blood in their veins through most of us will agree that the Jews this one man alone. are emphatically individualistic. Again, it is a practice in many hospitals for all of the internes tc take PALESTINE TEACHES their turns at giving their blood for ENGLAND transfusion cases. Consider how many That was very interesting — what Jewish internes there are, and how Dr. Maurice Hexter of the Jewish inuch Jewish blood must through this Agency, said. I mean the fact that the source have been diffused among non- Inglish ministry called him in to adJews. vise them, by reason of hie Palestine I should like to know if these re- experience, on the matter of relieving cipients are to be on the black list of unemployment in England by land the Fascists, if the Fascists come into settlement. How long ago was it that these universal power. It's really criminal if this comes about, when you con- iritish statesmen virtually ridiculed sider that many of these former in- the idea that the Jews could make a valids never ate a plate of gefulte fish go of it in Palestine? Arid now, aparently, they see that it has-been in their lives. such a "go" that they are taking lesPERCENTAGE JEWS sons from Palestine-for England. . Considering more seriously this And Palestine has done it without matter of those with some Jewish inflation, deflation, planned economy blood in their veins—"the percentage or any of the hundred other nostrums. Jews," as they are called, I ventured ^o remark the other day in a converWe get impatient, and there crops sion, that perhaps their plight in ut our human weakness—Titcomb.
Council Bluffs News -.
New Year's Greetings From John J. Myrtue Mayor of CouncU Bluffs On the eve of your Rosh Hashonah, year 5694, I wish to take this opportunity to vrish the Jewish people of my city a very Happy New Year. May this coming year fulfill all of your hopes and desires and bring to you' and yours good health and success.
New Year's Greetings •:--:.:v:.-;.
F r o m
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Your Correspondent Fannie R. Katelmah The writer of this column wishes to take this opportunity to -wish all the readers, both far and near, a most Happy New Year. May the new year be a joyous one, bringing success and contentment to all. Bosh Hashonah Services Appropriate services for Rosh Hashonah will usher in the new year at the Cheyra Yisroel synagogue at 618 Mynster Street this evening commencing at six o'clock. On Thursday, the morning services will begin at 7 o'clock, and the evening services will commence at 5 o'clock. On Friday morning, services will begin at 7 o'clock. Rev. A. Gendler of Omaha and Rev.
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Wedding Date Set Miss Lucie lKrasne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Krasne of Council Bluffs, has chosen Tuesday evening, October J7, as the date for her marriage to Mr. Lawrence Gross, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Gross of Omaha. The date was revealed at a luncheon given by her cousin, Miss Ida Krasne, at her home. Announcement of the wedding date was concealed in folded place cards daintily decorated in pink and white rosebuds alternated with candles. Numerous ether affairs are being given in honor of this popular brideto-be. Agndas Achim The Council Bluffs Agudas Achim Society have postponed their regular meeting scheduled for Thursday evening, on account of the Holidays, until next Thursday evening, September 28. at 8 o'clock, at the Eagles Hall. Senior Hadassah The Council Bluffs Senior Hadassah are planning to open their fall season on Wednesday afternoon, October 11, at the Chieftain Hotel. An election of officers will take place and plans will be made for the coming year's activities. Jewish National Fond A Jewish National Fund Council is being organized in Council Bluffs and a meeting will be held in the near future. Plans are being made to distribute Jewish National Fund boxes into every Jewish home who does not have one. Any family desiring one of these boxes is urged to call Mr. Sam Sacks or Miss Fannie Katelman, who are in charge of the distribution of the boxes.
New Year Message By RABBI
FREDERICK COHN,
Temple Israel
A Spirited Reply to Hitler's Echo Resentment Against Old Line About East European Jews Voiced by Dr. Aronstam
We stand again at the Detroit (J. T. A.)—Statements by threshold of a Mew Year. Fritz Hailer, German vice-counsel in Detroit, defending the Hitler reMore than ever is there gime and blaming East European reason for doubt and anxJewish settlers for the anti-Semitic program of the Nazis, have aroused iety. deep resentment among members of The situation in Gerthe Detroit Jewish community and brought a spirited reply from Dr. many, far from being reNoah E. Aronstam, noted Detroit lieved, seems to be growphysician and scholar, who frequenting worse. The eodstence ly in the past appeared on the same platform with Mr. Hailer. and welfare of the Jew is Recalling the fiftieth birthday anthreatened throughout niversary of Professor Albert Einstein, at which the German official the world. paid tribute to the now-exiled scienBut the one big glortist as "one of the most distinguished sons of Germany," Dr. Aronious thing about our Holy stam remarked that "times have Days is that they deepen changed and you, Mr. Hailer, are now throwing a flood of invectives the faith of Israel. The against all the non-Aryans who at 'Day of Memorial' reminds us that God lias been present live in Germany." with us these many years, and it inspires in our soul Dr. Aronstam, pointing to the recof excesses against Jews in Gerthe hope and confidence that God will be with us ord many, declared that these could not further. "He sleepeth not arid slumbereth not, the be condoned "as excesses unavoidin times of revolution and atKeeper of Israel." God is awake to all oppression able tributable to irresponsible persons" and injustice, and He will raise up the agencies of and asserted that messages from German-Jewish organizations, quoted help and deliverance. by Mr. Hailer, could not be used as proof that all had been serene since So the New Year comes to us with its message "Goodness under what stress of hope. It says "Fear not, O Israel! I am with thee and duresf knows those quotations were to deliver thee. Only be strong and very courag- made by the aforementioned organizations." eous!" May the New Year awaken hope and courage THIS AND THAT Jabotinsky, the Revisionist Zionist in every Jewish breast•:; and may it inspire within us leader, is a criminal lawyer, and they that faith that will remove even mountains of diffi- say, a swell one. What Minneapolis Jewish boy at culty, take the load of doubt arid fear from our Harvard regarded by Professor Irvhearts, and fill us with that joy and strength that ing Babbitis as the official exponent of humanistic philosophy? can come only from the consolations and inspira- hisMaud Nathan's autobiography has tions of religion. a foreword by the late Dr. Henry Van
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"Take thy New Year with Thanksgiving Fear not aught it may disclose, For it holds not joy or sorrow Other than thy Father chose, And His love secures to thee Fairer choice than thine could be" A happy, blessed New Year to one and all!
Dyke. Dr. Soskin, prominent English Zionist, agricultural expert, is said to be able to get more «mt of a foot of1 ground than any other man in Eng land. What well-known wealthy Jewish professor at Columbia used to turn over his salary to Columbia so that the late Professor Felix Adler, then teaching ethics at the institution, might get paid? Intellect annuls fate. So far as a man thinks, he is free.
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New
AD) MEMORIAL FLOWER FUND OF FEDERATION
Year'sEditipn—THE
Fannye Goldberg and her mother, Mrs. A. Goldberg, of New Orleans, La.; and Miss Gertrude Marantz of Chicago; Miss Lucille Kronick, Esther Helin, and Eudice Stillman, of Sioux City, la.
Hillel Foundation
ENTERTADf AT L1JNCHEOJJ Mrs. W. A. Eacusin and Mrs. Victor Zucker entertained at a one-o'clock luncheon for twenty-one guests at the Paxton Hotel, Thursday, September 14, honoring Miss Lucille Krasne of Council Bluffs, a bride-to-be, and Mrs. Morris Katleman of Los Angeles.
The Jewry of Omaha are urged to contribute to the "Memorial Flower Fund" of the Jewish Community 'Center and Welfare Federation. This Flower Fund serves the threefold purpose of honoring the departed, consoling the bereaved, and aiding the needy. The Federation in this connection makes the following statement to the public: "The giving to charity in honor of the dead is in accordance •with the Jewish tradition. Should any of our members be so unfortunate as to suffer the loss of a friend br loved one, may we not ask that •what would ordinarily be spent for the passing tribute of flowers be Bent to our Federation and placed in -the Memorial Flower Fund, to aid us in our work." Following is a copy of the card sent to the contributors: This will acknowledge receipt of your contribution of —— to t i e Memorial Flower Fund of the Federation, in memory of The beautiful spirit manifested by you keeps green the memory of the departed, and brings cheer to those in need of help. Yours faithfully, Jewish Community Center and Welfare Federation. Omaha, Nebr., —193—.
Page 7—Section B
ESSr-Wednesday, September 20, 1933
'STANDARD' DERIDES SETTLING 250,000 JEWS IN PALEST1N
New Year Message By RABBI DAVJD A. GOLDSTEIN,
Conservative Synagogue
We look back over the passing of the year 5693 with few regrets. The RETURNS HOME Miss Ann Raskin of Siottx City has world has suffered anothreturned to her home following .a er year of painful econweek's visit at the home of the S. Katomic dislocation. Every leman family. nation has its hundreds of FOR HOLYDAYS Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Beitel and sons, thousands, and even milIrving and Jerome, hi .*e left for Chi- lionSy of unemployed. cago, to spend the holydays with relaHunger and privation tives and friends. stalk in every land, dePLEDGING The above is a picture of typical bor. These foundations in various colUniversity of Nebraska chapter stroying even the possiB'nai Brith Hillel Foundation quar- leges are part of the "wider scopeac- of The Sigma Delta Tau sorority announces ters. the pledging of the following: Fran- bility of happiness and tivities of the international B'nai This is the home of- the Michigan ces Kalin, Sioux City, la.; Sally No- contentment. Hillel Foundation, located at Ann Ar- Brith. vak, Nebraska City; Faye Weisman, The New Year, howChicago; Bernice Yousem, Omaha. dress with short puffed sleeves of the The sorority entertained the Zeta ever, brings hope. There mode. Her veil of white Beta Tau and Sigma Alpha Mu fraterSociety "News prevailing tulle formed a tight-fitting: cap and nities at house dances this week-end. is the challenge and the possibility to begin over was caught a t the sides by orange again. May the coming year usher in solutions to BBOWUVffACHSCHOEN blossoms. She carried a bouquet of EINSTEIN'S FIRST ENGAGEMENT bride's roses. . our economic problems, that men may again live at OFFENSE Mr. and Mrs. Herman Nachschoen Her .attendants "were Fannye GoldBob Ritchie, a well-known" newsannounce the engagement of their berg, Gertrude Marantz, Allye Simon, paperman, gives an account >«f the ease. daughter, Lillian, to Mr. Nate Brown, and Reva Goldenberg, who was maid first statement issued by Einstein to For our own people, the year has been most son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Brown. of honor. the press. The announcement of the -: engagetragic. Not since 1492, the year of the expulsion of Miss Goldberg wore a yellow crepe Ritchie had met Einstein on the ment was made at a bridge party for gown with organdie sleeves and match- ship which was bringing the professor the Jews from Spain, have our people suffered so Following is a copy of the card twenty-four guests, given at the Nach- ing, accessories. The hack was low and for the first time to America. sent to the bereaved family: schoen home Sunday evening. A red square. She carried talisman roses. "Professor," said Ritchie, "you'd great a tragedy as in Germany. We who live in this To help perpetuate the memory of and white color scheme was carried Miss Marantz was gowned in green better have a statement ready for the blessed America of ours feel deeply the pain of our out at a midnight supper, when the satin and carried Columbia roses. Her ship news reporters when they climb the Departed : announcement was made. accessories were white. • brothers. We must answer them that they can rely a contribution to the Memorial Flowaboard in New York." Miss Simon wore green crepe, with er Fund has been made by "Why, will there be any of them to upon us for sympathy and material help. STOLLEB-BAER white accessories, and carried Johana- see me?" The memory of your Loved One Mr. and Mrs. H. Baer of Woodstock, hill roses.;•• Miss Goldenberg, inaid of "Yes, there'll be quite a few," said Palestine, providentially, looms as the greatest will be kept green, and the Mem- HI., announce the engagement of their honor, carried Hollywood roses. Her Ritchie. orial Flower Fund to which the con- daughter, Shirley, to George Stoller of gown was an aquamarine crepe .with "Well," said "Einstein, "really, I do hope for our people. We rejoice that Zion is providcowl neck in front and low in back. not know anything about the business. tribution has been made will bring Omaha, on September 15. ing a refuge for suffering Israel. We must resolve to Accessories were white. cheer and comfort to those in need. Will you do me a favor? Will you Ushers were Ban Cohen, Herman make a statement for me, and I will work mightily to accelerate the influx of harrassed, May God comfort you in your BEAUTIFULLY APPOINTED Chn, Sam Wine. Best man was Ed sign it." grief, and Time assuage your sor- CEREMONY. The marriage of Miss Rona Lincoln, Lincoln, brother of the bride. row. And so Ritchie made the statement. hounded Jews into the Land of our Fathers. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Lin- Preceding the' ceremony Miss Julia Faithfully, In our prayers fora New Year of Happiness, let Jewish Welfare Federation. coln, to Mr. Phil Smith, son of Mrs. Zuker sang, accompanied by Lou Saks Instinct is intelligence Incapable of Ida Smith, was held September 10 at on; the violin. Rabbi Uri Miller offius all keep in mind our brethren everywhere. May Omaha, Nebr., — — 193—. self-consciousness.—Sterling. the Medical Arts Tearooms, with a ciated. God grant that the coming year bring peace and A reception and dance followed the Sloth makes all things difficult. beautifully appointed ceremony. Integrity without knowledge is healing to Israel and to all mankind. The bride, given: in marriage by her ceremony. Hit industry all things easy.—FrankOut-of-town guests Included Miss weak and useless.—Dr. Johnson. father and mother, wore a white' satin .in.
LONDON (J. T. A.)—The project to settle 250.000 German Jews in Palestine, Which the American delegation will sponsor at the World Zionist Congress in Prague later this month, is dismissed as fantastic in the London Evening Standard, one of the Beaverbrook newspapers. It is impossible for Palestine to support immigration to this extent, the paper claims. Referring to the Jewish demand for the opening oO Transjordania for Jewish settlement, the paper asserts that the British view is that Transjordania must remain a purely Arab country. In the same issue of the Evening Standard, the German Crown Prince, WiLhelm, irrevocably commits himself to Hitlerism. In a signed article prominently featured in the paper he asserts that although the foreign press is trumpeting daily tales of violence and persecution, as in the days of the World War, the Hitler revolution was justified. "I am convinced the whole cultural world will thank Hitler for saving Germany raid entire civilization from Bolshevism," says Wilhelm. The Beaverbrook papers have lately been enthusiastically praising Hitler. Ralph D. Blumenfeld, who recently retired as chairman of the hoard of the Beaverbrook organization and as editor of the Beaverbrook London Express, has become one of the strongest defenders of the antiNazi boycott movement and one of Hitler's severest critics.
Vote to Further Boycott MATTAPAN, J a p a n—The larpe preliminary conference of the Jewish communities of Mattapan and Dorchester, held under the auspices of the New England office of the American Jewish Congress, voted unanimously in favor of an uncompromising boycott of German goods and German ships. Irony is an insult conveyed in the form of a compliment.—Whipple. Intellect annuls fate. So far as a man thinks, he is free. Integrity without knowledge weak and useless.—Dr. Johnson.
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wew x ear's locution—•lnu: JUJWisti FKESS—vyednesday, September 2U, 1933
rage 8—section B •o*
Kodtier Komments 1 in Hollywood f By "Ab" Kaiman
resentatives, a severe arid critical people here have the symptoms af- mous hits, and Sammy Coslow, who audience.. ...". And when I return ter a /'night. out" and their ail- wrote- "Learn to Croon"- and the dont' fail to ask men, to tell you thement may be diagnosed as "encepha- Kate Smith theme song, are inYiddish story related to me by Ed litis schnappsica" . . . Perrys "brass tensely Jewish and interested in acWynn . . . it can be termed as a rail" is a night rendezvous for many tivities in their home towns . . . classic . .-. Another super production of the film celebrities . . . the noise Coslow especially can be termed as on the "lot" is 'The Prize Fighter and din in this "emporium which dis- the perfect6 host . . . People who and the Lady" starring Sfax Baer, penses the liquid permitted by lawcome out here suffering from "Hay By RABBI URI MILLER, heavyweight championship, contender (4 per cent in this state) is equiva- Fever" generally depart with a "Hey, The sun of a New Year . .... inquiry of -Baer -as to his Jew-lent to that of a boiler factory . . . Hey Fever" I . . . but as the promish lineage, he smilingly answered, the singing waiters, one of whom is inent local producer who is known rises on a Jewish world "Well" I have an aunt in. New York a former opera warbler, encourage for his "thick" accent would say cloud-covered. by the name of Mrs. Ida Adelstein" the customers who are generally in "include me out of it"! . . . Eddie heavily a hilarious mood by the time they arive here . . . "Mr. and Mrs. Am-Cantor is keenly interested in the Germany with its JewOddities and Facts work of the local Anti-Nazi com- exterminating governOmaha "Romeos" will probably erica" have gone romantic to judge mittee and has volunteered his serthem by the demand for popular yearn to roam while the girls will ment policy,'the endless begin to think more of home when sheet music . . . a statement made vices in any capacity . . . this seems to be the mecca of Nazi sympathizers to me by Jay Gorney, writer of "Brotale of economic discrimthey hear that the Secretary of ,the L. A. Junior College has declared ther can you spare a dime," re- . . . it is being met with vigorous
New Year Message Vaad Halhr
YIDDISHISTS TO AGAIN CONVENE IN CZERNOWTR
25 Years After First ConferGood Yontiff. ence, Leaders Are to Meet „ Good Yontiff! . . . a n d a "gooten Again in the Same Town yahr" . . .rambling through the Boyle Heights section . • „: . Boyle CZERNOWITZ (J. T. A.) — The an Irish; appendage but it represents the greater part of the Jewish sectwenty-fifth anniversary of the first tion of the city . . .Temple, BrookYiddish language conference, which lyn and Central -avenue- teeming with was held here in September, 1908, will activity in preparation of the "Yom be commemorated by a two-day conTaivim";. . . unlike the New York ference scheduled for September 10 East Side for there are no.'push and 11. ination and physical percarts or "baigel on a stick" hawkers The conference has been called by here . . . ~ the local society of Yiddish writers secution in the countries and journalists. Some of the particiAnent Former Omahans of Eastern Europe, spiritpants in the first conference have Louis Mosher in the production been invited, together with a number dept. of the Phil .Goldstone pictures ual suppression in Russia of prominent Yiddish writers and rep; . . Ted Turner with the Freeman—the tale of the Jewish resentatives of Jewish institutions all Lang sound recording laboratories over the world. A simultaneous ex. . . D a n Greenhouse with the M. G. tragedy drags its weary M. film editing dept. . . Eddie Splig hibition of Yiddish books has also with the Fox ..West Coast theaters way down the ages to been planned. . . . F r e d Hershorn, Dave Klein in The first Yiddish language conferreach us with misery acthe drug business in San Pedro . . • ence was convoked by proclamation Ray Platt has a bottling concern in issued from New York and signed by cumulated and despair Ratbi I M Miner Ventura . . . Phil Goldblatt with Jacob Gordin and David Pinski, faunimpaired. And even in a Palestine, miraculously mous Yiddish playwrights, and Dr. the "K" parking system^ . -. Mrs. Sarah Lazarus formerly Sarah RuChaim Zhitlowsky and Dr. Nossn prosperous, hovers the danger of a political pogrom Birnbaum, bin is the secretary of the Duarte Yiddishist leaders. hospital for consumptives . •. .; the by the powers that be that will bring desolation to Dr. Birnbaumboth was then visiting in the venerable old gentleman Rev. E. United States and first suggested the this one oasis in the death-dealing desert that is ourvalue Fleischman is secretary of a Synaof such a conference. Among gogue . ':. . Hazel Kooper . ..-.Mr. world. others prominent at this conference and Mr3. Joe Lewis . . . Mr. and was the famous revolutionary, Esther, In our country the weakening of Jewish effort who Mrs. . Melvin Katleman . . -..Nat subsequently was one of the ediand Maurice Castleman . . . Paul and loss of morale as a result of the depression has as tors of the Yiddish edition of Lenin'a Isaacson; . . . . works. yet shown no signs of abating. Studio Rumblings The conference declared Yiddish a The major studios today•. can, be The lesson that comes to me asa result of this "national language of the Yiddish virtually termed as a "city within a and gave a decided impetus past year is the desperate need for self-sufficiency. people," city" . . . replicas of streets and to the systematization of Yiddish buildings and exteriors often "seen Israel dependent upon others for its physical security grammar and orthography. Moreover, in the pictures . . . something faseffort to crystallize and organor its spiritual sustenance is a people walking the inizeanJewish cinating in .watching a scene filmed cultural life, it discussed and recorded . . . the confusion of problems of and suggested procedpathway that leads to tragedy and the graveyard of cameras, lights, props, a veritable for the Yiddish theater and the peoples. Israel must be physically secure—which can ures labrynth of production equipment press, Jewish autonomy, and the Jewsuch as dezzles the eye .• . . mixers, be actualized only in a Jewish Palestine. It must be ish youth. grips, juicers and many other queer Mane Katz named this work of art "A Difficult Problem of the Talmud." It is a representa- spiritually independent—which can be realized only terms are employed by the many Flocking to Syria technicians that are assembled when tive type of the new Hebrew art in the Holy Land. by the intensification of a traditional Jewish life, Jerusalem. — Egyptian Jews who even the slightest "bit" is being "done . . . Saw the "rushes" of a that there are approximately 18,- veals the fact that his ^'Ah but it opposition by a well organized group free of and unbesmirched by the subservient apeing formerly spent their annual vacations in Palestine, are now flocking tailor shop scene in which Geo. 000 more women than men in this is Love" is his greatest seller and far of the ways of tfie peoples amongst whom we live. to the Lebanon in Syria. Givot and Ed Wynn are the laugh city . . . physicians say that the exceeds the sale of the song that of prominent local citizens . . . According to reports, this sudden producers . . . it brought spontan- symptoms of sleeping sickness are stirred the nation . . . Lew Baron, It is with a fervent prayer that the coming year switch is caused by the new, very eous laughs from the small group stupor, partial paralysis of vision writer of the music in "Scandals" Buy what thou hast no need of, and assembled in the projecting room and dizziness and term it "encepha- and "Follies" shows Wolfe Gilbert, may see us nearer this goal of self-sufficiency that I strict, regulations for tourists put ere long thou shalt sell thy necesinto effect recently by the British which included various studio rep- litis lethargica" . . . a number of writer of "Ramoha" and other: faextend my sincerest greetings. saries.—Franklin. Consular in Egypt. •
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A Difficult Problem of the Talmud
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Page 9—Section B
... Hew Xear'a.EditicB^EeE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday,- Septembers©, 193S - —-
Palestine Types; Pioneer, Arab and Jew Who Bridges the Gap By Iiblby Benedict knowing how to cultivate the land (J. T. A. Special Correspondence) better /when the Arab has no land Jerusalem—Jochanan is a cnalutz, left t o . cultivate?'?. and has been one for twelve years. "There is enough, land, for everyHe is of middle height, slim, blond, body, enough cnltivatable land.'-' and brown, -with the steady blue eyes "There should be union," he adthat—strange as it may seem—Pal- mitted, ; voluntarily. "We are cousestinian children seem to be born ins, you a#d I. We should, know yrith and Palestinians of long stand- how .to, live together. But .tell me, ing seem to acquire. why do.you believe England? Don't His is the vigilant, belligerent at- you know what-she wants . . ,%" titude. Near the colony •where he i s lies an. Arab village, and he is always doubtful about tomorrow, bupt never afraid. "There -will be peace . someday, jvon't there?" I said. "Real peace?" "Keep on hoping," he answeerd. "Isn't understanding bound to beRochester, N. Y. (J. 3V A.)-4-A gin?"' "When we will have a majority in sharp :> contrast between - Nazi - • GerPalestine, there will be understand- many and thet h e Soviet TJnion was was pqrr 1 trayed by Rabbi Philip &• Bexristsii ing. of Temple Brith Kodesh, who-TecentWhat He Doesn't Like And it is n e t only in regard to ly returned here after spending the the Arabs that he is so. He has no summer observing -conditions in the more friendship for the old, be- two countries. "The Jew has found a new free-, curled, velvet-hatted Jews who guard the supposedly .holy places of the dom in Russia," Ceclared Rabbi' land, and beg alms for their crum- Bernstein, "a freedom that he had bling institutions. The places they never known before. He lives,, guard interest him, because he knows works and studies where he pleases. something about archaeology, but There is no position in the nation they iesented his sacreligious kick- that is not open to him. ing of the stones as he went around "Anti-Semitism is a crime, and with u s , and would just as soon that those who give expression to it are he and his kind didn't exist, which )unished. When I was in Stalincompliment he returns wholeheart- rad, a man who called the Jewish edly. manager ef a restaurant, "Zhid," Nor does he like the people who as in jail. There are many other live in cooperatives, and retain a xamples of this kind that I could part of the organization of private give. property. And as for the small cap"It is true on the other hand that italists around Petach Tikyah, who the synagogues a r e empty, or have hire Arab labor . . .! een converted into clubs or muMordecai is a bus driver on the ;eums. Only a handful of old peohighways of Palestine, which means le attend. Hebrew is literally a that he is one of the hundred and ead language. Zionism is no longer eeventy owners of the bus system an issue. I t is regarded as Teligious Egefl, one of the cooperatives of the in origin and a tool of British imHistadruth. The Communists have perialtei Mordecai has lived in Palestine ;uccced3d; scon organized Jewish rewill be no mere."' since he was four years old, and he Eabti Bernstein then described his is twenty-seven now. He speaks impressions of Germany. "I wish to Arabic even better than Hebrew. At every official stop on the long onfirm cut of my own experience,'" ride from Haifa to Jerusalem, where ze said, "the judgment of others Arab policemen had any examina- hat the s t a t i o n of t h e Jew in Gertion t o . make, he was met with many is hopeless. The Hitler govsmiles and friendliness. The drivers ernment is relentless in its determiof the Arab buses that passed seem- nation to crush the 3cvr. And Hit? erism i s here to stay." ed t o know him and smiled, too. "Do you . always get along so There is a great deal in the; first well?" I askedlhiin. K impression.—Congrave. .- ; - "I've got a bullet in my shoulder from the rjpts of 1921," lie said, "and in 1929 X-jjpent--iSzee months in^jail* but they^re people,'-5ust \ a s . we are, and we mustn't forget it." - * *' * Friendly Egyptian Arab Probably the most shocking inAbdul is an Egyptian Arab, a condividual incident in Jewish life durductor on the trains that run to ing the past year was the assassKantara, so that he spends as much ination of Dr. Cnaim Arlosoroff, the time on" Palestinian soil as on Egyp- brilliant leader of the Labor Party tian soil. in Palestine. His murder, for which He is a poet, in his way, and says two Revisionists are on trial, was that he once "wrote a long poem the climax of a long series of bitabout Tel Aviv, which he loves. In ter disputes, clashes and violent the poem he talks about the beaucombats between Revisionists and tiful Jewish girls of Tel Aviv. Laborites in Palestine. - "But tell me," he said, "why do The Laborites and Revisionists Jews pay six piastres for a package by their quarrel have divided t h e of cigarettes to a Jew, and refuse to Palestine: Jewish community into pay three piastres for the same cig- warring /factions, one holding the arettes to an Arab? And why do Revisionists are justified in their they refuse to hire Arab labor?" opposition to the Socialistic program and pro-Weizmann policy of " I t isn't so," I argued. "Union the liaborites, and the other -upArab labor and union Jewish labor holding the point of view of the are in close contact; it's only cheap Laborites whose theories on the r e Arab labor that is objected to, and building of Palestine have gained you know that cheap labor should such ground that in the election, of be eliminated as livell as I do. The deegaltes to the 18th Zionist Constandard of living has been raised gress they came out the largest you know that, too. Even the fields party for the first time. are better cultivated . . ." "Yes, but what is the use of
Arlosorpff 's Msipder S Jewry;
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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PR ESS—Wednesday, September. 20, _ 1933 ,
Page 10—Section B
OUT OF NAZIS' SERVICE POSTS
J«ws Gain in Public Life
Palestine Makes . Great Strides
While almost everywhere in Europe Jewry lived through a year under the dread spectre of anti-Semitic violence, economic discriminaand the effects of the world-, Rigid Definitions of "Front" tion wide depression, the Jews of Pal-: Soldiers Negate Services estine enjoyed a year of prosperity,; of Non-Aryans calm and growing stability. " In Palestine unemployment was Berlin. (J.T.A.)—The circle round unknown, the government had a the small number of Jews that are surplus in its treasury and an unstill, allowed to practice as doctors or lawyers, or to hold official posi- precedented business boom was untions, is being drawn closer and closr der way, stimulated. by the great er. The original Nazi law for the wave of Jewish immigration from exclusion of Jews from these occupa- Germany as well as from other tions exempted so-called "Front- lands, including the United States, kaempfer" (front fighters) from its which sent a larger number of improvisions. Such Jews as had fought migrants in the last year than at for Germany during the War, or any time since the reconstruction whose fathers or sons had been kill- ot the Jewish National Home beed in the War, were to be allowed The opening of the Haifa harbor, to continue in their posts. increased export trade and a growApparently this law,which left only a very small number of Jews in their ing industrial activity of lusty proposts, did not go far enough for the portions al bespoke the remarkable Nazi "purists." But the law had advance in progress of Palestine. been passed, and they had to make „ the best of it—and so it was subThe Jew to the Christian jected to the interpretations of the Nazi jurists. -. The simplest approach was through the word "Frontkaerrip- From the German of Friedrich Hebbel fer." What was the exact meaning of the word? It had naturally been I sank befo*i you, pale and scarred and bleeding. supposed that itmeant those who had And pointed dumbly to the hideous • participated on the German side in the Great War. ••• Past; Then cried aloud, my fearful wounds Variety of Definitions scarce heeding, But, since ther was no legal defi" 0 fair New Age! my Saviour nition of the word, the various aucomes at iast!" thorities that had to put the law into practice began to define the word in whatever way suited them best. In You' gazed upon me sunk in contem: plation; : some cases it'was taken to mean a man who had actually been in the Your eye though sombre seemed trenches—and Jews who had . been compassionate, attached to the Headquarters staff So that my soul's long night of degraor the military transport service, dation were excluded from the category - Was lit by new-born hope of altered "Frontkaempfer." In other cases it fate. . • •was taken to imply membership of a "fighting squad", and Jews who were Alas for me! You only apprehended attached to other sections were exThose ancient wounds that wrought cluded, even if they could prove my slow decay; that they had actually participated Shuddering, you counted them—unin the fighting. bound, untended— Then sick at heart turned silently away. Strike Against Schochtim DETROIT —The Vaad Ha-Ir, the Council of Orthodox Jews of Detroit, And now to prove to all the coming ages _'•••' ]• •-':'•::• is conducting a strike against the That I am outlawed from the race chicken killers (chochtei oifois), in a of men, . . . _ .. ; demand that they reduce the present price of 10c for the killing of each You grave my countenance on iron pages; chicken.
FELICITATIONS I Marriage is the cornerstone of family life—a pillar of strength in the development and progress of civilization. Through the ages of Jewish history the home life of the people of Israel has been a well-spring of integrity and moral betterment, setting a standard of the highest order. We accordingly proudly welcome the increasing nuptial ties among our readers and congratulate these additions during the past year to the ever-growing list of marriages recorded in T H E JEWISH PRESS:
Jewish political preferment has reached its highest point in the United States during the year 5693 when Herbert H. Lehman and Henry Horner were chossn the first Jewish governors of New York and Illinois, respectively. Their election brought the number of Jewish governors to four, Julius Meier being governor of Oregon and Arthur Seligman governor of New Mexico. The governor of Florida, Dave Sholz, is also believed to be a Jew. During this year 10 Jews were elected to Congress and two Jews were defeated for the United States Senate. Many cities, headed by Newark, elected Jewish mayors, and the number of Jewish judges, state legislators and municipal of\JI caac u
Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Mrs. Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss
Edythe R. Mink and Mr. Norman S. Fregger Marie Blessie and Mr. Ben Lazer Helen Bernstein and Mr. Harold C. Wohlner Bertha Shafton and Mr. Ben Goffstein Helen Adler and Mr. Jacob S. Michnik Miriam Bramberg and Mr. Herbert D. Robinson Helen I/evine and Mr. Alfred Kissin Lillian Schiff and Mr. Harold P. Farber Selma Seka and Mr. Isadore Tretiak Rose Ricks and Mr. Nathan W. Gimple Ruth F. Sunderland and Mr. J. E. Rosenthal Helen Richardson and Mr. Hugo Heyn Frances Schwidelson and Mr. David Greenberg Nancy Lawrence and Mr". Jerome Diamond Helen Wolinsky and Mr. Leo* Meyerson Tobye Steinberg and Dr. Henry Rosner Mary Maizel and Mr. -Seymour Kantor Dorothy Lustgarten and Mr. Max Riekes Ida. Rosenbaum and Mr. Alex Dochen Anne Hertzberg and Mr. Samuel S. Steinberg Alice Stern and Mr. Jack Turek Margaret Slosburg and Mr. Harry Jacobs Ruth Riekes and Mr. Morton Richards Edythe Dolgoff and Mr. Sam Rosenblatt Shirley A. Jandff and Mr. Melvin S. Katleman
Then sternly you repeat the ancient ban. 0 , drag i t forth from that dark Tabernacle, •-'-.. My image, marred with all deformity! . ;•.• ,- ; . ; ; . . . '-: y O, s e t ' i t up with every hateful shackle, . In the clear sunlight, for the World :'
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You watched your martyrs racked and. torn asunder. What knowledge from their maimed forma did you win ?
Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss
Lilyan Haykin and Mr. Lester J. Goldman Ann Blank and Mr. Lou Sogolow Rose Minkin and Mr. George Lefstien Sara Marcus and Mr. Irving Ruben Dorothy Margolin and Mr. Max Platt Esther Raduziner and Mr. William G. Singer Bertha Greenhouse and Mr. Jack Rosen Mary Weiner and Mr. Arthur Minkoff Lee Shames and Mr. Harold S. Barish Dorothy F. Levine and Mr. Maurice Schrier Sue Corenman and Mr. Nate MozerIda Daytch and Mr. George Strauss Alice Supornick and Mr. Sidney Goffstein Sarah Dinion and Mr. David Fellman Ruth Frisch and Dr. O. S. Belzer Minnie Regan and Mr. Max Paperny Esther Weinzveg and Mr. Sam Giller Lucial Goldenberg and Mr. Albert Steinberg Ida Lustgarten and Mr. John A. Goodwin Celia Kooper and Mr. Morris Katleman Pansy Brown and Mr. Samuel Marks Lyl Steinberg and Mr. Joe Raduziner Blossom Sharman and Mr. Morris Weiner Ann Freeman and Mr. Arthur Friedman Ruth Slutsky aud Mr. Lou Waldorf
TEL A W WILL GET LOAN FOR IMPROVEMENTS
jJiicimru-Ltriic
The naming of two Jews to important diplomatic posts and the prominence of Jews in the administration of the New Deal also elicited attention.
Jewish War Veterans Active
One of the most significant developments in Jewish life during the past year was the growth of Jewish, war veterans groups in many -countries as protective agencies against anti-Semitic rioters. In Austria the Jewish War Veterans were organized to combat the growing Nazi menace. In Poland, Jewish Veterans Un.ioris. bearing the name of Vladimir Jabotinsky, have been created. In Prance the Jewish War Veterans Jed the successful fight against the anti-Semitic papers of Coty. In the United States the Jewish War VetTheir torture only roused your love invented the Sun, the Moon and the erans initiated the anti-German and wonder; Stars.") boycott. You deemed not every wound they (Reprinted from Detroit Chronicle) In England a group of Jewish bore a sin. veteran founded the Blue Shirts Brown Book —Translated by Bertrar' Lloyd. to protect Jews from Fascist hooligans. (Of this poem, written in 183S, the NEW YORK—The Brown Book of Plans are now on foot to unite great poet vvrote in a letter to Felix the Hitler Terror will be published all Jewish veteran groups into an Bamberg, dated September 1, 1847,in the United States late this month by Alfred A. Knopf. The book was re- international body. without any refinements or point- cently published in England by the thoughts of the century, but was nev- World Committee for the Victims of Love is strong aa death; jealousy ertheless suppressed (by the Vienna German Fascism, headed by Lord is cruel as the grave.—Song of Sol"It expressed in my fashion, that is, Marley. omon. making, the simple humanitarian censorship) . . . Yes, it is possible for Irony is an insult conveyed in the Love is strong as death; jealousy is one to be suspected here of having form of a compliment.—Whipple. cruel as the grave,—Song of Solomon.
Not to Be Floated Publicly; Taken Up by Banks, Insurance Firms LONDON (J. T- A.)—Negotiations for a loan for the city of Tel Aviv, Palestine's all - Jewish municipality, have been successfully concluded, it was reliably learned. The city had sought a loan of 750,000 pounds for public improvements. An official announcement by the Palestine government is expected next week since the overnment, even though it is not responsible for the loan, must sanction t before it can_be effectegL_===_ The loan, it is understood, will not be floated publicly but will be taken up by banking houses and insurance companies. It is to yield four per cent interest The city of Tel Aviv was compelled to ssek the loan after it had failed to reach an agreement with the Palestine government for a share of the 2,000,000-pound Palestinian loan which has been projected. The government failed to grant Tel Aviv a share of the loan although considerable portions of it have been allocated for water supply and other improvements in Jaffa and Jerusalem. The municipality of Tel Aviv complained that the necessity for an independent loan imposed an extra burden upon the people of Tel Aviv because they will have to carry the double burden of interest payments on the general loan and on the city's loan. But despite the handicap of a private loan, the large sum coming to Tel Aviv will enable it to undertake extensive developments, employing numerous workers on roads, new buildings, and particularly on the construction of the industrial center which the municipality plans to erect in order to remove existing factories from the heart of Tel Aviv, thus carrying out the plans for an improved town. NEW YORK—The feeble attitude on the part of Americans toward Ger* man anti-Jewish atrocities was criticized by Simon Ackerman, metropolitan clothing manufacturer, who just returned to New York from a European tour.
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MASON APTS. 31st and MASON
ORAC APTS. 911 FOREST AVE.
REIDA APTS. 35th and JONES
ROOSEVELT APTS. 48th and DAVENPORT
TROY APTS. 30th and HARNEY
WOODMEN CIRCLE 3303 FARNAM
DOMESTIC Dr. Rubnitz Dr. Hirschman Hymie Milder William Milder C. Louis Meyer Goodman Meyerson L. Wolf son H. Harris George W. Condon Lynn P. Campbell A. V. Kinsler R.Streblow H. J. Cooper W.H. Head Pete Wendell O. Fox Leon Mendelson Rev. R. R. Brown Harry Steinberg Dr. Dr Wilson D. B. Cohn N. Perlis Joe Wolf Robt. Kooper David Blacker I. Abramson AaronRipps N. S. Yaffe A. Schwaczkin *
1934 FEATURES
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2004 FARNAM ST. ATlantie 4485-6
5015 SO. 24th ST. South. Omaha
New-Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PR ESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
Personal Greetings for Rosh Hashonah MB. and MBS. FRANK E. ACKEBMAN extend to their friends and relatives best wishes [ for Health, Happiness and Prosperity for the coming year. • MB. and MBS. WILLIAM ALBERTS and son, PHILIP STANLEY, 3502 Cass street, wish their friends and relatives a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
B MR. and MRS. M. M. BARISH and Family, 912 Mercer Park Boad, wish their friends and relatives a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity. • MR. and SIRS. SAM BEBER and son, HARLEY HILLEL, extend New Year greetings to all their friends. BIKUB CHOLIM SOCIETY wishes all of Omaha Jewry a Healthy, Happy and Prosperous New. Year. • ' MB. and MBS. DATID BLACKER and family extend to all their ; friends and relatives their heartiest wishes for a Happy, and Prosperous New Year. MB. and MBS. family extend and relatives Happy and " Year.
' MB. and MRS. BATE BOLKEB and daughter, LOUISE, wish their friends and relatives Health, Happiness and Prosperity for the__ coming year. • MB. and MBS. A. H. BBODKEY and daughters extend to their rel; •; atives and friends best wishes for a Happy New Year. • MR. and MBS. BEN BBODKEY. and family, 2812 Dodge street, extend heartiest wishes to their i relatives and friends for a Happy • and Prosperous New Year. • MBS. M. BRODKEY and sons extend to all their relatives and friends bast wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MB. and MBS. I. BERKQW1TZ and family extend New. Year greetings to all their friends • and relatives. ' )
m MR. and MRS. JOHN A. BEBER and daughters, Barbara and Carolyn Gayle, extend to their • relatives and friends sincere wishes for a year of Health,' • Wealth and Happiness. © MB. and MBS. SIMON BORDY and family wish their relatives and friends a most Joyous and Prosperous New Year. •' MB. and MBS. J. P. BATT and family take this means of extending greetings and hearty good wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year to their friends far and near. • DR. and MBS. 0. S. BELZEB, 1013 South 35th avenue, extend heartiest New Year greetings to their relatives and friends. • MR. and MBS. M. BERNSTEIN, 210 Park avenue, Council Bluffs, extend their heartiest greetings and best wishes to all their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. • MB. and MBS. HABBY BLACKER wish their relatives and friends a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity.
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e BABBI and MBS. FREDERICK COHN wish their many friends a Prosperous and Happy New Year. O MR. SAM CORNBLETH extends his best wishes to all his friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. • DATE CROUNSE wishes all his friends and patrons a Happy and .Prosperous New Year. "• MB. and MBS. L. J. CHERNISS and family, 3935 North 22nd street, . wish their relatives and friends Health, Happiness and Prosperity in the coming year.
E DR. and MBS. J. M. ERMAff extend best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy New Year. -
I. BLACKER and to all their friends best wishes for a Prosperous New
• MB. and MBS. WILLIAM. BOASBERG and son, LEONARD, extend heartiest wishes to their f relatives and friends for a Hap| py and Prosperous New Year.
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MB. and MBS. M. E . CHAPMAN and children, BEBNARD and HELEN JANE, extend heartiest greetings of the New Year to their relatives and friends. • MB. and MBS. DATE COHN and children, G E B A L D I N E and JULIUS, 113 South 55th street, extend stneerest greetings and heartiest good wishes to their relatives and friends far and near.
ME. and MBS. L CHAPMAN and sons, 111 South 49th avenue, extend heartiest greetings of the Now Year to their relatives and friends.
MB. and MBS. ALEXANDER D. ' FRANK and daughters, MURIEL and ELAINE, 100S Martha street, extend heartiest greetings to their relatives and friends for a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity. • DATE and MIKE FREEMAN wish their friends and relatives a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity. • MB. and MRS. MEYEB FBIEDEL and family, 4919 California street, extend their heartiest greetings and sincerest wishes to their friends and relatives for a Happy New Year. • DR. SAMUEL Z. FAIER, 708 Medical Arts Building, extends to his friends and relatives sincere wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. DR. and MBS. LEON E. FELLMAN take this means of extending greetings and hearty good wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year to their friends and relatives. • MB. and MBS. MAX FOX and family, '2045 North 19th street, wish their relatives and friends both far and near a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity. • BABBI N. FELDMAN extends best wishes for a Year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity to his rel* atives, friends, members of the Adass Yeshurim congregation, members of the Vaad, and to the entire Jewish community.
G DB. and MBS. A. GREENBEBG and children extend their heartiest greetings for the New Year to their relatives and friends. • MB. arid MBS. HYMAN E. GBEENBEBG and son, BEBNARD EDIT ABD, extend heartiest and best wishes, to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Pros-: perous New Year. DB. and MBS. MAYNABD M. GBEENBEBG extend to all their relatives and friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MB. and MBS. A. GOLDSTEIN and family, 670 North 57th street, extend heartiest and best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. • BABBI and MBS. DAYID GOLDSTEIN and eons, JONATHAN and JEREMY, extend to all their friends best wishes for a New Year of Happiness.
BABBI H. GR0D1NSKY, 2639 Davenport street, extends his best wishes to his relatives and friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MB. WILLIAM GBODINSKY, 737 Omaha National Bank bldg., wishes all his friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year. • MR. and MRS. DAVID GOLDMAN and family extend to their friends and relatives sincere . wishes for a Joyous New Year. • MR. and MRS. J. J. GREENBERG anil children, Lee Jane and- Barton, extend to their friends and relatives -' sincere 'wishes for a Happy New Year. New Year's Greetings from DB. and MBS. M. L GORDON and family. MR. And MBS. MORRIS GROSSMAN and family, 210 West Washington avenue. Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend heartiest greetings of the New "Year to their relatives and friends.
MB. and MBS. IKE KBASNE and - family, 316 Grace street, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their very best wishes to all their relatives and friends for a most Happy and Prosperous New Year. and MRS. JAKE KRASNE, 519 Oakland avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend best wish.es to their relatives and friends for a Happy New Year. T
MR. and MBS. A. HEBZBEBG, 104 North 55th street, extend to all their relatives and friends heartiest greetings for the New Year. MRS. C L A R A H0RWITZ, and daughter, ESTHER, extend to their relatives and friends heartiest greetings for a year of Health, Wealth and Happiness. The officers of the Omaha chapter of HADASSAH extend heartiest greetings for a Year of Health, Happiness, and Prosperity to the members of Hadassah and to the entire Jewish community.
MBS. GERTRUDE JACOBS and son, NATHAN, Blackstone hotel, extend to all their friends best and heartiest wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. • MR. and MRS. JOE JACOBS and son, ALAN, extend to all their friends and relatives their heartiest greetings and best wishes for a year of Happiness and Prosperity. MB. and MBS. MOBBIS E. JACOBS and daughter wish to express to their relatives and friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. THE JEWISH WOMEN'S WELFARE ORGANIZATION wishes Omaha Jewry a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
K MB, and MBS. PHILIP M. KLUTZNICK and BETTY LU extend their best wishes to their friends and relatives for a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity. • MR. and MRS. AARON KATZ wish their friends a Joyous and Prosperous .New Year. MR. and MRS. JULIUS KATEL. MAN and family, 417 Oakland avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend to their friends and relatives best wishes for Health, Happiness and Prosperity for the coming year. • MR. and MRS. GEORGE KBASNE and family, 125 South Eighth street, Council Bluffs, Iowa, wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
MR, and MRS. HYMIE MILDER and sons wish their relatives and friends a New Year of Happiness and Prosperity.
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MR. and MRS. SAMUEL H. KATELMAN and family. 601 Willow avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their heartiest greetings to their relatives and friends for Happiness and Prosperity for the Coming year.
MB. and MRS. LOUIS H. KATELMAN and small son, ATRUM, 729 South 21st street. Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend best wishes to their relatives and friends for a Happy New Year. MR. A B N E B KAEffAN extends heartiest greetings to all for a most Joyous and Prosperous New Year.
H MR. and MRS. J. HAffN of the American Coal Company, extend best wishes for a year of health, happiness and prosperity to their relatives, friends and patrons. • MR. L. HARRIS, 2859 California street, extends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year to his relatives and friends.
BABBI URI MILLER extends New Year greetings to members Of the Yaad Ha'Ihr and its affiliates and to the entire Jewish community.
MR. and MBS. FRANK KBASNE and daughters, LUCILLE and MARJOBIE, 311 Stutsman street. Council Bluffs, Iowa, wish all their relatives and friends a year of health and happiness.
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MR. and MRS. HARRY MARCUS extend best wishes for a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity to the members of the Vaad Ha'Ihr, its affiliates and to the Jewish community. /
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MR. and MRS. SAMUEL MEYERSON and family, 600 Roosevelt avenue. Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend their very best wishes to all of their relatives and friends for a most Happy and Prosperous New Year.
N . tfR. and MRS. H. SOL NOVTTSKY and daughters, Lois and Gloria, wish their friends and relatives, Health, Happiness and Prosperity for the coming year.
MR. and MRS. J. S. PEARLSTIEN and son extend best wishes to all their friends for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
MR. and MRS. SOL LEWIS and family, 2107 Grant street, extend best wishes to all their relatives and friends for a year of Health, Wealth and Prosperity.
DR. DATID CAHN PLATT extends to all his friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. • MR. and MRS. HARRY H. PRIESMAN and family w i s h their friends both far and near a HapV py and Prosperous New Year4 i--
MR. and MRS. MATHIAS F. LETENSON and daughters, JUDITH, DORIS and JEAN MARIE, extend New Year's greetings to all their " relatives and friends. • .; DR. and MRS. PHILIP LEVEY extend their heartiest wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year to all their relatives and friends.
MR. and MRS. IRTIN C. LETI1T take this means of extending greetings and hearty good wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year to their friends far and near. We extend our greetings and heartiest good wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year to all our friends and w e l l - w i s h e r s . L A D I E S ' LABOR LYCEUM CLUB, 22nd and Clark streets. • MR. JOSEPH LINTZMAN, attorney, 534 Insurance building, wishes his relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
M MR. and MRS. MORRIS MILDER and family of Fairacres extend best wishes to their friends and relatives for happiness and prosperity for the coming New Year. • DR. SAMUEL MORGAN, 536 WorldHerald Bldg., extends to all his relatives and friends best wishes for a New Year of Happiness. •
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DB. NATHAN MUSKIN wishes all his friends a Happy and: Prosperous New Year.
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MB. and MBS. tRVIN STALMASTEtt and son, LYNN, wish all their friends a Happy New Year. MBS. LENA STEIN of the Stein Delicatessen, 1414 North 24th street, wishes her friends and patrons a Happy and Prosperous New Year. DR. A. A. STEINBERG, 536 WorldHerald Bldg., extends to all bis relatives-and friends best wishes for a Happy New Year. • DR. S, Z. STEBN wishes his relatives and friends happiness and prosperity tor the New Year. MR. and MBS. SAMUEL H. STERN and son, ARNOLD JAY, 342 North 35th avenue, extend heartiest good wishes to their relatives and friends for a year of health and prosperity. MB. and MRS. IZZIE STISS and family wish their friends health, happiness and prosperity in the coming year.
MR. and MRS. IT. LETINSON, 3014 Webster street, wish all their friends and relatives a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity.
MR. and MRS. J. LIES and family; 1924 Sahler street, wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
MR. and MRS. LESTER SIMON, 611 North 50th street, extend to all their relatives and friends best wishes for a Happy New
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MR. and MBS. HERMAN MEYERSON and family, 127 South Eighth street, Council Bluffs, Iowa, take this means of extending greetings and hearty good wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year to their friends far and near.
MRS. MINNIE LAPIDUS and son, EARL, extend their heartiest best wishes to all for a Happy New Year.
MR. and MRS. B. A. SIMON, 611 North 50th street, wish their relatives and friends a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
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MR, and MRS. MILTON MAYPER and family wish all their friends and relatives a New Year of Health, Wealth and Happiness. . ; • ; , •
MR. and MRS. E. SELLZ and family extend their best wishes to all their friends and relatives for a New Year of Health and Happlnness.
MR. and MRS. W. A. RACUSIN. and daughter, NAN REA, extend -heartiest greetings for the News • Year to their relatives and friends. •
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MESSRS. BERNARD and DATID ROBINSON, of the Robinson Drug Co., 1802 North 24th street, ex-' tend best wishes to their rela- . tives, friends and patrons for a Happy New Year. DR. and MBS. PHILIP BOMONEK and daughter, DOBOTHY LIPSEY, extend best wishes for the New Year to all their friends. • MR. and MBS. JOE RAZNICK and family, 3834 Hamilton street, wish to extend to their relatives and friends in Nebraska and Iowa heartiest greetings for a Happy New Year. • DR. and MRS. A. S. RUBNITZ and children, 5016 Burt street, extend best wishes for the coming year to all their relatives and friends. MR. and MRS. AARON RIPS and sons, Norman and Leonard, extend to their relatives and friends sincere wishes for a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity. O MR. and MBS. SAM BOSENTHAL and family of Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend best wishes to their relatives and friends for a year of Health, Happiness and Prosperity. MR. and MRS. WILLIAM BADUZINER wish their relatives and friends a year of Health, Happlcsss and Prosperity.
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HB. and MBS. BEN L SELDIN and family, 611 Oakland Drive, Council Bluffs, Iowa, extend to all of their relatives and friends best wishes for a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. J. Z. STADLAN and family, 614 Mynster street. Council Bluffs, Iowa, wish their relatives and friends a year of health, happiness and prosperity. MR. and MRS. MORRIS SELNER and sons, 2518 Seward street, wish their relatives and friends and all Omaha Jewry a year of Health and Success.
MB. and MBS. M. TURNER and j family, 1702 North 24th street. ' wish ^everyone a Happy and Prosperous New Year. MR. and MRS. HARRY TRUSTIN and family extend to their friends and relatives sincere wishes for a Happy New Year. MR. and MRS. J. TRETIAK and daughters, Anne and Sarah, wish their friends and relatives Health, Happiness and Prosperity for the coming year.
w MB. and MBS. H. A. WOLF and son. JUSTIN, extend to their relatievs and friends best wishes for a Happy and prosperous New Year. • MB. and MRS. L M. WINTROUB and family take this means of extending greetings and hearty good wishes to their friends both far and near for a Happy and Prosperous New Year.
SEASON'S GREETINGS FBOM THE ZDTHAN FAMILY MR. and MRS. VICTOR ZUCKER, 2514 North 16th street, extend heartiest and best wishes for th« New Year to their relatives and friends.
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New Year***. Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Thursday, SepfemSer 2T,
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\ The dawn of the JVetD Year hanlshes the darkness of yesterday . . . bringing cheer to a gloomy world. The lingering shadows of business anaemia accompanied by travail and chaos .. . retreat before the golden glow of a bright future. In this season ofrenewal of faith, the high road of Jewish history leads to wide outlooks . . . . the irrevocable cast with its sorrows and despair fade before the increased viddness of tomorrow's rays of hope.
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As the sunbeams over the hills of eternity shorten the shadows of the gloaming . .electriccity, the magic servant of mankind, continues to play an ever-increasing role in lighting with undimmed lustre the way toward a shadowless future, happier, more peaceful and more contented. May the year 5694 brighten your homes with the warming shafts of good cheer, good health, and good times. -i£
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A SUBSIDIARY OF ELECTRIC
LIGHT SERVICE CO., INC.
ATLANTIC /J OO RICAL WIRINC AND SERVICE-
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New Year's Editioa--TJiE JEWISH PRESS—W«dnes4ay,_ SeRfceinber m . 193a
Page 2—Section C
A Portrait Philanthropies Executives J. Greenberg, Dr. A. Greenberg, Dr. the student an opportunity to com-2300 contributions and that shows H. Hirsehman, Wm. L. Holzman, plete his work at school which lie thorough canvassing • To Dr. Abraham Greenberg, is Rabbi U r i Miller, Henry Monsky, might not have been able to do with"It was obvious that for a cam- due much of the credit for the splenMrs. L. Neveleff, Mr. Sam Eavitz, uot such assistance, and years of ef- paign to have to its credit a thorough did organization of the campaign Dr. Morris Margolin, Mrs. Philip fort might have gone to waste. Like in canvass of that sort it must be pre-forces. Dr. Greenberg gave attenSher, Harry Silverman, Louis Som- the Family Welfare Department, the ceded by competent "organization, ad- tion to the organization of the cammer, Irvin Stalmaster, Dr. J . Wein- Social Service Committee has simequate publicity, and a thorough in- paign months in advance of the acberg, and Miss Blanche Zimman. ilarly faced the difficulty rising out filtration of the Federation's propa- tual date set for the campaign, and Mrs. B. A. Simon, has cooperated of insufficient funds, although more ganda," writes an observer from a two months preceding the drive he with t h e department in providing students have applied for scholar- neighboring community. gave literally undivided attention to clothing through her activities in the ship loans. Nevertheless during1 the "I feel that you have an excep- every detail and to all necessary Needle Guild, and Mrs. J . J | Green- period of review, four scholarships tionally large number of subscribers problems—this wos given unstiltingly berg has been in charge of the dis-have been awarded amounting to to your Federation for the size of and with great personal sacrifice. tribution of clothing through the $700.00. your, community," writes another. David Goldman, chairman of the Federation's supply room. To these "I think, you're doing well in hav-Initial Gifts committee, psrrormed an 7 In addition to the scholarship work ladies most of the credit is due for ing both your pledges and collections meeting the urgent need "for" "cloth- the committee has for many years run so "well in comparison with 1932, Herculean task not only in raising a substantial amount of the camsponsored the annual Father and Son ing of Jewish dependent families i n in view of the untoward events paign's quota, but more particularly .Omaha. Miss Rose Cohen is the case Banquets, • has , assisted in minister- of the early part of thrift year."— in mobilizing new recruits for the worker, who has carried the terrific ing to the needs of delinquent chilThis observation of a leading Fed- army of Philanthropies workers. dren and Jewish^ men arid women in eration load, cheerfully and ably. executive in the countrv con- Max Barish, as chairman of the state institutions."!;. The committee is firms the Organizational activity is the life- requiring some form of service has 193r v 1932 1933 remarks mad^ by Mr. General Solicitation had undoubtedly now organizing a campaign to have Medical Board blood of a community. During a in 1933 nearly trebled as Compared Jan. -,.29 20 27 -39 Harry Wolf at the closing luncheon, the most difficult job, since the prosJewish men and women in Omaha period of economic stress,'the com- with only •two. years ago. Shrunken1 Feb. '-',"•* 16 45V, 26 51 The Medical Advisory Board h a s who are non-citizens to become citi- commenting on the fact even though pects as signed to his division inmunal life of a people either dis- funds and pressure ..from various Mar. '" y 48 35- 34 75 ; rendered invaluable service in connecwe reached only $20,000.00 out of the cluded many of thise •who have beintegrates or blossoms into'fertility. sources .have naturally compelled April - , 63 85 52 120 tio with the work of the Family zens or at least secure their first pa- $40,000.00 campaign goal, this drive come victims of the distressing times. pers. •, The year 5693 showed no diminu- some adjustments. As a result the May ^82 79 116 176 Welfare Department. must be recorded as a striking vicThe health : Their "work among children ~^Rs tory for the united efforts of Omaha It was not unexpected that ftis divtion of the humming activity so char, families' inner, resources were scru- J u n e , . ,*.'-' " 8 i • 103 102! • 13fr problem during the past year h a s ision failed to reach its quota but it acteristic of Omaha Jewish' life. In- tinized closely so that the relief ^ - 130 " 163 198 been tremendous and the ; Jewish been particularly effective, from both Jewry. made up for this by its persistent the preventative and curative standstead, a new bond of united' co-op- could be kept within available funds. g 55 ' 149' "" 166 physicians of. Omaha have^ rendered It is true that getting $3u,0u0, and thorough canvass of the Jewish eration was prevalent, for the mu- Nevertheless, the Federation has Sept. ' 60 87 99 service without compensation and a t points. They have' taken charge •wiien a minimum of $40,000 was population. tual benefit of all. maintained its standard of adequate" Oct. •'•• 47 110 78 personal sacrifice unstintingly and of the Jewish, juvenile problem in needed to meet the requirements of The same holds true of Mrs. Since no better mirror of the Jew- relief which it has steadfastly re- Nov. 25 50 cheerfully. The Medical Advisory Omaha and .."-"as." a . consequence the the 31 agencies benefiting from Jeanette Arnstein who led the Woish life of the community can ba found tained during the many years of Dec. 25 18 56 Board included: Dr. Herman J a h r , Jewish children's delinquency has Philanthropies funds, did not lighten men's Division. Hundreds of women's than the work of the organizations— its activity. Thus, our Federation The.good work of t h e . Federation Chairman; Dr. Meyer Beber, Dr. O.fallen to' a very low percentage, less th£ task of the budget committee. cards have been called on three and with its cross-section of human in- has continued to provide the Jewish has continued though a tremendous S. Belzer, Dr. Max Block, Dr. J . M. \ than one per cent. TMs juvenile work The unexpected emergency caused by terests and human endeavors—the dependent families with adequate loss of income w a s suffered. The JErmari,'T)r. B. T. Friedman, D r . M.is considered one of the Committee's the distress of German Jewry has more times and every available dolJewish Press presents its annual re- food allowances, shelter, clothing and Comurilty Chest alone h a s reduced I. Gordon, Dr. A. Greenberg, Dr. M.most important*" functions, in fact, so made it necessary to allocate addi- lar was secured by the women workers. sume of-the Omaha orgamzafiona medical care—at a time when many its appropriation to • the Federation M. Greenberg, Dr. M. Grodinsky, ~Dr. important that the chairman, Dr. Sher, tional funds for German relief. And agencies throughout the country have by, nearly $5,000 in 1932, w i t h i n H. Hirsehman', Dr. B . TVI. &illy. D r . attends'juvenile^court every Saturday. the distressing situation of our \,im The Youth's Division, led by Justin Wolf was the only division that radically cut down on their food allow- added reduction of $9,000 for 1933. P.hilip Levey, Dr. M. Margolin, Dr. The committe has during the past local institutions required .—r:3 spec- reached its quota early in the camNathan Muskin, Dr. D. C. Platt, Dr. year included Drl Philip Sher as ial allocations which were not made ances, and many of them have "turnr Family Welfare Philip Romonek, Dr. A. S. Rubnitz, chairman; Mrs. Jeanette Arnstein, the year before. Mr. Wolf as budget paign. Naturally, the hub of Jewish act- ed over their relief cases to the Here is^ the comparative case load Dr. Philip Sher, Dr. A. A. Steinberg, Max Barish, Eugene Blazer, Rabbi chairman and others on his commitCampaign Organization ivity locally is at the Jewish Com* county authorities. munity Center. The intensely Jew- Hundreds of pieces of clothing have of the Family Welfare department: Dr. S. Z. Stern and Dr. J . A. Wein- Frederick Cohn, Rabbi D. A. Gold- tee have given much thought, ^jnThe campaign organization includberg. • 1930 1931 1932 1933 stein, Philip Klutznick, Rabbi Uri sideration, and even •wcrr~ a,o f J now ed Wm. L. Holzman, honorary chairish work done there is the heart of been distributed to needy families, Jan. -' 42 55 58 80 Miller, Leo Rosen thai, and Isadore to make the distribution as fair and man; Dr. Abe Greenberg, general Omaha Jewry. most of it being secured through our adequate as conditions permitted. In chairman; Dave Goldman, chairman, SOCIAL SERVICE . 4 5 55 61 83 Abramson. Following is the report for the own resources through the aid of the Feb. view of these facts, it became nec- Initial Gifts committee; Alfred S. . 47 . 60 69 94 The Social Service Committee headyear's activity of the J. C. C. and Needle Guild and many Jewish firms Mar. = JEWISH PHILANTHROPIES essary to reduce the appropriations Mayer, Vice-chairman, Initial Gifts Apr. 47 60 66 99 ed by "Dr. Philip Sher has devoted "Welfare Federation by Jacob S. and individuals. May. 44 55 60 105 its energies 'to the rehabilitation of ' At the close of the last Philan- to some of the agencies, beneficiaries committee; Harry Silverman, vicePearlstien, executive director, who An illustration of the problem con- June. 46 55 , 62 104 children under its care arid provid-, thropies Campaign held in May con- of the Philanthropies. The results chairman, General Solicitation comhas been at the helm for the past fronting the "Federation this year is J u l y , - -. 44 57 65 95. ing opportunities for those especially gratulatory messages came in from of the campaign have indicated more mittee; Mrs. Jeanette Arnstein, chairtwo years: clearly than anything else that Omthe extent of the need for medical Unprecedented economic conditions Much credit for the work of this gifted throjigh scholarship loans. many observers in different parts aha Jewry, is well united and or- man Women's Division; Justin Wolf, care. For a period of only three "which affected business and indusdepartment i s due to t h e Family During the period between 1926-1932 of the country. ganized to meet an emergency situa- Chairman Youth's Division, Harry trial life throughout the world could months the Federation furnished 272 Welfare Committee, which administers the Social Service Committee has ad- " I know a little bit about Omaha, tion, at the same time is a true A. Wolf, chairman Budget Commitnot help but also affect the Federa- days of hospital care costing $612. the family welfare service for thevanced a sum exceeding $4000.00 in and I must say that the 1933 results indexand to the trying experiences of tee; Joe Greenberg, chairman Quota In addition, about $300.00 were spent tion activities. But, a sm-vey of the Federation, formulates the general scholarship loans to needy students. ought to ~ be highly satisfactory to the past year. (Continued on Page 3) •work accomplished reveals that on drugs, medical appliances, x-ray, policies of the department, and con-Very frequently such loans offered your leadership. You have almost though rapidly-mounting problems and dental care. siders t h e most difficult cases." The arise demanding almost super-huhThe transient problem usS- Dean a committee meets regularly twice a man efforts to solve them the re- source of great worry because of the month and also whenever a n emsources of a community can be increasing numbers of transients who ergency requires. tapped unbelievably. have come to our city. Mrs. Hary A. Wolf is chairman. Despite a lowered income for the The following table tells its ownThe others are Rabbi Frederick Cohn, Pederation, the number of families story: Rabbi David A. OolHstpi". M— J.
Organizational Activity Gives Panoramic View of Omaha Jewish Work Summary of the Past
Welfare Federation
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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PR ESS—Wednesday, September 20, I93S
PANORAMIC VIEW OF WORK ACCOMPLISHED BY J E I I S H ORGANIZATIONS IN OMAHA
required. The department has other- ter's program during the past year wise extended its program and ser-reveals the remarkable resourcefulexpectation. It not only achieved its vices to all groups. ness cf the people who have planned The Physical Department lias been and administered the Center proprimary purpose of bringing to the Center groups for all types, of func- directed by the Committee on Phys- gram, despite the curtailed budget. tions, but, in these distressing times ical Education which included: Irvin Their accomplishment is due entirely (Continued from Page 2) sponsorship of the. group which sh« Levin, chairman; Mrs. Frank to the unselfishness and devotion of led for so many years, naturally when every available dollar is needed C. committee; Frank Ackerman, chair- somewhat affected the program. towards maintenance of the insti- Brookstein, Arthur A. Cohn, Phil the members of the various Center man Publicity committee; Milton R. However, a successful production of tution, it' has also supplied a mod- Feldman, Robert H. Kooper, Isadore committees who have cooperated in Abrahams, chairman Speakers com- the famous play, "if I Were You," erate income. Likewise a series of Levinson, Jay M. Malashock, Dr. making the program effective. mittee, and Jacob S. Pearlstien, Ex- by Sholem Alechim, has definitely social functions have proven the Cen- David C. Platt, Joe Rico, Dr. Philip Much credit for this program is Romonek, Earl Siegel, Dr. A. A. ecutive Director. shown the possibilities of the dra-ter'3 adequacy in meeting the needs Steinberg, Jay Stoler, Harry Trustin, due to Jack W. Marer, chairman of the Center committee. Other mem: is the Executive matic work in the Center. The pro- of the Jewish people in Omaha. Phineas Wintroub. bers of the committee include: Milduction was under the direction of Physical Department Morris H. Sogolow has been the ton Abrahams, Harold Barish, EuBlazer, Rabbi Frederick Cohn, Max John McGee; Justin Wolf as producThe Physical Department has hadDirector of the department during gene Blazer, Julius Bisno, Abe Brodr tion manager contributed much to a year of almost unprecedented suc- the past year, assisted by David key, Mrs. Frank Brookstein, Harry Sein Rab^f D S & ^ the success of the performance. Mrs. cess. The new Health Club for Chesneau. i Sol Fellman was in charge B. Cohen, Arthur Cohn, Rabbi Fredis and professional men hasof the basket room, and Mrs. Philip erick Cohn, David Feder, Philip FeldJ. Letwin has been the matron for man, Mrs. Max Fromkin, Rabbi D. surplus rather A. Goldstein, I. F. Goodman, David time that expansion of accomodations the women's department. vin Levin, Harry Malashock, Harry financial side. Marcus, Jack W. Marer, Goodman for that group of membership was A cursory examination of the Cen- Greenberg, Mrs. Max Holaman, Max Jewish Hour Meyerson, William Milder, Rabbi Uri Miller, Henry Monsky, I MorgenAnother inovation in last year's Btern, Mrs. L. Neveleff, Ralph Nogg,!! program was the Jewish Hour over Sam Ravitz, Isadore* Shafer, Dr. KFAB. A program of Jewish music Philip Sher, Irvin Stalmaster, Sam' including a five-minute speech on Zacharia and Harry B. Zimman. j some Jewish topic was sponsored It is impossible to enumerate the by the Jewish Comunity Center on efforts made by every one in the' an experimental basis for a period campaign. So many jobs are most of eight weeks. Mrs. Henry Monsky essential to the success of a drive' directed the choir, which included: but the performers of those tasks Ivy Siegel, Mrs. Nate Green, Marian of necessity and very often of their, Greenberger, Al Soffer, Dorothy own choosing remain in the back-' Marko, Frieda Soffer, Sam Yaffee, ground. To mention only a few: Ida Sorrine, Ed Himelstein, Pearl Milton Abrahams as chairman of Marcus and Dave Slobodinsky. the speaker's committee organized a In addition to the choir the followcorps of speakers and brought the ing rendered individual programs: message of the Jewish Philanthropies! Dr. Isadore Dansky, Rose Brandeis, to tvery Jewish organization in Om-j Thelma Gaspar, Sophie Newman. aha, omitting none. The numerous The following spoke over the radio comments on .our campaign publicity j in the interest of the Federation: was ample testimony to the splendid j Henry Monsky, Sam Beber, Dave Dr. A. Greenberg, Rabbi work done by Frank Ackerman, as; Goldman, Uri Miller spoke on Palestine. Abner Publicity chairman. For weeks in ad- Kaiman was the announcer. vance the message of the PhilanThe Center Sunday School has thropies was brought before the Jewdaily newspapers. Joe Greenberg and his Quota committe spent hours and an adequate curriculum and method hours in careful scrutiny of some' of religious education. The School 4,000 prospects. Without this im-j has met the need of a large number portant task the campaign results >of Omaha Jewish children who othermight have been vastly different. \ wise would have received no Jewish To the majors in all divisions, to, education. Rabbi David A. Goldstein the 500 workers enrolled in all di- j stein again volunteered his services visions go the appreciation for thej as principal of the school, during the • untiring energy and devotion, fori past year. The innovation of a year ago of weeks in advance and during the, campaign.
Page S—Section C Holzman, L. Holzman, Abner Kai- Fund, as a permanent memorial to man, Aaron Katz, Ben Kazlowsky, the departed Jewish leader of this Philip Klutznick, Robert Kooper, community. Mrs. J. H. Kulakofsky, Lester. LaThe purpose of organizing the pidus, Irvin Levin, Isadore Levinson, •fund is "to accept any gift, grant, Louis Lipp, J. M. Malashock, Harry devise or bequest in trust for eduMarcus, Dr. M. Margolin, William cational, charitable, religious or benHilder, Rabbi Uri Miller, Mrs. Henry evolent uses or purposes of Jewish Monsky, Mrs. L. Neveleff, Dr. D. C.character." The powers are flexible, Platt, Joe Rice, Dr. Philip Romonek, so that the purposes of the trust Earl Siegel, Irvin Stalmaster, Dr. fund may be changed to meet changA. A. Steinberg, Jay Stoler, Harry ing conditions. Trustin, Phineas Wintroub, Justin The officers of the Fund aie: Wolf, Sam Zacharia, and David Harry B. Zimman, president; J. H. Cohn. Kulakofsky, vice-president; David Goldman, treasurer; and David Lapidus Community Trust Fund Blacker, secretary. A summary of the year's developThe affairs of the fund are being ments in the Jewish Federation's administered by a board of trustees activities would be incomplete with- of seventeen, ten life members and out mention of the organization of (Continued on Page 4) the Harry Lapidus Communnity Trust
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GREETINGS FROM CHAS.B.MOREARTY j
The Jewish Community Center, doubtedly the most important Jewish Greetings to My Jewish Friends: institution in Omaha, has felt more I wish to avail myself of this opthan any other institution, the effects portunity to extend to my Jewish of the stress and strain of the friends my very best wishes for times. The J. C. C. had to make sac- their New Year. that I may rifices in order. to meet the needs have the privilegeI hope pleasure of in other departments • of the* Federa- making your New and a happier tion. Due to these conditions the and more successful Year one. Adult Educational program, which was introduced two years ago, had We all depend upon our friends to be curtailed during the past year for: our success in life and I, .like due to lack of funds. While a pro- all my fellow professional and busigram of four lectures on Jewish ness friends, depend entirely upon subjects was scheduled, only two the co-operation we receive from our were made available — Dr. A. L. Sachar, who gave a brilliant discourse of "The Romance of the Rothschilds," and Miss Florence Bernstein, who gave a most entertaining program of Jewish music. The attendance and the subsequent comments of those present attests tully to the need of such a cultural series on the Jewish Center program. The Community Forum presented another array of speakers: Governor Philip LaFollette; Drew Pearson, the brilliant journalist, Dr. Will Durant, and Rabbi Stephen S. Wise. Unfortunately Warden Lawes, scheduled to close the series, was compelled to cancel his engagements due to illness. Judge Irvin Stalmaster was chairman of the Educational Committee during the past year. The committee included: H. H. Auerbach, Rabbi Frederick Cohn, Harry B. Cohen, Mrs. Max Fromkin, Rabbi D. A. Chas. B. Morearty Goldsfein, Mrs. Max Holzman, Abner President, Jetter Brewing Co. Kaiman, Mrs. Jeanette Arnstein, Mrs. J. H. Kulakofsky, Dr. Morris Margo- fellow citizens for success in whatlin, Mrs. Henry Monsky, Win, L.ever enterprise we are endeavoring Holzman, Philip Klutznick, and Jack to sponsor. Whether we sell insurance, practice law, or manufacture Marer. and sell beer, we must of necessity School of Music look to those who have confidence in An innovation in last year's pro- us for success in our professional gram was the Center School of Mu-and our business enterprises. sic. The School of Music was or- At the present time, I am using ganized to give a sound musical edu- my best efforts to furnish for the cation, not merely in playing, and public the finest beer that can possinging but also in the science of sibly be made. In this connection, I music; and to afford opportunities have employed men who are outfor musical education to those whoj standing in f their '. various departlack adequate financial resources for ments to produce this beverage which private study. The music school,, be- has been" denied the public for such ing a cooperative undertaking, is a long'period' of time. After manur operated on a non-profit basis. An factoring the product with the best Advisory Board, including some • of' of materials and equipment, it would Omaha's finest musicians, supervised be impossible for us to function unthe courses. less our friends " co-operate 'with us by "purchasing the product that we The faculty included: - •-•• Piano: Jean P. Duffield, Rose manufacture. Brandeis and Mrs. Jennie LevenWere it not for Jake Crounse and son; Violin: Mrs. Earnest Reese our other friends who fought so and Miss Sophie Newman; vigorously, for the enactment of the C e l l o : E. Oscar Weinstein; Beer Bill in Lincoln, it would not be Voice: Miss Juliet McCune, and possible for us to. have a business Mrs. Nathan E. Green; Brass today. \, Through this message I wish Wind Instruments: Harold Dal- to thank Mr.\ Crounse and all the linger; Harmony: Cecil Berryothers who so vigorously battled man. for the right; to ^manufacture, sell and consumer beer in Nebraska. Not The Advisory Board included: Cecil W. Berryman, Harry Bra- only, are we permitted to manufacviroff, August. M. B o r g l u m , ture and sell beer, but many men in Martin W. Bush, Jean P. Duf- the wholesale distribution, transporfield, Jack W. Marer, Irvin Stal- tation and retail distribution have been given an opportunity to make master, Mrs. Harry A. Wolf, and an honest and legitimate income Mrs. Henry Monsky, Director. Reduction of the budget curtail- through the sale of the product that -A ed the activities of the Center Play- we manufacture. ers. Mrs. Herman Jahr, who .has for Repeating my expression of good years led the dramatic activities of wishes to my Jewish friends and exthe Center, has developed a nucleus tending a cordial invitation to visit of interested and devoted members us at the Jetter Brewery, Ifam In dramatics. Sincerely, ' The unforseen. and regretted resigChas. B. Morearty, . President. nation of Mrs. Jahr from active
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MELLOW NOURISHING
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In the cordial spirit which prevails at this festival season, we extend to our many Jewish friends and patrons our sincere wishes for good health and prosperity throughout the New Year.
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Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
Pag-e 4—Section C
Panoramic View of Work izations In Omaha
District. Philip. Klutznick has recent- years of existence, the following sums ly resigned as executive secretary of'for various causes: the A. Z. A. after a remarkably sue- To 139 widows, and beneficiaries, as cessful term of service. He was suc- death benefit, $68,895; sick benefit, ceeded by Julius Bisno. Dr. A. Green- j $3,175.50; donations for outside causes, berg was elected to the general com- j $24,960; relief to members, $3,855; mittee of the District. community center building, $1,800; to The present officers of the B'nai furnishing lodge room, $1,750. Brith are: Rabbi David A. Goldstein, As usual, large attendances marked president; Leo Abramson, vice-presi- the regular meetings during the year, dent; Sam H. Green, secretary; Harry i A prominent speaker was featured at Friedman, treasurer, a position he has j most of these meetings. The memberheld for the past forty years; Dr. ship roster is well above four hunMaynard Greenberg, warden; Carl dred. E aI T O T ? * Er^L t>\ Nathan a. Yaffe, president of the F e Il}j*™J} Im U S t e' .e S « h? ' Sand6e Isadore C e d So6 Omaha Hebrew club, is serving his term in that office. Other presexecutive committee include Morns fourth ent officers are: Dr. A. A. Steinberg, Potash, Harry Mendelson, J. S. Pearl- vice-president; Sol Rosenberg, secrestien, N. S. Yaffe, Sam Rothenberg tary; John Feldman, treasurer; Barand David Hahn. ney H. Feltman, Abraham Richards, and Louis Morgan, trustees; Max Fromkin, Mark Lorig, and Morris Minkin, members of the executive committee. . The Omaha Hebrew Club, a landmark in Jewish communal activity, has continued its benefactory civic and welfare work during the past year, never failing to assist or initiate Jewish, projects and causes both here and The Council of Jewish Women offers its membership a program broad in abroad. and touching on practically The organization, was organized on scope July 1, 1892 by a group of pioneers, I e v e r v PQase of Jewish life, both localfar-seeing citizens who visioned the ly and nationally. future. The twenty-one charter mem- The Omaha Council during this pist bers -were Samuel Becker, Mendel year has again whole-heartedly coBlank, Esau Fleishman, S o l o m o n operated in making the program, of Greenberg, Jacob Kendis, Isaac Kes- the national order a success. The unsel, Ocias Kornblut, Arnold Levin, dertakings of the women were varied Moses Mabel, Abraham Monsky, Saul and interesting. Robinson, Aaron Rubinstein, Moses Mrs. Robert Glazer was acting presSchwartz, Joseph Sokolovsky, Michael ident during the latter part of the Sokolovsky, Osher Sokolovsky, Sam- culb season. Mrs. Frederick Cohn is uel Sunberg, Baruch Waxman, and honorary president Other officers:" Isaac Wienick. Mrs. Leo Rosenthal, treasurer; Mrs. Of these founders, only three are Morris Levey, recording secretary; living: Mendel Blank, Esau Fleishman, Mrs. S. E. Gilinsky, corresponding secretary; Mrs. David Sherman, audiand Arnold Levin. The Omaha Hebrew Club has been tor. Directors include Mrs. J. J. Greena blessing to many a widow of a de- berg, Mrs. Philip Sher, Mrs. Albert ceased member and to members sick Krasne, and Miss Hazel Degen. or in distress, besides donating liber- Honorary board members: the Mesally to the various charities. Visits are dames David A. Goldstein, Louis Nevalso paid to brother members who are eleff, J. H.Kulakofsky, M. L. Conn, M. ill, and night watch arranged for se- F. Levenson, and Kate Tatle. riously ill and deceased brothers. . . Board of managers: the Mesdames The club has paid out, during its 41 Robert Glazer, J. H. Kulakofsky, Jean-
themselves to take charity, but ••who L. L. Burkenroad, assisted by M. E. were the victims of unexpected, re- Handler. About forty new members seven elected for a two-year term. verses, have been able to effect their were added to the club, roster. The life members are Sam Beber, ecOnomie rehabilitation through a temAbe Goldstein, Dr. A. Greenberg, porary loan of $100 or $200 from the • •William L. Holzman, J. H. Kula- Jewish Free Loan Society. Loans are kofsky, Henry Monsky, Dr. Philip made to any Omaha Jewish family of During the past year Omaha Lodge Sher, Irvin Stalmaster, Harry A. good character, self-respect and good No. 534 of the B'nai Brith carried Wolf, Harry B. Zimman. standing in the community, upon notes on loyally in co-operation with the Those elected for two years include endorsed by business men. work of the international order. Max Barish, David Blacker, David Harry A. Wolf is chairman of the The B'nai Brith ably champions the Goldman, J. J. Greenberg, Philip Free Loan Society. The other memKlutznick, Harry Malashock, Harry bers of the committee in charge in- cause of Israel in national as well as The tragic Trustin. . . ; clude J. H. Kulakofsky, William Gro- international affairs. The Harry Lapidus Community dinsky, David Feder, and Leo Abram- plight of German Jewry received the attention of the order. Every effort Trust Fund constitutes a, most fit- son. ting memorial to the man who gave The loans are made from a contin- possible was made to alleviate the so much of himself for the welfare of uous and permanent revolving fund. misery of our German brethren. The Anti-defamation league has his fellow-men, and it will assure It originally began with a capital of in the course of time adequate means $1,000, representing a $100 gift from continued its necessary work in defor the carrying on of the work to each of ten communally-minded men. fending the Jewish name against atwhich Harry Lapidus gave a life- Liberal contributions by public-spirit- tacks. The Hillel Foundations have time of effort and devotion. ed men and women wha recognized been a positive influence loyalties The space alloted for this sum- the great value of the Jewish* Free among the Jewish students on our mary dies not permit an enumeration Loan Society have steadily increased college campuses. The B'nai Brith of the various organizations that the working capital, until the total is monthly magazine has obtained Jewhave rendered valuable service and now $27,974.75. ish information and enlightenment for financial support during the past Since its inception, the Free Loan its thousands of readers. Locally, the B'nai Brith has strugyear. has made 1,527 loans, amounting to Brief mention should, however, be $130,733.47. From January through gled with the problems caused by the made of the following: The Jewish August of this year 46 loans were depression. The loyalty and devotion of active membership has enabled the Free Loan Society has materially re- made, amounting to $6,863.75. duced the relief load of the Federa- Included among the contributions to local lodge to maintain its high stantion in a f f o r d i n g opportunity the Free Loan since January 1, 1933, dards. During the year Isadore Abthrough loans in enabling families. are: Mrs. E. Katelman, mother of the ramson effectively directed its af! to battle through their difficulties late Jacob Katleman, $50; Mrs. Aaron fairs. without becoming public charges; the Wolf, in memory of her late husband, The local .lodge has reason to be Council of Jewish Women who has $50; Mrs. Minnie Lapidus and son, proud of the fact that it has contribaided by a special contribution to Earl, in celebration of the golden wed- uted to the leadership of the District provide milk for a number of de- ding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. A. Grand Lodge. pendent families: The Bikur ChoHenry Monsky stands foremost V -o • 4— l. hl. t+dA ™«, ith Levin. $10; Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Stal- among the leaders of the entire order. hm Society who has cooperated with m a s t i n c e l e b r a t i o n o f tte golden the Federation in providing funds w c d d i n g ^ ^ ^ Qf ^ a Q | M n L Sam Beber, founder of. A. Z. A., comfor drugs for dependent families, AXevin, $10. pleted his term as President; of the and is otherwise closely cooperating It is becoming more and more of a •with the Federation in cases where custom among the Jewish people of help is a problem; and the Jewish Omaha to contribute to the Jewish Women's Welfare Organization, who Free Loan Society, in memory of dear as the Federation's auxiliary has departed ones as well as in celebraaided in every direction in nearly all tion a happy occasion. The comof the Federation's activities, both mitteeof appeals to the Jewish comthrough financial support and the munity to increase these contribucontribution of personal service of since the need today is greater its. membership, and the President, tions, than ever before. Mrs. Louis Neveleff. who but a short time ago The Community Center and Wel- Many contributors to this fund are now fare Federation's activities are co- were in need of temporary relief through ordinated and administered by its this very fund. They will not accept Executive Committee consisting of: iharity, only an opportunity for Wm. L. Holzman, president; Henry economicbut adjustment through a timely Monsky, first vice-president; Sam loan—which though not. charity is yet Beber, second vice-president; Mrs. L. charitable. Neveleff, third vice-president; Harry Silverman, secretary; Abe Goldstein, -treasurer. Dr. Philip Sher is Honorary-President, and the three Honorary Vice- The Highland Country club enjoyed Presidents are Mrs. Harry Lapidus, the most successful season for the Mrs. Morris Levy, anrl Harry B. summer of 1933 since its organization. Zimman. The Executive Board includes: A. Abe Herzberg again served as B. Alpirn, Mrs. Jeanette Arnstein, president. Other officers: M. E. Max Barish, Eugene Blazer, David Handler, vice-president; E d w a r d Cohn, Dave Goldman, Dr. A. Green- Treller, secretary; and Harry Malaberg, David Greenberg, Joe Green- shock, treasurer. berg, Mrs. J. J. Greenberg, Abe The Board of Directors consisted Herzberg, Philip Klutenick, Robert of Sam J. Leon, Jerome Heyn, M. Kooper, Mrs. J. H. Kulakofsky, J. H. Chapman, Al Mayer, Dave Feder, Kulakofsky, Harry Malashock, Jack Dr. A. Greenberg, Ben Danbaum, Marer, Morris M i l d e r , William Dr. M. I. Gordon, Mose Yousem, Milder, Irvin Stalmaster, Harry A. Morton L. Degen, Milton Livingston, Wolf, Mrs. H. A. Wolf and Izador Zieg- I. B. Zimman, Morris Milder. L. L. ler. Burkenroad, H. A. Wolf, J. H. Kulakofsky, and Morris Ferer. Sam Leon was chairman of the greens committee, Dave Feder of the entertainment committee, Milton Livingston of the house committee, L. L. Burkenroad of the membership The Jewish Women's Welfare Or- committee, and Edward Treller of ganization, which has been active in the finance committee. Mrs. Phillip the affairs of the Jews of Omaha fcr Levey was chairman of the ladies over a quarter of a century, is yet one entertainment committee, and Mrs. of the major organizations in Omaha M. E. Handler of the ladies golf Jewish life. committee. The organization, which lately con- The opening dinner dance on May solidated with the Jewish Community 27 was one of the gayest and most Center and the Jewish Philanthropies, successful affairs in the history of has taken part in almost every activity the club, about 175 members and of the past few years. out-of-town guests attending. Music The women of the Jewish Women's for, the. affair and the ensuing SatWelfare Organization have co-o"perated urday nights was furnished by Art in making possible the ever-popular Randall and his orchestra. The closFather-Son and Mother-Daughter ban- ing dinner dance will be held Satquets, and they have sponsored, en- urday, September 2. couraged and helped the Center PlayGolf was taken up .with more eners Guild. THE thusiasm than ever before, especially The Society takes a very active part among the women players.. The in relief work by helping dependent Jewish families in Omaha, and it also men's championship. golf match was CHOICEST co-operates with the Jewish Philan- again won- by Julian Milder, Howard Wertheimer won the second flight thropies. PRODUCT The organization does much for the title, and Morris Micklin the third social life of the younger element by flight. For the women, Mrs. Manning OF THE sponsoring and chaperoning Sunday afternoon tea dances at the J. C. C. Handler again won the club chamThe women in the organization work pionship. Mrs. F. Engel won the EWEI and do their utmost to help make a second flight. success of whatever task is under- Cups were presented to the winART taken by the organization. ners of the men's matches at a stag The Jewish Women's Welfare Or- held August 16, and to the winners ganization prides itself in being an in- of the women's matches at a lunchtegral part in the local communal life. eon and bridge August 30. -Mrs. L. Neveleff is president Mrs. J. Leslie L. Burkenroad, chairman of Malashock is vice-president; Mrs. N. a special entertainment committee, Levinson, treasurer; Mrs. I. Stalmas- and Mrs. Phillip Levey, chairman of ter, recording secretary; Mrs. H. New- the ladies' entertainment committee, man, corresponding secretary; Miss gave the members of the club some Blanche Zimman, secretary of dues. highly successful and unusual parties —7a style show on June 28, a Monte Carlo party on July 3, and several of their famous stag parties. A golf party and stag was held Wednesday, The constructive work achieved by August. 30, and was called "George the Jewish Free Loan Society, a bless- Miller Day" In honor of tEe club> ing to our communal life since its in- "pro." Several post-season 'parties are ' __. " ' ' ception, has been particularly praise- being arranged. A" very Bnccessfu^nfembership drive worthy during? the stress of economic was held, daring the month of March upheaval. ' Many families who cannot reconcile and April tinder the chairmanship of (Continued from Page 3)
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B'nai Britfa
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Omaha Hebrew Club
Council of Jewish Women
nette Arnstein, Leo Rosenthal, Morton Jewish Community Center. All monies raised by this moans by the Council Degen. An outstandinsly constructive piece is used in the Council Scholarship of work has been done by the Coun- Loan fund. Several scholarships to decil In. social service. Mrs. Jeannette serring girls were again granted this Arnstein is chairman and Mrs. H. A. year. Wolf is co-chairman of this commit- The educational committee, with tee. Among their duties, they assist ac- Mrs. J. H. Kulakofsky as chairman, tively with the social service vrork did outstanding work during the year. The Council did not jointly sponsor done by the Welfare Federation. The social service committee aided I the Communtiy Forum this year, but in connection with the Nebraska Tu- did assist in the sale of tickets. berculosis camp for under nourished The current topics course was conchildren. They also co-operated in as- tinued last year, led by Rabbi David sisting the .Hadassah Milk Fund, the A. Goldstein. Pro-Falashas and the Palestine Light- Another project successfully underhouse, in addition to helping the tu- taken was the conducting of a child berculosis stamp sale. study class. A splendid piece of work was ac- The committee on Religion and Recomplished in connection with the ligious Education has initiated an imDouglas County Medical Association, portant communal survey, the facts sidss offering workers, the Council and figures to be used in promulgatwas one of the largest, if not the larg- ing Jewish education in the city. among the women's organizations of Enumerated above are some of the est, donors of funds for this work, important functions of the local Counthe city. Miss Hazel Degen had charge cil of Jewish Women. Their activity of this committee. has shown an intensification which The Council continued its work in augurs well for the future. Education for the Foreign-Born, under the leadership of Mrs. Sam Beber. Their classes were very well attended and they are rendering a constructive service in- teaching English to the forl T " In taking stock of the activities ol [ A s usual,the Council co-operated in Hadassah /during the past year, one the Comm^vlty Chest and Jewish Phil- cannot help but feet a sense of satisanthropies *drives. \ - J / ; • - faction that in spite of the many Sewing, with Mrs. Morton Degen as disintegrating forces at work, Hadchairman, was another important ac- assah kept right on—not only in tivity. This was done by volunteer sums of money raised but also in V in connection with the Red that valuable new material in the Cross, and many garments were pre- form of a number of enthusiastic pared thus. young matrons was added to the j Both local and national problems membership list. Many of these are yrere discussed by the civics and leg- this year assuming responsible jobs. islative group, under the chairmanship All Zionist activity with its burof Mrs. Robert Glazer. Among other den of money-raising has necessarily things, they completed the study of neglected the personal and social side the tariff and its effects on economic of club work. In order to bring this conditions today. They also thorough- fraternal element into the organizaly studied the local government tion and in order to give the memBraille work as an aid for the blind bers of Hadassah a feeling of reand also help for the bard of hearing ceiving as well as giving, the Hacame junder the direction of a cpm- dassah Book Review groups were ormittee headed by Mrs. Reuben Natel- ganized. Between 75 and 100 women attended the monthly group meetings : This year .the Council- lending library consolidated with that of the (Continued on Page 6)
Hadassah
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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PR ESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
Page (£—Section C
Panoramic View of Work Accomplished By Jewish Organizations In Omaha (Continued from Page 4)
United Palestine Council
gogues in Omaha were guests of honor, and united in felicitating Temple Israel upon this joyous occasion. During the past twenty-nine years Rabbi Frederick Conn, outstanding locally and nationally, has been the spiritual guide and teacher of Temple Israel. He has continued to be a strong factor in creating good will and a spirit of friendliness between the creeds which constitute our community. The officers who served the past term are: A. Goldstein, president; Harry Wilinsky, vice-president; Louis Hiller, treasurer, and Minnie H. Wolf, secretary. The board of trustees consisted of Sol Degen, M. E. Handler, Milton Abrahams, Max Holzman, Sam Leon, Harry Rosenfeld, Henry Rosenthai, Alfred Mayer, Fred Rosenstock, and David Goldman.
ORTHODOX Vaad Ha'Ihr
The past year has been one of intense activity for the Vaad. In January they procured the services of Rabbi Uri Miller as spiritual leader and installed him on February 5 in a ceremony attended by many local and out-of-town prominent Jews. Since then, Friday night services, traditional, yet adapted to the youth, have been conducted at the B'nai Israel synagogue, followed by a forum discussion group. A Ladies Auxiliary, a; Junior Auxiliary, and a Young Men's organization have been formed, all affiliated with the Vaad and carrying on intensive cultural and social activities. A Junior Synagogue has been formed in co-operation with the City Talmud Torah, and a Religious School, meeting Sunday mornings at the B'nai Israel synagogue, has been established. The Vaad has interested itself in the Kashrus problem and in the Meshulochim and hopes to solve both of these equitably soon. The four orthdox synagogues— Beth Hamedrosh Hagodol, B'nai Israel, B'nai Jacob, and Adass Yeshurim—are member-organizations of the Vaad. Commissioners of the Vaad include H. Marcus, S. Ravitz, N. Levin son, N. Wilfson, I. Morgenstern, I. Goldstein, and M. Kirshenbaum.
•which met at the homes of the members, f The United Palestine Council of Those in charge of Group 1 wer« Omaha has brought about a unificaMrs. A Romm and Mrs. M. Bran- tion of the forces of local Zionist deis; Group 2, Mrs. Joseph Rosen- groups. berg and Mrs. Simon Pizer; Group Constituent members are the Zion3, Mrs. Sol Novitsky and Mrs. J. J. ist District, Hadassah, Junior HadasFriedman; Group 4, Mrs. I. Dansky sah, Mizrachi, Poale Zion, Pioneer and Mrs. Jake Blank. These groups "Women, National Workers Alliance, are now under the chairmanship of Greater Palestine Committee, and the Mrs. O. S. Belzer, chairman of the Jewish National Fund. Educational Committee, who will also The Council is the final authority organize a cultural group similar to on all Zionist activities of the constitthat which has functioned for the uent groups, being a clearing house past three years. for their activities and thus avoiding A new activity of the organization conflicting dates. for the coming year is the collection The purpose of the Council is "the of the National Fund boxes, under enrollment of all organizations doing the direction of Mrs. I. Dansky. Up Palestinian or Zionist work in Omaha to the present Hadassah's Jewish Na- into a Council which has for its protional Fund work consisted of rais- gram the development of a healthy inCONSERVATIVE ing funds for that worthy cause terest in Palestinian enterprises, the With the closing of the year 5693, through'its Gift Fund. Last year harmonization and integration of all Mrs. Morris Friedel succeeded in Palestine efforts, and the stimulation the Conservative Synagogue can look B'nai Israel raising over $350 in this way. The of greater activity toward the end that back with satisfaction to a year of This firmly-founded major Jewish progress. In spite of the depression, fund is now in the hands of Mrs. J. the ideal of Zion rebuilt may be more the Synagogue has been able to mark congregation was founded on July 15, J. Friedman. speedily realized." a growth not only in numbers bat 1884 by fourteen pioneers of Omaha At the last board meeting of the Morris Friedel is president; Mrs. also in the loyalty and interest of Jewry. In 1910 the present site was •past year it was decided to have an M. F. Levenson is secretary-treasurer; the membership. purchased and the $55,000 building administration fund from which do- Mrs. J. Richlin and Mrs. I. Hurwitz, The Friday evening services were now standing there was erected nations may be made to various vice-presidents. On the executive com- very well attended regularly. Again It is at the B'nai Israel synagogue worthy causes which the organization mittee are M. D. Brodkey, Morris Min- and again during the year the audit- that headquarteds have been estabis called upon to help, such as the kin, and M. F. Levenson. orium was filled to capacity. • lishd for Rabbi Uri Miller, spiritual Jewish Philanthropies, the work of During the past year Mr. J. J. leader of the Vaad. Here also club the Women Pioneers of Palestine, Greenberg led t he activities of the rooms have been decorated for meetetc. Mrs. A. D. Frank heads this Synagogue as president. He was ably ings of the Vaad affiliates. committee. assisted by the following officers: Cantor Abraham Schwaczldn and Harry Silverman, first vice-pres- his male choir have been featured in Mrs. Julius Stein will continue as ident; Dave Cohen, second vice-pres- the services of the congregation. TEMPLE ISRAEL head of the medical fund. Mrs. I. The commissioners of the synaGrossman will assist her as chairman Last spring Temple Israel celebrated ident; Al Frank, secretary; A. B. of the rummage sales, and Mrs. its silver anniversary in the "new" Alperin, treasurer; and Dr. A. Green- gogue are A. Cohen, William Milder, Jack.Kaufman will be in charge of Temple, which event was signalized berg, Mose Yousem, Sam Bebery and J. Tretiak, L. Epstein, M. Blank, H. ads for the year book. Mrs. Dave with a dinner in the vestry rooms of Harry Kulakofsky, members of the Marcus, Joe Wolf. S. Weiss is secSherman will act as chairman of the Temple. Rabbis of Jewish syna- executive committee. retary. community co-operation. Mrs. Irvin Levin, assisted by Mrs. Louis Sogo- j low, will edit a monthly bulletin to I be published during the club year. Mrs. B. A. Simon will continue as chairman of the finance committee, to collect delinquent dues. She will, be assisted by Mrs. Dave Epstein as co-chairman. The chairmanship of the hospitality committee will be taken over by Mrs. A. Romm. Mrs. Joseph Goldware, who served as infant welfare chairman, will this year take charge of the annual linen shower. Mrs. Jacob Blank will continue as chairman of the school luncheon fund, with Mrs. David R. Cohen as xo-chairman. Mrs. Julius Abrahamson will head the membership committee, and Mrs. Sol Novitsky will be motor corps head. Mrs. J. H. .Kulakofsky will again act as Parliamentarian and chairman of the constitution committee. ' The program committee will again be under the direction of Mrs. David A. Goldstein, with Mrs. Morris Franklin as co-chairman. Mrs. A. Theodore will take charge of the sewing circle. The publicity work will be handled by Mrs. Allen Kohan. Mrs. Max Fromkin will continue as chairman of senior-junior relations. Mrs. T. A. Tully will head the social committee. Mrs. E. Weinberg, who headed the sick visiting committee, will this year serve her pet cause, the J. N. F. Her work will be taken over by Mrs. R. A. Bleicher, who has organized a committee in the form of a bridge club. ;*V-#^/-*. The money derived from the monthly meetings will be used to plant trees in Palestine in the name of members who have recovered from serious illness. Trees were already On Rosh Hashonah ,we pause from our regular routine; planted for Mrs. Meyer Friedel and it is the hour of resolution. * -~ Mrs. Jacob Lieb. Mrs. A. S. Rubnitz will again be in charge of the telephone committee, More serious are our problems than ever, with everyone and Mrs. Sam Cohen has assumed facing a national crisis. The National Recovery Act is responsibility for the membership and give or get luncheons. our salvation so why not let us resolve—TO SUPPORT The officers, who will continue in T H E N R A. office a second year, will be: Mrs. M. F. Levenson, president; Mrs. J. J. Friedman and Mrs.TuYou will be both patriotic and wise to relieve your houselius Abrahanmson, vice-presidents; Mrs. J. M. Erman and Mrs. Dave hold of Wash Day. Stein, financial secretaries; Mrs. Jor seph Rosenberg, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Hyman Cohen, recordLet the SANITARY LAUNDRY assure you the best ing secretary; Mrs. A. Romm, treasin laundry service. . urer. A record of the activities of Hadassah for the past year would not be complete without mention of the eighth annual convention of the Southwest Region, which took place in Omaha May 29 and 30. The convention was pronounced one of the most successful held in the region. Mrs. S. H. Soboroff of Chicago as guest speaker was honored at a dinner attended by 250 men arid women and again at a luncheon which taxed the capacity of the Center auditorium. A beautiful tea at the Paxton ended the conference. The Omaha chapter was again honored by the re-election of one of its members, Mrs. Joseph Rosenberg as president. Other Omaha women serving the region are Mrs. M. F. Levenson/ vice-president; and Mrs. Max Fromkin, editor.of region bulletin.
Spiritual
Beth Hamedrosh Hagodol
The Beth Hamedrosh Hagodol synagogue at 19th and Burt has had another successful year. For the High Holydays they have brought back to Omaha Cantor Joseph Malek, one of the leading chazans in the country. He will conduct the services assisted by a personallytrained choir. The officers of the congregation are: L. Harris, president; M. Minkin, vice-president; J. Kulakofsky, secretary; H. Rimmerman, treasurer. Other commissioners include A. Richards, H. Soskins, M. Venger, A. Stoller.
B'nai Jacob
Adass Yeshurim
Brotherhood
Congregation of Israel
The Brotherhood of Temple Israel is affiliated with the National Federation of Brotherhoods, and carries out a full program in being of service to local Reform Judaism. As such, the Brotherhood forms an integral part of the activity of Temple Israel. This men's club stimulates interest in the reform movement in various ways. It is in charge of all men's activities and much of the social life of the Temple which is not sponsored by the Sisterhood. The Brotherhood and Sisterhood co-operate in many functions in order to promote more activity and spirit in the Temple. The Sisterhood does the catering at all Brotherhood luncheons. Meetings are held monthly, with a prominent speaker and an entertaining program featuring each meeting of the group. Louis Somberg is president of the
The true spirit of orthodox Jewry once again flourished during the past year at the Adass Yeshurim synagogue, 25th and Seward, under the spiritual leadership of Rabbi N. Feldman. The officers of the congregation: M. Mittleman, president; D. Shukert, vice-president; J. Kirshenbaum, secretary; S. Fellman, treasurer. Other commissioners are G. Soref, M. Zwebelman, and E. Lindenbaum. Services and synagogual activities were conducted as usual at the Congregation of Israel, the South Omaha orthodox synagogue. Officers are: A. Iipsman, president; A. jacobson, vice-president; M. Tatleman, secretary; S. Corenman, treasurer; Harry Dworsky, M. Katzman, and Nathan Perelman, trustees.
The B'nai Jacob synagogue at 24th and Nicholas found its spiritual strength undiminished during the past year, under the guidance of Rabbi H. Grodzinsky. I. Grossman is president of the congregation, and B. Shafton, viceThe great end of all human inpresident. Other officers are M. Grossman, S. Katleman, A. Hirsch, dustry is the attainment of happiJ . Kaplan, Abrahamson. ness.—Hume.
(Continued on Page 7)
Best wishes for the New Year. May it bring to you and your family health, happiness, peace and prosperity. And may our relationship in the coming year be as pleasant as it has been in the past. . •
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Page 7—Section C
New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS-^Wednesday, September 20, 1933
Panoramic View of f Organizational Work (Continued from Page 6)
Brotherhood; Sam Singer, vice-president; and David R. Cohen, secretarytreasurer.
Sisterhood The Temple Israel Sisterhood alms to further the highest ideals of Judaism, to promote sociability and fellowship/among the members, to increase Temple attendance, to assist financially, and to aid in the religious, social and educational activities o£ the congregation of Temple Israel. Mrs. Carl Furth is president of the Sisterhood. Other officers are: Mrs. Max Holzman, vice-president; Mrs. Julius Newman, recording secretary; Mrs. Bert Hene, corresponding secretary; Harry Rubenstein, treasurer; Mrs. I. Rosonthal, auditor. The group is affiliated with the National Federation of Sisterhoods, and supports as many of its activities as seem advisable to the local Sisterhood board. The local Sisterhood takes entire charge of the managing and financing of the Sunday School at the Temple. The committee under the able leadership of Mrs. Louis Kulakofsky, assisted by Mrs. M. L. Conn, has done marvelous work. The annual Sisterhood Sabbath was last year under the direction of the late Mrs. William Holzman, who did such able and efficient work. ' Mrs. Harry Rosenield was in charge of student activities, with particular stress upon aiding out-of-town students. The current topics class, with Mrs. Sam GilinsKy as chairman, was again successfully sponsored, with Rabbi Frederick Conn, the leader of the class, delivering lectures and book reviews. They contribute liberally to many worthwhile projects, including the Hebrew University College Scholarship and dormitory funds, the National Farm School, etc. They, of course, planned and aided in Temple social affairs. For the coming year, the women in the Sisterhood are to be divided into six groups or circles. The heads of these circles are: the Mesdames Jeanette Arnstein, Bert Hene, Sam Appleman, Mollie Cohen, Joseph Weinberg,
IN MEMORIAM
| and Sam Wertheimer, sr. The annual rummage sale of the Sisterhood will be held in October. Mrs. I. Rosenthal is in charge. Mrs. Louis Hiller is chairman of the chapel fund, started some years ago to raise money with which to build a chapel at the cemetery. Donations are given to the fund in memory of loved ones. A feature last year was the tri-State Sisterhood convention early in November. The conference was held in Omaha with delegates from Missouri, Iowa and Nebraska. Mrs. Harry Ros-enfeld' was chairman.
When death doth end life's too brief span, The living must endure, content — In knowing that one's memory and deeds Will still remain — a deathless monument. Henry Bimmerman, 68 Sadie Mann, 44 Meyer Silbennan, 41 l e n s Bisuoff, 54 Mis. H. Miller, 60 Sose Bernstein, 73 Herman Franklin, 47 Jacob Ziegler, 100 Harry Hahn, 58 Isador Kline, 58 Mrs. Nettie Harding, 57 Zipa Kaplan, 87 Jacob Oberman, 71 N . P . FeiL73 Jennie Keinschreiber, 67 Himon Lincoln, 72 Tetta Troehaft, 60 Florence Rosenberg, 60 Harry Goldberg, 43 Sam Goldberg, 47 Pearl Cohen, 81 Morris Holzman, 43 Sarah Borison, 67 Mrs. Fannie Lerman, 42 Mrs. Molly Karson, 37 Jacob Sutler, 58 Frank Forman, 42 Bane Rips, 46 Matthew Friedman, SO Olga Sovinsky, 70
Conservative Auxiliary Occupying, within the short span of four years, one of the leading positions in the roster of women's organizations, the Conservative Synagogue Auxiliary now begins its fifth year confident that it will continue its steady growth and development in service to synagogue and community. A resume of the past year shows^ that the Auxiliary has progressed* steadily in size and activity. Its membership has increased from 149 to 162 within the last twelve months, a splendid record in view of the fact that membership must remain within the limitations of the congregational roll. Undismayed by a particularly difficult year, the Auxiliary undertook and carried through to a successful con-, elusion a novel financial project that surpassed its quota and raised over one thousand dollars for the synagogue. Even more important than the financial success, however, is the fact that t i e project brought every auxiliary member into the fold of .active workers. Likewise, in community co-operation, the Auxiliary has played its part, generously and willingly. Pledges to the Jewish "Philanthropies and the Community Chest have been renewed, and the Auxiliary has always supplied leaders and a corps of enthusiastic workers for all drives. Again, the Auxiliary repeated a project of a year ago, when all out-oftown students were invited to a Friday evening social. In this way it is hoped that a genuine social and religious tie will be established with
._ Palestine Council joined a committee headed by William Holzman, The Ladies Auxiliary of the Vaad is honorary chairman and Philip Ha'Ihr is the "women's counterpart of iilutznick as chairman in making the the Vaad and is the most important onference one of the outstanding in the region's history. Immediately of its affiliated organizations. Organized at the beginning of the preceding the conference forty-three year, the Ladies' Auxiliary has done members were added to the district's a tremendous amount of work in both •oster. The district has held several culcultural and material fields. It has sponsored a religious school and var- tural meetings during the past term ous cultural groups, and has held and has cooperated with other ormonthly meetings characterized by ganizations interested in advancing programs of cultural and religious Palestinian work. Rabbi David Goldjtein officially represented the local content. The organization has thus, served district at the convention of the Z. 0. to bind the Jewish women to the A. in Chicago last July. Officers of the district are: Morris —F.& N. A. orthodox synagogues and to give the women their proper place in syna- Friedel, president; N. S. Yaffe and gogue activities. Moreover, as a re- A. Frank, vice-presidents; Joseph Sam Xipof sky, 78 Max "Wintroub, 35 sult of. the enthusiasm of the women Tretiak, treasurer; Dr. O. S. Belier, Jacob Weiss, 60 Lillian Rosenberg, 51 Sarah Bochman, 60 of the Auxiliary, a whole series of secretary. The executive committee Leon Bioch, 69 Max L. Miller, 56 Bosie Hershong, 55 new activities have been initiated, all includes Dr. I. Dansky, J. Feldman, Bnelah Jeannette Miller, 22 Fannie Gross, 51 tending to intensify the spirit of Rabbi David A. Goldstein, M. F. Aaron Wolf, 67 Ida Bernstein, 85 traditional Judaism in the member- Levenson, J. Lintzman, Charles David Cohen, 66 Jacob Adler, 67 ship of the synagogues and their Mann, Philip Klutznick, M. D. BrodHarry Robinson, 28 Abe Bandy, 44 key, Sam H. TJavis, J. Bisno, Meyer -families. Anna Bosinsky, 67 Tina Hirsch, 82 The Ladies Auxiliary has sponsor- Freeman, Dr. A. Greenberg, J. S. Sam Lipsey, 60 Rose Brann Newman, 74 Pearlstien, and Max Barish. Dora Shrago, 62 Dr. A. Romm, 56 ed various affairs, including an Edith F. Holzman, 55 Rebecca Coren, 80 nual ball held in March, an installaEsther Cohen, 66 Hirsch Baer Himebloom, 45 tion dinner for Rabbi Uri Miller, a Sally Cohen, 18 Theodore Diamond, 2 theater party, a Vaad picnic, plus a Sigbert Kahn, 60 Henry Trochtenberg, 62 series of entertainments for members Sam Rosenblatt, 40 Morris Gitlin, 56 of the religious school. Its members The Pioneer Women's Organization Betty Silverman, 38 Bessie Wintroub Pill, 36 Bernard Shames, 70 have taken an active part in all com- works for the liberation of their peoMichael Gross, 88 ple as a whole throughout the DiasSamuel Cohn, 38 mercial activities. Joseph White, 43 pora and for the rebuilding of PalEtta Cherniss, 75 Dorothy Kahn, 33 Officers of the Ladies Auxiliary estine as a national homeland. Abraham Monsky, 75 Max Katskee, 61 include Mrs. L. Neveleff, president; Molly Dnbnoff, 60 Mina BosenthaL 81 During the last year, the Pioneer Mrs. N. Levinson, vice-president; Harry B. Milder, 46 Harry L. Cohn, 59 Women accomplished much in the upSimon Jfeveleff, 50 Mrs. H. Marcus, treasurer; Mrs. WilNathan Greenberg, 56 building of the Jewish woman through Moses £ . Jacobsen, 70 liam Milder, corresponding secretary their program of education and propGoldie Kulakofsky, 76 Hattie Gilinsky, 72 David Janoff, 26 and Mrs. N. Greenberg, recording aganda. Much was done toward reachMoses L. Cohen, 82 Fanny Simon, 89 secretary. ing this idea locally by the visit of Jacob Katleman, 70 Betty Segal, 58 Max Haiti, 53 Mrs. Michael Rubashov of Palestine, Mande Goldberg, 42 Mrs. William L. Holzman, 63 who included Omaha in her tour of Martin Meyer, 72 the United States and Canada. The work of the Pioneer Women, The feature of the past year's program of the local Zionist District both as Chalutzos in Palestine and as Initiated two years ago, the, Oneg there is the Gift Fund of the Auxil- was its sponsorship of the Extraor active supporters in the United States, Shabbosem have come to mean much iary which is set aside exclusively as dinary Conference of the Central has been recognized more than ever Southwest Region which broOght t< this year. It is a tribute to the organto the Auxiliary, as they fill a longa building fund. That this, too. has Omaha many distinguished visitors, ization's WOrh that Mrs. Rubashov, felt need in the cultural life of the group. Always varied and delightful, kept pace with the strides forward foremost among "whom were Morris Pioneer Woman leader in the Holy the programs were well attended and made by the group, is evident from Rothenberg, president Z. 0 . A.; Prof. Land, was elected as a delegate to the promise to be quite as popular and the ever increasing list of names that Gustave Klausner, Regional presi Eighteenth Zionist Congress. As part of their work, these women interesting this year. are inscribed in the Book of Remem- dent; Harry Friedberg-, national lead are contributing toward the support er; Dr. Alexander Wolf, who entered Programs for the year were varied, brance as donors. of the Hebrew University, the Teachthe movement at the time of Theowith undoubtedly the most important That the zeal and enthusiasm of the dor Herzl, and Mendel Fisher, execu ers* Seminary, the Political Fund, the —that whicli brought together Conserwomenfolk has proved a real inspira- tive director of the region. The con National Fund. Locally, the group parvative auxiliaries from . Lincoln, and ticipated in every flower day, belongSioux City in a joint conference with tion and encouragement is not to be ference sessions and events were hel ed to the Jewish National Fund Coundoubted, and it is with high hope and at the Jewish Community Center lasi cil, and to the Zionist Council and conOmaha. It is hoped that such a meeting may become an annual one, all confidence that the Auxiliary embarks Novmber and they were well attend- tributed to the Philanthropies. gained so mucn from the interchange upon this, the fifth year of its exist- ed b y the Omaha Jewish community Omaha is listed as among the most of ideas and plans. ence, again under the leadership of its at large. Member organizations of the Unit As a further symbol of progress, able president, Mrs. J. H. Kulakofsky. (Continued on Page 8)
Vaad Auxiliary
Pioneer Women
Zionist Organization
these out-of-town young people, all of whom were appreciative of the opportunity afforded them to become acquainted with the synagogue. The progress made by the choir is deemed an outstanding accomplishment of the past year. Today, as an unaccompanied vocal group, the choir of thi3 synagogue has no peer and few equals in the community. It was under the direct guidance of the Auxiliary and through the inspiration of a few of, its leaders that such splendid results have been attained, and the Auxiliary is justly proud of this group of young people whose singing contributes so much to the beauty of each service.
FIRST IN SALES-because it is First in Flavor
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Butter-Nut sets itself an unusually high standard of flavor. That is why it stands first in sales. Our customers expect finer coffee and that is what we give them. We find it pays. First of all, we buy more delicious coffees. To find them we test hundreds of samples of the world's finest grades. We hunt out the coffees with exceptional richness, mellowness and aroma. These we blend into that unchanging fine flavor folks have learned to expect of Butter-Nut. No can of Butter-Nut is ever below standard. Many coffees cost as much—but none can compare with Butter-Nut for flavor. Try it • . . and seel Let taste guide your choice. ^
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NeW Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PR ESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
Page S—Section C
Panoramic View of Work Accomplished By Organizations In Omaha (Continued from Page 7) successful cities in money-raising projects for the Pioneer work. The support of non-members has been particularly encouraging. Since most of the Pioneer kvutzohs have become self-supporting, the organization's aim for next year is to give the German girls the same opportunities afforded the girls from, other parts of the -world.
Daughters of Zion The Omaha Daughters of Zion, Jewish National Fund Auxiliary, has a membership of over two hundred •women who work devotedly for the National Fund,-who in return purchase dunams of land in Palestine and send certificates for the dunams. The upbuilding in the Homeland in aided materially by $1,000 annually from this group. In their eight years of existence, they have sent the J. N. F. a total of $7,500 and have $500 on hand which they will send this month. They have also raised three thousand dollars for the J. N. F. boxes, including flap and flower , days. Four years ago the Daughters of Zion sent the last installment of a $3,000 pledge to the Jewish National Fund for the purchase of a lot for the building of a dormitory of the Hebrew Teachers College at Beth Hakerem, Palestine. The local group has been sent pictures of the place. In the pictures can be plainly seen a sign reading: "Beth Hakerem's Teacher's Seminary—Land donated by the Omaha Daughters of Zion for hostel and agricultural training fields." . A special project started by the Daughters of Zion in .1930 was the undertaking to raise $5,000 for a •water installation in a new colony in Palestine, where it is hoped that fifty families will soon become selfsupporting. The group has already raised $2,000 of its agreed quota. This project is especially important because the problem of water supply in Palestine is very difficult and fountains and wells and rivers are scarce. The group has distributed about 700 J. N. F- boxes. They give hearty
co-operation to all Palestinian organ-1 lars were collected in pennies, nickels izations, contributing liberally each j and dollars. The bitterness of the Geryear to the national drive for funds man persecution of our brethren in for Palestine. They have also made Germany has heavily taxed the land contributions to such projects as a problem in Palestine. Steamers arrive Center synagogue in Jerusalem, the daily, weekly, bringing refugees to Jews must gain admittance* Golden Book, the local Philanthro- Palestine, to the Homeland to save their lives. pies, etc. is raised largely Land, is the crying need, land for Their money through bazaars, balls, rummage houses, for farming, for barracks to sales, concerts, regular card parties make employment for the exiles and and society dues. They give sev- the Jewish National Fund has a deseral programs, as on Chanukah and perately urgent problem to solve. Money is needed and must be had imPassover. mediately in order to buy soil for the are: Mrs. Jacob The officers Goldware, president; Mrs. B. Eisen- thousands cf incoming Chalutzim to berg, vice-president; Mrs. L. Mor- become established within the homegan, finance secretary; Mrs. Max land. Arbitman, recording secretary; Mrs. The Jewish National Fund Council Max Goldstein, treasurer. of Omaha, serving as a clearing house Mrs. S. Fellman is chairman of for all Jewish National Fund activibox collections and tree donations, ties, is composed of all groups interested in the upbuilding of a Jewish and Mrs. I Beber is treasurer. Other chairmen: Membership drive, National Home. The following groups Mrs. L. - Friedman and Mrs. M. are represented and have faithfully Braude; bazaar, Mrs. M. Linda; card and earnestly worked for the benefit party, Mrs. A. Shafton; rummage of the Fund: Junior Hadassah, Senior Hadassah, Daughters of Zion, Pioneer sale, Mrs. A. Greenberg. The board of directors include the Women, Zionist District, Mizrachi, Mesdames L. Rosenblatt, E. Wein- Poalei Zion, National Workers' Alliberg, S. Platt, D. Soref, S. Krizel- ance, and all synagogues. The Nationman, J. Abrahamson, and N. Levin- al Fund Council of Omaha has collected $2,571.35 in the past year, son. These contributions were made by tree planting, inscriptions in the Golden Book, Dunam land purchases, Blue and White National Fund boxes, The Keren Kayemeth L'lsrael estab- collection in the synagogues, flag lished thirty-two years ago at the days, etc. Dr. O. S. Belzer is chairman of the Fourth International Congress of the World Zionist Organization, for the re- local National Fund Council. demption of the soil of Palestine as The Keren Kayemeth is all-importhe inalienable property of the Jewish tant because of its inclusiveness. It is people, has proved to be an acknowl- a fund for every Jew, regardless of edged panacea for a homeless people. status, rich or poor. Every Jew must The founders were prophetic in the co-operate in order to enable our peosense of foreseeing the necessity of ple to come to a full realization of building a sovereign nation, not only the Third Redemption. for political reasons, but as a refuge for the Jewish people from their nemesis, anti-Ssmitism. No institution has been so endeared During the year, hundreds of cases and no institution has so penetrated of want, sorrow and sickness are the hearts of the Jewish masses as the helped through the effort of the memJewish National Fund since its estab- bers of the Bikur Cholim Society.: lishment. The sacredness in which it The Bikur Cholim was founded in has been held is evidenced by the fact 1926 for the purpose of visiting, comthat it is reverenced by the Jews the forting, and taking care of the sick. world over. ' The members who on the most part Through the short years of its ex- are busy housewives take time off to istence, approximately 10,000,000 dol- help their distressed neighbors.
Keren Kayemeth
Bikur Cholki
The Bikur Cholim takes care of its members and non-members alike. Seldom do the women in this group miss visiting the hospitals at least once a week, and usually on Fridays, when they take home-made delicacies to the patients to help brighten the prospect of a Sabbath away from home. Often when a mother is ill and unable to manage her house and children, a member of the Bikur Cholim will go into the handicapped house and wash, cook and clean just as she does for her own loved ones. All the women in the Bikur Cholim, which numbers over one thousand members, do their share of charity and are indeed an asset to Omaha Jewry. The officers of the Bikur Cholim are: Mrs. L. Neveleff, president; Mrs: G. Fish, vice-president; Mrs. J. Finkie, and Mrs. J. Abramson, recording secretaries; Mrs. L. Mendelson, corresponding secretary; Mrs. L. Morgan, treasurer.
Labor Lyceum Much activity is to be found during the year at the Labor Lyceum, located at 22nd and Clark streets. The building was erected eleven years ago and houses many Jewish organizational work.
Ladies' Labor Lyceum Club The Ladies Labor Lyceum club enjoyed a very fruitful and active year. Their charitable and social work was varied, and they assisted different projects, such as the labor movement, the Philanthropies, the Ort, the Consumptives Hospital in Denver, etc. The officers are Mrs. N. Lehr, secretary; Mrs. L. Witkin, treasurer; Mrs. J. Elkin, hospitaler, and Mrs. L. Bailen, press reporter.
Chesed Shel Ernes Chesed Shel Emes, the three Hebrew words meaning "Kindness in all sincerity," is indeed a most fitting name for this society. Founded seven years ago that the orthodox Jew might be buried according to the ritual prescribed by Jewish law, the society has its place in the hearts of the Omaha Jews. The Chesed Shel Emes was formed on the basis of equality. As death makes all men equal, the rich and poor alike have the same rites performed for their dear ones. The Jews down through the ages through the execution of the last simple rites makes death a noble thing. Thus the Chesed Shel Emes society makes it possible for the orthodox Jew whether famed or humble to be buried as his fathers were before him. The society numbering over 400 members meets once a month. The
money, and that was the Omaha Workmen's Loan Association. The Association was started with a jpirit of helpfulness to those who were unfortunate or temporarily embarrassed, and this policy has prevailed to this day. There are many The Jewish National Workers' Al- people who need temporary help but liance was organized twenty-six years who does not desire charity, and this ago, with branches all over the coun- need the Association has filled. try. The Omaha branch is No. 54. During the past few years of unThe Jewish National Workers' Al- precedented economic conditions the liance has been very instrumental in Omaha Workmen's Loan Association promulgating national aspirations has proven of invaluable assistance among the Jewish people in this The Workmen's Circle, Branch 173, country. Its purpose has been main- to local Jewish business men and celebrated its twenty-fifth annivers- ly to get the Jewish working .class working men who can through this organization, on the strength of their ary on December 21, 1932, with a interested in Palestine work. personal character, obtain financial banquet given at the Labor Lyceum The organization has built hospitbuilding. It will be a long remem- als in the Holy Land, and today op- assistance, without any red tape or bered event by those who attended. erates a famed hospital for conval- publicity. When a person desires a One of the highlights of the evening escents, on Mount Carmel, in Pales- loan he is not asked the size of his was the presence there of a charter tine. It organized the Ha'sneh, a family and the amount of insurance member of the organization, Mr. life and fire insurance organization, he carries. He merely signs a note Dave Kuklin of Lincoln. Mr. Harry in Eretz Yisroel, which is prospering with two responsible members. AlSheanin, now of Los Angeles, and and doing splendid work. It was also though it is easy to borrow money also a charter member, sent his instrumental in organizing a work- from this Association, it has yet to lose a cent. There are two reasons greetings and congratulations. Mr. ers' bank there. for this: first, the system is such Sheanin is one of the most devoted members of the organization/ Repre- Its insurance policy is a regular that the loan cannot lose; and secsentatives from branches at Sioux life insurance form and is protected ond, the members know that this orCity, Lincoln, Des Moines, and South by the laws of the state of New ganization belongs to them. Where a person would hesitate to pay a debt York. Omaha, were also present. Workers' Alliance elsewhere, he will sacrifice to pay ThetheNational The branch has always been in the first group in this country his Workmen's Loan debt. front ranks of those carrying on re- was establish Jewish Folk Shules, The members consist of Jewish peolief work, and despite the general to where Jewish and Hebrew literature, ple of all walks of life and of all depression, it has continued to fur- folk songs, are studied. It also branches of Judaisni, and is nonpolnish aid to all those institutions maintains etc., the National J e w i s h itical in character. Its members now which it has helped in the past. Teachers' Seminary, first insti- include many who ridiculed such an Among these are the Los Angeles tution of its kind the where Jewish organization but who now realize the Sanitarium, the Denver Sanitarium, young men get an academic course importance of it. the Deborah Sanitarium, the Ex-Pa- and are prepared to teach Jewish. tients Home in Denver, the NaturalDuring the banking holiday in the ization Aid League in New York, the early part of 1933 people brought" Ort, the Jewish Federation of Omaha thousands of dollars to be left in the and many others. Association as they were afraid of The 750 branches of the Work- This association has usefully serv- banks and felt perfectly secure with men's Circle, in the United States ed this community for over a period this Association because they underand Canada, through the general of- of seventeen years. Never has the stood its purpose. fice in New York, contributed a need for such an organization been The officers and directors give up large amount for the aid of the Jew- greater, because present conditions freely of their time to work for this ish refugees in Germany. have affected everyone. The small Association, serving without pay. The Mid-Western District Commit- business men and workers have been Though elections come twice a year, tee, which is composed of the Omaha, among those hardest hit. Every loan there are some who have been reSioux City, Des Moines and Lincoln company and bank from whom he elected time after time and have branches, the Ladies Auxiliaries, the could borrow money in the past re- served as either officers or directors Young Circle Clubs, and the Singing fused to help him. There was one Verein, held its yearly conference in place where he could, and did get (Continued on Page 9)
dues, which in dollars and cents amount to little, is in the act of charity and millions. Each and every member of the society works unassumingly and tries to do her best in helping out unfortunate fellowmen in times of grief and sororw. The officers are: Mrs. L. Neveleff, president; Mrs. J. Milder, vice-president; Mrs. S. Weinzveg, secretary; and Mrs. H. Milder, treasurer.
Sioux City on September 3 and 4. Plans for the future work of these branches were made.
National Workers' Alliance
Workmen's Circle 173
Omaha Workmen's Loan
UShonah Tovah Tekosevu We Extend Our Best Wishes for a
Happy New Year
Season's Greeting Successor to Gasoline
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New Year's Edition—-THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
Panoramic View of Organization Work
lick, vice-president; M. Tatleman, secretary; Joe Sherman, treasurer; Harry Fladennan, A. Jacobson, Jack Savich, and A. Weiner, trustees. The organization is fifteen years old and has done excellent work in :ick benefits.
Golden Hill
(Continued from Page 8)
talks by Rabbi Frederick Cohn, Rabbi David A. Goldstein, and Rabbi TJri Miller as featured speakers. A Purim program was held in March and a five-piece breakfast set raffled off. In April, a Pesach program was given. May was the most active month of the year, starting with a motherdaughter bridge party at the Paxton. Omaha was hostess to the south-
the home now. The home contains a marble plaque of this Association since the first day in which are inscribed names of 'dear The Golden Hill Society, formed for of its existence. the purpose of maintaining the cemones. Loans are made for a maximum peretery and caring for the chapel at the iod of eight months in sums up to olden Hill cemetery, meets monthly $500.00 at an interest charge of only at the homes of members. The women six per cent The borrowers repay have shown an active interest in the this loan in "weekly installments. The Hazomir Singing Society has group, despite the fact that the so"When "because of unforseen difficul- made itself a valuable asset to theciety has no social activities. ties the borrower cannot repay his communal life of the city, and has Mrs. L Peart man is president. Othloan in the eight months he is given made remarkable progress in vocal er officers are: Mrs. Sam Epstein, additional time. vice-president'; Mrs. D. B. Epstein, accomplishments. This Association is a non-profit The Hazomir gave bi-monthly pro- secretary; Mrs. J. J. Greenbexg, treasgroup. After the payment of all op- rams over radio station WOW on urer. erating expenses, the surplus profit is Monday nights. These broadcasts distributed among its members. were continued until Pesach. At this time there are approximately When the Jewish Community Cen300 members. Two years ago there ter inaugurated the "Jewish Hour," was loaned out eighty thousand dol- the Hazomir Singing Society was The B'nai Jacob Auxiliary -was lars and last year seventy-two thous- heard over KOIL on these programs foimed this summer, with the purpose and. This year it will be somewhat several Sunday mornings. . of raising funds to be used in the Imless. The association has no outside The organization plans to again provement of the Pleasant Hill cemeindebtedness. .-::,.-:' ..../. broadcast starting next month. Their ery. P. Ginsburg is president of the or- programs will be heard twice a month. The first affair under the sponsorganization. David Slobodinslty is president of ship of the group was a large card the Hazomir. Other officers: Rose party given at the Paxton in August. Abramson, vice-president; Dr. X Dan-, TLe event was successful from both a and social viewpomt. sky, treasurer; Ida Kupperman, secretary; Emmanual Sellz, sergeant-at- The officers are: Mrs. L. Kaplan, The Deborah Society is the women's arms. Included on the executive hoard president; Mrs. S. "Frohm, vice-presiauxiliary of the City Talmud Torah, are Mrs. I. Dansky, Morris Teplitsky, dent; Mrs. B. Shafton, treasurer; Mrs. and its membership of over 250 women and Boris Korney. J. Abramson, financial secretary; Mrs. have given excellent aid in the main- Cantor A. Schwaczkin, who has been Zernofsky, recording secretary. tenance and strengthening, of the in- cantor of the B'nai Israel synagogue stitution. for the past eight years, is director of This past year they have been espe- the Society, having served in this cacially active in arranging affairs for pacity since the beginning of the orthe children and otherwise furthering ganization. The Omaha chapter of Junior HaJewish education. The group was founded in 1930 by dassah has completed a successful Mrs. K. Tatle is president. Harry Bender, -who is now honorary year under the guidance of its presipresident. ' dent, Mrs. Sidney Katleman, and its In addition to their business ses- sponsor, Mrs. Fromkin. sions, the Hazomir also gave several The season, started with a "manless social affairs. A feature was a picnic party October 11 at the JewDespite the fact that the Mutual for members and friends; at Cowles cabaret" ish Community Center, a t which time Loan has been in existence only six Lake in July. Three interesting pro- about thirty new members Twere honyears, i t has made an impressive rec- grams were also given at the Center, ored guests. ord. •'..•' '•;•; •- .•: . : - , • . ; . . . : with members furnishing the enter- The-outstanding social event was M. Selicow is president; A. Forman, tainment :• the annual Thanksgiving dance which •vice-president; Max Crounse, treasurAn ambitious program Is being pre- was held November 24 at the Fontener; Sam Stein, secretary; Max From- pared for this fall. Right now, the elle Hotel. About 250 couples attend T kin,. legal advisor. The board of di- group is pointing to the •Chanukah ed and the dance was a success socialrectors includes Max Crounse, Hymie program. Rehearsals will start Octo- ly and financially. Zorinsky, Sam Lipp, Louis Gitlin, S ber 9 and will be held regularly MonThe December event "was a banquet Zusman and Harry Kesnick.: day evenings. given_ December 20 at the Jewish Community Center, at which time Miss Dorothy Finkelstein, vice-president of the National Junior Hadassah and president of the Central Tri-State reThe Jewish Loan Association in B'nai Abraham, a flourishing ben- gion, was guest of honor and principal South Omaha, the Independent Work- •_ organization in South Omaha, speaker. men's Loan, fills a practical need for evolent enjoyed an excellent year. In January a tea-dance was held at the small borrower. Loans are made to its membership at a very low rate The officers of the group are Paul- Spor's Club ; Araby. February Harry Dworsky, president; Ben Gere- was devoted to cultural meetings, with of interest. . Officers are: A. Schlaifer, president; Ben Martin, vice-president; M. Tatleman, secretary; Goodman .Meyerson, treasurer; Harry Dworsky, Lieb Wolfson, Ben Gerelick, Ben Kazlowsky, trustees.
Page Nine—Section C
western region of the Junior Hadassah convention on May 27 and 28, with headquarters at the Paxton. The convention started with a (heater party Saturday afternoon, followed by a buffet supper at the Paxton. Saturday evening a "Stunt Night" was held. Sunday morning business sessions -were held. After the interest-
1,
(Continued on Page 11)
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B'nai Jacob Auxiliary
Deborah Society
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Junior Hadassah
Mntoal Loan
Indenencleat Workmen's Loan
Ladies Free Loan The Ladies' Free Loan Society is rendering constructive and efficient service, maTrinj? loans of small sums m to thirty dollars to members only No interest is charged, and these timely loans have been of great value. Thev organization meets twice a month' at the Jewish Community Center. Mrs. S. TJarson i s president. Other •. officers are: Mrs. S. Epstein, first vice-president; Mrs. M. Rosenstein. second vice-president; Mrs. L. Adler, treasurer: Mrs. S. Janowsfey, loan secretary: Mrs. J- Weiner, finance secretary; MrSi J. Miller, recording secretarv. Trustees are Mrs. L. "RuDensteiri and Mrs, Lena Bleicher. The hospital mTiTrnttoe includes Mrs. S. Lipsey and Mrs. J . B?n.
The Mizrachi Zionist Organiza.* \ was to a great extent quiescent during the past year. In the last several i months several meetings have been ] held and an active program is being planned for the future. - -! The organization meets every second Wednesday at the Beth Hamedrosh Has:odol synagogue, 19th and Burt. Officers include: S. Ravitz. president; M. Venger. vice-president; E. Bloch, secretary. A. Cohen, treasurer. The executive committee consist of L. Blumenthal, 'M. Brody. Rabbi N. Feldman, J. Kirshenbaum, S. Katleman, N. Levinson, H. Marcus, C. D. Mendelson. S. Riekes, Rev. A. SchwaczMn, Rev. J. Shukert, A. G. Weih3tein, E. Weinberg.
OM Peoples Home The Daughters of Israel Aid Society carries the brunt of caring for the Old People's Home, located at 2504 Charles street. The 013 People's Home was founded by fhe late Mrs. S. Ravitz, whose untiring- efforts made it a most worthy institution. . Ten people are being cared for at
Nazi Terrorists Seeking Einstein's life
LONDON^-The London Daily Herald reports that the "Fehme," Nazi terrorist organization responsible fOT a score of political-murders, has set a price of 1,000 pounds on the head of Professor Albert ^Einstein. Th? Teward, says the paper, will be paid to the man who will "silence" the famous Jewish scientist who has won the deep hatred of the Nazis.
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Gd.^ Omaka. Nebraska
Page Ten—Section 0
Stream to Poland of Germany KATOWICE (J. T. A.)—Officials estimate that more than six thousand Jewish refugees from Germany have passed through this little city in Polish Upper Silesia. A few of them—perhaps one thousand—have remained here. The rest have scattered to various parts of Poland and Eastern Europe to rebuild their lives' Each has brought his story of hardship and oppression. And from them one may learn more about Jews in Germany than from those who remain in that country. They come from all parts of Germany. , Jews in Katowice and other parts of Poland are finding this country no promised land of milk and honey. Both the officials, who have little love SHOTWEIX, MONSKT. GnOmNSKY & VANCE, Attorneys 737 Omahn National Dank Bids. KOTICK OF INCORPORATION OF - SIOUX REALTY COMPANY Notice is-hereby given that the under-
' signed have : formed a corporation under the laws of the State of Nebraska. The name of the corporation is SIOUX KEALa'Y COMPANY nnd the principal place of transacting its business is the City of Omaha, Douglas County, Nebraska. The general nature of the business to be transacted is, to maintain and operate n real estate company nnd to purchase, lease, and otherwise acquire real estate and personal propel ty of every kind and description and to sell, convey, lease, mortgage or otherwise encumber any and all such property and to manage, operate, develop and In general deal in said property, either directly or through ownership of stock in any other corporation or association. The corporation shall have power to borrow or raise money, to issue bonds, mortgages, debentures, stock or other obligations for that purposu and in payment for property purchased or acquired by it, or for any other object in or about its business. The amount of capital stock authorized is $25,OCOO . O divided into 1K0 shares of the par value of. $100.00, all of which when issued shall be fully paid and non-assessable. The stock may be paid for in cash, property ' or other thing of value as determined by the Board of Directors. The time of commencement of the corporation is the time of filing the articles of Incorporation in the office of the County Clerk of Douglas County, Nebraska, and the date of termination is January 1st, 1933. unless the corporation is sooner dissolved as provided by law. The highest amount of indebtedness or liability to which the corporation is at any time to subject itself shall not exceed two-thirds of its capital stock, provided this restriction shall not apply to indebtedness represented by obligations secured by liens on property of the value exceeding the amount of the secured indebtedness at least -23%. nor to nny guarantee made by the corporation for the payment of any obligations transferred by it where the same are secured liy prop?rty as above indicated. The nffairs of the corporation shall be conducted by a Board of Directors consisting of not less than two nor more than five ns may be 'fixed by the by-laws. The Board of Directors shall elect n President. Vice-President, Secretary and Treasurer, any two of which offices, except those of President nnd Vice-President, may be held by the same person.
O-15-33-4t
H. MAUQUARnT E. G. MAGXEY Incorporators.
JOSEPH MNTZ3IAN. Attorney 034 Insurance Bids. NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION •Yd the County Court of Douglas County, jNebrnska. ; -In the Matter of. the Estate ol Max ; Hariz, Deceased. All persons interested in said estate are hereby notified that a petition has been tiled in said Court alleging that Bald deceased died leaving no last will and pray~~ Ing for administration upon his estate, and that a hearing will be had on said petition before said court on the 7th day of October. 1!)33. and that if. they fail to appear nt said Court on the said 7th day of October. 1933, nt 0 o'clock A. II., to contest said petition, the Court may grant the R4ine and grant administration of snid'estnfe to Manuel Hartz or some other'suitable person and proceed to n settlement thereof. BltYCE CRAWFORD. 0-15-33-3t County Judge.
New Year's Edition—-THE JEWISH PR ESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933 for Jews, and the millions of unemployed, who eye the immigrants with no small measure of hate, resent tho coming of these thousands of oppressed refugees. Whether the Jews be rich or poor makes little essential difference. It is true that those with some wealth are shown the deference usually bestowed by fawning humanity; but beneath this thin coat of superficial courtesy a heavy strata of jealousy lies. Wealthy Jews are pointed at on the streets. "They left Poland to escape helping us fight Russia after the World War," the Poles say. "They went to Germany- and made fortunes, while we fought and became poor." Hundreds of returning Eastern Jews are being concentrated in ghettos in communes near Katowice. They live here in a state of poverty, distress and dirt that is almost beyond description. TOTAVA * McGROARTY, Attorneys Union State Bank ISulldlnc Omaha, Neb. IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOUGLAS COUNTY, NEBRASKA. BERNARD JOHNSON, 1'laiutiff, )' Doc. 297 vs. ) No. 218 ELLA JOHNSON, ) NOTICE Defendant. ) To ELLA JOHNSON, whose place of residence is unknown and upon whom personal service of summons cannot be had, defendant: You are hereby notified that on the 11th day of September, 1033, Bernard Johnson ns plaintiff filed his petition ngniust you in the District Court of Douglas County, Nebraska. Doc. 297, No. 248, the object and prayer of which petition is'to"obtain"n"divorce from you on the grounds of extreme cruelty. You are required to answer said petition on or before tie Cth day "of November, 1933, or said petition against you will be taken as true. BERNARD JOHNSON. 9-22-33-3t. Plaintiff. RAYMOND 8. HII.I/, Attorney 438 Frances Bide. Sioux City, Iowa. NOTICE OF INCORPORATION. TO WHOM IT MAX CONCERN: Notice is hereby given that there has been incorporated . under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Nebraska, a corporation as follows: The name of the corporation shall be the NATIONAL AMUSEMENT COMPANY. The principal place of transacting its business shall be at Omaha. Douglas County. Nebraska. The general nature of the business to be transacted by it. shall be the operation of any and nil kinds of amusements, contests, entertainments, races, and whatever else may be classified as relating to the show business. This corporation has the right to borrow money, and acquire, purchase, convey, lease, sub-let, contract for and deal in leases for real property necessary for its business. The amount of capital stock authorized is Ten -Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00) divided into One Hundred (100) shares of One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) each. No stock shall be issued until the corporation has received payment in full therefor nt par in cash or property; provided, however, that when- stock is issued for anything else than money it must meet approval with the laws of the. state of Nebraska. This corporation commenced husiness immediately upon the issuance of the certificate of incorporation by the Secretary of State and after the nmonnt of capital stock in the sum of Three Hundred Dollars ($300.00) had been issued nnd paid for. which was on the 22nd day of August, 1933. nnd continue for the period of twenty years with the right of renewal, unless sooner dissolved by a two-thirds vote of nil capital stock subscribed nt n stockholders' meeting. The highest amount of indebtedness to which this corporation may at any time subject itself shall not exceed two-thirds of its capitnl stock, except ns authorized now or hereafter authorized or permitted by law. The affairs of this corporation are to be conducted by a board of directors consisting of not less than two nor more than five, who shall elect n President. VicePresident, Secretary nnd Treasurer, and the officers to be as follows: President. Casler
Stein. Tostoffire. Sioux City. Iowa: Vico-
President. John Weinstein, Postoffice. Omaha. Nebraska: Secretary. Casler Stein,
rostoffiee. Sioux City. Iowa: Treasurer
Samuel Swartz, Postoffice, Omaha, Ne\ l Dated at Omahn. Nebraska, this 22nd day of Angust. A. D. 1033. By CASLER STEIN, -". • President. CASLER STEIN. 9-l-33-4t. Secretary.
We Extend Our Very Best Wishes for a Most
In Pszcayna, Rybnik, Swietochlowice, little succor to German Jews, Polish Tarnowski, Gory and other adjoining Jews are living up to all traditions of territories, they are tendered hospi- their race in the measure of charity tality, the sole merit of which lies in they are extending their less fortuthe kindness with which it is offered nate brothers. Themselves accustomed to Polish Jewsto stark poverty, they are generously sharing their meager possessions with No Drainage System Many ghettos can be detected from Jews from Germany. a distance by no other sense than that of smell. Entire blocks are without Jerusalem.—The Palestinian government granted one thousand certi* sewage systems or drainage. Pigs and! efnment geese are the only scavengers of these j ? l c a t . e s . o f . t h e * h r e e thousand five beleaguered areas; and their ineffir hundred demanded by the Jewish ciency' is evident by the squalor of Agency, on account of the next the streets and the unwholesome odors schedule. that emanate from them. While the Polish government offers rFRADENBURG, 8TAI.MASTER £ BEBER
resolution, unanimously adopted by What Vision! the delegates, which was read into BERLIN— The Eighteenth World the minutes of the organization and sent to President Roosevelt and other Zionist Congress, "with its Jewish Atlantic City, (J.T.A.)—A scath- federal and state officials. brown, shirts, its stolen Hitler salute ing condemnation of the Jewish perand its so-called colonists in white secution in Germany was voiced by frocks," is nothing but the first united Consistency, thou art a jewel. 300 delegates attending the closing Jewish attack against Germany, the —Proverbs. session of the 38th annual convention Voelkischer Beobachter, newspaper of the Maryland State Bar Association here. There is no virtue so truly great owned by Adolf Hitler, declares in summing up the Congress. and godlike as justice.—Addison. The attack was embodied i n
Bar of Maryland Denounces Nazism
L/Shonah Tovah Tekosevu!
Attorneys
FRADENBURG, STALMASTER & BEBER ; NOTICE BY PUBLICATION ON PETITION OF FINAL ADMINISTRATION 650 Omaha National Bank 151 tig. i ACCOUNT— In the County Court of Douglas County, NOTICE OF A3IENDMENT TO ARTI- ! •<r H I Nebraska. In the Mutter of the Estate of Mollle o-ivpn thit on the 11th Kicker Maroney, Deceased. „* «o^ in the ' A I 1 persons interested in said matter are to^,!>ar in-M: n«in AM ofPIrvhi Stnlmaster at «T« Omnlia ! h e r e b 5 ' notified that on the Sth day of Nationa? B^nkBuild^^^ngf Omaha Nebraska [ September. 1033. Thelma Bullock Grlpp at a special meeting of the stockholders ! *»led. u petition in said County Court, ArHMi. I nfrh£ Articles of Incorporation< Paying thnt her final ndmimstratiou ac«-nsAmended to read as follows ' c o u n t tn^ herein be settled and allowed, follows:• The name of the corpora- , a n d t J j a t s h e he , , s c h a r g e ( 1 f r o m h e r .trust wasAUTICLE amended 1. to reau as IOIIOWS. lion shall be "DOUGLAS SALES COM- as administratrix and that a hearing will PANY." be had on said petition before said Court, SIOKRIS MILDER, President. on the 7th day of October, 1933, nnd that B. MILDER, Secretary if you fail to appear before said Court on the said 7th day of October. 1933. at 9 o'clock A. M., and contest said petition the KAZLOWSKY & CARNAZZO, Attorneys j Court mr.y grant, the prayer of said petition, enter a decree of beirship, and make i'ii Insurance Bids. such other and further orders, allowances PROBATE NOTICE and decrees, as to this Court may seem In the Matter of the Estate of Moses proper, to the end that all matters perJacobson, also known as M. K. Jaeobson, taining to said estate may be finally setDeceased. tled and determined. Notice is hereby given: That the credi- 1 BRYCE CRAWFORD, tors of said deceased will meet the admin- ! 0-15-33-3t County Judge. " istratrix of said estate,. before me. County 11 of of Douglas County, Nebraska, ' J" ™ U°u=las Countv. Nebraska, at IRVIN C. I.EY1N. Attorney the County Court Room, in said County, 301 Electric Building on i he lith day of November, 1933, and on the tith day of January, 1934, at 0 o'clock I A. M., each day, for the purpose of preNOTICE OF INCORPORATION OF senting their claims for examination, adOMAHA PARLOR FRAME COMPANY justment and allowance. Three months are j Notice is hereby given that the underallowed for the creditors to present their ' signed have associated themselves together claims, from the Ctli day of Octol>er, 1933. ' and have organized a corporation under BltYCE CRAWFORD. the laws of the state of Nebraska. The 9-15-33-3t County Judge. name of this corporation is OMAHA PARLOR FRAME COMPANY. The principal FRADKSBURG, STALMASTEU & BEBER, place of business shall be at Omaha. Nebraska, and the general nature of the busAttorneys iness to be transacted shall be to own and 600 Omaha National Bank Bids. operate one or more manufacturing plants and to manufacture, sell, and deal generi NOTICE OF ARTICLES OF ally in the wholesale and retail of ail INCORPORATION OF forms of lumber, furniture frames, etc., also SMITH CONCESSIONS. INC. in like manner to manufacture and Notice is hereby Riven that the under- deal generally in and with all kinds of signed hnve formed a corporation pursu- materials, tools, machinery, accessories, ant to the laws of the state of Nebraska, appliances and equipment in coiiuecunder the name of SMITH CONCESSIONS. tion with said business and to mniinINC.; with its principal place of business factnre. purchase or otherwise acquire and at Omaha. Nebraska. The general nature deal in and with goods, wnres and merof the business to lie the acquisition and chandise and personal property of every operation of concessions and restaurants class and description and to deal in land and to do any and nil things incidental to to the same extent as natural persons the carrying on o£ snid business, including might or could do, to borrow money, to the right to own and hold real estate. The issue bonds, debentures, nnd to hold and authorized capital stock shall be. $10,000.00 sell stock of this and other corporations and all of said stork shall be common and and to do anything insofar as the same of the par value of $100.00 per share and may be useful or necessary in connection o said a d stock sto s h l be be fullyy p all of shall paid for the conduct of the business and to do when issued and non-assessable. The cor- , n n v nn nn, ia gs to the porntion shall commence doing business Sfur a , A g or ^ might upon the filing of its articles with the the forep.'oinc specific powers shall not be County Clerk of Douglas County. Nebras- j h e l d t 0 " I i m r t ^ r r e s t r ict in any manner kii. and shall continue for a period of SO, t K e p o w e r s o f t n i s corporation. The anthory a d e ^ h e highest g , years from saidd date, amount j ^ ^" ^^. , , , , s t o c k l s jjlo,o0O.0O divided into nbd t which h h the th corporation ti j o o 0 0each,h off nun-blediiess to 1 0 0 s h a ' r' e s ot t n e p a r v a l t I e o { {jioo.00 may subject Use f shall not exceed two-J T h e c o r p o r a t i o n & a ,i commence business thirds of Us capital stock. The affairs of ot tfi th fl o t AlIjrust> 1933, a n d s n a U this corporation shall be managed terminate on the 25th day of August. 10S3. Board of not less than two Directors. The its life be extended beyond that annual meeting of the corporation shall be unless date by an amendment to these articles. held - The highest amount of nny indebtedness or each liability to which this corporation ls at any rectors shall hold its annual meeting and time to subject itself is not to exceed twoelect a President, a Vice-President. a Sec- thirds of its capital stock. The affairs of retary and a Treasurer. Any two of said this corporation shall be conducted by a offices may be held by one and the same board of directors of not less lhnn two nor person. These articles may be amended at more than five, and the following officers: any regular or special meeting of the stock- a president, a vice-president, a secretary holders upon the affirmative vote of two- and a treasurer, any two of .which offices thirds of all of the outstanding stock. may be held by one and the same person. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties; SAM KRAFT hereto hnve hereunto set their hands this | PAUL KATZMAN 23rd day of August. 1033. I ISRAEL KATZMAN. IIAURT SMITH Incorporators. DAVID SMITH i In the presenrp of: Incorporators. 'IRVIN C. LEVIN. In the presence of: 3 WILLIAM STALMASTER.
May the advent of the New Year 5694 bring new hope and new strength to the sons of Israel . . . may the unbounded faith and courage in the face of adversity bring a reward of Health, Happiness and Prosperity.
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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PRESS—Wednesday, September 20, 1933
Page Eleven—Section C
Z. A. Day.' A banquet was followed National Jewish Hospital in Den- Frohm, Hy Goodbinder, Sol Tuchby a program which featured Mr. ver, the Jewish Philanthropies, the man, Sam Garrop. Irwin Wezelman. Harry "Friedberg of Kansas City as Comunity Chest and other -worthprincipal speaker. They also joined . . hands in the observance of Interna- while causes. In conjunction with Sam Beber tional A. Z. A. Sabbath, and again united forces in sponsoring the tenth Chapter No. 100, a Boy Scout Troop international A. Z. A. convention, has been sponsored and developed The Community Center troop was organized in 1921. For the past three the climax of the year's activities. at the Center. matinee dances were very successful Dan Lintzman "was the chapter's of(Continued from Page 9) years it has been under the leaderIn line -with religious activities and reached a fitting cilmax on the ficial delegate to the highly success- j throughout the •winter and spring ship of Dr. D. C. Platt. ing business session, a luncheon was fourth annual 'Tsi Mu Day" in the ful convention. months the Mother Chapter spon- This only Jewish troop in Omaha givan at the Hotel Paxton, with del- , crowning of Miss Psi Mu 1933 A fine program was given on A. Z sored and plans to continue to sponegatss of the Senior Hadassah being J announcement of awards, A. Parents Day, with the parents of sor a weekly Jewish history and philosophy class under the direction guests of the Juniors. The conven- The social pages for the past year all members in attendance. tion ended with a dance at the Pax- are replete with many pleasant memof Rabbi David Goldstein. Under During the year a large number of j ton Hotel Sunday night,- attended- by ories: The Mother's Day tea, the cultural meetings were held, with j Rabbi Goldstein's guidance the anMay dance at the Fontenelle, the various speakers. Round-table dis-j nual A. Z. A. Sabbath was held at about 200 couples. The chapter for the first time monthly smokers and stags during cussions followed. the Conservative Synagogue with A. started the "Give or Get" banquet, the fall and -winter^seasons and more The "All Star Nite" of the Senior Z. A. boys from the local chapters and 23 members who raised their) recently the moonlight hikes and pic- Council was won by the chapter directing the service. In May, the quota of five dollars, through s o m eFh™ . « ^ h^^f honoring Fraterj •with the presentation of a c o m e d y annual A. Z. A. Parents' Day Celebration was held in the lodge room private affairs, such as benefit j *hp M- Sdrnltz, M. D., now m- farce, "Uncle Tom's Cabin." During the year William Wolfe, at the Jewish Comunity Center. bridges, and dancing parties, were teriung in Boston, Mass., and infor' honored guests at a banquet held at!™^ gatherings too numerous to men- Ralph Nogg, Maurice Katz and Sam- Aside from these cultural activuel Meyerson were presented with ities the chapter has not been lax tie Csnter June 21. The members more serious side: The life membership certificates on. be- in sponsoring •worthwhile social afwho raised their quotas were the AnA tie club's advisor, Irvin C. coming of age. fairs which contribute amply to soMisses Eoss Abramson, Rose Dol-j The chapter was represented in the cial life of the younger Jewish set goff, Ethel Epstein, Dora Freshman, Levin, notably his discourse on HitMarie Gilbert, Ida Fine, Mina Freed- ler and the Nazi situation, the round M. V. A. A. tournaments. Herman in Omaha. Each year the chapter enters a man, Anna Gorelick, Evelyn Glazer, table discussions on local and federal Blumenthal, winner of the chapter Fremette Goldberg, Anna Hahn, An- politics and the reviewing and dis- tennis tournament, represented the skit in the J. C. C. Senior Council na Kuznit, Fannie Katelman, Lor- cussion of national and international chapter in the meet this falL The AH Star Night. In line with other swimming team, captained by Irv- Senior Council Activities the Moraine King, Lillian Nachschoen, Sara Jewish problems, the monthly pro- ing won the J. C. C. swim- ther Chapters debate' team, conAnn Noddle, Jeannette.Resnick, Euth grams featuring talks by prominent mingMerriem, meet. sisting of Ben Shrier and Ernie business and professional men more Swengil, Sarah Solomonow, Freda A smoker was held each time a Preisman, was undefeated in the Soffer, Ruth Silver, Mildred Whit- than filled the intellectual require- new group of members was taken Senior Council Debating League and ments of a busy young men's organman and Mrs. Sidney Katleman. into the organization. was presented with the Judge Irvin ization. Mrs. Max Fromkin presented honA feature of the socia'i =t-son was Stalmaster debate trophy. or pins ,to Mrs. Katleman and the In its athletic report the Psi Mu the annual. dance frolic, an all-day Basketball, kittenball, handball, points with pride to the recent clos-Misses Dora Freshman, Marie Gilouting at Naeve's, and a weiner ping-pong, golf and tennis tournaing of the second kittenball season bert, Anna.Hahn, Frimette Goldberg, • r o a s t . ; " - • ' • - . , . .. '.:•;•' • • ments are held during the year. The Sara Ann Noddle, and Ruth Slobod- for Jewish teams in Omaha which Besides contributing to the Philanmost outstanding of these is the distended with the Psi Mu in secure insky. thropies, "the chapter donated to the trict M. V. A. A. tournament which Rabbi Miller conducted a class for Possession of the championship for Lapidus. Memorial Forest and the was held this year in Kansas City. members studying Customs and Cer- J secondd successive year The Th Psi P Xapidus Memorial Fund. The basketball team placed second in basketball team was <^mpionof emonics- during the season and in| The chapter also sponsored the the tournament. The debate team June, ten members were presented. J. C C. pre-season basketball Boy Scout troop No. 69. was victor in the tournament in Kancertificates toward their Goodfellow^ague and finished the regular seasas City by defeating St. Louis in L " \ son m second place. For its handball the finals. This completed an unS The °new:~officerS who were in- program, the Psi Mu presents a pardefeated "year for the team. Teams stalled at the banquet to serve for the Jade> of+ champions, havmg m its were also entered in the invitational coming year are Miss Ida Fine, pres-1 n u ^ t the best the J. C. C. boasts The Mother Chapter of A. Z. A. tennis tournament which was held in ident; Dora Freshman, first vice- of: J. C. C. champions in both sin- may look back upon the past year Kansas City. The basketball team D Dolgoff,. l f fsecond d i ] gj e s and and doubles doubles, and the city •dou dou- as one which has been highly suc- was coached by Johnny Rosenblatt, the president; R Rose, viceduo. cessful in. carrying out the pro- debate team by Phil Klutznick. The president; Minnie Frohm. recording gram of.; Aleph Zadik Aleph of the athletic manager is Oscar Marowitx. secretary; Sara Ann Noddle, correAs its latest activity the Mother B'nai B'riith. Both in a cultural and sponding secretary; Bess KirshenChapter is putting forth all its ensocial manner, the chapter has adbaum, financial treasurer; Jeannette hered to the creed of Patriotism, ergy possible for the support and Resnick, recording treasurer, and . The year 5693 has been the most Judaism, Fillial Love, Charity, Con- success of the Young People's SynaFannie Katelman, reporter. gogue which is now organized and Several members attended the Na- colorful and richest in the short life duct, Purity and Fraternity. is about to set out upon its initial of Sam Beber Chapter 100 of A. The chapter took the first steps tional Convention which "was held in year. Z. A. The chapter has progressed toward establishing the Lapidus Chicago the last week in August. despite the hard times, and its every Memorial Forest in Palestine, in Present officers of the chapter are During the summer, an outing was venture proved successful. memory of our late .Harry Lapidus, Israel Bercovici, president; Irving held for members at Peony park. On The chapter celebrated its fourth at whose home the idea of A. Z. A. Chudacoff, vice-president; E r n i e September/ 14 a dancing party was 'anniversary November 4 with a was born. A tablet is to be erected Nogg, secretary; Louis Minkin,treasgiven at Peony park for members large smoker.on The new members to on the site of the forest in his lovand their guests, as the last affair the group were honored at a suc- ing memory. A drive is now being urer; Sam Turkel and Jack Temin sergeants at arms; Ernie Priesman for the year 5693. cessful tea-dance at l i e Club Araby made' throughout the chapters in the reporter; Sam Finkel, chaplain. United States and Canada for the later that month. Life membership cards were awardIn December the chapter joined support of this fund. awarded during the past year to Art Throughout the year Chapter No. Grossman, Sam Finkel, M i l t o n with the Mother chapter in sponsoring a celebration of International A. 1 has made contributions to the .The Young Men's Vaad is a group , of young men affiliated with the "Vaad | Ha'Ihr. As such it is gradually assumSEASON'S GREETINGS ing responsibility for the cultural and religious aspects of the youth movement in Omaha Orthodox Jewry. " Meetings, which have been held on every other Tuesday, have been replete with cultural activities, and it has sponsored and conducted a Friday evening service of the Vaad, a debate, a summer formal dance and similaT cultural and social activities. It intends to enlarge its scope of activities for the coming year. Officers include Ephraim Marks, president; Dr^ I. Weiss, vice-president; | David Fishman, secretary, and Sidney \ Epstein, treasurer. Rabbi Uri Miller \ is advisor of the g roup. \
Panoramic View of Organization Work
Boy Scouts
is sponsored by both A. Z. A. chapters and also by a troop committee of which Sam Zacharia is chairman, and which includes Dr. Samuel Faier, Julius Bisno, Herman Faier, Saul Graetz, and Louis Lapp. The troop merged with Troop 72, of •which David Fishman was scoutmaster, making him and Dr. Platt co-scout masters. Assistant scout-master is Sidney Coyne, and junior assistant
scout-master is Leo Eisenstatt Troop secretary is Ruben Lippett, quartern master, Abraham Dansky, bugler, Ab-» raham Resnick, senior patrol leader, Herman Siporin. The troop is divided into four patrols: a Bob "White patrol with Leonard White, patrol leader: Rattlesnake patrol, Jacob Wiseman, patrol leader; (Continued on Page 12)
Heartiest Wishes for a Most Happy and Prosperous New Year
A.Z.JL1
DIAMOND CIGAR STORE
A. Z. A. 100
SAM HOUSE, Prop.
Young Men's Vaad
Face the Future Unafraid!
New Year's Greetings
Junior Vaad Auxiliary The Junior Vaad Auxiliary was formed the early part of this year as a youth counterpart of the Vaad Auxiliary. As such it has carried on a series of cultural and social activities in consonance with its purpose. It has Sponsored Forum discussion groups after Friday evening services; a class in Hebrew- and a cultural group. E?*h of its meetings, held every other Monday at tha clubrooms of the B'nai Israel, has a cultural aspect. The organization has also .sponsored a summer formal -dancej< a debate with the Young Men's Vaad, and has aided the senior auxiliary in its various activities. It is planning a very active winterseason. Membership is open to allgirls of the Jewish community. Officers include: Ida Bercovici, president; Dora Freshman, vice-president; Sarah Malashock, secretary; Bess Kirshenbaum, treasurer;. Bess B. u b e n stein, parliamentarian," .and Margaret Hurwitz, and Rose Dorgoff, sergeants-at-arms. . ;. The adviser of the group is Rabbi TJri Miller, and the sponsors are Mrs. L. Neveleff and Mrs. Nate Greenberg. .-
PsiMu Another eventful year has passed into history and with its passing there has been written into the . scrolls of the Psi Mu Fraternity many and varied pages" of fraternal life* social, communal, intellectual, and athletic. . The past year found the fraternity again sponsoring Sunday- matinee dances in the J. C.C. ballroom." With the co-operation of the Jewish Worn-" en's Welfare Federation who furnish-' : ed sponsors for each dance and hos- ; tesses for the George Washington tea - given • -each year in * connection with one of the series of dances, the
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815 No. 18th St.
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New Year's Edition—THE JEWISH PR ESS—Wednesday, September 20, 19S5
Page Twelve—Section G
riod, surpassing the anticipations of everyone. The orange industry especially ia increasing many fold every year"During the year 1933, 4,500,000 cases have been exported and shipped to many parts of the world, and even to Canada. "Eefrigeration plants and packing houses have been established on a large scale. "Many banks have been organized with large capital and are offering liberal credit at very low rates of interest. In my talks with a number of bankers, I was informed that during; the last four, years, and especially during the last year, many wealthy families have arrived in Palestine with capital ranging from $25,000 to $250,000. These people have seen an opportunity in Palestine and are taking advantage of those opportunities offered to them. "The. real estate industry has grown beyond all epectations. Millions of dollars have been invested in this industry. During my stay in Jerusalem, I witnessed the sale of an office building on Jaffa Street, the business center of the.city, for.the sum of 53,000 pounds, equal to about $250,000."
Botany Museum Organization Work (Continued from Page 11) • Beaver patrol, Myron Conn; Cobra .patrol, Abe Resnick. - The,troop has a full program of activities. It is at present planning a •Court of honor a t t h e J. C. C.
Girl Scouts With six former members as a nucleus, the Girl Scout troop of the J. C. C. was reorganized in February, 1933, through the efforts of Mrs. Max Holzman, an active participant in Omaha Girl Scouting. Miss Dorothy Weiner was given the leadership. of this group, with Miss Sylvia ; Weiner as lieutenant. In the past six months the troop has reached a membership of;32. The troop has engaged in many scout ac: tivities, and members have earned : many honors. : : At the city-wide court of awards held last'June, Mary Arbitman, leader of patrol No. 1, received the Silver Service Strip . . . a n honor awarded for five years of loyalty and . achievement in Girl Scouting. ' Only orie other girl out of the 1,000 scouts in Omaha received this award. Other girls in the troop received merit badges for projects in cooking, health, and" scholarship. The troop met throughout the summer. In July the scouts with the aid of the 'women of their troop committee successfully put on a drive to send every member of the troop to Camp-Ma-Ha. Mrs. Max Hozman donated the radio on which chances were sold and money made to accomplish this for the girls. Every girl who wished to go was given a week at the camp. Since their return from,camp the girls have been working on the requirements for the Hostess Badge. In line with this they are planning to; give a luncheon, every detail of which will be carried out by the girls themselves.
The story of the progress of The Service Life Insurance Company with the home office in Omaha is the story of success through efficiently serving the public's interests. The Union Pacific Life Assurance Company was the foundation company upon which the present Service Life was developed. Under the general managership of Mr. John Farber, the Union Pacific closed its first year with $2,293,763 in force, the second year $4,142,414, the third year almost $6,000,000. Since July, 1926, Mr. Farber has developed a $23,000,000 insurance company. Last year Mr. Farber and his associates acquired the Equity Life of Omaha, a $5,000,000 concern. The news of .the merger of these two companies had barely had time to reach the press and the public when the Service Life Insurance Company of Lincoln, Nebraska, was purchased. Its business was moved to Omaha and consolidated wiUi the two companies already operating successfully under Mr. Farber's management. Here is shown part of the Museum undertaken in connection with the boMen's thoughts are much according An enlarged featured department of tanical garden which was dedicated of Biblical Botany and Arab Plant- last the company is a modern- equipped year.-The garden was the gift of to their inclinations.—Bacon. Lore at the Hebrew University, Jer- Solomon Lamport of New York City. The .museum is part of the work usalem, Palestine. in 1923 and for the fourth in 1927. Harry Fischel Finds time "Prosperity is noticed everywhere," declares Mr. Fischel in his comment Palestine Is Booming Every on Palestine." "Business is booming. industry has made great progNEW YORK (J. T. A.)—Additional testimony to the remarkable improvements in the economic condition of Palestine has been given by Harry Fischel, real estate operator, Zionist and philanthropist, who, with Mrs. Fischel recently returned from their fifth trip- They first visited Palestine when it was under Turkish rule, in 1910; again in 1921, for the third A series of activities of a social and religious character are being planned for the coming year.
Sigma Kappa Chi The Habonim is an organization of boys from 13 to 18 affiliated with the Orthodox synagogue. It is sponsored by the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America whose headquarters are in New YorTr. The local chapter is being sponsored by Rabbi Uri Miller. Present officers include Norman Wezelman, president, and Joe Harris, secretary.
Service Life Insurance Co* Has a History of Great Progress
Sigma Kappa Chi is sponsored by Mrs. Irvin C. Levin. Its officers are: Hannah Gossick, president; Goldie Fish, vice-president; Evelyn Green, secretary; Sylvia Parilman, treasurer ; Dora Dolgoff, reporter. The girls have been very active this past year. Highlights on their program include a bridge, a Chanukah tea dance at the Women's club, and a picnic. They have also done :haritable work.
5694 May It Be a Year of Progress and Prosperity for Everyone
ress. New industries have sprung up. Large factories have been erected, as well as large office buildings in order to provide office space for the thousands of people who are interested in the various business enterprises for export and import. Even new bank buildings have been erected almost equal in style and beauty to those in the large cities in America. "The building industry has grown beyond all expectations, and wages have increased considerably. In spite of the large immigration, no unemployment exists in the large cities, such as Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, and especially in Haifa, which city has grown many fold during the last six years, on account of being the largest port of the Near East to be constructed there. The building trade is controlled by the Jews and very little Arab labor is employed in the building industry. "Agriculture has also made unusual progress. The citron industry, consisting of oranges, grape-fruit, lemons and esrogim, and last, but not least, the wine industry, have grown to a great extent in this short pe-
and Irvin Stalmaster. Mr. Farber expects to strengthen his company even further. "We intend to •go ahead," he stated, "and build an institution that Nebraska will point to with pride. We are going to buy additional companies, whose assets are sound and bring them to Omaha, consolidate them with the Service Life and in that way do our bit toward giving employment to Omaha and Nebraska people."
Sales Promotion, Advertising and Sales Training Department, und«r the supervision of A. D. Freyer. The thrift department has also been enlarged, and J. M. Foreman and O. F. Harlan, recognized authorities on thrift insurance, have been placed ia charge. The personnel of the Service Life incluldes: John Farber, president; H. New Congregation P. Farber, secretary; Walter Duda, LANSING, Mich.—The organization treasurer; Dr. E. £3. Simmons, medical director; W. F. Pate, director. The of a new Jewish congregation in LanAdvisory Council includes Lloyd Dort sing has been completed.
My very best wishes for a Happy and Prosoerous New Year to all my friends and clientele. ISADORE ABRAMSON 1 ACCEPT OUR SINCERE WISHES FOR A VERY
Abramson Audit Co.
HAPPY NEW YEAR
Certified Public Accountants I 852 Brandeis Theatre Bldg.
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2205 Farnam
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