In the Interests of the Jewish People
Dedicated to the . Ideals of Judaism IHMina
Entered as fr*econa Class Mai] M I'ostofflcc of Omaha, Nebraska,
-Illhnuary lhnuary 21, 1021, at y \A.ct \ A t off March M h 3, 3 1S79 1
NORMAN THOMAS FORUM L
Be Called Ilitler' an Insult, Court Rules
OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1934
Vol. IX—No. 49
OMAHANS TO 1 AT CONCLAVE OF
Federation Meeting Monday, January 29
JUSTIC
Due to the city-wide and nationWARSAW, (J.T.A.)—It is an inwide observance of the birthday sult to call a person "Hitler," the of President Franklin D. Rooselocal municipal court ruled here velt on Tuesday, January 30, the in a case tried before it. The ruldate of the annual meeting of the Jewish Federations to Be DisOutstanding Intellectual Will ing was reached when a woman Jewish Community Center and cussed at Assembly in ChiSpeak on "A New Deal neighbor charged Mrs. Nathalip Welfare Federation has. b e e n cago This Week-End Freund with having insulted her or a New Day" changed to Monday evening, Janin the course of a verbal quarrel . (Reprinted from Harper's Magazine.) nary 29, at 7:30 p. m., at the A large delegation of Omahans ia A capacity attendance is expected by calling her a "she-Hitler." J. C. C. auditorium. planning to attend the sessions of the The court recognized the claim for the lecture by Norman Thomas society which lives un- ] servants, instead of the masters, of one can read the record of Mr. BranThe Jewry of Omaha are urged first national assembly of Jewish on "A New Deal or a New Day" at as valid and ordered Mrs. Freund derA apolitical written constitution must have'*1the — public, ~«i>"~ •+the •»•«» recognition ---^r^sf^-n of ~P the +*,„ „,»_ ad- deis' career as an advocate without to hold this date open. federations and welfare funds. The the Jewish Community Center this to pay a fine of one hundred judges whose law is an exercise in ministrator's task as at least as im- laying emphasis upon qualities which conclave will be held in C h i c a g o , Monday evening, January 8, start- zlotys. H statesmanship. • For if they are to portant as that of the legislator—it are all his_ own. A passion for jusJanuary 6 and 7, under the ausing at 8 pan. This will be the second safeguard principle, they have also was to concrete issues involving tice in the first place; a sense that pices of the National Council of Jewnumber on the Community Forum ih adjust it to: changing needs. It is these questions that his life as an where wrong is being done it is the ish Federations and Welfare Funds. series. ; their task to scan the horizon of the advocate had been devoted. citizen's business to move to the atThe Omaha Federation is a memDr. F. W. Heagey will preside and future not less" than of the past". And he had interpreted the pur- tack upon wrong. A fine regard for ber of the Council. The local offiintroduce the speaker. The PrinceThey must be aware that statutes pose of that life ijn a way somewhat individual rights which" looks upon cial delegates will be Henry Monsky, ton Club, of which Dr. Heagey is are made, ideas given affirmation, different from that of the typical the common man not merely as the who is a member of the national expresident, will entertain for Thomas because environments change with bUCCCSaj-Ul subject of certain legal privileges ofsuccessful practitioner of the law. ecutive committee of the National £JJ..£M»UtUiiVAXt;i. . V4. l a i d Ilk. »*. [ —' , l ~ » ~ O X • O that day at a luncheon. the growth of experience. The Amer- There had run through his career j ficially conferred, but as a personJouncil, and Jacob S. Pearlstien, ex' * The lecture will be followed by an have the"thread of a "consfstent" ican Constitution would not have' ecutive director of the local J. C. C. • * • • implica— • ality whose frustration is an explicit open forum. survived if the Supreme Court had! t i o n that the lawyer's business is at denial of whatever creative purpose Meeting Date To Be Changed and Welfare Federation. : : : Thomas was the Socialist candidate content to seek its meaning in least as much the^ protection of the we may discover in life. There are, Among the other communal leaders From Thursday to for president of the United States in Address at Jewish Community been the climate of opinion which deter- public as : the safeguarding of vested too, a devotion and a fearless integwho will attend are included William Monday the last election^ He is recognized as Center Under Auspices of mined the operation of its original interests w h i c h / t h r e a t e n e d public rity of mind without which no man — Holzman, Harry A. Wolf, Sam having one of the most brilliant minds Local B'nai Brith substance. It is a framework into well-being. Adventures like his strug- can be a great judge. Brandeis the Leo Abramson was named presi- Beber, Dr. A. Greenberg, Harry Silof the day, and is one of the most which new ideas must be fitted, not gle against the Massachusetts insur- advocate was not a respecter of per- dent of the local lodge of the B'nai •erman, Dave Goldman, Philip Klutzforceful and eloquent speakers in Richard Gutstadt, national director a barrier against, their-access to ance system, or the betrayal, both of sons; he drove straight to the truth Brith at the election of officers held nick, Max Barish. America on economic and internation- of the Anti-Defamation League, has constitutional status. It does not deny l a s t Thursday at A feature of the conference will the public and i|s shareholders by he had grasped without care for the " al subjects. accepted the invitation'. of Omaha the right of legislative experiment; the New Haven railroad; experiences consequences of Iiis adventure. the Jewish Com- be an address on Sunday evening by ' At present Norman Thomas is ex- Lodge No. 354 Bnai Brith to adasks only that the grounds for at- Use his ' fight against the • Morgan munity Center. He James G. McDonald, high commisThe record of Mr. Brandeis as an ecutive director of the League for dress a meeting at the Jewish Com- it tempting it should be built upon the stranglehold over i public credit; the advocate is the record o f a great succeeds Rabbi Da- sioner of the League of Nations comIndustrial Democracy and is contrbi- munity Center, on January . 21, at reasonable experience of men. vid A. Goldstein. mission for Gei-man refugees. realization, in the Ballinger case, fighter in the cause of social justice. uting editor of The Nation, World 8:15 P.M. Mr. Gutstadt has been Abramson is secre- A reappraisal of private philanthroIt is because he has approached that a Cabinet officer could deliber- But what distinguishes him in that Tomorrow and New Leader. the pivot about which the currents tary of the Jewish pic standards in the light of increased - He is a graduate of Princeton Uni- of Jewish life have played most en- his judicial work in this temper that ately surrender public interest to pri- record from a sec re of lesser fisrures Free Loan, secretary governmental expenditures for relief versity (1905) and of the Union ergetically. His store of knowledge Mr. Justice Brandeis is likely to be vate greed and lie, with presidential is less the moral than the intellecof the board of work and changing social needs unprotection, to make the surrender regarded as one of the essential figtual qualities he brought to its serTheological Seminary. After grad- concerning Hitler and other anticounty commission- der the New Deal wil be the aim of uating from the Seminary, Thomas Jewish activities in the past, year or" ures in the history of the Supreme effective; the knowledge, from his vice. Above all, perhaps, is the masers, and chairman the assembly, according to Sol M. became asociate pastor of the Brick more is unlimited. ; His coming to Court. He came to the Bench at a experience of the Garment Workers sive volume of knowledge; no man of the Douglas Coun- Stroock, who will deliver the keynote Presbyterian Church * in New York Omaha after considerable insistence critical, period in its evolution. The of New York,-that the trade unions of his generation has so fully underty old age pension address at the opening dinner Satwere not only a necessary instrusociety with whose destiny it; was stood the inner workings of the ecoCity and later, as director of the by local leaders is for the purpose urday. commission. American Parish, did extensive work of acquainting Omaha Jewry with charged was in one of those obvious ment of democracy, but one which, nomic system- That gave to his genproperly utilized, was capable of With delegates from federated epochs, of Vital transition by which eralizationsa power which defied Other officers for among the immigrant population. of anti- Semitic efforts and the program charitable groups in thirty cities from the adequacy of its institutions are achieving vital social good; the rec- contradiction. It made them scientific the c o m i n g year the upper East Side. Leo Abramson of the Anti-Defamation League to are: Max Barish, coast to coast participating, the asHe resigned his position during the combat the -growth of these dan- mostseverely tested. The America of ognition, through the famous-Oregon in the technical sense of that term. case, that the power of the legislathe frontier period had finally passed Anyone who reads, for example, his vice-president; Sam Green, secretary; sembly will map out a program for war and served successively. as sec- gerous movements. away. It had been transformed into ture might be : exerted to impose de- evidence before the Pujo Committee Harry Friedman,treasurer; Dr. May- organized Jewish philanthropy in the United States and Canada on the ciliation, editor of the World Tomor/I lents as an orator. Eeports from a great. world-power dominated by sirable social standards upon the op- twenty years ago r will have the best nard Greenberg, warden; Carl Lag- basis of a nine-point program preeration of industry—these gave to the big interests of giant finance man, guardian, and Dr. Leon Fellinsight yet available into the characrow and associate editor of The other communities where he has appared for the meeting. Mr. Brandeis an awareness of the and giant industry. These confronted man, Pphraim Marks and Nathan S. ter of the financial crisis of the last Nation. He was also in 1923 editor peared indicate that the message he The conference will also go into the state as quasi-independent em- contours of his time rarely, open to three years. Anyone who wants to Yaffe, trustees. of the New York Leader. delivers has created an unequalled pires whose authority, challenged the the successful lawyer. They made understand the contemporary plight Members of the executive commit- detail concerning the e x p a n d i n g • William Grodlnsky is chairman of impression. the educational committee, which has Admission to the meeting will be right of popular will to determine him see the processes of social life of the railroads will find the most tee include I. Shafer, J. J. Friedman, phases of Jewish federations- and the the character of the life it would not as things to <ieny or affirm in effective materials for judgment in Harry Mendelson, Dave Freeman, Dr. work which should be embraced in charge of the lectures. by card only. Because of the nature lead. Laissez-faire America had de- t e r m s : of past experience, but as his their efforts. published in 1907, of O. S. Belzer, and Louis Alberts. of the meeting attendance will be stroyed the casual process out of things to recognize and to evaluate New analysis, Haven finance. The method is Delegates to the district lodge conlimited to those securing cards. With- which it had been born. A persis- in terms of the function they, were built upon the appreciation of signi- vention to be held next summer in in the week admission cards will be tence of the negative state would seeking- to fulfill., ,'-•'•.• ~ ficant detail, the power to weave this Grand Eapids, Mich., include Dr. A. sent to the B'nai Brith membership have meant the domination of Amerinto a pattern from which %he mean- Greenberg, Philip Kiutznick, Rabbi .But not less significant than the and to other Jewish organizations. ican life by interests which had no ing stands out with incisive clarity. D. A. Goldstein, Abner Kaimsn, Irvin experience of life was thecharacter A small •niiTpihp.r of admission c a r d s real concern in the maintenance of a Mr. Brandeis brought to its~ inters •It is-safcieaalist in the best.sense of Stalmaster,-and Isadora: Abrasisas, will be held in. reserve * by the comWhen informed '"of \he "History Iridemocratic society. The task was the The meeting day of the B'nai Brith fttitue to be conducted by Dr. A. IJ. mittee headed by Philip Klutznick. immense one of remaking the proc- pretation. I t counted, no doubt, for that term. Ill has been changed. From now on something that his forbears had come Those who fail to get cards and deSach'ar'afc the J, C. C. on the weekesses of politics so as to adapt them President Wilson's nomination of meetings will be held the first and to America after the tragedy of 1848 end of January 26, 27 and 28, Sam sire to attend should call Mr. Klutz- to new purposes capable of controllMr. Brandeis to the Bench in 1916 is third Monday of each month. The Beber, a personal friend of Sachar, nick at Atlantic 8122 or Sam Green ing effectively this challenge to the in search of the legendary freedom not unlikely to rank as among the next meeting of the lodge, at which London, (J.T.A.) —German Jewry's of the New World; that gave a perhailed it as the greatest cultural at Jackson 1252. American idea. ! half dozen major acts of his period time the new officers will be install- position will be stabilized shortly iti spective to his purpose which supevent of the year. ' • A dinner honoring the guest speakone way or another, Dr. Chaim Weizof office. It was significant enough ed, will be Monday, January 15. plied it with the drive and energy That is the meaning of that preKnowing Dr. Sachar as: ~the fore- er will. be. held at the Jewish Commann, former president of the World in the opposition it aroused; no man most Hillel Foundation director.in munity Center January 21, at 6:15 war generation in which men so va-j that a romantic inheritance of liber- can be better known than by the enZionist Organization, and head of the rious as Roosevelt and Bryan, Wilalism ' so naturally brings. But no the country and one of the most P.M. The price per plate is 75 cents. Zionist commission for settling Geremies he makes. It was even more popular professors on the University Reservations, can. be made with the son and La Follette sought to make man-Jewish refugees in Palestine, designificant by reason of the temper the government of America again secretary of .the lodge, Mr. Green. of Illinois campus, Beber stated that clared in an address delivered before and method it brought to the work capable of response to the new needs "In all my experience I have never the conference of the British Zionist of the Supreme Court. Before 1916 which had been born. They were sigheard a more interesting, more perFederation. "Even hell has limits," Mr. Justice Holmes had been a libnificai.'S rather by their pretest than suasive orator than Dr. Sachar. He Dr. Weizmann said, pointing out that eral influence there because his mind by their creativeness; and not the succeeds in doing what very few even in Russia, the position of the was too skeptical to insist that his The second number on the Jewish least barrier against their success scholars can do, namely, he : makes David Lazarus, Omaha singer who Jews has been stabilized. Lecture series will take place Wedwas the inability of the Supreme own judgment of what was desirable history live for his audience." has Tisen in music ranks sensation"Within five or six years, German nesday evening, January 24, at the Court to realize the coming of a new should be equated with cconstitutionally, •will be heard this evening, Among the lectures to be given Jewry will be reduced to half its presJewish Community Center. Dr. Leo time. Judges like Field, Peckham, aj truth. But Mr. Justice Holmes not will'be one on "If's that Changed and Brewer still looked upon the only enjoyed a lonely eminence in P. Honor, director of the College of ent number, and will perhaps be diJewish History." In his" fascinating Constitution as an instrument devised this regard; he was content to ac- Jewish Studies of Chicago, will be gestible among sixty millions of Ger* Goldie Myerson, internationallymanner Dr. Sachar will show how prevent the invasion of the claims cept the traditional affirmation by de- the speaker. The subject is "The mans," Dr. Weizmann declared. apparently trivial events have known leader of the women Chalut- to property by public poli"One-third of the total Chalut?, duction as the proper judicial meth- Meaning of Jewish History." changed the course of a people's zos in Palestine, will be in Omaha of private put forward -in the interest of od; and the careful student of his Dr. Honor is an • ideal choice to (pioneer) immigration into Palestine destiny, how the caprice of a despot Saturday and Sunday, January 13 cies social well-being. Their view of the opinions will find that his differences speak on this subject. From • 1916 to is from Germany," the veteran Zionist saved I Jews from annihilation and and 14. functions the state was wholly from his brethrern lay less in the 1929 he was instructor of Jewish leader pointed out. "Also more than how, on the other hand, the fanat- She will speak in Yiddish over ra- negative inof character. based substance of their philosophy than in History and Education, and Regis- one thousand tourists and capitalists icism of a bishop drenched most of dio, station KOIL Saturday, January upon the individualisticIt nwas a t u.r a 1the refusal on his part to make it a trar, of the Teachers Institute of enter Palestine from Germany each Europe with Jewish blood. \ 13, from 6:30 to 7 p. m. rights philosophy of the eighteenth final and unchallengeable way of the Jewish Theological Seminary of month. Assuming an annual emigre* Sunday, she will be honored at a century, in which the idea of freeThose who have : heard this lecAmerica. He was supervisor of the tion of twenty thousand German Jews, life. ture say they "never dreamed Jewish dinner at the Jewish Community dom of contract was'the sacred founteaching of Jewish history for the half will go to Palestine. The income It was the importance of Mr. JusCenter, starting at 6:30 p. m. The history had such color and romance. dation of popular well-being. It did Bureau of Jewish Education of New to be expected for Palestine from vartice Brandeis' -accession to the Court It is truly a history that is "strang- dinner will'be followed by a pro- not dawn.upon any of them that libthat -where Holmes was a liberal by York from 1915 to 1917, and Direc- ious sources will be about one hungram, featuring an address in Eng- erty of contract only begins where er than fiction.'" negation he was a liberal by positive tor of the Department of Person- dred and fifty thousand pounds anMiss Grace Dansky, president -. of lish by Mrs. Myerson. equality of bargaining power begins; nually and this will enable the abaffirmation. He brought to the court nel of the bureau during 1922-23. the Study Group of the Conserva- There will also be a musical prosorption of six thousand German refDuring 1928 and 1929 he lectured not only a willingness to doubt its gram, including Yiddish songs by that unless the state can use its autive Synagogue, announces that tickr traditional outlook but an alternative in the Department of Religious Ed- ugees each year. ets for the Sachar Institute are al- Mrs. Belmont, accompanied at the thority to maintain an equal barphilosophy which might reasonably ucation, Teachers College and Co- "Should our campaign for two milready on sale. They can be obtained piano by Margaret Hurwitz. Mr. and gaining-power the claim of the inlion pounds for the settlement of Gersupersede it. The very fact that it- lumbia University. from Miss Zelda Saferstein at the Mrs. J. Raznick will present a Chas- dividual to adequate self-expression man-Jewish refugees prove successTickets for the remaining four idic. sketch. is unlikely, in any serious sense of was an alternative led his critics at J. C. C. office or from members of Mrs. Myerson will be here under the word, to secure recognition. Preonce to the assumption that he was, lectures of the Jewish Lecture ser- ful, half going to Palestine and hal£ the Study Group. the" auspices of the local Pioneer war America was laying, through the in the special American sense, a rad- ies can be bought at the price of to the rest of the world, Palestine will Women. Omaha audiences have heard intellectual obscurantism of the Suical. That is a mistaken view. There $1.25. They can be procured at the receive a million, pounds in the next her before, she being enthusiasti- preme Court, the foundations of an has been nothing in his analysis of desk of the Jewish Community Cen- three years. And I can definitely cally received. A number of Oma: industrial feudalism in which the social foundations w h i c h suggests ter. Tickets for the individual lec- prove that Palestine is capable o£ David Lazarus hans also heard her address the na- concept of a genuine social freedom any ultimate dissatisfaction with tures can be bought at 50c per lec- absorbing thirty-five thousand immigrants in the aext three years. tional Hadassah convention in Chi- might easily have lost all signifi- January 5, on the NBC network over their p r i m a r y assumptions. But ture. cance. The democratic idea was beOther numbers on the series in"France cannot absorb twenty-five cago recently. whereas to most -members of the SuKOIL at 9 p.m. as soloist with Frank A Hurdy-Gurdy Ball, sponsored by Reservations for the dinner may ing unconsciously sacrificed upon the Simon's Armco band. preme Court the main purpose of the clude Professor Moses P. Jung of thousand refugees, but Palestine Je Temple Israel Sisterhood j will be altar of an outworn interpretation of the University of Iowa. His subject absorbing thousands without needing Young Lazarus's most recent ap- Constitution was to preserve the is given a t the Paxton Hotel,. Wednes- be made at the Community Center, by free contract. If American civiliza"Dynamic Religion," Dr. Julias or asking for relief," Dr. Weizmann rights of private property from inThursday, January 11. was in Dayton, Ohio, where day, January 24 at 9 p. m.. A r t Rantion was being made for the busi- pearance vasion by the popular will, to Mr. Siegel, "The Two Bibles," and a concluded. the critics praised him highly. Among dall and his orchestra will furnish ness man it was being so made at the comments about Lazarus •written Justice Brandeis the control of their symposium on Conservative Reform, the music. ' the expense of the American idea. by the music critics of Dayton news- pathological results by state action and Orthodox Judaism, by chosen The ball room decorations, and of each of these papers : . . : • ; • ' • • was an inherent and desirable asser- representatives the entertainment will be carried n phases of Judaism. tion that this function was both inout in the vogue of 1890. Few people have ever come to the A. S. Kany, Dayton Herald— "His herent and desirable, the insistence There will be: a door prize, and a service of the Supreme Court so well tone qualities are already superb. He that no constitutional interpretation The recently-elected officers of the Mrs. Meyer Friedel, 37, died at equipped as Mr. Brandeis for the ac- is imbued with the dramatic fire prize waltz will also be a feature was justified wjiich. spught to put Omaha Hebrew club will be installed her home, 4919 California street, necessary to characterize a singer of the evening. J: « complishment of its essential funcat a meeting of the organization Mrs. Joseph Bonoff is chairman last Thursday night, December 28, tion of statesmanship. It is true that as worthy of his song, he sings with barriers in the way of its attainment, which has constituted the real Sunday afternoon at 4 p. m. at the a landslide assurance and yet with a of the ball committee. Tickets which following a long illness. he was one of only three men who She is survived by her husband; have sat there who had never held dignified reserve, his .enunciation is innovation of Mr. Justice Brandeis sell for one dollar a couple may be Harvey Don Shapiro, three-year- J. C. C. The officers will be installed by secured from i the following; Mes- two daughters, Dorothy and Bernice; political office; but the major part of near to perfection, he has a com- in the years since he has sat upon old son of Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Shadames F . Adler, Clarence. Bergman, one son, Leonard; and two brothers, his life had been passed amid the manding presence and a magnetic the Court. piro, of Grand Island, formerly of Mas Fromkin. Cantor E, Sellz wili M. L. Cohn, Milton: Livingston, Harry and Jacob Burstein. He sought to affirm an implicit ex- Omaha, passed away there after a render several Jewish selections, atifl kind of controversy in. which the personality." Henry Pollack, Edward. Trailer, Funeral services were held at the main political m issues of the time Virginia D. Sturm, Dayton Daily tension of the boundaries of State- six-week illness. refreshments will be served. Harry Wolf, Sam Wessel, G. Wer- residence Friday afternoon, with- bu- were being shaped. The place of the News—"If one may borrow a popu- power wider than any judge of the Besides his parents, he is sur- The officers: Dr. A. A. Steinberg, theimer, S. B. Gilinsky, M. Rubin- rial in Golden Hill cemetery. public utility in the state, the claims lar expression and say David La- Court has sought to sanction since vived by his grandpaients, Mr. and president; Barney Feltman, vice-presstein, Jules Newman, .M. Krupp, H. Mrs. Friedel had been active in and purposes of labor organization, zarus 'has everything' to create for the days of Mr. Chief Justice Mar- Mrs. Max Shapiro and Mr. snd Mrs. ident; Sol Rosenberg, secretary; Joha : Z. Eosenfeld, Dave Rosenstock, Jos. the work of Hadassah. the significance for society of a himself a front rank place among shall. The method of this affirmation Reuben Ferer, all of Omaha. Fcldman, treasurer; Ben Kazlowsky, Bonoff, Morris. Jacobs, I. Ziegler, highly centralized money-power, the singers, it would be putting it mildly. has been of extraordinary interest Funeral services were held Mon- Louis Morgan and Jack D. GavecF. Engel, Jeanette Arnstein, Sam Warsaw.—The oldest Jewish woman degree to which social processes like He has not only a deep musical sense, and importance. In a sense, indeed, day in Omaha at the Jewish Funer- man, trustees. Executive board memBialac,; Ronald Gladstone, and Miss in Warsaw, Mrs. Bayle Tittelman, died insurance and transportation may be but the ability to retain and put to al home, with burial in Pleasant Hill bers includa Irvin C. Levin, Daniel Hazel Degen. ; i here at the. age of 108. •. so regulated as to make them the excellent use hi3 teaching." cemetery. Schwartz, and Hyman Shrier. (Coontiaued on Page 7.).
By Harold J. Laski
LEO ABRAMSON ELECTED HEAD
RICHARD GUTSTADT TOSPEAKHERE ON JANUARY 21
PRAISES INSTITUTE BY Dfc JL L^SACHAK
QPTMSTICALLY OF
GOLDIE MYERSON, CHALUTZOS LEADER, TO VISIT IN OMAHA
Lazarus Will Sing Over Radio Today
DR. SPEAKER ON JEWISH LECTURE PROGRAM
Novel Hufdy-Gurdy B a l l tgr Sisterhood
MRS. MEYER FRIEDEL, 37, PASSED AWAY THURSDAY
Omaha Hebrew Club Installation Sunday
DEATH CLAMS UXTII
'
PAGE 2—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1934
Zweig's Epitaph for Jakob Wassermattn By STEFAN ZWEIG - One of the greatest figures in modern letters died this week with the demise of Jakob WasKermann, distinguished creative artist and novelist. At the time of his death, Wassermann stood closer to the Jewish community than he ever had throughout his lifetime. "My Life As German and Jew," his autobiography, ap* peared in America only a few months ago as a symbol of his desire to reidentify himself with his people. Always anxious to be considered an integral part of Germany, his death found him an exile from the land to which he was so attached. It is fitting that this final tribute to him should come from a colleague and a co-religionist who is also one of the outstanding names in contemporary literature. This brief biographical sketch1 by the author of "Marie ' Antoinette" was written before the death of Wassermann and was intended as a survey of the latter's literary methods and achievements.
tutea not labor but a natural func- permanent achievement. An examtion. A peril, again, because imag- ple for the creative artists of aE ination of this sore easily approaches lands to study and admire. (Copyright, 1934, by Seven Arts the fantastic, so that art becomes Feature Syndicate) chaotic; for inherent in it lies a seductive power to resolve every occurence into dream-vision and nebulous ephemera. But in this case— and we see it more clearly from book Eev. Laurance Plank, of the First to book—the inner impulse to exag- Unitarian church, will speak to the gerate was counteracted by an un- women of the Conservative Synausual artistic sense, a rare alertness gogue auxiliary, at their next meetof the creative spirit combined with ing, Wednesday, January 10, at the boldness of imagination. A survey Jewish Community Center at 2:30 of Wassermann's works in the order p. m. His subje. i is to be "Plutocracy, of their appearance reveals to our Democracy and the Individual." A admiring eyes an evolution in which the rush of vision is more and more board meeting will be held at 1:30. subdued by the intellectual element, Last year Rev. Plank conducted a and the lavish extravagance of his book review for the auxiliary. almost Oriental fancy is made to Mrs. Goldie Myerson, outstanding submit more and more to the disciPioneer woman leader of Palestine, pline of. the creative force. The architect, the great builder of novels will be the guest speaker at the Oneg that he became, increasingly gained Shabbos, January 13, at the home of Reuben Kulakofsky. Mrs. A. J. the upper hand over the mere fabu- Mrs. Frank will be co-hostess. list, and exuberance and form became erer more happily balanced in his work. The story-teller of sixty had behind him a thinker conscious The Habonim held a meeting at of form; the disciplinary element the B'nai Israel last Sunday, Debrought solidity into the flow, and cember SI. Haskell Cohen, a sponever more lofty moral aspects ap- sor, selected a debate team, to be peared behind the originally purely known as the Debaters Three. No fictional action. In the last decade debates have been obtained yet, but of his life Jakob Wassermann was a schedule will be drawn soon. not merely a teller of tales in the This afternoon, January 5, the formal sense, but a great portrayer, Habonim will play basketball against debater, indicter and judge, an inter- the Talmud Torah, the first game preter and leader of our age. His scheduled in the midget league. Irv "Fall Mauritius," his "Ttzel Ander- Beitel is manager of the team. The gast" are like high peaks laden with game will start at 4 p. m. at the the perpetual snow of eternal pro- J. C. C. blems, and artistically also have the loftiness of such mountains. They have achieved a towering and overA gala time was had by members towering height, a new level dominated by powerful spiritual air cur- and guests of Fratority at the New rents, with a vista tnat embraces the Year's party held New Year's eve at the Congregation of Israel. most distant phases of life. Those on the party committee Such development from work to work is possible only when genius is were Max Marcus, chairman, Molly combined with patience. Jakob Was- Lipsman, Aaron Corenman, and GerCanar. Prizes "were won by sermann's stubbornly painstaking trude Rose Baumer, craftsmanship — which perhaps ap- Paul JSacks. - ^Alex Lipsman, and pears . petty to petty jnatures, and New members are- Esther Richbecause of this is all the more mag- man, Helen: Holzman, Frances Oland, nificent—should serve all artists as and Nathan Kraft. Mrs. A. Kazlowan example the like of which we can sky is sponsor. , ' \ hardly find in Germany today. For forty years this man, to whom story-' telling and faljulizing tame so natu?* rally, carried on a glorious battfe against his own facility, made writing more difficult for himself from book to book. Thousands and tens of thousands of pages were discarded, he wrote and rewrote the drafts of his novels ten and twenty times, and from year to year his style, that constant mirror of an author's inner perfection, rose to even more luminous planes. Although at the beginning Wassermann, in a certain sense, stood in direct contrast to Hugo von Hofmannsthal—the latte> exemplifying ideal form, the other a lavish flow—his last writings revealed him as the heir and most appropriate administrator of that fine prose, where warmth and color, fire and lucidity are most beautifully united. A wealth of figures, scenes, events and situations gives this great SHE'LL novelist the right to the title of the German Balzac, a tireless, passionate and over-passionate painter of our inexhaustible age. In his modesty he Jet his person be obscured'by his work, overshadowed by his own achievement. But we must not forget to point out his hidden heroism, the merciless straining of creative effort that, quietly built another world within ours. We have here an almost unparalleled example of a task set by destiny surpassed by sheer will-power, by inner discipline and magnificent conscientiousness, so that the moving current of life is transformed into
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—The Editor. The predominant position of Jakob Wassermann in German—and, indeed, European—epic literature^ appears to me to be based on the creative interaction of three factors: an incessantly active, inexorable creative imagination, a controlled, uncommonly lucid artistic determination and an almost unique, veritably superhuman conscientiousness and assiduity. The prime element of his extraordinary talent was his imagination. Wassermann was a born fabulist who moulded his characters without concentrated effort. And as it were burning focalization of his spiritual eye compelled him to see all events, people and realities as through a magnifying and agitating lens. He did not take hold of his themes— they took hold of him. All his experiences, all. that he heard, read or learned became, without conscious volition on his part, exciting events, adventures and visions. Unrealistic through and through, he did. not reproduce reality even when he thought he was creating living portraits or following real historic facts; he regenerated them, re-invented existing things in an intensified • form, /exaggerated every figure by driving it deeply into his subconsciousness and magnifying beyond its normal size to demonic proportions. His world— not untrue to reality, but rather hyperbolically true—was a world more vehement and dramatic, iriore--tense and spiritual and magnificent;'• For him creative work was an intoxication, a super-realization of reality approaching that of Balzac, to -whom he bore a close temperamental resemblance. An imagination of this sort, gushing forth hotly out of -his soul and his senses, is, precisely because of its constant flow, both a blessing and a peril for the artist. A blessing because the creative process, shaping and moulding, is continuous, so that reality is transformed into art continuously, and not merely in rare moments of inspiration; for to such an artist the telling of tales consti-
Forbes Bakery Offer Sliced Pumpernickel The Forbes Bakery, .2711 North 24th street, Webster 6400, announces that they are now slicing their pumpernickel bread. The bakery is owned and operated by Isadore and Jack Forbes. "The name 'Forbes'", they state, "has stood for quality bakery products for many years and we shall continue to offer the best."
Fratority
SPEAKERS' BUREAU LIFE INSURANCE— FOR ROUND TABIE WHAT IT IS AND
A "Speaker's Bureau" of prominent individuals has been formed by the Round Table of Jewish Youth. Included on the bureau are Harry A. Wolf, Henry Monsky, William By the Service Life Insurance Holzman, Irvin Stalmaster, Sam BeCompany, Omaha ber, Philip Klutznick, Harry Silverman, Leo Abramson, Jacob PearlIs Life Insurance Safe? stien, and Dr. A. Greenberg. There would, of course, be many Members of the bureau will ad- ways of going about to find an honest dress the constituent organizations of answer to the question—Is Life Inthe Round Table at various times on surance Safe? Some of the ways we subjects of interest and importance might suggest would be better than to Jewish youth. others. Some of them, of course, The Round Table is sponsoring a would be open to criticism. mammoth mass meeting at the J. C. But there is one way that stands C. Sunday afternoon, January 21, for above all others in fairness and that the entire Jewish youth of Omaha. is to let history answer the question Mr. Richard Gutstadt, national head for us. If history can say that Life of the B'nai Brith Anti-Defamation Insurance has stood up in the face league, will be the principal speaker of the greatest economic convulsions at the rally. the world has experienced and, if Questionaires have been distributed history demonstrates that life insurto all of the organizations which are ance is built with such safety factors members of the Round Table. The that in good times and ba'l times alike purpose of the questionnaires is to to it keeps on meeting its promises, ascertain data which will be useful paying its claims, and meeting its in mapping out a program for the obligations, then we can feel safe to Round Table members. put our faith and trust in life insurance. Now let's see what history has to say about life insurance. The Current Topics Course conIn 1857 paper inflation was esducted by Rabbi Frederick Cohnwill timated at two thousand million dolbe held at the Blackstone Hotel, on lars! Eighteen banks in New York city failed in one day! Mobs carried Tuesday morning, January 9. Dr. Cohn's subject is "1934." He banners marked, "Bread or Death", will discuss the new American pot- paraded the streets of the larger cities. On November 6th a mob of icies, Russia, Germany and Japan. Mrs. S. E. Gilinsky is in charge five thousand hungry men attacked the New York City Hall. The debt of tickets. to Europe reached the astounding total of $450,000,000.00. The world seemed to be sweeping into illimitable ruin. It was in this troublesome At the meeting of the Ladies In- year that the fundamental. principles dependent Club at the J. C. C. Wed- on which life insurance rests were nesday, January 10, at 8 p. m., the being tried and tested and life inprincipal speaker will be Mother surance certainly stood the test. In 1873 the New York Stock ExBloor, who will talk on "The Role of the Women in the Class Strug- change closed for a week! Seventygle." There is no admission charge, two railway corporations were in default! Masses of laborers were out and the public is invited. of employment! Eighteen stock exchange firms failed in one day! The President of the United States went Mrs. I. Beber, chairman of the J. to New York from Washington to N. F. donations, announces contribu- see what could be done. Did Life Insurance stand the test during this tions by the following: Mr. and M.'s. J. Fregger, in honor critical period? Yes, it did! Many of the birth of a grandchild; Mr. of the life insurance companies in and Mrs. J. Goodbinder, in honor of business today survived the terrible the Bar Mitzvah of their son; Mr. year of 1873 which certainly is a and Mrs. H. Steinberg, in honor of the birth of a grandchild. The Daughters of Zion have met at the homes of the following members for their literary meetings: Mesdames M. Braude, D. Soref, P. Krizelman, M. Arbitinan, and B. Eiseriberg. . • • z.
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Irving Chudacoff was chosen president of A. Z. A. 1 at the semi-annual election held Sunday. Other officers are: Massie Baum, vice-president; Ernie Nogg, secretary; Louis J. Riklin, tre«surer; Israel Bercovici, chaplain; Art Weiner, reporter; Jack Temin and Hy Green, sergeants-at-arms: Harry Weinberg, who represented the chapter at the District 6 convention in Milwaukee December 25, 26 and 27, was elected secretary of the district. The Lincoln A. Z. A. chapter will play the Mother chapter basketball team Sunday afternoon at the J. C. C. at 3 p. m. Plans for entertaining the visiting alephs are being arranged by Louis J. Riklin, chairman, Harry Weinberg, and Earnie Nogg. The "Winter Opener" dance for the members of the chapter and the visiting Aleph's will be held Sunday evening at the Seville Room of the K. C. The Creightonians will play. Seventy-five bids were issued.
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Mizrachi A M'laveh Malkeh given by the local Mizrachi organization will take place Saturday evening, January 13, at the B'nai Israel synagogue, 18th and Chicago streets. These traditional feasts ushering out the Sabbath are given each month by the local Mizrachi which is thus spreading the doctrines of religious Zionism. At these affairs refreshments are served and. traditional songs and melodies of the Sabbath and Palestine are rendered. Short talks concerning various aspects of Mizrachi are given. These functions are open to all members of the Jewish community and an invitation is extended to all to participate. Mr. S. Ravitz is the chairman of the local Mizrachi.
Irving Chudacoff Heads A. Z. A. No. 1
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tribute to the plan upon which ths everlasting life insurance companies were built In 1893 four hundred and seven public and private banks failed in one month's time! Scorching winds reduced the corn crop of Iowa, Kansas, and Nebraska from 584,000,000 bushels to 137,000,000 bushels. Interest rates rose to 360 percent. One hundred and sixty nine railroads were unable to meet mortgage interest. Federal troops hurried from city to protect property against the riots and desperate demonstrations of the mobs of hungry men thronging the streets. During these trying times, Life Insurance Companies carried on paying out a total of $175,973,210.00 in a year when money almost entirely "disappeared from circulation." In 1907 poverty faced the nation. We had been overspeeding, overconsuming and destroying m o r e wealth than was produced. Commercial failures increased 170 percent. The amount of government currency shrank until it was not sufficient to carry on the country's business. Improvised currencies came into use. Certificates made out by corporations were circulated as money. Bids of one hundred percent for call money brought no response. Yet during 1907 not a single Life Insurance Company found it necessary to disturb its regular business of paying cash when and as cash was due. $445,069,100.00 was paid out during the year. In our next week's article we will give our readers further proof of the safety of life insurance and why it is the safest investment in the world today.
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PAGE- 3VTHE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1934 Catholica; one representative for the tions now serving the refugees is because of the magnitude of the fiUniversal Christian Council and the clear. The responsible heads of the nancial and economic crisis through European Office for Inter-Church larger of such organizations have al- which the world is passing. Aid; and one representative for the ready expressed to the High Com- Many countries which in other and Academic Assistance Council, the missioner their cordial desire to co- mere promising circumstances would Emergency Committee for Displaced operate with him in efforts to secure have welcomed the refugees as imGerman Scholars, the International a more effective division of labor and migrants "have felt compelled relucStudent Service and Le Comite de of responsibility. " But beyond this tantly no doubt, to restrict or almost placement des Intellectuels Refugies. there is also the need for a larger to exclude newcomers. It will thereIt is anticipated that the bureau measure of coordination in the for- fore be the task of the High Comwill be convened before each meeting mulation of a comprehensive pro- missioner, in cooperation with the orof the permanent committee of the gram, not so much for relief as for ganizations experienced in this work, governing body and that it will work th.G retraining and placement of the to fit some of the refug-ees for abclosely with the governmental repre- refugees in communities in different sorption in the life of the countries sentatives. In these ways it is hoped parts of the world . . . " where they now are, and to search that. the private organizations will Such a program of reconstruction the world for places where others have a full opportunity to present body during1 its four day meeting their views at every stage of the will require very large funds. To can go to begin their life anew. were devoted to questions of organ- High Commission's activities. There secure these the governing body, it Thus far in our efforts at Lauization and of general policy. The can be no doubt that only through is hoped, will give its moral support sanne we have created a machine. relationship between the governing s-och close coordination of private in- to the financial appeals launched on It is for all of us, Jews and nonbehalf of the comprehensive pro- Jews alike, who believe in the fundabody and the High Commissioner was itiative governmental coopera- grams when these are formulated. mental principles of equality before outlined. Provision was also made tion canand ' the High Commissioner's The other major portion of the the law and of racial tolerance, so for -effective cooperation with the office be made to function effective- High Commissioner's task—negotia- painfully won through the ages, to governing body by interested private ly. organizations. To this end an advistion? with governments—will have to work together to make this instruory council was created. Nine Jew- The governing body at its Lau- do, presumably, with such technical mentality contribute in the fullest ish and an" equal number of non- sanne meeting did not undertake to questions as travel and identification possible measure to the settlement of Jewish organizations were invited to delimit except in very broad terms papers for the refugees and their the refugees in new homes where name representatives on it. The for- the work to be undertaken by the property rights, and in general with they will have opportunities to build mer were: the American Jewish Joint High Commissioner. It is conceived, the privileges so accorded or to be a new life for themselves and to Distribution Committee; the Jewish however, that the High Commission- accorded to the refugees in the coun- search materially and culturally their Colonization Association; the Jewish er's office should not undertake di- tries where they now are or to which new homelands. Agency for Palestine; the Group of rect work of relief, that instead the they might be expected to go. This By James G. McDonald (Copyright, 1934, by Seven Arts Organizations of the American, dealings with individual refugees Feature Syndicate) French, Polish and Dutch Jewish should be left to the private organ- latter subject is the more important (League of Nations High Commissioner.) Communities; and Le Comite des Del- izations already functioning or to In this official statement by the FrencK citizens, a c t i n g chiefly administrative expenses. These things egations Juives, comprising represen- others which might be set up. For League of Nations High Com- through Le Comte National de Se^ done, the new-institution was left to tatives from the Jewish communities the High Commissioner's office itself missioner for German Refugees cours aux Eefugies, have raised and organize. itself and to determine the of Central and Eastern Europe, to undertake case work would necessitate the building up of E large and of its- activities. the.case of 60,000 exiles, from expended for the care of these refu- scope Ireece and Italy. The organizations expensive staff, with representatives r the Nazi regime, is laid before gees nearly ten . million French The High Commissioner was nam- other than Jewish were: Caritas in numerous centers, and would inthe world as a problem which it francs. The larger _ _ proportion _ of ed on October 26. The first meeting Catholica; Joint representation of the considerable overlapping and Senda f iff to your must solve if civilization is not to this total. was raised from French of the governing body was held Universal Christian Council for Life volve Relative or friend in duplicating with existing organizawithin six weeks of that appointreceive a terrible blow. This •ollections. The balance was contriband Work and the European office tions—precisely the condition which tiie Soviet Union (Ru«ia). ited by American and British relief ment. The site of the' office of the for International Church Aid; The the statement is published as a docuHigh Commissioner is expected 4fe vill nov 4et much •gencies. . Now the French govern- High Commission was fixed at Lau- Society of Friends; the International to lessen. ment of major importance for an more for his money in ment feels that it has to reconsider sanne. Representatives of 12 of the Federation of Trade Unions; an inunderstanding of the plight of ttieTORGSIN STORES. STORES its policy, and the officers of the countries invited were present as ternational employers' organization; In general the High CommissionGerman Jews.—The Editor. "For InformaHon vrfte Comite National have renewed their follows: Professor Bourquin, Belg- Joint representation of the Emer- er's office vould seem to have two EVERY CITY or visit your local bant. urgent appeal for enlarged financial ium; Viscount Lobkowicz, Czechoslobroad functions: first, the work of gency Committee in Aid of Displaced or authorized ajent The problem created by the refuvakia; Dr. Borberg, Denmark; Sen- German Soldiers, the Academic Coun- coordination; second, the conduct of gees coming from Germany is in its contributions. PRICES BRASDCALUr REDUCED ' ' implications -world-wide. It involves The data available for the Jewish ator Berenger, France; Viscount cil and the International Student negotiations with governments. In principles vital to civilized " peoples refugees in France and elsewhere are Cecil, Great Britain; Senator Majoni, I Service; Save the Children Intema- his opening address to the governing everywhere. It can be solved only much more „accurate than those for Italy; Dr. .Doude van Tronstwijk, tional Union and Le Comite National body the High Commissioner interby the cooperation of many govern- the non-Jewish refugees. The ef- Netherlands; Dr. Chodzko, Poland; (Francais) de. Secours aux Refugies. preted the first of these functions as ments and private organizations in forts by private Jewish organizations Dr. Westman, Sweden; Dr. Roth- Ifc is expected that the Advisory follows: different parts of the world. The and communities have been unremit- mund, Switzerland; Professor Cham- Council will be convened regularly in "The need for coordinating the var* _ present proportions of the work, ting. Large sums have already been berlain, United States; Ambassador advance of meetings of the govern- ed activities of the many organizaGENERAL REPRESEKfTATIVE tn U.S.A. <#> AWTORQ,2fcl FIFTH ing body, in order that its suggesthough large, are an inadequate expended to meet the immediate Guani, Uruguay. measure of the possible needs. It is needs of the refugees and much Lord Cecil, the British representa- tions may be available for considerthis present and potential task which, larger amounts will probably be tive, was elected chairman. His ac- ation by the governmental represenas Lord Cecil puts it, constitutes "a raised by these organizations for the ceptance of-this post greatly encour- tatives. A smaller advisory body, great challenge—a challenge to the retraining and settlement of their aged all of those associated with the called the "bureau" was also set up, principles of our civilization which coreligionists. It would be unfair, work.- Ambassador Guani, represen- composed of representatives of those have governed the world increasing- however, not to underline that the tative of Uruguay, was named vice- organizations which in the judgment ly for nearly 2,000 years. We must Jewish efforts have by no means chairman. These two officials and I . , , . . . • , , ,„ either respond to that challenge, or, been limited to Jewish refugees, Pro- the representatives of Holland, Swit- a s s i s t h i m . in the work of relief and testants, Catholics and refugees of as it seems to me, the civilization and France, together with reconstruction." On this bureau the we enjoy will receive a terrible blow. no religious faith at all have been zerland and are in many instances being re- the High Commissioner,-make up the following were invited to name repAccording to the latest estimates lieved by Jewish charity. Permanent Committee o f the High resentatives: the Jewish Colonization to reach the High Commissioner (the Unfortunately only a few non-Jew- Commission. This committee acts in Association; the American Jewish figures are still tentative), the total organizations and individuals effect as an executive for the larger Joint Distribution Committee; the number of refugees from Germany is ish manifested active interest in body. The sessions of- the governing Jewish Agency for Palestine; Caritas about 60,000. Classified on a relig- have the nonrjewish refugees. The result ious basis about^ 51,000 refugees,v«r is that the.work among-this group* One Big Savings Group in 86 per cent are Jews/ The other ^14 been less well organized and less per cent are non-Jews—Catholics, has Our January White Sale! adequately financed. However, exmembers of various • Protestant de- cellent work is being done by nonnominations, or not classified as sectarian organizations—for example, members of any religious group. Con- those devoted to finding positions for trary to the popular opinion not, all intellectuals and professional men the refugees from Germany are Ger- women; and the trade unions and the mans; a considerable proportion are labor' organizations have made unrenon-Germans. It is estimated that mitting effort3 to support those who more than 16,000 are of Polish or particularly look to them for help. other than German nationality, or are But it is quite clear that much more stateless—that is without any clearly than has been dene must be done by Madeira Chinese Mosaic defined or recognized nationality. non-Jews if the Christian and nonCook, bake, Italian Cut Work Petit Point The distribution of refugees is now sectarian refugees" are to be f get meals estimated as follows: quately cared for and if the whole EXQUISITE handmade linens . . . the pride of every this easy, France -. .25,000 problem is to be solved. woman who appreciates nice things . . . We've pillow Palestine 6,500 - At the Assembly of the League of better way Poland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6,000 Nations last Septembei there was a cases Madeira napkins, scarfs, bridge sets, luncheon sets Czechoslovakia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-,0Q0singular unanimity of feeling among and banqaet clothes . . . unusually priced. Holland 5,000 .the representatives of countries borBRAKDE1S—Basement POTATO PEELER—If* England . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . s . . 3,000 dering on Germany that the refugee alant * B « M . Pull aay sin aotu» uviaily Belgium 2,500 problem could no longer be handled (Sickly- M» vattr. Switzerland . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . i". 2,500 adequately merely by the private orScandinavia ..'..:... 1,500 ganizations. It was this conviction Mercerized Table Napkins Austria 800 which led the representative of the Size 20x20, Satin finish, mercer- ,m j-w Saar and Luxembourg ..-.;;... 500 Dutch government to present and ized table damask . . . floral and I I §/"» press his proposal for the creation Italy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ; . . . . . - . - . 500 conventional, each JL %J %+ of the office of a High Commissioner Other countries including Spain ' and U. S. A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,000 to help coordinate the efforts of the Mercerized Table Damask Other refugee situations since the private organizations and of the gov1,000 yds. of fall bleached dam- «—| e% COFFEE - &RINDER— ask with colored border. 58 in. «C ^ ^ » Size 70x88 World War have involved large num- ernments. It was at first planned Size 70x70 HaMa M l * M l 4 af-eaf• wide Yd «J*J V tn. Satf.fMar. Crtatf* - feere of persons, but none has pre- that this office should be an organ cam*. m r f i M cr l a c ^fcented more inherent difficulties or of the League of Nations, responsible to the Council of the League; and fi-_ Linen Crash Toweling has been thrust upon the world at a nanced by the League. But the of1,000 yds. all linen crash towel- *« g-b. tiir.e or more acute and general econing. Fine grade . . . colored bor- f J <F* omic crisis. Moreover, it is likely fice as finally set up was made auders. (Limit of 10 yards). Yd JL &ak\* Napkins, Doz., 4.49 tonomous. The Council of the Leathat the number of refugees from gue named the High Commissioner, THHE loveliest of table damask . . . Pure Germany will continue to increase. invited 15 countries to name repreBeautiful Filet Cloths * Irish linen with a beautiful satin finish. Some of the most intelligent and Just 100, 51x72 all lace filet <« *m ^ v S sentatives'to constitute the governing Your choice of two gorgeous patterns . . . cloths . . . In the most attrac- | | (U sober students of the present situa- body, and advanced the sum of 25,000 SHREDDER. 8LICER— floral and conventional. tive designs . . . Each JL » H t / Exclvviv? - safety ~ftitur*. tion are of the opinion that unless Swiss francs as a loan for the initial L a m caaaeity Jioasar. BRAXDEIS—Basement BRANDEIS—^Basement^ Fast, easy U as*. Cut* the plight of the Jews in Germany is - . . •Bat. radically ameliorated it may become necessary for tens of thousands of the • younger generation to be settled Mr. Marcus personally suOur January White Sales! Your Chance to Save! elsewhere. This would be a task pervises-the dry cleaning The great kitchen labor saver—doe« all the tiring which would test to the uttermost arm work of getting the meals. Compare Mixmaater and pressing of all garthe resources of the private organwith any food mixer selling np to $100.00. Then ments sent to his plant. izations and persons interested as _ _ _ _ _ you will aee why it is the national preference. And well as the absorptive capacities of MIXER —Hlah c o > t » ««iljr $21.00 complete with juice extractor and OlttNK MI the receiving countries. Happily ••-.5*"!" .£*! atrainer,- 2- lovely jade "green mixing bowl*,- automatic' - ttnoil flint *~ """ il dropper. there is still the "possibility that this mass migration may not have to be carried out." Meantime the actual Reg. 2.98 and 3.49 Values task has borne .heavily upon certain H. MARCUS, Prop. countries. In. general the countries neighbor1941 Vinton JA. 1440 ing on 'Germany adopted; at the beginning of the flight of the refugees, a policy of the open door and generF O O D CHOPPER— »>O L I S H T R AND CAN OPENER—H«M« KIIIFE RHARPEJCH H E A T GRINOEK— BUFFER—CUaa. iB-. u d tBnwaM m w l . r£!*a» •SKS*- j £ ^ ous hospitality. Czechoslovakia and ANLY 400 . . . large size 86x108 D m art anna ar taar wr. valutas-aafanra Itanstiaaatk adaa. Ea- M n t» * • ' " » • ' « * ; ' • k m . Cob eaana ar w d bta aiaeaa. Canaa. Hrafcr aatanstia. • * » , ate. A d _ ^ W » . THE HEA Poland received several thousands of Y spreads in lovely jacqnard derefugees. In the later country many signs .;•'. colors for every bedof these were Polish nationals. DenThat Same. room . . . blue, green, orchid, rose Small Down Payment mark, Belgium and Holland also reand gold . . . all neatly scalloped. Shoe Comfort ceived refugees in large numbers in Balance Easy Terms Remarkable values! if you have your shoes proportion to' their size. But it was repaired at the France which became the temporary Lovely Cotton Crinkle Spreads home of by far the largest numbers. STANDARD TTRACTIVE s a d practical spreads . . . easily washed, and ironing i s The French government, priding not necessary . . . Several pretty colors . . ; Neat scallops. Size 81x105. iShoe Repair Go. itself on its tradition of hospitality J. U KHAUB, Prop. ' to the oppressed, put no obstacles in BRAXDE1S—Basement 1810 the way of the stream of reguees Fanuun that crossed the Belgian frontier or St. passed through the Saar into France.
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PAGE 4—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1934
THE JEWISH PRESS .
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Editorial Office: 490 Brandeis Theater Building. Print Shop Address: 1307 Howard Street Sioux City Office—Jewish Community Center DAVID BLACKER - - - • Business and Managing Editor FRANK R. ACKERMAN - - - - - - - - - - - Editor FANNIE KATELMAN - - Council Bluffs, Iowa, Correspondent ANN PILL • . ' . - - • - . Sioux City, Iowa, Correspondent
more people can get closer to farming', more people will achieve contentment in the era to come.
Asininity in Propaganda There is evidently nothing too degrading or debasing for the Nazi propagandists. Their latest move in the United States is repulsive to right-thinking people and makes more welcome than ever the Congressional investigation of Nazi attempts to undermine the peace and good-will of this land. This new Nazi maneuver to incite race hatred shows a mind of the Hitler level— demoniac slyness, yet downright dumb. They have profusely distributed stickers over New Jersey and New York urging the boycott of Gentiles. Artistically designed, the stickers bear large black print reading: "Buy Jewish—Boycott Gentiles." So as to clinch the identity of the stickers, their makers have inscribed the star of David in the center of which is the law of Moses, ani other trappings symbolic of Jewish traditions appear on the stamp. Such a trick is obviously childish. Its purpose is open, the identity of the true perpetrators easy to guess. It is another bit of evidence added to the already imposing amount ready for submission to the Congressional committee. Congressman Dickstein's preliminary investigation has uncovered enough evidence to conclusively show that the Nazis are undermining American institutions and by their subversive operations are attempting to stir up racial hatred and engender unrest and civil strife. Dickstein made a wise move when he announced that he would refuse to head the official Congressional investigating committee. We want this investigation to be without even a breath of partiality. We want the facts brought to light. We are interested in having the country know what has been actually going on behind the scenes. No Jew should serve on that committee. It should be strictly unbiased, searching relentlessly into the facts, so that once and for all we can be rid of the despised Hitlerism in the United States.
BY THE WAY By DAVID SCHWARTZ
THANK YOU, SCHMONAH
Dear D. S.: I understand you have been complaining of late, that other columnists, such as Winchell • for instance, have their girl secretaries write them a letter once in a while, which really are nothing but columns and so save them occasionally the severe cerebral labor of regularly getting up a column. Well, here's little Schmonah doing the same thing for you. You might begin the column by telling of that Maccabean festival at Roumania, with its Jewish population of nearly a million, Madison Square Garden. That wasn't such a bad one that Harry Hershtook the spotlight in the world's news this past week with the field sprang at that scene when he assassination of Ion Duca, leader of the Liberal Party and premier said that the Jews have a mission— "are ine zu mischen sich"—everyof the Roumanian government. The Jewish factor in the turbulent where. Roumanian scene became unquestionably vital when the murAnd then Hershfield told the story derer, Nicholas Constaninescu, declared that he had killed Duca about the Nazi meeting in the Berbecause the latter had "sold Roumania to the Jews." lin church. You remember—the chairman called upon all those who were " The assassin Constaninescu is a tool of the Iron Guard, Jews to withdraw. So all the Jews Roumania's fascist, anti-Semitic organization. It is known that retired and then the chairman called the Iron Guards have a list of high officials and prominent Roufor all those who had any Jewish blood to retire, and there began anmanians who do not subscribe to their political philosophy "markother movement in the audience, and ed for death." The Iron Guardists have a "martyr corps*' just as it began, Jesus in the picture of young men, who, like Constaninescu, are willing to sacrifice on the wall came to life and said to those rising: "Kumt, lomir gehen" their lives in order to kill the enemies of their fascism. Zelea (Come, let us go.) Codreanu, the Iron Guard leader, had threatened Duca with death And spealang about mission, as in an article in his newspaper, saying that he personally would we were a few paragraphs ago, did commit the deed. Of course, he was not present when the shootConsiderable attention has been directed toward Brazil's ab- you know that some years ago Bering was actually done, it being so much more convenient to have sorptive capacity since it has become known that the League of nard G. Richards wrote an article urging that the Jews resume missomeone else convinced that "you should have the honor of being Nations Commission for Refugees is thinking seriously of settling sionary work for their religion. He a martyr." contends that at one time, Jews did a number of such refugees on South American soil. this very thing:, and he thinks we To understand the events leading up to the murder, it is Several colonization efforts in Brazil with the aid of the do it again. necessary to review recent events in Roumania. Vaida Voevod, ICA (Jewish Colonization Organization) have been attempted with should And, by the way, did you notice while head of the Roumanian government, not only failed to check little or no success. Despite this, reports from Brazil indicate that "Einstein at that Maccabean festival ? the growing menace of the Iron Guardists but actually encour- the government would be willing to offer concessions for those I was sitting onlv several rows behim and had a good opportuaged them. Gaining courage from the victories being scored by the willing to settle on the soil and that with this help and with a hind nity tr> observe the world's greatest Nazis in Germany, the Roumanian fascists, with the moral as capital of about five hundred dollars per family profitable Jewish mind. H« seemed so entirely at home well as financial backing of the Hitlerites, grew bolder and bolder. colonies could be established. In the industries, the wages paid are at the festival—that's what I liked They instituted a minor terrorism, threatening bodily harm to so little that German emigrants would have to lower their stand- about him there. He took out a bis: brown pipe their political opponents and vowing dire punishment to the lib- ard of living considerably to make both ends meet. The factory from his pocket and lit it up and erals and the Jews. In an attempt to stem the rising tide of ter- hand is paid five to eight milreis a day. (A milreis is eight to ten smoked away with such a benien roristic fascism, King Carol courageously dismissed the Voevod American cents.) However, immigrants could build up new indus- countenance. It was a oleasnre to I felt like getting him his carcabinet and asked a former political enemy of his, Dr. Ion G. tries or introduce a number of callings which have not been de- see. rot sliocers. And all the time ten Duca, the leader of the Liberal party, to form a cabinet. While veloped there. thousand eyes from every corner of f he Garden were neeriner at him. and on the surface, this act seemed a courageous step by the king for There are over 50,000 Jewish people in Brazil now. The Jewseemed not to know anvtnmsc right and justice, it is entirely possible and plausible that he did ish citizens of Brazil say they will welcome an influx of Jewish he about it. A*o vie em meint man ear it in self-defense. The antics and the talk and the bravado of the immigrants, as it would infuse new color and vigor into the life nisrht — if you understand my EsIron Guards grew wilder and wilder, until the very life and safety of the Jewish community, elements which have been lacking since kimo. And as the music was being carof the high officials of Roumania were endangered. To combat the immigration barriers were set up. ~ o oled or whatever it is that is done Nazism in Roumania, King Carol necessarily was forced to turn with music, I ketit on "operaing" sometb;T|or 1'Ve the following: to the Liberal government. In Duca's words, "The Liberal party Oh, the bis: brown pipe believes that only collaboration and harmony between the various That E'Ti=t«in smokes peoples living in the country can assure its progress and prosThe Soviet government does not seem to be making much Ts it bis? O. reiaMvely perity. The Jews are a loyal, law-abiding section of the popula- headway in its effort to have the area of Bureya in the Far East I<? it brown? tion, therefore we are for co-operation with them." Duca's as- set aside for the creation of an autonomous Jewish area within O, absolutely. sumption to power was followed by a general election in which the Soviet framework. The settlement of the area by the Jewish And a young woman sitting by mv the Liberal party gained an overwhelming victory. Since the Iron citizens has been so slow that the date set for. the ultimate con- side remarked, observing Einstein's face: "Oh, he looks so sweet—Fd Guard obviously threatened the peace and justice of the nation, summation of the idea has been changed to 1935. Vke to W«T> un his facp. and take it the Liberal government took steps to suppress it. After teaching Bureya is not to become an autonomous Jewish region until home." "What." said L "are you like the Iron Guardists that their methods of violence and terrorism such time as the Jewish people form over one-half of the total the wonr>aM who wanted the head of the Baptist?" were disliked, by arresting those who had been most active in population. To date, this percentage seems to be widening in the the wav, did you know illegal action, the Duca government showed its leniency by re- wrong direction, the Jewish residents constituting only fourteen And. bv i"c*em taiifTit himself to T>1ay leasing all incarcerated Iron Guardists from prison. The reply of per cent, despite a campaign among Jews in Russian cities to in- the vio'Hn and some noted •profesthe Iron Guardists was the assassination of Duca. duce them to settle on the land in Bureya. However, they may sional who nlnvs with him saM that he hold* the bow wron?, and does Duca's name will go down in history as a martyr who sac- eventually succeed in their campaign, since the Russian govern- ot^er tViirifs wrong, but he plays rificed his life for justice and fair treatment to all peoples in his ment is making a determined effort to settle large numbers of weM. nevertheless. And spenidns: abont music, T>aviel country, as a noble man who died in the service of the highest Russian citizens in the Siberian Far East and, of late, has been T?««5Tiir. k tells me tbat little children making attractive concessions to citizens willing to leave the cities patriotism. A world already shuddering from the sadism of Hitof si-? are tano-'ht to oomnose t^<nr and heavy populated districts to live there. Their great obstacle, own mns'c fit the Henrv Street Setlerism is horrified by this latest demonstration of what Nazism of course, is the rigors which settlers in that section must endure. tlement MiTnc School, one of the acand its methods will stoop to. The same cowardly stamp of Hitler t'vit''1* in the general charge of Lilmentality is present, leading many to believe that the murder of lian Wald. Duca is a warning by the Nazi Internationale that they intend by Now this matter of iust ^.nvbody composing music is diffoult to unblood and brutality to exterminate anyone who dares differ with During the past month-two items of interest concerning the Hers+and. We are all authors after a them. The Nazis and the Iron Guards, linked hand in hand in the Jewish National Fund for Palestine have been recorded in the fashion, for we all use nrose, but it latest events in Roumania, are foes of mankind. If King Carol is contemporary annals of national work. The first is that during seems at the Henry Street school, intimidated by this latest manifestation of terrorism, another link the twelve months ending September 30th, the Jewish National thev also po on the assumption that mav all also be musical comwill be forged in the chain which is threatening civilization with Fund for the buying'of land in Palestine in the name of the Jew- they nosers. And this settlement school, doom. The heroes of today's history will be the men of all coun- ish people collected two hundred and twenty thousand pounds, an hy the. wav, is so good that T am tries who are willing to sacrifice all to check the would-be increase of ten per cent over the collections of the preceding year. told that a number of the children elite Park Avenue are sent there stroyers of liberalism and progress. ' The second is that the directorate of the Fund has now decided of —their elders regard in: it as better to insert a clause in all its contracts of hereditary lease with set- than the costly professional schools tlers on its land in which the principle of Sabbath observance is of mnsic. Did you notice Winchell in his colfirmly established. umn the ofher dav flash the news The Jewish back-to-the-land movement has been gaining That the Jewish National Fund has been able to accumulate that Ot*o K»hn had returned to Jumomentum throughout the world. Special impetus to this idea nearly a quarter of a million pounds within one year is a strikinpr daism, that Kfihn had said that he rath°r be a humble Jew doine has been given of late in this country, where there are approxi- testimony to the growing realization of the Mosaic precept of land would his part than anvfhing else — or mately one hundred thousand Jewish farmers. The latest project nationalization, "And the land shall be theirs forever." The Sab- words to similar effect. of this type is the Jiomestead settlement of two hundred Jewish Dath regulation, supported by all parties in the movement, indi- Also that Jacob De Haas is readfamilies in New Jersey, aided by a government loan of half a mil- cates the transfer into legal form of Jewish traditional practice. ins: proofs on two voluminous works of his authorship — his abbreviated lion dollars. encyclopedia of thinsrs Jewi<=li—and Two hundred families, recruited from the needle trade indushis two-volume history of Palestine, for whi"h he had been jratherine; matries, will be settled on small farms, each of which will have at "We are now paying the price of the War. The toll of lives terial about twenty years. Both will least one acre for gardening. A co-operative farm, with a dairy was paid at the time—on the nail—the economic toll is being paid be out in a counle of months. herd, a hennery and facilities for providing other foods for the now—the bills are coming in. Unemployment, starvation, upheaval And do you know that that youns settlement are also being organized. There will also be erected a are stalking the world. And the Jews represent but an infinitesi- woman in the Jewish division of the school and a community center. A modern factory, to serve as a mal proportion of the world-wide suffering."—Joseph Leftwich. New York public library, whom you always compliment on her annearmodel for similar projects, will be built. The factory products will ance, is anprry at you? She told me be disposed of in the New York market, but the farm produce will other day, that the late Rabbi "There is a mighty tide of resentment rising in this nation the Blau had once remarked that girls not be put on the market—supplying the settlement instead. against the corruptive influences of the movies."—Rabbi Abba who are complimented on their ap; This project will be a demonstration in decentralized industry Hillel Silver. pearance outrht to regard it as an insult, for the tendency is always to and subsistence farming which is expected to go on a self-supportcompliment the homely ones, and ing basis and eventually to be co-operatively owned. While similar when you persist in doine that thine 'Palestine continues, to constitute the central Jewish hope Jewish projects have failed, this one is expected to profit by the to a girl, she may know that you reothers' mistakes. The Provisional Commission for the Establish- and offers the best opportunity for Jewish refugees to rebuild gard her really as homely and are trying to soothe her. So next time ment of Jewish Farm Settlements, recently formed, is aiding in their broken lives."—Morris Rothenberg. you had better ask her why she is "^establishing the settlement and is especially anxious for it to sucfeeling so skkly. 1 ceed, so that it may serve as the model for similar projects. If Man—and women more—are. pecu-
The Week in Review
Bloody Sadism
Prospects in Brazil
Little Headway in Bureya
And thus he slept for seventy years. When he awoke, he observed a man gathering fruit from the carob-tree. "Dost thou know who planted this tree?" he asked the man. "My grandfather," was the answer. Choni then said to himself, "Surely I must have slept seventy years." He noticed that there had been born several generations of mules unto his mule. He then went to his home and inquired where the son of Choni Hamogel was. He was told that his son was no longer living, but that his grandson was alive. He then said: "I am Choni Hamogel." But they would not believe him. He went to the college where the Rabbis were studying, and heard them saying: "This Holacha is as clear as in the days of Choni Hamogel, who, when entering the house of study, would render a clear decision upon any question put to him by the Rabbis." He said to them: "I am that Choni Hamogel." But they would not believe him nor would they accord him due respect. This discouraged him, whereupon he prayed to God that he might die, and By O. O. DASIIEB so he died. Raba said: "This illustrates the current statement: 'Either give me the respect due me or give Whoso diggeth a pit shall fall me death.'" therein, and he that rolleth a stone, it shall return upon him. Wrath is cruel and anger is overNATIONAL whelming, but who is able to stand jealousy ? ACCESSORIES. Inc. Better is an open rebuke than love EVERYTHING that is hidden. For the Auto TALMUD 2051 Farnam AT. 5524 Choni Hamogel was once traveling on the road, and he noticed a man planting a carob-tree. He asked him how many yrars it would take before the trea would bear fruit. "Seventy years," the man answered. "What!" exclaimed Choni. "Art thou then sure that thou wilt live seventy Washing—Greasing years?" And the man replied, "I found carob-trees in existence when PREPARE NOW FOR I came into the world. Consequently WINTER DRIVING my ancestors must have planted them. Why should I not also plant them for my children?" Meantime, Choni became hungry and sat down to eat (near the newJA. 6860 2823 Dodge ly-planted tree). After the meal he fell asleep and a grotto formed around him so that he disappeared.
liar. You remember that Galician story? Two Jews were on the train in Galicia. Said one to the other: "Where are you going?" Answered the second: "To Lemberg." Said the first: "Why do you have to lie to me. You know that I know that you are going to Lemberg, but you tell me Lemberg, because yoa know that if you say Lemberg, I'll think you are going to Cracow, but you are really going to Lemberg, so why don't you say you are going to Cracow and speak the truth?" Well, the story seems to me, has a bearing on this young woman at the library. At any rate it helps to fill this column and I am sure you must be grateful for that. SCHMONAH ESRAY.
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PAGE 5—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1934
J.C.C. CALENDAR
i. i
TO HOLLYWOOD, FLA. Miss Frances Lee Kort, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nate Kort, left for Hollywood, Fla., where she will visit for the winter with her aunt, Mrs. Lillian Stine.
Sunday, January 7. Psi Mu Dance, 3 pjn. Hebrew Club, 3 p.m. ^ Monday, January 8. Bikur Cho- VISITING HERE Miss Jeanette Zeligson of Oklalim, 2 pan. Community Forum Presents: Norman Thomas, 8 pan. homa City is spending three weeks Tuesday, January 9. Deborah vacation with Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Society, 2 pjn. Jr. Basketball Horwich. League, 7:30 pan. Wednesday, January 10. Con ON BUYING TRIP servaiave Synagogue Auxiliary, 2 Mr. Harry Sladerman of 4824 So. pjn. Phi Beta Epsilon Banquet, 22 street left Monday for Chicago 6 pjn. on a buying trip. He will be gone Thursday, January 11. Junior over a week. Hadassah History Class, 8 pjn. Senior Basketball League, 7 p.m. PARTY Saturday January 13. Central SLU3IBER The "666" bunco club held a High School Water Carnival, 8 slumber party at the home of Miss pjn. Monovitz on New Year's eve, Sunday, January 14. Conserva- Lillian attending a midnight show. tive Synagogue Board Meeting 10 after Guests of honor were Miss Eva Wolf am. Pioneer Women's Dinner 6 of Fremont the Misses Inez pjn. Psi Mu Dance, 3 pan. Om- Leaff and Roseand Albert of Sioux City. aha Hebrew Club, 3 pan. Monday, January 15. Conservative Synagogue Book Review 8 p. BENEFIT BRIDGE Mrs. J. Goldware, president of the m. "Return of the Native," by Daughters of Zion, entertained at a Rabbi David A. Goldstein. Wednesday, January 17. Daugh- benefit bridge party at her home ters of Zion 2 pan. Sr. Hadassah "Wednesday afternoon. It is -expected that the various members of the Card Party, 8 pan. Thursday, January 18. Jr. Ha- I group give similar affairs to help raise funds for the organization. dassah Meeting, 8 pan. Sunday, January 21. Psi Mu Dance 3 p.m. Omaha Hebrew BENEFIT BRIDGE Club, 3 pan. B'nai Brith Affair, A pleasant evening and a big sur8 pan. prise is planned for the benefit Monday, January 22. Jr. Vaad bridge to be given by the Ladies Bridge, 8 p.m. Auxiliary of the congregation of IsWednesday, January 24. Jr. rael, 25th and J streets, January Vaad Forum, 8 p.m. "Dr. Leo L. 14 at 8 p. m. Admission is fifty 1 Honor". cents per couple. Refreshments will Thursday, January 25. Jr. be served. Hadassah History Class, 8 p. m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday, MATINEE DANCE January 26, 27 and 28. Dr. A. L. The Creightonians will furnish muSachar Institute, sponsored by sic at the regular matinee dance at Study Group of the Conservative the J. C. C. under the sponsorship Synagogue. of the Psi Mu this Sunday afterMonday, January 29. Annual noon at 3:30 p. m. Meeting of Federation, 8 pan. Wednesday, January 31. Book Review, "Hear Ye Sons", 8 pjn. Junior Society Sponsored by the Conservative Dr. Morris Margolin has been invitSynagogue Auxiliary — Rabbi D. ed to be guest speaker at the coming A. Goldstein. meeting of the Junior Society of the Conservative Synagogue on Tuesday GUESTS evening, January 9, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Turek have Miss Ann Lintzman, 3647 California had as their holiday guests their street. Dr. Margolin has selected for brothers, Messrs. Philip and Louis his subject "Origin of Diseases" which Turek of Chicago, formerly of Om- will be followed by a round table disaha. cussion with members. Mr. Philip Turek returned home several days ago. Mr. Louis Turek Opens Office will leave shortly to resume his Dr. Ben Goldware, chiropodist and medical studies. foot specialist, announces the opening of his office at 611-22 Redick Tower building. S. A. M. MOTHER'S CLUB The next meeting of the S. A. M. Dr. Goldware is an Omahan, but Mothers' Club will be held Wetaes : for the past five years he has been day afternoon, January 17, at the living in Chicago, where he attendhome of -sirs. Julias Chait, Roland ed college and after graduating conApt No. 2, at the Strehlow Ter- ducted his practice and was associated with the Illinois College of Chirrace Court. opody and Foot Surgery as staff clinician and member of the faculty. DINNER DANCE Sixty couples attended the gala New Year's eve dinner dance given by the Xi Lambda fraternity in the Seville Room of the Knights of Columbus building. Guests from Sioux City, St. Joseph, Des Moines and Atehison attended. A novel .floor show was pre- A complete Jewelry service. Lowest sented. The Creightonians furnished in price and highest in quality. the music.
WEITZ-SIEGEL ENGAGEMENT On New Year's eve Mr. and Mrs. David Siegel announced the engagement of their daughter, Rose, to Mr. Leo Weitz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Weitz. No definite date has been set for the wedding.
BLOOM-PITLOR ENGAGEMENT Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Htlor announce the engagement of their daughter, Helen, to Mr. Joe Bloom, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. Bloom of Chicago. Miss Helen Pitlor has been visiting for the past year in Chicago BLEND-ROTHENBERG with her grandmother, Mrs. S. WolMARRIAG3 Miss Balnche Eothenberg. daugh- pa. ter of Mr. and Mrs. B. Rothenberg, The- wedding will take place at became the bride of Mr. Samuel the Stevens Hotel in three months. Blend of Dallas, Texas, at 3 p. m. Sunday afternoon, December 24, at WEDDING ANNIVERSARY the B'nai Israel synagogue, -with A surprise party was held on Rabbi TJri Miller officiating. New Year's eve at the home of Mr. The young couple left for Dallas, and Mrs. D. Charney, 1513 Military, where they will mate their future in honor of their twenty-second wedhome. ding anniversary. .Bridge and pinochle were played. Lunch was served at midnight, when telegrams of conFBIED-WOLK MAEB1AGE Miss Sadie Wolk, daughter of Mr. gratulations were read. and Mrs. Louis Wolk, became the bride of Mr. Leo Fried, son of Mrs. DANCING PARTY W. Fried, on Sunday, December 24, at Tickets have been distributed this the home of the bride's "parents, with week for the dancing party that only members of the two families at- Mrs. Sol Novitsky's group of the tending. Rabbi David A. Goldstein Conservative Synagogue is to give officiated. on Sunday evening, February 11, the eve of Abraham Lincoln's birthday ANNOUNCE BIRTH at the Fontenelle hotel. It promises Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Kay of San to be one of the outstanding' social Jose, California, announce the birth events of the new year. of a daughter, Helen Marjorie, on Novel decorations and a prize December 28. Mr. Kay, formerly of waltz are among the interesting Omaha, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. plans already completed, Mrs. NovReuben Kulakofsky. itsky has announced. Assisting her are: Mesdames Jack Bramson and Sam Green, co-chairCenter-Council Book men, John Faier, tickets, and Isadora Abramson, Leo J. Adler, MorSale for This Month ris Bernstein, William Boasberg, Faier, A. D. Frank, Leon FellAlthough more than half of the John man, Moe Greenberg, Nathan Horbooks on sale at the joint CenterCouncil public rental library at the wich, M. Levenson, Irvin Levin, J. C. C. for popular bargain prices Philip Levery, Jack Marer, Jack have been sold already, 75 excellent Melcher, Bernice Natelson, Ben Newbargains in popular titles are still man, S. A. Osheroff, Ben Perleman, ready for book collectors and read- David Potach, William Raduziner, ers, according to Mrs. Irvin Levin, Ben Shapiro, Morris Sogolow, Irvin library committee chairman of the Stalmaster, Sam Rosenblatt, Charles Omaha Council of Jewish Women. Ross, Sam Stern, Leo Waxenberg, Receipts of the library go for the Phineas Wintroub, Al "Wohlner, H. direct benefit of the Council's schol- A. Wolf, B. Yousem, Millard Krasarship loan funds for poor Jewish ne, Morris Katelman, Jack Luttbeg. college girls, whose education might ESTEBTXTSS FOB VISITOR otherwise be denied.' Mrs. Rebecca Kaiman entertained Excellent recent mysteries, master- twelve guests New Year's day in pieces of humor, adventure stories, honor of Miss Shirley Saxon who is love stories; books by such authors visiting here from Brooklyn, N. Y. as Fannie Hurst, Faith Baldwin, Donald Henderson Clarke, Anne Green, AT DINNER Kathleen Norris, Hobart, Edgar Wal- ENTERTAIN Mr. and Mrs. Baum entertained lace, Beeding, Francis Brett Young, at dinner for 14J.guests Hew Year's Ellery Queen, Margaret Kennedy, eve, honoring Mrs. Ben Woskow and Dell, and Deval are included in this Mrs. Clara Rabinowitz of Kansas list of books. Practically all of the City. Tie dinner was followed by books sell for only 25c, with a very bridge, at which " Mrs. Woskow few at 20c and 30c also. scored high. In addition the library conducts a Mrs. Woskow was formerly Miss • separate rental department of more Ida Baum of Omaha. than 300 books, books in it renting for only 3c per day. Books in this ENTERTAIN AT TEA department are being added contin- Mrs. Jake Blank, chairman of the uously. The book sale will continue Hadassah luncheon fund, and through the month of January, with Mrs. Davidschool R. Cohen, co-chairman, probably several more recent favor- entertained Wednesday afternoon at FOR THE WINTER ites added to the list for popular a tea at the home of Mrs. Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Meyer Giventer have for the members of their committee In addition to the above f eatores, who are arranging for the Senior motored to Miami, Fla., for the winthe library announces that it will Hadassah evening card party, to be ter months. gladly handle, as it did in the past, given at the J. C. C. on Wednesday niMlnlwu^ipiiiMwiimiuipiii^wtwiTUi^ the getting of new books of all types evening, January 17. or of magazine subscriptions for •»iyone who wishes, getting them for TEA DANCE a discount for the customer. This is Among the holiday parties was a an especially attractive feature and no-host tea dance given on Saturday " service of the library, and is a mon- at the Aquila Court by some mem~ ey-saver for book lovers and maga- bers of the younger school set. zine readers. For further informaGuests included Dorothy Camel, .' tion on this last, Mrs. Levin should Shirley Fiedler, Alta Hirsch, Pauline *fce consulted. . Margolin, Florence Mosher, Lottie You con now buy The library wiH be open every eve- Rips, Mildred Safestein, Merrian ning and Sunday afternoons as usual Wiesman, Sylvia Wiesman, and Elon the second floor, J. C C. eanor Harris of Minneapolis.
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Mrs. R. Kulakofsky Honored By "Home"
Hadassah
Men's Group of Vaad Being Formed
The Hadassah Book Review section No. 1 will meat this Saturday afternoon at 2 p. m. at the home of Mrs. At the annual meeting of the Joseph Rosenberg. Rabbi Uri Miller An organization similar to the Omaha Orthopedic Association and will review "The Sinner" by I. J. Brotherhoods and Men's Clubs vf Hattie B. Munroe Home for Conva- Singer. Temples and Synagogues is being lescent Children, Mrs. Reuben Kuformed under the auspices of the lakofsky was elected first vice-pres- Ten Hadassah hostesses will spon- Vaad. A definite name has not as ident. sor a bake sale at the Brandeis yet been chosen. She has been on the board and Store on January 10. For any inThe organization meeting will be executive committee of the Home formation in regard to the bake sals, in the form of a dinner, Thursday for a number of years. The Home is call Mrs. Julius Stein. evening, January 18, at 7 o'clock. non-sectarian, caring for an averAt this meeting election of officers will take place and plans for the age of 35 to 45 children at all times. It is partially maintained by the Young Men's Vaad coming activities will be formulated. Community Chest. Mr. Sol Lagman is chairman of David Slobodinsky, president of Besides being active in the work the Young Men's Vaad announces the arrangements committee with of this organization, Mrs. Kulakof- the following committee chairmen: Charles Fellman, Dr. A. Steinberg, sky is a member of the board of diSam Hahn, lecture series; Arthur Max Chasen and Ben Kazlowsky as rectors of the Visiting Nurses Asso- Cohen, synagogue; Hy Finkelstein committee members. Harry Mendelciation, a member of the executive and Joe Saks, co-chairmen of cul- son is chairman of the program comcommittee of the American Red tural committee; James Lamson, so- mittee. Members include Dr. N. H. Cross, of the Nebraska Tuberculosis cial; Dave Hahn and Joe Saks, co- Greenberg, Dr. Victor E. Levine, WilAssociation, and of the Omaha chairmen of membership; Rudy Mit- liam Milder, Reuben Han-is, Harry Branch of the American Needle tleman and Sid Epstein, financial; Rimmerman and Ephraim Marks. Guild, and is a member of the Coun- Louis J. Riklin, publicity; Sol Krizelcil of Social Agencies. man, committee on committees.
Turned Down Job
Ladies' Labor Lyceum A concert and Russian tea party will be given by the Ladies Labor Lyceum club on January 28 at 8 p. m. at the Labor Lyceum, 22nd and Clark. The general public is invited. Admission will be twenty-five cents. The Ladies Labor Lyceum will hold a social meeting Tuesday afternoon, January 9, at 2:30 p. m. at the Labor Lyceum, 22nd and Clark. Refreshments will be served. All members are urged to attend.
Haifa.—Jewish porters employed in the Haifa harbor refused to load The regular monthly meeting of oranges on the German steamer Tythe Board of Governors has been nus, which flies the Nazi flag. changed from Monday, January 8, to Wednesday evening, January 10, EFFECTIVE MONDAY, JAN. 8 at 8 o'clock, at the B'nai Israel synagogue, 18th and Chicago. This change was made in order not to conflict with the lecture forum. All members of thj Board of Governors are asked to be present as important business is on the agendum.
Vaad Ha'Itir
DAMP WASH
Berlin.—Foreign Jews living in Germany and who are in need of winter relief will receive help only if Vaad Auxiliary their consulates support the winter On Tuesday, January 9, at two relief fund being raised by the Nazi o'clock, members of the Women's party, the Nazi press officially reAuxiliary of the Vaad will visit the ported. Nebraska Power and Light Company's electrical kitchen. There will be no admission charge. The Power company is paying the organization fifteen cents for every lady present. Those wishing to attend, whether members or non-members, are asked We carry all kinds of coal and every grade to call Mrs. Ackennan, Atlantic of coal. Our prices are as low as any . 5999, or Mrs. Schwaczkin, Atlantic quoted by local coal dealers. All we ask 5534. for is a trial order. The maximum number -which can attend is one hundred.
LET US SUPPLY YOUR COAL NEEDS....
Jerusalem.—A new government department to be known as the Central Statistical Bureau will be established here in the near future, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency learns.
CONSUMERS COAL CO.
13th and Nicholas
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AT. 4444 |
David Sherman, Propr. _
OMAHA'S STYLE CENTER . , . I6TH AND HA&NEY
Sensational January Clearance of
FUR COATS CLOTH COATS DRESSES Many are LESS , than ONE-HALF FORMER PRICES Our regular stock of fashionable, quality apparel drastically reduced to prices that make buying now an investment. Never in our memory have such values been offered in a January Clearance Sale S
CLOTH COATS Regularly to $39.75 Now $19 CLOTH COATS Regularly to $59.75 Now CLOTH COATS Regularly to $79.75 Now
FUR COATS FUR COATS FUR COATS
'Regularly to $$9.75 N o w
DRESSES DRESSES DRESSES
Regularly to $15.09 N e w
$6
Regularly to $19.75 : N o w
$|
Regularly to $89.75 Regularly to $110
Reguktrly to $39.75 : NoW.$15
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SEVEN COME ELEVEN—A new surf recreation is being enjoyed by Santa Monica, Cal., folk, in the form of surf dice. These oversize dice are taken into the ocean. The waves then roll the dice back on the surf while those on the beach wait breathlessly for their number. Miss Leona Weaver is snapped sitting on two large cubes.
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Mary Pickford, seen here between two war aces at National Air Race ball in Los Angeles.
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SHE'S 0. K."—Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh, upper left, with George B. Post, aircraft official, is pictured inspecting the colonel's new seaplane at Northbeach airport, near New York.
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NOT A FABLE —The classic fable by Aesop of, the turtle that won in a race with a rabbit was proved to be more than a mere fable by these two contestants in a marathon classic at Johns Hopkins hospital in'Baltimore. The lowly tortoise not only actually won the race but was presented with a cup.
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former vice presidents of the United States, Charles Curtis and Charles G. Dawes,
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EOCKEFELLER AS A SHEPHERD
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SOVIET DICTATOR PAYS TRIBUTE TO DEPARTED WOMAN LEADER ON HOLIDAY—Dudley Field Malone, noted New York lawyer, and ' Mrs. Malone and Dudley, Jr., are snapped strolling on the beach at Atlantic Beach, L. I.
ANCIENT CITY BROUGHT TO LIGHT—These ancient ruins of a city believed to be nearly 5,000 years old have been discovered close to the Fourth Pyramid, near" Cairo, Egypt. Dr. Selim Hassan of the University of Cairo and his party have brought to light hundreds of beautiful pottery vessels.
jrAGE 7—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1934
An Analysis ot Justice Brandeis
"AV* Hears Givot Enjoying Huge Success
H
WORLD - WIDE
!eligi§is Services
Ed Rosenbaiim to Head A. Z. A. 100
j Ed Rosenbaum was named presijdent of A. Z. A. 100 at the semi| annual election of officers held Sunday afternoon at the J. C. C. He sucTemple ceeds Low Canar. Other officers: Myron Tarnoff, Eabbi David H. Wice will deliver vice-president; Meyer Rosenbaum, a sermon on "Indictment or Vindication" at services at Temple Israel secretary; Sam Friedman, treasurer; this evening. Saturday morning he j Bill Rosenbanm, and Iz. Mittleman, will conduct the regular children's sergeants-at-arros; Al Monovitz, reporter; Lou Canar, chaplain. services. On Sunday morning the regular sessions of the Keligious School wilJ Junior Yaad Auxiliary be held. Parents are urged not to At the next meeting of the Junior permit the weather to interfere Vaad Auxiliary Tuesday evening, with the. children's attendance. January 9, the following chairmen Sunday afternoon at 4 p. m. thewill name their committees: Young People's group will meet at Minnie Frohm, synagogue commit' the Temple. tee; Dolgoff, ways and means; Tuesday evening at the adult study SaxahRoseMalashock, program; Bess class Rabbi Wice will discuss his- Kirshenbaum, membership; Blanche torically the subject, "The Naming Binstein, culture; Libby Elewitz, ef Jewish Children." courtesy.
According to word received in Omaha by Abner Kaiman from Herman Bemie, brother of the famed Ben (Continued from Page 1.) Brandeis* philosophy tmless he starts Bernie, George Givot—the Omaha who have resided in Germany for by resisting' the temptation to re- lad who made good as a comedian— Empty S t o r e s many years, and who told unlimited is in New York enjoying a successHelping None gard him as an economic radical. It cannot, perhaps, claim novelty, German residence permits, were sudful appearance with Max Baer at Berlin.—Mora than one-third of the Eince it is nothing BO much as theThe American social system does not adaptation to a new medium of Mr. permit constitutional adventures of the Casino de Paree. Givot is joint total number of stores in Berlin, denly ordered by the police to turn in Justice Brandeis* method as an ad- that kind,to its judges. Not, in any [master of ceremonies at the Casino, some 23,877. are empty as a result their permits. They were notified to vocate. It has been a deliberate ef- case, that the foundations of his so- which is owned by Fannie Brice and of the ruin that has overtaken Jew- report to the police and exchange ish trade, Dsr Angriff, leading Nazi their unlimited permits for others limfort to make the "Constration con- cial theory are proletarian in temper. her husband. form to the tasks of an economic He has neither said nor written any- "Ah" further hears that Givot will newspaper, disclosed. This does not iting their residence in Germany to statesmanship conceived in the terms thing which indicates a sympathy do a short for Warner Brothers this include the total number of empty three or six months. of a conscious social philosophy. Un- "with a revolutionary interpretation month, and that then he will go on residences, the number of which Der Dutch Social Democrats, like Mr. Justice Holmes, Brandeis of the American scene. His effort has the road as featured player in "New Angriff did not reveal. Unions Push Boycott has not sought to remain above the rather been, a search for the ways of Workers," the musical production New York.—The Dutch Social DemCleared of "C&arge" utilizing the established principles of battle in which, subject only to the which starred Jimmy Durante. He ocratic party and the Trade Union Berlin.—Sir" John Simon, British Amending power, the Supreme Court the existing order to the maximum wiil ba in Omaha in the spring. Center in Holland have set up a cenForeign Minister, and distinguished advantage for its citizens. To make is the ultimate arbiter. Bather he tral boycott committee and local comEnglish lawyer, has been formally has attempted to appraise the ten-of American capitalism a system in for boycotting goods made in dencies hetween which he was called which, in an atmosphere of justice construction it was molded to deny is and officially cleared of the charge mittees Hitler Germany, according to the to judge, and to bring all the re-and freedom, the ordinary man hasa feat as considerable as any in the of being a Jew by the government press of the International Fedsources of his art and knowledge to an opportunity that is real—this has recent annals of jurisprudence. Nor of the Third Pweich. The Nazi au- erationreports of Trade Unions (IFTU). has it been given to many to make a thorities have also been kind enough Conservative secure the victory of those he thought been the constant purpose in his The aim of the committee is to enmost consonant with the public •wel- mind. Clearly enough, there is no whole nation feel that its law mayto establish a racial lineage for Sir John. gage young people principally in the At services tonight the theme of fare. Where, for the most part, the basic radicalism in that purpose; in still be an instrument of justice. According to an official order is- propaganda action regnired- The Rabbi David A. Goldstein's discourse conservative members of the Court its very essence, i t is nothing so IV (J.T.A.) —A unique strike have been the servants of assump- much as the re-orientation of his- No one can come into Mr. Justice sued to the German press: "Refer- Dutch labor movement is spending will be "Science, Judaism and Mirtions of which either they were main- toric America to the new environ- Brandeis' presence without the sense ences which have been cropping up large sums of money to make the boy- acles." He will discuss the question was declared here by the students of ly unconscious or unprepared explic- ment of giant capitalism. And it fol- that he is meeting a remarkable man. from time to time that the British cott as effective and fruitful as pos- of whether modern men can believe the Radin Yesniva, a Jewish theological seminary. itly to avow, Mr. Justice Brandeis lows, if the re-orientation is to be It is not, indeed, that his talk has Foreign Minister, Sir John Simon, is sible. in miracles. The students announced that they has deliberately revealed both the made successfully, that the law must either the depth or breadth which a Jew, must stop. Simon is no Jew. Greek Yom Kippur Decree Next Friday evening the polpit of end he had in view and the full pan- then be regarded above all function- makes an hour with Mr. Justice Furthermore, he is descended from Revoked the Conservative Synagogue will be would refrain from participation in Talmud study, the cbiel occupation at oply of argument "which led Mm toally. It is a weapon, perhaps the vi-Holmes one of the seminal experi- an old Welsh line." Athens.—The minister of economics honored with the presence of Rabbi the Yeshiva, so long as they are not prefer that end. His opinions, there- tal weapon, in subduing the behavior ences of a lifetime. There is not the Drive for Palestine Work Hyrcan Rabinowitz of Sioux City, revocation of the senate provided with lood. fore, have heen at once a massive of men and their institutions, to ends flashing phrase, nor the power to New York.—The Mizrachi Organ- announced decree including Yum Kippur, the who will deliver the sermon. Rabbi Ratlin Yeshiva -was founded by picture of the contemporary social that are predicated as desirable. j suddenly evoke some vista which ization of America, has launched a Jewish Day of Atonement, in the Rabinowitz has many friends in Om-theThe late "Choletz Chaim," nged Jewish scene and an evaluation of its char- From that primary postulate all; lights up the endless corridor of drive to raise $200,000 for the Mizaha who have heard him in past acteristics. In the whole history of else -. follows -T.-.T-: with -^ a _ ._rigorous _• ilogic. _:._._ If -,!• t i m e . Discussion with him has a way rachi Palestine Fund, officers an- compulsory list of holidays to be ob-years. It is expected that a large scholar and sage 'who died a short the Court there has been no more man is to be the master of his in-of becoming friendly cross-examina- nounced following a conference held served by all people. A new decree congregation will greet our Sioux time ago. Since his death officials in was issued making the closing of City neighbor. I charge of the Yeshiva have been unfrank explanation of the motives stitutions, the Constitution must be tion, in which you find yourself at the Hotel Pennsylvania. shops on Yom Kippur obligatory only ! able to provide the students With which have underlain the judicial so shaped as to admit his mastery. stimulated to be your best, to put While Rabbi Rabinowitz is speak- food. As long as the "Chofetz Chaim" for Jews. Canadian Immigration purpose than this effort. I t has From this he infers the need to hu-forth all you know, to aim at a preThe government acted on the ad-ing in Omaha next Friday, Rabbi was alive, his enormous prestige brought the processes of law into a manize the industrial system. Profit cision of statement, an exactness of Drops 32 Percent Goldstein will deliver the principal closer relation with life than at anymust be subordinate to social respon- reference, which leave you, at the Montreal.—The first ten months of vice of the governor of Salonica in address at the fiftieth anniversary among orthodox Jews and the worldtaking this action in order to halt wide recognition of his saintly charert time since the foundation of the Re-sibility; it cannot be quoted as an: d» more aware of what you thought the current year have indicated a of Adass Yeshuren of Minneapolis, acter brought heavy contributions to the anti-Semitic agitation flood which public. considerable decrease of the immigraargument against reasonable hours i than you had ever been able to disthe oldest Conservative synagogue in the Yeshiva, which appear to have tion into Canada, according to fig- the decree had started. the northwest. For it has taught us both what of labor, an adequate standard of cover for yourself. stopped on his death. issued here recently. Levinne Honored in the judge is seeking to do, and thewaeres, the duty to bear the cost of Yon are amazed at the mass of ures Forty-one races, representing almaterial which, he regards as impor- social insurance. Because g^ant bus- knowledge that has gone into the in-most as many countries, entered Can- Ecuador Vaad New York.—Isadore Lhevinne, welltant for his purposes. It has re- iness tends to the habits of imperial- sights he contributes. It is not that jected the historic picture of him as istic autocracy, the state may put itsgraceful knowledge of the man ofada between January and October, a known Anglo-Jewish writer a n d the impartial producer of a ballet of jhook* into the mouth of Leviathan; the world who knows effortlessly the I decrease of thirty-two per cent over teacher of Spanish, has been decorat- Regular services will be held Tobloodless categories. It has admitted I t o enforce efficiency, to compel com- attractive adornments of conversa- 1032. During the present year, 2,461 ed by the government of the South night at 8 o'clock at the B'nai Isexpressly that his private preference petition, to regulate prices, to insist tion. It is not even a natural gift for immigrants of so-called "non-Nordic" American republic of Ecuador with rael synagogue, 18th and Chicago for a scheme cf values, a way ofupon the recognition of trade unions, the right phrase. I t is rather some- classification arrived and were ad- the medal of the Order of Almarita. streets, under the auspices of the life, enters into and shapes the dis-to protect the little man against the thing akin to a genius for selecting mitted. He is the first Jew to receive the Vaad. Rabbi Miller -will preach on "Is the Jewish Home Responsible position of the figures he chooses to overweening power of such gigantic significant fact, for putting it into a Local Jewish circles are deploring honor. for Spiritual Poverty of American which gives it new meanthe fact that the immigration barmake. It has recognized also, and corporations as the chain store sys- perspective Mr. Lhevinne received the decora1 ing of which you had been unaware. riers are high. tems—for him there is nothing in •with insistent fullness, the chic contion in recognition of his two volumes Jewish Youth?" This will include a text of his function, even if indirect- activity of this kind against which He has the happy power of making Hillel Foundation in English on life in Ecuador. One discussion of what place the Jewly, he is a legislator by whose in- the Constitution lays down a bar. Hehis interlocutor put his best foot for- Symposium of the books, 'The Enchanted Jun- ish parents can. play in the Jewish sight the pattern of sscial life is de-is prepared to force the public utili- ward; he will try to build his ingle," was selected by the Junior Lit- upbuilding of their children. Cantor termined. It argues that into the ties to a:t upon the assumption that sights into an illuminating general- Chicago.—Under the auspices of the erary Guild and the Boy Scouts of Schwaczkin and the B'nai Israel B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation of the America as one of the outstanding choir will chant the traditional praymaking of his decision there must service to the public is the first law ization. ers, j enter all the knowledge that, as it of their being; and he has denied the He can be at once as hard as University of Illinois, a symposium on books of the year. The Junior Congregation will hold I is made, is available to him; so that right of a traditional basis of nrofit- stone and as tender as a woman. No "Th« Roots of Anti-Semitism" will be the jurist's law expands the .signifi- making to stand in the way of that one can be the fighter that life has held Wednesday evening, January 24, Einstein Property Seizure its services Saturday morning at 10 j cance of stare decisis to adjust these obligation. He has insisted that the made him without a stern toughness in the Covenant Club here in Chicago. Confession of Weakness o'clock. These services are conducted latter to new needs and expanding conferment of coroorate privilisres in- of nature which distinguishes be- Polish Jewish Federation "" Los Angeles.—In an editorial de- with the cooperation of the City Talpurposes. To the stuff of these de- volves duties in the corporation con- tween enemies and friends a little To Foster Trade Relations nouncing the seizure of the property mud Torah. All children are urged cisions go all thaT"gairW'^EfiifiT«3 cernedr4he^f&lfilment of which is no ruthlessly. No one,—either^-^can- have York.—The Federation^ of Po^_qf Albert. Einstein by the Hitler gov- to be present. AT. 2524. from the laboratory of social experi- less urgent a function that the re-his unending passion for righteous- lish Jews in America has organized ernment, the Las Angeles Times de- The .Religious School of the Vaad" ence, so that Vebleh and John Mar-, alization :of the nrofit inherent in its ness without a g r i m resentment a new organization called the Amer- clares that the act is an open con- meets Sunday morning at 10 o'clock. shall, Hobson and Mr. Justice Story, privilege. At each point in the social against those whose effort is built ican Polish Industrial Bureau whose fession of weakness on the part of Rathenau and Mr. Justice Holmes process he denies the risrht of the on the betrayal of its standards. He purpose it will be to stimulate trade j the regime. find themselves cheek by jowl in the Caurt to substitute its •will for that i has no use for the men who arerelations between Poland and the "The action of the Nazi government 1 confirming citations. That -goes, he of .* i.i__ :*. can — be - ' comfortable and complacent amidst United States according to an an- in Germany in confiscating the prothe ,._-_•!_< legislature .._•.— unless it seems to emphasize, to the makinp: sho-wn unmistakably that the lattsr the pain and inefficiency, of contem- nouncercent made by Benjamin Win- perty - of Albert .Einstein," says the of law which goes ta the maidngof violates every canon of a decent reaeditorial, "is probably the most stupid ter, president or the Federation. civilization. the life it seeks to express.; It is an sonableness. He is for competition porary blunder the Hitlerites have yet comThe Bureau is recognized hy the PoBut his gentleness is omninresent. effort to build the law in terms of against the invisible empire of monmitted. It makes clear that the real lish government. The motive behind Mr. Justice Holmes, himself the emthe total social experience it em- opoly. He is for that legislative ennew organization is to direct the objection to Einstein is not his asbodies. It is humanism at its best, eourasrement of incentive which gives bodiment of a genius for friendship, the stream of Polish trade to the United serted Communism, but his Hebraic by reason of its unwillingness to re-the little man his chance of success has borne testimony to hia power of States instead of Germany, according ancestry, and that the Nazis are not keeping friends. He keeps them withpudiate as insignificant whatever in in life. He is suspicious of bigness honest enough and courageous enough t < * Mr. Winter. ' out compulsion; and he has never the experience of men may affect to say so." and centralization, of the impersonal lost them save on those final grounds then- activity as citizens. And for New Residence Order that reason, it is emphatic that the T>ower of institutions which, like of public indifference which make a Berlin. — Numerous foreign Jews, Joint Distribution Committee validity cf the legal result is always Wall Street, tend to destroy the man honorable by the enemies he acNew York.—On account of the unrea function of its social consequences. nrospect of individual initiative, of quires. In an almost imperceptible lenting" anti-Jewish repressions in The categories of the Constitution that separation between ownership way he brings to friendship its es; : Germany which are reported to be and responsibility which inhibits in | 1 | | | | | | M 1 S A S H I. sential gifts, the sympathy of magisare set not by obedience to a past growing in scope and intensity, there tradition but by thsir elastic adapta- society a pervasive sense of civil re- tral silence, the unostentatious coun•Storm; -Daeiri—-Combi not ion Doom is a need for immediate measures in tion to the needs of a swiftly chang- sncnsibility as the foundation of in- sel that comes always at the critical relief of the children of the German THE dividual behavior in economic life. moment, the unhurried judgment that xng scene. Jewish families. Funds must be . I t is not, I think, an unfair ac- is generous without bring passionraised at once for salvation of these The result has been profound. It is count of Mr. Justice Brandeis' social ate. children, according- to an announcenot merely that, in seventeen fever- philosophy to represent it as a kind The root of his nature is a masment of the German Relief Fund ol ish years, Mr. Justice Brandeis has of modified Jeffersonian democracy. sive simplicity. His wants are few «.T^«i^*J^—^r^r*MliMnimy-iJ u M urn mil ^ i y the American Jewish Joint Distribumade a profound- impact--- upon the i lake his great predecessor, he is in- and simply satisfied. A good friend, tion Committee of which Rabbi Jonah of Nebraska Women Court itself; a personality; so mas- sistent that the worth of the state a great book, time to reflect, the I Paxton Mitchell Co. I ? B. Wise is chairman. - - Iron, - - Aluminum - worth of chance to be in the great fight, these I consists in the gg Try a Bag Today to Grej and sive could hardly have Present plans of the Committee call itself felt in so constant ana" confin- individual citizens. like him, also, he have formed the essential contours for an immediate expenditure of $1,Bronze Castings nons an association- I t is not merely argues with passionate conviction of his existence. There is neither ar.200,000 in addition to sums already Wood and Hetal Patterns either that he has been able, by thethat only a society of equals can berogance nor vanity in his nature. He advanced for German Jewish relief 2614 Martha St. HA. 6523 (direction he has given to its work, to free; and he is, therefore, hostile to exacts a high measure of service purposes. -Bwalten a new popular confidence in any form of industrial organization from his colleagues; but he has the the Court. Most important is the fact which emphasizes the differences, gift by a phrase or a look of makthat the adoption of his method of rather than the identities, of each ing its fulfilment seem amply reExcellent Safety approach to the law has fertilized man's claim to a share in the com-paid. He is but little interested in and revitalized its study all over the mon welfare. So that his search, with the habits of the big world or its Record Is Lauded United States; in this aspect, bis in-considerable optimism and a definite- swiftly changing fashions. The book! fluence in the. last generation has ly ethical evaluation of behavior, is he wants is not the book of the p o - j I. H. McNeil, superintendent of disbeen second only to that of Mr. Jus-for the conditions of an idealized cap- ment but the one he is assured has j tribution of the Nebraska Power : Gdibuf Cuts and tice Holmes. He has effected that italism in which, by state action, this extended the boundaries of knowlCompany, was re-elected chairman of marriage between law and political environment can be c r e a t e d an 31 edge. the General Safety Committee of his economy which, nearly thirty years maintained. It is a policy of positive There are those who have found company and the associate company, ago,, Holmes pointed out was the liberalism "in which the social philos- him cold. But this, I think, is to misJSlUiSiMMiliiZsiiJBiliSuSiJ&k^^ Citizens Power and Light Company, CflGRBVtilG CO. most essential path of progress. He opher will note with interest the kin - take for coldness the protective arfor the coming year. McNeil was has done more than any judge with- ship to doctrines like those of Hob- mament of a proudly sensitive nalauded for the excellent safety record Theme Qi.46261 in the jurisdiction of the Common house and T. H. Green. But he will ture. No one would call him cold which the company had in 1933. The Law -to give vigor and creativenessjnote als:> how peculiarly and vitally who has been intimate with him. No company has had no lost-time accito its sociological interpretation. He American are both its springs and one who has seen him, for instance, dents for two and one-half years. has made law alive by suffusing it its expression. The intellectual seed in the company of Mr. Justice Holmes The Citizens Power and Light Comwith a deliberate and mirpss^ful in- from which it grows is that which but must have delighted in the radipany has" gone three and one-half terest in the social forces put of underlay the profound sense _ of in- ance of that friendly interchange of Without a lost-time accident. The Menu Always years •which its basic evaluations are made. justice in Shay's rebellion, which dic- thought. He can be severe. I have R. C. Geppert, director of safety Law as living function instead of tated Thoreau's noble defiance of hisheard him dismiss a publicist of our work for the two utility companies, Provides Good law as historic principle—this has epoch, which moved Abraham Lin- time who, like Jesxtrrai, had in sucpresided at the meeting. He stated been the abiding-foundation of its coln to the melancholy perception cess waxed fat, in stinging phrases that the . excellent safety record methodology. He has been able there- that an America could not endure which bit and were intended to bite. Foods of which has been marked up by the which was half-slave, half-free. But I have heard him also take eagby-to renew the vitality of American electric companies I -of Omaha and • jurisprudence by making it an active Upon its validity, indeed, only the er pains to explain some difiicullt act Unequaled Variety •Council Bluffs is envied by all elecfuture can pronounce with adequacy; of a politician of whose bona fides criticism of American ideals. And tric companies in the Middle West. these he has sought to shape not, as so much of its essential spirit is em-he was convinced in the most genat Moderate Prices Mr. Geppert read several letters of bodied in the measures of President erous way. I should not tSink of has been customary with the Court, congratulation from utility companies by building upon the. assumption that Roosevelt that one is tempted to af- coldness in the context of his charia this section. past experience is inevitably present firm that the destiny cf that fateful acter. There is a real aloofness of Eat at the Officials of the compasy, including value, but by the insistence that each experiment will be the epitaph, also, temper, a detachment from the obEoy Page, Fay Smith, F. J. Moylan, generation, must- see ifs own prob- upon Mr. Justice Brandeis' philoso- vious or immediate- But this» I think, I. D. Pettegrew and Ralph Walter, is an essential part of that prophetic **» lems with its own eyes. It is, no phy. were present. Each congratulated doubt, a pragmatic interpretation of What will survive -in Mr. Justice insight which is in Mm almost a rathe General Safety Committee for the lavr* But. it would be difficult to Brandeis' outlook, what has about it cial gift. No. one can see him in acthe no-accident record. find in the whole range of modern the inescapable quality of perma- tion without a new understanding of I. H. McNeil, in taking over the jurisprudence an equation more com- nence, is less the end he seeks to the Hebraic gift of moral vision. I t gavel for another year, stated that plete between technic and creative- serve than the way in which he hasis not for nothing that he is of the 1511 Faraam St. "there will be no change in the safenesp. sought to servei it. To have made the people from whom Isaiah sai Haity program for the coming year." No on*;'can grasp Mr. justice law responsive to a philosophy of re- monides and Spinoza were born.
SllffiE FOR FOOD
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FAVORITE
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After school the children will be hungry. Let them hat)e all the butter they want
HENSHAW CAFETERIA
Be Sure That the Butter You Buy Is
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PAGE 8—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1934. a big surprise but a last quarter A» has been made by Lea Grossman, Lithuanian Jews War rally by the A. Z. A. No. l stopped Jiead of the Physical Department, The stage is set at the J. • C. C. their attack long enough to defeat with the first game next Tuesday. on Trade Squeeze Plan for- one of the biggest turn-outs j them by the score of 20 to 16. TheThe following men will probably Chicago, (J. T. A.) — Resentment this year when the;fast Lincoln A. Xi Lambdas also dropped a heart- represent the J. C. C. in these KOVNO,- Lithuania (J.T.A.)—Lithamong Chicago Jews at appearances Z. A. team clashes with the A. Z. A.breaking match to ' the pre-jseason matches: Doc Ellis, Bob Kooper, uanian Jewish merchants are consid-in Berlin of Mme. Rosa Raisa, famed No.' 1 chapter. The outstate squad winners, Psi Mus, by tho score of Abe Brodkey, Phil Feltman, Art Cohn, Joe Cohen, Iz Levinson, C. B.erably worried by the steadily inMiss ANNA PILL. Correspondent opera star and member of the Chicago is one of. the most highly touted in 25-20. Opera company, and expressions of this tiistrict and is expected to go The XL'a led meet of the game Schoppe, Harry Trustin, Paul Stein- creasing policy of squeezing but Jews sentiment that Jewish residents of the far in the annual .national A. Z. A.but the basket shooting of Siga! berg, Sam Gelinsky, Rudy Anthony, from many business fields, particuwill be held in the social hall. Parcity should not attend performances tournament held next month in Lin-and Rosen put the winners ahead Leo Wilson, Ben Schapiro, Les larly the import and export trades. Bolstein to Head ticipating in the service will be Rose at which Mme. Raisa was scheduled coln. The. .Omaha quintet is one o£.in the closing minutes of the con-Burkenroad. The authorities, who are assisting, Ernest Epstein, Meyer Or- to sing, led to issuance of a state- the outstanding fives in the Senior test. The gym was well-filled with B'iiaiBrith Lodge Albert, this policy, just granted a concession,. likoff, Milton Barrent, Rebecca Still- ment for her through the company's league and promises to make the satisfied spectators and enthusiasm league leading Mothers Cook- to the Lithuanian Central Co-operaMilton Bolstein was elected presi- man, Henry Ginsberg, and Paul Sper- pres3 bureau, explaining her Berlin game a thriller. Both teams have waxed high over the closely-con- i iesThe team ran rampant over the Thor- tives for the entirs import trade from dent of the local .B'nai Bcith lodge, ling. appearances. been rivals for many years and re-tested tilts. peians last Tuesday to the tune of England. The agreement involving. , at -the' 1recent annual- election. He Rosabelle Wigodosky, Leah Her- The statement repeated Mme. Rai-gardless of the outcome a return 34 to 1. In the other junior league the concession is said to be directly. succeeds . Leon; ' Dohrofsky, : retiring man, and Herman Rubin are in charge sa's assertion, made on her arrival in game is in the making at the CapiSome good performances were game the A. Z. A. No. 100 pulled aimed against the Jewish merchants. of the reception arrangements. president., .-!.-..._ this country, thai she had not been tol city. made in the first annual swimming a big upset by defeating the Pants Other officers elected for the new aware of the persecution of the Jews _ A leading contender for the title jm e G t f o r j u n i o r b o y S i Norman Bordy Store, 13 to 8. Gendler of the first The apparent idea involved is to isoterm include Prank Margolin, vice in Germany when she signed a con- in Mothers and Leo m the junior league is Mothers'| L G O Chodak chodak were the the stars stars of of place team was high point man of late altogether Jews from the interMount Sinai president; Lester Davidson, recordtract to appear there and promised Cookies, scheduled to meet the fast the events. the evening with 1 points, but Ru-national trade. ing secretary; Dr. L, J. Dimsdale, Dr. -Theodore N. Lewis will speak that she would never enter Germany Trinity M. E. team in the preliminbin's three field goals enabled him corresponding secretary; Morris E. this evening on the subject "Looking again while the present Nazi govern- ary contest. The Cookie five is The summary: IRVIN C. LEVIN, Attorney to keep the lead with 29. 20-yard free style—First, Bordy; Skalovsky, treasurer;, Leon_ Dobrof- Forward", at Mount Sinai Temple. ment remained in power. 301 Electric BUl noted for their passing attack and second, Burke; third, Fennell; sky, monitor; Ephriani; Baronr;%aTr. The volunteer choir will sing during scoring punch. The church team is fourth, Kraft; fifth, Margolin. Time, den; Joe Givot, guardian; A. M. the service. PROBATE NOTICE an aggressive and dependable group. The basketball schedules for the In thP Mntter of the Estate of SIEGMUKD Davis, Morey Lipschutz and' Dr. H. Monday morning, T) . Lewis will Tentative lineups for the feature 20-yard back stroke—First, Cho- week: HIUSCHBKllU, niso known as SIGr M. Levin, trustees and; Rabbi H. R. speak before the members of the game are: MXJXD UIKSCIIEERG, Deceased. dak; second, Kraft; third, Bordy; Senior League — Thursday, Janu- Notice is herpliy given tli.it the creditors Kabinowitz and Dr. Theodore N. Sioux. City Ministerial Association. j Lincoln— Pos. Omaha fourth, Burke; fifth, Margolin. Time, of said deceased -will meet the executrir of Lewis, honorary trustees. The trus- Sunday morning, session of the Reary 11, starting at 7 p. m. (Gold ; F_.. „ A. Adler ssiid estate, before me. County Judge ot tees "will comprise the advisory com- ligious School will be resumed. BTF.R.K. A. Z. A...No. 1 vs Marks Market; I Goldberg .^ F Comar 20-yard breast stroke—First, MerDouglas County, Xehrnska, nt tbe County mittee for the lodge for the coming Iiooin, in said County, on the 13th Finkelstein C J. Texnin riam; second, Bordy; third, Kraft; Psi Ma TS Wardrobe; Xi Lambda vs Court day of Februnry. ]0,14. nnd on the 13th BENEFIT GABD PARTY NEXT Deep Rocks. Grossman . G;. dny of April, ]!KH, nt 0 o'clock A. M., each J. Adler fourth, Chodak. Time, :26. The new officers will be installed WEDNESDAY KIGHT <3nj-, for the purpose of presenting their Novicoff „ _G Friedman 601yard medley relay—Winning Junior League — Tuesday, Janucl.'iims for examination, adjustment and at a banquet, January 24. An out Mrs. Sam Gross will be hostess at The tip-off for the opening tilt nllowanoe. Three months are allowed for of town speaker is; scheduled to apa Benefit Card Party next Wednes- will be at 2:00. Admission for these team, (Chodak, Kraft and Margo- ary 9, starting at 7:30 p. m.: the creditors to present their claims, from A. Z. A. No. ID0 vs. Thorpeians; the 33th dny of .Tanunry, 1934. pear at this time. Mr. Bolstein is in Fifty couples attended the Newday evening, January 10th, at eight t w o b a s e b a l l entertainments will lin). Time, :48.6. BKYCE CRAWFORD, 40-yard free style—Bordy and Mother's Cookies vs Pants Store. charge of the arrangements. Year Party given last Sunday night o clock at the. Eagles Hall. Proceeds De 15 cents. 12-22-33-3t. County Judge, Chodak tie for first; third, Gendler, The: regular bi-monthly meeting, by the Ivre Club in the Hotel War- front this affair will go to the Ladies' fourth, Epstein; fifty, Fennell. Time, scheduled Tuesday evening, has been rior. Dancing was followed by break- Auxiliary of the Talmud Torah, and An inter-club dual handball meet :26. postponed until next Tuesday, Jan- fast. the public is cordially invited to atuary 9. tend. The date for this card party between the Y. M. C. A. and the Fancy diving—First, Bordy; secJ. C. C. began last Wednesday on ond, Burke; third, Fennell; fourth, Mrs. M. Brayer was surprised at was originally set for next Tuesday, the J's four-wall courts. Next Tues- Chodak; fifth, Kraft. a house warming party last- Thurs- but has been changed to the following day the teams will meet a t the Y. Pioneer Leader day afternoon, in her home at 718 day. Reservations may be made by Eight doubles teams will participate tentative game with the LinIowa Street. Sixty-five women, at- calling Mrs. Gross, phone 5850J. Ad- in these series of games. The handTo Speak Here tended^ Sports and the J. C. C. girls' A social hour was followed mission will be 35c per person. ball teams which will represent the varsity basketball sextet has been Mrs. Goldie Meyerson, national sec- by refreshments. Center in the first round of play scheduled for January 10 at the retary of the Pioneer Women's or.. CLUBS will be: Goldman-Beber, Weiner-Ad- Center by Lee Grossman, physical ganization will come to Sioux City The Council Bluffs Lodge No. 688 ler, Mr. and Mrs. Marsh, 506 West 14th Goldberg-Bloom, Sigal-Yaffe, director. Twelve girls who have January 15 and will spend two days Street entertained 35 guests last of the Independent Order of the B'nai Altsuler-Ban, Lev- been turning out.regularly are: Ida here with members of the local Saturday evening as a courtesy to Brith will hold the installation of of- ey-Schriebman,Horwich-Herman, and Sokoloff-Pinkel. Bauserfield,- Phylia Soref, Marion Pioneer club. several out of town guests. The ficers next Monday evening, January McClintock, Miriam Greenberg,-Mary Mrs. Meyerson who visited the evening hours were spent at bridge, 8th, at 8:30 o'clock at the Eagles Hall. The Marks Market led by Willie Turey, Flo Brookstein, Rae Spar, Sioux City chapter several years ago and refreshments All members are urged to attend. Rewere served. Smith pulled an upset last Thursday Minnie Yaffee, Ellebelle Korney, will speak before an open meeting The guests of honor freshments will be served following included Mrs. by nosing out the Deep Rocks, 26- Margaret Koerting, Eva Marcus and and be the guest; of honor at a ban- M. Popoff of Los Angeles, Mrs. Sam the meeting. 24. Smith was the mainstay, scoring Jo Losey. quet during her stay in the city. of Ramona, S. D., Miss Lillian 15 points for his team. In the other The Pioneer Women are an in- Feder, Esther Rivin of Chamberlain, S. The Council Bluffs Chapter ot the contests the Wardrobe nearly pulled Lee Grossman will "hold a daily dependent organization, working to- and Senior Hadassah will hold their and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Foreman calisthenics a t ' 12:15 and at 10:15 ward the strengthening of the Jewish D., monthly meeting on January 17 th, and of Sioux Falls, S. D. people as an independent nation. The plans are being made to have this to Yale Meyerson, Leonard Krasne, Jack a. m. on Sunday, starting next Monlocal chapter is composed of thirty- Mrs. Isadore Marsh, 509 Isabella be an open meeting at the Chieftain Gordon, Robert Rosenfeld, and Coil- day. Street, entertained at an evening of five members. bridge recently, honoring the same hotel. Further announcement will be man Yudelson, all students at the The Health Club volleyball league made in next week's issue of the Jew- University of Iowa at Iowa City. guests. . will fold tip today with the chamish Press. Miss Carolyn Rosenfeld left TuesJunior Hadassah pionship rnatch Doc Ellis' Athletics day for Los Angeles, Calif., to resume Mrs. Sam Lipman was hostess at The regular meeting of the Junior a luncheon and bridge party Wed- The Council Bluffs Chapter No. 7 of her studies at the University of Cali- and Iz Levinson's Giants. The Giants were victorious in the first Hadassah chapter will take place nesday afternoon, h o n o r i n g her the A. Z. A. will hold a meeting next fornia. round of play while the Athletics Sunday afternoon, January 7th, at 2 Miss Gwendolyn ileyerson left Wednext Wednesday evening in the Jew-daughter Rose, whose; marriage to ish Community Center. The meeting Stanley Carl of New York City will o'clock at the synagogue at 618 Myn-nesday for Lincoln, where she is a came, back to capture the second. ster street Henry Mendelson, local student at the University of Nebraska. Axt .arrangement for a series" of DO NOT BE FOOLED by the fat* thof at! +ir«», will be a joint gathering, of the Ha-be an event of next month. president, who attended the District Miss Pauline Bernstein is leaving volleyball games with the Y. Jf."<J. dassah and the' Young Judean groups A. Z. A. conference In Milwaukee, Saturday night for Madison, Wisconhurriedly glanced at, look more or less alike. sponsored by the Hadasah, and known The Hadassah Sub-Debs held a Wisconsin, last week, will give a re- sin, to resume her studies at the Unias the Junior Judeans and the Ha-slumber New Year's Eve, in While Mohawk Tires are considered by many port of the convention. versity of Wisconsin. dassah' Sub-Debs. The program will the homeparty of Miss Elaine Rosenfeld. Jack Rosenfeld T£ft Wednesday for be • presented by the Junior Judeans. •o be the mosf beautiful tires now made in The Chevra B'nai Yisroel Society Lexington, Mo., wljeire he is attending Following the program, plans will Miss Neomi Bernstein of MinneWentworth 'Military!*Academy. will hold a meeting next Tuesday be completed for the next few months. America, their real superiority lies considerably apolis is a guest this week in the night, January 9th, at eight o'clock at Miss Freda Albert will preside. home of her sister, Mrs. Eli Robinow. the Chevra B'nai Yisroel synagogue Mr. and Mrs. Frank Krasne and deeper than in mere appearance, regardless of daughter, Marjorie, left Thursday at 618 Mynster street. Sisterhood night for Los Angeles, California, for Members of the Debra Club met how excellent they may seem to the eye. an extended visit; Numerous fareTuesday evening in the Jewish ComCOLLEGE SET BETURXS TO The monthly, meeting of the Mount munity Center. well parties have 'Been given in their STUDIES Remember, too, that while a carpet tack is a Sinai Temple Sisterhood will be held Among the college • students who honor. this noon in the Temple Annex, fol- Miss Bess Zeligson and Miss Mil- have returned to. their various schools carpet tack, one looking and acting very much lowing a one o'clock luncheon. Plotkin visited with friends in of learning following a two weeks' Mr. and Mrs. Abe Markovitz had as Miss Inez Osborne, director, of the dred their house guests during the holiwinter vacation at home are Messrs. like another, tires may differ in quality as greatly Carroll School of Dancing" will be Omaha this week. days Mr. and Mrs. Jack Friedman and in charge of the program, which will MONSKY. GHODINSKV & small daughter, Natalie, and Mrs. as the day and night differ in light and shade. consist of dances, readings, and mu- Rose Albert, Inez Leaff, Jennie 8HOTWEIX, George Wright, all of Des Molnes, la., VANCE and HAKSX B. COHEN <5hindler, Sarah Rocklin, Eudice Still737 Omaha National Bank Bide. sical numbers. and Miss Shirley Hoffman of Kansas AH tires are built round to fit a wheel, but only Mrs. Joe Miller will give, a re- man, and Leah Herman visited with City, Mo, Numerous affairs were NOTICE TO FREDERICK it. WEINSTEIN, REBA given in their honor during their port on the Sisterhood convention friends in Omaha, last week end.. WEINSTEIN, MOSES FANGEK, .SADY.E held recently in Omaha. Mrs. S. K. NOVOSON and MAUUICE J. NOVO- visit. The Friedmans returned to Miss Rosaline Pizer of Omaha is SON, impleaded with FANGER REALTY their home last week" and Miss HoffSchulein is in charge of the luncheon. a corporation, and JOUS a guest, this week in the home of COMPANY, Mrs. Louis Agranoff will preside* DOE, real name unknown: man left Monday for her home in Notice Is hereby civen that on the 21stKansas City. Mrs. Wright, mother of Miss Frances Emlein. Sund?/ after- day of December, 1033, Sophie Nevelett are built to meet Mohawk's exacting standards noon Miss Emlein entertained a filed her petition to commence an action Mrs. Markowitz, will remain here for Shaare Zion the District Court of Douglas County, group of friends at a tea, as a cour- in Nebraska, Doc. 300, Page 162, against the a several weeks' visit. of quality and workmanship. tesy to Miss Pizer. above named defendants, the objects and "Can or Shall the Jew Survive" prayer of -which said petition is to foreclose a certain mortgage in the snm of Miss Rose Mendelson entertained is the subject of Rabbi H. R. RabEarl Himowitz, Albert Herzoff, Na- $3,000.00 covering the North One-Half twenty guests at a Bridge-Tea at her inowitz's sermon this evening at (NV>) of the West One-Hnif (Wi£) of the East One-Third (El/3) of L,ot Two (2),home Sunday afternoon. Out-of-town Shaare Zion Synagogue. Cantor A. than Levich and Henry Himowitz Block One Hundred Twenty (120), Original Pliskin with the synagogue choir will visited in' Omaha, last week end.. City of Omaha. Douglas County, Nebraska, guests present were Miss Dorothy as surveyed and lithographed, which was Weinstein of Fort Worth, Texas, and chant the service. Harry Shulman dion the 4th day of February, 1028, Mrs. Jake Kroloff of Council executed rects the choir. by - the Fnnger Realty Company, a cor- Miss Lillian Jacobs of Iowa City. poration, by itB duly authorized and conOver 600 people attended the Stu-Bluffs, Iowa, visited with friends in stituted officers, Moses Fanger, President, dents Welcome Service held last Fri- Sioux City this week.; and Marie Goldblatt, Secretary, and by Miss Jeannette Baron of Kansas Sadye K. Novoson and Maurice J. Novo- City, Mo,, spent the past week-end day evening. Rabbi • Uri Miller of Stay in the Tower son, sometimes known as Sadie K. Novo- here visiting her parents, Mr. and Omaha delivered the sermon. Fol- New Place for son and Morris J. Novoson, wife nnd hns; band, as mortgagors, to Sophie Neveleff, Mrs. Joe Baron. of Hospitality lowing the services, an informal re- Land Office which said mortgage was recorded on the ception was held in the social hall of day of February, 1028, in Book C35, Tel Aviv, Palestine.—The ; legal 14thPage • 37, of the Mortgage Records of Mrs. B. Saltzman returned home the synagogue, with the Ladies Aux- question • whether the-vestibule ;o£ a at Douglas County, Nebraska, said .mortgage Sunday following a week's visit in - From the Morri son tower you iliary acting as hostesses. Students synagogue can be used as a real es- being executed, delivered and given to sethe payment of a certain promissory Manning, Iowa, at the home of her look down on the "busiest taking part in the program included tate office. will- be decided by a; court cure note. an.obligation in writing, dated FebrBill Lansberg, Dena Beron, Edward of law here after an Investigation is u a r y s . 1928; that the defendants Fred- son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and corner in the world";but high erick R. Weinstein and' Reba . Welnstein Mrs. Keith Peltz. Miller, William Mqsow, jGerald Co- launched into the matter. up in the quiet, homelike v .'. .,_•_. claim certain interests in the above dehen, Jack Greenberg, Berhice Galin- The local magistrate has received a scribed mortgnged premises by virtue of rooms you are far away from having purchased same, but that whatever sky, Lilliam Magaziner, Ivan -Lasen- complaint that ambitious inembers of interest they or either of them have In or noise and hurry. Deep, sof* sky, Bernard Lazriowich, Ida Edel- the synagogue of Merzak Baatei Mel-- to said mortgaged premises is subject to, Rev. A. Diamond junior nnd inferior to tho lien of the plainbeds bring sound sleep. N o man and Burn ell Koolish. -,, ... , .. acha, the artisans' suburb, for want tiff's mortgage; that John Doe, real name Recognized as Of her Chicago hotel gives as On January 19, the Baccalaureate of a better place, have established the unknown, is a tenant in possession of said premises, and that whatever InPRACTICAL MOHEL service for the Jewish graduates of land office in the hall of the house of mortgaged much at such reasonable rates. terest the said John i Doe has, if any, in said mortgaged premises. Is subject to, Central and East High School vwill prayer. . • ':'- " ' " the. Phone 1059 junior and Inferior • to the lien Pf the Quick, Cheerful Service be held in the synagogue^- Twenty- The c wardens have voiced protest plaintiffs mortgage*, And that there is now COUNCIL BLUFFS .the plaintiff on said Indebtedness the five students will participate, •, that commerce is a desecration of the due sum of $3564.10 with interest thereon at In the Heart of the Loop Following the service.: a .reception Holy place. the rate of 10% per annum from and after DAFID H0BERMA5 BARNEY HOBERMAN • December 21st.-1933. Home of Terrace Garden
Mme. Raisa Explains Her Berlin Appearance
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Notice ia.further given that plaintiff prays that an nfeconnting be had for the amount due her • under nnd by virtue of said, mortgage for principal and Interest; that same be adjudged and decreed to be a first mortgage Hen on said-mortgaged premises;: that the defendants or some of them be "ordered and directed to pay plaintiff the sum eo found due thereon and in default of such payment for twenty: days from the entry <>f the decree, said premises be sold for the satisfaction of said mort-. gage debt as provided by law and the purchaser put In possession thereof;.that said defendants and each of them be foreclosed of all right, title, Interest and equity of redeineptlon In or - to snid:moxtgnjsed premises; that the plaintiff recover her posts in. this action expended; that the der fenaants Fanger Realty . Company and Moses Fangep.bo decreed to be personally liable for any deficiency remaining after applying the proceeds of said sale andthat She. be granted such? other anfl further relief as to the court may seem just and equitable.• Notice .is further given that yon nnil ! each of yon are hereby required to answer '. «aid petition on or before the 10th day" of '• February, 1934. • . • • SOPHIE NEVELEFF, By Shotwell. Monsky. Grodinsky, Vance. ~ « . — and-Harry B. Cohen, . ' , 12-29-33-lt: Her Attorney*.
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