December 14, 1934

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to the lileah Immsk Pe&ple "JEntereil a s JSeeond Class "Hail •1'OBtOttlCC dtf£ h

.j JO. 3821. at

, 3LB34

Vol. X—2*o. 4 6

People Sabotage

''Officers Monday! 'he ssfnyn—SiTr?i^?a* e l e c t i o n o f

Glasgow, :ScotSand (WJ*^.) Thousand* of-kilted Scotsmen are skating •' ifaeir "Iseajis anoarniully anfl -wondering1 what ±he -world Jias COTQE to "wrhssi Scotsmen can't. -win

- SPIM AT

i cers of the local lodge of the iB'rith will be 'held Monday evening. | "33ie anost liqpeful -flung 3 saw i n and declared -fhat '^Hitler is insane on [December "17. at the Jewish Com-j Germany i mxmrfcy Center. "Delegates -will .also \ y Jast Etnmner "was the -wa> ttw> Jewish question." -Classes :in Omaha's •aiUer,** she said, "still has an imm xif i h e "Nazis \ be chosen dor the convention of Dis- ; Authorities Gaim -Qav ihe lanfeSemtti Union Here g_ o£ _Bigh l mense i b i d xm "imrny German rpegple, -was being -sabotaged :by i h e German io be: <OiifliYEfl catnm a r e Ajnctiarmig smooHily, ac-. y but ilie Reeling i n Germany "towarn peojple,"33oroti}yTinnnpsan (Mrs. Sin-with rfee bag-pipsrs of &e" Je*asii I t s Usefulness clair ItewiB) declared during -her ad- Mm i s . ;going .down nrnH down snfl !LadB' BxigaJie m ^LcnSonr an: all- cording ;to Dr. TMiip ^ h e r , Sounder j Pea^Ted on t h e program will be dress on ~**H ' **re Crisis ti> Erermany" the- down." Two "things, ah<> pointed out, and president. "Whsn registration was, s o m e entertainment by George Givot, Jewish sranp ol players. : 3itirli<rmt> are. hnTfJmg Germany/together today: i- (JTA)—After "ten-years •*tghmrtrng--rrMTrp jaSicially Siill xlosea, l .fee fe students d ." Givrt, Gree]: Sy -TmaTihnoas -^vate of i3ie. judg- bered apprtmmately 200. "Work i n Soviet IRussia, i h e Jewish which attended the opening number of of war and lear of Bitter, of «s, ;all ^Scotsmen ^and -veteran bagColonization .Association (ICA), i h e t h e Community IForum series a t the chaos. | Capacity classes are taking fee-Ln Onmha that evening i i r s t riareign Jewish relief organiza- 2. S2. XL, 'Wednesday evening. Hn Jxsr opinion, the "Nazi revolution" pipers, iJie iag-j3ping »if tthe Jew- !eleven subjects being taught. There A b l l e r ^anxum ish flayers ^sas iaDfid a s i t e best iion i o work under ±he Soviet .regime, part famous -foreign caixespondent,. "was cnot a revolution ol a social tdass 'has been xonsiderabie demand ^or an i ^ aceoTdingin *all .Scotland, Ungiaffli, Ireland 'was crrdeTed ±0 liquidate'its activities. Miss "Thompson Teas ousted from fier- irrimarily, lint a .revolution of a ^gentour of the | additional class on Thursday ev^ Ateamson. president. and Whales. The order -was issued last "pieek by •ma-ny :~Hiim"^p^gt iniinTIi*u*. :~Kfof» ^li^R s p e n t eration. "She iold neT audience "how Ttbfr •s -with a e. niovBjnings, and it i s possible that one or -&s Comzet, the government jcnmmit- many iyears :as ;press • correspondent i n y ^ t h TTt trf^rrrprfTy'\tz\t\ JJ rnw|i-n|» with 3a i merit, of the "Onion o: American Hetwo rmare subjects may be added to T i gJ l f h i h Berlin and -carious other European leeling df despair -yxai Ihad grasped a t on land, ixf-^which "ieefEar settling j brew Congregations. the = currienhzm after the iirst of "the i The theme of the meetings this P TPeter Bmidovitch, Tiee^nresident of cities, und is -well-versed in ^European the :Nazi program, since i t promised everything "to -everyiiody. Witii tbe .". ' ' .---••• jyear is "The Necessity for HeligiouH ~ftas TT. S. 5 . -JB.,' is chairman. "The ar- a f f a i r s . 1£ mew ^subjects are .addetl. •they Be'r "states i h a t " i h e Jewish CohmizaI liecovery5' alongside of the -efforts She Jdeclared ihat many^ many Ger- passage ofiime, they nave become diswill be tiosen irom the iollowing: "tion ZAssdciation must no "longer tcon!that are being put iorward toward as'Jxatl ibldTnerwMle she was there illusioned Zin -Hitlerism. "HieTe iis nnA course in Jewish philosophy, Jew-' un Germany a big,- heroic iimie J±F • colonization activities i n i h e t"*3 a m ashamed :to 4 e a <Geniian; ! economic recovery. ish legends, and Jewish folk songs.1 movement, but under a dictatorship i t iafewish -autonomous ^regions i n the (ijecauseaf "this anti-Semitic ;* These meetings are arranged "with Those interested in any particular: Ukraine •where 3t 'has:been operating !She ~told of -many instances where is difficult i o r the -people i o know i the objective of obtaining lor the isubject or having suggestions are; since 1923. y will lijfi'i Jewish ^families rreceive ^gffts. :Howers -what as soing on, since i h e ? nnicate with William I ^ e ^ o n ^ Jerm^Kesidents \ F ^ d l / i S S ^ J i t u e n t : :teng±h and i ^ | ^ f e An explanation a s i o what'-xaused land xandy 3rom Gentile -iriends -who are-cut off rfrom -essential iniorraatinB iand sdm t 0 arouse and are inrther -told so many things drastic order was ;given >by -Com-1could :mot continue "their jfrteirdship soustry-smd-Canada!. - ^ x S t a d l a n ^ Council ^ T •• mterest in the a r e untrue." . - • iin . .n -statement io- i h e i openly Sor :iear of oomproinising both One a e a r ; Jevrs of America, on belialf of their added to i h e faculty of the \ ••*-3t" i s -very difficult," .Miss 03iaixn>-: Telegraphic- Agency. Tteiaewanfl Bentile. i national religious institutions, such statement Tjomte-out i b a t ihe-3[GAij She guoteda German-frieim a s tell- son said, "to -find anyone in Germany Geneva (JTA).—The extraordinary j ^ the Hebrew "Union college, the I>eft Hession of the Coundl of the l,eague : p a T t m e n t o f Synagogue awl School •:-• Son-ean-%e-a--Gentile -and- over "SO years -old wno js-a \Nazi. -£t i s : -.eugaged-tm-aelfrligaida- 'ri Tfae -school will -not liold sessians of Nations unanimously approved of jE x t e n s i o n ; a n d V, n i m b e r o f religious during.riiiE.3iast -the ;nnti^Semitic agitation, of also -^very idifficult etc find .anyone in i i t i e w ^ears anaisapport fl 17. •was no longer -sufficiently active in rthe JIazis, but :yon c a n t b e a Christian Germany unaer-20 "who i s mat ;£L Nazi, activities maintained by ihe union. of ; •limits the ^irotectioii of the Jews in or .-was not ;n INazi nr Cannnunist a t ^promoting Jewish -colonization in Uus- jand .support it." ^And JUss Thompson Dr. Leyy is one ol a group of 250 l&te Baar ~to one -year only if the landed, ""There are a Tot of Christians one riime." Hefarev,- Union leader* v-ho STT apeak'Saar plebiscite next month turns; the tnr: on this theme. Re. observed hi« fifs tZThompson "sras. introduaed bjy Jewish 'Ctilohization -AsEocia- j.in Germanyr' territory over io Germany. JMason, tspciety editor of .merely xamonflaging its•;... 'Of -the-anti^Semiiic program a s agitieth birtliday jusi a lew weeks ago, j The supreuK iribunal vrhicli the 3eB-liguidation sctiYities. by investing rtated xm all sides constantly -from traone of SheJlocal.nailies. Stein's xa3e:_nx rmaiiLbwri; xS :i3oth! the g J l ;a jyear idio, tpress tmd JLecturre iJlatform f chapters; I3U=eaiSe3s of ihe'iBSiai Slrith j • "three Siundred iJumsand oruhles were 3?red S . THiite,. chairman of only iin-its colonization jxrojects in^^hreally .taken seriously :by .the -German -nmn. committee, made. :tae introductory, are invited. ; .. - _ . -j ; tion to Seal with -every complaint com-', life. He is Hussia," -ihe Comzet statement de-^masses,.thenaio-3fiwcoUld.live:in GeT- remarJis and, •introduced Itrs. "Mason. i r v i n g : iSiflJ :«f ILincaln,-; grandi • ing xram Jews or any other minority; ly mail and outstanding' leader. He ckxres. ' I h i s sum "is .orijy one-ienth of pnany. T h e 3aet i b n t -thousands conAleph •Godol ri£;A. Z. A., "Kill ire the iin the Saar and to decite whether the \is .a vice-president of the Central -thfi -sinns wKich i h e Agro-Joint, i h e j-rtinue t o rwofk and-Jive ibere jiemanC- Sinart talks, songs,; The 'Women's Division of the Je->v- i eomplainte are justified. A yeaT after '••Conference of American Habbis. J&mefican JewEh organization ;is Jn- ;strateB ibat -tlte jRerman jieople, a s . a id II. Wiee will intro33td .special - fiatelainment, -will be [.isfa Cammanity: Center and Welfare • ^ ' ^ 5 ^ ^ ; ^ ^.flj^al ^ n i be I 3 i a b b i "vestnig annually fin \Jswish xokaiizar. widte rhave a n inlieTent_sanse of debifc -evening. -fflnttrres BE i a s :HMgram.. (Peaeration is ^nauguratmg a ^ e w I dissolved, since its existence wffl no id u c e 1>T iion vfofk in ISnssia. Tbts i s , uiuLWiih-Galdstein is chairman of :±he iiTiwmuwt JA.. Z. A. "1 .andtserviee —— an exchange bureau i o r f'lgnggy ^ necessary. j'ifacttfcatifaeiniBas^sEhich- iSbe aescribed :the "ihird JReieh" :as game [tickets tn "lectirres. nraiaaticB, •nrasi-nrasi- ;i Dggphs 'Xtesphs assurances giver. sriveri h\ by mnneriramsr- ^ ^ i o c a l committee for the Union. Jewish Golonitaiion Association *t& -nation suffering irom ^a -aervpus a t -the -Jggdsli-Xlominanity Seater. -• ical events, .and other communal acti- 0 1 I S "French and Czechoslovakia!! Oiiiers on the cammittee include jhas at fits -Sisposal, a r e incometaoi breakdown, led by three -people sufA.. 2L JA.~. day :fire.prfties. ' ; statesmen xo JewiA delegates .in i i e ; Manning Handler. Dr. E. T. TriedT h e second1 aiumber on "the i a s at its disposal, incomparably larg- fering rrroni a .nervous "breakdown," •, "-itoys ietw.een] ' The purpose of tiie bureau is t o ; course of the last Jew -weeks that they : nian. Jlabbi Frederick Cohii and Eablecture series Jieing sponsored--J17 e r tfhan of die Agro^Foiritl £ t , 3^iedicate fbscaoae the medium iirrougii widch ! would see -to it that Jewish -rights bi "Wice. Jicnior "Vaafl .XI^MIJ-*^^-wlll he Jselll IThe sl 3emsh ^colonies i fctirose -not xtsiag •tfaetriick€ts"-iolvaTi- Lskoald be iully and indefinitely pre-r: Pollowing this evenmg'e services,

10 MMF H

insr tDecemberllS "at -i " ^ . •jjxj--^jii^r-47illj-^

gfitting -will ;naw he ttceSovlfit -^overmnent "diiectly. T h e 3fiTO^ -colonies -"WBISI ^were aannnis^ i c t e d l j y ^ifiBB-HCTA a r e ;iacated:an ihe antonomous :.Jewisn

r of tine"'^eobnass,*

affairs vriiv lasn -ihe tickets ~Ui [ tected "in ihe Saar, not a single mfiffi- ', the Sisterhood of Temple "Israel ^will snaal -2nd aaSsbfefie-r^sotl [ihs -evening i o ihose unable i o :afiora i ber of the Council raised .any objec- i hold E "TecEFtion in "htmrrr of "Jte. ..virtues «S t h s j i r -purchase one. A file of ihese -wish- iicm a t ih«* session to ihe paragraph Levj-. The public, is invited to attend jjEttriatsmy: - filial jnig "to barrow such tickets -Trill be in ihe Iranct-German agreemem on sad ine«t 3labbi IJBYJ.' y,: jjaxity, -xanSact,' ira-,jiept.-- •- .. • ' !"&£ Saar which.jprovioes ikat-«guality ; 3>r. :Freaerick Cohn -of Teanple TiiaaeJjavii^iicfaetsio-aiiy-sffaiFs-liciT ."ibe national Tiilturilies :is gwss-: "Israel will -wxsroy the^f t»f j ^anabfe 'ter-mtfeenri -are..iggnested 3g--GenaBrr •Beth' SMtonv -part diplomatic in: SJtmx.-CiirrCmnmuniiy, Center or with Mrs. IrTom- xS. •embarrassed by ihe fact ihat the • -vin Stalnsaster, iiead of i t e educaJf ation? faafi -found lie WEy tional xsommittee of ..the astsntiyto force "Germany i o 'accord :to thei-I -fonHea Wonisn's Divisiou. ^Mrs. Stalmaster's committee inchaSes ten -women, -who Ihave alreadjof the diplomats -admitted \ j-faeeoiae active -workers in -co-ppetatthe [ ing with the Center, ge-oneratiug in to live np the Connnnnity j'ortiin a3id aiding :iple of enforcing' pro- ; ———— "Kitii the adult education program. iectiQEfomational and ^racial mintsr-. Season tickets for the J. C. C

saxians^123 :w2n~varians 3ieapie ii ibis ^visit :m prance, ^Latvia, ,3»dlanii, p 3Ef(roe "fheiSaviet ^ovsrnmant xame i » \ slovakia, -Austria, TEnghmfl -and 3taly, tparliament, i t THIS disclosed herr ;power. ThereMTS coloniesTvnich-was< h iolish naily,0.1th old ld Czafist U i i Ibustrowan-v ICi startea iimBer the aaegime. Godzienny. .Some oi ihein are jjver a lumdred | ^ J J S J i t js;-undeTstQod,'naay~be xm , old. The colony. IDobroe, jict oi revenge an the 3»art -of .tlie maining -may be. iibiained .iat~a-» .18, one of ihe nHest of tfeene sblanies, o l i s h " government "against i h e "Tip!? a .population ^ af-abont 3ive ihou- xongly -warjdsd .addxass -delivered i n Band Jews. ihe Tblish parliament By Jir. Joshua The Jewish Colariizatibn Aasocia; ities. : regular basketball league season ^will Tvnichlhe ^accused the Polish iion was .active ;in JUissia long :bebefore ifae -entire world A sensaiion vras crsateil at .the--go on sale next week, 1J8P Grossman, meeiang of iiie Council when Captain physical director announced. iare i h e war. 3t asniparariiy suspend- \ ^ -njistreating i h e Jewish 3>apubj.tion xif-ihe 1 ed its activities jflofittg1 "ihe Jiolshevak I - j ^ ^ xeducing i t i o beggary, Anthony ISden, head of the Sritish '• The season tickets "wiir: entitle "the Esasou, "iNigtttLJJver oaos.- This is _a aevolniion. i t , iowever, asesumed i t s I ^cemding -to iifi 3Ronsh jpaper, fte ; dfilegatior. at Geneva, announced that; holder to admission to all league colorful and .highly dramatic "Stflry j -wnaric in 3tnssia i n 1323, oh i h e bams ^iggtatai systsm in Poland vdll 'be j - - _= i-Kngland .is ready to send B-ritish i game? during: the '1?>34-So "««Hren. -.Ac1 ol 'the last stand of .the "Spaaisli :in j eff a special arrangement jnnde ninth . ^ ^ H ^ ^ ^ M ^ a y i h a t :it T?ffi Salt Lake City. Utah, (JTA) ;-troops i o "the Saai* ouring- the plebis- \ cording to present ii'ians, "there -will Hew.IMexico. . j 11 -the -Soviet gavexnment. ^ 1 ^ ^ 5 , 0 3 3 ^ ^ j O r i h e Jewish tmmoT— one -aimks of Utah he nsnaliy' E3re " ^ I17311-® "^31 : n c r t do so and if: be 28 games played, two on each will be held (J. T. -A.>—The -tremenThe oxderJssued Ijy i h e ^Soviet -an- jj^j. -^ return a rshjgle deputy i o ifee "t. Prendi To- j Tuesday antl Thursday nights. Single i h\- Jews IRl R -&aritiaa, alflon^gh'preveniinE^re JJQA. j-ggjm. jb± jspecial ^jarlianieEtaTy aesi h e Jewish race i S •aunister j^avai uecbtred i o the j admission for each evening -was -set Sunday ^ftemoGii.DecemijeT 23. xtt mmoxities "Ti3<»r the c 3rom rontmnlng its activitifis along ^ ^ ^ j ^ vjje iheld, i h e journal rasi n the affairs of this ±a i a r ' C o n n . c f l , . t I i s t Trance is definitely d e - | a t ^ trents: seastro tiolcet!? aw one ,,,?; government were '.picturfid here at-an ; ot t o i h e luies of amnnaimg .Jewish 3gri- sgjted,' anfl i h e constitution Trill .be state a t the present time. ; t C T m i r r 1e a ™ TBrHci'Hte :fc Because of "fee unusual interest bel -among its pioneers. i ^ f f * ^ 1 movement ^ovem OT t of tro troops into < 'Grossman stated that the low searailture. Hoes not interfere with i h e n m m ^ abolishing -proportional j e - detection onass •meeting .adaresseii by but Jews are also ,president Gregory iPetrovsky oT the ing shown in ~the activities of son ticket rate will enable more pe°"which i h e Jewish Cblaniza- -presentation in iiie :Sejm and i n the of Utah Sioneers, a state Ukraine ^Soviet Republic. _ and its workshop, i h e groirp, 3 statement by ihe liench diplo-; p t e ^ nttes& -the contests, adding lion Association ciation:is :is xonducting xonductmg 'm in Jbcs JbB- i "Under Czarism, :he said, only, iich whose -membership has -heretofore a I w in granling rredit land -helping j • * ; color to the igames, and giving- the ordinance, aetion, has severaf Jews -weeks ago the French Jewish merchants and •professionals been lnniteo, is extending an invita- of : i o :niigrate ifrom ihe country. e .vennnent so] greater incentive to no be p i a y e T S : a among its jnembers^ and one of its' i o ihe noanced t]iat ft i o "live in I[harkov. iian t o all interested -to join. prmcipal ofiicers, Berber!: I . .Aue3?mm3efll>yiBaroniHirsch. pbjeed i y a JuL open rmeeting viill" be held on forces to .the ..Saar ir, :ssnd The tickets -will be on sale at the Bait Xake City, department ; ort j«r,. - strengthsn _ In 12.31 Saron TManfice-de IHirsch i^h s local police "Kharkov Thursday evening. Ttecember 20. at iirt i:more than 125,000 . . . . . . . . : store operator -who "has been chosen ^ t j ^ during the plebiscite*^next ; f a r jlecided i o n s e -his frmTrmTtap f i-rrtnTW> t o , Ihe J. C. C. a t S p. m . There lias .been a great Increase in the. individual members of the second viee-nTesident, is-a Jew. month. °j 3 > o l a n a •save -fee JJfiws of ^Eastern lEurops t"*^6 ^ the aunnber of Jewish -workers tent.; O11S :eams. T i e Jews have been ^represented j T h e ' Saar report approved by the -Jrom deaeneratian and Tiim. In "^ifiw i ish aelectors iiave a n 3^absskxte -plcryefl in iniiustry, he said. T I K K -wfll in Uteb. "-since t h e Errly OO'S or soon Council fails -not only -to protect JewXha&ov locomotivfi-^works 'enapioys of .his -knowledge of i h e iistaxic late paTuamsnt. of the Jewish rpeople, lie -fiiouEht i h e aspxesentation :m i h e roming of 3iigham Toxmg, ^isti interests but. alsv themtsrests t>f 3,500 Jewish Twarlcers, -while rtiiou&li : ihe speech Mnnaon leader and -first -goventor of I American investors. iffiUions of dot- i .best £XDfidifint~would .bfi^&e iranspoTtands of oothers jaxe employed i n ttrae-. by ZUr. Thon in i h e jaarliament, "in t i e Utah -territory. They -were given Liars iuvssted by Americans .in .Saar;; _ing of Jews into "new xountfiesa Ihe omphuned fof the desper- tor works, electro-ntecbanie works, 3J S.)—An epiil&t kindly-welcome by "the mesabers of; ^enterpcrises will now face i h e same ! settling ihem on land." and imetaTlurgical ^i odirlicnlt position • : in?*I?; fti« dominant church, core, -perhaps,! fate a s the debts which Germanv owes1 !He iomuled ihe Jewish 'Coloiiization Jewish -workers take a rpart dn ±he _ A regular meeting of the Omatw S *> fee 2aet that ihey _attended i o i t_ o American investors. The "bonds -with -an initial cap- Jewry, a Jewish weekly, -Association ic'ity round] ;and dhe jjoflitical .life oil jFolksbiat, -which appears i n 3Eielsli,: busniess and also because • owned by Americans and other for-' Hebrew School PaTeut-Teachers -HS"ital oJ ?10^JOO^OQO, Ao which 3ie iater •the.country:* Jewish iEmhs ;are xon.IMormon, or 'letter• eigners in :Saar investments Vvill now ! socisticm will be held Tuesday, -added a ifuxfiier ^0^)1)0,000. This was Polish Upper T^l^gin. -yrss conxiscated. v ducting •important cultural dd 'J intended *to ^serve ras a JiasiB Sat -escation -work. T h e -Jewish choir, -te ^HtEsive xolonization -.of Russian .Jews pointed out, Ihad "iecome a ^reat ar- ihat : against which .the government, tsf i t e ! arnmunee ihe various chairmen ol i n .Argentina. DBrring 3Sa238S7J5.O0O tistic loxce :in i h e lifs o£ the xity. tproniptea* d i e Brooklyn jEliiical CuU Unitetl States crecently protested offi- ; the sJanding committees a t this tinre. : Jewish ^amuies aettteS rthere, Ibut latA special Jewish imflitia 1JHS" been iarre School 'to J?eveal ihat -arnoTrg its : cially. ; The mann -.speaker of the cvenrag er the colonization movement .stopped created as TceH as a. Jewish "law xonxt students T^as i h e ^seven :and a half; and -the HCA llhriited iitself -to cansolAccording i o i k e agreement farmu-1 will be Mrs. Jrwin Sammec, rpresi3>resldfin± ^etrovsky saia. of 3. Jewish prcDEessional iduLiu!^ vthe -position of £he first jjroups lated at Home, 'Jrance -will -receive j dent of tile Omaha Council «I ParThe election Jcampaigii Lin «JfiVEisii -whose iinisTTiggneR ijnotient i s .has been sreceiven here that 01 settlers. from Germany about ?SO$OO,0GO com-1 ent-Teachers associations. sections of ifae -1 ilrrrifno JS being -jcar— 1,, -the 'iighest in i h e -jsraria,, :2nfl .25 Samuel iSchlfismgET, acoznier Dmahan, g in aflfiititss to jfa 1B96 33aTan Birsch died .and neJSTS. .Aima'ShlaeB TSUI At A e -annual Section of officers on entirely i n "VtHi^TgTi- lEven dieH last SEriday might a t ILos ATISBtons degrees higher than that of TEanstein. vtjueathed all ahares i n i h e IECA ^nines, in;pimio selections, "Rabbi U r i of ihe 3>ebaTah Seeietv. heM Tnesi S nouncemfints-of .ihe .Soviet Central : Tests ibsve «stablishBd i h a t iiiis ii l B l ,Ber- les.• 3Le ihad "been a resident of Dma^ e ; - w i l l --speak ^Committee .are published Brooklyn *J5KunderkinQ*" has a mental Tm, iFranKort, omd rHie -AnglorJewish jlha 5or i e n ;years, "leaving ihere nbout -iE j activities. i n ^Yiddish. age of 36. !He has inrenissltainnnbsr Equal -Association oi ILandon. lEach of i h e S5 -years .ago. All interested in Jewish education lir= A habitants of i h e .SaaT rggardleaE 30 ^Surviving are "three sisters: IMrs. alphabet ami Tuimerical anosical ni>: iire above recerve'd ^Five ihousand Bhares. jfirst -viee-ijsresidesi; ~"~ ~~ "- - ^ ~" "~' invited to ioia. t; -Mrs. Mrs. JJ.. Perdinand Adler and JHTS. Theodore tation system. language and "Teligioi*. ^Iciual: In the .mticles xif i h e organization g ^Bernstein, isecond -vice^pTesid^mt; Haver of Dmaha, and TSrs. Charles :ar6 also to Uaxon had .stipulated -that up ISas. J . IFmfcpI, ireastrrer; • !3irs. .>—-Turkey-too ; Istanbul social insurance •io -ftftv -per =ent .xS i h e capital i e jJtoaewater rd Xos_&ngeles. jjears t o .have its Jewish ,^iikl rpro- ! Charles 3ios£, -Tecoxiding secretarr; |-relief is concerned. spent on ihe puri'-lma* oi land -and -&e ____^_^^____ digy in ihB person xS iseven-afear-nia ]3Hrs. IMas %3Froinkin, Smaiice -secre- j T h e official coEununipue • issued; seoond-half oor colonization ^mrposes ; ' with Tejraru to "fee agreement said: | Oslia Xebovttch, who iis bemg-haitefi jtary. and loans i o Jewish setflers. The second" !Tonth.*s IForum a s :a gfinius on i h s Tsiano. "Mer anusi- J I **Xiiis .inorning, 'the'. .helfl Rehearsals are sared by ifae Sound Table c£ 3ewish j cal talents .are .so 'Hwft'aing '&st 3^resihe 3Tourh-Bras held a f i h e J . C. C Tues32rnie IPriesman -was .chosen day evening, vriih n large attendpersonally •v ~m -» -r m n Usat x£ .ihe UIothEr rhajrter xR A. nutted - w n i d i ^ l l l te •Of TUtnOEd ™Orah Set j-Z. JL a t JI .meeting -held ."Snnday at IHarold Baks led ih.e discussion, nnder' bis fae rorgan ..m •* -syna- j ssresmEst I e a e | i e c ] between 'the J . C. C. "He -succeeds Xonis J . ^ . i on "'Sewish Touih in Sss the Ger<m -fire well-known Economic T7arld To..Soeckex, -who ..is an/a^ganist . f e r i n a n ^ v The date i o r ihe -Hiirtieth anni- 3Qklin. on all •question^ 627 -Jews Deportefl •Other officers sleeted: offers an excellent oppnrday." B e declared ihat too profession, xontenas '.that : 2 3iazis: ^ M i w Tersary joelebration and banquet of submitted the "csamfaibmitted to the csamfai are permitted to -work i o r JSTCS ir,;a t i O E o f "the "Tahnnd "Torah :has ieen Bet tor -vice=president; 33yman Tcmin, ireas- Jewish .youths were g u i g the pxo- from Psatetine committee. ThL=! agree-' tnnity not only for acting but also jirer; A.rt -Adlsr, -senioT ^erjgEa Jjcndoa—^Between Jannarj' 1 and commercial establishments 3hsa th jjjgat p ^ signedd ty the French and ' for singing iessianal ^fields ^ n 3 suggested -that jPenrnsry 2. g g and danchig:. g JSovembsr .23 of this jrear C27 3 e r a -fact i h a t Jse played i a e jsrgan in a German governments tirraugh ibenmore ought -to enter t t e scientific -A special, elaborate jnrogram "is arma; Berbert "Marks, -jnninr I t is planned to have two -perfortnS were deportsd irom ^afesthifi, i n - svnagague is 3ro "viofcttkro iS IKaai' respectivE ambassadors anfl dele-i ances, a chiiiiren'p matinee asa em "bshg; arranged i o appropriately ob- _geant-at-arms;" Julian jKaihan, chap- xicultaral said artistic .fields. lam; and Daii 3Iiller, xeparter. " r izarred <st ifae frontier. «arvE i h e occasion. A~" onen diHatssion followed dt ievenhnr nerformanee.

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3>age 2—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1934 were active in this country. Not only and misrepresentation, caused him to of Christian prejudice and intoler- far below any human dignity." abandon his ;attacks upon the Jews ance toward Jews, brought Jewish The years of agitation, social did twenty-four anti-Semitic organizand to offer a public apology: to leaders to the point where they called ostracism, business boycott, and ations emerge sponsored by friends them. The agitation of the Ku-Klux- for a study of Jewish prejudices vocational discrimination by Nazis of the Brown Shirts, but the Klan Klan vented itself in vicious, general against Christians, to be made by not only hurt the Jews, it coarsened rode again in some communities. the Germans who themselves were in- Whisperings went the rounds, "We defamation of Jews, and in occasion- Jews. al physical mistreatment of individu- The progress along these lines, fected by the poisonous spirit that need a Hitler in America." More-al. Jews, but Roman Catholics and however, was threatened by .influ- they exhibited. Obviously the cam-over, Khaki Shirts, White Shirts and Negroes (the latter dominantly Prot- ences from Germany under Hitler. paign brought woe to the Jews; whfen Silver Shirts appeared. Taking :theft estant) suffered more cruelly. The The reactionaries in Europe began any human being is mistreated and cues from Hitler these outfits emhigh ^emotional energy of ..the Klan to plant the seeds of hatred of thedenied full rights as a man, he un-phasized the dangers to the-^United burned itself out in five years, but Jew upon the soil of economic misery, dergoes a psychological distortion. If States of "Jewish bankers" and the animosity toward the Jews, political chaos and general timidity tormentors belonging to the major "Jewish communists," adding a third which the Klan spread, lived after it. and fear by the simple strategy of groups think a Jew or Quaker or •warning against "the Jewish N. R. The Klan lost its membership when making the Jew a scapegoat for Negro or Oriental to be "peculiar" A." But the seed thus sown fell on the Coolidge prosperity era and theall the evils from which society suf- they should learn that persecution stony grounds. In 1934 the Silver stock exchange bull boom swept in. fers. In Germany anti-Semitism was creates peculiarities. And it is obvi- Shirts went bankrupt in North Carobigotry, prejudice and fanaticism. veloped, and the financial, industrial (Editor's note—The following arAs wages rise the market value of organized with the efficiency of a ous, too, that the Nazis suffered; the lina, where their national headquarters were located. A few months ticle by Dr. Clinchy comprises a and agricultural opportunities that The manifesto was directed particu- hatred seems to depreciate. well-oiled machine. Adolf Hitler's years of anti-Semitic talk, mulled chapter from his new book. "All init offerer! to its. citizens were ample larly towards overcoming the propa- The Jews of America were par- National Socialist Party made its over in mass meetings night after earlier, failure to make headway the Name of, God," which in the au-for, all. The commercial' capacity ,oi ganda, circulating in tha United ticularly startled during 1926 by thecase chiefly around a mania against night by orators who combined the closed their offices in Oklahoma thor's own words;is "Ayigorous plea the Jew wa§ yrelcomed, • as {it usually; States and elsewhere, accusing the incident a t Massena, New York, one per cent of Germany's popula- technique of Aimee Semple McPher- •where, twelve years before, the to end racial and religious preju- is, with any new group tintil their Jews of a conspiracy to foster com- where a state trooper had interrog-. tion. The Nazi 'Program for the son with that of the Ku-Klux-Klan, agents of the Ku-Klux-Klan had sucdice." Dr. Clinchy, an ordained initiative, diligence and. success excite munism, and to destroy Christian ated an aged Jew to ascertain Ages" had twenty-five points, of made hooligan rowdies out of many cessfully swept the state in a whirlIresbyterian minister, has since 1928 the jealousy of .competitors. Eco- civilization'. The American Commit- whether the Jews employed Chris- which seven planks were devoted to storm-troopers. Their rough horse(Continued on Page 7.) been director "of the National Con- nomic rivalry, except in a pioneering tee on the -Rights of Religious Mi- tian blood during the Feast of Pass- the humiliation and disenfranchise- play turned frequently into bullying sort of way, was as yet unknown in norities, which issued the appeal, over, a myth of ancient European ment of Jewish citizens. For the first parties for whippings with steel rods, ference of Jews and Christians of •which Newton D. Baker, Carlton J. America. The first great influx of concluded it with the following decla- vintage. The Christian child whose time in the history of modern civil- and sadistic torturing of Jewish vicJews helped to develop the country; ration: Hayes and Roger Straus are codisappearance provoked the inquiry ization anti-Semitism became an in-tims, even to the point of death. chairmen. In his book, Dr. Clinchy at a time when industrial develop- "In this time of world unrest, had already been found safe. Such a tegral part of a state policy when *A surprising aspect of this anti- Let me protect four Interests . . . I took' the historical approach to thement was in its initial stages. Class when the minds of men are still torn relic of medieval superstition was Hitler came into power in 1933. Dur-Semitic parade, drummed up by Hit- write INSURANCE of every description LIFE, in stronjr, reliable com* question of inter-faith relations. conflicts between capital and labor, by the passion of war, when suspi- naturally a shock and it was found ing the ten years previous the Nazi ler in Germany, was the resistance including; panics ONLY . Let's talk It over. "The' present course of Protestant- Were rare, and as a result there was cion, jealously and fear deeply per- necessary to explain that ever since campaigners to it in America. The Nazis exhibited initiated and executed a City Finance & Insurance Co. Catholic-Jewish dealings," he says inno political radicalism. Moreover, meate the public thought, and when the Patriarch Abraham Jews had ambition in 1933, hoping 1409 Farnam St. AT. 7007 or WA. G1S0 his Introduction, "is not intelligible the economic difficulties which later special and solemn responsibility stood against human sacrifice, and devastating attack on the Jews, using missionary unless we see the picture in its set-w$re exploited by anti-Semitic dema- rests upon the American people to that no animal blood had been shed pamphlets, derisive songs, speeches to spread their doctrines and influand posters. Before the election of ence internationally. Nazi spokesmen help heal the world's wounds, we ap-in the synagogue services since the Hitler, potent newspapers had been lectured in the United States, Nazi ting; This article is published by-spe- gogues were conspicuously absent •' • -' Equally significant was the lack of 1 peal to all people of good-will to con- destruction of the temple in 70 A. D.headlining anti-Semitism for five drill masters introduced the goosecial arrangement between the Jewish extensive anti-Jewish literature. The Telegraphic Agency and t h e : John spurious Protocols of the Elders of demn every effort to arouse decisive Jews had never before been confront- years. To warm up the party, Hitler step, and Nazi publicists scattered Day company, publishers of _'• the Zion fraudulently devised in Europe, passions against any of our fellow ed with an actual case of belief inin his campaign declared, "We need tons of printed matter, all with the KOSHER MARKET countrymen; to aid in eradicating did not begin to disseminate their racial prejudice and religious fa- this libel of the "blood ritual" on thespite, . hatred, hatred, hatred and anti-Semitic note in the refrain of (Formerly Soskln's Meat Market) poison until after the first decade of naticism; and to create a just and part of a responsible public servant once more hatred." To stimulate this their song. But anti-Semitism simply, 1552 No. 20th WE. 5450 in this country. Until the last two decades of thethe twentieth " century, coincident madness, which Hitler aroused in or- did not catch on in the America of Reuben Greenberg:, back from Chinineteenth century t h e spectre of with the intensification of the revo^ humane public sentiment that shall 1933. The most significant development der to unify his followers in a concago, invitee yon to renew business anti-Semitism as i t is known today lutionary movement in Kussia. I t isrecognize the Fatherhood of God andof the 1920's, however, was the ex-suming emotion, he wanted a com- To be sure, during this period, acquaintanceship. had not reared its head upon Ameri- true that anti-Jewish literature ex- the brotherhood of man, and shall tent to which Jews were subjected to mon enemy upon which to focus it, high-powered anti-Semitic organizers can soil. Such discrimination against isted in Germany, but its content had demand that no man shall be denied restrictions of one kind or another. and singled out the Jews. The Nazi the inalienable rights of.freedom of the Jew as there was during the two This discrimination was particularly anti-Semitic agitators drew the -vorst preceding centuries was based large- not spread far outside its boundary, conscience and worship because they marked in the field of employment, slander of Jews from the storehouse belong to another race or profess a beyond the neighboring countries, ly upon. a policy borrowed from the where Jews found i t increasingly dif- of historic Jew-baiting, and from political conditions which stimu- different faith. old' world which declared Chrisficult to secure positions with non- current "Aryan" racial legends. They lated anti-Semitism in Germany—the tianity to be the religion of the This "appeal, the first united exJewish firms, Social discrimination used the fictitious Protocols of the state.;The issue in America, in other growth of a liberal and anti-militar- pression of opposition to religious itself more blatantly Elders of Zion to indict Jews as also evidenced istic party—-had not found their worlds, was pro-Christianity, specificand racial prejudice in the history of as Jews were refused admittance to guilty of the Red Revolution. In anally. pro-Protestantism, rather than counterpart on American soil. Neith- this country, indicated the alarm felt many hotels, resorts and clubs. Nor other mood they damned the Jews for er did the anti-Jewish agitation in anti-Semitism predicated upon a n in. sober quarters against the imporwas anti-Jewish prejudice confined the diametrically opposite crime of tagonism against the Jew. The dis-England, which met a similar influx tation into the United States of to these realms: Jewish students in exercising outrageous capitalistic of Jewish -immigrants from eastern abilities suffered by t h e Jews r e power. European hatreds. The threat of an the colleges and universities found suited mainly from the disinclina- Europe and which culminated in the the path to membership in fraterni"Hitler's anti-Semitic agitation," organized anti-Jewish movement, Aliens Act.of 1906, have noticeable tion of the Christian majority to ties and college societies definitely wrote a German Lutheran Christian parallel to those which were being tolerate a religion which did not reverberations of the American scene. recognize Jesus Christ. Jewish dis- It was the postwar period of the furthered in many countries in blocked. A virtual numerus clausus pastor in 1932, "surpasses by far all g was established by some institutions past anti-Semitic propaganda and the 1920's which saw the birth of an or- Europe, aroused concern in the - abilities were essentially a religious ganized anti-Semitic movement in hearts of many Americans who still of higher learning, notably medical immorality of the methods has inmatter, and where they, impinged the United States. remembered the burning bitternessschools, to keep down the mounting creased- in the same measure. By upon other fields, the law was of the anti-Catholic agitation of thenumber of Jewish students. And baiting, lying, slandering, forging, ally given a liberal. interpretation. The beginnings of modern anti- previous century. I t was no wonder Jews with graduate school degrees insinuating, in word and pTint, Die When these disabilities of a religious Semitism in America were associated that a Christian protest against anti- were shunted away from educational NationalsozialLstiche Arbeiterpartie nature were finally removed the Jewwith a: wave of reaction which flood- Semitism was further (The Nazi Party) overshadows all broadcast and other professions. ed virtually every country that had t o o t h i s place a s a normal and an throughout the country on January About this time many thoughtful previous achievements a t mass sugequal citizen in the life of the na- been a •victim' of the war. I t was21, 1921, headed by Woodrow Wilson, Jews acted on the Assumption that a gestion. The level of taste has sunk this period -which witnessed^ the in• Perfect as a neglition.. "•: , •'• '. . '•'-. '•'• •-•• _.j William Howard Taft and William scientific diagnosis of anti-Semitism cipience of the Hitler movement in Nor was the Jewish question vigor- Germany and the development of aCardinal O'Connell. The signatories would be more valuable than moralizgee or robe. Made by ously raised during the period of host included many distinguished political ing on the subject. This led them to of anti-Semitic organizations in bitter-anti-Catholic agitation which many other countries of Europe. The and intellectual leaders. Nelly Don with dress assert that, as the" treatment for a preceded "the present^ century. The disillusionment of the victors was no' This prompt protest by Christians malignant disease.jlemands both relines, deep lap and reason Jf or this was ihat i h e Jews- less bitter than the fury of the van-undoubtedly Mowed up the spread of straints and action* on the part of the constituted neither a potential politi- quished. In the countries which won anti-Semitism, though it did not victim of it, so the Jew suffering gracious manner. cal menace nor an economic or so-the war an attempt was made to hold greatly check the activities of thefrom anti-Semitisnt can do much to cial threat. They were not present,in the Jews responsible for the Bolshe- Ku-Klux-Klan. A number of books, help himself. "Such a formula,'* said America in sufficient; numbers i6 revolution in Russia, and multi- pamphlets and newspaper articles at- one Jew, "niusfc necessitate a biting © They're ideal comcause serious concern. to the Protest- vic farious "patriotic" and anti-Semitic tacking the Jews appeared simul- self-analysis among Jews, as a preant majority. organizations were set up as bul-taneously with the blows of The liminary requisite." The willingness panions for lounging, The absence in America-of any- warks against the menace of alleged Dearborn Independent, and were con- of forward-looking Christians to confor informal e n t e r thing like the medieval or modern "Jewish communism." In the defeated tinued for a period of several years. fess Christian'faults in the relations European hatred of ::the Jews is at-countries the Jews were accused of The arraignment of Henry Ford by between Christians" and Jews, led to taining, for hours and tested by the comparative mildness being responsible for the loss of theresponsible citizens of all creeds, and plain speaking by Jews about Jewof the first outbreak of anti-Semit- war. Economic misery, which was athe law-suit ultimately brought ish faults. The frank admission and hours at home. ish in the United States, which was part of the aftermath of the war, in- against him on the- grounds of libel straight dealing by Christian leaders INSURED CABS a concomitant of the huge wave • of tensified the feeling against the Jewish imnrigration-.at the end of the Jews. In some countries the "Jewish last an<d»the beginning of the present economic menace" was- ascribed to century..; The Jewish influx of that socialistic tendencies, while in others, period produced nothing more than notably in Germany, the Jews were an unimportant relatively harmless charged with being the perpetrators anti-Jewish literature, and a period of a capitalistic conspiracy, to conof equally mild social ostracism of trol the world. ( • ) Youthful Donabout the Jew, exemplified by his disbarS«g-No-Mer Jersey. Hose, ment from some" exclusive hotels and The rising tide of anti-Semitic green end blue. -Size* 14 resorts. Nothing of the nature of the propaganda in Europe was felt in a +©20 S8.95 frenzy and the fury which greeted back-wash of anti-Semitism in Amerthe earlier immigration of the Cath- ica. In 1920 The Dearborn Independ(b) New crinkly crepe in olics from Ireland marred the ar- ent, owned by Henry Ford, began a two tones of blue, French rival of ;•the Jewish immigrants from series of attacks based upon the claret or black with scarlet Russia, Poland and other eastern libels contained in the Protocols of sleeves. Sizes 14 to 42 the Elders of Zion. At the same time, European countries. the Ku-Klux-Klan was reincarnated Until the second decade of the twentieth' century, which witnessed and added to its anti-Catholic plat(c) Metal stitching trims the revival of the Ku-Klux-Klan, an- form a vituperative agitation against rick satin. In rich shades of ti-Semitism was confined to instances the Jews. of social discrimination against Jews. The reaction to this new type of green, tost and blue; also It was van individual and unorgan- anti-Semitism was swift. On the day WacLSfew 12 t o 20 $16.75 ized phenomenon. I t remained quies- before Christmas, 1920, leaders of cent, since the causes -which led tothe Protestant, Catholic and Jewish modern, organized anti-Semitism had groups united in an appeal to the not yet emerged. For one thing, the people of America to.help safeguard country" was comparatively unde^ religious liberty from the menace of Ju9t <J00 of them at this remarkable price. Cat on

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I'age 3—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 19S4 the peoples have been crushed out of existence. "No man is allowed to have words of peace or consolation. The mind of Germany is daily more impregnated with the poison of the Nazi press. Forgotten are Hitler's promises of bread and -freedom for the masses.:The German masses are drilling. All this could never have happened if Hitler had-not had the Jews on whom to concentrate the anger of an insulted and humiliated German nation. With the injection of the Jewish question he befuddled the massmind and led the German" people into that cage of steel and terror from which there seems no -escape. The Jews served as a scapegoat and the attack on German Jewish life as the thin edge of the wedge to open a breach in the defenses of democracy. The same maneuver is being repeated in France and in the United States. The Jews are under fire. The attacks against them are multiplying. This is, therefore, the hour of decision. This is the blossom hour of fate. If the liberals continue to stand by apathetically dismissing the formation of Nazist battle groups in America as a mere <juarrel between Germans and Jews, between two racial minorities and continue to close their eyes to the larger implications of events, not only will the Jews of America in that case fare infinitely worse than the Jews of Germany, but American liberals and intellectuals and friends of peace and humanists and progressives will feel in their own bodies the full fiendish bestiality of a Nazi terror. For Nazis have but one enemy: democrats. The shade' does not matterIt is still time to halt the advance •of these enemies of civilization. But time is pressing. The attacks to which the Jews of America are exposed at present are a warning that the decisive moment is drawing near. For liberals to allow the Nazis to continue their operations against the Jews with impunity is to hasten the advent of Fascism, that is to say, to assist in digging the graves of millions of young Americans.

to By Pierre Van Paassen

* In this trenchant criticism, 3tr. States in turn pass under a regime i the Jewish curse" as their six dally * Van Paassen, noted foreign corres- that.knows no other issue out of the, newspapers repeat day after day. The pondent, charges the liberals with economic crisis but pogroms, cultural; people are being led to expect that a * being blind to the ominous perils, nihilism, the enslavement of women, Fascist Internationale in. which each . banging over the world and warns the militarization of the masses and nation is armed to the teeth, shall be the surest guarantee of peace. There that the universal assault on the ultimately, inevitably—war? . Jews is the prelude to a world-wide The trouble is that the liberal ele- are indeed some strange fraternal orattack on liberals. The Editor! ments are not aware to this day of ganizations in this -world. But a Fasthat is to say, chauvinist * * * the insidious nature of the Nazi-Fas- cist Europe, enthroned in every counNothing is more disturbing in the cist propaganda in the United States, nationalism try, each nation defiantly present hour of peril than to see the in France and in the remaining dem- the other with a chip on its watching colossal indifference prevailing among ocratic countries. The Nazi propagan- would not delay more thanshoulder, year non-Jewish liberals and democrats in da makes it appear as if their activ- the greatest catastrophe the a world the face of the gruesome tide of anti : ity is solely directed against the Jews. has ever seen. The nations'would fly Semitic barbarism let loose by the By a ceaseless propaganda they seek at each others' throats and tear each Nazi regime in Germany and now to hammer it into the heads of the to pieces and on the smoking coursing through the world in waves masses that the Jew is responsible for Other ruins of and Serlin and Warwhich are not only growing ever more the devastating economic crisis which saw and Paris Bucharest would be raised formidable and relentless but which is raging in the world, and so arouse the red banner of Bolshevism. are invading countries whose demo- popular anger for the purpose of decratic institutions were thought to priving the Jews of an influence which We have a choice: bar the road to have .rendered them immune for all they do not possess. In reality, they Nazi Fascism now in a united front time against a resurgence of black- are exerting all their strength to with all the believers in progress, or est medievalism.- In spite of the vast gather around themselves shock troops eventually be shoved into the armies amount of material published on the and to give their movement a mass- of an eventual Nazi America as canmenace of. Hitlerism by scrupulously basis. But when that mass-basis has non fodder to fight equally helpless objective observers, in spite of the finally been achieved, when they have and terrorized victims of another Nazi alarm signals sent up by the Jews at become a power in the state, when land on the battlefields. Madison Square and . elsewhere', in they feel strong enough to attack,-in It is not for nothing that the great spite of the constantlyr more bitter that hour their onslaught is by no munitions trusts in Europe are the and virulent anti-Jewish agitation of means directed exclusively against most loyal financial backers of the the Nazis — today they do not hesi- Jewish organizations and Jewish life nascent Fascisms, as tKey were of the tate to broadcast that Jewish money in general. In that moment, hut not Hitler movement in its. years" of infinanced the assassination of the JUT before, Nazism takes off the mask cubation. The munition, trusts, it is goslav monarch — the liberal world and stands revealed as the most in- true, did and do not aim at the deon the whole, it cannot be denied, has transigent foe of democracy and of struction of the Jews. They do net remained strangely indifferent. There human progress and also as the fo- care a great deal how Hitler gathered are, of course, notable exceptions, but menter of war in the interests of the the masses •around him, on what slothey have not taken fire. They cer- international munition trusts. But in gan the" Sturm-Abteilungen were tainly have not come forward in a that moment, we should not forget, it formed, so long as the movement led mighty, single-minded clan to bar the is also too late to organize resistance to the complete subjugation of -the road to the brown-shirted despoilers In the moment of Nazi triumph no German people, the eradication of of humanity. : KLEEN-HEET argument avails, for no discussion is peace societies, the destruction of Sometimes it seems as if the gen- permitted. In one blow, or by the in- democratic institutions. The road to OIL BURNERS erosity and the humanity of the lib- vocation of a non-existing- threat to war had to be opened up as a way out Olson Bros. erals, 'which has been poured out so law" and order, as happened in Ger- of- the depression. If the Jews had to often on behalf of this or that op- many, the Nazis simply. suspend the bear the brunt of the attack, well, 2612 Learenworth AT. 23C0 pressed or downtrodden group or peo- operation of democratic institutions. after all, they were only Jews. The Jewish question is a false: issue . _ Today, one great nation has passed ple, has suddenly frozen upl It is. as if: they stand mesmerized t>efore what to mobilize the pent-up dissatisfaction under the diabolical power of Nazism appears to them an inescapable his- in .society. But.. the objective of; the and now prepares cynically, openly for JOHN FELDMAN toric fatality against which it is fu- Nazi, attack is the same everywhere, war with, a tempo that is constantly Is engaged in the business of sellnamely the destruction of democratic being speeded up. All organizations tile to marshal their strength. Anding all kinds ot RELIGIOUS ARinevitably the question arises in our government. Democratic . institutions which were international in outlook TICLES—Taleisim, Books, Jewish minds whether the liberals have not are the object of their bitterest hat- have been dissolved in Germany. AH Bibles in Hebrew and English. red, because they are, as a true exwho believed in the brotherhood of grown tired, or whether it can be that GL. 2972 . the magnitude of the evil bearing pression of the people's will, the last men have been silenced. All societies Res. 609 So. 50th St g^reat barrier against an armed worldlooking towards collaboration among down upon us in the form of Nazism has struck -them with paralysis both conflict. of speech and action. 'And the second Here in France, where the Bucardquestion which flows logically out of ists, the Croix de Feu, the Fraricists, the first is this: -Are the liberals go- the iiigueurs,'the National Socialists, ing,-to stand by idly as the attacks the. Solidarists,. the Cainelots du Eoi upon-their dearest possession — dem- and half., a dozen r other powerful! ocratic freedom — multiply and bring groups, not merely advocate the ex-i to their knees tie one citadel of de- pulsion of the Jews _ from dominantmocracy after the other? Isn't the positions" in "the state, from- the col-: destruction of' democratic ^institutions ieges : ahd^ffom • industry,' but 'op'enly; and of the labor organizations in Ger- speak""of a real SL-Bartholomew, a many, - Austria and Italy enough ? total extermination of the" Jews — "to Must France,-Britain and the United rid "the* world once and for air from I ". TRY HAYDEN'S FIRST

This indeed is not the hour to dream and dally in futile debate. The enemy is at the gate. The Jews are the first to "feel the impact of his assaults. We will come next. The hour to rally our forces in the widest possible united front, taking in all the true friends of America's democratic institutions wherever they may be found, that hour has arrived. To fail now is to go down in .history as unworthy- of the name of liberals. To hurl back the Nazis now will mean the turning point in the world's headlong dash for barbarism and a black century-long night of slavery. (Copyright, 1934, by Seven Arts Feature Syndicate.)

Vaad Men's Club COMMUNITY Dinner Thursday; VARSITY CAGE TEAM First practice for the J, C." C. men's..varsity-team,will-be held Sunday afternoon at- S:SQ o'clock,. Lee. Grossman announced.; Grossman will serve' as coach for the team. An attractive schedule with outstanding teams in the midwest i-j being arranged for the team. It is planned to have at least -one game a week, on Sunday^afteraoon -at- the Center gym. Leo Berman and Nate Cutler have been appointed co-managers for the team.

The regular monthly dinner meeting of the Vaad Men's Club will be held Thursday, December 20, a t - 7 p. m. at the B'nai; Israel: synagogue. The election.of officers for the ensuing term will be held. Lazar Kapland will give an address. A playlet, "One Thursday Evening," will be presented by members of the Center Players Guild. - Members wishing to make reservations are asked to call Mr. H. Segall or Mr. Sidney Katelman. Patronize Jewish Press advertisers.

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Page 4—THE JEWISH

THE JEWISH PRESS .

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. ~~ . Editorial Office: 490 Braiwieia Theater Building. _ ' ' Sioux City Office-^Jewfsh Conununity: Center ' DAVID BLACKER *-•' - » - - / Business and Managing Editor 1 FRANK R. &CKERMAN - - i - -- - - - - - - - --Editor !RABBI URI MILLER - - - - - - - - Contributing Editor. FANNIE KATELMAN -. - - Council Bluffs, Iowa. Correspondent ANN PILL - - - - - - - - Sioux City, Iowa, Correspondent ! Print Shop Address: 1307 Howard Street ^ ,-

A Weak Reed It is the height of folly to lean for support upon a weak reed, and recent events have removed from consideration the shaky prop of the League of Nations concerning Jewish problems. The latest manifestation of impotence by the League was its ratification of the pact on the Saar signed by Germany and France. This pact in effect turns over to the wolves of Hitlerland more innocent victims to be sacrificed on the altar of barbarism and medievalism. The Nazis, magnanimous souls that they are, guarantee to take no reprisals or proceedings on any inhabitants of the £3aar, regardless of race, religion 6r political belief, for one year after the plebiscite, inhabitants being defined as any persons who have lived in the Saar for at least three years prior* to January 13, 1935. And France and the League of Nations call this a concession on the part of Germany! They term it a concession that the Hitler Wodans say they will not wait one minute before putting the inquisitorial searchlight upon the Jews, Catholics and laborists who have lived in the Saar less than three years, and will condescend to wait twelve months before wreaking vengeance upon their opponents who have resided in that territory three years. When the League of Nations was unable to obtain from Germany a perpetual guarantee concerning the minorities in the Saar —the same kind of guarantee which exists in Upper Silesia—the League sank only deeper in-the bog of its weakness. One of the fundamental purposes of the League was supposed to be to protect the minorities and the mih'taristically weak. While it is true that during its life of sixteen years the League has not shown any particular strength in the enforcement of the existing minority treaties, this is the first time it has deliberately sanctioned a pact which leaves a minority at the known mercilessness of a strong power. This action so undermines our faith, that it is difficult to see how in the future we can place our confidence in a League which has thus violated* its trust.

Increased Tempo The bright spot in the Jewish news continues to be Palestine, where the Jewish National homeland is being rebuilt. This last week negotiations were closed for the purchase of the Lake Huleh land, which when drained and prepared for agriculture will be the most fertile land in. the Holy Land. The Jewish Agency will immediately start to drain the plain, and it is estimated that in the neighborhood of thirty thousand Jewish immigrants will be able to settle there. The purchase of this area of forty thousand acres is the most important Jewish land transaction in Palestine since the buying of the Emek; in fact, it is already being called "TheT^ew Emek." Situated near the Syrian border, it lies at sea level and is' surrounded, except at the southern end, by the Hermon Mountains, which slope off into the Huleh plain. The floor of the valley is almost level. Some 5,000 Arabs live there, but ample provision has been made for the Arabs who may be displaced by the Jewish colonization. The acquisition of this land climaxed twenty years of negotiations by Dr. Chaim Weizmann, the late Chaim Arlosoroff and Joshua Hankin, agronomist. Even more heartening than the actual purchase were a few by-products. Arab residents at Huleh, realizing how much they will gain by the Jewish ownership, sent a delegation to Jerusalem; to welcome their new Jewish neighbors and to voice their satisfaction at the new deal they are to receive. Even-more significant:is the reaction an official quarters.. Receiving an Arab delegation (not from the Huleh region) which came to protest Jewish immigration and land purchases, High Commissioner Wauchope, supposedly with the approval of the Colonial office, declared: "I think *it is for the good of the country that about 40,000 dunams of marshy land which have little present value should be* drained for cultivation and cause the economic position of the local Arabs to be improved at the same time. This would reduce, if not wholly eradicate, malaria, thus assuring the best result for the health and happiness of the inhabitants of the district." The deductions from,these events augur Well for the future of the Jewish Homeland; A large and growing number of Arabs realize the raised standard of living and manifold benefits which have accrued to them through Jewish colonization, and the Palestiniangovernment willsriloivsr an^^ increase m the teriipo of Jewish immigration as the Economic absorptive capacity of the country grows. \

Having a Christmas Tree

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The B'hai: B*rith magazine this month publishes a timely editorial, "On Having a Christmas Tree/' which is herewith reprinted': We hear it reported that there are Jewish homes in which Christmas trees twinkle in the festive season. The Jewish mother in such a house likes to rationalize her Christmas tree. This Christmas tree, she says, has no religious significance, significance. "Merely a beautiful sentiment," she explains. "A mystical touch in our house. A lovely symbol. I feel my children should not be denied something so beautiful." She would be more convincing if she took into her house the lovely symbolism of Jewish life also. Of these she knows .little or nothing.-' From her neighbors she borrows a pretty sentiment though Jewish life is rich with sentimental observance. Candles are for Christmas trees and her house knows not the mystical illumination that is in the candles of Chanukah. The Star of Bethlehem shines atop her Christmas tree for the guidance of Santa Claus for whom her children wait; but they have heard nothing: of the gentle soul of the prophet of peace for whom the door is opened at. Seder. Candles for the Christmas tree, but not candles for the Sab-

3, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1934

bath eve when the spirit of the Sabbath bride waits at the door not in toto be dismissed, they have Experience. taken to this mode of venting what But all that I do know is this — of the Jewish home to enter. :':'... is really, if not a pathological streak that life has a content for X that Her mother's candlesticks have been relegated to the attic; in them, a psychological malaise, it never had before. but in her yard she has planted the trees of past Christmases which should psyched by Dr. Frued. HE PLEADS FOR HIS which she bought with the living roots . . . "They stand for NEPHEW WE STILL NEED beautiful memories," she explains. "Beautiful memories of the Strangely, enough, there was RELIGION By DAVID SCHWARTZ children's childhood, never to be forgotten." • (Continued on Page 8.) I myself believe that we find these "But your mother's candlesticks, my dear lady." perverse streaks in Jews because "Oh, those are merely relics of outworn, medieval observance. PICKETING AND LABORITES there was a too rapid release from We passed that long ago." Man is a queer animal. If you still religious doctrine. It may be true

BY THE WAY

A Barter Agreement

don't believe it, consider the incident that occurred last week at the recently concluded convention" of the Foalei Zionists (Labor Zionists.) I did not attend the convention, but as I walked into a restaurant that -night, I chanced to meet one who had just come from it — and he informed me that the left wingers had picketed the convention. "Ah, so our communist brethren can't go for the mildness of the Laborites economics," I said. "No, it isn't that," he replied. "They were picketing the convention because of the fact that Yiddish is not supported in Palestine, while Hebrew is."

that religion- is .not what it professes to be. To those who tell me that the Bible was not revealed in any divine way, I may listen and may agree possibly that scientific argument may lean more to their side than to the view that it divinely revealed. But even to agree to that is far from admitting that religion does not serve as a potent and very solitary influence in society.

The Jews, the Catholics and the labor elements in this country have in unmistakable terms denounced the Nazi regime and refused to purchase goods made under Hitler. About two weeks ago the State department of this country showed its displeasure at the discrimination Germany displayed against American creditors by sending a sharply-worded note to the Nazi regime. The Treasury Department of the United States-, it was reported, looked upon barter between this country and Germany, especially as regards nitrates, as constituting dumping. The Netherlands and the THE CONVERTED ANARCHIST United Kingdom are having much trouble getting Germany to pay I came across a very good illustrafor recent purchases and the British cotton yarn producers retion of what I am talking about the cently refused to make further deliveries until overdue accounts other day. were paid up. Forgetting past debts, European countries are havX is a Jewish farmer in New JerTHE SEA OR THE sey. ing great difficulties with Germany in getting her to pay for what I remember X ten years back. He CEMETERY she is receiving. I have been told by a Palestinian was an araTchist. Not one of those These isolated facts would seem to end the projected barter a very interesting story in this con- bomb throwin-g anarchists, but one the philosophical variety — the agreement between the United States and Germany. It is there- nection. It seemed that- a meeting of of the Beth Am recently took place in man who had sacked in Kropotkia fore somewhat of an unpleasant shock to learn that negotiations Tel Aviv in a building peculiarly sit- and the other anarchist philosophers to the full. X was and is a man of have been completed for such a barter, involving 500,000 bales of uated, "keen perceptions and as far as his On one side was the MediterranAmerican cotton in return for nitrates from Germany. The Exdoctrine was concerned, he could arean. On the other, a cemetery. port-Import bank will finance the transaction, which was pushed A number, small bat vociferous, gue it from A to Izzard. through by the southern cotton magnates. Of Tiddisnists, had come to the But within the last year, someThe agreement is a concession by the t\merican government meeting determined to raise a rum- thing happened to X. Not anything pus. They protested the discussions tangible. Just an inner revolution of to the Hitler regime which will not have the moral support of the be in Yiddish. All of a sudden X decided millions of American citizens who have protested by words and by The chairman listened and then athatsort. his boy who had been raised action against the inhuman Hitlerism which holds sway in Ger- announced. "This meeting will use atheistically a n d anarchistically Hebrew as its language. Those who should become bar mitzvah in the many. . ... '••;-• . . • r.r.'^Vc .;•••...•: -.-••' want Yiddish can jump into one or the other sides of the building — in the sea or the cemetery. And the great thong, who were Hebrew, thunderously applauded. And had I been there, I should have applauded.

Polish Grief

Everything is relative. We oft-times magnify in our minds our own troubles, but when brought face to face with the drouth on the other side of the fence we prefer the relatively green pastur of our own. Those who grumble about conditions in this country should THAT PERVERSE read about the Jewish quarter in Warsaw, Poland. The plight of STREAK But what is it after all that led these economically-oppressed souls is so desperate that the tenants these Yiddishists to picket the Labor of an apartment house in this Jewish quarter have demanded that Zionists convention ? the landlord enclose all windows with iron railings because too Is it actually because they are so of Yiddish? many of their neighbors were committing suicide by jumping fond I myself doubt it. from the unprotected windows and they are constantly living in I think it is due to nothing but a a state of nervous apprehension, never knowing when another perverse streak in their make-up. That same group years ago were body will come hurtling past them on its way to "escape." protesting against Zionism altogethMuch thought needs to be given to the situation of over a er, but now that Zionism and Jewmillion starving Polish Jews, more or less overlooked in the more ish Palestine has acquired a subspectacular events surrounding German Jewry^Ppland has ob- stance and a momentum that cantained concessions on some land in Liberia, and it is stated that a settlement of Polish Jews may be made there.s Another strong GEMS of the BIBLE possibility is the settlement of Polish Jews in Biro Bidjan, the autonomous Jewish Republic in Soviet Russia. While Jewish leadand TALMUD ers in all parts of the world would rather not see the Jewry of By O. O. DASHES Pland migrate to Russia and Biro Bidjart, still this is better than the devastating and certain economic strangulation in Poland. And justice is turned backward No position can dignify the man. It is the man who dignifies the position.

CHARITY ABUSES By RABBI URI MILLER . From New York City come reports of a Jewish charity racket prosecuted by the city at the insistence of several prominent contributors, including a well-known crooner. It brings forcibly to our attention a weakness of American Jewish life that will necessitate, eventually, drastic remedial measures. : With Jewish communities weakly organized,! with decentralization of authority still the ruling mode, with a poorly organized and practically inarticulate public opinion the only source of compulsion, Jewish communities have been the victims of numerous charity rackets of every type and variety. Organizations spring up mushroom-like and proceed to capitalize on the tradition of Jewish charity. No books are held, no audit taken and there is no one to call to account. Very often doubtful means and unethical practices are resorted to in an attempt.to mulct the Jewish community of more and more money. Charity benefit-affairs at which a minute percentage is actually given to charity are quite frequent. Organizations whose fund-raising activities and abilities outreach their need are too often to be found. Institutions whose purpose is insignificant or outmoded still run at full blast. The perfect example of such are the numerous American immigrant aid agencies still operating in a non-immigration,period. And this continues unabated, for no one has authority td pass judgment on the worthiness of the purpose. No one knows if the money reaches the goal for which it has ostensibly been collected. And very often worthy charities suffer, not only because of the competition, but because individuals protesting, however, ineffectually, against this racketeering, refuse to contribute to all organizations without discrimination. Our community has probably had less of this cancerous growth than most Jewish communities. Yet there is much improvement in. jthis respect to be desired, and therefore much to be done even in Omaha. We would suggest, as an opening measure that the Jewish Welfare Federation furnish a free professional auditing service to all local organization collecting funds, for whatever means, from the Jewish community. All organizations availing themselves of this service would be permitted and urged to publicize the fact and the community at large should be educated to demand this as a minimum requirement of every charity fund-raising organization. Much would still be left undone. There is a question of the worthiness of the purpose, of unnecessary duplication of work and other pertinent problems. As our community becomes better organized and its governing body more representative of the whole community, these problems will be faced—and solved. But a beginning to the dissolution of charity abases can and ought to be : made now. ">. ...,_.. ^~Z.—:~^., - - .<-------.

and righteousness standeth afar off; for truth hath stumbled in the broad place and uprightness cannot enter. "Whereas thou hast been forsaken and hated, I will make thee an eternal excellency, a joy of many generations.

orthodox Jewish sense. Now what I am going to tell you may sound incredulous, but I ask you to believe me, that I am telling the literal truth. X decided his son should be bar mitzvah. But you can't be bar mitzvah, if you haven't been circumcised, and the boy had not been. So that rite had to be performed. But wait, there •was a hitch. How can you religiously perform that rite, if the parents had not been married, and the atheistic and anarchistic X had not believed in marriage. So what happened? So tiiis happened. Within several weeks, the parents who had lived together but not married, married; further, the Abrahamic rite was performed on the son — and the boy made Bar Mitzvah all within the space of a short interval. X is deeply religious now. There are the Sabbath candles, the prayers —the celebration of holidays—everything. And X seems to have gotten something very fundamental out of it. Something that integrated and saved him from despair. I can't explain just how a man so deeply conversant with, atheistic doctrine could have snddenly thrown all this overboard and become almost a fanatic Jew. It is a case that belongs to the category described by Wm. James in his Varieties of Religious

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Violence shall no more be heard in thy land, desolation nor destruction within thy borders; thou shalt call thy walls salvation and thy gates praise.

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Thy people also shall be all righteous; they shall inherit the land forever. TAL3IUD We are taught in a Baratiha: If two were traveling in a desert and one of them has a bottle of water which is. sufficient for one man oniy until he may reach, an inhabited place and if both would drink then it would not be enough and both would die of thirst, Ben Pettira declared that in such a case it is better that both should drink and die than one should witness the death of his comrade; until R. Akiba came and taught (Lev. 25.7) That thy brother may live with thee thy own life is preferred to the life of thy brother. Rabbi Simon said: The usuers lose more than they profit, for they deny God; furthermore, they inake Moses unwise and his law untrue, saying "If he knew that usury brings great profit, he would not have written that it is prohibited." Our rabbis were taught: The following three are pleading for relief from their troubles and very few can help them. 1, he who loans money without witnesses or notes; 2, he who assigns all his possessions to his children while he,is still alive; 3, he whose wife rules* over him. Bobba had some carriers who during their wort broke a barrel of wine belonging to him. He took their garments for the damage caused him and they came to complain before Bob, who commanded Bobba to return their garments. The carriers complained again: "We are poor; we worked the whole day. We are hungry, and we have nothing to eat." And Bob told Robba that he must pay them for their labor. Bobba asked: "la so the law?" And he answered: "Yea, (Prov. 2.20) 'And observe th« path of the righteoaa.'"

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Page 5—THE JEWISH PRESS, EBIDAT, DECEMBER 14, 1934 GUEST FROM MINNEAPOLIS Miss Mildred Morris of Minneapolis, Minn., is the guest, of her uncle and aunt, Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Erman.

X

FOR HOLIDAYS Milton Wolsky, who is an art student at the Chicago Art Institute and is also taking a short course at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts, is home for a ten-day vacation. His mother, Mrs. Agnes Wolsky, is giving a family dinner in his honor. He will also be entertained by his aunts, Mrs. M. L. Horwich and Mrs. Anna Cooper.

Mrs. Fromkin Guest | Bible Study Class Daughters of Zion Rabbi David EL Wice will conduct to Meet Wednesday; Speaker in Lincoln his Bible study class on Tuesday

Mrs. Max Fromkin was the guest afternoon, December 18, at 2:30 p.m. The Daughters of Zion will hold speaker at the October membership at the home of Mrs. S. H. Singer. a regular meeting on Wednesday afternoon, December 19, at the J. C. Ctea of the Lincoln chapter of HadasRETURNS TO OMAHA : .. An interesting program has been sah at Lincoln, Neb., last Sunday. Election of Vaad Mrs. Max Levine has just returned arranged, and tea and refreshments Her subject was "Hadassah and to Omaha after spending the paet What it Has Done for the American Auxiliary Monday will be served. ten weeks: visiting- with friends and Mrs. S. Fellman was hostess to the Jewess." relatives in New York City; where At this affair many new members The election of officers will fea- executive board Tuesday afternoon. she was widely entertained. She also were enrolled in both Senior and ture the meeting of the Ladies Aux- Important business was discussed spent some time in Cleveland, where PLEDGE DANCE iliary of the Vaad Ha'Ihr, to be held and plans laid for future activities.she visited with Mr. and Mrs. Louis Beta Tau Kappa, Omaha Univer- Junior Hadassah. at the B'nai Israel synagogue next After the meeting, refreshments Waldorf. Mrs.; Waldorf was formerly- sity fraternity held its second annual Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock. were served. Ruth Slutsky of Omaha. > :, '; pledge dance in Jacobs Hall at the Daughters of Israel H0RW1TZ-MENDELS0N ANNOUNCE BIRTH On the program Rabbi Uri Miller university Saturday evening, DecemENGAGEMENT Mr. end Mrs. Max L. Holzman anreview "The Forty Days of Knowledge without integrity Bridge on Tuesday will ber 2. One hundred and twenty-five is Mr. and Mrs. C D . Mendelson an- nounce the birth of a son Wednes- FROM KANSAS CITY Musa Dagh" by Franz Werfel. bids were issued for the affair. The dangerous and dreadful.—Johnson. nounce the engagement of their day morning," December 12. . Mrs. Ira Bosenblum and her brothThe Daughters of Israel Aid so- Refreshments will be served at the daughter, Ida. to Mr. Henry Horer, Manuel M. Gross, Tioth of Kan- Campus Club orchestra played. ciety is giving a benefit bridge for conclusion of the meeting. All memSylvan J. Frankel and Macy Baum witz of Chicago. sas City, Mo., returned home Sunday ON EXTENDED TRIP EAST the Old Peoples Home at the home, bers are urged to attend. No date has been-set for the wed- Miss Roseline Fizer left Wednes- after spending .the week-end visiting were in charge of the dance. Joseph 2504 Charles street, on Tuesday aft- The book review group of the Greenstone is president of the fraWANTED ding. day- for an extended trip east. She their father, Mr. Harry Gross of the Ladies Vaad Auxiliary will meet ernoon, -December 18, 2 p. m. will be a delegate representing the Gross Lumber Co.i who '% <onva!es- ternity. Experienced plutrmaeist for Iowa Tuesday afternoon at the home of j The general public is invited. GOLDEN WEDDING town of 20,000. Omaha alumni a t the national con- cing at the Lord Lister hospital Mrs. I. Elewitz, 2453 WMtmore. ANNIVERSARY vention of Sigma Delta'Tau, to ba from injuries suffered two weeks ago IN PITTSBURGH Rabbi Miller will review "Beyond Write Jewish Press, Bos T-10 Mr. Max Yaffe, violinist, formerly The golden wedding anniversary of held in Buffalo, N. Y., December 24 when he was hit by an automobile. Women," by Maurice Samuel. MemCouncil's International with the Omaha Symphony and Sixty Mr. and Mrs. Abe Bordy of Fre- to December 26. She will stop in ChiClub orchestras, is at present play- Relations Study Group bers of the Auxiliary are invited. V mont, Nebr., was observed with a cago- and Detroit; and will go on to TO BERMUDA . ' Mrs. Louis Richards of San, Jose, ing with Jack Pettis and his orchesfamily supper a?week ago Sunday New York. Calif., who recently visited in Oma- tra at the Towne Club, one of Pittsevening at Mary • Stein's Hamilton Mrs. Julius Abrahamson, 2521 Miss Pizer entertained at a buffet Erman Heads ; ; ha during an extended trip,- is now burgh's exclusive night clubs. Cafe. .• V V.-:.". . •' - :,. luncheon Friday. North Fifty-third street, will enter,; Quality Jr. Vaad Program Service When Mr. Yaffe's engagement in in Bermuda for a two-week stay. En tain the members of the internationa' Among those attending were Mr. route home she will again stop off Pittsburgh terminates, he will visit relations study group of the Counci and Mrs. Simon Bordy, Mr. and Mrs. TWENTIETH ANNIVERSARY in Baltimore, Md., and New York of Jewish Women at a dessert cof- At the meeting of the Junior Vaad Keuben Bordy, Mr. and Mrs. SeyMr. and Mrs. Simon Bordy cele- for a short visit in Omaha. city before returning to Omaha. fee at 10 o'clock Tuesday, Decem- Auxiliary to be held Tuesday, Demour Cohn, ] of Omaha j Mr. and brated their twentieth wedding annicember 18, Dr. J. M. Erman will HOME FOR. VACATION ber 18. Mrs. Sam Olesker and Mr. and Mrs. versary last week. IN WASHINGTON show his pictures of the world war Miss Zerline Somberg, senior at Dr. Lyman Harris will discuss Jack Swartz of Walthill; Mr. and and discuss some of the aspects of One of the features of the annua "Conditions in the Saar." the University of Missouri, will arMrs. Louis Predmestky, of Fremont; ENTERTAINS AT BRIDGE war. rive Sunday morning from Columbia fall party and dance at the Lee and fourteen grandchildren; .'••-. Miss Goldie Zusman entertained at The dance complimenting paid-up Reva Bordy, 10-year-old daughter a bridge Sunday at her home in hon- to spend the holiday vacation with House, Washington, held last Thursmembers which was to have been day for Nebraskans resident in the her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Somof Mr. and Mrs. Simon Bordy, re- or of Miss Ann Berman, a bride-toheld immediately following the meetDistrict of Columbia was musical Oneg Shabbos cited a poem she wrote especially be, and for Miss Sonia Rosenblitt of berg. numbers by the Jacobson Sisters. The next Oneg Shabbos of the ing has been postponed indefinitely. for the occasion. Buddy Swartz, 12- Philadelphia, who is visiting with Phone AT-2815 2815 Farnam St. The Jacobson Sisters' Trio, often RECUPERATING •-.. Conservative Synagogue Auxiliary year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Miss Sonia Roitstein. Mrs. Sam Epstein, who underwent heard on concert and over the air in will take place at the home of Mrs. Patronize Jewish Press advertisers. Swartz, gave several coronet selecThe color scheme was carried out a major operation at Rochester, Omaha, is composed of Ina Jacob Dave Cohn, 113 South Fifty-fifth tions. in pink and blue. Prizes were won son, violinist; Sara Jacobson KirMany friends attended the recep- by Miss Kalah Franklin, Miss Betty Minn., is now convalescing at her stein, cornetist; and Molly H. Jacob- street, Saturday, December 15, with Mrs. Dave Greenberg as co-hostess. tion which followed the dinner. Mr. Burstein, Miss Sylvia Gerelick, and home. son, pianist. Miss Margaret Joyce Abramson and. Mrs. Abe Bordy were showered Miss Minnie Novey. will read Louis Untermeyer's "Mono•with many telegrams, gifts, and flowSOCIAL MEETING Supper-Dance By logue from a Mattress Grave." ers. •-. • . ' -••'•••. "• ;- " FORMAL DANCE Mrs. Abe Siegel, now residing in The theme of the afternoon's disT^r Where Omaha Shops With Confidence The Alpha Gamma Chi, Jewish soPhi Beta Epsilon Creston, la., was honored at a social cussion will be "A Prelude to 'SalGOLDEN WEDDING rority at Municipal University of meeting of the Fa-Hon sorority held ANNIVERSARY . Phi Beta Epsilon, Creighton social Monday evening at the home of vation.' " Omaha, is making preparations for Mr. and Mrs. Max Venger recent- their formal dance to be given Thurs- fraternity, opened its formal season Leah Siegel. An election of officers ly celebrated their golden wedding day evening, December 27, at the with a supper-dance December 7, in will be held Monday evening, Dethe main dining room of Hotel Fon- cember 17, at the home of Mrs. anniversary. They are spending Chermot ballroom. MARY STEIN "their second honeymoon" in Florida . Miss Beth Platt, assisted by the tenelle. Thirty-two couples attended Selma Tretiak. Kosher Style Restaurant for the winter, their present address Misses Rose Shafer and Betty Fell- the "Night in Harlem" affair, which Complete Kosher Style centered about Lloyd Hunter's thir"being 140 Washington avenue, Miami man, is in charge of arrangements. COXYALESCING teen-piece negro orchestra. U DAILY Beach. Miss Both. Swengil, who recently High spots on the program were underwent an appendectomy at the 50c to 75c ANNOUNCE BIRTH Members of Zeta imitations by Lloyd Hunter; accor- Lutheran hospital, is now convalescing LUNCHES Dr. and Mrs. M. Margolin annumbers by Evelyn Nations at her home. Beta Tau Active dion nounce the birth of a daughter, 35c and song specialties by the New sephine Ann, - December 11 at the Private Dining Room for Parties, York team of Sawyer and Smith. THOBPEIAKS Zeta Beta Tau fraternity at Lin- Out-of-town guests included Mr. The Thorpeian Athletic club has anLutheran hospital. -•.',..- •'•: ..-"''••.'' Clubs and Small Weddings coln has kept up its activities on the Nathan E. Levitch of Sioux City; nounced that they will hold a New REASONABLE and University,ofNebraska campus. Year's Eve party at the Elks ballroom. Z S ' S r ^ r S M i t v Miss Esther Stein, Miss Helen B Heads Vassar Club JA. 9S93 2406 Farnam Herbert Kaplan and Albert Stein Ellis, «,,. ayi , MMr. _ TLouis ._ TrL.T ,;„„,,„ f They have reserved the entire seventh and Lipmano of Mrs. Isidor Ziegler was elected were recently selected for the varsity Lincoln. floor for that purpose. president of the Omaha Vassar dub debate team from a large field of at a meeting of the group held last contestants. The varsity members were chosen from an all-university Friday. tryout. Bob Stiefler is competing in the long debate tournament this Bridge Lessons week. Last year the trophy was reThe fourth of a series of bridge tired by Herbert Kaplan. lessons sponsored by the Temple Lloyd Friedman and Phil LaseroIsrael Sisterhood will be given on witz weTe members of the Pershing Monday, December 17, at 8 p. m. at rifle crack squad which performed the Temple. , in the Kosmet Klub Revue and at the Military balL Albert Stein is to be initiated into the organization Committees Work this week, and seven of the chapter Tailored and lace trim have been pledged. on Winter Dance freshmen negligees in beautiful This last month's law bulletin pastel shades. Bright Committees are working diligently again carried articles written by colors and dark tones. S o m e contrastingly .toward making the annual informal Justin Wolf and Herman Rosenblatt. trimmed. winter dance of the Junior Society Both Wolf and Rosenblatt have been the outstanding affair of the group. selected as student editors of the The dance will be held at the Fon- review. \ ' tenelle on Sunday evening, December - The chapter gave a down-town 23, with Art Randall and his orches- party last month at the Hotel Corntra furnishing the music. hiisker, with approximately three No-host parties are already being hundred couples attending. Thanksarranged by Messrs and Mesdames giving evening the chapter played H. S. Novitsky, David Greenberg, J, host to the younger high school set, J.- Greenberg, Arthur Cohn, William' with boys from Omaha and Lincoln AH wool flannel robes In plain colors and Alberts, Irvin Levin, Herbert Neve- invited. LOUNGING novelties with generleff, Sam Rochman, A. Pitlor, and PAJAMAS ous laps and wide belts Sidney Katleman. beautifully trimmed. One and two-piece Among others who' plan to attend Sizes 14 to 44. ullk loungtnj; pa* Fleishman & Soskin are the Messrs. and Mesdames David jnnran tf> ibigie colors, bettmtitatly (Formerly In the employ of I* Harris) Cohn, John Beber, Elmer Gross, Mortrimmed and two • QUALITY CERTIFIED BY TEST OF Twelve years experience c o l o r nnUntris Katleman, Sam Swartz, Sam Ban, tlont. Perfect fitInsurance with Reliable Companies Leo Milder, Jack Milder, Harry Rent ting canmets. BETTER FABRICS TESTING BUREAU Estate . • • Property Management Rochman, Micky Krupinsky, Dr. MaySIS So. 15th St. JA. ?311 nard Greenberg, and Messrs. Sam * SEALED 1*1 TRANSPARENT WRAP Handler, Al Batt, Matt Simmons, TO KEEP IT FRESH, UNHANDLED Morris Klein, Adolph Neer. A special meeting of the Junior Society Will be held at Stein's Restaurant, 24th and Farnam, Monday evening, December 17, 6:15 p. m.

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Sigma Omicron chapter of the Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity at the University of Nebraska held a formal dance at the Comhusker hotel December 8, which was attended by more than 300 couples. The dance was broadcast , over radio .station KFOR. Many alumni from Sioux City, Omaha, Kansas City and Salina, Kansas, were present. •

Sorority Meeting A regular meeting of the Begalapta sorority was held Sunday, December 9, at the home of Lois Gerlisfci. Plans were discussed for .the winter'3 social functions.

This Year Give Books Stay I help yon select y o u children's boots. —Mrs. J. A. Solomon

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"BABS" MDIVANI STEPS OUT—Princess Mdivani, the former Barbara Hutton, five-and-ten-cent store heiress, wears her valuable earrings at the "County Fair" ball in the Waldorf-Astoria, New York.

NEW FORMAL EVENING ENSEMBLE—La Tosca, a new velvet, fashions this formal evening; ensemble, with a white fox-trimmed cape and a gown with long slim lines featuring a new halter bade bodice in open wing effect. The gown, which is sleeveless, has a - NORTHWEST DIGS OUT—Scenes in St. Paul following an eight-inch snow, the heaviest fall since" little shoulder cape effect over the upper ami. 1928, are typical as the northwest feels the first pangs of winter. Drifts in St. Paul were 12 feet high. V 7 -

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MEXICO'S NEW PRESIDENT—General Lazaro M. Cardenas, at 39, takes the oath of office as president of Mexico.

MEETS DEATH IN GLIDER—The body of Warren E. Eaton is transferred to a launch after the glider expert, jerked from his craft by a tug of the plane towing it, fell 1,200 feet to his death in Biscayne bay, at Miami, Fla. Inset, just before the plunge.

GLORIA POSES—Gloria Vanderbilt, accompanied by her aunt and guardian, Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, surprises photographer by posing after attending church at S t Mary's, Roslyn, R. I. A privaU detective is guarding Gloria.

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L C""J^flBN^WAanNE".•.C^BETPSTSON--Towering:Joiin'Wayne, western P^-fim"8t^&d^l»€r0'0l^niany a Trojan football game, greets a'son—;;_ " Mchte^AliihonijT-Morrison. .^At the University-of Southern Cali-V lornia, : -tb^ Xa%«r: waa known as '^buke" Morrison. Wayne is ENGINES CRASH W IOWA SNOWSTORM—Wreckage of two freight engines that met head-on in a blindine snowstorm at DerMoines, la., is pictured. Three treinnren were injured.

JUNIOR.GRAND CHAMPION STEER—Snookwns, l.iSS-pound Aberdeen-Angus baby beef, -wins the grand championship Of tb» junior steer competition at the International livestock Ehibiti Chicago. Kenneth Kinsinger, 19, of Chenoa, DU pictured finookumm. antered him for Marr. his ll-jreat-Old

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Page 7—THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1934

[IMAHA JOBBING QUINT Complete Plans For Luncheon Is Given by LIFE INSURANCE— Affair by Hadassah Conservative Auxiliary CAPTURES PRESEASON WHAT IT IS AND Final plans were completed for the Fifty new members -were welcomed CAGE CHAMPIONSHIP Hadassah Eainbow bridge luncheon into the Women's Auxiliary of the

Local students attending out-of-town institutions will also be represented. Szold Obtained For Members of the" Ladles Vaad AuxilCouncil Program iary will nenor the students and their guests st a reception following the Bernard Szold of the Community service. Playhouse will give a reading before at a meeting last Monday at the Conservative Synagogue at the Chathe Council of Jewish Women at the Final Standings. home of Mrs. J. M. Erman. This af- nukah luncheon held Wednesday at next meeting, to be held at the J. C. Conservative Jr. Vaad Congregation C. on Monday afternoon, December L. fair will take v place on "Wednesday; the J. C. C. At services at the Conservative will 31, Mrs. J. H. Kulakofsky, program January 16, at the Blackstone." An The program included musical By the Service life Insurance synagogue this evening Eabbi David The Junior Vaad Congregation Omaha Jobbing Co. ....' r : . ,_.7 1 meet Saturday morning at 10:30 a. chairman, has announced. outstanding affair is being planned, numbers and- a humorous review of Psi Mu *..,«...^W...6 Company, Omaha A. Goldstein will deliver a sermon m. Sir. and Mrs. Sam Brovrn will he with; novel, color decorations depict- the year's activities in verse. ChaXi Lambdas ......-..;.*..... .4 on "Can an Irreligious Man be a hosts to the congregation. A special ' Tork Batteries . . . . . . . . . , . . . '.& 3 ing the rainbow shades. nukah gifts were exchanged. , Ee-ATIEAGE 3 L 4 ^ KEST PIJUT Good Jew?" invitation to attend the services is Golden Hill Society . .'Proceeds of this luncheon will .go ports were given on the road show. TThere Is no question but that the Boulevard Grocery _.......". 3 Next week Eabt>i Goldstein will extended .5 toward the medical fund, of which A. Z. A. ................ W.2 future trill see an ever-increasing emMeeting Wednesday. Mrs. Arthur A. Cohn has been speak on "What Do Children Owe to Torah. to members of the Talmud Mrs. H. S. Npvitsky is chairman. "Wardrobe Clothiers . . . . . . . . 2 named chairman of the annual Febr- phasis laid upon, the usefulness of life A d P ? " H ill b hi Parents?" He will base his . The following committees .. and uary dancing party to be given by insurance as the ideal thrift medium Aged Be Ims /......O A regular meeting of the Ladies sermon on the recently-published committee chairmen were appointed: the Conservative Synagogue Auxili- for the average man, an emphasis laid novel, Golden Hill Society will be held Wed"Years Are So Long," by J. Confirmation Class The Omaha Jobbing Co. quint capDecember 19, at 2:30 p. m. Dessert, Mrs. Henry Belmont, ary at the Paxton hotel Saturday upon the .power ol life insurance to Lawrence. enable a man to take a long look into Plans Charity Dance nesday, tared the championship in the J. C. chairman; Mesdames David Bern- night, February 9. at the home of Mrs. M. Zalk, G17 C'preseason basketball league, last stein, J. Rosenberg, Eeuben Bordy, Mrs. Harry Txustin will be cp- the future, and then to build a finanLincoln boulevard. Temple The confirmation class of the •week, turning in a pair of victories, Simon Pizer, Ji H. Kulakofsky, Max chainhan and Mrs. John Faier ticket cial program -which •will enable him to his ambitions for himself and one of which was by the forfeit Barish. Dr. Felix Levy, rabbi of Emaviuel Conservative synagogue is giving a chairman. A committee of thirty realize for Ms family. Young:1 Menys Vaad route. • • '" congregation of Chicago, •will occupy charity dance at the J. G. C, DecemSalad, Mrs. L Dansky, chairman; women will assist. Mrs. Jack Marer For this purpose, life insurance is the ' pulpit at Temple Israel this ber 15. The Young Men's Vaad will meet In a postponed game, the Jobbers Mesdames M. Brodkey, David B. is in charge of publicity. the ideal medium. evening, as part of the Union tour Loyal Kaplan is in charge of alii Tuesday evening, December IS, at eked out a one-point win over the Cohen, Harry Kochmari, Phil RosenThe amounts to be deposited are of the congregations, in connection arrangements, and he is being assist-i the B'nai Israel synagogue at 8 p.m. much-improved A. Z. A. five, 22 to blatt, William Alberts. Charvat to Speak known definitely; the amounts to be j with a nation-wide movement of the ed by Bernice Silverman, Euth Bloch, 21. The Jobbers led all the way, but Tables and decorations, Mrs. J. M. received at the end of the plan are Union of American Hebrew Con- Genevieve Stein, and Pauline Eothonly the final whistle kept the A. Z. Erman, chairman; Mesdames E. M. Basketball Officials to Junior Hadassah known definitely; no other financial gregations. The theme of this year's kop. A. youngsters from gathering the Shlaes, Max Davis, Mose Yousem, A meeting for the men who will plans with such certainty and meetings is "The Necessity for Ee- The contributions ©f the class •win. The Jobbers!;;got their;forfeit Eeuben Brown, Phineas Wintroub, Frank C. Charvat, professor of system officiate in the J. C. C. regular seaexactness as does life insurance. ligions Recovery." members will be devoted to the plant-! son basketball English at Creighton university, will from the Tork Ba&ries,; who 5 failed Harry Braviroff. league, will be held Because it is a semi-compulsory Eabtri David H. TTice will intrxn to put in an aj>pe#rance for. their Sandwiches, Mrs. Arthur Cohen, be the guest speaker at the nest plan, calling for regular deposits at duce Dr. Levy. Following the service ing of trees in Palestine. Sunday afternoon in Lee Grossman's Tuesday night coiitest. " ; f,; chairman; Mesdames Harry Trustin, meeting of Junior Hadassah, to be regular times, thrift is carried through the Sisterhood will hold a reception office at 2:30 o'clock. held at the J. C. C. Thursday eveThe Psi Mus/'displaying Officials for the season will be / p y g A A ;; world Julius Stein, William Milder, Mrs. ning, December 20, his subject be- years when other savings plans fail; in honor of Dr. Levy. The public is Success is the child of audacity.— Johnny Eosenblatt, Dave Chesnau f h B Seed. Tickets, Mrs. A. D. Frank; the estate set ahead is large and def- invited. of power, won from the Boulevard ing "Let's Be Sentimental." Disraeli. and Cletus Grace. Grocery five, to;win second place in door, Mrs. Irvin Levin and Mrs. J. The Junior Hadassah held a Cha- inite; it can be seen; the destination Saturday morning services will beBlank; service, Mrs Sam * Theodore is known. So men make unusual sacthe league. Jack;.-: Sadofsky led the gin at 10:30 a. m. nukah program last Thursday everifices to carry through on life insur- The Bible class will meet Tuesday, attack which brought the Psi-Mus a and Mrs A- Pradell; courtesy, Mes- ning. dames D. Goldstein, Morris Katie- Eev. A. Schwaczkin kindled • the ance plans. 39 to 15 triumph!; ;' December 18, at 2.-SO p. m. at the The first extra-period game ttt the man, David E. Cohen, Julius Abra- Chanukah candles and sang a group home of Mrs. S. H. Singer. preseason schedule, turned iip last hamson. of Chanukah songs, accompanied at Preseason Handball Hereafter the Tuesday evening week, when the "Wardrobe dothiers Mrs. Arthur Cohn is general the piano by "Miss Euth Shyken. A classes will be conducted entirely •were forced to go extra time in winTournament Starts by Chanukah slat was presented by the Eabbi Wice. The history class ning from the A. Z. A.'s 22 to 20. In Misses Sarah German, Evelyn Glaz" ' meets at 8 p. m. and the class on other games played last week, the er, .and Ann Goodbinder. Miss Dora Play in the J. C. C. preseason "Anti-Semitism" at 9 p. m. In the Xi Lambdas won from the luckless Hadassah Luncheon Freshman was chairman of the pro- singles handball tournament got un- latter class material will be used Be Ims, 22 to 14, and also from the der .way this week with two prelimi- from "The Eise and Destiny of the gram. Held Last Tuesday A report on the Thanksgiving nary "Wardrobes, 23 to 20. The Omaha matches being played. Saul German Jew," the new work written Jobbers defeated the Pants Store agLevey defeated Leo Hamilton Ber-] by Prof. Jacob E. Marcus, professor dance was given by Miss Kalah Mrs. J. J. Friedman, chairman of gregation, 23 to 17 in a special exFranklin, general chairman, the man, 21-16, 21-11, and M. Frank/a of history at the Hebrew Union colthe Hadassah Milk Fund, held a hibition contest which was substitutdance proving a social and financial won from Art Lipp, 21-19, 3-21, 21-!lege. ed for the Jobbing Co.-Tork Battery successful luncheon and card party success. Approximately 175 couples Tuesday, December 11, at the Haycontest. No. 1—SS.40 Zero DisThe remainder of the pairings is! den auditorium. Beautiful prizes attended the dance. tillate 7c GaL as follows: Sam Katzman vs. winVaad No. 2—32^6 Zero Gas Play in the J. C. C. regular season were awarded at each table, and Carnival-Bazaar Held ner between Dave Cohn and Saul Services at the B'nai Israel synaOil 6%c GaL basketball league will get under way many door prizes of groceries were Graetz; Jack Ban vs. Jack Sadofsky; gogue this evening •will be conducted No. S—28^0 Zero Fuel Tuesday, December 18, it was decid- distributed. By Pioneer Women Manny Goldberg vs. Len Herman; by members of the Young Men's Oil 6He Gal. ed by the J. C. C. athletic commit- Those haying milk bags are asked The carnival-bazaar sponsored by Earl Siegel vs. winner between Wil- Vaad. to communicate with Mrs. Friedman; tee at a meeting last Tuesday. the Pioneer "Women last week-end at lie Bloom and Jack Adler; Ephraim Nathan Fine will act as rabbi, and Eight, teams have signified their also, those who wish to contribute to the Labor Lyceum was termed one Marks vs. M. Franklin; Nate Cut- David Slobodinsky as cantor. Ad••••.. of the most outstanding successes on ler vs. Al Soffer; Paul Grossman vs. intentions, of playing in the league the. milk fund, ., . This fund, one of the most im the "Pioneer "Women's calendar, ac- George Shapiro; MiHard Sigal vs. dresses will be given by Sam White. They are: Psi Mu, defending chamRudy Mittleman and Haskell Cohn. portarit Hadassah raises, is used to cording to a report to the organiza- Saul Levey. pion, Omaha Jobbing Co^_-preseason After the services, a program wall titleholder, Xi Lambdas, Pants Store, give jjroper nourishment to the in- tion by Mrs. Max Goldstein, chair- Paul. Grossman is the defending be sponsored by the Junior Vaad fants and young children. This is A. Z. A., Wardrobe Clothiers, P.e man. .' :..•••_•. :; champion. Auxiliary, with Eose Soffer, Goldie part of the infant welfare division Mrs. S. Okun, ticket chairman, an„ 1ms, ana the Boulevard Grocery. Wolfson and Mae Tucker participatof HadassaTi. • nounced that the drawing for the The season's schedule will be ing. chair took place at the «lose of the drawn up at a later date. Plans are going forward for the Wins Grid Letter The Hadassah sewing group will bazaar, with Aaron Raznick the winannual student service to be held at allLou Weiner, former Tech meet Monday, December 17, at th ner. A. Richards and Mrs. S. Friedel around star athlete, was a football the B'nai.Israel synagogue next FriJ. C. C. conducted the drawing. letter-winner at Pittsburg, Kans., day. According to present plans, rep,Girls Cagers to Play This organization is planning a Teachers college, under coach Ed- resentatives of local Jewish fraterdinner for a Pioneer "Women repre- ward 'Blue1' HowelL Tiities and sororities will participate. on Monday Evening ;•: Cultural Meeting sentative from Palestine on January 14," They-jtsk^all organization^ to A practice game -fpr--4lie_^-J^&; ; Mrs. Max Fromkin, cultoral..ttj :••'•-; girls varsity basketball, .team.;• has inan of the Omaha chapteTof IB&dasV "hold this date; open. * sah, announces that the next meetbeen scheduled with Bellevue for. the Center, floor, Monday night. The ing of the cultural group will be held Fathers and Sons game will get under way a t 7:30 January 14. There will be no cultural meeting during December. - : Banquet at Temple There will be no admission charge, The annual father and son "banquet and spectators -are invited to "get Re-Im Planning at Temple Israel was held Tuesday their first glimpse at the J. C. C. evening. Harry Cooper spoke for the For Gala Affair girls basketball team. • •:""" fathers and Lazar Kaplan for the HE The Ee-Im club is.making plans sons. Included on the program were a. gala New Year's eve party* at Malady Endangering for the Odd Fellows halL A prominent community singing under, direction orchestra will play.' '.- • - ;.-•_ of Ben Stiefler, magical tricks, imOur Social Health local This will be an invitation, affair. personations, and a fire-eating act Those wishing to make reservations from the world's fair. Boy Scouts of : (Continued from Pag£2.) at 31.50 per coupe; are asked to ll Troop 82 were.guests and presented a stunt. Lyle Williams spoke briefly ^#ind campaign for members at ten Joe Nitz, Atlantic: 7855. :r dollars a man. in southern ^California '""i ^William Kaiman will entertain .for for the Boy.Scouts; Arthur KulakofTruly this lamp Trill be •where shirt organizers iiad solicited •Ebe dub at ffie next meeting, which sky gave the prayer for. the boys. appreciated by the whole members from door to door,: with an •Hfill J>e held Tuesday evening at the William L. Holzman was toastmasfamily. It was seientiflter. Harry Malashock was general anti-Semitic appeal, the first flush of callr designed for readsuccess in 1933 faded ; out in 1934, -The . Be-Im basketball team is program chairman. "Harry Wilinsky ing and c I o E e Vorfe. was in charge "of preparations . for : whereas ihe Utopians, a society with Tepidly rounding into shape for the Absolutely aoeyeEtrain! the dinner. Beautiful waffle irons pronounced social passion free from 'Ji' C. C. league play,; which begins No glare . . . no shaflthat make the most degroup animosities, in the same year December 16; Two old-time stars who licious, golden, -brc-vm OTTS! The perfect reafilolled up a membership five timis have returned to play after a num•wafflesJ See t h e m -if. Tonkel, the Balagola' ing lamp. that of -which the dying anti-Semites ber-of. seasons ^nd are showing up y o u ' r e looting for & could boast '•'"'/ ; Presented on Sunday lorely gift for someone. well, are Sam Leibbwitz, goard, and The industrial depression intro- Dave Frank, fbrwartL""" A large crowd attended the presduced by the financial crash of 1929 entation of "Tonkel, the Balagola," was accompanied, as earlier depresgiven at the J. C. C. Sunday "by th< sions have been, by an acute out- Temple College Club Progressive Hebrew club for the break of racial and religious prejuPlans Youth Service benefit of Jewish - school children in dices, but this was the first major Poland. Those having the leading depression during which snch hys- The College club of Temple" Israel roles .were L-'Wolk--and Mr. and Mrs. teria met with so little hospitality is making plans for a youth service, J. Raznick. or support. While Nazis were duping to be held Friday evening,' December According to J. Eiklin, presiden' Morning — Evening — Midnight their followers once mare with sum- 28. of judiciary committee of the organ' mons to meet the depression with Members of the College <:lub will ization consists of Dr. Leon Fellman hatred, and setting one group against actively: participate, iii the service. chairman; Ben Eechter, Ben Goreanother, Americans, refusing to : be Lazar Kaplan, ; president, is in lick,. Jacob Savich, and Sam Nepom I T . Omaha 8:05 am €:00 pm 1159 pra fooled again, seemed -. t° have the: charge of arrangements. . " ... . Ar. Kansas Oly 1:30 p » 11:15 pro 7-.15 am nick._The general committee, consist sense to realize that T?r6testants, Tlireii$l'Steeping Car on Wianrght Tram. ing of representatives _of the organ Air-conditioned, Diaing-fiarior Observation Service on Morning Catholics and Jews wer& allj in the. Palestine League Elects ization proper, the Ladies Auxiliary and Evening Trams. • . same economic boat, and that all teble Chair Cars srn3 Coacrtes. and the loan group, is composed "of Dr. Einstein would float or sink together. Cincinnati.—Professor Albert Ein- Dr. I. Dansky, chairman; J.~KikIin The career of anti-Semitism, how- stein has been elected a National ] Sam - Freed, Sam dayman, Dave OMAHA -- ST. LOUIS ever, is not yet ended. Anti-Semitism Associate of the League for Labor J Oruch, Mrs. David Denenbergy Mrs. Lt. Omaha . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 : 0 5 am &0Q pm 1159 pm is a disease of the body politic whose Palestine. " jHyman Glicken, Charles Canfield. course it is difficult to predict. We Ar. S t Look . . : . . . . . . . . !9:15'pa"7:23 am 4:55 pm may believe that the disease, is arThrash Drying torn Sieepe Leaves 655 pm. Air-ContJitJoned Dming-Parlor Observation Service Omsfa-r rested; we cannot hope that' it is Kansas City-Kansas Giy-St. -Louis. cured. At any time it may "break out THE again, perhaps at some .new place, for the seeds of: it are deeply emBARGAIN RAIL FARES EVERY DAY We have many kinds and prices . - » all ex>bedded and widely spread, l e t any cetleiit irons, gnaranteerl . , . the kind that Rail feres ll^ougloijt t i e West and Southwest have been reduced & portion of the social organism be One way rates ROW as low wslte. per mile—round trip as low as 1.8c per Koofl eervice for years. subjected to unusual strain and the mile. "Tickets on sale dairy. Puflman surcharge abofished of Nebraska Women insidious malady is likely to appear once more. Like a convalescent TRAVEL IN COMFORT BY TRAIN — I T COSTS LESS Try a Bag Today patient, the American people will do well to guard their social health during the critical decade that is ahead, .Tickets — Reservation* since, as thoughtful observers are Travel Information aware, the adjustments in industrial J.LHSK, " and political economy that are alGs»- Ast., Pass. Dcpf. 140* First Nat'I Bask Bldg. ready under way will provide occasions for a relapse into anti* cmr Rotn OFFICE 1611 Fsmras Semitism. It is in seasons of stormy economic weather that chronic religiJscfcam ous and racial prejudices are revived " A SERVICE [NSTJTUTION and exploited. (Copyright,: 1934j Jewish Telegraphic.! - Agency, J n c ) .

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Page' 8-^THE JE"WISH PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1934

Sioux City News

Auxiliary Luncheon _ to Be Held Tuesday

and -Ben Kubby. An outline of the work and heed of the JewisK National Fund will be given. All members are urged to attends

Council Bluffs News

. MOXS.KY. GKOPIXSKT A coin, will spend the week-end here,! and HARRY B. COHEN, Atty». jrfsifirig "her i>arents, Mr. i n d Mrs. "Her- VANl'K,787 Omaha "Sail Bfc. Bldg-. man Meyerson. She will bring as her PROBATE NOTICE. guest, her sorority sister, Miss FlorIn tbp mnrtpr or thp. estate of ence Sineerim of Woodbine, la. A. COKNBER, Deceased.

Honoring the new members, of the Ladies Auxiliary of Shaare Zion, the Notice is hereby. given : Mr. and Mrs. /William Greenstein BY P. B. K. Auxiliary will have a luncheon, and Thnt tbe creditors of said deceased .will and small -son,V Harvey Arnold, of meet tthe exetnitrix of said estate, before program in. the synagogue social haili nie Count Td f DoiiRlue D l C nie. County .Tudge of County, Ur. JuKus-M. Mosfeovitz was elected Greenville, 111.; left Wednesday for ANNA PILL, Tuesday afternoon, December 18. ^<el)rnska, nt the County Court Room, in president of tlte JGouncil Bluffs lodge their home, following a; ten-day visit BnW Gountjr. on the nth d i i y o f Pebrnarv,' Mrs. Hi M., Sherman, president of No. 688 of -the Independent Order of here at the home of Mrs. Greenstein's 3U3.;. am\ on the Sth clny of April, 1935, at the Auxiliary, "will act as chairman the B'nai B'rith at a meeting held on brother-in-law and sister, Mr.- and y o clock a. m., each day, for th«>c npurpose 1 ? ^ ? 1' ;;?? s e B t lltnnRRtt^^eell r c l l a i nnmm**o*e oc n*n*>e1' n'«oh. «h ?^? of the luncheon and will' preside. .. Monday evening at the Eagles hall. Mrs. Jake Mendelson. ..'"-' •adjustment and . iillownii.ee. Three months Jerusalem (W.N.S.)—-The Palestine Featured oh 'the program will be He succeeds Nathan L. Nogg. Other nre r allowed for the crenitors to present clalm% f r o m tb Government's' surplus is now $17,* r'th d a - v o f January, an address by Miss IjlUan.Romiro'w- officers chosen for the coming year The cultural group of, the. Council 500,000 as the result of the addition sky ,on . "Why the Jewish Woman are: Nathan B. Gilin'sky, vice presi- Bulffs Senior Hadassah "will meet next BRYCE CRAWFORD. . 1O , , „ . County Judge. Should Belong to the> Synagogue." dent; Millard Krasne, recordijag sec- Monday .evening,' December 17, at tbe of a $5,000,000 reserve for the first •12-14-JU—St. Mrs. Elizabeth Kaplan, -who is Miss Romirowsky '• is" a .member of retary t, Albert Fox, financial secre-" nine' months of. 1934, according to JACK W. MARBU, Attor»«y-at-Irfiw ouring the United -States -as a dele- the Hebrew School Faculty and - an tary; Louie H. Katelman, treasurer; home of. Mrs. Joe Gotsdiner, 2643 Ave- the Palestine Gazette, official govCourt Hous« nue D. gate, from ~ the Moatzes Hapoaloth authority on Jewish subjects. ernment publication. • Nathan Nogg, monitor;. Dr. Isaac S O F AK ° ^ 1 ^ L ""CI.ES OF INCORt-OCouncil of Women. Workers) of LeRoy Goldblatt will sing a group Sternhill,- assistant monitor; Abe L. Word has been received here of the RATION OF CAPITOL DELIVERY Sunday afternoon, December 16, the •alestine, will visit Sioux City and of two songs, "That Wonderful Katelmanr guardian, and Messrsl Her- Ideatb 8HOTWEIX, MONSKV, GUODINSKY & SERVICE, INC. of Louis Namen of Fort Dadge, Sioux City A. Z. A. chapter No. 12 -will he local chapter -of the Pioneer Mother of-Mine^' and "The Valley man Meyerson, S.. Shyken and Sam la., Tuesday evening. He was 41 years VANCE, and EAEIiT B. COHEN, Attys. Notice is hereby given that the uiuler737 Omaha Nat'l Bk. Bldg. Bigned, pursuant to the lnws of the State, commemorate International A; Z. A. Women on January 13. Plans have of the Moon." Me will be accompa- Sacks as trustees. of Nebraska, have formed a corporation old. Mr. Namen was born in Omaha, Day, "with an appropriate,:program und een started by the local chapter to nied by'Mrs. I.-.H.; Levin. -Cantor A. Delegates elected for the annual con- and also had lived in Council Bluffs the name of which is "CAPITOt, DELIVH\ PUBLICATION OS PETI- ERY SERVICE, INC." nnd its principal open meeting in the Jewish Communi- sponsor a. banquet, honoring Mrs. Pliskin will sing a group of Russian vention of the District Grand Lodge prior to his moving to Fort Dodge, XOTICE TION FOB. SETTLEMENT OF FIWAL plnce of business is in the City of Omaha . . ty Center at 3 o'clock. On that day all laplan. : AnaiiNisTKATior* ACCOUNT Douglas County. Nebroskn. The objects songs. Mi3s Bertha Heshelow will ac- No. 6 of the B'nai B'rith to be held where he has made his home for the In the County Court of Douglas County, for which this corporation is formed are the A..Z. A. chapters throughout the The Council of Women. Workers company him, \ next summer-, are Messrs. O. Hofeh- past twenty-five years. He is survived Nebraska. for the purpose of engaging in the genUnited States and Canada will join in f Palestine is organized to assist Matter of the Estate of CHAKLKS eral pneknge delivery service nna any and man, Louis H. Katelman, and Nathan by his widow and two daughters in InP.the A social, hour wilt follow the proSLINUKliLAND. Deceased: other delivery service; to purchase, the celebration of this occasion: tie women workers who come to L. Nogg. ' Alternates for the conven- Fort Dodge; three sisters, Mrs. Tillie All persons interested in said matter nil lease, hold nnd otherwise acquire real and A. Z. A. Day is' set aside by the in- 'alestine. It assists them to accli- gram. are hereby notified that on the 1st day personnl property of every kind and detion are ' Dr. Issac Sternhill and Shamberg of Hutchinson, Kans., Mrs. December. 1834. Edward H. Sngert filed scription nnd to sell, dispose of," lease ternational . .fraternity as a day in mate themselves to: agricultural work Messrs. Loujs Bernstein and Ben I. Minnie Ager, and Mrs, Rose Gordon of of a petition in said County Court,' praying convey nnd mortgage, any and nil of the •which . every • Aleph .brings back to in the colonies-• and- industrial, l Council Bluffs; one brother, Harry, of that his final administration account filed said property, to borrow money and to do Seldin. . . ' • • • • • • • herein lie settled and allowed, nnd thnt things necessnry. or. incident to the mind the ideals, aims and, work for n the.cities of Palestine. -. • • • [ The installation; of : the new officers Memphis, Tenn.; his stepmother, Mrs. he be discharged from his trust ns admin- all operation of. its business. The authorized "Which the organization stands." . S. L. Namen of Council Bluffs; two istrator and that n hearing will be had Mrs. Kaplan has spent a number capitnl stock is $10,000.00 which shnll "b«s will take .place .onV Monday evening, said petition before sairt Court on the fully paid nnd non-nssessable' when isThe principal speaker of the after- f years as a Chalutzah in Palestine step-sisters, Mrs. Abe Jossem of Oma- oa January 14, at the Eagles hall. . The date for the next book review Srth dny of December, 1934, nnd thnt if sued nnd may lie issued for cash,- goods, noon will be Mr. Louis Lippj Omaha and in working -with .women worker's ha, and. Miss Edith Namen of Council yon fall to appear bet'oru. said Court- on wares and merchandise, or both. With the to be/given by Rabbi H. R. Rabinothe said 29th day of December, 1034 at 0 attorney and charter ..member of. the n Europe. assent in writing of the holders of CO per •. • ,Miis' Sarah Solomoriqw is leaving Bluffs; and three step-brothers, Al- o'clock A.-M:. uird contest said petition, cent witz has beeit set ahead toJanuary of the outstanding Btock pursuant to first A.Z.A. chapter. Mr. Lipp is noted court may grant the prayer" of said the. votes given in person or by proxy st 7. Rabbi Rabinowitz will "review "An today for St. Loais, .Mb., where her bert Namen ol Omaha, and Max andthe not only for his eloquence in.speakpetition, enter a decree of heirship, nnd Eli Namen of Council Blufts..Funeral a meeting called for thnt purExperiment in Auto Biography," by marriage to Mr.. Ben Rudn6r of St. services will be held this "Friday morn- make such other nnd further orders, al- pose or nt specially an mutual meeting, the BonrU -ing,-but-for-his knowledge of A.-Z. A, Louis will take place on Sunday, Delowances nnd decrees, as to this Court of Directors' shall have the power and H. G. Wells. . Work and interest in it. seem proper, to the end that all mnt- authority to sell, assign, transfer and concember 30^ Numerous dinners parties, ing at Fort Dodge. All members of the may Last Moriday;. evening,'. Rabbi Ra-. ters to said estate may be fin- vey or otherwise dispose of the property family from Omaha and Council Bluffs nlly pertaining The invocation and benediction will luncheons. and bridge parties have settled and determined. and assets of the corporation as on enMiss Fannie Cohen, 1011 Ninth binowitz 1 reviewed "The Years Are been given, in honor of Misa-Solom- left,yesterday to attend the funeral. be given by Max Maron, chaplain of BRYCE CRAWFORD. tirety and going concern on such terms So "Long ." ..Over 40 people heard the* treet, will hold open house, next 12-7-34—3t County Judge. and conditions ng to the said Board may • the chapter. Rudolph Schindler, pres: onow. Among ' her' recent hostesses . seem fit nnd proper. The corporation shall ident of the chapter -will speak on Junday afternoon, from 3 to 5, hou- review. ' were the Mesdames Dave, Finkel, J. Mrs. Herman Meyerson entertained commence business on the filing of the MONSKY, GKOBINSKT & Articles, of. Incorporation in the office of the work of the Sioux City chapter. >ring her cousin Miss Anne Cohen Goldware, Irving Pazoff, Miss Evelyn twenty guests at a dinner party at her SHOTWKLL, VANCE nnd HARBY B. -COHEN the County C.erk of Douglns Connty, Ne- The presentation of the-Ay-Z... A. if New York City, who will leave Zwieback, and- Miss Aim Felhnan, all home last Thursday evening in honor Attomeys braska. Its highest amount of indebted"37 Omaha National Bank Bide. ness shnll not exceed two-thirds of iti day class of new members will be "or her home after a visit here of of "Omaha, and Mesdames Sam Meyer- of Miss Sarah Solomonow, whose marcnpital stock. The nffnirs of the corporamade by Milton Bolstein, president several months. She has been a guest son, Ben. J. Gershiiri. W. Solomonow, riage to Mr. Ben Rudner, of St. Louis, tion shn!l be administered by a Board of Election of officers will occupy th-s M. Bemstetn, Max Simon and Herman in the home of her uncle and aunty Of the B'nai,. B'rith. BT PCBIJCATION OX TETI- Directors of not less thnn three nor more Mo- will take place.on December 30. NOTICE : business meeting of the B'nai B'rith than five members who shall be elected TIOJJ FOB SETTLEMENT OF FI»AL A musical program will be pre-Mr. and Mrs. J. Cohen. Saitlin, a reMeyerson. \ * • The evening's diversion was bridge. at the nnnunl meeting to be held on the AD3UNISTBATION ACCOUNT lodge, when they meet iiext" WednesEented by . Lester Lazriowich.^ Re- cent bride. In the County Court of Douglas County, second Tuesday of February of ench year. day evening. Mr. Milton Bolstein, The Board shall from this number elect Nebraska. freshments will conclude t h e ' p r o - Miss Cohen will visit with relatThe Couneit-Bluffs Agudas Achim; Mrs. George Krasne entertained the In the Matter of the Estate of ALICE 1,. a president, vice-president, secretary and gram. Max Zeligson is the.general tives and friends in Minneapolis, president, will preside. treasurer.-The articles may be amended at Asaociation"held an election -of offiSlilNUERLAND, Deceased: regular meeting of the stockholders chairman of the program, and in be- Chicago;, Gary, Indiana, and Cleve- "A report of the "membership com- cers last Thirrsday evening; at the members of her afternoon club at .a All persons iaterested in said matter nre any notified that - on the 1st dny of or at any Rpecinl meeting called for that half of the chapter extended an in- land before going .to New York City. mittee will be made by Edwin W; Eagles liail.' Mr." Sam Kosenthal -was luncheon at her home, Wednesday af- herebyDecember, 1934, Edward M. Sagert filed purpose after ten days' notice of such proBaron, chairman of the committee, ternoon. . .. — —-.-_ vitation to the Sioux City Jewry to a petition in Baid County Court, praying posed amendment in writing has been re-elected president for the ensuing Miss Cohen-has been the recipient ;that his final administration account filed mailed to all stockholders nnd upon the attend the celebration. >f a number of social courtesies dur- and applications for membership will term. Other officers chosen were Joe herein be settled and allowed, and that he affirmative vote of two-thirds of the'cap" be submitted- to the lodge. . . . . . . A'stag^moker in the evening for ing the past few weeks. > Miss1 Gwendolyn Meyerson, student be discharged, from his trust as adminis- ital stock. . Passer, vice president; Charles Saltzand that a hearing will be had on members of the chapter and prospecman, financial secretary; O.Hochman,. at the University of Nebraska at Lin- trator isntd petition before said Court on the Dnted at Omaha, Nebraska, November, tive members will'conclude the day's recording, secretaryi Sam Gross, treas20th. day of December, 1034, and that U Six couples were-p-n^-sts-at a din-; 14, 1934. • . - -• yoH fail to appear before said Court o" events." The smoker- will'be. held in ner party in the A.. 5 . Emlein home Miss Rosabelle Wigodsky was urer, and Messrs. Ike Krasnej Dave CEKALD E. taVIOIETTE »nd ISADOKE GOLDSTEIN the said 23th day of December, ISSi at 0 . BEN KAHiOWSKY, Attyg TAUL GOLDSTEIN the Jewish Community Center. Mr. last Sunday evening, when. Mr. and elected president of the Debra club Fox; Harry Kubby and Simon-Steino'clock a. m;, and contest said petition, Insurance Butldinp: ARTBTTR GOLDSTEIN the Court may grant the prayer of said J. H. Godfring, general secretary of Mrs. Emlein entertained.. honoring at their election _held Monday eve- berg, as board members. Installation Ineorporators. petition, enter a "decree of heirship, and In the presence of: Jncfc W. Marer. • the.Y..M., C. A. will speak a t the their daughter Frances on the occa- ning. She ."succeeds Miss Rose Albert. of the new officers will take place mate such other and further orders,"al•"• NOTICE XiV ABMINISTBATION : . : " In the Connty Court of Douglas County, lowances and decrees, as to this Court ll-23-34-4t. smoker, and a varied program will sion of her birthday. The election meeting, was held in theJanuary 3, at the, Eagles hall. . _ may seem proper, to the end-that all matfollow. l ^ h f r n c t t e r of the estate i>t ERNEST ters pertaining to snid estnte mity be Among the guests ;was Miss Helen home of -Miss Jennie Shiridler. H1MMELMAN, Deceased. . . . .-^ determined. Other officers elected were Pearl Jack ,""#einey of, the United .States All persons interested in salu estate are finally settled nnd Levitt of St. Paul, who lias been visBItYCE CKAWFOKD. j Navy, who spent the past week Jtere -ftereby notified that a ^ t i t i o n "has been iting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.Olensky, vice-president; Sylvia Herzfiled in Bald Court alleging.that said .devisiting at the home of i i s brother off, treasurer; -Libbie Olensky, secreL. Levitt this week. * i ceased died leaving no last will and p p T tary; Sarah Sadoff,. publicity chairr and sister-in-law, ^Ir: ^ i ' M r s . Robert Ing SOT- adnanistration; opon his;. estate, MAX FKOMKIN. Attorney Rabbi H. R. Rabinowitz will speak nnd. that a bearing will be haa on £aia Insurance Building. fliis evening "on the subject "What Is Mr. and Mrs. Sam Skalovsky, 1702 man, and rDorothy Gelson," sergeant- Weiner, left for,San Francisco for-a- petition before said court on the uth d»y short stay prior t» making a trip to S.JaJMJafy.,183.\ and that-If they tail to Wrong with-"the Young American randview blvd., announce the birth at-anns. «t said Conrt on the .said ath day the Philippines,. Mr, Wpiner has just appear OF or Jaijuary, i ^ , i.i •• i> i.oeu n. n>., to con- NOTICE OF 1NCOBPORATION ; ' Jew."-Cantor.. A. Pliskin and the f a daughter. COMPANY recently returned from a thtee-year test said petttien, the Court may srapt. NoticeTREBOK-BKALTY. is hereby giTen: Synagogue choir "will 'chant- the servthe-same and grant aUmlriistration .of said stay in China.-' "••.' •'..':'"\" : : That MAX FKOMKIN and KEJ.SO A. estale to Gerald K. LaVioletteor some oth- MOKGAX ice. , • ". I - ,'•'. - --•:'•-: Mrs. J. Hoffman of Minneapolis: The Bible... class conducted. byr Rabhave formed ' "a corporation, er snitable-person !and proceed to a settle- kuowM as "the "TKEBOR itEAtTX' COMhas; been a guest this week in the At .the Junior Congregation servbi H. R^ Habinowitjs-will-be held-next TVIr. .and' Mrsi-^amtlel H:- Katelman me«,t thereof. ; ^ 1 PANX.H with its principal place of busic n A , ices .tomorrow .morning, Howard home: of her brother-in-law ' and sis- Monday, afternoon'} at 2:45 o'clock. enfertained thef.ii'Mttb^fa of "their Sunness in-Omnha. Donglns Connty, Nebrasr County Jtidge. ka.Thfe object and purpose foT which'this Sacks will .read the law,., and Morris ter, Mr." and Mrsi EH.Robinow. Mrs. The group is making an extensive day night bridge-club a t their home Corporation is organized, and the powers at a study of the.Book of Genesis under Ginsberg will act as'Cantpr. Mr. and Hoffman has. been the guest it BhBll have are as follows: To acquire I E O S 4 "WHITE, Attys. 1 Sunday night. • , wi!' cnobie your rcSofiv© by purchase or otherwise, own, hold,- buy. Mrs. M. ,A. Levich, honoring^ their number, of patties during her stay the leadership, of Rabbi. Rabinowitz. S*4 City -SML' "Bk. BJd Sell," convey, lense, mortgnie or encumber in' the U.S.S.R. to feey Bon, ".David,- qn. h^a bijthday,4 Avi'l here. " real: estate or. other: property, personal or The class meets in the social hall Miss rlaraise jitch, daughter',of -Mr. S O t l O B B I rtBLICATIOS ON* PETI- mixed, aud'to do any-and all things nehecvy clothing, shoe§, unserve, .refreshments' to , the children of Shaare Zion synagogue. , , M O S F O B SETTLEMENT OF FINAI, cessary and-proper-in connection with the and Mrs; Leo. Fitcji,- iaasrone of the •:•' derwear, foodstuffs on« AbMINISTKATION ACCOUNT ? of theilJunioB Copgregatloni •••..••;,*'cl-."" • Mrs. X?eorge* Israel will arrive here! owning' or:-operation of .re«l estate and : leading' TOles; in.."*£he inheritors," In fhe , County Court of Douglas . County, personal prdperty. The capital stock of countless other dotnestk * Over" 500 jpeoplc attended" the *Cfe£ next week to visit with' her" son-in• ' '_!' " - _ , . ' . _ this Corpprntion shall he Ten, Thousand which ja:being,J)res.entcd:by the^Cpm- Nebraska. . or. i ITS po r t.e& crttcles nukah:-program" Sunday 'afternodn; law and 'daughter, Mr. and Mrs. E. Dollars (*10,Q«>.00h divided into one hunIn the Matter Vt the Estate of-JAKP 1 (100) shares of common stock of tho (Continued from Page 4.) ...'.' munity Players at ; the.Omaha Com- :FKKEK, also knovrn as J. FEKEK. and dred These gifts will be ctauM; given by the children of the Hebrew J. Fribourg. par value of One Hundred. Dollars <?100.00) - ISAAC FEBElt, Deceased:- - » munity. Playhousei A matinee ^how ;: other case not without similarities to School and .the Sunday school.: Revalued with the oncoming each. . ' - - . .; '.- . All persons Interested in said matte.r are the one just mentioned which came will be. given .Saturday arternoon' and 'herebv notified that on the (5th. day of Defreshments • vfere served to the chilThe erfstenee of this corporation shall of the long Russian wintet the play wilr end with the Saturday cember, 1934, "Jennie Fcref Hied a petition begin on the filing" of a copy- or its Arinto my purview this week. dren by Mrss Mary Ranter, on the In County Court; praying that her final ticles of Incorporation with the County Prices compare, administration account filed herein be set- Clert of iionglas County. Nebraska, : as I was talking" to a Jew, who tooevening's pertoftnancfc ' occasion of lteV'son Philip's Bar Mitztled and allowed, and • thnt she -Tie -dis- provided by l«w, "and.shaH continue for a was one of the old. school of radivah, Saturday* • \ .'.<:*.;:..•.: . favorably with from her trust as administratrix period, of- fifty years, unless : sooner disMore than seventy young women cals — a man connected with one of A large crowd' attended/ tlie Chanu- charged and that a hearing * » 1 be had on said solved "by the unanimous vote of the isthose in America attended -the membership party of the leading general news agencies kah program i>rc*ented at-the Chevra petition before, said Court on the 5th' day sued and outstanding common stock. The f January." 1035, aud that if J*ou firil to amount of indebtedness to which this the Junior Hadassah, Wednesday in the world. He is in charge of the B'nai Yisroel synagogue Sunday after- iappear before said Court on the said 5th Corporation may at nny time, subject Far Tecgsta •Mton evening in., the West hotel. Paid up French division of this agency. He is noon by the local Talmud Torah Sun- day of January, 103T>, at 9 otlock a:m., and itself, shall not exceed two-thirds of its ••a jr«» lend bank ' contest said peUtion, tbe Court may grant capitel stock, but said restriction shnil not > i 4 ' Mr. Samuel Saylor, national secre- membership in the chapter was thea man who has been all over the day'School. Mr: O. Hbchman presided the prayer of eaid petition, enter a decree apply to rnortga«tes placed on the said real of heirship. and m a l e such other and estate."Xhe • business of this' Corpdrntion tary of •" Hechalute" organization ;of requirement for attendance. world — has worked in such places as chairman and made the opening farther orders, allowances and decrees, as shall be condncted by ,n Board of two DiAmerica' spoke- before, meiiibers:; of A .program of skits and dances remarks. Mr. Nathan Gilinsky was the to thiH Court may seem proper, to the end. rectors, to be selected ' from the stockthe all matters pertaining- to said estate holders at their regular Jannunl meetinp: drnn^r wWc\ was the Junior Poale Zion group a t their: principal speaker. Btis subject was that n Rome; may be finally Settled and determined. the Directors from taeir number, shall at 6:30r The diSner tables were decomeeting.* "last wefek, - 1|E.;'. ; BRY.CE CRAWFORD. "The Significance' of Chanukah." A elect." a: ^President, Vice-rresident, SecreAfter we had discussed the matter tary and '• TreaBurer. A,ny Director may stopped, in Sioux City for a; day,'dur- rated ^carrying out the theme of the which brought me to- see him which group of, Chanukah recitations were 12-14-34—3t • . . - •• County Jndgc. hold ojie OT more of the above offices in ing his .tour of the;.midwest.:He; out- months of the. year, with, membershad no relation to things Jewish, he given by the Sunday School children, FBADENBrUG, "»VEBB,- BGBER, the Corphrntion. '•... ' • . , IN . TTCTXESS .WHEREOF, we have inculding Caretta Brown, Shirley Ballined the. work. of\tbe Chalutzim and seated according to the month of says to me: SICK & KELLEV, Attys. hereunto set our hands this 11th day of 650 Omaha Natl Bk. Kidg. General Representative In U.S.A told of their "work in Palestine. He their- birthday. December, 1034. . " . "You know, I am an old tim& radi- aban, Sol Baum, Jacob Brown, Ed«t AMTORQ, 261 Fifth Ave., N.Y. MAX FROMKIN, ward ChernisB, Clarabelle" Cohen, NOTtaught members of the Junior Poale Mis;3 Virginia Hodgdon of the Car-cal PROBATE NOTICE. and frankly I don't believe : KELSO A. MORGAN, Zion a group of Palestinian song: roll school., of dancing presented, a in Zionism, nationalism or anything man Chemiss, Betty Cohen, Shirley Di- In the matter of the estate of JACOB 12-14-34—4t • Incorporators. BEUNSTEIN, Deceased. . program of dances. A musical skit amond, Irwin Cherniss, jiszie Diamond, and dances. . ;. ' of that sort, but I want to ask a Notice is hereby given; - • Ethel Gordon, Billy Fried, Betty Lee . That the creditors of said deceased will At their meeting Sunday after- was presented by Elizabeth Passman, favor of you. _ Harris,"OrvHle Fried,. Shirfep Krause, •meet the administrator of said estate, benoon, the following chairmen were Sybil Merlin, Dorothy Epstein, Ruth "Go ahead," I said. me. County Jndpe of Douglas CounExplore the World's Far Corners with James Boring's Milton Gordon, Harriet Kubby, Joan fore Rifkin,.Dorothy Merlin, Mary Rozofty, Nebraska, at the County Court Koom, appointed: Palestinian activities, Til"Well," he resumed, "I have a in said County,"on the nth.day of FebruKrause, Sol Kutler, Betty Rae Kubby, lie Franklin; project worki, Sophie sky, Frances Jacobsbn, Saretta Krig- nephew who is attending college. He ; ary, ; 1035 and on the 5th day of April, : Franklin; representatives to the sten, Ruth Wigodsky, Beatrice Pill, has just entered his sophomore year. O w e n Meyerson,' Stanley Krasne, 193T). nt 9 o'clock a. m , each day, for the : purposp of'presenting their claims .for exElaine Meyerson, Elinor Passer, Eveand Kozena Sacks. Jewish National^ Fund Council, Ruamination, adjustment and jillowiince. He knows almost nothing about JewJames Boring's famous Small Party Cruises provide all the The after'dinner hours were spent ish things. He does not look very lyn" Peflmutter; Aivin'Passer, Marvin Three months are allowed for the credidolph Schindler* and" Tillie Franklin tors to present (heir claims, from the 5th Richards, Shirley-/ Perlmutter, Pearl playing bingo. features of the big cruise but limited membership assures Plans, were made to .decorate I Jewish. Well, he came back at the Richards, Sarah Stadlan, Millard Sel- day of January, 1935.CRATTFORD, room in the Jewish Community Cencomplete individual independence. Rates include First-Class end of the last college term, a per- din, Lawrence • Steinbergj Kenneth 12-14-34—3t County Judge." ter where their meetings are held. plexed boy. Something had happened Sacks, Esther Zoorwifl, Edward Stein-; accommodations oh the finest steamers of the world's greatThe( room will be decorated carrying WEBB, BEBEK, KLCTZto him. I investigated and' found berg, Emmanuel-Stadlan, Marilyn ITtADENBURG, Talks•" by members of the club est fleets and the best hotels and automobiles ashore. NICK & KEtLEY, Attys. out a Palestinian theme. Plans wen that he was-greatly troubled by theSaltzman, Esther Sacks, Audrey Telp630 Omaha Natl Bk. B were features of the program at the also made for a luncheon thi fact that he was a Jew. He had sud- ner, Igal. Stadlan and Jack Wolpa. A ^ . - ' t J g g j , a^.^.^.'.a ».g t * i .t t 9 u n i t t -t--ti -r- ir -i—-•—• T I I * - T I T t- T - T - I " - • month, to raise funds for "the! Poale American club, meeting, held last denly discovered that he was a Jew. violin duet was given by Igal Stadlan NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION. - t h e County Court of "Douglns County, Yugen campaign. Sularartfr, Beres- Sunday afternoon in the Jewish Or rather to be more correct, i t had and Emmanuel Stadlan.6 A group of I nNebraska. Community Center. Marvin Kline kin is in charge of this. In the matter «f the estate of LEON S. WEST BOUND ; been discovered fo£, him. The great Chanukah songs were sung by the KOPAIiD, Deceased." ' South Sea Islands, Samoa, Fiji, • The meeting next week . will be spoke on "Why Minnesota has Such publicity given to Hitlerism has putchildren, accompanied at the piano by All Hawaii,' Japan, Philippines, Bali, persons Interested in said estate are •New • Zealand, Australia, Bali, Java, • Angkor, Straits Settleheld jointly with the A..Z. A. chap- a' Powerful Football Team this something in the general run of col- Miss Ruth Shyken, The Chanukah. ser- hereby notified that a petition h.is' bp'en Year." Joe;Maron spoke on "Initiafiled in snid Court alleging that said'dements, Burma, India, Egypt, the ter. * .' Java, Straits Settlements, Angdied leaving no laBt. will nnd praytive and Judgment." Sam Edelman lege students, and many" of them had vices were .conducted by Mr. J. Z. ceased Mediterranean—S. S. PRESIing for administration upon his estate, Stadlan, principal of the Sunday kor, Philippines, China, Japan, spoke on the prospects of the Rose been asking him if he was a Jew, and thnt a hearing will be had on said peDENT HOOVER from" San School. Other teachers who assisted in tition before said court on the 5th day of Hawaii—S; S. MARIPOSA from and their attitude had so changed to Bowl tournament. David Tilevitz Francisco, December 28th (via January. 1935, and that if they fail to apSan Franci3co February 5th — spoke on his idea of the most valu- him that this boy,has ,begun to be-the coaching of the children were Miss pear at said Court on the said Sth day of S. S. PRESIDENT WILSON, lieve that-being a Jew is something Toby Zoorwill, Miss Marian Perlmut- January, 1033, a t 9 o'clock a. m., to conEabbi Jacob Ogle of Lincoln, Neb. able football player this season. December 6th from New York) 122 days—all-inclusive rate Miss Freda Zoprwill and Morton test said petition, the Court mny.grant the Igg days—all-inclusive rate. will occupy the pulpit at Mount -Plans to start their oratorical and terrible — something inferior. Now, ter, same niid crast nrlministratian of snid es$1975 Adler. Brief talks were given by to Theresa Kopnld or some other suit$2185 Sinai Temple this evening. He will debating contest in an effort to dis-as I say, I am against Zionism, and Messrs. H e r m a n Meyerson, Sam tate able person and proceed to a settlement speak in. behalf of the Union of cover latent talent in the club, were against nationalism, but I am will- Sacks and S. Sbyken. Refreshments thereof. • • BETCE CRAWFORD. American Hebrew Congregations, ir made,' and Joe Maron was appointed ing to forget my theories now for 1 were "given to the children. 12-14-S4—St . Connty Jndgp. Cincinnati. Mr. Hymair Fishgall chairman of the project, with Marvin have come to believe that if I could EAST BOUND president of the temple, Tsill intro Kline and Charles Shindler, jr., to inculcate some Jewish nationalism in The Council Bnlffs Senior assist' him. ihim, this nephew of mine would dace Babbi Ogle. ..' • < The Mediterranean, Holy Land, Panama, Columbia, Ecuador, obsession that sah will hold "-an importantr ' Dr. Lewis .will occupy =the pulpit Tickets for the Amorlan drawing; cured of the strange Egypt, India, Ceylon, Straits m Peru, Chile, Argentina, Brazil, next Wednesday afternoon, December Recognized as i t . Lincoln, "Neb., also .speaking-" ir are on sale by members of the club. has come over W "*" Settlements, Angkor, Java, Bali, Trinidad—S. S. SANTA MARIA The drawing will be made early in So you want anything stranget 19, at the Hotel Chief tain.. The combehalf of the union. , PR\CTICAL 5H>HRI. Philippines, C*hina, Japan, Hamittee, in charge of the program con-' January. A modernistic table lamp than this plea of this anti-Zionist to from New York January Sth— • The annual father and" son banPhone 1059 •' waii-i-S. S. AQUITANIA from sists of Mrs'. Max Simon, chairman, J 58 days—all-inclusive rate. will be given. Chances are ten-cents; cuet of the temple will be held ir New York January Slst—131 1 tonneil Rlnffs, la. And it goes to • prove my original and Mesdames Sam Meyerson, Sam j the temple December 26.',The Sister- each. 5 Sacks, Louis Bernstein, Ben Telpner days—all-inclusive rate $2185 squad .point, whicU was this — that we The Amorian basketball hood of the temple will ] serve the have"been "talking1 too much- whether dinner'with Mrs. I. Miller, and Mrs. ersui|j ui jucunaxu uauiuo^m, w»^^ this or that ; thing - was true or not, Sam Cohen in charge. Secure complete information from The team .will play its first game|and ,we.have forgotten all the while,

I

Miss

Palestine's Surplus . ' Now $17,5Q®JOO®

OF PIONEER LOUIS LIPP WILL DHIGATE SPEAK AT A. L A . WOMEN TOi VISIT HERE DAY CELEBRATION

Date Set Ahead For Book Review

Society News

Election at B'nai B'rith Wednesday

Heads Debra Club

Shaare Zion

"in:

Bible Class

By the Way

Jr. Hadassah Holds Party

Junior Poale

*•

;

•; SMALL .PARTY; CRUISES

Amorians

Around the World 1 Around the Pacifib

Mount Sinai

Around the World

Ret. A. Diamond

i

The Sisterhood will hold a can party for its members on the sam« tomorrow evening at 6 o'clock, when that it is veiy.hard indeed to know evening, as the father and son -ban- they meet-the team of- the -First ^hat is true, but whether-an idea is Presbyterian Church in the Y. M. C. truejOr is not true, is not half as iniquet. Mrs. Philip Kalin and Mrs. Louis Goldberg are-in charge of theA.-church league. The ganWwilTbef i>ortant- as whether we can afford played at the Y. M. C. Atobe withoatit. party. , , '. ' '

m

VAL J. PETER TRAVEL BUREAU 13D7 Howard St. Tel: AT 8028

Phone KArnfc'y 1226 '

;

Farnam at Thirty-third

Around South America

Omaha, Nebraska


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