June 18, 1937

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tlT [NOTICE

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reby given that on the me, 1U37, a t 1 p. m: a t an .and Storage Comipltal Avenue. Omaha Perrfn Van - and Storwm E6T1 to the hishest h the ^ollowinjr articles sgins to the following: L-iwler, S05-2nd Ave,.

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' " This column i s copyright by tho SsTen Arts Festtnrs Synflircate. Seprodcctioa Jh wlaole o r in""part strictly forbtaden. Any : infringement on this copyright be prosecuted.

Baskets. 2 Beds CoraBoarG, 2 Boxes & Conm Cabinets. Dresser. r.tr Table. Gas. Stove, Chair. TJhp. Davenport, ih. Rocker. Radio. Couch. i Board, Stand, 3 Rugs,

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the lien for storage ana 3-'owed on said articles

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p Van and Storage, "W. a FERRIN. [TO NON-RESIDENT iSFENDANT . .

laODINSKY, MABER &. HEN, Attorneys \TiONiL POWER MAST CO., a corporation, r'£'• HE11EBY NOTIFIED 3rd day of May. 1337, • HANTS E X - ' COMPANY, a , J an action tv.-o counts, the first SKsse"3. on a contract enI. "or" shout the 15th day 1 and in -which said first SaSntiff- seelis to recover po.00. The second canso Based eri the furnlshius j trudis for hauling and hs&3 by the plaintiff a t I s n d request, and for filnfiff seeks to recover 59.75.

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; Let us turn tlie -^vision -within r4 c lor -ten minutes. Ten minutes is F " ' " 'ji'TsMa (JTA) - A J w - l not. a very long time. It . still • ./smaller, Aaron Liss, is the I • "* • ~r of Waal be claims is thei . leaves you on the day on -which , -icJlest booS ot the Bike in exyou look -within for. ten minutes , j-istence. I t - i s ' a copy of Genesis J between fifteen and sixteen hours l of «jd"aoatioa2^ . in Hebrew, "the size of an aspirinto spend on business and bridge, g Ssrnzts tablet." .family and friends,™polities and -j The pages are 3-16 of a square pictures, eating and drinking and AESOHUbsd TO •moving about in space. jinch in size. Using a fine quill, ' The •K-orld, ^ e are, bound to (JTA) •'—— Expansion | Liss wrote the test on banknote London aflmit,; i3 in a n evil, case. Cruel of educational services and em- j pager under a magnifying glass. ware range, cruel witch and hereigration .facilities -was announced j Jewish emigration, Prague tic hunting blacken the face of "With a larger and more in- which accounts for a large part by the Council for,. German J e w - I ^ , ^ of t—p P a ' e s ^ n e Germany a n d R u s s i a . The Mid- clusive-program Camp Akiba will of the total emigration in all East ry in a report in -which Lord Her- I 11 si* tile Ages are "back" and those of open its third season a t the Jew-European lands, w a s only 3 per bert Samuel, chairman of the{'"^^" J ' c~ Ti us "who were grown u p before t h e ish Community Center," Monday cent of the total in Czechoslova- Coancil's British section, depict- j '•" "World "IVar get up every5 morning morning, Jijne 21, at .9 o'cloclr. kia during 1936, the government ed the constantly-increasing crive Omalfk Eio and look at our paper- appalled This home camp t o r boys and bureau of statistics revealed in of Jews to -emigrate from " Geropportunity , """. amazed, half-incredulous at th girls, 5 to 14 years of age, con-reporting that there were 233 many. Gelegrates to "break-down of that aibt unlovely tirehes throughout—the day, five Jewish emigrants among the to"Pressure to leave Gersicny erson'E ia^fc and not unhopeful -trorld tin days a week until 5 o'clock. tal of 7,201 who left t h e country does not diminish and is likely to be aggravated," Lord Sanrael • once -we This year's program includes last- year. . sSMoscow (JTA) — said, " a s the methodical,' relsatinIf the is in an evil case classes in woodwork, metal work the Jewish people is in a worse and leather work. a s well as Try as you will t o repress t h e lit swimming, music, dancing, ana ter and immitigable horrors of dramatics. ' general economic life Is main- j j s-ntonoinons region' were outlined j Poland a n d: Germany and other tained." Leading educators maintain adisittsd j t i l 5 s ves^ »>y Boris Troitsky, vice j lands'-'-7—- you cannot.- I n the end that t h e home camp is the answThe council report I t s t&sk F r e sident of the Govemneat ] you cannot. Nor t h e menace to er to- a vital problem. Summer that only a quarter o: Coramission for Settling Jews ca. Palestine." Nor t h e infiltration of cannot be a period of unsuperhad been accomplished. that poison and that evil here and vised play. The educational prothe Land. The • training of yoimg s e s , there and yon — - i n a neighbor- gram of the year should be conGiving f-crther details of t t e ; women a n d children leaving ing city, in the. nest block. There inued through the summer on a Over 50,000 Sign Statement "on school-must be expanded .to ? r o - ^ g l o n _ s third five-year plan is no use trying to deceive ourthe Yiddsh C m n t Uciiiy, pliy basis. The Home camp not ; • Ideals of Religions selves. Things are as they are. the only meets this problem but doe3 Liberty .. •And is it not a fact, a cold, o without breaking the importthere education, t h e report sEiS. hard fact that all this evil has ant- family contact by taking the would be "brocg'ht in as follows: New York ("V7NS) —- Over 50come upon t h e -world precisely child away from t h e home. 000 of the nation's Protestant, during; the period of intensified Nev- -"-o-k Camp Akiba has been singled Catholic and Jewish clergymen technology, of t h e race of invennd the Xa:i have signed a statement reaffirm-! out by national agencies as one tion; of the whirl of machines, of by o. / • " ^ • ; B ; a ; _ s ^ .j? 7 p H P , n t ak y the council. Emigration-j ^ ^ f t e ^ the gradual abandonment of re- of the finest homecamps 'in the ing the American principle of civ- taken tlement, he said, 'be t o ' il and Teligious freedom which of Jews to North End ligion and the habit of looking coiintry. • of German Germ create a coapact Jewish agrictil•was submitted to them last J a n d The day at Camp Akiba begins within and t h e -withering of the South America- will be assisted ti5ral population, increass •"""the of Chu r s h r of : great traditions of mankind and at 9 n'clock with roll call and uary by the National Conference with credit facilities. of Jews and Christians, it was anplans j sowing area of. the region a s i the despair in spiritual culture inspection which Is followed "by I E <il The council c l announced and'the exchange of the great dis- oat-door games. After an appetiz- nounced here by Dr. Everett R» for . another ' intergovernmental create a coarce of foaSer to satis- D"l a Clinchy, director of the Conferfy the growing needs of cattle' ^oi ciplines of education among both ing Juncbeon at noon there is a conference to convert t t e -press th c League- of Nations " arrangement | raising. . Jews and Gentiles for utilitarian period of rest. The afternoon is ence. no the general population of j Made public simultaneously In *„» T P nf -refusees into an in-1 Since studies and games, and t h e sub-devoted to crafts and swimming. e s for care of refugees into be in-'! several thousand American comstitution, broadly and symbolical- Jewish content is prominent ternational convention, to enlarge j the region is expected to by t a e -ena or the -five i munities, t h e pronouncement is its competence, and to COVET re?- I creased ly speaking, of golf l o r gemara? throughout the program. creasedtoby200,000, the -end Mr, of thTroitsfey ! years I s i t so t>r not? Ruth Allen is camp director designed to serve as a backfire ugees' rights to economic assis- said on© of the important confii- \ against the spread in t h e TJnited tance and their right to work.' And still men and women. and is being assisted by a capyounger and older, talk about able staff of counselors including States of anti-Semitic, anti-CathA financial report for 12S3 tions for successful settlemeEt of j olic and anti-Protestant propaganshowed total recipts of 25S- immigrants was the creation of i new inventions and- other insti- Betty Fellman, Evelyn Dansky, an incep.enaent s o u r c e ^ f food | da and to encourage a determintutions and further gadgets and ifertrude. Ornch, Ruth rpv Finer, ation on the part of citizens ev- 7S3 pounds with 250,000 pounds is, lie fie'clsrea, woula i fabout"$1.250V000)) to he dec, t be b found f 2 j supply. Tiis, nobody, or almost nobody, seems Florence Steinberg, Alta Hirscb, ^ e h r e r in ..„«-. i necessitate inereasmg as yet tp be losing faith in the Bill Gray, Haskell Cohen, Sol erywhere to resist such un-Amer- in ican- and' divisive propaganda. I sowing aripa *bj between sixty aafi multiplication of inventions and Susma.n,-and Dan i ESTentj- ttD^HRiia tectares, tafl "institutions and organizations and .The.text of 'the statement fdl-j Mrs.. Herman ' Jahr_will diigct rthB""totn.I"EOWing""area"fey"S 5Ti".C-oi)' .- sadgEts-.--;-. They.-Bay .lit. Russia -that the' 'camp dramatics and HosiUIe lows:•'•.-."The • United". States' ":-t>{| S hectares, which would result in. a religion i s the opiate of the.-peo- Alberts will Assist .-with t h e danc- America' is dedicated to.the t r u t h ' four-fold Increase in t i e region's " pie.: Low" forms -of religion have ing classes. Bob Posley will be tbat all tnen' are "endowed by rural population bv _ creating s.t Germar- lire "usder the shadow \ -sometimes*'been."that; But techtheir Creator with certain inalienin charge of the swimming. least 10,000 new farms. nology has become the anaestheable rights, that among these are d persecutios. EUS gross raisrep-! Rates for Center members for life, liberty and the pursuit of The isdEstrial develspiaest cf i rssntation" tic of the human soul. That is and that events i n ; r eight week camping period ar» a mere catastrophic thing than happiness." Civil liberies and rethe region flaring, the next five! ^that cotntry leave "no possible j twenty-one dollars. The rate for religion ever was. People no longligious rights that derive from years, the Goverrimes-t official I ? er either believe or doubt. They non-members is twenty-four dol- this truth a r e today being assailstated, would require immigra- ! * • . manipulate "matter! they handle lars. ed. "We of t h e Protestant, Cath- Beperi 2aads on. Basis of 5ev-1 tios of about 25,000 new work- j * Registrations "for the Camp are olic and -Jewish faiths therefore, tools. If you _ want t o know the ers, ."who, "with their families, j j eral Years'. now being taken at the office of believing that these liberties and .result — look about you. would increase the population "by | -^ Study rights are based upon the princiPerhaps there j is something the Jewish Coihmunity Center. between forty and forty-five ! j ,n govern- \ tfc=nT , ples of religion and are depen^rrong -with t h e inner man.; Perthousand persons. ir e Evange- \ ^ ^ dent for their perpetuation upon Atlantic City, N. J. (WNS) — haps there is something wrong to cttenu . J5.J.;,, •siciams the cultivation of those princi- A high incidence of heart disease •with that human will from which m CiiUrch, '. „ „, fie Opoose Barring of ples, affirm our loyalty to these in young Jews was reported to liuman action indisputably arises =; fundamenals of all just govern- the American Medical AssociaPerhaps there is something .lv 12. T i e con- -_;_.„ Jews in Medicine ment, and express our confidence tion's convention by Drs. R. Earle wrong with the temper of the in the traditions of American life Glendy, Samuel A. Levine and Ooul., Perhaps, a s .."Wordsworth Lwow, Poland ( J T A ) — A con- that have championed and appli- Paul D. White in a paper based eaid, the world is too much with Us and we have gven our hearts ference of Polish physicians has ed them. I n America we have and on several years of study of 100 . io w adopted with only three dissent- must maintain a land wherein cases of heart disease patients away. Whenever in other ages the ing votes, a resolution opposing people of different religious con- under 40 years of age, and SOO Jewsh people-has been hard be- introduction of the "Aryan para- victions and contrasting cultural cases of persons over SO Bufferset, it has not only turned out- graph" barring Jews although traditions may live together in ing from the disease who had asKsrt-er Seitung Esreals ward. I t ; has turned inward. I the Warsaw Physicians' TJnion amity and mutual respect. The been patients at the cardiac clinThis as So^cs of Ettge has gon© to eternal sources to had adopted such a resolution nation can reply upon the mobil- ic of the Massachusetts General and sent a delegation here t o deized spiritual forces of Catholics, Hospital in Boston. fortify its soul. And it has sur' Protestants and Jews to support vived. Today we have stronger fend It. The report declared that in Berlin' (JTA) —Proceeds from The meeting also decided to and defend this truly American coronary disease in the early dec- the "flight t a x " imposed on. all more unity organizations and ideal." . call a general conference of Poever ' before among Jews than ades of life "racial factors are no emigrants by the German Govern.wherewitb to resist the on- lish physicians .to protest against doubt also of importance' in • view ment have totalled $ 7 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 D ' C O J slaughts of t h e world. And that t i e anti-Semitic action taken by of t h e high incidence of Jewish since t h e Kasis camte into power ; fie: is a great gain; it is the great the "Warsaw union. x people in our Eeries of 100 pa- according to the Frankfurter; ths gain. But why does not that un- Government authorities are untients. Relatively far more of the Zeitung. erculosis ity, why do n o t these organiza- derstood to be considering t h e ler old folks . were of British race | cha=tions accomplish more? "Wiry are gality of "Aryan paragraph" resNew York (WNS) Seeking stock than in the young coronary' c e U o r B r a e n i :i ll gl t r io n; i l1l c9e3a 1 i E S o u n t s , w"e so largely a debating society olutions recently adopted by a improved and more effective care group. But here selection and! - i to 25 per cent of an ei and a committee of mere ; pro-number of Polish unions of p r o - of tuberculosis sufferers, a joint other factors, like time of i: | tune. When introduced, it was test? I think that one reason is fessionals. Legal opinion Is be- study committee headed . by I r a gration,'may well enter. i l i e r e ! levied o s fortusea • of $£0,000 c-r :Je-5c-j that we Tiave lost the inwardness lived unanimous in regarding-the M. Younker of New York and Dr. were no persons'of Jewish, extrac- more, but the >7azis reduced the ! e2and the driving passion and the resolutions as unconstitutional Philip Hillkowitz of Denver has tion in the older, whereas 3S per minimum to $20,000. \ ap-' mystic faith of old. In other days It has not yet been decided whe- undertaken the first comprehen- cent of the young group were ""What .W£s originally intended i °a« we had • those and no organiza- ther the Government will ._ take sive survey of the subject of tu- Jewish." . . as s, deterrent to prevent t a e j ^ E tion. Today we have the organi- any action. berculosis among Jews in-', the : Jewish physicians carried . oil flight of capital cevel sation and not those. And thereUnited States. . the lion's share of medals given j "j fore the organisations have not The technical head of the sur- by the Association. For scientific j J the Frankfurter Eeit O will and passion and faith |vey will be Dr. Phillip Klein'_of exhibits of individual im enough. They are great hulking New York. tions Drs.' Arthur Steinberg sntJ!' ' t / . lie tcx bodies -with, small starved crip•Representatives of both the N.. H. • Einhoni shared i t s Of pled souls. Only the individuals Council of Jewish Federations medal •srith five other physicians Wlio compose the organizations Australia has been "conquered! land Welfare Funds and* of the The bronze meflal i a Can "give them a soul,*a will, a From" t h e land of kangaroos,! Council of • Jewish'National Agea-|to Dr. Louis Gross of passion ,a fire that will burn bushmen and a thriving Jewish fcies, which includes the national j Hospital, New York, aafl Dr. Ivloraway: some of the. evil of the community comes a word that j Jewish .tuberculosis, institutions world. I saw:; the individuals. extends t h e sway of t h e National j in Denver and Los Angeles,• mase xr Z- r-~ -"=, That means you who read these Federation of Temple Sisterhoods jup the me the membership words, you__and me. » . . you and into four continents end sis coun- i committee. a i e . . " . '•"•..**' •_•• • - '•• " . ' . tries. The Beth Israel Guild of A-man came to a Chasid and GERMAN JEWISH.WA asked: "When Mesiiach comes Beth Israel trill he lie.a Chasid or a Miibjna- bourne, Australia, has just affil- VETERANS BOY LAND.;-/ iated with the gid?"'The Chasid answered: will be a.. "Jiithnsgid i n .order' that Jewish woman's religious organi- FOR PARAGUAY CGIMY — C -r—.a? th the Mithnagdim may Miss Nan Marks, the honorable and receive him, for -we Chasidimj

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to vote <>• ..he t•»€!.<.»'• J.

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JOmaha. Nebraska, this gay. 1927.' - - '-

|; Our Advertisers"

OMAHA, NEBRASKA, TBIF" T, JUNE IE

OfflSFM C?

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iFOUTHER NOTIFIED [Ion waa' commenced in ! Court or the City ot las Count}', Nebraska, be that same was comfit :•' of- attachment and Iras issued and lunus be|a in the possession of s Sons. Inc. a corporaleretf attached. You are fa that on the. 28th day Jtne said Aarqn Ferer"& TT2leti that1 it--was- Snin the sum of jme time the raid $237.24, iSaron i Inc.. were ordered to i s -until the further or- . Imd this cause was coh| said Court until tha fly, 1937. at_nlne o'clock S3 purpose of procuring ton by publication, and fr notified to appear on JlSth day of July, 1!)3T. 5 A.. II., or default will . lalnst- you. .-.-..

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KnteretJ a s Secbna CIss3 Mall Matter on January 21. "1S21, a t PoatoffJca 01 Umaha. Nebraska, oade? the Act. of Ilarchfl3.-2S79_

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-The Sisterhood Federation has [s p o r t g organizations who liave o - t i e Chancellor 7 . 1 " v_r= =~| H ' E - . J a e ; ; Z;~ -—~c Inventions which have almost member groups throughout t h e | purchased 35 .hectares (14 acres) him that fee irmst ruined the world of the peoples •United" States,, T Canada, Panama, jOf ploughed laud 35 kilometres j ononilc Tpolicyp g rre, squally guilty pin so far^ -liave U lort insight, vision, the way, theEngland, iSouth Africa, and n o " j from .Asunselon,' capital .of. Para-1 mur ob*t a recognition of the one by this latest affiliation-—Ans- | guaj\ according 'to a report iaj 11- 2 : iinS nosdful to be felt, known, tralia. Jlore than 55,003 women j.Xbe. Saield, organ of t t e Kelcli Sens •auus. — less - — »»o—-"*i argument are affiliated with this"-vital ; s r m | Jewish War Veterans' League, fey and cst.T.,1 - uoivc;. •>•>- need a n d laore emuhah — faith, *vis-jpf t h e .Liberal'synagogues of tlie.|M. Gottechalis, former president •srorld ori.nlo" co 1 of the veterans* Coblents breach. ! Eaay obtain a r:ee£?^ fcr^-s~ i»a^ (Continued on pa^e 8.) 'world.

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THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JUNE 18, 1937

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. . The transactloni in the glove business | thousands rears could take my mother out of the became- an associate- producer i . -. ,«..» lifted as, "loans" foi •* ' l a kitchen. Grimly I held fast to my v h 1 ^ * ^* ? j^r received notes , . himself . . ..limited his-saluta-j what is the index finger!? purpose, and all the time I was he pair la believ! tions to five -words. Today h e . l CUT. singing the new syncopated songs, ' a big producer ^ , t e i BO less thar he grunts,' I them —- shall I say? the Sophie ^m "clients' (Copyright, If37 Jewish T Tucker touch. v orld . . . Sonu •pfcie Agency, Inc.) ; Fritz Feld, who was a sensaI can remember the first song i r.mes are knowr , Fat-Ion in "Tbe Miracle" years I sang there; it was "Goodbye, i l . " • i the clientele . ' E.^0 asd who once produces! "Itas Mr. Greenback;" They didn't pay oil from four oi 1 ir. Palestine, is coming- to' tfce a cafe singer .in those days, at < i< rtmenta, whose fore again as an actor. Did soiae least not on Second Avenue, and , i -nit ?625 month outstanding work in "I Met K i n the artist didn't have to guess .1 ""tary called on ; in Paris." The other day he rewhether she was a success. She CHARACTER: - Whatev 'some limousine j ceived a call frora Fox Studio. K-e 1 could tell by the coins tossed in c 'iffpiir. not evm ! thought it -was for dialogue C l - : he- Eiay fre — S.T>.& whs.te } the hat, and when my voluntary Xew York courts may cist ~s ,Told to Byrdo LI. Baker ' Seeing to insiKI reefing. When lie got to tbe set, J L . salary mounted up to two hunt e found lie was slatefi for the.-^o with his grand larceny - ' he pair's interpst ; Port Jervi?, N. Y. — Camp A. ; York City, an dan editor of "The dred dollars a'week I knew I was | comedy lead. It mu?t hare been jseat — the man who is fibphle Tucker, beloved <•- portion of th«! They put wings on my feet and Just about this time Z. A., in this city, is now ready , Ileconstructiozist," will conduct I-Ratnff m rt« shnsp. . "to hundreds of thousands t Stress of stage and screen, here finally Awakened my conscious- succeeding. p<! was put to Ratoff on the phone. the Edison Company offered a to receive more than 500 boys i the forum on "Judaism as a Civtells readers of the- Jewish ness, just : before .school finished thousand •>" f>s appears cpricwcrs throughout the v;c dollars for ten records; who • have been selected as delej ilization." Dr. Abraham Goldberg Press and "other Seven Arts' I came to.my sense. I wasn't go- I .wanted this money. I went to - r mple the rabbi Rabbi Eeida Heir SchmeUc 1 publications, the story of her ing to be'a slavey, and my moth- Orange, N. J., and parked myself gates from their respective cities j the oldest member —- in point oi I Edgar Allan Woolf, the scribe, character that rivals in i- • -«f paid rent for j is often mistaken for Sid Grauyouth, which is the theme of a er wasn't going to stand long in front of the factory door, and to the Bar Mitzvah Convention of ! service — of the "World Zinoist i te Mendel Beilthe rogues and rackete? ' j man. Whenever this happens the Aleph Zadik Aleph, Junior Actions Committee and vice presbiographical scenario she is hours over the • kitchen stove in the end I made the ten records 'irriouB Kiev ritfiction . . . Twelve years f_ I Yfoolf keeps a straight face 'and Order B'nai B'rith to be held ident of the American ' Jewish ' now preparing for the films. cooking, cooking .eternally cook- and'got the thousand dollars. i rind the Beilis j writes out "a pass for Grausnan's returned to this' country — • June 23 to June 30. Congress, will conduct a CampTHE EDITOR ing. Five years later I was able " onx to this day having resided here pom*B'ack in Hartford my family An important feature of the fire Forum on "Palestine Before ! Chinese Theatre. • to take my mother" out of that . . And now one anfi left for four or fire and After the War." "We came to Boston from Odes- kitchen. grieved and my mother.' turned Convention, which will eomem.-'.'.' r oils lawyers of —billed' as 'the "-Grand RE sa -when I was two months old. gray because of me and because crate the thirteenth anniversary In flicker slanguage a J.IOS Principal speaker at the Bar lifibowitz, has RuniEiria." . . . He grot e Ci ' When I look at the carefree of the unkind remarks made by of the founding of the Order, will My father had heard from com! "take" means a scene without •"•pd the case -and of. the sort g i v rades of the wonders and marve- young' things in the night clubs people. • That was another reason be a series of forums to be con- Mitzvah "Celebration, which, will | sound. They claim Lu'bitsch be- • reception channel swimmers end oil ° of the story lous opportunities of "golden" today I ihink of my' own youth. why I determined never to go ducted by leading authorities in take place on Sunday evening, I gan it . . . he used to say "Mit- ; turning heroes . . . Why &r S June 27th, will be Alfred M. CoIts days and nights barren of - <• More interesting America, and to escape the severe back to Hartford until I was a their respective fields. Inspector | out sound." ; Tie grot ttiat reception is z military service of Russia he had pleasure and play: • A3 a young success;. I wanted to ma£e them L. O, Schilder, Chief of the ident- hen, International President of j __ in jtself . . . And one that * gone to the New World. He left girl I never went to % dance. take back what they had said. It ification division of the Federal the B'nai B'rith. Still another | Charitable: An elderly woman : '• tbe interest of Samuel 7i r 1 " Tev.-ish TelegraThere was no money, no time for my mother-and four children, but was in 1913 that'I came back a Bureau of Investigation, Depart- forum on "Youth and His Re-! sells gardenias in front of a cer- ; man. of the staff of The D<" i'-y, Inc.) frivolities, Tnever had a party sent for them as soon as he was star, arid the ovation I received ment of Justice, will lead a for- sponsibility t6 World Peace" will j tain night club. Every time Win- ; Who . discovered, among c nble to get enough money togeth- frock, and I don't remember ever heeled many wounds. And the um on "Youth and Crime." be conducted by Dr. J. Max Weis, | cfaell^ goes there lie buys her en- j things, that there was no such getting a new dress over which greatest joy I have had was takjp.rnal, a Marano o£ er. Director of the Education De- tire stock • title as "Grand Rabbi of Ruman- „, Waes Rabbi Milton Steinberg, of the sends it hime my mother in h^er weariness,'failF physician on Coling my mother out of that dreadr I 'never knew exactly where I onoss partment of World Peacheways. and she is able to quit work much j ia" . . . That not one of the com- j '-. voyage. •was' born.' My mother knew It was ed to drop asleep while making ful environment. My father did Park' Avenue Synagogue, New before her usual. time. \ mittee of sponsors for the Grand on the road enroute from Odessa* it. My new dresses ne.ver gave me not live long,^ but my mother,, " '• i Rabbi's reception had any idea; pleasure for this reason; I always ra v:as in 18 7!) apthank God, was able- to enjoy the with the warmer weather sendbut "somewhere in Russia" Is the o* who or what he was and had Julius Scraps and Scribbles: Irving j had ,to think of my tired mother minister of fifruitsof my .success. - ing scores diving into the coolbeat information I Ifave as to my Cummings received a.' laudatory j merely lent their names to tbe pointed asleep over the. work. Because I ing tank. Lee Grossman announcnance. birthplace. * Travel was not committee as a matter o£ estrrscroll from the "Societe ties Ar-! or pleasant fifty years ago in that too was, tired and.' knew what it (Copyrigt.-'_3^7 by Seven Arts ed that'swimming activity in all , tistes" in France for.his "White ' listed political custom . . . Ar.d • ••.!'.' i :: i J'ii!iiiiiiinniiiiiniiiii)fln!| classes has been increased by 100 land, and my mother, with four meant to work until you drop, I By HELEN ZIGMQND • Feature Syndicate) | Parade" just two years after he : one of the "sponsors" was ner = per cent. other children, traveling in crude could really sympathize "with my .5 I directed it! Bobby Breen dived ', other than Borough Presidr; t ; ~(' ..' •' "'.-'.. •wasons over rough roads, could mother. ' ."•.'• Member are urged to. get Into Hollywood — Milton Berle, va- i into Malibu Lake . . got stuck in > Samuel Levy of Manhattan . . . LEGIONNAIRES FROM perhaps scarced be blamed if she> the swim of things and take ad- cationing in New York, descjib- i the mud . . . hurt his head. Ben-.; Zukerman, suspicious ol t'rf I had ho childhood or youth as 2 o i . Bottle || •£ forgot to inquire as to the name these terms are understood today. NEBRASKA vantage ot the refreshing exer- ed Hollywood as a grand place . . | ny Rubin lias oranges, lemons, ; whole business, alone of the -F^.•"Lcilp Family g ^j of the place where she was com-' I had' only hard • work and the cise of swimming. said when he arrived at RKO, j grapefruit, vegetables on his I porters covering tbe receptior. ••» ' . O c J pelled 'to stop while another life restaurant. My ; parents ' had a c, right away they gave him ' a i ranch . . . but no house. Thecia wrote a story that left no doi'V" Nebraska Legionnaires w i l l ' , niiiniiuiniiiiiiniiniiniil •was ushered into the world. hard timfe trying to feed us all J. C., C. will observe National luncheon, served "Brislun" of | Bara and hubby are off on world as to what he thought oi it ail . . march sixtfi in the 1937 "Amer! • By dint of wagon trails and and send us to school,: yet they ican Legion- national convention Swim for.Health week in an ap- beef. Liked the Trocadero food | tour that will last a year. Peter i Then, almost twelve years 'at™. h eterrage passage we finally arriv- managed* to have us all go to che-r parade-up Fifth Avenue in New;propriate manner with a program i too, only it's a little too ritzy. j Loire's avocation is buying and j his supscions appeared sudden1.:. 'Z'- ' . V ia ed irt Boston and were reunited der too. I learned to read and York, September 21,- national "to be presented Monday at T p. "Three waiters stand at your ! selling plays . . . and the ledger : jarricgly to be confirmed , . , T" e •with my father, whose latest babe write: Yiddish, Hebrew/ nor have headquarters of the Legion an- m. in the pool. Dan Greenfield table . . . one hands you the bill ! shows a profit. Alexander Carr'"GraEd Rabbi" End fcis secrets" was two months old when first he I forgotten this accomplishment; nounces in.the June Issue of their will be in charge-of the affair. . . -. the other two carry you outj. worries so much that even bisj Kiss Marj" Berd had fallen f-fr-' eaw her. We were all. tagged in My parents placed great store by publication, the National LegionLici In the ' Life saving technique will be -when you look at it." He met a 1 toupee is turning grey. Irving : of the lawrfce charge v== t »*! the steerage, and I kept my tag education ' and Jewish education naire. ! to- : ~ ;; C a n j demonstrated with one of the fea-.nice fellow out here . . . some- J Stone's "Lust for Life" be obtaining money fraudulently ,'r -cc for years, until finally it crumbl- cam© first in their estimation. i«i. apsioirtment in j Omaha Post No. : 1 legion of- turea being an exhibition of 85- body by the name of Winchell, a I flickerizecL : charge on which indictments reed to'piece's. They., were Orthodox .Jews, and pound boys breaking holds and ji v;-hrs:e r.T\tl colored shirtniece of Ben Bernie. He likes ficials hope to send their nation: cently were returned) . . . On My father had started a res- very strict'In their observance of making pictures . . . just finished prize winning band" to compete carrying 150 pounders. This week's Gold-wynners: Sam , the promise that the "rabbi" i\ arts: cUslyw T5Ptte?-ne arrirtaurant in Bost(5n,_serving meals .tradition. Vm fifty yearB old nowal . You must leave one . . . a great Movie . . . a su- and his partner were going over , would again and lead the delegates of with Gofi" ]' VOIHT m e at twenty-five cents each and was — I'm notyashamed to admit it; the Nebraska department in the ,« perb epic! . . . but he couldn't re- the affairs of their new company, • in their 'communK New members continue to join Interests, his 'CltCEts" quite successful. But they had I'm proud of it! intereE' r AIEIII i believe It twenty-four-hour parade which the J. C. C. The athletic depart- member the name of it! when the latter, ,in admiration, 1: were allegedly persuaded to turn rA, racketeers in those days too —'•or not, I have yet to taste ham or starts off the convention. The ment wishes to welcome the folremarked, "Sam, I think you're over Bums of money to him (al"slickers" and "sharpers" they bacon.. Nor "do , I eat butter wjth proceeds of the massive fireworks lowing newcomers: Arthur Caesar labors hard at ! the ' greatest producer in Aiser- j ways through his secretary) vary4 Fsrnsrn St. were called. Two of these, look- meat. " ' * " '. , ' exposition* Mown circus and band Dorothy Marie Smith, . Ruth pen-pushing. A friend compli- i ica." ' Unflattered, he answered, j ing from few dollsrs to many ing about Boston, saw my fathhe As I. grew into f girlhood it de- concert sponsored by the Omaha Reiter, Lorraine Greenspan, Edna mented him on his good work. I "Hmpa . . . so 'let's no er's flourishing little restaurant veloped Sc that I had two talents. I Post in the interest of a safe and Mae Suppli, Marty Lea Byron, "I often wonder about that," he | about it. I know I am." trguei and, in their greed desired it'. could sing Hi and I had business sane' Fourth of July celebration Beverly Alvord, Shirley Davis, mused. "You know my brother, FREE! Ar, E->-r*-t They told'my father that he niust ability. Unconsciously, on the evening . of July -5 at Shirley Gravett, Drene Cherniss, Irving, the songwriter? He " rhy- He had an arguiaect about the ! Id <r~-. go to New .York;, that was where singing' Wag second naturebecause to me,•Creighton Stadium, Omaha, will Mary Bugbee, Raymond Ander- mes 'sky* with 'fly' and makes a use of "index finger" ia a script, j fortune beckoned. He, being.' in-: lortune oeciconea. as, o e i n g m - ; I w o u l d occasionally sing in my be used to finance'this appear- son, O. R. Schulz, Charles Eaton, lot more money than I do-. . ." The writer said it meant' tbe fore- j ;' • ' ••••"'-•' •'. ••••*-"" • -..'•• "Wilbur Eaton, Aaron Smith, experienced listened. They told Other's restuara'nh Then I found ance.. finger . . . Sam insisted it was j. him of a fine establishment on a that, .the patrons liked it. A new Omaha Post No. 1 was recog- Clayton; Marsh, , Sidney Green- -. Parkyakarkus claim's the rea- the thumb. ^ Finally our filnsosnl' prominent street which they restaurant moved ,into the neighbaum, Virginia - Daley, Betty son they put him in the. cast of clinched the ...controversy with', . • ; : : F m fit 22nd Use Our would exchange for his Boston borhood,1 and it irked, me greatly nized again by national Bradley, Helen Sholund,- Derleen "New-'Faces"-'wag that 'his -face "You're telling "Ke' sfie^ tbi--' ters as the world's -largest cafe and what money he was able w h e n l saw some of t>ur bwricusi6an Legiort post with-2,'503 mem-: Merrill, ' Doris Smith, .and Betty has been used less on the screen mi to get together. ;tomers'going there. I sang often- bers. •'•• - -• . '-.."• -. '•'tfian anyone else's ~ so'it is still . S h a d d o n . " '':,"• •':'•'' "".";•'..•'"-• chi With high hopes my father re- er, and found that when I sang new. jChairman Morris E. Jacobs of aci moved hig family • to New York. the customers' came back. . . the finance committee" of Omahai •gei An important change in J. C. Alas! The fine restaurant was a. I had one diversion. There was Post No. 1 has appointed Mr. V. Success on Film Row: A young me little shack in a neighborhood of a theatre In the-'... neighborhood, C. Hascall chairman of the box C. swimming schedules has been holly-wood-be arrived r in town i 'i announced for t h e summer no business, and within two and sometimes, when I could get sale.s committee for the fireworks ihi months. Business girls.may now hoping for fame and fortune'-=— months he had lost -. everything a half hour or so. free, I would display. cht get into the tank on Mondays and and a job.- tTnkno'wn," he hailed •which by industry and honesty hang around the stage doors. I Wednesday from 5:30 to S:30 the slightest acquaintance with he had accumulated i n . Boston. was young, I was fresh and I p. m. Men may use the tank dur- long effusive greetings. One day Expenses were high and we. were could sing. I would hail the proson ing the same hours on Tuesdays he got a job ES assistant to an --" r strangers so he started back tow- fessionals as they came out and associate T>roducer . . . cut his r and Thursdays. ard Boston. There wasn't enough tell them that If they would come | £ • By. RAY SOHAPIEO "hellos"-to tea words. Later he j money, so we stopped at Hartford; to our cafe for dinner I would Xtrs Volleyballers didn't let the Conn., .and without friends 5ie sing for them. ; They laughed, on , Taking the spotlight in the J. heat dull their ardor. Matron managed -to -open a little restau- but they came. 'As a matter of CLEAN LINEN jMei r a n t there. I wag only seven years fact I know that I couldn't sing C. C. summer sports program are women are banging the ball | around with just as much whoop the youngsters' who playSoftball S Always Attracts old at that time, but I ^ a d . t o a" note according to the standards as four months ago while the 5, everySunday "afternoon at 1 p. •work hard in that restaurant. OMAHA TOWEL of operatic singers and \ classic only thing the men do, is make % SUPPLY Today I employ a cook, but my.musicians but I had something.'I m. at Central high. .•_ They're putting on a hot race it hotter. cook -always knows that I know knew this, and that "something" <: Yours Since 1S76 Geli the kitchen. And how! We also" became the ladder up which I for the pennant as well as demonN .:; KE 2S2S The Center Athletic Council kept a rooming house at this climbed' to' reach my heart's de- strating some nifty Jewish talent on the field. Out of group playwill hold their regular meeting at tlme,,and during my school years sire.- - ' • .' • -''.;; • '" '; ; .. •/• . ing every Sunday, Lee Grossman Of l the Hill Hotel at 12:15 p. m. gam I was compelled to get .up at four It was the year that I was slx-^ predicts a' crack array of ath- Thursday noon, June' 24. Leslie .o'clock in the morning, build 3*. 3 teen that I'decided to put my for- l e t e s . . ' > ' • . ' j •j Burkenroad, chairman will pre- 1 FOR . . . . of t. fires, make beds and • clean the tune to the test. The Jewish High Last Sunday's game3 found side. house. It wasn't cruelty "on £be ing Holy Days were approaching/ and Giants iand" Cards still deadlockyj>art Q£ my parents, which bound- we were busier han ever,, clean' me to such hard 'tasks, but dire ing cooking and getting ready for ed^ for first place as r the Giants 20 Hew Police Stations B • Sweet Butter necessity, which demanded that the solemn occasion. None was defeated the-Yanks, 7 to 4, and Jerusalem — Twenty new po-I • Dated Mills all of us. must work every minute busier than I, for I had been the Cards slugged the Tigers Into If we .wanted to exist. _ ' promised that If I ' would take submission, 17 to 13. It took a lice , stations will soon be estab- B • Sour Cream •I attended the! Brown School care of the house-'and the-cook- big second frame when they scor- lished along Palestine's frontiers, y and meny other ppotiucta ed seven runs, for the Giants to particularly in the north, it was in Hartford, and I was not, a ing while my mother did the necget their win while in the other announced by Roy. G. B. Spicer, M Ask Yciir Grocer or Cnil bright scholar. How could' I be, J i when I was so sleepy and tired essary shopping I" should have a game, the question- was how far •Inspector General of Police, and three days' vacation. I did the rethat my poor, little brain refused quired work SndHhten I -went on and how often the ball could be Prisons. Sold, 1 •-• ' '•• ' of S! to function and the subjects all my ^vacation. But I': didn't come h i t . 3 HA 222G This week's "games pit Cards Jews probably settled in China seemed dull? Only one class wasday j back in three days. '' against Yanks and Giants against as early as G5 C E. Prog; not dull — the singing class. I What really happened was that =entei always thought I could sing, and I fan away from liom'e, and my Tigers. The spot is ripe for an no matter "how tired and' sleepy only regret is that I ran away on upset and both leaders will have Sing, boot! I was I-became alert in the music Yom Kippur, whlch: was an added to be on their toes to stay on top. tive '•> class; and I became so competent grief to my parents. I went to I: The waters in the J. C. C. pool that good Mr. Emerson, my sing- New -York, but I didn't look up have been, getting a generous ing teacher — who took special and 1 any friends'or relatives, for well cents pains wjth -me and taught me all I knew' that they would immedi- splashing these past few weeks • Tij he knew — came- to -depend on atelybundle meoff'home, I went Open's me to take "his classes when he to '• Schwartz's on Second : Avenue nah v waa called, away. I could take and to similar places. If my singthem all .from the lowest to the ing . brought more customers! to o4 highest,'and this was the oneiiD my father's small cafe, I reason.•wort: terest an'l delight of my school ed,, it could /bring customers to iPranl .E3ug Cfasnlns O^esfcl direci life. "others -as well. I started singing For Limited Timo Ai I was determined to graduate my songs;.jazz was'just coming 2 Russ Clesnsd end the c. •with my claps, and I did. it was. In, arid I was determined to sucnot through scholarship that I ceed.. Never would; I go back to herg Print.?, _lB^"cJ got my diploma. I did it through my home until I could go back.a -n»' H a n d Blocked Free Estimates on music, and I remember that success, a help'to my family, and Ot; my Cleaning of •when my diploma was handed to - L«.ee T i i XacIcccS-£)ovrn O^rpots othj- £, rae J.ho principal said: "Here Is cas Co. scat HA aoos JreslT ons girl who has received her dl*SOLE OWNER IT. Cs? c r t 2 Piece Glor": , ploma on her personality." It was Gfar, " the first time I had ever heard , Announcement, has been made T'.q the word-which was to play such by Ilitlsc and ,Hiepen, Funeral Diothr rectors that' Mr.. C H. ,T. Riepen Hrenr i an important 'part in my career. Music and singing helped me Is now sole owner. The estabRutL Si >M FT Gvu- i " bear my hours Of drudgery, and lishment will continue under its ' tunes haunted even my sleep. present name. SO i , Brass, Bronse, Aluminumi f' C* * ^ m , - ' A e r o f Soft Grsy Iron and ScmiStoel Casting's, Wood cud Motal Patterns and Saah Weights carried in stock. WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS Bronze and Cast Iron Grilles a spocia!t>% ° Scliralft'o Chocolates © Muriel, Cuoota Rey

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THE JEWISH PBESS,"FSIDAT? JITNS IS,'Y93~' . . The transactiom ys listed as. "loans" foi client received notes . . shion, the pair is believ. obtained no less that, from " c l i e n t s ' ' ;t the \rorld . . . Some tinent names are Knowi uded in the clientele . . operated from four 01 rent apartments, •whose illed abont S625monthhe secretary called or a handsome limpusinf rsed chauffeur not even y's mite being to insigo spur the pair's interest it some portion of the is obtained -was put to s purposes appears cerFor example the rabbi to ' have paid rent lor for the late Mendel Beilof the famous Kiev riter trial, and the Beilis . ,the Bronx to this' day praises . . .And now one aost famous la^ryers of Samuel Leibowitz, has ly entered the case-and chapters.of the - story nee yet more interesting ents. tT 193" Jewish Telegraic Agency, Inc.)-

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sioned Jean de.; Botton, a Jewish | E=aphy of Louis D. . Bran sic s, E. er sections of the state. He frequently "appeared: In g e . j painter from Saloalki living - in i couple of books by Emil lyi-'v p bates on issues-of r tha .day 3^3 j Paris," t o - m a k e a. painting of t h e ! and a novel of Southern l i e his appearanced w a s ' t a a r U e a fey j c o r o n a t l o n ceremonies . . . T h e j E l s a Godschaus, GisUngvi. .-. great crowds. •••': . . . ' '•' " ••- i0 W E e r °* t h e 'Qrset brand of per-1 Southern 'Jewish .novelist, * ..Throughout'his-lite-.'he^-as-the ! f ^ ? c s . ^ i a h is giving a head- [ ainosg the works confiscate 1' ssrbject of many a .paxpphlet ..juib- acae to a perfume'cnarnsd by.the j the Nevr Orleans police as ••"•-lishejt by the-interests.he fought. family of-a- notorious French ! munistic" literature in a'ra His various physical combats Mrith anti-Semite, is a gentleman call-1 a bock store . . you v-in-re political adversaries ^brought. ______ ed Tint, whose Paris establish-1 btr that a couple of column* — ' and | ^ e told yon about "Dr. c - nation-wide attention.' At that meat is. closed' en Saturday : time correspondents of stLEisrons, who ' himself attends the synag-o- I Brandt, German refuges p-c en Ij S U e tBrice daily . . . German i sor, w_y>,-though a teacher st eastern and foreign publications I University in Exile, which * were stationed in Omaha, I1 a! workmen at the German- pavilion " | c.f. f the Paris Espos.iticn .are.com- I established to give position t- " In years to come when the £u- j p ial records -were not immacu- head of Rosewater. they never missed-a chance, to ture historian, unhampered b y : a | i a t e . The list of enemies, men publicize Rosewater's battles, ver- pletely cut off frois the outside \ iiecl German scholars, vas c~~ • Rosewater journalistic effalse romanticism still clinging world . . -They are not permitted irtibuting to Nazi newspapers bal and political. n a d felt the verbal sting of were not solely confined to So savage could he he in his ta talk to foreigners and the let- This has EOW been confirmeer about the early days of the plains j Rosewater and his Omaha Beo, forts English periodicals, for at one attacks that one time the Eee wasters they send home must be Dr. Alvin Johnson, dean o country, "writes his epic, he •will j g reis? rapidly, time he started a Bohemian pa- _ fi hundred dollars the.! mailed for them by the foreman university, many cf whose find a man like Edward Rose-j l a J u l y > i 8 7 3 i R 0S ewater hefined Te . . . Their, leader explains that trons are Zevrs,, i a s i:, water more typically the plains- jg a n a career of physical combat, per to urge the Czechs to come t o ! state Supreme""court""for" -his iI they don't understand eaough I Branfit, holding t that he 1 the free lands of Nebraska. I comments on its activities. man than the two-.gunned variety probably unequaled by any Amerevea to bey a postage ; right to tree speech . . . He Tras Republican Nationalf i n j U B e of 1906 he again'an-,i sFrench popularized by fiction. \ lean editor, by demanding tasa we'll let you' guess at an j Cotnmitteeman from Nebraska, j nounced himself as a canflifiate i . P Edward Rosewater, whose tre- apology from St. A. D. the real reason . .. . Leslie Hore- !ABOUT | but continually antagonized his|f the United''States Senate. By! o r mendous courage as editor and combe, publisher < another party by bolting the Republican ja s e r i e s o f trades Norri- Brcnrn i B e H s h a - England's new minister ] A former president o_ the 7 _ -legislator captured the imaginadaily, for derogatory re- candidates when he didn't lite w a s nominated, on tbe sixtb • bal-i ° •vrar. Is the author of a sensa- i ist Organization of America \ tion of people of I^ebraska as no Omaha,that jj : uonal novel -which trill had been made in the them. In'1894 he acted as a godat the state convention BE man except perhaps William Jen- editorial columns of Balcombo's father to the Populist-Democrat lot _ _ _ the election, i ^ i s d e s * ir. manuscript form until i 'before the month is over . . . " " subsequently won nings Bryan, was one of tne paper. When he received no an- Fusion and championed the nn-1 -Rooe-ra'tor ^fprnpri ™rn«p«Pii to! b e retires from public life . . . j correspondent who reported thr.t Rosewater seemed reconciled to, giants of the frontier. Gifted with swer, Rosewater armed himself successful senatorial campaign ot; his defeat and threw the support j T h e d l m e thriller so dear to • Josef Stalin was planning to pet an uncanny vision, he saw disbeing ex- t married forgot one little detail— . cowhide whip and started of the Bee to his recent, opponent, j 7°un g readers is lt^ ^ c o w h i d e w h i p and started William Jennings-Bryan. ploited in Germany to engender Stalin is already married to the Twice he represented the Unit-j Eight days later he died, R tances that eclipsed the length of, f o r t h t 0 c h a s t i s e h i s journalistic anti-Semitism in- youngsters . . . s i s t e r of Lazarus Kaganovitcb. the rollingfrom prairie that s P r e a d | adversary. ' ' ed States at the Universal Postal j alizing they had lost a real chaci•westward his home. Meeting Balcombe at one of, Congress, in 1S97 being elected \P i O n, t i e people of Nebraska sin- The Hitler Youth book publishing ; one of the Jewish commissars . . . Rosewater was born of Jewish the main thoroughfares _of the •vice president of that body. He ! cerely mourned the passing of one firm has issued a flock of hair- ; Pierre van Paassen, back from a 0. parents in a small Bohemian vil- city, Rosewater began to wield was also a member of the Unit- jwho "fQT almost four decades had raising tales all doctored to mate ! record-breaking speaking four of C the villains Jews . . . The late Jan \ the country, will be, on his -raytr . lage in 1841. Thirteen years at- his whip in a vigorous manner. ed States Mint Committee. • [fought their battles. Gamarnii, Marshal of the Soviet to Europe befor long: to contact l . i ^ ' ter his birth the family migrated Balcombe, a stronger and taller ; He was one of the original pro-! array, never gave up his interest leaders of the anti-Xas; and ar.tto tne United States and settled man than the diminutive Rose- moters of the Trans-Missippi Ex- j — in things Jewish . . . It was he Fascist forces for a series cf senin Cleveland. At the age of •water, managed to hold his arm.position held in Omaha in 1S98, j er who helpel his brother-in-law. sational articles to appear in the seventeen Rosewater was apprenpapers of the respec- and after the Spanish-American ticed as a telegapher and in a j Chaim "Nachraan Bialik. and oth-Seres Arts publications . . Pierre War was considered as a possible attested to the U v e ccombatants ombatants er Russian Zionists to get to Pal- incidentally, vrVA author a bocl. few weeks felt himself capable of | h Q n o r Q f U g o w n i n t e T e s t e d p a r . governor of one of the newly acBY PHEfEAS J..BIROX estine after the Russian Tevolu- ; which we predict •will be a bes,~ e =* accepting a regular assignment. ty, all impartial observers Quired insular possessions of the gave United States. • seller . . . Henry Mentor's lor.z tion . . . SO HEIiP CS His impatience ; took him ; from Balcombe the decision. I expected book, "Chatosi," is nr. This year's World Zionist ConTwice he was in the race of Cleveland to Vincennes, Indiana, A few months later Rosewater the nomination as United States gress is being held in Zurich only XEWS TO ;TOT i dead but merely dormant . . . Wt where he soon "realized he had;j found himself at the receiving The sponsors of the --Interna- hear It has. reacted ths poir, over-rated his • proficiency as a i end of a dangerous "weapon. A Senator from Nebraska and each because the pewers that be in telegrapher, and> he was forced to i Captain Kelley, taking a leaf defeat brought groans from a France, Belgium and Czechoslov- tional Conference Against Racisra where completion may be espec:large portion of the population. akla turned thumbs down on it j and Anti-Seraitisin, which is to ed at the end of tbe summer . . . relinquish his position. i from Rosewater's, own book, at- Early in his journalistic career . . Premier Leon Blum said noth-! be held in Paris in September got Stanley Bero. tb.e forgotten ma;: In time, however, he achieved tempted to horsewhip him. ing doing on Paris, and Premier i he' had taken up cudgels in be\ their wire crossed ia organizing of American Jewry, will be t? the - necessary skill and was asafterwards ' James half of the people against the IPaul van Zealand ditto'd St on an American delegation . . . At years old on June 2 3 . . . He sti'.l ' > . ' .a signed to Oberlin, Ohio, as a rega member of one. of. has more pep and ideas thrr ular operator. Shortly afterward, Omaha's most prominent fami- powerful railroad interests that; Brussels . . . Premier Eduard' a meeting of interested parties many g Jewish leaaer half ir.r in March of 1861, he accepted a been given large concessions j Benes, who is regarded as a called by Roger Baldwin i t ' w a s age . . . One of tbe chief n o c r r and at the time serving on jihad n ibe s t a t e b y t h e I e d e r a l g O v e r nfriend of Zionism, also put his discovered that the sponsors had position with the Southwestern lies, thB B o a r d o f Education, took ex- , . m e n t f a n d t h o s s interests erests left, left,no no foot down when Prague was con-invited Samuel Unterrneyer to get low was Minnette Sbermal, fourCompany in Nashville, to some remarks that stone unturned to bring about sidered . . . Even the Canton of up tbe American delegation ar.fi ers over the death of Jesn Ka~Rosewater had published in tne Rosewater's defeat. Geneva declined to permit the had then extended a similar bid cer and presideEt of tbe ,Te< r for over a year, leaving to Harlow Fans Club', which boas.s Bee. When Creighton attempted In 1899, the year of his first! Congress to be held within its to another organization . . . >Jow 2.S0O nierabers on three conti:.the United States, military tele- to use his fists on him, Roseattempt to reach the halls of Con-' borders Rumors have it that; the two groups have to get togegraph corps after the capture of. water drew a revolver and peac» ! ents . . . . - : ther.. . . Trade unio? leaders are gress, two senators were to be i the non-Zionists taking Fort Donelson by the Union army w a s John ~ temporarily restored. Creigh| | t d . So intense a battle was; tage of the strained political sitnot a little worried over a move e ec e . He accompanied ton then challenged Rosewater to , f o u g _t that the situation became \ uation confronting the Zionists, to establish the Association cf j C. Fremont in the campaign of with shotguns, an encoun- |a n a t i O nal affair and Mark Han-! intend to insist on full parity Catholic Trade Unionists . . . One West A7irginia and was later aterduel which happily never took -^ held a committee meeting in j with the Zionists in the new ex- of the exhibits at Xew York's transferred to the army of VirWorld Fair may be the model of ginia,- then under General Pope. - I n l g 7 S K o s e w a t e r was struck: New York to effect a compromise.! ecutive of the Jewish Agency for the first automobile inviented by Had senators been popularly Palestine . . . We hear t h a t the After the second battle of Bull o tfae h e a d w i t h a b l l l y b y a n Af elected at that time Rosewater i Zionist contention "will be that; Siegfried * Marcus - . • Marcus' Q n tfae h e a d w i t h a b l l l y b y a n o undoubtedly been j there is no justification for press-: grand-nephew, Clarence Low. is j W- Kun he was recalled to Washing- jtoriqns O m a h a gambler, and lat- would have ^' j ing this matter now when it trying to prevail upon the Vienna j / ton to accept an exceptionally re- | e r R o t h a c k e r , , the editor of the named. . sponsible position with-the ™ r | O m a h a Republican, used the After his first defeat he contin-1 would deeply affect unity on Pal- ^Technical Muesuin to lend the department. j same weapon to even scores with j/u e d h j s editorial tirades against i estine . . A commission of ira- j model for the Fair . . . Wonder Picked men Tvere chosen Rosewater for an editorial stab, j the interests he disliked. He wasSI portant American leaders, non-1 what prompted German theatrithis work which entailed the According to Alfred, Sorenson. an ardent anti-prohibitionist, and j Jewish, will soon leave for Po-; cal interests to acquire the Gerhandling of messages of. the sec-the historian of Omaha, Rothack- feeling his editorial columns, had j land to make a study of the Jew- j man rights to "Having a Tv'ozLfierretary of vrar and even those o £ j e r h a d n e v e r hesitated to use Ms a limited audience, he talked! ish situation_ there Time," a play,President Lincoln. -It was-,vrhile .j columnsv to pour "abuse'"upon the firom the lecture platform in oth- King George VI has comirtis- about Jews GH vacati lie was assigned to the White House that Edward Rosewater i telegraphed to the the world the A ^'Emancipation Prodamation.'V t I n September, 1863, at the insistence of Edward Creighton, /who ths previous year had" completed the Pacific Telegraph Company, Rosewater resigned from r?scv, the army corps and came to Omah a to manage tlje office of the new organization.; . i Omaha, then but nine years j old, was a collection of hastilyliuilt houses on. streets that in .tret weather were impassable inud-holes in ary weather so dust ! blown they obscured vision. Emi- j grant trains, westward bound, ; carried hardy men and women to hew a path for civilization. It For Vita-Fresh MAXWELL HOUSE-COFFEE'., You know how wonderfolly good 2.IAXWELL . X •was the colorful setting for a j HOUSE COFFEE is when you serys- it wife comes packed ia ths srsper-VECsinn caa . .--. thecolorful personality. j r For seven • years Rosewater re- j Ttpik or cream for breaMast and other MILone sure way to-bring you coffee as delisiouslymained with .the Pacific compan>, ! CHIGS meals....But there are two other ways then resigned to help found the J fresh and'^holssoss as'the very-hour-it. left Omaha Daily Tribune, a journal- j of enjoying this superb roaster-fresh coffee. the roastinf. oven. Hot DAYS fresh," but Istic enterprise that within a Jew; '• Try MAXWELL " HOUSE ' in demitasss : form weeks failed. That same year : HOUSE fresh! And so coffee can be Iresher after a FLEISCHIGE meal and discover a new though he had . been elected a ; t h a n t h a t . • • • • • • • • • • ; .• . member of the state legislature j delight, a new coffee enjoyment! . and sat through what is undoubt- | •dly one t>f the stormiest sessions j And* try MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE as a Your grocer, has 'MAXWELL EOUSS COFIn the annals of Nebraska. He [ cooling,-refreshing drink on a hot day-"n-as the leading figure in the | FEE in'the new Brip G-rind, if you'prefer drip you'll love it! Serve • ICED . MAXWELL light to impeach the first gover- ; coffee, and in the Eepjlax Grind for percolated > k David D i d Butler HOUSE COFFEE to your summer guests and of Nebraska, Butler. ! s g or boiled coffee. Get a can today. ^ i j d The Omaha Bee, which came to win their praise and compliments J be so associated with the name t Df Edward Rosewater, was starrIn this space we could go on to tc'I sd'at this time. Originally it was a ^ small, pamphlet-sized- sheet yen £.11 s.bou_t the ir.ee given away: to gain .support for Kosewater's measure authorjzins a board of education for the.city Df omaha. Owing to the response of the public, Rosewater continDrip Grind and Kes*a!arued its publ-cation. \ From its start ..on J u n e - 1 9 . 1S71, the Omaha Bee gave every promise of adding much life to the already blatant atmosphere of the frontier -city. . The inde-J pendent and fearless policy inX augurate* by Rosewater made _ it V V undoubtedly the most ..influential paper in the west,, and the fame r. ci OS of its fiery and militant editor <o n spread throus&out the nation. Rosewater never minced words. He dominated the .political scene ' * "1 "^ if SU ii •by fighting all those whose olfit

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THE JEWISH PBESS, FRIDAY,- JUNE IS, 1937'

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I .A Collegian's View , " n u m b e r of people h a v e law." political ideiiB. t h e y form them Rabbi Josuha then remarked: I Dear Editor: selves into K si&rty a n d with thci. By Kabto Frederick (John "I am sure that this child will in j When the water readies plumb org-£:i\izf'd Ki.-.'engrth they ex<r future-become a Rabbi of Israel, • to .our necks, we 3i:i;.st_c-"y out. such p. fo:v;> s ba.i w i t h a li;,!< Of wxiters,'one of the greatest is Ralph Waldo Emerson. I swear to God that I shell not I Shall we lei ourselves crown v.illi- time- Uiey r r ^ l h e t h e i r ambition EBbiis&ed o^ery SjViday at Omaha. Nebraska, by By Dr. Phtli? Slser America may _be proud of having produced him. He is leave this place until I will suc- |out at least a whimper? Were v e if ihos,- unJ'I:'ionE a r e rig-lit. On THE JEWISH PRESS PUBLISHING <X)MPANY probably the young republic's greatest achievement thus far, ceed in liberating that prisoner I created only fo have BIUiuij" vrn- ins B : : ; 1 furl, h e r — ' if t h e i r c m Vnt3i any araor.nt of money it may! ter crammed down nv.v th.rop.ts? di'.ionp fleriir.nfl i t , they i;i;<. , ; " KH3LE ' , her.supreme spiritual^product. Subscription Prlccv oao sear •. • • - * - $2.00 But with righteousness shall lie \be asked for him." It was related Every .cenerptJon rcngt awaken to si.pn> :o iKM-i'inf- a n a t i o n wi-. Advertising rate3 turntaaed on application; , America is supposed to be one of the most materialistic of judge the poor, and. decide with! • that Rabbi ••Joshua did not leave • its burden. X O T come? our awak- t!ieJ r e^.-p g o v e r n m e n t a n d p.>v countries. Emerson himself in one of his writings alluded to equity for "the meek ot the land.,; the city until he had liberated ening-. , err.inc- bod!'•••? 10 t a k e care n' Editorial Otflca: 500 Branaela Theater her as 'sensual, avai'icious America.' Yet she attained eto the And the -wait shall dwell with i that child for a big sum of mon>h?ir ;n;prnr: t i o n a l affairs. So i = Slous City Offic&—JewlsnCommunity Centex : the lamb, and the leopard shall t ey. Many days did not pass be- •women in the colleges and un;.-ir nor ioticua a n d r e a s o n a b l e i-n.i height of spirituality in Emerson. '•'•.• '• Print Shop Address: 4604 So. 24th Street that child became a Rabbi ; versities today are realizing lliE-t even p r a c t i c a l t o proceed in rarlie down -with the kid, and t h e fore : Emerson was the descendant of eight generations of Puri- calf DAVID BU&CKBR - • B u s i n e s s and Managing Editor and -the young lions arid t h e ' in Israel and this was Rabbi Ish- the -world is> not as sweet as have r y i u s c u t PVCTI a n Undertakins;? FRANK R. ACKBRMAN - - . - "- -. - --.- • Editor. tan clergymen. He was himself a minister at the outset of his falling together, and a little tnael. '• been our younjr . Uves in ouv V.-f. bpiicve t h e Zionist movenunt PANNIB KATELMAN CooncU Bluffs, Iowa, Co-respondent j Rabbi said: From tiie time of homes. "We have been protected,. hr.s ?boi.;i(iered t h i s h a p p y ta?k \ career, being in charge of an important Unitarian Church in child shall lead them. ANN PILL - •'• - - -Slons City, ioWa, Correspondent Set ye an ensign upon the high i Moses until the time of Robbi, '! Protected ranch loo much. In Tact for liip ,ievvi8h people. Boston - - until he resigned as a result of doctrinal and ritual mountain, life np the voice unto j •we.do not find one man -who wasso sheltered that now the realizadifferences, to devote himself thereafter to literature, becom- them, wave the hand that they • unique in the possession of wis-tion of the facts of this -world S o t - t h e Zionist. Congress is tii<= o£ (his m o v e m e n t . lii; : also brings the realization of the vsiicVcsmon Vote Sunday!;' .: • ' • - . 7 -':.;•' .^•'-';•'•: / .' ing America's chief author and one of the greatest writers &ay go into the gates of the ao-jdom, riches and glory. e v-r,nt oi;r .spokesman t o whisI Our Rabbis were taught: We inadequacy of cur preparations. p r r iii? i4e;ise? Do w e want our .AVe were this week in' receipt of a. telegram from an offi- in the world. His pulpit was now the books he wrote, address- b'les. have to support gentile poor to- I What are-the main, bitter fuels? cial of the Zionist Organization of America urging editorial ing, a larger congregation that now included the world. The ex- Our Kahbis were taught: ,. I t gether with the poor of Israel. It Oh, too many to enumerate on Pnokps-.M? i:i t o s t a n d in t h e roar O'L t h e a u d i t o r i u m ? D o we want bupport for the Zionist Organization ticket number one in the tent of Emerson's influence was l'eniarkable. I t included, as happened once that Rabin Joshia, is our duty to visit sick gentile [paper; Suit just. one .will iKus- or.r F-r>o'-esman t o b e h e a r d by a | trate. We are "Jews ia a Gentogether with the sick of Israel. •who -went to the great city Rome Zionist elections to be held m Omaha and every part of thewell as.his own country, England, Germany, Russia, penetratIt is proper to bury the dead bo- j tile world.'' This oft repeated fev.- v e f . k . sffineless. deaf na•was. told that there -was a boy | eo.un.try nest Sunday, June 20. The telegram seeks this sup- ing even to India. Carlyle and the young Herbert Spencer were prisoner1 with a line appearance,: dies o£ gentile together with dead I phrase is really the basis of oi;r tion.?'' T h e y v,-hy p u s h t h e Crmpr-ess off to a small city .in a port on the necessity for a united.front of all Zionist*parties greatly indebted to »him. He is the virtual creator of Nietzs : bright eyes. He went and sta-1bodies o£ Israel because it will I troubles. But why SIKHIU' it tcke j-pe-;,; rve'h progressinfr Euro|ip. | twenty years to learn this when' tioned himself a t the door of the foster good will. in the -world Zionist congress elections in .the face of the criti- Che's Superman. I n Russia such.diverse personalities as Tol-prison and said to the boy: "Whoj Ttie sri-ii-Tid r e s o u r c e s , t h e enthusI ten would suffice? And then ten Rob said: "It is prohibited for cal situation created by the impending report oi-'the British stoy and"Pobiedonotseff, Grand Procurator of the (Czarist) gave Jacob for a spoil alid Israel | a man to eat before lie feeds his •more good years could have- been iji.?;!!.1 3;tU:i]prs, tlie powerful sup; used to prepare and carry out :;.pone'f are in the United State?. to the robbers?" Upon which the janimal.'' Royal Commission-on Palestine. * \ Holy Synod felt the influence of Emerson. But yov.We cement: e chance to voice our child prisoaer replied: ""Was it j Rabbi-Simon said to his dis-plan of counter-attack. . TVe are one-lmndred-percent advocates of Jewish unity in Emerson's great theme was the human soul and the 'Over not the Lord? He against whom ciples: dilemma opiiiious, to volunteer our g>>r"My children, copy a y sny you knew of this dealing with the vital problems confronting Jewry in Palestine. Soul, of which it was a spark and an expression. All revela- we nave sinned and _in -whose customs for ray customs are se-years asro. Then vrhy not condi- yiff-. utici to show our ability, 1 We have continually and even vehemently emphasized the need tion was through the human soul. Therefore one should guard ways they would not walk; nei- lected from the best of customs tion us in. or.r early childhood Tor TVjii our 3-rmble but definite the battle we ' rr.ust enter ns ther were they obedient unto His of Rabbi Akiba. for the various Jewish groups and parties to pull in one direc- and cherish* its slightest manifestation. "Obey your instinct" grown ups? With cur yoi;np ORf> of the many Collegians of tion instead of diverting their strength on a tangent. Our said Emerson. Therefore he became the advocate of limitless s-'rengtb. we could be a great p.id 1 oth physically and mentally ir foes would like no thing, better than to see internal bickering self-trust* Nowhere has it received such thrilling expression v ..irking out a' solution. The ariry" —Israel Horustein acting like a hemmorhage to weaken our life-blood and make as in the famous paragraph from what is perhaps his greatest r ' f i c e r r J -'-=- '*"- ,-•>-•-'-'—•' "-"• J1~r Atlanta. Georgia

Ralph Waldo Emerson

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us easy prey for their maliciously-hatched designs. However, essay, the essay on 'Self Reliance.' "Trust thyself!" he writes. ( because we believe in unity is no reason for us to subscribe to "Every heari vibrates to that iron string; Accept the place the The• Mizrachi Ticket 1 Labor Viewpoint , are, the General Zionist ticket in the forthcoming election. The divine providence has eound for you, the society of your con' 'I In my previous article I tried: In next Sunday's election for;t o p o i n t out to the readers of the j purpose of these elections are to choose delegates to represent temporaries, the connection of events. Great men have always Zionist delegates, -we urge Qma- j Jewish press the responsibility < us at the "World Zionist. Congrss in August. That is where done so, and confided themselves childlike to the genius of ha Jewry to vote the Mizrachi j w hich is theirs. I attempted to \ the unity must show; itself. The"delegates representing the their age, betraying their, perception that the Eternal «was ticket, ticket number 3. The dele-j E jj 0 W thera how important it is; various schools of thought in the Zionist movement are tostirring at their hearts, working through their hands, predom- gates whota you will elect by vot-J t i i a t t jj e y use their best judgment j ing ticket 3 are pledged to those i ^ t e n ttey vote in the Zionist j meet-to thrash out the problems involved and when they have inating in all. their being. And we are now men, and must principles and policies which will j e i ect .ion to be held next Sunday, i discussed the situation pro and con they should decide on a accept in the highest mind the same transcendent destiny; and continue to make possible the j j j , o p e t n g t \>y this time every j him waste is e y in just i -,-unified, strong course of action backed by every delegation. riot pinched in a corner, not cowards fleeing before a revolu- achievement o£ a complete Eretz jJ e w v l l o j j a s purchased a shekel j alizint:' his situation. permeated by the spirit j b a s r i J a < i e u p h i so r her mind to \ So what is the present accepted The Zionist official who wired us took the position that a labor tion, but redeemers and benefactors, pious aspirants to be noble Yisroel, of our great inheritance, the v o t e ' his shekel according to t h eanswer ' to our troubles? The Ziongroup already refused a united front in the forthcoming elec- clay under the Almighty- effort let us advance on chaos and Torah. f^cts and not merely because j ist movement, end to us colletiMizrachi is not a mere party in some friend asks,his vote for any'ates logically so. tVhen a iarc? tion. ^Ehis seems to us predetermining the -issue. If the labor the dark." •/'.• , Zionism; it is the Jewish people. party. group refused to co-operate after their policies have been vetoed Emerson is most heartening and inspiring. Hawthorne re- It represent all those sacred prin-; In a s effort to clearly discuss at the World Congress, then we would accuse them of harmfor "whSch Jews have shown 1 the issues at this election I have ferred to 'the mountain atmosphere of his lofty thought.' His ciples c~ ' * their devotion through a hundred j tried to analyze each party on the ing the best interests of the Jewish people in a critical moment. "l < writing is electric. His doctrine is a veritable tonic. "Hitch generations. i ballot. In' my last article I told; But, we can hardly blame them o'r any other group for seekMizrachi has always maintain- j ^ h y the General Zionist party is , your wagon to a star" is one of his well-known immortal ing as many voters as possible in the selection of delegates to ed and fought with all its In ° t entitled to your support bephrases. "All the world loves a lover" is Emerson s declarathe World Congress. As far as local co-operation is concerned, strengtb, for the principle that j cause this party has no platform the leaders of all political groups have stressed above all else tion. Also,/the truly wise pronouncement, "To have a friend, life in Erezt Yisrael should bejor policy to offer for the chief ia the traditional i issue id this election. I showed ' the necessity of buying a shekel and voting Sunday . .-.and, one must be one!" One cannot begin to quote" all the lovely, maintained spirit, with a proper observance! readers ol this column that the. striking, original thoughts of Emerson.^ One must read his secondly, emphasized their own political viewpoint. of the Sabbath, with loyalty to I big issue is the struggle between ; writings beginning with 'Nature' in which the doctrine of Evo- the dietary laws, and with a heal-i Jewish' labor and Jewish capital.: Possibly one of the reasons why. the Zionist movement has lution is clearly set forth even before Darwin and Spencer, all thy religious national system of j l a this issue the life and MseKarr never reached the zenith in membership and mass support has throughliis "Essays" -which contain the profoundest ideas on education. ' '/ of our Jewish laborers are a t . been the vast influence of the General Zionists. They have fol- "Compensation," "Spiritual Laws," "History," "Heroism," and Remember that the Mizrachi is stake. On. this issue the General j Zionist 'party is divided. This lowed a weak course, vacillating in its-trend", and have lost much a host of other subjects; his addresses on "The American the only organization that is question cannot be solved fighting with its fullest power j because of th'e lack of a vigorous, militant stand on major, ques- Scholar" ancl "The Divinity School Address" which were, as against this destructive spirit of S ur votes for the General tions. Theirs has been the unity of non-interest, a middle-of- Oliver Wendell Holmes expressed it "America's Declaration opposition towards religion asd j Zionist Par>.y. „ . , . . . • A l s o iIJ n rUsi e as the-road course. The unity we seek is a strongly-expressed of Intellectual Independence," sounding the note of a newthe Torah.. Only the educational c u s s e d t h e >erits Ofi f x Hj a cf " , system of Mizrachi ia Palestine I s a t f\ ^ ^; i unity fortified by a fusion of interests with each difference of literature as well as a most radical and refreshing attitude is bringing up its thousands of 1 P^S"-jiHow me to r e pe^; t l l a t t l l i s W0Tth ? P art J" KES r.oi.u-i opinion lending depth and color to the whole. towards Christianity and religion in general. Emerson is onepupils in the spirit o t Torah a n d | i n tradition and affording them a j S to gain by your vote. Xeuicr, of the greatest liberals of all time. One of the world's great- secular training as well, which jthey nor the Jewish cause vrul be b e t e r oU avote for l e H This year in the United States a total of over 260,000 est idealists, he is yet a practical idealist. Underneath the ^ ?0~organization \ has fali will assure their spiritual health jtfiassah. This shekels were sold, breaking all previous records. This means Brahmin was the Yankee. Despite-his. absorption in the most t t e a Tv bat t h e y that the "United States will be represented at the Zurich con- spiritual ideas and ideals, Emerson's foot was ever on the Mizrachi also includes a strong i f r O E 1 tgh° e z i o 3 l i s 't workers organization called Ha-| There gress by ninety delegates. The largest number of shekels, 100,- ground. -He said Action was pearls and rubies.to one's dis- poel Hamizrachi, n u ra b e r rn s ! i s n o T a l i d r e a s o T 1 "mncil.^ l c T t! eir j e ; r g J ' . o a t h e 000, were sold by Hadassah. Hadassah by entering a separate course. And his spirit was most beautiful. How intoxicatingly thousands of ' religious-minded \ ballot ncr »or asking ioar_ • ; ticket in the elections for the first time, has taken a step which lovely the following passages: "If the stars should appear one workers under the slogan "Torah j support.The activities of jt i e sN o w ^m h a t a b m U l h e o t h e ^ p.fr" may lead it from its non-political field of mercy into a political night in a thousand years, how would men believe and adore; Va-Avodah." this movement in rebuiding the j - ^ « ^ e r four on the oailot maelstrom which may seriously impair Hadassah work. Up toand preserve for many generations the remembrance of theLand should receive the support i l s the. Judenstaadt paro. I J ^ 1 " i spend no t t e e on this party, i^ey now all factions in Zionism have respected and supported Ha- city of God which had been shown! But-every night come out of every loyal Jew. I /} i carries on agitation I a r e t f c e remains of the Revisiondassah endeavor, but political strife might easily in the future these envoys of beauty and light the- universe' with theS- ad- forMizrachi ist a hundred percent Jewish la- j Party and -don;t have enough wreck the present full co-operation Hadassah enjoys. TKe Gen- monishing smiles. " ' bor- as fundamental to Palestin- support in this country to be even ^ ian Jewish development. It con-i Considered. i eral Zionists were nest in sales with 71,000 shekels sold, fol1 R aM l i k e t0 s p e n d s o r a e t l I e "Give me health and a day,, and I will make the pomp of demns speculation, which it con-1 " "°" ^ • lowed by the Laborites with 60,000, Mizrachi with .35,000 and harmful for our Land and h e r e t o <"SCMS the mencs o. tue the State. Party with less than a thousand. If the proportion, Emperors ridiculous. The dawn is my Assyria; the sun-set and siders Mizrachi party. After much stu-• moon-rise my Paphos and unimaginable realm of faerie; broad contrary to the spirit of the Tor-dv and careful thought it is my > of shekel sales is the same in Sunday's elections, then the party ah. noon shall be my England of the senses and the understandMizrachi maintains a clear and sincere decision that the cause of line-up of the American delegation would b e : Hadassah 33, Lalterable program — that of the Jewish Homeland will be set--. ing; the night shallbe my Germany of mystic philosophy and unalterable General Zionists 24, Labor 21, Mizrachi IV, State Party 1. - dreams." .Wish Law, T.-i-t,- Jewish T-wi»h ™™nWc thea Jewish prophets, iouslr damaged if the Mizraccii ~ •-..''• '

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.' Emerson was the author of a large body of poetry. He Jewish religion, and Jewish mor- of the Jewish Congress. In attack- | Far more important than which party you vote fqr Sunthe Mizrachi party I would' was a poet at heart. Whereas most of his verse has the un- The f i g u r e " 3 " is symbolic of i I am . cle r day is the exhortation to vote* Cast your ballot. Let tWworld l i k e t 0 m a k e lt ^^ ^ , ? : finished rugged form, like that of Whitman whom he wasour three-fold slogan — the Land ! n o t know that the Jewish, pe- Ve are solidly and unifiedly behind attacking TGugion. iveapom the first to hail and encourage, it has passages of ravishing of Israel, the people of Israel, the the Zionist movement; tlu . the World Zionist' Congress made Torah: of Israel. i is a very fine thing in us place beauty, as for instance the following from "Hhodora": •• A victory for Mizrachi is a!*"1* i f s ? l a T C i s n o t 3!1 ' c , f t a r 5 e °Lf'. up of representatives of the various philosophies of Zionism, Soldi1 victory for. our Torah, which is the affairs our Homeland. -U.j "Tell them, dear, that if eyes Were made for seeing, can -of doubt this statement of si: speaks in the'name of Jewry; that world Jewry is as one prethe very spring of our existence. anyone, ou b a v e o n l y t 0 o p e a a y t i S Then beauty is its own excuse for being." day 'i •Orcr Demands of the Zionist I t>" , il f " 1 pared to support the Palestinian pioneers who are, so to speak, ' oi rs>'f u bUo oo kf £ o rm>" P r o o L «-lst(>rr j Emerson was the author of the famous "Concord Hymn," Congress ' in the front.line trenches in the battle to give new"hope and l . V e note with the deepest ap- ili on o r i^iances where otie re-; enteri containing the words that have reverberated throughout the prehension that the resolution to | ^ another has gamea connew life to a re-inspired people in their national homeland. world: . . • " observe the Sabbath in the public ! t r c l 0 tTf ce er s o m e C0 T untr; "- u L a bootlj life "of Eretz . Yisrael, so-entnus-f f^ere results: xn.every.^ca.b. tive < Here1 once the embattled farmers stood • -ctmfitry" "suffered or went to j .The : Summer Home Camp iastically voted at the nineteenth i And fired the shot heard round the world. and t Zionist Congress, has never been ruin. Religion and the state can-j Camp Akiba, the summer home camp at the Jewish ComEmerson, too, has been 'heard round the world' and Mscarried out by the responsible not be mixed. It could not he cents, munity Center, opens its eight-week schedule next Monday. *. influence continues undiminished and imabating. New books Zionist, agencies. "We therefore done in the past and it cannot be • Th., in Palestine. TCe care not! a reminder to parents that the day of irasupervised play is over. on Emerson, "The Sage of Concord,' 'The Prophet of America,' demand that a special department done endanger the "splendid wort ofj be established in the executive of aah TS. • "Learn while you play" is the keynote of-this camp for ourare continually appearing. : the Jewish Agency, charged with the past 20 years by placing ccn-j v youngsters. No longer is the summer months unproductive for Thirty-four years ago America and the world celebrated the execution of this. resolution, trol.of Palestine work into thejj the children, since character-building and craftsmanship are the Centenary of the birth of Emerson. The late'Senator Hoar particularly wth regard to the hands -of the 3\lizraeci party. • Aside from this feet what va) : direct; taking, the place of unorganized,'hit-and-miss wasting of theof Massachusetts^ in his Centenary address, delivered in Sym•(Continued on. "Pasre T.I j (Continued on page S.) vacation period. , " ;v N the ci; phony Hall, Boston, did me the honor of .quoting at length At the Jewish Community Center camp a complete program the following passage from an article on Emerson that I had among the• unnumbered Lost. of those "throughout-'the Troriaj berg 7 slstinj , under systematic arrangement is given, including games, written in honor of the occasion: ,; _ who confess tliemselves the eager and devoted readers, stucieiits. I Oth 'music, crafts, dramatics, dancing, art, swimming, hikes, singing "Emerson's hold on the minds and"' thoughts • of .'men is sad aclsiirers of the inspired and inspiring Emerson, ijis v.orcisj and picnics. Each child is under'the supervision of a trained truly remarkable. The circle of his influence groivs. continually are on every tongue. His sentences illumine the pagres andj Toby ireahn counselor and records are kept so that parents may be ac-wider and vic&er, and the power, that-.he has exerted and still adora tlie specclics of the' greatest Trritcrs ancl orators. In the Gloria quainted with aptitudes and problems. A lunch will be serevd exerts is nothing short of amazing. He appeals to the most press, ia -periodicals, on: the. lips of preachers and plsti'orni Ginsb at noon, and later in the day each child will be given milk. A various and most diverse natures and personalities. The prreat- speakers, in in the introd ntroduction to volum es, ill the books them-! !:ensl_ , rest period y;ill break the afternoon program. est and the humblest unite in paying him homage. He frvri'sRuth The popularity of the summer camp and its efficacy were ates and inspires the hearts and Eouls, ol! all. Not nerely tlio Grue* i proven, last summer. The fee is so nominal that every parent boys and girls, yea and the men r.ud women, of two continents go tt , Fund. should send his child to the school. Not to do so, is to deprive who come to his writing with a feeliag us il a new world had 'the child of something worthwhile which will help mold his been .discovered and a new era opened in their lives, vclio were character along improved lines. peruse his -works with a delight and an avidity marer.ied ar>d •die , 'Shim f' unsatisfied by any other author, ancient or modern., not alone ®Fast of Tarnmuz...... Sat.,' Jnne 26 ; the enthusiastic, the idealistic, the sentimental; pests, dream.•vi-or.r.lin.j v 'Tisha B'Ab » ......T^T. .Sat., July 17 ers, 'literary' persons, dilettante?, particularly women, but the ;rces Rosh Hashonah ;...JIon., Sept. 6 calmest, the sanest, the toberc^t, the mc3t 'practics!*: lawyer:, Fast of Gedaliah Wed., Sept. 8 editors, statesmen, philosophers, business men - - tlieso nrj •

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THE JEWISH

f people "have [dsas. they form them, a parly and with tlicL strength., they exer irce that with a littl< realize their ambitionmbitions are Tight. Gourther —' if their .conmanu .. it, - they tak-e iscorne a nation vith government "and. govdies to take care oi rsational affairs. So is kal and reasonable and itical to proceed in carsuch an undertaking:? e the Zionist movement Idered this happy task ish people. • i Zionist Congress is the a of this movement, bo our spokesman to •\vhislease? Do we want OUT I to stand in the. rear uditoriuni? Do ws ^rant esman to he heard by a ., spineless, deaf naey vrhy push the Coni to a small city i n a y progressing Europe. id resources, the enthus.eners. the powerful sup,re in the United States, hd a chance to voice our to volunteer our serld to show our ability. r humble hut definite sns-o-ered? i the. many Collegians of

, FRIDAY. JTTXE IS. 1937

Page 5

EXROCTE TO XEVP YORK PLiEASANT HILL fadassafi Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L*ee are visiting in Omaha en route- to A-regular raet - r c» Every effort is being made 1;; sant New York. They" have, been the Hill Cease - j a o " Hadassah to bring its rnetnbsr^ , ID guests of Mrs. Lee's sisters and !t 0 l e U s o n '•• held on T u e - 1 1 , J >. ^ P° Sunday, June 20, %',0 at the B'J ca .. -j brother, Mr. and Mr:*. J. Cohn Mr., and Mrs. O. H. Greenb.erg,' j to Tote'in. the election of ilele- j ^ " >. 24th and \ ^ and Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Her- j gates to the World Zionist Con- ' ^>re vrtl] be f-"1 >. ' i rentioa. -Members can call for.,^". man. . % Mrs. Lee is the former Estelle ] their ShekoKm at the Hadassab. 1 "'"' Mr. and Mrs. HarryTable. On Sunday, June 6. Miss Ida W o l f tr» R P / . P ; W O i Herman. Mr. Lee is a concert am' .. -,, , WOU: t O KeCeiVe Lipton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 1 : s l c i a n of Xew'Tofk and Is the fa J - The • committee responsible lor Sam Upton o£ Sioux City Iowa. I . M r .a n d JMrs. I r s . J Justin. u a t i n . WWolf o l f a r are e , I ther of the famous radio and jMrs. f f « ^ SDavid ojt A. theGoldstein, vote - i n ccbair-: ite.: T i e Jetrisi A, became the bride, ot Mr. ^\ Uham ja r r i v i n g today t o be the g u e s t s j stage cornedi Pinky | man. and Mrs. J. II. KuhiliOfstj-.". Alliance trill he Wolfe of Omaha, son ,o£ . Mrs. i o £ J I r l o i r ' s ' parents' Mr and! ! co-<;!iairnian, and the JMesdase?; ing on Tuesday J r Rose Wolfe of Chicago. The^redrj M r s ; ^ A . Wolf. Mr.'Wolf has j TO j Morris' Arliin, .Tnlius Abraham-i Jewish Com mi. :AXGEI1KS -dmg.tppk place at the Del P r a d o ; s p e n t t h e p a s t y e a r a t t h e j ^ , . . j H. Hireehmau and her | son, William Alberts, . -M. Bar- 1S: p. ni." AH ' 1 Hotel with Rabbi Keller offlciat- jv a r { j Law School where "he h a s ; •>c -. Mrs.. L. G. Gross, depart' stein. R. Bordv, O. B?lzer, D.; ?d 10 be " -" Q' lnB ' -;: " -.••••••. \b e e n m a j o r i n g , i n P u b l i c L a w , ,j nday to visit relatives in Blacker, M. 51. Earish, D~" \-j,:i' Ti- in ; will be ^ The bride young couple, L o g A n g e l e g _ T I ; e y expect to be i Cohen, I. Dansky. JI. P; M. Franklin, Frohm, for-five weeks. ered, Bible •R-ith- tv?o orchids. Im- • I Goldware. J. J. Gfeenberz-, L-eon \ cial, Cu'tu mediately after the ceremony the; Sir. and Mrs. H. A. Wolf. vrill • Graetz, A. Katz. M. Katelman. J . | couple left for P. wedding trip at:.reeeive"ijifornian>"on'Sunday be-|fO VISIT IN DENVER Kaufman. M. F. L-evenson. Irrin \ Social a\ , C * EsteS P a r k . After June 21 theV-Hvein.A fallrnnm.nfi >_ - c u r daughter: I j e T i l l i j _M_ Xewman, Julius of The tween 4 nnrf and 7 7 in in ihp the ballroom of j TUia= Miss Esther K tiie ."* ^~ < will be at home at the Hanscom ;t h e Blacltstone Hotel. Ko inrita-j of Mr. ahd Mrs. Bonjamin k l a i A. Pradell, J. Rosen- oa JuneOmaha ; 7 at ill" ^" — ^ Apartments^ . . "• tions have been issued. . man, left last Monday for DenA. S. Rnbnitz. I. W. RosenOr, June 14 th° Omahans attending the 'treading. -. _ . ver, Colorado, -where sheTvill visit 1 ... H. Rochman. E. A. Sitron. yon. the home otPT "J l* " her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. ;J u l e s ghapiro. .Julius Stein, T. A.st 1 •were Mr. and Mrs. A. Sherman, - • committee uad " E D S e ! d i n a n d t i e M i s s e s A U c i e o , TM , v „' are .oi - ! Tullv, A? L. Wohlncr, and X. S. ship of Mr. K? —' • brother-in-law and sister of the ;x "AT,. - ATTEND WEDDING r Mr., and. Mrs. N. T Lennan a n d B e r n l c e S e l d i 3 l . T l i e Seldins: Y a f f e groom, and Irvin SUilmaster. Plans for the' r* " ~ Reaving Saturday lor • Hammond, |a r e SormkT oraaha. residents, and I ' Yiddish play. Miss Bernice Seldin FIXRELSTEIX-ROSEM5KKG of. their son, Mickey Kaplan to graduated from t i e Boulder Col- ; .Women's Mizrachi Catherine Barton on June 20. ege of Music. - ' . . . ' ' Deboj Miss Zena" Rosenberg', daughter; i An interesting meeting of the of Mr. and Mrs. George Rosent - ^ I organization -5ras held "Wednesday' i h e executive ' < - r C" tiic j_ •* berg of Hastings. Nebraska, be-: KXTERTAIXS FOR BRIDE-TO- j T o COAS1' j afternoon at the J. C. C. came the bride of Louis Finkel-• JBen Helphand of Fremont who i There were tvv-o guest speakers. Deborah Soc-ietj L . t t ' of Mrs. J. Beri--- , i " ~ stein, son of Mr. and Mrs. FinkelMiss Ruth t e e Bloch entertain- received his master of science deto pian the actii -v ' "' stein of .Lincoln, on Sunday, af- ed at a tea at her home last Sun- ;g r e e { roln ^ g TJii iversity of Iowa ' n - 0 : 11 in detail the election of delegates The Deborah Sic ' v «:'' at six. o'clock ; day "in honor of Miss Gertrude n . accepted a position a s t w e e k h 3 S ternoon.. June 1 J for the World Zionist Congress to port the City TV " u ^ T ill F ! at the Hotel Blackstone in Oma-; Bernice Bloch and Miss. Lottie J o n t i l e actuarial' staff of a large c - r r be held Sunday. Jacob Kahz. Tal• 1 ^. Jp hope? to enlist tl t. b n o r-\ lia. Rabbi Harry Jolt of Lincoln ; Ripps brides-to-be. Assisting were i insurance 'compsihy of Los Anmud Torah instructor, read sev- Jewish woman in t => ^ and Rabbi David -A. "Goldstein of! Mrs. Sheff" Kr.tzkee and the Mis- g e l e s . ing. Oniaba, performed the ceremony: ses Charlotte iNogg. Harriet Salz-! Helphand, th.c- son of Mr. anderal Zionist articles. Ben Handier grave a report P LTiie meniberfch. > ec.-iT_i in the presence of "about eighty- man; Evelyn Greenbaum,. Lillian . ^ j , . ^ Da Tid Helphand. will as-o nMrs. t n eUOI 1 n T)° • " live-relatives. " • . " • , . ' Friedlander. Betty Rosen, Louise •s u m e h i s , d n [ - l e s o n the coast this ' - - -^'zra.ni co^.ven clndcs: The, Me T " ^ J The bride was lovely m a"white i Miller. Mildred Saferstein, Go.ld-j ji oli tj a y, ' Beslc'.es ' attendins the tion held recently in Atlantic • stein, chairman I.«-.L..a" C . I v ! Aaron Katz, Jul" ^ r satin gown of floor length. :Miss'; ie Silverman, and Doris Makof- • University of I.ora where he. also City. A benefit bridge will be given Belle Rosenberg of Hastings. was : sky. One .hundred and. twenty-five :r e c e i v e ( 1 .- h } s .- bachelor. d?gree, Tatle, Charles = 1i=> 0 h'er sister's only attendant. Aaron ; invitations were ; issued-. • | Helphand; was a student at thefor the organization by Mrs. L.Belmont, Joe G^iav-i-e c r •Blumentbal at her home Tues-; tTniversity of 2«ebraska. Fiukelstein served his brother as I "*! c^ ' day, June 21!. A one o'clock des-: nie Bernstein, BXTKRTAIXS FOR VISITOR "best" man. Tl £ \ sert-luncheon veil! be served. : following t h e ceremony, a wed- , Mrs. A. Spmberg entertained at KLECTED TO PHI BETA Mrs. Joe Tucbman, chairman of :Joe Guss Heeds 'ding supper was served at the : her home on Thursday in honor | KAPPA Jewish Community Center. j of her granddaughter,- Barbara j Lawrence Bardy, son oi Mr. and the rummage sale, announces that ; A.Z.A. lOOChaptei C " 1 -. T Mr. Finkelstein. and his bride j Cheseni. of Lincoln. Mrs. Simon B-ordy, was elected to will open Monday, June 21, a t ; New officers of left Monday on a honeymoon trip.i / — " the Phi Beta Kappa, and Grace streets. She asks ",Chapter No. 10P, \ ^ ^ fL. I 1 CT to New .York City. to ' be | LELSHOClv-KAI'iAX honorary, fraternity, at the " ! 24th that member having some- A^ixt six months n <l=>r*r at gone about/one month. Upon their j Mr. and Mrs. "Meyer Kaplan v e r s i t y of Chicago. Mr. Bordy thing anv to donate call.her, and thea special meeting 1 return, they will make their home] announce the engagement of their j v a 9 aw ardedl his degree in histhings will be picked up. i .Tev>'isli Cor.im^" ' daughter Ruth, to-Paul Lelshock,!-^ orv a t \^e TJniversitv. convocain Lincoln. A correction is to Ije made ini !Monday.. June 1-3 (son of Mr. and .Mrs. E. Lelshock tion last Friday. the announcement of tree • dona-i of Sioux City, Iowa. 1 _\i - ^ ro^ p a p e r _ ,.,„_ ; He was alio offered a graduate, t i o n s ^ lasJ . ^ J o e GUES u-a» " FKESHCMAX-KOTLT5R r honor scholarship in-the history , _ donated in honor of \ dol t o f u e c o r c ir vl The marriage of Miss Betty j A X X O U K C E BIRTH 1 department •ot the University, but; M B r o d ] i e y ^nT-fi.'Paul5-ack? v~« Kotler, daughter of Mrs.* Jennie j Mr. and Mrs. Milton R.- Abra^jhad previously accepted a fellow-! t • n ~\r or.d • elected Aleph S G-°*i na_.i-v.. Kotler, to Mr. Harry Freshman, ; bam. announce the birth of a js & i p i n g e n l jtic languages and lit- j • \ s. M. Arbitman in honor of son of Mrs. Bessie Freshman,-will j daughter, June 10, at the Meth-; e r atures from Harvard. : Mszkir to se "cof a niece, Jeanette Fr> .be solemnized on Sunday, June_j o fli st hospital. -.; „ " .' j Mr. and Mrs. Bordy and f am-! A Leo Alpersoa - < - -* 1 20. at the home ot the bride. Rab-j " ; —__—___ . ; Uy have returned from Chicago; Gi>L>or. bi David A. Goldstein^ will offic-j" Mr." and Mrs. Edward "Werner j - ^ e r e they, attended -graduation i Eikur Ciolira Baiaar Manuel Hia^_- e late. : •'."'. *. . " i of Villlsca, Iowa, announce the 1 e s e r cises. •' •' a? j Sunday, August 1, ha? b^r-n Aiepb Shotn-t Gt A reception wiirbe held from i birth of 'a son, born Saturday.! I definitely decided upon as thebe assisted by "i.c ~l 4 to ~. No invitation have been |june 12. at the Clarkson hospital j I date for the annual Bikur Ctoiiia new Alc-yh .Slir'oi-'- ' u Bik:ur Cholim in "Omaha. Mrs.. Weiner is the.i Castleman is tL- T^- \ issued. i Bazaar. former, 'Miss Tillie Markpvitz. of ; or in charge c ' l The Bilrur Cholim' Society held ! C o u n c i l "Bluffs•• '."- • " • " " • ,| licity, and II--i ~ i~ j-a lovely puncheon, on Monday,] Patronize Our Advertisers jjune 14, s.t the Jewish CommunMr. and Mrs. J. D. Kendis of OX TRIP EAST Loa Angeles, formerly; of Omaha, !"*Vlis's"Eveiyn* Kaiman has left! & Center. Mrs. L. Neveleff prehave announced the engagement] f o r a n e x t e i i a e d . trip east. She sided. Mirs. H. Azorin sang sevSUPERFLUOUS K&5K of their daughter. "Evelyn cral Jew5fih songs. Her daughter j Rerrjoved by v J s U ^ e v r .Y o r k i Washington. Multiple Eiectroiysis -George M. Friedland; son of-Mr., n d B a l U m o r e before returnin Goldie accompanied her at the; All Work Guaranteed ; Los piano. ". • CO1VSULTATION FREE •and Mrs. Louis Friedland of it h e f i r s t of July. . and Corjf identis! . Plans -were made for a draw-; Angeles. No date has yet been set j ." . "' ing to be. held at a later date. • lor the wedding. ~ | TO ^ S I T IX CALIFOMNIA 523 World-Herald Eids. At d'-Z j Berta Newman left TV'ednesday MiCSSBEnG-GIilCKEX Patranize Our Advertisers [evening to visit Mr. and Mrs.. M. Mr.; and Mrs. H. Glicken anLipp of Sacramento, Califore_. engagement of their Bia. Before returning to Omaha, Tiounce C. daughter Miss Dorothy Glicken, she will spend" some time in Angeles and San "Francisco to Mr. Sam Minsberg of Los Ani'l " geles, son of Mr. and . Mrs.: S. ._ \ Minsberg. No date has been setElected — • Grand Regent.of for the Tvedding. tile Eoyal Arcanran

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GVKSTS HERE Milton R. Abrahams was last Mr. and Mrs. Ben Gurwitz and son, Marvin, are the guests of j week elected grand regent of the Mr. and Mrs.' Abe" Coltoff, -par-i Royal Arcanum* of Nebraska and ents of-Mrs. Gurwitz. Mr. Gur- j Western Iowa, -vvitz -w-ill return to his home in j — ; ' " California on Sunday while Mrs. Gurwitz vrill remain for two more IT WELL PAY ¥OU w e e k s . . .'•. .. . • " ' • - . To Consult

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The program at 4 p. m. Sun-j When hnjring • day, ' Jane 20 at the Joslyn Me- J DIAMONDS- : . " . morial,' is to be presented by the!WEDD2NG BINGS • Grieg Male Chorus ofr Lincoln, | WATCHES •".".-SILVERWAEE Nebraska. !• This choir is composed of 3S'and GIFT JEWEi.KV business' and professional men of ' Lincoln, and the program is to j be sung in four languages: Eng- ; lish, " Swedish,- Norwegian and

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E1BE CAMPAIGN—To stop forest fires, such as this spectacular one on the Pacific Coast, the United States Forest Service has instituted a nation-wide campaign. Aiding the campaign; James Montgomery Magg has presented a picture of Uncle Sam as fire warden^to be accepted by President Roosevelt. More than 40,000,000 acres are burned each year.

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TIE-UP—Governor Frante Murphy, indicated by arrow, addressing CIO United Automobile Workers and their sympathizers who swarmed into Lansing, Mich., took control of ths capital city's business section pn-i tied up traffic, in protest over the arrest of eight pickets. They dispersed at the Governor's request, but later another "work holiday" was declared ty A. F. of L. members.

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FAME CAIXS INJURES BEAUTIf—Jessie Simpson. 13, of Hackensack. If. J., beauty contest winner, recently lost both legs under a moving train. Life seemed to halt, but she didn't quit. Now she has a contract to pose for a watch company's advertising and five "artists, including Hal Phyfe, New York photographer of beautiful •women, assure her of other work.

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WBATH FEOM THE CLOUDS—More than 70 non-combatants, including women and children, were killed in Barcelona; Spain, when seven Rebel bombing planes roared over the city and dropped bombs. Above, searchers are exploring wreckage for the deid and injured.--This is" one of the terrifying chapters written during Spain's civfl war, which is hardly a year old.

DlZ SCANS THE MAUr—What the fan tells Dizzy Dean in this letter, evidently isn't pleasant to the St. Louis Cardinals' pitching ace, as he reads his mail In a New York hotel. Dizzy, whose real name is Jerome, recently was suspended for alleged derogatory remarks; but was later reinstated. This picture was taken during a lay-off for rain.

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PASTOK—This orisisal picture, just received in the United States, shows the Rev. Robert Jardine, vicar of St. Paul's, Darlington, England, who Incurred the wrath cf Anglican high churchmen by a a r r y i n c tie Duke and Duchess cf Windsor at Monts, Franco.

cfJcrt ta'lDcric b ies OJ ViCt?.r^s c« tlis six-raor.tlis-old TTertci— Air Impress p^.zv v :-c. U. TI'T piano cr&slica on licr? . -,:>. r '•? bacj or tncil E: '!, fcrt SoCios h&d n o t '02c:i f ^ j n i .

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O£!NG SHE PffiOPHET—Fireworks display over Jerusalem, City of many faiths. This celebration vms held by Palestine on MOUlCd el Nebi, birthday of the Prophet Mohammed Snnonettecl dome of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is in'right center. Christians participated this year.

FINGEK WAVE GOT HIM BLUE RIBEON—This yearling Hereford •won a blue ribbon in tljo- rccoat Fat Stock show held ia. Montgomery, Ala., and spectators said the iin-er wave the s.niK."l i.bplr.yed helped. A. V.. Thrash, second from left.. fe:uT him the wave. Allen S^Grubb-, ci.ti'.e ticc:Hi',*is at left: Others are Allen E. Grabb, Jr., and Jolm lisll, extreme ri^ht.

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THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JUNE IS, 1837

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' s-wSmmerB should take inatruc' Trill be. I sm confident that the 1 one in a boat. bridge hanga! And the total cost: this same party to xrhoia the groves of those Je^ris' I 7. If. is tin-vise for "beginning : t-ions in Ufe saving. A good s-wimI Number Two party Till "be given of "the four-year job, -/which cause" of Palestine meant so little •who used Arab labor. These are to tine inflated rubber m e : i<= not neoefvp-,1' t> rood Hi" an overwhelming majority on ' ETimffiprs Strauss master-minded' from 'a] 110 " 57 comes to you and asks you the sort of men who make up theIi June •" H sy e ^ f T ' r i ! , F* c ' s& n""e i T * c « T f 2 0. v T temporary house on a hill to place them in charge cl the * •> r 1 ~f , ,-.»,. ir Zionist Party. They .lire I . . . . . . By ..Morris. ICInkin f r c v r f T--T--- x i >.r - j " i overlooking... San Francisco, Bay, work lor our-Homeland. t " e r k o* ' ' ' J , t i c T I . ' 1 ; 1 •? ; p , rf i n c J one ideal and that ideal is h •where* h'e could see his bridge Via- There are many more reasons •. ing skyward and hear the ham-.j -R-hy no thinking Jew dares to: their Homeland. T-heir. life and mers -hitting steel as th'e -world's j TDte for the Mizrachi Party. Tinte ' everything they longest single span structure-was j fell and you spaceof • do permit, ae to :j^«^u they +*.„ would „„., gladly- give to bnUt, Ti-as ?35,000,0001 thenot many things this ' help their beloved Homeland, F :tsrcE - '• . Seen, oeea on 011a a bridge-building unuge-uuiiiuus job,'{.-party juu» {-party has nas done uone and ana tor lor viiin.^. cf it.. the party -who. is-the past Tork (JTA-) Krs. Felix ; He could not play football, ' j Strauss looks like anything .but 1-they- deserve your censure end ; Thisyears is has more Jewish intaiirburg predicted last "reek bnt knew how to -write poetry.; bascule door hangers and the |a n engineer. Short, -wearing a cap n o t -your vote. However, there is • six yea _— .„ r_ glasses, into Palestine that in all : that immense" sums of money A little fellow, under 5 feet isi mooring mast,his for llghter-than-air crafts. But principal life all d thick, Bhell-rimined glasses, One-'more party on this ballot; grantssu-iecu years ..«»» ^ ^ B Jewish V C j woul be needed "lor many years' of the height, he has become the work has been the building and he has T>een .mistaken;for a time- about--whoni I-woulft like to spend i_jhe sixteen r c i. world's biggest Mnster Builder designing of bridges, especially clerk. A'n& this - engineering gen- a little time, and that is the La-("Homeland ia Palestine. This is to come" to aid stricken Jews ia ius who has. overcome distances bor.Zionist Party or the number | the Number Two Party that ask European countries. She addresof Bridges. Read about the fas- bridges that other engineers said and tides and spaces never.before two "party. . • and fleservers yoar support next sed TOO persons at a luccbecK in cinating career of Joseph; B. -were impractical or impossible. conquered by; man : .also". -writes her honor given "by the Jo:nt DisThis party is not asking yeur j Sunday. . • Strauss .in this'article. The first of the Strauss • trun- poetry.. - He ;.1s "just as proud of support because of any prejudice; Let us remember oae thing. tribution Ccmirittts at the Hotel SUE: you. might oversleep F.nt: \. —THE EDITOR nion-bascule bridges • -went- up innis book'of verse" ashe is of any "wE,lce up-B. ciBo.er.'? | | or friendship. They are asking | The Labor Zionist Party is notWai drc!-Astoria. : jf an-' Cleveland, -with Strauss supervisof his bridges. Equally important 11. Do not push pecple into the |; Mrs. TTarburg,; who recently for your vote entirely on their j asking your vote because if i s , . . . _ . . , „ . . . . j It Anubis. the jackal-god to him is the training of Ameri- record of the past six years. I t ;• looking.for power. Although .they ; returned front _ .....to Europe, vrater; they m?.y not ^e Rule tn •< cieni Egypt, ^BS'pw.iooKeu uowu upon |ff 5r t construction at ;hi : own risk, 3 cient looked' down : .San Francisco from his distant ? h * railroad that wanted the can youth in the ideals of citizen- •was' just six years ago that the I received an overwhelming' major-"; Ea id that the J. D. C. » « ^ c , . « - ' swim. .Valhalla on May 2Sth when the span didn't believe it feasible, ship. He pioneered in this field Jews of the world placed control j ity two years Ego they did' not . i ng -f.500,000 cf its funds in the "11. ~T~.v. hsve TJr> busine?? ir. P r monumental $35,000,000 Golden Since then he .has. built nearly too, having founded .the; Amer- of 'the - Jewish World Congress' grab all the executive seats for : 'united - States fv^r placement • of EtcRil boat alone jf ypv; cs.~i.tiot .? Gate Bridge was throw* open to 1w50.0 -bridges, m every part of thecan Citizenship Foundation, of into the hands-of the Labor par- • themselves.' Of the seven places refugee ctil en, .professionals swim. However, vhen ;'cu r ? t \ orld traffic, he.tnust have shrieked | - tDAmong the principal, mon- -which he is president. ty. Four-rears ago and' two years .i on the executive they took but and ethers. [ into a bort, whetheY o~ v.ot rcr. ', ic, he.tnust. - . -hare :shrieked | • • -• ' "™°" to^ his Nowhere in th'e -world -will you ago'they again received the cup-j there and formed a coalition exe- •George-Backer, chairman of the1 are B ewimHier, step directly into e'1 g engineering g ggenius ^vith glee.at the sight of!the swas-'j a r e t t e ^ a bridge named for .Strausg, Ip o r t .01 Jewish people. It is i cutive with the other -parties. If New York campaign of the J. 3 .the center of It, Sit down and re- J ?5,000,000;; bridge over find tika, universal symbol of Jew-ha-i Of"the » _ _ "r" " . ~. r i port t n e jewion y^^tn^. •"• -*• 1 — — u „..»_» „ „ h b tred, fluttering In. the breeze] ^ Columbia Rivera at but neither: but neither is is there tnere any land iana in m Ijt hh ee }. _ r, ee cc oo rr dd rf^--{_. ^ . ^ ;•t they the themajority majority again again ,C - i appealed for assistance for the main seated. TClaen getting out oT * s i _ yyear e a r«. s o o f h e y r receive eceiTe f -^rfc the boat, take cold oj b-th iff.*; •the--world v 1 _ where - * _ , « . .a bridge v « H . _ built . h « m by w . . f o r t n. e. Jewish - _ . . Homeland _ . • that ' • • en-; -this v , year . v » will ^ m .again . , ; , give ^ r the t o i j ^ ^ a s h g t , the. e. longest g E l l r o p e a n C0UIltries Long.the festoons of all the al- SW Washington, they sides and walk ir. the center so as < er span in the world; .the.$12,through the J..3.-C. Other speakhim or with his;methodsdoesn I p of ev' other parties a voice on the exet I t l e s t h e m t ot h e SU port lies' national emblems' that decctai 1 cutive. In return for vnnr your vote vote ;e r s ^g-g Ea>,bi Morris S. L&E&rcn not to tip it. If the tost phoiUS I " " * ' « "i«nTi_nPnt-._Te can c a ngo so S ; - ". ^ - . _ ^ , _ _ t.h .i s.- c o m m u n U, tr_. .; :cu , f i«, T n » t r n .for as.hismonument.He r1 tiv orated. the, city. Eor that; bridge; 000,000 bridge tliat spans the St- stand promise to continue their , a n d M r S i - D a r i d E . Goidfarb. Mrs. carsize or tip c-'er, stcy with the •• 1 River. at- Montreal; r the an triumph 1iawrence an almost almost unbelievable unbelievable ,"-.. tnumpn r~ — — —, —r.—. - - - and^ltoost any place-in the ITnitcrisis ,en-i splendid work of the past two ; L e 0 S u , 1 z b e . - e r ' boat. ' :1 y c_. flre,_-tof VTK of man over nature, was "the work i Arlington Memorial Bridge over IS. Do not be just R average'< i States and be^ertain^to spot . d aann gered Jor^Pale They^prom| rZhuvf ^ a *'co~minion to g ^ r e d fte JJewisn e w i s h c cause a u s e l in n P ar l_. -| years E^tine. ^oun.c» _.uu uc v* "vu_"'.":*-r-.!-._, the ' j w » ^J.J. O « " = . . ^ J V of a Jew, Joseph B a e r i n a n ^ Potomac in- the nation's cape at least one bridge thar was con-| the! ise all their effort to open the; have her . portrait painted fcy'•• swimmer; take some instruction" c a nd h Strauss, perhaps the world's ! O^ T e r[ t^ l l e S^^riesaMne^bridge the River; of Palestine Btructed by y or by^the designs j p a s t , t w p .y e a r s h a v e been darfe ' gates ^ — *to our oppres-' Fritz "Werner, vrfco is donating and become a good swimmer. All j greatest living bridge tinilder: i over CChicago hicgo R v ; and the Btructedby^him greatest livingof the bridge . "bnilderl " ^ lifting " brethren - in European coun- his fee to the J. p. C. The porThe opening Golden Gate ! world's longest bridge, a t and methods he developed." But years for; the Jews over the __ , Bridge, containing the longest; S a u l t s t e - Marie ,in lUchigan. He t the _ trait will be hung in the T. "W. tire wpTid." Through all this per-j tries. .They, promise "to u e UGolden U 1 U C U u Gate a l c J )Bridge,.his l i U 6 . , . m o „ most t.'

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single span in t h e world, 4,200 fw a s a l s 0 the consulting.engineer recent achievement, will-stand as the »o acme of .his -contribution to. feet not only wrote finis to one ° nt h e George Washington Bridge *v>,io ,oontrihntin-n to m D «f of t h e marvel's of modern en-a c r ° s s the Hudson: and. the net-,engineering, unless he should o r i l a b t climaxed h e ca irineering{ but climaiedv tthe ca-1^ .^-of - bridges-built in -Newsome day bridge the Narrows ^be-

' ibd the Jewish cause in Palestine ;his work in behalf of the Jew-H A ^ t - ' V i r was"•• never ': allowed to falter. I n .ish —workers in Palestine._In short t h e ' p a s t two years the Arab ; they will again give their heart | ur • Michael Sol-omtm -Alexander,strikes aTose and it was thought | and soul ,to the . cause of j bom a Jew, was first Anglican that the^ disurbance would halt; Homeland. the work of the upbuilding of! No Jew to whom the cause of Bishop -of Jerusalem. Palestine. However, guided by! Zionism is dear should vote any

tween New; York and Staten Isreer of an inventive constfuction ' York Y° r k Harbor .for the Port, of New land or the Golden Horn-at Congenius who achieved "the anaAlthough .he was still' in hisstantinople. Such':, bridges are now chievable. " • . :, forties he was- a world-famous au- bridges are-nowj regarded ,as^ viso t h e r ticket but the Number Two |a e ^ ^ zionist zionist tt hh eeccaat tl lEEee ooII Strauss' parental Tiackground thority on movable..and fixed bridges are n o r g Ticket. For the reasons I have ' ul Hints and physique are anything but bridge designs, when, he was first ionary as a span across the Atlan-, withstood all the ia thig ^ ihe what one might expect to'find in i n«ase aesigna. ^yueu. lie «*= «.«.tic. But .Joseph,Baermann Strauss! j ; iya t h i g ^ ihe y \ m l r h e l dm o trhee i f g r o a B d b u t | i goi vse a t i fin engineer. His father was a j approached in 1917.; - with the specializes in converting specializes in converting the lm-\ , | j . •possible .and. the visionary i n t o ; vote-Sunday, June 2 0 th. you will i mlr h e l d t h e i f g r o a B d b u t ioTls a r t i c l e y o u o w e l h e I I 1 y o u r a d v a n c e d t h e c a u s e o f z 5 o 3 i s s l to portrait painter and his mother a!IBscheme to• bridge San .Francisco (Continued from page 5.1 $ td hay TnT1« nrsr^ u s you VOTI r** [i a polls, as you the .possible ibl dand th the ipractical. n r y into new heights. Not only did they I; vwgo t Sfu nthe Juneand 2 0 th will musician. In Cincinnati, where he Bay. ^- There> had been .talk of strong swimmer. If you are swimGolden Gate bridge :for. half a '( Copyright 1937 by Seven Arts noia 10 what WU-L they mcj had nau but ^«L 43 ^« j , ceive your ballot, consider the hold on to ming .a loEg distance in a large , born 67 years ago; no onecentury before . Strauss .;*tackled new settlements were esablisbed ; merits of all the parties on thebody : • Feature-Syndicate.) seth-er ou are expected much of Joe Strauss. He of water, the job. Up tq thai_time\no bridge and due to their courage and vi\ ballot, ask yourself which one of; expert, was a little fellow — even today engineer believed a span of more a beginner1 or sion they earned the respect offers the most for our Homeland. he is under five feet and weigha than a third of a-mile: could be be sccompsried Labor all the 'World by the buHding of \ Ask your heart and you mind for j she only 135 pounds r— to -whom phy- built, especially, across so treacha port at Tel Aviv. This wonder-: whom to vote and when you re-', (Continued'from page 4.) sically big men were heroes. But erous a course ^as the Golden ful work was described by TJ. S. \ view to yourself all theacts I ; h e past p a s t record r e c o r d of o f this t h i s "-party p a r t y tthat n a t i r u l w o r K w a s a e s c r i D e a D J U . O . : ••-•• —. whathe lacked in size and weight Gate. Even the'most you and many optimistic tthe he made up for in: courage. He advocates of this bridge believed is asking youf vofes.'For a per--J Senator Copeland as one of the j have just given. y>ad tisae to reof all time. j othersI.Iknow have not hyour decision •went but for the football team at that it would- costs-, hundreds of iod of two years; - from 1933 ' to i wonders read^. of late, T v-Tinw what h M i h i party t joined j i d 1 Surely'ail - - "-of --'you have -^ -»• jMate, *hat the University of Cincinnati, hut j millions of dollars,-if It -were at 1935 "theT'Mizrachl his teammates tho/ught it.would all possible. But Strauss not only with the revisionists and boycott- the bravery'of the Jewish Chalut- | of be fun to: use him for-a football. thought it possible but knew he ed every-Zionist fund. .They re- zim ;duri.ng_the days of the Arab invest Safety. 'And he ended up in the hospital could build it for less than 550,- fused any. aid in the cause of Pal* j terrorism." These brave members fWHI before playing in even a single"'comer-uua u IOTi e s s L U ^ ,_„,-estine during, the two: years-for j of theiabor Zionist Party xaafie : Same. It was Suring his convales- 000,000. And he did, in the face the -reason that;.the. Labor party-mewrpages: in history . by their *^- Annuity, EnSew er.t, S-rfe 5CN i IPf-i- cence that he determined to make |.°* almost insuperable natural ob-, had won "control' in the Zionist brave deeds, during those dark f K r r" the world forget his physical {."taele- and terrific opposition by executive. They -were willing to days'. __;• Each day they sacrificed Represents £1 Ctrs??j Compsn. I1 • Mms Wb handicap by doing something of business^and real estate interests, sacrifice, the entire Zionist move- their .livesrto..protect. Jewish, colus—Every Type ef trtsurance Tvhich even the - biggest of men One difficulty after another was ment, they, were willing to dstroy J onies a n d ; Jewish groves. X : t 2812 Leavenwcnh end eonds writitr™ Cat! A T - . ~-~,,i.i v= -.-rnwi .. met and conquered. The seem- the entire hopes for a homeland j only .those' groves where Je~i?h | ?657 or WA-E133, be proud. "•T™, ™ 'L , «t „• • ,1 . . . i ingly impossible task of financing - ' • -

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t e r i a . Two-years later he wash u s t r u c t u r e m a y oe obtained t a c k in Cincinnati teaching at h i s i| yi y aa ffew . the e w nfigures; the cables^are cables''are alma mater. But in 1895 he re-held in place by7 128r,000;0t)0 ; cided he. .TraB -""-"— - ; - - -not — - •cut - - out to be a pounds of concrete; the 5004 cell3 b asdde- o n w h i c h 7 4 6 . f o o t iigu- towera .: professor and he took a Job Signer and .squad ^boss with the s t a n d a r eh e l d t o g e t l i e r b y , o v e r •• Clucago Sanitary T>i8trlct Later 2>0o0,0o6 rivets; •so^OOo'mUe^ of .. spun into the ^two' lie joined ,JtalPn, Modjeski as an . - • •»•• 36^-- \-,i assistant . engineer. With this inch cables from -which the great l>ackgroun-d of practical experience he set u p his own engineering firm in -1904; and from-then on began to make engineering

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SEE YOUR DIALER Think of an electric refrigerator that uses no current &i zll • more thani>0% of the time! That builds up enough cold in just a fewininutes to^iasf almost an hour! Here's real full-powered refii«eia.tiQri.. ••snd operating economy, too. It's the new r Xitcken-proved V/estias^ouse—Kitchen-praved tinder actual I home conditions the .world over.;..• • . , ? , Reports from 89 KOMB Proving -Kitchens in s. test «srly in 1937 show that runmng'time of the mechanism STcrsged only 13.% — much less, than'two hours.out of twelve. Current , consumption also was remarkably • low;—averaging only 2/3 "kwh. per day, only 20. kilowatt .hours.'per month. A xemcrkabb record!... And' a -remarkable rcfrlgsrEtor, too! Come in and tzz the nsw Etchea-prowd Westinghouss!

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Miss Mary Daskovsky of Chica- is? What Js the permanent- sub- tees. The installation of officers' Columbia network for a full-hour j i go, visited in Sious • City this stratum of that trorld of actions will take place at the next meet- | .broadcast. Formerly week with friends and relatives. and appearances among which we Ing to be held Monday evening, '"~move? It is the originating and June 28. ami beard finrlEg the p creative soul of man which makes montfes on • Satarfiay signts, t&e; Word has been received here of things and can unmake them. It Sir. and Mrs. Abe Hosenberg new series -will continue ccrsrg; the birth of a son. to Mr. and Mrs. is that-soul which is drugged and had as their house -.guests last the Euraiaer TTSITS the Ferfi Sen- • WilHasn Wolf, of Austin, Minnes- confused by the clatter, of. the week end* Mr. and Mrs. A. Gins-I day Evening Hour takes its usual .'—>«.' ota; Mrs. Wolf is tho former things it has made today, and hasberg of Aberdeen, South Dakota; | -vacation from the airwaves. ; ~r*r- « Charlotte Rosenstock of Sioux become the tool of its tools and Mr. and Mr-9. V»r. Geller of St. Jo-i jPollovriEgr a pattern similar to i • City." . . . the slave of its devices and the

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seph, - Mo., and the Misses • Jerry j that which has jnsde the present; j -, ^

serf of its vain and outer argu- and Sally Rosenberg of Beverly [ series so popular, the sew edition i -c— Joseph Goldstein was elected Aleph Godol at the annual elecHills, California, who came to at-jo f "Universal Rhvtiai" will con- ^-s--.Mrs. Johanna Marx has return- ments. tion meeting of the A..Z. A. held ed'home after a two month stay turned within and listened to the tend the Finkelstein-Hosenberg j tinue to star Richard Base!!!,' thia week. lack Merlin was elect- in Chicago1 where she underwent turned within .an dlistened. to the wedding, Sunday, June 13 at the j favorite 'Met' baritone; Alee Tern-! ,_ _ ed Aleph S'gan; Toby Shlndler, an operation^ ' voice. you hear, you stop ar- Blackstone Hotel ia Omaha. The pletoa, blind English piano viz-.,. _ Aleph Mazker; Calmon Levich, guing. You will take upon your- Misses Jerry and Sally Rosenberg ard; Carolyn Urhs.net, soprano, ! , e <.<. -r. Aleph Gisbor; Myron Heeger, MlS3 Carolyn' Fishgall has re-self the shekel and the whole woe will remain for a two weeks' visit and R e s . Chandler's orchestra.;,, ,_„ ~r Sioux City Jewry will rote in Aleph Shotar Godol; Morris AI- turned to Sioux City from, Madis- of the Jewish people and the here. Augmenting this popular group- , r - r i __ the. Zionist elections this Sunday, z'enberg, Aleph • Shotar Koton; on" Wisconsin where she attended whole woe of the world "and you j will be featured chorus and guest j __"* ~ '_t June 20, at the same time that Dave TilevitzV Aleph Cohan- Go- the -University of Wisconsin. She will know the one thing needful I Rev. and Mrs. Z. Barkaiow istars.' ' ' • • -' ;c t . - - Jews throughout the United dol; and Sidney Kalin, ~ Aleph wilf'spend -the summer with her and do it. And you will be more i and "family, formerly'of "Chicago, j States will cast their ballots for Sbphir. ..'.' . parents, Mr.' and Mrs. H. Fish- traneffcil and more certain of have moved to 90S Seventh Ave-; Amatus Lusiiaims, a Iilars.no, \' representatives at the World yourself and the world. You will nue. Rev. .Barbakow is the Shoe- j was physician to Pope Julius Herman Rubini the retiring gall.' " Zionist Congress. " even have a better time. But "that! feet in Council Bluffs, and the president was elected Junior adPolls will be Bet up at the Jew- visor; Leon Dobrofsky, and Sam and j Kosher Meat Market is located at The Mizrachi Ticket ! Mrs. Sam- Pickus returned last is reward and'by-product ish Community Center, and shek- Epstein were re-elected senior ad- week • from New Orleans, where cannot be striven for . . . 737 West Broadway. {Continued from page 4.) j el holders may vote between the visors, as was Sam \Veiner. she .visted Vr'ith relatives. The ten minutea are over . . . Mrs. Max Cohn entertained the iJevrishfundamentals cf Sabbath j hours of 10 to 12 Jn the morning Jack Merlin,, was elected dele(Copyright-1937 By Seven'Arts and 3 to 6 in the afternoon. members- of her Afternoon Club ja n ^ dietary laws._ gate to the national convention at ; Feature Syndicate.) Mrs. N. Bailin and "children of A registered shekel: is the only Port Jervis, New- York. at luncheoa at her home at 3006 ) " ' ,w « M 4 t e ™!L. e « u , a l * p p v r e " ! Atkinson, Nebraska, are visiting credential that permits one . to The chapter voted a gift' of here-with Mrs. Bailin's'father, J. Avenue B, Tuesday* afternoon, ih e a s l o a t b a t t h e Histsdreth hzs . v i never fulfilled it promise to trans- ; - ' -' participate in the Zionist\.Con- money to the •United'Jewish Ap- H. Bolstcin. June 15. | -fern, its public kitchens into cUe— z gress' election. ;There will be four peal. -; ' • ' - . ' . r tickets to be voted this year; the About thirty guests attended a tary observance. This failure de-jshr^.^ . *" Miss Adeline Xaftalin of Fargo finitely proves its indifferent atj budget. General' Zionist ticket; the; MIzSmoker given by the Council North Dakota' is a guest here in of Jewish fCMi rachi, the Poale Zion and the HaBluffs Chapter No. 7 of the A. Z. titude toward Jewish sanctities, j 6. T i e aatier the home of "Miss Dorothy EpVv' e therefore demand that the j cation and dassah. . ' •' . j A. Monday evening. June 14, at stein.: Miss. Epstein returned this The local board in chage of the Miss Ruth Rifkin,. daughter of week from Minneapolis," where the borne of Abe Raben, 2115 Congress take every needed step! tine FT"-" election is composed of Mrs. Jack Mr. and Mrs. Mike Rifkin, >903 she-received- her. degree Monday Avenue D. Officers of the Oniaha to bring about k&shruth is these 1 gov^-rr. ^ It" r j " T. ~~e Robinson, Mr* Max Mason,, Mr. R., South Paxton street, will.become from the University of-Minnesota. A. Z. A. Chapter No. 1 and Cen-kitches. TOTIXG SUNDAY " , S. The same change must be &sj borp-r ^ tury Chapter were guests of the Voting for tlje twentieth. World H, Emlein, and Miss Ruth Grue- t h e b r i d e o j S a m u e i E . Epstein,.. guests s u r e d i a all the Institutions s-sd ' won.s-. ^v ckin. son of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Epstein, :. Miss AnnabeHa, Emlein' visited Zionist Congres- will take .place local chapter, honored '3423 Correetlonvllle road, this in •Mitchell,, ..South, Dakota last in Council Bluffs Sunday, June were four new members who are i colonies being supported by the i serr,esi; t Sunday afternoon,' at 5:30 o'clock week- with, her brother-in-law-and 20, at the Chevra B'nai Yisroel George Brown.^Jale Gotsdiner, Keren Kayeneth and Keren Hay-| ' s ' f. esod. This demand also applies! - ~' synagogue at 618 Mynster Street. Robert Passer, and Harold Bernin the Shaare Zion Synagogue. sister, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Kalin. Polling will take place from nine stein. Card games furnished the • to all Zionist Hachsharah groups ji P 1 " ^ "'"' /J ~*'~ , ' r'" Rabbi H. R. Rabinowitz and Cani ^ ^ ' C v . •'.- ,-i.l,. "Y-. " ' " „ " . tor A. Pllskin will officiate at the ; Miss Sadie Shulkin and* Miss o'clock in the morning until five diversion for the evening. The I ia the diaspora. / Miss' Florence Lohrmann .who ceremony. » : Besg Lipshulz . departed . .Sunday o'clock ; in".the afternoon.. .Mrs. committee ia charge of this affair 4. The law whieh determines I E I l i ". f " r " ' '"",' *• r . '.V. C-r was elected president of the JunThe bride will wear a gown of evening for Los.Angeles, Califor- Herman Marowitz Is chairman in were Joe Pertautter and Irving; the character cf the : pcharge of the voting and she is ior Hadassah chapter at their an- white net with a long train. The nia, where .they will spend the Cohen. Plans were discussed - for | system .according to the desires being assisted by the following the coming A. Z. A. regional of the majority of parents ia any j nual election held laast week is dress will be self trimmed with usmmer months visiting. board: Louis H. Katelman, O. tournament to be sponsored by locality, should be abrogated. Vv'e co-chairman of t h e Summer rows of shirring and caught" at is re1 r" '" r ~ J -? Dance, which is being sponsored the throat with two clusters of Milton Taxer, of Sioux City, is Hochman, Sam Sacks, Mrs. Mor-the local chapter on August 7, Sdemand that proper religions ] to - . : / ' " . j schools be established wherever by the Junior Hadassah next pearls. Her veil will fall from a on'e of.26 Iowa State college stu- ris Grossman, and Mrs. Abe Bear. and 9. If. T T r c r^-^^*" Tuesday evening, June _22. The' halo head dress and will-be fin- dents, who left, this week for All members who have their Shej there is any request whatsoever reopened fc" TZ< ^" cclrr T- Uor kkels are urged to come to the dance will be given at Shoreacre, gertip length. She will carry an Rainy Lake, Minnesota, to attend Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lee of Los for this type of instruction. j beginning at 9 o'clock and Tom- arm, bouquet of talisman roses. will leave! 5. Hapoel Haraizrachi crust be Iby a; six. week civil engineering polls and vote Sunday. Five tic- Angeles, California kets will be marked on the ballot : my Hart's orchestra will play for ..';,' Sunday for. their home following J accorded the same privileges as J o ^1 3 . Miss Dorothy Epstein, sister of camp.. • and the Hadassah ticket will be a ten day visit here at the home j dancing. Miss Saretta Krigsten, the groom will be maid of honor the Histadruth, with regard t o ! who. was elected first vice presi- and will wear -a; frock of. aqua . Norman Brodkey, who attends Ticket No. 5. The Zionist Con- of Dr. and Mrs. Oscar Greenberg. j colonization by the Jewish Na-| gress will be held in Switzerland dent of the chapter. Is co-chair- marine net. She will carry a nose- the Northern Illinois College of Sirs. Lee is a sister to Mrs. Green- j tiosal Fund and public - worts | beginning August third and will man with Miss Lohrmann. Pro- s a y of mixed flowers. Ernest Ep- Optometry, has returned for themark the fortieth anniversary of berg. Numerous affair were given ' carried en by generous Zionist j ceeds from the dance .will go tow-1 stein will be groomsman. Other summer months with-his par- the Zionist movement. Everyone in their honor during their stay ard the Hadassah projects in Pal- attendants will be Mr. and Mrs.ents,: Mr. and .Mrs. John Brod- is urged to vote for their dele- here. . i 6. Vv'e favor organised labor in Ir a c v ; ; s ; estine. j Abe Stein of Omaha, and Dr. and key, 3244 Jackson street. I Palestine, as a mear.5 of prevent- ! gates to the Congress. :. Miss Rose Sperling was elect- Mrs. Frank Epstein. Mrs. Stein Mr.'and Mrs. Simon Steinberg jl B g . low V £ g e S j l o s g t o u r S t ^ g i ed second vice president, Miss will wear a peach net dress and Harley Rivin of Tyndall, South and daughter, Miss Helen Stein- j K n f a v o r a ^ i e l a -b o r conditions. But i i:. Nell Sinlkin, secretary, and Miss Mrs. Epstein, pink net. Little Dakota, is in Sioux City visiting Among those who are planning berg, departed last Wednes- :w e d e i n a n d - n c u t r a l connnissian,! Ida . Cohen, treasurer. Board Miss Rivoli -Agranoff, to attend the National Grocers' wearing with relatives. , day on an eastern motor trip t o , ^ y ^ s l l a U a p P O r tioa labor in an! . members elected are Miss Connie aqua marine organdy will be the Convention -at Boston, Mass. be gone about three weeks. They! q itable manner among the var-{ "i<J " e U Saitlin, Miss Ruth Grueskin, Miss flower girl and Master Roger starting Sunday, June 20, are will visit relatives in Philadel-. ^ organizations, and i o u s o r k ers Rosalie Sacks.and Miss Bluma singer, wlil: be the ring bearer. Mr. and Mrs .Nathan. Nogg, Mr. NC I Olensky. and .Mrs. Sam Roffman, Mr. andphia, New York City, Boston, and t h U 3 p - e T e 2 t i nt ralabor strife. ! Mrs.'Dave'Hi Shulkin will sing (Continued from "paga. 1) Elkins, West Virginia. While In executive must create a j 7 The Mrs. Simon Steinberg, and Mes"I Love: You Truly" accompanied ~~ : - Boston, they will attend the Na- p e c i a i department for the mid- j at the piano by Miss Libble Olen- Ion; immediacy . . . T w o hundred srs. M. Bernstein, Sam Steinberg, tional Grocers' Convention . nest sdie class, in order to aid those sky\ and the wedding inarch and thousand shekolim at most have Herman Meyerson, Max Steinberg week. middle class Jews who have been j ,^J taken In America. Why not and Sara Meyersoh. recessional. Trill be played by MIsa been drives * pis.ee ' """ ' Tl "" nai : H _.. from .their econo; so Olensky and Miss Jean Shindler, a million? Because men have Mr. and Sirs. Harry Schlessing- > i a t h e l a E d s cf exile, so teat the; stopped to argue, to palaver, to r Dr. Louis Dimsdale was elected v i o l i n i s t . • '•;• • -"• The Council Bluffs. Lodge No. er and Mrs. D. Earnett of Des a v b e F r o p e r ] j - fitted in to th president of the B'oai B'rith / A wedding dinner in the social put themselves and their mech- 688 of the B'nai Brith held its Moines, Iowa spent the past week. rm inanstrial life a g r i c t .5 t 5 1 r a l E : i d lodge, to succeed Edwin W. Ba-hall of the synagogue for the rel- anical opinions forward. teref - t r annual election of officers Mon- end here visiting at the home of «.» ; Palestine. of A— I ron, retiring president. Dave Al- atives and intimate friends of the have. not listened to the voice day evening, June 14, at the Mr. and Sirs. Herniaa Marowitz. ECtlC1' t V c bert was elected vice president; couple will follow the ceremony, within which is also the voice of Eagle Hall. Mr. Nathan Gilin- While here, they attended the ^ S. The national education sys- she f in Palestine must be concf a 10- J Sam Epstein, recording secretary: arid a reception-and dance will be the fatal march of history; they sky was re-elected president for wedding of Miss Sena Rosenberg ntem e c t e d in the spirit of traditional Dr.-Milton Idzal,- .corresponding given In the social hall at,8:30 have drowned out the still smallthe coming year. Other officers of Hastings to Mr. Louis Tinkel- JudaiEis. Every otter system not secretary. ' - • - . ' "" . • o'clock. After a : wedding trip to voice within with the roar of ma- chosen were Millard H. Krasne, stein of Lincoln, which took place based ca Israels religious tradiv vice president; Leon Frankel, re- Sunday afternoon, June 13, at tion, shall .be adjudged a private whic ' Edwin Baron was named mon- the Black Hills,; Mr. Epstein and chines, debates, ratiocinations. itor, Dave Shulkin, and Nathan his bride will make their home in A very friendly and learned cordiiig secretary; Al Fox, finan- tb.3 Hotel Blackstoae in Omaha, j enterprise, &nd shall not be en- "YC ;• that < = the Ida Apartments. ' ' . and distinguished critic wrote of cial. secretary; Louis H. KatelGorchow, warden. titled to support from general the 7 Dr. Julius M. Elected to the board of trusGuests from out-of-town at the something I had written the oth- man, treasurer; Mr. and Mrs. Sara Lincoln ea-j Zionist funds. EP.d r ! tees were Hyman Flshgall, Sam wedding will be Mr. and Mrs. Joe ,ed day,: that of such matters he Moskovitz, monitor; Dr.- Isaac tertained twenty-five guests at 9. We demand that in the genjSohen, and Louis J, Kaplan. | Gralnlk, of Fort Dodge; Miss Ad- was no judge, seeing t h a t h e was Sternhill, assistant monitor; Sam their home at 916 — Twenty- eral education budget tbere shall j aline Naftalia of ' Fargo, North bound to the realities of what has Sacks, guardian; and Messrs. third Avenue Sunday _ evening, £ l s o b e i a c j u g e a the yeshivoth Aaro' r Dakota; Mrs. . William- Fusske, been and is. But what is the back- Morris Grossman and S. Shyken, June 13. Bridge was the .even- j&nd TalmuddTo: Injuries Prove Fatal .s in is. the Holy t i o r . T <•• Torahs furl h^- r Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. L. Silver ground within of all that was and and Dr. Oscar Greenberg, as trus- ing's diversion followed by a mid- ^ a c i . of y.<1 i' Funeral service for Jacob A. of Laurel, Nebraska; Mr., and night supper.- Honored guest was j 10 _ ^ - e faror a coalition execu- Sons "Pickus, of Walthill, Nebraska; Mrs. M. Lasher of Dakota City, Mrs. Lincoln's sister,' Mrs. - Joe j t i r e in v l 3 j c l l a U recognised Z-ioa- debtp I AT SUNRISE:, EMPTY WASTELAND/ were held Sunday morning at Nebraska; Mr. and Mrs. I, BlumLazarus of Omaha, who Is leav- ' ist parties shall have' equal repre- Fere- "t hold «rs 1 Mount Sinai Temple, with Rabbi l'!n. Mrsv C. Gerelikr Mrs. Harry ing shortly for Sweetwater,- Tex- sentation. "* fler c C ' .Theodore" N. Lewis officiating. Fellman, Mrs. L. E. Fellman, Mr. as to reside. 11/ Vve ask that the budget of and Mrs. Simon Gerellk, all of Mr. Pickus, who was;62 years old the Jewish Agency also cover the I5"tfc , : vras injured the previous Tues- Omaha; Mr. Morris Holland,, MilThe Council Bluffs Senior .Ha- religious needs cf the land, such A. I I . h t the the day, when a train struck .the carwaukee; Mr. and Mrs. Sid Spatts dassah held a luncheon at |£ S ra}jjjiSr saoc htina, ritual baths you 1 ° of Iowa City-and Miss Delia Izen cr fc -1 he was driving. H Hotel Chieftain Wednesday a f t e r - j a n d o t h e r important religious es- a t 12 " c of Ashville, North Carolina. Surviving Mr, Pickua are his noon, June 16, when the new of- sentials in the settlements. be e" widow; two daughters, Sara, Miss Rirkin has been honored ficers were installed for the com- 12. Jewish labor, the most lin- s u c Mr. E. Cooper, princiHelen and Louise;" three broth- at a number of parties this week ing term. Mr. E. sjooper, p n a a - portant element in the physical " l-, , p.rs, Sam G. Pickua, Sioux City at- and was the inspiration for a one pal of the Talmud Torah, was the j rebuilding of the land, must betorney, Joseph Pickus of Chicago, o'clock luncheon Tuesday in the guest speaker. He spoke on the ..c o l n e a controlling factor in Pal- a u nnd Herman Pickua of St. Louis: Davidson Tea Room when Mrs.' '• voting of the Shekels . for the estiae's Jewish life. and six Bister, Mrs. Mite Skalov- Dave H. Bhulkih was her hostess. World Congress nest Sunday, and IS. "We condemn without re- fi-4-"--" sky, Mrs. Morris Skalovsky and Wednesday noon, Mrs. Meyer .Eph member b tto j g e r v e every type of. speculation urged every Ha&assah Mrs. A. D. Horwitz, all of Sioux stein, Mrs.. Jack Lassman,' and use her shekel and vote. Reports ji a gretz Yisrael and demand that City; Mrs. L. Chernua of St. Mrs. Leon Shulkin entertained at of the Southwestern Regional | a u necessary steps be ' taken at Louis, Mrs. Mandelstam ot Balti- a luncheon at'ScrlbblnB" MapleConvention were given by Mrs. j o - E s t o combat this evil. more, and. Mrs. F. Levy of St.lawn In her honor, and WednesRichard Gordon, Mrs. Morris | %0 ^he British Gcreratscst Paul, Minnesota. • day evening, Sophie and Tillle Grossman, Mrs. Saul Suvalsky 1 j -^- es jj a u C pp 0 S 9 -^th all our Franklin gave a steak \fry at and Mrs. Harry Cherniss, who at- | power every attetnpt by the BritSouth. Ravine as a courtesy to tended the convention at St.; jsjj povernm-ent to eivide the Mr. Epstein- and .his fiancee. •VJA7 SUNSET: MOD£RW PIONEER 5ETTLSMENT/jg Louis, Missouri recently. ^ Tber ( Hcly I.r.r.d irto cr-!;:-* cr; r. r r r This afternoon... Mrs. Abe Stein discussed the next eonventicn. to j other form. V o fhr.Il oppose -r-^th of Omaha will entertain , at a 1 be held ia Ccuncil Bluffs in IOCS. o'clock" luncheon in tpe Oasis Mrs. Albert ICrasne was prcgrcn it'.: r~--' honoring Miss Rifkin. chairman for the past year, "r",. Herman Marowits and Mrs. Ea~« Beginning the second week of Gross were-co-chairmen in clarrs the campaign for the United Jew-i Announcement1 haa been made of. the luncheon, and were ar 5f,h Apjpeal here, more than twb-!i h !? ^eek by Mr. and Mrs. M. by Mrs. L. Cherniacfe and : : r thirds of the §10,000 quota" hasj Fish, 1815 Center streets of the Samuel"H. "Katelman. .- • been raised, according to Mr. J. marriage of .their daughter, MIsa L. Levitt, general chairman of Edith Fish, to Leon Goldsmith, '• AU new3 items for this colu the drive, and the balance is es-on May 14. Should be phoned in to P. R. Both Mr. Goldsmith -and" his pected to be pledged within the before five o'clock each. Tues-lay bride are enrolled' as students at next few days. | afternoon in order to assure pj.^the University of Iowa, Iowa City The committees working on the j lieatioa in the current is.£-s cC drive .have expressed a deep satPhone 4-101 or . Mrs. Sol Seff returned to her the Jewish Pres isfaction with the co-operation S50. . they are receiving from the Sioux homo in Oak Park, Illiiois, SunCityVJewo, and the eager response day evening,; after a , two v.-eeli Tisit here with -her parents. Mr. to the solicitations. "UNIVERSAL Mr-.A. M>. Davis and Mr. E. E.and Mrn. A. Greenberg. , -. •• BEGlim_ HEW-. SERIES Baroa who ara "heaping the iaRudy Shindler -Rill-leave for dividual gif^s committeo plan to coiapleto their work during the Chicago this week, to-make M< (a complete home In Chicago, He will be as' J""' next sociated there with a wholesale up meeting will be held.

Society News

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NOTICE 1 f- estate Samuel

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patronise Our Advertisers

with -friends.

above photographs, taken on ilarch 21st. 1937, tell the p. -^ story of-ivhat transpires on nationally redeemed soil. Note"the | | Ain Hakoreli village v.-hich was completed between su'.irire .ind U ".unset. fTho tall structure is a Wai eh Tower sukable for de-j> feiisfe"purposes as well . . .) 'J Within the past twenty months, eighteen new settlement? were established on the lands of the Jewish Nations! 'Firnd which is about to or>en a new zone under the slocan 'Hacalilrl (To Galilee!)

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jewelry concern. ~"

Mrs. Fred" Foreman o£ Madison, The Youns Juiifccn Carnival South Dakota is in" Sious City hold Tuesday ovciiins In the eo-this week visiting v.-ith relatives. cio.1 hall o" Shr.:iro Zlon attracted Mrs. Fred Sherman returned :i Izv^e tiurabe* of people and P.. financial 3uccer:r\ The from Council Bluffs this v,-ee!i, i procee vrillfeeciven toward the where one visited with friends and relatives. Miss Eernlce Rier.Youns Juucan fjnota ot the Jew- man o£ Council Bluffs returned ish National Fund, with her and spent Sunday here

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