July 23, 1937

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u an article entitled Democracy." unreservedly the their faith and "the-. Dr. Morrison warm & icracy they have "no-l Ive the.ir faith' from sluences of the dem!g by insulating.it alia of a recial and rity." Holding' that of the Jewish proJew's immemorial ous obsession with he illusion that his iple, are tbe object v favor of God, who j laintenance of their J and separateness [urn which, soon or performed some tvolving human des-

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views expressed' by Lndg l«ewisoha in his column are his own and do not aeces^ earily reflect the policies or at-' titnde of our 'publication. • Reproduction in isrhola or in part strictly: forbidden.

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ture and essence. It 0 be a compromise. For a compromise sets of interests one ose interests as'they real nature "and - not tolerably falsifying

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liYCE CRA"WT0TU5. "" Connty Judge. MADERr u |£N, Attorneys Jia National Bank , ifeby given that t h e tinJa - fornted a. ctjrnoratlon e Iaw3 of thei State of name of .tbe corpo?a,_ Mquor Company, with pace of business in OmaThe : objects -for.-orhich .1 is formed', are to ~buy, abate at ,-tetail: any .and Iverases.-and.liguQr: and lease/: tire, and otherreal • and " personal> w > y kind and. description soose.- of. 'lease, convey, v a n r -and- all oT-Bald, borrow, money. and_ to isecessarv to-B.ccoTnp»iFii for -w-hlch this-corporaIsed.- The total aulhpr, lock 'of- the corporation fr -value $100-per" shard, Imon, arid "snail be f uliy fs-aasessable" and such ». issued for cash, goods. ilerchandise, good-will o r ' jtion of the - same.' The itfaH-- cpminence business ing of Its articles with fterlc of Douglas County. | d shall. continue until . ST.- The higftest amount jsa shall not exreed 2 /3 f|l stock. The affairs of !>n Khali be admlnisterpd f "directors consisting, .of and not more than 5 tfie by-laws; , -The factors shall-elect a. prer' secretary..and

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The Oz3.£ha. Lodge of SES.I B'rith will h e l d - s snecial meet-! ing on Monday evening, Uly 26,]

Palistrn'e'ay tlii'ttirn- i Jewish. history. • It j carried out between Turkey I voices the"hope that the proposed ; tbe- Aneriem-' Jewish- JOIJU. "£>is-; ^ former counsel to Franklin D. X.*1. T<,^rt.st a tfl will jtributioa asd ' t i s , and Greece.. " • 1 Roosevelt when:: the latter was Morris.. Eotbenberg, n o t e d Jewish-State will be'-ealsrced.-• be-enlarged. . • CcsiTEittee + Reason two: Britain has not governor of New York- .Repre-! American Jewish leader ' a n d Poland liets Xcw -Sknsists Wave \ ORT have agreed ifl cooruiB&'.ei "taken every opportunity . of enEHenbosen. of ] Prominent New York lawyer, w a s Elacfe FUs • • • • I their-facili.ties. for Jewish j^ro^Ssentative Henry couraging co-operation Therefore between,i Pittsburgh; and Dr. Samuel M'ar- appointed to "the New York Bench -Warsaw (JTA)—TV i t h the ; siosal .training in Vote. d. u? " Arabs and Jews.' of .Polish, authorities,; The agreement vas of know-1 sosb.es, chairman of the Congress this week by Mayor Fiorello H. "Rritain has no means «•• • . _ fng as she now decides, that committee onpointed Poland.: Mr. Fertig out that the there is "an irreconcilable conentire Jewish community of this flict!" Between the. two parties, eluding Dr. Stephen Wise, j ious towns in Poland July IS and Mr. Xeustsdt of the .1. D. C.,\ K 'C-"F and ' Leo Brams&n. Mr. Meisner, to a conflict that is adjudged country is stricken with anguish Judge.Julian W. Mack and Felix (Tisha B'Ah),against Great Britas a result of daily letters re• irreconcilable there must be some Mr. Herz-1 Mr. ain's plan to partition Palestine M. Warburg. . .measure of moral equality. But ceived from Poland describing Messages • from many promin- between Jews and Arabs. i Britain has yielded: not even to the disastrous jplight of their felBr. Kshn" stated tbat the J. D. j i t z- :€,„ v Dr. Mar- ent leaders and-Jewish commuC., without ismorJTis the work political terrorism, such as. that- low-Jews in Poland. nities throughout' the country, the Jewish ColonijatioTi Assacia- •• t : of the old Russian Nihilists, but goshes expressed the hope that S o l L e w i s M o v e s ••• tion Association/and other organ-' ^*_,_.,*~1 " ^ ^ p - - " ' ' to' mere .gangsterism—to assas- the United States would follow were received felicitating Judge izations in the sphere of profes- ; \ -'l ^ '_* J^^ '\. 'sins of women and children, to its traditional policy as the cham- Rothenberg upon his > appointEioisal training, wo*aW in the ' s - j " ^ " ~SV\ highwaymen and thieves. A stern pion of human rights wherever ment and paying tribute to his Sol Lewis, for many years cue ; fare cooperate with the OUT 1n!j^*-'-<E •" *"'"~~ y *""* repression of crime and a--decade oppression occurs and Represen- ability, and civic and commercial E r informed Sec- leadership during the past decade of Omaha's, prominent dealers in : all plans regarding t h e establish- j ^_ r '^~^"7\ " ".*" " . t a t i e Ellenbogen g of political education of the Pair tative iCiC electrical appliances, today movi and a.half. mpnt of new training' centers 3 " n j " i . c j hl the j retary Hull that the overwhelmJudge Rothenberg was named ed from his former location at j P o l a n d . r n r : I td i , ; if"_5": ' . _"' 20tc and Faraam to nsw ijuart-; .< r true judgment concerning -tte j in favor ol United States_govern- for a lull ten-year term and will I T h e J. D. C. also tmcertsikes,:'" ers ©a the southwest corner " * ! take his seat in the Magistrates ^character-of the conflict. Let. us i ^ e n t _interven«on^in . M i l of | i s said, thgt' existing- • trajnia?:; ISta and Farnam^stfeeta. character of the The Court. " „ _ ! schools it ETibsidizes wcrk in -At The appointment. of Judge C --'. At tthis i "new location^^ 1801 t ar- : f t n r e fafa ccl loogg??ggt t ccoon nt at -a cc tt _ . ,t t hh t tl l33ee ; remember these two reasons that persecuted Polish Jewry render the report Rothenberg was hailed by leaders nam street, Mr. Lewis, -who -as ; O R _ , _ K e - 3 r d i l l E agricultural End s \ c - . c : Wise expressed the view that as of 4he Royal memorandum submxued byr Commission false to t i e very taken a long-term lease, will b 'industrial a v e " tra|cir.g, only consults-j > " v- *-••• core despite its elegance of style American citizens- they had a as a boon to the city judicial sys: ' ~-~~~ " gestures of right to petition our government tem who pointed out that the more floor space to-display BIS tions snd -ratitrial- exchange of in-| 'and self-satisfied in the interests of- Polish Jewry high qualities of leadership of complete line of General. Electric \ formation will be carried oa forjeo. ' i ' c llgh-miridedness. ' the present "in view of recognised principles! judgment which he manifested ia j appliances. i Let us now turn to the his services to Jewish causes and > During 200:r'-r -? g his business career. _ ^ ^ ^ ^ „„„„___„ „. _ nnb'Jceed _lat also j Accompli. We are offered a ter- of iniernational law and the his services to Jewish causes and i h d many O l n a " ; relief committees has furnished, hare been or-'-a-': 8 'Titqry of 2,500 square miles. ^Jn- usages ,which: have Ions, been es- his legal practice, as well as his Lewis : ! devotion to liberalism eminently ha Jewish' homes with neeessaTy, c a n - . e S t a r 0 T I £ r h O T l t p c ianrl to E ; S F - • - r " among civilized na^ - l e s s Britain desires to force us tablished T T. equip him for a distinguished equipment, and his ever-iscr«BS- ; T ; c t 5 m g G . - t t " grzesc' (Brest-Lit-i into' a permanent irrederitism tions." career on the bench. ing clientele testify to his- excel- : 0 T _ f e ) p o C T O S 1 > Jewish "ecoaot ^ 6he Will have to add-at least. (1) Judge Rothenberg, who is lent service ana. quality mercaaa- organizatlons have established 45 member of the law firm of Telsy, dise. ! relief bodies, it was staled. T.-I have built, (2) the greater Rothenberg and Young, has been lore than 1,110 'sufferers ia part of Kegeb, withheld for, no o prominently identified with nai the excesses have beea 'officially Reason at all, (3) our existent for_ more ••IMV- *F""/r*»*!f ""nf^r ITTC •' registered, accc-rding to the -i-cr ;i Meyer Horn, 74, for thirty-five tional Jewish affairs . Trans-Jordanian colonies. If, we TO JtWlSti. I i d f i l l J 2>; t r a l relief committee, a n d " 550 her these mini- jT e a r 3 associated with .Paston and [than fifteen years. During the j '- • " •• i Jewish families have tens far reshall have I Gallagher,-'-died Saturday night of j period in which he served . as w e mum . ..._—I . .-- . i-t.i .a c,/ [President of tha Zionist Organi^ Funeral services ser P r a g u e (WNS)—Dr. Ednard ceived assistance. a. territory at Uation of America, and in his sc- Benes, president of t h e Republic i ? " ' T • he ia-Monday' afternoon area 3,000 , square-miles—an wereJewishFuneral Home with tivities as a National Chairman of Cseclioslova"feia, has'-.'become' 1 the of Plightly larger larger -than the area HEAVT CONTRIBUTORS j riishtly -tha -hirial in Golden Hill Cemetefs. | of the United Palestine Appeal he godfather to triplets born to Mr. Delaware or about one-fourth of has visited many • • communities and Mrs. Leib- Hersakevits, Pallbearers were: Hyman l e r a •JOZGREEK AIR FLEET.\ the area of Belgium. What cap j . p o __ couple in a Carpatfco-Rcso r _ w ^ e do with that? What • will er John' Rosenblatt. Mose Kras- and brought his influenle to bear nt of American s i a n t 0 ^ h ; np' Michael Krasne. Lawrence i in the development Athens (!?TNTS) —Coatrifcutioss • •'-'-' support* * - - the. rebuilding of for Dr. Benes consented to be jrod•The land has no •mineTal[ Krag•* j ie> ' and'.Al Wohlner. •v by Eer! father after the ptcx:d -. father.' Honorary pallbearers included Palestine. h e a l t h of any. kind." It is far tobac-co merchant, Several weeks ago Judge R o t h - J w h o i B . a coachman,- had informed s , ^ * _ - l ^ ^ ' from'• infertile •• but by no means Harry" Wolf. Paul Gallagher, R. _ssy. b~ Elijah Nac5-i rich Yet I do not doubt but that E. Winkelissn, Fred Dascher, F. enberg was re-elected Chairman | t h e - p r e s i d e n t o f the birth or the ' " " " ' JeTrish' sClaier, s day's ': of tne Administrative .Committee {triplets. Mrs. Benes has t " Jewish intelligence and devotion, E. PeaTce, and Abe GpldsteJn.^ - \ mfeg>bya many Jewish workers em- ; pay of the Zionist Organisat|on of js t e p s t 0 p r o T i d e f o r t l 3 e " skill and patience will do the i phasized thB. heavy participatic-a ; Anierica. He is also co-chairman j ; of the children. ! ot Jews ia the nation-wide drive ; of the Council of tbe Jewish I I to raise funds for "'tfce'Greek sip- j Agency for Palestine. - ' ' •' *|. IS 1 5 i r S a population ol.'---«30). jer-j MS JEWISH In tbe course of the ceremony j'. The of,l ..Directors of theAn equal density jj cciuare mile. The Board Boa 'during which Judge Rothenberg | P O E T '.FOE a'mST i of population 3ffould make'it ^os- E e l n . E i •A'usliiary:'discUssed their was ^sworn in, he gaid Be : - y a s | r~~": : slble for our state to hold nearly j p r o g r a t n >: for the coming year at grateful for the" opportshitT the i Tel Aviv (WXS-Palcc-r . AEenWedI two millions of -people. But sups, j a breakfast meeting held for]cy)— Another mile - stcisa . ia the that by,supreme efforts ^re |. negtjay morning at Elmwood appointment . offered.. him pose public service and., "particularly •> bnildiis ot the .first Jewish -port | two'-thousand .years "was isark- ; Te! of ipfondi.that it •• came-. •'.-from the; [ ; ob.Blank, JaC | greatest Mayor .and. a .torsmost |ed'wheii ships -broTight tiiffiir.xr.; ];.>>• A^iliary, .. asked ;.; tl^rtV-all the densitr {oron?iWstate th ]> ^ seo hetses'-c-i:3 liberal iigars of oar generation." I to ill® Tel AT IT port instead cf " population of, the Belgian prof- members retain their posts* tor the isortJiera Ti-VA Judge Rothenberg- saia. .at j Jaffa,, the Arab'.port nearbrA d Brabant j jnces of rP a we tould - 8nJSort^ta-;- Uic-|T*";nr;" major fund-raisins . pro-j Ins ; interest J n thB ^causs _cf : PalJewish port. d- iestine.and the. Jewish causa ' of "three-;-SiilHons i;jectis--were,•''decided" upon is on: -tbs assumed ". 3.000 .'sq.uar That- ia tbe"..-ut"most,.;and Ch to conjecture-.so.- is to• conjecture

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BEMES GODFATHER

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3,-1337. J '"•"" •" '":• * S J. CHRISTOPHER, (XA CHItlSTOPHKR. Incorpnra t orn.

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-,. LEVIN, Atty.J ela Thcatro. .Bldg.•'_ATE NOTlCEv" •'.'.•: r of tha- Estate pi- Sam ereby .-given--that'-the Id deceased--will meet . Jx. of said estate, bety Judge'.-. of JJouglaa ska, at .the'; 'Cbunty n said Countr. .on the jgust. 1937, and on tiro , tobeiv 1337, at: 3 o'clock by, for the purpose ,ot "'r claims lor ersmina^ it and allowance. Three lowed for the creditors ;r claims, from the 23rd

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Palrings»for the annual cham[ in. the.lodge rooms of the Jewish j .JBSY7 CL¥3 pionship tournament at the HighCommunity C e n t e r s.t ° S : 1 5 ! leld ia CC Jewish Delefatibn Is Eeceived land Country club were announci o'clock. ' ! of .iifc£'ltl«*;s» 2; Fiirst ed Wednesday by the Club Pro, by Secretary of ! I t - i s not''customary for the - -The.open meeting and installaBill Schuehart. I •"••"""•.• " S t a t e • . " . . • • ' i I.odg-8 to hold a meeting during A. H. Brodkey, defending cham- tion of officers of the Oiaaha Hefor this! To. celebrate tbe.final week of ! the s u n n i e r months but due to Washington, D. C. (WNS)— pion, was the low qualifier. Ac- bre'w'.Club scheduled The cables- forecasts of the , , Expressing deep sympathy ,-with cording to most observers the Sunday has again been'postponed. | s first period Csiap Akiba held i t ..h e Talcor Agency have proved to be Elravood i » a = T - t a r o r t s B t . matters of the plight of Polish Jewry, Sec- battle will be between Brodkey The meeting is to take place ca : an ail day outing at correct. . The- published report of . p i c n j e | business t l i t t here B.nsen this last Tliursfls retary of State Huir promised a and Richard Hiller, 1935. cham- Sunday,.August 1. at 3:30 in the |P a r t the Royal Commission bears them lodge room of the Jewish" Com-iIancb.es were brought from home j special meeting is beingcalled by , delegation of* the American Jew- pion. out. That report is "written in | by tbe campers EE3 milk and ice I Karry B Cohen, vice president to make'., the best Two rounds of the tournament munlty Center. the grave and humane style of , cream was furnished by the j i a t h e E b £ e a c e c f P r e s i d e n t J u l . , possible use of. the data-supplied are to be played by Sunday night. . the Great English state papers. him i n a memoYandum which the The championship match is exIts authors felt. 4hai . they were The morning WES- taken up j l l i B -fc^siio. i group, headed by Dr.. Stephen S. pected to take place two weeks creating justice -with a magnaini'•Fith a .'number of corapetitions. I ' All ' B'n'ai' 3'rlih E"-1"—r -r » Wise, president of the Congress, from Sunday. mous. vision. They praise our ."1211CS Cohn won .tae hundred- | urged to" attend. Mat f"1 d ^ z± left "With, him'after an audience Pairings: "Yishub in no ignoble terms. They. rard dash-with Korraan • Eevits | importance .to the l o ^ v . , ec at the State Department. CHAMPIOXSHIP FlilGHT "are doubtless convinced that rscosd and Selwin Snvalsky i A. H. Brodkey vs. Harold Spear. The delegation of 19, - repretory Trill remember them for *%?„,! T'V/'- ^;'{r tr^rr1 P"?'h TH^I. I senting 17 communities. in 15 Abe Pepper vs. Dr. M. Greenberg. good. Before shattering these r.er was Marvin Scvalsky. Dickie ! states, "was"selected after.a con- Marvin Treller vs. Sam Leon. ~ sincere pretensions I must add % i Shostak came in second and Mar- jference of some . 200 delegates J. Milder vs. Harold Farber. % I **'«, u * «t - that I council no ugly IntransigeWarsaw (JTA)—Clarification j vis Cbesler third. | .j from'all parts ;of the country had Richard Hiller vs. Lester Simon. nnce toward Britain nor a mere of the Polish'Government's atti-f Audrey Wolf- asd Lorrcine j | assembled here.'- The memoran- Ed Spears vs. Leo Nogg... churlish. Tefusal of her offer. But dum Jett* with Secretary. Hull em- Richard Gordon vs. J. Slalashock. tude toward the -proposed crea- : Wc-lk tied -for first place in one \ to /keep straight the historic recphasized t h a t , the United- States Harry Trustln vs. Irvin Ziegman. J tion of a Jewish State in-Pales-; of'the seveny-'ive yard cashes | ord it is-imperative to say that tine was-made by official- circles , for —oiaea. In the -other,- Arlene ' SECOXD FLIGHT ,_ ' •was the chief, factor in the rethe essential arguments of the to the J e w i s h " Telegraphic i Dsnsky was victor ' and Edith . J V ^ * * W constitution of Polish independ- Jerry Gordon vs. Morton Hilled Royal Commission are—doubtless lottiser ence -and urgently requested the Sam Wertheimer vs. Paul Blotcky f Agency. Xiord Peel and his colleagues a-n-fi- Phyllis j The British proposal, is was i Audrey Wolf TJ.. S. Goyernment -to intervene Louis Hiller vs. Phil Laser. • Jerns&lei know the;r Shakespeare well-— with the Polish government to Maurice, Micklin vs. Richard Jo- stated, is welcomed only insofar; "VTohtoer won the slipper-kicking cy) — Flans for a sc~ " "as false as dicers' oaths." i 0- „-„, as it provides for establishaeiit \\ competition. i bring about .an..end to the op- . sephson. baseball scrnlc projects ef r.r ~" They, a r e s o . for t w o reasons. r 6 s s l o a o f P o l J s h J e w r y a n d ' t h e L. Schlalfer vs. Al Mayer. [ o of an a independent p Je-srjsi j terri- •: After a - series^ "' One: e: The T h e Commission C o m m i s s i o n aassumes s s u m e s r e s tt o rt a t ii o n tt 0 tt hh e m of f t ^ i f f lu ll l J. H. Kulatofsky vs. M. E. Hand- tory. Drawback from tne Polish.! games the campers ^returned to r.rce to ths fievelcpisr** n tine. The'progTEin ' r^tacitly and even .explicitly a and equal rights as citizens. viewpoint, however, is that the ; the Center fsr £ i ler. - . ' ' . .—,.. t-TiT The- older boys have planned i activity outlined• Jj ^~° ^ •»moral and political parity of In the course of his conversa- Bud. Slosburg vs. Shrolly . Good- j frontiers of the proposed State have been drawn so as to limit ; a n overnight hike, s n d next w e e k ; Agency. c.oBs;:ft? of E I ,~~Iclaim between, the Jewish, people man. tion with the delegation, Secre, on the one hand and the P.alesthe absorption of a large number ;parents • and.- pampers , JWIII - be ; and agricultural" enK THIRD FLIGHT tary Hull, revealed. an intimate • tinian Arabs on the other. TbTere of immigrants. j g-nests of t h e Camp a t a camp- j Knowledge of the conditions un- Sam Ziegman, bye 1. .The-sum of sr; , is no such parity. There is in Government, spokesman declar- j fire. • • i der which Polish^Jewry lives, ex- Sam Ziegman vs, Abe' Vener 81,000,00.0 to he E' the world the overwhelming Jerry' Heyn vs.Dave Cohen. e d ' i t was premature to- -express^.. For the Eeventh week of camp ; pressed regret that he was reSp. Judennot -which is the crime of 'r e groweanopinon- on Poland's action at j a special motion picture program i ceiving the delegation under such Leonard Kay vs. Morris Levey. ' Christendom. There is no AraDerGeneva on the British Govern- ] I>ES Deen jjlanised. The camp will : unhappy auspices and voiced the Dave Levine va. I. Chapman. not. The Arabs, a once small inent's' declaration ot policy witb; C n3 after eight weeks-of activity" hope that he might agajQ' confer Ernile Npgg vs. Robert Kooper. ; increased b and obscure clan, in a few. cenivsi, . with Jewish leaders on a more, Morris Cohen vs. Dave Greenberg. regard to- partition. • The Polish :--srfth a carnival and pageant. _ tbe r «rr turies of high warlike and fanaRegistrations for the remain-, OvJj auspicious occasion. The detailed Abe Goldstein vs. Morris Katie- Government, it was stated, is en--; sura- o: man. . '.,'.-':• tical vitabty conquered by the m e m o i i j i i • left gaged in gathering "information ; | n g weeks of tha Camp can still ; fx^'_ with , h i m .building cosstrnctipn iT" Moe Linsman vs. Howard Kaplan. from interested parties, particu-' be made at tbe office of the Jewsword an empjrfe- that- extends v r n ) l g h with the co-operatior f' GENTLEMAN'S . FLIGHT larly Polis"h Jews. . lisa Community Center. with .a policy toward Irom Gibraltar, to; the Euphrates. thorities , f.. ,» zur Corporation; 4. *>= n • .,„_ t o As-a people dwelling on itB soil their- Jewish citizens , which has A. B. Alplrin vs. Moe JVenger. The Kurjer Wilenski, organ of cf a new bond issue r" f'?<• they hold it still. And most 6i made them "the most oppressed Allan Icohen rs. R. H. Brown. the Polish' Legionaires, in an ed,, »^. . r*er s. to~>>"l'c'" V"t v >T that empire is notoriously under- and perhaps the most desperate Sam Swartz TS. Jake Slosburg. itorial demanded creation of a i» populated and underdeveloped. Milton Jdayper vs. Morrie. Klein. nation-wide Pro^PalesUne ComT-rc—* . >f h u m a n There Is -no -reason, ethical, polimittee, to -create understRnding accused era Europe" and p . tical or. economic, why-we could between Jews and Poles. . .. not have been given at least the Polish government of denying to An editorial in Polska Zbrojna, •whole of Cis-Jordania. If 225,000 Jews "not only the rights guarorgan of the-Polish" Array, deanteed to them by, treaty and conscribes the British -itcyal Com- _

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Ication, however,. Is msis of this scheme, • It holds that there' between the.Jewish he". Arab"' people. At d' silliest it. even. sws on the 'one hand edans oh the other. p.-The question lies Pewisn people -^the fed, homeless homepeople who have a snsatiori "and ah act emand at the hands • itself — and: circa t-PalestinianJJLrabs,. iinize the rights^-of of Arabs; they an be guaranteed eseryation of their |jral," e c o~n d m i e

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ROYAL €030nsSION =" • : R i E P O R T S - . ' • ' • The viefrs expressed hy udwig Lewisohn in his column are his own. and do not necessarily reflect the policies or attitude of our publication. -Reproduction in -•whole, or "in part strictly forbidden. . ' -;

the Jewish position" -.- democracy to 5,mans "held together d cultural unity by octrine of the folldc nsported to America, our democratic now are, and : maintain -their racnd their • racial'sep-

a binational St3te analogous to: Switzgium, whether they or .minority, tzerland are.a lemings in.! y.' The Slovaks in ia ^ r e a minority, mples and the prinr ihg them that the asion should have hould have strictly conflict aa': one behole; Jewish .peojplft gmeht of tha Arab fen set out upon that ; build Tip: a techniU.ty for both -under , j the problem as, M&? 1 actually, it ^stands. Ijiise of the division \y will not.stand the jjence for the simple '{: reason -that- It cori,o fundamental reali toric process. • '•"--.

OJIAHA. XS3RASKA, FRIDAY, JULY 23. 1337

THE

e Jews ' themselves anti-Semitism, he nregenerate'. human Sy says, in effect: if ronp feels that -way and insists upon liv.-." biological and cnlI as religious alooftake the consequen-

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•Shtsred as'Sseona ClaEs" Mall ilatter oa January 21, 1S21. a t Fostofflco of Omaha." Nebraska, ander tho Act of March ,3, 1S73

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THE JEWISH PRESS. FRIDAY,' JULY 23. 1937 y. All li*- did in Milwaukee sedition.: of the Jews ia 1343. | vJsitiEg the Stcver Siemens! in meet he's- entered, r.nfl cops the British Empire. _ three national titles in two drys, TJT.E tc rrhi the 100-meter dash . . . .-Arthur Dinter, 'author... of i Central Park s.nd sittin.r; for a In India both parties Contr thf junior events and to walk gress and Imperialist alike — ac-|"Tlse SEE against the Blood," a j while ia the sunshine en t i e bB&tiEg the world's record hnid•c"f v'di, holii hurdle* titles in, c-ept the common thesis'that Ar-| a-pre-war novel which was the'j beach he• himself designed, for the er in. one event, he's more tihp.i; the «ininv events. To windttptW* yan, Semite, Hindu, Moslem, Bud-j first book propagandizing racial I Memorial.{ you knew • thai-it was a flask in the pan. AUG al- s season lie r?<es« feonve first in th« though Allan Tolniieh, the cnedhlst and Christian must,, and anti-Semitism, is In • dutch '-with j due to .Bero's efforts thai m^ from Petroit'g lev hurcles £nrt second in the .. . ' Dinter's "German4morlal was built). . . . We men* j m&n'track tes.ti can, continue to live together and Hitler. lnph ftnrcies et the World Labor share the responsibilities of gov- People's C h u r c h Movement," ition this now because just a t ew j! Wayae •Uiuversitr. Cis. ,:i -these Athletic Csvr.i.val. No winder he ernment in the great community. which was supposed to fulfil the • days ago Eero, was hit by s.s hiEgs. end Jots more. .-VKE picked Cor the dashes and Briton. French, Protestant and Reformation by purging the doc-• automobile, and Ht the time of j fiver* t he F,ner.i ' hv.rc-.Jpf- in the tesm named by the T •Si, A s i a n i s Catholic live side by side and trine of .salvation from'alien in-i writing ' is lying seriously' i-1 at|» f~ "" A. A. I*, to nmke a tour of Japan jointly govern the vast Dominion flueace has been forbidden Mount Sinai Hospital. . . ; And |s- yoingster. At his: present J next Tiiorth, we wonder tow many of the i whSc' fair to win forlurei of Canada. • The same experi- throughout Germany. . • . c a bias u •• ence- applies to South Africa. J.D.C. big shots will send hira £E: j tit]© "Jewish 2 BIOGRAPHICAL* NOTES expression cf sympathy nevr. . . . \Owens," he's a riuch for tt>«r- 4 0 Why is it impossible to conFriends .of Jeremiah T. 'Ma1 >p or is. v:: 1.5ns gentry are not Dr. Abraham Corslnik, finest ! Oi;™pJe team. template similar cooperation of knew much about. honey, the president of the races and creeds in Palestine? stylist among Yiddish' journal-; TOLMTCK'S SECOKU the Bible, hut we do know all Arabs-and Jews are both Semites A.A.U., who are pushing him asIsts Ss ia J.It. • Kisco hospital; the Democratic candidate for with a heart attack, and his '• Just FO you'll member this De- v.ho^l r 1 lie " •pi athletic champion In their origin. mayor of New York because anti- friends are very much con-: troit speed merchant, let's review Of Ir- f!f-l liroiber' >tfcpr Samson, the Nazi record will'enable him "to c e r n e d . . . . his' IPS" record to dr.te. He pent who lost'. IHK r.peed and cun/ •„ j (Copyright 1937 by American started by running sway with the r.ing- when Ihef. r>pliiah dame f By special arrangement Tritfa- a'precarious existence, mainly in sumption that two races, langu- Newspapers, Inc., and Universal get a large Jewish vote, had bet- iM s 65-metre high hurdles in the na- >'&ve l:i;r. P.TI unexpected haircut. ter soft pedal thefact that hi j * THE IfEAT E th© Sunday New York' Evening. the hUls.", ^ T ages and religions .cannot dwell in Service. All rights reserved. Re- middle name is Titus. Titus Sigmund Freii'a's latest theory : tior.al A. A. XT. indoor chanipion>n VES prpp.t stuff in- his Journal and American and all Since ^the Mandate' the Jews amity In the same country. Thla production in whole or in part being the name" of the Roman j is that Moses 'was'no Jew 'but s,n ; ships. In the Central lEtercoHeg- aay. A uxooeni Samson would be 1 other Hearst papers the Seven"- have-poured.over $355,000,^00 of is contrary to" the experience of forbidden.) ; - - . . - . " . . emperor who destroyed the* Tern-j Egyptian, because, says the pap-'late Conference indoor champion- too. HfTjr1*1 vhp pfivpnee ballyhoo '&xta -Feature Syndicate pro- capital Into, the land impoverishpie in Jerusalem. . . . It'll stir-jpy of psychoanalysis, "Moses" is .: ship he wen the fi 0-yard dash. :t'ld Hen Kliolorn. of Czechocents this important article tjy ed by centuries of Arab,and Turprise no one if the widow of the ! the Egyptian word for child. the 60-yard high hiirclcs and the'Eic. .Ia, vhem H.r Pro-Palestine kish neglect, inefficiency and cor; England's grant statesman unlate Bernard S. Deutsch, who But doesn't he knoi? that it 65-raru low hurCles, Kcoring IE Fee' t'ion !,- importing'- for a ruption. This money has not der Triioss iiremiership the gov* been Invested in usry nor In was elected president of the New an Egyptian princess who gave of'his team's 23 points. At the [ per' rfT-rppnSnjr matches. Dave', emment of Great Britain is- building-of luxury : houses for York Board of Aldermen in the! Moses h!s~ name? It must Penn. Reiaj-s he WPR sixtb in. the v'}~" "eat priup f« Davjd ITnLa Guardia sweep of 1933, ishave been a case of Freudian sub- cfint-iiry F-prinf,. His iti^peFt cip.r : vcv sued the Balfonr .Declaration.;' speculators who have iriade "fori?-. ;? TP«I-T pffpling' of six nominated for her husband's job consciousness tbst proiaptefi tSatj^rss fit i.t.e ~Mict!igt.Ti p CV.F.W- *?p His views at this time are of tunes In the Jerusalem stock exAlAnd the cop letby the Fusionists. JDr. and ]Los Ange!es Jewish sheet to pjonshfps when he pullerl en iror exchange, but in honest, produc- ZIONIST NEWS cpecial significance. -;' my son.' are E.C- ihsadline a letter to the editor on man 'stwrA, Trinning- the 100 i -THE EDITOR tive development of the resources , You can bank on it that the him go because h*> thought j Mrs. Chaici v of the country, r— in drainage, re- Zurich World Zionist ^Congress Gershwin's/pere h a a said ".Judge-jcepting Mazeltovs on t h e eng-age- j Hitler's speech in favor of t h e ! 200, and t h e 120 yard fir, 1 f their son, Benjamin*, to Spanish rebels, "Hitler- In Sain.", 22® yarfi low tr.rSlc? End n r - ' ment. of fThe. Palestine Report, is a de-clamation, planting of marsh and will NOT take any definite action Gershwin is my son. ' wilderness, in housing, in new ina Miss Ponaeranee of Itcndon. . . on the Palestine partition scheme- ETHER FLASHES But it -must have been the ; cirg first on the plorable ending, to one .of the, Berlin hotelkeeper^ are bltter- Solomon Sagall, president of heat when the caption -writer of : j-F.rd relay. His time for the hi r . . . I t will refer the. whole matmost imaginative experiments dustries, in electricity. But it la acknowledge that theater to a special comtn.ission of in- ly disappointed because President j Scophony. Xtd., a British firm j the Hartford Jewish Ledger used dred was 9.7 while he clkl ff-f which the Great War made poaThe alble.; ' , ,: -: . •'. transformation 'which lias taken vestigation which will make an Roosevelt's -son, Franklih, Jr., j which owns patents to a revolu- \ a picttire of George Bernard rlong in 21.6. Ideals corporated; in the treat- place is attributable, not merely exhaustive study of the.',Jewish' and hia bride,, the former M i s s i o n a r y telpvision device, is the \ Shaw and captiosed it "George comet from Detroit TEE returrpr. ies of peace — the. international to Jewish money but even more state proposal and report back to Ethel du Pont,-have decided to^ son-of Rabbi Jakob Meier Segalo- ; Eernhard," the anti-Xazi editor the wincer of the 2 2 0-vard l~v federation to insure peace, reduc- so to Jewish skilK Intelligence ah extraordinary Congress in boycott Nasilandl . : . The ban rltch, Orthodox chief rabbi of j in Paris . . . Mark Bellinger's I hurdles and was secon'd in tl<= "tion of armaments to the point and enterprise. The advent of.; 1938. . . . . That's-what was done on non-Aryan musicians doesn't Brussels. . . . Sybil Jason, Holly-; plan to break the round-the- ! h'sh -hurdles at the Centra! 7: Ibe'ra'they'.-would not:exceed, the the Jews has been like the trans? at the sixth Congress "when" Eng- J?revent the music of Jewish com-j wood's Jewish Shirley Temple, j world flying record held by thetercolieg-iate outdoor cSi&mpicrdimensions of an adeauate police ffusibn of healthy y blood-to a com-1 land offered Uganda to the Jews, posers from being played In the! has become the pawn in a scram- i late .Wiley Post was scotched j ships. At the National Co'.!eg:j'«> k d vitality i l i and d . . . It is more'than a vague pos- cafes and music halls of Ger-'ble between her parents, Mr. and-! when .'the Department cf- Corn- ' A. A. V. meet he finished ' fores, elimination of war as a munity that Jacked means of adjusting and determin- vigor. sibility that the meeting of the many. . . . The tunes of exiled | Mrs.; Israel . Jacobsoa' of Cape- j meroe refused to jjract him and ia the high hurdles. Despite 1 » ing the dispjites between nations .This success from which the Council of the Jewish Agency to Jewish musicians are sold to 1 town, South Africa, endi *her; Dick Merrill permission for the : amazing record he was stiil r r —have all been gradually aban- Arabs, high and low, have profit- be ield after the Zionist Congress note-copiers in Hamburg, who sell uncle, Harry Jacobson. . . . The j flight. . . v Georgie Jessel is 'unksown until the National A. ~ . doned. .//•-•' ed, has not Induced gratitude in may be the last. . . . There's the copies to bandmasters at parents a are readying a divorce considering A * r y a - n i z i n g his U. outdoor champiocships.. The <And now -the. Jewish National their' breasts. On the contrary it, lots of talk that Mrs. Edward -from 3..to 5 marks a piece. and the uncle wants to be raade ischnozzle. Gene Venzke, mile, he came into his own. ES Home in -Palestine is to.be muti- has Incited jealousy,, suspicion, Jacobs, president ' of Hadassah, The Th Joe Louis-Tommy Farr bout Sybil's permanent .guardian. riianer, and Johnny Woodru", c2 t- r..t..e lated and left to shamble along, a- fear and downright hatred. Hence will be named' fo the new World in America almost came a crop- ABOUT PEOPLE Negro ,speed - deaion from, Pitts'disfigured . and shapeless cripple. the trouble. When; for two orZionist Executive, Congratulations to Hollywood burgh, BO likee the- A.A.U.'s bs.n Morris per when. London heard that Millions of brave men, reso- three years the prospects of Jew- Rothenberg, who was elected" a Farr was a Fascist. , , . A little •f— more Bpccifically, W a r n G r ; on American athletes going to lutely led. won the victory. A suc- ish settlement appeared .dubious delegate to the Zionist Congress sum-shoeing disclosed ithat the Brothers—for having at last-dis-J Germany. . . . cession . of... weak -,.governments the Araba were tolerent and quie- will probably stay at home, h a v - ! r u m o r w a s a m 7th, being based covered Curt Bois, the German | (Copyright, 19S7, by-Seven A r t s ' have already muddled away most scent.' Now that' its triumphs are ing his hands full with his new-on the report that Fascists were Jewish comedian, who rolled 'era Feature SyEdicate.) *X V here Onc'./r »f Its greatest achievements and aij accomplished fact the Arab is ly acquired job as a magistrate- displaying a picture of the Eng- \ in the aisles la Germany before j extinguished its brightest hopes. in revolt at a -movement "whose o f New York City, This lish challenger giving the Fascist'that unfortunate country became It /was wellsald a few days ago achiefements in fifteen years are should remind you that we told salute.. ...•,-The National Union Naziland. . . . Bois has been in 1 c;—„..,; by one of the ablest publicists of such a condemnation of Tiis inep- y o u a couple of weeks ago that of Boxers exposed the canard... . . j America for several years now | By IEY KUPCIKET the day, who is by no means hos- titude. an ex-president of the Z. O. A.The efficiency of the Nazi espion- j and has acquired a perfect Engtile to the existing British GovEven if 'partition .was inevit- was in line for a New York age system is due to the fact that j lish. . . . If you remember, we -TEWISH. JESSE OWEXS ernment, that the Palestine Re- able the actual division of terri- Magistracy. . . . . Morris Margu- Hitler agents are the highest paid! told .yon about him, and won-! When Marty Glicfeman ar.5 jiort is "a confession of failure, tory and towns proposed in the Hes, secretary of the Z. O. A., will in the world, . . . Xazi spies get I dered .. when Hollywood would j Sara. StoIIer made lsst year'5 .•wounding to our national pride." Report is unintelligent It doonia also miss the- Congress, because $125 a month, as compared with "wake, up, to his presence in theioiyinpic team there, were lor 5 That is the British view of this large tracts of "fertile land in the his. presence Is needed here in 590 for Russian spies, ?75 for the! U.S.A. . . . In tbe not too dis-: hooplas among r.nser meiischer.. doctfrnerit. . It'Is a lamentable ad- North and South to desolation. the absence of the Zionist big- Italians, and $45 for the French, j tant future, you'll split your sides ! Jewish track and field stars be-ru~t -r. c. mission that Britain owing to theSouth of the Galilean lake and A big supply of copies . . .American, tourists/are sojjaughing at tfce*sntics of Bois ia i ing as scarce as kosher butcfcer-F feebleness, vacillation and pusil r North of Beersheba there are gies. scarce in Germany this year thatjthe movie version of • "Torarich." : in Nazilasd, Marty asd Sam werp l*lananimlty of her administrators, hundreds of thousands of dunams of the Royal-Commission report the Nazis have hired two big-- j . . . while we're passing out con- j seven-day wonders. Bat when a the Nazi steamer arrived on which the Jews, 6nce>~fertilized failed to; carry through the time American press agents to j gratulations. herd's - a flock of j really great Jewish track athlc-.c •Snission entrusted to ,her-;by the with their industry and which are Bremen. . •. Incidentally, the nlug.tli9 beauties of Nasiland. J them to Rabbi Harry. J^ Stern of | put-on the spikes and bcss~ report is Belling like.hotcakes. . . •. leading nations, of the world: I t now pure desert and- sw^pap. Jew. . . T h e jab WilT cost 50 grand. .Montreal, who has joined ths-l-burning up the cisderg there necessarily lower British; ish enterprise In a feisr 'years GElifHWIXISMS n ^ i ' s ' ; ; . '..; 1, . . A grisly-piece cf Jewish h i s r ] r a n | L S -of tbe . benedicts at Isst. j wasn't even a peep. WIISE &;gvr j'ij.ersliwln's most "cfiertssdposjJrestfge, coming as it does after .w.ouldir'estore ihem to their pristhe fiascos of Manchuria, jAbys- tine /verdure and'glory. But this se'aslon wa3 a photograpa > f the tory was recalled when workmen . .... He went-all the.way- to Har- jTrlns ionv ch^'ffi.pionstips ia. .ere ,- \ d n i a and Spanish non-interven- f o o J i s h document perpetuates present King; George of: England, excavating for a new armory risbarg. Pa., for his bride, the day, scores consistently in tion. . . . . ~ .- ':.-':•• these unsightly wastes. The Arabs Inscribed with the \fprds "from near an old Jewish' cemetery In |former Miss Sylvia Goldstein. . . . I What will sixteen and a-half prefer this blot to 'Jewish occupa- George? to George."- . . . The Basle, Switzerland, dug np what Speaking of congratulations, you . ' ; . composer was S Tjo'so.m pal of Jewish scholars say is some earth remember that just a couple of million Jews, dispersed over;the tion. The Pal- weeks ago Stanley Eero, veteran eurface of the globe In every con« . . The Ara.bs have .every reason King Edward, too, - who has a from Palestine. jtinent, think of this proposal to to. hfe; thankful'.'for the war tocomplete collection of- all of Ger- estine son, 'identified by its col-social worker, celebrated his %ix-\ i Tjreak i Ihe solemn pledge "-.' given Which the Zionist pledge • was in-shwin's" work's, i . . Gershwin or, was found under the skulls j tieth birthday. . .-.Of course he j ~ rr them by the great nations in Te- cident, for. the .treaties "that,regis- was once the roller-skating cham- of -the skeletons of 25 Jews who received some- congratulations.) tered' Allied Victory, in that war. pion of the East-Side. A few- had been burled facing East and but his< former fellow workers; of jturn for services promised and teas—Every • Typ* cf Insurance Before the war there was not a.weeks before he- died he contrib- with outstretched arms. <". . The the J.D.C. didn't sa much, ES give ens Bends written. Csli AT. rendered?' ' - : ' Blngle free Arab nation in the 7657 cr WA-E150. cemetery dates from the time of him a luncheon. . . . So he celeI" The Zionists, to whom the prouted 5100 to the United Palestine I I world. Every Arab country had a mise of a. national home was givAppeal. . . . -His greatest ambi- the "Black Death" and the per-brated the- occasion by quietly foreign master. Now at least four | en, have "to be satisfied with^a tion was to be a n actor. , . . mutilated Canaan, without Zlon, great Arab /nations' are ^Indepen- Once he seriously' considered dent and self-governing — AraCcL'rti Shcp r: Bethlehem or Judea. It will! be writing an opera in which he I'c^rih floor a national home for Jews fr/Sm bfti. Iraq, gyria and Egypt. Had would -blend- native and : immi[•which -will be excluded their holy the. Allies been defeated in war grant strains. . . . H e had ac\ cities, the site of the Temple of these. milUpna of, now liberated tuaUy'"compo3ed music to "Ths their fathers, lands in which their Arabs would have been, still un- Dybbuk" when he learned that 'immortal poets and prophets der foreign domination. an Italian had • acquired the dwelt.. It willbe a Jewish home How much did the Arabs con- rights-to the Jewish-theme plot. •without Judea — Zionism with- tribute toward their •oVn eman- . . .Legend had' it that Gersh-. ' out Zioh. They .return t o the cipation? in Iran, Syria and Pal-win's mother sahg Yiddish songs Promised Land to find a promise estine they fought in the armies at home,- but it was just a myth. broken by those who gave it.« of their .oppressors. Arab tribes . . . He was once' fired from a R Whose Is the failure? who hsSl rebelled against the theatre' because an actor -com„ y Have the Jews failed in their .Turk, under Hussein's leadership; plained - he • didn't know how to $)art of the bargain? The prom- rendered effective assistance to play the piano, He always the Allies, but.their numbers ag^ composed at night. N Jse they gave of help in the war . . A His 'was fulfilled in letter and spirit. gregated but_&' few .thousand favorite story;was about the time •'And their help was truly, helpful. horsemen1.- They "fought with all his -father was - arrested in New JThat is admitted. : ' •' - '.. the dash and daring that once York for speeding. - . . . "You ' Have they failed in their ef- made the prowesa of Arab caval- can't arrest me," cald Pop Gershv:, : forts at; colonization? Trouble has ry, the terror of nations and em- " _ . . is . "George Gershwin arisen entirely from ; the magni- pirea from the Euphrates' to the1win tude* of their success.. The; Pales- Loire. But the vast majority of tine -Report handsomely acknow- their race in the Great Wag-fightledges their triumph. Their land ing'for-their TurlclBh*conquerors. Battlements aremodels of inten- Arab freedom was won by the end. sive' culture. -They have drained soldiers and sailors.of, the,BHtmalarial swamps which produced iah Empire. Allenby had "under --Material • THE/BEST CONCRETE nothing but the germs of disease his command in t h e Polestine - BECAUSE • - and have converted them - into campaign 450,000' men drdwn Cv 1. All materials pass state And gardens, which • maintain happy, from every part of the Empire. federor specifications, ssstir. ^^ ' (ng the highest quality. prosperous little communltieo. This figure "included men of all 2. Accurate control of properThey have^ established flourishing 'tlons, assuring full quantity. ranks, races and services In the industries in the barren < sand '3. Exclusive "Consistency Ms. army. The maximum ntrengtb/of tar" assuring hlsher strength !dunes of the Mediterranean. They and uniform workability. "have built Tel Aviv, a modern the-Mesopotamian'force was 446(f«S«d tr.d K.L-K.trtZ EAST! Vi\' p-zt^.H KSW k'c,;'? ef rc-v'cr, C I T V ; 000.' The casualties sustained by city of 150,000 inhabitants which, • CD20 Doi^o ' - CL 23CD 1 )issay itt'nszl'.Z'Vsisi'.zr'.Xs frsr. «'.; ever l!-s »-5>rti...T!-.e i/»37-'''AN! h p-s^ the Empire in two campaigns for '! in its productive activity, its- adArab liberation amounted to l / s ministration. Its amenities and the OOO/men, the expenditure reached From c'.l cf t's rsi-'~, f.-r.-^ - culture of its people, will rival many hundreds of millions, of every - any community,of ita size on thepounds sterling; Chores of that great inland sea. !,s»KOTS?SiN'SS, ;'?F:iA»,TK"L'l"\VATs:r.S K '-'r rt-:»-~ci What did Britain get out of all The Jewish settlement have not this costly effort? Apart from the V.'s:fe l t \ k only prospered themselves but overthrov/ of one of the German - yea CM cr.'sy e G L ' l ! i l l ~ ~ ' •"'' ™Z"'~ r"- l . t ...C':'-- f- .' -' -••they have diffused that prosperity allies, nothing for herself except CS t!«t new EASTMAN! DrZ J "'.:-.;••?;-, ,-.•--,.-' r^:.:j • ,-.' j :•; - - • : ? - i throughout the whole land or years of worry. 5 L J , C ^ , : , ^ , ( r ' - " D * - r - ' 1 * f J i - • • » » ? • • • * • - ' '-'* ' - - 1 • ••""' I' Z t ' r Canaan. Trade has leaped up, What did the-Arabs get out of revenue has increased four fold, it? "Freedom over a vast territory •wages of the Arab laborer (who much more extensive than that not? "cyints to -slaughter all hiaruled over by tha imposing embenefactors) feave stjeast trebled pire of the Assyrian,kings. Cttmet F ^ i ^ ~ - q,nd his health and. that of his The idea of partition ia repudchildren improved by the"elimina- iated by both Arabs and Jews. *™», S u tion of malsrfa and by the Jew-The notion1 which underlies this ' Jsh health servicoa. crazy scheme is the hasty asauap< •-' , f£ -f\&-;r The Palestine Report faithfulJ K , ly records the ffict that before the Jews took the country in hand it . Our Funoral Parloro Aro Furnished in Hotno-Lihcs Fasbioa - -was a squalid desolation.-'Fertile rallays and plaino which former"COUr.TSOUG—liELIADLE" '. " ly maintained' millions had be' come .poiflonios boss or paTched deserts. According-to the report:1 FVUERAL DIRECTORS • "The population, still overwhelmFnrnam at 33rd f|A 1220 ingly Arab in character, eked out"

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THE JEWISH.PEESS, FRIDAY,'JULY 23, 1 he did in Milwaukee jwin the 100-meter dash unior events and to walk 1 both hurdles titles in pr events. To wind up the $ ie raced bonre first In the X, Sles and second in^ the j-dles at the World Labor Carnival. No wonder he ted for the dashes and in the team named by the ; to make a tour of Japan inth.

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X SAMSON 3 •writing gentry ar& not d to know much' about tale, but we do know all he first athletic champion \\, brother Samson, tho To lost his speed and cunhen that Delilah dame m'an "unexpected haircut, was great stuff in his modern Samson -would be ence the advance "ballyhoo [id Ben Sholom, of Czechoa, •whom the Pro-Palestine tion is importingv for a 3f -wrestling matches. Dave, jreal name is Bavid Unis a mere stripling of sir id weighs 250 pounds. Alj he's only 25, he is eredita being the heave and phampion of Palestine, Itsechoslovakia and Sweden. Continued on page S.)

dose -with 2,700 square miles? flowed the borders cf Sewry, a~S I. We have, it is conceded!, done has become a world problem t-e- [ miracles in the Jewish colonies. Quiring a. world solution.. Why can we: not repeat tiers— 7. It- has bees, realised by frith better facilities—in» .the most of us that the Arab-Jewish' compressed territory of the en-i problem has--reached-as Impasse, tire State as proposed? < • " because it is impossible cf soluS. As an independent, Jewish tion. This * ne'er Jewish Stats I State it would have the immedi- would, in the best and most Vi\l ate- task to laanch a plan i s tent manner, serve to solve this *j search of colonies under Jewish j grave • question, more than any j NOR A^-Xlii H I C A mandate or control, so as to find .;-other proposal so far advances,' j C OLUr^ room for those Jews wseta Pal-j An issue which cosla not be •RT.i'CT1 lUTTTTT T C I BLiAST MYTH THAT TALKING \ estine could not possibly a'ceon-i avoided has been cleared n? at WITH HANDS 3S IKHTIHENTI modate. This is a most impcr- j last—the Gordian.* knot lias beea JETTISH TI1 . . . Trt,'.cii ret a n t phas's a n d d u t y of - t h e n e w j c s t . d i i S s us 11. Z-CCtior feccus Jewish State. It may obtain the | The rejection of the report feature is re ths Hi-ike rase. support of eome countries asfl cf i would be a national calamity, ths ASSAIL, S. L.O5 AK G"U^."Ci the League of Nations for this: greatest of our tragedies. It is JEV.-S TITIO GA^SLE KEAVILT purpose, for this humans se£Tch j bound to play directly .into t i e EL'IL. GIVZ; XOT:-:::;C- TO ; E T . - , entirely devoid of imperialistic j hands of our enemies. ISH CKAKITT. . . . Perhaps' ambitions. It would tend to j (Copyright, 1837, by'Seven Arts t i e r feel tfcet chsrl^Jisn't a cc.:e 1 you Tor br. against the Land' •which the .-Mandatory Gov- to his obligations as a Jew—and solve a .problem which has overFeature Syndicate.) encizgli preposition. Partition of Palestine? Do you ernment takes_pessession of. But t o the rest of Jewry—if he were BRITISH AKKT CFPICEE ON ' 'avor'a Jewish State based on theT^egeb is the Empirei's anchor •to" reject half the loaf proffered pie" Telpner's "Ice Breaker" par- COAST SUGGESTS DL'KE OF; 'ha proposed new mandate? to the windward. It- is the- alter- to us. ty proved very informal and con-VOXDSQR AS \\4 KING OF I "•ALIiouis Iiipsky, member of the native to the Suez Canal line, it may be sufficient here to genial and served to start many . Bssirp hi pro-" TToTld Zionist Executive,-gives,. which is now.impaired/; The road' enumerate briefly my reasons for By "Benny lasting friendships. I met S or :,rz ilr'E Vs TievrB In an exclusive article to Akaba, P l u B * h e ' corridors to favoring the establishment of a 10 swell gals and about 20 nerr pOEttl C3 t t e Br r" T this hotly <lebatea question. the sea—the one leading to Jaf- Jewish State, even though It be A. Z. A. convention goers are fellows whom I had never known Lit; nil Ot V.e^cejH'from Kfi Davia? Keuben J''inK, -weil-fcnoTvn fa, the other to Haifa^—repres?nt- smaller than what we migEt have generally a genial lot. They love before. jumalist and econoniist, tells. the-Empire's interest in the par- expected or wished or deamt of. to gather at convention heafiquar^ Athletics were run off in EUKOFE; '. ;*• ,s why. he favors the : Royal tition of Palestine. , Each of these skeletonized points ters or in their rooms and - dis- smooth fashion by Horold Fox CZECH P R E S I D E N T BE- ed commission report. The same avoidance, of frank- may be separately elucidated at cuss how. things are going; vrho and Mas Turner. ^Seally, Morry, COMES GODFATHER TO JEWWhat Ho XOC think? to blame for the things that go I never realized what swell "xnus- ISH - TRIPLETS. . . . Well, ness is adopted in the. report of some future .time. the Royal Commission with re1. A Jewish State would bring wrong, and who to compliment Clemen" this A. S. A. region has j wasn't a • Jew the godfather o' gard to Jerusalem, the Holy City, a new sense of dignity to us, for the afSairs that turn out O. got until I got a peep at some of the Fr&neh Canadian quintuplets" of interest to all Christendom. It among ourselves and among the K. And many, once they get back the classy competition in the softJEWS HEAVIEST . CONTRIB: §§K: .By Lends Lipsky ' * [cannot be'assigned either to the non-Jews. Can any one clearly to their -home towns like to dis- ball and tennis games, and in the UTORS TO rTND FOR GREEK cuss the convention with those report of the Royal Com- |J e w s o r t 0 t h e Arabs, and there- portray at this moment the lofty track and field events. All of the AIR F"LEET. . .. .. Is this what 1lK T,« I - . _ ' - - . fission, generally approvedJ ' by fore-must remain under the guar- dignity of Jewish statehood, citi- unfortunate 1enough" not to be sport's events were carefully of- the Nails term the flight of -JewS Majesty's Government, is to dianship of-England. One would zenship, with its accompanying able to attend . Some even write ficiated by experts. ish.-'capital? tne basis of an approach' to think that-so*, holy a city, sacred governing apparatus .—ft- a Jewish brother alephs from out of town noi-cp Klwanis point, one of the high POLAND AND -ROUKAKIA Ani c " "i"1 «e- League of Nations for the ']to t h e f o l 2 o w e r s " o f t h r e e President, cabinet, parliament — to tell them of the time that he, spots (in more ways than one) SEEN BLOCKING PALESTINE the convention-goer had. ?juidation of the Palestine. ManM ' religions, the Inevitable capital j something we have not had for of Council Bluffs served as the PARTITION • BECAUSE OF 2EThese letters1^ sometimes speak late. It sterns to be the general of any State that may be set up so many centuries? Because of ftrhpression that the proposed dis- in the Holy Land, would be our status as an independent na- good of the convention, and uftiDmberment of Palestine is pf- placed under the .guardianship of tion we are bound ±o gain greater sometimes bad. ;Here Is a letter Ih&zi as the only available1 means a commission in which various respect from the rest of the peo- that we should-like to submit for food, beautiful girls, marvelous is the Palestine Mandate. "vTOKLD CONGRESS OF JEWS your approval, that we think will landscape. ""Who could ask for IA reconcile the seemingly ir- nations and the- interested re- ples in the world. PROPOSED TO .DECIDE OX ACbe typical of letters sent fey ftboncilable national claims of ligions would be' represented. anything more? But there was 2. A Jewish State would have "esg and Arabs. v But, as others England is not the. defender of its represSatatives in the League alephs following the Corn Belt more. A neat program was plan- CEPTANCE OP PARTITION. . . . lave already Tnade' clear, the par- all faiths. It does not.speak for of Nations (as stipulated in t'ha regional alephs' association meet ned by Frank Pirsch that kept TiTe*'thought this vras t i e Junction Kiion of "Palestine -will not the Moslems or the Jews. It does Report) as well as properly ac- -at Council .Bluffs, on August 7, S, the folks laughing. cf the Zionist Cosgress. feliieve ,the desired. reconciliation. not speak tor the- Catholic credited plenipotentiaries in every and 9. The Jewish mothers of Council PAJLESSIXE 9 a the contrary, It may provide Church,, but -as one of the inci- country on earth, officially, dipBluffs served the luncheon which "Dear Morry: KETV* JEWISH SETTLEKEICT ftjel for a more concentrated at-" dents of partition -England :pro- lomatically recognized by the was given at the synagogue at [LOCATED IN PROPOSED ARAB It sure was tough that you jack upon the Jewjsh position-by poses to accept the trusteeship of governments of the world—not noon on August 9. Good Kosher i STATE ANNOUNCES KEFUSAL i.he encircling Arab states, whose the 'Cflty of David, which Is to bey even excluding Nazi Germany. It had to miss the A. Z. A. tourna- food was featured en t t TQ'TSUDGE FROSI LAND. . . . Sostility would not he :- lessened! transformed into"' an 'outpost of- is difficult to "imagine a more m e n t convention at Council and shortly after dinner The settlers .budged from Ge?~ Bluffs. Boy, we sure had a real Intensified by the act of partition. Anglo-Saxon civilization. And it perfect and effective way-"of takhelped us to .digest the generous [ niacy ctite recefetlr, cifin't thsj kidding. I hate to make •She further dismemberment of takes under its .wing . the! Newing up the cause of JewYy whenPalestine will not improve Arab- Jerusalem,i built by Jews, as well ever affected even outside of the you burst with envy, but I've just j Then.-.tiat- same evening came \ (Copyright,- IS3J, fcv Seven Arts got to tell you what happened to if swish relations in the slightest. as the old. P-eature Syndicate.) Palestinian borders. As a spring- give me world of new enthusJassi the dance. Awards were made, ' From the heaavior of the board of co-ordinated and re- for old A. Z. A. during the intermission, to the The report • of the Royal ComArabs in Palestine since the responsible Jewish opinion and exYou know, that this was the various contestants who were port was issued it appears that mission is : an admirable docu- pression it has never been equalfirst convention I have ever at- i lucky enough to win. Smooth ment in tone and spirit. It is %"&e plan does no£•••fill, them with ed for the good it is bound to tended, and I was prepared for dance music" by . a- renowned orsuave and gracious.. • * . It gives •sathnsiasm. On the contrary, accomplish. * ** .: about anything and everything. I chestra proved conducive to a tiSey are more -intransigeant "than praise in due measure to both 3.-As a direct corollary of the came to C. B. with plenty of lovely evening, enjoyed "by all the aver. What they have already Jews and" Arabs. I t properly Elephs and their dates. received on account of •"prom- evaluates the significance of the above one has good reason to be dough for tasi fare and scared to The dance marked the concluises" is now .-.."becoming lmcr-sTi re-establishment of a ' Jewish inclined to believe that had this death I'd be dated up with some- sion of the conclave, and all of 'even to the casual newspaper State in the'Holy Land. But the proposed Jewish State been in thing with a face and fissure that us were sorry to leave. 3'aader. In 'Iraq, Syria, Saudi Jewish State It proposes is, in existence in the early part of could scare even Popeye. "Well, Morry, I must close now. But was I surprised? Everyia.rabia and Transjordan you have effect, a State that w^U be incap- 1933 it is very doubtful w&ether Hoping to see you at the next A. ATabr States tha,tj include over a" able of assuming sovereignty or all the vicious anti-Semitic- laws thing was ia readin%ss for me and S. A. convention., I remain, isaillion and_ a half square miles; of serving adequately as a haven and? regulations would have been all of the other alephs. All ray : Fraternally, "• • ;She porfioifr";of **:'ttte' Children-', 'ot of refuge for a substantial num- adopted in Germany and later fears of expensive taxi fare trere Toxit BsiSfir, s Israel in the proposed J*ewish ber of Jews. It'Will t>e Incapable more or leS3 copied in other cotm- vanished when I saw Abe Rabea's "Eessy Aleph" *|?tates is not-much more than two Iof establishing a n . economic life tries^—"Poland and Rouinania, for transportation set-up. "Plenty of of its own. It will be surrounded example. It Is one thing to pass free, transportation for everyone" ffchousand square miles.* What, if Eliss Legardo, arriving In T5r- j i-fiot the absolute elimination of by warring '. tribes. I t will be laws against a race or a "peo- seemed to be his Eiotto. And the dates! Bob, oh boy! In- ginia in 1621, was perhaps the ;;'«e Jewish people from Palestine, lacking' in the possession of those ple" who have no official voice first Jew to" enter wist -is now • Si'ould reconcile these irreconcil- historic places In Palestine with or representation anywhere, and stead of the scarecrow I was the United States. .which its ancient. national life S'Ue kinsmen? The reduction of its is Quite another mater to afraid ol getting* I and all the laws other alephs got swell dates. And '£ae Land of Israel: could go no was intimately associated. : The adopt .Such uncivilized Dr. Isaac Abrs.hs.ias was the farther, and they remain TinsatiB- gift of a. Jewish. State of these against r a Tecognised full-fledged when I say swell, I mean swell in ;; dimensions is a travesty of the first Je-wish graduate of Cclcsa-1 every conceivable way; good wtlad.' -. - " ' " :• ' .- .' '• " "" * j nation among all the other nat;5 Under cover of the proposal for ideal which" the • Jewish people! tibns of the earth—even "though lookers, swell dancers, good per- bia University. He was a jlsartition, however, a . radical have -nurtured for : two thousand. it be as small as proposed ia the sonalities -— all around gals. Bat- ber of ths class of 1 7 7 4 of ~K.is.gz ing'chairman Herb Rosenthal was College. *¥ftange takes place in the posi- years. report. -. ^ Ciliion of England. The Mandate Is 4. Jewish culture, education, right when he said that the creasi ;"a be liquidated not because Jews science, art. language and eora- ! of - the crop was being picked for . . AEiong tfee Hessian mercensries sent here during the RevoSad Arabs will not agree, but hemerce . would have the greatest- us. lution were several Jews, most 'of Sfituse its . provisions embarrass All of the various affairs were development opportunities f o r By Eexiben Fink /freedom of action in the pursuit and self-expression, not only for run off in splendid fashion.. "Cu- whom settled here after tee war. • af its own interests. Largely to .The creation o l an Independent the Jewish citizens in the pro¥aolve Its own imperial designs, Jewish State,; even if only in .a posed Jewish State "but, to some iSngland moves to scrap the Man- part' of -Palestine—on, say, "be- degree, for Jews everywhere1, and jaate, to throw off all the obliga- tween one-fourth^ and- one-third especially wherever and whent i o n s I t assumed- when it became of 'its territory—is the most ever they be deprived' of these and proposes to amazing and Intriguing sensation 'cultural opportunities. Instead that"has come to us In two thou-sand years. It should be hailed of going-to Aberdeen and to the <Mandatory, take possession of the larger part by every Jew as the greatest and Dublin to study medicine some.of. //•of. ' Palestine unhampered i y most" important chapter in all our American Jewish youths •promises, covenants- and trustee- these long years. ; There are so ("quota'd" ovjt by many of our u'uversities) . might s/Ships. ;*- ".' -• . - • ' . . - :-. . jnany valid: reasons for its aecep:\ : In the skilful drafting of • the tance thafithey outweigh by far- well register in the universities fei Auv .or .Haifa. ; report of the Royal Commission any objections to'the plan. And 5. The ^Jewish . State would the Mandatory Government ap- of course-there are objections. A. :: pears in the role of a, fatigued whole loaf, It should "be born4 in give the best opportunity for. mediator . with, a troublesome mind (a great part, nearing the • Jewish science and agriculture.to quarrel on its hands. It has tried whole,' of Palestine),- would un- develop the small State and its to conciliate the parties^to the questionably be more, acceptable resources so as to enable it to quarrel,1 without success. It now to us and would' answer our support the ; greatest possible pleads, with Jews and Arabs to prayers and our needs mgre number of Jews. This will-also accept a disinterested-, proposal fully; but1'one would not live up be our acid test. What can ba Cf OIT Ffcssf tor a settlement of _ irreconcilable differences through a permanent territorial divorce. But it changes Its role of arbiter and conciliator •without frankly, revealing the new position It intends to occupy. It avoids, all allusion, to the fact thai in the proposed divorce the estate in dispute is to have the larger part of its assets scooped out of it. It draws attention to what one party will receive, and to what t i e other is to-receive, but keeps under cover that • part of the estate which it proposes to draw out and take possession-of under a so-called '."permanent" mandate. •-.-•- _^_ " -; ., .„* It-keeps in the~ shadow the SOPHISTICATES eftte fact that, the large segment. ot Palestine called the Negeb, which leads to Akaba. and is' to be the terminus of a new imperial line, is to be held under a "permanent" mandate. In "the report ''the Negeb is described by; allu'-r* Bion as desert. It seems, td havp no claimant It is unknown territory. That is why it is not to be divided or' partitioned, and is •v left as a Tesidue, of the Holy

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THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY. JCTiY 23. 1037

Published every Friday at Omaha, Nebrasfea. toy,

sparse gray matter too much^because after all the Jewish people are not kin of the nazis* . . . though the opportunity might lend itself for revengeful measures, the people of Israel still live by the might of right.

HE JEWISH PRESS PUBUSHINO COMPANY Subscription. Pries, one year Advertising rates furnished oa application.

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Editorial Oftlca: 600 .Brandeis Theater Building. SIoox City Offico—Jevrtsh Community Cantor Print Shop Address: 4504 So. 24tb Street DAVID BLACKER. - • Business and Managing Editor FRAWK R. ACKBRMAN . . . . . . . . . . Kdtto? FANNIE KATEL.MAN Council Blotto, Iowa, Correspondent ANN PILL . . . . Sionz City, lojra, Correspondent .

Investigation

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Small need of..gain: : After the quiet conies • And shadows creep, How sweet, mid peaceful glooms, Softly to sleep!" - - Frederick Coin.

U8

4,261 JEWS ENTERED

i be a stunt pilot, no less. ARGENTINA IK 1936 The subject of 'retirement' is in the air. I t has no doubt XEWS BRIEFS FROM THE FILM CAPITAL *•."-*" been precipitated by President Roosevelt's action in seeking , Max Keinhardt, famous ^ 5mmeans to compel; the retirement of Supreme Court judges at> „ „ and screen, countered by ambitious persons with s.lSS in 19R5, It was an-By Dr. P&itis* jpressario of the stage nounced by Soprottnis, Hebrew? at least, seventy years of age, feeling that men beyond that plans to build a new home near who hope to reach fame end for- Immigrant aid society. Nearly woujwuuii. . . . Eddie Cr.ntor tune in the film'studios, youthful age, however capable and noble, nevertheless have their eyeHollywood. half, or SOI o£ the 1.639 newedmoK BIBLK sight dimmed particularly in matters pertaining to social prog- And the stability "of thy times was elected president of the Jew- David O. Selznfclc was awarded a erg who registered with the B6» ish Theatrical Guild of America, j plaque by the Hollywood"" Chamress and reform. " * shall oe a hoard of salvation, . . . Other,officers for lfl.37 are: | ber of Commerce. The Kolly- ciety came Poland, 507 from Gei> many, £22 from other EuVopean Vice Presidents: George Jessel ,\ wood civic body has been trying The general subject .of leisure, occupying the public mind j wFsdom and knowledge, and '; countries, and 109 from various 1 Sam H. Harris, Fred Block, Wil-: for years to discourage the in- Latin-American republics. , - . • - usually _ . i n . . because i__—;_•_•_ of ^c :increased^ „ „ _ « n . u j .leisure i . n , , - ' Adue n a to in. dim.. fear of the Lord which is more than shor-!! treasure. Ilara Morris, Dr. Hugo-Riesenfeld.. flux of-movie-struck persons who tened. hours of labor and the still-continuing wide-spread non-j -He who walketh righteously land A. A. Jailer. Treasurer: Abe";often reach Hollywood broke and: Kab \ now) tsch-Kempner, discouraged and thus become a '. I,y d ia employment, has no dojibt also stimulated the discussion of and speaketh uprightly, he whoj istant Treasti I^ medical woman, was serious community problem. . . . 1 Financial the seneral Subject of'retirement' jdespiseth trie gain of oppressions, j •-..-. , . • ,. , v. , . iwho shaieth his hands from hhold- tary: Sam Forrest. Executive Al Eoasberg's widow gets the in IP 2 appointed a*profes«or at cash estate valued at 55,250 left 'the University of Berlin, the first The 'resignation'-in our city (according to his own s t a t e - i i n g o f b r i b e 8 , w^o stoppeth Secretary: Dave Ferguson women to be so honored Jn Prusment a sort of precipitated and forced retirement) of the Rev. j ears from hearing of blood and Paranaounl s by the famous gag writer of Bufsia. • ' and Hollywood. Boasberg i h one of f the th mostt prominent i t pastors t f Omaha, O h ii shutteth shutteth his his eyes eyes from from looking Frank G. Smith, of looking •. a invented an u

By Rabbi Frederick Cohn

'

Gems of the Bible anc! Talmud '

Widespread publicity given the opening of camp "Noidland" at' Andover, New Jersey, focused the pitiless spotlight of public opinion upon nazi propaganda, in this country. This was the seventeenth.-'nazl cainp opened on American i ; territory, and news-picture agencies sent out graphic, tell-tale \ photos to itevery section of the United States showing the mili» • '•,•••'" ' • •, » "i i » 4i T-1- i ri i * - ^ i UDOn e v i l , h e «*»»11 <»w«11 nn Jiip-h- i ^ tary display and brazen flaunting of nazi emblems and ideology. for eighteen years spiritual leader of the First Central Con-^^,g , a c e ^f ( Fritz Kiihn, assertedly the nazi fuehrer in this country, de- gregational Church, has also brought the subject of 'retire- munitions of rocks,, his bread clared that all camp members are American citizens, but as fargg shall be granted, his waters shall as we haye been able to ascertain, he himself is not a citizen of ment' prominently, to the fore. be sure. When should a person 'retire' _ (or be retired) f "We can Come near, ye nations, to hear. this country. i ' ••_•-.•-.*•. . . < ye peoples. Let When we couple the outright attempt to spread Hitlerite probably answer the question best by stating -when he should j and attend, not retire (or be retired). He should not retire (or be retired) I-**'^Af h^*r>- and the fullness propaganda through nazi 'camps with the facts: presented to when he is in full possession of his faculties, when he is at the thereof the world, and all things ' i - congress showing that nazis had wormed their way into- the top-notch of his physical condition, in perfect health and that come forth of it. TALMUD 'Unitea States munition sites presumably for the purpose of in- strength; when he is at the full tide of useful professional or . Rabbi Isaac ."You shall forming the German military office of our munitions secrets, business activity performing his functions-to the fullest satis- always have thesaid: respect for a conwe come to the obvious conclusion, that action mustfeetaken. faction of a large circle that comes under his ministration or [gregation,, for the priests while •] It is high time that'we drop our previous attitude of "indiffer- , , ••-••; . „ - . . • , • - . • . . , • . . • j v ireciting their benediction stand ence" and take steps to halt such subversive, un-American ac- feels his influence; when he is of the greatest service and bene-j w l t h their faces toward their eontivities. •''. •"•'•-'• • ' fit to.those whom it is Tiis primary duty to serve, as well as to igregatlon, and with their backs If these people in the nazi eamps prefer a "heil Hitler" the entire communitv, meeting moreover with the widest accep- toward the shtfchtna (the ark). and a swastika to the freedom and liberty of the United States, tance and acclaim. Such a person should not retire (or be rethey'need not meet in seventeen camps here . . . they can take -tired)-.-" He'has a duty to exert his powers and employ them'g"erve to receive the Divine presthe next boat for Berlin. If,'on the other hand, their piirpose beneficially while he is in good physical, intellectual, moral, j ence—the class of scorners. is to seep nazi propaganda into the public consciousness of and spiritual condition. To cease to function (or not be pertaught: were Our Rabbis America, then our government should stomp the movement out mitted jo-fuhction) is like leaving a costly instrument or most "Since the destruction of the - -. while it is Btill in its infancy. A congressional investigation delicate tool to lie idle, to rust or to be destroyed. I t is a Temple, learned men began ' • was voted down several weeks back, tout events since then indi- crime against humanity not to use (or be permitted to use) feel ashamed, and aristocratic cate the necessity for a sweeping, comprehensive study into the powers-God* has given one for the benefit of one's fellow- families bent their heads, men of | tin--American activities tending to undermine United States man, to stifle creativity, as well as prevent the fruition and acts were diminished, and men of j power began to rule: also, taletradition. fulfillment Si one's own personality and individuality. Self- bearers ruled over th© righteous. I \

l^ySS'^Bi?

Retirement

was the man who was responsible

anchor sherbet dish. The dish for the laugh-getting lines spoken has a specially-designed spur in by Jgck Benny and other famous its center which keeps t h e . See comedians of the air lanes and cream from sliding or turning on have movies the plate. Patent rights IB?", by Seven Arts been; issued and leading firiig Feature Syndicate.) Etore chains are promoting the sale of the invention. . . . After an absence of seven rears, Sylvia Sidney will return to the Broadway stage ia a Theatre Guild show nest season. . . . Because Buenos Aires (WNS) —Jewish he produced a motion picture immigration to Argentina m 1936 dealing with the hardships en- amounted to 4.261 as compared

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realization (which must not be thwarted) is the goaljrad pur-K There is no one to argue, no.one to plead or ask tor the existence j •pose of human life. of Israel, and upon whom shall ' e» Oswald's back. ' • , . Of course there, comes a time when old age prevents the we rely? Only upon our Heaven*iJ The prospective fuehrer of Great Britain, Sir Oswald Mose- proper'discharge of one's functions. No one has expressed this ly Father." ly, irith two disastrous set-backs on record, is making another more beautifully than Emerson i a his fine $oem, "Terminus": bid: for power. To all observers British 'Fascism had been - "It is time to be old, . laughed out of-existence. Then last year Sir Oswald was again To take in sail: . . By LOUTS FEKARSKY leading his legions, this time through the Jewish sections of The God of Bounds, ^ London's East .End. • •'.:.-•-Who set8rto-seas a shore, -. HOLLYWOOD, CALIF. 1 ; A'counter-demonstration of admirable proportions sent him :....Met me on his fatal rdunds : ", ANOTHER" JEWISH* ENTER. v into panicky conference with his personal fuehrer, Mussolini. jTAIXEB CLICKS-OX RADIO " And said,- "No more! ^ ' | This column has another sucAnother blow .came to the movement with the death of the No further shoot ; ; * •'...•.y,v ', cess story to record for its readreputed benefactor, Lady Lucy Houston, noblewoman-by-mar;•".:;••*•"• " T h y broad ambitious branches •'•-'• ! ers. You undoubtedly will readxi%ge.- British Fascism seemed quite dead. •.'"•'[""'".. W o Y. r t h y r•o*o• tt,c" A i t •»•!-« i. . - » i lly"recall, .especially it you are a But Sir Oswald is one of these gentlemen who prefer no As the Bible has said, 'So far shalt thou go and no f u r - , J o e P e n n e r radio fan, the radio TOice of the man who geets Joe J life to one of obscurity. His place is in the_ headlines and he'sther, and here shall thy proud waves be-stayed."

JKe Jln<i of Oswald?

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Old age necessarily incapacitates, but the question arises,' In villainous tone with "Hello, determined to stay there. So British Fascism has staged its 'when is a person oldV The statement has been made that 'a [to on that program as "Butch third appearance. en person is as old as his arteries.' Some people are old at thirty j SehmuU." That character is His latest march, sans blaekshirts, has been termed by his at played, by Phil opponents a decided fiasco. As a climax to his recent round while .others are young at ninety. A few years ago it wassplendidly mer, a fine, clean-cut chap who of activities, Moselywas set-upon by determined anti-Fascists the fashion Jo say that forty was the discarding age. Prof. comes trom a strictly Orthodox i yrb j Osier obtained great notoriet}' by suggesting (in sarcasm and Jewish home in -New York. and was rescued by a tram. clti Is one of those rare individuals! the irony, of course), that people should be chloroformed at forty Had policemen on Arab steeds swept through the crowd his faith who attend serv,imp with lowered lances or cohorts swooped from the sky in aero- '('Oslerized' it came to be called). There was a tendency to among Ices at & temple every evening. , .planes, Sir Oswald would have acquired an aura of romance. cast men on the junk-pile at that age; it was difficult for a You can Had him helping form i . But there is something ill-omened in .rescue by a plain, every- person over forty to obtain employment, even when there was the minyan at Temple Beth El in ; , out Hollywood every night that his | work. Of late, there has been a reaction. "We are told 'lifework • Proi day street car. permits. . " | Iroi Since the tram-is considered in• transportation circles an {begins at forty/ According to that a person seventy years of Kramer is now enjoying a five- ' E -W out-dated mode of travel it.is most appropriate that Sir Os-[age (when President Roosevelt suggests Supreme Court Jus- weeks' reunion and visits with " H. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Solo- ' Dart' wald should pass~out 6f the picture aboard this vehicle. I" tices should retire) is only thirty years old. Whereas those his mon Kramer of 12*65 Walton' i89 t under forty are not yet born.' Ave., The Bronx, the first trip he ' A Peek in Fantasy 'And If the suggestion of a certain British: army officer, now But seriously, a person should be usefully'employed and has made home in seven years. ffhat he has a new contract, callvisiting in America, is taken seriously, the British m parti- serve society in his profession and occupation, as long as bisand ' Hq ing for hii services exclusively to ; tioning Palestne will not 'only have solved their difficulties bodily and mental condition whatever his age "permits the Joe Eennerr to show his proud ' forts arisei in the Near East but "at the same time taken care of a more proper discharge of his function; when great wealth or finan- father and mother. Kramer r e - ' tude't pressing problem - » what to, do with the Duke of Windsor. cial independence .do not tempt him to forsake jhis calling or cently' finished 33 weejfes* work tin©-] the radio with Pehner and Aid "Since," the major states, "the Duke of Windsor is 100th occupation; ,wjien" the special duties of his.business or pro-on his work BO well fchat Penner took Bettlei in direct descent of King .David, he will make a suitable king fession do not prove too irksome, arduous or uncongenial for over his management beginning , aive i for Palestine." Arid if he plays chess/a very suitable chess him to continue to perform them. Experience is invaluable next October for radio, motion xaalar) picture and vaudeville perform'partner for the Emir Abdullah* who counts this game of kings and the world should be permitted to profit by the experience ances. notblri Since then he has been among "his vices. • ° . . • and h! gained from year's of conscientious and successful pursuit of besieged by film studios and raearden "When most everyone is anxious to hide any suggestion of a certain way of life to which long practice has given tried dio agents anxious to sigri: him, ' proapei but since Penner ' wants Phil's Jewish-blood, the British, royal family under the guidance of proficiency and proven efficiency. If age brings forth experi- voice They t used exclusively on >his proQueen Victoria conducted an exhaustive search to find a blood nce, it is an argument for, not against, age^as a.qualification gram they were out of luck. Even industJ Sunesi connection with the Jewish royal house. the cartoon characters are using 'or great, wide, "beneficient service. liave b expression, "Hello, Joe." ' .With & knack peculiar to genealogists, the enterprising .When tKe burden becomes too heavy a person should of the «ity'of' Kramer" is clickins in Hollygentlemen of the .College of Heralds evidently found the miss- ourse be permitted to retire. But this is not likely normally to wood* ia big time style. .'.... in Us i ministri ing" link and the Star of 'David, could have taken its rightful jecu'i' unless in the case d£ sickness or some particular emer- JERRY TUCKER' IX - -• cultureplaee on the Coat of Arms with the'Lion and the Unicorn and enev. "TOVARICH" .. ^ . ••• . any coa the other, heraldic devices. ehorea i All naturally look forward tp a final honorable retire- Little blue-eyed,/ red-headed, The J It. is a pleasant thought to "learn" that Edward is onement, freed from financial care and with life Wade as. com- .freckle-faced. Jerry ' Tucker gets ' Only pr good break in the movies...' of us and that he might^be king of this new Jewish state. He fortable and pleasureable^ as possible; with books, travel, another they ha« He has just landed a part' As one'.i has "other attsUjutes beside the tradition of royal blood to through friends, dear onesj; precious memories and blessed hopes. En- of the urchins ia "Torarich.." The.Canaan. stand him in, good stead when the time arrives to^mound the visaging such, some one has said, "the evening hoars are best.' H-year-oW son of Mrs. Leonard J revenue Schali iftd the late Mr. '.Sc&att! throne of Judea. / . Twilight! sunset! the most beautiful period of the day; before of •wages o Chicago ia & veteran of "Our The Duke of Windsor brings out all the monarchist in us. the shadows gather; before dark night descends. Bow Mri [Gang" comedies and: has risen "SoweVer, should he become king of the Jewish state, we shall i: /"Thvis departed Hiawatha, in the glory of the sunset." ' m 'character parts and b\s been ia t h e ; suspect collusion between the Royal Commission and those Thus beautifully sang the noble Longfellow. \ ^YHMS »m «•,*.«. years, *—- mind — you. •>--• •-.children ; who forced the abdication. tion of i there comes of"course-ithe final, inevitable 'retirement/ The -youngster^Hves in_ Holly-, ish healJ with htt mother, who Death retires all, even ^he retirers! God give'th His beloved The p coaches aim. He -.• SSs iaever j

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- ' A., sense of humor is-a good companion to have along on the road of modern life. We can therefore chuckle at the consternation caused among the Brown-shirted fanatics of Berlin when the details of the British plan to .partition Palestine revealed, that over a thousand of the blond simon-pure Aryar nazis would come under the jurisdiction of the proposed Jew ish.state. And the entire German colony of Sarona, outside oj Tel Aviv would be under the thumb of thc_Jewish state-to-be Jn fact, so hot .burns the flames-of nazi resentment that an official protest to Great Britain is being .considered. How ever, the Hitlerite high moguls' need not strain their already

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studied at-a •dramatic school. The] talented youngster recently ap-.J peared.in "OB,:.Doctor/': with- Ed-.: ward Bverett Hcrton: "Love in a ! 'Bnngalow," Shirley Temple's pic-; ture; "Captain January aufi Mar-; tha"..'Ray* asd -Bob Burns*: star-: ring vehicle. ."Mountain Music.":' You'shiould hear Jerry reciieU He.; has memorised scores' and' scores; of- recitations. Ton .would .thlnfel h«: has aspirations to be a great a?tbr,••'-•:pfo«3ucer,*' director,- or. s^.metii'ing like-'thaC~;.-N-otliiln8.*' o f the kind. He has ambitioas to

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THE JEWISH P3SS3, 7KIDAT. JULY 23: 1?ST iri who was responsible gh-getting lines spoken snn'y and other famous of the air lanes and

HOXTH'S. STAY "GUEST MIGHT'AT - ! The.: hisses. Esther and Elaine :•'.. 'HIGHLAND SATURDAY] Al? APP2ECIATIO1* Rosenthal, daughters of -Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Rosenthal.' accom- j By.. Harry Herchfield An Open House and Gcost panied their uncle ~and aunt, Mr. Karry KersMieia, . ratstsntfand Mrs. Joseph Levine, to Aber-Slight will be held this Saturday deen, Soutfe Dakota, for a 1 evening at the Highland Country ing Bros-Stray commentator, !| Club. A program of special ester-! contributes this sppre-dstioa cf month's stay. y pp

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j The.-Onis.ha Club c,i Xew cr ; is planning sn They will return the first part j tsinment is planned, and Austin' George Gessimisi,. whose "WEDDING "RECEPTION LUNCHEON HOSTESS B^evans and his orchestra will furj mature death is mocraed hy osrV of August, I trip to Playland, Tlye Beac Mr., and Mrs. Harry Segall and nish the music for the dinner j musical America.—The Editor. I TTestchester County, New York.j Mrs.- Rose Schwartz was hos-

WS ENTERED ARGENTIMW 1936 Aires (WNS) —Jewish on to Argentina in ,1936 tq_J,261 as compared ,9 in 1935, it was anby Soprotmis, Hebrew t aid society. Kearly Olof the 1,639 newcomregistered with the soe Poland. 507 from Ger2 from other European and 109 from various erican republics.

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•Miss Sarah 'Whitman -will enter, j : On July 11. lbs C^"ub held s.n cat-! VISIT H E B E • ". , . • • • dance. tain a t a reception on Sunday af- tess, a t a luncheon for twelve TO ! TTe who hare survived George ' ing at Palisades Interstate Park. \ • Mrs.. Harry Kosenthal of Chiternoon, July 25, from four until guests '"to. honor of ~Mrs. -Harry cago and daughters, Dorothy and | Gershwin are not aware of tbe u Z. A. 1 seven o'clock at the .Segall .home Cooper of Los Angeles. . . - . ' . . Lillian, arrived for a -visit with jiaeasure ol things. T*'e. who but at 1624 Evans Street, in honor ^ f moments ago had been his relatives and friends. of. Mr. and I#rs. Maurice B. Ka-TWO-l&OKTllS STAY'. IK EAST : • * Haskell Lazere last week wen : c o n t 6 m p o r a r r appreciate™ are Mrs. Rosenthal was formerly teTman of Council Bluffs. Mrs. the right-to represent the Moth-; BOV t h e I o r t t m 6 t e tr tkat-Miss Rosfe Himelsteln and herMiss Sarah Goodman of Omaha. er chapter in the tennis' singles ; GersSwin gate UIs genius G Katelman T»ae formerly Miso Milmatches- at the summer tourna-. t o E n d n r g f o r X dred "Whitman prior to her mar-niece, MiE3 - Dorothy Koplowitz, ment to be held in Council, ^ ^ g ^ fcas b e e n | & e " left for a two months stay in theFOB CANADIAN ROCKIES S o j riage on June 25. ' ; • • •••

Rose G. Cohen left for the Ca-; B l u f f B o n , A t s g a s t 7, 8 i a n d 9 , by t _ n ^ r ,», p _ r status nadian Kockies ..where she wiU jd e f e a tlng Herb'Meches in a close p e e ° O l t I 1 1 S t r a - E " 3 o n c GARDEN TARTY vacation at Lake Louise, Banff, match in the final round c! the i that it leaves us stunned - - yet T a r n and glowing, Stcn-ned that •"•'•• • • / • • • • Miss.Lillian Katz, daughter of T O " C H I C A G O and Emerald Lake. chapter tennis tournament. The bone and flesh in the form of e Kella Singer , left last Friday •; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Katz, enterscore .was S-3, S-4, S-3. friend is corporeal no more. Yet _ tainediat a garden party at her night for Chicago. TORECEITO S17KDAY Meches and Lazere who play a a feeling of warmth a i d glow ~hehome on Saturday evening:, July Mr. and Mrs/ George Soiref brilliant game as "a doubles team of our proximity with his 17, for forty guests ik honor -of TO VISIT SS CHICAGO will be at homer Sunday, July 25, -will represent the chapter in that; tality. So Ions ^s msn's Ivy Sfegel left on Saturday for her sister, Misa Marjorie .Katz from 3 to 5 o^cloci and from 7 capacity. "With the tennis soulful titwho celebrated her sixteenth ! a visit in Chicago^. to, 9 o'clock, to receive friends birthday. and relatives in honor of their boys are on to the pointings -of anothMOTOB TRIP Ejf ST : . ' son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and ball and track at the hope locg shall Mr. and -Mrs. Maurice : Civin i ier's 1 a " ' B U F F E T ' SUFFER-'• " "• '''," '•• Mrs."Irving Soiref, who fiavfe re- they too may represent the chap-j" - T ^ T ™ x"^ + t" & " —'*>j and family left' on July 11 f6"r turned from Palestine. No cards Mr.'and Mrs. I. Berkowitz en•If. ,»•*,» ter in the U ^ « n - competitions, . ^ M n t i n , 8 j GershTrm.be of tn:s compiled calledpert mankind. If- the five week motor, trip through the hare been issued. who tertained at a buffet supper, tor decree that men should foreast. They will visit relatives in boys think that they have excel, ten coiiples Sunday, July 18 in severed, cities Including New York, get all that has gone before-, then lent chances. honor of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Poughkeepsie, and Bridgeport. CONVALESCING •utterances of Ecng-sonsd Miss Ruth Goldsten, who TeJoe Hornstelh Tecently returnBerkowitz of Grand Island- who sacic man ci shaeently underwent an appendecthave been vacationing" here" for _ t Port T,__* Jervis, T-^-J-n.-«^r v . , v iry on to the jnilleraum - - iheir . „___ „ _..._ , ___ .._, VISITING' IN LOS 'AXGELES omy, is convalescing at the home .!-_ tion at New York, the past week. . Ber, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Silverman of her Bister, Mrs. L. H. Cohen, where he was the chapter's alter- j infinity reverberations Xmd th«r Mr. and Mrs.. Milton ; was tagged and twin daughter, Marlene and Iway into the genius o* others to I i at birth . . , Jack Benny saw. t a r lpft for Kansas City where "they Marilyn, have been the guests^ of 447 Forest Drive, Council Bluffs. nate representative.come, to be formed strain into ! light as Benny Kubelsty, his will remain for a week. . ' ' Mr. SilvQrman'B mother, /MrsTM. song. • Mary Livingstone, Ssdye Marks . Silverman ol Los Angeles. •A. Z..A.-1C0 He who hss jnst passed on re- J. . Jan Peerce used to ariETer to' ceived the spark from untold ut- ; Jack Perelffiui.il and Abe L^-mar.' Bj Vl'SlTS TIVE3 terance before hira. K© did not . the band maeEtro, as Abraham 03APIBO An executive meeting of A. Z. MIES Shirley Sarigsh has been A. No. 100 was held Monday, 'fail us -when'that inspiration be- : Simcn . . . No fair guessins retTisiUng Telatives in L03 Angeles. July 19, at the Jewish Communand ! ers' tirth tag . , . By:.BIrs. David .M.""Keqfln;an The J- C C. Youngsters. Soft- csme his. He nurtured to understand it - -. .- , and ity Center. \ Each committee ball League last Sunday found j _»' GTEST IN XOS ANGELES chairman gave his report with the Yanlcs upsetting the Cards i then left to HE a heritage that * e , VACATION- NOTE: D. L. S.., Graham Crocker" H«frigerator Misa'Hhoda Krasne has been plans for the next two months. ; shall not carelessly K-^ « , . , . » „ « ~r . 1 5 in <„ a , -ror^: Etude. We i vacationing on sn island in Lake by the'score of n 11-1S -rery y - - " ";_ . ".-Cake . * .'•'"• the guest of her cousin, Miss Mar- Plans for the formal installaGeorge, post cards UE these fcnlfast played contest. It was a sev - ^ r e now heir to a priceless 1-2. cup "butter; 1 cup sugar; 1 jorie Krasne, of Los Angeles. tion of officers to take place next en inning affair, vrlth brilliant agencies recording gift letins: "TV'ES pusHed into lake nt] egg; 3 tablespoons cream; 1 cup Monday in the Center lodseroom fielding taking place, and gane activities and ceasing cf a Trorl yesterday arfi found out 'or firr-t, crushed -pineapple; .2 1-4 cup TO VISIT E? OMAHA were discussed. A number of of humans must of necessity do \ time -what absorptive caps city | being played in less than graham cracker, crumbs; .1 cup . "T>"€ had trouble | Mrs. Louis Abrahamson and prominent speakers will be on the hour-s t i n t ' | ^ h a ^ t h e 5"' & 0 - " Eimplx print in I means, chopped walnutB. Arabs CE 'Se r t t r r Mrs. A. B. Ctierniss of St. Paul, program. •» In the other contest, the Giants \ cold frpe these •<»rgs, "George seme Cream butter and strsar. Addi Minnesota, arrived In-'- Omaha On Tuesday, July 27, the tra- defeated the Tigers by a score of;Gershwin, eminent composer, dies: eS fi of the isl egg beaten nntil light. Add cream -Monday to spend ten days visit- ditional 'Installation dance will be 9-0 flue to a forfeit The kitting,at thirty-eight." But we. biocfe-; tioaes-the isia , . Tbe outing Mr. and Mrs. Julius' Sherman held at Peony Park. .A special Of the Zernovsky Brothers, Mar-i "*£ out for a few- minutes other ; house was placed under peraw: arid pineapple. meeting1 will be held August-2, at vfn Line an oblong bread pan with 1 and .family, vin nnri and Tinn Don, fpatnrprt featured fhn' the' Tan-1 Tan- \ pressing pressing events, can and should ; eat mandate, however." . . . which -time all unfinished busi- kee heavy wax paper and place a RADIO NOTE: TConder i£"there ness will be considered. layer of fine cracker crnmbs AT'JOSLTN are sny rsdio sets in the town schedule finds The organ program at the Josabout one-half inch deep on the During the winter of 1793 ing the league leading bottom. Over this" pour 3 or 4 lyn Memorial this Sunday aftertablespoons - of pineapple juice noon at 4:00' will be-presented by dent, leased the Philadelphia fers. These games are played at • In and 1-3 of the pineapple misture. Mr. Martin W. Bush, assisted by m. at the - Central Hi?h home there is a cf rsi^io home of Isaac Franks. Sprinkle with chopped walnuts. Thelma^ Gaspar, violinist. . Grounds. . G«orf;e - - i t s co-?r,;rr rhrws srCCT:?? STCTvY: Add _ second layer < of". cracker jsittinp at the rie.r.3. On _ thrt Guita !.€•=-:?. -cc~e".^ 7 c W-crnmbs, pineapple and nuts, and - P a u l Steinberg.-rwho-has been rhr'tpprprh. in.tb? f f ^ '" ' '," of K c r b T i d ; r"= IJ1" y complete by" adding third" layer. in charge of the Youngsters soft^ritinc, rr« t>e words .t- J.rm ^ yourg rivf'.-'--_ " ' " r r -rer Cover with wax paper and let Ball League, is taking his vaca- - - followed by s, few bars c stand In refrigerator 24 'honra. tion for the next two weeks and music - - that mrs.cal messac" .o Cut in slices and serve with whip! Earl Siegel, member of the Ath- her that wts written dirertly ped cream. \ : . Hollywood —-Sam Goldwyn —- Bobb'y Breen •s. picture, "I don't j j e t l c C o t a m i t t e e , will^e in charge from one un3er?tar.dirg heart io first, last and always a showman. have to worry about wrinkles." jo l the" contest. He win be ssly s s - " o t h e r . JRIarshmnllow Apricot Delight £fe originated a new preview George Jessel and Nornia will ra-!. s ; s ^ e( j y Sam. Epstein, another!! That rimr^? r ^ r t r r r r r n . ! 'of the Athletic'" Commit-1that soulful ir.?crirticn to ; i c u p apricot pulp;' 2 cups J m e t h o d t h i s -week .-".,:.-took' the .dials via-the etnsr as a., team. !m e ^ whom he called " ! - > r " is p niarshmalknrs; 1 cup chopped first print of "Dead End" to a Bert Lahr and Phil Baker are re- j t e s walnuts: 1 cup whipped cream. small town lor the unbiased op- cent additions to the comicalities j Another casualty was reported er than sny synrhrsy thrt Combine apricot Tulp, the inion of the "people". Had the of the town. ,Mary Livingstone ia |J n t h e jjealth Club Volley Bail rould wrifp i" a wrrli r->t rather difficult camera subject. competition when "Wild'Bill Jcf- directly raterr.s.1. marshmallows cut In- quarters, theatre manager, announced that rTid nuts. Let.stand for one hour "Mr. Goldwyn. wanted, not their For her film debut they shot her fes came up with a dislocated and Orrrhwln you tzi tc« gcruir?- ^ ^ — ~ ^ j ^ ~ j, t> A.iw.,Zoi. refrigerator, then fold in whip- praise, but their reactions to any rom one side only.. • . the other hadly bruised thumb last week.'ners cf man. Whoever feels that volley tell is; In George Gprs>wi-'? cwr, rrn- \ trt G:,J .. f ped cream. Pile lightly in sher- weak points they might discov- profile wasn't so "Barrymore." a ladies* game is cordially lnvit- pic we have all t i e eulogy r=ocr; bet.glasses and sprinkle" with cut- er." In the lobby were tables at np Ted cherries for color. RetAirn -which the amateur critics could Frits Feld, actor-like, enjoys j ed to play or witness a game with rary to fcrr.or the cercLs:i. to the rGfrigerator until ready to dissertate at ease., Goldwynhim- the center of the stage. At a re- ] the Health Club any Monday, Gershwin's rights m::st b? reself hovered abotit, met all com- cent party he was out of focus,! Wednesday, or Friday at 12:S0. Fr ected; he wrcte fcr r-sn tr.d . -Bcrre.'-- - •'". ' .• ; . ' . -' / ers, eagerly^ discussed the film. so to speak. Made a great show T h e eparfiiesa can assure Result: Many, valuable sugges- of tiredness, ho-humhjg, yawning. you will change your mind ar.d p tions for retakes . . . and more 1 IB.' of cooked prunes; 1 ;l-2 important , . .greater public'es- etc Finally existed for s.-aap. Ko \ So away saying that it is oae ol nip pninfe juicej-1 package lemon teem than ever for Herr'Gold- one took notice. Returned in ajth© roughest, and toughest games few minutes . ; . got plenty.of at- i played. • Jello: 1 egg white. Heat 1 cup wyn. ' ... ' • .'.. tention . . . wore a sign marked sweetened Ernne- juice and pour Swimmers are continuing to Beware'— Mad Dog." over jello. Add 1-2 cup cold pass their American Red Cross Be-Thankful Dept: "You can't prune juiee. Set asISe in a cool beginners and swimmers tests. New tune by Sam Coslow and place until it quivers. Whip egg be as handsome as Gable," say An average of the Ritz Brothers, "and bB white until stiff. Chop. prunes until fine. Add jello whip until to make as funny faces as we Pope-Eye, a Set of Dishes, Keeno, j 1 light and fluffy. Add beaten egg do." K -H-hite and mix just enough to Mama Jacobs is again seen ae/ . . what more is girls classes in the evening. AUsn fold In prune mixture. Pour in mold to congeal. Serye with eompahying Ariel - - u h - -Elaine there to say? . Blank and Bruce "Boots" Greenand John here-and there. Hm-m, whip cream. berg are the-last two junior boys' ; they jieed a chaperone yet? At the age of nine Sylvia Sid- i-to p a E S t h e l r s ^ i m m e r g t e s t . "J Prune .Cake • ..} ney was the best fielder on a boys History a la Hollywood: Final 3 cups flour; 1 teaspoon salt: • scenes of "Road Back" depicting baseball team. east.

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4 teaspoons baking powder; .1 eup "butter; 2 cups sugar; 4 egBs; German children being taught to Another story current about Al \ 1 tablespoon grated lemon rind; be soldiers Incensed the local i/ \ 2-3 . cup prune water;- 2 cups Nazi consul. So the offending Boasberg concerns the time he drove to the studio in a car withchopped cooked prunes (unsweet- truth will be sweetened.. . . J ened); 1 1-2 cui) chopped wal- takes shot . - . more romance de- out a top. Someone asked whethveloped . . .iove interest emphas- er he had been in an accident. nute. I just entered one of those conized, v ... _. • ;•;. ••' ; . Sift flour, ? salt and baking "Uncle". Carl had more cour- tests and had to send in the top powder together. Cream butter, ' ' '. ' ' ...' * of my car!" 1 1-2 cup sugar gradually. Beat age . ..'.' well.-Beat eggs Tin til light and Harry Wardell, who used to be Viola - Brothers Shore insists fluffy. Beat • in remaining 1-2 cup sugar. Add to'creamed mix- Al Jolson's double on the stage. .that "for years she has lived in now.a sort of personal assistant I Hollywood with one foot on the ture. Combine lemon rind and is prune * water. Add alternately to a producer. The other day he went to his boss. "I-ve been with with sifted dry ingredients. Fold you a long time." "That's right," in prunes and nuts. . Bake ; in the esec.'"And never did layers and when- cold cover with agreed a thing for 'you." "Uh-huh." 7-minute icing and "cover "with "Well," ventured TYardell, "how coarsely? crushed or rolled pea- about & raise?" "Okay,*' was the A : nuts.' ' ; - ...':.-. "--' -. -- amazing reply. .Harry will xecov-t|s

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- . . . ' fi Apricot Bread •: • ' ; • • • . er. -flour; 2 teaspoons bakClose-ups: Gordon and Revel ing powder; 1-4 teaspoon soda; can write.a hit tune in one Ccy! 1-2 teaspoon" salt; 1-2 cup sugary Irving; Pichel-'TTill sire a nuT^mcr i^ . 1-2 enp whole wheat flour; 3-4 course In Dramatics at Berkeley. J cup~* dried, apricots;. 1 egg; .S-4 Sybil Jason's parents, If;rr.«l Ja- J J, 1 cop milk;: 1 -teaspoon orange coDson ana T/ife, OTe telling; it to [^ juice; 1 tablespoon melted butter. a judge In Capetown, South Af-jy; : Sift together^rat. five inRi;eai- rica. Her unclei Harry J-acobson, hj ents. Stir in "Whole wheat flpnr. in Hollywood, is her guardim fcrip P u t ' apricots through food cliop- five years! Max Factor calculates \'f$ T>er. Add to dry ingredients. he has performed.scsme five hnn-l'l Mix ^ e »v;Beat^ess.^ : ^ A.dd.'iiU^--| d r e d t h o u s a n d '^la'mpuriiations'.in j orange juice, and butter.^ :«"^ : . t h e fiini_colony sines 1909. "For r-linuid to dry ingredients. .Stir j „ g i g jj S t h e \ only enoush-to blend well. ?our • in a greased pan. Bake at ZT5 degrees for thirty-five minutes. FREE] An Espcri

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FEEE STATE HEAD -VISITS TRINITY — President Eamon.De Valera, whose government recently was returned" in the Irish Free State by a narrow margin, shown speaking a t ceremonies in connection with the opening of the new reading room a t Trinity College, Dublin. The President has been receiving treatment for eye trouble, but this picture shows *"*" in evident good form again.:

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THEY'LL TAKE THE HIGH BOAD—^More than 1,400 inhabitants of Shawneetown, HI., got good and tired of having flood waters of the Ohio river inundate their homes and property every time the river felt like going on a rampage. Since they couldn't move either the Ohio bi the Wabash, which converge a few miles above their town, they took the alternative and decided to move their community—three miles to the west and 400 feet above sea level.

Upper right shows how they plotted their r.eTr tOvni. viih I'.Iayor Fred Howell, extreme right, helping Clifford Durham cn.i fsrr.,:--' select their new model home. Lcwer nght, one of ths s.r~y *.r,nt? in which families are living since the iioods -trc^isd thslr harass away. Upper left, how floods left a ns:r_e stranded and, Icvcr left. ttie floods came and moved this church rijht into ths v.-ACils cf - the street. Higher ground relocation Ls expected to t::I:o t r o rears.

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GOVERNOR ASKS HELPi-Governor Charles V. Hurley of Massachusetts asked President Roosevelt to sanction use of Coast Guard boats to .transport food between the mainland and Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard islands. Food and other supplies .for 27,000" .islanders waited on docks a t New Bedford, as above, as t h e result ' of southeastern Massachusetts seamen's strike.

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LAST OF THE HINDENBURG—Skeleton of the giant airship Hindenburg carted away from the point where it fell in flames at Lakehurst, N. J., goes to .the furnaces of a smelting company at Maurer, N. J . Althougu the ship originally cost about $3,000,000, remains ere wcrth tetweca $4,000 and .$12,000, the amount to be determined by weight of pure aluminum recovered.

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church at F^ris, l i e , Bapt ^ EL, after arrested in P^tsScld, the body or his i parishioner. ICrs. Dennis Kelly, was found in the Ivlississippi river. Police said hs confessed to hitting her vith a hainnisr, during a cuarrel, snfi pushing her body o 3 ths ICcrk Twain fcrifise r.car Kcnribc.:, ICo. Ke is married. 1 IV

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HEAT IBKS WO&F PUPS—Awak-Konoow and Yak-Sook, wol pups, v/ere hot "and bothered by Los Angeles heat, after they arrived from the zoo in Calgary, Canada, Virginia- Murray, a zoo visit'pr, shows how tame they are. The pups were a reciprocal gift for a pair of rare Java peacocks' presented by Los Angeles.

NET STAE—Meet Miss Margot Lumb, one of the latest additions to England's Vightman Cup tennis team, which will-soon invade the United States. This is a recent'studio portrait of the new net star. Described as "England's fittest sports girl," she already is the British woman squash racquets champion, and is called "Lady Lightning" of squash.

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THE .JEWISH FS2SS, FRIDAY, JULY 2rr, IDST for thousands of years Ia every land. -. It must be recognized that -is- | tolerance and perisecutJcn tske I i . : many forms and fron tira> to j tliae their serpeat-iike heads ap- j J pear to polsoli and terrify thei tol- j KM m m I ©rant and the just ia every land. j It is deplorable that education ^ jand enlightenment h a v e sot International -crushed and destroyed these foes Railvteyz of liberty and happiness. F.e-ssts Senator JooepE T. Robinson Hay. we not with propriety exJewish Sfcrf® press the hope that wholesome . America mourns the death of decide on leaders and laws of the • \ i , f ~-x i Arab Stare epect for public authority? His world opinion may influence .senSenator - Sosp^h T. Kobinsoa, state; that Jews may not hold oftiment in- Germany so '"that in contribution ~to religion is recogBriti leader of the Roosevelt forces. fice, or own, manage, or control time—a short time.—the iron "Four yearn ago he delivered In any newspaper, or practice law nized throughout the world. His grip of racial hatred Eay be re" " - r ' " — •"• "the Senate a speech! against or sit as juorors or commercial racial integrity has continued in and the Jews again be periNnzi .intolerance, the test. 01 judges. spito of contacts with Gentiles fmitted to eajoy fair freofics? • , ...: .-.-. vrhich we present herewith. I t Jews whose ancestors, have is an appropriate comment on lived in Germany -for- hundreds rrd rr Senator liobinson's Tiews on of years are thus deprived of the ,p IF. 71 e: intolerance and Digotry. f primary" rights of citizenship. Six ' ~- . n c r". "V —The Editor, hundred thousand Jews lived in >— X" One ot the unsolved mysteries Germany a t the outbreak of the By Mrs. Herbert H. old' principle still prevails ia r" of history is. the. recurrence of world war in 1914, and 12,000 of Mrs. Lehman, wife of the Gov-places that, "all things beisg movements marked by intolerance them died in battle 'during that ,7 equal," the preference is given to f i ernor of New York,' here -de- the man. While we women, of and persecution. Ad m i t t e d l y conflict.. r' " p e~E ;v.~e forms of physical torture pracUniversities are closed to Jew-j scribes the progress madefeywo- course, deplore this fact, -vre rec•-j p r o c ticed during the Middle Ages are ish scientists and .students. The mon in thts comparatively short ognise in it a healthy challenge no. longer resorted, to, save in right of Jewish children to attend time that they have participated which keeps us vigilant aad en rare instances; nevertheless in primary -school is limited or de- in the world's activities outide^ our toes, and makes us take the larger aspects the manifesta- nied. •"-' , . - the home.—The Editor. stock of ourselves from tin:© to tions of cruelty differ now only time. Almost every profession and The world has undergone many slightly from those of primitive While the right of'woman to vocation is closed against persons < . h a n g e 3 d l i r i n g the last twenty• time3. . '- . -..•.••her livelihood in all fields ot Jewish blood. This astoundsense of security ' I t is both surprising and dis-' Ing and oppressive policy is ren-1five.years. Astability, so charac- of activity and endeavor is gena n d eternaI appointing to one familiar with dered the more intolerable byi 1 erally recognized, it is perhsps ia the character and disposition of decrees forbidding-Jews to leave taristic of the temper of the the field of social work that she times twenty-five years ago has the German people to take note been supplanted, in many cases; has made her greatest of the alarming persecution of Nazi songs sung a t parades by a feeling of insecurity, appre- and most contributions, ,7etrs -which during recent.months and mass' meetings stimulate and toward progress was The has occurred i n m a n y parts of crystalize the - spirit x>f anti- hension and fear for the future. e a r l .i^f C r r r r r r ; .c ji-- ' In spite of this change of t e m - i y evident in the development Germany. ^Apparently the condi- Semitism. I t is -sufficient' to o f r r ft r 1 " • ' • - " < b r - ' ' ' f r ' = T ' per, and perhaps because it has j woman's participation in the and fleld tions referred to originate in quote two starisas: o£« social service. -Woman's aroused "in them* a sense of re- | political policy supported by gen- "The Fatherland needs men; T " " . h c: , . - P r ^ , " ; ] <• energies, her potential effectiveand obligation, wospoasibility eral public opinion. It is my It -ia in'dreadful plight. ness in affairs of Importance men have gained in self-conf i-j have conception of the German citizen It is only, when Jews die 1 b e e a logically diverted, i s denes, in the ability to map out I that he is liberal in opinion and That "German Buffering ends. ',"--:r'r r-~ .'",, > " • " ; ~ *- •--', r ~ ! sreat measure, to movements for their course and to follow it r e not usually disposed to act '-oplent^ssly and with courage. They social progress and for c m c impressively. ••.•••.-• •'.•._•.' ~~rc~ r" , ' r ; T"r~'-"T •<• ~ r "Thus do the storm columns have found for themselves new, proveiaent. . In substantially all Making due allowance, for the Stand ready for the battle of the paths leading toward higher goals j c a s e s t h e s e t w o a r e • T-ot T s r o r ' : r r * r - - - - - -< . i exaggeration and misrepresentaraces. . •-. ' and toward these goals they > A e ^ -ori n 1her "»-•• preoccupation •" tion which inevitably color re- It is-only when Jews bleed i t h those •>/-rz i l r : " /-" -<•' r " - r~ "• movements which strive with ever-increasing en-j ^ -., ports of cruel incidents, there ap-j That we are liberated." i r p f T r - r " ' - r ~ r o •-• - z '•>••* cari n e r thusiasm and loyalty. ! T outside the limits of , f h e r i r . r ' . - r c'. ','- r - ' > " > r r ' 1 ' i pears conclusive evidence that the Quite naturally thig organized : i • . J. ±1. ^ ,v i her home It is inevitable that Xazi administration has startled propaganda, carried on by writers! c, I P r d * V r 1 . c C ? • -^ r - f The very fact that, they inare ex-j j „^ , „ nnd shocked manldnd by the and EpeakerB prominent in politi-.jPected now to play a part every - . n n i i n „ b r o a d e r knowledge fi9 d f of those oatr.»i-f.jpr.f- ir. - i ' f .-.". <= v 1 "severe policies enforced against cal authority, embraced in. the } l _f acOvity f side views that affect the special jevrs—even those of only partly platform of the political party in er effort and .achievement. with which she is contwentr-five years ago. in ! & Jewish blood." ".,.-;... • """' • control, and its songro of hatred Iitical womenwere ' the political field women-were j , ' the The evidence to which refer- have stimulated and quickened T h e Q 1 2 a l i t y that marked fiEbtins fur the right of . ' r a n | • „ * „ / lHt rf t h e V 0 H a a . t h * r " " f" '^c T ' " ' ^ f ence is made is found: First, in public sentiment against th© Jews * prn c i ' v" v •' "•- '• "~~addresses' delivered by German in Germany to the extent that chise against antagonism and dis- •of years ago not alone of men. but of officials, including Canceller Hit- they have become discouraged individualism. Such militant TSler and his minister'of propagan- and their defenders.have been in- women themselves, who feared ; formers as Carrie Nation went da. Dr. Goebbels; secondly, in the timidated. • Numerous • incidents that the,right to. vote would fob I their tempestuous but purposeful editorial policies of many.news- are reported i y correspondents to them of thrsir womanliness and j •way aloag an individual path jI which they set themselves. l a papers; thirdly, id the remarks local: and foreign newspapers in- their love for the home. Fortunately this did not prove | more recent decades each color| :\ r "!-• •" ''T T'~'\ "T •" of speakers to mass meetings of dicating that the^ Brown Shirts to be the case. On the contrary, I ] German citizens: fourthly, in the have committed robberies and asful but loae crusaders have gradsongs; and, fifthly, in the saults with Immunity, from pun- believe , ually been supplanted by groups n n U e d Jn a c5minoI1 legislative arid., administrative i s h m e n t . l t ; is . asserted , upon great pride to the c o n t r i b u t i o n s ^ ^ ^ appears — to —he reliable au- •they have political program.. . . , . . , j what „„«... ..*., . made i_ in i. the ^political T. i| p u r p o s e . Individualism has £ivThe most regrettable, circum- thority that Jewish barristers j world since they have been act0 € n l i g Q t e n e < j CO operaFtrnre is disclosed in what ap- jand -doctors have been beaten ccpted there as a resl lactor< They t l o n * Tii9 f a nf a r e and- defiance pears -to bs"-'-the ^attitude of a j - a n ^ a r i r e n "thrbugu the streets of have shown that they are capable JJoJ, t h e { o n a e r d a y h a v e b e e a r e _ ...This map.shows the^^division of Pa'aiestme. e.^ t"proTiopsr p ....... .-_• Tvillages i they to shoulder,, jp , a c e d t y raore r e s t r a l E e d i U a g e g nntl "tllB until they have have fainted fainted g * lnritv the-Soval Gominission in its report into a Jewish. U l i L i ^ (t-ii. ith themen harmony with themen ods of influencing public opinion. citizens, which while resulting in from exhaustidn; that thousands to perfect .improving conditions and in Arab State and a British. Mandated Territorv. in The popular conception of wo,-ruelty toward individuals of of Jews have attempted- to flee the home a better place man exclusively In the-role of a the country, but that frontiers Tewish blood also appears to suptort the policy of .driving; Jews^j a r 9 e losed by new passport regu in which to live. ministering angel has givea way which shs is interested the sense ' and secular thought, KEfisssah fiistia- launching a E S F educ?.tioa&i pro-: They have recognized in t h e | t 0 a n e w pict}lte «-Ionian—«tiU of organizstioti which "rom their "occupations and of j ] a tions and. escape has become right of franchise an ever-present jr e t a i a i n g ae.. tendtr Qualities of guishes American life. She fcss p-iis that will ie:p the Jerrfsih j "anying them the opportunity to > difficult—.almost imite'ssible. •rccrnan to evaluate the " culturel' am their living. '', • | : I t is • sickening .and - terrifying. traditions of her pe-cpie. This As early as 1924 .Chancellor | t o realize that• ' t£ great people necessitates E. tetter TEderEtatt.T.tler wrote a.T)ook entitled "My j ^ h 0 S e advance during thousands ; scientific social knowledge of the c s a c i i s as<3 in er- iEg of tae currejit T-rkT£ prcb_ -. The _ philosophy | "^tnipBle." The ,twelfth edition Io f y e a rB has been marked by not- woman is satisfied to sit supinely it w e n t i e t J l J as d for the leTns. Thus HESassah, which, tu•vas printed in ilunich in 1.932, \aMe achievements in the arts and by, accepting situations as they jo f p l t y ^ ~ s i ^ ' ^ r ' { Q ^ p h i l - !S or r< r »-<! is alleged to declare, at page j sc iences should respond to im- come, rejoicing if they are pleas-1 osophy . • of ' rehabilitation • ~ " i of a homeland fojs- thouph co3ceri-.eS with s, specific ;0: :' . „ .-_"•.•.'. !pulses of cruelty and inhumanity a n t aiM looking o a t h e m a s i n - building. Wcmaa EO-W Jewis ia ?s.lest£ss the American if t h e y a r e n o t . S h e n o w herself with such movements as IIJewish W6EE2S has plsred «a im- finfia itself involved in -P-OTIE"If the Jew wins . .".his crown i wn ic:h when they have, spent their evitable : of victory is the death wreath of! f o r c e -V7ill have lowered German BE&S herself, " W h a t c a n I d o she" considers cosstrECtivs anfi portant part. Jewish women, or- •wid-e problems, Is a s exaiEp'e cf in the opinion of all about i t ? " And she proceeds toJ^" or ta"whUer" : SheTeeis"'to : strike ganised through Hsdassais, have j the way ia w ich 1woman's horihumanity, and. this planet/ will j IF 'or.r? r"—ec" with whom ; Germany act. In this way she keeps her- a t t h e T € T y T O O t o f t h e . t r o u W e been able to-plsy an effective rrcr - IF 'or.r? r t t - i ; once again, as it did ages^ ago, j p e o p i e s and commercial self informed" regardlng-"all mat- and worEs with all the power at psrt not cs'y in the upbuild:-s flontthrouph of j m u s t p the,,ether "bereft 1 r r r men d f d :: myself lf jjre i at i O na throughout the future.; ters pertaining to the welfare of [h w .-command for those csanges of Palestine but 5a the enr::"> c" .*. v .,,1. rr f, r : ! r .~~ en , . . "When 1 defend gainst the-Jews I fight for t h e j I t i s n o t suggested that the TJnit- her home and becomes an import-j the greatest mest of Jewish lire ia v i l l secure .rroY" Twesty-flve years sgo. ed States intervene or attempt to ant cog on the machinery of gov- happiness for t a e "greatest n u n work of the Lord." ernment. « . .. ". . \ HadaE&ah wascrgsnized, tV~ determine the domestic policies The Nazi program " provides ber. In the economic field women that only persons of German of the German people. The Jewish' woman ia Such cruel policies as are re- have made great,. strides. The country has been quick to avail j ily. circumscribed by those' VETblood may be citizens'and that geacral to the work of v-pthose who are not citizens shall [ { e r r e a to will bring their .own World War had robbed the.indus- herself of - the' opportunities for riera • be governed by laws regulating penalties.'..'.' They 'will result in t»ial and economic world of man greater freedom, which have beea j "en. Today,- with a cew Ea3erforeigners; that only citizens may oss of international prestige, in power. Woman suddenly found accorded to all. women, apd to j standing c* the implications o* moral • reaction, among the Ger- herself In a new position, whers apply to these niovemests all public movements, with, a ; -people of far-reaching ef- many industries and professions mastering of ergsunzailoa tech- ! man Under ?»ew ^ I j S 'loss of trade and com- were open to her. She toofc her nique, Kadassah i s s heea able to | ect. in proper place and one is justified GENERAL FOODS BUIS its infiueaee acd has serHEW GLOVER. LEAF.CLUB' merce..ia concluding that she has filled a Ter v- 119 So. 15411 Street It ha3 sometimes been said it creditably, since there are to• -SNOW KING COMPANY\™* " ^ e ' EectiTe UlstT^ hat the Israelites "are -a'.people DANCE TO THE without a country. In & sense day few fields which exclude wo" ' :__ • i meat Ia accelerating the fievelopClarence Francis, president of' roEnt o f p * l e s t i a « & s t h e h e n s I o r men.. * MUSIC OFbroader hat ig true; but in a homeless and pcrsecstea .Tews, i3 it not-tnown that Jews It is true that in many cases General Foods Corporation, snRAY DE V/1T7-S In America., ia response to tt? 1 nounced to day. the acquisition by have made their home in every a woman must show 'exceptional company of Snow K.isg BakZc I V *-^r" -~T"T t ability:to succeed ia the face of and? That the characteristic of v SyBC0 HI HoB8PS _ing Powder and Dairy "Maid Bak-[ ' the Jew ia peacefulnesa and re-competition with raea, and the |ing Powder, products of ths Scnw O GXCCLLEHT F 0 D 3 j King .Baking PovriCr Coapaay at "" o ssT sn, f>r,ums Ciacianati, Ohio. « Oar Ccsrcosl Croilod SfscSu The acquired conrany h?s > /,ro S KOOKBAT been in the baking powder bus- iness continuously and tuectrr- l , fully sicce 1837, and l.s di;tri-|r' r? butioa Js most extensive is the > A r."ETV C A S aotithwestera and caulicactens L' parts of the raited Ftst*"-, cc-ij' cording to tfa& aimc"iicsm^3it. * Sir. Parlin Lihard. Vice prcrl- ' • dent of tha Saow Kias co~7E.~j%, A Division of will join the G-caercl TccCs orsr,KiEa!lon to bo ' s cir.r"? c' 'E^o^r Slag and Da'ry H i l l c;cr- ( ' CORPORATION atlons.

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I: ready to mobilize its aiding conflict in North j homeland. Even young I these of the Sodo sect 1st year.

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Braoo, Bronze, Alwmtauin, Soft Grey iron and ScnsiSteel Castings, Wood'nnd Metal P a t t e r n s ane! Sash V/cishts carried in stock. Sr0:1=0 • and, Cast Iroa Grilles a specialty. bped by Old'Glory. here is •onal Exposition in Paris, ,od American and French, jtook m e lead in empha.jn friendship, praisins t h s anding. - .

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THE JEWISH PESSS, FRIDAY, 5TJLT 23. 1937 ed home following a two month's visit' with relatives in .I1O3 Angeles and Oakland, California.

bees in Paris for a yes LEA loved its city almost fee ' had loved Berlin.. Oz.ly hz did wish that his mother wcc'd Miss Arlene Krasne, daughter look less worried, and that kis of-Mr. and Mrs. Leo Krasne, has father—ranch though he loved J.1ISS ANNA PILL, coxreapoadaa returned' home-'from a visit in going around the city with hiss.— Sious City,' Iowa. ^ if call have more important business to attend to. Miss Yetta Felnbers has reMiss Dorothy Cohen, daughter It ires about this time that turned to Sioux City after spend; ByKonrad's parents told Mrs, that ing the past sis months in Daven- of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cohen of they •would saos • go traveling port, Iowa. •-; ' • . : . Harlan, is expected tp return homo today • following a?- three ever j sgafa. But where they planned \ Sious City members of the A. / t h a t he learned Just what j to. go is something Mr. TCcrM j trie _.-%. v r E^C. ^-^ J Slutsky .of weeks*, visit with- relatives at which Mr. World started to tell 2. A. :cb.apter received an official -Mr. and-Mrsv'-Louls r een" the rreasoa ffor th d h£d been" the endMadison, Wisconsin '..•'aid;* Cedar Thff C e s e r & LLICI DeSmet aife visiting • in''.Sioux City can't teli yon till Invitation to the summer A. Z. A. you two weeks ago? • Or has all Rapids;• Iowal . " . " " • ?. 2,CCC, s.z. r c r e s . s e ";' *. ' . • ") . conference to be held August 7, this •week.the important business . of swimJS ya. utiii i. t_e l_«t c.r-c C-J T 8, and a, in Council Bluffs, zvhen ming and lying in the shade and then. The Bar Mitzvah • of •'AJvin: Pas- all the other things we huraans the •fszi campaign of ' bate Miss Rose Silver of Omaha visa delegation from that chapter frighten ' h t a iato-^Ehutting up1:<(Copyright, 18S7, by Seven Arts visited here last week end. Plans ited' with • friends' in; Sioux City ser, son,.of Mri.and Mrs. Joe "Pas-, do to get by in the Summer-time shop", and'as-his ladies' clothing T««, n,«m.»i • . Feature n»,,-« sSjiidicate.) ser, ;took; place! J u l y M 5 , a t ' , t h e made, you forget about this 'Gerfor the conference were: describe! t h i s w e e k ; . . > '-<•/•;. ' • " ; Chevra . B'nai Yisroel synagogue man Jewish boy to whom th© re- store nad sold 'beautiful dresses | ~" '' ' by the AlephB : from Council "Slnffs, and the local members Mrs.' Meyer Shubb spent sever- at 6i8'Mynster"Street. , , gime of the Nazis meant a great at -reasonable prices many of his | M O S E S S A G A • I S old cnstoisers v,aincng the Cfcris- i Boston —- An elevc have begun plans to send a large al-days,thia week visiting with change in his life? SUPPORTED BY Dr; Isaac Stefnhill and, his son, tians hsd continued to buy there. I mission, comprising:delegation to "the meet. friends in Minneapplis. •"•" To be t>n the safe side, Mr. But in the next block had besn a NEW DISCOVERY of -tfce legislature srs'i Vernon, are spfndlng a couples of *Mas Turner, advisor' of. • the World wants to remind you that ~ .appointed by • the Go chapter, was accompanied. here \ . Mrs. AlvinL'owe of' Plainview, weeks* at ,Camp'- Dodge at Des Konrad, s t the age of nine, sud- competitor who had now turned Nazi, and who hsd hoped ' that (Continued from page 7.) been set up to insiitu New Jersey, arrived in Sioux Cify [' Moines, • Iowa.; by. Meyer Maltz and Abe Raben, denly discovered that some of. the the anti-Jewish boycott which the ; tigaUon • of Nazi, F members of the chapter and ,therecently' fee Bible to American e: A B W l i a i 1 lm .•Messrs. Saul Suvalsky and Fred boys who had been his friends Nazis had proclaimed would put Itio „„„« » •i ,'° . 1 Misses Florence Meyerson and u=— Hausmann «•,„.«,. -„* _» jCherrilss' have returned home fol- stopped playing with him, that Herr out of v. business i: QS, declared that the B'b - 3" | irities in and..Miriam Fiedler, who will be Dp)iglas-street. ire the j hi3 teacher no longer liked him, lowing a^ ten day.fishing trip In very quickly, so that he—-the; official hostesses at the conven; other colonies-" as -well ES In Fu'ri- iegislatJire. that his father and mother were jNjrthern Minnesota;, They made Nazi—could get all the trade. tion. • : • ' . : • Al Sumne'r. of Cleveland, Ohio, full of unusual worries. And from which Herr Hausmann bad j the trip -overland. !i . \ • Hebrew The Sioux City chapter, wll arrived inVSiotix 'City this week what puzzled and hurt him most gives an "honored place m been making his living. This j th hold its next, meeting at. Grand- to visit with fdends and relatives. is's Share of-TJ. E. Mr. and Mrs. Ike Feblowitz and was the discovery that t h e rea-Nazi had been furious to sea that \ classical education in early view park next ;Wednesday evenson for all this was the fact that for Lake even Christians still ^rcre baying I• America. Discussing the inflning, when new members will bs Tw&nty-four friends gave a sur- children left Sunday A Bible- end' the Hebrew their clothes at the Hausmacn ence -of the prise party last Sunday for Mrs. Okobojo, where they have taken he was a Jewish boy. elected. ; • Keif . York... (JTA) —S:nce on American la-w, ideals J* Kanofsky, and presented heV a cottage for a two weeks' vaca- Konrad and his Jewish friends, store. .He had then told the P p -i;-heritage 'Hitler, came into-power in instittttioas.. Dr. Kewaasa i n d tion: ' •".".. ; with a gift. •;•••••• Hans Kohn and Richard Kaliski, lice that Herr was GcriiiELv has lost- more tha: that the Mosaic lai FREE INSTALLATION •Miss; Harriet Schaeffer of Om-j tried to get their parents to es- plotting against the Hitler gov- said her proportionate share ' oj i h e plied to morals, SabbatB, slavery Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cohen of aha-13 visiting, here with her couplain to them why their being ernment—which wasn't true, of United . FORJUNIOR HADASSAH sin, u andu ceducation adopted by " ™ " •were « » acoptea 6 r ; - " ; ; - . 1Miss "Ann- Kaifo'feky. She was Harlan entertained at a family Jewish made any difference to caurse, bat that didn't make any U\" t h e supper party-Monday evening at K»*s_. i . «?*>* .American . lawmakers, t"ff^J" ^ . The Board of Directors of the a guest at a swimmihg party giv- their home. -Among the out-of- the, German Christians, but no difference to the envious Nazi rmpvpr and that in s.n even broader •which Samuel en this week in her honor. • • . ono could answer the question. and it tras only because Herr Junior Hadassah, met Thursday Er.nor.nceS I •sense the American concept of. president. . town guests were Mr. and Mrs. B.So that the boys had to decide Hausmann had always been evening Jn the home of MJss DorBill Mosow of Chicago will Saltzman of. Council Bluffs and to grin and bear it/though it was j •well liked; and respected a a o a s liberty and Its militant opposition ! othy Merlin, 1915 Pierce Street, ia the Hebrew j 0LAIT' 1Z&Z1 leave' this week after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Keith Peltz and often very hard for Koarad to | "his friends and business associto make plans for the installation daughter, Lorraipe, of Manning. here with^his parents," Mr. and keep smiling when the Christian ate3 that tie wasn't of new officers. into boys who had once been his a concentration camp immediateThe installation meeting will Mrs. J. H.'Mosow. Miss June Meyerson,. daughter friends called him nasty names, follow a dinner at the Oasis. Miss of. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Meyerson, or when "the teacher made the - Ruth Orllkoff is.chairman of the Mr., and Mrs. Louis Wlgodsky and tain who Itnew some ct the N . M I s a Maxine Leibovitz, Jewish boys stand up w i t h ' t h e leaders, campaign 'in'GrpEf'B- r r -- . jommittee on arrangements. 'Miss and sons,'David and Jimmie dehad obtained permission daughter of Mr. and Mrs/Abe half vt .the-'Spari?h F o H 'Florence 'Xohrmann. who. wasparted Wednesday 'for Lbs~-Anr rest of •" the class1 to sing the for Herr Haasmann to cell "bis where they will Leibovitz, are touring a number Horst • Wessel song about how de-store—-to ' ills - Nazi competitor, Budapest CVv'XS) — A cam- laborite Ds'ly Hernlc ci— i elected- president- at.-the closing geles, California* 1 of| cities in Iowa on a "rushing lightful it is to see Jewish" blood who of conr^e paid :o forbid".KoEg-arian J meeting of the season'moved re- make an extended/stay. • '•••• much less] trip" for the Sigma Delta Tau flow. KSe a a . cently to Omaha, and her succesbut Hebrew j " than it' was ' worth—and to keep ! ^° y if Interest >n sor will be elected before the in- Miss Sylvia Borshevskjr left for .Sorority: of. the University of the'^noney he received, on condi' Ecfeools, Then one day, when Konrad Chicago last -Friday evening to Iowa. Miss Meyerson is rush meetings acd docuiae&ts has been • jstallation meeting. _. tionthat he and his. family, would' The first American E visit with . her sister. Miss Char- chairman. They will visit in Sioux came home from school, he found leave Germany at once. launched by the Hungarian antiwas piloted from T\ "c City, Des Moines, Cedar Rapids, the whole house upset, with his lotte Borshevsky. Semites. ' ' •• • ^ — ; father and mother busily packing- ... You ean.Eee that the Hatas- ." As a first step ia this drive. America in I?24 br Ke-ll Mason City, and the Tri-cities. the big trunks that always ac- manns didn't really have ranch .they are seeking to prevail -upon I E t e i r Miss Ruth Feldman departed companied the Hausmann family to look forward to .when they the education seniorities -to force J .' Mrs. L. Cherniack entertained this week for • Oklahoma City Mrs. A. I. Kay, formerly of on their vacation trips'..' No soon- reached Paris—Tsrhlch, ^if. you re-}all Jewish efaildrcn to attend "only ! the members of'" her Afternoon Sioux City, and now of Los An-where she wilt visit with friends. Club at a luncheon at her home er did Konrad 'appear in the member year geography, is tbe schools where Hebrew is tjj S itache in the - I'tlllppine Vgeles, spent Thursday here with doorway'than he too was set to capita"! city of France. They t a d j language of isstruttJon. Wednesday afternoon. ' I during' the incumbency Pres- ; tier brother-in-law and sister, *ilr. mwMiiimmisssMSSSSSMMi work—and' what "a lot of fetch>:Eioaey, so that they/weren't j |ident Ttft, "1,b.en GG-rer r-Genand Mrs. A. I. Sacks, 2807 Pierce 1 ," M "e y e r Meyerson returned Ing and carrying' he did that aft- In •/danger -of," Etarvfag; fefTjjj^Tir ieral. Street. She was accompanied by home Sunday following a trip to ernoon! 'He was kept to busy t forever, j i e r son-in-law and daughter, Mr. tnat Tie didri't set a'chance to and i t Denver and Colorado Springs." bs lisrd for Kerr j lEriesion and Mrs. Ernest Nogg. ask any"' questions/'nhd '•when Hansmana. tp .'get-',Into* .bBsiness , wts granted a large Salcniki —_A subject . The Council Bluffs Chapter No. ffrially all t h \ trunks were pack- there, 3a s strange country wnere j was B¥ P . H. S . Miss Evelyn Jacobs entertaintreated" everr the jroTeris- In Georgia for tig se X. of the A.'Z. A. held a very imed he was BO tired that he wss jhe.kne'Rr very few. people. Koa^.^ | ,'cd at a scavenger hunt Jast SunBT-Eteni'for the first j portant meeting last Wednesday glad to go to.bed at once without ]rad," of course, didn't Saow sbout i nrr, day evening 'on the occasion of Isaac CabHe. histor-' AGUDAS ACHB1, PICNIC evening at the home of ' Irving bothering to find out why the (.these, t&ingrs at tbe time, but be ! {&her birthday. Following~the hunt, GFT •n, spoke on "Greeks acd lews I Cohen. A complete report of the family was The Council Bluffs Agiidaa Aci soing away * before j couldn't help not'eing that the i j she was bosteses at a 'weiner atfce Course of Eistory."- ' j g him' Society' fs planning to hold International A. Z. A. conven- the close of school. roast. '-...•••: little "flat they ES lived! in ss in Paris its annual Picnic early in August. tion was given by Abe Raben who : The' next morning his motlier j w s n ' t nearly fiss fl • , ' Sir. Harry Kubby, president,-an- attended the convention at Camp waked him very early, and ex-JBerlia- home, 'and - that tfceir Je^r to t '• -Miss Ina Leah Kroloff return- nounced that'there will be plenty Cejwin at Port Jervis, New.York. -there Russia, " - ' ed home this week after a two'of soft drinks given free and nov- Various committees were appoint- .plaining, that "they'had -to''catch j wasn't any. maid* to help i i s .' -Date End KB* Bars . week visit with relatives and elty games are-being arranged for ed for solicitations for the pro-a trais, rushed him" through hi3 j mother• with the .hcuseworfc, snd: Take % cup melted butter, •Sanchez, a Spanish g" "idressing and breakfast faster) that'his-father, who had always . Wends in Chicago. both young and old to' asure every- gram booklet advertising to, bethan ever before" in. Konrad's ex-j been -working at his sfore all day, j , 2"beaten'eggs, *4 cu one a good,'time. This-picnic is used at the Corn Belt r conclave, perjence—*ven faster, than on 'now spent ziiqst of bis time in the] t.6J.fpoda b£.kisi ' Saretta Krjgsten, Dorothy' Mer- free to "everyone, all members August 7, .." • . . j der,1 i* tcsspooa ciusasicis, a lew vrzs depc that morning, two years • before, j house. e En-fercr C^^.Tif•E lin, Fanny Kozofsky and. Nell Sin- ;heir families arid their friends are grains 'of salt, 1 cup' fiates cut Fieeo? t r ikln spent last .week end at the Invited to attend. Mr. 'Herman ; Mr. Sam Maltzman and his when'for'once In his life he had " B u t .Konrad . .didn't, complain. ! fine, 1 cup chopped nut's. overslept and had almost been when ,hjs,incther .patched his old Inn at Lake Okoboji. .ion Meyerson la, generat chairman in daughter, Miss Gertrude Maltz- late Cersbii the ingredients in tbe to school." Tt wasn't" till the clothes ;.jfi5Stpsd . el . fciiyinp charge of arrangem.«nts. Further man of Boston, Mass., have been Hausmanns were''at "last settled LmSpread 5a £ Ehalorder ~g{v ' Mrs. Max Merlin^and children details twill:he announced next spending the past two "months in their com^ariment 'in the train irax paper. : .'.; ^ • '; , spent last week end in ,.Omaha •week..'.; trousers, or, -wfeen hiss lunch conI here , visiting Mr. Maltzman's that he had a chance to ask for Bat?- is visiting with the former's parThe Council Bluffs Lodge No. daughter,. Mrs.' William Perlmut- the explanation which certainly sisted of. potato eonp every day j J*lagCTsha ped" piece s " « d ' roll in! ents, Mr. and Mrs. S. s'egal. •" At least' he has!powdered • sngar while warm. .any Jews '688 of the B'nai'B'rith wiH hold a ter,'.and.Mr. Perlmutter. Numer- was bis due. Wouldn't you think in •the noa-tfewB." T: regular meeting Monday evening, ous- affairs were given ins.the.ir somebody had a lot of explaining, clothes to wear, and his suppers sad !<. e Jerald Pill will return to Chi-July 26, at 8:30 o'clock at the"honor "during the past, t w o there clEted • •• Pic Htet • do if you were suddenly drag- were always very good, even cago Sunday after spending the. Eagle Hall. A further report of the months. Mrs. Perlmutter expects to sometimes t h s Kausmanus ; Apple pie "will have a new-fla- ed in 1'64S ged'off on a trip In ths middle M-. s> . r-, f-^ts •week here visiting with his mo-recent District Convention will be to accompany her father and sishad one of those whlpped-creara vor if you grate a'.little • orangs Je-^s left w; of the school year? ther, Mrs. Philip Pill. cakes that bad always been his rind iato the sugar &nd spriakie given by Dr. Jylius M. Moskovitz. ter back to Boston next week for What, Konrad's parents told mother's pride. For Konrafi over thcjipples la tfee ustisl yrs.j. a visit. '.' •'_ ' _ • " \ A' —~ " '' him that morning on t h e , t r a i a Quickly • learned that under the Miss Marian Katelmanjeft Satr. Miss-Rose Bosofcky spent last was simply that He'rr Hausmann circumstances he was a very Our Advertisers week end in Omaha Visiting with urday evening for Winnipeg, Canhad been offered a marvelous op- lucky boy. friends. *"" . . ada for a two week's vacation trip portunity to enter into a new -'As he didn't know French, he = GROO1NSKY, "MAKER, & (Continued from page 2.) business in Paris, and that was went to a special school for Ger- MONSKY,"COHEN, • Philip Dobrofsky of Chicago'ar- where she-will be the hcuse guest Attorney* of Miss Esther Steiman. She will 737 Osish* Nations! Bank why they had to pack and leave man children. Aad there he s e t rived In Sioux Citylt-his week to Notice i s hereby pivea that the un- j He also won the 'wrestling chamvisit in Minneapolis also before reso suddenly. But when Konrad visit with his parents, Mr. and boys and girls, who have farmed a corporation , pionship at the : 1035 Maccabiad. asked whether they were g o m g !many others, Germany to the laws of the State of I .VIrsvN. Dobrofsky. Before he re-iturning as sudden-als0 h a d left Like his biblical forebear, UnNebraska.'The name of .thes ccrpors- . turns to Chicago, he is spending to haye their own -furniture . in l i . he, and he saw that most is J end A Uguor Company, with j Mr. and Mrs. Sam Birffb have re-, relch is pious. He's - a. • former Paris—he loved his comfortable j y u i. children were far worse t!on several days in Minneapolis. its princisml place of business in One- j o f the!?e turned home following a week's Breslq.u yeshiva bocher, speaks Nebraska. The objects-for which | llttle desk in which |o H " t h a n h e . Some of. them had ha. this corporation Sa formed fire to bny, | f, Lucille and Elaine Mushkln, trip to Colorado Swrlngs,- Estes didn't fit FPJS, a/id distribute at retail any and and Manitoii. Theylnade the a!I kinds of beverages, and H<;uor; End and Ruth Levich^of Minot, N. D. to purchase, !esi«e, hire, and . other•'.•. for this modern Samson when he ( returned to Sioux City Saturday by motor. the.sort "of books boys everyL^o poor "to bay Hiem things to wise ECQMire real end persons! promakes his bow among the wrestafter spending a week with where love—he was very much wear, but hsd to take the oat-perty of every land and description-, : arsd to sell, dispose of, lease, convey, j Miss Helen Cherniss -returned ling gents. ' . . . . " ; . ' friends in Sioux -Falls. 'Miss Ledisappointed to hear that all grown clothing of other cKsldren. and mortgage ; any and ell C* ssifi home Sunday, following a two (Copyright 1937 , by Seven Arts vich is a guest at the Mushkin those things had been sold, and Some of-Konrad's new classmates propert.v; to borrow money sn<5 »o weeks' vacation 'tripto LoS An, (Feature Syndicate) do al! things necessary ECComplish iome, •. , ; ;,;•._ v .'.... '!-•' that the new owners were already j ^ " n ' t 'even have enough to eat— the purposes for -B-h!oh to this cojT>orsgeles and San" Francisco; Calif orntion is orgunized. The total author- f themselves at home though when the teacher diacovi , . V •-.. .-• . . ' . ; . , • •. -:-, . J n 1334 a Jew, Ju'ceff Faquin, making iT.ed- capital stock of,---the corporstion | V Miss Hannah Holdofsky returnamong the chairs and tables and e r e d that she arranged to have S10.000. par value ?SOS per shp.re, | had navigated the ' then known bureaus and sofas that had made I ed recently from Omaha where Mrs. Bernstein has return/world. . she visited with friends. Miss up the Hausmann home. Now! Shirley Fox returned to* Sioux Konrad understood' .why v his j - City with Miss Holdofsky. for a any ' combination' c* the sarae. mother had told him to be sure' K<mrad'"an4 the other Germ corporation Khali commence visit here' to pack,all the toy* _and books he jJ e w } g h children t3|>cu the filing- of tts art:C : C ... ., _________ county clerk .oi iHmstas best—a privileg-e he never E ^ n t a l l t h e i r t S r a ^ bemoaning Mrs. Alfred Levlch will enter-' on his vacation trip, whe. o n e | t h e f a t e t h a t h a d r o b b e d t h e m o f tain tomorrow afternoon at a shaii ban «n& two books were all he ] t h e h a p p y H fe they had been B « d ^ » ' i • - - along. „ lot the ran i stock. party,; honoring Miss r u t h Lehad been permitted to take *" j the corpors Eion KhaH vich -of Mlnot, North. Dakota and Even, on : t h ^ train that-mornI by- a. board of directj sp ; t. rSd" t1 v . | not ltxs th in 2 fsr.d : MiS3. Betty Burnett of Huron, ing Konrad.reaIteed that- t u par'*• ' as ps-ovide . South Dakota.. \ ' Heart of r

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often told him, the most beautiParis-is a beautiful' city, &s5 fut* dresses were made for had a chance to see csany In fact, his mother looked fine" historical landmarkssad, and once, when she thought ji there. -His father, r.ot-behtK busy he v a s too busy looking oat ofi.'making. a -livins, .had'-plenty cf the window t%> sec her, KoKnrad ! tisas to take ; hiis arcund-to se? watched her reflection in .the ithe "sights, arid see them, he dfd.

Eegistered(Holstein cattle*.at the Sanatorium of the Jewish the tears her 'eyes, j Consumptives' Relief Society of Denver were judged and classi- wiped 1 So Kcnrad too began.- to fee! i fied this week by officials of the Holstein-Friesian Association that the occasion •wasn't'as joyof America, who described the herd as "one of the finest in ful as JJJS • parents were trying'. to. the United States."- Part of the herd, wliicR consists of 60 head make iiini believe, and it -.-as c end" and quiet 11111-3 her r.-::3 of purebred stock, is shown inside the model dairy of the San-'very mado that Ions trip to c ts.trr:~:', fctorium, which-supplies all of the milk and cream used-there. city, a trip "hich a fc-v K : : . ! - , Automatic- milking machines insure perfect sanitation. One is before vroald tz.ro r.:c.i~z t L : ' happiest czcitencnt for him. , shown in operation. But it v/asa't until ranch ir.ttr, i

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