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jr t h e conversion people, for the ation of the Jewths grathering of da about.«the ban-
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JJ ia his column sra his o-.rn rind do not EccesEnrily reflect the policies or at« tstndo of our publication. Hcpsreduction in .whole, or in part -strictly forbidden. • . • JCSXIFICATIOS "We k n e w t h e g e n e r a l t e n o r of t h e R e p o r t of t h e R o y a l ComniLs-' Eion on P a l e s t i n e . W e k n e w from '
aa Second Class Mall Matter oa -January 21. 1S21. a t a of Omaha. Nebraska, under tha Act -at ilarchS. 1S73
Fete !o Postponed
\ WEBB.BEBER, :•_"& KELLEY, irneys ate Bank-BIdg. I
r". Siven that on the
:ernb~r; 3P37. at;-30 .the" Barish-Sand'ers Z3x>2 Tan-iam Street. » the .undersigned
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OMAHA, KEBE,>'" T vA. FRIDAY,-AUGUST 27, 1937
TO CLOSE BUEKGEPICEL-1' The City Tr" closed until '
Because of t h e i " r r ^ r 1 size of next week's N'evr Ye' ~ F edition of the Jewish Pres^ extracts that t h e commi?sioner3 ] tse paper will go to v~^~- r---number of c*.-i „ , „ _ _ „ _ , •were not ungenerous in their ap-; •"• Geneva Ov2sS—Palcor jigea- lj". "All news and socle ' Prominent National Leaders; alysis. prciistil of our work nor unmind- j nmst be in by 5 p. m. Z'^~> C |cy)—A warning that it is fiaxLgerAre .Expected to There have been no cases re-!, l u l o" t h e temper ol the Jews' August GO. ... _ , ; ous to hurry with t h e partition who have rebult Jewish civillza- j Participate ported among pupils of the T a l - | o £ P a l e s t l l i e is saitnSed In the retion. And for that very reason wo j j port which the Mandates CoraAnnouncement is made that t h e . mud Torah. •were the better able to point out I imission completed lor the forth-; the lameness of their conclusions. | - , . „ Fourth annual meeting of the 1c j coming session of the League of If their 'objective findings TvereML»2133tOZ" 1\ West Central . States Regional j Nations council. The final' ses-' correct — aud, of course, theyl Conference of the Council of Jew•r T ' sion of the Commission was -were — then it/made no sense to ish Federations and Welfare I marked by the adoption of its i Cantor Aaron Edg-ar eay. that an,irreconcilable conHigh Holyday • Services of theFunds is to be held in Minenapoi report which is secret and can- jBeth El Synagogue will c l flict ai5 between two moral equals B'nai1 Sholqm • Congregation will the latter part of October. not be published until the League : "Se".iro:b'" PTVICS Z':?T made the Mandate unworkable. ho held under the direction of Council registers its decision. I t ; Through 'the Iiindnee3 of an of- Cantor Herman Llirowitz a t the The conference comprises the organized Jewish communities in ; is emphasized, therefore, that ficer (Rabbi Louis J. Schwefel) Elka Club. • " : anv information as to its contents o£ the Jewish National Fund I the following state: Missouri, Cantor Mirowitz, who conductV" 7 ' ( v am now able to give chapter and Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Io- Disciplinary Action Considered : na Ihypothetical. Against. Meier t is learned, however, by the ; verse for the findings of the Hoywa, Minnesota, North Dakota, Palcor News Agency, that the. re- -. Grossman el Commission from the report in j South Dakota, Wisconsin, Illinois port oE th-e Commission will a d - , : cxtense. And these findings from (WNS)—Disciplinary : v i s e t h e C o u n c i l t 0 g.=Te t h e B r ; . _ (Exclusive of Chicago) and t h e London t h e report c l weighty servants of city of Winnipeg in Manitoba, action against Meier Grossman, ;i g h g o v e r n l a e n t t h e E e c essary , i the British empire, not, Heaven (leader of the Jewish state party, ;a u t l l o r i t y t 0 e x p l o r e , b y aegotia-' Canada. fchows, antecedently "Bold" to U3 The Council of Federations is j is beir-g considered by Dr. Chaira Uons> t h e . p a r t i t i o n solution which " in any, sense, are of the most a national organization which has | Weizmann, president of the World , t h e B r i t i s h g O T e r a l a e l . t considers •'• burning, immediate and historic come to the front during the past I Zionist Organization, because of ;t f a e m o g t h o p e f u l f o r Palestine. •; importance. The foolish and the five years -with a view t o improv- the disclosure by Grossman of the B u t r e c o r n m e a ( i a t i O I 2 S Of callow "aud. tho pathogenically ing the social services within the text of an_alleged memorandum ;M a n d a t e s -Commission ar«» couchhostile will. continue to. babble— Jewish community, in order to in - which Dr- Weizmana 3s e'd in such terms that, in the 1he pseudo-liberals and the little make for better adjustment of ported to have recorded a coaver- i " failure, the coatiimance f fleeing renegades who feed, them, the Jew to the American scene. sation with William G. A. O r a s like that Sir. Herbert Solow of the existing Palestine ManIn addition, Federation concerns by-Gpre,Bfitish Colonial Secre•Whose article "Zioni?in in .Extre3tiatier.s date and all other itself with t h e responsibilities J tary.in which the latter alleged- :r e m a i a . f u I I y g u a r a n t e e d . mis" was .eagerly -.-olfed down - € Jewish communities have towards ! ly agreed to important modifica\ ' " , , " , . by t h e Now: York Nation as its the problems of "the Jew in the j tions in the Royal Commission's! Examining the advantages ar.a contribution —r-.but it.will hereinternational scene. Two major | Palestine , partition plan. Bated ' disadvantages ol -partition, u t after be Eeen to be mere babhle. parts o f this program are the re-] July 19th, 12 days after the r c b - ! Mandates Commission is^ una=;r nr The commissioners dwelt first lief of persecuted and economic-1 lication of the Royal Commission :mo"fi m - t a e ""f*" L " T . J," J! 0 '"" 1 of course Upon the material strucally distressed Jews in , Central| report, the -document was ir;ade., b e "dangerous .o jurry. xCere«. r.r.tor Ar.ro~ 3~. •— ture' of civilization which we have and Eastern Europe, and for the |p u b l i c i n t h e Jewish Chronicle f o r e - t h e Commission has made , on Saturday. August 2r . ., „ created in a ' barren and ruincu rehabilitation of Palestine." which obtained it" from Grossman, inew, constructive suggestions r e - Jewish Community C r and neglected land, the great p r o The conference in the past lias ' The highlights o f the memo- [ garding the necessity o. a long will be assisted "by r c ductive fanning communities, ths picked voices. dcaith with family welfare, child randum credit the Colonial Sec-! Period ol j a n a a o n wn c . magnificent, and cs they remail: xiThe. traditional and ^ care, community center work.' im- retary as agreeing to speedy n-i provide the experience for^a "essentially European"' city of IL Sllrowita Tel Aviv, the new cities, a s conf migrant aid, t h e adjustment .ol quidation of the proposed t e m " ! ^ ! ^ ! ^ n g ' « i e ^ g g e s t L n s ir.g "Selicoth** tunes v-i I T in modern harmonic British mandates over I tition trasted with t h e old, of Jerusa- e;l the services of the congrega- private social work to emergent porary four cities to be included in the ! offered to the League Council by Members of the choir T r public welfare activities, fundlem and Haifa. But the commis- t i o n j a s t year, hD3 appeared in Jewish stated to the inclusion of'.the Commission for the admin.s- riet Bernstein, Ida Gii'. raising, and intelligent budgeting. sionerB did not fail t o dwell on concert in Omaha raveral times. of Jerusalem Jerusalem in in I oration of Palestine a u n n g t h e Guss, Irene Fisliberp year t h e Regional Confer- tt n nT Tn n ee w w quaVter quaVter. of both the cultural and moral qualRosh Hashonah services will bo This --„.. , v w ence will make employment and | Jewish state, to adjustment I transition _PfJ^d are proposals Green, Shirley JIsltE, r r . d tbe ities of the Yishuv. "The literary held on Sunday r.i~ht, September provisional cus, Esther Steinberg, I cantonizanon ! vocational guidance t h e central j f ^ e Commission's plan to e i ; ' " ~ " " o output- of tho Jsntional H o n s is S, a t 6:30. Scrvicos r.Ionday and a unique mandate or t h eSteinberg-, Hae Wolfsor out^of all proportion of 400,000 Tuesday. morninj will begin a theme. A number of experts in elude the Rutenberg electric con- |;! nnder these fields will lead in the dis- cession and th'e'De'ad sea.develop- creation, in place of the present Bodin, Jack Dolgoff, r^c people is one of the most renarlc- 8:30. cussion and their names will be ablo featurea of t h o Krtiosal "TTn'ra -ICippur. c-rrvjee Tuesday it tr e in. tor 'uture Jevisi Ead Ara Home." Higher^ and -even tleep-: ? night. September 1 }, will t-e held announced during' t h e coming also declares that OnnsT>y-Gore <•!-„.. statesw e e k s . . . _ • • said t h e "Admirals r-cre : • i ^ « . *™3« J-"J!XQ is. J . H L ! J L S climbs and cleaves the conclusion r.t 6:30. Wedne-d.:y r/orr.Inr: serThe'"program, of t h e National. him" with' regard to K--;'~ gentlemen, in a final ;or- vicrs.vqll start a t «:3;>. of ? : : !•- i r ^ - o i * x-tkir 5 '^^^''.wi ••'• oil' their ^PBychojc^crj .•S. Frisch.' is- jjre3i;lcr.t ot iUc Council 'is'" adva'aced'tjiru "' one"j njat "-he*~fegarded' as large annual conference and thru Sable" the plan to set u r a io':,t p . : "The champions of Congregation." six:regibnal conferences, whose p O r t between Jaffa and Tel Aviv i Zionism have alv.-aya held'•—and programs parallel the one that is under British, control. Accord.i:? on tha whole they have proved Once agrair. the* Moth— uVW w - • being developed in this area un- to the document Welzmom is . Z. A .will present T[k\it — that a Jew reales'ed from der the leadership of Arthur Brin said to have declared ibat "the , on anti-Jev,'i9h environment and Achar Hatanns Dance - •«• • of Minneapolis, Irving Bettman of Admiralty could get all they 'restored' to Palestine would not i T o n Kippur night. Sep'«-- •"•- i : St. Louis, Henry Monsky of Oma-wanted from us by direct agreeonly.feel free as-he had. never felt I zi the P&stos Hotel. J ^ c ^ ha, and others. before but would also acquire' a ment, but not through t h e govMunich, Germany (JTA) — j be furnished by Jack F^ =-' r- - " - " new self-confidence, a new zest in The executive committee and ernment itself. If they tried to Officiating at a royal wedding. I twelve piece liatid. living from hlB consciousness that officers of t h e West Central collar Haifa, we should make j Cardinal Faulhaber denounced ] Each year, the dance L ' rW . w a s engaged In a great conStates Regional conference are:- things extremely unpleasant for ithe Nazi principle of "race breed- | feature of the erenins; -> - v otructive tacit.".'Finally,, to r e - Oumniiiigs De2crib"s3 Probe S3 George Oppenheimer, . Kansas them in Geneva." i in^ of tl^e new A- Z * f v '^I ing." main on the moral grounds, t h e City; A-. H. Baron.,: Sioux City, •While .neither Dr. Weizmann I Lauding the church sacrament ' heart. Candidates icr !i - • -lilpve of a Check-' commissioners declare that. "in Iowa; Nathan M. Stein, Milwau- nor Mr. prmsby-Gore have denied .o f marriage, the Cardinal said: | will be announced lri«-' T times'of disturbance the Jews, a s kee; -William L. Holzinan, Oma- that such a conversation took | "When, however, . wedlock is "year's Sweetheart was " ~lt compared with the Arabs, are the ha; A. B. Cowen, Dsnv.er; Rabbi place, Dr.. WTeizmann said: "I do.: instituted as an instrument of ra- ;Bloch. law abiding section of the popula- .Washington,-D."C. (WN)—The Eugene Mannheimer, De3 Moines; how Mr. Grossman ob- ! cial breeding by which the i Tlifi coir.nr»ttes in ^ —n~r c t ot tion: and'indeed throughout the nves;tigatipn v of nazi .propaganda" Aaron Scheinfeld, Milwaukee; ntained i t (the momorandum). He.lowest level of ethics is attained I t i n s VCDr's ufiiice ]?- j ^ " ^ ~ o and' camps: in this eountry which •wn'ole.-Beries of putbreakB, and Max M. Xevand, Wichita; Clar'' a nation is unable either to ; chairinsn, Jne B. Kor: -business to. publish it. under . great ' prbyocatioh, ' t h e y ongress-.refused-,- to undertake ence Ullman,- Peoria; - Herman f^ere n ois nothing which needs to achieve national renascence or to •as .turned-over--to' the Federal KaVe shown"' a notable." capacity Wilk,. Fargo; Milton P . Fore- he hidden, hut it is a report of a I rise to a really high cultural I Tickets Ere n e w o r r - ' n for.; discipline and self-restraint.'" Bureau of Investigation (the G- Etone, St. Paul; Sam Sudow, Ab- private conversation and nobody ; L"EY be p u r c h a s e d from r-"> i L standing In ;tb.is fine -passage, of • course, men) w.hen . Attorned .- General erdeen, Louis Ehrlich, Kansas Lber of A. S. A. 1. has any right t o disclose it." tliere .begins that subtle, helf- Homer S^ CumTnlngs announced City; Arthur Brin, Minneapolis, Score F a u l h a b e r Grossman charged the memoranhe ted ^requested' !the Bureau " t o 4 coriscions falsification which t h e President ;Irvin Bettman, St. scheme of Dr. M a n n h e i m , Germany .. ( H a \ r s C"££Z' £" — ~'~~c E cbmmlssioners ^needed. for: their nrafee' a- cursory : eiamination" ' ol Louis,- Tice' President; Henry dum indicated a over something"! via JTA) — Cardinal Faulha^-- l eiEmana t0put own; ethical • justification ; since nazi campa. V-to ascertain'if there Monsty, Omaha, second vice pres- jW ' " - the Zionist congress and de-| Archbishop of Munich, was shr™- TIL --' they foreknew .'th'at" their conclu- .are any facts rwarrahting further ident; Louis D. Steiner, St. Louis .e d. " .t h. a .t . — ^-r-_. 11^ o*+-«i-«^ by ^-r- the 4^^ organ ^*-^^n o^* +v ^ « r " ^ attacked m a n d D r . Tv'eizinaiin l y ! siohs would have t o falsify their nvestigation." ./Describing t h e Treasurer; Charles I. Cooper, German Kno^rie : r . findings. There were no general <J-man's inquiry • as "more of a Minneapolis, Secretary; Mr. Irvin should be asked to resign in or- j neo-pagan enemy "oufbreajks." There were Arab heck-up' than a formal investi- Bettman is chairman of the pro- der t o show t h e Jewish people of God- movement as an the Jews i Officers cf . the- Cl l • : he will • never submit to threats of the Reich, a friend of th riots' inspired by Arab :notable3, gation," Mr. . Cummings indi- gram committee and Samuel Ger] Eir.es hare expressed and never submit t o disraember\ and an avowed pacifist. 1 tome ofv^-hom '••were and are still cated that'he acted, in response^ to son ia secretary ol^that committee. tuce t o l h e members c.r : ment of our historic homeland-" | The publication Die Siogru me, • ha Choir nnd Dramatic on "the salary lists' of the British etters:-submitted .tb the State DeThree.annual Conferences have ; >iDntiCii™li- rc-o-^ i l o ^ h->TT! rl (S^l r, -r-;Tl i heatedly assailed "him deel partment by .Representative "Wil- been held in this region in the "If we are ready to struggle to 1 dealing with t h e iam Citron < of Connecticut. The past, Omaha Nebraska in 1934, the end for our sacred'conviction, i cob Gordon on Sundt* ~ Arab situation, the commissioners tate- Department referred t h e Des Moines Iowa in 1935 and we will succeed in creating a to- i 3, at the Jewish Cornir once more show their magnani- matter, to the Department of Jus- Kansas City in Ilissouri, 1936. tal racist state despite Christian : mpua objectivity. _and 'once and tice. .-••. . hypocrisy anS the millions ol 1 Pur.eral Hon^.e. lor all clear us from every shadJ-(WNS) —DenyAndover, '• The entire proceect'? —: j Jewish capital. Then our dear ow of; reproach. The point ou,t ing that the >-German-American The Workmen's Circle DramaGermany wil "have one people, one thai'since 1920 the Arab popula- Bund l a s anything to hide, Fritz tic Club will give the five-act fuehrer, one Reich, cue religion." : Che?efi • She!- Smes, •' tion has arisen, from 300,000 to Kuhn,; fuehrer of t h e organizaj cause cf the larp? n u r Yiddish operetta, "Caldunia" hy j $50,000 "due only in a slight;de-. tion whose . camps are under inI neral? -it has taken ca' • Goldsaden on Sunday, October i g£f»|/J££5 JQ | | £ HELD L., gfee .to immigration," that since quiry: by the G-men, declared that' j out charge, is in n-?? 31, a t 8:30 p. m. at the Central, . the coming of the Jews the rich his organization welcomed "a FedBerlin (WNS)—Ghettoization, i to csrry cr. tfeeir won'. Club (former Knights of C o l u m - i ^ i an A AZIZ Arabs' have grown richer and that eral^ investigation. 'Nazism's solution for the Jewish bus building), 20th and- Dodge; I gram. : ""at least six' times more Arab; Tork : (WNS>—One mil- problem in Germany, was intro- Streets. j owned-land is now planted'w3tb lion' copies of a-new anti-Semitic duced to Berlin for t h e first operetta is being played! tion c citrus' than in 19'20" and that' in pamphlet.entitled-,-"A- Key t o the time Trhen officials of the Prenz- forThis t h e first time in Omaha and The Congregation Shaare /.ion the ^Lsame period "the rate of Mystery" are in-the possession of lauerberg district installed 100 1 of the masterpieces from! 1 5 4 S ^ o r t h 20th street, wiil bo.s - \rages lias steadily gone up"/tor Dr. J J , C--Lamhert of Montreal, new ••benches — - —in -• a public «--. park -and ~ -| pen of Goldsaden. ' The Dra- ! holiday services during Kosh orcaniEEtior.s. the Arab worker and that "the who" is shipping them Into t h e inscribed, 92 of. them wiffi t h e Hashona and Yoia ICippur, Sept- - c l u b i s r e c e a r s i s g ' {eilahln'.are-'bn the whole better TTnited States, addressed to all per"Jews prohibited" and the f n U c a s L T h e p u M i c is a s s u r e d ; tember 6 ana 7, and September ; t*"S "p» •»». *5*i» .rft C5i e *- .«^ ?*• p fn v 1l 5 off than they were in 192O.".They Unifed States, a 1 ing eight ight with with the the inscripinscri organization a worthwhile1 j o known to remaining g fepoint out furthermore that "Jew- sons and organiaztions ! Tickets are on sale every U J l s h c sentiments, sentiments it itjjtion tion "reserved "reserved for for Jews. J e w s " "<"•' evening. have anU-Jewlsh ish example has done much - to h here %y the Kon- [Angriff, mouthpiece of PropaganTicke'ts are fifty and seventy-! f r o m 4 P-•m -' improve .Arab cultivation," that Tvas charged c a a r g e u iitut: u j t,ix*^ *^ww- — w . -r*.-__„ ~ . i--~a— _LiCK.e!S a r e IIILV aiiu. KCVCI«IJ ; "the reclamation' and anti-matar- Sectarian'.Anti-Nazi League. Col. j da Minister Goehbels, indicated f l v e . c e nts, tax 'included:' A large-; rk uridertalien in Jewish col- E." N.V Sanctuary,-avowed ; anti-'j that similar steps will be taken atiiaber of tickets have already - I Seen-sold. Those wishing reserv-; Semite,-has" already received a j elsewhere. oiilea' has, benefitted all Arabs in .Meanwhile t i e anti-Jewish ed seats should call; Mr.'M. Sel-j =-al the'nteighborhood," that."Uxe ben- large pupply of- t h e pamphlets drive continued i a other • s p h e r e s l i c o w > ticket chairman. At. S3S4 !F r iFur g a , j _ o _ _ __ - eficent: effect of,Jewish immigra- while"l?,*000 others :have been with Minister of the Interior or evenings, Ja, OS 7 2. ;. man, _ tion Jon'Arib..welfare" is "well distributed in, Toronto. Frick forbidding any but Jews to Proceeds of' the Operetta will j &n Been "in. the marked increase of patroniss. book- go toward the. upieep cl fas' La- \ •':••• '••shops .and decreeing a' ban oa Arab population ^.within -tTie VONfAPENMMAffbS the | bor Lyceum ''areas affected by Jewish develabandonment -of Jewish nsmes by | •" ;> 'W/OJl ''JEWlSB-t APEB. ©pment" and . that "the further Tlenna (WKSV •— Citing; the Jews but epeclfically recomiseiid- | • Gmabr . SCOUTS URGEQ claim, based, on.'the Jewish coning such changes in the case o£ i Sur tribution to revenue, seemg indis- r e c e n t . Austtb-G'erman"- press , TO-WAR QH i l l putable." They • sum u p : - ."The agreement,- Fraias .Ton Papen. Aryans or persons with . only a : five s Xrabs "have BharedV to a consider- German ambassador to. Austria, I small percentage-of Jewish blood. Berlin (WN5) able degree in the material i e n e - demanded that the Austrian gov-j Frick also forbade the works ofl Ths aaiiy lits which Jewish, immigration ernment suppress the Ncue Welt, Jewish authors to be printed in -cad deed implicit ia .XMisberslii? | Hariy 5 a s broujrht." Nor did=they forget organ of the'Jewish State Party,;Gothic Jett^rs becrusc t i c - were ; 7t the 3o~; gecrut.s can that "welfare work has been done because of tho paper's criticism invented £>y s n Aryan, Bishop rel-.ievci by and warned Jewish book- jj Je^-t* irho "are t.be devris of the • " Ha? l o r Arab "a» Vv-ell as Jew by Jew of t h e Nazi regime." The press 2sh institutions, ^notably the Ha- agreement pledges "both countries shoj*s that they are now permit- ; worlfi," Jnlins Streic'her told 4 i-ductec to "outlaw attacks on either coua-1 ted to carry "books by s a y t u t , Hunsarian-Scouts ^Continued, on page'3.) •Jewish or foreign authors ! ing Germany. try. The fifteenth anniversary celebration of Highland-Country Club, planned for September 4, has been postponed because of the illness of the general . chairman o£. the evening, Allan Kohan,
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n> By .Gregory Blattman,
The little known story of a San Francisco Jewish Xnr. trad, er who initiated the movement vrhich resulted tn the purchase of Alaska by the UnitecJ States Srom .Russia 7O years ago is .fcold .by Mr. lUattman in tills "fascinating chapter from 'American Jewish history on the occasion of Alaska's celebrajj tion of its twenty-lirth annivorsary. aa a -territory.—The pi<Ut6r. ,, .
fur traders who vrere operating in Alaska stepped fnto the picture and' initiated the efforts that •were to be climaxed by the sale I of Alaska to the United States. ; The British-controlled Hudson JB'ay Fur company was vitally initerested in Alaska: It was angling for control of the Russian American Fur . company whose
I charter from the Russian government expired*.in-1867. If the r Of all the territorial accessions British acquired this company to tho original 13 colonies that Alaska -was certain, to fall into comprised the United States in their lap. . The first man to 3L776 none has paid such great recognize the danger, according dividends -as Alaska, -which is to Mr. Ballaine, was Philip GoldSow celebrating the twenty-fifth stone of San Francisco. He was anniversary of its establishment tho personal representative ol a as a territory and the seventieth Jewish fur syndicate and knew anniversary of its purchase from the vast riches of Alaska -from
were on the ground directing the campaign as inconspicuously as possible; Their motives were frankly commercial In t h e main, but they rendered a patriotic service to tho nation, wnich we are only beginning to appreciate." One of Goldstone's associates was Lewis Gerstle, who had become prosperous in t h e grocery and brokerage business in San Francisco, where he had settled during t h e gold rush. days.. Shortly after the1 ~ purchase of Alaska Gerstle becanio, t h e head of a syndicate which acquired the rights and privileges : of t h e old Russian American Company. From this 'syndicate grew the Alaska Commercial. Company in L l i . . . „ ., ~ " " ' " " - y '"
(Copyright 1937 By Seven Arts Feature Syndicate.) *
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need of money made the Czar more than anxious to rid himself of hia American colony. It was during President Buchanan's administration that Russia \ offered 'Alaska to the United States- The imminent crisis that was to lead to the civil war dulled American interest and the negotiations came to naught. It was at this juncture that a Syndicate of California Jewish
The \ •rrill he', t>l Mies', of Meyp chook, 3 ehoolc, i 5 o'cloc ivitz, E; Canton * tho cere The b in, will ; B ry talisK § be floor! train. X; maid of
of Cfeief Katr.net Kibitszer , , . KISH-MASK: An important mE.R-belrlnd-t'he-sceB.es in t fc e Costa' Kican colonization plan to set in motion by the quiet Refugee Economic. Corporation vas Leo K. Sack, former failed States Minister to Costs. Rica, . . , As a private individual, ?£»!>£' than a repre&entatlTe o' the United States, lie -worked clow.ly with the Costa RicsB. Gcwr.tp.er.t snd the'R. E. C. on. the plans sr,.1 paved the v-'ay for the t;ltimate coatract . . . Incidentally, the New York Times story on the completion of the negouptioEE was a scoop anc" an acr.5ecr.tel one at tuEt . . . It hEfl beer. 3Fter.(W to KE"5P the f.ning cnipf. v.r.tn the tion itf=e'f FBH under r e y Geza. Kerczeg;, co-author of,
; that swell Emile Zol& Him (story [and script), be less? ; known as themay r.utbc-r ot theveil Al Jolson musical rebiclc, "TTonfier j Bar" . . . And EE fr.e hnsband of | Lecpoldina KoRst.ar.tln?., F E "Arysn" actress who is 'still yery i popular ir» Germany despite ber i Je-wisfe husband . . . Rerczeg, you ! ought to know, top, is -the man j t*rho £c*<r-pte& l\iussolir.i's plciy I about Xapo'ieo", which vas proia Germany . . . And the Edapetion was the one ! Hercze ; used in Nazilsad, too, »t the ansietence of Mussolini himself . , . 'Not only has the Lone Ster State I of Texas get a tcvn istmed Fe.11 estiuc, "but, believe it or not, it ! has one EBia-sd Rosenberg . . . As 1 ' a r fig we're "heeE able to check there are only three Jerusalem!! while i :a all the United Stetee, i there were ten Ptlestineg ft the I last count . . . Did you knev-* t.frt.i 1 Father Coughlin's organ, Social'
A. ENTERS LINE-UP: The Jewish Free State ( i f and when it is constituted will face the world with this formidable line-up, or the patentPete
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ed from the United States the ex-be overhauled: Russia. "When Secretary of State Personal visits to^the north For clusive right for 20 years of seal (Copyright, 1937, by Paul A. [William H. Seward paid Russia several years he had been trying Hshing on the islands off Alaska. -Peters.) tobuy thefranchise ?t the 37.300,000 for the bleak, snow-11to buy the franchise ol the ^-f In return for this monopoly the PRESIDENT — Dr. Chaim covered northern empire ot 5S6,- sian American Fur company company -.paid the United States Weizman ;400 square miles it -was gener- the superior resource? of the a yearly rental and royalty upon VICE-PRESIDENT — Menachevery seal caught from 1870 toem Mendel Ussishkin (he'll be ally believed the United States British had blocked himlad acquired a white elephant. Unable by their own efforts to 1890. The total payments from drafted.) ^ •that Alaska would ' swing the deal, Goldstone and his Gerstle's firm to the United suspected MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFjhave any value, and it. was dub-' associates turned for help to-the States were far in excess of the I FAIRS — Moshe Shertok Sed 'Seward'-a,, Folly." Fortu- late Cornelius Cole, then one of$¥7,200,000 the United States CHANCELLOR OF THE EXSiately for Seward's reputation California's representatives In paid to Russia for all of Alaska. CHEQUER — Eliezer Kaplan the United States senate. A few She discovery of vast natural reINTERIOR MINISTER— Isaac As part of the agreement Gerbonrces in Alaska have made the [years ago Mr. Ballaine, still pur- stle's company also established Ben-Zvi "Alaska purchase the best bargain i suing his investigation into the trading posts, schools, churches LABOR MINISTER — David ££ d In I 1867 Sam ever made. 1867real reason for the purchase of and, in many other ways contrib- Ben Gurion the- aum of $7,200,000 was stag- Alaska, discussed the matter with uted greatly to the development COMMERCE MINISTER — has Senator Cole;' In the following of Alaska. Under Gerstle's direc- Siegfried Hoofien gerlng but since then Alaska has produced more than a billion dol- I words Senator Cole confirmed tion the Alaska Commercial Com- AGRICULTURE'MINISTER —
Oars in gold, while the annual j what Mr. Ballaine had long SUBSalmon catch alone is valued at | "The original and most active 'els times the cost. of "Seward's .Folly," to say nothing of the mover in the plan to buy Alaska pralue of furs, coal and other re- after, the Civil War, reviving effort that had been dropped just awai sources. before the outbreak of that con-in tfi f" Historians credit Seward with flict, was an enterprising Jewish sorec [having sponsored the purchase of American promoter and fur tradaccoi HAlaska from Russia not- because er by. the name of Philip Gqldmad* •3io had any idea of .its potental stone, of San Francisco. He had in. c f?alue hut merely, as a diplomatic been to Alaska on'fur buying excecoE 'gesture of gratitude to the Czar-- peditions, and knew of its great ris J 3st Empire, which had' ranged wealth, but he was mainly Interawar itself on the side of the .United ested in its furs. He enlisted the Mi States during the civil war. It help of other Jewish gentlemen ed " be remembered that In 1863^ of (California s,nd of several Pie," -when the confederacy had almost wealthy non-Jews", who, after the •were (won the support of England and purchase of Alaska, were grouped Jew51 ture2 "France, Russian ileets steamed together in the Alaska Commer{Into the harbors of San Francisco cial Company. Their first intenJm bnd "New York as a warning -that tion was to succeed to the rights inowi {French, and British- recognition of of the Russian American Comand 2 fche Southern rebels would mean pany, whose • charter expired In Jwar with .Russia. Tri appreciation 1S67, but on discovering that the <of this timely aid, so the story Hudson Bay Company, an English teoes, Seward agreed to buy Alas- corporation was negotiating to pa, -which-Russia could no long- take over theirlghts, property and Pla interests'of the Russian company the T pr afford to keep. . / for S< But in this important year of they conceived the idea of our servic history there has come buying Alaska outright, making it an American possession, and ham c forward John E. Ballaine, the thereby shutting out the Hudson officia fcnan "who. went to Alaska in 1898 Bay Company as a fur trading bi So find built the city of Seward, with monopoly in Alaska, such as it has a, k fascinating fact-buttressed story had grown to be in Canada. in Eu. prbich indfeatea that the purchase field. I jof Alaska from Russia was due "Mr.-Goldstone and some of his vices ' ,o the foresight and understand- associate came to me in WashingM. La Ingof a long forgotten Jewish fur ton soon after I entered the SenHarne, trader. Ballaine's disclosure must ate and explained the whole, sitstreet. \>o accepted as historically correct uation very' fully. 1 had heard .« t3inco he haa no personal axe to much i of Russian America, as it 0rlnd and because his story" Is wa3 then called, for at that-vtlme jbased on statements by a man and for several years prior its fisheries Were important Who took a leading part in fur- cod sources of sea food supply for the thering the purchase. ' Tra< i Long skeptical about -the real mining camps of< California, so 1 during "Jfeason for the acquisition of readily favored the plan to buy recited J-Uaska, Mr. Ballaine, now close it. I took Mr. Goldstone and some Cantor, •, 5to 70, undertook to Investigate of his associate to see Mr. SewCemete matter. His first discovery ard, the Secretary of State, and tween a forgotten Congressional re-. they laid all the facts before him. o'clock, Jportdated February 27, 1869. and Me Seward was inclined to be the Cej vain and liked the impression to entitled "Report No. 35, Alaska ing uni go out t h a t i e was the originator Investigation, , Fortieth Congress, duct t of-all Important policies handled Although this reaches .Third Session." through hia department. We Ireport deals' primarily, w i t h ing thq agreed among ourselves that in icharges that the Russian ambasments.' order to-enlist his active help Tre sador employed bribery to push would make it "appear that he was through congress the bill appro- the originator of the plan to buy priating the Alaska .purchase Alaska,' and he played that role price, it also reveals that nego- all through the negotiations,, but tiations for the sale ' of Alaska at the ; same-time Mr. Goldstone Rabti focted ' lad-been initiated by Russia In a n dh i s asao c Ia tes from California August; 11858, at the end of the Crimean in Eurcj jtvar. Defeat by ^England, France tended<' and Turkey, the certainty that Switzer, England would capture Alaska Jn tsaseyt© «ow Snglanc the event of .another Anglo-RusFrance. sian war, and Russia's urgent
pany organized a line ocean steamships between San Francisco and Alaska and put into operation more than a score of river boats on the Yukon, and other vessels plying between Dawson and Nome. These transportation facilities were to a large extent responsible for the rapidity with which the gold hunters were able to reach Alaska when the yellow metal was discovered there at the turn of the century.-,
Moshe Smilansky EDUCATION MINISTER — Dr. Judah L# Magnes (let bygones be bygones) . WAR MINISTER — Vladimir Jabotinsky (how camhe refuse?) NAVY M I N I S T E R ' - ^ Goldie Myerson (why not?) AIR MINISTER— Harry Richman PROPAGANDA MINISTER -— Berl Katznelson POSTS AND TELEGRAPHS Meir ^Grossman ' Today there are some 60,000 MINISTER people in Alaska, of whom about j (objections overruled) HEALTH AND SOCIAL WEL-j 500 are Jews. Apart from the occasional fur ^merchants, like FARE MINISTER — Henrietta Goldstqne, who visited Alaska in Szold (unanimous) the 1860's, the first Jewish setMINISTER OF TRANSPORT— tlers came-with the Russian fish- Israel Rokach ing fleets. Proof that there were PORTS AND HARBORS MINJews In Alaska before it passed, I S T E R — Nathan- (Kaplan under the American flag Is seen ..COLONIAL SECRETARY — in the many Alaskan Eskimos Ab. Goldberg who claim Jewish: ancestry. One MINISTRY OF ARTS AND of these-is Mala who played the CULTURE — Sholom Asch, Secleading role in a recent Holly- retary of Literature; Mark Shawood picture. Mala is the son of gal. Secretary of Fine and Praca. Russian Jewisn fur trader tical Arts; Bronislaw Huberman, whose business took him to the Secretary of Music; Dr. Saul Tsfar, frozen North half a century chernikowsky, Poet Laureate; ago, where he married an Eskimo Irving Berlin, Secretary of Jazz girl. Another early Jewish settler MINISTER ~ OF COLONIZAis John Oat, born Jacob; Offeh- TION, PUBLIC WORKS AND dahl,- who owns a fishing enter- PLANNING — Arthur Ruppin < . prise at Koggiung, in Bristol Bay. IMMIGRATION MINISTER — It waa not until after 1890, Isaac Gruenbaura however, that any large number That's quite an imposing cabof American Jews found their inet . . . I f there are any posts way to Alaska. Among these Q we've omitted, kindly submit the Goldstein, Hellenthals, Seid- your nominations to this colyum envergs, and Swartzs. The Gold- and they they will be given every stein clan settled in Jurieau, consideration . . . No bribe will be. where Isadore Goldstein is now accepted (under ten grand, we maycir. Edward Seidenverg is mean) . ; . , And now for the dipmayor of Nome. His predecessor lomatic corps . Our list of canwas Dr. Rex Swartz. One of Alas- dldates for those important posts ka's circuit Judges is Simon Hell- is also copyrighted, reproduction enthal, who dispenses justice over a 3,500-mile area during a 30 day journey by boat through the Aleutian Islands. . When Alaska commemorated the 25th anniversary of its acquisition of territorial status on
Justice, hss gained mightily in-Its Yorkville circulation? . . . Robert NathsE, the author, has turned; (lewii a S1000-p.-veek offer from Eoilyvoocl !;imply because he 1 coefni't ih?nk «o ir.uch of filmv;;if: (.ml Ur- jprodncts find people , . . .Dr, CnrJm T,"fi?;m8nn haB a poo: iv. Y\P. nrr- V'lf.ptinf home «t Kehovp-i!. , . , J'Aw prchitect wag EricTi .^endFli»ohp.r R Germ«n.TewJKb architect . . . . 1-eslie HoreBelisha. new British War Minister, once -c-f,p. poUtical reporter tor the Daily iaj;p"*?« . '. , Sammy RephrvrUy, r b f f s champ of Ame-irs f r d P^PT oountries, once was kinjrpin o' the pawnpusherB in the AJPPJI. Kad.ik Aleph.
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(Copyright I6S7 Jewish 1'eiefffa- ' phtc Agency, Inc.) Ernestine Ko.«e. Polish Jewess, -*-as rn e.r-^c'w.t.f ot the fumed leminisi, Eiisjrr; B, Anthonv, JH
to Jacob Lwov-iSsch Teitel w*g trace in Kussis during the C««rist regime, the only ,7cw F.ppoirited R migti-
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CANTOR LEVINSOK Cantor LeTinson, former Omahan, will, visit the city and -will lead the High Holiday services at the Beth Harnedrosh Hagoflel SynSgogae at 19th and Burt Sts. He -will chant the services SelIcoth beginning with the night of Saturday the 2Sth oJ August midnight. The main services of Rosh. Hashonah -will be held .the night of Sept. 5, and the morning services of the 6th and 7th, and ok Yom Kippur the night of Steptember 14th and the 15th. While attend
High School of
Commerce, which is now Tech High, Levinsoa's fine voice attracted the attention o£ some of his teachers, sr>.d he TTSS encouraged to ...cultivate his voice. On graduation he left for XeiF York Tfhere he ^vas soon einginj under some of the leading Cantors in the metropolis, among them, the -vrorld famous CEBtor Joseph Rosenblatt, (now deceased.) His formers friends and admirers -prill have thp pleasure of hearing Cantor Levirsson chsEt the High Holiday services.
W here Omah®. Shops WrthConfidence
In whole or part forbidden -vrith- j GREECE — Chief Rabbi Zvi; out special permission of the • Hirscfc. Kcrets i copyright ovrners . . . . j LEAGUE OF NATIONS DELE- ' AMBASSADORS I GATE'— Dr. Nafctiin Golfimana TO UNITED STATES — Rabbi Stephen S. "tt'ise (let's forget the There are a few more posftiorr past).. that need filling- . . . For CSS.ITGREAT BRITAIN — Neville Laski (he may have to be draft- ple, the head of the Criminal Ired) vestigation Department Es5?ht Toe THE ARAB STATE; —-Viscount | Keir Grossman, on the strength Samuell (how (h can he h refuse?) f ? ) of his feat in. digging up ths.t BIRO-BIDJAN — M. Oigin Weizmann ineiaorandiiia on r (this >Ttnay be difficult) talk -with Colonial Secretary WillU. S. S. R. — Leon Trotsfey iam Ormsby-Gore . . . And the (with apologies to Comrade Sta-! c. I. O. niteht • decide it -vrsatef. Ha) • ' an ambassador "" ' to the Palestine FRANCE — Bernard Lecache Federation of Labor and -whe GERMANY — Kurt Blumen- could do better than David Duhfeld (and if Comrade Hitler ob- issky? . . . And what is s. cabinet jects, we'll give him Fiorello H. | without a brain trust? . . . KocLaGuardia) ) esty forbids'us frctn making E C C POLAND —r Dr. F. Rotten-j inations for that important es ofstreich j ficio job . . . Peters, however, ITALY — Chief Rabbi David j might consider the honorary pof t Prato * VATICAN— Rabbi Jacob Fish-j man -~ Gjrl AUSTRIA — Robert'.'Strickler room wiiila fasnily leeatexi HUNGARY — Daniel Auster CZECHOSLOVAKIA — Angelo i west. Close to car line. Cell AT. 145Q. RUMANIA — Meyer Ebner
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August 24th and the 70th year of its existence under the American flag, there were few who remembered the p a r t played by Goldstone, Gerstle and the Jews Who followed them into Alaska; in t h e development of America's \ northern outpost. History has a! way of ignoring the modest, but i n ' any history of Alaska an important chapter must be assigned to t h e Jewish pioneers who helped add it to the United States.
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THE JETTISH TK-S?, FRIDAY.
ihas satncd' mightily in .its ^ circulation? . . '. Robsrt j the author, has turned SlOOp^a-week' offer from bd simply because be pitrifc so' much of fiimi its products anfi people Chaim "Weizmann. has a ^is new Palestine home a t h . . . His architect was iendelsohn, a Germnn.rchitect . .-. Leslie Horenow BritiBh War illnis^ :e "was political Reporter Daily Express ..'. . Sammy |ky, c h e B a champ • of and other countries, ta feingpin of the .pawnin the Aleph Zadlk Aleph.
•By-Harvey O'Connor
;ht 1937 Jewish Telegraihic Agency, Inc.) tine Rose, Polish Jewess; associate of the famed ,- Susan B. Anthony. Lwowitsch. Teltel
Russia during the Czar:
different to and outside nati interests." It had been expects cause the refugees -were to be S"ew York ( settled on privately o-sraed propnineteen Arneri •vrere arrested San Jose, Costa Rica (WNS)—; e r t y *-he existing immigration reand hela in jr.i! irc , Germany, i strictiotis would be so obstacle, The Refugee Economic Corpora-j or live hours was tola tion's plan to establish a colony !but the newspaper poicts ciit that murucaGo j,ere this w e e k bj. Arth-llr j , B R r . ; tills is no reason Thy the g-orerr.of .German-Jewish refugees as farmers on a 50,000 acre tract i saent "should not enforce esist- ry, Jr., of ?,Iidd!e"burE. K. T., who it has bought in Guana Caste was i ins immigration laws, Thich are was in charge of -the tourist
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denounced "by the influential i s i r a b l e s b u ta l s 0 t o p r o t e c t C o s t a Costa R ica . - Although the newspaper Diario do de Costa Hica Rican workers from i the ccmpeti- ^.n!yw $* *v eT au The fascinating story of how Jp i e ^no had come here as mere I tained. This little can o£ store as "dangerous to the country's •I ^^ »«""»«• "•-~ -"_ *•--• polish, *„.„ for instance. a Meyer Gusjjenheim,/an immi- immigrants, • • without -... ..^ money —or —! __i.-..i, ^ c t , ^ o He -HQ made mnrtn a. future" and impossible of realfaa--j tloa ot ^employed toreignsrs. grant Jew, started the world frfends, and now were wealthy. few pennies out of that can, andt l o n T a e a e r opposes uis the^ colP opposes - ,' — famous. Guggenheim industrial The thought comforted Meyer as the manufacturer made.thousands | tion.- The Ppaper foreign workers competing -with exilarchsfirs under^Ioslem rule, empire vsith a peddler's pack- Tie dug his heels into the sod ofj-of dollars. He fingeredthe black. \Qn ? because it fears the influx of j ianBostanai, is told to this first of lour cap- the park and planned for himself pasty stuff. That German chemist 1 native •" *—labor -.—vn-o -with ian :exilarccs descendant s r of"David, andnnnnotmr also because it;>and * """"' '~ " tides talica from Mr. O'Con- and Barbara. As for Barbara, she in Bethlehem -would.'. know what believes the refugees will never j ried it was made of. Why not drop in be absorbed in the Costa Rican j King nor's book, "THE GTJGGEK- doubted not at all. see him nest time he was up" HEIMS", which the Seven Arts Long before dawn on Mondays, and . . . population but will "remain in """"'" Feature Syndicate and the Jew- the Guggenheim household was there"? ' . Meyer had thrown his knapish Press present by exclusive' astir, preparing Meyer for his arrangement with Covici-Friefle week-long sortie. Before it wassack in, the corner of the chemPublishers — EDITOR light, Barbara was at the door ist's shop.- He produced the can -waving him farewell as he -walked of polish.. The chemist smiled. • Along muddy lanes from shack down the street, bent to his knap- Time was hanging heavy on a to shack in Pennsylvannia's dark sack, bound for far regions where dull morning Certainly ie'd run " and grim, anthracite region trug- he could sell twice as much as it through a few: tests for" this fine-looking lad, who certainly ed young Meyer Guggenheim. The Father Simon,: plodding plodding along g was no ordinary peddler. wind .blew and the rain soaked Philadelphia's peddler-congested • That.Friday Meyer returned exthrough his brown beard, trickl- strests. uberant to break the good news |ed" down hi3 "neck, sopped into In this age of good roads and hisr socks. His pants sloshed well stocked stores, even a t the jto his father.. Here:-—he waved • against his ankles. > •' •".•'• country, crossroads, peddling as 'a sheet of,paper — is.the magic : On" he trudged, stopped under Meyer Guggenheim understood it formula that may-buy-me a horse. No more' packs." Already he felt a heavy knapsack, bent t o the is a lost way of life. But the genelements,; like his ^ancestors' for eral store of the 1850's in east- it an exertion to stand-straight. centuries in Switzerland and Ger- ern Pennsylvania stocked only His back was bending prematureSIXTEENTH AT" HARNEY many. At doors of -wretched the fundamental staples —flour, ly into, -the age-long curve, the Christian curse upon . his race.; " shanties" he 'beseeched, In meager sugar, dried beans and peas, a English: "Shoe strings, glue, lace, few bolts of cloth, thread, the But he smiled. _trumphantly as ribbons, stove polish, everything simpler kitchen utensils. As often he . remembered the meaning of t o r your .home I have -with m e , as not the housewife was told, his. first. .name. The Enlightened. very cheap." ^ , "Sorry, but we're out of that," - After, the .evening meal Father ' The rain blew into the barren or "We don't carry that." It was Simon and Meyer huddled in a Toom, the-.' baby -whimpered, the before the day of rural free de- corner debating the most serious since they had decided miner's -wife frowned and bang- livery and: thousand-page farm problem to quit Swiss soil. A few hundred ed the door. "The dirty Jews," catalogues. • . had been - accumulated. she muttered," as had Christian From his pack, Meyer filled t h e it be ventured on stocking housewives in Switzerland and gaps. In its mysterious depths, supplies for this business? Point Germany. were ^Shoe strings, scraps of lace, *.***., ~^ twehtyryear-old stove and furniture polish, rib- by point, hia brown eyes flashing The. slight. o , youth sighed, walked down the bon, amazing new safety pins, with eagerness, Meyer countered path, and headed for the next odds and ends of spices, packages hi3 father's objections and won him over to the new endeavor. door. of needles. If the housewife was By Friday night h e was back in a receptive mood and had a (Continued Next Week.) in the crowded little house in little- spare cash, Meyer was Philadelphia where' he lived hia greeted without respect. As he father, nla three sister, the "Wid-slung his> pack to the floor, the LARGE JEWISH COMMUNITY ow Myers— now Mrs. Simon Gug- children crowded about to peer genheim -7- and her sons . andinto i t s awesome, delightful m'BASELIN inn daughters. - In the glow of-the in reinforce his halting CENTURY ' candles he sat down to the ritual depths/'and; lf -with cries of joy. H He leftt repast, next to hia fifteen-year- English lightened — though old-stepsister, Barbara. I t rwas. with" his sack Basel, Switzerland (JTA)couldn't feel the differ' g o o d to be back, sheltered, sur- his-'back You'll Register Plenty of chaeological remains have been n c e — a n d his purse heavier. In ToUnded at .last by friendly faces, etime accidentally discovered here indihousewives. Began to expect Charm With These cheered by the sound of a langumonthly visit Jfrom the cheer- cating that a large Jewish comage he understood. Good, too, to the munity existed in Basel as early friendly young .Jewish pedbe sitting next to Barbara, -i conr ful, dlr. Most of .his fellow craftsmen as the eleventh century. fidante of his hopes, whose warm grew apathetic Workers digging the foundaor^ surly or could faith in his worth; buoyfid " him notslough off' ways tions of a new university buildand manneragainst the sharp realities, of his seemed/uncouth. But ing found a large number Gladys Chandler" •working life. Oh the long voyage isms-that Meyer wag vigorbusyouth, even tombstones with strange inscripicross the Atlantic they had plan- handsome, a : Juniors refused :to cringe. tions. Archaeologists who examV ned their future:_. a nice home, He believedand ined the stones found they were in Ameiifia'it,promise friends, children^ music, ani-end of equality and opportunity. He inscribed in Hebrew and belongforever to tbS' haunting fears and walked hia roundaas an itinerant ed. to a Jewish cemetery- of f the the starved.life of fettered Swit- merchant,., necessary and, useful. eleventh and twelfth centuries. zerland. He saw no reason for suppliance. And" what was happening? Nevertheless he detested "the Patronize Our Advertisers Over,'there, the Guggenheim fam- pack on his back, age-long stigma ily had escaped Irom -peddling, of his race. How could he get rid the badge of the race, to a shop of it? As he jogged along, he The most adorable collection you tif their own. They sold it for-aschemed and planned, and" poked, have ever seen in plain colors, song- to come to the land of op-poked • everywhere- for : light and portunity, and.- here they were, guidance. plaids and trimmed woolens espeThe Genuine Bates Grip back where they started. Pack on People made money from that Bowling Ball now sold cially designed for collegiate chic back, knocking at doors, scratch- sack. Taut not he. Manufacturers! in Omaha by tke ing out a» living. lived in fine Philadelphia homes i True, they were_ alive, along elm-bordered streets. Scores J Bhackled only by lack of money, it immigrants like nimself came not by. laws and rigid racial bar- .0 the back-doors of their estabriers. They had arrived in Phil- lishments, paid out painfully JA 2724 -11 & Douglas adelphia nearly penniless, know- jarned dollars for assorted smallAn Important Item In every girl's wardrobe." Soft princess The Bates Grip Ball vrxil ing no English, dependent on thegoods, and trudged through easand jacket types with novel* trimmings end zipper fastener produce higher scores and • helping hand of sympathetic feK ;ern Pennsylavnia and New Jer- eliminate the 'sore' thumb closing. Blacks, greens, wines and ~ ~ low-countrymen. There was food jey to gather, pennies nickels and browns. A coileqe shop -favorite on the table, for which all bent dimes, most of which went back priced at their headB in reverent gratitude. JO the manufacturer when the j There was fire on • the .. hearth. pack was replenished. . They had-never had to take charOh, for a horse, any kind of a ity, : except for some ceremonial horse, even one lamed and wheematzoth.. given to Father Simon zy, Meyer complained bitterly. end by the Hebrew Relief Associa- Why should a man do something rJ3siertaf Company tion for his first passover in thea horse could do definitely betTHE BEST CONCRETE BECAUSE - - - . 6trange land. But after a year's ter? Why must he be a beast of All materials pass state ana onerous work, with Simon at. fif- burden?. "How rich I'd feel if I 1. federal specifications, assurthe highest quality. ty-six peddling in the streets of had an old horse, any kind of a 2. ing : Accurate control of proporPhiladelphia ami;Ms son conduct- horse," he told his friends. .It betions, assuring full quantity. ing forays into the'outlying coun- came an obsession with Meyer,3. Exclusive ."Consistency Meter" assuring higher strenoth try, those bright pictures ' t h a t who dreamed of the day when he and uniform workability. Meyer painted would possess one. Meyer and and Barbara Barbara had /p ould p s GL 2SS3 4520 In -words seemed.badly,blmrred. Plodding along, he reflected on Not vthat Barbara cared too much ibout it s "She, sang; as-she his ware and the profits they conbustled about the- hquse which ^ bounded her wbrldV .She ., wa sorry that Meyer .must"work si hard, but the "Good IiO'rd' am vMeyer would take care; of-that Borne day. Every , Saturday they went to the little synagogue in an old church on "New Market Street, - A HEW CAP. and there she prayed for. his sucUNTIL YOU HAVE cess. Later in' the day '.'they- would HEADED .FOR- A GRAND £ HEW walk along /Pr6nt: Street • on the Delaware, watching the animated COLLEGE CAREER! water traffic, or stroll down busy |} Market Street." Sometimes they!} would go' to a q.uiet square and Ois&Ws Most Popusettle down to serious business. lar snd Fastest. Meyer would pull out his little English-German word book and Barbara would catechize him, superior in her knowledge only because ahe held the key in her hands. PllODO While she listened, patiently if Hz ^r not too attentively, Meyer described the life lie saw in the bach country."- The -poverty that surfor Daiaoatratisa •RIAX'BL BASISH rounded him 'he brushed aside. What mattered was that- plenty ThTs srnart Irrtle telt will major In cH'c and cfiarm on of people were well-to^do, had any College-Campus! Its pert snap brim is warn comfortable houses, lived in seup or down, and ins crcsgrab trim hss^s t!are_a» curity. Some were even wealthy. \H own. -- Perfect for .travel end a'i! sc."ocs acisvitjeSi Occasionally he dropped his burBlack, brown, r.Bvy end allfeJi shades.. 2l'/ 2 i o 2 3 den to pass the'time. 61 day with Inch head skss. We have a c~zna cp-'sction,'toes. Jewish merchants in these backot cinsr'Telts to pisass you tihcr^mnsbng young tar country towns. Tea, tbe^ too had collegia r,d . .• carried \ h e pack in their time but it was riot/hard in this country to prosper. Indeed, right in Phil^^^^^^^ii&a4fe(^fii^jss4ife adelphia thero were Jewish' pco-
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. ..THE JEWISH PBESS, FRIDAY, *\UGI7ST 27, 193?
The Flowering of-Israel
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JHB JEWISH PRESS PUBLISHED COMPANY
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world-wide competition in armaments, increasing, rather th; diminishing, t h e danger of .-a final outbreak o£ another' worl By Rabbi Frederick Oohn •KT -n 1 J <*. i. i.. 1 • xi * - -1 ,. l«'ide w a r a n d ruinous catastrophe. The raping cf Ethiopia New England 'flowered,' not only m t h e poets a n d novelists, L + ;,, *„„«,,., ivt n • , , -,,-•,, ?v ™ , Emerson, Hawthorne, Longfellow, "Whittier, Holmes,'; .-.. - Lowell, _ ^ _;„..•'-. __ 'iStill tresh m our minds n d still unavenged). The lawie seizure of Manchukuo still( agoes unpunished and futilely" pro
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\(>r "• tie said Thoreau, etc., but also In the historians and biographers, Sparks tested. The Nazis continue in their career of national "end ii O T. \ leaner and Oabscrtptloa Price, ono year • • • • • • SS.oo (Lives of Columbus and Washington), Tichnor - (History of <-. IHngs line ternational crime. Anti-Semitism still continues as the di Advertisingfates furnJsfi>ea 00 application. r Spanish Literature), Bancroft (History of America), Prescott I: 1 ^nce for usgrace of civilization and humanity. There is still wide-sprea 1 Editorial Office: 600 Branasia Theater Building. rrt behavior (Histories of Mexico and Peru, and Lives of Charles V and ,f.;ni ar SloBS City Office—Jewish Ootataunlty Center and stubborn and heartless and evmcal ~ , . . . -r-r - « ' . v -.^ 1 ,-*• '• , - ^ , T . , , . . „ • . social Philip IL of Spain). Motley (Rise of Dutch Republic), Francis 3itiqn to social reform. Surely there are countless, dishearter Print Shop Address: 4604 So. 24th Street i f 1 entitled to Parkman (Canada), etc. DAVID'"BLACKER - • Business" .ami--Managing tSditor t t etude as a ing evils in the world, and the Jew above all others, as specif!i c P. FRANK R. AOKBRMAN ' • - • - • • ••""• Editor History, as the record of humanity is a very important ally discharging his historic mission and function, must be f * boyg like it FANI4ID ILATSLMAN Council Bluffs,, Iowa, Correspondent r told Themand fascinating study. It is good to see man as he was at the everlastingly snd practically opposed to all evil and wronr hi c is \ mdow-cleanANN PILL • • "-'<- Glous City, lotta, Correspondent beginning, and in his uprise from savagery to civilization, and must be uncompromisingly and powerfully on the side of righ^ ^ £ M" f 1", the venai: in his progress along the lines of national and. human develop* i Court. t TV must be a brave and courageous leader in all moral reforms, v bnged -with ment, political, cultural, etc. fearless and inspiring advocate, protagonist, snd champion cf r l'ost a poster x Among the most important of all histories, from the point Although technically approving the Partition Plan, the 'righteousness and justice'; at whatever cost, suffering, or sac J . v , i s L S..,. e I t c.i.-^ iC i.^ ......... '. . •"^ke! Jews are League of Nations Mandate Commission at the same time ad- of view also of influence upon the rest of mankind is that of rifice. F,t€filis;p- your country!" and with tin :e to absorb lnrge rmmbers 's from trouble centers making in.suiting noises and gesministered a rebuke to the Mandatory power that Great Britain IsraeL There is 'the glory that was Greece and the grandeur It is a great privilege as well as moment, our responsi- [ ^ •ope?" th u:rc& to Jews passing by. cannot afford to overlook and which will undoubtedly have that was Rome,' and there is the subliminity that was Israel. bility to be a Jew. May. the coming Holy Days deepen within ! repercussions when Parliament comes to study the Partition Let us%reeall the words of the historian Philip Van Ness Myers. us the consciousness of what it truly means to be a 'Jew,' snd U,coo trees were rented r.lonr "Of all elements in the rich legacy bequeathed, to the modern fortify us with that faith and heroic spirit that will bring nearer • avenue a kilometre in length. p roposal. ":»'.'•' » . . an Recognizing the lack of firmness and the vacillating policy by the ancient world, by far the most important in their in- and nearer that moral and spiritual 'salvation' which is to be Four I',prlin Jews charged -with ori rom circulf.tir,?: copies of thje letter of the Mandatory, the Commission boldly states that such a fluence upon the course of events were those transmitted by wrought for the whole world largely and primarily, as of old, j ^"settlements I Thomas INiF.nn vrote to the dean ac program encouraged the Arabs to institute-a reign of terror the ancient Hebrews." And modern Israel, too, has been of through the Jew. ! maintaining the foreeis. Income o£ Bora: University in reply to an nij from the sale of these saplings, ennonnceniGnt tlrat Bonn's honorand continue their depradations in the hope of stopping Jew- highest significance to'humanity. - - Frederick Colin. is! j and from the employment con- ary neg'-ec to him had been resish immigration. Israel is one of the oldest of peoples. If not reaching as tei i nectefi with foreptstjon, is an im- cinded, v-ere sentenced to terms lea At the very outbreak of trouble, the Jews insisted that far back as China, she was contemporary with Babylon, Assyria, portant factor in the weii-being o* impripotnisent from five to in1 j of the settlements. the attitude of the government was responsible for the entire and Egypt in the early dawn of civilization, later with Persia, Gems of the Bible Je ! Fine trees continued to hold series of riots.- The Jews were, not the only ones who were Greece, and Rome, and today is vitally connected with every and Talmud i j first place among the i1.?; , , r <• III 111 oses Russel, a Jew, victims of Arab terrorism, but the Arabs themselves suffered nation on earth and intimately concerned with every important 'representing 2£ psr cer> r ' > . By Dr. Philip Sher 1 "s mate of the Sechappening all over the globe. Spain, Holland, America are but ' season's total. Carob *-ra greater loss of life. . ~- r ; r rp? a Tiegiment during i increasing In smporiEEf, Now the Mandates Commission suggests that the two new I infants compared with Israeli Napoleon, addressing his, army r,t Valley Forge. i they are forest f.£ veil r BIBLE wit. states continue-under the mandate or that, if necegsary, difat the foot of the pyramids during his Egyptian campaign said, | trees. Besides bearing ' • Let the wicked forsake his way tui "Soldiers forty centuries ago look down upon you." Literally, and the man o£ iniquity his! Jerusalem, (JTA) — A victory 1 the seventh or eighth ye • ferent mandates be, given. SPG ' and spade over sun and j planting, the carob has ti VEE LEAF CLUB Mil'; Britain has shown herself incapable of administering the forty centuries look down upon the Jew—twenty centuries be- thoughts, and let him return unto; the Lord, and He will have cora- j arsonist's torch is being celebrat- . ol resisting fire.. All ti.e *. 15th Strett h e r e t h e proper government. While the Arab state will have few Jews, fore the Christian era, and twenty centuries (approximately) passion upon him. j^ ^y Jewish National trees at Mishmar Eaeme... s Fun£5 the Jewish state will have-a minority of Arabs and as the since the birth of Christianity. Jewish history may instructively For ray thoughts are not vour: - agency for. purchase and the Balfour Forest CANCE TO THE thr L 'vlcj > lire ('urine f Hoi • Arabs of Palestine were constantly having their number in- be divided into eight periods of about five hundred vears Noughts; neither are your ways; development of lands for the damagedV =fcy MUSIC OF i 16. My ways. For as the heavens are cbo bellion have sir revive^ creased by illegal immigrants, it is likely that the new Jewish each: I, from Abraham (the first Jew, Founder of the Jewish flAY DE WITT'S higher than the earth, so are My During the planting season since Me The tot£l number c" state will be faced with the same problem. All the evils in* faith, and Father of the Jewish People) to Moses (2000-1500 ways and My thoughts higher ; i a s t year's Arab revolt the Jewish planted by t t e J. N. F. i • vitj Synce Hi-Hatftn X a t i o n a 1 Fund succeeded in end o£ the current vpgr .•wifc j herent in the present set-up in Palestine will continue in. the B. C ) ; II, from Moses to King David (1500-1000 B. C.); III,than yours.' For ye shall go out with 5oy,i! tph! aa inl t i n S trees far more rapid!? m > cn a n a r e » ^T FOOD new arrangement, for peace in Palestine, it has been seen, de- from David to the first .destruction of the nation (iOOO-500. and lead forth -with peace, t ! i e marauders had been able to b o u t 2 2?0 acres1THE BEST IN DRINKS destro (6 pends upon the position taken by the Mandatory power.them. The final outcome roughly); TV, from 500 to the Christian Era (Hebrews' Second mountains and the hills shall;oC t h J' -t no! BreUtd Sttakt e r a c e of Supreme forth before you into sing-i Panting against Yet what other nation could assume the Mandate? France Commonwealth) ; V , from (second) destruction of Jewish Na- break U'M'HB Jng. destruction, revealed in Karnea?, Patror.:r=- O r r in Syria partitioned the country into a Moslem Syria and a tion to completion of the Talmud (Christian Era to 500 A. D.); magazine published by TAIJMCD predominantly Christian Lebanon and difficulties continue, for •VI, .-from Talmud to Arabian Era (500 to 1000 A>. D.) ; VII, Our Rabbis were taught: One i F. was: a-vs. in t the most part due to poor administration. The "United States Golden Age in Spain (1000-1500 A. D.); VIII, The Modern shall not remove stones from his 1 Trees destroi-ed last refer—5 4core own premises to public places. It 000. •who the Arabs-had hoped would assume the mandate at the Period (1500-today) (1492-1937). Trees planted this year — EC6accc Dealer i~ Zz-cl-Jz Tcr"-. happened once that one did so, er Religious Articles •; close of the World war will have none of it. "We may truly say that humanity has 'flowered' in Israel. and a pious man who was passing i 000. mad 242$ Decstur Street WEb«ter 3527 in i I As long as the British continue as the mandatory power; For what has been Israel's role during all these forty centuries by atthe time said to him: "Thou seco ignoramus, why dost thou remove \ '•'•'. . ignor more hare been planted, plus Us ,, I there is but one other course, for Palestine. The Jews arid the of its "recorded history! to discontinue 1 from I Arabs must work out their own salvation on the basis of co-1 Israel has been the bearer of Ethical Monotheism. Thisi^g" , thee avrz.offering all my contempl»tM'i operation and understanding. Suddenly made aware of a com- is its distinctive character and pre-eminent achievement. Thisiises?' He laughted at the pious j of Jewish ed •! •* \ along the bants ot the Naamer I mon problem and a common purpose the two peoples of Pales- is, moreover, the precise part it was appointed, or felt itself man. f shf" religious River in the northern." section of item ,; tine are seeking to "solve the difficulties by themselves. \v*hile 'chjosen,' to fulfill. The charter of the Jewish people and the r I r*n everyJew, it is still, too early to place too much hope in this new Arab- Jewish "religion (a 'Magna Charta,'- indeed!) is'expressed in new ture , MschJewish rapproachment, should it be successful then the Par-briefest, most comprehensive form—Israel's 'mission' in a nut•« o^ o" the best tition proposal will not have been in vain. shell—in the classic words of Genesis defining Abraham's 'call': •CVP ' * r , V . i P „ .. . which will. divide the residential '- er stock e t r~r ti- r •ft.ictJ i i. !i . ifrom the industrial zone of "I have known him, in order that he may command his sons j claimed: ,,n -u and ••O, how right that Pious Z e T n l u n - E i g h t r 0 W E t o t a H n g and his! household after him, to keep the way of the Lord by man doing righteousness and justice." The elements of this extra* Rabbi Ami s.nd Rabbi Assi were sitting before Rabbi Isaac Napordinary sentence are: 1) the selection or election that made cha. "While one is not -very apt to sympathize with the doings-of; One was asking him to say PI Hitler, the difficulties he has cannot be overlooked. Though Israel 'the .Chosen People' ('known him'); 2) the idea of some traditional law, and the : requested him to say some for S he rules Germany with an iron hand, though his whims may 'command1 which implies teaching, from which sprang the whole other f servi upset the ^peace of Europe and ruin the holidays and diges- character of Judaism as 'Torah' ("Teaching," "Moral Teachliam • tion j>f British statesmen, der Fuehrer is primarily an artist. 3) the words 'sons' and particularly 'household'.which •was interrupted by the one desirofficl' hi Si; Arecruit from the less romantic ranks of house painters, marvellously designate Israel as it was to become as not so ing the legend, and when he lias «. - „ ., _,. .started to tell a story, he was intrr Adolph attempted to make his mark in the realm of the fine much,a i- ,. , . , • , .,••- • p a 'Household' jj terrupted pVd by bytheothe In El', nation, race, etc., as a Family Group, the other. He then arts, and was rebuffed enough'times to have discouraged a less (professing a common religion); 4) 'the way of.the Lord,' the| 8aJ d: "I till field. ., tell you vices; •• hardy soul. But Hitler, prolific spinner of theories decided briefest ^possible description of Monotheism; and 5) 'righteous- It is like unto a man who has bi M. Li: wives— one old and a young one that the "decadent Jewish spirit" in art was frustrating his ness and justice'; 6) the briefest possible description of Ethics, The Harm young one picks his gray hair j ambitions. . street conveying its very essence. . because she wants him to look and tsfe old one picks his Now with Germany in the palm of his hand, he has had Is there any need of Israel today? Has not Israel ful- young black ha.ir in order that he may the A constant stream 01 ^rnenca s Pis! Mt.slxow which he so desired. Prominently displayed in the iilled its function! Has it not been superseded by its daughter- look old. The result is that he befavorite white shirts flews over galleries among representative German art, .were numerous religions, Christianity and Mohammedanism, and perhaps by comes baldheaded. So it is with our counters to well dressed sen. sketches by Germany's artistic genius, who., had. to become a. modern science and philosophyl Were it not better if Israel me — I am not able to say anything. Tra dictator to have his genius recognized. were at length to die, and disappear from the face of the earth! Surini Alas > The unappreciative public instead of hurrying to "Would it be missed? ..Would "not rather some of the most vexrecitet Canto:' the exhibit of 'sane' art, paid to see the paintings and statuary ing problems be solved, for the Jews themselves and for the £4™et' ; o f w h i c i l mil(it disapproved. Where the galleries of this ex- rest of the world? hibit were crowded, the exhibit of "German" art was to a large No doubt there are many who would heartily welcome o'clocli extent ignored. . . • ' the CQ (among them, I am ashamed to say some Jews themselves!) $3.50 ing u r ' But Hitler is not to be outdone. He will bum the paintings such a 'solution' of 'the Jewish Problem'—a solution by dissoduct |> that are preferred above his own. He will become the leading lution! But not only as a Jew and a Rabbi but,as a student artist By Robert Stone ln s "t5; of Germany if he has to destroy the work of every other of history and as an observer of current political, national, in—-'-•' artist. TJbus the course of German, art goes on. " • ternational, social, and human events, I am profoundly conjk,ii»i..%. A, W vinced that there is moreneed than ever of Israel in the modHIT BY COMMERCIAL SUBSTIN e e d - M o r e Z o l a s . . \ ; ; : - ' • • - ' • ; • ' •••"•"••'• -. ';: ',:. •• ern world and the faithful prosecution of its 'mission' (which Which shows that modgives it a real 'raison d'etre' for being, despite the Nazis and ern business doesn't stop even at Rabj The filming o£ the life of the Rreat French writer, Emile, the enemies of the Jew) as the representatis-esof Ethical Mon- competing with Heaven. Zola, has reawakened interest in the two star figures of the JEWISH DOCTOR DEVELOPS August otheism and its teachers, advocates, and exemplars. Monothe- POTENTIAL PREVENTATORY in Eurl "Dreyfus Case"-^-preyf us himself :and his champion, - Zola. By ism is more than a theological or metaphysical teaching. It is FOR INFANTILE PARALYSIS tended'far the more commanding of the two was the non-Jew Zola, who Switzei profoundly practical. The Unity of God implies not merely the We'll bet it doesn't find a market drawing upon a (tremendous reserve 'of-'equraee,' faced*thc rein Nazi Germany. Englan actionary interests of France—the. army, the monarchists, and Unity, of the, Cosmos (which has philosophical and scientific inFrance, terest) but the Unity of Humanity, which in fostering Brother- DUKE OF KENT MAKES TWO the clergy. _ ', ' . : hood would tend to do away With hate, prejudice, and even POLISH JEWISH LADS HAPPY Though the innocent victim of the most vicious frame-up war; and the Unity of the Moral Law which would make rightWHITE POLO SHIRTS WHITE SHGitTJE HOSIER! VISAS And he makes in modern; military history, Dreyfus was •nevertheless part of eousness obligatory upon nations as well .as individuals, upon TJNE $1 sad f 1,95 3,000,000 others green with envy. Embroidered docks, 50c ; the group: who-used him as: their scapegoat. He, rather than the strong as well as the weak. And the world is not yet monbe j AUTO-DA-FE of MIsc - passionately denouncing those who persecuted Mmr submitted,- otheistic. Christianity is supposed to be a monotheistic re-! FOR NON-ARYAN PAINTINGS sure way of immortalizing! Of JIeyi| A Womfcrjul blindly obedient though his reward, except for the intervention ligion, but its monotheism is not pure, is still too much clouded' their ^creators, ohook, r W'hitneY Famous Showing 0} of a few lovers of truth, would have been imprisonment. chook, i wth Trinitarianism, tending to divisions not only among re- XXJRNS* OUT TO B^ A S o'cloi, . Among the Jews there are many DreyfuseL Unaware of ligions but among the human race. The concept of Unity would ] VERTED J E W . . ."wonder v,-nz, r. • v the gleaming sword of Dainocle9 above their heads, they go unite mankind. . ""*• raadder, the Jews, or the Nazis, Canton their ways, adhering to the conventional pprejudices, seein^ the the the ceri. j , seeing And surely there is need of the Jew's loftiest teaching broadcloth, exceptional^ well The I world as the pressure" of society demands they see it rather Ethics, of "the highest .Moral standards o£ 'rigkteousnci tailored,. Pcintssttcr perfect The s m a r t necScand i Di:ATH THREAT . Jn, -R-IU ' ' ' than in its true light light. wear to pleasingly ry taljst contrast your shirts How. many Jews who be floor o( white. train. I to prevent his disastrous rise injustices perpetrated on a defeated Germany? t a l k cf •will b e any? -How How many! gaged ia the savagery o£ war, wherein so-called ccivilirrd and Jews practi th l Katz. I. Free on all shirts Jews eager eager for for toleration toleration, practice the same ttolerance they bc S !! even 'religious' human beings toar and slangier each each othclian Stc for? And how many who beseech the Christian world to know {like wild beasts and devise fiendish instruments to maini and SOV.-HS ? TillCT BOUGIand understand Judaism, Imovf and understand' the Christian j annihilate and rot .world" Davo The Jewish world, despite its great' number who ery for snan an social justice,-.Btill needs more 2olas, men who can rbe ab ove doers; a workl universally preparing for war, rrith r-uch v,p-i ECtrAixm J e w s P L E A B Kricknu ' t u e passions of the mob and earnestly seek the triumph of trnth. right and weH-inlentionecl nations as Great Britain ?a^d cvra!' ? R A Y B f t E O O K f : JEWISH* them It is a need v^e share with our Christian brethren. our beloved Ameriea forced in self-defense to take part m theicatinTry^aTen't used.
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joa, (JTAJ — "You .Tealj a good sound hiding," jigistrate Metcale said in |g a window-cleaner and tr to forty shillings fine [til's jail sentence for ustfn'g words and behavior Jews. •".[are as much entitled to beace and" quietude as a [t miserable boys.-like e Magistrate told Thomts, 28, the window-cleandbert "Wells, 17, the venOld Street Court, wo were charged -with on a lamp-post a poster 'Britons awake! Jews are your country!" and with insulting noises and gesJews passing by.
FKE1DEN-COOPERMAX AXXOUXCE BIBTH The marriage of Miss Sibyl : Mr.' and Mrs. L.
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* 1*jnaniely""scholarship relief to college students forced to'this country through persecution" and "furnishing scientific literature this on a to the Hebrew University of Palstudio com- estine." chicken liv- - Refinancing fraternity funds, style) with constitutional amendments, a matters of general Interest constituted the general business of jttte convention. New Officers
ing has wound up his career for; ithe timo being . . . leaves to be-' | come a legitimate (take it either iway you Mice) actor In Cape Cod, CLEAN LINEII [ | Massachusetts — The Mas -Baers iactosera'*! heir It in Doc. . Abe Lyinan help- 3! Always Attracts C«=icr OMAHA TOWEL 1 ed Paul Whitoman form his first M f| • • • SUPPLY They were both Chi(band / Years Siaco 1C7S caso cabbies . . . Sid Silvers raises I -ICE -2B2S frogs . . ". clalm3 they're a. source S -. ! of income, a table delicacy.
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Drive, Council" Bluff a. She is also ! Fred Astalre flicker will never be; City; Scribe, Mrs. A. R. Wolf ol keynote of the annual Sigma Al- j camps in this country ty the visiting her aunt and uncle, Mr-1 seen — that was GracieV dance ' Xew Orleans, La.; Treasurer, pha Mu Fall Roundup this week- men would "be rclJcwefi b BENEFIT BRIDGE and Mrs. P . Zollotuchen of Oma- rehearsals A watchman, so i sirs. S- Cohen of Cleveland. Ohio; end in Omaha. i eral prosecution "or Emngg'lri; v f A Benefit bridge "was given by ha and other. Council Bluffs rel- we're told, sits outside the Jolson j Editor, Mrs. A. Bettelheim of S. A. M.'s and their guests j guns froni one camp to the "Women's Mizrachi at the atives. nursery all night to guard the Berkeley, Calif.; Alumnae Secrefrom all ever the iliddle-TCest | and , cosrressior.sl home of Mrs. A. Shafton. A large baby. tary, Mrs. S. Klein of Pittsburgh •will be present for this gala cele- •' of all subversive movements. grroup attended and a substantial TO RETURN HOME Pa.; Ritualist, Mrs. O. Brown of bration. The Roundup will be j Mr. Dioksteis said that Atsum was raise-* for the benefit ' Mrs. Sonya Kaye of New York, Cleveland, Ohio; H i s t o r i a n , | initiated by an, informal "get-to- j ney-Generel Cucunings Luise Rainer means well of the new building of the Beth the former Sonya Cohn of Omaha, but her .English doesnt always Elaine Barlow of Leavenworth ; "p Saturday [i inrestiCBtins P a r t Zeiroth girls school in Tel Aviv. who has been the guest of her make the meaning clear. The [ Kansas; Field Secretary, Mrs. M. ' !x b ~ " Mrs. Sophie Rothkop "was chair- a u n t > M r s _M _ Cohen, and her cou- studio phoned her the other day Rusnak of Chicago, 111. "Creat- evening. j gur-s from on , , . . . . • , , . . . An informal stag smoker Et the i otter. man of the bridge. Mrs. K. Wirie, s j n > j j r s . L . shupt, will leave SatIt she knew her casting more Alumnae Interest" was j ' P a x t o n T n l occupy occupy the chairman of the drawing, an- urday for New York. "While here jCto'ask all that, the time and place of j io nn eg o t i h e liveliest forums on the ! H o tte nl fct call, SnIJ!jaT attel Kcanounces that drawing of the elec- she has been extensively enter- her nest appearance on the set. ; schedule due to the ^ ^ + fraternit p r o s r a E 1 r g f he the fraternity and their tric mixer will be held at the first tained. "No, thank you," she said sweet-; i arg - e number of alumnae present. the mshees, will be a*regular meeting of the organizaly.and hung up. outstanding feature of this ' jo r d e d * ample" "opportunity to beA n tion in Septeml er. ti th one e whole day: conventlon was the day c o m e a c q K a r n t e d . Oa finishing his last picture, [ spent out-of-doors; beginning The highlight of the affair Trill CONVALESCING Jack Benny reversed the proce- > with a swimming meet on the ut_ ( Miss Bertha Giiss i3 convalescdure of gift-giving. He gave the [beach at ten in the morning, hut-: t o n > Sunday evening- Music foln gat the "Mefhbd'ist Hospital folBy HELEN 23GB1OND largest checks to the lowest sal-|fet luncheon on the terrace of dancing is to be presented by the lowing an emergency appendectr aried workers . . . to his collea-jthe Country Club, and a business renowned orchestra of Freddie omy." . • ';-••'••. Hollywood — It seems strange gues he gave a dollar each . . . to j session on the Verandah of the Ebener. Party chairman Alfred . . . the Chaplin studio has never the director, a two-cent stamp . . j Club. . The sunburned faces sud j Fiedler promises that this will be TO VISIT IS SEATTLE „ been fully equipped for talkies. in ;all, he passed out a thousand j backs belied the cool weather of • ^ jjj t enjoyable of the yearlyt e 0S Mrs. M. Ackerman departed His last picture was mostly synNew Hampshire. The convention ;f a m e d Sigma" Alpha Mi Rountidollars. Tuesday morning for a two weeks chronized music with little talkwas concluded with a formal ban-l 1 , p S i stay in Seattle, 'Washington. She ing. If he holds to his determinaFiddletown, California, h a s quet portraying the . growth of will visit her son, Dr. Frederick tion to star Patflette Goddard, he elected X>ave Rubinoff as its first the fraternity, with Mrs. Beatrice :: F. Ackerman. ' :'will have t a completely modernize mayor. They didn't name the Behrman' as toastmistress, and the plant for sound. town after him, however . . . that speakers ranging from on© of the j HOLIDAY VISITORS j; happened when the farmers fid- founders, Mrs. Barnet Srsolin to > . There wUI be a regular meetMr. and Mrs. David Wohlner of Latest model in alibis: A pic- dled for rain and' got It during the delegate from the newest • ing of the Ladles' Free hv&n SoXew York City are the guests of ture player should never be late the drought ot 1S49. chapter, Lucille Greenberr, oi Al- i ciety on Wednesday. Septesiber Mr. and Mrs.- Harry Wohlner. to work It's an unbreakable pha Zeta. State College, Pa. 11, at 2 p. in. at.the Jewish CoinThey plan to remain over the hol- rule. Hence when .Benny Baker \ inunity Center. Another addition to.the Sammy idays. . . . arrived on the '. Bet, .flushed, Saga concernst 4he great Goldbreathless, and tardy, he met the wyn discussing agents, "I hate EMls Caster Heads Usica RETURN'S FROM EAST . director's glare with, " I — I — agents," exclaims Sam, "I hate IT WTM, FAY TOO New York (JTA)— Eddie Can,- Mrs. Louis Albert has returned It took me, twenty minntes to say them BO. much that I don't even tor, famed radio and screen star, To Gsssslt from a three months stay in the goodbye to the new dog my wife bother to ignore them!" blossomed out as a labor leader east. "While their she visited just bought!" If left the director when he was elected president of friends and relatives in New speechless, and" the matter was Good Shabbas. When ti:r"-=™ the American Federation of KadYork, Buffalo, Schenectady and dropped. io Artists. DIATIGI' TDS "Washington. During her stay Lew Pollack and Sidney. Mitch- (Copyright 1937 Jewish'Telegrashe was extensively entertained. ell, note-jotters, trust no one, not phls Agency, Inc.) There 5s record of a number even the air waves. They do their RETURN TO MEN*XEAPOLIS of German Jews who were tried work In i room BO soundproof Dr. and Mrs. Irving J. "Weiss that no high C can escape. E\ery by the • Inquisition of Mexico. and son, Robert Elliot, of Minne- night they lock their inspirations : apolis who have been visiting in a vault controlled' by a time 'In t h s Heart of the White In Mr. and Mrs. Meyer . Weiss and lock . a n d are there every j Mountains—Find the Heart of Aby King Ferdinand to lamily, left' Monday morning for morning when it opens. L O" was the slogan of the Sev- the "West Indies. - their home. During their visit etittt National Convention of Althey were extensively entertainIt's good to see,old-ttmers make pha Epsilon Phi held at The Baled. : • . Coimsctlor on S o e a a smash comeback. Solly Ward, sams, In Dixville Notch, N.. H., well-known to the stage for years July 11th through 15th, and dedHOME FROM TRIP is sans-a-tlonal. as a comic Bus- icated to. the Eesqulcentennial eelCouncil slan officer Mrs. J. Mendelson of in "Flight from!elJration of the formation of t h e ! Bluffs returned last week from a Glory." We hope he'll continue to j Constitution ef the TJ, S. two weeks stay in Collinsville and pursue a film career or, vice , The magnificence of the site, Okawville Springs, Illinois where the delightful weather, the per- Us'e Our Easy Payment P i a a — F a r a a i a a t 2 2 a d she visited with her sisters, Mrs. versa. fect hospitality of the whole staff William Greenstein of, CollinsMIscha Auef's next role will be of the Balsams, and the well-orville and Mrs. Harry Levitan of that of a swaml. it.requires a ganized management of the conMemphis, Tennessee.. difficult make-up. MIscha reports vention, itself, mads this .reunion
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prize in a Debate Contest at South High school. She will complete this trip during the winter by going to Florida.
"Workman's Circle Dramatic Club, Saturday evening, " August 21, RETURNS HOME Miss Fannie Sacks has return•when Mr. and Mrs. E. Selz ob'Cc—-~ - r v l ed from Chicago where •'h served the Bar Mitzvah of their a week with friends and relatives. twin sons, Norman and Edward, - The model of the Beth El Eyn-"l given by Mr. Greenberg and by!P h a s i z ed "All indication, points to „ Sharing honors were Mr. an,d Mr3. .gogue, which has been on dig-t h e T l c e chairman of the cam- ! t h e fa c t t h a * l h e - «"*=»««* out .agogue Hymen Ruderman who announc- VISITORS FROM -NE WYORK S working will see all prospects be-p TCL The Sacks family of 4805 S. play a t the home of J. J. Green- paign, Jack Marer and Mrs. Jaed the birth of a son to their j. fia'vs &nd that 22ndStreet berg, chairman' of the 1337 Beth were •visited this son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and I .chances are good for acotapleEl Building Fund Campaign, hss jc o b Blank. week by an Mrs. Esther aunt, Mrs. Al Ruderman of Chicago. y Ycm Lo i- A V E aroused great enthusiasm on the'}' Co-chairmen of the campaign | tion of the Campaign The evening was spent in songs Sacks, and their cousins, Mr. andpart of those participating in the: report a genuine enthusiasm for j Kippur evening." Mrs. Myron Sacks, all of New and recitations. the new synagogue. There has | The next report meeting -will be y g g York. T&e Visitors departed for drive. b 2 ^>»"»- T « * At'n mpptine held Wednesdav ^ t e e n a-notable increase in 'iadi-ii held on Thursday. September 2. a tour -of Yellowstone Park. AcAt a meeting held ^Wednesday . ^ ^ v l e a g e s a n d a n e n c ourag-i Notices giving time and place will „,.,.,„ " f^ .y^. f. >IISCEIiLu\XEOrS SHOWER companying them was Louis •nf-ght at the home of the. chair- j tag reE p O nse from the members. ! be sent to all those.interested. Miss Rose Kaplan and Miss Sacks of Omaha. man, twelve out of the twenty! i n commenting on the work of] John and Alan McDonald are Alice Susman weraco^hostesses at C.a committees reported! Talks were j the past week, Mr. Greeaberg em-] architects for the Synagogue. a miscellanous shower on Monday COUNCIL BLUFFS VISITOR evening in honor of Miss Sophie Miss Bernice - Soaorow of San scribed as a former secretary tr Beber. Out-of-town guests were Antonio, Texas, is the guest of they've cured him of insomnia . . i of Charleston, "W. Ta., being the j Sigsia Hitler, Representative Sairic 1 Miss Leah Herman and Miss Pau- her aunt and uncle. Mr. and Mrs.George Burns whispers that the j new national Bean; Sub-Dean, i Dickstein. predicted that the r-reline Peller of Minneapolis, and .. . . _ . Forest funniest part of the Gracie Allen- ; Mrs. A. Markewich of Kew York I Hilarity and gaiety will be the lirninary iiiTestiEr&tioa of Miss Ann Kaplan of Avoca, Iowa. Sam J. Gershun, 42
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rtbrced to discontinue d I am offering all my , wks is contemplat- •" at selection of Jewish t -many otter religious amount on each item' •will last antil everycreditors. All tlie hew g Holidays as Machilk or •wool of t i e best r with my other otbek
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D. Herman Cooperman, daughter of Mr. Har-1 announce the birth of a daughter, ry Cooperman to Mr. 'William j Nancy Joyce, on August 9, at the Freiden, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Methodist Hospital.. J. Freiden, will be solemnized on Sunday,. August 29, at the Hotel TOURIXG WEST Fontenelle. Miss Charlotte Sacks is now The couple plan to mate their touring the West. Her trip was home in Philadelphia.. awarded her for winning first
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J1SLEEP—^Miss Patricia Maguire, 32, of Oak Park, 111., in a coma for 5M> years, a victim of sleeping sickness, who recently took a turn for the worse and was rushed to (» hospital. Many widely known physicians have studied her illness but have been unable to aid her. Her only sign of consciousness was when she was fed.
GUARDING BaiBGE OLDES THAN SEEMOET—Chinese soldiers guarding the Marco Polo bridge, as Japanese advanced, on Pcsping. This structure .is an ancient'span mentioned fcy the Venetian traveler in his memoirs. It bec£m.e a strategic point in the fighting around Peiping and has been the center of intermittent fighting ever since the Japanese captured the ancient city.
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COSIFOST KITS FOS KIN—A" Japanese women's association of Southsm California meets at Los . Angeles to make comfort kits for Japanese soldiers fighting in China, seme of vrliom. are their rela^^ , ^ ^ •tlves. The kits contain American cigarettes, raisins, dried £gs, assorted nuts, chocolate &nd handkerchiefs. Sirailar kits are still remembered bj An:sricen veterans. " '
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QUITS—General Satumino Cedillo who resigned as Mexican Secretary of Agriculture when he found himself out of step with President Cardenas. The General heads his own private army of 15,000 men.
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BY CABLE — Carlotta Lamer* daughter of a Salina, Kan., hotel man, who is on her way to India to marry J. William Sinclair, Inspector for an American oU company, who 'proposed to her by cable.' She Is the former if off B d d Rogers' R ' bth wife Buddy brother, •***• Bh "Rogers.
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-;..r WAB CLOUBS OVEE ITALY—Not figurative war clouds b u t such billows of smoke a n d gas a s m i g h t be encountered in real warfare were swept aside by these Italian t a n k s a t recent maneuvers n e a r Veneto, viewed by high officers of t h e a r m y . I t was in this district t h a t Italians engaged a n d defeated ' t h e Austrians, during t h e World W a r .
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SLAYING 3US?SCT~A study of Albert Dyer. 32-ycar-old forrr.cr • crosEins guard, cc-on to fca tried in Los Anael^s en a ch-rc3 of slayincr tares little girls. Police say hs enticed them away jro» a . to a mounfc±i-£id2.
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THE JEWISH PRESS, FSIDAT, AUGUST 27, already opean stage, will appear ia. thethe last tires weeks he has been ^k^ i Yiddish Art Theatre's "Brothers clubbing the bail ferociously, ™> "™* ^ ^ " i iT*> - Ashkenari" for her Anerican'hanging out doubles and homers By BIAXA, KLOTTS"SCCLPXOIlS.OF ! debut. It was Maurice Schwartz* i ^ i U l pleasant regularity. .ana J^S SIXTX IS ^ ^ J Amazing and phenomonal to j has been tops. ^ e n From the delicate threads of a 'the lay reader are the recent bio- !invitation which brought her to!Breceiving in Terr this country, and though the ! . ^ erished but d i t t d i i as coEcecea cherisheS but distant dream . is: logical discoveries set forth by , our -~tre*= SCOTCHING SCOOPS Tom Sawyer" . . . Sain, who is a woven-a comely conclusion to the ;Dr; Jane Oppenheimer in the July ! ^DT,*fv *"«,„ ""1who speaks both j ler mother j That 'sensational scoop" in the sprinter, will play the-part of simple, creative life of Mrs- Es- | issue of The Collecting Net. Re- rencl1 he lr":T?, Yiddish press about secret nego- leader of the mob -who chases In- ther.-Moskovitx of Philadelphia, f erred to, is the exigence of a l i n g u tiations, between the non-Zionist dian John In the murder scene days as second s to lave i who, though 60 years old, has \ "Sculptor of Life," who, usder American group and Arab repre-.j. Rabbi Morris Lazaron of Balti- only recently discovered her latand Tid- ;string catcher Ere over. i p r O per worfcing conditions, fashsentatives is not a betrayal on fmore is utilizing his vacation 'to ent ability as an artist. dish'at short EO ultimate ! WORKERS' OLYMPIAD! j ions the aboriginal common 'clay* the- part of the non-Zionists,- but put the finishing touches on a We hare just .finished persn- • Born in Achokov, near Odessa,'; into organisms of goal, 'nevertheless, iss Hollywood a betrayal of confidence on-the book, the subject of which is be- she was 17 when she came to ing the results of the third Work- i • • • . , I .-.-..•-r " '> t h e a n i m a l k i n g d o m . Thus once part ol the so-called scoopsters . • ing--kept.a dark secret . . . Paul. this -country, and soon married, j To the oldest Jewess. in Am-ere' Olympiad »heid in Antwerp [ V-T. o" .Tc hear' the^distant rumble untry, and soon married, jm o r ee v v e e hearthe^distant rumble There •were conversations between M i h h ; tthrough h h j TWO boys and thres girls kept her imo £o r the Muni has announcedd he;s theory of life eternal of sterdam, Frau Sara Goede, great- at the end cf July. Two things ] \~y;~<Ci " T I Arab" leaders: arid non- with the movies, but Hollywood busy, so busy that she had little grandmother ia a. .family' nuinber- stirred our particular interest, Zionist gentlemen. on the. subject: says he'll appear in the film bio- time to indulge herself. Deeply man's eventual power to rejuventhe Isrge representation from! of a-.peaceful relationship between graphies of Joseph Pulitzer and j rooted was the vision, the hope Palestine and the number cf Jew-* -irree err. \ children and great-graadchildren, the two races in Palestine . ; .. , Anatole France . . . Grover Whal-1 o f a lifetime that some day -there it is by putting the "sculptor'" to \Queen presented zn : Ish entries from ether countries. CVT. These conversations were private^ en, America's best-dressed man, I vs-oulA spring into blossom prod- work fashioning a new body out I easy-chair sccompasied hy a per-j The Palestine workers had SCCX- -I'm W 1 of; the ashes of the old, and is entalk!}, a, mutual \ sounding-out j earned his first dougb. by lighting. act- of the surging creative force | soaal message of good wishes in (entrants ia football, water polo, "Which- might- have led to a con- j Sabbath fires for East Side Jews she harbored in her bosom . , . dorsed by startling evidence pre- celebration of Frau Goede's 10Ota. I basketball, handball, boxing, i sented'before the National Acsd! • crete proposal'; . . The premature!. . . Judge Irving"Lehman, broth- But always it was "tomorrow" ! swimming, tennis and track. None I~r_ ' birthday destroyed-those peaceful;! er of N. Y.'s Governor, owns one | s ' n r e iy there would come some emy of Sciences by Prof. Osc, (Copyright 1937 by Seven Arts cf the Palestine.' F.thletps won t prospects r ." . T h e r e i s , however, 6f this finest collections of Jewish less occupied tomorrow. There E. Schotto of ' Amherst College, j • title .but they showed er.cugh. tc Feature Syndihate) New techniques have been de-1 ah ironical climax to the, Zionist, curio3 . . . Did you know that the I indicate that they will score st | cries of horrpr at these negotia- inventor^ of the' xylophone- was hungry . stomachs to be" fed, a | the 1940 Olympics'. The only tions. - . . ' . J u s t when Dr. Weiz- Michel Gusikoff? : Jewish title winner was A. Mel-' The" guide bruised "knee to be bandaged, a to elucidate the causes for differ- j nick, of England, who copped the mann. throw-up his hands-indig- who- shows Hollyood visitors the tear to be appeassd. Esther Mos- entiation of small groups of cells, Tusr* F t C'Z j ping pong championship. There nantly about these "separate and [places of interest is a brother of kovitz had no time to be an artist that is, why-«ome bits unauthorized negotiations" some- the late Captain s Ernst Roehm, t h i n g happened . . The London one-time boss of the Nazi storm But as the children grew up JewiBh Chronicle published a troops, who was killed in the there appeared manifestations of "secret document" written by 1934 purge . . . their artistic strain of blood: none other than _ Dr, "Weizmann, TIPS TO YE EDITOR as a youngster had Harry, telling in detail of the Zionist It sounds like an election puff been winning innumerable prizes All of which brings to mind the j events, is the signal that the There'll be three of cur lads in leader's conversations with OrmsIt's also the line-up cf the Easter collciri-: byrGore a few -weeks before t h a . . . It really must be a wild can- for portraits of prominent people } recent announcement by the "wo- j track season is over. was gradually paving the way for j men's service committee of the la hint to us that it's time for c u r | f t e all-stars wb»n tber ireet the Zionist Congress convened . . . In the success and note which was i American"-Chemical Society of the ; J e w i sh a ' that document Weizmann accepts later to be his; Philip, the young- j award of three graduate scholar-J track team. partition provided a few bound- al- S. Copeland has a brother er son, was studying to become a j ships in chemistry, amor-nting to i Sam Stoller, Mic. ary lines of the Jewish State be .decorator; Lillian and Sophia! 51,200, and of which one recipi- | lan Toirich, Way changed v . - For the Zionist presabout Senator Hugo L. Black, turned t 0 nrriting dramatic,; ent is Miriam Straus, Cleveland, 440, Abe Rosengrantz,- Michigan Ir o s i T > Trinity halfback, will plav ident to-~accept partition in a conversatipn with the-British C o l o n - ! n e w . S u p r e l n e Court Justice, hav- s k e t c t l e S ) staging and performing i Ohio, a graduate of the Flora ; Normal; 8S0, Abe Rosenkranti; • ^ith the all-stars . . . The only ial Minister before the Congress ! i n g e e n . a I n e n d O l h e K u K i . U X i them;'Ethel, too, was. gaining Stone Mather College of the i one mile, .Abe .Hosenkraatz; 110- ,J e wo r the Giants is Walter Singhad expressed itself on the sub-! K l a n > n o b o d y seems to remember jrrecognition -g e r .. O n the ! Western Reserve University, who ! meter high hurdles, Allan Tol-!cer, e c o - E n J t i o i l aas s a a' s m r former Sj-rp.euse wir.gman . . . singer . . . . . that he is the same fellow who ject,was anything but, .straight exposed the anti-Semitic Sentinels stage and air. But Esther Mos- will become a candidate for the ; mich, 200-meter low hardies, Al| Ronald Lubin of California of'jlan Tolmich; high jump; Victor j singles t a e doctorate at the University title in the kovitz, as she sat slowly rocking politics;. .-•*' -Weizmann's face j h Vi j Brown University; ^. | Bernstein, Brown Liuversity; jS r a n d national ^ork-the ,.. . j must be red now whenever he of the Republic and threw a pan-, ' " " „ , . . . . • . . „ fbroad jump, Sam Stoller; h o p , ; L O S Angeles . . . Returning to th speaks about the "Arab negotia- ic into the pseudo-patriotic ^ ( n e w s p a p e r , in which she. zealousAnd in New York,.behmd t h e ; J ^ F dls-!ring after a four month Bieg fallen busy of rnnfiisimi confusion in in as,j.j ly followed Zionist news, ,«• o P n P R of as- , ^ nlaess> tions in Kew York" . . . . L e T y > g a n F r a n . j^ y Escenes true that the Non-Sectarian Anti-* Erie E CRASH HOLLYWOOD for the e i s c o 01 m icM 1 t o her.lap—she fell to reminisc- j sembling party tickets j Nazi League spent $8,000 on ad7" P Club; pole vault, j European middJeweig-ht ing: of her grandfathers, both re- J municipal elections, to be held i Hollywood is picking up Shafcevertising in the Catholic pres3 Tered and beloved rabbis, of herd next November, a group of civic- ,| Standish Medina, Princeton; shot; stop?«d Frank Lobianco in xse; speare for the .screen, aa you t DannT and got only 85 replies and pract"' Columbia. fifth round . . . Sydney Greens- \ know . . . So in one of the musical cousin, Boris Borislovsky, - the ; minded women have oeei Quietly | ' "' r , T l r K s ; pas retained his South African i comedy films, in which Jack Ben• artist to "the Czar, and an-_i working out a plan for the n a x ^ ^ M S O V... f, the Anti-Nazi League reminds .us other, Ephraim Kashkow, violin- \ Looking around for an expla- amateur light-hesvyweicht "wrest-j ny has -A. good time picking artists "<^ i m u m representation of their sex that our managing editor is 1st, and a physician of repute, j which-has until now been held nation of the sudden spurt of the ling crown for. the third conseca- ; and models, you will see a poster laughing out loud at Boris Nel-who for escape from the world of out of" the limelight. A list of Giants is the latest pastime cf tive year . . . Karvin Kecnt snd j •which reads: "Biron Swim, Suits son, executive ^secretary; of the science loses himself in the realm jj prepared as a result baseball bugs. 'We don't have to Sain Fensr o* New York's Trinity i — You Know It's a Biron" names A week ago Nelson of the brush and easel -i . . And •0 { the activities of Mrs. Lionel look* farther than home plate be- Cl-ab are the netr national A. A. I How does thi3 come to Shake- League raised holy hob because our m. which Hank Canning has IT. seaior one-wall double hsnd-l speare, you'll ask us . Just e. reported in a news dispatch "slowly her eyes would rove from ] Sutro who is New York chairman . ' I one to another of her son's paint| f the League for Women for I been doing a swell job ia the ab-ball .titlists. look up " L o v e ' s Labor Lost," that the G-men were Investigatof the League for Women for s e n c e o n d she shej president President and Other Public Off- jj sence of Gcs .Mancuso. Sfanct Hack's •where Lord Biron. of Navarre is ing the Nazi camps . . . Nelson ings on the wall --. . . aand backstopplag- has always left (Copyright IS ST. by Seven one of the main ^ characters . . . had a letter from boss G-man would remember how as a girl ices, as well as a member of the !' backstopplag. Feature Syndicslc.) Here are some of the things the too had once dreamed Fusion City Advisory Board. It Ione something be taleat desired,with butthe aoj d i d she i-E Now, with the. children well |1b doubtedtohis j Bard says about Lord Biron- (who Hoover to. deny i t - - • - v - ^ t a s D e e n S € n t to the headquar.. Laugh of course was one of our ances- you see the papers? grown up, and free time a bitjters of the various political par- stick i£ he played .regularly. I s J Which ,Te- more plentiful, she set herself bito , ties and to the five couiity chairtors) . ."."Biron, the merry mad- that off, Boris cap lord: "Not a word with him minds us that some- organization" the task,- At. first,' during those | men .in t h e .h o p e t h a t the'womea t u t a. jent" . . . "What will Biron ought to look into th& reports precious leisure moments at the j mentioned in it may be given sersay when that he shall hear . . . that Raymond Whitcomb tourist end; of the day she would spend | i o a s consideration. Of those inX P"nccl of yoi WHOLESALE "DISTEIBUTGKS How will he scorn! how will he people are refusing to "take, Jew- long, hours moulding little clay j eluded are Dr. Anna Hochfeider, • Sckrafft's Chocolates * Iv'isrle", Ci2es-,ta Ri ris1r;-to'!b!uf:r' spend his wit! How will.he tri- ish passengers on. the Normandie, figares: small models, larger jhead -of the Alliance of Civ;" £«•Er - • Cssssia Dry Ginger Ale » s i ' Karrcrler Cif » umph, leap and laugh at it!" . . . . which they chartered, for a South r End your :F.~i' " '' • •' '• • • F&lstaff Beer -*~"Whitcoaibr, Qn.es:i. . , «.,AEJi-,they, werer2>eslnt' vice-Women/ and- a-lonrter- . . s^lstHis- ^rfjrxriznas- tellst T h American ;"©uYe- bound 1 315 -So. 13tk' Street AT 42S it our memory serves .us aright, n i n g t o take form, to .describe | a n f Corporation Counsel cZ •world's; largest tongue proclaims sponsored a Jewish cruise to' Pal- action, to express rhythm . York City, and Mrs. Jack Loeb, Kttle up for pi you for man T.eplete.with, mocks." estine: a number of years ago Critics : whoDj. h«r son brought president of the Ray Current ThEt's wfcj- • and-the; "pert -Biron" says of. There is also a charge against to see her work-encouraged her. j Events Club and member of more himEelf; '."Liik'e a "demigod here sit the Swedish Shipping Line to the Thus her boundless--.talent:found" j car "Kith Goc than any other wosian ia I in' tho sky, "arid wretched fools' effect that it doesn't want" non- •its-natural-outlet,--though-she. had d j New York- Especially noted for Becreta heedily o'eiveye" • . . B u t , Aryan business .rV. Sidney Hill- never studied art. ardent efforts in-: communal afto return to " Hollywood, -what man and/John Lii;Lewis, big bos- Her most beloved piece is. the | fairs is the name of Mrs. Arthur burns.Tia tip is that neither ses of the CV I. • O-, • are'•• at oddsbas relief plaguy, of h e r mother,-'. Hays Sulzberger, president ^ h e Shakespeare-nor we get any xoy- over what attitude the .C. I. O. showing the furrows of age-, the p fe Association of ^ew i°y_K, ar . cities ilor the use of the name we should take toward Roosevelt sunken cheeks, the strange light city.. And . since .training^ in the | .two have-made famous Hillmann favors continued- sup- of wisdom in the deep-set eyes, j law should be a qnalifying asse. port, while Lewis is inclined to But, too there were others: Al- j for civic activity, Ssaasda DraKHAIX (iP 11EI4GIOX , v. „ , —..: - „ The rabbinate, which, bitterly be less friendly ...•„ Believe it or bert Einstein, Franklin D. Boose-i ^ffi, head of the Bronx Wonens Herzl, Thomas j Bar Association, is 'mcrade^ in opposes calendar, reform,] ia, heart- not, but Jfew. York, radio listen- velt •' Theodore ; ily, in- favor of any reform,' that ers have recently heard the voices Edison. And when she took to j the list. So we're standing b •will prevent: Ro3hHashanah : from of Hitler and Goebbels coming) the "-easel, there .were little paint- now in the hope that further incoming : during the Labor. Day over program from local stations ings and sketches which proved spirations- will evolve from the •week end," as It does this year . T h e equally successful With such precedent set'by the ?Cew/.York It's done like this . Becauss ol the;; early High Holy stations sell time for German warm enthusiasm were met thewomen Days there'll be: thousands of em- programs in bulk to contractors endeavors of Mrs. Esther Mosko- ••' Gerta • -Rosen", the attractive, pty pews in urban synagogues who are Nazi agents . . . These I-ritz,"that the colorful little ssene blonde, Viennese actress, "who, •while the Jewish Summer resorta gentry, "li slip iin transcripts the sailboats and i t of f ttalks'jyith lkj d the th little littl since.she was •fourteen-has been, •will do a rushing. business by Dei- Fuehrer and his nfouth- jc o u n t r y house on a grassy "bank, building a reputation ca the EurIsadore ' Worth of Camden, N. J.,plecg in program supposed to be j fonner Assistant V. S. District exclusively musical >. . . The sta- ! Attorney, is being groomed for a tions carrying these programs — senior vlce-commandership of theWBNX, WHOM, WFAB, WBBC.j Jewish War Veterans . Some and WWRL, all small outfits — Of the most cockeyed reporting in are cutting out Buch programs, years waa contributed by the having been scared off by swarms general news agencies-in . their of protests . . . Etorie3 on the Zionist-Congress (Copyright 1937 By Seven Arts But the prize boner came from Feature Syndicate.) the United Press, which reported that the opponents p£ partition Debarred >• had organized, themselves into the New York (WNS) — Debarred New. Zionist Organization . . . . That's the ^Revisionist outfit, who from emigrating . because . most took this nanjetwo years' ago . . countries refuse, to ; admit state. Jewish deaf mutes in New York less persons, 250 stateless Jewish •attend a weekly service at Tem- families in Germany,, most ple Emanu-El .. i . T h e deaf wor- whom came to. Germany after the . shippers pay: no attention to theRussian Revolution, are in a des^ rabbi, but keep their eyes glued perate plight, according to a rer| on Mrs. Tanya Nash, a rabbi's wi^ port received by the Joint Dis'-.'-. i flow, who translate the sermon in- tribution Committee. ; to sign language . . Another myth has been smashed by the: king ot g _ garlic dealers, who reports that ' Jerusalem (JTA) —An antiJews, not Italians,- use the most partition campaign: fund,"- to garlic in their cooking . . . ; administered by Vladimir Jabot- j : ABOVT P E O P L E ; ^y •. • insky, leader of the. New Zionist •': The least enviable foreign cor- Organization, was launched here respondent jobs at the moment by a general committee. Among are being held down by Robert trustees of the fund is Professor •fM6 $ Berko'w, "United Press manager in Joseph Klausner. :. Shanghai," and Morris J. Harris, •Who- has a similar job with' the -Associated Press . . ..Sam Stoller • Cantor 'Herman Miro•whb-niade the 1936 Olympic team c r d zzo£~rz ac™c ccs—CTJ~Z . "wits. \'/ill-ccmduct Rosh b'ut didn't get to run, will appear T i or In ,JETol\ywood's picturization of Hashonali" -and;. ¥osi
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Zionists had agreed ca certc i ccr.Siticns fcr aa AraD-Jii"»si — z.-.'- I t c UEdcrrlasding v ith t ; Arab cc2ssat. at Gcnf^c. TIie=3 ccr-C - - tions were acrc-tcd to. ^c z-.£.,~- ' .{--_ brcer to espodiats^ a rov.rd t^^Ie •;••.. i t'conference. --c Ths ccrdilicn: T fc^ci the re::- -z Tj'.cnizi rpckEEniE" ere c i i r ^ - ' " ?,-
HOLLWOOD HOBBIES Harry Einstein (Parkyarkarkus to you!) says his pet hobby is collecting old American silver . . . Holds IJcaiorial Services r?i?' He is considered an authority on Memorial services, traditional this subject . . . He is an inveterof the prchst: ;!on cf \".i t-rloc t r d IVe -<-^ which Bud during the month of Ellul, are ate radio fan and like to play amount ttey had been srcttsnjr. ofbeing held at the Jewish Plot of | S°*-> swim and to watch football Barsky is producins . . . Felts j fered' them ?62 fcr a rerforni- er=L=icr.t ir. Palest-Ire ) to Floyd cemetqry Sunday morning track and hockey events . . . For Bernard and Irving Bibo are! ance." Since they they dezr. pet9 he has a parrot, which he writing the musical score for, by, Cantor A. Pliskin, until Roslj I $62, .at least, a day, and claims speaks Greek . . .-At the Patronize Our AC\ ert.scrs Hashonah. - Special appointments time Einstein left his home in "Wallaby Jim of the Islands" for rnever received lees. may bo made with the Cantor by Boston in 1P33 to take up-enter- Barsky-. . . From Grand National, I ]\ ^ - —* we also learn that a romantic I Returning from a .ten -week calling at hi3 home. tainment w o r k , Parkyakarkus comedy,', "At Your Service JIa-' trip in Europe, Rabbi Theodore was' the highest salaried retail dame,",* by Albert Alexander, co- Arab Leader CI iL c oEti=aed ficra r t r s 1) N. Lewis expressed the opinion advertising executive in New En- producer with his brother, Max, Non-Z:on£cto A -ire 2 rc. • that Nazi- pcopoganda in • Austria gland , .'-. Binnie Barnes enjoys left Cedars of Lebanon. Hospital dasraa. Jevish r>ro:c^::crr.; rrc and Czechoslovakia is causing riding, swimming, "golf *and ten- after treatment for a kidney ail- j great concern to :most European Mrs.. Joe -Kutiher,' president or n i s another Jerusalem (Yv'XS-i?aircr .Agen--She has dark brown eyes ment, M. H. Hoffman, statesmen interested ia world the Ladies' Auxiliary. of. Shaar--* and her; r featuresr-are mpre>Latiii GNF film maker, entered the cy)—Jamal. Hussein!, relative; of rac«-s." Kence they doc's=re tt-< t h e peace. War clouds cover Eu- Zion Bynagogila; was; hp'ste'ss »to than; typically English .-'. : She is same institution — and for the) the Mufti of Jerusalem .-and" mem- "the growth in \ r a b irambsrs bas | cr rope, he said, and only a miracle members" of • th<i .Auxiliary - E'orJd a -London lass, you know-;-. . . very skme reason . ' . . Binnie ber of the Arab Higher Commit- been largely-,<iue to the health j services" initiated and carried on ] can avert the general conflict for at asluncheon'- in'Jher home Wo Vin'ce" Barnett's hobbies are • fly^ Barneshas cancelled her plans to tee, asserted i in an. Interview .pub- by Jews. . j the nations are preparing. ing and amateur photography \ . . sail for 'England to make a movie lished*. int Palestine, on- the.occaWe are forever vindicated rnor- j Rabbi Lewis spent two weeks He coilects''photogr3phsan'd"auto- for Alexander Korda in order to sion offliis.retard.-from...abroad to ally and materially. Zionists have of his time in Europe in Russia, Mrii'Bnd;-.Mrs..:A. Pessen and gfaphs .of famous fliers . . - • • Bar- take the-'second'feminine lead in repres^pJE Palesfjae.', Arab • '/Inter- made no claim' •which the Royal CJ— "t - -c r and was of the opinion that the sons .ot Lbs Angeles, California, rett- has • two brothers who < are^ The Aflventures of Marco Polo" ests, .that nonrZioaists"bad'agreed f r Coaaission-does ,not allow. Our Stalin regime was ''heading for are recent-guests-in -the home of physicians- and two- sisters- who .1. Larry Adier's work in "The in a conference wtth'.Arab leaders Ropes aRd aspirations are justia fall." The intellectuals, he Mrs. William Kantor, 1923 are married to physicians-..;.,His Singing Marine" is making the to- a suspension i of ;Jewish '.immified in the face of Christendom. tl>e stated, have lost confidence in Jones street. Mrs. -Kantor en- wife, the former Genevieve Meier critics rave . . . Bebe Daniels and gration .in. Palestine. . • And yet the 'Royal Ccniniission t;e ofDetroit, -is a non-p.cofes'sional . Ben Lybn are remaining abroad Stalin's leadership and the masses tertained a group of friends last •ace Iizat Tannous, another member drew false and untenable conclu- j are forced to work.hard and for Friday evening, in her home, hon- ; . iWing.Pichel loves music;, . • for an Indefinite period, we hear r T£ of the Arab Higher Committee sioas and sold us out in the end j " " " * ' " " f-f. Sally: Eilers is. fond of music, too, Ben is a native of Baltimore . . . low wages. -. .. : ' oring the, guests. . : who returned with him, was in to the mere unmoral Papan for- j besides-being a fine" ballroom When last heard of Bebe and Ben "Freedom of religion has sedancer,; rider, swimmer,';. golfer they w§re discussing a South the United States conferring with ces of the world and cur Zionist i rious limitations in Russia" RabMiss Beatrice PHI left Monnon-Zionists. " , ' Cfengresg, despite the opposition j (Cc She always American trip . . . Another famed bi Lewis said. "Government of- day for Chicago, where she will and teriis player Husseini • declared that non- of Stephen Wise End Ussishkin. : dreamed of being an actress- , .... ficials are hostile to religion and visit 'With friends. ••"- • June ClaywortB's liobbies" /are over? effort has been made to i«M»M&>^^ ..* swimming,diving, horseback, ridstamp out religion by closing Rabbi and > Mrs. . Sol: BolotniSynagogues and churches. Never- kov, 207 Fourteenth•' streets .had ing,' singing and playing, the- pitheless, many of the older per- as' their .'guests .last .week, .Rev. ano . , . .' She speaks. Italian, MinnniEiffl Boating sons still remain devout:" He and Mrs. Nathan; Gotdwaser, of French" arid'Spanish "described Russia as a country of Chicago, parents .'of • Mrs.vBolot- and" swimming *re Jerome,Cowan's favorite.diversions".'., .Liiise •no free speech, little free press, nikov.V . . ' . ' ' ;."•;•'• Rainer, who they, "say I s ."making and a constitution- that has become considerably weakened." ; Bernard'Lazere departed this the great'Garbo look to her,! laurRabbi Lewis' trip included week for? Chicago, where he-has els,: is. interested in farm'ing\and Stops in- England, Sweden, Fin- made business connections....-,.. hopes-to-live close' to tlie .. soil wiien»'her'film, career ends . . . land, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Austria/ Switzerland and France. Friends of Stanley ',' Shulkin Sie' is plahnihg.tq'buy a.farm in / , * , ! gave a" surprise party • for him the East, possibiy fn"^^ Pennsylvan. . ^.V Saturday evening,' on the "occa- ia or''Connecticut : 'Census of Jewish" ,NEWS BIT. ' - . ' • . . : • - , . . : sion of his birthday. . Playwright Benl;Hecht,.-whose Population Ended H Earl Novich is spending this new: writing contract vwith; Samuel Goldw^n is said to .call for, the Under the direction -of Miss week visiting with friends In biggest^payment ever recorded in Ruth Marx, a complete census of Omaha. an individual writing^ contrast, is the Jewish population in Sioux to return.- to ;New ;l"6rk early in Jlrs. Max Rosenstock and City has been taken during the October to start rehearsals for daughter Bertil 'returned home .J>a3t month,, and will be-kept-on his new play, "To Quito .- and this week . after a three month file at the Jewish Community visit with Mrs.-Rosenstock's par- Back," in; which "Sylvia. Sidney Centerwill be: starred by the Theatre A group of volunteer workers ents in Holland. Guild . . .-Hecht will first-prepare took the census, which will inMrs. Philip * Shermon, : 1704 the. screeji play for*fSweet>Land clude the- listing of children of a musical- -picture Douglas street,' returning • home of .Liberty," school age as well as aduitB. base"d"?6h the Federal Theatre prothis .wee'i from Excelsoir Springs, In redecorating the rooms at Speaking of -'Federal tho Jewish Community Center Mo., stopped first in Omaha with friends. Theatres.<reminds • iis that Yasha preparatory.for the fall' meetings where she visited Eugene Sherman1 spent the -week- Frank is"', enjoying • treme'iTdous and- classes, there 'is a need for .as a'producer with the ^additional, furniture. •• . Anyone end in OBaaha . arid -.returned home with his .mother.. Also ac- L03 Angeles Federal Theatre-prohaving furniture they wish to do.His prpductio.ns-.at the nate lor this purpose is asked.to companying: . Mrs.- Sherman... to ject Greek.open air: theatre,and.;in loget in touch with Miss Dorothy ioux City for-a: week's r visit were cal .theatres are- v/inningxtLa acMerlin at the office of the.Cen- Mortin Kulesh- .and- ,Charlotte claim-of-critics . - . . Yasha~.-formter. -• •' • ••' ••. • - • Shafton. ••.;-«-- . . . erly. was^with B. P.t Schtilberg in
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- ' Shaare Zion Synagogue Schlichos services at Shaare Zion synagogue will be held this Saturday night at 12 o'clock in the synagogue.' - Cantor A. PlisIiin and a special* choir of men's voices will chant the ritual. The choir has been specially trained by Cantor Pliskin for the holidayservices.
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Mrs. Sarah Braver, .60, .widow • of Hahbi'Braver -who was rabbi /.of Adas Yeshuren synagogue here for- nearly ten years ;prior to • his death in Sioux City last year, died last, week at Kansas City in the home of Jier son, Rabbi • J.udah" Braver. FJaneral services were held in Sioux City last Wednesday;afternoonMrs.- Braver, was born^in. •uania. "She left Sioux City last year after the death.of her husband, and moved to Kansas City. ' Surviving- are six sons, Rabb Braver of Kansas City. Rabbi Kirsh Braver of Canton. Ohio; Jack Brave" Pittsburgh. Ell Braver of- .c - . a . son who lives in Be id another in 'j<.fr\rn. and Mi1': ^•"i"'-*"". An opportunity t ;e one of [ Another feature that cceornof vhom resides in ' Pittsburgh \, the greatest educatu ..-I exhibits j panies the sea monster is "Serand the other two in Kansas' f all-time'•will'be .given the; peo-! pentina." ' ' •
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I pie. of.-this ;,vicinity next; w.eek.j Captain David' J.* Barnett," vet' when the Mammoth-Marine Hip- eran whaling commander, acTinbereth..'Israel, podrome arrives in Omaha'for a [companies the exhibition, and 1 Th" Tipheretli Israel Syna- seven days - engagement starting spins many an intresting yarn Th Tip i its it year off rre- Monday, August SO.. • One of the relative to his past" experiences -osuo"" will bosin Selichoth" features of the exhibit is a huge and also enlightens the specta31"iouG iouG services servic with ''Selich d i h t at 12 o'clock sea monster weighing.68 tons and tors on the life and- habits of the to" bo held niSdniEht t 2S No is over 55 feet long. In a per- various specimens on exhibit, and on Saturday. August 28. tic':^ts of admission are ncces- fect state of- preservation, • and is in charge'of a crew of thirty just as it appeared, when encoun- men that also accompany th-1 exEveryone- is vrelcoinc. slry" Tho fanou famous Cantor Israel tered off the coast of San Cle-hibition. raente several months ago. In X-caTog Cbicano with his choii addition to the tea monster "the • All attractions which aro on el specially constructed railroad car, 4 m chant the 3:T7!COS durinp fie iltab Holidays on September t> exhibit will' include over 40 | will be placed'on a siding at Forother specimens of marine life,, tieth and LeaveriVofth itnmed-atc: n d 7 ana 15th. Ho will also such as the-octopus, pilot fish.jly on arrival in Omaha and vill "Selichotli."'-Everyone-if as- man eating sharks, sr/ord - fish, j be'open- to tho public from noo:; j j svr lurcd to caioy hlo traditional and a modern type of harpoonj until 10 p.-m. daily." Admiccioa soul-stlrrinr; me)odie=. sun used in th'e capture' of, 10- cents, n?bbl S. I- Bolotnikov \;ui whales. ' •'• • 5T)/ali" before ' •;.••;•
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The ticket committee for the holiday services will be .at . the synagogue Saturday evening from 10 until 12 for those who wish to get seats for the holidays. The committee will also be at synagogue Sunday morning— .••... 'Harold Slotsky, son. o£ Mr.1 and Mrs. S. Slotskyi will"celebrate his Ear Mitzvah. tomorrow.; morning at Shaare.Zion synagogue. Monday-evening, teachers of the" Shaare Zion synagogue Sunday school will he guests of Rabbi and Mrs, Hablnowitz. in their home. ;; -
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