I
4 THE WORLD'S f
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In th e Istcrcs is, of the
LIJDWIG LEWISOHR s.hereby given that ihs u n . "
She views expressed by Lad•wig .I/e.wlsohn in his column are his ovvn arid do not necessarily reflect the policies or attitude of our''publication. Reproduction in whole or ic part strictly forbidden. •
L- iif f ? r r o e d a corporation ta-the laws of the..stakeTo" I The name of "the corporas>sy.-Tea. Shop, Inc.. with ita place, of business in Omaha, |-. Tho objects for ' n-hlch oration -is formed are; To .-_ erect, provide, maintain lease, purchase, acquire Joy-and dispose of, by^sale •use, in any town,- cify or p • the United- Stateai tea pffee houses, restauiants. p s houses, or places of re: to; make and execute -any
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KtHered as Second Class Mali Matter on January 21. 1S21. a t foptottlce oi Omaha. Nebraska, under the Act of March 3. IS7»
OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FBIDAY, OCTOBER S, 1937
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greements for the rental of
5s of business as are'herein «i: to construct, own, fpurrlntain, operate, sell, .lease of. any such property, and ion-er to purchase and! hold iple, or otherwise, suet real may be necessary for carrye ; business of said corporaa for the purpose oficom>yinent of" said corporation.
company Is authorized to
3ney. the same to be secured lanner as'. the Board of Di- •
ay authorize. The total' auapital stock Is SIO.OOO.Q). par (.00 per share, all' stockjicomshall be fully paid antSnonwhsn issued. The corpora/ commence business"'lupon I-of the articles with.: the Jerk of Douglas County,. Neba shall continue until .JanHZ...- The highest amount of pss. shall not exceed' two[the capital • stock. The busie s of the corporationiishall red by a Board; of not; less nor more th.tn five' in/hum-flhall be elected a t thir anting of the stockholder, to a 'the first llondav inljanach year. The' Board-shall. number, elect a president, dent, secretary and Ixeasta corporation shall'-tuive a a articles may. be amended neetins of the stockholders firmative vote of -two-UUrds ed . and outstanding stock, otice of the meeting a i d its. hall have • been given Ho: all irs,, as provided in thti By-' September 17th. 1937. 'i MARIE E. COSTELLO •' FLORENCE R. JIAY?? ES •-.
The great intense dramatic preoccupations, shut out or overlay the apparently lesser ones. Must •we accept a dlvision-of -Palestine? What will be ultimately given us and b.i •what terms? Will the Jewish people - sustain the comEXPRESS APPRECIATION munity in Eretz yisrael and see r FOR DRAMATIC' ' to its increase with a more pas•, r r sionate zeal than ever? Revolving PRODUCTION questions in one's mind, discussing them, living "with them The officers of the Chesed Ebel may De a severe and at times Eznes. have expressed their aptragic business. But it .is at least preciation to the Omaha Choir no inglorious one. .••'"'_ . and Dramatic Club who last SunAnd then suddenly one line day, evening presented a benefit "TMs Is the Lard" to Be Gires day stalk In upon you the coms>t Pasraaiodi't Oa performance of "Chaseh, the OrIVIllfti H i d e s ' t o augment its control over Pal- phan" to raise funds for the work mon realities of Jewish life in October 19 estinians there. America. In a given .community of the Jewish Funeral Horns. i A street censorship prevented The Ill -—and that no unfavorable one— :ios • picture, "This Is A large audience witnessed the ( ' local newspapers from publishing fewer than half of the Jewish -will'be shown.-st the production which was under a word of- the' extensive reports families have: any synagogue afParamount Theater on Tuesday, direction of Sir. Ben Martin. ,nd reactions abroad on the filiation. Fewer than one tenth October 13, at S:15, as the. first JERUSALEM ( J . T. A.) — tringent steps taken Friday. TelG have any Zionist affiliation. The .Spurred attraction oa the Ceater Forum. to action by the assassiThe City Talmud Tc-rah • will iphone service with neighboring rest live lives without any funda- nation of Galilee District CommisProceeds • from. the showing will open four C'CIOCIJ en. Monday countries remained suspended, almental relationship to any center go to the City Talmud Tcrah sad if thest^ , sioner Lewis Y. Andrews and histhough' service was functioning ban cf the health fiepartof - Jewish consciousnessy to any the Jewish National .Fund. bodyguard, the Palestine Governraect is " lifted. 'Againfill pupils with' distant countries. historic focus, to any awareness An autheatic chapter ia theare .asked to report ' oa the Co^fror - : ; - r of their place .and station in his-ment last week cracked down on Strong measures were taken by heroic story of the colonisation of Arab leadership. clt, officer tory or the world of the present. he Government to guard against t ' Palestine, the picture traces the Acting with dramatic sudden- disturbances in the wake of the to : ny outlook beyond the. shal^ j development of the country from Parents are urged to en low bustle, the dreadful alterna- ness, but in accordance with a coup. Police and military deI the arrival of the first Jewish their children ficring tfee tion of empty business and empty carefully conceived plan, the au-tachments guarded all roads arid pleasure in the immediate fore- thorities * deposed Grand Mufti patrolled the streets of important Seaffimis Seligions and facial pioneer* of fifty years ago to the j ^ D B n f i e e , b r a E C h accompUshBieats of the present. open „„.„,-„„ ground scene of American life Haj Amin el Husseinl from his population centers. A strong on „,„.,,,„ Men Say. be .lield•<t \ z ^ o -Equality in Radio day. - . - V, And then, to rub salt Into this government-paid position as pres- guard continued to surround the \rili open . r J .».. Epescli , Among the HgMights . of the ; v •wound, there turn-up charming ident of the Moslem Supreme Mosque of Omar, which the Muf; picture are scenes" showing''the j jfMf-f jKiN" J s | | Council, arrested four Arab leadnot uneducated people who have ti continued to occupy protected Washington, D. C. (WNS) — founding • of Tel"'Aviv, the .raar-j * LL&X&JSM- k *,"& made an Ersatz-religion of their ers and outlawed the. Arab Su- by a bodyguajrd of faithful folAdmitting charges that he was stalling of the. Jewish Legion en- j for coad J r;r c negations and abstentions, of preme Committee and all its na-lowers. a member of the Ku Klux der-General- Aliesby outside'the j • their emptiness and flight, and tional affiliates. bees.. £iii zl. 7 , The Official Gazette announced once Klan but. asserting that he reof "Jerusalem,'the laying: eft have turned . . . Never mind what Trill be v "i ',V * An official communique an- that the Mufti is not eligible for signed before becoming a member walls the foundation' stone of toe He- \ Tf'fP'FP y have turned or Vhat shadow nounced the arrest of Fuad Sa- the presidency of the Moslem •tltiliJ l i i t i l of the United' States Senate and b r e * University, the speech cf cf no embracable substance they ba, secretary of the committee; (Continued on page S.) that he has had nothing to d o j ^ r d Balfour • at • the . epeniag' of feign" to themselves to have em- Mayor Hussein Khalidi of Jeruswith it -since, Supreme ' Court) the' University; .and scenes of the \ braced. , -• -. • 1,-end-: alem;, the Mufti's nephew, JamJustice Hugo L. Black, In aa un-activities of the colonies and the j WCZ3C2.. t S ^ H e s r ^ ^ T al el Husseini, and Tukan bey thriving modern cities' 'of. Tel] C T S _ &t *£*-€r-£^l£u • £i$f!%f \ It -would be laughable.if it were precedented radio address to the Shouman, manager of the Arab Aviv, Kslfa, -and New Jerusalem. J . : '--Oc-toacr-A-l • ] not so dreadful. Thousands of nation, vigorously denied that-he roles in the picture * • ' •'• j American Jews, hundreds of thou- Bank and an American citizen. was. intolerant or bigoted. Hail- . Featured : 1 The Mufti himself, whom the sands of American Jews, exist ing the constitutional "safeguard are enacted by members-of the) . Jewish women of the city• will j psychologically and that means in Royal Commission taxed with a to complete liberty of religious famous Jercsalem troupe, the'j Ejoin-with-those "of other-deEomi-j ' " ' " j stions in. s a inter-£axth confer- j this case both spiritually and Inlarge -measure of responsibility belief" as a "declaration of -tne K a b i m a b . • • • ' • As a unique presentation ©f_! ence to be ; fceldcs TtsrsSay,' Octhe broader sense politically too, for the 193S disorders, was regreatest importance to "lie fu1 1 Tjy virtue of a defense-mechanism.. ported isolated in a room o t the ture of America ..as a . natJoa of tfce evening,".there will be a.con-i iober £1, &t-the .Firs have built up a wall be- Mosque of Omar in the Old City. Death Ends Long Career . in} free people," he- - assailed « a ny|.cert given by.'the combined choirs The. Mosque, chief Moslem house themselves, and all the movemeat or action by any group of the Temple, Beth El £S.d British Pnilie of worship, was surrounded by a s O~z\d deepest realities of their lives. No, 1 that threatens to • bring about a Haz'omir, tinder tfee ''joint dire?Servica ' tween not only the inner realities. The detachment of heavily armeo solresult inconsistent with this un- 'tion- of Cantors " A. SchwaczK"* C diers. ' : • ." , outer ones too. Behind this wall restricted individual right" • as a and Aaron Sdgar, and Mr. A! F i r - C London (JTA)—Viscount-Peel, "menace to.freedom.". If will a-they crouch. Historic forces are TAKES ABOARD CRUISER battering at this wall. A top lay- Warrants were issued for thewho headed the Royal 'Commiscoaipssy tbe ' oir oa tbe Parrof other mem- sion which recommended creation er of brick and mortar, crumbles. arrest of a number 1 Hfv .T/virlsh -ort subjects _ ~w Do*ybfr*"suppose. these -peopla per- bers of -tSe "Arab- Supreme Com- of -independent States through three-way iiarti-1 . . - • mit themselves .toi look over the mittee/ including Ahmed Hilini . Tickets for tie.' picture will vail, which is so" easy for them Pasha and Yacoub -Husseinl. tion of the Holy Land as the only I : Birmingham,. Ala. now? No. They crouch still lower. Those arrested were taken aboard means of settling Arab-Jewish The late Herman B. Beck, who fifty . and seventy-five . cents J T Soon they will'be—as layer after the British cruiser Sussex at Hai-difficulties of long standing, died was In the wholesale .^grocery adults and ; thirtj--£ive • cents for r"~~c'i o i layer crumbles—-upon their bellies fa. It was understood they would at Petersfield last week, at: the and candy'business in this city children. .The' first ticket of tbc t ' ' like very snakes: "What an atti- be removed to the island of Sey-age of 70. lor 40 years, was the Jewish Foruia books will. also, admit, ^ e F t 1 T tude for man! What an attitude chelles in the Indian ocean. Lord Peel's death brought • to friend mentioned by Justice. i'Foruni. tickets .-are. three dollar^ ', TCTL. T.IG for Jews! What, I ask myself a ^ --' f Preparations- for the drastic a# end a long and distinguished Black in his radio address, e I for the_series of. seven attrsctiorr { —-g Yz.^ c thousand times, is there so attrac- measures to suppress the new career in the public service,; cli- native- of Greensboro, Ala., I for nou-metnbsrs and two dollar" j Cc d t — r ; "T.L > C o tive about this old-fashioned and wave of terrorism climaxed by themaxed last year when he was ap- Mr. Beck died on November 4, j for members. '.'zz-'z V r ; " now wholly discredited ideal.,of Nazareth assassinations were un- pointed chairman of the Royal 1932. A ;^r;i.cr= Et 1^:1", c I Epa'raim" Marks - is-'. genera! n A"I "t-*"r r : c n i." merging with the world? Are derstood to have been started sev- Commission to- investigate the His widow, Mrs. Beet, said: chairman of • the • Forum' commit- v-i-c^ Dc'c C -r^ w.:: r-cr :'e. t rr" ". >; r "T <•. ' 1936 disorders in Palestine and individuated people so slightly eral days previous. -"I • have never known a finer, tee. administration of the mandate. fcr 1-:CC. that they feel no .freedom and kindlier man in all a y life. I First intimation that anything comfort in* their own individua- unusual was in the wind came His first role in service of the have never known Justice t i r d to t e kcli :r. Crcrirr.. tion?1 Do I not -understands the with the unexplained suspension government was also connected Black to speak aa unkind word has £.s its c'z;~z^ r z; V~. ~~z" •worl of Western and of Ameri- of all telephone service through- with a Royal Commission, when during the 40 years I have can- civilization as well as they out the country- Several hours at the turn of the century he was known him., He has never do? Do I not, Upon the wiole, elapsed before service was re-named to the Royal Commission shown to the slightest degree love it as much and,, as under- stored. for the Port of London. any racial or religious intolertakingstandingly as they do? Do ; V T " CcvCH """ • B'nsi -B'rith activities for In the intervening years,, he ance. All that Mr. Black said (A censorship delayed trans Milton and Brahms, let us say, .in his address was true." coming season'. will start'on Mon-j held such posts as Under-Secre^ mean less to \pie than to them? mission of dispatches on the anti- tary of State of War, Minister day evening at S o'clock wJi-EaJ ' I think not. I am, sure not. YetArab drive.) the Omaha lodge' holds Its open- j of Transport (then an unpaid poAP.3IX liEAVES He charged that the attempt to ing stag at the Hill hotel. Memit never occurs t<T .m&" -ttiatj it sition), Secretary of State for In~f r J would be fine, that it would be Meanwhile, all police and m|li-dia, First Commissioner of ."Works, label him a Klansman tends to bers of the Council' Bluffs lodge ~s- j -C- T -" " r • .cr t '. r . tary leaves were cancelled and revive religious discord and a release to give up—even if it are also expected to attend. member of €he Indian Round Tawere not so dangerous and soorders to stand by were given. ble Conference, chairman of themay, if continued "infect our so- • Dr. A. .Greenbsrg, president cf jz~ - _ ^ r r ' " cial and business life with the : rF foolish as a practical matter—: The Royal Sussex Regiment can- Wheat Commission. poison of religious bigotry." He District Grand tbfige No. 6, w&oj '-^ ^_ - • one jot or tittle of my Jewishness, celled its departure for Egypt and recently completed, a" circle "tourj <y J ""• In submitting a 404-page, re- warned that the concerted cammy identification with my people the Black Watch regiment arof. the. lodges • ia t i s district, is i CXii. rived here. port on the Palestine investigapaign against him might lead to and so with what in me is. deep— First sign of the "raids came tion, Lord Peel on behalf of theboycotts against [persons .because expected to relate his experiences 1 est^ with what in me or anyone Is while on his trip. Several acts of j«r- , T . E T , six-mm body explained the reawhen detachments of police of their religion. Dening implit a the, quite ultimate groundwork of entertainment are to be provided J * ^ l > " character, vision, the substance of started surrounding apartments sons that led the commission to cations that he is Intolerant, he and .refreshments .will be served.! CcTl1 In which members of the Arab recommend a solution of thesaid he had "no sympathy with th<? soul itself. '.. . • Hyman Shrier is' chainaas c* J 7 Mark, please, that this descrip- Supreme Committee resided. Si- Arab-Jewish problem that has any organization or group which, t h e p r o g r a m committee aiTEEg-i •—'won bitter condemnation from the multaneously, detachments' of anywhere or at any tim.e, arrotion of the human psychical situleg for the scioser. Karry 3 . j ation is no fanciful one at all, I ttroops were ,dispatched to other Arab a mingled reception from gates to itself the un-American Cohen, vice: president of : t t e j Tbs r e the Jews and an '"expectant attiparts "of Palestine, particularly power to interfere in the slightest is scientifically exact. Each hulodge, will .preside in the - £•£>-: E-"t_r~ man group has its configuration. Nazareth. In Haifi, police and tude" from the League of Na-degree with complete religious sence of Julius Bisao, who .has ; C-E'CS v ^ c r _w*''"ii^^ troops surrounded the govern•freedom" and added that he had tions. According to that inner configuFt - • the greatest sympathy and admi- not yet "returned from Ms ' trip ration it builds up culture, ethics ment's district o f f i c e s and ration for the Negro race and abroad. trends. From these i n turn comes searched the desks of Arab officials t° • discover whether inforthat-"some, of my best and-most . Well, in the typical action of the government's raids intimate frtends are Catholics and desert there -were those.who hun- mation Jews." . ' . . '_ .•'• . gered after Egypt and' there were had been secretly received. • Shortly after the raids had "Shortly after I moved to these who danced about the Birmingham," he declared, "more golden calf, I. e.,. the bull-god been carried out, an official comof the idolatofs round about. So munique was issued explaining" Dave Cohn was elected presi- than a quarter of- a century Ego, j that this trend too is- a t least a that suppression of the Arab Su- dent "of the Beth El synagogue I;formed-one of the most raised; " C a l d u n l a , " Trili.be presented- c a i c 'S2' ~? .-; long, long trend of the"'"Jewish]>reme Committee, which in 1936at the annual "dinner held Thurs- friendships of my life with'a soa \Sunday e v e a i s g , October S I , by j '*. : . ' ; " " "Jh people. There are always-genera- directed ^the Arab _ general strikeday night a t the Jewish Commu- of Jewish faith. He was one oJ nay jt h e > W o r k m e n ' s Circle D r a m a t i c j ~— r ^- > Clab a t .the . C e n t r a l Club, S l s t ! ' * '±~ ~ ti-ns, like that generation of old,against Jews and the government, i nity Center. Dave Greesberg was closest associates and strongest i and . a a d D o i g s s t r e e t s s.t S:SG ; : ~ ^ '- . vice president; political supporters. Months of that are destined to .die ^tn^ the was motivated by the existence of 1 named first 1 "i ~"~~ ' "" Arthur Cohen, second vice presi- our lives were -. spent togetSar, s i a r p . an organized, terrorist and assasdesert, and there are alwaya those .are fifty and seventy-| " ' r . - - C *. sination campaign. The action, dent; Reuben Bordy, treasurer, much'of the time in his horse. He | n Tickets •who are glad to have escaped according to the communique, and Al Frank, secretary. .-1 OUei-wiJ ) stood' so nearly'in' the place of a | ' * e cea * s » tas: from Egypt—quite .without any was taken under the Palestine De- -...' A capacity audience attended. father, to. me that-while ia t n e r " i u £ ° t o or the. nv. cheap unfairness to Egypt or thefense Order in Council. Rabbi David A. Goldstein was army In 191S I designated this keep o£ the Labor Lys Egyptians—and who, recognizing trusted Jewish friend as sole ex- Ing. Tickets-sicgli I e xcssrre: The Havas News Agency re- toastmaster of the evening. the desert, as such, prefer; it to ported an Arab .was killed by two Mr. . Herman . Auerbacb. was ecutor of my-will. I c r a y cata- as EOOS as possible. Egypt.:Why?; .Becawse beyond thedesert, if they can only win to it,. British sentinels who fired upon principal speaker and told of hispaigss for p"^ «-% rlies the land; of promise—the land him when he failed to heed a recent trip through eastern Eu- j g s i r" thei- promise arid" there are command, to halt. rope. He stressed the need of as- j mJa e . even those Vho prefer the desert , Government to Establish gcest ia K ; h nc sisting relatives in Poland. Arab Agency. V to 7'gypt although they lenow that The .Palestine: Government, they themselves will not live to •Esther ¥ a a Ryk Bead • velt, Vs see the land'of promise. X"" they having suppressed the Arab Suhone and they pray that their preme Committee, was underAmsterdam (JTA) — lladaine to be - .^ cZ children will see Cana'an, ' stood to -have started prepara- Esther DeBoer >ran Ryk, one of | Court." The funniest' part of this whole tions for • establishment of anthe outstanding figures 011 the j busifless is that' the people with Arab Agency, similar to the Jew-Dutch stage, and known as Use! AmstTi '™ (,T" * •> — the defense-complex against their ish: Agency for Palestine, •'as I oldest active actress In the coua-j meat " Judaism and Jewishness think:[ recommended . by the. British 1 try, died here last week at the j points' that they are F^ientiHc and Hp- Royal Commission. ' 'age 6f-.S4...; She was a fcnlgat oi noted r tn-dato and thaf the sffallctw nonThe Government-officially re- Orange Nassau and. a'member of j Rector " eristent univerjalism which they quested Lebanon, the republic I the Order of the Crown of'Bel-'j Uriver-••• (Continued on page 8.) ^bordering Palestine on the north, 1 s
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THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER .8, 1937 pathway of true freedom." \PARAGUAY NAM£S#EW terial. In a generation When the Senator Burke recently anpeople were beginning to sea the nounced that, when Congress reGems of the Bible' danger of such exploitation and of convenes, he will call for a thor- ] the concentration of the nation's activieugh investigation of N Ascuncion, Paraguay (\VNS)_»f wealth in a few bands, Filene, a Dy • Dr. Philip S W Dr. Isaac F.08enEWei&, Rouman-" philosopher of finance and ncncement came on the heels of i&n-bo7'n physician, has been apstatesman of business, sought to published reports showing Nc~! pointed Taraguavan ..minister tc employ his wealth for the better- BIBL.E activity in tigs, country h?-C the Eomiblic of Colombia". Dr. R 0 ment of human society. Then the men of ^Israel said ; «en2vei£ came from Czernowit2 Omaha, Neb.—Speaking o the [ reached a serious stegs. Under no illusions as to the unto Gideon: Rule thou over us On tho same program. I^POTisrd 2C rears- ngo and settled in Sesquicestenniai social efficiency of our industria —both thou, thy son, anct thy Constitutional civilization, Filene believed that son's son, for tlsou hast saved us program of Aleph Zadik Aleph, Belove, International A. S, A, o r a -Euenos Aircc, "Argentina, where By Berlrand Jonas Junior Order of B'nai E'rith, IT. torical CuP.mrion for I!)"7/ fm-e , j , ecnine ?me as a eurgon. He the modern business system was out of the Midlan. a Ebort talk on the eDr,tnb<-iionF ; <;i,,,, Few men retain the social tween municipal political ma- present order. He believed it at present more or less lawless And lie jaid unto them: I will S. Senator Edward R. Burke, of cf ;ronth to American democracy, j p n r ert vv.llu. distinction in the ideals of their yotith when they chines and the trusts, Filene must adjust itself if it hoped to. But also believed that we are now not rule over you. Neither shall Nebraska', paid a magnificent ynn army medical corps become wealthy. But Edward joined in the jousts against the survive.' Speaking frequently be- in the morning hours of a period niy son rule over you—the Lord tribute to the part -of the Jew- He c.ted examples of ;routfcfu5 fisr-j( - ]7 tlie recent Clmco war beA. FUene not only held fast to dragon of corruption in. Boston. fore important gatherings at In. which business men, to suc- shall rule ovar you. ish people 'in making possible the ures who took a full PV.A active ', fy-g "r.rcguay and Bolivia, his bat went far beyond them It- was be who engaged Louis D.1 Jionie and abroad, he never failed ceed, ' will be compelled to adopt democratic form of government part in the Etru.ccie for inde- ! to, become in "a certain sense Brandeis, then a brilliant" attor to advocate his social, precepts.; the sort of policies that will give T A L M U D - •' " • Which now-exists in the Uniteg Pendecce and in the formulation' appointed r one of the spiritual fathers- of us an Increasingly better social Rabbi Akiba was a shepherd in States. His talk was heard over of the Constitution after icde-nl of t h e When, the Roosevelt, adminisney, to direct the. fight, against a the New Deal. Br. Jonas tells scheme, by the; traction and. util- tration came into power Filene order, where the average man the employ of the rich Ben Kolba. more than seventy radio stations pendeEce T,-E.F von. m 1777. Max Baer, assistant executivt the story of how this'muUimil- ity trust to gain control of Bos- became one of its leading sup- will not be compelled to eshaust Shebua, the lattjr's daughter, ob-, ia principal cities of the land. lionaire J e w i s h merchant ton's street railway and lighting porters. His ad~ice and counsel himself in merely providing food, served that Rabbi Akiba -was j "From the discovery of Amer- secretary of the A. 2. A., acted ci fOugbt for social arid economic systems. / Out o f this successful were frequently sought, by the clothing and shelter for himself, very pious and talented, and fell ica to tbe present day," lie paid, announcer and introduced the justice for. two generations.— battle.grew the.Public"Franchise President. In'the establishment ot wife and children, with virtually in love with him. She said to him: "in every period of national crisis, speakers. The Editor. League of Boston',-and the Mu- the NRA he played, an important no energy left for the higher "If I marry you, will you go to Jewish raea and. women have Habbi Sabato Morass, because nicipal Planning Commission, of part ,and was head of the recov- things of life. If the United a college to study the Torah?" made outstanding contributions to Years before . Franklin D. both of which he served as presi- ery administration in Massachu- States Is any nearer to such a "Indeed, surely," he replied. They the welfare of oar country. On of his anti-slavery sentiments Boosevelt coined the happy phrase dent. Although he hated war as setts. He saw in the New Deal social order today than it was a were secretly married and she the battle field, heroic Jews have | was elected a life member of the "New Deal" and made' it the slo- bitterly as he:fought social in- the bulwark against social revolu- generation ago it is in no. small sent him off to the college. Yv'hen gladly offered the supreme sacri-1 Union League club of Philadelgan of nig successful efforts to equality, Filene was among the tion and a realization of the so- measure due to the "gospel her father became aware of this . ' Men of this race have j phia. translate, into reality two genera- first of the ' dollar-a-year-men cial precepts he had been ad- preached and practiced by Ed- secret marriage, he ordered her to I fice exerted a unique and powerful in- I tions of struggle for economic during the "World "War, serving vancing for two generations. Al- ward A. Filene. leave his hou^e, and vovred • that | .fluence in • the essential develop-; justice in" the Unfted States, an op the executive committee of the though big business and finance she should not enjoy the benefit | ment of trade and commerce,Austrian Jewish immigrant's eon. War Shipping Board. At the were lined up against Roosevelt (Copyright, 1937, by Seven Arts of his estate. Akiba went and i business and industry. Every ; •who had become a multi-million- close of• the war he turned' his in the 1936 elections, Filene Features) spert twelve years at the college, j learned profession points with -. aire was preaching and putting to efforts toward, the creation' of stood firm in backing the . New Enjoy the Thrift of c Charge Account and on his return he had with I pride today, as always, • to Jew-' the test of practicality on a mod- agencies for preserving world Deal. ,He argued that- without it him twelve thousand disciples^ . | ish leaders. Medicine and law, ! est ecale his progressive ideas ; on peace. He'helped organize the business would have been doomed. On nearing close to the dwell- j art, science and literature would | child labor legislation, unemploy- League to Enforce Peace and A year-ago he startled the busiing of his dear loving wife, he'each suffer an irreparable loss if! y Triumph for the Tuxment insurance, higher wages and sponsored a series of peace prizes ness:fraternity by resigning from overheard the conversation of an contributions made by the Jews i §j shorter hours, "labor unionism,- in Germany France, England and the United States Chamber of edo revers may be worn ai shown, old woman who was asking "how were to be eliminated. Jewish i igj (credit unions, social security, co- Italy in 1924. cr buttoned under tbe collar. ColCommerce, which, he :had helped -."; long is that unfortunate woman charities have set an example for I % London (JTA3—The Evening operative stores and. social jusestablish because Jie regarded its lar and cvfts cf Persian lamb. /» all the world to follow . . . " . j §1 goingto lead the life of a. widtice in general. Tiat.man was Ed- National attention was first fo- •opposition to the New Deal, as Staadard reports that a represenblack, grey, and beige. Sizes 12 Senator Burke called upon the ! §1 ow?" Whereupon she. replied: ward Albert. Filene of Boston, cused oh Filene In" 19 21 when he harmful to business and democ- tative of the British Broadcasting to 18. ~....$6}.QQ Jewish youth of America to fol- | 8 'If my husband, would hearken company has gone to Germany In iwfiosei "death at the age of 77 robs tpunded the Credit Union Nation- racy. . . . ' _ . ' low in the footsteps of tne-ir fath! | j unto me, lie would return, and an effort to overcome Nazi obthe nation of one of its few big al Extension Bureau to introduce ers in' upholding and perpetuating ' gj business•" men who was- wise to this country an adaptation of Notwithstanding f r e q u e n t jections to a scheduled broadcast stay there twelve more years." Rabbi Akiba said to himself: our democratic form of govern- j M .enough to understand that mod- the European co-operative credit charges -that he was -turning So- from London of the recently pubi §§ "Since she is satisfied, I will act ment. ern competitive economy will, and plans as means of democratizing cialist, Filene' was nothing of the lished concerto by,Schumann. ,must fail unless it. can achieve, a finance and rescuing the' small sort. He was, however, a staunch " . . . I t Is my sincere hope | 'B. The concerto was specially according to her wish." He immesocially and! scientifically man- borrower from banks.and usurers. believer in the co-operative sys- composed' by Schumann for the diately returned and spent 12 a n d fond belief t h a t American jj fi aged- production and distribution From the first unit which he or- tem. In 1936 he organized the famous violinist Joachim, who more years at the college.-When Jews will be found, as their fath- '• •§? pf wealth in the public interest. . ganized in Boston the Credit jConsumer Distributor Corpora- played, it for the composer for he Teturned he brought with him ers before them, alway valiantly i fl It was this phase of his career Union has expanded to a point tion with a capital of $1,000,000. the first time in 1854. The B.34,000 disciples. His "wife, In- engaged in striving to upnoSd | % xather than his success as ^'mer- where It numbers 450,000 mem- to seve as a central buying and B. .C. had arranged for Miss Dar- formed of his arrival, went out and strengthen free America, j Ij chant that' made Edward Filene bers organized in 3,000 unions service unit for a large chain of anyi, a grand niece of the violin- to meet him, and -when her neigh- Thus j-ou will help to imrncrtal- j ij great. He was born- in Salem, which have assets of more than co-operative department stores ist, to be the soloist at the con- bors suggested that she borrow ize t h e y jsj Massachusetts, once the scene of ?75,000,000. Filene personally and dther types of retail business. certo's first performance, which arments to dress more neatly to who have so splendidly labored ': 9, •VTitca-htiuting and burning.' And underwrote the cost of the entire Shortly before his death he. per- was to open its newest broadcast- meet him, she replied: "He knows to bring us thus far. along ! IS! &e devoted half a century to a organization from the beginning suaded the Federal Resettlement ing station. me well, ana I do not need extra jietarrained effort to destroy some to the extent of more than $2,- Administration to turn over Nazi ban on the performance is garments to improve my appearJof the witches, human and eco- 000,000. His main thought in Greenbelt, Maryland, planned as traceable to the fact that Joa- ance." "When she reached daughter even if she had a a r r l e ; Inomle who were pushing the na- fathering the credit union was to and kissed him. "When his attend-' a great scholar, he replied: "Xot Qhim was a Jew. The broadcasting a model community, to this cortion toward-the brink-of disaster. eliminate usury, thus reducing company Is expected to issue a ants were about to push her away, poration, which planned' to have S&n of poor parents, he started interest costs and releasing" instatement on the matter within she prostrated herself before him cble to learn r.s little as cue chaplife in his father' store. Once he creased buying power. Millions of the residents own all the stores the next few days. Rabbi Akiba said: "Let her alone, | Therel a d hopes of going to Harvard Americans have been helped by they patronize and share in the profits. His unflagging zeal for for my Torah and yours are due' upon RaLbi Akiba sr.iJ: "I cm '| l>Ut family reverses forced him to these credit unions, which are Yehudl Menuhin, who was to o her." T"cr father, having been 1 the one.'" Kalba. Shebus immedij 'end his formal schooling at high really banks owned and operated social betterment reached a climax In October, 1936, when he have played the concerto for the nformed t^at such a preat schol-i ately fell face forward -upor. r.cb-. [school. Later in life he said " I by wage-earners, loans from iflufpiujd Out that although one may which are granted to applicants announced at the biennial con- first time in this country, recent- ar had arrived and who had re- | bi Akiba's feet r-r-A kissed hasty act, Paid: :m oie haif cf his er.tlre jj6wish become aB learned by shop- on no other security than a repu- gress of the Co-operative League ly also was forbidden by shall go to see this scholar. Per-' fortune. Rah-ti Akiba ylng as by going to Harvard, tation for honesty' and sound of the United States his repudia- Nazi regime to give the performhaps he will invalidate the vow did the same tMng vr*tb T.cn AZJLI, tion of the existing profit system ance. become wiser than some character. I made against my suffering and this is the —-san:r.e ot the and his conclusion that the trimen who go through HarOne ot Napoleon's daughter." Tv'ho:i Rabbi Akiba Eayir.c: "Eve fellows E r e ; as the v a r d , ' i t wisdom means having the Filene was not just another umph of the co-operative system Jew, originally as!:ed him whether his intr::tian mother acts, so ds:s the i c u t h things you k.now permeated with merchant prince turned philan- was inevitable. In the latter sys- liassena, was was to make the vow against his, ter." life and sympathy and under- thropist. He employed his wealth tem alone did he see the solution named Manasseh. standing for your fellow man." not so much to help existing of the problem of distribution. FUene didn't ,' fit Intoit was. Filene did become charitable institutions as to pro!;wise, wise in introducing the jects designed to make ' such chronicles of the self-made man. • U\i ^z> Vs-> L! I T Li Li L L ^ SGolden Rule into business, wise agencies less and less necessary He never offered aphorisms i n advocating a new capitalism by removing the causes of pover- success. Once he said "the world WAKTS .YOUR ll&LZZ. QU TKCIR CCGKG . . . and insisting that we can get sol- ty, unemployment and social in- is waiting for a league of young iyeney in human society without security. To this end he endowed people to suppress stories of sucwith several ^million dollars the cessful: men." Twentieth Century Fund which standards Filene was supremely pcrappinjj the works. d Responsible for much of the has been'responsible for many im- successful. He won a growth of his father's business, portant studies on the improve- fortune from his business and i g] IFilene's talent was first evi- ment of -ecoflomie, industrial, then retired to test out theories denced in the establishment of civic and educational conditions. which If applied would make im.the automatic bargain basement, In the good old days of rugged possible the creation of fortunes } a plan under which basement individualism, when dog-eat-dog such as his. And that's what he were automatically marked was the motto of American busi- wanted. He .understood that Idown until the end of a 'certain ness and Industry, Filene was re- ideas and methods In vogue 'period when, if still unsold, they garded as a radical because of his one generation are antiquated Jn bwere given away to the city's progressive ideas in a generation when the tycoons [charitable institutions. This sys- When the , clothing . workers .tem was the first of its kind in Bostpn could not find any hall .in of industry were exploiting the country. Toward the end of which to hold strike meetings he nation's wealth and, human ma|th& lapt century, Filene, then invited-them to meet in the audij president of William , Filene and torium ] ,S6ns Boston's largest department pioneer advocate of the five-day j store, startled the business world wees, cornpulsory old-age and nnj i y establishing the Filene Co-op- emplcymcit insurance ^.nd sociali Jerativo Association which i d dii H hd You'll asree—the greatest radios we've ever \ . t i e firm's 3,000 employes greater tience with the type of employer ijjdwers in many respects offered—at prices you can easily efford! 39 who exploited his workers. ;ti6se of the management, stunning 1938 super-value models —each 7 STTH '; IT a >; a' H.K.*K jidea was called revolutionary by men who failed to recognize that packed with many important, new features! Ills competitors, but business and industry must keep garded it simply as giving effect f They offer you more stations—greater powi pace with changing conditions. It i.o his conception of social justice. ,er—increased selectivity—and the most f* Early in this century, when re- 'distribution of the nation's wealth thrillingly lifelike tone you've ever heard! formers like Lincoln Steffens, was the only means of preserving ,George Creel and others began ' Stunning Beauty-Tone cabinets lend an added capitalism. Filene was for capiExposing the corrupt alliances be- talism but not capitalism of the of charin to any living
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THE JEWISH PEESS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER S, 1037
\GUAY NM1ES JEW ancion, Paraguay (WNS) ;aac Rosenzweig, fiokmanrn physician, has been apd Paraguayan .minister to >puhlic of Colombia, ijr: Ro-. iig- came £rom Czethowitz ;ars ago and settled in s Aires, 'Argentina, .'••where ined fame as a su'rgbn. Jle with distinction in the uayan army medical;! corps ; the recent Chaco war "be-Paraguay and Bolivia.
acclaimed the "German Socrates." supplied with a clea» Hebrew ment which licks Jewish : -• ' But its greatest service was to commentary — the work of learn- men ar.d women the -vroriw c tender recognition, likewise for ed friends inspired with, a clear with the pioneers cf Palet.. ; the first time, to a German Jew Hebrew commentary — the work the maintenance of-a mode" " ~ as\a leader in German and Ear. •of learned friends inspired with asd school at ileisr Shfej-r" . ' c opean thought. • file" new spirit — which avoided ' maintens-iice of a modern v.r : Though his home -sras no-vr a. Jtalmudic embroidery and sought ing school for Palestine i ; r? center for intellectuals from all: merely to resolve grammatical and the furtfeeracce of Jr~ lands, when he left its door and: and logical difficulties. Through Xational Fund activities ~ 1 strolled the streets "with his fain-1 the original and its commentaries buying of land is Palestine. The JnEJor Kacassah a".s-> i ily ne quickly lost his "privil-j the reader could learn to think eges." "Papa!" cried his children,; and write in a. correct Hebrew, leavers to increase Irncprle^-pre "•vrhy do the boys throv stones • and thro-agh the translation to all aspects of Jewish li:e .. • . . . . ,, . I,., -,,, _, .. at us — why do they chase us iturn his Yiddish into a pure Ger- : means of cultural programs c The sesqui-centennial anniman. to participat'! in the upbi . «. to Leasing— "em ganzer j likewise alive. For a generation a n d s c r e a m 4 J Jews,. Jg u , versary of the .death of Moses justice : Ma n ver 1< 11 The work won instant acclaim. of a Jewish homeland in I'c ! f V f y " ; a manHelnejand more — u n h r j e . ' i s h schools ; , , I a crime t o b e a Jew? Thea h e Mendelssohn, famous .German A few rabbis thundered, impotent '•tine- It likewise assists ev£-; called him. Yet everything he were founded -and Christian class- w o u ] d fl h i s &s b&] Jewish philosopher, is being ob- |; put his hand to affected Jewish rooms dropped their restrictions I bans,'a few copies were burned cal cause in t h e community. served. Although the 150th an- 'destiny. To begin -with, he freed -— a host of young Jew.-, repeat- relates, sigh to himsel;, "Men. in, pious bon-fires; but the mass ; Anyone wishing to jDin '.• r< men — "what have you let your-. niversary actually occurred last j Germany from her servitude to ed Mendelssohn's esperienc.-, pas- j ^ ] ^ of Jews, long prep-red and eager ed to call Kalah Franklir, ? es year — he died on January 4, [foreign culture, and by criticism sing from the Talmud to secular j to break from the narrow hor.zon ',1236; Anne Bernian. Ja. •-'' Somewhat subtler than the; 1780 — the Jews or Germany ! a n d example recreated German learning through their own ef-: o£ the ghetto, took tli.. book -to ,or Bettye Tucllman. Ke. o i r f . street gamins, a Swiss preacher; failed to mart the date because ! literature and its language. And forts and the aid of frifnds a lit- — Lavator — sought to lure him: their heart. A generation of | of conditions prevailing in the ('characteristic of his humanism— youths used it as stepping-stone; as a champion of reason, into eiReich.-The. sesqaiceiUennial has Itbe o l d b u t aborted humanism of tle further along the road. to a larger life. It became the j Writes First Book their refuting Christianity or -em- • been taken up by Jews outside j ReUchlin — he brought Mendelsymbol if not the- actual tool of i bracing it. But Mendelssohn reUnder Lessing's encouragement and is being observed this year ssohn (and therewith Jewry) into "With seventeen old girls cord| Mendelssohn turned author. His j fused to walk into the old znedie- : -an inner emancipation. instead. ' ing back and eleven pledges. T pthis world. 1 3 reborn CUU1 ' ""•""• first work, "Philosophische Ges-!val trap — a public debate withThe Jewish Telegraphic Agenta chapter began another ;c ' ~ Mendelssohn too fell heir to a | p r a c n e . . (Philosophic Discourses,' opinion stacked against him — I JUNIOR HAD ASSAM cy was fortunate in obtaining, year in their now two yer r c Born in i i75g) on him the respect of ac-| which had cost his people only! for adaption for Anglo-Jewish > W house. The girls -who pledge^ £~£. (1729), the son of a pen. !jademic circles and piqued Fred-j too dear. In a reply which awoke' At a meeting held September Betty Beeson, Lillian Frieda n->'. publications, the section on Dessau nlless Toral1 Mendelssohn in Sir. Uwen- i . . scribe, lie cad the! erick with a desire to meet that \ Germany to an appreciation of i 30 at the Jewish Community Ceis- iJane Goetz, Caroline Kules'" ."1^ . . youn Jew thal's recently published brilli- ^ *??*_*? J?. t ^ ? l ? i s ;? i !'i e, I curiosity—"the ^ who ' ! human ' ' dignity even when it was! ter, members of the Junior Had-' dith Levenson and C"n< .'•'it ant historical narrative, "The and Talm-ud by a man who, in ad- •w r o t e j n German." And despite j not Christian, he proved that j assail outlined the program for jSklar, all of Omaha; Betty E . -v.1 Jews of Germany," issued by dition, guided him to the trea-j tiis business labors — he eventu- l while he might be a "philosopher1 i the coming season. A membership ' felcl of North. Flatte; Kina " - r " the Jewish Publication Socie- snres of Maimonides — the same \a n y became a partner of his em- j he was far from being a "bad j tea is to be held at the Rome Ho- ' and Shirley Polsky of L , i - r - - : ty of America.) Maimonides who had quickened jp i O yer and possessed-of a modest | Jew." And thrusting deeper still, [ tel from 2 to 5 en Sunday, Octo- i Sylvia Neilson, St. Joseph. T'i=' souri, and Sara Snieerir., Voocl—THE EDITOR 1 Rabbi Judah Low and Spinoza, j fortune — he flung himself at! he drove home the lesson of the •ber 24. Bay and night the boy studied the i Lessing's side into the regener- \ new age: neither reason nor good ! The annual Thanksgiving dance ; bine, Iotra. master of Jewish rationalism un-| a tion of German thought and j taste can tolerate a religious; has been set for November 25 at • t n d e r t h e direction o£ Z^ .' iC* ing produced his playlet ' T h e I _ -,,• . . . .j i taste. ; quarrel. j the Hotel Paxton. Bobbv Bow- ;Krasne, president, formal i m . ; Jews" — in which already 1 | frail physique. • Maimonides gave j H e translated' Honsseau'a dls-1 Seek to End Ghetto I man's orchestra will furnish the icg took place September If, f^ the germ of "Nathan the Wise." me my deformity, he used to; c o u r s e o n inequality among men' But! Mendelssohn had not emerg- • music.' Anne Goodbinder is ad- ilowed by a house party. It told about a traveler who sav-tell of his humped back, "but I | _ i n w h i c i f a s a J e W p h e i a d ! ed unscathed. Convinced like all vertising chairman; Aune Kuznit, j Theta chapter received vc-vC chairman, and Esther j place in scholsrshi? among r- —~ed the life of a Laron and refused love H r e a khim e n e d nevertheless; if he has |m Q r e t h a n a s p e c u l a t i T e interest, i thinkers of the day, that reason! patron my body, jias he n o t j H e e d U e d N i k o i a r s -Bibliotek," j and good taste — "Aufklarnn Lazerson, good fellow chairman. 1 us sororities for the second reany and every reward — even a"t o ( marriage with the baron's lovely °6 i for it by strengthening my jt ] l e f a m 0 T I S o r r a n 0{ the new j Enlightment" the Germans call-; Anne Kusnit was again ap- ;ciester last year. daughter. When pressed to ex-i?,. * M^™0111^63 did more for |m o v e m e n t j a n d contributed volu- i ed it — were enough to insure: pointed J. X. F. representative, j Josephine Rubr.itz was 11: L~ lm t b a n t ; b e 1 I s p i e d l i m to plain Ws mad refusal the traveler i ^ T* . l f J iminously to its successor, the [ mankind justice and amity, he j The Flag Day will be held Octo- ; chairman of the finance cr ' f r* stammered, "But l a m a — Jew." !b f c o ™ e another guide^o ttfe per- j "uteraturbriefe," .In the latter : realized that the Jews likewise j ber I". j the Y. TV\ C." A. Rose Hi 1 f-" Upon recovering from the s h o c t I P ' ^ e d - ^ d once again try to mar-j & e d a r e d c a l l r r e d e r i c k to task needed enlightening. The Ger-| The Fontenelle Hotel has "been 1Celnia Hill were elected-to ?••-•<for writing his poetry in French j mans were suffering from a cul-] chosen as the headquarters for | on the Y. TT. C. A. cabinet—;r"> the baron exclaimed, "How "we -y Judaism and Reason. Expelled from Ferlin land — w e are inclined to hope —-.! tural lag due to the Thirty Years; the Southwest Regional Confer-^ "only stiphoxore members, "f.-^would respect them if all Jews "11 .e •were like you!'' "And if all At fourteen, driven by his thirst j publishing what he wrote. Toge- S War; and the Jews, because of ence to be held in Omaha, De- I Arbitman lea Christians were like you," ex- for secular knowledge, Mendel- j ther with Lessing's 'Laokoon' his I ghetto stagnation, were lagging; cember 4 and 5. The Banquet and ifreshman commission g r c r. r s claimed the traveler in turn, 'how ssohn tramped to Berlin. The ; essays on esthetics broke ground ! behind the Germans. A few sallies jDance will be held at the Rome. sponsored by the Y. TC. C. A. able they would be!' The'travel-1 n e w s P i r i t " w ' a3 already abroad in Jf o r t h e i a t e r h a r T e s t s of Schiller | at playing shtadlan — interced- ' Chairman, s o far announced, are: Social chairman for the i " i - v er's servant/ who now learned f o r ; i t s Jndengasse. One Abraham ja l l d Go ethe. In 1763 his study i ing for his people in Switzerland j Reception" Chairman, Bettye year will he Muriel Franl . Ti the first time the race and faith j.Posner had the adudacity to d i s - j o n Evidence in Metaphysics cap-' and Saxony — sharpened this; Tuchman; Dating, Alice Joyce; active chapter also elected Tr^r-1" of his master, capped the general c a r d h i s beard; a youth was dis-j t ured the prize of the Berlin konvicUon. Christian prejudice, he ! Susman, and Sunday Dinner, Hay ;Krasne to serve as intran. u-rl bewilderment with a puzzled con- c o v e r e d l n t h e possession of a Academy against eveii the com-; felt, was matched by Jewish ob-j Tucker. j representative. fession: "There are, it. seems, i German book. To be sure, Posner petition of Kant; and as a fur- j scurantism; together they built The Junior Hadassah also an- j Tassels, girls pep organ:-?--rr. grow his beard was compelled compelled to t g w hi beard ther reward, Frederick made him j the common wall which .kept the jnounced an opening for a repre- i sponsored the annual drive 'cr Jews -who are not Jews at all." was — though the- community a "privileged Jew,'' giving him j ghetto intact. Tearing down one isentative of the Omaha group to University A theologian of Gottingen, again players. J o r : ' . .1 E P r,o f e s s o r Johann Michaelis ' h a d t o induce Frederick to issue jt h e r i g n t n o t t o be thrown out of I side of the wall would automatic- the Convention of Jewish "Women !Rubnitz was appointed cap i r"i el doubted the servant's discovery- ' a royal command for the purpose j Berlin. The story goes that the j ally bring down-the other. The: to be held in Detroit, November j one of the sis teams. J He reflected the consensus of op- — and the youth was expelled, I Marquis d'Argens wrote the King j way to win equality was to make 23 to 29. Social events had an e i ' ! : Tin his behalf: "A philosopher who ! one's self an equal. The key to inion on the play "when he ques- bookless, from the city. For young Jewsh women be-1 start. Open house and inspectio:: oned -whether a decent Jew —- More significant, Mendelssohn ji s a b a d p ro testant to grant this reason and taste — as Mecdels- tween the ages cf 17 and 29, the ;of Tooms was held on Septembcund kindred souls among his, h p r i vii l e g e tao a philosopher h h could ld show h ffrom hi who Is sohn his own ex- |Junior HaSassah offers opportn- \ IS. Following formal pledging rr. Jew "was therefore not a Jew — found v. ^ considered ^^v,^- a - probable r. could or people, men able and willing to , a b a d Jew." Xot to be behind roy- perience — lay in abadoning Tid- .nity for cultural and social con- . October 10, the S. D. T.'s will fruu . u be even plausible character. The re- j satisfy his thirst. Israel Zamos, a ity, the Berlin Jewry exempted j dish, purifying Hebrew and learn-; tacts and charity work. ' tertain their escorts at a buf'ct mark came to the ears of a Jew- a self-instructed refugee from , Mendelssohn from all communal j iag German. The Junior Hadassah, one of j supper in the chapter houss. To furnish this key to his fel- the world's largest international \About sixty are expected to ish youth who was studying phil- the bearded ghettos of Poland, J taxes. Called "German Socrates" osophy in a Berlin garret. With- opened for him the realm of malow-Jews he launched upon his young women's organizations has jtend. out doubting the existence Qf j thematics. Abraham Kisch, aj His fame culminated in the pub-! most enduring achie'vement: the as its aims and purposes: the i Theta chapter was hostess Christians who .wrote the play '[Physician from Prague, taught j i i c a t i o n o f »phadon.. (1767), a | translation of the Torah — the strengther-ins cf the Youth Mrve-, proved they did"exist'.'— "the lad him the': rudiments of Xatin; and i it tie dialogue which tried to j Pentateuch—into German (177Spoured his bitter indignation into h e • ' w a s soon struggling with a jp r o T e the immortality of the soul|S3). Its volumes contained both a memorable letter "Is it- not j Latin version of the bible of rea- ]a n d w hich succeeded for the first ! the Hebrew, original and the Gerenough," he wrote, "that we must jE o n Locke's "Essay." Another time in clothing philosophy -with j man version — the. latter writ- ; suffer Christian hate? They are j Physician Aaron G u m p e r t z a German that was a pleasure to j ten with Mendelssohnian simplic- I tireless in oppressing us, in d e - U ^ n < ^ h l l a of tne court factor, read. The public, in fact t read j ity and grace and, to ease the ; priving us of every means to en-! E h a s c l e v e a v n d - t h ^ ^ f"5" fifteen edjtions of it; it was wide-! reader's task, printed In Hebrew joy a free and peaceable life, nay, i «an Jew to^be ^ u a t e d from ly translated, and the author was! characters. The original text was in making us the butt and laugh-! t h e University of Frankfort-oningstock of the world. Must they i the-Oder;. introduced him to Gerlikewise deny us the one consol- j ^ J 1 Philosophy and l.terature, ation remaining to any T i c t i m : ! and even to the president of the •w-ill sell you this nationally adverhis virtue?" "•' I Berlin Academy — and finally tised Radio at a price that will meet A fe* years later (1754) the j - t o T ^ e s ^ f all competition with a serv^ice that we • It was apparent that if one young student met the equally j will please you. young, playwright over a chess-! loved among." the right people board. Moses Mendelssohn had [ of the Judehgasse there WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS found the Christian who could be i need to hide a German a beard. And that they wel— loved and Gotthold Ephraim Lesr I il like sing the Jews who could be hon^ f ^ X " ^ t ^ ored. They played chess, togeth-- Mendelssohn, -who was soon haper, and in the garden of. the St. py to earn a pittance as a tutor Nicholas church talked philoso- and then as a bookkeeper, showphy. Surely a reasonable and ed. the old-spirit of Jewir to be hardly momentous thing to do.! Tet Jew and Gentile-had ' n o t walked and talked like this since FOR RENT: Sleeping room for single man. 3 2 0 4 Curathe Renaissance. It meant' for ini»~. Near Creighton UniverGermany and its Jews the dawn sity. WE 4 6 4 9 . of- the Age of Reason. • 'This is hardly the place to: do
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THE JEWISH PRESS, FKIDAY, OCTOBER- 8, 193T
Commissioner Andrews, its agitation was the direct cause. PUBLISHtD EVERY FRIDAY AT OMAHA. NEBRASKA. BY
THE JEWISH PRESS PUBLISHING COMPANY SUBSCRIPTION PRICE. On6 Year • • • ADVERTISING RATES FURNISHED ON APPLICATION EDITORIAL. OFFICE) SCO BPANDEIS THEATER BUIL.DIN6 SIOUX* CITY OFFICE—JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER PRINT SHOP ADDRESS—4504 SO. 24TH STREET
S2.CO
The killing of Andrews was no doubt the first of & serie of murders of British colonials by the Arabs. It perhaps foreshadows the beginningj)f a rebellion which the Jews have b%en expecting for sometime. It can only be hoped that'the esil of the principal Arab agitators will mean continued peace fo: a land that deserves respite from terror and murder.
, ; .'; :A World of Wickedness •' ; •
fuse to fTBt.her with any group dlsArise, O LoTd, arid let Thine enemies be scattered, let those J G e x * m a . n - . A m G f ic&Xl loyal t,o America." who hate Thee, flee before Thee! All evil-doers, of whatever kind, are eaeiaies and haters of God, and must be pat to rout lest they plunge into ruin the world. Evil must be destroyed or tnmmiiniiim, present it will destroy the world. . That seems to be the conviction of | San Francisco (VTKS) i f to American m->IUP J. Tabor or Coai German-Americans President "Roosevelt in his remarkable, courageous, and epoch. master of the Namaking speech a few days ago ia Chicago. That Is the 'moral1 <?, warned the farmersey pi: the Trenton and the everlasting truth of the Noah-Flood story. That is ! uug the San Francisco celebration the profound, inimitable conviction of moral and non-sentsmen- j ^ Ge"'1,EJn D a ^ o n t h e ? r o l l n d tal but truth-piercing Israel. That is a part of Israel's 'mission' I ^ ^ r i c l s n 'cH^-enF in the world, to set forth the inviolable and inexorable bssis j ing dedicated to furthering and condition of happiness and peace in the world, viz., riplit- |-Ka!:i cause."
DAVID BLACKER Business and Managing Editor By Eabbi Frederick Ophn • ' FRANK It. ACKERMAN . V " *" ' Editor LEONARD NATHAN .-•."•-.. - • . Associate Editor In our synagogues we will be reading about the Flood. RABBI FREDERICK COHN Contributing Editor The" story is ,well known; how the whole world was filled eoosness: to be a proclaimer of righteousness, to help every |cf ^ l e f ^ e ^ ; S f " c i a i m s RABBI THEODORE N. LEWIS - , - Book Editor with, wickedness, all flesh had corrupted its way.' An al righteous cause, to be ever oa the side of rigbtooustjo-ss; to j ooo members said, said that ANN PILL Siour City, Iowa, Correspondent righteous God found it necessary to wipe out wicked mankind be displayed at tl ' resist unrighteousness in whatever form with every ounce of
by a universal, all-destructive flood. And Noah and his famil; ball during the ceiebrrone's being; above all to be an exemplar of the highest right- iI California (.ion. The Horst Wessel song, were saved, because he was righteous. From him the world Reputation eousness; so that truth and righteousness and justice be ! cial Nazi anthem, will be sui.c was replenished again with what was hoped to be a better and --Tjiistice-Blaefc lias-finally spoken. As -tfas to be expected Guaranteed strengthened and victorious, wickedness weakened and ulti- i and the speaker will be Bare) • Slanfred von Killingcr, of Tier' his words did not satisfy those who created the furor about worthier mankind. mately dominated and destroyed. ! Nazi representative in San FirrThe story may not be literally true. If may only be one his appointment.. His speech was the defense of one, who after, In the not too distant future may the rainbow of peace, i cisco. It is apparent from ti attaining i n intellectual maturity," now finds his earlier indis- of.the legends which Israel incorporated into its Bible from love and happiness arch over a redeemed, a vo-consccrated that the celebration is p.ot a mee*the Babylonians in the midst of whose civilization and culture humanity. cretions threatening him with ruin. | ing of American citizens, contend that Germans in U r We have found it difficult to reconcile ourselves to the Israel's early ancestors, and Israel in later times also, lived - - Frederick Colm. United States should be loyal t<* fact that a man, who by his own admission had joined so in- for so many centuries. But fundamentally the story is proHitler. VTe cannot hold any sui " T- ti < £ C » ' faidious ah organization*as the klan, is.now to sit on the bench foundly true. views. We are Americans and roThere certainly are floods. We have no doubt of it, who of the highest court of the laid. Yet charity forces us to con, sider his record while in the senate and his spirited enuncia- ess than a year ago experienced the Cincinnati flood, and who have known the Johnstown, the Erie, the Dayton, Missistion "of the fundamental principles of religious tolerance. The record of Justice Black of the last few years is clear, sippi, and other floods with their devastations on a greater or By DB. THEOBOSE N. LEWIS as he says. Moreover in his speech Friday night Black rebuked esser scale. These may have well been, a great, well-nigh uniEabbi, Mossat Ska! Tesagi®, Siosx Csty the principles of the klan and vindicated himself with his ef- versal inundation which exterminated a great part of humanity, memory of which was preserved in the tradition of a great fective denunciation of intolerance. "Ceresaonies in Modern Jewish I the traditions and the ritual Hugo Black was bom into a political environment not un-many peoples, and found permanent and classic expression in Life," Rabbi E. Schwara. rnlonj which they so scrupulously Of American Hebrew Coiagrega-1 hered were of divine origin and like that of post-war Germany—a defeated, bitter south being the marvelous literature of Israel. loss. CtaciiinaU. 7S Pages. that the fulfilling ofj [[authority, exploited by its conquerors. His first contacts were with the Israel's religious genius utilized this legend, if you please, t h s t i t t d " i h " j One of the definitely eacour- ||| t h e s e c constituted a "mizvah," ignorance and bigotry of the southern masses whose defeat as it did so many others that are found in the picturesque aging, pheaomena ia American | r e l i ^ o u s «uty aad aa act or piety, made them prey for every demagogue. .'...-. pages of Genesis 'to point a moral' as well as 'adorn a tale.' Jewish life is the increasing de-|| w h i c h E O t 0 E l y P l e a s e d the Deity but the doer reward in b a t iinsured n For him there were not the intellectual family environ- As'Shakespeare took old plays from the shelves of London mand oa the part of rabbis and <the P r e d theJewish doer ceremonial reward • hereafter. laymen for the re-introduction; of ments enjoyed by Brandeis and Cardozo. In his backwoods Theaters and stamped them with his incomparable dramatic ceremonial in home and syna- had a supernatural, an "otherAlabama village there was no tradition of progressive politics. and poetic genius to make of them virtually new productions, ogue. The dominant rationalism world," background which made observance obligatory, and nonHe was educated in a rude one-rooni school and denied the so Israel took the primitive legends of the race and stamped of the last century has destroyed observance sinful. This supernat1 of Jewish sentiment and privilege of an expensive Harvard education where his horizons them with its own moral genius, to become thenceforth vehicles much mysticism. Together with many a ural background no longer exists. might have been broadened. He did not, as did Holmes, have of the most powerful spiritual character and influence. orca that was indeed obsolete Religious ceremonial, Jewish zr.i non-Jewish, is no longer deemed the opportunity of sitting at the feet of America's prime intelSo with the story of the Flood. Hence its vital and prac- and occasionally even out of har- to be of divine origin; neither fie mony with the spirit of'the tides, lectual figure, Ralph Waldo Emerson. He was a product of an tical influence and bearing and application today. Alas, the believe that observance many aa important and hallowed we isolated community, off the main current of life. His support world is again filled with wickedness, more so it seems than custom, ceremony and ritual was pleases the Deity, or that it irof the klan was part of the community's politics and,to his in many years or generations in the past. Men become dis- cast aside. Discrimination and sures reward in the worlS-tccome. It possesses but one value. discredit, like other small-town lawyers of the south, to insure heartened and express themselves pessimistically," as regards selection were woefully lacking. social—and offers only the uncerThis destructive process his political future he joined the organization. the moral, or rather extremely immoral, condition of the world. robbed Jewish life of much beau- i a m a s s u r a a c e of emotional satisand f tio stimulus. This This new ty, poetry t d inspiration." i ' " ^^ a n d stimulus Yet neither by word nor deed in his years in the Senate We are amazed when we stop to contemplate it. We are led to ty, and inspiration. The ii " tude towards has Hugo Black, shown himself a disciple of the vicious prin- feel that all conscience has perished from the earth, that men homes which only a short time! m n i a l c a n a l o n religious cerecan alone explain the go possessed a distinctive Jew- ! monial ° " ^ i ciples of the Man. He has not merely given lip-service to liber- are activated only by the lowest and basest self-interest, that ish atmosphere are today indis- wholesale repudiation and disrealism, but has become one of its most ardent exponents. Almost they trample ruthlessly and brutally on the rights of others, tinguishable from • non-Jewish. gard of such ancient institutions the Sabbath and the Festivals, without exception his actions have been in a spirit contrary are swayed only by the vilest greed, are dominated only by The life of the individual Jew, as once itrengthened and enriched the dietary laws, and the whole ^to the xi _ motives ^ £• of* the x».- T,-!_..--. ;he fiercest passions of hate, anger, lust, and desire for ret Klan. )y the beauty of the festivals and range of Jewish doctrine ant}- cusIn his eleven years in the Senate he has grown. He has venge, by the ignoblest feelings of fear, suspicion, prejudice, he poetry of ceremonial, is nowj tom. Instead of supernatural 'orig- j and authority, Jewish ritual is ; influenced by the most progressive spirits of that august and injustice against their fellow-man, all of which expresses >mpty. jews as a group, especial- in y the more thoughtful and sen- regarded, and rightly, as the pro- I The Largest Shotting I'ody, including our own Senator Norris. itself in the most fiendish cruelty, in the most horrible violence sitive, experience a profound duct of Jewish folk-life, as the j oneliness end loag for those expression of the Jewish group. The opposition to Black comes from ^elements that "never and-savage destruction. of Men'$ Fine of deep and abiding Big-, And Jewish ceremonial to enjoy before,have.shown themselves great enemies of tile klan. How Do we fully realize the abject condition of the world! The •orms sificsnee wbica they permitted to j observance and popularity must I many of the voices so raised were heard in the 'Twenties when horrible slaughter that is taking place among the so-called •ass out from their lives. They I •give beauty and joy. the Elan constituted one of the greatest ^dangers ever, faced •'civilized* peoples of the earth? Civil war continuing in Spain, earn for the emotional stimulus! ^ ° achieve this desirable end, by the Republic ? V * no nearer,a termination than at the beginning, on the. contrary of the ancieat • ceremonies, and it is imperative to preserve and the beauty and faith and joy intensify the group spirit of the i I t is highly significant also that the Klan, usually so re- because of the unwarranted, impertinent and altogether inex- frr these provided to generations o j j Jew, to make the Jew conscious luctant to disclose anything about its members, so much so cusable and unjustifiable interference and open and acknowl- Jews. j of belonging to a distinct commuthat it dresses them in "hoods to keep their identity secret, has edged invasion by Italy and Germany liable to break forth at The thoroagh-going cultural nity and to make him eager to preserve the life and culture and been generous in revealing Black's.record. any moment into, a War involving the whole world, besides assimilation of American Jews religion of his people. And unless makes distinctive Jewish life difBecause of the: accompanying circumstances, perhaps wiser which the World War of twenty-three years ago will seem in- ficult. Only those who conscious- we direct the education of choices for the Bench could have been made. But since Jus- significant in comparison. Do we realize that faith seems to ly strive to achieve this desirable Jew toward this wide and inclusive end, ail pleas tice Black seemingly sincerely accepts his responsibility i n the have perished from among men, so that men can no longer goal succeed, and even they, only, turn to ceremonial are vain much sacrifice and hardship Your sport jacket is too spirit of the Constitution, in the -desire to preserve religious trust one another, their most sacred and inviolable pledged after portant to and discipline. Y/et, though the the exhortations for a more careful. observance of Jewish customs harmony, it is best to forget his past and concentrate on his word, the most solemn oaths and treaties, as well as honest task is extremely difficult, we compromis you expect will fall on deaf ears. To speak present and future. agreements and engagements among supposedly,honorable men dare not shirk it. Despite disap- of Jewish ceremonies and to iggreat things of i The Nebraska's first pointment and failure, we, must and gentlemen? Do we realize what Mussolini's raiding and repeatedly emphasize the signifi- nore the people that is to observe choice of Ame gives you the these, is to miss the most salient raping of weak, helpless Mhiopia.has meant, his unconscion- cance, the indispensable character fact TKe Grand Mufti Makes a Mistake of the whole problem. The choice o America's able conduct since, his defiance of England ,and the League of Jewish ceremonial, and the ira- ceremonies like the religion imperative necessity for reintroThe Arab High Commission tiriaer the leadershipp o i ' i r of Nations, his threatening of the foundations and security of ducing, it into home and syna- the Jew require physical agents, i Nebraska, features: d Mfi f J These must be imbued with s Grand Mufti of Jerusalem has made its supreme mistake. -It: the British Empire throughout the world, his hypocritical gogue. • deathless will to live as Jews— may not have the opportunity to make andther. : v championing of the Moslem world, which no doubt accounts in This brief volume Is designed distinct, unique and apart. The Four-pocket belted leather Cost—cocoa It -was permissible for it to sanction the sniping at Jew- large measure for the Arab riots in Palestine and the jeapor- to a!d in this sacred and neces- foremost obstacle to Jewish life suede—the sli-purpose sport coal. sary work. Frankly and careful- is the paralysis of this will to be ish' colonists and the murder of peaceful citizens"; it was pos-ding of the peace of the world? Do we fully realize the ly does Rabbi Schwarz dissect the a Jew-—accelerated by cultural sible for its minions to dynamite schools and trains with im-i enormity of Germany's conduct under the Nazis whose .'Na- probleai of Jewish ceremonial ob- assimilation, and by the unfriendor belted punity. Even the occasional shooting of a British soldier could' tional Socialism' is rather 'National Sin,' for the whole nation servance. Rightly does he empha- liness of the environment, which : size that Judaism In the past was makes Jewish birth a hindrance Horsehide. go-unpunished. . " . is immersed in the most sinful acts; injustice and persecution primarily observance and that if and a burden. The fatal defect But under no circumstance are British officiate to.be as- of the Jew, with the" attempt of absolute extermination, taking it ia to carry any weight for us Reform Judaism has been ex-1 ©Button stj-Ie two o sassinated. The killing of District Commissioner Andrews has- away his rights not only as a citizen but as a man, heaping of this day and generation, it treme emphasis on the abstract belt back—Su and CEDC leather. culminated in the wholesale arrest and exile of the foremost upon him the greatest indignities, insult upon insult, calumniat- .must, again become a m&tter of and theoretically reli Intelligent and careful observance transformation of the Jewish peoArab trouble-makers and resulted in the deposing of the-Grand ing him in the eyes of the-whole world in the attempt to bring —not, -as it is to so many, a ple into a colorless and indiffer®Lasksn Lamb Jackets mcG 3" horseM u f t i . '.'. • ••• - •- •••• / '• . * . " .••. f . . ; ; • - • ; . A \ about his complete humiliation and destruction—-and the Nazis mere fora <jf speech, a Etriag of ent religious denomination. To hide and kangaroo goat Earlan shoulders. The situation is extremelyi;delicate. The Grand Mufti, mak- persecution of religion irr general,' their attempt to restore an meaningless platitudes. save the religious of the Jew ,to He considers the Sabbath, the restore Jewish, ceremonial and ing his last stand m the Mosque of Omar, has urged his fol- outworn paganism; their utter cruelty and barbarism; Hitler three pilgrim festivals Chanukah tradition it is imperative to save lowers io. provoke the British troops to commit blbodshed at striking hands with Mussolini, the two major bandits and high- and Purim, citing ancient usage the Jew. And this requires a' culthis Moslem sanctuary. And there ever remains the possibility waymen and gangsters of the day? And both probably 'in and suggesting modern counter- tural and spiritual renaissance of parts.. The Sabbath can be made a i comprehensive nature. off his hi escape. J cahoots' with Japan, in virtually admitted alliance, and osten- meaningful by the addition of. the „. That the Grand Mufti after years of inciting trouble in sibly to defend the Avorld against 'communism' which at the K i d d i | l s a ' b? t h e singing of JewPalestine was still in a position to defy British rule shows the Israel Jacobs, elected; to repreish melodies, by making our worvery worst is not as bad as, and to.be preferred above,' their ship " more""traditional e. g. great- sent Pennsylvania in'1751, was insane policy of the Mandatory government. This self-styled two brands of Fascism! Morality "and humanity seem to be er . use of Hebrew, etc. His sug- the first Jew ia Congress. descendant of the prophet has always been considered, even shattered by the bombs that a conscienceless and altogether gestions concerning Chanukak by those who supported him, the most ambitions agitator 'in The first original Purim are 'valuable. The btutal and ruthless Japan is dropping upon Shanghai and Nan- and the Arab world." ' > • ."..•' >:'• ,,' Passover festival, t^te most popu- Spanish literature, king, , wantonly and seemingly delightedly literally hurling lar ot the three pilgrim festivals attributed to a Jew, He was brought to Jerusalem by Lord Samuel from a conrole Costa. scores-and thousands of the -most-innocent and helpless men, is considered at length. TJie r centration camp. In the pay of the British government he orof the religious school is emphawomen and children, civilians arid non-combatants, and hither'' sized. The rite et Confirmation! ganized, civil disobedience, incited riot, fomented terror and reto^ exempt from harm in war, to the most horrible destruction. associated with the . Festival of 2 or 3 'bedroemt bellion, and still retained his position. Fear of reprisals did Styim Gala re ! We can hardly realize that this is the twentieth Christian and Weeks Is described. How to make cfeess, completely not force the British to keep him in office, for his following the sixtieth Jewish century. Conditions, are appallingly like Sukkoth real and vital has long •with ei! modern cor»rr.i. perplexed the rabbis, and interis small, consisting as it does mainly of Arab land-owners. Here's .every varia on in the new Sweater those in the time of Noah. Is the world about ripe for another esting suggestions are advanced.i eaces, Fop remt WE ZZZ7. developments—fro wool to finest vicunas. As long as his victims were not members of thb colonial flood?. Its own hideous and heinous wickedness is rapidly The chapter on the synagogue, Every wanted sty and color effect government,'his depradations went unchecked and lie contin- bringing upon itself another and inevitable and colossal and the home and' what should i be done • to strengthen these :--J ued to draw his salary though he alone was' responsible for catastrophe. dispensable agftncles ia' Je-^-irb ! the terror that gripped the entire country. • O that there may be many Noahs as seeds and centres life is helpful. Despite his reputation the Foreign office toyed with the of righteousness to preserve the world from utter destruction! The asithcr fails to note tl * idea of making him Caliph of the.Moslem world, an office to fundamental difficulty -with, E -UO that champions of justice and righteousness may arise like era Jewish ceremonial. OUT f_rtwhich he aspired. Only the fear that aneient,Arab feuds would Zola (whom the wonderful screen-play 'Emil.Zola,'* so marvel- fath^rs with unsb.rLcbe reawakened and a situation the British could not. handle, ously and so inspiringly portrays), to undo immemorial wrongs, able faith, that the ceresnoh'f. prevented his assuming this office in abeyance since tho Sultan to help enthrone the right and overthrow the diabolically'-.evil I wa$ chased from power. 0 for justice to bo done, 'speedily, in our $2?; to criminal Nazi Like all trouble-snakers the-Grand Mufti WJJS bound to Germany, to swsfeh-bucklii!* Mu&solini, to terribly -..aggressive overstep himself. Though in all probability tho Arab High predatory Japan! In the case of all evil and evil-doers!" t h e Commission did not give its Sanction to the as3a33ination of yholo world intone; rath Israel it; divinely ailitwrt Paste,
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The 3os3yn ilemoria) is sentins i-lie Ibllowins activities jsn Sunday, October Ilk 3 : SO S». il.—Lecture luslL X.eeture by Miss laa Blactmore on •'Mexico City." 4 T. M..—Concert lialL Concert Try Pather irianagan'B Buys' Choir -with Martin IV. Bu&h at the or-
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Miss Silverman also ^honors Trith other October briaesto-Tie at a luncheon given by the Mesdames J. Hosen, S. Geifman, j [ 3Utd Joe GoldTrars a t the Paxtan \ Hotel on Tuesday, September i S . j j idn Thursday of last Treek a no-; > host luncheon -was. .given at the j r Paxton Hotel lor the "bride-to-be.! I Ben D. SQveT'-entertainea j i
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Coronafio Hotel In St, XiDUis. Miss Frsiicn is a. crsuas-t DI : i : •Washington "Csive-Eity in St. ; J j Louis. Her f i a n c e -SXtsnaaS, | J Cerigiiton ruivfirsity CoII^re of '. I j
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ccuflict p-rese-stea an intsrestiau lecture on t i e subject r sad nnfvrered c^ESticus en the present "j A smoker "vrs-s feels orse of J a c t "Epstein ts ny, October T. ..
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ilrs. Harry Mendelsohn, chair-! l f i B ^ t i l x e a ° f t u l l e Co-hostesses •with Mrs. Hubea--=s of the Goldie Myerson Sew- r l B c e a n a gathered to stein "will be Mrs. 3161 ing BTDup., --announces that, the i headpiece. Mrs. Bloch stein and Ers. Ed. next meeting of the se-tring group !2 shover hou^uet vf -wllte bride'-S A short talk on the -"Problems ; | j l T03es ^Hl meet on Tuesday, October I S , ! - J ^ s^eet peas, and of the'Toath of Todays Trill h e j l i i s reat1 »t O^SO at ihe home of Mrs,: H. j **** ^ ^ . , given "hy JJJrs. C. 3sL .Soss ol ths | ^ g JttEj-erson, ZibZ'hii Cass street.i ' T h e -maid of honor. Miss Doro- •Omaha League of "Women Voters. ;lj§| Important husiness is to b e ' thy Anne Camel, -wore a gown of at this ineeting. AH : rust satin made on princess lines. EDCIETI !j j members i a v e ieen urgsd t o a t - She carried .an arm bouguet of I The first Tegular Tneetiag of j-^p -Johanna Hill rose3. The of j tend. .Miss Mildred'»SafErstein. irides-i'the Deborah .Society -will be >E13 i§|§ ; maid, Tras of royal bine satia. I Tuesday afteraoan, October 12.. at ' g g j Her "bouquet -svas of talisman! 2 o'clock at the Jetrish C o s s m - i g : : To begin their aeisr seasons j nity Center. :^g , members of the Co-uncil ijjroses.. . Chicago B B e r n a T a Tax ol • At .the soeial loHoTving ihs j l H h t f Hadassah are jjb e B t BluEfB Chapter of 1^^ • Gorman PJps. hrDther meeting :tea ^rill be served. sntertaiiuns as guests all new Tilrs. Joe Goli'srare is president -bride, and Harold PerelQl at a-1-o'clock birthday •and Mrs. C- S. Unss, secretary, of luncheon to be Ield on Tuesday huf£et dinner -tras served to ths • Society. "
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•^^ B ° n A3SlE a 3 I?_P D ^ e ^.':i Sioux Cityr Mr. and Ers, Morris I * 3 S J S Blank: is -chairmaa ol the
!-Fas ot-'Chicago.; -Mr. and-Mrs. A. | briaga. Those iriEting to xLttend Mrs. Phil Sacks and Mrs. ! L. Cohen of Tarfeio, MisBOuri; iaay obtain tieiets from .members 0. Sternhin. . ! Mrs. J. X. Berman of ^Valtham,; of the Junior CouseB nr _ ^ •• _ ' ~ ~ . : ;Massachusetts-; Miss.Fan •Werxeek! floor. . Tickets a r e tairty-firel^ U&CieLSSEl!! '• i of Sansas City, Missouri, and j cents." ' .' TJIB lirst mesting Of HadaBsab ' Barney i
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l e l a on iredneDday, Octo- J Kansas. • ] tar E, a t the Jewish Community ( ^T- a n 3 Mrs. Bloch left on a •Center. Approximately 250 -srom- redding trip to Chicago. On their «n uttfinded. Heports were heard 1 return they -will reside at 4D2S from -all the standing commit- ' Hickory street. 'tees. Mrs. M. D. Urodfcey, chair-! tnsn of the TsmmbeTEhip commit- XO ES.CHLS2OH £X tse, ana nsr co-chairiaan., XIr Mrs. 3 . A. Siicoa. l ~ t
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33L Barish, TeporiBd.EEly-tTrD 31CT7 1 inomiE? for a t i r e s treek's r t e y | , .tnpmberB. ' ja The 2-unmisfe £a.l? dirertPd by — . Mrs. T. Gro££Siaa Trill be Xtid October I n . The annual cartl parry x. ill !>" • "beaded bj- Mrs. Ida Stein aad T-iU "be held, at fhs Partrnn. na Octs-1 her 27. Mrs. J. Snulman armounced i , ihat the Je-vriLh Kational 3Tunfl j 1 3 2 S S o . -2C2» S i r a c *
driTe •»rI3 bei;iir October 17.
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Bsvid Greeabers, on Tues-! 'Marsrolin, of Onisha, Trill . tate day, Dctoher'l2, lor :a iitaciean i 3>^e on Kovember 14. i t the meeting. j"" ~" Plans lor the coming year -win A 7. A 100 j ' he
as cD-chairmsa are Mrs._\ 3 & n i a r t l r D X o £ CMcago. j o'clock at the Jewish Ctjmmusitv Sanl SuvalBfey, Mrs. LEO ^eyer-j -ont-tst-iovrn'•• guests included i Centex.- Ths affair is to -be opes Bon, Mrs. Sam Satelman, Mrs. ^ • ; a n f l . I i r s _ Archie Kroloff. otiio-the uublic'
in the asw Sweater ol, to finest color effect
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a t t h e Hotel Chieftara, • j 275 guests iollo-^ing the cere-i 1 |? On the program Trill lie Sirs, j ^ ^ .Assisting the hostess 'Trsre j •Covert T . BTDTWI Trho * a ^Gertrude and Miss Tie Junior -Council -srill spoa- ;:^S jilaylet. Mrs. Harry li. 316ch, sisters of the .bridegroom, t a t a benefit 'bridge on :1 meeting and '31x8. Harry freshman. and lira, j day evening, -October 2 7Weanesis chairman of , -at
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Jiliss Lottie Rips, daughter of Sir. i gjgjj^ij, juj^ej- -^-ixi also t a t e ^ ^ l Cohen, .,.. lanaSamuel N. Eips, "became j p^ee Deliver Mrs. M.^Tenger. s e « - e - i t l l e : b r i a e o l H a x o l £ l s l D c l l j B o no f | ' members ^ m s t n t e j D r| tKOr: Mrs. B. sbeffler corre--iiIr_ ^ MrsL 3Dsepil H o e h . The ! a e ara^ms have teen asted to i _ Bponding Becretary; Mrs. 3). Sheer- m^n-iage -sras performed by Sab-j l u r n t l l e m - ^ £ t ^ i mS6tins. mam. Tublicitv; and iHrs. H.. S i l - ; ^ David A. Goldstein before an; • ! Trerman and Sirs. Ben Milder, tel-, jmpro-vised altar banked -vrith • « • " -^ 1 lefihone. <j)alms and Hanked on either side! .OISllSTilCSa T i e next meeting wiU be at the i ^ g i s . _ c a n a ] e c a i a ^ l 2 _ t r a _ j . Inme of Jlra. Silverman -Dn j ^ ^^: ^ D , .,,,„„ „ _ .„„„ i The Sisterhood Circle headed -TiurBday, October 21. lJ7 Mrs. Julius ^eTr hare ;== velvet made cm princess tisrht-fittin1*' i t s - c e r t i°eeting and lanpheoaj^s ^«_^> 'lines Trith Ion ° ' on "vTednesday, October 20, at. 1;H§ C C « I Z Z71 ! sleeves and a neck of the G0W1EMYERSDE • . .. j square ling. A three-guarter\! o'clock, at the home of ilrs. Hsr- ! =
:oo important t o , „ . yon expect Nebraska's first st gives you tb.s, Firsts at The ires:
aroockrt Jackets ape leather.
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The marriage of 7Jlss ^ilasine . • The lirst meeting D£ the aewlyof St. Loui?, uE.t:jrfcter of appointed £secutive coTninittes xsf _ i the TVomen'B TJivision of the Jew-; 'MT- 2 ^ " J i r s - -*•• E - Frelici.. ; i s h Community Csnter' Trill meet i I l i I r - Siaroia Marsolin of o n e of -the p , ! City, son of 3Ir. a d lirs. uis | a t t hee llinme president.
ISETB. liester Pezzner and iars. jTillUE Horn5tefn itmored ieT at a luncheon sntl theater -party.
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pper Jacket—plain aede. Cape. Gcsi,<
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hen, HETTY Cohen, J a c i Cohea, L Daiislvy, S. Csnar, David "Epstein, 1 J. I . Friedman, Alfred A. TlieSler, 7, J. Kreidsn, 3. H. Freeman, SETH
' seine -activiuss. All inert -who are DEneEt limclieoii Trill go to Use j to join the bastetball lezm -were hold a 1 o'cloei Iu.nci.en* on fund l o r the ne-s? 33sth. SeiroQi's i aslred to-report to Xormjuj S u t WednesdEy, October I S . A surTO CO5TE5TIO5f ' '.;• I ; girl .flthool in Tel Aviv. | lin. MTB. M. F . Levenson leftj ! .. All members of the "Women's XhnrsaBy evening ior IJetrDit, j F r a n i Chase, noted -writer, vrho ' by l-s. Trustin ana ! ilizrachi -who -give benefits -sill yhere she Trill attend the Confer! covered the 1S"2 Sino-Japansse ! ba eligible for" t h e Donor's ence on Land ^Redemption of the i Luncheon t o be i e l d in the Vin- j ^«—«—• .Je-vriBh Jvational Fund. She ilex. Those making up tables also i ^ = stop In Chicago for a few days. -trill be eligible l o r the Donors' ^ g « r -7 Luncheon. . • |jj| | €^"f" *^"v* 2 . B . T . MOTHEK'S CLTB | ! The first regular meeting of i | | i :!*i ^m. -ib &J The "Z. B. T. I I oilier'B Club met j 3iT5. Hopoia Sloch i the Eeason Trill be held on "Wed- ! §H§ a t t h e home of 3Irs. Harry Mala- I ' nesday, October 20. The iasts.Tla- ; ^ g . shotik on Thursday, September j On Sunday afternoon a t 4-rS0 jtiD31 D l 0 ££i CErs -55-01 b s i e i a a t : ! = 30. ~J5eTir officers .at the Highland Country 'Club,; ^ - ^ UmB_ ThB drawing . for t h e ; ^ \ss J * J •*& ~ <t -were: Mrs.
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act her liome last Satur&arr at a luncheon honoring Hiss Sllver-mn-n and Iktiss Dorothy Saltzstein, also a bride-elect. •On Saturday -evening Mrs. M.or^ B IFranfelin honored IVTiss SilTerman at a hridse and Tnifluisht lunch. WT, 'Weiner T7as also lonorefl lliat erening a t a stag a t the r o n t^ppTip Hotel giren Ijy . the S i
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TISTTIXG Jeanette Eesnick ol X»QS ATI-geles i a s been -visiting her parents, Mr. ana Mrs. I . M. Eesniok. She jilans ID stay for a jnonth.
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Mrs. Julius Stein. Guests -trere; Mrs. Julius Ke-n-mari's Circle, of j —: members of the ticket-selling' the Sisterhood. Admission T*riH IDS ! BAH 3VHTZTAH OCTOSEK 10 1 J«T. and isIrB. Ben liiistgartea j committee. fifty cents. The luncheon i s open 2uBEibers of • tliiB ccsmciittee of 10.2 So. ;38tn street ..announce to ihe public. HesErva.tion5 .may "be inaQe ~br\ the Bar Mitzrai ol their son, are: .the Kesdsnies Julius AbrnAlbei-ts. calling WA 4O09 or HA 6039.! Chester, on Saturday moratag, | T2f^D31' Mrs. Julius Newman and 3Jrs.au-j October 1GJ at the BEth Hame2L HUB Abraha-mson .are in ciargs. jarosi Hagoflel synagogue, i s t h ! : jlac. Beaten Erotra, Heraum Co•'• • : ;' ianfl Burt streets*
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•WILHEI<MINA ASKS PKEPARE'DNESS—Scene as Queen Vvilheteina of The Netherlands opened the Dutch Parliament at The Hague and announced from the throne that shs in£hded to reir^force the nation's military strength. She said that was because of Europe's tension. Later she was too iii fron a cold to install Dr. J a n Patijn, the new Foreign Minister.
PLANTS A TREE—Princess Elizabeth, who. may some day be queen of Great Britain, plants an ash tree in the Garden of Friendship, a t the eighth birthday party of her-cousin, the young Master^of Carnegie, right. The scene is in Kincardineshire, Scotland. Also shown are Princess Margaret Rose, her sister; left, and Miss Zoe d'Erlanger.
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ZZZZL3 C I / i T r - r s r : Sr.lfv:r- o: revd'e;, : - m r r Prime ICrJstcr cf Er.flrncl, vllh I.^:1r Er'cvir. z'-r-t? r ^->i"-f~iTi climb r et l'( cr.t Fe'lerir, £r;rrc->r''s,, Trtigupr t'- ^.i^ »'bo-<- p.«- "Pritain's Premier, the Earl has becT. is feilin? hcs-l-h recpni'r fr<d mountain climbing is one^or the means he uses £&\ly ir f.r, effort to recover his strength.
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JUNGLE FILM PARTNERS — Shapely, Eleanor Holm, wife of ^ Bandmaster Arthur Jarrett, abandons her mermaid" role -1<- flit through a Hollywood forest as the mate of the new Tarzan, Glenn' *. Morris. Above, she meets two important actors in-the play. Center" is Mr. Morris and left is Jiggs the ape. Miss Holm.'former Olympic * champion and winner of many swimming trophies, has recentlyappeared a t the Great Lakes fair at Cleveland. - •-
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cadets lining up with the ccnipr.r.y guldens. Lcwcr left, C, 1,1. T, C. cadets stepping out on a training hike at Canip Dix. Upper ri~ht, here's ssrious business. C. M. T. C. youngsters at Fort KacArthur, San Pcdrc, Cal., polish ar.5 oil three-inch shells, preparatory to Srfcg theni m cnti-circraft practice. Center, D company, machine-gun unit of the lOSth Ir^antry. New York National Guard, hauling a g-ca into position at Pine Ccrr.p, N. Y. Lower right, hish-sppad tanks that make 60 miles ars hour, used by the Missouri National Guard. Richt center. Private Leo Butter of the 105th National Guard Ir.far.trr, Erooklrr,. X. T» bids his sweetheart good-by beroro entrcirins for CB.ZT.P S a t h .
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SECOND DEFENSE'LINE—Forever available, as .the-nation's defense .forces, are--Uncle. Sam's regular' army* navy, and the marine, corpse- But supplementing these "sentinels is a vast number of. civilian soldiers," constantly, in training'and ready'at a moment's nbticer.to' cope with.any emergency. This-army is'called tbe-nation's second .-Jinet of defense. . It -includes,, the National Guard of^each-state,, the Citizens* Military ^Training Corps &nd other forces.\ • .'. . ; • ' -_ - - - . v .Here are-scenes indicative 'of'life in the field-for'Uncle Sam's citizen-soldiers.everywhere;'Upper left; rookies-arriving at the . C* VL T. C; quarters a t Camp Bis. N. J., and, below,' C- M. T* C.
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;0!i HEK T<?O3SIES HTD3T—Margarita-(Mano) Mersinan, 19,-is toe daughter of the American Consul at Tahiti and, having lived on the island most of her life, was not accustomed "to wearing the fancy dresa shoes of America. Hence, when she visited Hollywood recently, her new shoes just burned up her leet. Here she-cools them while she agrees America is nice.
A V-ti-'S—• Ilrs. D. Buchanan Merryman, aunt of the Duchess of Windsor," the fonrur ^V/allacs V/arfiGld of Ealtimora, cs - sha arrived, 'in - HGT? Ycrli from. Europe.- Sha.xeocatly has been s guest of the Windsors ~rt Wasserleonburg, Austria,
EOT SBQT KOW A II^IICS" D—This interior formerly xrzs t i e nl£ht cIuSj in Shansh^i.birfora Japanera fcc=::.a boir.br.rclir.c: the ' Peris of ihe Orient been converted into a hospital for wounded Chinese soldiers, cta-Scd fcy volunteer rv.rs: Kemains of the ornate decorations ars still discernible.
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Sea bow many-of these q u o t!oE3 you can answer after IJETG read Sir. \Torid's i SSo Accther" ctiat.~Wbo ' is Sir - Keill. Ma!» ioha? -' -' -: •;-. 2. How many German .refugees ara still homeless? ' G. \7bst ia sosss oJ the.-wosk 3 dcae by the OSE? - . - • L • . 4. l a vyhat country tTcre th'o" a^vspapcra forbfdfiea to print PreslQeat Eooseveira Constitar' tion Cay. speech? * . ' ,-• S. XSIxo tTas Frederick iBnrr Opper?. . 6- Kama a. famous Jewish omitlioJoglst vrfio died recently. :•: ,7. 5o whota was the Bal« •touz Declaration addressed?_••_• S. Vkhsit <lid the Coonidl of
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f Bewdley, former Prime starts a mountain climb *y his labors as Britain's !th recently and moiins daily in an effort to
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O H20-cream cossasii.S she vltemia A i; which, the erases . . ihe ^iSaraia A • . lias httn retaored, kit ROS calj Isizs a rich tla'iy soures of. this vstuab>3 Vi!25l.iB • « &itlA lio laf-C; n$ for riilk, v»hi?h j fcato a llfc-thr.z 17hole fi'ttt lisSis B CI} fl33 IlC. " btvtsf.
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catioa of data parportins t o ' Pushcart on Delancey show that Saprems Court Jtjstics | ss it Sr e3e t& e• W• £•s When questioned &s a Black -eras and still i3 a msriber j *ana€l" *roia C c s ' Of tlis night-sfiirt brieads . . . It nectiist and..trss selling .iis proseem3"the Kluciers didn't t a k e ' g c c s t o - ^ 5 r liis expenses to tha kindlyy to Black's Blacks exposure of the !1 «°aveatJon • . . . F e w els«5::ily tipsy anti-Semitic Sentisolis of tha Ee-i legionnaires;fr6a Ji'aass,£!iBSetts public .and other riolators o» ! P^reded ded ' ©atsifie atslfie tha ' Gertssa ias ; lias's pier asd Ehcated: civil liberties, so they turned over v a s t to haag Hitler" . . • documents from Klan files to of • Legionnaires took hosi5 anti-Ne'e Deal ne-wEpspcra^n . . . as ioureairs . . Blacfc'o court colleagce Louis D. Brandcia conU eay 4 let .About b^ e e r th*m B y ^ ^ ^ ^ s t i e Gcrassthla business it he ^-aated' to . . .! i a r a s n cellars in Yor&rille, ^-hich For soxnfe ot the very gentlemen i I i n 6 e s r the-^ad-of tho. parsds now railing against Black b e - i • • • ^issest thrill cf the eoacause he's said to be a KlansrSan 1 ventioa «€ek «as claimed by farries l J Fo= £ousht ths confirmation of B r a n - ! - * tr ' fi0 ^ ^ i a 1 E dels because ho is a Jew . . . And !"V7eri« ^at- battles ES a back priJustics Cdrdoso also enters the Ts £a t 9r >t t aa 8a ! 5 B o * entcrUiaed his 'picture, for ho had couatea on j K e w -cosmaadsr stt a fiiaE®r Bloeli to counteract the conr dis- i ^ Yorfc-. . ..Tiers saust bs position of Justice IJcRcynolds, jptofltyofL«gioa posts nais^d .for -c-ho, accordlns to 039 report, Setts. ...for vre sa^r Lefioantires publicly insulted CarSoso by cay-h^ 2 * 111 ^ c 4 p s {ascribe3:«-it!i'J««-. The-oaly'-pair of 'Jt ssstno only Jews asd soss of convicts caa get 011 the i £ 1 I t s sportea ia tie paraSs w£3 Supreme Court" . . '. "WhleS re- worn -by,.Harry -Frcedssaa cf minds us to tell ,yoa rot to be Brooklya, a •CanafiSan.-bfiTa veterSurprised If someone sjJ'rinco a an who tbssftt' with tos Slack bombshell by disclesias that an- TTateh HislslaEdera . . .-•Proudest other member of tba Sapreas oceapact of -.the rstriewias staEsi Court is an es-KlaSEEsan.. . , Sat vas Mrs. AnSs B. ITisiEsw. old•svhatoTcr ths outcone, you you can est taciahsr •'' of ths ' GsM Star
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the Nazis again, here's a laugh for you: While a Los Angeles Nazi clnb was flavins a picnic recently: an airplane dropped' a flock of leaflets on the "plealfii-ers—and cure enongn, tho*s Isafj A3asrica.n Itegien coareatioa lets explained tha cruelty of NazIt's the Ka IQui "itlia iteslf; t£t ® mi«iai&-ssed lev, • tirenrlag & ism and pointed out how much that is responsible for the publi-1 LeJtfpn tmiio-m, Iia-srkiug rescts.bIes frora a
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which Mr. World hopes all xst yoa • which _is tho it, but he ice & reel s:ili- ' tfeo O3D ct smcti yea Hits ;I. tisnr jy hate-filled s.ry record, haring: Furred ir the rcsdy rci3 fa tills rtcl^s t^it STOB ca Yoa Kirpur. ftaay part of this. e£ wa? of 1ST9 in So-th A£r-.ebo tho Holy fuct a Jew ia p a i. Vcrica E-ks's debt to th«s fsprc-sntSn; ttt crisinii traeo Cf I dent of thi-3 ors^tisitica; late Gecrse Gerch-pri:;, vbo st£rt-
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|son|rs left unfinished by GersSFire iundred "Win . . . It VES Date trho did they aro. no loager permitted to World's joke3 aren't really fucay. | bcwled by Leo \\ rrangement of sit on any beach they-please, but Perbapa yea are right, at that. Ke Je^rs ssd Arabs "Rhapsody ia .Else" for - the Kelcher, ESS; £.rd v must choosa only, certain btsachesr hasa't had. much •tiiaa to afe still p'rotestins sgalait the "GoM-B-ya Foilisfe" . ". . That Coi man, 502. marked "For Sews Oniy"-~for all to huEJor. lately, so £9 may. ba British plan - to partltloa tbs M. Robert.GaEgecheia vr&o is be- The high Ein~-?' r tne world as it beiBg JewJsn consiaeratsly- ont cf Sate. To tell coaatry iato esparste' Jewish sag ing stteS for filTorcs is the "sly 226 ana'the £icr ti-e? r r i !« frwere' some contagious diseass; tho trath*. tse doesn't. eVea toiow Arab States, and btoodisised Is 8tIH member of the famosa industrial Eouinaniaa Jevrcs seeing the •whether thtjcomJc section of yctsr -going on. Just how Great Britala claaVho-has tarasd Catholic g tes.ai E.ncle •EE t V c Tbe high Semites in tneii1 coantry paper-stilMsss the famous Happy ji ia goiag to carry oat it® plan He jjts .a-grardson of t i e orijinsi ' i l 5 : c r s ' SS7" zzi tie fc^ . tCS-JE more active- and ppjrerfal: , cad Hooligan cartoons -which taes score -E£.E itel 1 hasn't .bscojsa clear as yet. feat j Meyer G j a g g e n b e i m . . . . Sirs, many, many othe? such sights are ed American boys and girls for to •wrido-sr c £ the tlse ; tha Cdancll of tie Leagas ef N£-| j"^' ;~ jger s t ^ C s ls iin Mr. World'a memory. many years.- if you'v©- never .sesa o- France, has a -word abo-at it, but ii is a feet tS ..Ambassador ^ But tha picture Msn|t enlirely Happy Hooligan &B.& his thfea !it- UOaS tO.Whoa Ea»laad ii f«- ]Uestablished an annual trarei:ns? tliat JcIicE Streicier. KEEI t:£'f " dark, fortunately. It is true, for tls nephews arid Maud—who is a spansifcls eager tha y .Fa" acprored scholarship of $2,500 to enable a No. I Jew-ha.te-, has ;ust iost E. has plan. 'ofCid&H? tha partitica It Is a^ expected Frenchman to- etiidy politics or libel suit . . . Court Keackel ^c: exatnple,.tiat,Sir Neill_ Malcolm. | mule—just"-a3k .your dad. He'll '-^Edate, 'Le^guaoi Nations High Coiainis-1remember. Th& reason vbf -Mr. sdeace ia the United • States . . . Donnsrsmarck, E^Ieiltn CL^L^IC, tiia Leslie cf Satlons saj> sioner lor Gerasa Refugees, baa World is meatioalag this .fanny partiUoa •'-will be drzwn. Kp t?y Marsh&ll Goldberg, UriiTerEity c£ won ths suit t^z.lz.zl E.rcIcLi; aboat tli^ British plan to pa> reported"that 35,000 btthisa ref- paper character today Is .that, itist Great Britain as quickly ES psrsi* Pittsbcrgh'e galloping bactfield and his. Etuerctr, T L C ^ ]_; Li^ ugees, practically all of them Jew- recently . the. creator -of 'Happy blc—It will tafeo a a s a b e r ct star, is called "Eigsis" ca tSs sued for sls.r.£z~\" i;r Zrrziiv l~ tltion Palestine? ©. Wby may iho Zioaista ish, are homeless, •with 'no Idea Hooligan-died. This artist's nams EJonths at the T£ry least—und ths campus. . ho!a a special Congress neat -vrhere to.turn for shelter; but an- was Frederick Bar? Opper, and Zionists, trill probably hold s sp&. first "wile of an E.rce?i.rr cf t^t other fepprU from the Paris of- h© •was aa • American .Jew Congress " cest s a a a r r to The German- press dida't print i Count year? e^ a Jtrcct had icrcfice of the'Jewish health organiconsider the British proposal. 10. TOiat sort of drug was. parents came to this country sation OSE, tells us that ia the recently developed •with the aid Austria eighty-odd years ' • - Now "that 'Sir. World is h&tk In last year .ihis group has given from yl two Jewish scientists? ago. Mr. Burr w£3 very famous the Palestinian •wsr .scse he medical, care to 70,000 Jewish in your father's ^ and graEdfath- j suesses he d better get baci to children of trhom a large percenthis • business, which thesa fiars BJJJX So many things have been hap- age . are refugees from Germany, er*s day, though in the Ust few seems to consist mainly cf -watchyears—he iras" OTer SO "when he pening on our globe of late that £ thi that, atrion'g:.."otSer things, died—rho had retired froa his Ing, people fight "srars. Bat i t . Mr. World can't keep up witli and least fee has ose coaso'atiea: Jest 630,000 bottle3 of ssilfe -w-era sap' " • - . • ' himself. In fact; he's slightly dls- plied to such children.': Again, it • w o r t . * ' • • a coaple of ^eeks ago .PrCiisssor Another famous Jew frho died sy from trying to Tratch all the- is true that ' the G-men-- have S. R. Heashav ol New York cnilast month trss Lord Lionel Vetsity, ."H-ith. th'e assistance e£ •wars that are going - on in his eastern' hemisphere. How would found that a great deal of Nazi, Wsk}U>r RothechiW of London, tr-o .Jewish scientists, D. Greea a g r e a t o r a itholosist. To you feel if you trere a round ball propaganda is going on even inj ^ y 6 a tfae ^ o J , o o k l o f t 'and M. Silf, dereleped-'-- a neir and had to keep your eye on the -United-"States;." but at thej drug ^s-hich 1S"EO pcrwerfcl that a same time the American nation is;! „ . the dictionary,- as little of--it,., if dropped frcn aa bombings in the Spanish Meditercelebrating the 150th anniversary ^ n Eh yon should, Mr."'World ' •will «ss,n and on the Chinese coast the Constitution, -Which pro- plain that it means a scientist airplane in tfea ^ay bciabs Ere so ; f | at the same time? So you under-. of tects people in this country who specializes, in the Ettidy o£ often dropped nb-ff, csa mata s s "t stand -c-hy Mr." World is suffering againstalleudh. eatirs aray" faint •e-lthsst dciss dreadful persecution ! ail Pany of th© soldiers asy real h&fa. from a stiff neck, and is heaving aa ia going on "Kothschild in many parts of a deep-sigh of relief as at last-he his life and. a great deal of turns to our peaceful American Europe today. Did you notice, by gathering a ] raiss hiiEsfefilf hi^li esotsjs^ by l^is scene and settles down for a nice, the -way, thai the Kasi papers 6 f ' birds, for •srb.ich. he j bootstraps ta float ersr all Ms weren't allowed to print the Con-i Quiet chat. EQI1B3 S E ^ sfrcp EOS© Day speech of President He would like to forget to tell stitution 6f this new fircg -?r£.ers it'll do Rbossvelt, becausa ~; ho mad© it to the you about all thfe tragic things clear' ia. that speech that the blase York ' MnSsna'; of' Katural he ha3 seen 'happening to Jews American people •would neTer (New1 ^ History; the rest of it, iacludfns V in the -past few creeks, but corns-: p ol "ditch (Copyright, 1S37, h? Seven Arts Vs* how or - other such things don't EUbmit to such tyranny aa that I thoasan'ds" o~f rara let themselves ba forgotten. Pol- under which Germany must now t ] i a g G 2 C r 3 i public has never ctca . Feature SyaSicats) suffer? While we're on the subject of
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TMJ5 JEWISH PRESS,-FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1337
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crovdfrjg of the EvnP-gogues and be more crowde7~thI7 tli, Mr. and. Mrs. I." Harlow aij! sj.rnsgogBe rnesitber&fcip, ifce varinounce the wedding of their sisT"» i-oss branches ol ike Ei-ocir-*- sneveter, Fanny Harlow, to Samuel . (CoatScceci from pag© 1) Wll "raert vrill kzve l.COC.cro m e a Kaplan of Boston. The wedding cultivate is anything but a with- tiers; n:onej' "will <• - pouricg' , (Continued from Pago 1.) took, place September 25 in St. ''"""if " ' !""'> by Seven A r t ered delusion and that I ana. £ • l enture Syndicate.) Louis. They -will make their home Religious Courts. The announceTapping o'ae of the world's "race inj'stlc." Let'then read, Jusrt MISS ANNA PILL, correspondent ment was made, it is understood, in Kansas City. 'greatest entertainment and talent) to begin wiib, .Dr. Rutb . Be^ein reply, to threats voiced. by Patronize Qcr Advei Users Mr. and Mrs. Harlow also anr nounce the engagement of their Arab notables that they would sources, General Foods has signed diet's Patterns cf Culture. We I 7 ll] he this r c r r l t r Vc-.^ IT^o"?^sister. Miss Ethel Harlow, to Mor- elect him to that post as demon- a contract with Loew's, Inc., Etip- Je^s t a r e onr culture-pattern j £"f*T. ****** pr,f^ ; p U r i ^ " ^ ^^t'OO'^ V^j^ 'KViN c . i-EVIN, Atty. ton Meyers of Junction City, stration of their continued sup- ulating that Metro-Goldwrn-May- vrfeich Is the expression in the B. .indeis Theatre Bids. fold; chiiorea wi'A r-i$.y cut E!:u-rf,v port and in protest against the world of reality o* our sool-pate. will-produce a weekly one-hour Kansas, and the, engagement of 1 Ions cfter Bar-n:i:.f:r&ie r e In * NOTICE O.^ADMTNISTRATION government's action. . tern, just as all ' ctiier peoples] radio show for Maxwell' House their sister, Ida Harlow,; to Irv-. The annual Congregational ing Krause of Chicago. Both couOpens Way to Compromise Coffee. This means/ according to have and it is this characteristic | T. ?.•:. H. A.'s the Eebre-- c.:aE?as meeting of Mount Sinai Temple ples will be married this fall. . Meanwhile, another Arab lead- an announcement by J. K. Evans, of'having a culture-pattern d his I •will take place "Monday evening, * '- ' • - : ' • • ' er,- Ahmed Hilmi Pasha, was ar- General Foods Sales company vice own that is the ucivcrsaS VLSSII of ' I EtVSPURCi. Vs;'. Junior Hadassah will give its October 11, following a dinner EEEER. LUTX?v:CK iliss Naomi" Sacks of Crestou, rested'at Gaza and taken to Haifa president, -i-that, excluding pre- man. And that1 Jew is K « S ! Ini-! annual membership tea Sunday at the Warrior Hotel.|Mr. Hyman Unloa f.tste mas, accordrng ID a •univerpal. I vious; commitments, stars, players on a Royal Air Force plane. There afternoon, October 10, in the Fishgall, president of the congre- Iowa,-visited last week-end with he Joined four other Arab leaders and literary talent under contract aH-iiuisan criterion, who is s e « ; .Egyptian room of the Oasis, from gation, will give an annual re-, her parents', Mr. and Mrs. Sam j NOTICE OF PROBATE OP WfLIL in confinement on the British to M-G-M are now available for a Jeir. Sacks. us the Counly Court of Douglas '3 to 5 o'clock. port, and election of members to St'esc© snd sr5.oderr.it}- ere j a new Maxwell House Coffee procruiser Sussex to await exile. Miss Bertha Gortenberg of the board of directors will be \ ,'n the the words suite literally to enrjure! gram which will celebrate its Estate «} While.. Jews hailed the coup, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Galinsky, Kansas 'City •••will -be the guest held. " with. All right. Let them eon- Ij Ail TJv'r opening November 4 at 9 P. .the Mufti's adherents were deand Dr. Delia Galinsky a r e visitspeaker. Miss Gortenberg js presUntie to bs. But let jseopk;, tiid 'i fKta s'-e E. ••". T., oyer the Immediately following the coni, a potiident of the southwest region of gregational election, Mr. Ben ing in Milwaukee, Wis,, and pressed. The general opinion was red network. t especially JewSsli people, n n k o c j1 ifrfi.viriK- for th^ 3.(roi'!f-ue of iR. C that Ragheb bey Nashashibi, forcertain Junior Hadassah, and an active Sekt, president of the brother- Chicago. • ' ' - . ' little surer than t.lj.cy IiE.t-StS3K.lly I tiSPtn:nicT!t n<;w on Vie in srsid Court. mer mayor of Jerusalem, and bitThis . spectacular contract enit<i Sarah member of the Kansas City hood, will take the chair for the rn'.rT*n>^.ir>z; to E>e t h e ir;?t ' v:r,l ?=nc vVRllmaV'o'r Fom«_ other Miitnb)e~peVitable perter opponent o£ the Mufti, would bodies two important milestones do> t b a J . ^ « " t they call (5;:k-:;Ufje II trr:iRinf-rt of said deceased, and thf.s Pon Rtic. pruce.~c,: to a settlement settlement Mrs. Edward Endman of Chichapter. annual bVotherhood meeting and Jtcnvih? v-'id h? h;\6 on FRM neUtior cago is visiting in the home of succeed him as the most import- ia radio and motion picture bis- truth is still truth sml I:> is of, c |I n Miss Saretta Krigsten, presi- election. ' BRTCE CRAWFORD, ant figure in Palestine Arab life. tory. First,, it provides for the discarded fallacy, Aril >? r. )•><-,?> hrf.-jpe Jisskl Court on the ICth'day t«' 10-t-C^-"-' Mr. and Mrs." Philip Sherman, OciJjijt-r, IK". s:r:d thet if thej- f«.;i dent of the Sioux /City chapter, County Judge. m a k e B Te in The dinner will be served'at 7 His accession to the leadership first organired exploitation of' a j " > B^Hlon, thai, they 1704 Douglas street. Mrs. Sher•will greet the members and o'clock. I ifiih day of October, 10S7, s t S e'eicciwas expected to open the way to film company's talent by a single are scientifically HARRv S I L V E R w I ^rTttorn man will go .to Omaha Sunday to guests, and Mrs. W. C. Slotsky, ti*., to contest t h e probate of saiu .'oE Eraneeig. Theater Bldg. Arab-Jewish-British compromises, sponsor. . And second, it forms not • decelTec! by a ruiturn.1 t£n:c- A, V. M M. t h e Court m a y allow find r>roattend the wedding,of Miss.Mar- particularly on ' the paramount president of the Senior Hadassah, Paid wiil e n d e r c n t adminiftrF.the first assurance for a sponsor lag cf EEywhcre from twe-nty-five urAs of COMMITTEES REPORT will speak briefly. garet Baer to Charles Levine. NOTKDE OF 'NCORPORATION OF said estete to MErcarei: A. question of projected partition of of a steady flow of topaotch mo- to forty years. They mi" 3',-n.ve Hf.ir. GYPSY T E A SHOP, INC. r.'ihrsi or some other puitfibie person. A musical number will be 1 the Holy Land. TO FEDERATION BOARD f'T'tCT a decree- of helrship, find pro™ K K-tios i h»reh." riven that the unsorse surprises. Anacns the fiirxstion picture taleat for broadcast Of interest to Sioux Cityans given by Jean Montrose and Mary the"eo^. havp formed a corporation ing and blessed remits r>r .Tc^fi cce^ to a FP'-.tVmeni notables r. telegraphed purposes. EUVCE CKAWFOED, was the wedding last Sunday aft- . Arab Kaplan, and a skit written by Committee chairmen'presented ernoon of Miss Katherine Gral- Arab rulers of neighboring counCount;- JiifTjrc. The " new radio series, to be being scientifically scrupulous Ri?d 9-14-ST-St Miss Helen Herzoff will be prein>n is i,.-)«;,• Tea iihop. Inc.. with Its their reports at the meeting of nek, daughter fof Kolman Gralnek tries protesting ] the arrests and produced by M-G-M, -will probab- up-to-date . -will be the everf?C-SS & E L t ' M E N T H A L , Attys, sented. . r>-mc;pn. m~~o of business in Omaha. the board of directors of the of Marshalltown, Iowa, to Edwin deportations ""of their colleagues. ly come from a special theater on j ^e»ra:-=!<a The objects 'for which 4?« Brar.deis Theatre Miss Rose Sperling is chairman Federation of Jewish Social Serv;.i-:!R corporation is formed a r e : To of the tea, with Miss Dorothy ice Wednesday evening. Mr. E. N. W.' Baron, son of Mrs. Leah The Hebrew daily Haaretz " de- the film company's lot ia Culver I ABRAHAMS & O'CONNOR, Att>t. I PROBATE NOTICE ' introduce. erect, provide, maintain In the X a t t e r of t h e E s t a t e of o p i a t e , .lease, purchase. acquire! *°" Erandeit Theater Bids."' Epstein in' charge of the program, Grueskin presided. Baron of Sioux City. The wedding clared in an editorial that • the .'City. The> show will provide a i c r r w f.m! dispose of. by sale f ho.fi, government finally took the step weekly "free pass," so to speak, PJOTSCE EY PUBLICATION ON P E -' Goorjre ^V, Prost. Decenssa. and Miss Rose Shiloff, refreshtook place in the Gralnek! JJoticc is hereby jr-ver. that t h e ,or cti!»:vi5e. in »ny tov.-n. city or • The following reports were demanded and expected • by the die United Stales." tea into 'znovieland* where motion TSTION FOR -SETTLEMENT o r i creditors of said deceased vi-ili niee; ; couniy. l r ments. in • Marshalltown at candlelight SHOPS, oor.ee linisses. restaurants, heard: Finance, Eli' Robinow; Jewish community" arid by the picture and radio faES can see £ ^ *»«'N'STRATION A C I the ec5r!i:n!strator of ss.id e s ' r t e , be- inns, eefinp houses, or places of reThe first regular meeting of Out of Town Institutions, Barney under a canopy of palms. Rabbi world. i fore roe, Count}' Judg-e of Doupla-r ; ~ frpsiirren:: to make and "execute films in the making, rub elbows In t h e County Court of I County. Kebrasks. a t the County ; r.nr F.ii F.£rreerr>"T]1s for the rentalany Monroe Levins of Des Moines Junior Hadassah will take place Baron; Building of Fund,^- Max ' Court Room, in sain -Cotsnty. on the ; with stars, estras, script girls,, . , v . , „ , .. _ . . •nest Wednesday evening, October Friedman; Housing- Committee, read the marriage ceremony. The riacc-p o? business as nre herein I 20lh cls.y of Norernber. 1DZ~, F.UC on ; such en^moi-rtori: tr, construct, own, pur• . „ . ^ In the Matter of the Estate cf 13, in the Jewish Community H. Singer; Emergency Loan, Si bride was attired in a black suit " Mr.- and Mrs. Louis Orloff of I the £!*t.h dsy of .TEmiary. ir-"S, Et e i chase, mnintfiin. operate, sell. lea?e scenic designers, makeup men—' Samuel Eelzer, Deceased. ! o'ciock A. I I . , each daj-, l o r the p u r - • dispose of, c r y nuoh property, and •Center. Miss Krigsten will pre- Krueger; ^Talmud Torah, Jack trimmed in Persian lamb and Los Angeles announced tha mar- the varied aad glamorous popula- I . A ! 1 Persons interested in said mat- '. pope of prcpentin^T their CIPJIII^ for ; or : have rower to purchase and hold side and committees for the com- London; Social Service", Miss wore a corsage. Of orchids. riage of -her "daughter, Jliss" Ann .. . . . . . i" ; , , . ter are hereby notified that on the •; exs.mi-nat.ion, ac^juptrnent f-nd aHo^v- • fc in fop rimnlR, or o!nenvis:e, such real ; snee Three months Ere eI1ove<3 for Iostatf 65 ro.P.y be. nnjepsary for carrying year will be named. Orloff,: to Lee Herzoff,of Reno, Following the ceremony a wedtion. O f the M-G-M lot. 5th day of October. 1S3T, Oscar C. Dorothy Merlin. A general resume ! the cr^d'tor? to present their cinirns, i"S' on thp !:;i5m«s of snid corporaStars, authors, song writers, | Goldner filed s_ petition in: ss.iS Conn- : rrorr; the 2?trt flav of Octoher. 1X~, • tfo". A'IC fc* ih** pnrpope of comof the work was presented by Mr. ding dinner was served for 25 im- Nevada. He,is a son of Mr. and B R r C E CHAWFORD, ! piete erioyrner.t of said corporation, 3 8 Mrs.'. Max HerzoXf, 2310 Court mediate relatives of the bride Grueskin' .'.directors, orchestras and featured J mmis^rat'ioS^EcS^unt^fiie'a herein be ; 5: 10-E-*T-St. County Judg-e, | the sp.ic Cismpf-nv is authorized to ' and groom. Guests from "away street. ". •* ':'!•.. borrow morse'-, the ssrae to be secured players of every classification ! settled and sllowed, and that he be FRAOENEUR5. WEBB. EEEER, who attended the wedding were The couple were married Sep- wlU lend their talents to making! i£*£T?ul?>? h^rin™^" *T£i in such rr;a>;nsr nf the Board of Di"Ben Barkin; assistant executive KLUTZNfCK & KELUEV, A ' . t y s , rp.-to^ m;--.y rviiinn>e. The total sn'Mrs.' Leah Baron, Mr. and Mrs. tember 21 in Reno, where they t h e p r o g r a m . ' a n o u t s t a n d i n g g O j o n ssid petition before said Court/on 5Jn?or> £';Ete Bank S i d e thc-rizr^l cp;^*.^i' s'l-ick I? Sl<).oo>HHi. par secretary of the A. Z. A., will A. H. Baron and daughter, Bev- reside. VH'iie r-w.ev p» r simra. F.l! stock combe the principal speaker at the BY PUEi-SCATIOfv! ON F E - ' mon. anr3 shall be fully pnid and nonminutes of drama, music and j «£t ^ % ^ n 1 o " ? S ^ ' b ^ S ^'•: N3T1CE Rabbi Theodore N. /Lewis will erlyy of Sioux City; Mr. and Mrs. FOR S E T T L E M E N T OP i n^^epsnbi^ T.-hc?- is.-:m-<I. Tiie corporaA. Z. A. Day celebration planned comedy., AU Of t h e i m p o r t a n t • Court on the said SOth day of Octo- i TiTlON er I9 T a t 9 Irving Goldstein and .children, Relatives of Hiss Eva. Orllkoff, tion RlinJi cornrnence businc?=: upon FiSiAL M-G-M pictures will be previewed \ j? ; ". , . o'clock A. jr.. and con- i COUNT. AUIV.ilMiSI KAT1ON AC- : the by the local chapter for October speak this evening at the regular fiiinr o"" thp nrMolea with the they essay on the screen. daughter of Mr.'.and Mrs. Eon Paul Jean and Eernadine of Chi.. . ,. . .. , , test sasa petition, the Conrt mav 8 o'clock service on "Russia and 17. The Omaha chapters have In the Count?- Court of Douglas Ci.ujrty CI"rl-: o* Doiiirto County, Nethe the stars playing t hof e roles grant the prayer of as saidtopetition, en- '' County. With inauguration the !ances cago; and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gral-j Orlikoff, and Ben Dobrofsky, son braska, rnr! shr.V. continue- until .lanthe New Freedom." ;•! Xelirssfcsu and decrees, this Court jm ter a decree of"1he'rBhip, and raak© • In the Matter cf t h e E s t a t e of UB"y ~i, IT'tiC. Toe hiE.-hest amount oC been invited to Sioux City to at^\ seem to theorders, _en<^ that &u nek of Fort Dodge. of Mr. and" Mrs. Nathan Dobrof- new sho-vr, t h e . present Maxwell,! such other proper, and further sl'ovrphri'! ??ot ^Tc^er! t*1--O"tend the program that day. X.. Ccwger, Deceased. , indebtf'flip^^ Mr. Baron and his bride spent I sky, witnessed their wedding in House program, Cap'n Henry's 1 be'^finafiy'^ettiied'ind fletermlnel ^ ^ .! Frances All rerson<; interpsted in sakl mr-t- ; The phapter held a weiner . BRTCE CRAWFORD. •ter Ere hereby noti.f.ied • that on the ,thirds Of thp O^piiRi prnck. "'im bt several days in Sioux City tliisj the SnaareZion synago-ue Sun- Show Boat, will be t e m p o r a r i l y ! roast last Saturday evening, with 1 Stli day of Occober, 1?"~, Flors Heide- : nn.s? affair? of thr corporate County Judge. week, - and left Thursday for I day afternoon. Rabbi H. R. Rab- discontinued after some 265 con- 10-S-37-"t <i mann filed a petition in said County be mzxTingec hy R Paarc OL ~ Morris Ginsberg ia charge of the Rabbi H. R. Rabinowitz, will Choyenne, Wyoming, where they | inowitz and Cantor A. Piiskin of- secutive broadcasts, one of the STATEMENT C F OWNERSHIP, 'Court, pr&yinfr t h t t her 'itist Edmln- j than t^'o nor nio^-e Thpn fp-e • i \ arrangements. At the recent speak this evening at Shaare Zion her, v h o PhF-i^. be plect-?n r-1 7 MANAGEMENT, ETC., C F T H E ficiated.A wedding dinner for 60 longest runs in radio .history. ~1 tied &i>d allowed, a n a that she be j ntiKl Troe;ir;i:- of the Ptoi'kho! ' •• • JEWISH PRESS meeting funds were contributed synagogue on "Th^ United States will make their home. guests followed .the ceremo^r. ;.<1ischsrfreil froTti her trust ris rdmin- : be f-cid on t!i«r first ?.Tnn.-!ay by the chapter toward the pur- Constitution and the Jews." Canuary of each year. The I^on.r iistrs>tr:x and ihrA a. bearine vill be ! Required by the Act cf Congress cf Mr. and Mrs. . Dobrofslty..left Fast Day for Hassfyk. Mr. and Mrs. I. Aisenberg of chase of an iron lung. i had on sr.id. petition before ssi<t Court i from this number. eJpct s p-; March 3, 1533 tor A. 'Pliskin and the synagogue Statement for October 1, 2J!."7: P u b - : on t h e ",0th. day of October. ISflT, Eiia i: •Prague (WNS) — September The chapters basketball prac- choir will chant the ritual. The Creamridge, New Jersey, are vis- for- New Orleans, from where they ' thr.t if you fail to appear before said Tirer. T'be corporation P5:R1! lished -vreekly a t OinahE, Xebrasks. will sail' October ? for z. Carib14th, the day of the death, .of tice will begin"in-the middle of new and enlarged choir is com- iting in Sioux City with their T r a c k Ackerman: publisher j Court on the said SOth day of Oc'o- s-ral. The nriicic-f- mnv be. r bean cruice. They will make- their Thomas G. ^lasaryk, founder and" Editor. and OTtTier, • David Blacker; known .; ber. 1837, a t 9 o'clock :.A. J'., a n c ccrj- ; at nv.y mfoMns of fh^ p;o<'! ^Sctobef. . • . posed of Ida Heshelow, Ann Lip- nephew, Morris Aisenberg. Mr. Ihe f..-rfi'-matp-e w:e <">: iv:< home in Sious City upon their first president of Czechoslovakia, stockholders, irjortgrairees s n d other test said petition, t h e Court ms.y [by !r ton, Tillie Shindler, Jean Mont! 5rrar.t the prsyer of sa;.,'i petition, en* of : P.W i?5=u?r] Pr:d out. tr-uri?ni" security holders, holding cme per oent return. ' and Mrs. Aisenberg are members was pr o c l a i m e d as a , per- or more of bonds, mortgages a n d o*5i- tor s. decree of h^frship. End TD£l<e \ provided notice of the rose, Ann.Raskin, Ida Shindler, •MANY- AT BOOK REVIEW Norma Cohen,' Gussie' Sekt, Mar- of the Hechalutz farm in; New ' Kuch other "nil further orclers. r:liovr~ • none. petual fast day for_ the Jews of er securities, lances End decrees, ns to this Court •<Si.srr.e3) DAVID BLACKER. Dr. M. B. Pass • of Denver (jzectulovalna in a 'manifesto isgaret Kosberg, Mrs. M.'B. Herz- Jersey, preparatory . to going . to Sworn ta and sub^cri^ed before rne .may seem proper, to the em! t h r t r.il A large attendance heard the off, Jack Merlin, Earl Novich, spent last week-end in Sious City sued by tfeeCsech rabbinate dur- this 1st Say ef- October; lf'37. ; matters pertair.injj to said pstrte n s y ; I be finallr settled s n d •HiAXK n . ACKERUAS, first in the series of book reviews Bernard and Lester Lazriowitch, Palestine to make their home with his uncle and aunt, T.Ir. and ing the funeral of the great i ' EKTCE Xotarj" Public. given by Rabbi H. R. Rabinowitz Ben Leibowitz, Jack Zeligson, Da- next year. , [Mrs. A. I. Sacks. i lO-S-17-St. °<>« (Commission expires J u b ' -S. 104") statesman. Monday evening in the social Tiall vid Tiievitz,- Waiter Woskoff, of the synagogue. He reviewed George Shindler and Joseph BarMiiM^l^fe^ai^jS^fe^a^i^^ "The Pretender," by Feucht- ricks. •wanger. , . , At the Junior Congregation The next book review will be ET~3 given October 18, and the Rabbi service tomorrow morning, Harold Rosenthal will act as Cantor; will review "The Seven Who David Kuntz, reader:of. t h e law, Fled." and Miss Rose Goldman of the Hebrew School will tell the chilI C C dren a story. ' \••;•.''
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The game room at the Jewish Community Center has "been fully equipped and is open every afternoon and evening. Two ping pong tables have been installed as well as bean bag games and checker boards. The ballroom dancing class met . "Wednesday evening in the Center for its second session.
Society News
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Miss Rose Holdofsky, daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Harry Holdofsky, will become the._bride of Marvin Krockover, son of Mrs. Rae Krockover of Kansas City, this Sunday afternoon a t 5 o'clock in the Shaare Zion synagogue. Rabbi H. R. Rabinowitz and Cantor Pliskin will officiate at the marriage ceremony." Mr. Frank Huntsman, violinist, and Mrs. Frank Huntsman, pianist, will play the nuptial music. i; . — _ _ ,. . George Shulman will sing "I Love Two Hebrew school, teachers You Truly" and "At Dawning" have been engaged for the local before the ceremony. Talmud Torah and classes were The bride, gowned, in white resumed last Monday. Miss Rose Goldman of Chicago and- Mr. M. satin, will be attended by her B / a u n o f Atlanta, Georgia, will sisters. Misses Fannie and; Hannah Holdofsky. Her gown will be in charge of. the classes. In a statement concerning the fall in a long train, and her long Hi;br3w school to the Jewish veil will be caught in a. coronet Pres.!, Mr. Jack London, presi- of pearls and orange blossoms. dent of ..the Board' of Education Miss Fannie Holdofsky will wear said,. "We are pleased to an- copper gold velvet and Miss Hannounce that we have succeeded in nah will wear a -rose taffeta .--..getting two very efficient He- gown. Little Miss Libbie Knpx, brew school teachers, -and we urge all parents who have chil- daughter of Mr: and Mrs. Jacob dren of school age to register Knox, will be the flower girl, and them at once. Registration will be Arthur "Fein, son of Mr. and Mrs. held this week from 4 (o 6 and Frank Fein, will be ring, bearer. Sunday morning from 10 to 12 Max Holdofsky will act as best T .man. . .• ; '•';,-. o'clock. : 250 . invitations have been-issued for the wedding dinner, which will follow the ceremony. Services at Tiphereth Israel A dance will be held in the social synagogue will begin this evening hall, of th3 synagogue from 10 at 0 o'clock and Saturday morn- until'12 o'clock with Frank Hastings and his orchestra supplying ing at 9 o'clock. Rabbi S. Bolotnikov will begin the music. Guests from away will Include a series of talks-on the Chumish, Sunday and Monday at 5 o'clocii Mr. and Mrs. M. Myerowitz, Mr. in the afternoon, and on the Tal- and Mrs. S. Kanner, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Kanner, Mr. and Mrs. I. mud Tuesday and Wednesday. Sofcolsky and Mr. and Mrs. Baumer, all of Omaha; Mrs. Jacobs and daughter, Beverly, of Kansas City, and t!-e bridegroom's mother, Sirs. Ray Krockover of At a Board Meeting of the .Sen- Kansas City. ior Hadassah held Tuesday afterMr. Krockover and his bride noon, the -following program will leave for a month's trip to committee was named: Mrs. Max the west coast, and Trill make Hosenstoclr, Mrs. H, R. Rabino- their home in- Siouz City after Vitz, Mrs. Theodore N. Lewis and their return. Sirs. E. N. Grueskin. Sirs. Louis Agranoff was Sol Lansberg, son of Mr. and named chairman o£ the member- Mrs. John Lan3bergv 2707 Jones ship drive. street, left Sunday for New York Plans were discussed for the City TChero he ia attending the Hadassah Sabbath to be held No- world serle3 Eame3, Beforo reTember 6 and tiie first meeting turning home, he will make an extended tour of the east. scheduled for October 3G.
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The hxisband whe^ss ia a hurrry to go off to business . . . the •wife who is getting ready for her., household .tasks . . . . both* greet the new .day -with .the refreshing, friendly stlssulatlosa of a cup' ai. 'dellctcss MAXWELL HOUS COFFEE at the breakfast table. What -esajoyssent it brings! What good cheer It gives! For MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE, a favorite ia Jewish homes for 'oye? half a century, Is a matchless Mend of better coffees! Its richness • arid' raelloiraess of flavor; its sisooth, fusil.Tbodied goodneEs is&vites '•siahesitatiag enjeysaent of another cap. Wonderfully .good with cream or miik with! MILCKIG caeals a.nd felack .with FLEISCHIG meals.
Urge Registration ., for Hebrew School
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Tftis fliser coffes cosssss to you V
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BRIP GEINb for tsakisg the richest, raost drip coffee.you've ever tasted. ' ! 1 REGUL/KR GEiriD for making perfect coffes ha. pcrocl^tsr er by toil!r*~.
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