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1937,. by Seven Art3 iiure Syndicate)
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|RG, WEBB, - B E BS-R k and KEU-EY. Aft?'* in state Bank. Bldg,, Omaha, Neb. iiereby given that on No-. 1937. the Bartsh • Sanders cipal--place or txansactlljg ' Omaha. Nebraska, adoptflment to' its Articles ifcf•• l .by? which Article 1 was read as follows: . " S a n e -
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his owB'antl do-nafriecescarily 'reflect-the'- policies 6* attltodo. of/onr-publication. "Re* jspcfiEctioii ia' tvliolo • a? in -. part -strictly lorbUidgh. ->•.., •---/.
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of thfa corporation,' sljti!K Mitchell. Jnc." : . .. .:• Omaha,-Nebraska, t h l 3 ' November. 1537. „ :£• SANDERS MOTOR COJ' lax SL Bnrisli, President..Elutznick. .
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I n s p i t e / p i t i e extensive and quite justly written article in the Times of December 3 there will 1)0 or, at least, there may ba a temptation on the part of American Jewry to let the Mexican iaatter elide from Its consciousness. For it Is true that /we have many and sharp . preoccupations, Tery many and very .sharp and that it is hard, brutally hard to be forced to add another to those.
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:URG; :WEBB, BEBER, :NICKJS. KELLEY, •
Attorneys . . on State Bank Bldg.- -
Publication" on Petition ait of final • Administra-
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jraska, in tbe Matter of of Jeanette -;Itubin, l>e-
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3 interested In said mat:by notified .that on the f-November... 1937. isaao a petition in said County \ns; that his filial a d t i h wrant filed herein ,t>«, sf-tbwed> and that he be dish tis.'trust-as adminisfTa. ill annexed and that a &o had on said petition Court on the 27th day rif 337. nnd that if yon fall tsfore said Court on tbe br- of December. 1937, nt 9 jL, and. contest said ->etibrt may grant.the prayer Stion, enter a decree «if d mate • such other ; anil prs. allowances and . deh this Court may seem [he end that all niattei s to. said estate may bo td and determined. 5EICE CRA\CEORt>. County Judst".
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Eatsred as-Saoona Ciasa Hall flatter OQ January n . isa; at
OMAHA, XSB3ASKA,
-" • t^atoTfiea o? Omaha,-.Nebraska, DUiier the Act of March S. 1S79
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FLORENCE BARS ' »TA)—A conflict e Jews of Florence a by the decision of t i e ,,,i-d of tbe Jewish Community to Tetnove the women choristers from the choir of the Great temple. The presence of women in t i e choir provoked strong protests from the more'orthodox members of the Jewish community.
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Affair ;W-i II Again en to •Anxious amatenrs' are awaiting the spinning, of Omaha's own wheel of fortune this Sunday evening at 7:45:-when the local lodge of B'nai B'rith' presents its second annual amateur night at the Jewish .Community Center. Billy Meyers, who has been associated with the Federal Music project here In Omaha, and who formerly was master of ceremonies at-the Paramount theater, will be master of ceremonies for the evening. -
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S e c t 2fef7 Oorraissionsrs ans Governors at
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j The anneal meeting and ban-: | (juet of the Vaad H'lhr were held j T'ae i last Sunday evening' at the Jew- : for St.- •z'ish Cominunity Center. Over I 20 0 "members participated in an I evening of speeches and enter-; fainmtnt. • - Mr. -Morris Burstein, as toast- i master, introduced the speaker. i\ J of the evening, Rabbi Uri Miller; of New Orleans, La., former j spiritual leader of the Yaad. R&b- j bi Miller stressed tbe need of | such an organization as the Yaad
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Kin of Omaiias * Dies ia St. Paul
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-Proposes World Conference of ' Jewish''Savantf
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a conference of scholars, writers, T * in Mexico there was at least one rabbis, educators and social work~» i — ' j the I non-Aryan. - Now evidently this JEROME NAMEDers be formed in this country "to i tine German group in Mexico has unstudy and deliberation T O SECURITIES BOARD substitute dergone all the deteriorations of for passion and partisan emothe entire German people and is tion" arid that a world conclave "Washington, D. C. (WNS)— now, led by embassy and consulh& then organized on a similar ate, a virulent center ; of anti- Appointment of Jerome N. Frank, basis. He also urged organiza, ^ , _-,, ^ ^ T>—-__^ : Semitic infection. So .soon as New York attorney, to one of the tion of lay groups to meet and of- So interested is tbe German • r^T you have'"such a center it Is/not two vacancies on the Federal Se- fer criticism, of organized Jewish go-v\rninent in the utterances of j speeches made while ia this conn- \ too difficult to persuade Bhop- curities * and 'Exchange commis- life, and spoke of the need for a Dr. 'Joachim P r i n i , who will i try have been forwarded to Ber- \ Iceeper and-small •manufacturer sion, was announced here by speak here on Jas. nrv *, t"1 at ix^ ^-r~^ ~— j - ^ — = ^.—r, r v. c _ -and artisan that he would be-a President Roosevelt^ . Mr. Frank, change of attitude on'the part of since lie lias esi1 - r i a cn. ^ - c "tL little better- off if --the- Jewish who is- a graduate of the IJniver- individuals' to emphasize tbe im-rent lecture tCur, r r ct j portance of. Judaism as a tradithe Xazi espioE"" «•'•— aeighbor were robbed or expelled sity of Chicago and a member of ' tion. - •.- • . : or ostracised. But in.order to getthe New York law firm of Green- • He recalled the conference oa ways been ia •-•> a r <--Dr. Prinz, unt 1 zi' *1- ~ men~ to consent to robbery smil baum, Wolff & Ernest, had pre-Jewish .Affairs and Institute of country in tbe e""'v r a i, "" cruelty againsf the'- .imoffendihg' viously been associated with the tcV administration as gen-! Biblical and Post-Brbllcar Litcni- of Germany's, iu *-or r 1 those Innocent'"feliowraen/Tnust XTntil last' a " ^ „ American corrc " 1 *' and e Institute this . "Judischo RUEn-' T " myth,'which .girts .others-[-well-..- ' - .• -. : . , we iope to i 'Gennan Zionist • - — • the courage; to:'beconia/ tiieves ' .He..re'EJgnea .!a" Kay, 1336, .loir lowing .a,'shak'eup.'inthe:A. A. A. |-thempermanent mstituUojis. . ever the Nasi t,u~ ^r~ ~ arid hooligans . . . . . " • ;'/.' ;.,,".. : ———: ."' taken exceptio f i j i » •It is not to be;-thought1 of that For a'time'he was.'special assistThe ' salon of Signora Nathan, in speeches in ,. r ^ktnerican Jewry, can 'stand, ssisis snt to-the.'Reconstrnctlon Finance end see this*r; monstrous thing corporation; and recently was en- j mother of.: Ernesto Nathan, "'late ordered tbe "Ku ^ I 2 Succeed in this Hep.ublic of Sles- gaged as -government counsel In j mayor of Rome, was. the center /aim from its ^ v. ». — (CoBtinued-Qirpage s.)• - power.cases. He is 48 years old. i for the adherents, of Mazzini. eats.
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' . But the Mexican situation- is sinister - for two reasons; ; marks the arrival of active politico-economic, anti-Semitic Jegis-_ t «* -„* lation - on this continent; it establishes the tact-that, such legislation can be attempted in a country apparently democratic and-at least by- its slogans revolutionary. Furthermore there are only 18,000 Jews among the Mexican millions; Jewish immiSecretary of Interior Tells of j to sponsor traditional onbodox; gration., into /Mexico . has always Judaism in Omafaa. j Those Jl'Saiping <*» Cash prizes of 515, §10 and 55 beensmall and is, from the naThe annual report of the Vaafi i Liberty wHl,be awarded to the three amat u r e b t the country and its posactivities was given by I. Gold- i sibilities, jaot likely ever to be teurs adjudged winners by the apstein, president. Greetings on | New York (JTA)—Secretary of considerable. The Jews who are plause of the audience. - . behalf of the Ladies auxlliarr —The Interior ' Harold . L. Ickes, citing not £t ; there have worked hard to estab- " Included , in the entries are: persecutions of minorities for were extended by Mrs. D. B. Eping Erlish themselves in a mo3t modest Bab'ette",'G'irisburg, vocalist; Bob stein, president. racial and religions reasons ; •way.. The majority have a tevy,,.;tap :dancer; Stan. Epstein,^ Mrs. H. Belmont, accompanied • among the "sniplngs at Liberty" accordionistand acrobat;.Louise' tshtickel parnossah, a bit of a. livby Al Finkel, sang several num- the r ' ^ behind "our o w n democratic ! ing—no more. And now the cry Nathan, tap-dancer; Melvin Linsfront," warned jast week against bers. Cantor A. Schwaczkin also the coi.rtrj. Coir- r" SP" Lor• is raised Of the;:danger "of "un- man, radio _ impersonator; ; Orms! j -Gore rr.: -^rc'. "Fascist-minded men" .as "the prepented a musical 'program. house cf re—.r"-^' .n r^-ri^ desirable immigrants" and the raine ,Fregger,, vocalis.t; .Florence Tbe following were elected as real enemies of our institutions." a quecticm ^ v *^CT^ "^— / ' " •'quotas f r o m those countries FredkW sbng and t a p ; Harriet •commissioners for the coming, Addressing the anneal diaiier : Orms1'; -Co-e r ? . - ; -o . . whence Jews may come are cut Bernstein',.vocalist; Eleanor FredStanley F. Levin, S. Kavitz, of the American Civil Liberties i J with rcrsrd 1 c tLe '•cFtiodown to ,nothing and the cry is kin, . acrobatic dancing; Justin Levinson, 1,1. Kosenstein, I. ' union at the Hotel Roosevelt, Mr. by Goc'Tr^r ' also raised of "disloyal competi- Ross, vocalist, and Maurice Klai-p," J Ickes said that "it is these men Goldstein, L. Epstein, Dare tion" which'is a queer synonym man, comedy siriger. Conaectientt Yankees Adopt who, pretending that they would j Crounse, Dr. O. S. Belzer and whether it i= 7 • r-s°>l ' - r a joirt co~:r . «-c rr .--1.,, : ' for honest, decent Jewish/busiA. Z.'-A. •. 100 has' entered a Eesolution Against save us from dreadful ' Com-! Morris Burstein. to ccr1' ^"=r :-.crs f-r t! » e w ness, and a' Mexican legislator sketch with . the following cast: / • : Band Camp munisin, would superimpose up-j * members cf the board of of Pr'^7 -p " named, amusingly', enough,- Israel Sonny /Richard, Manuel Himelon. America an equally dreadful! governors are: Earn Epstein, Mas • Falcon, says- that the Jews are stein, - Jack Epstein -and Norman Arbitrsan, Max Fromkin, Max Southbury, Conn. (JTA) —- Fascism." v T:'''"1"" ~ rr in Mexico Illegally, 'having come KukUn. Morris Adler, Ray Scha- Some 160 farmers and townspeo! Eirshenbauni, Jake Shj-kin, Has i n g t c ** " r ' - * — " - t 1 <• """ r " ".' T ' ~ "Of what a t avail is it," he /in as P61e3 and Czechs, etc. piro, Leo Sherman and Sam Wolk pie, "~r —--— ""-•", ple, most of of them o: of. Yankee ex- jc l.a '"°f ^ *!*!!. % " j , " . " t f P t'' Chasen. N. S. Yaffe, S. Katlemac.; on Orfo^rr r i . red town ' t 0 P r e T e a t d i s c n a ^ a t i c n ;S a m B l o o m £ n d H a • Whereat the Times correspond- will present a comedy skit for A. traction, voted at a special Merriam. T a k . r g .^n-f v . ir O c «-if f* ,; ~ "T, y •" , by t h e state because of race or i [___ i • ent correctly asks . just where Z. A. 1. Sigma Apha Mu of Lin- meeting last week to bar the pro- j meat cf. Le He* c' Cc-~ r, -_ rr, ;because of religous, political t r ' . ^ . ^ . ^ . , . / r ! ^ ^ ^ « . m ^ T -•Senor Falcon expected them to coln has entered t h a t :rrrr r r r t ' - r .-•—cr*—r e^->." < -i >-J. T - - , - -.:-" . a sketch en- Nazi' • German-American B u n di VT economic faith if such discrisitna- ' [ , r f : ;| ' '_v ; ' • r_\' ' rj£et Jewish/passportsV Three Jews, titled "Grunts *n Groans," with from establishing a camp here. n o m i c rhso-> 1,1 e ! ^ , - . r , i ' - "• — " s ' ~ - , •£' » i one being Kurt Rosenfeld* have Norman Bordy, Irvin Yaffe and c o l o n i ' l ?- cr-tf—'- t - " ." = r ~ i ^ r v - r ' - " - - ,~ - s ' A. unanimous resolution was tion is allowed to corporate pow-1-^T^/«4-»I /already been expelled as "unde- Dave Bernstein: i er which in many ways has shown sdopted condemning the estab-jf' -• slrafoles." A Geserah' in classical w i t h t h - " o - " ' -«• ~r , - ' • ' . " " *-- - t - r - .-- r~ -~ • - r Ernie /eriesman will a c t as a c - i i s h m e n t ^ w i t h i n t h e town of " a n y ^ i t s e f t 0 b e E t r o n S e r , more perva-, I sive and more ruthless than the ". Is developing [ in the sister cbmpanist for the evening. Isirr.irrr'i-h1" '""'"• " ' •'" - •* " 1 -\ <- " - organization which is governed or republic—is - that not the" phrase gres.ter r - c T " ' r r 1 '" " < — ' The committee in charge of ar- directed by a foreign govern- state Itself?" Attacking the supreme court, c -•—to-the South.rangements for the evening in- ment." Secretary Ickes asserted that j ••' The Cardenas government pre- cludes Dr. Leon Tellman, Milton The meeting-'then voted to "when the congress, all to rarely,', tends'not to know,-not to.,under- Frohm and Art Robinson. Hymen aag1 TJsofficially, Voics rEise_ r- C" •establish a zoning commission, has sought to protect minority j stand, not to have any h c n d i h i ' a ' chairman.--of the' which. ..it is;understoodtjjfll_rnJ.< -grotip^s srg&isst~~racial--sHscruBiaa-) j ^ f ^ r . ,-Jt is a. S i i t i e e - -;'.-•• /.'.••' S-.-.'"•?' '-'••'-'' '- •' as sodn -as It ia organized, ths color."' r ' " Oiasli Inevitable tion and economic coercion, the | styled revolutionary: r'Last year's amateur night was the land acquired here by the t h e i"'~7 "" supreme court has frequently nulI except one_ within the very one 'of the most successful events London (JTA)'—Support of a ' RoyEi C1 Bund is not suitable for camping lified its efforts." administration "of that govern- ever 'taking place at the Jewish plan broached by President Jticah •' • r e c t .". -•= r * .. . ^ can tell y what devious Community '"'Center. A record- purposes. Mr. Ickes recalled the "moronic Magnes of the Hebrew university ; c~ 1 - r p " r b ~ i * jr""£i'"- •- ' T' The Bund last month quietly (motives and what dark devices breaking crowd filled the Center exhibitionism" of the Ku Klux j in Jerusalem, for a solution oZ! 'and what sinister Involvements auditorium. ./Winners of the con- bought some 500 acres bordering Klan a few years ago, and said the Palestine problem based on a • that government plays its present test were later taken to nearby on Lake Zoar. Aroused by what that although it had died down bi-national state rather than par- ; -. r r~ri* v r ,. retar 1 evil and equivocal game. In an B'nai B'rith chapters where they many called an incipient-Nazi in- here, the same kind of "nightt a student; the K*" " ?~ * l > ' 1 ' vasion, the townspeople called the eloquent and subtle editorial the appeared on the program. shirt" lunacy had engulfed whole con cniver- : meeting to prevent the Bund j[nations abroad. He asserted that Jewish liay, having recounted sity by Mussa Husfeisi, a cousin ' had T;'f-r-«-. : - , - , » . r ' There will .'; be no admission from opening its camp here.j "Fascism has not been quaranthe situation in -Mexico, comof Jerusalem's exiled Mufti. . • tion? rc r ET " • . The meeting, which was held in j tined, but that it- is capable of ments as follows: "But the gov- charge. . ; Discussing the possibilities of gratio n A= : r y s e r r * the Congregational church be-] ernment .13 good', to . Jews; only , Arab-Jewisb. co-operation, Hus-; tiens - t" c• V , . - — 5 e .•when it'comes to Jews, It loses cause the town hall was too ] ieapicg wide oceans." seini stated that unless an agree- ; ~ r .g-at. C - C t. T " r--r that all' its power and all It's Influsmall, was presided over by the r meat were reached along the lines I Tl1c- v ^ y •=• T t t a t r "F" ence. Strange, what our fate is Rev. 51. E. N. Lindsey, pastor of of the Magnes proposals, a clash T z . ~r ~ said. •vr* r - t . - - ' like! The strongest become weak the church, who acted as moderawould be inevitable. He said a the r~~ v -t -!- i - v - . , ~ •. ^ 'as they would interest themselves tor.. Mr. Lindsey told his congreround table conference Was the avai"" •fdr us, the,cleverest turn foolish Charlotte Sacks, the • sixth gation from the pulpit last SunWord has been received here j =: o n l y g o l u t I o a o f t e impasse but and the best turn wicked. Thus member of her family to gradu- day that the Bund was an "nndo s , t 7'-T" '- T i t v " " " " of the death cf Sirs. Rose Cher-, t f a a t t M g v o l l l d hbe futile without it Is everywhere and always; ate from South High school, will Christian, un-American, insidious basis for agreeerant having been •niss, who.died December S m at. thus i t has come to.be in Mexed be c o m menee- menace." beforehand, Husseini ernPaul,.Minn., where she had li^ j reactiea ico, too." . ' .,.'". . . ment speaker at Every resident of the town re- for the past 56 years. Mrs. Cher-. p i E s i z e d thcit he was expressing • Have wo any ulterior facts to t h e graduating Ic e l T e a the niss was .a frequent personal vie—s and did a special appeal in visitor m ] go on? I happen.-to/know that t h i s mails to attend the meeting; with Omaha and had many relatives only exercises esent any family party. the German colony,1a' Mexico not r A --' " - evenlns. a reprint of a magazine article at- here including her brother, Juland,..especially In Mexico; City, tached on the Nazi camp move- ius Sherman. As astudent has been for many years a strong ' at South, .Miss merit in the United States -calling ' Mrs.' Cherniss was the widow •colony. These people '• never at' Sacks has taken it a direct arm of German govern- of the late A. B. Cherniss who tempted—and this was upon the as a s part in the many ment propaganda. died a year ago. whole their Tight—to become be > ! activities includ- Surviving besides Mr. Sherman -Mexican in any but • superficial i is Mrs. Louis Abranamson of St. j i n g .dramatics, senses. They always had;, their [ "Warsaw (WXS) — Enrsged by Paul, a sister. own schools-and colleges, JUis- ^Clikvloita S.-.cks Prince ' syst-" the marriage of youni landa-schulen "w i t h "faculties debate,' 'journalism- and music. MIchae! Radziwill, scion cf one of | brought from Germany. When, She represented Omaha in the the oldest and most ariEticratio j cast >1C0R TO PRESENT Tipon America's entry into the Midland debate tournament and ;| families of Polaad, to a Jewess, i TVorld "War, the registration in won a . debate scholarship that MOTED OPERA SFARS\ New York . (JTA^.Organizahis relatives-held a family pow-i fro'si the German, departments of our took her en a tour of the west tion of a world conclave of lead"~————— j wow and issued a, statement <ie- . City. colleges and universities dropped and south. She has been a mem- ers of Jewish thotight "for the Kan . The Omaha branch of Icor will j i j i n s a a s £nd t b a t h e is to nothing,-more than one teach- her of the Dramatic club, for j the'sig- on December 26 present Mas j ch a r n g legally p u r p o s e o f considering irresponsible. ! ce) er of German and more especial- three years and had a part in the nificance and the' development of Brodin and Zelda Elatin, famous j e nThe statement was designed to senior play. our tradition" was urged at a Jewish opera singers, at a cully the discharged Prussian - exnullify a marriage contract in Besides being assistant editor dinner meeting by Dr. Louis Fin- tural festival to be held at the i which the Prince assigned half of change teachers were absorbed by the German gymnasia .in Mex- of the- "Tooter" she was presi- kelstein, provost- of the • Jewish Jewish Community Center. | his property to his wife, the forJewish folk songs, several I taer Jeanette Suchostov, a salesico. But in those, days the Ger-dent of the Portia club, reporter Theological seminary, who said mans in Mexico were minded like for the,-Purple Mask and is a tho proposal represented t h e sketches and Russian songs will I girl from Galicia. Radz'will also their government a t home. Their member, of the Advanced Senior views of the faculty .directors and be included, o-n tlie program. ; adopted t i e eight-year-old son of ' J e " ~ *-•" /.' alumni of the seminary. anti-Semitism was repressed or Glee club. 7 There will be no collection. | his wife "by a former inarriagre. i art, r - r - ' SIis3 Sacks i3 also a member of latent and among those then colDr. Finkelstein suggested that ; lice -": -'—r leagues of mine who were hired the National Honor society.
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mvpntonre Jn another ofrins or.llfls hotel. Wh»th•J.° -buSJnesi or pleasure at. the••&ole1 Clark makes V-Ideal—base of operapjjs- -as wcDaa a restful HUet"-. at the end of tho iy's "campaign." G o o a •«>a. .naturaly. Anfl moa-ite cnarses. as -well a3 for om accommodations, Eivo ml significance- to a'ssur-' Z:word—COMFORT.
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first r l v-~ ? — T '£V-screci 1 T- -Jr ~Ci ~ ~ rt isa Yc"•tv cn p-"t -. _,.E - cthe ,Te : < : * • C " ~ — - r '• Music frr 11." € r - c -c v r = r ( .._ • .—_-~ tOCM C-nisfced b- U
M1EETM
'LO3 ANQEUIS
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THE JEWISH PRESS—FRTDAY, DECEMBER 17. 1037
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terest. Audiences chuckled vitfc enjoyment over the representatlon of life In a fcachsliara-Clinlutz training farm — in America, and they Etcrecs in "svonder at the authentic interpretation oC Cbr.s-' sidie and other Jewish dances I At sc-rvicc».aa resho brought to them. For inter- 1j f ^ . d n.W.ro'? rercnor- t-ric -t ?';''TnTnlttp«- for a e he Are }\ e Los:np- T!-i Grr • f' i<»rm "Uictatorpretation of the Chassidlc spirit t - on -j» r L u f mbprs of the cn(i S require? cj."tio?;«nr-rs ' 3'n--j Patur^ay ntorn^g rerrires 1' fvlon \fo"mmittee patliy lcrt it* be ---a^prcratea' into be held at 11, r' 1 define the key .'A a groie^qr.e caricature. I Xest week ?-zl bi Ti'ice Dvora Lapson, America's Chas3ldic. feeling that dancing is inal compositions which reflected . r f . . ctv" «.' i'i ,. . j f. \ 1 r 1 • Fho vvr.s "the official gsie^t of, speak en "?,!PII of th? Year-"' - - 1 PP. headed 'by only important druiseuBo crc* a part fo life impressed Itself the dance of the Yemenite, of the tl.r.r. ccci.i t i c £T~- - ' ' t 1 >" the spirJliual leaders of ir.any cf — ^r~~ating entirely in the Jewish deep-into her soul. Rarely were ohalutz, of the chassid, of the 1 i 1'Tt'e, In<TIana, X T . Cu f c r J ' . . T l ' " . r ' the Cfca^fidic communities i n ! _ }"J'' ^ . filed, has just, returned. from her feet still; • seldom was • she oriental, the cabalist, the- Jewess v T»cn James B. 1 5 •cM"."' f-.I % I • i< central ar.d soatliern Pola-nd. } } ,f\ cver.jrc: _^r.^^i a tour of Poland during which not humming. Sho attended the welcoming tho -Sabbath with the • i\rx the Na'tional c t d l "i; * * •- I c r 11 11 ." v ' Usually they resented the tour- Da^id A. Golds'em v .1 j.pcc.1: or. she made concert appearances first Sholom Aleichem school in lighting- of the* candles. She not •"*$.-Pd at a comists T,-ho car.ie to look at their , "Growing Up—How to i^crtic = ; n r " f : o ' ' - < ' { - . - " * an<l studied material for new this -country, where she studied only made an art form of Jewish v )\ul t h e word ii"r c" i b ' l i ' i l " TctT-s. , ways, but Dvora Lapson, tsey ' ••lati-.re Porscr.ality." dances. Sho aroused, ninong dancing and pantomime. At nine dances, but interpreted .through < !"i F couid nnswer felt, .-vras one o£ them. Jlsny < -^'e*-'- Friday evrclr-s '_h^rct!: tho Polish Jews a new appre- she .'WHO' already being applauded dances every.- phase > o£ Jewish r r o ' e " t cl -.!_<-• r e r - E ; C V J - -•> , o » 1 rabbis wrote letters to theirTel-, -•- syss-c-cve i- invii::•;••, t-1 fftciation of the Jewish dance. by audiences. life. For she found rhythm in ' i >m^hf testifying atives !r. the Uaitcd-States tell- cents hc;r--£ror.; rchoc'. t" r t f r - ; Dvora Lapson, who is now As she grew older she perfect- the picture of tho Talmudist por* biir) etp'ressed Dvora Lepson ing-how the great American Jew- servlrrs v-.th their r<"rcri.\' writing a book on. the Jewish " ed her technique in the classical ing over his tomes and harmony 1 -1 ' *-he "definition : 1 dance end planning a nation* dance, - studying under s u c h in the sight of the Jewish ghetto hint can be found in the Hebrew ish danseuse iisd code to speak a srcc'.sl fcatv.-e Carf-r .'.r",-i; -• ' - - h, j ii is.ht' 'Kre lised Eclprr T-.U1 <-ff,clEle v wide tour in the near future, I teachers, as Irma Duncan, Doris wedding. terms for dancing, which signify to then and study their lore. i ; >-ts'<5.' A repre1 discusses in this absorbing in- I Humphrey and Michel Foklne. Dvora Lapson's fin^l appcer- u'ar c'-oir.av.gnTtec I : : ^ c , She showed Jew and Gentile leaping, circling, turning and *f ' rrrsy 'antf' Navy terview with The Jewish Press But the general dance was n o t ' tfae Jewish dance. She was dance making merry. ance in Polar.d was In the VIel- i=r chrlr. IlcLb: C''.£- c r . , r.,. -. . , , r T r r , p (l tlte bill. rik en '-Th£ Sur:c:r her experiences in Poland, the enough for her; while she could c :l director and leading danseuse of - "There was little Jewish danc- ka Revia, largest theatre in Vv'ar! • f f ' • • * , i , , F ' - v p o r t e f f receipt history of tho Jewish. . dance learn technique through the clasJacob Weinberg's Palestinian op- ing, in the. Middle Ages—little saw, and spencored by the I'td- Character." "' ^ \ - c" T r •• r c~ T^ " 'I < M o t w t B from and its importance as an art sical dance, nothing, thrilled her eration cl Jc»is>._ St.i:dcnts ctpe-l. " CChristians h i i - j - - ., . - „ , , r - - , ? _ - > „ „ . „ , , » f „ , - . , , . t h e ©stabllsh"VAAT they had in the days of persecu- land. A T«ord nudiencs of tiorery.,.-~r, . * „ - era, The Pioneers." form.-—-Editor's Rote. as had the Chassidic danco of her | i e a r n e d how the Jew dan-ces tion about which to dance. Still, At the lexc Ffr childhood. She wanted some- When she performed in two from -the oppression of the ghet- than 3.500 flocked to the they're RabM : : ; : t o i A. cr ; r ' r ' e -n ^ - p - -f, f r - ' < - -^ ^-"-'tinan-Anierican to jo'm in repeated ovatior.': for P A little, girl of five. begged her thing more. And so, after grad- churcheSr—the first Jewish: danc- to came Chassidisrn. At one of her. Among tiose present was speck cr. "A Father"! : father to take her to the Chassi-! ™tion from Hunter College In er to- appear in a church— in the the darkest moments in Jewish Mrs. J. L. Peretz, cced widow o£ Crr.tcr A. ?chv r c r k r v . die sntiebel for . . the Saturday | New York, she went to Palestine- Community Church in New York history, the call of the Baal the celebrated Yiddish writer. ate. and then 1n the great Rockefel- Shem Tov came like the rays of The regular .Tur.icr C night festivities. There, on New I Mrs. Pereiz waited for fcer after -Coming to the • Jewish home- ler Riverside C h u r c h . The refreshing .light. tlon f.ervi?"'- are l.'l.i n York's lower East Side, while the the perfor~.r-r.ee to praise her cai Sabbath stolo reluctatltly away land-opened new vistas.. Here churchgoers gained a new appre"The Baal Shem offered the work. It was Mrs. Perets's last •i;ref;&' _^ „ „ . ,. in the gathering gloom, the was Jewish life bubbling over. ciation ,-eif.-Jewish art. ' She also Jews escape from their worldly ! eTFr i appearance at a public funct on; ' g--turcci . ^ . ^ . .. Her* were exuberant Jewish performed Jewish dances in a cares and joy in communion with Chassidim, who had brought . v number of New Jersey schools as the creator through the ecstasy she died soon afterward. vril" their love of tho danco "with them dances to be found. v[zh rr The Jewish press, with one nc- Day sa:J she "l-rc^Eit "In Palestine," she said, "I a part of an experiment carried of dancing and singing. The QUIZ ant from' Poland, praised God " with cord, heaped garlands on the to Polar.d." officia tei ecstatic gyrations. . The ' girl's could see that the" dance has be-out by a committee of Columbia rhythmic swaying of the body exEven the ar.ti-Fcrr. . c rrc~':' and c act blua eyes gleamed as she -watched gun to play a new role in the life University educators, in present- presses.^ the exaltation of the brow of the American Jewi.-h •were i byj them;' her body swayed and" her of the Jew. Both as a spontan- ing the'cultures, of various peo- Chassid. "Wherever Chassidim as- danseuse. The tiseme of tbeir ar- was r.:cved to commer.t en i<-.---r f. ' * of J> Ce> , " j " «1 . - f r r ' f were sembled they were sure to reach tides was the sarae—Polish Jew- Lapsoi;, so creat a r f r i<r>l i^° on the part of ples in America. " These head shook to and fro, setting, eous expression v shoot! v J ry is amazed and glsd that such aroused. ABC, crgai o C :b" v a- - ' ^ " • " r t *• c -"' el ' 1 the s; the her braided brown tresses to masses?/ t>f- - enthusiastic • young contributions, to inter-faith and a stage of mass exaltation when JewiSh artistry should come from i.lently anti-Jewish Kara, .(KationJews, and as a medium of ^.cre- inter-group good will. ' . : "..'•' • ' • " . ' one d Sal •whirling;' the rebbe's discourse led first to America. M." Broderson, consid- j al Radical),,.Party, -_J>Hter Iy. ,^at- • ; in the anj Years later that girl,.who was ative art, the Hebrew dance is an intriguing'tune, then to a ges- ered the arbiter of Jewish art in | tacked-ber ,s.nd.. ,expressecL incig-r-»- ^ - > - •« T • - f v - r • ' f with' fcee now Dvora -Lapson, the famous once-more-coming-to-the fore. Dvora Lapson studied the Jew- ticulative dance." Poland. wrote in the Xeue Volks-| nation that . h.er toiir. had^be^en C. C o i * * i f l . T l ' O r ~ * n «~ V ' f locks, pal danseuse and mime, fulfilled -a • ."Th© best example Js the Hora. ish, dance,, tracing it back to the blatt of Lodz: ' | turned into •:a>de-njor1s.t4-aUoa,..or young < .long-felt hope by going to 'Po-This • dervish-like dance, though dawn of recorded history. DancIt. was this Chassidic joy of "One of the unusual and for-! Jewish solidarity that must hurt PTi| land to study the Jewish dance only .adopted, has become known ing, she found, - ha3-. been . the rhythmic religion- that -Dvora - - ., ; con at its fountain-head. But she did throughout the world. The Hora rhythmic expression .of religion. Lapson was able to study when tunate exceptions is a Jewish j Polish interests." f »r ' its heavy, thump- The physical faculties are coor- she went t a Poland in September. dancer froin America, Drora Lap.2 more than that; Dyora • Lapson dancing,.v The Jewish dsnee,.arabassador . -» 1 ^ *- • -Z- " •*---' son . . . . t h e first thing that ( danced for the- Jews' of- Poland— ing rhythm,; as if symbolic of a dinated :.witn' the feeling of ec- She went into the shtleblach s returned, now from-hex $ha interpreting .for: new.peasantry," has become'j'; so stasyrDancing has been that self- w h e r e Chassidim congregated, struck us was that she brought i 1r tour. "Sh^. caine.-.bapk .*••• 1 the old home spirit, and without j sidle dances that Poland had giv- closely. Sbvipled, with th© message forgetful union with, the spirit- and studied - cldsely the - body mind seethingT*cit' h ..,y—^.. iff apolegetJcs, of all places—from i ; jj^j en to the world—and -they were of the new Palestine that where- ual . ; is tho Tiighest*£orm -of movements and -the. hand .mo- America. Our own Polish Jewish •. dances,, and she t a d : ever _yon come upon a group £ of amazed, for there is a proverbial religion.. King. David said, in -..his tions. She made sketches in orin the .mind ,of; Polish .Jewry a . ; impression. abroad that American ctfaltftzim, whether it be In' Pal- psalm,;."All" my "bones -shall-6ay, der to be able better to interpret community, which, is so steeped c£ the,,_daiice. In traditional Jewishness, w i t h , , new appreciation -.- , .... • Jewry is culturally too immature ;estine or in the training farms 0 Lord, who is like unto,thee?" these-.dances. . its 'bottomless reservoir of Jew- [s h e .^ss begun, work . o n ,a book j ^to produce much-of artistic Jew- of-Poland,: Germany- or America, rl."Danclng,." says Dvora Lapson, While Poland has the source ! ish life, manners, lore, melody, 'on the Jewish dance. And. the you ara sure to find the Hora ;"j?as**an important .~nd "intimate * ish importance. • : .• '.material of the Jewish dance, in line and rhythm, has not danced "by all." ' « not pro- images In her m:r.d She acted" in the uncoriscious 'par;' of. the life of the Hebrews. plenty, Dvora Lapson found that duced even one crystallized ;e>.! into new cr.Tes vp __"."art'--She.also' observed Chassidic Sha, capacity of America's. JeVry amEvery important public event the Jewish dance, as an art form be shown to AnzcriT.- ,T?TTy from" Po- was-- accompanied by dancing. was hardly at all developed in ist, one cultivated Jewish dar.ee Sat bassador of. th'e; dance."' For,' al- dances,--'transplanted ; Dvcra Lr.proa e~b.£r1;s cr. . . , But America of the skyscrap4orj though she-"had. gone ;to; Poland land- to-^i'e- fresh soil of Pales- ,The-'-exodus, Jrom Egypt Was* ac-Poland, There was-not one out-er, sober, worldly, modern, has a caticn-wide tour in" tt? r a r , 1 tine. 'SHex-fBaw-.','small groups/'of to study, to ^ind in the life Vpf " ""'ed.^wHh tlmbrelsv.-and standing Jewish dancer-there, al- through Dvora Lapson, like a future. ;; , that intense''center of JewisTi.liv-; elderly pS|ple - dance with great jefng.'- l i the' desert the though many Jewish -dancers dove of the dance, sent tb u s ' ^ p of -:the Ing material'for her" hew .dances;: fcraeUteir,-. danced before? the were to be found in the • ballets good tidings of old-Jewish%beauty if Simetfh Bar Yo"j;"hai Golden. Calf. Jejjhtah's daughter and ensembles of-Poland. •• SIoi slie was also 'able tOvStlrilnt^esf; >lj<jffethe Cab^a) went ffutCto m<? S E'er1 v1c*t6rious . And-go ,t-ie .Jews- flecked to• see in lire form of dance. Wonderful If in 'the- Jeijrtsl" ->--••---'-•• *i.--•*-«• \ - , are your ways, O Jewish art!" '[ 1 F 'V*~A-' of the *"— f prmr-father ; tI >breIs' the ambassador of—the- Jewish Der Moment ol Warsaw said't and! means •. ,'b t-; religious?.3'vjexpr5ss,{ron^ upon ?.?" -The ^"Israelite", -women d.a n e e reaped,-xin- - "Immature she "was "sot 1 " feenUcientallj- or"; A u d i e n C e S ' 6 l • +W« ^TirjfW-"*i!»i* ftifjotand danced all flight went "out Vb'Tue.et -jSapJ. ^Araerlca^fT.h.ey gained a new ap- -shriekedly JevisTi., birt discreetly ' | 1 great if ire that bl'dzed from his victory"*over>p_ preciation both for the soio -and modestly Jewish." Kaint.[ holy tomb. • i and . poets. Hailed)" heri? ' \ .:; tines • 'with sieging "and with dance and lor American Jewish called-her "a poetic humorist." 1 j ances; • -Jewish sculptors ..; and '.•'"15eep'-'vshe- probed 'into Jewish dancteig.' . King David - danced artistry. The Polish Jews asked Th© Literarische Bletler declared ', -*y > r j painters' admired-the.beauty.aiid. lKejn 'Palestine to watch gestfire her about the dance; the-Yiddish "she coraes us vrith such deeply authenticity-oilier' gestures. ••' aird?.motions \and gesticulatlonss. • -'-"Usually-it ;was- _ the ';women newspapers discussed it exten- original accomplishments in £ • On'this tour :of "Poland; £rom In;.Jerusalem and-,.in; Safed.'jin -Who, took "the initiative r in'"'danc- sively. In Warsaw,.Lwow, Wilno, field which, vith us, bas not , I •which-'she has--.just returned, the: pioneer kvutzot of the Emek, ing. ^".Records are lacking, to de- Cracow and Lodz she appeared in been exploited." The Warsavr ' Dvora L'apsdn; in •addition- to she studied the rhythms of the scribe- "the Hebrew" dances, but a recitals and aroused, intense In- correspondent of 'the Xew Ycrk % .-dancing -and" studying :imaterial Yemenites, the oriental Jews and !A.br» for flew dances,, found time. to?;Inr [the-modern Jews, their folk lore, vestigate the general situation; of .their-'music and their dances. to prea the Jews. "She; visited the uni-The'" traditions of the Jews asOth« versities,- where : Jewish students sumed- richer meaning. Biblical r x *f Johi •were, daily •being " beaten. ' and Ruth,., the; daughter of Jephtah, Phil forced'.In to-"ghetto benches*"'and- •Esther, Miriam and David came ;txr life in her.imagination so tljat she visited -Jews of town-and': •Sirs, to see how •they lived. : In one she:was, able to construct dances yetai little town, she---stood, ; thrilled',. "about,ithem.-,- ;• before . the » house where' her : • ,rWhep. Dvora ..Lapson returned •Faac mother was horn. ,. :to the United States she revised her ."repertoire,, abandoning clasDvora Lapson.. is the only : TCCi C"'". TTI7CT7 r . *" 7L~'',~:CK K L , E B E D portant dancer- In the United sical dances "in. davor of her or^g",••-. iT"r-T- c - ^ -,- • f T . o . .r ~ _ - — " r t c t ' t o t h e , Per Us States; functioning exclusively, in ;- - ' , : -.-.-—'; -- - c . . . .-1 » - r .r • ' . -»: .a~e c u t . weU. the the Jewish field. Her chosen n .-''."'.-.- . - . - - . . , - ; . ; . - . . - : c, ; . . • • « t h e r cane, this sion*;is.;to.1 interpret to. the Jews ' I <' . " T - . - ^ - - - ,- cv— ~ i , ! , » F- T-CV V.-Oui<J Prim aami and to.1 tito outside world the tra'7'?} J -•'-c"i---"j: —•" "" — -" foc^ rv.Is, ant1 KC ^EONditions ahdy.earnings of the .Jewfrom clud; •S1 ish people through: the -medium cupei 1 • *,'• r . • t- ; ' BronEC, 10 O ?ng a of the dance. She conceives her- •yBraoo.'"Soft Gray- Iron and Set-ai-1 ' ' ' ' ' ~ ,' ' cord] self not as a dancer -Who -haj>pens; ' Stool" Casilngo, Wood and treaa t o - b e Jewish;-.tint- as a> Jewish t Metal Pnttcrno ond Snob' .•was dancer. The Jewish .conscious1 WeigHtO'carried in stock.*. Sirs, ness suffuses all for-work..-" ~ Brohzoi -and Cast Iron Sirs.. Grill go a specialty. ".It could hardly'-be otherwise. ^he i 'She. was born into a Chassidic 27th and Martha-St. family, living In New York, in -- HA 5523 • •was •which to dance and be Jewish B •were one and the same. The Jow.'i Per [i. ccrs
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Iletabers-of Theta chapter of over by Tlrs. J. C-11'T.PO \rr.3 Sigma Delta Tau held their pest- given Tu"|3ap^ sftcr;.^^ to to-2T v lu csana Chanukah party Thursday •or • 5ie™ • ns.'szabcrs of the Ecbcrri Daughters of Irr-el AiJ roc>t: ' » ^ ' ^'cTi~~ r"'"' ^' " ~ ". \~~" '"''1 i v^~~ night at the chapter houca. -The society, nphraini ;ij.rtE*£*vc „£ Trfll bs heli oa Tiisci-r, Dccc~-' Vc-i'T ~" "*" r - T : - ^ii-^~- Ir ' "° ** --'- - ' 1r r 11 vt v J short Us'.* o n ' t t e ^rcri: cf t^s occasioa was especially inisortb~~ 21 £t 2 "• n; ct""ii" *r" "l ' ' t~ '"i - -" V* ' — " *r" ant'elnea it T/CS also the birthday Talmud",Torch and rsye Eiell Ccr.:aiua;ty Cl-Ur. ' \ \ ~\"r ^ played, a ' nunber of J^Tisi ESAll rsenbers beve bfesa i^rrsi i **.' „ _'^1 .Tiici'marriae8,oI'Mis3 Sara JcrTemple Madeline'Baer, honorary member Ic:tic'*s on the accr^fca. . ' ry^.TreUs^-Viauchter^it^rj-arid to attend this =^ectipg cs SCT_-^» tbe. ,-is-Dri o: ^ h e ? Aai ^.-».h i ppIcVJta" weekly lunch- of ttie chapter. " * - As'a, Bgic'il "Jyatars • el the v , .• ' ' i ] Mrk- Joso^h'iTrcti'ii/! to '"Joe'IX-ilmeetingJacpb Kai:z, a nieaber to be di"s At 'the dinner preceding- the irian^ Bon^o't rira.-B.-FoSfl^da, t p o t eon '"V^cdn^day- noon" at tho, Ho- party, of the Tahnud Tcraa stcil, preMrs. Baer -was presented cascea place place laBt'Saturday'eVcnSnniaVthe laBtSatuy 1 with a radio. Rone Hill of-Lin- sented, a model- Trld^ud Torah I"": r.. '* * v 1 home ,oJ .Rab6i Divld " AT. Goldcoln headed the committee: in classroom., ,Ass:stic-_a;s ss EtuCITY cStncs Piiineas charge of the party. She w£s(£s- dents were: /MrXandjiMfJ3/«.-Gitnlck have sisted by Josephiae Rubaits, Jans Wintroub,, Henry ,SeiniQat, Jack been sbltlng ifeeir" ir E.on-tn-law and Goetz,' Lillian Freidlander and KaufEian^»Jacob .KaLs,. II. P. Lev- 'The .Bible cl^Ls coaducled- t r j Z. ztzv Z.T.1 L - v t r t ZzCr. lir' / r ^ f J ^ _ \ " " f ""f h *ai'd '• Mr G e^uple -»-will DS/'hsldV- Suhday-F. aft- d'a^shtqr" *Mrl *ai;d Mrs. Gua eason, ^ y a , Konecky > end C. S. the TeiL^le iErtcrcisterLood tnJ. i T'UZ^Z c'_i: , - ^ H Ir..':".,._ .r. c : , ' _". " * T ?". Harriet Byron. ernoon, December lp'; at' Mrs. Gitths Council ^cf, J=^-';i. Trcicn j c?"-{. ^r^ ,- "L!" t l s - . Z. ~\."z rr~ An Invitation to attend a rush Ross. , of the bride's parents. aonth." About l 40 > new inerabers were trill "nr-Bt Tucriar'ncrzSrs t t tea sponsored by Theta 1 Before he? .irarFiQ.',TC/,iar;j.,-f unpresent. ; *. ,, . „ 10:30 tt the Elackctcne'tctel. /.t Phi, journalism hoaorary." man, was tho^GHieSt cf T hooor,iat rt f-c 1 e^ Rsbbl DavSd \viceJs In.charge received ' by Josephlae Rubnits, n U r A recital of ipcatry'and mu^Jc •Junior-In the college of arts cud on!, 1 ^ " JuniorCouncil the ^.^HOlen^^.Masaret,'. poet, and sciences.. Salnia Zveltel, a incm I Ccr-.be't r e r i o z s l - t o u r e r . t ^ n i zi - " ^ - * * .'••• -"• • - . ui « Fpt'sfsonVvlolinist, ber of Orchesis, honorary .dancThe Omaha section, of the Na. ; J r . o = ; r : e - i C i , : _.. & t tte end o i j ^ - ' ^ W ^ . j j j ' - ^ -••_ ^ 3 Fellmaa, bo 5 pre?i;nt<cl'-'ln\ the Joslyn MeMtB, ing organization, took part in "the tea. and"" Mra^^JapqV'Kah? en- lnbrl{il*>le(5iure,-haU'ivt'v 2:30 p. in.recital sponsored by this club tional Council.of Jew^h Juniors J 1 r Is planning' a'breakfast honoring rirs.' Ben Brodkey, co-caairrnen"| ^ i ^ , , j * ^ , " ^ *^-»^ " ^ r ' ' ^ •"""** - r ' ?r - ' ' c ' r r " ; o - r j f -r * rtatDied: a t ^ a ; ' ^ I n ^ e r ^ M r a this cSuPday* af ternooa Friday night, December 10,,; at 11153, erc eC of the Qaiaha chapter, caacuace Dora' Tannenbaum,'. field : At'ttWr-trrrvlrr r=£rt=rE:rr! ^ f " c - ~ - " - t r I F T -U?^ Nathan-', GUnick .also entertained, ?, t ro. In the lecture. the ' University gymnasium-";for the* follo-sring .articles- neecVd . aV in her-h,otior: ' " 'i'/Vr •,. ' ' C •Denise •will "the- Nebraska ••Physical Education worker .for' the 'National/Council give ,an. 'fifjiatrb&ed• lecture- on association. She has also"-been of-Jewish' Women, January ;2, at tlon and' its '66 subsicliary1 SnEti- A-Lg tc.-^; v-7/; te Lcli. Tcz T',-? TVT-p-oi-i.^" r P"rer* Citj~< Csrved Prom appointed as a-member of the ar- the Black\ Mirror room'ofi the tutions?for the 1S37-IS3S ::-ea Fontenelle' hotel. Miss Gertrude rangements committee for--;Or- G'lis's. "assisted . by..'• Miss. Irene sn&wer; to be' held "vvednes^E^, program-''of;, recorded organ chesis initiation "which will •; be The Flshberg, 'MiE3 .Rogs" Mendel- January. 5,-at the. Je-rish Copof-|HJr. and Mrs. .Ben Milder -will .ffiiti be- presented,' In theheld- ia January. . sohn and Miss Lillian Kaiser, Is- munity. Center: ' be'celebrated 2at a cocktail party ,. Freshmea of Theta are'.also in charge of' arrangements. at ,4 p. m. Sunday. Sheets (72x99 and crib size). team. . e:'£.c.icc.:ec. L L V O ct ci . T : at Mr. Paul H. Grummann", 'direc- taking part in campus activities. -'.Crinkly..bedspreads. at 99 o'clock Wednesday V^il •,A"new'group Interested; in drathrough. U P F? •€• . • . v,I ••ir..u,af , Judith Levensoa, Omaha, was-setor'of the Jbslyri^Memorlal, will Blanke.ts-:.(single, and crib BeaDecember ?9. at tho Paston homatics met at : the ' home of',Mrs. ' ' '. . ' tejl- All their friends arc Invited, glVje a>leetare.on "Christmas Tra- lected to act as secretary at the Sam Teper and plans for a short con' clotji). trr.EUr.iiE.. ?r ;•;.-.u... g r r e . ^ r ! 1 Pillows1 aad pillow eases. No Invitations, have-been Issued. ditions" -at "4:301 p. m. Sunday In Freshmen- 'Associated . Women's play, for the February meeting Studeats meetiag Wedaesday. tho -lecture hall . . Towels (Turkish, face and, T L E - E . ' - T . C. scrorlt: Ltld iLe! j . b o u Ub&-ci.or • f - c. x-r- !,•••- • < '. under way. .-[The Jcsiyn Memorial's _• "Open Sylvia Nelsoa. S t Joseph, sang in areThe kitchen).. .. ..1O VISIT-IK CA^tlTOBNIA.' a n n u a l . Ct SLrutE-fc rs.--r i t I t s 1 oa io o'-hei'iJ TL<. iovi. t r . o, , Current Events group .is Miss Ltbby Meyerson>left .-Fri- Evening" progra"ffi'will be given a student program at the UniKitcien towelling by yard. t o n s cr XJEE Ecrtfcs. £?utstr Icct i LLIt 'CLT'E M L ! , V L I ;,.I ,S. 1. '.; . meeting every Wednesday, at versity coliseum Sunday afterCal., C l this' ^Sunday* evening- The art moralnR^fof day moralnR^ ^l White Canton flannel. k: S I " xcisrFec: fuel! r i i e L«-EC i.--c a ;> . .1 , J f ( U - . ' : 7:30 at the, Jewish Community • ;'• M u s ' l i n ; (n-e'a v r niatsriE.1 j ' s . r v a ••Krrzc)-:-, rro-rrr., to'tc ' _ •where she wilUvislt relatlyea.'and naileries will bo open'from 7:30 noon. •, Center under the leadership of to'fl:SO p. m., and a program ot Rosalyn Lighinsty, arts arid Mrs. George Neuhaus. bleacliea--and'-iinblraclieS). i tr«rr:-5s' :—r—"«s. -~ •r friends. . , 5 Chrlatmaff; Eonsa siing by Father science senior of' Lincoln, • has Diapers and diaper c l o t b . ^ v" ^ c"?c-'r>c eu.'i-E: tv» f-e-, Flanagan's Boyo' choir will be been., entered 'as the represeataS. A. M. lilOTHEU'S CUVB (Birds' ' Eye-27-fE«s). Eir,p to. donate a' EVE cf mcr.e;- ; The December meeting of thepresented In the concert hall a t 8 tlve of Sigma Delta Tail'In the JUmOR.VAAD ' Damask for.tablecloths ( v t i t e to be used for cnarltz-Ke rur- I . S. A. M-- Mother's -..club -will be p. m. Tho public Ia cordially in- annual aU-unfrersity b e a u t y only). • : po3es. ; . I• held on Tuesday,'December 21. a t vited to attend. queen contest 'sponsored, by the A meetings of the "Junior -Vaad . Bathrobes (all sizes). r meeting 5TE.EStreia r-eld-lsr.t r.'.^i | • the home "of-Mb.'-R: Bordy, 5640 Cornhusker, ^Nebraska uaiverslty study group was held Tuesday Pajasss."(fl&anel and cottoa).j atAtte" tocfc -oC OBC:I. Leavenworth- street. , i annual. Pictures of contestants eveniag, 'December -14, at- the Nightgowns /(miiElia and flsa-i CoaploIJeyar will have as herwill be sent to Cecil B. DeMille in •home of. Miss Anne' Go'odbinder. El-r-long sleeves)'. Luncheon wl.ll be served at 1 \ . Rabbi Milton- A.: Kopsteia spoke Sweaters- (all "sires>. p.- m. Members have been urged houseguest for tho ^eek-ead Mar- Hollywood for fiaal judgiag. oa'"Jewish'Laws."' Dr. Harry Kur2, chairman of Jorle'Welnbbrs of Gious City. Convaies'ceat ' Jackets (white j to be present. ;the "r'omance -language depirtAt th« • nest meeting • Rabbi flahnel)'. ' • • taeat at the university,, -will speak Kopstein will'-, cbatiaue his talk • Bed pads-. (17x24-!sch). HERS ON VACATION at the next culture-hour of Sigma and "plans will'be formulated for Henry lieadoloon, ,who has TJadsrsliirts aad •enderdraweys Richard Gordon^ _who attendo school. Delta. Tau. on January, 6. bqen residing in New York City a-social affair! : The nest meet- (all sises).. the Tomen P p the" Preparatory Children's - bloomers (ail Elscs). ,' Port Deposit," Maryland. Is spend- for the past-year, wilU arrive on - Theta has also entered ' two ing is-to be held on-January-4 at tpp.shlrts ; s a d - tlctscs ' ( t " ! '• I:".',:.:* i"z ing his winter vacation 'with, nlo Monday to'sgend the weak viGlt- badminton, teams-in the lntra- :the home of Miss Sarah -Berg, v • •.i sizes).. . . . . . : parents. Dr. and'-Mrs. Mr I- Gor- injj hia parento, Ilr. and Mrs. J.'m'urals- contest- -which Is part .of 2025"North "Nin'eteeath street. Trousers"'" a a d don. Jerry Gordon..who la •& ow- Mcadelcon of Council Blu«3. and.the.latramural activities sponsored; by • the '.Women's Athletic size's)'." ' ' V . ' dent-at^Harvard. ID also espocted hia Blcten. Kose asd;Beverley. COUNCIL • ©? JEWISH "association. Two bowling teams, Bpys'-ssssS-saite. •• ~ home during the week. composed of 12 members of TheGirls' petticoats (all E:;CS). Tho lilsnca.Charrotte and Do-ta, are also'participating' in the "Warm d_resses—r-lzz CELEBRATES Sklar. daunhters of Mr. and Round Robin touraameat spoa- • T h e ; Civic' " a a d ; Legislative BIRTHDAY > -. group of * the. Couscil' of "Jewish •; Infants'. Trlco silrts.' Helen B<ssnlct. daughter of Mr.Mro. A. lar t arc catcrtalnins at Eored by the W. A. A. Womea-'ia''meeting today -'at"''the. • cloths. '•; . and Mrs. N. Reonlcfe. 1021 North a tea onSunday, Decssibe? 19, of Mrs." ffrom 3/to G home ''of Mrs'.. J. ' Chernlack. of Twenty-thlrd> otreet, will'be host•::".• A . ' Z . A . i 6 P ;.•' ess1 to-her friend.c.on .Sunday, De- v«a' Lotwin, a briflo-to-be. New officers of Sain Beber Council Bluffs. - Mrs. Xeo linger bbo: Fl Florence .chaptei!/N6.j 190..-were ilectati; '.at will be co*hbstess. ag; -pirograia'^Jcr - t h e t l c 2- — and • S cember • 19 19. ^ h t w e n r The: Child • Study gTOup of .the p'ctoi«5ls,_c:in» honor 'of^hfer lOjth" SWar, 333rty ^•.reiruiar..iaeetlng" of :tae chapter raso'n t , ' irjnrilo TfsSo,- Lillian Sanday,". December 12, a t theCounciV wil^meet' on - Tuesday, ah out-of-towa E?£ birthday/ \ \~ >'\ Prled'laader, 'Caroline- Kudesh Jewish •-Community Center. ; ? • December 21, at \hs Koae'of Mrs. playlet.'' ' " v •'sad .Sara^Smeeria -at "Woodbine; Jpe Guss wfis re-elected Aleph Sam Steinberg,* 2014 Ndrth 'Fifty- . 'Besides-ac'tTiai:llae'as bci^s ? ? - ' . - • ' •> s la. • ^ '• * -~' Mftjs'<Thelma G.aspi.7. ho^Ja Godol aad Paul Sacks -was -re- second,, street." Mr¥r*AV A. Stela- cep'ted"'tq,e«ialp; : i^e 'tCO-boi EEV-'".^"•^,'i- " " " ' " . - ' "^UraTAbe'sSiar'and Mrs! Jack 11 hospital on..Mount- Sccjus,. cE.s'i j ^.~eleeted-;r to: the office of Aleph berg -will "be" hool;q Junlor,~at the'.EHsima School;qf^ donations' a r e 'solicited/ Fcr~£d- '^t -^*, -.*,, _-^ win'preside a t the tea S''g;aa..-,.,Jay'."W'eisiaan, .-who v a s Music,'Rochest.ex. N. / I . , to >omc ^, 1& tablC3, c - . ... chosen. Aleph' Mazkir, tlast July, WORTHWMlLEMCASlQM' ditloaal • luforiaatson- call --1:rs. ; w-. tor the Rnebea'J issued. cpntlnEea ..to* hold the pi.tice" for (of MTS. 'Sea- Brodkey, AT If £7, or!- -'-.,7../ ^ :^ ' ^ „—».-. ," . ! ' the'.nekt^six'months, iiarry Sox was -named"- Aleph ' GiSbor aijd M&3 Shirley Barlah' will arrive Haskell Morris was re-elected The Wortriwh'ile.'.Occasioa fund \J8JL1 I N I on--i>£cember^ 23 ".to^ spend her Aleph Glsbor." Maaay Hlinelsteln Mr.r-nnd Mrs.- _, . .^ winter vacation with"*her parents, and Abe , Resaick will serve ;. as of the Deborah'EDciety through TiBitin> in New >York, .. Mr; a'nd'Mfs-'BJ'.-Barish. She will Aleph Shotare Godol cad Aleph its. chairman, M.r3. J. Fiakel, aaand Philadelphia. *•-•«—« "as,»-guest Miss Harriet Shotare K o t ' o n e respectively. nounces the followJag coatribupected hbme the Tatter pjErf.of the have' Sbibal of^irglnto,; Minn. Mian Harold ZetinSky was chosea tions: '-Mr./ and" Mrs. J." : Frieden ia •week' aftejr ependlnjj. *• foy -,daya Sfiibel is a. clasamato of Misa BarJ Aleph Kohen" Godol. honor, of their son's marriage; in '"WaBhinBton> D. -G^t g; of ChiThe chapter has "beea busy Mrs. David Stern-in' honor of her cago., -v ,« f i T .-cajjo. during the past two -sreeks pre-j daughter's teagagem.eat; - Z.1TS. S. : i "- • " . , ' . • y paring for the Rock Island con-| Olander'ia' memory vof husbacd Mr .andMrs. G^ Asron of -,,At.tne Ghanuk'ab., tea given by vention December 25, 26 and 27.1 atid"daughter;-Mr. S.T*.& Hrs. B. A. Mr" .and"-Mrs.' The basketball team defeated-^the Simoa iii" memory of Mother, Mrs. kansas k a n s "51ty,.,M.o..~>paoijace 5 . j tho -• i f d g h t e r % a « n ? u t n | vthe I^aie3^.Free,X.paa t Mrs. S.Mother chapter five in a practice J.'-J. Simon;"-Mrs. L. Lchd'pa ia birth of-a,-daughter. . % a « n ? u t n | iyaver,\ pfacident, t was honored game Sunday on the Center r ^7 of her floor,- 30-27.- • Debatern and .era- memory' of mother, Mrs; J. J. SiDimb^r 8^at Q& &***&•££ ,by tho' m%mhsrs'-in'honor mon, ; and" Mr."aae. 2Jrs.. L. Tv'it1 pftal I 1 tors have been working with.Ad- kin in memory of Mrs. Fridea. Oltnlcfc of wedding" anaberrary * Is, the fft !*1 fr » r |i 1- ^ • visers Ha3kell Cohen ' and 'Dan Mrs." 3 . Sknrnltek hes'also' ccaOmaha. '•;;VAAD Lintzman for the past month. . - tributed-laj'aiemorjr cf*her broth"f .A sendoff smoker will be'.held er,, Mr., J. 'BeraEtein. ; d Mrs. He\bo;tKeyele; j 'A T9s:ular; ,mecthsg of the Tuesday evening at the home of Mr.>nd-^ho Mrshirt.h-'of a-dau^hter Young 'iHoa's .\Vaad will take Sonny Richards for all chapter h h^ e 15 aa tt place 'oniTuedday, .December 21, members who plan to attend the on^Wedn^fciy^tXficc tho- Nicholas. Sehn-honpltal. k. at',8 p. ,m.,at~the j3oneregatlon regioaal eonyentioa. AtSracto • • i * ."• > ^ B"nal' J IsiT5l t - eighteenth and -is being formed by members of 1 OMAHA TC'.VSL Mr. "and Mrs/ Samuel H. Stern Chicago otVeets. , important busl- the social committee • who are ia sEi" will''bo rdlscussed at thl charge of all arrangemeats. announce t h e ' birth "of. a* ponT • SUPPLY • Howard Beryl,-<on-December 1 . ; Yosrs £:asc IG7 Winner of the chapter's draw,;n3tji^f.,r":,"<: ~r ;" v " ICE ZZZ'C f'li<iabcr3v and their; friends are Ing is Bill Rushlau who received welcome' to' attend. a lady's wrist watch. • fMr. -«and- Mrbr .Hyman Levlno- c^ c*'. r.™" t ~ '. v . " ""', -. " ennounco' the birth' pf , a ' o o ^ lr tr'y r r*-c- •' -at "the Clarioonihocr
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JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1937
PUOLltiMbD t V t B Y
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iTA)—-Ford wag , „ of'.the, death at DerW bja. ol Chic! Rabbi irnssJ. 8a, after 50 ;ti"e • service to . the
and for a time a member of the houselioul of Eraerson, his enthusiastic admirer, in a sense his disciple. But he was by no means a mere <jeho or imitator of Emerson. He had a pronounced personality of his own and a most striking originality, Ey Dr. gfcetto bescli eysteKt • S3Sfie> itsj»e-vrls^ economic ~corcf=. both of thought and of expression. His literary style is in no JSrst appearance is. Koumania ; & short time ov.r i k g v;'A respect like Emerson's, though his thought may resemble the BIBLI3 when Dr. .Cornelius Cassasoiici, ; every tovrn ana citr, IrDi.May the Lord cat off all flat- rector ©* ths Esieharest Technical • trade battaHon, 1 -crcler master's, universally acknowledged as the prophet of America, of the new country and'the new times. Both were liberals and tering, lips, the tongue that speak- school, .snaouaeea <• that , Jewish ; forward Ecrcfl." eth proud Ifcioss, who. have ^tudeEts .mast henceforth, occupy ; — — — — ~. even radicals; both were intellectual and spiritual pioneers. our toassiss -will make u s -Juiglity,, •seats ia segregated ssciiens c£ the ' Aliti-Ebccliita L&W Tl'i
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our lips are -with us, •who is Lord I claEsroosss. Tfes order •sras iir.se-i Kovno {VCX'S) Legist' Thoreau blazed a new path in soeial progress by his famous over us! . Jdiately protested tj- the "Union cf ! outlaw the practice- ofTte „ . .-•••• . . Editor 'experiment' recorded in "Walden," the most popular and de- For the oppression of the'poor.'| EouEifiEiaa Jews as & Tiolatic-2 cf I Lit^uat'a v."es v ^ e d I"' 13 ••»• Associate Editor s . . Contributing Editor lightful of his writings. Walden was the pond about a half for tha sigbisg. of the needy now jthe Roskasiait cosstituttoa CES !u a n k . 2 'Soci'£.{v f 0 ? t W Frt I will arisa'saith t t e Lord. I cc-atrarx • to tfes progras o£ the -o f crvieltv to AEirr.alF et . . .-. . • Book Editor mile from Concord, that charming village or town, the Weimar . | ,, sl£hl COISfeI.e]nce. Gene-Rl How long shall I take counsel I ..Liberal party. of America whose Goethe was Emerson, famous in American Sioux City, Iowa, Correspondent in my"soul, having sorrow in my At ths Eaiss time tfee enti-tfeT"- ; vitch. president o' the historical annals since there was fired 'the shot heard round heart by 6&y' How loag EbsS! ish boycott gained new impetus; g s J d jt V-T.F not intended U > inhere , •with the cpecteg cf the first five jt h c j c v s ^ r . t? i n s t P i t e d ' 0 J . rcocliu- j the world' in our American Revolution, only about ten miles .my enemy be exalted over meT As tor- me, Ia Thy mercy fio I cf a .chain of co-operatives stores ! c a t j O n o j j j , e jevisb me Lhod of I ._„ L e a v e s t h e L e a g u e ' . ' •..'• ' \. from Boston, 'the hub' of the new intellectual and cultural uni- trust, my heart shall rejoice ia organized by the ..nti-Seosltte'. , i eriiss." . ' slat e t Attesting to the present moribund state of the League of verse. Thoreau loved Walden passionately, though he loved Thy salvation. \ ** Ircn Guard ES part of it* loti-Nations was the almost imperceptible ripple of comment caused all the beautiful lakes or ponds in the vicinity. He had known Jewish crcsade- T h s Etores Ere ' ™-»_^»TO^^™I^«-TOr~TO^~»^r selliag nserchandise a t cost price by Italy's receipt withdrawal. When Japan, t h e first major^ it and loved it from boyhood. He declared that it had a 'patent -• There -were four judges in So-! mt power to leave Geneva, haughtily marched out to defy the con- of heaven to be the only Walden Pond in the world,' 'a gemdbm. If i- person wounded his ]and a r e Intended t a force out ©£ neighbor, they decided that t h s ! business Jewish . a c r c h a E t s . T h e i I demnation of its action in Manchuria, the peace of the world of first water that Concord wore in its coronet.' Here, on astriker shall be paid for bleediss ! first stores a r e ia Bucharest EEd Seferafft'* C* cco's'fe ps- A l e • j seemed momentarily hanging in balance. Germany's withdrawal beautiful hillside, surrounded by the magic woods, squatting on him. Elieser, the servant cf ie t h e r s a r e pj&aaed ia every i s i Abraham, happened to be there,•[ portant to-vrsi a s d . city. Selca l a few years later threatened European.security. property belonging to the noble and generous Emerson, bor- and -was -rounded, and when he 5Codresnu, ehiel .of t h e I r c n 3 1 5 E©, I2vth I The League, as one of its inherent faults, was as strong rowing an axe from his good friend Bronson Aleott, father of came to tfce Judge to coraplaiE, | -Guard, issued a proclsmstioa pa i% •^ as its weakest link. Yet, though it has failed in its major pur- Louisa M. (and recently celebrated in a noteworthy book "Ped- the later salfl, You must p a y | Si i pose of averting armed conflict;,it has nevertheless become part dlar's Progress") with his own hands he built himself a eabin him for bleeding." Whereupon he toofe a etone and -wounded the j j of the international scene and in minor capacities functions out of a shanty bought from an Irish laborer, on the railroad Judge saying, "The payment for ti with efficiency. '; (the marvellous new invention of the day) and out of wood bleeding which you owe to me, | Store Hezrs $ A. M. is €:SS U ntil Christrnzn ej As Americans we have often been, accused by Europeans cut by him from- the forest, crossing the lake in his boat for pay me." They had a bed for j transients. If the stranger ' was % of being partially responsible for the League's failure, by our the fine white sand for the mortal; for the chimney and fire- top long for the bed, they made '-J refusal to join. But the early years of the League diplomacy place which, when it began to. get cold, he constructed: in which him shorter, if too short they vindicated the American attitude. I t became the instrument he lived, all alone (with only a few occasional visitors and him- stretched the stranger. Wbeo QUIZ: Eliezer came there, they told him of the victor powers. The most important articles of the League self visiting Concord at intermittent intervals) for two years to sleep in the bed. Whereupon offlcia and c were never resorted to—the disarmament clauses, the peaceful and two months; living the life that he recorded so interest- he answered, "Since my mother J i i •were of J' ingly in "Walden," close to nature, in intimate relation not died I vowed not to sleep in a readjustment of the status quo. shoot} When a poor man haponly'with sky and water, with forest and hill-side, by night and bed." As Jews-we see the protector of European minorities standthe si pened to be there every one used one a1 ing like a helpless giant, retaining enough of Wilsonian, ideal- by day; but with the denizens of the wood and water, the to give him a dinar on which his in the with! 3)}| ism to be eager to assist, but kept in check in fear of upset- birds and fishes and animals of all sorts (some climbed upon name •was easraved, but they did locks.! his knee and table and ate the food out of his very hand). He not sell-him any food, and when I : young s' | ting the apple-cart. the stranger died of starvation, ! i The League will not in any likelihood miss .the Italian dele- lived on beans that he himself planted, hoed, and harvested, each oss cazae and took his dsnat „., gation. Since the rise of Mussolini it has added little to theand even sold. (He had planted about one and one-half acres back. There was a girl who used to supply a poor mai. -with, bread, If sessions, and by its action held the principles up to ridicule. of them, and ha'd about eleven acres planted in potatoes, corn, "Which she used to hide in a pitchturnips, and peas). He realized a profit above • his expenses 21 I t now appears that Mussolini is out to organize a Fascist er while she went for water, and was the enormous sum of about twenty-seven cents a irhea this was found out, they ill League of Nations. If Geneva seemed a storm center, it will smeared her body with honey, Jj I become a mere breeze compared to any international organi- iveek for food (There was-a lesson in economy for the whole "and put her on tfae rooJ for the xtravagant.aridspend-thrift world to take note of!) He ex; | sation.'made -up of dictators. Men who brook no criticism in bees- It a person struct hi» ]| their own lands are hot apt to be found eo-operative when they changed some beans for rice ('as a lover, of the philosophy of neighbor's wife and she miscarIndia should!) He drank no tea or coffee or even milk, only ried, the judgea decided that th«' ', • - - '• ,r -'" it lj meet their counter-parts. woman should be given to the The League, without Italy, without Germany, without pure water from the pellucid pond. Thoreau moreover (like striker and he should return, her If £ 1 Japan, is not dead. Sovereign nations for the first time in his- George "Bernard Shaw) was a vegetarian, abstaining from car- when sho would be pregnant 'M EaLtory are being confronted with the problem o£ compromising nivorous food. He had long outgrown hunting and cared very again. They made a stipulation that if *°]ltheir sovereignty for their security and the League will remain little for fishing (though sometimes under the spur of necesa gnest is invited to a wedding, lo ^ I a sleeping giant until that lesson is brought home; But in fields, sity he indulged in that, even at midnight and under tha spell and brings another one with him. • lira | other than the diplomatic, it works on quietly^ without sensa- of the moon). He cared still less for fish, deeming it not par- that the iavster .b*. stripped of his ticularly nourishing and rather unclean in the preparation, garments. If one had a row cf S*c, i tional outbursts, waiting until its day finally arrives. 'not worth, its cost.' He discourses most delightfully on Food, bricks eTery en© cf them came Business and Managing Editor
DAVID J3LACKER.•"... , " • FRANK R. ACKERMAN LEONARD NATHAN RABBI FREDERICK COHN KABB1 THEODORE N. LEWIS ANN P I L L • .
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:^\\ I n February a new high commissioner will come to Pales;- tain animal life which 'he declares to be 'animal'heat' which ox he had to pasture all ths catiraa tine. -Like so many other British civil-servants his reputation must be safeguarded that life's fire go not out. A bed is 'a tle ct the city one day, but fee P2! has not gone beyond the musty corridors of the British colon- shelter within a shelter.', Cloth'es.'sK^nld 'suit' us (Hint for •who possessed none at-all, had to r»lj! iaL office. Undoubtedly capable, Ihe is-nevertheless unknown in an advertising slogan for a clothing establishment!) The wear- pasture two days. -? s! this country, few ever having heard "the name of Sir Harold er should change as well as his clones. How can new cldthes $300,000 to Caraegi© , j | MacMichael until it was officially announced that he would fit him unless the man become correspondingly new? Fuel j warms-:you twice, first in the perspiration of cutting it, then . Pittsburgh (WNS)—^ succeed Sir Arthur Wauchope? Kssrke Fa?k Pro-] ment cf the. as it burns. I t is most fitting 'that every one should build his Without consciously desiring to be a man of mystery, he is fessorship of Social Relations st j known only by rumor". It is said that his stay in the Sudan own house. Should he be a cuckoo that lays his eggs in other ths Carnegie Institute ol Tech-! by Presi- | birds' nests? In the solitude and leisure and opportunity af- nology was O t h where he came in contact with the Sudanese Arab chiefs has Doherty in a j dent ' Robert E., forded him for meditation, reading and stiidy and writing (inhinv pro-Arab. This charge will probably be heard many revealing- that - t h e | -i| ; need, this was one of the prime reasons for entering the woods), statement piij;i times again. ./ Maulce and Laura Falk founds- j If • MIE;? ; Nevertheless he has the sincere good wishes and sympathy Thoreau gives birth to some of the most beautiful and inspir- tion has given $300,000 to Carne- j - ||, •Mrti % .for the saport of a program j p j of the Jews of the world. He goes to-a land where inan hates ing thoughts, published to the world in "Walden" about five of education and research in soI man. Not only is there the problem of Jew and Arab, which years after he left his hermit's retreat (About eighty-five years cial relations. 3s of course the primary problem at .present, but he has theago! Yet the book-is thoroughly modern without the 'least difficult task of keeping peace among the thousands of reli- archaic flavor.) His style is forthright, fluent, with no attempt Albert II c* Austria becsKEs cf gious groups that guard the sacred shriiies of the country. It to be, artificial or flowery; perfectly natural; paradoxical and his bens-voleat sttitude was tattctingly called, "Becsfector of the jis a land that has becom^e a pawn in the diplomatic game, an- humorous; yet full of the finest fancy and imagination, Thoreau Jews." ' ". was a real 'poet,' though so thoroughly .practical.in every day | other powder keg in. the European arsenal. It is' he who.in all probability will again- see Palestine matters. He was the handy-man around Emerson's house (That sam yeai j maimed—a Palestine once sliced, off Syria, a Palestine once great man was at a perfect loss when it came to even hoeing FOR RENT—Two roonts tad kitelacn — all | taken from Transjordan, a Palestine whose remains are again his garden). There was nothing he could not do with Ids cjojeni - ccsrCEienecs. Cs.il hands. By trade and inheritance he was a pencil-maker (to WE 3527. ' cord < to be broken into bits, a piece for. the Arabs, a piece for the -- . eke out a living when other means failed, as well as to sup : liJews, and a piece for the English. * • . ~. Sir Harold is a powerful figure of a manj perhaps it will ^port his-widowed mother and* sister). No wonder he could Sirs '' Mrs!! | be within his power to bring partiaV peace to the land, toend wield a pencil so'well when it came to authorship! He ran at least this blood feud that has so foolishly flared between the Concord Lyceum Bureau successfully. He was a very Intwo peoples—cousins as the Arab King Feisal once appropri- dian for natural lore. He could feel his way in the dark through,
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the pathless wood returning-at midnight from a visit to Concord (even in Winter). His careless foot could in a moment turn up some Indian arrow-heads. He knew bird-lore, plantiore, animal-lore, pond-lore—-man-lore 1- Such a one was perfectly fitted to give us a true philosophy of life, one that would confront reality and yet was infinitely removed from crass materialism; on the contrary was filled with the finest spirituality, the noblest and most inspiring idealism. He reduced life to its lowest• terms. "Life_y?&n sweetest" -he wrote ^'nearest the bone!" His great message was Simplicity, Economy, Independence, Leisure, Solitude,' Meditation, Keadi Study, : Constructive Creation,. "Williaia Henry Ch'anning has probably best expressed i t : .,
1HeiiMcl^Heine . . " • - . . . „•••'.•• •; j':[ . Fitting it is that at this time there should -appear a bioIgraphy of Heinrieli Heine, for today there are many spiritue'!-brethren of the German bard. The others perhaps have not I-reached Ms gemus but they too sing unwanted songs. .<•-.'"., •Within Heine theJew always remained strong, yet lie sang •was Davi German songs and those songs still remain so beloved even in •A l o r l ; Germany the Nazis cannot purge songbooks of them, merely withholding his name and relegating him tb the gallery of "~; ?* j anonymities. 3i>erHeine w was at one and the same time Jew and German. He lah the wanderer like his ancestors, and like them he aspired the ; ' "To live content with ; small means; to seek elegance ratbsr I'tfl high ideals. Yet his heart was with Germany and smugly^Gold;: 1 Tirtubus men hounded him into exile as so many Germans have than luxury, and refinement rather than fashion; to-be frorthj. i not respectable; and wealthy, not rich; -to listen to birds and Biaai; I beea hounded* in this last century. Tlie names of those who babes, arid stars and sages with open heart; to study- hard. persecuted him: have been forgotten arid those that are known .think quietly, talk gently; do all ^cheerfully, bear all jaanfull'y; I are; spoken with contempt. He has" brought"greater glory to never. In a word to let the spiritual jhis lan^'iban those who put him out. ; i : 1
bidderiand'unconscious, grow up throfigh;the coDimoE'. ,.: .;': Pictured-aboveTisj Yeh'udiJSesuliiBj ysisiafttl-ifiss'Mcf Tlr •Trhe.''.Syrtiphonj»'...o.f violin, and : Ms pmnist £iiter,-HepMibsls; wfes will safe : ea? Drai;• V."";: ; :.: •' B y . - . B a b b i F r e d e r i c k C o b n ••-.)';. : ". '•'• .'•-•• .;,' : , - ; ; . their' rare joint-Eppe2raac23'.sa:'rsii©' : .at;gtte3*s ea'-tSa f T/ill.! England 'flowered' also in Henry: David thoreau imday Ilv 11S5I.. Novf) Hovs, T?ill(|l ('David Henry' he was christened) as well as in Emerson, HawK to - i ? | t h 6 r n e , Longfellow, and the. rest whom T a n Wyck Brooks That b ray Sj-raphoaj." I [treats of so inspiringly in his crowned- masterpiece "The Flowilering of New; England." He was one of that coterie of genius Let i t bs our Gynp^&ajT. 'for if" that flourished About the middle of the nineteenth century It %7&3 the syxiplicnj Hit .-.HUTJ^. and who constitufe the glory; of New England and 'American. literature, its very heart and soul. H e '.was ia. neighbor, fricad, Frederick Cohiu
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TEE JEWISH PEBSS—FRroAT, DSCE3I33R 17, 19S? , {A)7yypv&. was 'reIre of^the death at 1)?rna* 'Wbya, of Chief Habbi iSerossi, S5. - after 50 l ractHro-- •service t o Cyrenaica.^
tfeo Hajer-Gessrsl enjoyed Pilsts had to be coercsi l r I t s ea EIQCII that ho expressed tt&e hope that another medal would is liotoricjL.ly untsn^lle. ?.z t?o awarded -to Natb&n Gabey, co proved by n a s t irr.rsETlic.3 Ftufiicr. *JUt Tlcrtresl \', i"-, * that he — the Major-Genexal— mr but etpeciE.Hr Vy Its. recctt v e r t nr could, come to see Mrs. Gobey * L " J again and taste some more of her ' Christien-Jcvi*i 7rr~"5r." Le cri-i cooking. . Tie slither report? <•-—*> T - y l ' crr J I , of the world war, you t vulgar rrejudlccs CT.CC-ETE tfr I.en, oi P or iSrsn • h Jev ' c *• I 1 n r have heard taat in tins lat(A novel la Use j ly discarded the old ?riiidUve ' » txeenEcic!: rly, " d?vK. i c ter years of that conflict the Jews ). Rob- ; conception of deity with which it Anti-Semites would refcu-e at IMs .7 1, there than to have to import cf various countries, especially -ert SL Grey. £52 pa^es. Price began, a n d evolved throcrb. Ebsurd statement ? l t r - ' f n.fhor r*r r QUESTIONS them. For the comlnjj Passover, I MB. Great Britain," tho Halted'States , f C3.C3. \711iett Clark asd ccza- prophet, sage and raibi, an ethi- J=enth cJ Tahreh, "Tie t C- ^ — v T h e " « • • t0 t h s€ ds however, Sb.ansb.al Jewry won't and Canada, formed a Jewish l e | cal. univerBa! and deeply spiritual 1' ; cv 1 ~T T } « Eu frf-.'rv See tow manjr ol-tnesa ba able to have hone-baked inat- gion which wont to PalcDtlno to This is a bold, arresting and &od idea. It is this etnkal J a i a - j 4 ^ * ' r*tdo Z!J r e : n a i ? tlona yon ,csn ansvr?? ? after yea j zoth,;all as a result of the Japanwith the British army ther© nobly motivated book. Jt per- 1 K a T*1 its sablisss doctrir.ee cf ID- ! -,J •". -I I, ese .invasioa. For, as you must faavo read Sir. TVorid'o the^ Turks. Thla Jewlsb trays wita tkill and insisht t f c s ' T r a t h , J«tlc. Hnnaa Brother- claimed by anti-Semltee tbe TC : • : V 3' P." Pi *1 h'a* VRE have read in your daily paper, fee 5£e Anotbe?" cbat. >n is planning a big cclcbraever, is Elcrly untrue. " " I T ;ri \ rt i r't r CTi Japanese dropped a great many tioa for Its tweaty-first anniver- growth and expansion of the God hood, Pcac® and Lore, that Jesus , God guilty of ruck criir: S. Where was the ; i " I r ' rrd Preached EO eloqccatly. Everr idea, fron that of & tribal ceSty bombs in the Sb.ansb.ai crea and sary nest Sprin's. Plaas are now bakery of Shsnjjisai located? Certtinly. t h e STLX innch ruin wita their huge bolas made for a tour of Pales- and clas protector, to that o! uai- Gattribute the Kaaareae applied to should knew better. His ctierrr*- „„„S. Wbst happensa to it? father of nanteiad, as re- j °d appears ia Jewish liturgy. , *. * iV, P>.--» a. Describe .a heroic deed ot Sunn— and one of the tine to be'undertaken'by-Legionr c ' f l «• •Unree young r-Jewo 'dnrinj; tfas sheila landed right in the ia the Old and the-New| & ad literature, asd was the com-i ed emanation ^cr u,e cppopiaon ^jg naires in May,' EO that they can munity-owned matzoth factory of. ESS for.. themselves tae progress Test^eat, Th ..varlo . u w ! tJi Shanghai' tezribss^teieat.. Po.ses.ioa ~ ls>7 71 BS of rer- j »s.t«age. ^ •cf hi, people fa j J» «J™«an£ ^ f ! ^ ^ ^ : L=l • -4. How <lld Major-General TahstEepoo and destroyed it. 01 that' has b©sn made there since in this continuousa process I "pcuEt es naught such necessary ~ elation as received ..by Abransia, j Most, ansarins is the author's T f McCoy of tiie U. S.' Arm? £ct coarao Shanghai Jewry is pretty they fought for tea Holy Land. ! matter as profit and gr" "emEnce," ^J" £J Mesas, tbs Prophets, Jesus, Paal, j failure to indict Paul for psrvcrtbadly; off in general now, -with, EO In 1917 and 1918, whea the Lo* portion o? geffllte S?sh? i is both mischievous end errcrov.s. - ^r etc, are.analysed with aa easejiag" tte jropbstic messas© of 'property destroyed there,,-eo J 0 r 5. What was the Jewish l*s« gioa was ia Palestine, there and freedom, both refreshing aad j Jesus into a body cf Greet nyth- i The author's purpose as eplen- • " " t „ ,. gion? that it Trill bs practically impos-jh't Tory raany Jewish, coloalea adiairable. Oae grows ' acutely i ology, whica to this very cay coa- : did. namely to portray the. jrracift. How will it celebrate its Eiblo for them to pay for mat-1 there, and Esuch of the coaatry ccnBcioss that the God idea is act j stitutes a grave impediment to ual growth cf the iSca cf uriverJ w re. C r IF- f 31st anniversary?. ! soth to b© Bsnt there from abroad I •&&& still undeveloped desert oa static and ftalsaed csaeej.t—but i the religion of Jesus. .Certainly • salisia E=£ of fcumar. brother. ». Who Gold that the fete of jj for ""nest Passover. . "They ara i niarshea.- You can • picture. for rathsr that It is always elsa-Egiss. ! Jesus sad Pst:I have naught ia i hood, and to emphasize our prep- tr- domacrcwj- dcpsutls on the Sate therefore hoping that - sosas - of j yourself hew delighted these relapse into tribElifrn whict acre cosiinon. escepticg ra.ee a n d ' ent their, more fortunate; IsBbisr " "" W Palestine? -" is threatening to KE.iMla.te conM d p vi~?" c } i enalleagins. Mankind's fail- blood. Paul succeeded ia' winning temporary ciriliEEtion. Kot cr>ly 8.- What~pro3res3 bas "been in taore peaceful countries . will they sea- tho hundreds of Jewish j because fee •-f r *" * rir— coloalca and farms :• and-• oraags-! « • to mcas-ara up to tbe »arser , mankind to t i s gospel becamade with, the plan to settle comsi to their rescue with the 25,is bis purpose praisevorthy, h's - . « — . ••»,. T«W««5, tactorisa fart^tf.,. «„<! Polish Jews in aiaSasasear? - 000 pound3 of inatspili: they grovca, the. Jewish and t t latieatB Into the naturs, ch&rac-. rigiaiy £sd ccrsciousiy eseluded : rengious iEitn . 8. "Whsst new canal baa fo®ea need; and Mr. World is sure they other businesses that have sprung ter snfl attributes' of the Divtee, i the prophetic Eesa.se of Jesus •! rictios Etirrliifc, i i fc sc; fcis social will'not be disappointed. ;-. proposed for Palestine? us to PalestiE© elnea the end of cf its lapses^ and retrogression, : frora bis preachics sad doctrine, i |_*" c ^" f l o f J | ' " ^ { ^ ?r vj oi l r e v par©' recortsd clearly snfi with , The world li&s accepted Paul but; ^ t X T ^ e c e e d ^ E W ^ i n j U y ' ETifi 10,'Wbo the -erar. ' have been Jewish heroes gg official in Ataarica? in There Tie author psr-: the Slno-Japanese (that, means Jlow old is bo? grav© wrong against; jest, very likely formed in bis to pronounce) war, :i tes r ,, an i M ^ | tally,_we«tlr-«l* that toe S u i H - , . ^ ^ y ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ G e r . |g a T t o ^ _ , , . v _ o n r t w early youth vr'k'STi h e •WE? ViJifier tbe sway c "tribal" s°.ieis EUG Assuming that most of you He can not realiie prejudices. not :in rid girls read tae news sec- j ! Ps.nl." If God delighted is. Jesus. to* Leader of the Reics. that this -rerj prove'3 th® superhuinan couraga tion of this paper, or at least | be certainly must have recoiled BO ri^bt^oi'Slj excoriates has beDespite Its noble latent glance n.t it, Mr. "World isn't go- their faith. These young-raen caw J a nd faith ef the Jews In the face high, purpose tbe volume will i at Paul and feis mental cor.tor- come ia Judaism rather cf manthat the Ward Synagogue of j of all obstacles, but 1s important ing to tell you about the most to Jews. l a : tiOEB. Two personalities, more tin d. Protector tn& Guarf-isn of j prove i important- happenings that it is a subtle, though j contraflictorv aBd coaflictjug, it.is all the Eternal Ke'upe. To this * « « • Senator T^a^ner foeU that S many of a b a t t t e the taken place in the Jewish " World^ ^__ Spirit the stittor of tbe if Palestine falls democracy ev-i sssurenSly- an unconscious, -oepre-| difficult to co^ce.ve. It stood midway betweea.: Japanduring.-the last couple of esses Ms poeti- ' erywhera will ba in danger,. and j cation of Judaism whose divinity | Most credible is tbe a u t h o r ' s , . . ^ p s S L l m ese and Chinese troops; «thin bebut will take It for granted that ing hit by Bhellafion the'guns dselared tbat "tner© "can-bo Tss, by implication, Tahweb, tribal, j ignorenee of tbe' role s.ad &oc-: you tenow of the troubles so many of both sides. And tfeey^ knewj Etopping short until t b s Laad fcarsa fcarsa and an cruel, as oppessd tojj trlnes cf the Ptarisees. £nd ot; i&h literature tun liturgy f t | Jews have been having in various that beforolons the eyaagogue d tha o' f Israel-wlas Ha-cosiplste.interGod, revealed by Jesas, adopted their place ia •ht have rsiBETUE-bly t~rT*-; "corners "of the earth. In Poland would be nothing bat a saoand of national fresdosa." He should read Her- j ,.„. pj the Christian cburcb, and a the es,rly tribDl zn& via- ' and Roumania • and, of eouros, debris i a which the sacred Toraa -.-But eiaea -Palestlas even Ia tae 'Deity of lore and mercy. The ford and discover tbe noble ideals i e deity into a --ivergE a n d Jewi' coaGermany, our fellov Scrolls would amount to oaly ca best £&C3 would ba too .eiaall.to very' titla, "I, T&hwea," i» based . and the- Mgb miadedness that in- ] il God, ever preseat .' • c c r] /ftlnue to have a difficult-tine of much dust. Eo. diarc; f the cacrltical assumptioa 1 spired this great and snuca- ma- i, lonca for all tas perse- _r &nxicns to receive zni. e: Wit, in Palestine tho sovernment bulltta and shrajael '2rJ£C fc -c!! _ct:tV'l-JOTS cf tlsa1 world, etforta npon that the God ef Israel Is local assS jligaed brotherhood. Ke will tbea : t cv M, is eontinuins to mate efforts t o ' barbarioiss. wbcfe&s, tbe God of eeas® to make tbe term Pharisee 'calm the unrest among the Arabs directions, they. TOsic^i£*a^i"|«r3 cttll-.befc^E&Ca to fSnd soza® jChristianity is universal, kind aad synonoaoES with, hypocrite. It is ; and reocrcd "Ui&'.'ai^riifeer'-plaeo '£{' fcr "'Jewisa "J csleaisai ' Z7S'" and so on and so forth. All forgiving. Each a perversion of! utterlyy impossible to coaceive tbe "holy scrolls, brinsins' ffcJaE.tJ.MS.s5 LtlipaT -Yoa n a y remember that interestins happenings that you eafe and cound to a quisle? : Pnarlsees s.adresBJES God as they Qtilto a fsw Eioat&s eso ; thc* faet esensable in th® t| about—-but Mr. should Frccci Eorcracseat offered to let •and fiosaatle,- becomes reprehea-! ef Pharisa'-ssi ss fan-, Polish. JS-5T3 csttltt In tha island sible "la the socially r some other events in thia cbnt, eo | of MaSajEEcar—whleb. you should autoor's inabUlty to ecidsre coin.I t s s t l e « ^istoriesliy falsa, sxc eirce : about froai your stamp eol- plete intellectual essanctpatioa ! Kcrford's studies. youas cica rest of this paper in order to ?r tertaat aa cfHeial Pol- from bis early confiitloniag sn3 without excess. ,ljeep up with what wo may call ares of Ito t t ? 0 anfi Chief- Kabbl a n d training hM caused BJB to &o la- In dealing vita the cruellisica, ^fihe general Jewish situation. : azl -each of "thcrt:^cc?tiri-4:«ag-Polo went to Madagascar justie® to Jndaiani and the-, eyna- tie author is asala lcrE cf As one place is aa good sis an?cats of appreciation.sata ers tr.£ pe'.5e6 plumt acwly disccvered evidmce, End j s taa psESibilitlea. Tiesa -SOSB«., s a d led M a to repeat, other, ilr. "World will take a Ions ^>^"» cica bara now returned to oasdouEly, Eaay a psjnsto coafinas tbe ycprlar bat ftlr-e j .These ar© hcroea of a t?ar sow thrca -cica returned' to :c stride across the Pacific for the belief test tbe Je-^s wer? resjea-j aati-Jewish prejudice. first event hs has to report—to BOiBS oa. Bat llr. "World. also P'clasd, and bave cabaitted - a Ths anther rssarfis nalveTssl- Elbls for thsp Calvary trasredy, that' war-torn Shanghai, scene of come wants to toll -yoa absut ~a hero. plaa for t s s settling- o? sorae 6? ,.and .risotly eo, as.ta» raest of the bitterest fishting between of tha great worlS v a r . t l a t was tbclasanda of Polish Jows la that - \'f f r--n d-erelepaeat "la t-h"e r•i the Japanese and tho Chinese ia foasht twenty cn3 ffitrs jenrs •trajsical isle. You can isiagin© ajjo—aa Asaerican-Jofrlsii csldler with what anslety the tlirea rail- •.faita and rellgSoa • ef their war. There aro Jews la China too, you linow," oomo of who died in Franco away baeb, lioa poverty-Btrlekca Jewa of Po- But fca is grisvoasly wreag whea them white and Eome yellow lilie la 1918. His name wao Katfcss laad ara "awaiting the deeUloa. of ^ts ascribes. this isajestie fioctrina tho rest of the Chinese,, and theso Gobey, aad hs was juat ainstoca tho Froacb. Coleaial ninistsr on to a saddea llluialaatlsn ia the Ccsse la £»ndl let JSWB have naturally been having years old whea txa was .Jsilled, taa jslaa, Trclelii Escana a new Ufa jalad of Jcsss, carried to practiNow,' Eiaetcsa yeaVb latirt lili Tsm'd* new BOPO for sos@ •of them cal fruition by Paul. Tins truth cs tell yoxs. -why a community life of their own, with Shanghai ras TperKaps their moaory baa been honored by tho immedUtely. and for others ia Is that this supreme Ideal of oai- j Drive you V ' Jr_ jaars to iosa3. i :. versal brother&oe>S appears in til largest center. Ia _the~llttle towa American Government' £wlta; tif> yiiarsa new Gd|is bac!? to - Palestiae, r youIts power and glory and majesty j of Tangteeppor' in tho Dbangaai awarding of the E c b~rvrarea, they even had" their own Servlea Cross for bis '."aerolsmv will eurely bs interested td'hear' la-.the Old Testament. * Certainly j matsotb. bakery, which providc4 Since the medal eouldn'-t bo givea of .Ui6' plan "©£ D?. A: Wert>«r, to isaera tha teachings cf Heses., j fo? a i e w carnal. Isaiah, Hlcba and Jerezsiah, to j the Jews of that neighborhood to Nathan Gobey hisucU, it was Jewish engineer g with the 25,000 pqund3 of raat- jjlvea to his aged mother, who Tho j l a n is for tao Icasest eaaal sapprsas so audacious aad aaiverloth they needed each Passover. has beoa xaouralng hlra'all tkeso in tho world,, 2SO niles ia length, ealistis a steteiaent, ssd OE© China'ia rather iar away from years. PorEaps it coacoled. her -a to .go £rpa Haifa, oa tho Mediter- aaoas'jery Essay, as, "Have T » .<• « * Y kj the Jewish eentors of Europe and, bit to '&aow that nsr Goverameat rancan Sea, to Aisba, ©a tho 1 not cae Father in Heaven, has America, you see, -so it Beamed appreciates what her^coa did—fla SHT, T i s plaa has bcoa eubiait- not ca® God created us all?" ia to • to balio tho matsoth rijjht met a. hero's death trails'-pottiag ted to th® British sovcra.E2.ent, betray aa obstlaata jsrejodics \ \ . 1 three Gorman machine' guaa out whleli eould flad zzch sa" casal agalsst tbs Old Testament, and ta |? very cccful. That's revcrsiag nlaof action cinsla-banded. In any ;e. Wlisrs: J deny its basle ease,-when Uajor-Gcnafal P r a a i tory, isn't it? Ia ethor words, tha did . Jesas discover tas tcra • of @uca a eaaal,'- providR. UcCoy of .tba V. - 0. • Array fiid E# iear jj _5"at!ssr, asd waterway bstweaa r • called "upon Mrs. Gobey In her Ht- 1ns B It.applied to tbs D«ity? Most a«-i tie Bronx flat to present he? with I Mediterranean and tho Kcd Sea a •ynatoiue the, medal, sho felt that she toois c s r s « ' less tt4 opposite «f|*«»«ly • l» t tOf created wanted to give tb& M&jir-Caneref its s2iBie?rspted a*, d r j read acrcr3 the IleS Sea Af v w ' ' « - • i o" 0 " Judaism has 12 for tao etadrca cf Iiraal oa their of her tasty way oat "of Us And with t£5s Kr. "world leavs-3 you for aactber fsrtate&t.. Only, In order to cacoutajjs yea to tafcs ed as vice presldsat of the Kaehan interest la Jewish affiairs alta Eyasgc^a cf yea -era still h@ ctill wscts to tall. yea sacotsrass aa to you that y-eate Is ao • obataela try t s -beat"Bis rec to becoaics presiinsat in Jewish (Copyright, 193", CJ For.Morris Wcinbers (
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SONS ^UTORS t ° Muriel, Caeoto Rery Harvester Cigars AT 4292
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UPSIDE DOWN—A gust of wind caught this Marine Flying Corps_ plane, piloted by Sergeant Benjamin -P. Belcher,- just as it was about to land at.Floyd Bennett Field. .Long Island, and flipped it completely over on its back. Belcher's^safety belt held him clear'.of the ground and he was uninjured, though the plane, en route from Quantico, Va., was badly damaged.
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JAPANESE POSH TOWAHD • NANKING—Choking the*road «1th-a mass of'animal, vehicles £iid humanity, here are Japanese troops and "supply trains, en'routs to Ntasisrg, as they jrush enwara from Shanghai" toward -Nanlring. Nansmng is sn important rdl center smd this road was violently shelled. The picture was rushed-to. the-United: States by-transpacific clipper air mail.
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TO GS3MANX—Ejga R. WU_ssn, retsnin American at prascnt Assistant Secretcry of Stdte. sslected ss successor tc • *_ ">' ^ •* J''-~T^' ; ' " > . , ' ' J ' Vvillic^i E. Dodd. •who has re• V, *l T ' V -* | ' -^ I' sisnQd as United States Anzbas*..-—^^-w.^....._^,., J^_—/w ^ - ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ . j ^ , ^ .||.|n|.. ,j_. I?.1,,.'„.?.; ',siior to Gerrsarj after cc-iror •. " -• " * ' . ' - '.' „" -••'.-•" --.VersS-il ciisconifort. Xvlr. Wilson. Z\ ENEMIES OVES 5S3E T7ESE—British and American soldiers;--held -eprrepcrted .en- "- bt>m-;n Evanston. III., and gradcroachments on the International Settlement in Shanghai"by the' Japanese shd.erentuc-Ejv.th&.ci'plisted frora Yale, was for 10 anese retired. Here; British Tommies hold no grudge for the invaders and sha&ehai:{!s.'frfta Jepanecs • ficrs J^inister to Switacrlarjd, soldiers across the barbed wire entanglement that encircles the International Settlement.' . . ,as't«ell sis in ether ports.
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EIADBED HONORS SOVIET—Citizens of Madrid viewi a-plaque naming a street in the Spanish capital Soviet Union. Avenue, hoh.'Oring Soviet Russia, reported to have furnishjed-supplies and ammunition to the Loyalist Government" in the .^a^-torn country:
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-TO I T . 1 X I A N - C H 2 E 2 S \ 7 a v i n s l t e l i c n f t s cr Kotla "personnerofthe"Japansss"eniba£sy""in*Rbrris,"rajpc2;d ta's, pcpliIir~dJ3fr, -'iirdtisn : of the embassy.'Japan reccatly-sisnsd & thrsa-ccmsrci j;--st w i ^ i r i-i Gsrn munism. Since then the Italians'have boen-SccressircI? fri^dlx toTia,?-ivth-? Ki
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POLITENESS..— Much-bowing and scraping .occurred as above w h e n French: diplomats left London for -France, after -'a re'cent conference. Left to right: 'British Prime Minister Neville ! Chamberlain bows' to French Foreign Minister .Yvon' Delbos," ,while-.Sir Robert- Vansittart, iBritish,Undersecretary.for For!eign. Affairs, bows to' .French ;Premier- Camille - Chautemps.
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GHIB ACS—Clint Frank, left, bale's famous-backlicia'ace, receives the Helsman trophy from Walter L. Conwell, president of the Downtown Athletic Club, in N«rE7>Yorls.,Frcia!i amassed a total of 52d points durins-his career.-' • ~FOS.YJLIE'S
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"HOT2B7SD"—Senator Geor^a 1.. Berry 6l Tennessee, who charned at condemnation hearins"3 :n Knoxville-tnat ho and 2D rx:oelate clnixnauts hadfccen"rcTrbod" fay. the Tennecscs VaKey Authority of Isacea on isarblo r.t ILii mestinc in Chijja^o of U12 bl- 1 ncldinEn nor/ co\-sred. by the Joe Crcnin, Bostcn Sled 5c;i; IL-^wi.1 £ water of-Korris LaKe. Sox; Buefcy HCJTIG, Wsshir^ton £;s;tc
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THE JEWISH PRESS—FMD AY. DECEMBER IT, 1D3T i and the Mother chapter i3 begln- 400 umbrellas were hired . , , desk. Wei!, the s'iin will be -with only one threat of Keno. i ning to learn what it means to be each person held two umbrellas "warming just in care . itVo rival writers at swords able to take it. Last summer, the i overhead ~, and pfesto! the Xo. 100 team defeated the A. zAshot was magnificent. Realism: l a t h elobby of the taints met _t a party and had to A. No. 1 in the Softball finals to j Vi*arner Theatre is a life-?"r = d ] t o polite. ."How're you getting .Exhibiting .a fast breaking of- win the region championship and i "Unsung heroes: "Bluebird" H figure of Paul Muni as _oU,along?" grudged o_e. "All right. tensive,~ the J. C- C. Varsity team . again last week the younger boysPenner I (without a d u c k ) j writing at Ms desk. Several pat- Keeping alive." The first eyed of Coach Phil Gerelick easily de- '' with a'do-or-die spirit defeated]brought happiness to five hun-j rons looked a t . him, startled, feated'a Sokol' quintet, SS to 13, i last year's* regional, .basketball dred crippled children . . . had I caught their breath, then laughed at the" Center last Sunuay. The' champs. To such, players a3 Har- especially charted busses to take heryjbuily-oa discovering: biro, to ; be ; of was. I r.ection Tvith the conduct of'the b_«=i"bhie-shirted boys wero handling' ry Fox, Milt' Saylon, Norman them to the play, "Pinocchio." _______ npss of this corpora tion. the ball in nifty style, completely j Kuklin, Jack Epstein, Joe ; Kir-' Benny Rubin's current "good i To carry on business p.t any place or John and Elaine", Barrie-raore ! places Tvithin the jurisdiction of the baffling the opposition With their sbenbautn. Irv Porbes and.Man- deed" is a sponsorless radio proI Unite . States and in any End E2! fritlO" "passing." '". ' ' •" -juel Himelstein go the praise and gram to which he donates his have: completed, th'eir first : It'remained for the old stand-' my advice is to .watch" them in. thetime . . . solicits aid for the need- of marital (not niaHsal.) -bliss". . >rtzed capital stock of this by," Titiliarfl Sigal, to c o m e ! A- Z. A. tournament December iest'family In each city where his J shall be ?]fl.Ono.nn. divides into one hundred (10(1). share?; of t h e broadcast is heard. Results were ' tlirqirgh with the day's high-scor- I 25-6-3 at Hock Island, 111.. ]pax value of SKiil.Oi) each: and all of so overwhelming that several ln£. performance. Sigal dumped i • —-——• . said 1stock shall be common stock end shall be paid for in cash, notes or __30' Uniojr State BanH Slda..' in 13 points with deadly* under-j The ; special Jewish women's; families instead of one were other "propejiy or service?, Et the Omaha.- Nsts. ' rpsfonnble market vnlue thereof, and basket shooting: Some splendid i class which started last week has helped by each station. shall nbn-aspsssalile. Notica is hereby given that on -N'o- The becorporation passing by Sigal showed the J. C. j shown a remarkable increase .in "This Week" tells of an un-vp.mber shall comrnencf? - 2ir, 1BS7, ;tba . __aris_ Sanders revealed benevolence on the part C; center in a different light and'. attendance which to the Jewish ^s"ovpT7it>pr, 'iHCT. s r i ' 5 i t s p*c^ "Mayfer 'toward 'Marie. with ..Us-principal tjlabe c-f •tran"=s--t'X5a sha!] terminate'on the list fans are looking for a great sea- women in this community who doof Louibee cay of No1 business-.«t: Omaha, Nebraska.- sdcrvt- vember, 2027, unioss its l:Te tie exDressier during "her.-; last illness;-' not belong to this class.should be Eon from "Cy." pa--;an:cmen<3ment . t V i1t s . Articles d tended beyond -paid £ate by -amenc!s r ir by Which Article I was inent to these articles. However,, Coach Gerelick re- proof enough as to the adyan- Unfailingly -each "week he trekke_ •iBcbfperatton."read a s follows: That the highest ciriount of ar;y frnorthward laden-with a brief f'used'to single out any individual • tages offered in Lee Grossman's ".Name debtedneps- or liahtlitv to V\-hich th!s --..—. — this corporation corporation is at any time to rubied as'turnlng in the'best play. He'.morning class. Those that have brimful of scripts. He went to be- il_xsoa-_Htche!I. .nc." • itself, shall not exceed two-thirds o" discuss with her the story for her used the entire squad, substitut-[ enrolled in this class which conDated at, Omaha. Nebraska. its capital stock. nest picture. Itbuoyed her up, 20th day of November. lf>37. ing: liberally. Sammy Gantmann, I venes each Tuesday and ThursThat the affairs of this corporation shall be conducted b r a board of cithe -Creighton football Jioy, re-iday mornings at 9:30 .are: Dor- kept her happy. Though' he fenew rpctors of not iess than two nor morcthat she would' never return to vealed ' himself "a* classy' p'layer I othy Kooper, Marie Blacker, Ruth : r than fivp. End ths following officers:I share of stock s telutiaicls A President. Vice-President. Secre- ' and non-EsseKsat K-ilethe one-lianded shooting of i Rice, Sadie Greenberg^Elizabeth work, he never let her know that • L.l PhKip.'M.-26-37-tt. V • •-• . : tary and Treasurer, KKV two of which 1 cor-pnrF.tion shs ." ' • ' • PoX> Bogclo'noif \T33" something tot'Rshenstetn, Jean TUchman, Na'o-he knew; " offices may-be held bj- -one and the as of Septem'DPr ::: '. IRViN: C. _EV!N,'Attorney. same person. contirrae i-far a marvel'at/ Otherwise, the start-' mi- Co_n, Esther Rips,-Dora Al. (T63.---Branae!* . T h e a t e r Buuding. thfirpartpr. HEXRT E. >fAR5HAL_. rhf rju S h i r l e y b e a h e e x p l o d e s : " I t ' s •}• incebtedness to v * ' EOSK O'NEILL, ers.-GeHer, IzBogdonoff, Weiner : 1 ^hali a t p.r.y tirr^ incorporators. : sJiA' Burroughs, in addition to In Trr-p-ftr!* Of: they refer Hannah Gillnsky, Reva it burns -me up when little Eigal, all-gave sterling perfoi*mstar-| '"Notice is hereby given that the tinto me as 'the > • ' ' '
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Stern, Rose Lin sman and Estelle | let!" There, • Old Mother '• aelT5iffne<J have associates.'themselves together and have organized a corp.,•' - . Hubbard •„""... . reme—iber your fj ration —This year's Center team is play-! Stalmaster. • tracer the la-n-s of the State ».: Ing" lia'rd and fast—and what's •pressure! '..--'. . ' .'• ' "': tion is NAT1OX._>' Al'fl" COXDiThe women's gym, '.swim and niore, it's playing for keeps. ——.•.-" • |.T1O"N1NG. INC. The principal placo volleyball class -that 'me-et'sAHonRprnn frnm tho Pari-.-^ of-bustoess. ?hall be at Omaha. Ke
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adustiy could create[Pont,Jeft. president Ty-, if- only the '"tax ie Congress of Am- • -r :• York." .'With-iinx aville Corporation.
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Here are a few of many fe&tares c new G. E. Washer, C. C Acfvcter long life to clothes, long life to washer,
-through ior.tho upset- To each | floors. "What "artistic"-sets*they ' d made!! ' and "every one'' of'the game llads
(in tlie- winning: team I have only Today they have less noticepraise a"^.their v.;in" came,from the resnlt of ~determination determination and and the the able, but equally effective, meth"guts" that It takes for a badly \ ods. The "Zola" script-called for outclassed'" team to .get up And! 400 •extras to storm the street strike T)ack. For years now the outside the courtroom. Pour hunA, Z. A. No. 100 has been taking dred at five dollars ad^T^T Jf on the chin from ths Mother iously they changed the Ecens to
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flagpole facing: flrs'-V " n£: o p -.tlis -Co]DrarJo. .sculptor, a n d i s pai-fc'. —it—£ granife." "r V" r - -' 1- - • -*' *
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Bcnnington, Neb.,--at the Center | mgs h a d a lot of fun;-at_ -holiday r OQuintetn i n i e t . tjerformfed^ performed in in their their best best I' manufacture, deal in, lease, m-n. aT,, cpyrt at-3 p. m- The outstaters ] party given in the .Center recrea- swing manner, '"they're' great, thereof, accesories, instruments, degenerally have a fast outfit and tion room. A special lunch was aren't, they?" admired Jack Ben- vices, and to deal in any and all devices, parts and supplies coiir.ectea tfie J. C. C. boys will have to re-prepared and then gifts were ex- ny. "Yes," sighed Eddy, dream- therewith or relating thereto, both _i sume their speedy-play to retain changed by the members of this ily, "and they're all boys!" • wholesale and-retail. ]^l class: To climax the,,-iporning, To apply for, purchase, or 5n sny ' '~-> their, unbeaten record. manner acquire and hold, to operate j;j A. _. .A. No. 1. -will meet Sher- the women engaged in a hotly Ben "Blue has been taking les- and sell, and to license others, and in \z. > contested-volleyball game gave any manner deal-with an;- and ai; ' \t: Tvin-'VyniiamB in a prelim at 2 sons in magic for a sequence in rights, inventions, improvements and [S^ vent to their spirit. ^ ! '^ his current flicker. Yesterday he processes.To purchase, lease, or otherwise j - ^ , ' proudly gathered the cast about acQpire,- and to jold. own. sell an', ;i ,A four-team club league and a him for a "demonstration: 'Show- dispose of real and personal property ; jji . A Tveloome addition to the J. c ' t r> of an kinds, and to deal n «toclc.^1 i_^ | C, C.'-women's athletic depart- four-team Junior league- will fea- ily Tie broke an egg into a chaf- — » -<,ebe_tun« and, securities •— t,S js? I mkqt.'last weeli .w.as Mrs. Elsie ture the winter sport of- basket- ing dish . . . then another . . . every sort, - --i 1 ^.'ickberg "of. Grandj Island. Neb., ball at the Center this winter. setr fire to them and covered the To botro-w money for its corporate !' K.1 ! t o Due to start on Thursday evening, purposes, Issue bonds, if.-wntureo ' ' v,-ill. serve, as capacity -as dish . . . waited a dramatic mothe Xr'ra masseuEe.. in- the ladies Jbcker December SO, Lee .Grossman is, tore off the cover.' In 1 time t a time, of and tocorporation secure he same urging that all contracts- and tke dis,h nvas a-white bunny.'Blue | by mortgage, pledge, deed. trust cr "•jroom.-:'._".' .-i -, i otherwise. : • Mrs!" VYicl;bers.,v»ill be ,able to entry-fee money be irf- by-Decem- lboted- dejectedly at it, "That • To purchase, hoia. sell anfl transfer j of stock of this and other corber 22, • render, .servicir each vreek-dayfellow told me it would be "a shares porations; to' acquire the _ x_orning~fram-9 to li,:30 a. m« rights, assets and property, «nd to chicken!" undert_l;e_a_d assume the 'Whole or During the 15th century the • ' Treatments . include general any part of the obligations or crir : body-normalizing effects. An Jn- Jews of Centra Europe were acIdio-cine-crasies: Mae "VTest person.' firm, association or ccrpcration. and in general to do anything liovation for the ladies will be the cuseS of instigating "the Hussite likes kippered herring. , rise for the first time of the steam movementBinnie Barnes smokes a pipe Our Advertisers. tath. Appointments-may, be made -7-but.not in public, .by calling the J. C.C. physical dei Peter Lorre has his chauffeur partment. - . * ' ' , • ' ", ijnder .'contract—for life.-* Invest Safety, Wisely • Harry <Jreen 13 at -his card \,. ,• • tricks again . . . this time in. : Orchids to tne A. 7,.- A:'Xo. 100 „ By SELEN ZIGIIONB don. ' * •basketball team for the fine showing they made last "Sunday Samuel Kiitzman, scribbler on Hollywood-—"I- Saw Them Eddie Cantor's writing Hipreeerrts £1 Ctrong Compan.•vrhen they came, from behind to staff, ies—-Every Typs cf Insurance defeat.the A, Z. A. Ko- 1.H0-27. WhenI", & photobiography of the skipped back .east, to be awarded ^ " C : - ; ; >..r!*t;n» C&B ATGetting- ati ~to"_;-' ba'a- siurti'.TiiS' movies xlescribes-one melEoS" ot- his sheep-skfn ia dental surgery, 1 Century boys were behind, i t the economizing" in 190S. "PTorking then scurried Tight back to hi3 3"".o .of . the 'first' .quarter" by the on" a microscopic budget, they en.d sr.ore.of 11-2'and then displayed couldn't afford props, so Chairs, a spirited, offensive drive as they tables, and other furniture -were piled-..uif enough points to" break painted on - canvas - walls - -and
200 •
i
•7 I
Eccfcic WcSa Iros. Plea to with !Hs bocuEial gift.
l i k e thoBsaads of others—dis> - *• \"1-"V" c 3 " 1 forever'the <^ . >**^ d r a d g « r y of ' .._a_d-firi_s. Say .good-bye . 'to smoke; dirt and soot: . Eajoythelusury of uniform heat 24 hoars a day as 1 needed, a__ actually save j_o_ey. on' lieatinfj costs. -Boa't confuse Combastiofieer with ordinary ' stokers. ONLY Combas- tiaaeec has the famous * Breathing cuel Bed and the AaiomcticKespirator. And ecrr only, a few dollars down installs CombustiSS-
v v w -v v V ear in any foroace. No ia- / terrupiion of your heating . service. Asfcior illustrated ^ book tel!i_s how Com- "C isustioncsr _ssures cis=n, Toealthful, aatoinaticheat —and saves yon money.
Crkp._ golden Brffjra ioos'.I -wliea it's a medsm EKstris Tocnlrr. K b d _fcr "quid: saoeia czd -tasty •fcrcssMccls.-« ^Ht cay
Thiffl-lua l i b -C a modem SCC!KC Sead Irao. Risks l e r Irosiag ds^-s ear-. ier . . . s-uickcr ias yacrs to CSS2. Hero's c s" OVCJ csd ever.
pey, left, .who tetite4 ;i£l a surpriss -visit to
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The s e w G. H. Re f ri.~era.tor is s i l sUl
THE JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1937
Page
i: i . i . t - . f>cr . 1-.: . •<!>&—but t h e volve a number of Russians ir Pari3 and Harbin, !Is.nchuki:o, inL \ " J ' . O" .'. c . . . . i n . i n r r e open cluding Marko'f, the notorious leader o£ the anti-Semitic fraction O...' C ; l r i\ r if vii£ univeroi the pre-Revohitiona'y Russian The December meeting of the "'•} ; • . • , I • . P.- J cl BE-id, is a Duma. According to in[orr:;ation Ladies auxiliary of Shaare Zion ft';..; i.- ' - . ""' f c -\ liUie of oi% received here, Markoff recent!} synagogue will follow a 1 o'clock &:r.;r^ : I '.c I .-. T I . F students transferred frcra Paris to Erfurt, luncheon in the synagogue social r-F i.->- " : . ' " • . T -1 '• 1 -,Tf t o workGermany vrhere he is actirg cs cshall. Tuesday afternoon, Decem' c - v ' - - " • . " i r * r r i r h e r get ber 21. Financing of Aati-S e m i t e s sistant to Col. finch Fieise-hai:- Llutusl Herpec* cf C~Ttr,-f ; b c > P ; . I T " V-i " rr- b r i c k s t o er's "Weltcier.st," world-wide anMrs. Joe-Kutcher will preside l'i i'c", 'I p r " " r - - ' ' ' T ' c e n t e r on ' ffhroujr-oat V/crld Ecirr r«tcrec rt 1 ti-Semitic propaganda service. at the brief business meeting, L r v i Scopi ?•- . ~C ti 1 ^!! therePart of Policy and Mrs. Frank Margolin will be Toedli. it was shewn, acted cs if T-C corn- ^ : r — - ' " . b o u p h one jeno chairman of thei program. Chilv " bp b r " i t j r r c.r< v h e n t h e Berne Switzerland (JTA) —Berne representative ot the "VTeltXew York, (JTA)—Tbe p o r RULES OP SUBSCRIPdren of the Sunday': school will The Nazi Government's method dienst, as well as Gauleiter (Nazi tion cf Arah-Jev- if h rUfflc-uKies ii . ' ' t f ." f f r c^c>c'c-r ~7 \" v c \ ided by, . TIOH CONTEST present a variety program. of spreading anti-Seniltsrni al'road district'lcndcr) fcr Bcrre acd al-Pf-lcctlre _jr.r.y ron:c no', frcn , - „ • , , . , , . r -,-j , j - r - ^ i n p — a n d . Mrs. Morey Llpshiitz and Mrs. acd financing anti-Jewish, activ- so deputy leader ot the Ttussisn tl.cfs fl^hi'np cut tbc r^.efticr ir ' r ' i -'— •• Tvir ' ' r v b<3"FT-er they 1; Anyone is- eligible to enRobert Sacks are in charge of the ities throughout the world were World Fascist O r g a n i z n t ion, Jbe 7cIIticEl E'-ons, l-rt f-cn irer - r r r ." "• 1 r '•" rir^^p? every Three hundred dollars In cash ter. One of the most valued me- luncheon arrangements. : r which has headquarters sn Harrevealed Jast week by the arrest t's"-. "" -*•" i" " o"' b"T>u*»p y i t h a "ircrr icvcv" c' th^ IZfbrev i r. prizes vlll be given by the Jew2. The contest'will open De- diums of Jewish" culture and inhere of Boris Toedli, a Swiss citi- bin. Although Swiss-bore, Toecli vcrslty, Ssiruei B. r.rkcl, r". ~cc- c r r " . f - • ;-,( f " . ' n b ' ' ball, but ish Pres3 In a 1938 subscription cember 1OT 1037, and close tellectual activities and news of zen, on suspicion, of conducting lived :r.ost o£ his life in Russia, tor cf t.be Airericcr. Frirris cC I Wile 1 1 1 ? ' I t ; •- rompared sales contest to be conducted in January Iff, 1038. the affairs of Judaism today Is espionage activities on behalf of and t i e TCazis asserted!}' brought the Ketrew vr.ive-El(.>, cccifec Sioux City from December 20 to 3. The person selling the the weekly Jewish newspapers him irozz Harbin to Switzerland last v eel: o i h> rea.rr. 're — Germany. January 15. greatest number of subscrip- published in all sections of the The i r - - - : - " - - r Kfuaent Police discovered in Toedli's in orcer to use his Swiss citizer.,. A grand first prize of* $150 will tions to. the Jewish Press In United States. body of '"'—*",'* •-^\,'<^v s t u home 300 documents scd lexers !1 ship to cover up his Xczl rctivjbe awarded to the person selling Sioux City, during the time of For years these newspapers l > " X" TTu *., —~ \ \ lldpISlS T h e Ir-I'-ersItr on ?,".ci r t indicating that he and others ties. the greatest number of subscrip- tbo contest will receive 5150. have served their, communities Scopus, i h r o u s h ;!,e niufvrl r e - S-V.C E. ^nci.I>' c," J.1 . . '1 en of the* were in constant touch with the . Among To°.cT.i's cocumenls po-' spect I!cr tb? respective ci^~Tv^e^ f'l -Ei -f £.-e \ ,- t . ' c United tions, to the Jewish Press in the second! £5100, and third, $50. faithfully, contributing t h e i r c£ fslESThird Reich and received funds lice unearthed a 1 ollotted period. Second prize will •i. Every person not sharing share as a means of communica5--,r =•-, rrri-, r ' '-OTT, New under which C6 Xrzi of the .',rr>s E.rd J f v s t - ' f I" V c k , or<- C-o7- ~ t • •-••{", sr,d one. and Instructions for stimulating "be $100 and'third prize" §50. No- in the grand prizes will re- tion through which Jews have E-roupes. TP.cy v e i l iTrt to ? r r r " ' body works for nothing, for each ceive 50 cents fop each sub- been able to keep abreast of their High Light of Winter Season antl-Jewi3Q propi^rrda. Police I agents were ra*<3 to he o?crrtJ-£' aztior t h - t Ara*>« sri ,'p-^-r o r r L-c-i P p r r " '" r,r-F, '".'hf m s t r u c impounded more than 150 cf th°! in various ceuntr'ss. Tbe p £ " r s ' ilve top£Ll-er, said Mr. r . r k e ir. to Be Held at contestant not sharing in the scription sold. times, and-serving as intra-comd o c u m e n t s and. rSotcsraphed !a!so revealed that German ccr.r..:- an Warrior grand prizes will receive 50 cents 5. The Jewish Press stipu- munal bonds uniting and expressiKtervlfw v ; t h the .""cvisii I ' r o l . i.c~>leof - T \ r r . r i i . Dr. Alexthen for use as evidence in Tosd- lates hare been ir.rtructeti to is-' Jor each subscription he sells. lates that a total of 400 sub- ing • Jewish opinion. They have f r i c r . ' i c . 11 rro-". I. J, sue visas to Ti"hite Russians actThe annual mid-winter dance, li's trial. The Jewish Press makes only scriptions be sold In Sioux been a connecting link between ing as German agents vho are InAmong the documents sre paOne stipulation—that the aggre- City. happenings of interest and thesponsored by the Junior Hadassah chapter of Sioux City, will be pers indicating that the German capable of chtcicing vissjs from ' " E F T e r r s . ' ' r e t frrir (h^ I^E'PCI 1 gate number of subscriptions sold 0. Entrance blanks and sub- Jewish people. in Sioux City will total 400. But scription books may be ob- Behind the scenes inspiration_ held Sunday evening, December authorities finance the activities the Nanscn International Cffice cc—.trc-eri'rr. but fror,- r l " c r no matter the result, the 50 cents tained at the Sioux City Jew- ofThese"newspap"er7harbeen"thei 19 ' l n t h , e ^llroom of the War-jot White Russ:as CEti-Semites for "stateless" refugees. Some of there Russians, it T*-EF for each subscription will be ish Community Center. suport of the communities they frior h o t e L This affair, ia former disciosed by the documents', were suing German visas to then. paid. No contestant can lose. He serve as reflected by Bubscrip- fff™' * M » * t " c t e ^ Jf^ff g An official receipt trss fount! paid from Nazi sources to travrl cJ ?fterrri"rr to FO'-'T iY'.s c 'is certain to get a return for the tions. They desire to serve, but tendance, and the committees in j-.-v-, >" '", r~! -<—Nationferpnre br hatred m i fo~ce." to Berne to testify against the signed by Toea'i en Slay 5, 1935, charge of the arrangements, plan time and effort expended. l they must have an audience. money froni Ger- Jews at the sensational "Prelo-' rir. F.rkf". v-bc cr~i" "~erl vi }• f' jTr r r - r . - r r r r r f '.->• l>-dden by Ail subscriptions to the Jewish For 23 years the JewislT'Press to accommodate a great many. asknowledgiig C-f" "°'r;— -_(.i - ; i «' p ' r v ' i h p r o r many "covering the cost of thecois" trial. The money appeared Press terminate January ' 1, so of Omaha has been serving Jew- Among those who will attend will Protocols r " . T " p F f r v s->.pf "•>-• rr, innsiisivith t^acbers ant! FivJpr^E. FL \" to have been obtained cMe'ly trial." This evidently that participants in ' the contest ish families in the Omaha, Sioux be a number of the young men refers to the trial in Berne in the from Alfred Rosenberg. "Fplr;ti:al 4bst botb. t^e frrr/tr r r d F,vf»-t z'c f - r i r r* " r r - " r, r - i . - r r po!itt•will have all of Sioux City in and women who will be hone City and Lincoln area. autumn of l'Jo4 ia wtica the leader" cf the Third Reich, ard "bo;r ft -A c rr'-ors ^ f" fe- cr'. or rrr'r" c r - r " .vhich to work. Credit for mailed The Jewish Press feels that it from college for the winter vaca- Jewish community instituted libel Dr. E:evert. one cf ihe ec tcrs cf Thp (-/cf v-'- r n c ' ip Ad(subscriptions may be _ given to has done a good job. It has j tion. proceeding against Si^iss Nazi Reirhsfuehrer Hitler's Vcelkiscb- ilOTi In Pt'.eFtir.c ir. zr.T T T r tc ; r - r r r r C*T~~'' "•?"•-• r y.nblnany contestant Indicated. There Jack Reams and his orchestra brought news local, national and FO- 1 F ' " * P " F " <•- ;. y . f C\gleaders for distributing ths, "Pro- \ er Beobachter, chief crgan cf the Vill be no limitations on the sales international in character, inter- ! will supply the music for danc- tocols of the Elders of Zior.," pur- German Xazi Party. There r r e r o Arab stveer"? n ; b ° pf any entrant. ing. In charge of the arrangec"O"S£- f r r 1 - " " c r =""' o Giving its first performance preted from a Jewish viewpoint, ments will be Miss Ruth Orlikoff, ported record of a plot for Jewish Entrance blanks and subscripIn addition to the forthrc:r.:r-s: imivfTFII^" — X"^^brb j* b^ccr^e to members of the Jewish com1 tion books may be obtained at Monday evening, the newly - orMiss domination of the world. The ver- trial cf Toedli, the Swiss Feder- v "'T._]tj.- J ? J s . . r e n t s A£CTPC "cr^. -- Vo'1!" X r i " - r ' C i r " ' b-r" r'frn<"It h^s ^ u g b t to gather j » * * * * « « * » dict at this trial declared the al authorities are starting prothe Jewish Community Center In ganized Jewish Art theater group Esther Eirenberg. P c r i T^~vrvr~ F~ v i i.'h vm{"Protocols" a forgery. P• Sioux City, headquarters of . the of the Jewish Community Center, j all the news, through the faciliceedings against Col. F'.eischauer, pandist. en chr.rpes cf fc'^r.g TcrnTc'. Xrt^ m r I^r reportefl The December meeting of Junties of two telegraph agencies won the praise and the plaudits anti-Semitic lawyer and rrc~r.-. .content. The seized documents also infalss evi; C nce a; the : r ; 4 ,:\zl. , and its own-local staff; and toior Hadassah was held "WednesArnold Levin of the Jewish of a large attendance at an open supplement that with interesting, day evening in the Jewish ComJPrees staff will arrive in Sioux meeting. timely features about people and munity Center. Mr. O. O. MarksCity..today to take charge of the Two- plays were/presented, "A events. bury was the guest speaker. Rejcontest. He will register partici- Bargain's a Bargain"- and "Dports of the recent convention The Jewish Press has sought to pants at the Community Center 2D8." The cast for the first inheld in Omaha were made by and instruct them in the contest cluded Margaret Kosberg, . Sally present p. complete news coverage delegates to the meetings. Miss anytime before Sunday morning, Welnste, Rudy Shindler,1 J o e in every home, in the belief that Saretta Krigsten presided at the December ID, at 9 a. m., when Goldstein, Marvin Beech •: and every Jew wants to acquaint him- meeting and Miss Dorothy Ep.the contest officially will begin. Sadie TaSer... The cast for "D-nelf with Jewish activities through stein was in charge of the pro'A meeting of all who plan to en- 298" was- made' up of Esther the -medium of: an alWewish gram. ter will be held late Saturday aft- Erlnberg, Lillian RIvin, Charles1 i newspaper ernoon, December 18, at theShindler, Earl Novich^and Rosalie ' To fulfill its aim jj.8 Jewish I Press mu3t reach every Jewish • , Community Center, when the Sacks. " Both playa were • directed by home. It'3 present -objective is first subscription books will be A. Z. A. Sabbath, postponed Miss Josephine Lavalliere. Both 1Sioux City. It offers weekly a from last week, will be held this Checked out. casts did admirable work and in field of culture and entertain- evening at Shaare Zion synathe comedy, "A Bargain's a Bar- ment as expressed in the column gogue. Joe Maron and Nathaniel Ha'dascalta Plane gain," the audience fenjoyed re- by Ludwig LewisOhn, the book Singer will present, a- debate on peated mordents of hilarious fun review by Rabbi Theodore Lewis, the • Partition of Palestine and Jtli Sfiabfo'oG and and interesting features by Phl-Calmon Levlch. will deliver an laughter.' neas BIron, Henry Montor, Al oration. Miss Rosena Sacks introduced Mrs. M. A. Weiner, 2133 aib Heights avenue, will be hostess the players; Mrs. Lucille Laval- Segal, Louis Pekarsky, Helen Tomorrow morning Wilbur r psri t o the Senior Hadassah Oneg Her, director of the theater proj- Zlgmond, Pierre van Passen, Bailin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Sbabbos, tomorrow afternoon at ect, Bpoke, and Miss Mary Treglia Maurice Samuels a n d Rabbi Bailln, will celebrate his Bar \2i. 4 ,3 o'clock. Current events v/lll be of the Community House spoke Frederick Cohn. Mitzvah. The Jewish Press now is un- During the Junior Congrega, given by Mrs. Fred Sherman and briefly. - ,. • \ dertaking a subscription sale con- tion service, Irving • Pliskin will j Sire. Louis Agranoff will speak j on the work of Henrietta Szold in test in Sioux City. Your co-oper- act as Cantor, and Davfti Kuntz Hadassah. ation and your continued Interest will be reader of the law. ReSociety News' in" the Press will be solicited and freshments will be served by Mr. At 4:30 o'clock the members Mrs. Gertrude Sirken, 308s : appreciated.. "Will listen to the radio broadcast and Mrs. Bailin in honor of'their j over the Columbia network, when South Fowler street, has an son. j 3virs. Mose3 Jacobs, national pres- nounced the. "marriage of her daughter. Miss Mildred Sirken, to I Jdent of Hadassah, will speak, j • The regular December meeting Harry Molbert,' son of Mr. arid (Coatinucl Jreza peso l ) i bf the chapter will be held on the Mrs. D. Molbert of _ Brooklyn, N. I .28 th and will follow a luncheon Y. The ceremony was performed Samuel Haffits, 45 years old, • for adults and children. Mrs.December 4 in' New York. died Saturday in a local hospital Ico. Wiser and more practicalMiss Sirken was for several following a heart attack. Funeral minded men than I must choose j Slax Hosenstock is in charge of i tho. program "arrangements, andyears a case.worker of. the Fam-services were Sunday afternoon the ways and means by which the ! Sirs. Rubin Miller, chairman of ily Welfare bureau here. She in the family home at 1214 Tenth right influence can be exerted \ -the School Luncheon fund, will attended Morningside college, re- street. ; Rabbi H. i R. Rablnowitz upon the Cardenas government \\ -r 1 jbe in- charge of the luncheon. ceived her bachelor of arts de- and Cantor A. Pliskin officiated to make good its words of tolerProceeds will go toward the In-gree at the University of Iowa at the funeral. ance and Its pretensions to be a .,• ffant Welfare fund. and at present Is taking courses Mr. Haffits is survived by hiscivilized government. And , this j <• Plans will be discussed for the at the Pennsylvania School of So-' widow, four children and a matter, It seenia To me, is a mat3olnt Junior and Senior meeting cial Work in Philadelphia; and brother, Leon, of Houston, Tex. ter that belongs vary definitely to the functions of the American to be held in January, and fordoing field work there for the Jewish Congren3 and even the |tho Purlm Bazaar to be held Jewish Welfare society. A. Z. A. World Jewish Congress and It Is Mr. Molbert, who received his ary ic Harch 17. to be hoped that the Congress bachelors degree, from New York Th& fast A. Z. A. basketball will not wait until the meeting i university and . a master degree rrom Coru'srriTi T3 associated with team'. defeated .the . Salvation promised for June when, as such i the New York state department Army quintet Thursday evening things move ia this age, it may j in a game of the Recreation be too late. J of labor, • league, 22 to 17. A feature was j 'At an election meeting of the One word snore. " American the close guarding of both teams. Jjoard of directors, Mr. ISiorey are not sensitive enough Mr. and Mrs. John Lansburg, Trailing "at the half, 9 to 5, theJews •J/Ipsbutz"was named president of 2707 and many Anerican Jewa Prisec 'will t-e a.\rr.rcGc. t street, returned re- A. Z. A. cagers rallied for a well naks too 'She congregafion for the coming cently Jones a point of a soIf-dcfcnsivG after a month's trip to Jrear. Mr. Lipshutz has been ac- Chicago and New -York City earned victory. Zellgson ecored ignorance of Jewish affairs. I_l i,-Lii ', -J^.tive for a number of years and a where they visited their son, Bill 13 points for the A. Z. A. team, have .the imprcrrion (it ns-y be! • zneruber of the board of dlrec- Lansburg. A new class of pledges was all vronst) thct the Americp.r; 4OT3. Vlce-presldenta elected inInitiated into • the chapter at a tourlct clude L. 'J. Kaplan, A. H. Baron meeting Thursday evening in thedefinitely on the Increase; and Fifty friends gave a surprise Community Center. and M. Satin. Eli Robinov/ was R o b e r t that sonio of that business, a ' aamed financial secretary; Dr. party on Mr. and . Mrs. Mark Cohen was pledge master. good deal of that businer,^, I- • prank Epstein, recording secre- Sabel, celebrating their tenth Jewish business. In a word, nicnj wedding anniversary. Following tary,, and Mas. Falk, treasurer. Jews, uncomfortable in this age c3® F a buffet supper, , the evening at the thought o£ Europe, go to ; hours were spent a t cards. Mexico and Jewish , tourist and ' fJlount Sisaai travel agencies are active in this ' Sabbi Theodore N. Lewi3 will Miss Lois Levitt, daughter of busine-33. Every Jev»' vho is plan-' ' speak this evening on -"Judaism Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Levitt, Bcllcnine to go to Meslcs and every I in Transition." New York (JTA)—Possjble JeT7isli,tourS:t asency and, under vue apartments, will arrivo home The Temple Father and Son Sunday from Smith college to fulfillment o" a prophecy ia the banquet will bo held December 28 spend her winter vacation wltli Book of Dsniol V/C3 seen by He-Jewish .pressure, every noa-Jcx.*ish tourist agency should at enc? Sa the Tomplp, and the dinner her parents. brew scholars hero 5n the ap-address in the most public nr.n*.7ill bo served by the Sisterhood. pointment o£ Sir Harold Alfred ner a question to the r.Icricrr. , ZilT3. L. S. Goldberg, president of Mrs. Emil Rosenstock has reIlacMlchasI as Palestine high government, to oar de-partner:'. tha Sisterhood, h33 appointed to her home in Kaunas comrnisioner. of State, to the lirrican corrc-' lira. M. Blank cad Sirs. Si. Mush- tuned The scholars pointed- to the spoadents in Mexico, the ctcar.:City after a wcek'3 visit in the i i a as chairmen of the dinner. opening-sentence in Chapter XII, shi? lines, the Mexican n a Max Ronenstock home. which reads as follows: "And at j—the vital and iraniefiicte qucr=- , that time will Michael tho great tion: Are ihesa thtr.^s true? PICKED ?C2 S7AP, TEA11S Miss Rose Knazik, COC VirT " Football coaches and officials glnla street, left last week for an ' prince -,vho standeth for the chii- V» hat -v. ill be the result? Is ;:e=-, <3ren o£ thy people, stand forth: extended visit v.-ith relatives in ico .-.till c civilized co j..fv \:'czv in picking sin all-star learn for and there -will be a tine o! dis-American New York City. tern lov.-a, named two north t FOB- ~: tress, such as hath sever i;02n n t a can go v.-ith z. seed co^Sious City boys who.attend CenHeld J Rabbi and Mrs. - Jacob II. since tUo esi3tenca o£ r.ny nation, tclcuco—a clean asd cieir Amertra.! Klga Ecliool. They are Karry pre;k • Slabei'S and Paul Salzman. Both Brown, 302 Terrace apartments, until that nr.inp time; and at that ican cortcionce end r:i -inclcr.^crt : JewisQ conscience? Ytn or r,o! ; • nro soniorr. at Central and liave announce* the birth of a non ontime snail tiiy people be dean Important p.irt ir. the December 12 in the Methodist livered, every one that shall be (Copyri/jht, 1937, by Szren. Art:i • Syndicate) found 'written in the book." hospital. athletics of the school.
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