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Tho rietTS expressed by Lud» wig Lewisolin in.bis. columa era hi3 ovrh s a d do not necessarily reflect tba policies or Qttitcda of oar publication. Reprbdnc* tion in whole or i s part strictly
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BEFUSCTIOXS AFTER PESACH Many months-ago a very brilliant friend of mine, one of the ablest minds in contemporary Jewry, -wrote me from Palestine, saying he had-heard—thua-rumor travels: and becomes stranger and more unreal •with distance—that, flfii . desperate over the inadequacy both moral and- spiritual o£ the Postpone Event Until Sponsor Nat to Press Jewish people, I had -withdrawn Evening- of Act for Giving Palesfrom the-world, of practical affairs into a realm of mystic conMay I I ' tine Citizenship templation and, like the Agndath Yisrael, was waiting for Mechiach 3ecause of the work being done to com© and heal our ills. What London (WNS) — The bill to on the Philanthropies campaign, probably gave rise ultimately to Aged Rabbi Included grant Palestine citizenship to per- Committees Named for the members of tiie organizations af- i : secuted Jews in Europe will not that rumor -tras'certain passages fIHated with the Pound Table of I fIH Meeting of Reforca Group Set Adrift be pressed in the House of Comjn my novel The Last Days of Jewish Youth have asfeesi By Nazis Congregations mons, its sponsor. Commander Shylock. Bnt these passages, ike Stage Kight, rriginaily schedulX. Oliver Locker-Lainpson, Conserv. the novel itself, like all my novels ed for May 4., be postponed until All local comtaSttee appointvative, declared, on the eve of a . with the exception of one that Wednesday evesiES, Kay 11. Praha {JTA)—Harried across has never, been published in the borders of three countries for scheduled second reading ol the ments for the Midwest Kegiosa! Besides the sketches to be gjv- Large Cast Keeccd fcr Final Play of America, were dramatic, objec- four days after being cast adrift measure which passed thB Hpuse Conference of the Union of Acertive, belonging within the story on an isolated Danube breakwat- by one vote when the Speaker Seasors held here the week ead of May and the characters and the jer- er by the Nazis. 15 of a group broke a 144-144 tie. "Table will be presented with the **_ U «-A 7 and 8 have been mafis by the Commander Locker-Lampson iod. But since I did long ago of 51 Jews from the Austrian d awards. general chairman, Isador Siegler, Try-outs for Maurice Maetersaid he had shelved action on the write a couple of autobiographi- province of Burgenland found linck's classic, "The Blue Bird" bill because he believed the sup- and the vice-chairman, Julius Ko- f\ cal volumes therefore, according shelter on a French river boat. senfeld of Council Bluffs. will be held on Sunday, Kay 1, • > I port of Commons had been won to the notions of that vast The 15, who had spent a night in the auditorium cf the Jewish 1 Members of the Advisory Com—> \ r^ L jority whom it hurts to think, my in Pheasants Wood on the Hun-for its underlying principle and Community Center at 2:SO. A novels are autobiographical- too, garian frontier, and also other therefore he thought it more im- mittee are: Eugene Blazer, David large cast including about filty which is aa silly as - i t is annoy- Jewish refugees, w e given per- portant to press for agreement on Block, Leslie Surkenroad, Dr. children End twenty-five adults Frederick Cohn, M. L. Conn. Ben the immediate provision of passing. will be needed for this play. mission to board the boat at the port facilities to Jewish refugees Danbaum, Sol L. Degen, David •Well, "'The Blue Eird" will be given the Jewish : people is frontier town, of Rajka following along the lines of the inter-gov- Goldman, Abe Goldstein, Louis under the direction ol Mrs. Herdreadfully inadequate. All of • us ernmental convention adopted a t Hiller, William Holzmac, Morris man Jahr. This will be the final who are-in the midst of Jewish Ltf i E. Jacobs, David Leviiie, Sam J. Geneva last February. presentation of the Center Playwork and Jewish life are, as. I FIND REFUGE IN CASTLE Leon, Louis E. Llpp, Milton Liv1 ers current secfcr. heard that able and gifted woingston, Alfred S. Mayer, Harry Vienna {JTA) — While Gordia's The Tra© Power man, Goldie Meyerson say one white flags emblematic of a Z. Rosenfeld. David Rosenslock, r re to Be Presented day not long ago,. »uch more completed purge of Jews fly Fred Rosenstocfe, Ben D. Silver, afraid of the Jewish people than from s e v e r a l First Tinse Dr. J. A. Weinberg, Sara WerthBurgenland <r ' v of any of the other factors which towns,. a group of exiles wa3 eimer. Rabbi David H. Wice, and determine the fate of that peo- reported to have found refuOH Sunday, May I , Harry Wilinslry. ple. 11 we could summon the i t h t O L l the Reception committee and is | c l a b c n ^ e r the direction cf Ben tie or the 74-year-old Hungarer and nnity of a living Jewish ian aristocrat, Princess Stepbeing assisted by Mrs David Martin will present for the first people, I will not say that our hanie LonyaL The Princess's ^ LE V Goldman, Tice chairjnan, Mrs. Da- time in Or " J- Gordin's {our- | * <<v r n t path would be easy in this insane first c\rc* vid H. Wice, Mrs. Frederick Cohn, act drama, "The True Power," at husband was C r o w n and savage period of history. I Prince Rudolf of Mayerling Center to Join with Other Mrs. Harry Wilinsky, Mrs. Isador the Jewish Community Center. T will say' that our fate co%ld be. Tee plsy concerns En Mrs. J. F . Cohen, Mrs. H. m iwr v r ."' . Local Group Work \ sit Party ",Expels immensely mitigated — both its'1 fame. According to tha reports > Agencies pretty girl of poor fa: outer circumstances • and that in- reaching Vienna, the refugees Mrs. Charles Sehimmel, and Mrs. young wife falls deeply in lore ner condition with which the out- were provided with - matzos Sam Josephson. Poland < "With the Jewish Community with the doctor's younger brother circumstances mast be_ met. Serving on the Badges, Tickets fl' and a schochet to enable them Center participating. Internationer." A play cf great emotional t i TTarsaw (TTNTS) — Eirtreinist j But that^inadeqnacy of the em- to celebrate Passover In an al Boys and Girls week will be ana Printing committee are: Mrs.depths, "The True Power" is ose !F Max Holzman, chairman; Mrs. anti-Ses:itlsai receives a severe j pirical Jewish peoplev that is to orthodox manner. .\ observed locally starting tomorSam Appleman, Mrs. Richard K. of the classics of the Yiddish blow ia Poland when the Camp i say, of the Jewish men and -wo-; row ajid continuing through May- Einstein,- Mrs. Iz Rosenthal, and stage. of Xational Unity, the govern- I men who are' alive today, will not Taking part 'in the play are: J. laest party, expelled the. League | They 6. ' Urs. Sam Gilinsky. finally discourage or. drive into diplomatic intervention. Henaan, Jack Saylan, Mrs. Philip £ Vr'vno' v c - n g "Pn^and, - its extreme ] An outgrowth of the Rotary 0 were provided with food and On the Convention hall and mere inactive mysticism,- any. one Crandel], Mrs. 3 . Martin, Mrs. j •ps.zcisl and anti-Semitic - right j who understands - either the • char- blankets by Jews of Pressburg, Club Boys week, Boys and Girls Reservation committee are: AbeJulius Schneider, Mrs. S- ' Canar, j •p-j'-nr "" "p^-, week is being sponsored in. Oma- Goldstein, chairman. Mrs. Sol Deacter of the -entire historic, pro- Czechoslovakia. Eaum'er. X. Martin, Miss Edith j -i-^*-- -,~tT", cess or, specifically the- history ol ""- The remaining"? 5, save one, Of ha by the Council of Social Agen- gen, Mrs. Herbert Harrison, Mrs. B. "Wolfsea, Mrs. isorin and- B. j £] sT ,_ ~-'r^ th&-gro»p,- ~who- had- been fcxrond- cies of which, the Center- is a the' Jewish -peoples-—-The-.people p ed Tback into^tistria .after jbeijig member. _,Ths jiirposs of the -ob- Sam- Leon, and Mrs. Louis Kul- Martin. . ... ... h t J t h t l U i = ,. that, we p j j >.that.;.we...leUgve/in •rescued from" "the "breakwater, servance "is t o rdcu5 alten'fl6ii""6n -• Members of the' Registration "J. EsTiica' will act as prompter. 1 thaiT~ibthins- can filers to be imprisoned, in the KJt- the needs and problems t>f young committee are:" Mrs. Harry Ho- N. Martin is president ef tha er cf t^~ * 'ifff""" aHbelieF H daunt, is the, entire Jewish peo- tsee barracks, were loaded on people and their activities. senfeld, chairman. Mrs. M. L. Co- club. A. 'Schneider will be chairple as an historical > identity- and lorries and sent to an unknown The Jewish Community Cen- hn, Mrs. J. A. Weinberg, Miss man of the everting. ispulEioa • cr me jjeague f ol- j super-personality. .It- concludes destination, probably to be smug- ter will have a display of the Hazel Degen, and Misg Serline Tickets for admission are 45 the. innumerable generations who gled across a different part of work ot the annual Home camp .Somberg. cents. Proceeds will be divided follovrefi shortly after its leaders had threatened to •wiitiTs.vr t i e i have gone before; it-includes-the the frontier. in a window at Orchard & Wil- The Banquet and Luncheon among charitable organisations support of their 60,000 members; prophets, . poets, • martyrs, sa.ges, with half the amount going to a helm's. Meanwhile, the Social DemoCommittee includes: Mrs. Sam ualess the governmeiit adoptee a | teachers, saints of all "the a^es; cratic Deputy Schultz of Pressfund for the relief cf Polish rcrA r~— on the local commit- •Wertheimer, chairman; M r s . Jewry. firm anti-Jetrisli policy. In reply j~-e~ it includes those nameless and un- burg and the Jewish Deputy An- teeServing are: Mrs. Barton Kuhns, Morton Degen, Mrs. Bert Hene, stmg thousands in every period of gelo Goldstein interviewed For- chairman; The Omaha Choir and Dra- General SlrtrarEynski cisisissefi ;- v " e A. J. F . Cross of Mrs. Abe Herzberg, Mrs. Louis matic history for -over-thr3e thousand eign Minister ..Kamil .Krofta re- the publicMr. club has presented several Jerzy RutkotrEiii, leader of the i Hiller, and Mrs. Milton Livingschools; Miss . R. League, and several meiabers cf i years who have .lived--and,-on a garding the refugees. plays within the last few years ~ , ^ rr Tuttle and Miss B. Vandruff of ston. its executive committee. At t i e [ thousand occasions, gladly laid with gTeat success. Reports here told a harrowing On the Ushers and Pages Comthe Red Cross; Mr. B. Squires of san.9 time lie tls-o cancelled the j down their lives, • in order that story of the experiences encoun- the Urban league; Rev. Howard mittee are: Mrs. Fred Rosenstock, menibsrsliip c&rd of Dsputy ^~^the Jewish people and the order by the 51 who had been Ohman, r e p r e s e n t i n g ' the chairman, Mrs. Loyal Cohn, Mrs. CISTP" BuSzynslTi. heaS c£ a rec-1 of faith and: conduct which : the tered by the Nazis in mid- churches; Mr. C. Weigers of* the Clarence L. Bergman, Mrs. J. J. ical ECti-Sersitlc group is. tfce \ Jewish people created may not cast adrift The inhabitants of Tha- Boy Scouts; Ruth Allen of the Friedman, and Mrs. M. Bernstein. ,'»'«>-»«ti Sejm, vria had bitterly cttacted ! perish from the earth. And it in- Danube. on the Czechoslovak bank Jewish Community Center; CathServing on the Finance Comthe government's Jewish emijrrs-; cludes finally the Jewish people ben, of the Danube, heard cries for erine Porter of the public library; mittee are: Sam Leon, chairman, tion and tosher slaughtering polof the future—your children and help Milton Abrahams, Mas Barish, coming from the Tiver. A Mrs. C. K. Ross of the Vocationicies is. his weekly paper, Jutro r _ mine and their posterity. rescue party found the group al Guidance council; H. T. Jones Paul Blotcky, M. E. Chapman, Mr. Israel Gershater, Trio re- Prasa. BuSzynski Is the author of ; He who has grasped this truth huddled on a breakwater. John Farber, Manning E. Handof the Omaha-Douglas County cently returned from Dallas, Tex., the til! to outlsir Eiechitc, and embraced- this vision may In the group were an 82-year Health council; Mrs. J. E. Ober- ler, Morton Hiller, Alfred S. has brought to t i e attention cf Elimination ct the Lecgrte cf But Mayer, Fred Sosenstock, and have hoursgive thatupare' dark.in. He old • rabbi and many women and reuter of the P.-T. A.; Mr. WilThe Je-wish Press, the following To-ang- Poland frora the ^o^ern- u i - ~rcr " he cannot or give Louis Sommer. children, who had been dumped liam H. Smails of the Group news item from a Dallas news- ment party is esrpecteS to result rises from every defeat. He by Miss Hazel Degen is chairman paper: Nazi storm troopers on the "Work division, and Mr. Arch ixx a"Etro^fcer governiaent attitranscends every disappointment. breakwater, and Mrs. David Rosesstock, vice.. food or Stafford of the Rotary club. "Action cf the Kev. L. Valen- tude tcwarfi c,Eti-Je-wish flisturHe is aware.ot -the fact that the warm clothing.without The days of the week will be chairman, of the Transportation tine Lee, pastor of the Ciurch o basces since memberE of tbe Thaben residents living Jewish people of today, cor- fed and sheltered them and dres- divided as follows: -Saturday, and Motor Car Committee. the Incarnation of Dallas, in pretcsrs the chief instigators • rupted and' hardened by a stupid sed the injuries of those who had Recognition day, with the Scout Morris E. Jacobs is chairman senting to the congregation ot League age and environment; does not of- been ill-treated by the troopers. Merit Badge s h o w ; Sunday, of the Publicity Committee and Temple raanu-El a gift of ?!,- cf anti-Jeirish escesses. espec'E.1ten enough loot -within, does not Refused permission by the Czech- Church day; Monday, National Leonard Nathan and Mrs. Een IS9.64 frora the' Ciurcli of the Iy in the uriT-ersiiles. party purge is also likely often enough Beet for the. sources oslovak authorities to remain, Child Health d a y ; Tuesday, Shapiro are assisting him. Incarnation for t i e aid of Euro- to The "bring E utiJicatioa cl E!1 ar ' ol its spiritual lite and poorer the group was sent to the Hun-Group "Work day with open house pean •within the indivisible oneness of garian . frontier where they were at Group "W.ork agencies; "Weded its history,- character and- faith. of to cross. Thence the 51 nesday, Vocational Guidance day; He knows. But he fights and forbidden le were driven back to the Austrian Thursday, Child Welfare day, strives on. For we have been in frontier, where 35 of-them were and Friday, Library day with j3 the higher, in the' highest sense, immediately arrested and impris- special exhibit at the library. address brought us t i e hope tii: a political and active people from oned in the Kittsee barracks. here in AmericE, at least, Chrisour origin on. The word of creatianity" trill not spell ssparatA delegation ot Bratislava Sol Wezelman with a SS.9 and tion was a word, but it was a Jews came to Praha to ask the Joseph SosbnicE Trith a 95.2 led ness, bstreS and cracifirion cf an creative word. It issued in. an Minister o£ Interior to modify the the Creighton university hesor eatire •jeopis," Dr. Lerto^it '"" list r a r " " " act. And noBooner had we betrrote the Rev. Mr. Lee, "but attitude, which is that roll for the mid-semester. ssr-- ?> .come a people than we embodied official rather ES eridesced t-y the &ea- les lenience in such cases will enOthers receiving higa averages, in our fundamental law, which is courage further expulsions into according to announcement by erosity of your congregation, Tras -also our lundamental faith, prin- Czechoslovak territory. Another Dean G. H. Fitzgribbons, S, j " ,true to-the teaching of its roundciples of social .and political ac- delegation went to London with () are; Gertrude Oruch, jenior, Uni- er, of lore, peace and brothertion. man Palestine Partition Com versity eollege. S2 2-17; Mildred hood." appeal for aid, Consider t n e Seflraa.and HaT- an ston. -vrent to Palestine last wees' "Laytin. Journalism The acney -represented t i e lresim.an, ; Meanwhile, it was reported torah ot this weeft. "One lawfrom Yugoslavia that two batches to begin its task ot dra-sring np 93 3-16; Dave Zwibelman, jour- proceeds o£ a. play presented hy shall be to him that Is home-born of Burgenland deportees had ar- a concrete plan for the proposed nalism sophomore, SO 11-1S, and the church en Good Friday. and nnto the stranger that soThs check, according to Kr. there in the past week but three-way partition of the Holy Epnraiia "Well, college of arts journeth among you -. . . Hereby rived Gershater, Tras delivered to the were allowed to enter. The Land into independent Jewish senior, 92. shall you know »that the living reportsnot and Arab state and a Britishsaid the refugees were Those named to its dean's temple fizirirs a congregation wil" >" v - ' - c r •".-c-'rr. God is among you . . . " What being detained at the frontier, mandated corridor. honor'Toll are: Arts and sciences, seder. at T:r" - , —, Ft - I ? C~: r an intimitably Jewish combina- penniless, without food and ade- T h e commission, chairman Ephraim T7oll, senior, aad Leon- r tion and juxtaposition that isl Quate clothing, John Woodland declared on leav- ard Leon, junior; school cf jourin failing health How unthinkable it is among any and without their passports. ing, espects to bs gone from two nalism, Mildred Laytin, fresaother people! - In Israel there • is to three months, depending on maa, and David Ztribetaan, to be equality according to the the time, needed to complete its sophomore, and uniyersity colKeU .-... 1..="^ ' order of human worth. There are inquiries," He said the first two lege, Doris Marks, junior, sad Officers for the s e v term to be no exclusion and disabilior three weeks In Palestine Gertrude Orueb, Junior. i starts this s o n t s have ties on' accidental or arbitrary would be spent inf tonring : the been elected by the Congregation i ^ grounds. And' an adherence to country to get acquainted with, LAST ROUND TABLE B'nai Israel, SZedbers _of the that law proves that the living conditions there, following which B a r d E r e ; B r L oa r r DANCE OK BIAT 1 5 i ° - ® « i = " " per God, who made all men to deBabylon, Long Island <WNS) the commissioners would "settle scend from one pair in order that —A country-Vfide drive against down to hearing the views ojf inj chairman, Stanley F. I^evin, Jono human creature should be able the activities o£ Nazi spies and terested People." Sir John refusThe last Round Table of Je^r- ji e .? h TrstEak, Jacob Bemsteis. J , to. say: I am i n essence better the German-American Bund has ed to make a statement as to the isa Yontn. dance of . tha season j^'iHiam Weissr. Paul i.sses, sjaa j ; than, you—that t h e living God is been launched by the Babylon commission's projects. "will be held Sunday ere-ins, •i j 0 T^ iBs e ^egeliaan.. E e r T e among the people. It'proves; in Board of Supervisors with theCommenting on tee commis- May l o , at the JeTrisIi Ccraciun-1 io<a of oozr~ Bis -mentis. other words? that an adherence appointtnent of aa investigating sion's departure, The Times Bald ity Center starting at 2 o'clc to t h ' t law, wins cosmos from committee of two justices ol the there had been too much delay in -The- Irring-Rnotles' orchestra' chaos, consecrates the world of peace and board members and "an carrying out the recommenda- tril • furnish the music. This is J nature by infusing into it the appeal to the Suffolk County^Su- tions of the Palestine Royal Com- an affair for couples only. Sea- ! spirit of man and makes good to pervisors to cooperate. The board mission. Critics'of partition, tbe' son tlcfcet3 admit. pee { mck^vetn^wha.^^'t.) "1st prevail over evil, and mercy- and a.cted after three ""American Le- editorial, declared, ..hsd produced Justice over cruelty and:wrong. gion I posts had adopted resolu- no. better" solution. Assfertisg .that' ASK COOPERATION an isvestisatioa of -as-A-ic How immensely . realistic tha tions; condemning subversive^, ac- the hopa of--an Arab-Zionist IN SETTING DA ""O,\ioT i caa propagait.Ga activities. is!. How the unspeakable savag- tivities of "small, but loud, un r roundtablo conference had provVd ery of this age is illustrated by Amertcan groups" on Long Is- ed a .sentimental- delusion, the .'•Rabbi David H. Goldstein and j the brutal oppression of -, the'.so- land. The protests were precipi- newspaper expressed the hope Caator Aaron Edgar recasst that i tated by the rumor that the Band that the successful issue of. the all-.thosa who . trGl reqsire their! journing strangers every t?he by the insane and cruel-and war is planning a new camp nearby Anglo-Italian treaty and tlie eslike arrogance of th« home born and by the •Bare ol arrests of pected FrencH-Italism agrcesiest the ' mcatlis of Jans or TiTlyi ^ s original Je«Ialj settlers c£j ." : - s ia caeeS the activitiss of its should first consult is-itli Aifl not only is it. perfectly- clear Nazi spies employed 5n Long Isesiiea "es-Slnfti ol Jerusalea. . ; hsfore SEtling.aiieflnits date. that no living God.- la'.presen. land aviation plants. I SCi- - -
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THE JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 193S
Page 2
Nazi .Race Office: Says Million Jews in Land
the Most Reverend James U. Ryan, S. D. T. Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Omaha out of the feverish rearmament programs, out of the broken promises and savage onslaughts q* nation on nation, one great, c l e a r , fundamental, principle seems to. emerge, as far as the United States is concerned. We Americans, if we are to have peace - and security, must hold fast to our traditional national and foreign policies. Since the days of Washington, with, but few exceptions,' these policies have been the clear high notes of our foreign, orientation. And we have The International situation is never gone wronfj except oa the. , so complex that not even experts occasions when we departed from are able to say, with any- degree these principles.. American imof certainty, what the principal perialism has now been" liquidatfactors entering into its makeup ed, though some of the scars of •are, much less are they able to that almost fatal adventure repredict what the future holds in main to plague us. As long as store for us. Currents, cross cur- we stay within our own borders, rents in bewildering fashion, po- as long as we seek no territory litical lineups ara established for outside, continental United States, the most < diverse reasons and as long as we mind our own busimotives; contradictory objectives ness, there is no certainty of our are embraced from,day to day. being drawn into, the maelstrom Any simplified picture of the gen- of the conflicting ambitions which eral situation is apt to be more activate the peoples of Asia and false than true. To. assert, as Europe at this hour. One of our many do, that the nations of the leading historians. Professor Beworld are lined-up in clear-cut mls of Yale^ as a conclusion to; fascist and democratic blocs is to his important study of our dipropose' ar pattern of world or- plomacy, writes the following ofganization altogether too simple what a true American policy for acceptance. The- realities of ought to be: "The continental pothe situation do not bear out such sition • has always b e e n the strength of the United States in conclusion. , : While, on the one hand, we the world. American successes find the democracies united, yet a diplomacy have been based on a continental policy. The inter1 we know, too, that they-are di- ests of the United States today vlded by largo and even funda; mental differences.. The totali- rest on the same support. A con•j tarian- states, on the other hand, tinental policy was instinctive >\ have surface agreements, . .hutwith the Fathers. Its pursuit has • I they are surface agreements and been most consonant with the '•{ not likely to stand up under the enius and the welfare of the ;i rough usage which is certainly in American people. When they, i; store for them. For example: have left it, to 'become of age* r Soviet Russia 13 a totalitarian or 'to take their place' on other :i state, yet it has a defensive and :ontinents — among the great offensive alliance With demo- powers of the world, they have Jcratic France. Italy and Germany made their mistakes. "When they Hare totalitarian allies, yet their have followed it, they have not •ivital. national interests clash at one astraj'." 'jseveral points, and specially now To a churchman, the internajsince the brutal conquest of Aus- tional situation presents a pictute 'trla by Nazi Germany. The Unitabout as black as It could pos;!e<L States holds herself aloof from sibly be. Religion today is being (European alliances and agreein a fashion, and with 'ments. However, if it comes to a apersecuted vicionsness, which has no par;jworld war we are as likely as not allel since the days of the Roman .'to see her united with powers emperors. This persecution, whose governing philosophy is warfare on religion, for suchthis it diametrically opposed to the one seems particularly character-' > :we now accept. The smaller1 s, though not exclusively so, European states are in continual ofstic, the totalitarian powers. Comferment, one moment veering to- munist Russia .has succeeded in wards the totalitarian grouping, the nation atheist, as has ;the next bidding for the support making Communist Turkey. • Communist •of the great democracies. • •'. , has fought the church.for ij From evens superficial survey Mexico a quarter a century. Loyalist ibf the international situation, in- Spain,has of hacked, destroyed and • tricate, contradictory, puzzling as murdered in the most approved it unquestionably Is, one conclu- communist 'fashion. Nazi" Gersion seem to emerge —national many, in more subtle yet just as Bellishness Is the dominant note effective fashlon.is now attemptin any picture we may draw. ng to exterminate religion. I say Every nation Is looking, almost religion, not only the Catholic 'i?olely and exclusively; towards* church. The Protestant, a n d i]LB' own safety and welfare. Se-jspecially the Jew, have, had to curity is the prime objective; suffer .terribly; the bruit of the •whatever promotes and is likely battle has been borne by the adto assure that gains recognition herents of the Catholic church. find acceptance, no matter how And with what result? In no foreign it may be to political be- case has the church" been deliefs publicly professed or to past stroyed, nor Is It likely to be. Tocommitments and alignments. day,: as always in. the past, it :\ The tremendous increase in stands four-square against the armaments, naval, military and destructive and revolting 'docair has arisen from fear for na- trines .of. .Caesarism, of .stajte dic.tfonal Bafety, and, it must be ad- tatorship. And this In. the name, mitted, not without good reason. not only of Catholicism, but. of The conquest, of smaller and religion itself. To bow the kpee yeaker nations -by the fascist to a Stalin, to a Hitler, to a Nestates has put every one on edge, grin would be to deny Christ/ has developed a well-grounded Such_denial.is unthinkable. distrust of the political honesty .The Christian world cannot hut of one's neighbors, has made of protest,horror, in indignation, treaties and agreements mere and in. .inshame at the senseless scraps of paper. Tho nations of persecution of the Jewish people the world feel, and Tightly'so^ on at this hour in so-many • that they can .have' no faith or going countries. Antl-semltlsm Is born •ijiit- any trust in one another. If of hatred, of jealousy, of Ignorthey are to survive they must, ance, which every Chriseach one, protect themselves. tian feelings must condemn, emotions Protection, means a powerful which-cannot be made a rational • army and navy. They have, there- basis for a-national The fore, gone about the bnsinesss of Jew has fundamentalpolicy. rights, the building an army and navy cap- same rights as a Christian. To able of meeting any emergency. - So wlde-sjread has this psychology o? feat, become, that even we in the United States who, have Uua Kimfeall'o the least to fear from our neighnew, exclusive bors, are arming to the-hilt, appropriating fabulous sums for njaval 'armaments, building' a STEF3ILI2INCS peace-time army larger a n d stronger than ever before In our SERVICE history. It is too bad that we O Kills all germs. All have been forced "Into such posiforeign matter removed. tion. But facts are facts. The Feathers completely reUnited States did not make presnovated. For Health and ent-day world conditions, though comfort—TRY IT! it!must be admitted we have contributed our 8har»«s the reigning anarchy.. However, no one but a COST—Average Pillow, blind and fatalistic pacifist would Z Lbs. or close his eyes to facts, would refuse, to arm, would put his faith in; diplomatic agreements or understanding which may be broken before the ink is dry on the paLAUM&RY Ci 2GS25C pejr on which they are written. CLEANERS ;put of all the conflicting obAT 02C0 , C. D.-S47S jectives and contradictory Ideologies, out of the dominating fear complexes which sway the world. The following article is a transcript of the talk given last Sunday evening over radio station KOIIi by the Most Bever. end James Ryan, S. T. D. Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Omaha. / Since it presents the view* - point of a distinguished American churchman regarding the present international situation, the JEWISH PRESS considers it of great interest to its readers. —-THE EDITOR
Where Omcha Sh&ps With
Berlin (WNS) — Contradicting recent official "figures from Jewish sources which set the present Jewish population of Germany at, 360,000, the National Socialist. Office for Racial Policy issued a statement declaring that under the terms of the Nuremberg racial and citizenship laws there are 800,000 to 1,000,000 persons resident in Germany who are Jews, including at least 450,000 full-blooded Jews. The statement adds that additional thousands will be classed as Jews after the 1939 census which is to based largely on racial grounds.
see these human rights trampled underfoot cannot but make, our blood boil. There is little that we. in America . can do but protest but protest we do with all the strength we have. As for the poor persecuted Jew, there is one, and an abiding, consolation—history attests, in unmistakable terms, to the vitality of his race. No tyrant has yet succeeded In destroying the Jewish people, and none is likely to succeed. The followers of the Catholic church salute the Protestants of Germany for .their manly cour- BRAZIL LIQUIDATES ageous fight against the powers NAZI MOVEMENT of-neo-paganiam. How any man. In sane mind, can Imagine that Rio de Janeiro (WNS) — A he would'be victorious, over the aimed at the complete erunited forces of Judaism, Cath- decree of all Nazi propaganda olicism and Protestantism, and adication Brazil has just been signed by Hitler so thinks, is beyond us. in Getulio Vargas. The Religion is of the soul; religion President bans all foreign politiis of the spirit. It cannot be de- measure cal parties, forbids foreign assostroyed by exile, prisons, concen- ciations to hold private or pubtration camps, or even death. To meetings and denies them the persecute, religion is only to lic to spread their ideologies. drive it deeper and deeper into right Also outlawed are uniforms, inthe soul of man. Hitler boasts slgnias, flags such as the swastihe will heverbow to Rome as ka. Foreign schools are placed Bismarck did,"will never go to under government supervision. Canossa as the Emperor FredTo prevent the._«ntry of Nazi erick did. It Is an idle boast The day I s not far distant when propagandists a new decree is behe, too, like all the persecutors ing drafted which will permit of the past, will go down on his only such aliens as are farmers, knees before the triumphant tourists, technicians and persons with sufficient means of support cross of Christ. -to enter^the country. Foreign poThe American people, up to tne litical and cultural groups were very recent past has shown very given 30 days to disband. little comprehension "of and, not Guilherme Tender, chief Nazi much Interest in, foreign politics, agent in Brazil, has been ordered or even in the foreign policies of to leave the country. our own government. The happenings of the last five years MOROCCAN RABBI have brought us face to face, and In ajrery rude 'fashion, with reHAILS FASCISTS alities' which cannot but give us Tangier, Morocco (WNS) — A pause. We have seen Communism triumph. In a half score of message of congratulations on itates; we have witnessed, too, the rebel capture of the key ihe victories of totalitarianism. Spanish city of Lerida was cabled We have seen, and painfully, to General Francisco Franco, Inwhat dictatorship means to other surgent chieftain by Chief Rabbi peoples. In their own lives and in Leon Jalfson, president ot the that of their neighbors. The tri- Rabbinical Court of Tetuan, umphs of totalitarianism, how- Spanish Morocco. The message ever, are hollow, a sham. De- said: "In the name of the high mocracy is still strong, powerful, Rabbinical Court and in my own anything but decadent. Liberty, name sincere felicitations on the and the love of liberty, are not occasion of the capture of Lerida, dead. While we view with hor- with fervent wishes for the utiror the frightful excesses of the mate triumph of the glorious'natotalitarian states, let us not for- tionalist movement." get "that the same condition can. come to'us if we deviate from the Osiris Iffla, a Parisian Jew, principles which lie at the basis j helped found the Pasteur Inof our country and Its constitu- stitute. ';•..' tion. Let us not fear communism nor facism; but let us not be; fooled by them either. Our dear- dom and of recognition of the :st possessions, political and per- rights of God and of man. The sonal freedom, educational and international situation will work religious freedom, social and eco- itself out without grave Injuryto nomic freedom, in a word', the us If we follow faithfully in the freedom b of n of democratic paths of the Fathers. The interideals, can only be lost if we our- national situation may be even selves fritter away or destroy it turned to ours and the world's by following after the false gods advantage if we remain steadfast and confirmed in the faith which of a materialistic philosophy. Thomas Jefferson committed to The present international situ- us a most precious heritage of ation can be bettered if we. in "Peace, commerce . and honest America mind • our own affairs friendship with all nations," he and are true to ; our traditional' wrote, "entangling alliances with policies born as they are of free- none."
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THE JEWISH PEESS—FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1933 j Get in sliape for i summer splash sessions.
ly Bernard Postal Once more American Jews • are beginning to ask whether under .present conditions they have a moral right*to.bring cMittrea Into the world, Mr. Postal has posed, this and othe r ; ' . p e r t i n e n t f questions to George J . Hecht, publisher of "Parents Magazine ana national chairman of Better Parenthood Week which begins May 1. His answers are illnminatiag and straigfit-jtorward. !; —The Editor.
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are in. Germany, Austria or Po-' land, or if he lived in one of those countries. "I might possibly I answer differently under such, circumstances," he replied. "But we have no moral or legal right to decide such a matter for other people, even*when their future seems hopless. We in this country are lucky and we certainly ought to discourage all thought of race suicide among Jews. There *s a certain amount of social and economic anti-Semitism in the United States, and it may even grow. .But by no stretch of the imagination can it be said that the situation "warrants race suicide.- Nor can 1 visualize conditions in this country that would ever warrant it." \
Four years ago two responsible Jewish spokesmen i n -widely separated parts of the world advocated -what" was tantamount to race suicide for Jews- One, an eminent London historian, said Jews must asfe themselves whethFinding Hecht so firmly oper they -can and should assume posed to race suicide, we assumed responsibility lor bringing Jewish he would have equally strong children into the world in the views on "what Jewish parents inture to face a fate which seems should do for their children once to become worse-every year. The having brought them into the other, a New York communal world. Here* ne was quite at home leader, declared that it he lived and plunged into the discussion in Germany he would certainly with animation. "There are few not wish to bring into this varld peoples which have displayed the children who would have" to face same consistent and intelligent as terrible a future as confront anxiety for the future of the them in Nazi Germany. young as we Jews," he began. Both were bitterly assailed by "Jewish parents go to extraordinJews and non-Jews. They were ary lengths to provide their chiltold that race suicide for Jews dren with-the best possible eduwas unthinkable. For Jews to cation. I know there are some •"-admit defeat by self-annihilation who feel that too many Jews have was described as stupid and ab- college degrees but don't know surd and-ja betrayal of their own how to operate a machine. But. I people and civilization.' Since still believe that a good education then, • however, the plight of the is the best thing parents can give Jews has grown worse as the area their children. Regardless of what of persecution broadened -nd may happen, education will alavenges of escape narrowed. In ways stand them in good stead. consequence this problem is again They may be barred from a procoming to the fore. Already the fession or denied admittance to a Jewish birth rate in Germany is club, but no one can deprive them exceeded by the death rate. Jew- of their brains." ish suicides in Austria, Hungary, Pausing a moment to emphaand Poland are multiplying. In size his meaning, Hecht then went almost every country of the world on to say that he also believed except in Palestine and Russia, "it behooves Jewish parents to the Jewish birth rate is falling teach their children the social rapidly. Again. Jews are asking, in graces. Parents should make it the light of' contemporary condi- easy for children to conduct themtions and the uncertainty of the selves properly in a non-Jewish future for tham, whether it is fair environment. It is important to bring children into such & that the growing Jewish generaworld. tion conform to the American We live, in a land where the standard of manners." size of one's family is a deeply Asked what he thought of the personal matter. One may have efforts to wean Jews away from ten children or no children and the white collar professions and still violate^no canon of patrio- tusn them towaidJmechanical and tism; or national- Tibnor. And Just agricultural pursuits Jn larger ; because we can determine this for numbers, Hecht - admitted he did ourselves, it becomes a question not look with favor on too speof vital- concern to Jews today. cialized training for the young. In the United States the future He regards adaptability extremeof Jewish youth is neither better ly desirable. "Parents," he said, nor worse than, that of youth as "have a great responsibility in a whole, yet,, the knowledge that the vocational guidance of their the world seems to b closing in children. It is up to them to oh the Jew is giving American study the various occupational Jews food for thought. They too fields in the light of economic are beginning to aslc whether conditions and the special situathey have a moral right to bring tion of Jews entering these fields. children into a .world that seems They would be well advised to to have gone mad. examine not only the possibilities Next week "being Better Parent- of success in a given field but alhood "Week, we decided to pass so the potential handicaps which this question to the national Jews may meet in a profession or Oairman of that movement, occupation before directing their George J. Hecht, who is both a children's interest along-any vofather and a Jew. He also qual- cational line. The "Wise parent ifies as something of an authority will not neglect this. If he does, on parenthood and its problems his children will not thank him for he is Publisher of The Par- for_it,:" ents' Magazine. Through this This brought us to another magazine, which he founded in 1026 when he was a bachelor of question—do Jews make' good 31, Hecht' has helped to educate parents? "My experience has almost half a generation of Amer- been," Hecht told us, "that the ican parents In the complex best parents among Jews are to science of rearing children. It be found among the moderately would be difficult to estimate how well-to-do. Extreme poverty handmany .children born since 192G icaps parents in buying the foods, have had their lives shaped by medical supplies, books and toys what their parents learned from that their children' need. Many Hecht's magazine, but some idea very wealthy Jews, on the other may be gathered from the fact hand, delegate too large a part that today The Parents' Magazine of the rearing of their children goes into homes with more than to tutors and governesses. As a 1,000,000 children. Hecht's idea whole, however, I find that Jews in starting his magazine, the -irst take their responsibilities as parof its kind in this country, was ents most seriously, probably beto provide those who have as- cause they realize that th'eir chilsumed the responsibilities of par r dren will have to struggle harder enthood and want, to make the to make their way in the world, most of their opportunities as and are therefore anxious to j^ve creators of hpman life and as moulders of human destinies "with £SSSSSS$JS«&$S$»$8SSS"!S"»^^ the information possessed by the scientist and-educator. His medium is a popular yet authoritative journal. . And so it was to George J. Hecht, publisher of a magazine to Which half a'million conscientious families look for help and guidance and advice in promoting the welfare of their more thanr-a. million children*-and in solving the YOUR OLD knotty problems of bringing them up from crib to college that we "put the thorny question -^should Jews have children under present ON ANEW 1938 -conditions? Since parents rely on hi3 magazine for direction in rearing children, we were pre-. pa'red for a blunt - refusal to answer. SAVE ON But we were-pleasantly sur©CURRENT prised for Hecht answered read° REPAIR BILLS ily. "There is no. reason or excuse for race suicide among the °FOOD Jews," he said. "True, the plight of Jews overseas is critical and seems to be growing worse, but I have a feeling that bad' as things are they can't last. The Jewish race will go on,\a.s it hag in the past. Despite- centuries of persecution and mass murder, Jews have multiplied in the face of all adversity. And they will On Account of Our Excontinue to do so. Jews should pert Seconditioning Denot hesitate.to have children. Hexe your interviewer interpartment, We CAN ALrupted to ask whether Hecht LOW YOU MORE. would feel, quite so strongly ind : veact in th& same way if conditions here tvere iike what they
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•/'The Center Library Corner"
The weekly comments on Palestine from THE PALESTINE R E V I E W : "SMALLHOLDERS CREATE A MODEL VILLAGE— Bet Sheorin; "TOWARD AN ECONOMIC POLICY" — "FIGHTING THE CRISIS" by H. Margulies; "FROM TO"WN>A*ND COUNTRY — SEA CRAFT AND SPORT" — Haifa. In the world of books: Here is a book which I would say no home should be without ;— that is only my opinion. "THE* ETHICS of JUDAISM,"' from the aspect of duty, by Maxwell Silver, D. D. (author of "Justice and Judaism In the Light of Today.") A new systematic treatment of the ethics of Judaism from the aspect of duty is offered to the student and general intelligent reader — Illustrated with quota-
„_.
PS
.T. C. C. BOTTLIXG LEAGUE s of Teams - -By L3E GSOSSII&ff j Name of team. W. h, i rn rr } Tig-eTg . . . " . . . , .50 40 j.n tthi e rrst 5 0 40 .r-f p , have In The softball league will "have ! "Wildcats 46 44 .511 trl:e tbe rlcy-orf ferff. .' "" ;r its gala opening on Sunday, May Sooners . . . . . E.II it jocks I.te t i e p"Erc" Tr.r-.cl" Cyclones . . . . 43 47 S, with three games scheduled. zl thfr season ar;d fr;-~i all :?f"41 49 All the clubs are putting on Jayha-wkers . . cai:::.j thcrs v.-;.I b= c--.-e E fs-v40 50 plenty of hustle signing: players Cornhuskers .. both flies- <-.! ibe t l roctLrs The regular schedule of and getting, in last minute practice sessions. It'll "be a fine ar- Jewish Cormauiiity Center "Scalrirhi ray of talent that faces the "bar- ing league ended last Tuesday i Xert T u e F el s Ti^r in the dash for the champion- with tiro teams, the Tigers r.r-"". , ler.ci:?"? frrr-'rrr the Wildcats deadlocked icr ioi:mr.ip ship. first place with 50 games von UJ fo-.c The league, you know, is*-afthem the best possible start in filiated with, the Nebraska State and 40 games lost. , b= tends z bLnri life. It lias been my experience association. Official umUp until last night the Tiser? I"?*"1" "•"' that Jews also recognize, more so Softball will be sent by the associa- were in first place by £henss"vcs , • perhaps than others, that the art pires tion to each of tee games. and needed only two wins ever ' ^..uch ^ er.;"ry--.ert. .nC '.c.s r . of bringing up children is noi. an the last place Cornhuskers who fellows,:.; T'S v e r e for instinctive one and therefore they The women's volleyball team tney "bOTrled last night to cinch are more eager to seek guidance another victory "Wednes- the pennant scramble, but Cap- rclrts to a Jews" are among the best custom- scored rjday night when they smothered tain Leo Weitz of the Tigers. bcvl.'r^ !:Ec ers for books and magazines on the players from the Benson overestimated his boys last r.:r*h*. ers re\t r.rr. : child rearing. The Child Study Community of our cf e gym and we want to Association of America, which call your attention to the fact telling them what an "easy term in this hesltt rrr has done a magnificent job, was that the Center women never they had to "bowl against on the last night. Captain Sara Katz- , tiowiir-s rn ccrre? started by Jews." have been defeated in • outside man's Corn"huskers were a".] again, We might have asked him many competition. . The only time they primed for this match and imrre- ' ^'e-""* more questions, but being unwill- lose is when they play. each, other diatelv proceeded to disprove ?:r. . reports of the ricj"-cff se:-i?s ing to exhibit ignorance on so in practice in the moraines. "Weitz's predictions by bo-srlinc: I * r - s £-^c tO7> vearr.s ar.S t i f r vital a matter as raising children, "Names of these 'dandy perform- rings around his boys and nak- r e ^ i ' ; s i cf the swejpc-ojks? t'. in the presence of an expert, we ers are Mesdames. Stella Jensen, ing thera look like amateurs. . na^.ect. brought the interview to a close, Bess Plummer, Zelma "Williams, The Cornhuskers took the first satisfied that Better Parenthood Fannette Lincoln, Thresa Dross, two games by huge margins, ard Week couldn't have found a bet- F. A. Marsh, Irene Danielson, Cy then eased up which, resulted in v ter chairman than GeefgeNHecht Cusick, Ruth "Woodward, Jessie the Tigers •winning the last game ! who proclaimed the birth of his Pe<3erj=on, Rose SommSrs and by a few pins. ^ I A me -tin;: of t JT Torir ,Tfirst child with a card reading Byrd "Pardun. The 'Wildcats, upon heariz? | daea. Gr CH? I I . V .:: be re'.c or. "Freda and George Hecht anthe news of the Tigers two losses ' Sunday, liar I. a nounce that they will now pracRoller skating is hitting a new bowling like bis league cham^tj Ccr.icr L.i. " : r C P . m. tice what they preach." peak in popularity in the wom- pions, and took all three panes bers ha%-c been a^kecl to (Copyright, 1938,' by Seven Arts en's classes, both morning and from Jack Melcher's Jayfcawtcr , bs r - ES e.r.\.. Feature Syndicate.) evening. • Skating partiess have crew. This resulted in a ccacl- j been staged recently while more lock between the two teams for ' UXI CR VAAD are being planned for the near jfirst place. The "Wildcats were ) paced by Captain Sam Borvich's j future. c c f the r v r_j 507 and Le& "Tiny" Eurwioh's ' 1 The E c:.t : 1519. ! i^ * V£a Swimming also is again corning Abe Tender's Sooners we~t ' held on ng vlll be aninto its own, with J. C. C. athletic through the bowling motions and [ By T patrons ussing the pool more took two out of three games frora ' nouncci later. than ever. Now is the time to "Meyerson's Cyclones, these garaes s Tatr: Cur having no bearing on the chare- ; The Jewish scene as viewed by ] editorial comments and interpre- tions from Talmudic, BiSle and pionship race at this time. The bowlers who got into the j tations of Current Events — to- medieval Jewish literature. d a y — yesterday — and. tomorIn essence the. book deals with charmed 500 circle last -Icht i row. " Ethics, duty — (Mitzvah) Moral were Leo Weitz, 53S; Sam Stein- j Good news! Turkey welcomes Law and duty. The moral and un- berg, 513; Sam Horwich, Z£~;\ Austrian-Jewish refugees — phy- iversal scope of the Jewish idea Lee Hurwieh, 519; Paul Steinof duty — the social character of berg, 50S, and Sammy Tousem sicians — and scholars. "ONE PESACH NIGHT" —an the Jewish idea of duty to men- with a 524. The two top teams, the Tigers episode in the career of Hyam tion but > few of the subjects and the Wildcats, will bowl a \! Salomon by Rabbi Leon Spitz in contained therein. "A BOOK OF J E W I S H three-game series this Similar the JEWISH YOUTH JOURNAL — the story of Pesach night in \ THOUGHTS" selected, by Joseph morning at 10 a. m. at the Ak- ; the year 1781 in old Philadelph- Herman Hertz, chief Rabbi of the Sar-Ben alleys to decide the. " i ia. — Worth your reading time. British Empire. A message of Ju- championship. Mr. Weitz's crew of himself. I "ON "MOUNT SCOPUS" by daism together with memories of Haim Tossky. From that moun- Jewish martyrdom and spiritual Abe Feldman. the Council Bluffs t h e shark, Mose Franklin, the Primtain top, Titus directed, 2000 achievements throughout years ago, the destruction of Jer- ages; Jewish thought at its high- a-donna, Frank Brooksteia, the | usalem. Today Hadassah built est and finest. This recent pub- Bowling Cleaner, and Sammr • there a Center of healing, teach- lication should be placed on your Steinberg, the Potato Peddler, J ing, and research — as told by book shelf to have and refer to having the cockyness knocked out of them "by Katzman's beys. the Director of the Hadassah often. The.Twelfth Annual observance can still win the championship if Medical Organization. only settle "down asd Stories at random: A short of "Jewish Book Week" will take they will instead of taking their opstory by Cecil Roth, "THE MAR- place in May this year. More bowl, Book "Week" in ponents lightly as they have is. TYR," in the JEWISH :SPECTA- about "Jewish : the past. The Wildcats, led r r TOR'S receat issue^ Is a medieval- next issue of this .column in the Captain Sara Hoi"vrieh, Gear^e story about Rabbi Moses ben Ab- Jewish Press. * raham of "Megger3heim,_a typical German-Jew of the fourteenth century. He was considered the greatest Talmudic scholar of his time as well as a skilled physician — unable to practice medicine -— and refusing to accept any payment for his spiritual and intellectual leadership of the Community. — Thus he was driven back for his livelihood "upon the petty money-lending on pledges which alone remained open to the Jew by law. He had a beautiful daughter, Judith, with whom Conrad von Rittenhofen fell in love, who was burned alive. Even today, a prayer in said memory: "May the Lord make thee even as the holy Martyr, Judith, daughter of Rabbi Moses of glorious, memory."
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I.HE JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1938
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• May Bfooooms
them their war in the day time,., by night in e pillar of lire to a n d their HgiU, that they Blight, c-n day i>.v.S "ic:hi. And they also liwnie ?>!-o«^-v?.of, The King ?h*D f!f>ni oi'.her soldiers after shf-m not to talk to bin*, fit F.H. P'.'t vken they arrest" nm Bud took him. he saw a T<;;;h on U>& coor post, and he I- n'ipii! ''T)n v(u; know what l=r ; They Ri>:-wpred, "Xo, 11 • I ? v,;-::- Vfi'S m." lie then but ?r : ; onstonifi"'" with s. hust id man Kinp thf.i vhiie he is within hi? servjaVuS £Uavtl him the ; from ivuhoui. VUh lioly One, praised be He. U .is :lie contrary. are inside, and He i-Iis ear ^'iisvtis ibem iron', without, .as it ; ip tsv.ii: ( P P . ir,7.;•! "The Lord • wiU cu;;r(: :i;y poins out aud thy eoniinc In." Thou s.hese also berr.n?R jivos^lytfR, f,nc" the Kins did nor senriruy n i c e Rf'fpr him. Oi-v wrt.srevp hp.vr rcUed upon i Jcahbi Simon RTir; TitbW Klazer lrjio liarf Gpclfct' LhRt vo decree pho*r..id be pTomtilt-p.t.ed nn< ' « i t people
And rapture Traits •with sunlight en the laud— For now we walk with beauty, hand in Land F
By Rabbi Frederick Oohn - - Frederick Col: "And after April, when May follows"—sings Browning. P(JO!-!OHbP EVbRV FHIDAY AT OMAMAt WSDBAOHA. OV "In the wondrously beautiful month of May,"—sings Heine. : :.-• ffiiB JBWlSja.-.PBBSS'gUBLXSHlKO <IOMFAft¥ "Ye that pipe and ye that play . -. . i - •« . »••• • -63.C0 GUDSGR1PTIQP. PftlCE, Ona Yea* •. «: » Ye that through your hearts today The \noked here drcv.-n out fofiiRATESFURNISHED QN APPUOATION I sword £jad hare ber.t their Feel the gladness of the May"—sings Wordsworth. EDITORIAL OFFICE: ©53 QRANDEIS THEATER BUILDING i to cast down the poor enc the All the poets intone the beauty of the blithesome season. U^ 6ITV OFFICE—JEWISH COMMUNITV OBNTEB , needy, to Elay such as are i-priph; By BS. 2HE0D03S K. LEWIS PRINT 6M0P ADDRB8&-4!aM CO. S4TH.-OTBSST _ ' in their vrpy; their s^vord sha! ^'In the merry month of May" is another note, reminiscent , enter into their ovrn hear' am • » JBuQlfle33 and Managing Edito? of the May Pole and other May dances. i | their bev" vili 5?e" broken, E, It is in the warm, moist May when the young people go. ! Better is a 1'ttle Lhef. the rictl•'• • Associate Edito? ISDAED SAXGWILL'S SELECT- sor, ZaEgwin ceases to be the i.ne ;eons leous hath, than the tibv into the. fresh woods with-their leaves of tender green and '••' • Contributing Eiflito? ED WORKS. THE JEWISH PCB- novelist and descriptive analyst j jhe wicked. ' ' . COHN " ' RABBI - , - Boa& Editor gather wild flowers and make May baskets to be presented IiTCATIOX SOCIETY OP AMER- and becomes, Instead, the c r i t i c ! TheVic'keil boT'-cyec1 rnd LBW1S CA. 1750 PAGES. §8.50. He finds the grandchildren qr.itef e th not, but the rirhYeoit'« Sionx City. lows. Correspondent with love and budding affection. ANH PILL inferior to their parents, their je l h graciously and g-ireih. Israel Zangwill vrs.s unques-It is the month of the poets. Browning and Dante were tionably the foremost Jewish man vitality having been sapped. I have beer yoyncr. nc their strong teneeneies to imita- am old. yet 1 hare the he-,-. not. see of letters during the last fifty tion and assimilation. In p A Chiasrchman Speaks . o born in May. t pursu| righteous forsaken nor hi? c years. Few Jetrs have erer vield- ing Anglaezzation,- they have c It is the month of the procession of the flowers; 'the first ed so powerful a pen and as fear- ,qil"jrea n a n v Of the vices, but few " ~ I ran Anti-Semitism, appealing to the baser instincts of man sweet violets of early spring'—the delicate lilies of. the valley— lessly and. brilliantly as he. Rearthrough hatred and avarice, has burst the confines of a purely. y of the virtues of the environment. Unklus hen Kieirikus embrncin the East End of London, Though thejr speak English, be- ! Jewish^question and has become the problem of all civilization the hyacinths and crocuses and daffodils and tulips with their ed Judaisni cue the K'z.z ='>•"' Zangwill came in contact with have acceptably in public and su- ; gorgeous colors—the lilacs, filling the air with their delicious and all civilizing agencies.. Men of intellect who are guided by the Jewish masses and hsd an perficially resemble the English- '•• soldiers to arrest him ev understanding knowledge of the men, they have nevertheless for- • er, persuaded d d there h ideals now recognize that the spread of anti-Semitism is a dis- fragrance—the peonies, proud and imperial, till the roses come most hec£rae prosel intimate details of Jewish felted in the process something \ a } s o K I n then sent othe tinct threat to the principles of right living so;laboriously built with June—the pansi.es, in their robes of queenly velvet; a life. And he was a. staunch and precious, independence of spirit, proud Jew with an abiding love ! self-esteem, strength of Chirac- warning- them that tl veritable regal riot of beauty and of glory. Is it any wonder up through the centuries. for the Torah, whoso overwhelm- I ter. not converse with, hi" t— Illustrative of the growing voice of non-Jewish leaders con- that at this season a lV\>rdsworth was inspired to write his ing spiritual power he clearly dis- | "Ghetto Tragedies" appeared ia jtbey arrested him &nd ^ « t o t E k e hJm and courageously interunder the title "They That j > he Raid t demning anti-Jewish'propaganda is the radio address given immortal "Ode on the Intimations of Immortality" ? The heart cerned preted. He was at home ia Bib- Work In Darkness" and "Ghet- !W " J t e ! ' y°v somethirb e feels immortal, filled with an infinite, an inexpressible and in•locally Sunday by the Most Reverend James Ryan, Bishop of lical, Rabbinic and Jewish philo- to Comedies" in ISO". These ) * iorchbearer carrie: i sophic literature, and in addi- stories are act ordinary bits, of i in front of the Kin jr. bi the Catholic Diocese of Omaha! In one paragraph, Bishop describable joy. gifted with a rare English fiction. In each, the author deals j King carry the liebt N May is the beautiful 'flowering' time. Civilization, too, hastion 'Ryan asserts:" . ''...;• style, and a powerful intellect. with a segment cf Jewish life and i people?" aiiU they fr c : had its 'Maytime,' its blossom-time, when the human spirit, too, 5&id he, "The T P Oi The unfathomable mystery of the i aiwajrg j n a fascinating manner. "N'o-" "The Christian world cannot but protest, in horror, in be He carries iif Jewish spirit, as reflected in the fx 0 one can forgret thj tragic hu- P1 'flowered,' budded and blossomed. After the long winter of indignation, and in shame "at the senseless persecution of the literary masterpieces of Israel, jm O ur in "The Sabbath Question j before Israel BE it is v c ir -Jewish people going on at this hour in so many countries. pre-historic time it budded and blossomed and bloomed in the filled him with awe and divine j j a Sudtainster." "The Diary of ailS,21) And the Lord..v-r' if i-e He literally revelled in the Uesfcujaad" is a poignact account j them in a riiiar of cio._>_ :c ic.1. Anti-semitism is born of hatred, of jealousy, of ignorance, feel- beautiful civilization of Babylon, and Assyria, of Egypt and joy. trorld of prophet, rabbi and sage, | O f the soul-coBflict of a convert- j ings which every Christian must condemn, emotions which can- China, and above all of Greece, of Borne and of Judea. All of and in more ways than one, was j ed Jew. who must rejoice crer ; spiritual offspring and heir, hus s o n » 8 anti-Semitic attacks oa ' not" be made a rational basis for a national policy. The Jew'a sudden, after the loaf* night of barbarism, there was 'thetheir His life was dedicated tp the Judaism and Jews. Despite a life- ! glory that was Greegffyand 'the grandeur that was Rome'— 9. l a s fundamental rights, the same rights as a Christian. To see servibe of Judaism, and the Jew. long hypocritical profession of * B Biker Chotim luncheon, 1 p. -; The intolerable lot of his people and the sublimest tha^M^as Israel. It was Marco Polo who disChristian belief, and conformity I these human rights trampled underfoot cannot but-make our made him a pioneer in the Zion- with church ritual, the father is j . rooms C f.td D, Jewish Coin-.' Certer. i bipod-boil. There is little that we-in America can do but pro-coverec^and disclosed tae long-hidden treasures of the "Flowery ist movement, where he labored still a Jew. In vividly portraying i s-r i t . I Kingdom"—as one cornea upon violets hiding modestly behind with Herzl and Ncrfiats. For reatefjt, but protest we do with all the strength we have. As for the spiritual agony of this Kes-j _ b _ _ c . „..,„ ,,. m . , t . . u u l . ! sons of his own, he became later S:SO p. m., r,udi- , the poor persecuted Jew, there is one, and an abiding, conso- their leaves of green. ^Chinese civilization was a shy flower- on a "territorialist" and champ- hirmad, his perpetual and Irre- j torium, Jewish Communirr Cer-! conciliable emotional stresses, ->ethe Uganda offer of Great 'Ifftibn - - history attests, in unmistakable terms, to the"vitality ing of the human spirit. Babylon, with her hanging gardens, ioned y tribute to the my- ; xbir aav. Britain, fiis fearless spirit knew Sangwill pays Assyria with her serried cohorts'of speared warriors, Egypt sterious hold cf Judaism upon j Senior Kadassah luncheon, 1 OjFhis race. No tyrant has yet succeeded-in destroying the no compromise/ After the Balwith her unimaginable treasures buried in the pyramids of her four declaration he repeatedly the Jew — a hold tenacious ip_ j - . . iOfige room. Jewish Com:Jewish people, and none is likely to succeed." defy and to defeat in J m^jjity Center warned his fellow Zionists, with enough toevery opposite pull and i Tbn^dar and"" Therein speaks a man with godliness in his heart. He is a entombed Pharoahs> all bear witness to the rich fertility of the prophetic insight, that the cru- actuality attraction. The intense J e w i s h - ' - " genius of man. coming to rare and variegated expression—like cial problem of Palestine was not Christian leader who lives the faith he professes. "Were all the mandatory power, but the ness of the author and his deep people who claim to be religious as richly endowed with the the brilliant hues of the multi-colored flowers. From proto- Arab population. . The warning, lore for Judaism are conveyed in deft manner. spirit of the brotherhood of man and as keenly alive to the plasm to PJato—from star-dust to Shakespeare—from the cos-ignored and ridiculed, . has re- a most Those not acquainted with turned to plague the Jewish in- Sangwill mic nebula to Mosea and Jesus and the Hebrew Prophets— will find this volume a underlying trends of the "day, much of the fear which hovers habitants of Palestine, and Zionsplendid introduction. It will, over the world would fade and vanish. .; • from the first stir of consciousness in the waking mind of man ism. give the reader an insight into I to Einstein, Master of Mind—how the human spirit has de7 Prbteatante, Catholics and Jews - - all have a common foe In the field of Jewish apologe- the rich and varied and absorb-' tics he was unquestionably with- ing Jewish life our forefathers to battle. The objectives at stake transcend the minor differ- veloped and made progress—as the buds of May to the full- out a peer in his day. With his enjoyed, z. life filled with hopes,", \ blossom roses of June! • And think of the gorgeous blossoms ences which distinguish the major religions, making it impertrenchant pen he battled continu- aspirations and dreams, which ously and strikingly for Israel. sustained and preserved "then in ative that all lovers of political, religious And personal"free- it has put forth on the way, of poetry and philosophy, of soar- for the ideals of the Torah and of their trials. ing state-craft and supreme wisdom I Think of Homer and the dom join forces to emerge triumphant on the battlefront of Judaism. But he did not content This splendid volume, should in every freedom, peace and social justice. In this struggle, the high- "Iliad" and "Odyssey," think of Virgil and the "Aeneid," think himself with the futile role of find an honored place p ery ! r to the Gentiles. He Jewish home, where the tamo:- | mindedness of men like Bishop Ryan serves as a reservoir of Dante and "The Divine Comedy" with its three worlds of ambassador was a prophet to his own people, tal. Israel Zangwill is not rerre- ! from which we draw courage and inspiration for the morrow. the "Inferno," "Purgatorio" and "Paradiso"! Think of Shakes- a prophet who regularly raised sented. peare, 'the animator of a world' as Maurois called him! Think his voice in protest a n i denunof Milton and bis "Paradise Losf'vand "Regained"! Think of ciation against the sins, delusions ;
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And above all, think of the Bible, Israel's Supreme 'flow- scene, he recorded his impres- Sunday, SFay 1. non-Jew was brutally murering' which combines all the qualities and excellencies of the sions without fear or favor. He Junior Council. 2 p. E . , rooms dered by a member of"-the incipient Nazi party for having the enormous diffi- G and D, Jewish Community Cenmasterpieces of the world; itself the World's Supreme Spir- appreciated written a book entitled, "The City Without jews." In this culties, psychic as trfll as mater- ter. volume, the author pictured the complete demoralization of itual Masterpiece 1 What have they which, the Bible has not? ial, that beset the Russian Jew- A. Z. A. Jvo. 1, 2:SO- p. HI., "Immigrant in his process of rooms 3C and L, Jewish ComnvanIt, too, has poetry, sublimest religious poetry. It, too, hasish the city of Vienna after a mass expulsion of its Jews. adjustment to the English scene, ity Center. The Vienna shown was an abject city denuded by chauv- drama, dramatic lives such as those of the heroes of the Bible. and these he describes with un- Omaha Hebrew club, S p. m.. erring, often harsh, truthfulness, lodge room, Jewish inist politicians of the most productive element of the popula- Where have the dramatic elements of the story of Joseph and but Invariably with indulgent Center. tion. From the clinics the greatest doctors are thrown while his brothers, which Germany's leading (though outlawed) sympathy. Zangwill never glossed Omaha Dramatic club produc- I over faults of the Jew, his incon- tion, "The True Power," g p. t . , ' the.sick bewail their losa. The women complain that they no writer, Thomea Mann has made the basis of his latest liter- sistency, his lack of conviction, auditorium, Jewish Community longer can purchase fashionable clothes now that the mer-ary production, been surpassed or-even equalled? The Book his readiness to compromise and Center. evasion. But, neither did he ig- EloswJay, Msy £. chants are no longer in business Each Viennese finds some of Esther is a magnificent drama. Job is a spiritual drama nore Jewish virtues and idealism. 'Workmen's Loan meeting, 8 p. : of sublimest character.' Solomon's "Song of Songs" is an exreason to regret the decision of the governmeat and soon the His boundless love for Israel was ra., rooms C and D, Jewish C o c - ' l filial In its nature and sweep. Th« quisite love drama, with" its superb Spring Song; so appropripeople_cry to have the Jews return. ' musity Center. unsightly and unattractive, causB'nai 3'rith., S p. is., loSrt The book was an interesting story, a warning to a people ate at this season: ed by a hostile environment and roosa, Jewish. Community Ccr.cruel oppression, did not blind "Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away! already succumbing to a poisonous virus. "Who thought it him to the beauty End heroism Hasomir' Choral society, 9 7. would ever a picture a true Vienna, a Vienna that we would for, lo, the winter is past, . of Jewi3h life. Pathos snfl humour he discovered even in the un- m., rooms K and L, Jewish Comever know? The rain is over and gone , seemly side of Jewish existence. munity Center. Yet today the Nazi government proudly announces that The flowers appear on the earth; He was a friendly, yet Just and Tuesday, Msj- S. Junior Council, 7:20 p. n:., courageous critic. within four years Austria will have chased from its borders The time of the singing of birds is come, room M, Jewish CcininnEitj^ CenThis Golden Jubilee volume, a ter. • . every Jew dwelling there.at the present time. Already, parAnd the voice of the turtle-dove is heard in our land; giant book of close to two thousBoy Scents, S p. in., lodrr ticularly in the province of Burgenland, this policy of expulThe fig-tree ripeneth her green figs and pages, opens with. "Children room, Jewish Community Center. sion has been instituted with accompanying cruelty. Jews, inAnd the vines are in blossom, they give forth their frag- of the Ghetto;" and Includes his "Grandchildren of the Ghetto;" Senior Hadassah, .1:30 p. m.. : • discriminate of age or sex, are robbed and beaten and fall vicrance. "Ghetto Comedies;" and "Ghetto lodge room, Jewish Cemniunify' ; tim /.to the poorest specimens of humanity the world has ever Tragedies" his principel Jew- Center. Arise, my lpve, my fair one, and come away I" "j works of fiction. Internationa! Tv'orkers' Orctr. ! And the Bible is 'of imaginations all compact.' It con- ish"Children r known; " of the Ghetto'' which, 8:So p. ia., rooms C sad D, JewPerhaps soon Vienna will be • - . a s prophesied - - a city tains the sublimest spiritual imagination, with its visions and first appeared under the imprint ish Community Center. the Jewish Publication Society WEEK OF MAY § j : without Jews.. There is little likelihood that the people will ideal conceptions, its poetic images and divinest metaphors. of in IS9 2, proved as immediate and enormous success. It was Ssmfisy, Jlay 8. ever cry to have them return. But Vienna will cea^e to be the Man's life is compared to a flower. Omaha Hebrew club. S p. i=.. j translated into many languages, •i great metropolis it now is. It is doomed to the status ^of a "As for man, his days are as grass; reprinted in several editions, and lodge room, Jewish Com; lunlty if provincial town. made Us author famous,, giving Center. As a flower of the field, so he flourisheth. Jewish Free Loan Society ' I him an international reputation } idge S p. p m., m lodge room, room Je Jeti- 1} For the wind passeth over it, and it is gone; and status. "In the "Children of Bridge. !!, the Ghetto" Israel Zangwill sym- Ish Community Center, And the place thereof knoweth it no more." |' pathetically and honestly records Mosdar, May 0. 'Gone wi|h the wind' is, indeed, the life of man and all in Bikur Cholim luncheon, 1 -,. •: easy delightful and pet pen. Not since the days preceding the Civil "War have Ameri- the generations of the past. chant style the habits, the cus- a., rooms C and D, Jewish Ccm- i ]J toms and the peculiar institu- munity Center. - cans been subjected to Bach fear as ia now being engendered "He cometh forth like a flower, and withereth." W o r k m e n ' s Loan m e e t i n g , S r . '• i tion of Ghetto Jews whom opt by the presence of the Nazis. As the magazine "Time" recentpression, and pogroms drove from m., J e w i s h C o m t a u n i t y Center. "All flesh is grass, ; Czaristic Russia and Poland to T u e s d a y , 3's-y 1 0 . . ly stated if a poll were to be taken of the nation's most unAnd all the goodliness thereof is as the flower of the field; the East End of London. Relig- J u n i o r Council; 7;S0 p . —... popular group, there is no doubt that the Nazis would,easily ion, it is only natural*to find the r o o m SI, J e w i s h C o m m u n i t y C T S - < The grass withereth, the flower fadeth? , . author dwelling upon .tha relig- ter. walk away with the prize. : Because the breath of the Lord bloweth upon it— ious life, custosts and traditions " Boy Scouts, S p. ta.. lodre • But evidently popular indignation has not deterred them. they brought with them, and room, JewisS Conmuiiity Center, Surely the people is grass. , their fate-in the new land.. The Wd Witness the atrong-armed measures employed on American The grass withereth, the flower fadeth." deep inwardness and "spirituality Stage-Xite, S*:SO is., Legionnaires; witness the terrorism.used against anti-Nazis. of'Judaism Zangwill experienced torium, Jewish Com acity And yet the Bible's triumphant conclusion is: personally, anS he takes his peo- ter. "We have been apt to regard .the Nasis in this country in ' "But the word of our God shall stand forever!" ple to task for neglecting this lateraaUonal •Wor Ordrr. the light of other cultural groups., "Were they such/there The Bible recognizes the permanent in the midst of the spiritual reality, often with sar- S P. 12., roonis C and D, J ewi - J humour. Despite many and Comnusity Center. would be no objection to them. Brazil and Argentine have passing, the eternal in the transient, the abiding underneath donic serio«3 faults, these children of h found it necessary to suppress their activities and rightly so. the perishing—as the blossoms of May, scattered upon ,the the ghetto are basically honor- Senior H&usssah lunchecs, I . f able, loyal and virtuon=. Especialm., iocge roorn, Jewish Co™- \«' In Csecho-Slovaliia theae Nazis were allowed to go their way ground, enrich the soil for future blossomings. ly praiseworthy is thetr deep re- Eiunlty Center. unhampered by the' government; they now accuse of mistreatligious faitft. Tits znoviEg tale of "For God, who created all things, can renew!" Music Festival.'S a. 1 "The Sabbath-breaker" is a more ravauditorluia, Jewish £nf -I:i*i ing them. .Consequently Czechoslovakia is now endangered t For God is the changeless Ground of all change: the In-persuasive argument for 3iul8&3 ityCenter. and .witbiaihe nest few; wee&s may bo thrown to Hitler. immortality than the most erudfinite and Eternal Basis of , all bloom, all beauty, and all ite and logical formulation. Pes- Friday. May IS. Music Festival, s &. • . In justification of the seizure of Austria, responsible fas- b l e s s i n g . ' " "•;' •••; • • ' • ; . . . . • ' ' . . . . ' • " . . pite poverty, lack of breeding and is., aaditoriu Jewish Ce cist xirclea iterated the principle that a power has a right a'hos.t.of unpleasant traits,'the May we say with Browning's "Paracelsus": ity Center Ghetto inhabitants are Kindly, deto penetrate into another power and .when the moment is ripe "Where'er I look is fire, where'er I listen cent, and'Intelligent, interested CQ&XTSG EVENTS lo seize the reins of government. ; more or lass ia spiritual values,' Music, and where I tend bliss evermore." deroted In & measure to the SynIn our zeal to retain our constitutional guarantees, we - Blanche Lea Walden has beautifully expressed the soul of producCIB sannot perzait those liberties we cherish to be taken from us. May : -• c"-c~i:o"aii3 concerned v»-ith, the s auaitoriaxa, Jewish rrc-crvatloa of their people'and Csster. The presence of 2Sazi groups in this country is a distinct men• "Now is the blossomtime when hearts are glad fcit::. Quite-an stfcilratle, often aes. TiiG7 £?o sot American citizens; their allegiance ia to With promise of fulfillment soon to be, inspirsng, group of mea and Leas Socie •> Jewish •wsmca, they are. government. They are enemies within our borders, When all our little worries crim and sad la "Grasaehildrcn of the Ghetoust (jo. • Our AzLvz Lie buried deep beneath tranquillity, to," a supplement; ta its prcdoces-
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THE JEWISH PEESS—FRIDAY, APEIL- 29, 1938
Sigma Alpha Mil
NEWIATFEDS TO BE HONORED A reception honoring Mr. and Mrs. Lazar Kaplan, who Trere recently married, will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Millard Krasne, 436.-South First street, Council Bluffs', on Sunday, May 1, from 3 to 6 p . m . ' ' No cards are being issued. -
RECEIVE OS GOI/DEX WEDDISG ANNIVERSARY Mr. and Mrs. I. Abrahamson •will receive at their home, 3035 Lincoln boulevard, on Sunday, May 1, from 3 to 5 and from 7 to 10 in honpr of their golden wedding anniversary. Friends and' relatives are Inited.
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No cards have been Issued.
OMAHA CliTJB OF NEW YORK . The Omaha Club of New York •will on Saturday evening. May 14, hold its second annual spring dance In the Georgian Room of The Omaha Chapter of Hadasthe Piccadilly Hotel in iNew York. sah will hold its anual election of officers followed by a tea at 2 p. ROYAL ELITE CLUB m., Wednesday, May 4 a t the The JRoyal Elite Club is spon- Jewish Community Center. The soring a card party on 'Wednes- regular meeting will be proceedday evening. May 4, at their club* ed by a I p. m. board meeting. room on the third floor of 315 Many important points of busSouth Fifteenth street. iness will be 'transacted during There will be table prizes, door the meeting. Besides the election prizes, and refreshments. of officers, delegates to the Southwestern Regional ConferOCTDfff SATURDAY ence being held in Council Bluffs Members of the Alpha Pi Tau May 18 and 19 will be decided on fraternity will hold an outing as well as the delegate to the NaSaturday night, April 30, at 10 tional Convention which will be P . m . '. • . •'.' -. held in St. Louis during October. Destination Is being kept a Tea will be~served under the secret by Chairman Al Oruch, direction of.Mrs. David A. Finkle, who promises that he has picked Mrs. Seamore Conn, and their out "just the spot." assisting hostesses Mrs. Isadore Berkowitz, Harry Z. Bernstein, Rueben Brody, Mas Canar, SamTO ENTERTAIN AT DINNER Reva Gorelick is entertaining uel Cohen, Max Davis, Abraham this Saturday, April 30; at a din- Greenbaum, Abe Katzkee, Abe I. ner to honor Adele Mayper and Pradell, Arthur Romm, B. A. SiJoe Hornstein, who. are soon" to mon, and Julius Stein. The program is being arranged married. by the Educational Committee headed by Mrs. M. F. Levenson. FROM SCOTTSBLUFF In addition to all local quotas Mrs. Harry Rushall of Scotts- already the Omaha bluff, Nebraska, has been the Chapter undertaken, Hadassah has pledged guest of her mother, Mrs. Hattle itself to of raise an. additional fund Nathan. of 5360 for the Youth Aliyah to transfer an Austrian child to PalHONORED ON BIRTHDAY Forty persons attended the eur- estine. Elaborate plans are being priso birthday party • given on made for the Annual "Give & April 16 for Mr. N. S. Yaffe. luncheon which will be held Among the out-of-town guests Get" the Jewish Community present were Mrs. Elsie Fogel May 25 atAdditional names are and Mrs. Bertha Weiner of Cal- Center. listed of those who -will be if ornla, and Mr. and Mrs. Max here honored at the luncheon, Mmes. Moser of Lincoln. Harry Altschuler, Joe Batt, Dave "W. Bernstein, David Blumenthal JOSLYX MEMORIAL D. M. Brown, Ben Burstein, HerOn Sunday, May 1, at 2:30 in man Dansky, I. Dansky, Sol Dethe concert hall of the Joslyn Me- gen, Benjamin Fleischman 'and morial, members of the Omaha M. M. Frieden. Music Teachers association will J Iso Mmes Sam Goldware, Sampresent a National Music Week Handler, Jacob Kahz, Jacob Kaprogram. At 3:30 Mr. Rowland telman, Mar Kaplan, Lawis LazHaynes will speak on "The Art erwitz, Sol Lewis, and Jack Linof Helping People in Education." . A concert will be given at 4 coln. Others are Mmes. Morris Margoo'clock by the St. Paul choir of lin, S. J. Plotkin, Max Rosen, NaLincoln. ' than Simon, Henry Solig and Sam "Wiesman. :Patronize Our Advertisers
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A Tegular meeting of the Ph Sigma sorority T7as held on Sni' day, April 24, at the home o Miss Marjorie Katz. Dorothy Katzman was elected to the office of secretary. Final details were submitted for a drawing to be held at th Jewish. Community Center at 3 p. m. on Sunday, May 8. Lazier Singer spoke- to th group on the work of the Philan' thropies and receired word thai the girls are all doing their share to help the drive.
Women's Misrachi
Pk. £u. A,
At an election held last Monay night, Leo Eisenstatt, Oma:a, was unanimously elected prior of Sigma Omicron chapter. Henry Greenberger, Grand Island, was elected exchequer, mid trvin Yaffe, Omaha, was elected •eeorder. Sidney Kalin of Sious lty was named historian, and Dave Kavich, Fremont, was elected assistant exchequer, Irving Iveitel,' Grand Island, is the out;oing prior. Sigma Omicron's debate team. composed of Sidney Kalin and Harold Turkel, Lincoln, is in the semi-finals of the university interfraternity debate tournament. At present standings they are undefeated, • The second in the series of lultural hours on Jewish Topics was held at the 'chapter house last , Wednesday. Rabbi Harry olt spoke on the Jewish State, and he was ably assisted by Mr. Dan Hill of Lincoln. The next ultural hour will be held Thursday, and this time the principle speaker will be Rabbi Ogle of incolnv These Cultural hours which Sigma Omicron is sponsoring In co-operation with the national offices of Sigma Alpha Mu, are rapidly gaining favor with the Jewish students of the university's campus. Represenative.groups from all the Jewish organizations on campus have been In attendance, besides a number of Lincoln's Jewry. Rabbi David Goldstein of Omaha, will conduct the discussion on May 4. Sigma Omicron chapter of Sigma Alpha Mu received a certificate from the national offices, signifying that Sigma Omicron chapter was the third highest chapter of any fraternity in scholarship in the United States and Canada. The computations were made by the National Interfr,aternity council. Significant also Is the fact that the two highest chapters were also chapters of Sigma Alpha Mu.
Ladies' Free Loan A' Tegnlar meeting of the Ladles* Free Loan society will be held on Wednesday, May 4, at 2 p. m. at the Jewish Community center,. Mrs. S. Fish, chairman of the card party to be held Sunday evening, May 8, at the Jewish Community Center, reports that plans are about completed. The public is cordially invited to the card party. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Fish. Mrs. J. Flnkel and Mrs. W. Kuklin are in charge of refreshments for the card party.
The carrying out of the Jewish Community Center Jibrary renovation was made positive by the successful Spring Frolic sponsored by Sam Beber Chapter 100 Saturday, April 2S, at Hotel Fasten. Approximately 1C0 couples attended. A definite appropriation for the library fund will be made to the Jewish Community Center by the chapter at its cert meeting. -Harold Zelins&y was elected chapter delegate and Herberts Forbes alternate to the International A. Z, A. camp convention to be held at Estes Park June 24 to July 1. The chapter also voted to ester a softball team in the Jewish Community Center league. A regular practice for all those Interested in trying out for the chapter team. was held Tuesday evening. The first league game is scheduled for Sunday morning at 11 z. m. Sam B e b e r Chapter 100 pledged $15 to the Jewish Philanthropies . fund for, thi3 year. Pictures of the chapter and members of the chapter were takea after the meeting for display purposes In Washington by Frank Chase. A Parents' Day committee coasisting of Paul Sacks, chairman; Jack Epstein, Manuel Hlnelstein, Abe Resnick and Joe Razniek was chosen to work with a similar committee from Chapter 1 in preparing for the Internatioaal A. Z. A. Parents* day, May S. Plans are being forrn.uls.ted for the chapter entry In the Rouad Table Stunt night .which will be held May 11. The cultural committee headed by Jack Epstein is in charge of. the choosing of a proper skit4or-'the chapter.
Members oJ the Wcssen's 31izrachi hare suggested that c s i en's r> ' Mother's Day a suitable way of The EEEUCI fiessert bridge- \ of o\~ or-s N- r paying tribute would be the luncheon sponsored by the Fleas-j wi;i ,. 1' • rcr T Planting cf a tree ia Palestine. Mrs. E. "Weiaberg is -chairman ant Hill Cemetery Bociety wiil be :j'sumrr-j r>' '. of the J. N. F. tree fund eoaisjt- I held on -Monday. May -. in the and z r-rz-r™ v ee. She may b& reached at Wal- j audStorium on the loth floor oi ; Tfc.B V , . b= r ! the BrEEdels stores starting £t < ing: ^r.^ ^ . i>r or nut 1S54. ' 12:30. I snterc; ec. Hostesses for the zitz\T PTC: I — M^sdames S. Jacobs, N. Rosen-\"t/r' " as-a-mi blatt, S. Korg£n. E. Sfcafton. J. j ' " "~ ' ' ' I Kaplan, M. .Arbitman, J. Abre- ! A , _ „ r - p -. i f On Monday, April 26, the Bss- 1 hamson, J. Xeeoraan. J. Gold- | <,eJJ ^ * J. o ' r , 6O 1 '', • c a-mi club, n e t af the hone cf I ware, S. llarte, J. Abramson, \T. i gV^ic-'' c;-'=- r ^ - . . 1 c Miss Elaine Lagman. j Tousem, Ben Yousem, B. Garrup, ' 7!^"'".,''', . T'- . . As this was the first neeting jS. Eabior, S. Frohm and S. Xitz. j c u e . " " ' that has been held since the club's inaugural fiance oa April i Sice-- •: v c - f i c-f . —13, a complete report iras sires I clasr. as to the results of the dance and The Omaha Section of the Xa- ( t was found, that a large profit I tioasl Council of Jewish Jursicrfe I had been made. The fact that 1 wil hold the!,? meeting >"ET 1 et | this money is to go to the Xeg- I 2: SO Et the Jewish Community! eoted Children's Fund in Pales- Center. j tine made making the money all Election of officers and also j | the more enjoyable. the drawing for the Emereon Ks.- • Since the Jewish Community _ di© will be tae most importatt' Center Is seeking to fprnish a order of business, however, deleroom for young Jewish organisa- gate for the Convention to b^ tion, the Eas-a-mi have donated held in Kineapolis will tlso b" a sum to this room. The Club ex- chosen at this time. pects to have every other meeting A report from the Xothe-at the Jewish Community Center. Daugi Te.. to be As another purpose o! the club at the Focteselle Hotel1 will be Is to help these Jewish people I heard from the Chairman, Be-- , who are le£3 fortunate, the Club ths Guss. , .' pledged itself to give five dollars - CoT-ncil members are i;rged tr ' t to the Jewish Philanthropies. bring their radio ticket stubs ETC" Several cf the members are as- I money and be Et the meetirg r r 1 : sisting ia the drive. i time. '
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A meeting of the Pioneer en's organization will be held on Tuesday, May 3. at 2 o'clock s t the Jewish Community Center. Plans for the bazaar to be held the last Sunday in May will be made. Members who hsve not gottea a five dollar luncheoa are urged to do so as soon as possible.
Let us show you the beauty of the latest shingles and roll type roofings . . . explain their economy and the BIRD Guarantee of protection. '•• A BIRD Boot will increase the value of your property and with our easy payment plan ycra can have the Job done
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The regular meeting of th Vaad Auxiliary will be held oi Tuesday, May 3, at 2:15 P. m, at the B'nai Israel Synagogue 18th and Chicago streets. • . Following the regular order o business, the election of olficeri will take place. All board merit bers are requested to be at th Executive board meeting at 1:31 p. m. The speaker of the afternoon will be Mrs. Paul Vere whose topic will be "Jewis Women in Review."
OMAHA'S RELIABLE PURSUER
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Vaad Auxiliary fVferlaff oi this hotel. 'WfcsUi- «r oa business cr pleasure beat the HoteJ Carts snakes an Ideal "JjaBO el cpsratjpoa," as t7en as a rcstfal "billet" a t tha eafl o? tho cay's "caanpalga." GO 0(3 XPooa, aataraly. And taoaenwa charges, cs t7eli £3 fo? final mt>ni—CQ^I dgslflcanea^T^Ty^ to .essaying
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CHESED SKEL EMES A regular meeting of t h e Chesed Shel Ernes will be held on Monday- at 2 o'clock' at the Chesed Shel Ernes building. All members .have been requested to attend.
Women's
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COKKiE SH
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THE JEWISH PEESS—FRIDAY, APEIL 29, 1938
'.Page'6
many Gorskys. Otherwise there is ing at his reflection in a mirror, " I had to. I guess it's better bag that at each blow must Christians." •• • • • "when I'm the hero in the play." than being a make believe, hero. b o u n c e b a c k . Mr. Truckman, let's be truly no reality of Christianity. I have so much - else that is • Errands "Come on," said Dan. "Mr. Or, on his day off from the (Copyright, 1SSS,fcrSeven Arts Feature Syndicate.) worth doing. I have these ideals poorhosi.se he is -worried . t acEvery day, when he had run Roth is waiting. "But I can't. I haven't a cos-whicli are a y inheritance and count of the crippled boj* whose all his errands, he-came to the f _ which inraybraver dreams I have mother believes that if she' conic. t |«: ' costume shop to' practice beiag a tume." ; thought to carry to the w o r l d . . . take him to a certain shriae fcev,; The Play hero. He practiced bowing regal, I "Come," urged Dan. "Mr. Roth Peace, justice, mercy, loving- might get •well; bat there is no i ly, with a majestic swing .from kindness, these are of my ideals money for the railroad tzre. Mr.' the waist. And he practiced ris- said to come right away." They walked through the dark- which came to n e from the laws Gorsky himself doesn't believe ir. ; ing nobly before his court, using merits s,nd letter? peizetf In Iron curative shris.es, but 'he says the the counter as his :hrone and theening street to the school and and th© prophets. Guard hee.dquf.ners reveal thai Dan, afraid Willie would, change faith of people must be respected. > enchanted costume maker for his the prevention oi the natioiivnd* Yet I have had to be like the his mind, held his arm as they knights and courtiers. Then he coup cVeiri agr.inst King- Carol'! hunted sheep seeking defensive Besides, it will comfort the heart entered the building and made home and added his day's shelter from wolves. Only recen*- cf the worasa to know that she j Decattir. III. (THNTS)—Chris-j jrot-errment r:'" '.he arrest ot A3* EXTENSION OF THE A cry rang out, just one, — and went earnings to his little pile.of mon- their way to the back of" the y I wrote. May Jews ia righte- has spoken to the saint ,t the tiang in this tevrv. were urged to; thousands 01 Iron' G-u.f,rd. leaders, I JEWISH COMMUNITY CEN- then, silence. Avner and Uri stage. Mr. Roth just looked a t ousness bring any more children shrine for her crippled contribute to the Joint Disivifcu- \ inducing' their cnietlfiin. Seleg l d boy. awoke in a fright crying: "Mum- ey. Willie very strangely then step- nto such a. world? r; called for tioc Committee a a letter ad-j Codreani, spvec. TT. is mam" an Jew:1, Good Sliabboth boys and girls my, Mummy!" while the startled . The day before the play came ped before the curtain. Mr. Gorsky goes begging here I ' dressed to a!l efetrch members by !ry from organized potvomf. mules dragged the cart forward. at last.'AH the characters of the a strike o£ Jewish totherhood. of the Junior Jewish Press! and there: " I come to ask for a children and parents," E. J. Huffier, president ~f the ! Examination nt the confiscat! This week we have all heard Whatever had happened ? ' And play brought their costumes to Mr."Dear donation to carry a crippled child voice rang out. " I Decatcr Church Cor.ncil, after he >ed documents 'shov.'s that Iron ! much abont the Philanthrop- then came the walling voices of.school, costumes of silk and lace want Roth's to a shrine. You and I don't be-^ Still, justice requires defense to Introduce the real hero and Dr. Edward S. Beyer, pro- j , ics. YOUB mothers and fathers men, women and children: "Ya, with glittering borders. Mr.*Roth I spoke to you about a little of a people that by reason of its lieve in such things, but we-must j fessor of religion n.t Milliken Uni- ! Guard chieftpins hncl received, instructions to BijrnPVi".f tlif- putscl called Willie aside. Surely and older brothers and sisters rabi ya rabi." race is beiag reduced and devast- be tolerant and respect this faith. | verslty, he.fl nfpsired vountnrilr by arresting p.il Jew? in the vil1 "Where is your costume?" he while ago, one who knows that ated. ; have all been very bnsy collect- those must be the Yemenites who You.and I are Christians and this ! Justice does call for voices real heroism is sacrifice, not fine et the opening meeting: of the lo-lages and towns EIK' sending ' ing funds for our unfortunate live In this quarter? Yes, all their asked him. that shall speak thunderously in is Christianity — to respect be- cal JDC campaifTE. Dr. Beyer! them tc the cities v.'heve thej robes. Willie!" stock had been stolenAnd the •' . . "I'll have it tomorrow, sir." Jewish people In other lands liefs that are not our own. Anrthe meeting that the Jews. were te.be herded into freight Willie was pushed before the defense of a people that has iaade hots continued ever louder from Willie answered happily. ' and for the sick and needy. it will be a great coia'ort to told v.-ere entirely too reticent in call- ships P.nc sent, cu' ©£ she country. curtain. A sea of faces smiled and and continues to taaKe good con- way, ill sides, and grew nearer to us. He went to Mr. Epstein's store the mother's heart; she has hsd Imst week, your Aunt Naomi to aaakiad; justice, ing- upoE others for help for their : All vho resisted vere to be slain Jut when we realized that^ it was straight from school and took the nodded. Tears sprang to his eyes. tributions visited one of the big national people. Then everyone was standing up indeed, speaks, for the right of so much pain." Property ev-nec! by Jews ant ur men shooting, and they were orders. At each^door he bowed hospitals that receive money So when I think of Christianity and shouting, \ "Hurrah for Wil-any people to live, even for peoletter of the Church Coun- Jewish organizations was to b« lurrying to our help from every majestically as he handed over from the Philanthropies and part of the district. Fathers and the order. And majestically he re- lie!" And there was his mother ple who have given so prophets, I always think of poorhouse n a n cil The said that the Jews "Ere cot confiscated am: furred over tc - t>aw many boys and girls of mothers came rushing forth in ceived his money from Mr. Ep-in the third row, dashing a tear philosophers, scientists, ' artists Mr. Gorsky who troubles himself asking the Christians for help" the Iron Guard. Th* speed with your age who could not get u p their night-clothes barefoot, be- stein and- went to practice in his from her cheek and calling his and Nobel prize winners. so much about Christian duty acd but "have submissively accepted! vfaich the .rpvernment crushed I from their bed and play as you wildered, and anxious to know hero's robe. Then he went home name with the rest of them. And Justice, as I hear it plainly,' who, knows the stranger as histheir lot and have gone to work the plo.? Is" believed to have pre:| can. They all had tuberculosis has happened. Everyone to dream of himself bowing and there was the costume maker says: "Where are Christians? neighbor. When I summon Chris- to make the best of it. In this vented "s serious uprising as the :\ and some of them will be In what was peering in the direction of bowing to a delighted audience. who was coming forward; holding Where are those who have the tians to the defense o£ Jews I they remind us of a Jew, vho,Coup was seliec'i'led tc take plact ;[ bed for years, and years to he "Wadi." But we didn't mau- And when he awoke it was theup the purple hero's robe. beatitudes as their inheritance? .think of some renowned Mr. 2,000 years ago, meekly accepted within, a lev,' riP.ys. Codreanu ha* ' •< come; but the more pennies we tge to catch the robbers. "For a real hero!" cried the Where are they who from their GcJrsky coming down from the al- His place on the cross. We, asbeen sentenced tc six months in All the day of the play, the daj when ;•[ can send to take care of these lame the cows and mules were Willie was to be a hero at, last. costume maker, "A present to a Master have the teaching of jus- tar of a cathedral or from the Christians, cannot accept this he- • prison for slsnilering: former ;j1 little boys and girls, the better 'eturned to their owners, and we "Your costume, Willie!" said boy who knows how to give!" tice for the oppressed? Let Chris- high bench of a court or from roic philosophy. As long as the ' Premier .Nocols-S Jov^s,. ij care they can get, the quicker vere saved."—thus Dudik would Mr. Roth in alarm. "The play's [ The g-overment has not yet deThe next moment the robe was tians speak in defense of the Jews the rare altitude of a philosopher lives of ihunen beings are Et j they will get well. So, today, draped majestically on Willie's who can cot so well speak for place . . . some Bishop Gorsky, or stake Christians must feel a re-': cicecl what punishment to give lonclade story- From thai night •; when we have so much to b e ' jnwards their parents would not tonight." a Mr. Justice Gorsky, or Presi! him for orEF-nizir.g' • the abortive sponsibility." "I'll have it tonight, sir." said shoulders, warm and beautiful. themselves." dent of a University Gorsky . . . {thankful for when we -think of let the four go on their 'trips' Willie. • putsch. A special Passover issue And Mr. Roth bent forward and Yes! More effective would be soine luminous Christian like lall the unfortunate Doys and with Yudke the Philosopher, or of Poninca. Vrerr.i, organ of the kissed his forehead. In 1635 *?rhesi a J e v of Kew A Check the voice of a great and influen1 girls in' Germany and Austria "Take a bow," whispered Mr. tial Christian defending the good poorhoiise man Gorsky hut more York tried to buy a house, ob- Cuzit party, was suppressed beven go out to the grove in the After school he made his way highly placed. . ^;and all of the sick boys.and venings any more. ' jections were raised to Jews own- j cause it contained a blood ritual through the windy streets to the Roth as the applause became name of the Jews. A great and j girls here in America, let us be I charge against the Jev.-s, lounder and londer. ing real estate. costume shop, his money jingling "My fellow-Christians, I have (To Be Continued) eloquent Christian prophet who ! grateful for our many blessings Silently, Willie gathered his puts in a small bag his mother had left my high place in the world aside all else to lead a cru• tand promise ourselves that we made him to keep it in. He paus- robe about him. His hope of be- sade for justice to the Jews! to give myself entirely hence1 will add as many pennies as ing a real hero had come true at ed before the window and looked Is this too much to ask for? forth to the defense of a people '• iwe ' can to our club pledge or last. Fearlessly, his eyes swept FREE! Ais Expert CounnelJop cc Room Arra at the robe, smooth and rich and who froia remote times have suf"£ive it to onr elder brothers his adorers who had risen to I dare to ask this from my pro-fered all revilemeat and who evea majestic. Whistling and jingling fcund veneration for Christianland sister so that we can help shout him name. By Deborah Pessin his coins he entered the store. ity; I would cot ask it did I cot to our time are afflicted by such those who do not have as much Willie had never been a hero, "Hello, Willie," said the cos- Laughing with joy, Willie took think of Christianity (side by a persecution as besmirches our ins we do. iitting in the cozy class room of tume maker. "I'll be with you in a bow. side with my Judaism) as one of'Christian civilization. I sum ' j t h i s week we shall have lis Hebrew school, he closed his a minute." . -' • the few lights left in the current Christians to go with me oa this Chapter IV of "THE FOUR •yes and pretended he was a Willie hoisted himself onto the cnisade for justice to the Jews; darkness. Fff.raE.i-n at 2 2 n d Our Easy Faty-isaest HEROES OF KINNERET" and might on a trusty steed gallop- counter, jingling' and jingling his call en fellow-Christians to dedi little story entitled "WILLIE ng on and on to rescue the prin- money. Nor do I know Christianity Iicate themselves to this Christly Girl Scouts TAKES A BOW," which tells cess in the beseiged tower, bis merely as a light in a vacuum, "Just as soon as I write out this defense of bursan dignJanet Graetz, Scout-Master how Willie did his part in helg- iword raised high like a streak of this check I'll get 70U your cosapart from the lives of men. I duty, The-Girl Scouts met on Sunday have seen it often ia the hearts ity." " ing in the Philanthropies Drive ght above his head. Or he was tume,"-the costume maker went afternoon, April 24, 1938, at the of people such as ray friend, Mr. Thus he would speslc to a world; rind boys and girls remember hero in a royal robe made Of r that would bow with reverect re- j the big iJag B'Omer party on ine • colored velvet that caught on."I can wait," said Willie, bend- Jewish Community Center. They John Gorsky. before this dazzling Chris- i Hunday after. May 15,, and rehe light in its warm, deep folds. ing over to watch him write. finished working on their felt Mr. Gorsky resides ia our poor spect and Martye Lea Byron gave tian; yet there would be sto ies j itiember, too, that i t will be "And now," said Mr. Roth, "That's a big name you're writ- a<elts report on the care- of the flag. house, a frail little Jnan who had for hizn as weJl as reverence. The j open to all boys and girls who 'I'd like to choose the hero for pain enough getting along in the ing on that check, isn't i t ? " blood o* his battered head Eight j Hi write a letter or story to Aunt he play." world until the poorhouse 1 ok mingle with his eyes ' but "Yes. j&ederation of Jewish Naomi's column. The class stirred uneasily, Charities/'Y said the costume him In. Once a week he gets a ': i Your Aunt Naomi. obscure their vision of jusfurlough from the poorhouse to not aiting for him to name the hero. maker. "I'm sending them this tice. go downtown where he troubles Willie opened his eyes. check." I could point to certEin highhimself about people who have placed Correct C30&MI And he tore it out of the book "Willie," said Mr. Roth, "You Christians . . . "Yes, BIT, even less than he. iave done excellent work all and waved it In the air to dry. ere the one to take up tins mat"What do they need money erm. I'm going to let you take There -i3 the teaeaeat house ter ol justice . . . or "You!" . . . By &L SEGAI* for?" asked Willie curiously. he hero's part." child who Mr. Gorsky is sure or "You!"; but there must be "Not for costumes?" would turn out to be a musical "I can't," said Willie. SOME MB. GORSKY H Chapter IV genius if he only had a piano. "Why not?" Mr. Roth asked. • . "Oh no. They use it to sup"JFVjur Heroes Go Adventuring" I am very grateful to non-Jew Mr. Gorsky goes about to hun". an "I've never been a hero, sir. I port hospitals, orphan asylums, nd people in want . . . " Harry Newman for caring so old piano for. him sad when he 4Yudke kept his word., wouldn't know how." The money suddenly felt very much about us. He. is the one has found it he runs from track"When" his turn came to do 'out- "You're too shy," Mr. Roth •with side -work' the four young adven- laid kindly. "You'll have to learn heavy in Willie's pocket. He who ia the magazine Judge gave man to trucknan I watched the costume maker lay out a ringing rallying cry sum-am asking you to haalOXansir, turers of Kinneret began making b take a bow." old ' . : the robe carefully on the counter. moning us to come out and fight piano to a poor child free. You their 'trips.' Yudke was nowMr. Roth turned to the class "Here you are," said the. cos- for onr good name and our rights. and I are Christian.;''.and this is elected head of the "Eretz-Israel JA 70S7 tume maker. "Your hero's robe, Exploration Cocpany." Of course again. He challenged notable Jews Christianity—to brisg tills piano GL 0343 their fathers grumbled and moth"I'm sure," he said, "your mo- all ready for theNplay tonight." (Brandeis, Morgenthau, Baruch) to the eager child. "My friend, Willie looked a t It helplessly. to lay aside everything else t o ers^worried, but'the four of them thers have some material they had! their own way; sometimes can use to make your costumes. It was his and he suddenly "wa3 lead a defense of Israel. they would go on top of a load And please asfc your mothers to ashamed to take it. All hl3 money Oh, I say, it is good to know of sweet-scented straw, some- tart on them immediately. The just for a costume. And some peo- that there is such a flaming times among planks and rafters, play is only two weeks off. Class ple . . . friend Mr. Newman in the or sacks full' of wheat. They is dismissed. Slowly he took the bag of mon- world. Ias t seems such a ,woujd be up with the lark and The Hero ey from his pocket and dropped onely, friendless generally world for a Jew return Home late at night Some Willie walked home through It onto the counter. and Mr. Newman is like a light in (\ days would find ^them tramping the gathering dusK. He swished Willie Leaves the thickening darkness. the white high-road which fringes his feet through the white, flee"I don't want the costume," he Yet I am not sure that Jews Lake Kinneret, and on others cy snow, pretending he was' wad- said softly. "Send my money to are the ones to take up the dethey! would _be toiling slowly up ing - through swirling water to them too." the hill-sides. Look at the Jor-rescue a lady on the opposite fense of Jews, to be their own And he ran to the door. dan (winding its-way down there shore. He swished on, faster and "Willie 1" cried the bewildered character witnesses. —-the houses seem like toys, and faster, and the lady on the oppo- costume maker. "Where are you I, the Jew, know how villaina the trees like pieces spread over site shore came closer and clos- going?" ously my name has been traa giant chess-board, while all er. In another moment he would Willie dashed out. He walked duced; I know what falsehood is tez, arou&d, as far as the eye can see, snatch her from the peril that quickly down the street.in the mouths of my enemies; I stretch the green fields and hills hung over her. "I guess^I'm glad," he kept say- feel sure of the worth of my short cf r-Cod: v« " of the Emek. Here and there nes-* Willie stopped suddenly before Ing aloud. **"I guess it's better to character; I feel exalted by contie the solitary colonies,'at a dis- the window of a costume shop. help people than tofcea make sciousness of a noble history; I ida't. dzre civcriis tance'from one another. How oneThere it was. He feasted his believe hero." \ am aware of my ideal3 which are longs to visit them, far off aseyes on it a'nd sighed deeply. Un- But Willie's heart ached hun- in the Testament and the prothey.'are . . . . der a soft light lay a hero's*robe, grily. He wasn't going to be a phets; I know what contributions ':! ; Dudik's Story — a- deep purple robe trimmed hero. No one would ask him tomany of my kinsmen have made "We'll get there some time" with gold and catching the light take a bow before a delighted to the good of the human-kind. Ruva1 was sure of, it. He was cer- in its deep, warm folds. He sigh- audience. B a t ia It for me, the Jew, to tain they would even get to Tel-ed again and swished home to "I'm glad I did it, anyhow," he to the world of my merits? Hai. tell hla mother. "And I need a said stoutly. "Huh, a make beli- spedk I like to think that humility is Who knows? Perhaps they costume," he finished his story. eve hero!" one of my merits (and God for•would have got there but for that "A real hero's .costume, a velvet - He entered the park to watch" give me if to boast of my humilrobe." 'accident.' the Ice-skating. Gay figures shot ity seems vanity) but humility is You asfc Dudik. and he'll tel His mother looked through g the past him as he leaned on a gaunt one of the things I have learned you ail..about it. You won't even trunks, through drawers, into tree at the edge of the rink.' Their from long living and tt Is not in have i to urge him -— he'll tel closets. At last she sat down and bright voices, softened as they my character to'present myself to you just the same . . . were carried away by.the wind, the world: "Listen, smiled timidly. rworld! Listen "Itj was a moonlight night in "I'm sorry, Willie," she said. rang distantly in his ears. He to the account of my virtuesf" the fiddle of the month and all "There's nothing in the house I watched the skaters cut capers No! on the Ice. His heart felt heavy, of uai the children of Moshava can us to make your costume." Besides, hasn't all my recent were riding home from Menache"I saw one in the costume then gay. mia, from a party which had been shop," he said hopefully. "I'm glad," he whispered again living been given" almost altogether to self-defenEe? And to held there. It was very late am "I wish I could buy It for you, and again, "glad!" we were tried out, our eyes near Willie. But not now, dear. Win- His feet began' to get numb, what end? I, the Jew, have been ly closed. Avner and Uri, Orah ter is here and our money must and he walked about briskly, a man warding off blows from I have eyen and.^via too, had all laid the! go for warm clothes." • kicking the snow before him. And many directions. •>:head3 on a sack of straw and fal For a moment Willie's heart when he was tried of walking he come to wonder ^rhether life is lea asleep. But we four wouldn'l sank. His sturdy steed seemed to went back to watch the skaters. worth while merely to fight engive ourselves a moment's rest; gallop away in the distance, fur- .Suddenly someone took his emies, merely to be a punching because in a few minutes w« ther and further from Willie, arm. He turned around.^ Dan, the TO THE• • » Li : should; be passing through th who had no robe to be a ; hero. boy who sat next to him in Hevalley!— the dangerous "Wad An Idea brew school, was beside him. Fedjas." — haunt of all the rot> "Mother!•* he cried suddenly. "Come on, Willie," said Dan. bers and murderers of the dis- 'Mr. Epstein, the grocer, needs "Mr. Roth is waiting. "You're trict. No! we wouldn't sleep a a boy. to : run errands. I'll" earn holding up the play." wink. ;JBlowly the wagon moved enough money . running errands "I can't." said Willie. " I have Brass. Brocsse, along,;! the mules walking with to buy the costume." not a costume." Soft Gres> Ivan and measured tread, half asleep, and. "Oh. Willie, it's too cold!" "Mr. Roth said never mind,' "Eushad a «Hs,ps: si" The&'it wfcs* S •call Castings, Wood . there was stUl a short distance "Ill dress warmly, and it's only Dan said, tugging at bis arm Stcol Metal Patterns and Sasb to go j . .another little bit . . . for two weeks. I've got to have "I'm glad. I found you, gillie io say cfJs? .Weights - carried m otocli. 'there, ;the danger "was past, the that costume or bow can I be a Mr. Roth sent us to look for you Bronso - er.d Cast Ires -Jo ^rosdlsr! TH<3$ "Wadiff had disappeared behind hero? Please, Mother!"* / and I went to your house and Grilles a specialty. us. The guaTd who was with-us "AH fight, my little hero," she your mother said you must be at 1 « • * spcrSerf, ioo, fes T wi! lowered his' rifle. Now we could said at last, and bundled him. into the costume shop. And the cos- . '27th and Martha St. aoro <r^ail doze of, for we were on our own two sweaters and a coat and a tume maker Bald he saw you. go . • -'HA 5583 k COT"© Yd Z ' ground land could already, TnaKe woolen cap. towards the parl$. Why did you out th^'faint outlines of the YemWillie ran down the street to do it, Willie?" How. rnor© ti:ca ©vss fed©?®, feey'ca Es-Sf enites' houses. But bark — what Mr. EpsTein's store, and In five was tnqt? What was the matter? minutes came out again, his arms Volues la Bcfe» Ii^a®^ &®® yessr cssl Th© The 'Sljomer' jumped us, grasp- full of packages. Whistling brisk• Ing his; rifle, and stood on hfs ly and stamping his feet to keep lodtzf. Tfcsia to ta® econosy esfi c guard., ifehadows were moving in warm, he delivered orders from WHOLESALE-'DISTRIBUTORS the. bayj-field. One, two, three,— door to" door. And when Mr. Ep& ' feaca of a 1S33 Seclde EeB^aralsr. ' ° Schrafft'fc Chocolates Mttrieff Caestp lots Of. them, — seven, all mount- stein told him that was all for ed and pleading cattle away. Why the day, and paid him his money, •• • • Canada Dry Gin^e? A!o ' .ami Harvester Casc were tripy burring like that, and he rode his make-believe steed to . ' ;. ... •• . • » F a l s t a f f B o e r . . • ' ' • • • :r .—« s r ~ why should they hide in our mear the costume shop to tell the cos- 315 So. 13tb Street " • AT 4 tume maker he was earning mondow? 1 ~J "Sh, '. whispered the Shomer, ey to buy the hero costume in the "don't njake a sound,.behave like window for a play at liir Hebrew : men!" -And•: as he said that he school. Oar Funeral Parlors Aro Fafafsbed fa Hoao'LlliQ Fac!ss©» "And may I try it on,? asked jumped •jofftfie cart, and began ' v '. -: , .:' "COURTEOUS-—SELfABLS"' ,'• runningjitowards the shadows. A Willje hopefully, "to practice be•-'•'' shot cracked through the dark- ing a hero?" "Certainly," said the costume ness, a dkcoad and a third J A hail of shots'; followed. Our heads maker helping him oft with it. FUfffiEAi. 0IBECTOSS o S.&J. were whirling, our hearts thump- "My, but you look brave in it!" Farnont at 33rd HA 3 2 2 5 'ng, ourjjliandg trembling and we "I'll look braver," said Willie as, ourinandg trempmg a Sucked Ibur heads involuntarily, stroking the rich folds and gaz^
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of the- WocdrasE. of the'i TZtr- n.nci New officers of Hadassah. were The Senior Hadassah One^ .'or-Ivt fieid repShabbot will be held In the home chosen at .the regular meeting ?£onday srnounced tl-f.t R, iC. • e'.S'Cted to ths of Mrs. R. H. Emlein tomorrow; aeld on ;Wednesday, April 20 I.Iiller, of 'Dallas, member of the clrc core Jive The following wil serve for the afternoon, with Mrs. Max BrodI board- ol directors and present 4 CENTER PLAYERS coming, year: Mrs. Leo Fitch T8E1T r. r i key, assisting hostess. i state EJanas-er cf Texas, will soon than 100 women attend- president; Mrs. Nathan Gilinsky PRESENT PLAY ed More tain t i e executive staff of the so- j the Hadassab linen shower first vice-president; Mrs. Leon ciety &% national- headquarters in j !P»VSN_ "The Dollar"! by PInski". wa Tuesday afternoon in the Jewish Frankel, second vice-president; PASSOVER NOTE: " I ' looke< ever, aren't quite realistic enough presented by tho Jewish Theater Community Center. A moving Mrs.. Nathan Nogg, secretary; 3reE.r...Mr. Kilter NOTICE OF CHATTEL, MORTGAGE group In the annual one'act play picture "Palestine" was featured Mrs. Harry Kubby, financial see over from' ray', house in,B«rchtes- •fc'frSi ttelr children's ediscatioa as Mores must have gazed . . . What they ought to ask is has fiercteS mtcn .line to tournament held this week at on. the program. . retary; and Mrs. Sam Bubb, trea gadea into the promised land."—Hitler, this: "If it takes 195 tons of csCentral High School. The cast in301h te.y of ArrH.' I!;"!.. speaking at a pre-ple&iscite rally On->p to destroy one sijuEre DONALD 6 W D K E V AMD MONSKY, j A. :,•:., r t in«.ip Cumin; cluded Morris Raskin, Jean Mon The following- delegates to the In'Salsburg, Austria . . . Now that plOElves COHEN GP.OOiNSKV, MAKER kllcaetre, etc., hoistnacy chiltrose. Herman f-.cks, Vernoi Hadassah convention were ;Chp3' Der' Fumbllns , Fuehrer has ac- dren can be bloTra to bits by one 1 sell fti public ruction, the bit Montrose, Eva - Shatffer, Dave en: Mrs. Richard Gordon, Mrs, knowledged kinship • with Moses, one-ton bomb?" . . . Or this . . . 7Z7 c m s h i Nationn?" Bank Buiitiing j bidder for Affair. to Talio Place at Montrose and Margaret Kosberg Leo Fitch,, and Mrs. Nathan Gil T-tiok "The Slavita Case" will be the Propaganda Minister Goebbe! "In."how many Sours -can'bombSynagogue in NOTICE The play was directed by-Miss insky. Alternates are Mrs. Leon IS KEKEBT G'ATW tfi&t Rosena Sacks,.with Miss Rosalie subject of Rabbi H. R. Rablno- Frankel, .Mrs. Julius . Moskovitz, may be 'expected, to rise to the oc ers,- traveling at SCO kilometres theNOTICE Evening d i>?" a chatte! m":1 fm.ee vo favuisderuiSTied o~gt.nizea a casion 'and' prove that the greai per hour, reach (a) Berlin; (b) corporation underheve Sacks In charge of the properomand Mrs.-fL. H. Cohen.. -. • the laws tn she or o- Shamf? body & Ra : Law-Giver was the daddy of 11 your home town from (a) Paris; State of Nebraska. The name of the par.r. Kipned by iirskine . The eleventh annual Mother Hn and the synagogue choir will •' Mr. William Holzman of Oma- "Aryans" and really an anti- (b) London?" . . . corporation'is KLSIN-RUSSEL.. KCTand Daughter -banquet will be ha showed moving pictures of Semite - . ' . . " Incidentally/ Ivlose chant the ritual.. . . JOR CO., and the principal place of j i> in held a t Shaare Zion synagogue its'business is the City, C Junior ' Congregation : will meet Mexico. Mrs. Morris Yudelson never got to'the promised land.' '••'CENSORSHIP: Leonard Lyoas transactingMpnday • evening, May 2, a t 6:30 of Omaha, Douglas Count;-, Neb-fts- j o was chairman-of the program. 4 tn at 10:30 tomorrow morning. Mr. o'clock in the synagogue social v.-ili tells th5s one ia his syndicated K. ka. The general nature of business s and Mrs. Max Ginsberg will serve to be transacted is to pu-cha^e. sell, j r, FT t'nf hall. The banquet will be sponY. '"Post colyura . . . A Broad-way MUSIC NOTE:. London musicdeliver, dispose r>C, and deal in. e.t j o A regular, meeting of the B'nal refreshments to the children in sored by the Ladie3 Auxiliary ol lovers are confidently expecting entertainer received the folJo-wing vholessle or retaij, either or both, of j f< honor of the birth of a grandson. B'rith was held Monday, April that Shaare Zion. The dinner will be automobiles, motor cars, motor trucks. • v- trie pu-'t.'o=o letter from his relatives ia Vithe ; entire \pre-Anschluss The thirteenth annual Mothers 25. Guest speaker was Mr. Jack Salzbarg' festival with • Toscanini, enna: "Ws can't anderstaafi why busses, bodies, parts, devices, p.cces- i jmii.Si': >• preceded by a brief service at fine -clis Night- service will be held next Harrison of Oakland, Iowa. Dr. Bruno Walter1 and the other scin the • foreign press is so agitated sories, gasohne, oi's, and e.il other \ p hrei- in.sti6:15 In the synagogue. articles, merchandise, or prepaniA. Greenberg, president of the tuted tc Mra. Maurice Rubin will act as Thirty members - of the execu-; Friday . evening. ; Mrs. Morris. District, also spoke. . tillants : who made the Austrian over what is happening here. Ev- tioriS riecessery, inculent?.! or vK*cl in ; p?.r-t -^K-^ecrecover cpr.neetion therewith, new and used, i SKA'AjTvS . tpastmaster and the . invocation tlve board attended an organiza- Weisberg will speak In behalf of C.O., affair a musical by-word, will b erything Is -wonderful" bere, EE3 either Close to sixty local members shifted or both; also to rebuild, repair; ^-S-3S-4t, will be giyen by Mrs. S. B. Gel-tion meeting for .the United Jew- the mothers, Miss Anna Pill in perfectly grasd, and the stories next-Spring'• to StratfordEnd sendee ar.y and all of the above I — fand.,-Mrs. Joe Kutcher, president ish Appeals, at the Jewish Com- behalf of the daughters and were present Sunday- at the on-Avon . . . you print.,, don't tell the truth &s classes of articles; and to lend antl I MPNSKN', Council of > ; the Auxiliary will ~ welcome munity Center, Tuesday evening. Howard Sacks in behalf of the Southwest Regional we see It. It's so wonderful here borrow money, v,'ith or v-ithout BQCUT-' O HEN. Atto'-ncyiF meeting held in Sioux City. sons. the-guests. A group of vocal sel- John Lansberg, chairman for-the 737 Omaha Na'iionai Bank Sidp. now that we can't thick of any ity, to e';eci^^€-. indorse, discount, and DRAMA NOTE: Prof. Eia Sunday, May 1, at 3 p.'m. there fleal in negotiable and non-negroT.ip.ble I ections will be offered by Miss 1938 drive, presided. E. N. Grueother place we'd like to be - - Instruments snd Becurities; to pur- j NOTICE 1? '-'•TC.F.F'"" f!H,7,s Thnf. is to be an initiation in the Large stein, who braved- that freak Apri: ezcept Dorothy Dikel, accompanied at skln was named vice-chairman possibly with A\itit Rosie." chase, le^ise or otherwise acquire resil ; the i-ruiei-si£:n-.?d have formed P. €orbliszard to come from his PrinceEagles Hall. Dr. Greenberg of the piano by Miss Rosanna Dikel. and A. Silverberg, treasurer. ':. . . . The letter was passed by theestate and personal property neces- | porF.tion. ton^ retreat to attend the TT. P. A Omaha will-be guest speaker. ReMiss. Saretta Krigsten will censors, who didn't know ss.rj' or incidental to the corpora- \ State of Nel A. M. Davis will be in charge freshments will be served. The Yiddish, show in his honor would Nazi business E B 5 to Eeli, convey, : no"nnT.p.tir-n speak' in' behalf of the daughters, of publicity; A. H. Baron, Barney that -"Aunt Rosie" had been de&d tion'E Rabbi Theodore N. Lewis will meeting les.se, encutTiber end dispose o$ such [ ^CT-TL'I,TZ' <* have enjoined' this hit of repartee is to be open to memj Miss Beverly Baron in behalf ol Baron, Rabbi S. Bolotnlkov, Rab- speak on "The American Hebrew four years . . . property; to purchase, hold. sell. I place of Imsi i n ttir- City o* , .Between a lady In the audithe ~ . granddaughters and Mrs. bi Lewis and Rabbi Rabinowitz, Year Book" at the regular ser- bers only. transfer EDG other vise fiispose ol ! ha, Pourias ence and our own Aleph Katz". capital stock, bonds or other securi- ; objects for • :, 1'ni? corpora H Maurice Lasensky, In behalf of in charge of the budget1 and dis- vice this evening in Mount Sinai -MISH-MASH: Arery Brcsfiage, ties of other corporations, and to pur- ; -formed are: the mothers. "A skit "Doll and bursements; Si Krueger, Law- Temple. Cantor Volovick, blind cantor, Said the lady: "I wonder if Ein- the' chase, hoid. rpell and transfer shares ; a p-enersi lad who sect the Americas Fairy" • i s ' t o be presented by rence Davidson and Sam -Cohen, Tomorrow evening, he will will conduct services, Friday at stein'understands what's going team to the Berlin Olympics two of its own capital stock. The author- j men: and p.ized capital stock is SlC.fltffl.flO. dj- | nu-chp.se. pe Misses Miriam Gelfand, Evelyn in charge of the Big Gifts. Com- speak a t the open air meeting In 7 p. m. and Saturday at 8:30 a. on." . . . Said Aleph: "Lady, he years ago, recently returned froa •rided into 100 shares of the par Sherman and Eileen Sherman. A mittee; Jake "Kalin, chairman of Grandview Park on the Consti- m. at the Chevra B'nai Yisroel understands the Einstein theory.' a Ecropeaa trip oa the Italian value o£, JlOOJjO each, &H of v-hich is anci eouinmerit of every kin*1 pv' dance number by Ruth Kutcher the small gifts, committee; Mrs. tution^ Week program. synagogue. Cantor Volovick is stock and ?:hen issued shall .REFUGEE NOTE: The State liner Res . . . At least one ship- common and' Gloria Novitsky, and a spec- Abe Pill, chairman of the Womnoted for his memorizing of the be fully and non-assessable. anc~ di^T^o^e of all t ypes an,:"! Kin<:lR oi reporter was tespted to ask Stock m a r paid be paid- lor in cash, prop- Parts, supplies. ialty number by Esther and Paul- en's Division. Other chairmen, for complete. Hebraic service. He is Department has already selected news Avery why he >adn't usad a Nazi services or other things of value ine-Friedman will complete the the division of 'solicitations were an accomplished pianist and nar-the- man it wants to head the In- ship . . . The AcsiriEs coup has erty, £s determined by the Board of Di- ecmpmeni and e.ppp.r?.1vs. PV.C, ia ternational committee that is to program. Songs arranged by Mrs. E. E. Baron, H. Lazriowich, Max rator of Hebrew. . r rectors. The time of commencement make repairs of e-.-e--y kind ; € ciiarbe • formed" t o execute 'the' Hull- been filmed hy March of Time of this corporation S'.,H;- Shuikin will be included in Rosenstock, Max Lasensky, A. B. Junior Hadassab. members will is the Gate of ail, . , Will soEs.e one please explain Roosevelt plan" to aid eraigfation ing of the Articles in the office of paratu?;. The Company shall bffve the community singing. Music Friedman, A. Silverberg, L. J. attend a May morning Brunch, The Sisterhood \ will sponsor a of political refugees from Europe why chess is reported ca the the County Clerk of Dousjias County, and issue during the dinner hour will" be Kaplan, and L. J. Kutcher. p sports pages of, newspapers sag Nebraska, to-f-it, April I I . 1?"S, f.nfi ftuthoritv to borrow money '••='= therefor-. this Sunday morning at 11:30 rummage sale soon. No definite Hi bbe announced furnished by Blanche Eleanor date nor .place has been set as —ay the date of. termination is J.Iey 1, j The total autho-izetf • pital ptock in The drive will be officially opr o'clock at the -Jewish Communper share. la bridga la the general news sec- 5SSS. The hig-hest amount or incebt- ElC.ino.fio, par vnhie fi ened May 10. It will bs preceded ty Center. A social hour will fol- yet _but. anyone who can donate this week at a conference la lik'bilitj,- to T-hic'h the cor- all Common Pt .-k, f.nf! plial' be fully Cocrses in Hebrew e d n e s s o rshall s. S. Kaplan is in charge of by a dinner for,the workers on any old clothes Is asked to phone Washington, of various organisa- tions? the brunch. a t any time subject it- paid rind. non ?!=o«F.bIe. The cortions interested la refugee aid sherthaad are now .being gireis ia poration the program; Mrs. A. B. Fried- May • 9. A meeting- on the" evening iowThe Mrs. Morris Yudelson, 5645 seJ* shsll not exceed the amount of poratior e'laii. commepce business Hadassah cultural meetwork. Palestine and also la this coun- its total authorized man,, the dining hall, with Mrs. of May 9, will" follow the dinner ign wa3 held Thursday evening in capital stock. I upon the 'ilinjr of if<; ArtioIeE with try' . . . . Paaaie Kcrst lives ia s provided, however, that this "res-trio • the S. Shuikin and Mrs. Frank Gor- for the workers and will be open *.he home of Mrs. Frank Epstein. th Count!' C?°"K of TVmg-lR.q Countj", The Emesel Club held It fourth tioc shall have no application to ob- I P.nd Ehali 1 continue until January 1, chow in charge of the menu. The to the public. An out of town LIT'RY NOTE: A : small group "medieval castle" apartment ia ligations annual banquet and Initiation in of the corporation, the p a y - | !!!5S. The hicii-'-si: amount of imlebtmen-of the congregation will speaker will' address the .open the Beaux Arts room of the Chief- of-substantial Jews sre planning Manhattan, which has 14 rocnis tner.ts of. -whicfe are sec-urefl by the j ertnePF shfili not f-xecer two-!]itrds of of re&l estate or other prop- the cp.pitai piock. '"he number of serve, the dinner. More than 300 meeting, however no solicitations A bsta for ev- transfer tain hotel, Sunday, April 24. Mis3 to start a'New York Yiddish daily aa-3 sis baths erty. The EiTairE of the corporation merr.lifys oC the BOP re! shali be proare expected to attend. Sylvia Endelman was chairman tabloid • . . . . - Featuring strictly ery 'uJght in the vreek tnt one are" will be made at this meeting. A. to be conducted by s. BosriJ of vided for by the E---1J>WS, which . . . . For the information of oar sensational'staff in the approved of the banquet and was assisted M.- Davis and-'Barney Baron will I Directors, consisting o* not. less than T<<iarii r-hali adminipier the sffairs o* esteemed contemporary, who retwo nor more than five in number, j the _ rorroration. The stockholders And having by the Misses Miriam Saks and tabloid •.manner be in- charge of:the arrangements Bo&rfi shall elect 8. President, shall hplc!_ _-heir p.nnual meeting on Mrs. Yoche Greneberg, 59, died Lorraine Meyerson, theme com- no political viewpoint to sell ceatly ,told his pcblio that Simon awhich for the meeting. The goal for-the Vice-Prcsifient, a Secretsn-% and a j the second edn"5=riaj- in .January of 1938 drive has been set at-$10,- Tuesday morning in her home, mittee, and the Misses Ruth Seld- The group has the cooperation.of Marks, sad, Israel. Sieff, noted Treasurer year r.nt" e'iPcr Direccors. The 1312 Jennings street, after a sick- ln and Llbby Grossman of the a prominent British Jew, British Jews, "are relatives," & 000. -'-Si•Directors stall elect a. - President, ness of several months. A native EUKKKASD, Yice-Pr?siden L. Seoretnr?' p.nc! Treaswas recently la this country nd Loafioa collesgse sarcastically VIXCENT At the meeting, a. resolution of Poland, Mrs. Grennberg came decoration committee. urer. The Articles n-p.y 'be amended incorpor&tors. "Ia fact, Mr. Peters, I t The theme of the banquet was la planning to return shortly. . . comments: V,VOT. notice a? pTvMefl for. "Xh« was adopted thanking ; Mr. J . ' L .to the United Stated 30 years o-nald BrodkejATTEST: It 53 even said they are brotherscorporstior; FhaT. b?.v*i ?. Peal, 4-IS-SS-4t Levitt chairman of the 1937 cam- ago. She had resided in Sioux "The Drama of Emesel" ,asd. decin-law and hare bees • for Qcite orations carried out the Idea of PALESTINE . NOTE: - Our cuspaign, for the work he had done. City since. She was a member of . ' toms-'expert .asks us to note that some tiiae - - nls.ee Mr. Sleff mar- tRVIN C, The following allocations to ; lh- the Ladies Auxiliary, of Shaare the theater. the • former Miss Marks" . . . heatre Blrig. 7£S B After-dinner speeches were giv- when you-go.to Palestine you-are ried ; Arrangements for. the Mother stitutions participating • in« the Zion synagogue. Dr. Nicholas Murray (Miracuobliged'to pay a 20 per cent Ed en by the Misses .. Ida Lerner, NCTiCC C and .Daughter luncheon, to be 1937 United " Jewish 'Appeals Funeral Services -were held valorem castons' duty on' • yoar lous)1 Butler confessed oa his Xclice is ^f-et' : given, by the Temple Sisterhood, Drive, were made. Joint.Distribu- Wednesday afternoon at Shaare June Meyerson, Lorraine Meyer- handwritten •• mez-usoth,-- t h e sa 6th' birthday xeceztly that he son, Sylvia Endelman, and Shir•j May-7, have been completed and tion Committee,: §3,150; United Zion synagogue with Rabbi H. R. ley Gershun. Miss • Florence Mey- on-tarbuBaes-;. '. .' But you can hsfi spent almost t-po hours er- porstioa v-^ ^~ c It v - c ; the following program Is an- Palestine Appeals, §2,100; HIas, Rabinowitz, .officiating. •?. : ag.-with Mussolini that demoe- of Kebrsskr T r p n r ~ ° p erson was mistress of ceremonies. bring In duty free - buffaloes'and . nounced by Mrs. Sol Novitsky, ?100;BeIIefalr, $200: Ort,: ?478; is ">*~r ^ n : <T~ j * Surviving are the widower, A. . Following- the banquet the for- camels,: gold -bullion',--Scrolls---; o£ ras better teas, -fascists . . . poration CCO ! prdgram chairman." Miss Frances Iowa Schdoi'of Religion,; $300; Greenberg; TA^ V TS e a'son, Jack, both of mal initiation was held In the the Law; . . ' ;f •"I'-'didn't • convince, hisa," he re- VICE i Kalin will act as toastmaster, and Jewish Consumptives -Relief So- Sioux City; thre place of b-L*- •">" t-sf' s» daughters, Mrs. Pioneer Ro«*a. The new members marked,, "and he dSda't convince Nebnaska. t ^S t e r>.rr-r' i will ^introduce the program in ciety of Denver, §151); Hebrew Bertha Adelstein> cf Rapid City, are the-Misses Bettie Grossman, r SHIP:- A Nffisf Propaganda Min- 3S^ but Tfre renalneS frissfis" . . . the tujEijie-*- i c ^ ' • ' ' ~ r ' ; rhyme.; A dance number will be Theological; Seminary of CHlcabe to e n p a r ^ ir- i*~ v t o •»••i given by Gloria Novitsky and go, ?12S; Polish School for Jew- Mrs. Ida Seff of v Chicago, • and Arlene Krasne, Marilyn Saltzman istry • afloat . . . . S o might be- de- S7-year-old Abs.Siiis, tail See fcu'.r^r » - ; 4r i. Ruth Kutcaer:. piano solo by ish Children,, f l o o r : Slobodka Mrs. Ann Seff^of Devenport, Ia.; —d J-Jorina Seldin. • • and all t ' P " c" —re scribed a-Gernr&n 'vessel-that-is equipment I - ^ - C - ' E . " J P I ' ~ F : Doris Pill; dance by \ ^Barbara Yeshlvah Building • Fund, % 2 5 0;four brothers, H. Miller of Sious slipping- in and out of South and has just bought t i e Manhattan hold or d i n "-r cC i fr>-r -.; Dayja; Piano solo by Sandy Bar- Hebrew University, $50; Hebrew CJty, J..Miller of Los Angeles, A. Mr.-and Mrs. Herman Fried of Central American ports . . . Its Opera House - w i t a S.COO.OCO and p e r s o r r . r o~< ~V * on, and Accordion solo by Jack University ^Hospital, ?50; "Wider Miller-of. Phoenix, and Z. Miller ouncil Bluffs have- announced crew, -'made-tip- of•-•• epell-blnders s takea ia Irora his hat-mov.sr for c^~pc~rr <• ->c\ r of -Russia;' and two sisters, Mrs. :he engagement of their 'daughi- Krueger; the corporf'ii— ' ! e Scope, ?50; American Jewish B. and^-agitators,. who'-go- on • shore cheefeiag operations . . . rou /-Sinclair of Minneapolis, and ; to> do eTer sc i-^ «- ter, Leona, to Philip Mulnlck, son leave,'-to ccrrd^-ct ''-Nasi .•' nseetiags, figures tiat's ?750,000 Committee, $100; Los.^Angeles Mrs; A. Z.. Levin of Sioux City. .; " A style show "Women Through Sanitorium, ant to, or r~c"* T d * c ; bf Mr. and Mrs. A. Mulniek of stir 'iip -enthcsiassi ~for Der' Fueh- Anti-Nasl League Tiss a $50; Hebrew Theoloplib- c e d e d ^ritl- , r c ce t r _ k i i i the Ages" will be a feature of the gical Seminary" Omaha.' •''...'' nesses. of • "Newr-York, rer,-distribute pois- icity: director . » . It's forraer bali1 program. Dr. Delia Galinsky will %50; • American" Jewish ,Congress,The EUtho- r r i T - » ^r1 No definite plans" have been ono'us pamphlets It's • prob- lyhooer, M. B. Serwick, is act-as narrator' and musical ac- 550; Total Distributions for* 1937 tlC.OOO.OQ. C i't^ - i- r c made for the wedding. for the ably-the only ship of. its' kind in shares o" t. e P?r ' ' ^ e • i companiments will be played by amounted to. $7,453.. May Day .will be ;the wedding ' foriasd 'American t'sioa "for Dem.-' CE rt. the-world . . .'An Argosy of Aryj Frances Kalin. Models will inday of two young women, who •Mrs. Ralph'Castle and ocracy . . . Oar Loadoa snoopster j „."ff, 1°^ anism . . •• ' . ; elude Joan Bailin, Carol Miller, have been feted during the past ~i'.£k y ^ i s > of Brooklyn,.are here 32fiers 'rcliE.t'E cc&ie over Lordj z.ir^,"F-'-c''. '•! Bertil Rosenstock, Helen Levin, few. weeks, - Miss Ruth 'Kosberg, visiting Mrs. - Castle's mother, Beaverfcroot, the publisher,' late-, Le 'c. .he I Jean. Harrison, Harriet Holland, DYNAE1O: . That's fcow Yiddish daughter of Mr., and Mrs. S. A. Mrs. E. Gilinsky. They will re^ . - . . His EreEing St£S«&rd'? • •—"T: Lois Novitsiy, and Elaine PickStreet '(East Broasivra-y' to Kosberg,- will become the bride main, in Council Bluffs for sev-Fleet et OU,' describes; Z. H." Rubiastein, gossip colEisa has! s piijus eral Weeks..of-Dave Kaplan, son of-Mr. and : tie-zaorsel sboct the daughter of j "'rr]-'"}----'the' •'reeently-elevate'd , Eisssgis _ i Tits luncheon.will be preceded Mrs. N. Lerman of Omaha, and J editor of The Day . . . One of .the Franco's or i i by a brief religious service in the Miss,Lillian Magasiner, daughter Ben E. Kubby left Satur- best-liked figures in. 'Yiddish Daka oi Alba, vrhoLondon, is so patri-1 ~^'v"-.V; : Temple, with t i e women and ct fa tlsa! The annual ; B'nai B'rith . elec- of Mr. and Mrs. A. SUverberg. ».JMr. J Wr,Los Angeles to visit his journalism today, Z.-H. is unfail- otic, • accordiag to the j children participating. Harold tion of officers will be held'next 3051 stone Park Boulevard, will sister, ? stock. Mrs. Ida Cohen. ngly jovial - despite the pace at story, that she refuses to try tc : T'~2 r'.'t>t rC 11| Grueskin pad Bob Pill will be in "Wednesday evening, May 4, at be married to- Hyman Hurwitz, which he drives himself . . . . His leara French, her exemse being j ! charge of the serving arrange- their'final meeting of the season. son of Mrs. Mary Hurwitz, 114 •1 m m T ' c , h a r l e 3 Burton" and. son, shift at The Day is from 6 s. nr. " t t a t she eaaaot feear to allow j f.Vc,J<"c-nc i ments and asskting them will be The meeting, which wil be desig- Jennings Btreet. >.--Pt--i Billy, returned Sunday to their to- about -raid-afternoon •. . . But one -?rcrd of the-language to pass j pres.Cer.. . the boys of last years and this nated as Past Presidents Night, -4 r The. Hurwitz-Magasiner nuplin Cedar Rapids. Iowa! when he's through, there, he gal-he,r lips so long as France t a s a j f;£ ' c" I years confirmation classes. wlU be a stag and will be follow- als will be solemnized Sunday, home They, spent the Passover holiday ops "up'to the broadcasting stu- Socialist lev? ES Priise Minister'' < j.:r^e ,i Mrs. Herman Miller, Mrs. SIed by a social hour and refresh- May 1, at 4 o'clock in the Mar_ , . i Kruegei" and Mrs. Max Rosen- ments. Reports of the Collection tin Hotel. Rabbi H.. R. • Rabino- in Council Bluffs with Mrs. Bur- dios :. . . To direct three radio L&ter editions of tlie BeaT- | programs—each cf - them • spon- erbr&ok .sheet were delicately cor- ' i stock will be In charge of the committee will, be heard as 'Well witz and Rabbi Theodore N. Lew- "arler^d^ma^V.^ ^ ' sored—for which he also supplies reeled to read "as long as Frscce \ --. -^. _ Jli icheon arrangements. as a report: of the convention is will officiate. More than 80 frr the scrlpt-and plans . . . *• •. has s Socialist as Prime Kinis-* :r:v;\ "c." which was held .here Iasj Sunday. guests will be present. Miss BerMrs.. Harry Mulnlck of Ponff,er"..'. . Oh, .-well, just about; i.'^cr. r.r More than 200 persons from nice Galinsky ^i\\ be bridesmaid Michigan, is spending a few •whea yo.a begin to get tired oZ I chapters at Omaha, Des Moines, and Mrs. Lorence Silverberg, ma- -C IMPORTS: The psst four years Sioux Falls, Lincoln, Council tron of honor. John Hurwitz will weeks in Council Bluffs with her have'seen a'steady increase' In muncliiag cstsos, Pesaci is-crer! Bluffs and Sioux1: City/attended be his brother's best man. Mari- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Phil Saks. imports of "sport weapons" by i Funeral .services for Mrs. Wil-the meetings - Sunday. .Registra- lyn Lou Bailin, daughter of Mr. *«•* * Albert Krasne left Satur- Poland . . . I n . 1934,- the couatTy (Copyrighted by purchased S52 weapons of that iliam' EIrenberg were held last tion was followed.by a business and Mrs. s. H. Bailin will be k On a bus graphic Agency, Inc.)flower girl. frip. ^ e 3 s description . . . The number ris^Thursday afternoon at Shaare ing to 1,477 by.the cad of 19S7 [Zion Synagogue, with Rabbi H. A wedding dinner will be servP' . . . At the saiae titae,-esports of ,R. Rabinowitz officiating. Mrs. Pdoblems. It was decided to hold ed after the ceremony. Mr. Hurthe fall conference in Lincoln, L k - . i.~Z.. such weapons to -other'countries (Elrenberg-, who was 39 years old, witz and his bride wil reside in uuWorld's-Window • has ; . shrunk to • aa iafialtesissal idled; In her home following an Nebraska. Sioux Falls after, a wedding trip. 1 \Luncheon was served.In the figure—19" last year . . . iillness of several months. r, (Continued from p a ^0 i.) ''•• Mrs. EIrenberg moved from Martin Hotel ballroom, after Miss Kosberg will become the :Sioux- City in 1920 to Osmond, which Julius Bl3no of Omaha bride of Dave Kaplan in, the among these heathen peoples who •QUESTIONNAIRE: Until quite Nebraska, living there until a spoke and conducted an open for- home of her parents. The cere- oppress the sojournera, butthes° recently, this, department hss just year and a half ago, when the um on vocational' guidance. The mony will take place at 2 o'clock peoples themselves -know it S D d discovered, the Federal Reserve ». •» k \ . family moved back to Sioux City. convention banquet was served with Rabbi Lewis officiating. proclaim it and trample their un- System asked 'applicants 'tar t°bs She was a member of the Eas-Sunday evening in .the Jewish Jack Merlin wil play the weading speakable hoofs upon any that o state their ancestry . . . Tfee tern star at Osmond and the He-Community.. Center wi(;h ': J.udge music. s v Ycrk *.»7A) — H cling to the freedom of the question-en the application-1 bJaak • - . . . . j brew Mothers Club and Ladles Fred Bernstein of, Chicago ' as ing God and herd in concen- 7&s • eliminated - esly • when Con- child family has file suit in Sc-j A reception from 3 to 6 o'clock presis Court here to save Amer-}} Auxiliary of Shaare Zion synago- principal speaker. His subject traUon camps the pastors of the xessraaa" 'Donald L. '-O'Toole-. of was The Philosophy of B'nal ia planned. Following a wedding confessional synod3 and the lead- Brooklyn called • it to the atten- cac assets cf its VISEES baskk j gue. .-•- -..-•- ' : • trip-to Chicago, Mr. Kaplan and B'rith; from ooafiscatSoa by the Ge r r a s a • ion vOf-President- Roosevelt and NaziJ Surviving a r e t h e widower; a his bride will make their home in ers of the kehillah of Vienna : f GOTernseat. : TheMnvocation was , given by son Bernard; a daughter, Esther; Sioux City. . Here we have &n insight, • brief he ^System's Board of Governors Tee rait, for $3.ES0,18S.SE, T. R. -Rabinowitz and Habthree Ulsters, Miss Dorothy Wland fragmentary, into that his- -. .' l a fairness to . the Board, St TFES filed by Earca Eugene de igodsky of Sioux City, Mrs. A. W. Miss Kosberg, Miss' Magaslner torical character and function of hould~.be.itoted.that the gnestica Rothschild, bead cf the Paris benedictlon. Murial Sanger 'and Krasnow of Norfolk, and Mrs. and Miss Friedell Brodkey, shar- the Jewish people. It is this ln- as jnclud'ed ia all iaaocesce sad branch cf the iamily, sgair.st feis I Sam-Snovsky of Sioux City; and LeRoy Goidbiatt sang solos. ed honors: at a party Wednesday signt.and an,undying loyalty to It hat 'it trss ' • eliminated- - without brother, Baron. Louis .von Roths- j Judge Bernstein waa introduced .two; brothers, Harry Wigodsky of bble,-'Chair—as Eccles writing evening, given by. Miss Beraice that saves us from ultimate dis\?s.s arrested shortly after •Yankfon, and James Meyers of by Dr. A. Greeriberg of Omaha Galinsky in her home. Miss Brod- couragement and despair. But it o ' •' Congressmasx - O'Toole. - that chSIS hild' ol Vienna snd the Vit-nmsse I who Is the district president Dr key will be married this summer . Minneapolis. '-..•• must be an active loyalty. And no there-has aever ••'been • any dis- •aafciag firra- cf S. M. Toa' Roths- | Louis J. Dimsdale. local presi- to Max - Resnick of Omaha. crimination on -the -basis of 'reliempirical. Jew, has the right-to dent, introduced Dr. Greehberg. 1 Mia. lean back and on the. basis of sa gion "and.;ancestry".. . . " -_.; ' .COUNCIL COLLECTS '.Baron Louis r e s KothsohJld Mr. and Mrs. L. Weinberg and inactive Jewish,idealism let• his E.S arrested s h o r t l y after j Hr- :,..' - OLD CLOTHING daughter, Marjorie, - 112 24th people drift intodarker and darkEDUCATION:.. Cbildrea of - the deposits of his bact were eon- ' *Rtf . i! The Council of Jewish Women street, left yesterday for Kansas er chaos. The insight obligates. Greater Reich-are .COT, -asa "have is collecting old clothing and City, to attend the celebration to- The^study of Torah must Issue in beea • for-sonie ' time, getting '-inSupreme Court Justice VTZZ.Kmagazines wnlct&wiilbe distributThe A. Z. A. chapter Is makine day of the golden wedding anni- good deeds. These two sentences tensely ~ realistic • izistrtjctloa ' Ia esthaler issued a irrit of attached through Sioux City charitable plans to celebrate Internationa! versary of Mr. and Mrs. H. Levy, are synonymous. They, mean one arithmetic'-. . ' . This'• is a 'sample ment'" which i s s been servefi- on agencies. Anyone wishing, to con- A. Z. A. Parents Day on May 1 Mrs. Welnberg's parents. Louis and the same thing. By -strictest problem < takes;' frost aa official averal o* tee city's largest tribute clothing or magazines The annual:A. z. 1 Iweetheari Weinberg will go from Iowa City adherence to them the redeiap- test-book . . .-"If It takes 185• banks, tying up all funds cj the may call Mrs. E.-E. Baron and ar- dance is schetffled'ior Mav s s to Kansas City for the occasion, tioa^of the Jewish .people from tons'-of'explosives to destroy' one Vienna bank oa deposit vrlth rangements "will be made to call . Meetings daringnhe ' joining his parents there today. the^Galuth within and the Galirifa .quara-kilometre- of a • bullt-«p months will be held fprvthe contributions. • The complaint ia the action without can be •: • accomplished arearho-w saasy..r one-toa;!The child-Study Group haa dis- wees instead «of every :Sia?ges that the $S,2SC,1E3.S5 Miss Fern Wolfson was ho3-briefly, and in our days. "' are-necessary'Ja : order : to continued ita meetings for the ess to members of the Debra (Copyright,. 1938, by. Seven Arts Feature Syndicate^) *-"-.-• Club' a t ' £fieir regular meeting .ease? to- tbe 'kiddies•-«,. .-"The ivrMeh. Baron Suigene ds Roths-] f.-drkin the fall. Asser.Levy: subsc«bed one-bun- Thursday evening. Refreshments ipeed'of:the'latest fceiaberB is child fcsS-ca deposit ia his broth-J d r *l £1°*}™ 5 ° * * > " to; prooa Karch 10, the day cf ] The SoEcini, Italian Jews of 300" kilometres per hour. In iiOTr er's'.bank , Saul:Brown, a merchant (died { ierman origin, were among the many hours can. bombers - reach. the .-Austrian snnesstic-n, 1652), was New York's first rah- for the buildingof the firstTuth•aa'-)':Paris;(b) PrSsae frora j-our outstanding printers-of the early : erancaurcn'in^New-York. : Patrcsiie Our Patronize o u r Advertisers ~~e -towa?".-,-.'"•TSe-.NasiSj-Iio.v*-• days of that trade.-
Shaare Zion
Mount Sinai
Junior Hadassah
MRS^.GREENBERG DIED TUESDAY
SOeiETYNEWS
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