O
A
i
A ;5kfp
vlcrra csprec=ed b j Lsdn!« 1/jTv.cohn in hfs column are bis ovTB.and do not necessnrilj reflect tho policies or cttitudo of oar publication. KcprorJuottort in wholo or in part ctrlctly
Entered as Second Class ITail Matter on Jan-jary 31, 1SI1, ct
PoqtofficQ. of Omaha. X_r:bra£]:a,_andf.rjhe Act of I.Iarcb 3. IJ7
New York Pm
02IAHA, NEBIL'' ~A, FRIDAY, JULY 8, 193$ s
ANHOUKCS FINAL RESULTS OF
^6
LEADERSHIP results of.,*" ...c?'-- IdX _,*i • \**-*$r &* Recurrently-in American JewJewish Congress e' V ; ..ua $ ish life there arises the question June'26,.Save ."' 'u&ced. Ll, o r linding a leader for a cause, Registration's tt ver six M E ^ H jff^ jf5|. a movement, an organization. A staunch adherent of theworld's foremost daily said un- hundred with 524, ..es being The problem becomes more and "American of Jewish Faith'' gulvocally. "When I was in the cast.- " - " • ' . - " not less desperate P.S time goes school of thought, Morrisr' Miakin received 270 Arthur 3:ay3 army during the war, a German There are a thousand men , i publisher of t i e "New votes asd 2 . Sloch, 1SS, and will Su zberser> on.. JVw supposedly made as good a be the delegates to the congress There are no lead-!-. . _r. .. „ . , . . York Times." Friday in Omaha target for me as any other alien of good Lay 'Plans to Aid B'na! to.be held'sometime in the ausoldier." , B'rith Membership tumn. Four other candidates be established in Palestine, it in America as there are people would, raise the question of His particular interest In thewere. up for election. in the kingdom of Sweden. Yet"whether or not I should con- present Jewish situation is the we tremble for the strength' of tinue to be a Jew." result of an ability to compre' Jack Spitrer of Los Angeles j one man -— great and good man hend by reason of similar circum- 1 I was elected Grand Ahsph Godol Recently returned from a trip though he is — and "we look with abroad, Mr. Sulzberger paused stances. "Should Adolph Hitler | of the A. Z. A. at the closing bus'i- j longing toward one other whom here for the day in the-course of tomorrow s t a r t a campaign ; ness sessions of the camp coaextreme old age keeps from en- a trip undertaken to study condi- against red-haired people, a red; vention at Estes Park, Colorado. tire activity. And we seek and tions in this part of the country. fa a i r e d protective association i i Walt Hadel of Los Angeles and we" debate and finally we seek no would be Organized here because 1 Stanley Rabiiiowitz of I) e s W h e n , asked how western by reason 'of their-red-hair those more. '.-.•_. •• '• ; Moines, Ia., the retiring- president -Jewry appears to a New Yorker, persons would be in a better po. It is true,, of course, that we he replied that he came here to " of the order, were elected, junior sition to realize the injustice of are Americans and. that many get the sentiments of western j members of t i e Supreme Advissuch a campaign." Jews are - properly and justly Americans arid is sure those sen; ory Council. . j Against Meddling . ! leaders in American life. But all timents are the same for Jew and ! Grand councillors for the eigbt | Americans belong (though the non-Jew alike. Long the target of New York's | A. Z. A. districts will be: District analogy halts) to more or less militantly articulate .elements, Morris Jacobs Chosen to } 1, Clifford Brauer, Worcester, "All Jews Jiot Brother ' , -' Head Committee specific religious and social Mr. Sulzberger has opposed any [Mass.; District 2, Eddie Kanter, If he is agitated on the Jewish campaign on the part of Amerigroups and many of them manin Charge j Kansas City, Kan.; District 2, age to unite leadership of these question, it is as an American can Jews to m ddle in the interI Saul Dizenfeld. Arabridge. Pa.; gronps or within these groups and humanitarian rather than a nal affairs of countries as Po'^.td Appointment of Morris E. j District 4, Joe Jacobs, San Franwith eminence in the national Jew. "I do not subscribe to the and German. He further ex- Jacobs as chairman of the com- j Cisco; District 5, Elmcre Sololife. And a given group among theory that "all Jews are broth- plained that he believed Musso- mittee- on arrangements was the mon. Charle-jlon, S. C.; District these groups is happy if it har- ers," the guiding spirit of the lini was in his rights when, he first.step taken ia the organizing 6, L e o n Friss, Minneapolis, stated that Italian Jews could not of a state-wida. conference of the Minn.; District 7, Robert Rosow. ; bors within its boundaries some figure of national importance, We Zionists as long as Zionism Jewish.. communities of Nebraska. San Antonio, Tex., and Canadian for then it • is assured or leaderwas part of British Imperial Mr. Jacobs' appointment TTES district, Lou Feldstein, Montreal. ship that will command for it the policy and as long as that policy Plans for increasing the r n n respect of the nation. But that conflicted with Italian aims and made by Jack W. Marer, who hasi ber o£ B'nai B'rita members obbeen temporary chairman ot the is, not true^among Jews. And the interests.. committee which conceived the tained from A. S. A. chapters tragic thing is that it becomes A son-in-law of the late Adolph idea of the conference. Plans for were made at the convention. less and less true. Among the "Ochs, his predecessor on the The plan calls for establish- men of the older generation we "New York Times," youthful apment of Joint A. Z. .\.-B'nai have Louis D. Brandeis and pearingr amiable Mr. Salzberger B'rith coiniKittees to deaj with Julian Mack. «Nor has their maghas maintained the tradition of i membership; the extension of in- . nificent espousal of the cause of high journalistic standards that vitations to older A. 3. A. mem-' their people ever cost them rehas made his paper the finest exPictured al?ove is Philip Kh. bers to attend B'nai B'rith meet- i spect or honor or friends or Ings; development of a B'nai j WE-S sssiedi escorts, rice-prer-ic'cmi;preferment in the national life. Ha3 Been Active in Local ample in the newspaper Held, Trustee of EEnaua-*! S'rith program with stronger ap- J The, younger generations have Affairs for Twenty peal for younger members; exDescended from several old fJed from us. Our ablest men . .' Years pansion of t i e A. Z. A. program zisk vnJl ssrre s s preslee™t cf t i e &r&nt. I,CTGS*« American-Jewish families that are' alienated even in this disj of education concerning B'nai j for generations have been identiastrous "age. They act as though Irvin Stalmaster, for over fied with communal life, he is a ' B'rith work; tee formation cf j they were not Jews. It is a frightbooster clubs far rosiger n e a - ,' ar lm j ful and a calamitous thing, and twenty years active in char- trustee of the Baron de Hirsch bers, - and, in the larger cities, i and the-* - Congregation unless the teaching of all history itable and philanthropic activities f u n d formation of separate 'B'ssI j means nothing it t i l l invoke its in Omaha, has announced he is Emanu-el of New York and is a B'rith lodges for A. Z. A. alumni j own Nemesis. " # . moving to California to practice member'of the executive commitEEd- other similar age groups. j law. tee of the Union of. American I am a friend of the American The international oratorical j Mr. Stalmaster has served on Hebrew congregations. Hi E. & i: 4 i\ U i- t f, I , *< | . •rabbinate. I know, it well.."With- the Supreme Court of Nebraska, contest was won by Paul-Good-| i *%# &s£V i&gg aii & s n | ^ K %$?.• t As objective and as well Inin it-there is a group of men, a was a Judge of the District Court formed as the news columns of I win of Nevr Haven, Conn. Seclarge and increasing group, that ! ond place winner was Kilton the Times, it is evident that he « i a t t tig' let- l i i i :fcsfc for"! devotion, intelligence, echolj DeutE-ch of Kansas City, Kan. has arrived at his opinion by £rship,-.i3 equal to any similar i Third -place wss awarded to Wi!careful consideration. -' • ' • grpup of men that has existed | liam Pearlstein of Roiik Island, While" In Omaha Mr.;'Sulzberganywhere. But the -rr.bbi, except j III. Rabbi David A. Goldstein of er. ws3 the .guest of Henry Doorly, for. one- or two transcendent In] Omaha -sras. -cue of the judges. publisher of the Omaha Worldejjj is and .should be priI Tbe international debate cfcam- . Herald.' : From'.here he' .'.Treat."by 'jxds.TOy_ .j|cJi.qlaF£'. teacher,,.guide,'- * of l-pionsiiip was woa-fcy the JMOw&u-] plane to'San 'Francisco..;.;zi:.vr:~ ""hisj ,• congregants arid leader in ' kee cfiapter Xo. SS. • .. ! these necessary email hundred fourth ^-eei of the llt$ season i hlc matters that constitute the textat the-Jewish CoEEUEitT Center, j J. ure Of the daily-lives of men. Tho definite results of the camp's pro- j ^ rabbi is not free for leadership in - Slorris'S..Jacobs-' .. . . gra.m to develop aptitudes and i e r r the higher sense. Nor has he, individual expression hare been j again .with one or. two exceptions, the ;ineeting were laid at the time noted. ' ! that reputation in the national of the Philanthropies campaign One o* the ..Outstanding1 fea- ; life' of. all America which constiwhen voluntary ' donations to the tores of the camp program, this i tutes one of the necessary marks fund'were received from concern for the iriciridtial ctilfi \fffliii^i'flP i^^^ri^? Omaha fi of effective group leadership and ft k s # 1 1 n h,11 £. I ft* 12' out-state communities. fcas been of inestimable value i s which made so useful and illustie development of personality. Prominent in Civic Activities trious the leadership of such men iali^i^I 1 Because counsellors at Camp: Mr. Jacobs has been prominent as Brandeis and of Mack. Akiba. hsve only small groups t c ' : But where are the eminent Groups Forming t o Assist in civic and communal activities. vhicii they must give attention During the , last Jewish Philan- Defeats Dr. Goldstein younger Jewish jurists^ goverthey are able to study each child Transfer of Reich thropies' campaign he was chairnors,' scientists, writers? Not. with tiozi Held and to discover ircivjduEl differA! free man of the Initial Gifts division. us. There "are chemists. Where Children ences and the talents cf the memla Detroit He Is on the executive committee is the American "Weizmann? The Omaha Tottth AliyaH com- bf the .Jewish Community Center bers of tneir "b-usfes." There are writers. Where is that Detroit (JTA)—Dr. Solomon. mittee of Hadassah headed by and'is a member of the board of TThere a ciila was formerly Irvin Stalmastc? line of Jewi-h leaders from Herzl Goldman of Chicago TTES elected tiraifl,fcyfinding oxA in. what he Mrs. Julius Stein has been form- directors of Temple Israel. to Arnold Zweig? Even Leon Blum is a member of the Jewish in Douglas County, served as As- ing groups of 10 persona who are For many years he has been president of the Zionist Organi- esceis, it is possible to bring him Agency, for Palestine, and on the sistant Attorney-General of Ne- contributing ?36 each to take prominently i d e n t i f i e d with zation of America this week in into Ective participaton is the camp progras. asfi to r-hec his floor of the Chambre des Deputes braska, and as Assistant CoUnty care of the.transfer of one child American Legion sad Ak-Sar-Bers tbe most heated election in its history. Rabbi Goldman defeated timidity. for each group from Germany to announced his Jewishness. For Attorney of Douglas County. 't- r v work.. ' . •' Dr. Israel Goldstein of New York A ntiiaber of sncli instances this Americans, almost cryptoFor ten years he was instruc- Palestine. 1 be rt The conference is scheduled to haye been recorded at the camp. by a vote of 330 to 237 at tie Judalsm of Jewish leaders in the tor in. Constitutional Law at the "It costs 5360 per child tobe called here in Omaca within Ke^-jstratiDn for "the seeosd national life (with honorable ex- University of Omaha, lecturer.on transplant these youth from their the nest month. However the Z. O. " A.'s 41st anneal convenhalf of the camp season is still ceptions) we have to go back to Labor Law, and is the author of blank future in Germany, Pola: d Omaha and Lincoln communities tion at the • Statler Hotel. It was the first time on record open. In extreme heat vrhen chilhte ominous example of the Ger- "The Jury System" and of the or Austria, and t o train them for •will" be excluded from participathat a president of tbe Sionist dren find it difficult to Play at many of Rathenau and Dernburg. book "What Price Jury Trials?" a life of usefulness in Palestine. tion in. the conference as both One is sorely tempted to name He served as trustee of the Omahans wishing to take part have .communal organizations of Organisation TTES -elected by demnames. It is better not to do so. Jewish Community Center and in this movement can do so by. ocratic ballot "of the convention the opportunity to make nee of .. But even/these, few able and well- Welfare Federation, is a former calling Mrs. Julius Stein, 4909 their- own. delegates. The balloting was fol- sis leisure £xT,rs. Omaha Merely AiHizig known - Jews who have identified president of the B'nai B'rith Webster street, Glendale 1948. lowed by tumultuous' demonstraOmaha'Jewry is "merely aiding tions for both candidates and a themselves with their people are Lodge, was Chairman for Omaha The Youth Aliyah movement : not apparent,when practical lead- in 1926 in the campaign to erect which originated in Germany five in the organizational work and rise of feeliEg to a r"'tnV ership is needed, when it is nec- the B'nai B'rith Infirmary Build- years ago through the efforts of will j)lace--the office of'the local climaxed •when Dr. Stephen. S^ essary to assume political respon- ing in Denver; served as repre- Henrietta Szold i s . conducting a Jewish Philanthropies at the dis- Wise, the retiring president,- ansibility, • when it is needful to ap- sentative for the Jewish War Re- nation-wide movement to ., bring posal of the new state group. nounced the result at the e~d of sibiliy, whe t A separate organization. has pear* in the arena. When that lief Campaign in , Nebraska in into Palestine as many European been agreed upon since the oat- a five-hoar session. boys and girls as possible. Miss Dr. GolfiE.au, in E3 address esmoment comes one finds,, alas, 1921, Chairman for the Cammo communities do not share in pressing gratitude for the honor paign in Omaha for the Jewish Szold' was retiring from active state l h neither the eminent philosopher Omaha institutions. By conductft f*7,!mFx*: *!: }®rifl of the New. School for Social Re- Theological Seminary in 1925,work when she was recalled to ing their own fund-raising . cam- given him, pledged everything at search- nor .the illustrious jurist and.also acted as Chairman for launch the Youth Aliyah move- paigns, these small groups will b ; his disposal to the Zionist c e r e ment and fieclared that tne thousof Harvard; We know that they the campaigns conducted in Oma- ment. able-to .-allocate the money as and ' miles be-ttresn Chicago and ttl iLs |« Hadassah has brought into they desire. are with "us. They will advise us ha in 1925 and 1926 in behalf of New 'York vould be almost ss from their ivory towers. They the United Palestine Appeal and Palestine to date 2,000 boys and The Jewish population of'Neare not candidates for office. the Jewish Orphans Home In girls of adolescent age who lived braska is concentrated in. Oaaba, though they -ds4 not exist, for geography would not interfere in abject hopelessness, were not They'do;not feel that they should Cleveland, Ohio. jbHt about 3,000 persons are scatbe ?in; the arena. He has served as trustee of permitted to learn trades, to en- | tered in communities at", through vrita -his duties. Tiis is the first t y; Well,- the arena is a place of both the National" Jewish Hospi- ter professions, to participate in ' the state. Nearly all havfe at one time that anyone living cratsife New York has been elected presidust and sometimes of blood. Po- j taMn Denver, Colorado, and asthe life bf their own country. ] litical passions not always of the Trustee of the National Orphans The European youth has foand time or- another signified a de- dent of the Z. O. A. sire to participate in Je-srisis life Dr. Goldaan, who -will be 45 : i purest and cleanest rage even j Home 'in Cleveland, Ohio, repre- a normal way of living in Palesand. many are regular contribuyears old CE August IS, vas vice-' ambng Jews, for Jew3 are people, seating Nebraska, tine. Kvutzah (co - operative) after all. No. doubt, no doubt. For the past four years as groups are organized and thetors to national Jewish organisa- president of the S. O. A. znd is s j tions. But where else among a people President of the Omaha Fixture boys and girls go through a six national co-ciaairraaa cf t h e j or a group so hard beset do" thei & Supply Company, in addition months' training course vthicli United Palestine Appeal. Ee is j high men so flee from responsi- to his practice of law, he has | a. Conservative rabbi, head of j consists of -a half-day's wo/k in bility? • j Congregatioa Anshe E-met of Chi- ! been In active charge and man- every department on the farm. We know the reasons, of agement of this business. With I cago. He iras bora in Kozin., Bus- j An average of 75 per cent of course.' I t is part of the lie and his leaving, two sons of Harry the graduates of the two-year, ' sia, and educated in New York, j the disease of the assimilatory Lapidus, founder of the Omaha course chooses to reniain on the Ii^iiiii3iiii-Hiii"ii: Dr. Goldman is the aulacr of "A j theory of the emancipation. But Fixture &" Supply Co., have tak- soil. Kabbi -Takes Stco&" and taar-y ar- | that lie should no longer deceive en over the affairs of the: busitides. He is married and lias ttro | This spring through the -efforts Officers of tne Omaha Heferc^ any one, and that disease should ness. • Ler-'er* Lapidus- as Vice- of Henrietta Szold, 1,000 visas cfiildren.. . ' \^S to club tsrere installed SantlaT. July S i2ls be made to cease its ravages." But President, and Earl Lapidus ES were obtained for. the entry of After the delegates had waited ! 1T> 3, by J. J. Friedman, past presian end of this miserable situation Treasurer." for close to tvro ionrs for the re- a ~"s-1fthe young pioneers into Pales- dent of the organisatioa. . ; of :a leaderless or almost leader(port of the EcraiaEtisg conrmit- I ii'ect€ tine. To date, however, HadasI. Morg-enste-a Trill cgsla rerre less people must be made. Some I tee, Dr. Wise arrived to report j tains : sah has been assured that as as president, and Daniel Schwartz day, some man,, despite the •''ust VIENNA PLAYWRIGHT ' boys and girls will be per- as Tice-presiSent. Sol Rosenberg j that a sincere attempt had "seen j ^^p-' and dirt of the arena, despite . ••.-.• DIES"AT DACHAU many mitted to enter Palestine as i3 serving his forty-eighth term Iraade to preE.erre the tradition of i ^- " . false accusation and silly impedifunds are provided. for. as secretary, "siiile' Join Fellsan (peace ia the Eiosist Crss.~icatl~.ii. jfoun.de c ai ments, will have, to take the Paris (JTA) •— Le Journal rewill be treasurer for the tfrty- ! It -WS.S repo-rted that a third party | ' f: ti Plunge. Who will It be? ported ' from , Berlin that Dr. (Copyright, 193S, by Seven: Arts Raoul Auernheimer, leading Aus- PEYSER. TO ATTEND '.- sixth time. t, ilvzs forcing .'. : : Feature, Syndicate) Trustees installed • ^-ere Louis trian playwright and last presi- -• • F1DAC CONGRESS dent of the PEN club, died re- ^Washington (JTA) —.Colonel MoYgan, E. Blocii Eiici S a n Julius I. Peyser, attorney, former EJoom. Members of t i e execu- " ' 3 22 in favor of REAPPOIHTED/TO • •' cently In the Dachau concentra- ("chairman of the executive coun- tive board are M. BlanS, A. Hich- I to bring ia its repo tion camp, • • • ' • . . • • , : : I been --siren to the ,p " : •• ; LIBRARY BOARD Mention of • the names of Dr. cil of the .American Jewish Con- arfis and Jack Saylaa. in lie- day. Anernheiiaer and Prof. Sifrmund gress and- former commander of Mrs; J. H. Kiilakofsky ' and Freud, at the International PEN the District : Department of the Tha cldast authority for Rabbi. Frederick Conn have been Club congress in Czechoslovakia Ameriean . Legion, has b e e a tradilioa of tlie ''Cid" ! s > a : reappointed to the city library last week brought the. delegates named'a delegate to represent the tste Je«v Ibn Alfange. Katicss {JTA' — * " J ' ~ aoard by Mayor Dan Butler. to their feet, cheering. Dr. Aiierh- American Legion'at t i e ' 3 9S9""*F. Soth have Eerved - in this ca- heircer had been under arrest j I. X). A. C. Congress to be bclci ia • Bafore 1181 a a s n t e r of E ijrr for-many years. . . . . since shortly after Anschluss. .Bucharest Attscst 2S. ' .. iish-Jetra-xasked* as srlghts. ne- sdsraoll
, N
nrni
(
A
iALIH
Til fipjO f|p 1
1
iiltiilLlI I!Lit
!
•
•
/
i
11 e ( £
THE JEWISH PRESS-FRIDAY, JULY 8, 193S Page 2
j period. Maybe it's the volley- ] has been notably ...ucces3ful. It tion of a community, of interests ! bailers who are ,;ener?.ting p.n the j has served to Increase the loyalty makes for tolerance. . • • I heat we're been having. ' j The Ku Klus Klan,, established j. of these groups to the Union. At | However, the biit play is being j to protect "AEiericanism^ in tlre'-i the same time it enables each 3j ICrs. Williais Gray ; £iven to our swinimini; pool. | group to develop rapidly in its south, spent most-of its "energies I I From raornsnjr to night, the pool:, in terrorizing- tfte' Negro, baiting ! the Yiddish own way. i is constantly teeming with pc'iri- j rtmslnted Catholics' and persecuting the! itr Honrfc. Present Russian Policy | ity. Everybody's remembering !, It was ^submerged after! Everything's hot. By WILLIAM HOLLAND The unfortunate attitude of Jews. ; our slogan: ,, ?. lands C._ Junior Junior Softball Softball league is : the Bolsheviks toward religion the pperiod of. reconstruction, but; Q Q g ! "Keep in trim — spinal" . for hornp "no care liffliimmmnnniDiminoiiiiiiiiiii the extension of has prevented t , reappeared-from time to • time,j reaching the boiling point. the expediencies of living, mind could accept them. They this policy to religious groups.. It | notably just after the world war.; x%vo of the midget clubs r,~:rpr,':-'f: !i?nds T h e following a r t i c l e w a s here are, however, numerous ignore the tremendous contribu- is hard to see how such a policy, j That the- spirit that fostered the j tied for first place. Sunday, tt«— i r.iit p->-e-r awarded first place in the vi'. :aniples where rigidity of j)rin- tion of the Jews to civilization, if pursued under the right condi-j Klaa. is not dead' is evident from ; two, the Yafiks and the Gsarf. For ^ion Philip Sher essay contest on no small part of which has been *~ | Jple.has resulted in FHt CVf>r the emergence o£ several smaller | battle it out to see which v'. tions might not have been equal• and Kellgious .Mutual. >treme' ostracism as to made;by German Jews. ; organizations Each as the Black | have'sole possession o£ the tcr ly successful. at the Municipal Uni- the'group Tor Zinr, In essence it is .witch burning. The Mormons might spot. There is not a strict analogy Legion of 1935-37. versity of Omaha.. have degenerated into a half out- To.suggest • that the difficulty between the social condition of a In the second game of the c i r . A? ^ 1 / Progress of Xegroes The worU: Other University of Omaha aw group such as the New Mexi- might be removed by any change group dispersed through another the Tigers,claw.at the Cardinals. i - y ] Th?t heave rr>d The lot of the Negro has im- These gatn'es are played Sunday priie-Winners and the winners can Penitentes. Instead they of attitude, •or conduct on the and larger group and that of a and flov •*< m V : Ann fnrpvei will be. of the i contest, conducted at have become, a highly respected part of the Jews is beside the localized nationality. . However, proved in the south.' When he afternoons',-at the Central High 1 Tvi pyer Creighton university will be s e c t . • ' ' . •' ,. ' .• . • .. ; .. point To the Nazis themselves the Soviet treatment furnishes a was put on his own responsibility playground. (.TTA) — Wiokham i F o r Zir-r | London published in subsequent edi-. The method of "compromise is the.Jews have been most advan- potent answer to those who main- by the Emancipation Proclama»d joirriis'.ist, proposes I Steed, not pvpr tion, there was much real doubt tions of the Jewish Press. — undoubtedly best in all- cases ex- tageous. " Their degradation "has Well, we finally got around to ' that the L'nitefi States and eH ii Bu! that national efficiency must as to whether his situation had For Eio>i The Editor. . cept those which are> stimulated satisfied a hunger of the post- tain something in which, we can knock j "civilized lations" in Europe rebe based on national ethic and been improved. The intolerant There Is• a'tendency in .going by politicians or are accompanied war bourgoisie psychology. "Aryan" German to the Kansas City athletic : t u r n one cultnral unity. Too, it must be of the south have used the "hope- off ?.!''• Ijnnr.P Iip.ve arhed sharks, back to first causes in the matter by deep seated hatreds and psyevery .Tew that There is a strong contrast be-1 remembered that Russian racial iGerman* The prourtri ,o break chopathic; conditions. In this : le^s" state of the Negro as an exi it vr'i of social psychology.to. go back to, j teanis, and our Omaha | country'expels &r>i "plunders. tween the way in which the race j tolerance is complete, extending Vov vinpyardP with connection I might add that one. primitive man. ,The social scienproblem-has been handled • in to the most cosmopolitan regions. cuse for failing to 'improve his j j . c. C. net sQiiad completely Ce- ; Addressing-' FB "ali-party meetT'fip .airp's- prppe. of the most frequent causes-for condition. After about 60 years j moMshed the K. C. gang at the , ing at Friends House, the former tist likes to. trace the causes of Germany' and the treatment it In contrast to the results of of abnormal intolerance is economic. freedom it was found that the i Omaha Tennis club courts ia last —•imes, editor said: "The intolerance back to the trihe. The j has received In Russia. - As has the Russian experiment on world DPU'.C1P(? v.-!rh hope weather, by have outlived oppressors in - the j number of, Negroes owning there, Sunday's torrid protective • instinct of. the tribe By "abnormal" I refer to atti- been pointed out, the German opinion have been led its members to seek safety in tudes out of proportion" to ,w'hat Jews had enjoyed a large meas- qnences -of the German action. own farms had increased from ' four matches to on?. past and will outlive their pres- j Tint vr.y fp^' '•f not The Omaha boys, with Elmer ent trials. ' There is one thin? absolute unity and. conformity- might be expected as a reaction ure of guarantees for over SO to 20 per cent. They have estabTn the lev.cl. n^v heart. Among many modern' savage to a given set- of unusual racial years. Under the influence of The Russians have added an ad- lished their own schools and j Shamberg, Nate Cutler, Ky Rob-j that covM tie done find fhr tribes We still have taboos and or religious: characteristics. In- this comparatively benevolent at- mirable policy to a list contain- churches without much aid from j bias and Joe Cohep, performing1 for every Jew Fen*- away anc v-riiuie-r:"ui blue primitive" fears. ' The more prim- tolerance frequently d - e v e l o p i titude 'they- had become highly ing many not easy to admire. The external sources. Under the lead- in sweltering fasfeion ia robbed by Germany, the civilSzen. Germans, on the other hand have when one group . finds itself in the sweltering heat, swept ell ' itiye the tr,ibe, the greater".is^lts nations in Europe, Urit- And. mighty ership of such outstanding men p , and the te U Germanized, ' It has been sai4 .s timidity and the more childish economic, competition with' an-, that they were culturally more disgusted the civilized world with as Wilberforce and B. T. Washrolled. F r o m r-r>T r:. singles encounters from' the Kan'• ed States, should send one 'Aryan' their show of brutal nationalism other. are its fears. Especially notable ington'.- the Negro has literallyjsas City players,; who got gooc German to Germany, deducting: Ever I ye rn German than Xtie Nordic Gerand intolerance. The results have | sunburns for their efforts. • from his wealth the proportion are the hostility to.strangers and lifted himself by the bootstraps. , For Dion. 7Aan m a n s - themselves. Essentially been even more devastating to the rigidity of social custom It would seem that the state of 1 .. H o v r ? r e r > . the "K. C. doubles needed la help the Jew'rh destiThere Is no more discouraging 17.vp? T ypp among.,such'tribes. • .-. . • • aspect of the modern world than there was no real race problem. the respect in which they have the Negro is far from hopeless. *fra o f / ° e Rosenzwei* and Car, tute. How long vill free, civiFor Eien. Under the Tsars, however, been held by the recognition of Maine defeated Coben and Roblized men scci women go on sitThere is no real need to carry, the • conviction on the part of Given the advantages of adequate the research back to the. savage. many people that we are in a pe- Russia was confronted with an the fact that German culture, un- schooling' he should go much bins to save the visitors from a ; ting and watching: helplessly the ' 7 her ep.vth strength There were about to • greatest abomination of the 20th In her sir ir- i>eacp There are not-many moderns so riod of decay. Certainly we see- enormous problem of-conflicting til recently has had no superior. farther. -'--•'out. witness the interesting ' century?'' cosmopolitan in their attitude all about" us the submergence of races and religions. A glance at On the other hand the Russians There for F:1! of us On . the west coast Orientals cut to that they never feel uncertainty ideaism as we have known' it. In the map will show how extensive were' a. backward, people. ^V1 ovirnins".' -vill OPHSP. have felt the pressure of similar were Russia's ^boundaries. They among strangers. ; We find no its place we'.find opportunist T^vc-v t T-'p?ri-i nr At the midway point in tbe PEN CLUBS' CONGRESS ! For Tiiori. TAon the Ger- attitudes. The Jews to whora Mr. . widespread tolerance- today for practicalities being rationalized included'Asiatics, and" Europeans, In February, RAPS ANTI-SEMITISM I the exercise of-any.form- of ex- into attacks on the/liberal ideal. Finns, Poles, Tartars and Jews. mann absorbed 193S, Austria, carrying Hull has offered refuge will cot softball race, the Milder Oils are j Ever I yean;-. •Religions varied from Protestant the full weight of their anti- find America too hospitable. We swing-ing.merrily on to the chara- I treme individualism.'Fear of the These attacks -have the strength and Greek Orthodox Christianity semitism to that country. As a have our unfortunate quota of pionship with the p'ueky A. %. - Frag-ue (VCNS) — After voting1 ! For Zior. unknown influences modern man It is to Mohammedanism. These groups recognition of the horror with persons who sympathize witn A. 100 kids hanging desparately (!cvm a resolution proposed by | on slightly different social fron- of unity and determination. 1 She hss stood alone Surveys have on. However, from the locks of the Polish delegation, to bar "po- ] tiers, but,-it is the same fear as the most evident characteristic existed In all stages of cultural which this country regarded the Hitler's ideas. Thppp two thousand years of those, who would revive hates, development": from savagery to persecutions which followed, Sec- shown that in recent years the things, it'll take an explosion to liticsl reBO'utioriS t t e t might give i that of the savage. "." r)prvir.Er thf1 hosts Respect More'.Than Tolerance deify war. and xeyassalize the in- the highest degree of advance- retary Hull issued a note to a number of prominent positions blow the Milders out of the title. offense to certain countries," the j Who brourht funeral biers. dividual, that they know exactly ment. As a whole, however, they number • of democratic nations held by Jews in this country has Last Sunday, the Oilers didn't , Internationa^ Pen Clubs Congress j Respect is" something "more what_they are -after,, while we were a people economically far urging them to co-operate in declined. They will*find.discrim- eeven ven have have to to play play to to gain gain s&vievie- 'endedJ Us, "'" e.jim-.&l' ronrention She pall? lip than . tolerance. ' I t implies a patiently do not. We are ignorant behind the rest Qf Europe. The giving asylum to the Austrian inations of al! sorts against their | tory. They toolc a 9-to-0 forfeit ; adopting resolutions denouncing : From r-:alf: rnd pain knowledge of tbe thing respected. of the modern significance of old prbblem of the Tsars since the refugees. membershipp in clubs,, their at- over ove'r the the A. A*. Z. Z. A. A. No. No. 1 1 tteam, as anti-Semitism End politics,? and j am, a Not only 'must the element it ideas. ;We fall, to see the bases :days,:of Napoleon, had been one " ' " " """ _ " a n I From out o: ' h e rpin. In coming to this country the tempts to live in certain restrict- many of the latter players went racial hatreds of and ' fear he. conquered and a restraint of our civilization". It'mu'sf con- of maintaining Russia on bare investijretion thecelling fate of /-.r.s-1 ed districts, and to get into eer-1 out of town oxer the holiday. By Jews will unquestionably enter a tinue to decay_until we know be applied to our" most primitive subsistence ;• terms, v They used more hospitable atmosphere. On tain schools. In general, -how- f the way, this is the first forfeit trian euthors no-r in Nazi con- j for the Jew" instincts, but. to respect we must what parts of. it are worth pre- despotic means to do this. centration camps. our season, acd since it. the other hand it is far from ever, their legal guarantees serving. . ' ' --. ;. -' -.: ."', " lie Tnion. of also understand. Tolerance is a excusable, we have nothing to i remain intact. They find many ' .. Tsarist Policy • ideal. The constitution of the Sou;h Af-ica. 1-"P vrill s?.i5 early negative sort of thing, a bearingAfricsa Pos . Tolerance Democratic , _ , persons who are genuinely 'sym- feel badly about. There is a great j oS The race policy of the Tsars United States guarantees that pathetic. in Aii^ru^T so ^s.sump- his -up'. Respect is aggressive." It is amount of interest ia this year's ! Tolerance to despotism ; is. a vny of Palestine. an idealistic'goal of liberal civili- form of;. "rotten - liberalism." was. known as "Forceable Russi-i there shall be no legal discriminSoftball league with all players j New York (JTA) — Rabbi IV zation that men may be able to When • intolerant measures have fication." It aimed "at complete | ation against any individual beFor those whom history is cne showing up every week. L. understand cultures, religions, served an immediate end, no dic- abolition of non-Russian culture cause of race or creed. For this great march on to the Millenium, The other two games were oneand. racial instincts other than tator; has hesitated to use them. and at religious,unity- for Rus- reason the political stimulus to tolerance is an inevitability. Most sided. The A. 2. A. No. 100s their, own, and develop, thereby a On the other hand'tolerance is.a sia. It put .limitations on the use racial and religious hatreds is of us have been sufficiently dis- knocked the championship hopes largely stifled. On the other significant sympathy; for them democratic institution.. Its legal by national minorities: of their hand, the economic causes for illusioned by the events of recent of the Alpha Pi Tsus for a looped h a t b native tongues. Extraneous reRespect for these-/things is the -basis • is written into " ' constitu•' our ^ squelching the:r o intolerance have been quite ac- years to deny the inevitability of! foes, 9 to 1. Tbe winners had a goal to be sought in order that tion, and is an essential' element ligious groups were restricted in tive. We have a number of op- achievement of any ideal. their religious' activities, not only shutout until the last inning; inEuropean democracies. tolerance may., be. assured.-.. Obviously education does not pressed groups. Religious inHostilities as the .result of InPerhaps the'most outstanding in' prbselytization" but also in tolerance is not what it once was, offer a. solution in itself. The when the A. P. T.'s pushed ever i tolerance, between groups residing' •example of modern racial and re- education and ..social service. possibly because of a falling off Germans are highly educated. tbeir lose tally. Good pitching ' by GHSS for the Century tessi in 'separate areas _ and., having; ligious persecution has. been Ger- Non-Russians were subject to of interest.In religion. They have become the font of in- was DON'T MISS the highlight. Otherwise, j their own governments are not many's treatment of the Jew. legal disabilities; the. Jews, for tolerance. Rousseau with his play was plenty sloppy. Xegro Problem i likely'to. bring on an acute situa- Anti-Semitism Js nothing new in instance, had what amounted to of the boas sauvsges showed Tie Mcr: K The greatest racial problem of idea Despite the Samson-like h5.tticg I tipn. The more preasing prob- Europe.. ' Until the emancipation an alien status, in respect to a singular ignorance of savages. lem is! that of, the dispersed - mi- started by Napoieon in the R,bine- rights. Pogroms were encouraged the United States has been its Man is probably neither natural- of Jiramy Burroughs, the Sigraa * nority, that is of groups- residing land, -the German Jew .'lived 'in against'the Jews and they lived large Negro population. While ly-good nor. naturally vile. His Alpha Mus :toe.k another licking southern intolerance of the Negro development will never fall out at the hands of the Adler Delicain .territories controlled'by other conditions somewhat- coiflparable In a state of constant fear. The Bolsheyiks_have dealt with has been attributed to tbe neces- the nature things. It must be lessens, by the score ol 17 to T. groups' having racial 6r;.religious •to those into .which he- is-'lbeing Jimmy • banged a hors-a run. a differences.' driven today-.... Supposedly his this problem since 1917 in an.en- sity for the White to maintain stimulated aad guided. his prestige, ther© is doubt as to triple and two doubles, giving the . • Several Solutions ",.,.',-•. emancipation was .complete "about tirely Ailferent manner. Theirs this. Just after the civil war, Those who still believe . that Afiler fielders plenty-of exercise, has been a policy of fostering the Jri, general .there -are several 1 S 4 V . . • . ' • - . . . ; ••;. • . ' . . ; • / • ; ' • . • • • . • . . , the southerners who were most there are certain ideals worth However, the Adiers also clipped solutions" available for the probAs soonT-however, as organized national consciousness of "minor- solicitous of the Negro's welfare attaining must find those ideals. the, ball in machine-gun fashion. ity groups. The Union is comlems of the dispersed minority. labor and corporate business, bewere the former slave owners. It Then they must "learn a little les- to get an easy victory. Some: of these are scarcely ,solu-' gan to pinch the middle classes posed of 11 autonomous republics was .the poof White class • with son _ froia i Here are Sunday's games: tions; as the pogrom and the of .Germany in their successful —constitution of 1936 — having whom he had numerous difficul- and adopted an attitude of agColuiabus-Park — Adiers vs. ghetto..;. Proselytizationi which is fight*- for economic 'concessions, ,equal status with each other. The ties* . There were race riots in gressive positivism. Liberalism, A. Z. A. 100. a solution,-.,is insignificant for political antl-semltism was again, principle has been laid down that many southern cities. The Negro if to Park — Alpha Pi survive, must become as vs. Dewey this discussion. A- small bufin- active. Among the parties formed these nationalities may secede had begun to furnish the incomA. Z. A. 1. teljij?ent minority can,educate a was Adolph Stocker's ; Christliche from the Union. There are other petent poor White with economic revolutionary West Elmwood — Sigma Alpha seventeenth century. larger, 'moire inert, grpup, to its Soziale Arbelters Partel of the grades of national entitles and competition. * Mn vs. Milder Oils. own point of view. The mission- 1880's.. The. AntisemiUsche Volks- regions, each- of which has, autonAntipathy between the Negro the people in social intelligence. ary, and white man generally, partel was established in, 18S9. omy and guarantees of respect to Despite the heat, the men voland poor White has persisted. have practiced this in backward By 1893 there were 16 anti- Its specific'culture. Phinehas Abraham (d. 1S87) leyball enthusiasts continue tc lands. : It suffices - to say that semitic deputies in the Reichstag. The, cultural development of Much of the difficulty of groups • capable of • dominating There has been this element ever ethnically separate groups has southern share cropper has been was. the. last surviving captain of report regularly for their health sessions during the noonday the. Trelawney militia of Jamai larger groups ' are seldom! op- since. been fostered. The All. -Union the result Negro and White to co-operate. pressed. Soviet, or congress, provides for Nazi Anti-Semitism There remain three solutions The: use of anti-semitism by the development of individual The Populist movement of jeach of which may be effective the Nazi party is well known.'The cultures and even fosters the nineties-was rendered ineffective .'under the proper conditions. The Nazis r have carried on their po- teaching • of separate languages. by the lack of support of southfirst is the .attainment of^segrega- litical "campaigns since 1920 al- In some cases these languages ern democrats,'who would .not cotion and autonomy. .Examples-of most entirely on the basis of anti- have been put into writing for operate with Negro republicans. such movements' are the. return semitism. In this, case,- undoubt- the first time under the rule of Early in 1937 a share croppers' of Jews to Palestine, the_ ship- edly, both economic competition the Bolsheviks. While it is extremely difficult ment of Negroes to Liberia dur- and political demagoguery have . Ing.the ^nineteenth'-century, and, stimulated an intolerant attitude. to get relia'ble Information as to White farmers united in one mosOfgnificant of all, the moveThe Jew was quite, successful in conditions under dictatorships. It the first' instances of this kind. ment for a united. Germany.: The German business and prominent has been conceded that this policy It is significant that the recognifact that minorities-left in coun- in finance. The political end tries outside Germany have been served by associating Judaism the victims-of discrimination has and Communism together in one been, frequently overlooked. • big enemy ia obvious, It is of Imi ' AssimiHation. portance to note some of the reaThe • second solution Is that of sons that allowed the movement asslmiliation."•. It involves certain to become so widely accepted in . "'•"•'• difficulties which- are frequently G e r m a n y . insurmountable. Especially not- . It has often been said that the able are those. difficulties typical German suffers from an.'inferiof the miscegenation of widely ority complex. Unlike the healthy different racial types, as Indian American or Briton, who is comand '•. White, In, the case .where a, pletely uninteresting to ' t h e member of one religious- sect psychiatrist, . h e Iive3 under a leaves that sect for- another it is continuous strain. After the war, exceptional if there is not-a kiss which had in itself been a major of social. status. Then, too, re- calamity, Germany suffered from pudiation may mean giving up a monetary inflation which things suited to the member's brougtit ruin to the middle class. temperament for an incompatible Furthermore the position of la__ culture, or religion. :"•••". bor relative to the middle class ^3? It has been pointed outr qulte became: stronger. After 1923, the frequently that the Jew. lives in average middle class. German, wa3 Glassy* Smooth Car Tractis . a vicious circle of social conflicts. looking • about for a scapegoat The ostracism to which his race whom he could blame for his eco- O Equip with is subject drives him into closed nomic -situations '•> Tradition had this great new groups. His tendency to , form found that scapegoat long ago. safety tire and cliques, is criticized. On-the other The Jew was saddled with the hand, any attempt he may'make blame for everything wrong with you take no to change his faith may leave Germany, from the loss of the chances because: him ; nnd his family caste-less," war to the' theory and practice Countries which have been hos- of Communism. The Nazi case pitable to the Jews have found a against the Jew; Js ingenious. The large degree' of • assimilation. conflict of capital and'labor arid Notable among these countries is. their selfish pursuit,of their own China, where many Jews have interests is neatly canonized as given up their religion and have "patriotic." : The difficulUes they become, to all appearances, more say are Jewish. Hochfinanz and Chinese than Jewish.' _ . '•: Jewish Communism. Further, Compromise and Concession they jsay,:-"there' is a Jewish conThe third solution' involves spiracy against the. White race. compromise and concessions , to They, base this xharge on the the majority. The minority race .Protocols of the Elders of Zion, or cr^ed gives up its most salient "which is a document supposedly "differences in order to maintain advocating a campaign for Jewitself in good reratiohs?with the ish world conquest! They further majority. It obviously involves depict the JGW3 as a mixture of less strain on' the Individual and Oriental and Negro stocks which fewer practical difficulties than has been built up for .centuries the. other two solutions. A strik- by 1 n c e.-s-t. u o u s intermarriaRo. ing example of the application of They say this face has been livthis, method was the Mormon re- ing parasitically on the White linq.uishment of polygamy "in the race. ' ' face of the encroachments and 7uno In Co Sen Qcrrdo'C PTCZ?CTX en SlF/iD ev Product of Depraved 3fljitJ3 pressures of surrounding society. • Such charges are too. unreak sonable obvious __ logical tninjc thing co to IHUKB make It. it Stiftns a a iogicai Fonaoie to" to refute. rei\tte. It i t is is OKVIOUS
' My Wish
HgE(
BIT
•
•
"
•
'
'
'
'
'
i
'
'•'
'
• , '
-
'
f
concessions of theory, as it were, that
only a depraved
national {_
THE JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY. JfLT S. 1933
PaceS
' Josef, age variously given, r^ to 25, was born in the '-'o ; town of L u c k , (prom r; Lutsk"s . . . But Lady Luc\ v ' looking the other way wh number came up . . . An,.. *, ;: number, the one given h ^ Acre prison's death cell, wa- ol . . . Which, even if you're r n . rersiiiious. still adds up t" . . . Incidentally. Dr. Phd'i > " • pph. Canadian-born attorns x ! the hapless youth, will be v. ; ing these shores within a ^ English cloth, unavailable across; WOMAN: WOMAN: Cherchez. Cherchez. a a French French i . . . His wife has been v _ the b o d r But i t th the border. But in most other .a d a K Q h a s i t j l a f e m m e . You'll • here lav some weeks . . . respects trade is dull, partly be-jb*e doine it when Hungarian poliQUESTION': Is it true jause of. the withdrawal of . Jew-i t i c s r e turns to pase one of tbe Cniversnl, Mexican paper i ish buying power. j world's press before, lens . . . attitude on Jews is t ."" ! With a sensational shift in the friendly -anti-Semitism" Business men hope that sumj Budapest cabinet . . . At the botmer tourists will provide a need-j torn of which will be' found a > ever that means) has imr :
i
T W
ff
—
•
~
r !
i
IT
i
v^» C S :s - ec— c five pfennigs &n;houiy ten hours Ycct'a day; and at the end 'they make" you do military exercises." (The following is the last of live articles on the Austrian ";_ Xo Opposition ' situation by a, well-known In an earlier article this writAmerican .newspaperman who , - r •- witnessed the seizure of Aus- er expressed the opinion that there was apparent here not even tria and subsequent developthe beginnings of effective oppoments there.) *„—J-V, '~.~--~ ,•„,-„.-)•„.* ir ?-, :.•> monev invested sition to the Nazi regime. No one ed fillip, to trade. Guessing the i Jewess named-. Frau Sipocz . . . Jewish believes that the 99.75 per cent extent of Nazi Austria's tourist ; The Crau is widow of the lace FLASH: The following Generai Goennu, in one of his "Ja's" cast for Hitler at the April pulling power is a favorite pa--'"Budapest mayor, an " A r y a n ' who election speeches. warned Aus- 10 plebiscite is a true measure of time. It is recognized that Jews • was forced out of office because Quent news item appear^ E ovop not come, that liberals will j of his marriage to a Jewess and'• British newspapers tria that •'getnutlichkeit" must N i d ' = t \ l t but bt_ will popular support, stay away in large numbers and ! who. when he tried a come-back LiX. Herr Hitler's chief not be used as a cover for lazi- _Nazidom's g a t i ». . , ,_ stay awa r llovers will ill no d i d under d i ness. "You can be ,as 'gemut- it is entirely-llKely tnat tne --aa || t jj- at r e a l l mmuussiiicc lovers will no ;;died died under mysterious circum-, camp. Group-leader Bruecln er mysterious circum, camp. Group-leader Bruecln e lich\ as you like," the general Us i t per cent is an .effective accurate gauge o l ^ o n g e r n n d Vienna the attraction stances . . . Frau Sipocz herself has been operated on for - rf o^J enemies. was taken with the same rays- ; trouble at Munich'' . . . Ai o said in substance, "but j - l y it once was. The g o v e r n m e n t h a s n o ,rea. j terious r.ilment that felled her ' London colleague sends us z. c , . you have finished your day's son And Life Goes On to fear the people who : husband, but recovered . . . Now. i with the pencilled caption: ?-: work." thought "Nein" but voted "Ja.V But Austrian shopkeepers are ; Dame Rumor has it, the widow ' mons in a Nutshell' per cent right and noble, but it ver they may have voted — fear hard realists; they insist that'the • ;- engaged to marry — hold your i isn't Viennese. There -was always he government is another mat- Salzberg Music festival was more \ breath — 72-year-old Foreign I MISH-MASH: James G Vc-' fC a typical Vienna tempo for do- ;?r v .Now that the hypnotism ex- a society magnet than anything ; Minister Koiomon de Kanya, as ! Donald, on the eve of sailiic io ' ins things; not unsurprisingly, it r'^d by banners, marching men else, and that people will go ; "Aryan" a statesman as Hun- : the Evir.n refugee-aid COETC '-^"e 1 :;attended the opening conceit s.. i was a kind of -waltz tempo char- and a thousand blaring bands there no atter what is played or j g a r y c a n b o a s t _ _. _ w n h the ; acterized by a suitable number of has come to an end, and Vienna who is playing. They point out ; nuptials, we are reliably .n- the Lewisohn stadium to I.e.- a I slow steps interspersed with frac- has resumed the important busi- that the introduction of cheap J formed,. de Kanya will resign as ! violin concerto br- Mende « " T tional'rests and rhythmic turns. ness of. earning its living, one travel mark and reduced railway i {0Yeign minister . . . .\nd Count i who, if he wore alive toda\, It was one of the chief charms of needs no microscrope to discover fares will go far towards blunt- i Eethlen, vigorous leader-of the ; would undoubtedly be among the the city that it had no puritanical considerable skepticism concern- ing" aversion to Nazi weltan- , Opposition, former premier and i refugees in whose interest" the ideas concerning a time for work ng what ,has happened. How schaung. And they believe that champion of the Jews, will be t parley was called It hasn't many foreigners will come moti- ! given the post . and a time for play.1 • ~g From which been announced, but American ' ong, people are asking, .will we vated purely by'.c-iriosity;/they j strategic spot the count, one of Delegate Myron C. Taylor was ! ' It is not going to-be an easy have cream for our coffee? When matter to turn the: Vienna waltz will we have to begin to scrimp will want *o see what 'Vienna, j the most popular figures in the given full ambassadorial rank for , into a goose step. The Austrian, with butter? How soon will we once the international capital of | involved Hungarian political pic- the Evian gathering . . . . D. L. S. ' being human and a German, have to dress ourselves with stuff a great empire, looks like as a j ture, will step back into the pre-. insists he's awaiting a postcard , likes parades and flapping ban- made out of trees instead of good provincial city of the Third j miership- . . . All of which the from Mr. Taylor which should | ners and the gusty emotional up- English cloth? How long will Reich. In any case, Germans j fj e rr House-Painter in Berlin will say: "Evian a wonderful time" lift of mass demonstrations; but our morning rolls remain white, will rush in gladly where foreign- | swallow as gracefully as he;did . . . The Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi ers* might fear to tread. • ! Czechoslovakia's mobilization league, whose boycott of the to get excited and virile ahout soft and crisp? Meanwhile Vienna is calm j Cherehez, as the French say, la Louis-Schmeling; execution (or •work is another matter. Jnst the again, and to every outward ap- | femme ./.. . was it a fight?) laid a crnoother day I heard someone comI quote a minor clerk in a gov- pearance, its old self. The cafe ! ' saurian egg. is now borsting that menting gloomily vabout labor ernment finance department: "1 tables are out on the sidewalks, i PROBLEM- Paul ir ha* just ! it made a~"profit" on the affair service, Prussian style: "Fifty- have to pay five.marks a month Whipped - cream, luscious and c o m e f a c e t o ' f a c e v i t h t h e w e U . •A League release announces to the party. I have to give 15 full-bodied as ever, tops the dethat, it had received a half dozen marks monthly for the Four-Year licious Viennese coffee. In the known Jewish "problem" ia ail Plan and five marks monthly for Prater, the giant ferris wheel It was flung at him by one of his ! ing profits inade by bettors on the Volksender. I have to sub- lifts slowly into a dazzling blue older playmates, a red-hended : the bout . . . And that two of the scribe to three German newspa- sky; the Wienerwald is green , i r i s n voungster, whose father is i letters accompanying the checks pers. I have to pay one hour's again; there -is music, laughter • And your P. A. P. ! requested that receipts for the earnings each, day as a tax. I and young strong wine in the >at ecop bout it from Paul. jr.. -svlio t donations be sent to — Mas have to go to the theater at least colorful peasant mns^on the out-| j s ^a r d aat s u p p e r t h e o t h e r p . m . j Schmeling . Palestine's . curtwice a month, and as ,1 cannot skirts of the city. What is haphe said out of a rent song-hit is "Hey, Let's Build find the cheapest seats, must buy pening in a hundred prisons j c l e a r g"Daddy," Galilee" . . . Author Morris Ry.y b e t w e e n E i p s oi c o w s seats commensurate with my throughout Austria is satisfac- , flew ..jks 'it true what Red told me i kind. Columbia Journalism" 'IT earnings. And recently a party torily hidden from view and one t o d a y t n a t t h e J e w s a r e r o b b i n - picture has- his in'a - brochure isofficial came to my small apart- may be sure that, when summer It h e G o v a m i n t ? sued by Columbia university to When P. A. United States Presents a ment, where I live with my moth- comes, orders will go out that i-p recovered consciousness, he promote its funds drive . . . Leger, and asked me how I was getFive Point Jews are nof'to be mistreated j gge"s7edTha't Red end in the brochure, which feating along, how much I was earn- where the eyes or ears of foreign , a n s w e r e d a n d SU question- tures a gallery of grads who've ; Program ing, did I/have^a servant and tourists may be offended. And b e i n v i t e d £ o r a b i t o f ing as to the source of his fa- made their mark la the world, so on. this time the orders will be miliar statement Evian-Les-Bains, France (JTA) Later that reads: "The;' are Columbia, these .". 'I' don't have a servant,' I obeyed. . —The 3 0-natioir refugee-aid conp. m., Paul,' jr., returned with living products of a university Red's refusal to be a party to which taught them, furnished ference opened • on "Wednesday sajd. 'My mother keeps (Copyrighted by Jewish Tele' . the conference Bluntly send- them with every facility for selfwith an agenda before it that fo4- me.' graphic Agency, Inc.) " 'So!" And what do you do ing the message, through a third j improvement, and gave them to made clear that President Rooseparty, that-Paul's old man w:is the world'' . . . Ryskind, a convelt, -whose initiative brought with"J your money?' " I save it,' was my answer. "a piece of ham" . . . T,ronder if I tributor to the Nation laconically about the meeting, sought a pro'At least I save as much as posthe American delegation to the I points, out, was expelled in 1917 gram to aid Catholic and Protes1 Evian conference would care to ! for writing verses that President tant exiles a$: well as Jews, and. sible. •".'W&at^inonsenss is Jthii?' intervene ; . . j Butler didn't like . . , Congrats refugees fronir Spain- and other said iny party friend. . • '"We do . • I to the Australian Jewish News countries as -well as Germany. not save in^the Third Reich. We EXECUTION: Shlorao B e n ' . . . Whose editor, K. G. Vv\, has The agenda tor the conference spend to rpread wort. You will prepared by the- state department, Giving a Ottawa (JTA) a:copy of wliich.was obtained in move into • a larger apartment; advance by this correspondent, you can afford it. ~And you will mock Fascist salute in the ccurse hire a servant" and let your poor of a debate in parliament on and the-numerous conversations Fascism, Justice Minister Ernest ield between the American dele- old mother-'rest.' "My mother isn't _old, and she Lapointe caustically remarked: j gation and representatives 'of private organizations, Catholic and would rather have a little money "The first Jew the Canadian! others, threw light on the presi- in the bank .than.stand, idle and Fascists will deal with when in \ work, but of power will be. Ernest Lapointe. "dent's ' intentions regarding the watch a servant course I had : tb do as I was told." He declared Canada was in "no conference. danger of Fascism, we <have the . Huge Taxation The agenda. Which, was sent by This, is an exceptional case situation well in hand." the United States government to all participants,' contains five only in the sense that "the man is Toronto (JTA) — G e r m a n a government.worker. But' hunrecommendations: dreds of 'thousands of civil serv- Consul-General Kropp protested 1_—That the conference cc sider measures Ito facilitate set- ice workers and party members to Mayor Frank Day against a tlement of political refugees from are similarly rigidly controlled, remark attributed to Alderman Germany and Austria under taxed and directed in their do- William Croft, who was reported -which as political refugees 'will mestic as well as official "affairs. to have said, after an inspection be considered not only those. wh' There are doubtless many who do of the Toronto Zoo, that it was have left the Reich, but those not mind this prod. from the so dirty,-"the-only thing I'd put Prussian bopt; there are others in ihere would be Hitler," The who wish to: leave- . • : consul asked that "the offensive 2 That the conference work who owe their jobs to the Nazis remarks be withdrawn." . Mr. and who are only too glad to "coout measures for assisting urgent operate;" but doubtless there are Croft replied: "I never heard cases within existing immigration many thousands who would like anything so ridiculous in all my regulations of the respective na- it better to be left alone. life. As far \as I am concerned tions, .with each government exWorkers' in private business the German consul can go to—-» pected to submit to the conferpeople of Canada are not go•Jj -J-' ence a" confidential statement on are less" rigidly controlled. But The ing to goosestep for him or anyits immigration policy and laws, ultimately their welfare must de- one.else." stating how many and what kind pend on the welfare of their emof immigrants it would-be ready ployers,'and at the moment busiri><v It. «. Down ot the close of the ISth ness in Vienna is none too good. .to admit: In-the first few weeks "of Ansch- ceritury the three callings that 3—That the conference agree luss, when the German army were open to Jews in Europe on a system of providing papers seemed to be quartered here in -were: Money-lending, old clothes acceptable to the participatin its entirety and when every train "dealing and peddling. In Venice governments to those refugees and p l a n e and automobile the Jewish community was tolerwho are unable to obtain docu brought in a^ new load of S. A., ated but with the express stipulaments of identity; S. S. or party officials, the shop- tion that it maintain in the Ghet4—That the conference estab- ping centers we^e crowded and to four loan-banks (pawn-broklish an inter-governmental office hotels booked to capacity. Ger- ing establishments in reality) for in some European capital to mans still are coming to buy the benefit of the poor. formulate and carry out a long range program for solving the refugee problem, not only in connection with Germany but in the larg'er sense; 5 That recommendations on the above subjects and others which the conference may discuss be submitted to the particiOmaha's Newest and Finest pating go~ernments in the form ., -Club of resolutions.. 'a> That the refugees problem • is far from being entirely Jewish East Omaha was indicated by George N. Shuster, editor of the American Catholic organ. Commonweal. Mr. Sinister, who is now surveying VNIGHTLY the Catholic refugee situation in Europe, and who conferred, with the American delegation to the conference, says that lOf.000 Catholics must leave Austria as r persecuted.' O t h e r non-Jewish DIRECT FROM deputations appeared before tbe American delegation and also emphasizes the precarious situation of the Catholics in Austria. The 30 governments participating- in the conference are: Argentina, Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada,; Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Denmark, the DoDirect frora Brown Palace, Qeavcr minican Republic, E c u a d o r , France, Great Britain, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras,- Mexico, the Netherlands. New Zealand, DELICIOUS STEAKS . Nicaragua, N o r w a y , Panama, and FRIED CHICKEN Paraguay, Peru, Sweden, Switzerland, Uruguay, United States and DINNERS • Venezuela. No n -.-. Immigration .. countries have not been invited. Jean Boncour,. son of former »Premier Paul Boncour, was appointed' secretary-general of the conference. • . , . (Copyrighted by Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.)
By VICTOR H. BEn.VSTETX
•>
*
_
1
You Si .ve the Different
i " : .. - , v
/
N MilSTES
2402 East Locust 3 Floor Shov/s
EtL^
B Beauty, "ihey're 'marveiousl^ handsome tires. Safety..Their amas« strength and stamina in servi safe, Lc Life, And the very tilings thzt mslie them safe, likewise 22£!;e tliem Ingly long time, ...Without yo^r
-.;- ,
IA
"S.
* . V •in
• • *
I
THE JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY. JULY 8, 193S
EWISH
/
: ;
••;. Man-Made Catastrophes By Babbi Frederick Cohn Li V^ua
I American • government 4o * i steps in defense. | ~ "Therefore, it is the J j of the American governn -*• ' I on and after this date * relations between this c~ ment and the German c ' <• ment cease; that no trn^ s c £ German manufacture sha 1 i_e ceived in aiiy American C L ' D house: that no goods of -' u i r manufacture shall tie ship-^ 1
Coinrri!TVJS G -, oi J
Z .;
Cr F
We were-.all: horrified by the recent railway disaster at By A :GAI* t- I L .Hies City, Montana, one of the worst in a decade in the history .• ' OPEX IJ2TTER • T f-railroading, when in the middle of the night, hundreds-of r V 1 To the Secretary of State, ADVERTISING RATED FURNISHED ON n >-'•' i r unsuspecting-'passengers, many of them on pleasure bent, with Washington, D. C. EDITORIAL OFFICE^ CC3 BRANDEI3 THEATER BUILDING the giving way of a bridge due to flood damages, were plung- Dear Mr. Hull: fro^-i SIOUX CUT OrFICfc—-JEWISH COMMUNITY liENIGR la writing this I am -separating export to Germany f ed into the raging water of the creek ,scores of thenl to death, my identiy as a Jew from my American port. We recre l ° c PRI»"J7 S H O P ADOResa—<zzi s o . M T H srflE-at curnstanccs that compel DAVID BLAUKGR Su3lae33 and Uannglns Editor nd even those who escaped to mental anguish, physical injury identy as an American. I am try-ed nation to separate its Ifc fi ^ -> ing ' to write this only as an Editor md suffering.".FRANK K. ; '•-,- 'J ' j l-> °" E American who is troubled about this commerce. . . . Associate BUlior LJ2ONAHD NATHAN "These restrictions sbj.il co t foreign events and their relationi tinue until persecutions ' \ ( Contributing Editor We are always appalled when these accidents occur. We ship to American life. RABBI FREDERICK CORN If I wrote this as a Jew my out- German government and tl <- G i i . Boob Editor sympathize with 4;he victims and do all we can to help them. BABB1 THEODORE N. LEWIS look might be called too subjec- man nation cease.'' Slous City. Iowa, Correspondent Hi km PILL , ^ 3o in the case of earth-quakes, floods, famine, epidemics of dis- tive, since this has to do -with the ' This, pain of many of my kinsmen is" • not be couched ia precis ci r ease, other, evils) catastrophes' of nature, or 'acts of God' — an'old, old story anyway. ' matic. language but. it ••i--c The Refugee Conference we rush instantiate* the aid of our stricken fellows, our hearts Not that as an American I-can • the rjeans by which, we m * feel no compassion for distant :: regale, .quarantine, irapi iP Since Wednesday the Refugee Conference has been meet- ;o out to them in sympathy and in generosity. victims of persecution. What civ- teach the criminal whose •• i" ing in Evian. Regardless of whatever concrete proposals arc ilized American can separate his cave {alien cpon our ha t s All this is noble and a credit to our humanity, but do we heart fr-oni the events in Germany rtwr r -T r Such quarantine woulc ' P . P r | reached, without doubt the onus of the care of the refugees— J ? ver stop to consider how inconsistent we are? There are man-!and look on with cold eyes that ; proved by every nioixl I. i. i f ' [ ^ Jew and non-Jew alike—is to fall on Jewish shoulders. > r say. This is none of my affair? American. There mar h "^ t made. catastrophes, evils for which we are directly responsible Indeed, among all enlightened |'who will say that it is r-> ° Cf This is not the first time Jews have been called upon to 1 -Americans these events have ; our business to gro in f~ m t I " and which We ourselves cause, about which we do nothing at all, t ( * i aid their brethren in distress. England, France, Spain, Porcaused a deep loathing and a i national niorality.to be t i lr* -, r ' i t >r very little, regard with a cynical indifference" and a weak poignant fear: A lothing for j teacher of others. For f I • t tugal and other' minor expulsions have through the centuries j sadism that is not the outgiving 'answer is that even if K » <' ;olerance, which in their aggregate and continuous presence demanded the opening of Jewish pursestrings. • r f- - r of bereft individuals, but the de-: morality it is also good v1 s i ivith us are far greater and worse than the calamities that ocliberate policy of a national gov- for the nation to defc: t= I The Spanish exile, it was once thought, had no parallel fby the most peaceful for horrors. .But Hitler is doing his share in dispelling that lasionally over-take us, and cause, infinitely more woe and ernment; a fear for civilization arainst another nation -s becoming Infected by savagery. belief. Then the tragedy of the exile was heightened by the mffering. There is the hell of war, in which thousands are Your own fine public utter- , predations visit serious terrors of the way. The homeless Spanish Jews were taken ilaughtered, men, women, and children; cities burned, fields rav- ances have given evidence that I upon its economy. you are in the leadership among ; And. after alLi-ir captive by pirates; they were caste on hostile shores; they fell ged, all manner of evil done, property destroyed, arid injur- Americans who detest the current : does exalt a nation. es inflicted for which mankind pays dearly .for years and years brutalities that ""wear the livery of I prey to armed bands. statesmanship. ' (Copyright 1S3S by S O F T \n.= To pay ransoms—much as ransoms are being demanded o-cdnie, "and from which never completely recovers. There Yet among my fellow-Americans ; Feature Syndicate.) today—the Jews emptied the synagogues of their wealth. Metals !s 'marPs inhumanity to man' which makes countless millions I find a sense of helpless frus- j tration as of men in the presence \ were melted down and sold. Silks and -rich materials were mourn 'in which man deliberately inflicts wrong upon his fel- of a d e v a s t i n g conflagration; Or T 1 Gems of the Ei r r _ put up for sale in the markets. Rich men, like the pious low man, in cruel injustice, barbarous persecution, the most which they can not approach . . . I and Talrauc Obadiah Sforno, slept in tents at the harbor to care for any flagrant and iniquitous example of which is the "Nazi's treat- 'Just what can we do about • this?" they ask. "After all, a do-1 By Dr. Philip Shcr of the refugees who might arrive by sea during the darkness. ment or rather mistreatment of the Jews in Germany and Aus- mesfic policy of the German gov- i can be none of the af- i This is supposedly a more humane era, one more keenly tria. There is the economic exploitation of the poverty and ernment fair of the American government. •: 'need of millions throughout the world. There is poverty itself, sensitive to human values. Our care of- the homeless of our BIBLE Isn't there some unwritten law I LO is the man that co c "e n generation will be a test of the degree of civilization to which so unnecessary and 'inexcusable' in a world filled with abundant of nations that enjoins one nation ] from "meddling-in the home" af-i life, and loveth the days tL-t ! = we have attained. resources of every kind, which man has not learned how pro-fairs of another? Indeed, we our- j may see gcci therein? K r th-> Already the A. Z. A. has struck &. sensible chord in divert- perly to;use or equitably to distribute. There.are vice and crime selves would be most resentful if j -tongue from evil ar.d L\ r 1 F - r some other nation were to at- : from speaking guile, r k i a u i ing the money for the Lapidus Memorial forest to the funds of every sort. All these evils We tolerate, and seem .to be help- tempt to tell us what to do or j evil and do good, sselt i r - ? £. for refugee relief. It has also been suggested that Jewish Less before them, whereas if we properly exerted ourselves, used not to do in a matter of our own I pursue it. business." - " i Evil shall kill the wic1 women contribute their wedding rings. one tithe of our energy arid ability to set ourslves to correct This I myself have said until thev that hate the rithteous -t We too must empty our synagogues of their useless wealth. and destroy them, to cope with them adequately with our high- recently; with the outraged con- beheld guilty. Unrighteous witness r^ ir sciences of millions of other Better to worship in a shed and save lives than to worship ly developed mental abilities and material resources, we could Americans I have stood in help- they ask me of things' t{-" 1 1r midst splendor while thousands of Jews suffer. master and overcome them. Man that has the most marvellous ess anger shaking a futile fist at know not, they repay ni" 'i i good, bereavement c a n ° t^ i r a savagery such as the advartcThe Jews of those countries that remain free are being material and mechanical inventions to his credit, man that in- ng frontiers of civilization had soul. called upon to make huge monetary sacrifices. But those sac- vented the auto, the air-ship, the ever marvellous radio, tele- seemed to •push, .into the remotest Let not them that r.r ^ ->~cfully s i n e enemies rejc c rifices are nothing compared to the sacrifice demanded of Ger- vision on the threshold of whose wide-spread practical use we abysses. nk v But now It may be asked: Is me, neither let them man and Austrian Jewry. tand, and similar wonderful achievements that are a matter this persecution only the business the eye that hate me, v t* " a We inay not like the idea of opening the gates to the refu- of the immediate or near future, is surely equal to cope with of Germany? When a domestic cause. r 1 'T policy of one nation brings grevTALMUD gees because it might endanger our own security; we may not these moral evils that are the cause of such wide-spread and ious problems to others is it still Kabbi Jlair said: " Wl -">~ c r> ' n like being asked to contribute. But; we are being asked to continual suffe'ring. Panics, depressions, uncertainty, insecurity, domestic? Does a persecution re- we know that even a 1 e- ^ main in the vacuum of domestic who is occupied with t" "- ^^^ c: ' 1 save human lives. There is no washing of hands. anxiety,-hardship, .penury are surely not necessary in a scien- business when its victims must of the Torah is likened t a t eT 1 : seek the shores of other lands to priest? The passage s •= ! To fail those that wander would be a crime that would tific'world, a world which, if not yet scientifically organized, escape its torments? Is it still net viticus IS.5) Which'if a - - - c be upon the head of Israel for all time. has made such progress in science, and has practically applied our affair when we must shelter he stall live by it. It ~-< •= i " and help find a new .way of life specify priest, Levite. or ^ - ^ ° it in so many marvellous ways. Ten thousand slaves are every for its victims? " but states in general if £. n „ The President's conference on whence it may be inferre t ' * moment at hand to do man's bidding in the form of electricity the rehabilitation of German ex- heathen too, who occnpie h -A new type of journalism devoted to pictorial presentation and electric and mechanical appliances. They cook our food iles itself suggests the interna- self with the study oi the ~c nh of current problems made its debut with a discussion of the for-us, light our-homes, carry our messages, perform Aladdin- tional character of the German is equal to • a hich-priett.' T t <= +1-~ Here, indeed, we are tak- Rabbi Juda said: c ^ cr I v t i •"Jewish Crisis."''Not only.•was- this magazine interesting, but like wonders for us at the push of a button, at the release of events. ing a hand in Treat seems to he meaning of t h s p r ^ » (T^-i despite the usual chorus of calamity hollers, was obviously fair. power. Will-any claim that man who has achieved so much is only another nation's domestic 1.14) And rnakest - *i as n e f , nr we are already by im- fish of the sea? V\ t"< aie i "TL What occasioned its damnation was some advice given the powerless to achieve in the higher realm of the spirit and in business; plication (which does not reach compared to fish cf the s a" c „i Jews., Whether or not the advice was justified, it still remains association with, his fellows, in a rational, orderly existence, the. impervious sensibilities of as the larger fish of ti r " a, Eavages) heaping hot reproaches swallow the smallei, ^c sound advice and worth remembering. one free from strife (as we. eliminated friction in our mach- on the persecutor's head. if n o t fr>r it with 1 -— r c Briefly the editors of this journal cautioned .the Jews inery),,^ the removal of evil, still more in its destruction at But I ask myself, is this enough of government, t h e st "1 1"" ' T\ ° k against being scornful of the social and business habits of Gen- the very source, in the positive prevention of it, in the elimina- for us to do? Is murder settled would have swallovrei er." when the body is decently burtiles. . "Even if some personal sacrifice seems involved, be" sen- tion of thq causes that produce it. Man after all is a rational ied? We do something about the 1 sitive to their reactions." We visit upon him the Our rahbis were t? srht T 1 c ' f L Hf "1 amUenlightened being. Why should he permit abuses that he murder. Adam, the first mar si-> r-" f~ moral abhorrence of society. We "Don't make yourself unnecessarily conspicuous in speech, 1 could easily put an end to if he were but resolutely determin- quarantine him either by impris- first day of his c r e a ' ^ n th" « dress, and manner. Don't be a nuisance by refusing to coned? Why should he be the author and perpetrator of acts that onment or by death. Thus we i set, he cried saying • "W rmake it known that society is riot rae, perhaps this is l-ca <;form as much as possible to every-day customs which are acbring such untold suffering upon millions of bjs fellow human tolerating the savagery of mur-sin, that the world CL I cepted by a majority of your fellow citizens. Don't be upset turned to chaos, a r d der. beings?. • . " •; ..---. "... • Particularly would • we • take i be the punishment o by little things and don't over-dramatize yourself in word and steps against • a well intrenched I which-.was decreed i rf1 gesture to gain small ends. -Don't let your personal relationmurderer who threw his oodles j Heaven." «•» ^ ° " ' •? We have 'applied science.' What we need is applied ships be dominated by the fact you are Jewish." . over the wall for his neighbor's however, when the d " r zvscience. We have been callous and indifferent, criminally negpeared he understood t s -^ care. Except for the final point, the warnings are all in order. lignt. An accident or catastrophe of nature arouses and ex- It seems to me that in the Ger- was the order cf th •> v> ciW* 1 Earose and sacrificed c-> c~ For the last there is little to say because of the human peculi1 " i 111 S cites'us. Why do we remain so heedless and unmoved at man- man situation the question is. kins There was How may ffe stop this murder? n T, "• i arity to be conscious of the thing that others are conscious of. the Jews and . he p.-^v'-^ made catastrophes, self-caused calamities? If man but would, Since his crimes have become a . It-is true that anti-Semitism is as much a Christian probvice cf his high of fir "1^ he could cause, wonders in the political but particularly in the problem that affects our own na- he who hss a tunoi o 1~ L \ tional . economy is it not now a lem as a Jewish one. -But there is a place that Jews can help 1 u~ Social world. Society could' be transformed overnight. The function of international business cut it off • and be , t i and that is in the regulation of their personal conduct. i r should.he allow it t " itrouble is .we have attacked our problems merely with our fin- to stop him? I, with a great manv other be afflicted?" And f ger-tips. Were we-resolutely to-apply 'our whole; hand, still Americans, have thought what to them all was that oi'i and be reliever T 1 i U \ I to seg-.s if 1 i x both hands, yea,head, heart, arid hand, our whole force, our do with this criminal g it one official by the n i ~ " n' regate him, to Quarantine him, to In line with the old adage that every dog must have his entire being, there is nothing-we could not accomplish. A Joe who objected to the!" "d^-i teach him. Certainly, our pious day, the American Nazis are being permitted" to air their views Louis with one well-directed blow, 'knocks out',a Schineling! reproaches have been without ing, "First you canr^t c t effect; he throws more and all the Jews, becaus ' -before legislative committees, both state and national. Who would have thought it possible? We would W equally any more of his victims over the wall j cannot get along -v L_->I t tr ^_, Giving them an opportunity to air their insanities before surprised at. results accomplished with earnest, determined, for.our,care. i ' | secoaaly, roui^lang^ ^ i ^ 1 '> How may -we surround him, I eane-u ;ai emp^re^ LI •. an impartial court will be like giving the country a catharsis well-directed^ above all conscientious effort. Let us continue not with bayonets but with evi- | own subjects. ; il- u ^ ^^ ^ In open forum their- words will be shown up as cheap and to.make,progress in science and to continually apply it, but dence of our abhorrence that he | saiu, T^y advice nr* can .unde-rstanar I have been | *"n there is a law t^-t ^ - - ^ ridiculous. above all let us educate, deepen and strengthen our moral cone 1 < c T - <- T ' of a great document the obstructs- the wish As a people we are toa lenient, taking these pernicious sciousness,; our conscience, and the most flagrant, even long- thinking United States government might j siust be executed a= r a , . accusations in .our stride, remembering there have been other standing wrongs and evils would be corrected and annihilated •prj-ite — one, indeed, that shall Vvhea he was taken ii ^ ^ II <.stand forever an imperishable ed he said,' "I beq ~ "i equally foolish libels. Jews have been persecuted and slain testament of international noral- property to Rph^i An. ' i colleacrues." for poisoning wells, causing the black death, murdering chil in an incrediblyJtnd amazingly short.time. Cannibalism has Ity. Addressed to the German eovcompletely ceased. Savagery' (except; in the Eurpean nations' dren for ritual purposes, instigating the Hussite movement in ernment it might read like this: ? rcttrlcu1; t ti Bohemia and the Protestant Reformation in Poland. We hav treatment of one another) has almost' disappeared from the : "The American government has earth,/eyenm-Africa. Human slavery (except economically) has viewed with distaste and alar^ shared with the Masons the responsibility for the French and ''" I the mass persecutions that have fotre places the-"- v American revolutions but must take the entire blame for the practically been abolished^ Great progress has been made in' been perpetrated within the Ger-j to dealing in. c'J «. 1 the cure of disease "(yellow fever is no longer a scourge, epi- man nations with the consent and v h e . seeond-har^ c L_ Russian one. • "" _i3 scarce of he Gerinan goveraHardly a calamity of history but that has been laid at demics'are scientifically dealt with, old traditional .diseases aare connivance at'-.r tear :.rr n cm the wane, remedies are being found even for cancer), the ment. . "la ordinary.-. ... circumslanc^s _ . . . the Synagogue door. , span of human life has been lengthened. Ppverty, too, is doomed such persecutions might not hr , tc-lrJcpllr. Today we are accused of ruling the world. One anti-Semite to go witti' powerful governments directing their attention the official concern -of the Amer- ican government but _ onSj the has gone so far as to say that Jews control Hitler and tha to its eradication. as" never before. .Never before \\~ere there cause of moral re%*ulsioa among | his persecutions are merely part of an inner struggle—or per! such efforts on behalf of peace (breaking down because of man's *he American people. 'However, since many of the haps a'smokescreen.moral weakness/his inherent .selfishness, greed and cowardice). victims of thess persecutions har» History has proved that unless these libels are refuted The world's sense/of justice is being aroused (notably in the been cast upon our hands lor cur , care, the American government ' tragic results can ensue. Because of this we. must insist tha age-old iniquity of the persecution of the Jew). 'Along pull no longer can regard itself as a. ( charges against us must be aired publicly and let the work" and.a pull all together' and humanity could accomplish won- detached onlooker at ' Gcrmnii events, know the truth; let the world see the individuals that taltf ders in the amelioration of th'e moral, social, and international "The German government can > it .upon themselves, to be our judges. condition of the world. The 'Kingdom of God' would be brought not be unavfare of the abboiTfr.»c which the American people atti appreciably nearer: Man•_,can, ..indeed,- become *a partner with other civilised people hare f«j4 ( God in the creation of the moral universe. Man-made calami- in the presence of these perr^cutlons. Since the German 'govern- ' ties^ can absolutely be made to disappear, to be replaced by ment has given no heed to the: i 5893-1030 man-made blessings of unity, of justice, of cooperation, of ra-anifestations of world opin.on '• -If-,-. n-\' -*- *P "5 " ' "~ '-• ?^? ^ ^ ' ?- J^ V P '"* " C~f ' Rosil Chodesh Ab Friday, July 29 peace, of undreamed of happiness. ssace i t s ej>.vi'5"^*- G'- •"•.'•'»'' - * -- • thousands . of Us people rus Fast o£ 9th. o£ Ab Saturday, August 6 bO'Jght new sodai ana eco-c^:."1 problems to the Aiaerican r...;::., j Eosh Chodeoh Elul; Sunday, August 28 -Frederick Colin. It bajonss necessary for th.» T i i 3 JEWISH PitESS PUiJi.lSHINU CUMI'ANY
~»
L
<•
r
c
r
"The Jewish Crioio"—With Advice
t in
I
i
t
i
1
T
t
*" I S
' ft I
t IP
I
>r o
( 1
—
1
< I
I
I
1 1
li
\ 1
'
1
i
1 I
\
- -
\
l
T
J
)| t
T
i uncii % », he c vI1
I
)
1
>5
md ( 1H i " "
1
[
1
l l SP1
n
io It
(
i » r
1 1 i ' r
1
?
1 I
(I
> f [ ,<, "H 1"? 1f p
1 " t 1 m
T
f r
(
-,L rs
t '
For Every Bog Hio Day- '.
c
TH2 JEWISH. CALEWD&E
r
-I
;t
Pete 6
THE JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY, JULY S, 1933
A.!Z. A,1
"
I *
ii U
Mother Chapter of A. Z. A, '•will: bold a regular meeting Tuesday, i July 12. at which time the newly j elected officers -trill be installed. |
Those to be installed are: Irv j Xog:g, Morton - Margolin, Leo i
TO
^pC M »
i
By Arlene Solomon
4 *tf>
«fc- C
««>! »
i
^ B
-CCj?-
%
j WHAT'S HAPPEXIXG EXIX2 ' a "€w r . r t rlLi ... .SOn . . . i If you're one cf the many
tree
c%
c
_
E '1 l C fXC"i Horn-. C c.rfe 13 »cz<* r Hi iccn Jev".Eh CCEgFleet 7C£. ZPZt
Sherinanr Ed Stein, Haskell Cohn, ! D 6 a r suz.V Q • i vno've beea puzzled by what JJEAX-TREXlAK j XOVAK-RLBEXSTEIX Stanley Turkel, Justin Priesman jj . Elaine Frank and I are i l l in i seems to be a sadder rash on Sunday at the hon«o of her par- '. Miss Kose Rubenstein, daugh- | and d Morris M i Arbitman. Abit [Colorado and are are *till till having havin a a ! the thepart part off certain c n c [Colorado and columnists to r e e ents, "iss Anne Tretiak, daugh-, ter of Mi\ and Mrs. k, v't spe-en i O Officers for this last term have { { swelejrant time. Although vreTe!! pooh-pooh theX Xszi spy probe fcr t! r;. . ' ""™ Morris--Arbitman, , T — - „ . v_v.-t T - - cu_.. . r • - ' insisting i i t hi h that t hh t the thiK i b fc ter o f Mr. and Mrs.' J. Tretiak, i stein, became the bride of Mas | been Leo Sher- . sun burned. from *• t t r" F V sw'raniiisg-, stiff jsani espjonag1 E ' '* becaine.the bride of Dr. Lloyd H. : Novak, son- of Mr. and Mrs. Sam jman, Irv Nngg. Haskell Lasere, from horseback riding, bruised ring, got no secret3 cf any value. g e t rre r — Dean of Milwaukee, -Wis.. son of ! Novak, on Sunday, June 19; The Morris Kirshenbaum, S t a n l e y from roller skating, and all maybe you agree with us that it's TOT \T z r:i Mr. and. Mrs. M-. Dean of Marih-j ceremony was performed by theTurkel, Pud - Wintroub -and Rayscratched from mountain climb- really intended to allay public ette, Wis. .'. _ j Rabbis David Goldstein and X.Shapiro. • / ing, ' we still say, "It's a great alarm . . . Bidja know that ih.z tc:. nsel '" The ceremony was performed ! Feldman. At this meetnig, Irv Noggr, del- | life"; Nazis still have a price of 56,500 .c v r ; by-Rabbi David A. Goldstein.-in r The bride was gowned in a egate to" the camp convention at i SUEJ- Q, I've never seen a city j on the head of Albert Einstein? : Tev to c: ec the presence * of the immediate i lovely model of niousseline de Estes: Park. Colo., will.' give his ! where everj-one dresses as in- ; . . . The height of something c Fv — families. [sole with a finger-tip veil. She report of that convention. Since cps.gs.nda was a I:rctzic 2!" C » .is J. , TZTI r.. . c er For, her marriage. Miss Tretiak carried a bouquet-of white roses sponsors of the fo- iLe wore . a blue and white Yfedge- and sweet peas. .at William E. It" r- v t c Miss Rubenstein was attended j one of the best, all members are wood .print suit with -white acpeople wear hats, and gloves are ! Dodd, jr., whose father was the >-ri.o r l by her two sisters who wore con- urged to be present. cessories.- • ' " • ' ' . a major curiosity. j former ambassaor to Germany, is Acs: .n Je".-E"—-\ "£ t The ceremony was followed by trasting : gowns of peach and -.'£ F'CIt really seems a shame that ja Kazi sympathizer . . . Tonne U r Lsi aquamarine and carried bouquets a family dinner. ' '•-..while -we're having such a grand j Dodd is running for congress in Out-of-town gues.s included of red, roses and sweet peas. time, Joy Yousem. and Lorraine ! Virginia, znd the object of ,the Sid Ic Mr. and Mrs. M. Dean, parents of . Mrs. Rubenstein, mother of the . ThePioneer Women's organi- Meyerson of. Council Bluffs are j r a m o r i s to put him in bad with the groom;-.'Mr. and Mrs. "Willard bride, and Mrs. Novak, mother of Dean of Chicago; Mr. and Mrs.the bridegroom, wore matching zation wiil hold their annual just recovering from the appea- ; t n e T O t e r s . _ . H e . gs o OTc!l ot British crTl E T - - IT Harry Goodman of Chicago, and dresses of rose-colored lace with luncheon Tuesday, July 12. a t 1 dicitis operations they uaaer-j a n E n t i . X a E l t h a t h e ' s chairman io f t h e American Committee for white v carnations PS corsages. Mr. Oscar Dean of Flint, Mich. p. m. a t Elmwood Park. • j went last week. U'T C After the cerenviiiy a dinner Following .a wedding trip to A .nominal s u m is .. charged j Darling, write and tell me 'Anti-Nazi Literature . . . A -promCanada, the couple will make was served for 50 friends and merely to cover . the expenses of iwhat you did over the Fourth, i inent Gerirsan import and ezpori to Somebody said you spent the •house in this country is trying relatives. A dance and reception t h e a f f a i r . te their horn - in Milwaukee. '•""•'' Before her marriage Mrs. Dean were: held at the Medical Arts Reservations may. be made by week-end with t h a t brilliant I hard to find jobs for two cf its • , Jewish employees, who must be was entertained by the following: tearoom. calling Mrs. J . Kaplan, Webster Mrs. Nathan Gitnick, Mrs. Joe Out-of-town guests included: 5454, or Mrs. S. Okun, Webster that- the Sintons, Phyllis, Walter, jf i r e d because of orders from Ber" E l ' Rothkop, Mrs. J. Kahz. Miss Re- Mr. and Mrs. J. Jl. Baker of Den- 1642. . . . . and the rest of the gang, left F n - j i i n . . . t.- Ecle S a m . s reTenE6 exi e in becca and-Miss Bess Kirshen- ver; Mr. M. Norick of Wilmibgand spent the holiday m Chi- j 2 g e n t s a r e c n the trail of Kax \baum, Mrs. Melvin Martin and tbh,'Del.; Mr. and Mrs. J. Khox cago. • ' Schmeling's American income . . . v-irc h r s f - i"; T L •Mrs. Sol Martin, and Miss Sarah arid Mrs. N. Kovick'and family Of Bikur, Choliin The Keu Brannfolser Seitinig, a ing.Zweitel of Grand Island? ! German language paper published Sioux City, and Mr. and Mrs. Abel Fellman. ' Pea "a rt Baker of Milwaukee. r> .-. The meeting of the Bikur Cho- They were in Omaha over the ' i n Neu'Braunfols, Tes., got offi las Fourth.Edythe Krasne of Oak-i Following a two weeks' wedlira scheduled for Monday, July GHX.ISSKX-BERG31AN following nifty about the, straUen L the until land, Neb., was also in town. Miss Frances Bergman, daugh- ding trip in the east, the couple 11, has been " postponed | Nazi organizations in this coun- ( EEd s..z Sugar plum, one tsf the shows Monday, August S.' ter of Mr. and-Mrs. Clarence will make their home in Omaha. I try: "We in the beautiful south wrigit, here has an old Indian wishing Bergman, became the bride, of j can under no circumstances agre^.' nerhev well. You make your wish, put Stewart Gilinsky. son of Mr., and ENGAGEMENT I to such crazy organizations in the i founder cZ Hi; your hands on the well, and if Mrs. I. M. Gilinsky, on Tuesday, ! "Mr. and Mrs. Sam Epstein anwater comes out, your wish will northern states which approve of j Gtmtb.e'-E ', June 2S; The'-wedding took place nounce the engagement of their Jew persecutioas _ s ^ e Ar.f, in the Fern Room of the Black- daughter, Ida, to Mr. Yale Hal- At a dessert, luncheon held last come true. Next time-I go. I'm un-American conflicts" . . . ( thc^1cv-c ; stone hotel with Rabbi Frederick- perin, son of Mrs. Fanny Hal- Thursday in the home, of the new going to wish for a pair of white j and un-Christiaa 1 huaraches. They're all the rage ; JE1T1SH Z Cohn Officiating. president of Hadassah, Mrs. M. perin. ' Dr. Henry Englander will re- j s1 S ^ lz ~_s t~ca n ^ L c_"^t> e . s _eThe bride'1; pown was of white ' No definite wedding date has D; Brodkey, the following chair- here, and even the fellows wear them for beach shoes. ign a s acting registrar of t h e " ~ e rue;>. rr. . . . - r * t c marquisette trimmed with -bow- been chosen. . men of standing committees were • Did ;rou know-that Rose Gold- sign lebrew r a i o n college Hebrew ge this fall I heav.ly gc ^-r-z.zrz. t -1- - . F . knots of white satin ribbon/ The appointed: stein was in Atchison, Kan., over A layman will be named t o I serv.ee t t - t O^:E full 'skirt showed a train "over- VISITING Uf CHICAGO . Membership, Mrs. Mas Cohen; e Ce the Fourth, and that Carol Kul- ! fill the cew position of b-usicess I £f F~r=rcr which•; feU the. tulle veil. She Jean and Irving Gendler left linen shower, Mrs. Ben Brodkey, esh was in Escelsior .„, EOT" -EEI. Springs? j manager a n d registrar . . . Fun-I carried a - bouquet of gardenias Mrs. . Rueben Kulakofsky; last Saturday evening for ChicaBob. Reuben and Sylvia Lurie, jE i e s t crac 3j; a t the meeting of ths quercd VuiYTrl,; and lilies "of the valley. g.o, where they will spend a two j phone, Mrs. Joe Lagman, Mrs. v-c Miss Marjorie Simon of Chica- weeks' vacation. In Chicago they Seymour Cohen; bulletin, Mrs. M.both of Fort Dodge, came into j Central Conferee cf American ths fcci cT f i r r r Floyd R a b b i i s cre dited to Rabbi Isaac! go, was maid of honor. Marion will visit their brother, Charles, F- Levenson; educational. Mrs. Omaha for -the Fourth. T Cohen cf Tarkio, Mo., was a n Gilinsky, brother . of the groom, of Brooklyn . . . nenz.Si.ic scdi.i z and-other friends and relatives. Paul Veret, Mrs. J . H. Kulabof- other visitor. was best man. the Louis - Schmelias . . . I-Ie rcre"r en:
Pioneer Women
sky; gift funa. Mrs. M. F . Levenson; Mrs: David Brodkey; hospitality, Mrs. Jack Bramson,' Mrs. Phillip Levey; child welfare, Mrs. Louis Alberts, Mrs. Henry Belmoht, Mrs. Milton Mayper, gogue. Twenty-fifth and Seward. Mrs. Aaron Rips; luncheon comFriends and relatives are in- mittee, Mrs. Leon Graetz, Mrs.
Following the ceremony a r e - ANNOUNCE BAK MITZVAH ception was Tield for members of Mr. and Mrs. A. Hoffman anthe immediate families. Mr. and nounce the Bar Mitzvah of their Mrs. Gilinsky left for a honey- oh, Selwln, on Saturday, July moon a t ' Troutdale-in-the-Pines, 16, a t the Adass Yeshuren synaColo.
' , ' • ' • •
Su be'I. ECU Z.-t e, £1 wake up in the my head and ses snow topped m o m - | ! u t i o a t 0 m a l ^ e t h " e = ™ T O ^ ^ goes c r t . •-: s tele ,tains through, my window, but it | 7' an honorary. Falasha . . . To -.-hieh Hartford's witty Abraham seems even stranger to have to Feldman, as chairman of the res- j r o c ^ _ sleep with three or four heavy olutions committee, rspoafied in | stc^_ n s . ^ blankets .this time of the year. ,yiag that he cc__ believed - - i• i£^2.otis * I hope • you're enjoying your kind by saj_ „ such en honor ill-advised, i n ' tiqi.e= Arthur Theodore; medical. Mrs. I vacation as much as I am mine. b t \ e c ; ^ - c t ' c r t"> E " r M..M. Barish, Mrs. Arthur Cohen, will visit Denver next week, and •FiPTr of the Rome-Berlin axis and|t 0
Icor
H a d a s s a h Gift "Fund
is the former Miss Sadie TatelThe Hadassah Gift Fund chair- on Sunday, July 10, starting at man. . •• ~• . .man, Mrs. M. F. Levenson, an- 3:30. . " At one period of Jewish hisA _ wrist watch will be given tory the rabbis permitted only nounces that all money received GOES TO NETVV YORK away. ploughmen and sailors to sins at Mrs. Morris Seiner left "Wed- through this fund will go to the their •nork. nesday , evening for New York Jewish National Fund. Those de-
be able to attend . . . What used! to be the swanky. Ciab Kictmaa | in New York is now the Jewish j Philosophers institute—and Har-;
RABBI GRAFMAN- " •' TO LONG BEACH Chicago <JTA)—-L. Elliot Grafman, for the past several years director of the speakers' bureau of the B'nai B'rith Anti-Defamation League, has been named rabbi of Temple Israel, Long Beach, Cal.
5 f. tt.
A
•&M±
ner, as it is a permanent way of rememberance. . The chairman can be reached- at 4 819'Farnam, or by phone, WA'OSoO.
,By Mrs. David EL Newmaa 'Suniitier Siore Eotirs 9 A. EL to 5 P, Si.
Suited Peanut Drop Cookies '.Vz cup butter. ~ i -Vz chp: sugar. .lt-> tablespoons honey. gg 2 Ik cups flour. . II teaspoon salt. 1 Vz teaspoons baking powder. % cup milk. .1 cup seedless, raisins. ?i cup ground salted peanuts (without skins). • Cream butter and add sugar. Then add honey, beaten egg. sifted dry ingredients and milk alternately. Reserve a. s m a l l amount of flour for flouring the raisins. Add raisins and ground peanuts; mix well and drop by teaspoohsf ul on greased cooky sheets about 1 % inch m a r t . Bake in.a 400-degree oven for 12 minutes' or until brown.
i ;
O Sixteenth at'Harney
I j
1
!
. , 1
FRIDAY! We Take Drastic
J
H?*t
i t
•
i (•
!
A
if // A//
_ . , _, ..
Entire Stock P^ I?* v T s3* PL. I 3 L i \
ce;
CENTER*
H»~
Re-Priced- in 3 ' Lov/-Price Groups Values to $12£5 zt
Values to $25 at
. Vslces to $3935 zi
and V/omsn In Attendances MR. WILLIAM ROSE, Licensed f.Iasoear MRS. ELSIE WICKSBURG,
\\
v
I
•i AH
LJ
Licensed Masseuse
Hurry down for this sals toaorrov/. Pic!: frca tlie -, loveliest, coolest, most provocstivs frocks of ths j csacon. Sees 9-15, 12-20, 36-44. ?
STEAM BATHS AND .•; ..MASSAGES -For Men and Wonica Call JA 1366 f oj- Appointxnent or Information
Ccrnars Second Floor >
% ' I
Ccsstd r»5S-
£„"-
T
^ *«. '
• r
}
• —iC' I _•' c " "
. Out-of-town, "guests were: Mrs: Jay Mulhauser, Mrs. Chduncey vited to attend the. service. Stoddard and Mrs. Herman; er of Los Angeles; Mr. and Mrs. -William Alberts; Youth i I'll tell vou what-I think of the the fact that the Falashas ar Louis Greenberg, Mrs." Arthur FOR3LUi DISNER DANCE Mr. and Mrs. I. M. Tretiak en- Aliyah, Mrs. Julius Stein; Motor | city when I write again. now Italian subjects . Bernstein, • Mrs. Meyer Fridstein dinner corps. Sirs. I. W.- Rosenblatt, Mrs. ) but gray-taired Rabbi Lawrence! Affectionately, and Mrs. Charles J . Simon, all of tertained at - a formal A. ! Schwartz of White Plains bronchi i Chicago, and Mrs. Branch Curtis dance last Friday evenihg for Dr. Harry J. Kooper; J. N. F., Mrs. the house with his I-r- j and daughter, Mary Sue, of Kan- and Mrs. Lloyd H. Dean at the Rueben Bordy, Mrs. Irvin C. Le- . P. S. You ought to frame the j down Paiton hotel. vin; program, Mrs. Phineas.Win- three stones I'm sending you. j promtu revision cf aa old fish' sas City, Mo. troub Mrs. Arthur Romm, Mrs. A. They're from the very top of j story in answer to words o£ cauTO WEST COAST D. Frank; rummage, Mrs. Harry Pike's Peak. tion' to the rabbis t y Sob-srt P. * c .a ANNOUNCE BIRTH 'Mr...and Mrs. Sam Canar a n i Reuben, Mrs. William Alberts; Goidffiann, president of the TTnioa ^' ~ ^.-rt "rc~° Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Grossman daughter, Gertrude, left Sunday of Aiaericsn Hebrew Congregh-j E - = I ; - ^ ^ ~ ^ announce t h e birth of a daugh- for a trip to the west coast. They social, Mrs. Sidney Epstein; Sen- HUNGARY INCREASES ior Junior Relations, Mrs. David tions . . . Paraphrasing the storr | c l c s 2 rJrr~~s~~ ter, Roberta Lane, June 27, at will remain for three vreeks. SEVERITY OF LAV/in which", the Talmudist cjtr. i • • • ^-^ f £ " : A. Goldstein, Mrs. J. H. Kulakofthe Clarkson Hospital. down the sign "fresit fish here) sky, Mrs. Irvin C. Levin, Mrs. ira_ Budapest (JTA) — The recent COUSINS CLUB Morris M. Franklin, Mrs. M. F . today" to nothing:, ending- •vritit j f *" BIRTH The Cousins club will meet on Levenson; community co-opera- decree' Implementing the law _ the pciiclii line "Why say l i s t ? . Mr. aud Mrs. Ruddy Mittleman Thursday, July 14, at the home curbing participation of Jews in Y o u c a n smell it all over i t s , , - of Flint, Mich.',- announce the of M. Meyerson in Council Bluffs. tion. Mrs. Irvin Xi. Levin, Mrs. O. Hungarian economy has the ef- i S. Belzer; administration, Mrs. , ~e . | place," Schwarts brought a roarj J birth of a daughter; Rhea Frans e feet of making the law : D B. A. Simon, Mrs. J. j . Friedman, vere, it was painted oat. by ap- i of approval from the rabbis ces, on June 25. The Mittlemans 1I visits'SON Mrs. E. D. Brbdkey. Mrs. T. are former Omahans. Mrs. MitOUld I ZZ? the 20 per cent quota sep-j J e remarked^ Sam Saltzman returned early Cole; courtesy, Mrs. Harold S. arately to the categories of doctleman is ..he former Bernice reseat? Yoa caa smell tL» last week from Chicago where he Barish; publicity, Mrs. Morris M. tors, • engineers and public and resentment throughout the room" Falk. . ha3-been visiting his. son, MarFranklin. . . . . Samuel Sciulrat.= private services, rather than to . . . Rabbi vin, who Is attending NorthwestANNOUNCE BIRTH the total. The decree also de- again held the convention vitis " Jlr. and Mrs. Harry 3. Janger ern University. clares that Christian children of his keen estezaporaneo-us oratory announce the birth of a daughmixed marriages, born after July, and reminded his colleagues, per<rbe Icorof ter; Elaine Marsha, at the Clarkhaps for tee tenth time, i i a t this are to be .resarfied 1919, son hospi'*.!, July 5. Mrs. Janger might be the last time lie trotld j annual picnic at Elmwood park Jews.
confirmaCity, where she will spend several siring to remember weeks visiting with her children. tions, Bar Mitzvahs, marriages, births; deaths, yahrzeits, anniversaries, and all other events by ATTEND AVEODING Mr. and Mrs. Samu. Novak and contributing to the Gift Fund their son, .Harold, are leaving to- may do so by calling Mrs. Levenday for Detroit to attend the son. wedding of their nephew, MaurThe local chairman will mail ice Novak. the recipient a notice immediately and this will be followed by a certificate from the National Hadassah in 'Nefr York. This method of honoring £ri6nds and relatives is a very worth -virile man-
•- T
» P ' ¥*?#'"'
I
• • T
E=
• / - • ••{
I..
ADS GIANT—This is the newest type of plane being installed by the British Imperial Airways for use in continental European service. The huge plane is designed to carry 40 passengers and can attain a • maximum speed of 200 miles an hour. Note the retractable /undercarriages which fold into the high wings. Automobile gives comparative size of the machine.
i
II
F. 3D. E. VTLL D ^ r i C i r r r r - V T A cvrfLc-rir-.- *--c ?n, ,jn<k final touches to this mor.ur^cnt tr_be c^icr're: tz u'.rr^.r., Ohio, by President Roosevelt. Julj" 15. J-I^S mor.uiroT.i nicrks- ihe P'to. vhere Ger.c-rf.1 Arthur St. Clz\r vr.s in?iirurr.;ec; pr'\r?o" o" >,'if Northvest "Territory 02 July IE, 17CC. At leTi-Iiunorsor X. l.f v-es. director of ths Fsasrs.! celebration con:misFi?n.
i I
BEAKS PUP AT IS—Sixteen years for a £og- is about the equivalent of 80 years for a human. So Mike Vella cf Detroit was c:uch surprised when he discovered that his 16-year-old Spite has givers birth to a healthy male puppy. Dog breeders said they had never heard of a "dog so old bearing ca cSs?riag..Bat here is Ldsss, jealously guarding her son. P a S i B O O T B — Considering that major •confUcts'otithe-last quarter centiiry have begun :in>5July,^European observers wonder' what, if -"'anjrthingiwiU ;happen in July, 1938. The World. :;War.: started July 28, 1914; Italy invaded Ethio•pla'-to; July.vl935; the Civil War started in Spain, *Jt|Iy,ilD,t;i936,'and the Japanese invaded China, ';July;28,;1937.* Above are scenes indicative of the fr^TrMd General Clarence R. Edwards
congratulates first men in his Yankee (26th) Division -. to - receive the Croix de Guerre, in France. Inset, Italians struggle with a 120-mm. gun on the. northern front in Ethiopia. Center, anxious, civilians in Barcelona, Spain/ watch the return of Insurgent air bombers. Bottom, road near Shanghai, China, choked .with troops and supplies for the Japanese army. Highly dangerous forces are now creating'new; fears.
o c ?•' i": ru?-s
will res~a,ia ours; n o Fiirrender." i>bc?"e. p h;:^p f5' treii cf Dr. l^CirosIav Tyrs on a hoa^s ir. I^rc^'uc. "D: Trrp founded
/?•/
/ p.
m
CSOWN WARD — This picture of 2-year-old Lance HaugwitzReventlow. son of the former Barbara Hutton, was made at a distance, showing him with his nurse in the grounds of his heavily guarded home at Winfield House, Regents Park, London. His mother recently placed him under the protection of the British courts and the Crown, as a ward in chancery.
}<V "" - V - ' ' S ' ,
-
>
K1
-•EOiaB.BUN SENSATION—Bob Seeds, left, home run sensation •who hit four,circuit clouts in one game and has continued his slugging. :The iNew. York Giants substitute left fielder is; shown .v/ith-iiis-teainiuate Mel Ott. Giants third baseman. Seeds was ^purchased from the Newark Bears of the International League.
SOCIETY AT BXKSES.—Scion of a widely -known Neir York family is William Rhinelander Stewart, left, shown ES S guest ct a recent dinner on the Starlight Roof cf the "tv aldorf-Astoria, Ne^" York. With him is Mrs. Robert Hays Smith, prominsnt society matron of San Francisco. Mrs. Smith's black dinaer govn was banaed with sequins and double row cf psarls.
ACCUSED—.Count Curt Haugwitz-Reventlow, handsome Danish nobleman, haled into a London court by his wife, the former Barbara Hutton, on a charge of using threats, which put her "in bodily fear."
P
TflUSTN'T THROW STONES—MUlion-doUar Glass Center buUding designed for the New York World's Fair and to be built largely of glass. It will house the exhibits of three leading glass producers. This model shows the 108-foot tower of blue plate glass. About 6.00Q square, feet of structural glass and 7,000 square feet of glass blocks will be used. •
ruple • torpedo tubes,: especially planned f or - QUic& attac&s in featttle. •I '
THE 3ETTISH PEESS—FRIDAY. JULY ?, 1PS5
T&ge
the ocean -while cursing you." ' phasis. Tiie other d^.y, trj ing- to "But, father, we will lose our cl nfy something for hi« crc-t he began waving wildly. "Please entire fortune'" ' "My son, is it not better to bestop," remonstrated the ten-rerpoor and alive, than rich and center, "I left ray glasses at i o a e , and I1can't see a thi-z dead?" ' The next morning a heated ar- you're Baring! ' gument arose bet-ween the aged .As Sztcusioa of tho Jewish Gonunxniity Oeate? Jew and his son. The young n a n Maybe that Rainer-Odet** h?r£called his father a miser, who holding so proxniEeat in the starved widows and orphans to prints, teas merely a precaution— Good Shabbath boys and girls his blood go cold. Who knows, he passed all the Inhabitants of thesatisfy his greed. The father, in to keep from co-s to blows. ! of Jewish Popiulsitlon of the Junior Jewish Press!' thought, "whether the father of. settlement, young . and old, with turn, rebukefi his son for being Many of the fsn-isafrs were j disobedient. A group of sailors caught., with a lapful of lovey- \ We hope you hare all had a this tiny tot hasn't just fallen the exception of those guarding New Impoverished dovey stories about the pair. Fact j very nice Fourth of July and front; a murderous bullet. And the the fields and groves, which they were watching them. 3y Killer The argument grew hotter and is . . . the split was something of i had planted -with -tears and tendare enjoying your vacation. We lessons -ended early that • day. a shock to Luise . . . she was so j ivonld l i t e to hean, from yon, " Their Forest Gone upset after filing of the papers, i Vienna fWNSI—Thirty tntmboys and girls. We" vsisfa you How did the evil:tidings reach de vith lowered heads, and tears j and pulled out the trunk of she didn't report t o . work for«j sand Jewish employes, of some wroia-.write to us and let n s the ; children? I n ' the afternoon • ^ l l e d . i n ^ t h e eyes^f many__as f bin Jewish-owned business enewels. Quickly he inserted the nearly a week. j 10,COO know what you are doing this they congregated, in the .school they saw- how griefstricken and key terprises in Vienna were nddefi to ana raised the cove?. summer and how you are grounds; and all of them knew sorrowful" their children were -at the mounting- relief rolls here Overboard "With the Jewels spending* your time. « that a : watchman had been the sight of. the handsome, gracewhen their employers regretfully "Marie Antoinette" -will unfold i 'You were once as precious to ful trees loaded In the wagons "This'..week vre have a story wounded and four-hundred trees me; as these jewels," t i e father in glory at a Premiere of Pre-! SETiOur.ced eir ircmediate dise n t i t l e d , "THE FALLEN •uprooted — the entire grove like so much-manure. shouted, "but now, I despise them niieres nest week . . . no advance; missal on orders from Nazi orIn a Cemtaon Grave • TREES". It tells how dear the which had been planted by the preview will take the edge off. ' too,- for having brought us ; toganizations. PracrThe funeral procession entered gether aboard this ship." trees are to our people in Pal?, children themselves. For them it The film runs 14,500 feet or two j dismissals were carried ' cstine and Tiovr mnch they,, was as though the very skies had the school play-ground. • The "Look Look! cried a sailor. and one-half hou-s! "S'orS was ioutThe s. denial by NED! offimean to them. "We can binder- fallen. Their grove of pines no children unloaded the tender, "He's lifting the trunk. Stop him! begun on it more than two years • cials,despite Josef Bnerckel, stand that for we realize how longer existed! Three years ago broken saplings to the sound of He's throwing it into the sea!" ago by the late Irving Tkalberg. j Reich including: commissioner tor Austria. and threw •bare- and rocky the land was on the fifteenth, day of Shevat suppressed weeping, 'Too late!" somebody else And sight unseen, we'll nominate :thai any official orders to that : before- .the Jewish pioneers <Arbor Day) the school-children them . into the pit. ..;" They filled cried out, "he's thrown It over- it for the A¥ARD picture cf the effect had been issued. Nevertheplanted the first Tiundred the pit again with'earth, and one came and then howranchsac-Tiad ; year. " ! less the orders were carried put board." rifice, work, and hardship went saplings and year after year they boy, an orphan said the -Prayer The - rest of the voyage was 100 per cert. At the same time I into the planting of these tt>ees. had added the same, number; and for the Departed, but broke off spent in peace. Three Strrs: Sara Jaffe re-i thousands cf other Jews etui em- j Our second story, is entitled," now the entire grove had gone. in the.middle in a flood of bitter "When they arrived at theiij ceives the leading role in "Gnng-a I ployed by Aryans were tlso cis- f "THE JEWEL DEALER," a Only a few weeks earlier on thetears in which lie was joined by destination, the father and son' Din." Shirley Deane gets the |misseS. The effect cf the, fi:slittle story which comes from thirty-third day of the Omer they all 4he others. told their story to the police. stellar spot ia "Safety ia Xua- i missals is to impoverish nearly had spent the day there for the Palestine and which wo are One of the teachers roused him-, last time; each child had hoed self to put heart Into them. "May They had the crew arrested im- bers." A i d if "Patent-Leather ' SO per cent of the Jewish popusure you.will enjoy. mediately. The . sailor who had Kid" is resiade as conteicplated, ' lation since- large numbers of the ground all around the trees be strong, children," broken into the ?H man's cabin John Jules Gsrfield will be.given ; Jews are already jobless as a reYOCR AXFST XAOMI he had: planted, had patted the your.hands said he, "He who gave us thewas found, to bave a pocketful of the^star part. i sult of "being barred from the profresh green branches and hadstrength to.; cover this desolate fessions and civil service posts. once again called the trees "by the land in so few years with thou- jewels. Theatened with a long Ben Bine had a brilliant idea All dismissed employes were denames they had been given when sands of trees will aid us to plant prison sentence, he confessed his planted-names of the tribes of is- a hundred a n d a thousand tor ev- part In the plot. Then the others . . . he would stand in front of nied severance PET. confessed also. the. Balalaika cafe, greet the raelY of. prophets, poets, heroes, ery tree . that was slain!" Meanwhile. B-aerckel tol By Ari Ibn-ZahavThe judge sentenced the crew stars, have a. hearty latish when I conference of foreign correspon- , ; and the great saints of the world. "Tomorrow well go and plant! • In t h e ' E m e t the children.; had Now; each child pictured to himtbey recognized hira. Bedecked i dents that the Jews ought to "'be to. work and pay off the loss in.never seen.rain during the month self "the slain trees lying one Tomorrow!!' The word - passed curred by the two Jews. The sail- in a RawBsian uniform he waited • glad" that the Nazi revolution is of June. And. so they knew that against the other _on the moist through the assembled children; ors' possessions were sold. The expectantly . . . ehiftingly . . . ; Austria "is not on the French or the heavenB must be weeping. In-, black earth like corpses on a bat- and with the words a new spirit money received from them were droopily . , , bnt nary a Dusen- | Russian pattern." The Jewish nocent people -murdered b y ' evil tlefield. How dreadful it was! of resolve entered their breasts. given -to the father and son toberg bove over tee Beverly crest. • question, he said. "rstnrslly Next day a'board was set uphelp pay for the loss of the jew- Finally decided to go in and rest , CE-ases problems, particularly in men lurking in ambush are Human beings can defend themhis weary feet. Imagine his sur- ! a city overfilled "sriili Jevs {or mourned and lamented by their selves, but the trees are fixed in over the big mound. On it els. prise to find the door locked! It i many years. I work os the theory kindred: but the trees that bad the ground and- are as helpless as written large and fair, in child"Even if we had net been paid was the one night in the week been destroyed, those thousands babes in their cradles—and they sh script, this epitaph: letting the little ones Elone for our loss," said the father to The common- grave of trees, " the son later, "it would still have that the restaurant remains i: of of fruit trees and ornamental had fallen! In spite of all their .Four and grabbing- the big ones. TTe Hundred souls in all, closed. trees which had been burnt, cut .-utility they -were thought to have Aged three years, two years, a been better to be poor and alive : work fcr Aryaniia-tior, but it down.or uprooted, were wept, and no right of existence! • Life was I must be- done lepally. Ky own than rich and dead." year. Blurbs: Rumors have it that ! entirely private feeling is that mourned for by the ski^s over- intended not for them but for And babies three months old." Sylvia Sidney and Luther Afiler ; the Jews should be rerncrec frcm , Night after night distant shots thorns and thistles and savages. head. were secreUy Hymenized before j productive industry and from c'"lcould be heard in the settlement, The children were "astonished, ashe sailed for Europe. Patricia ' tural pursuits where they rnigrht coming from the groves, the for- hamed and deeply hurt, but there Ellis bleaches again because her ' endanger. thR nation. But Jev-s. est and the thicket; and morning was no despair among them. JewA new feature made its debut friends, didn't recognize her ES a j have certain international capaciwhen the sun rose the watchmen ish children are the descendants in the last issue of the "Camp brunette. A reissue of "King of I ties, ana I see no obstacle to their . gathered together before the cen- of those wbo' came forth from By Ben Siraj Akiba Tattler." A thrilling car- Kings" won't be the "evasion of engaging in esporting and foreign tral building, with never one of Egypt and went up from "BabyMany, many years ago there toon, "The Mystery of the Haunt- ! much rejoicing . . . the original trade." them missing. The grown-ups lon; count'back to Ezra, JJehemPass," is being written and 'release WES no aid toward reBuerckel announced that 3,7EO worked in the field with a watch iah" and Zerubabel, to the victims lived an aged Jew who had aned drawn by Norman Zevitz, Donald ligious tolerance . . . and that was persons had been arrested by the set over them; the" children went of the Inquisition and to the.Bilu, only son.'Both were jewelers and Rice and Arnold Linsman. the first-pioneers in Palestine; B. H. Winds seem favorable for Nazis and that 150, half of them used to travel from country to to school with their hearts unBInnie Barnes and her . ex-heshad been sent to the Daceasy because of those who were the blood, of a people trained to country to visit their customers. The Chonim Alezim girls have band. Sain Joseph, to call on a Jews, patience and full of hope, and It happened: once that they sailhau concentration camp. Ke deworking or keeping g u a r d . faith 1 been serenading each other durthrough their veins. ed i o a'distant land to visit" a rabbi. Tne faculty of the Maxnied that -a rau?o~ .had been de"Where have they Bet. fire to' an- ..-'.. flows The l o s t Children Reinhardt school has listed Ed- manded for the release of Baron diamond dealer. They brought ing the rest period. other' orange-grove?" the childward Robinson as instructor and Louis Rothschild, saying "Kothswith them-a; trunk filled-with diaren^ would ask their teacher. New campers last week were Paul Muni as teacher of AD- child is being detained in & Vienfour that afternoon, when monds, jewelry, and various gold "And how many trees were de- theAtpolicemen Geraldine Wine, Warren Dennen- VANCED acting. Unusual as our na, prison and his pronertf is feewith their trinkets. • stroyed .during.the .night?"-Did dogs and 'onereturned of the watchman The sailors..on board 'the ship berg, Larry Solig, Ann Eisten- weathers is the fact that Mrs. ing- administered fcr* s. commisthey fire at the. .standing corn came to the ruined', ? they knew the old- man-kept a1 locked statt, : Phyllis "Wohlaer, Eileen Lubitsch wrote a story that her sioner. "We 'regard him a*-g. crimagain?";. '.-' ".,/,''•;'',/ stood stock-still in grove, Phyllis Wintroub and husband WANTS to direct. amazement. trunk, in his cabin, and they be- Gotsdiner, inal ace; there is no <juestioi> el 1 Two tiny bodies lay outstretched came very curious. They-decides! Shirley Dolgoff. releasing hira. Ke must receive • Ifew 'Desecrations The Great Sam expressed a de- 'QOC-5.—,-ef r">rirrrr.rrt." The teacher would calm them. on the ground. The watchman to find what it "cbntained.- 'One of the Chosirn side to meet "Mrs. Mai—Mrs. ; "The night passed quietly," -he dashed overto:them in sudden day while the father • and son The captains ball team are Harriet Mala—prop!" . , . but discovered . would reply. But the children, terror; at the sound of his'feet were sitting on;deck, a sailor" opr Alezim looking, (at him, knew otherwise. and to bis great relief, they raised ened their cabin-door with a pass- Parker and Gertrude Rosenblatt. she wasn't in the Social register! key, entered their room, and Duringg the break . the little • ones their their heads. "The children are all searched EvaChesler and Eleanor Fred-their belongings for the Heigh Ho! Off to print we g-o. ' cc;r,:-T. :.:r.ry ri .'.- — -' f-- -1 —-. ld fed S J I d ox oS the rg -ri-gbit"-—ke: cried, -joyfully; -to-r-ine would -fercrwd S J - oxte roS - the; policemen. . kin' won the Chicadees ball connothing key to the trunk, but of no avail. J policemen. -".There li "Th J " nothing bigger -boys who: had seen- the wrongl" .Looking." down.vatt 1-the He could not find it. Before leav- test. L k i " paper-at, home, and he -would-.TSr children" again, but ing, however, he went over to. the late.what had been happening. stopped and h!shis'hea'rt-all filled with, big box and tried to open. it. He The visit last week to the FairXeaT Herzlia they had destroyed tears They were .eyes lying on a could not even budge the lock. mont Creamery was described ia thousands of fruit-trees; at Beer- tiny little mound,each from.-which This made him very angry. Ut- the "Tattler" by Emma Ann Mcn Jacob -two hundred- . trees- bad •protruded • the end , of a branch. tering a vile curse, he kicked the "intosh.: w: L L L. vr been uprooted;.,,. three thousand The policemen approached and in trunk. He Tras just on the point trees had. been burnt . and. cut a choking; voice the ; "watchman of leaving when he noticed^ that down in the Balfour Forest; the said to them, "They have buried his kick bad dislodged a little threshing-rioor with everything the fallen- trees." The two police- door on.the left side-of the trunk that was on it had been;set alight men, Jiatives of distant .Scotland, a\id in it;-was the key. " " ; at Mishmar Haemek.- And theexchanged . . Precious Jewels glances pf commisershocked'children would return to ation and.:nodd«d their -heads In It took" him bnt a few seconds their class- -without any more sorrow. Then they _pa.tted - the to raise the lid. Before him was heart ,for their lessons. Instead — Three decades heads ofthe two weeping childheart , r t t i t h r thejr a. huge glittering heap ^of • dia- agoHollywood f l i t i Izxy Baline, a singing; waiter ren,' picked them lip and brought of listening- to t i e teacher .thejr. monds, rubles, sapphires, and Xigger Mike's on the Bowery, kept on looking out of the 'win- them home: other precious gems. He scooped at used to drop in at the corner Next morning all the children up dow, staring at the pinercovered a handful of blood-red stones, drug store to talk to the clerk, hill facing the. school.. Some of the school knew that Benja- locked the lid, replaced the key among'them could still remember min and Avigdor had-dug graves and ran to* tell his friends what Joe Schenck. The boys were pood how bald and -bare it. had once for their trees. During the inter- he had seen in the cabin of <the friends. Sometimes Izzy, had to bring a customer in fcr first-aid been — and who was to know val the two little boys told their old Jew. •:. ^ . treatment . . . or Joe would stop what it might look like again the companions, who gathered round That evening the son was s ; them in the play-ground, all that iting alone* on deck near some in a t Izzy's place for a snack. next day? . . . Both were ambitious and deterThere was a whispered conver- had happened; nor were they boxes watching the .dismal mined, to rise from their sordid sation between two of the child- aShamed to, tell of the scolding jhuge pcean. .A number of. sailors sat ren. "The burnt trees." .said one they had received from -their down hear the boxes and began to surroundings. Today Joe Schenck is chairman of the board o£ "go straight up to heaven just mothers for going to so danger-softly.. The young man beard Twentieth -.. Century-Fox, which like the Jews who were martyred oiis .a.spot at such a time. And af- talk the following conversation: produced "Alexander's Rag-Tiiao to tallow the Holy name." "Yes," ter hearing them out, all the chil. . And he said it was full Band," featuring Saline's (cow said;his companion," " a soul can- dren resolved- to dig a great com- «f ".gems and gold and diamonds not be burnt or cut up. When the mon grave for the saplings and ^s. big as your thumb-nail. Now IBerlin) melodies. The associatrunk falls the soul flies aloft seedlings that had been murder- Save-a-plan to get hold of it all tion, thus brought about, seals a S(?-year ftiendsbip. at once, and when the fire takes •ed. : : :.. . with very little trouble."' hold of the branches the soul After the interval three Of the "It's about time we got somespreads out in the smoke and children told the teachers of their thing good." another voice said, An audience of Hollywood's goes up. to heaven that way.". plan. The teachers tried to dis- "we're .all with you, so spill the elite mamas and juniors, crowded , 5 Stern as the teacher tried, to look, suade them, but the children beg- plot." into a real circus tent -where a ; " he could not ia "his heart be an- ged.and pleaded for permission to "Tomorrow at noon," genuine show of clowns, mathe- first gicians, etc., was put oa by the gry with them. He also "was un- do as they wished. One of theTOice continued, "three of us will able to concentrate on the lesteachers went to report to t h etall the young fellow over to th< daughter of Al G. Barnes. Near?**' f*$ f": sons. All the other adults w£re in members of the Parent's Commit- railing of the deck. A group of by stood a refreshment table ladL - - •». _ v the fields, making the rounds j of tee, and in the meantime, the others will walk by and accident- en with all sorts of goodies, a u ». v J. ' the .'thickets, their lives in /peril children took their own school Jy shove him into the ocean. It cake in the form of a circus tent, every moment; while he had to hoes and borrowed others from teron't be difficult to overpower doll favors of- clowns, monkeys, stay" in the central building just the nearest houses, and began to the riders. Looked like a ^ r ^ ^y ^ old 'man. Then we'll divide bare-back Irasgia®—a cestpIeS-s as though he were one of thed i g a deep, wide pit. -The- teacher the booty. Goldwyn production . . . but 'twas Does everyone agree?" children. That, night, he- decided, returned with two policemen and a kiddie party in the "GrauP f A murmur of assent -went just he would go out on guard; it was two wagons, took Eome of thearound. man" manner to celebrate Joan impossible to say in bed: Benny's (Jack's missis) fonrtn older boys and left for the up- • Another Scheme Home For Jfews . rooted grove. All the smaller lad hurried to the cabin milestone on itne'celluloid trail. At noon the children went children who:'had not helped to andThetold' all that he home to ask the news, of their dig the grave,; waited at the end tad heard.hi3 father When excited, Milton Berle re• ' mothers and'big sisters; their of, the village. The news spread - "My son," the father said, "to- sorts to wig-wagging for enifathers and older brothers were and t i e workers came to lend the morrow at ten o'clock you and 1 out in the fields, and the child- children a hand; when the grave their plans. At that ren, saw them but seldom. And was ready they all waited for the time break we will have a violent argruin the afternoons they would ga- return of the wagons. ment on deck. Fear not to throw thertogether In little.groups and Build - - Modernize .Burial of. the Trees abuse at me. I will curse you as gravely converse of ;the sacrifices AH was dead still as the creak a disobedient son: Finally,;I will Re-Roof - Re-Sido of man and tree, their little of the" approaching wheels was drag out the trunk of jewels,-' MitCl2, i 3^ < l ' GET FREE ESTir^ATC hearts overflowing with, grief heard, ~ and - a quiver passed open the lid, and throw it into and ,pain. . . through the-throng of little ones. ' ^ CC. lt.was-a very Bad morning in- The small children hid in their 19th ;& Nicholas deed when the ^heavens' wept. At mothers.' skirts, while, the older JA r~r Patronize Our Advertisers home the grown-ups were- white' ones bowed their heads.1 in the face, and every now and The tender, saplings on the wagagain half-suppressed sighs would ons looked like corpses from, a escape them. "What has happen- battle field, whose faces have not ed?" asked the children. "Noth- yet darkened under the shadow of ing at all," they were told, and deata;' the •pine-needles'"were' still that was all that could be learnt fresh and,'green. . But the branfrom their parents. But .when ches swayed to the motion of t?ie they lookedthey outsaw of the windows | wagons . like dead bodies. The _.,.. ^ —j-y^ j " p at school policemen, ' with dogs sniffing at the;ground; j children wept, as they .pointed Uca Cui* ILzzz-' Pcjiiiciii and tfj^y stood at the window, j out broken and uprooted trees to staring.-Something must have j one another, saying, .-"Isn't--that 'happened' after all. "Yes," ., the j my B'ar-Kochba? .That loots like teacher'-thought it best to tell King David." "And : the ••ere them, "sowiefhlns .-..did.;-happen that was .trodden underfoot "mi:;; fc_-^-i i&J, They destroyed a lot of trees dur- be Judah Halevi -who was also ings the night, but not in our dis- trodden underfoot by the hoofs of tricts. The "children grew fright- a' foeman's horse . »'•.". Gazing ened as they thought of the dan- sorrowfully r t the branches, each. Ca=2L2 Dry Gic-.c? ger in which their fathers and Child tried.to. recognize the trees brothers found themselves,' and wbica" he himself-had"/ planted. Z1Z £c. J3li one "of them burst out -'"crying.. |'The wasrons moved •"'slowly;., and "Daddy, iiaddyl" The teacher felt behind them and da either s:ds
Mr
Edited by Aim£ Naomi
t
Camp Notes
^—
^p»-i
V
.j..^j.«,,.
r
\
ii.
i
v
'
i,' i'
cr "' cc ,
Hi
r
f r r ' - .
*
i. 1
\$
c::v
t
4
THE JEWISH-PRESS-PEIDAT, JULY 8, 1935
Page S
1 tured spot in M-G-Mfs forthcom- dollars eaci Tresk . . . Jergess Eleanor FcveH -rnscle a TECRtjon corrTTy fe'rffirams from s. mustMOVE T O ' C L O S E • .- . ing' "Sweethearts'" . . '. With Tony h-s rei ewesl the Wonderful Wla- trip to New York via. the Faaaras I d a s . eskitled'Abe urrxx-.n, ElcaJloi • CHICAGO GHETTO Martin,. Milton is auditioning '.a. chell's air. contract rppins t i s Canal last spring, .the CE.pti.iii of '-is a. vnsr g:irl iitoce ciEfs.
Part. "While in Denver they visited with Sybil Merlin.
Chicago, (WNS) ^— The end of Chicago's Maxwell Street;market, widely -known as the: pushcart center of the Windy City's ghetto, was predicted.when Jewish businessmen, in the South S i d e launched a campaign to eliminate the market. ' A. Lincoln Wisler, president of the South Side Hebrew institute, called the "market a "cancerous growth gnawing at the vitals of American Jewry" and a breeding place of anti-Semitism. ' '
'iew radio £how for.sponsor consumption only, for possible fall contract . . . . Reminds us: Someone asked expectant father Phil Berl whether fee. hoped for. a boy or a girl.. "S'po fiif/erence," "said Phil stoutly,.'"Just so it's a Berl!" . ./ Coldest proposition at a party tbl other evening when Lionel Stander was trying to raffle off p.a' original manuscript-was Cfclco Mars . ,•. "Look," he grumbled, "the last manuscript I bought cost me $11,000* in a plagiarism suit. No more, thanks" . . . is "Millie DeGrasse," Fannie Brice will submerge the Baby'Snooks ejement of her libido.and go back to! comedy .dance antics which won. her fame, with; Ziegfield,. inher. next filzmsical, "Honolulu" . . . Mr.. and Mrs. North America By DICK CHASE are keeping their h a n d s so smooth and lovely that America's MERRY-GO-ROUNDUP — Ben One-Man Newspaper is now drawP. Schulberg, the man who dis- ing down an additional thousand covered Clara Bow and who developed such stellar personalities FRADENBURG;. WEBB, BEBER, as Marlene Dietrich, Emil Jan•KLUT2NICK AND KELLEY, nlngs, Sylvfi Sidney, Frederic 'Attorneys March, George Bancroft and Gary - SSS Union State Bank" Die's. Cooper,- is now bn the staff ~f - NOTICE OF INDEBTEDNESS Selznick-International, after two Notice Is hereby' given that all exyears as an independent producer isting debts cf Ti'olf Brothers oj^the . . . : Busby Berkeley will. direct 31st day of December. 1S37, amounted to the sum cf Sis Thousand Nine Mark Hellinger's "Comet f Over Hundred Dollars and Broadway" for Warner Bros. Sixty-one Twenty-Eight cents (S6.928.-S1.). . . . Since filing divorce action ' .. SAMUEL N. WOLF, against " Clifford Odets, Lulse • - President. Rainer had knocked off work at ;L . SAJItTEt, N. :WOLP, REBECCA WOLF. M-G-M . . . Her resumption ' of "Being a. majority of : the Board 61 chores on the set of "The Great Directors. . ' . . . . . . . Waltz" last week was accompanied by rumors of reconciliation . . . Milton Berle, for whom RKO has grown gaunt-eyed in a hunt for a proper vehicle—and all the while Mrs. Berle's • Baby Boy drawing down ^2,500 weekly honorarium—may get a fea-
Mr. and Mrs. Lou Kuklin, 1109 Recommend 'Interneship' West Second, will leave Saturday of Year for New evening'for a motor trip to DenRabbis ver, Colo., ' and Torrlngton and Cheyenne, Wyo., where they will Tannersville, N. Y. (JTA)—A visit friends and relatives. one-year^ "interneship" for rabbis was proposed, by the Rabbiflcal Mrs. Rosa Kaplan, 1109 West assembly, closing its 38th annual T h e 18th annual Talmud .Torah picnic will be held Sun- Second, has received word that convention at the Falrmount hoday, July 10, at Riverview park, her son, Dr. David Kaplan, haa tel. The 90 Conservative rabbis beginning at 2:30.- Games, con- been given an appointment in the attending the four-day sessions tests and•: raffles, -with prize Highland hospital at Rochester, adopted a resolution asking their awards, have been arranged. Sevparent body, the Jewish Theologeral surprise stunts and refreshical " Seminary» of America, to ments are promised.- Profits Mrs. Ben Chasen, Syracuse, broaden Its four-year course into from.the event will be used for Neb., will arrive this week to be a five-year curriculum, in the last the - Hebrew school. a guest in the home of her year of which the rabbi would General chairman for the af- mother, Mrs. Rose Kaplan. gain practical experience In his fair la Mr. Max Friedman. Mr. profession by serving under anPhilip Merkin of Tulsa, Okla., other rabbi or serving in a small Maurice Satin is food chairman; Mr. Max Falk, Mr. Joe Gorchow, a former Sioux CItyan, is a guest community which has no rabbi. transportation chairmen; Jack in the I. Merkin home. The .convention also promised Robinson,, raffle : chairman; Mr. to exert efforts to raise $100,000' Misses Dorothy Merlin, Saretta to save, the seminary , from the A. M. Davis, Dr. Dave Rodin, game chairmen; Mr. Louis Shind- Krlgsten and Fanny -Rosofsky necessity of curtailing its curler, food booth chairman; Mr. M. spent the week-end at Okoboji, riculum. The action wa3 taken Seff, Mr. M. Gorchow, gate ticket Iowa. after Dr. Louis Finkelsteln, prochairmen; Mr.- Hyman Shiloff, vost of the seminary, had told out-of-town publicity. Chairmen >3lr. Al Arno of Des Moines was the 1 delegates that the board of of committees are Mrs. A. Bain, a visitor in the home of Mr. and directors had decided that the Mrs. A.1 S. Felnberg, Mrs. M. E. Mrs. B. Schlndler over the week- seminary could not be conducted Friedman, Mrs. James Gang, Mrs. end. on a deficit basis and would have li.' Shlndler, Mra. Jacobson, Mrs. to close one or - more of its deA. li. Welner, Mrs. 1" Matlin and Ervan Maron of San Diego is a partments unless sufficient funds Mrs. J. D. Maron. Assisting the visitor in the home of his par- were raised during the • coming committee chairman are: Mr. ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Maron. year. . Harry Holdowsky, Mr. S. Snovv Establishment of machinery to sky, A. Z. A. members, E. N. Mr. William EIrenberg and Grueskln, R. H. Emlien, Lester daughter, Esther, and Margaret survey the work of "free lance" Heeger, Milton Mushkin, Sam Kozberg. and Dorothy Wlgodsky rabbis-and to check the abuses Mptnan, J. Gorchow, L. Feinberg, left this week for a motor trip resulting frpm • there being unJ. Gang,-Mrs. M. •A.^'LazeTe, Mrs.through the Black Hills, Yellow qualified men in the Tabbinate FRADENBURG, WEBB, BEBER, was proposed by Rabbi Jacob KLUTZNICK & KELLEY, Attys. H. EIrenberg, Mrs. I. J. Menln, Stone park and Denver. 200 Union State Bank Bids. Freedman, of Fair River, Mass. Mrs. S. Baron, Mrs. B. Fish and He suggested that the supervision Mrs. E.'Rubinstein. PROBATE NOTICE Esther Relf of St. Louis is a be undertaken by the Synagogue In the Matter of the Estate of guest of Mr. Hy Lotven in the I. Council of America, central or- Goldie Bergrer, Deceased. Merlin home. ' • ganization of all rabbinical asso- Notice Is Hereby Given: That the creditors of the said deceased will ciations. •" . meet the administrator with will anB e n Lebewich *» accompanied nexed of said estate, before me. The convention decided to emMr. and Mrs. J. Shindler, 1715 Jack • Merlin, ; who was elected ploy a permanent field worker, County Judge of Douglas County, Nebraska street; -announce the delegate to the A.-Z: A. conven- one of whose duties would be to Nebraska, at the County Court Room, engagement of their daughter. tion in- Este3 Park. A motor facilitate the placing of rabbis in In said County, on - the 16th day of 1938, and on the 17th day of Miss' Tillle Shlndler, .to Dr. Mil- caravan of 50 cars to the Conti- congregations. Questions c o n - August, October, 1338, at 9 o'clock a. m., each ton Grossman, son of Mr. and nental Divide and a mass horse- cerning -the Rabbinical Assem- day, for the purpose of presenting Mrs.- Sam' Grossman: of Chicago., back ride of 200 riders were fea- bly's attitude toward Palestine, their claims for examination, adjustand allowance. Three months Tfle" wedding will, he an early tures of the entertainment. social justice and welfare work ment are allowed for the creditors to preautumn event. Dr. Grossman Is were referred to- the executive sent their claims, from the 16th day of July, 1938. • council for consideration. a graduate of the school of medicine of the University of ChicaDr. Simon Greenberg of Phila- 6-24-38-3t BRTCE CRAWFORD. County Judge. go and has ' been an Interne, at delphia, was, re-elected president, IRVIN C. LEVIN, Attorney St. Joseph's hospital. for the last and the following other, officers: -763 Brandels Theater Bldg. Dr. Max Arzt, Scranton, Pa;, viceyear. Miss Shlndler left Saturpresident; "Rabbi Leon" S. Lang, • s . Dorotho Saltzmas ; day evening for a tworweek visit NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION j- A-^meeting was called Wednes- Newark, Nv J., treasurer; Rabbi in Chicago. .s In the County Court of Douglas Arthur H. Neulander, New York, day, June 29, by Mr. Simon 'shyCounty, Nebraska: !Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Epstein, ken dtnd Mrs.:Julius Katelman for recording secretary, and Rabbi IN THE MATTER OP THE ES2926 Pierce street, announced the reorganlzatioii of the Chevra Ralph Simon, New York, corre- TATE OP Alex Siskind, Deceased. sponding secretary. The follow- All persons interested In said es; ; , tho engagement of their daugh- Kadisha. tate are hereby notified that a petiwere added to the executive tion ter, Miss Dorothy Epstein, to,Dr. The ; newly elected/officers are ing has been filed in said Court alcouncil: Jacob Bosniak, New leging that said deceased died leavArnol Naftalin, son of Mr. and as follows:' . York;' Samuel Fredman, Philaing no last will'and praying for ad:Mrs. M. A.' Naftalin -it Fargo, N. Presfdeht: Sam Sacks. • : delphia; Jacob Freedman, -Fall minlstraton' upon his estate, and that D., at a buffet supper" In their Secretary: Sam Rosenthal. a hearing be had on said petition tiver, Mass.; S. Joshua Kohn, before saidwill home1 Thursday evening. ~-Miss court on the 23rd dav of Treasurer: Louis Katelman. .Itlca, N. Y.; Gershon Hadas, July, 1938, and that if they fail to Epstein Is a.' graduate dental Kansas City,' and Isidore Hoff- appear at said Court on the said "3rd hirgienist,' having completed work Therer will be a meeting of the man, New York. day of July, 1938, at 9 o'clock A. M. at the University of Minnesota In B'hai B rith Lodge Monday, July to contest said petition, the Court "According to the law, our de' June; 1937. . may grant the same and grant ad11, at 8f30 H :lsidn is that of a Jewish divorce ministration of said estate to Harry . Dr. Naftalin la a graduate ot Siskind or some other suitable pers necessary, for the annulment the dental school of the Univerr Junior, Hadassah-Is spon- )f a civil marriasre," Rabbi Isaac son and proceed to settlement there-- - • ; . . sity of Minnesota, and-spent, the soring an: aidVance'ticket sale for Slein of Springfield, Mass., re- of. BRTCE CRAWFORD. : last year as a dental interne in the motion picture, "Cocoahut ported in a paper on "The Case 7-I-38-3t County Judge. the U. S. public health service in Grove," which will be shown at )f Civil Marriage According to Philadelphia. The date for the the Strand Theater, "July 17, 18, Tewish Law.1' Touching on the wedding ha3 not been set. 19, 20, 21. ' >roblem of the "agunah" (de.i r Proceeds "will go to aid the ;erted wife), Rabbi Klein said ' Mr. Samuel Saitlln of Alex- Senior Hadassah' in their "Youth hat "we woull adhere to the rabJ andria, S. D., son of Mr. and Mrs. Allyah" work. The national chap- »lnic tradition of stretching the A. SaWln of this city, and Miss ter of Hadassah is striving to aw as far as possible to relieve Roberta' Welssman, daughter of transport young Jews from Cen- lie plight of the women. In all Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Welssman tral Europe to Palestine before other cases we should decide that of Chicago, were united in mar- September 30, when Immigration a Jewish divorce is necessary." riage Sunday evening in the quotas, will be limited. Dr. Solomon Goldman of Chio Sovereign hotel, Chicago. Rabbi Tickets may he obtained from cago, delivering the Morris LeAdam • Newburger performed the any Junior Hadassah member. vine Memorial lecture in Hebrew it's churned marriage ceremony. . On "Judaism and the Universe," The bride wore a white marMrs. Max Harris left Saturday eaid that Judaism was not a from. quisette gown - of Grecian lines for a ten day trip to Fremont, metaphysics and hardly a theoand a veil- of Brussels lace and Nebr. -She is being accompanied logy, but ^"concerns itself • priSweet .Cream tulle. Her bouquet was of lilies by her daughter, Betty Lou. marily with social living, buttressed by law." He said: "Pure of the valley. . . ':. Ina Barbara Welssman of ChiNorman Abrahamson, ; son of speculation leading nowhere or cago, a neice 'of the bride, and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Abrahamson, Reading to specious rationalism Joan LaMaskin . of' Chicago. were returned home- Monday, July 4, Was always discouraged. Hegel•flower girls..-. ^ after spending several weeks in ianism could be transformed into Nazism. Reason, unfortunately, Mivand Mra. Saitlin will be at Flint, Michigan. • ms been made to perform many home after, July 15, a t Alexanmagic trick and rite. The law dria." Sioux Cityana who attend- • Floyd Yudelson spent t h e tlaved the Jewish people from ed' the wedding were Mrt and week-end visiting friends In Kan- nese aberrations." . Mra. A. Saitlln. Misses Eva and saa City, Missouri. He returned Sondra Woskoff. Mr. and Mrs. home Tuesday. ' ' Henry Saitlln of Hartlngton, Jfeb.; Ben Sattlln of Fairmont, Mr. and Mrs, N. A. Plrsch are JJInn.; Mrs. Paul Handler of visiting for-three weeks in. New /g7 Rutherfort, N. J"., and Miss Sara York, Washington, and Bo3ton. Saitlin of Alexandria, N. D., were They.left Sunday. . '• other out-bt-town guests. Mrs. David Cetren of DavenMrs. -Max Holland and, daugh- port arrived here Saturday. She ter,' Harriet, left Thursday for will spend two weeks in Council Los Angeles, where they will Bluffs with her parents, Mr. and spend a inonth visiting relatives Mrs. Charles Saltzman. and friends. ' . Miss Lorraine Myerson Is conMrs. E. Schwartz and eon, Sam, valescing at home after undergo•"and Mra. M. Schevitzky and Miss ing a recent appendectomy at the ••-•Florence Sandier of St. Louis are M e r c y H o s p i t a l . visitors In the. home of Mr. and •Mrs. Dave Leyitsky. 815 Iowa, Misses .Leona a_n d Marlon where they will remain two Katelman were at Lake Okoboji for the week-end of July 4. They weeUs. . returned late Monday. ;MV. and Mrs. Louis' Orlikow HOTEL &HG BSTHS and sons, Archie, David and The Agudus Achlm Lodge is Lionel, of Winnipeg, Canada, will Bponaoring a free public picnic on This fins heUl will give newraesni.-sc,edsJ nsw leave Wednesday for Minneapolis, Sunday, July 10, at 1:30 p. m. to your vsestkn er hsdiK-heSisisy. Every after p. visit of several' days with oa Kiwanls Point. t o I h l b g cician cs2fc?i cad lusny while yea eaj'sy year Mr. and Mrs. B.' OrUkoff of 1117 Each family ••will bring their faviiiis ipsrl; drink tad bslhz in tSe cisalive / # « ^ . - , Villa -avenue. They spent Mon- own basket; Drinks will be furday with relatives and friends in nished by the Lodge. wtte»,er bss!j la d s sf-.ssr tel^t cf pcesEftl'TX h i I i : Omaha. • Entertainment is being planned RELAXATION" 503 « * & n ^ q a ; 3 s « st j / j for men, women and children. _ . . secluded In t!ic Easi-aea'* Ov.t5 v«4 prfviSs par*-.- / _!U., ^ Sam Sacks la chairman in Misa Goldie Lehman and Mrs.; yet, riS!>l et the fcsad of BsSh K S B S Rsvf, ' T_-*'/ i « s M*»V L. Goldsmith will .preside Jointly charge of' arrangements. at an evening^s party; in the .Gold\ eeava::eBtl9c'.lestirib-ei. smith home, Friday,- honoring BOAKE CARTER- •' -: ; m ^ V SPECIAL SUGOtfi'SATES / ~ - v . ^ Miss Bessie Osnowitz. . , ;• ••-•;•• •. • O N . N E W T I M E Herman Sacks was a week-end Boako Carter, radio's mo3t visitor"Jn Chicago.-•'-. popular •"news commentator, ; is nov/_ heard at a /new time. BeJlr, Sam Cohen spent Sunday ginning • on July 4, the program anil Monday; in Chicago". - V is being heard over Columbia stations at 6:45 p. to. CDST or 5:45 MIS3S3 Bluma: Merlin,- Dorothy" P.;m. CST every Monday, WedMerlin, Mary Bosofsky', and Jack nesday, Thursday and Friday. Merlin have returned from a 10- 1 Since February this-four-timesday trip -to Denver,and Estea a-week promotion has been sponPark. Jack Merlin was cantor spred by General Foods for Husfor the Friday, night seryicen at kies; the company's new whole tho A. Z. A. convention in Estea wheat flakes, and Post Toasties.
. Hollywood' Merry-Go-Rooiicl
N .
Y
.-
•
••
-
••
'
'
• ' . • • •
•••
weekly stipend froa $4,000 to the boat s.h.e; traveled. on..-prcsi- : .^-,,, rT - r : c ^*_ jfijif., by Saven-Artl $5,000 . . . (and it's not .i&lf I ifiea Lei a ship like Lk soias &&T- i -'. X'ee-txire byncicftte) enougi, we think) . . . Xlsut Reia-1 hardt's • "The Miracle," urbich the studio.. el'vered to 'th amazed New York in IS24, is ineh-locg replica, of the Sects, AM scheduled' f o r a spectacular i Fa ills, the model Trae carved by recounting by Warners next sea- jCaptain T. Teague of the original son . . . Heinz Herald and Gesa ir. his spare time . . -. Wli£.i: with NOTICE orTKnTrTEPN'E Herczeg, -^ho wrote the screen- her dancing, her. work ct M-G-K. >?o?iC€- if h?~t?h'.' f :r«-r> fiia:: fi play, for "Sola," hare turaed in her ship, and. her daily cross- ftJi-'r ' (iebJP «f A. WoK ft; "The Story of William Tell" ' at Seal::- on She SieC i;.a3" <>? Tfccv Warners . . . LosiS B. Mayer has (VOTtCE OP •-!NCO-RPCnAT32M CP I purchased a new home site . . . ELECTRONIO DEVEUOPWENT CO; ;•r-six Thousp.nc, Four KisnurecL doSiars and Js'inetesr. cents It's a SCO-acre ranch, located nest UQ.lt,.) • coor to Clarence Browa's rascto TAKE NOTICE of the IncorporaL K vroxj at Calabasas, near Eollywood . . . tion" of a company, the rsarne of ' KEBRCCA V.'OMV CAPTAIN POWEL1, — When which is EL.ECTHOK1C DEVELOPMENT CO.MFAKV. with principal' !>>ace oj .business t t Omaha, .Nebraska.- The ireneraS' rneture o f . t h e bijsiness is rrianu-rs.c :u"ir;gr ax?c! . ssHrri^v distributSnjr" and insi&Iling "roehuf&ctured i ."ticJes and ecuSpment arid accessorieF therefor, and in connection therewith to accisire, hold z.n& se!i Letters. Patent, "Copyrfshts, CbncfiPsions, etc., and ens-ape in reseafoh and designing-, snfi to hold rep.! estate and property necess£.!"y and .iticideTital to the business of the corporation.. The authorized cp.p'.ta! sitncfc if $10,000.00. The shades s.re 'SKlO.OOiJCr: ! At least S5,000.00 sh&S'.-fae psufi e s rei quSrefi by law e.t th« befrinutnE' of business. Business-will besrin -or. the ! filir.fr of the Articles with the •-C6ur.tr ! Cleris. The life • of the corporation is fifty rears, -w-ith right of ,.renev.-eJ.
BEN E, KAZLOWSKY, Attorney £32 iRstirancs- E!dg. NOTICE CF ADMINISTRATION
In the County Court of Douglas County. Nebraska: - IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF Simon Dikirnetrici. Deceased. Al persons Interested in said estate are hereby notified that a petition has been filed in said Court sJ2esing that sa!3 deceased fiied leaving no last -will and praying for administration upon his estate, and that a hearing- will be had on said petition before said court on the 23rd day of | July, 1SSS. and' that-!J they fail'-to appear at ssid Court or. the said 23rd day of July. 1S3S. at 9 o'clock A. . M. to contest said petition, the Court Tnay grar.t the B&me and grant administration of said estate to Eva Pikimewlcz or some • other KCitable person and proceed to a settlement thereof. -. . BETCE CRATTFORD, . 7-1-SS-St County Judge.
SAMUEL K. M"OLF. Eein^- F rr.'?i1or'it-1- of the. T^o-?5^^ of Directors. . ' ' 7-S-SS-lt EEENER, GOLDVVAKE «, S W i F T ,
435 Ornahs Nsiti,. Pank Elejg/ NCTICE O r At>?»:*M>eTT-iAT!dN * In. • the Covmly Court, of Do«irla«
• In tbe ?,I'.«er of the Esta.ie et Jriorris Shoshnlk. Deceaned. AM per«onp inter^r-itefl in e&kl *>stP:te -are here?'*" nr>tiA!*?d thp.t p.; i^etition .has been filer! ,in gale. Court allefrSng- ifrp-.t BP.U2. t* .'''easecl. diet' Jef.vins: lie-"las'.: \''lll £'.r:~i praying tot admirtsatraLion f.poii h»s esiatfc, Rnrl thai R -hearing: T'iK: be hp.ci on retd petl•tior, bfifore ppl? court "P. the 30th The amount, of Indebtedness As as <1;-.y' of July. 153S. nvC. t?)i;.t ii"'{he.v fised by law. The affairs of the cor- fail to p.cpear fit s?.kl Co>-,rt on th?
poration are to- be 'conducted- by its Bosrd of Directors' F.nfi OfJice^s." ELECTRONIC DEVEIiOPliENT CO. Ey GEORGE. RISK, Incorporator and President. And I. K. EROXTK, Incorporator an.fi S-24-3S-4t. Secretarj'-Tresaurer.
SPAS
S0;h tU-.y - o f J u i r .
5WS, -at
UJ;JLMJHJ V™* x
'*rs
/ r
is'an investment wnich brings.}To*a.rich divideasls'fi&y'rtwo'.wc^kf.o^t of the year. .•. deepening the "Jewish cossciotsaess wA hsSpbg. tes^smil ish heritage to. the nsing
If you haven't already paid p u r 1938 subscription,.cb st-todsv'- - - It -your children are not subscribers, give them a'subscriptiqn as- cd appreyour neighbor is s Bc^ar?iiPicnDexf rss.fee Hire tie if> P..
•
fmSmcjm
:
AT Til E 0 1 0 0 0 L U I I E S
•
© Educational.Features ^ElcSi'feo Jewish culture. •. •
ea, l£y£ h&,&& e eff
«»«• i*^. ».%—*» r - - ^ ••
serious a n c Lv^Iiu vclr%
and ^r,«
t
.
"JS. j~v^.
li
i -
.
-
•
.n inrr. czc* c:
8
o'clock A. ?.r.. tc content said p^iilon, the Court maj* prant the same and £rar>t aomhiietrr.tlor! Oi isaid eBiate to Ben S'noshnik or pome oJher Riiftable persor. and rroceecT. tc a thereof. • ' ' E S T G E Cn 7-S-SS-St. . County
. •