The views expressed by hudtrig Lsv/isohn in bis colamn uro ills own and do not necessarily reflect tho policies or attitude of on? publication. Reproduce t&jn in %vholo or In part strictl^ N forbidden. •
Entered as Second Class Mall Matter on January 31, 1331. Postoffice. of Omaha. Nebraska, under the Act of March 3, n
OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FKIDAT, JULY 29, 1SSS
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Joe S. ::o-r-^;,r, EO-J zi EVIAN AND AFTER and Mrs. S-m II'-Tst'- - v l Toward t h e end of the confera sopkomr-e zX CecTir Tp~i ence at Evian there took place a lania, Geor&.a vrs r.e^ number of discussions of vital significance to the Jewish people. Today Nathan Straus, adminis-, tion of the Jews. This was Iris It is possible that these discustrator of the United States Hous- way it s. Each y e ' " t1 e -ee of counter-acting the antisions and their meaning have not ing Authority, is in Omah.a to in- Semitism of, the old magazine highest ia s e l l e r s p arc been sufficiently observed. spect the Logan Fontenelle "Life." by th.e facult- ts The fina^ conclusions of the re- Autumn Series to Be Spon- Homes and the site of the pro- During the war Mr. Straus serv- Richard Hiller Brings Toping honcr^TV ports received by the conference posed South Omaha Housing Pro- ed as chief of- the war-time cable elected hi t i » cl Price In Auction sored by wer.e summed up by Sir,NiHl Malject. award. censorship. In 19 20 he was electBidding C o u n c i l .."'!.'. colm. . He made the following : £ In Omaha he will be the guest ed to the New York Senate as the Hcmstei". v as ss elected saepointsi That the British Dominat a luncheon to be given by therepresentative o£ the Silk Stockretary-tre£.E^"c ci! L".. f e The qualifying round for the iona and other'countries over-seas Mrs. Ruth Neuhaus, well known Chamber of Commerce. ing district. From 1926 wken he annual Highland Country Club is a grafi' c*e rZ C ^ - ' T ' were unanimously of the opinion in Omaha as. a commentator on Son am* namesake of the gTeat left the Senate until 1933 he was golf tournament "was held Tues- sciiool and s z ir:"r"be" c A Z that "any large-scale scheme of current events and a group leadA. 100. immigration could only arouse er, will present a morning lec- Jewish philanthropist, Mr. Straus president of the New York Park day afternoon at the stag given in honor of Senator Edward R. hostility," that therefore all theture series on' "World Affairs" was educated at Heidelberg ' and Association. His activities in. Jewish, affairs Burke. • governments concerned were op- under the auspices of the Council Munich, and later at Princeton where he became a; student of include the chairmanship of the At the auction of the players posed to "solid blocs of foreign of Jewish Women. cunder Woodrow Wil- American Palestine Campaign in the top price of ninety-five dolimmigrants" , who would, necesGiven for the benefit of the government New York City. For the past four lars was paid by Ed Rosen for sarily constitute an "alien ele- German Jewish Children's Aid, son. Ninety dollars Following his graduation he years his main interest has been Richard Hiller. ment'Mn the state. These coun- for which the National Council of better housing and before his apsi was bid by Abe Pepper for Irvia C £ tries consequently desired the Jewish Women is solely respon- joined the now-defunct New York If I i c r 1 cz . aliens in question to be intro- sible, the five lectures of the ser- Globe. A few years later he be-pointment by President Roose- Eiegraan and sixty-five dollars by x t C C duced "as individuals who would ies will be held in the'tenth floor came publisher of the magazine velt, he took the leading role la Moe. Venger for Julian Mildern; be able to find occupation and auditorium of .the Brandeis Store "Puck" in which he published a private housing projects in New Morris Ferer was auctioneer. become assimilated." He summed starting on Wednesday, October series of articles on the contribu- York. Tournament play' will start this ill* up: "I was driven to the conclu- 12. They will continue on sucSunday. The finals will be keld C £.1 C sion that the process of infiltra- ceeding Wednesdays through Noon Sunday, August 21. tion was likely to have far more vember 9. Richard Gordon, present cham- Camperc Gc e successful results." Slenderizing Classes pion will not defend t i s title. A' former "newspaper woman Former champions entered in the The gentlemen who gathered and graduate attorney, Mrs. Neu. If you want to take off tourney are Richard Hiller, Jullcr IE at Evian were intelligent men haus has practiced law In her forweight, there's no time like | ian Milder, Marvin Treller, and J. r t, ' and men not devoid of good-will. mer home, Denver, and at one the summer time, says Lee , With oil; c cc"c v Malashock. Treller was runner-up , That the problem of the German time held the'position of assisGrossman, physical director at the seasca, of last year's tournament. persecution of; our people is caus- tant attorney general of the state the' Jewish Community Center. Akiba h f c First Round pairings are: 11 ing real concern in -certain quar- of Colorado. ';• ' • Excess pounds.pour off, reon their ?~c,v s Championship Flight ters* is borne out by the ArchAt the present time she is in ports Mr. Grossman, during ca cz h i Richard Hiller vs. Lester Si- ^ ? . i ^ ? . : : _1 bishop'of Canterbury's asking the Colorado where she Is preparing this time of the year if you the A - l " mqn; Leonard Kay vs. Marvin play, " R e \ o p'rayer of the communicants of her talks. will exercise properly. Weight • is to be g^ e: Car Treller; J . Malashocfc vs. Harold his Church for" their ' Jewish Tickets will go on sale on Seplost much more rapidly in Candidate for Senate Op- Is Farber; Harry Trustin vs. -Julian camp, are r c\ brethren and by the more aston- ;ember 1. Mrs. Manuel,Grodinsky the summer than during any c-k- - T)f Milder; Dr. M. Greenberg vs. ' ': posed As ishing fact that Lord Halifax in s chairman of the ticket commitother season. Louis Hiller; Harry Kay vs. Leoing on its " c j r r n . v question.to Hitler's unofficial ex- tee and is .being assisted by Mrs. Bigot A week aco T L L ' K E . ' t s " Women who desire to slenNogg, M. Kruplnsky vs. Ed Speiploration cf Anglo-German rela- Harold Flrber and Mrs. Edwin er boys tnc z "l c v t - t . ; <• r r derize should take advaner. I. Schlaifer vs. Irvin Eiegman. tions urged strongly upon Berlin Brodkey, co-chairmen: Fifty womTopeka, Kan's. (JTA) . — ReTotal catc v *-r 4 V " <°F*- ••>"* " • - . tage of the remaining sumPresident's Flight the fact, that "the German gov- en are members of the ticket-sell- publican opposition against the mer days by exercising reguPaul Blotefcy vs. Ernie Nogg; teen with the p; -.s rcccurt.rsr l o •-eminent could prove its coopera- ng committee. Rev. Gerald B. Winrod. anti-Semlarly. They'll be surprised at Manny Handler vs. Bud Slosburg; elght' of the Iish cz.^s^'r •'-«—<! •
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tive spirit immediately by assisti n g t h e orderly emigration of- refv ugees." •"'••.' " T h e r e is, then, some cpneern; there is some Rbod-wilL There is, alas, no intelligence at all, nor any intelligent understanding of the problem which the Jewishpeople must face in icy isolation. We are grateful for every Jewish soul and every Jewish family that is saved and reestablished" within • some.liberal or liberatarian society. But neither the gentlemen at Evian nor the Archbishop of Canterbury nor -Lord Halifax have evidently the slightest .understanding of the historical
itic contender for the Republican
nomination for senator, mounted
the pleasing results. • And the best place to exercise is still the J. C. C. athletic department.
Last Fi.jCj v ^s ^ ee-i ;",_,=. ~-f Lou Somberg vs. Harold Speler; S. Wertheimer, J r . vs. Louie Kay; at Camp ^- Lt Max Chapman vs. Maurice Kiek- ing coun^^liO-s c^rse. Iin; Dr. Phil Levey vs. Morris Cof hen; Lloyd Friedman vs. Harold feat^rec :n tre Cherniack; Al Mayer vs. Morris On'Tuercci t t " Levey. a tour cC the ,~eThird Flight Warren Ackerraan vs. Jim. Rob- and y e s t f e r ^ ^t^ inson; A. B. Alpirn, bye. Robert went oa 1- ~s tc r A veil-; b e " Kooper vs. Si Silvers; Dave Co-
this week, with John D. M; Hamilton, chairman of the Republican National Committee; William Allen White, editor of the Emporia Gazette, and other Republican leaders issuing1 statements denouncing- his bigotry. In a letter written in reply to numerous requests for his views as a Kansah on the Situation, Mr. hen bye. Herbert Harrison vs. now ia f : r ets air Hamilton declared that the Rev. - f t i eT'i''^s 7 Yale Myerson; Morton Hiiler bye. A new fer*_'- cC t Wlnrod's victory in the four-cors a ( Royal Commission W i l l ilorris Linsraan vs. Morris Levey. ; » nered race would be a victory for 1 Return t o London ,-. events. intolerance. ; The S E C • '• '-'August--15 : . . : •:-. Explaining that he may not be' able to get home to vote on AuEraek" bT ; forces that present them with the Ui London (XTA),—The Colonial gust 2, Mr. Hamilton, in his Childr'Ti very problem they are trying to office announced::.that the PaleH- statement, -replying- to the Kansas Jor the " tine : Partition^cdmmlssion, which queries,.,-recalled ,:Ms_Q33ra ,staiuL Denies Used Quotations to help.: us,to : face.^ infiltration'"" and "assimilatfon "i3 " cbncludlng -.- a"three-m;bntBnn-" as a member of the Kansas Legb L iJT" -IS V Anti-Semitism have l e d to the German catas- vestlgation in Palestine, will re- islature from 1924 to 1929 trophe; infiltration and attempt- sume Shearings Vin London on Au-against the Ku Klux Klan. Detroit (JTA) — F a t h e r "Once again," he said, "intoled assimilatbon have unendurably gust 15. ; Emphasizing that the raharpened1 the Jewish ; problem in commission} is a technical body erance has raised its head on the Charles E. Coughlin last week dePoland and Rumania, WTiat has whose functions • are confined to midst of our political picture, and nied any anti-Semitic intent in made the expulsion of the Polish ascertaining-the practical possi- the voters of our state cannot quoting from "The Protocols of Progressing rapidly toward Jews impossible (aside from their bilities 4>f the. partition; scheme, avoid the issue whether they will the Elders of Zion" ia his publication. Social Justice. The "radio completion of plans for the A. Z. numbers) is the fact that the the Colonial office asked that r no. majority of- Polish Jewa live in persons wishing to give evidence "It is there, and it Is apparent priest" told Philip Slomovitz, edi- A. Reg-ional Tournament, .general dense Jewish settlements. They submit in advance six copies of a to' every one who has given the tor of the Detroit Jewish Chron- co-chairmen, Morris ArMtmrn \ have jiever, .like the.Jews^of Ger- memorandum . ; indicating t h e slightest thought to Kansas poli- icle, and former Judge James I. and Karold' Zelinsky announced • many, and Austria, been so atom- views they propose to present be- tie this year. If Mr. Winrod is Ellmann in an interview that he the appointasent of ten standing j held! • " ' ized, so fragmatized, that they fore.it. nominated for the United States was not using the "Protocols" as committees at a meeting Here are s-~™e c"c-l > rtE rc- •>. The London hearings ar© notSenate, it will again be injected a Jewish creation, but "to prove last Wednesday. have lost all; mass-resistance and swelterir-z tui^s-ns the Y rtF be- rr also all mass-inertia . and can expected to last more, than a into the national campaign, and that there Is a plot to engulf ;the . They are: ing hanced c»_t i>? re*1^!- Cc"1- i " "^ ft Outing, George Shafer; Bernie week, and it is believed that the world in a scheme of things pretherefore . be driven, back and our party in Kansas will be on munity Ccrtcr c t t r^ z t«••"•*•' ^ • forth as utterly helpless as sepa- commission will complete its re-the wrong side of a vital issue dicted in the 'Protocols' and now Epstein, Harold. Sluskia, Irving meat: Forbes, Harold Nesselson. rate dead leaves in a tempest. port and deliver It to.'the cabinet and opposed to our party policy coining true ia Russia and in this VGive i c k r boc-«- a cbrrce to ' c l Dating, I r r Nogg; Sonny Richcountry under the New Deal." *Fhe 450.000 Jews in .Palestine by the end of September. Accord- In other states. breathe, u e:.r ...jiilve-f,1, ^ ro - u ards, Sam • Wolfe, Joe Ktrsfeeacan* hold their own • against a ing to a timetable which observAbhorrs Anti-Semitism "We have all been shocked by otss clotl. -o c i a- ^.1 i.j,L ~ ^ I. world of enemies because they ers will be followed/ the cabinet the manifestations of Intolerance Father Coughlin declared he baum, Sam Rudennaii. ting p r - ' - t r c L - - r - v - 4 T—' v -- c are one mass, one" people, one will soon thereafter announce the growing up in the world else- abhorred anti-Semitism, but re- Dance, Dan Miller; Leo Sher"Wear c I j V v f •~v't *-•<-(? r e - \^ policy. -Debate ; in where, and we should be more sented attacks mad© on him in man, Harold Forbes. group, capable, of the defensive government ering whci ,a ,ts Lei. t ^r-7- i c . \ Publicity, Leo S t e n s s s ; Jus» This will exertion .o£.a..single will. But parliament will then follow.than shocked at its appearance on the Jewish press. In a discussion hi_'p r r c e r t E^I. - o l s PV HOHSS Slay Reject 100,000. families come into a our very doorstep and therefore of anti-Semitism, he expressed tin Priesass, Manuel Hiraelstein, " I n c l u C o t n z-^rCci V.C * Z ^ " c 1 The house of commons, which doubly vigilant. For that reason the view that "it can never hap- Ed Kuklia.. . country by the process bf infilvegetables r C I ! "E - ' " - 1 tration and in various stages of never accepted partition in- prin- I am quite willing that my views pe'ri here," advised ridicule as an Finance, Paul Sacks; Ed Stein, summer c1 fi\ ~>" r^v Ti'"ri-J rC ',•> • assimilation are "utterly helpless ciple, may handle the , question should be made known upon this antidote for hatred and said Jews Roland Lewis, Leonard. Lewis, purfe WE oagainst any- prejudice, any injus roughly If the proposed frontiers question, as should the views ought to be less fearful and less Fil Schulia. tlce! The slightest union of their of t^e Jewish and Arab states of all the leaders of our party in sensitive. He asserted that Jews Transportation, Hasten Lasere. Ad Book, Joe Guss; Morris, Ar- ice-"v£ter v t c i . c c^ : enemies spells their certain de- which are to be carved from the Kansas. continue to play a dominant role fs.it.-' Fcr the.ir enemies will unite Holy "Land fail to satisfy In re- "Should I have the opportunity in international finance, b u t bitman, Irv Nogg, Mas: Prostsk, and they, by the program of Sir spect to security and Immigration ot voting on August 2 as a Re- amended this to "a role in ex-Haskell Lasere, Roland Lewis,, ^ h f ° " ^ " " " " " " T possibilities. Zionist • circles are publican, acting-in. the Interests of cess of their numbers." NeJl Malcolm, must not' unite. Sonny Richards, Eernia TraclitesA--c ^ rr The theory- of the benevolen of the opinion that i t may b s my party and my country, I cer- "Jews are not the dumbest berg, Ed Dolgo'f. Harold Zelisi- e-sertioa c^T •. v (&., Gentile who has- Jewish irlend, necessary to convene - an extra- tainly would not vote for any one people in the world," lie said, and sky, Dan Killer, Justin Priessaan. is, of course, that infiltration and ordinary World Zionist Congress who has dedicated himself to a "there is nothing wrong with Luacheoa, Hilt Saylaa; Theo. „ „ assimilation will appease the an-in November or December to con- course of Intolerance, as has Mr.domination in certain fields of Cohn, Harry Goldstein, Ililtoi ' » ti-Seinitic. That is the illusion sider t h e , concrete proposals Winrod. endeavor." His major challenge Guss. . | • . -1
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ing, Morton Margolin, , that destroys us. Assimilation eventuating from ' the commis. "If the reason which I have. to Jewry, Father Coughlin said, does not allay enmity, i f only siori's investigation. given above for not voting for was to join, him and the Catholic The goyenment Is expected t o Mr. Winrod, which are all-suffic- church in fighting Communism. MILDER OILS ON WAY enfeebles us. Such are the stub- - born, facts. What the benevolent submit its Palestine policy to theient as far as I am concerned, do The delegation called attention to TO CHAMPIONSHIP Gentile dreams of — like oii L.eague of Nations council at the not appeal to others in Kansas, •opposition of many Jewish orv L 11own American pseudo-liberals — January session. Despite possible may I ask them to consider the ganizations to Comnmnisra. The Milder Oils moved a notch '" is a degree of assimilation in criticism there, it id believed the possible disastrous effects which meeting lasted two hours and closer to the J. C. C. Softball | which the Jews will disappear aa League will have to accept the his nomination would have upon •will be continued next -week. Mr. championship whea they defeat- | Reser'-cta-—« E." such. Frightened and fleeing j Mandatory's policy, -consequently the entire state, and local Repub- Slomovitz was invited to prepare ed the second-place A. Z. A. 1CS led at A. c. . c ' a reply to the articles on the outfit last Sunday, 15 to 9. Jews play into his hands by assur- j tt nn e er Q i sa strong probability that lican tickets in November." I veil sta: ^ 1 "Protocols" for publication , in a ing him, at least implicitly that League and Great Britain Tlie i A filer Delioattessens sub- ] tea Kct.~' ce forthcoming issue of Social Jus- mergeil the Alpha Pi Taus for the i Irvin S" ~ Buch a degree or assimilation i s ' ^ definitely committed within she months, to establishment of a tice. possible. first time this season, 14 to 1. j Omaha ..c a c ^ s % Well, it Is not. - The age3 have Jewish state in part of Palestine. While this does not mean Im proved "it. This-age has proved it over agaii. \ with terrifying mediate proclamation of a Jewish force. I repeat that"-we are grate- state, it should, however, end the ful for every Jew who is saved present virtual suspension of imfrom the fiery furnaces of Cen- migration into the proposed Jew-.--• . v •_ • tral Europe and reestablished in ish territory. the.West. But this process does not solve, nay, does not touch Workman's Circle The Youth Aliyah Committee A reader of the "Jewish-Press" the solution .of the Jewish probof the Omaha Chapter of Hadas- has sent in a clipping from, the -she came to America, they i already "l"'-?lem. We were expelled from EnTo'Hold Picnic. sah announces the completion of Milwaukee Journal that tells tor? When gland in 1290; we were expelled five groups of ten $36.00 donors a German housemaid in Milwau- gave her valuable gifts and from.Spain in 1492;-we are be- ' • A t each. This will enable five youths kee is bringing her old, once- i e r promise to write to tin™. ing expelled from Germany and With the rise of Hitler, J i to. leave the doomed countries of wealthy Jewish, employers • from Workman's"Circle,. Branch 258, Germany, Austria - and Poland Germany. Austria in 193S. were rained eeonomioall;" r " d Nothing touches the solution of will hold a family, picnic on Sun-and enter Palestine , where they "Elsa H.," the clipping tells, though* the'r letters -cere cL .iT^' 1 • the Jewish problem except the re-day, July .31, at Elmwobd Park: will go through a course of train- "is German. All her ancestors enough, Elsa -could read fcett c ~ settlement of Jews -'-somewhere All members and their families ing fitting them for useful living were pure Aryan German. She the Hn.es. During her sis jcr - *- 1 and somehow that forever pre- have been Invited. in the holy land. came to Milwaukee- sis years ago, Milwaukee siis 5ns.sa.5ed t^ ^sr<~ -Beer, pop; and Ice • cream, will Hadassah has been assured before Hitler's rise to power. She one • thoasand collars isrliic ; z'az cludes- their" expulsion. There is no other way. There is no other be served free through the cour- that as many children as funds has been told 'der Fuehrer's dain- offered her friends, but t;~ " • hope. The answer to the Jewish tesy of members, L. Papefny, S. will be provided for will be per- inating personality produced a fused. Finally one dsy lest r vproblem is to pour Jews into Pal- Colick.vand Ben Goreliek. . . mitted to enter Palestine. AH con- greater, more powerful Ger- she received e letter frosr "v — begging if she. could heir i c~ estine. • The answer to Arab resis- Members will bring their own tributions are being- accepted by many.'" tance is to pour Jews into Pales- Iunche3. Lunch time has been set tha chairman, Mrs. Julius Stein, 'Elsa can't help feeling a little j come to America. •••'•• ' tine. The: answer • to the prob- for 5:00. 4909 Webster, Gl. 1948. twinge of satisfaction ia seeing Kilwaukee labor ™ lems of -the necessarily" continuTo the list o£ ?36.00 pledgers homeland rise to its rightful and philanthropist signed ' Tews were found i s the Eale- are added the following: Mes- her ing diaspora; is to pour Jews into place as one of the world's lea-d- fidavit guarsnteeing the < Palestine. The Archbishop of aric Islands aa early as the sec-dame3 Sam Beber and Phil Klutz-- ing natiens. But Elsa also fcas of the German Jewish" lam ond century. -, Canterbury prays to our one and niclr, Mesdames Oscar S. Belzer friends in Germany — Jewish the necessary common God "In vain unless, he and, Sam "Wolf, Mrs. R. Freiden, friends —and they need her des- j iniraeiiistely ser.t urges the Colonial Office to pour Such Is the Inexorable-logic of Sirs. Morris Ferer, Mrs. Hyman perately." States eoEEiil in Hamburg Jewa into Palestine; Lord Halifax history; - such is the inescapable Feror, . Mrs. Karl Lewis, HesAt 17 "Elsa worked, in the home The Jewisi family are pleads with Hitler in vain unless fact. daces A. Koffman and Samuel of a wealthy Jewish lace manuought to America on t' ho persuades England to open (Copyright .1938 By Seven Arts Stcinberg, and The Friday After- facturer in Hamburg-. During her iags of fhe'T former vrldo the-doors of Palestine. " Feature Syndicate.) many years with, them, she fce-|-i noca Social Group.
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THE JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1938
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-" - 'sC zrr' '• ;~ -Vc'e ere fbe i v;ii:h s. twiirldc- its his non-JMah Emotionally he was not ready to l?':z^ r : L ^ f c c c; ;•" U r ' desired j ere, ''VSi *. e~e&t day' for \$ie abandon a solution Co attractive to his non-Jewish countrymen. From the other men, my suektion by Jewish T « e elicited most often a disinterested ::: r .'-:-::Ar-:: Apcncy, Inc.) Chamshrug of the shoulders; and, on new sta-! occasion, a bolder Pole or Ru. ; c -- cr ,- . . c;r;.tir.r,- d.<= name of i ft.f-^-.-T «S T-* F l ?.-•«- W i l l . manian did not hesitate to indicate brcadly that 'whereto?' was TTJ-CT1 . . . AT: r.rKc";s ty Natk&n a problem for the Jews to solve. j,p> \,j:|3i5,C-r"^"*GCi. fe*©l*C i ~ c z'z cr. "The ,-ev.irr rrohlesn in The Fatherlands of the Jews-are , 7 ; * . ' : . ' . ' " I~ ..i£ I ~ - r " t \ Journal, content to pfovide .the 'drive' for ' Ir tt.f:£..r.;:r.'- c. r,c"; c-,-.Ue atteaemigration. They do not feel the • r'.zz - - - pr.rlic'u'.c rl;- cH the Pol-j The Eitmual Ocrm&n Day celeresponsibility of concerning them% \iLh i v . i : r . l . o : . . . It HIE.F be i bratoE friven t r the Federation of selves with the necessary compleIf ."f Jr C" -,r'. ,r,r-. r r r r to Jev-B. Socie»i«« of In this second of-two. artic- onies of'Poland as in all the Jew- provide free advertising for their ment in this process. •tzl ft1: o r ' : i l c :-r-T :SE7 to Omahs v:\li be he'S Pa les taken from chapters ol his ish trade schools of that country. wareS; the resources of the gov- Emigration is never a desirable ! A : E > . . . yziir-c*. relief Ad- gust 6..EEd Sunda?vA riew book, "Feofclo At Bay," Movements thrive best when re- enmeht are at their service; "and solution. It involves flight and is tor ;-'xr-;- Mcpl.'ns tells the German Home r published by Oxford University inforced by ideals, and slogans. the violence of the anti-Semites resorted to-only when oae delrirtrator of life in the native land. to South 15th Press under the sponsorship, of Retraining-will proceed.most rap- ruins their Jewish competitors. spairs Moreover, the Jews cannot and colyum The princtpa! festivity TJTHI ll/ (, J t u . J - * pp the Conference on Jewish Rela- idly when necessity ( a n d ideal Yet Poles and others make per- mustmot their elimv>i?riir.~ the pos-place Sunfi&y afternoon' and' ;ttons as a comprehensive study combine to '"-endow physical labor sistent efforts to ba&d together in ination asacknowledge, a solution. Jews must fVt E.f c refuges ning, AuiruBt 7. Governor " !r.t:-'i:." • of the Jewish problem in Cen- with cooperatives. I t stands to reason social approval.: every suggestion1 that j rr" Tr^pr-ill's SOE Cochr&n v.-iH be honored ^ ' trial and Eastern Europe, ProRetraining must-concern Itself that the Jews who labor under repudiate" are the 'surplus population'; 1 fessor Janowsiry, t h e eminent to a greater extent with agricul- the most serious handicaps can- they is La t : £.::,se:, . vr: -.esico,- js h d that they have no stake in ' the ~.srr;r£ »'o R. r.o~-,"ET- . . . Carl I The celebration la held annualhistorian and economist, deals ture. •' There are • considerable not prevail unless they abandon land which was the home of their I A!pert, Drsf.or. Jc7-ir5- Advocate | Jy 1E-commemoration,ot Uw/Unfl' \vith the mnschichtung move- numbers of Jewish farmers in t ' h e chaotic Individualism to forefathers for centuries. The E.rsocU,tc- c e l l " , is, irrtrrt . . He ing of the f'srst organised group ment, agricultural settlement, .east-central 'Europe, "especially In Which/ they have long been accus- Jews of Poland and Rumania are i tMirlts the tjrrcrr ."f-ir*! Chroti- o* Gerir.anr its this coutttry*im cooperatives and emigration -as Sub-Carpathian Ruthenia;and In tomed. Cooperatives .would elim- hot interlopers." They have as the beet Acp'.o-Je-vrish'..October 6, l e s s . possible solutions.—THE EDI- Bessarabia.: Every effort must be inate duplication, waste and cut-much right to their homes as any T'he musical pvcgrani -will ©pan paper ia the vorifi . . . Carl, inTOR. . . ' - ; , " • • - -', -' made to keep these Jews on thethroat competition. The pooling other people in east-central Eurtb M l ' " F l l cidesttllj-, ie nov: a member of land. A portion of the city youth of resources W6uld enable a craft ope. e good ste.nsl!n£ cf the colrumnF,r should; be trained' for agriculture to secure'modern machines with-"Sin Vilna, I met an elderly One is tempted to counsel the fe&ssiety, QTialir^ing t-r virtue • of isn physlciau "whose sad, pathetic and Jews-must be prepared to out which the Jews cannot com- Jewe to 'dig In' and to cling to v &s ;nP'-ot"uceS ' Into his t«-o-fistefi "I Ttink- -'.s I humor recalled to : mind 'Borne push? their claim for. part of thepete successfully. The most ener- their position; not to yield to i • ;; i y,\i by pvoeelfPlease" . . . Tel Ariv hat l.",Ut getic and resourceful individuals soil of-their native lands whencharacters of ; the great Jewish no matter how persistbutterfly specimens it r o i : c " r \ humorist Shalom Alelchem.."When ever a favorable opportunity, pre- might assume leadership and pro- pressure, ent oi how destructive that presj have except Tor Kitlcr . . . "•" * r I raferred. to the need ot retraln- sents itself. At the present mo- vide the planning- and direction sure may be. Yet sound as this which are so sadlyv lacking a t ment such opportunities are not |ES<5e as. crf'e out of the-'- c r r ring, he said, 'Ah! . Umacichtung in evidence.: tltUe'-desirable land view is,~ I cannot subscribe to it, j er. Dr. "Paul Belch, vrim \i--'\ w means casting from one grave- s- now available for colonization present. Credit facilities which for I have heard men and women OILS of the •world's largest pr.'-E. '; Into;-another.'-. What Is the use of In the Polish 'Landlord's Para- do not exist for the individual say, ""We shall somehow or other collsctions v/kiie a phj'sio.f.r. ,: converting a petty trader into an dise,' and, the anti-Semitic ele- craftsman might become avail- end cur days in misery and want. Bferlla . .' . TuTla DonnSr, ">',-• artisan when government regula- ments in Rumania, as Well as in able for a cooperative, guild. Even isut what will be the future of thcrtn!aw tions and tno boycott render the Poland, are in no mood ,to per-tho government might be obliged our children?' Life in Poland and and put into effect a plan to coca- Prof. Svi Seharfstein . Whfcfi- killed Jn the Haifa ho".or?uF* lives Of both equally intolerable? mit even a fraction of .the %oll to to reckon -with an organized force Rumania Is martrydom,_ and ho bat ralsstateinenta about Jews fiyamean vacation? early this month, took bis vice's TWa is true, and yet retraining Is ass into the hands of Jews. Ru- such aa a union o£ cooperatives. one has the fight to" choose a stemming either from ignorance first naiae JLS tis" last . . . Arccid a Vital and. Imperative necessity, mania, "We have already referred to the martyr's life for another. has an abundance or malice . . . In executing t h e BANG: The Evi&n cor.fercs.es Belchmars, former STA Etaff men, If for no other reason, because f good'which Jewish cooperative credit associland will serve as an ilis not a solution, plan he bad the assistance of a opened snfi closssi with & bang is taking aviation lessons . . . -one cannot build on despair. We ustratlori."About two years ago ations of-Poland fostered by thebutEmigration many Jews ot east-Central group of Boston women-.who, In- - - both of them ia Palestine . .4 L&Cy Chatter!}''* Lover Is now must remember that, the bulkcf he Jewish Colonization Associa- Joint Distribution Committee and Europe have to emigrate. If spired by his columns, had code avaHable Is Hebrew, having been east-central European Jews must' tion applied to, t h e ' Rumanian the Jewish: Colonization Associa- we closewill minds to this stark to him for advice on how thsy , EDITOR: A fi&rk horse got the translated i s Palestine bj- Bf.rrolflam in their native lands. Government for legalization of Its tion through their sudsldiary, the truthj we our. may find ourselves con- could do tneir bit In .combatting post cf American Hebre*' manag- •uch Krupsicfe . . . Cafe Eeyal, Their only hope "lies'In prepara- activities," and the Council of -Min- American ' Joint Reconstruction • with a baffling refugee aEti-Semltisra . . . These women ing editor, vacated by Fanny Afi- Second Are. hangout of the cog^ tion-for. useful and productive isters granted the desired author- Poundatic-fi. In Lodz a pioneer fronted problem. Despairing men and trained aad they are now the lereteia to join th® Joint Distri- noscenti, Ss in iicurnir.g . . . At .Cream - labor. . The petty trader is not- isation. "Within ten days, how- producers' cooperative in me- •women will break, through all he of a movement that gives bution Committee e.s staff execu- the passing of Eoelants Cuno. only helpless at present; he is ab- ver, an anti-Semitic press cam- chanical-weaving has been organ- barriers, and destitute .fugitives nucleas ot spreading and bearins tive assistant to Joseph C. Hy-cne-time- labor reporter and a solutely without hope for, the fu- laign obliged the Council to. an- ized. Farther efforts -should be will flock "to every temporary proraiss real fruit . . . The -work that they man . . . He is Martin Panzer, Eon-Jcv. -p-bo en^.vrrev. mrrT- c ture. Even if governments well- nul its decision. The activities of made in this direction. The ef-haven of refuge. Efforts must be- •were doing at the time of Dr. free lance writer, who has been ir.or:srt v-i'j- nr::^cri. rl fci;: disposed to the' Jews were to the Jewish!. Colonization' Associa- forts to foater new export indus- made to organize and direct Jewby-lined ia such mags &s Esquire, cf hi? C T T tOTrypr ;/•-' . , , ,\ come to poi^er, the petty trader tion were forbidden and the Min- tries would assume greater sig- ish emigration from east-central Goldberg's death should recom- Ken and Americas Mercury . . . mend itself particularly to the ctartcler. -Jt? bryr rr v :j--z •wbiild be doomed. The develop- ister of Justice instructed all nificance, and would probably Europe. 'Whereto'? This queshis first venture into the An- tCtic e pet csec-t bu-i:! , , !, Nr, ;•«. ment of cooperatives can only re- magistrates, in Bessarabia to e i - licit greater support, if organ- tion will tax the. statesmanship united agency to combat aati- It's glo-Jewish field . . . Here's wishsult 'In his complete elimination." amine recent land purchases and ised on a cooperative basis. And of the Jewish people. But wheth- Ssmitisxa, now in process of for- ing him success . . . And you, too, pcrra, vLC'T be Itc szv '~ Z""~ r.c:an? . . . S.T.C r - r t l r £r:The - well-trained . artisan, how- to annul those found objection when the opportunity presents it- er or not lands are found willing mation. Fanny-. . . self to settle Jews on the land, to receive large numbers of Jews, c: T:££.:u.-; I.'r-rerohCu ic ever, c r the person equipped for able. ooperatlves would become indis- one land must remain, open to VACATIONS: When a sailor factory labor, ia at least not entensaWe, at leact In financing, in settlement and development by takes a holiday. it'B. usually s. tirely'unarmed in "the desperate Colonization* Aid PRODIGY: England has a Yeboat ride . . . With a busman, it's struggle for" existence of today, Discouraging as the present sit- mying and selling and in the Jews, namely Palestine. \ Kenuhin cf its ovn . . . In a bus trip . . . So, what more nat- 15-vear-ol<5 and he alone may hope to be ab- uation is, the Jews must never- itill2atlon of agricultural maYossef HassiS, -whoce hlnefyi The whole queStlohof ural than that scholars on vacasorbed In the life of his country heless persist in. tho demand that debut stood the critics on their ooperation should be studied in tion should turn to scholastics . . •when government and society and be' made available for some (Copyright, 1938, by Seven Arts cars . . . . The debut cre-vrsed As witness the' vacation labors years prove ittore friendly. of the destitute city, dwellers. uder to determine thoforras best of poverty and Illness'. Feature Syndicate) •tilted' to Jewiah aptitudes and undertaken by this group ct Retraining is of primary • i m - There are influential -Rumanian eeds. shared by the boy, Ms father t&a j . ' . hard-irorliing Je-srish Theological portance also for those who must Christians who,recognize that one cf frlecds wko had fsith Seminary professors . . Dr. Louis aia group emigrate and for the youths who of 'the solutions of, the Jewish the riddJer's geaius . . . Kotr Ernigratloa Kot a Solution Ginsberg is. preparing a Commenseek a permanent home In Pal- problem is colonization upon'-tfiij'. .Th© lion-j&wj&h 16Mefs of putop tary on the Babylonian Talmud estine. The transplanting of Pol- land. A change in^pj^irtf6sTTfof4^ d n a o h a T O glvan any , . Dr. Alexander Mars is editish or Rumanian Iiuftmenschen tunes may-placesnob- men-in-pbg at all to the future of ing his essays for Fell publica- to other lands would only shift sltions of authority. In Poland, ;he Jewish problem in their countion . . . Dr. Israel Davidson is the existing problems and' prob- too, the day cannot be far distant ries have seized upon emigration completing his edition of the - ably raise. new ones as well. If when the gentry ,'wil! . lj.e. ^.com- as an easy and, for them, costless Sedar Rabbi Sasdia w . . And Dr. trained for useful labor, the same pelled to reliii4ai3K:iik:'stra.nsle?;i - t o o - many riatioa^.feoikt'*.Wiie.S Louis Finkelsteln is doing .re| refugees would be enabled to ad-hold, on - the! 1 y "Smigf &t&"' to t search In the T&Imud'B sociologi! " • Just themselves Jquickly in their that day c6me8T.'.ir£te64 -Jewish iejfraiiuoften heard In central and cal background . . . Others simij new homelands. New Ipossiblli- farmers '8hpiild":;be\»n;J}6,n(ir;t6j saistern.Eiarope. I heard emigralarly engaged include Dr. Boaz i - ties for Immigration might even make good,the claim-to a 'share. tion characterised a* a solution Cofcen, Dr. H. L.. Ginsberg, Dr. • || develop, ^nce. the Bparselyj settled" •Iu ^the meantime such JBWS -majf- f the Jewish problem." by the PolIsrael Efros, Dr. Abraham HalLK . . lands are" assure'd that*7ewish im? flnd.a'iivelihood- in dairying, bee- :ah Ambassador to a western EurTRIBUTE: A gallant^splrlt de-kin, Dr... Samuel • Dlnln, Israel I1 -migration -would not -impose a keeping, fruit ; growing,, '.poultry' : pean Great Power,7 by a former parted this earth in the untiiaely Chipkis, Prof. Hillel Eavli and burden upon, the community. *The farming and the. like. *? .-. V- 'blish Foreign Minister, by twodeath of Dr. Ieaac .Qo.ldberg . . . •:'.' JewB:of'feast-central Europe recThese- rural occupations/are eadinff officials In the ' PQlish Long-before he had the pleasure f osrilze the'importanfce of retrain- considered new fields which await "orelgn Office, by several editors, of meeting him, this colyumist ing, and many organizations de- development by Jews.- In indus- by a number of Polish and Ru-had admired Goldberg as a hard- vote much .attention to.it. Normal try, too, a number of new proj- manian professors and by Several hitting, though erudite, critic and trade and agricultural schools, ects have been, suggested; One leaders of political-parties ia both essayist In the days of the old courses foradfilts -without a trade plan would find employment for countrl&3. I raised the baffling Mencken-Nathan American Merand finishing classes for artisans Jews in basket-making, i a ' t h e question, 'wheretof with every- cury . . . At the time of our meetare maintained. by ' the Jewish production of canned goods and one of these men, but tho former Ing (scarcely two months before i Colonisation Association, by thepreserves for -export, "chiefly to Tolish ; Foreign Minister alone, his death) Goldberg was full of i Ort, by Centos and byTWuzet. The America; another would attempt was sufficiently Interested to di plans for the future . . . He want! J o 1 n t Distribution Committee' ijo find- a market • for manufat- cuss the problem. I pointed out ed most passionately to „ plunge ; does not engage directly In trade tired goods, chiefly; hosiery,: in that, since no country was ready himself .deeper ." into the war \ education. Tmt it subsidizes the Great Britain' and the Colonies. to receive large numberd of Jews, against Nazism and Fascism . . . I schools 6t all four of the asBocia- One effort has . already yielded emigration was really an academ- The columns he wrote pillorying : tlons which have, been named and some results. -In the northwest- ic matter and realistic statesmen Hltlerisia he'd -have written if also many independent inatitu- ern part ot the- , Lublin region, must seek a positive solution there wers no; publications to i tlons. l.Thousatfd's of persons have somo 3,000 school children and within the.country. Otherwise'the publish them . . . They Wfes'e, he •pezzzs.zd cad been taught-trades, and many an old women have been set to work pauperisation of nearly 10 c& of eaid, a sort ot safety vaUre that property• " ' " • artisan of inadequate training has knitting sweaters, -iats, shawls, the country's population would kept his indignation from/ desbeen: enabled" to pass the govern-: and the like, for- export to £ng- not only ruin the Jews but also troying him . , , Into the battle ment examination - through - In-land."' Puny,as these attempts at unbalance the entire economic' against all sham and injustice he > struoUon -provided by these: or- reconstruction are, they deserve structure of Poland. He agreed put every ounce ei_tae spiritual ganizations. I visited the Vilna encouragement,. Yet - we arb inbut asked not t o be quoted.. I t Technlcum;.'and 1 "several 'Other duty bound, to say, a word of was evident that the- man wasstrength he possessed in such . trode DQhools. The spirit- of teach- warning,'»In the Lublin : region, yielding to the, forco of reason. generouis measure Not long ers and students is excellent, but the' destitute women and children before h'ia death, he had evolved tho equipment is antiquated and work twelve to fourteen -hours a inadequate. It should be made day for a wage of: 18 to 20 cents. high' ctlcsdcnSs cf SadasSry—rsspsrs possible for these Institutions to It is, of course, obvious ' that modernize thelr'equipment and to much of the success of such" venis law ted I d c if ccsfcst c! &s extend their influence. tures depends upon cheap labor. But limits 'must be set to exploiTraining of Young People the greatest care Hxs KefcccsSMS'BsQTfrers cad.Bess Distiib^tw The ' Hachsharah and Hecha- tation.beAnd taken that- what profits lutz movements, . although pri- must to prol&d i i ^ fcdul^Y fe^c^ <M^ASW3 feet e '•tA('i'>u- iai'Arfi.'if » ! .realized should benefit the marily concerned with the train- are workmen. To permit a chain, of ing o£ young people for pioneer middlemen -1—Jobbers, exporters, life in Palestine, have exerted a etc.—to" be forged out of misery Eoyc! Me:'er Tires en ysuT powerful influence in the direconly add injustice to discsr; V7zp vp yciT present tion of retraining. Not , all th would; toes end lack i'-msS tsfsly tress. One may accept with mis<Baany. thousands who flock to thegivings the union of business with preparatory colonies havep found philanthropy which these venit, possible to -proceed to Pales- tures involve; but no one ought tine.; Considerable numbers re- to permit exploitation, to 'parade Third Fleer main a t home, but they do notas philanthropy. . : •oar cas!a»ers SSTCT Is ps&ssiss c bssr sts?s e i revort-to their old mode of life ; They remain proficient industrla' The Phenomenal growth in the b j Its ceafiart JscpcErdisss j c - s Mcsss® cssfi.p workers or farm laborers who number and influence of cooperfa do • . have been, inspired by the Ideal of atives*, throughput east-central '. AfSsr ysa'vo p-.-» Cay;? physical labor.. It is difficult to Europe should serve both 23 a Mestcn ihrsvg!i thslf Fasts' : fsr 3 doyt—ccms bc;5: e n d 9 O3tlmate;the numbers 'hat. have warning and as an" example : for been thus retrained, but In al the Jews. Polish and Rumanian likelihood these , activities have artisans and traders of the. ChrisCsrI proved even more effective than tian faith have an enormous ad\ 713 FIT.Sr VJJuVMZ. t the trade : schools. Today as many vantage over the Jews in.> the ^ young men and women are in struggle for a livelihood. The pulArtificial Ice & Coar Co- "Pselfie Frkiit fins M " I.* .training in the preparatory col pit, the press, and: popular-orators C. A* Eradtey Prepuce C©*, SP^s. The Brown Fruit Ce> . *• B. Scfjas.vkp
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AND YAM SURE
THE JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY, 3ULT 23, 1938 need of national rights so obvious aratioa even cf the most positive j ginning .can be T and their realization, sa easy. If Irnd • work ont to cur detriment. iEolidstion of the -'t ' ie recent crisis ' governments -vrithcui This is -what t\ there is a place ia t i e world Czechoslovakia has clearly | trol out o the hcz-d ~Z tL Ticrwhere national autonomy for in j pie. Jews could reasonably be expect- demonstrated. S. I beli eve ed to function, it is~ Czechoslo- (Copyright, 18S8, by Seven Arts j public ctllity, Tr"b° vakia. And yet, even in this counFeature Syndicate) | municipally ciraec is so'.C. t o c r •-, try, where the theory of. national/ {taken ot%r i y tz:. autonomy was born and perfect[ t i e people si.6ziC ed, it has proved to be impossible i port-unity -to e:s~*of realization as far as the lews are con/eraed. | I -believe the T the Jews, although they Sixth District v l i l E.:'r-:-ec:E..£ z. i ~ form a separate nationality are . Sam Klaver, former president j f ^ j ^ ^^^ cp<=n j*r' not a nationality or of the Omaha Hebrew Club, is | yj^^ aITg tToaesV" - After -first joining v r i t b iessions. If Sudeten Germans are cial and professional posts. This nevertheless the same type as the Poles, the one of the candidates in the Sisth ' questions that ETP C Yoles, Hungarians and other to have national autonomy, why is the basis of national autonomy. minorities ,Jn ^Czechoslovakia in not Poles and Hungarians? - The But it so happens that the Jews i Germans, the Hungarians, the Bisrtict, .and is making an active them and thafwi'.l c; Croats and the numerous • ether campaign for Unlcameral Legis=' demanding'-- national, autonomy,': Czechoslovakian Government re- in* Czechoslovakia (as well as in I irant yo"r *•"• t&B 'Sexrd of'-that country have alized the justice of these de- many other countries) while they national, groups in Europe. They lature. Sir. Klaver was nominat- BOW abandoned that demand. mands (and maybe it was not Gil do not occupy four' percent of are a unique - nationality -which ed two years ago and was nosed basis. I hare noJ r~ oat by a very slight majority. "I grind. T.Iy piedg-e .o •Why? BJr."' -Zokerman' answers - mere justice, hut partly also .pres- state positions, nevertheless occu- does not form a separate econ- am asking for support upon a will serre ES faittCw'1. thai qoiestioa .la another of Ms sure) and is now preparing a new py 70 percent of the .commercial omic or territorial group in any purely non-political basis and be- ly and as ably as It :: country .in the world (Palestine . dearly thongfat "'out -dispatches • nationality law which will give and professional positions in the Not only have they no cause I believe I can be of real If yon approve ef! trozsi Knrope^rSHE • EDITOB.' each minority within its borders country.' If the Jews were to in- excluded). state of their own, but service to" the people -of my dis- er -S-tatements I hs1•e m r ; e cr.~~ the widest possible autonomy in sist' on a strict status of national territorial trict, my city, ray county and my even in those countries where : —One of the-few advantages of cultural, economic a n d political autonomy they would, indeed, be they live in compact masses, as state if-1 am nominated and elect- wiil mate -beiore tho numerous crises in Europe at affairs. v' election I v:Il- irz . - , ' . • entitled to state support of their in Poland and in some other ed. SA?.' TZi.1 "the present time is that occasionHebrew schools, of the communi- places, they are not an economic It is a t this point, that the Jews I believe it is only fair to the | E ^ candidate" fc-^T1 ally, without intention, and al- come in. Jews too, are a natonal ties and to a proportionate repre- entity independent o£ the rest of of the Sixth District to let | i a %h°"sts;TE B ' i T most against : the will•= of their minority in Czechoslovakia. • There sentation in the government. But the population of . the country. voters chief actors, they.sometimes help are over 180,000 Jews In the they would'also have to be lim- Territorially, as well as econom- them tso-w just where I stand | ^ • to> solve: old' and difficult prob- country and 100,000 of these live ited to four percent in commer- ically, Jews are part and parcel upon .some cf the most important j lems"-which, had stubbornly re- in compact masses in the pxov- cial and in professional positions of tiio rest of the populations of measures that may be proposed j Chelebi Bally, E. Turkish * r cv, • fused to be solved. Europe Is now nce of Carpatho-Russia. The rest which \would mean an economic the states they, live in''and can- in the next legislature. I do this ! Is 1716 aifiea Kirc1 in a.state pi great experimenta- j.Te scattered In the big towns of ruin, similar to, if not worse than not be separated from them. No so that you can judge whether or ! dato to ascend t i e t1 tion. In "the political laboratories Czechoslovakia, chiefly Prague. that Effected now in Nazi Ger- amount of theorizing about being not you think I can and wiil be j Isc^is,. of service to you. Eere are some | of the nations great tests are be'"..•." should not the Jews, too," be many. a nation and being'entitled to na- of the things far which I EtEnd: ! ing made which would not be at- "Why in the new measure for The demands f o r . national tional rights like others is o£ any .1. I .believe that Omaha, is entempted in peaceful' times, and included autonomy? . The demand rights were, therefore, quickly avail. For even if Jews are a na- titled to a larger share of the the •; results -are of Tital Interest national plausible, particularly to dropped even by the Zionist spon- tion (and this, too, is doubtful) state gasoline money that is aland concern to- the' various- peo- seems Jews of a nationalistic trend of sors of the scheme. Jewish lead- they are a nation of a different lotted to this county so that we ple.. Occasionally it happens that mind most-Jews in Eastern ers are now negotiating with the kind to which the Tistsal national can. do more repair work on our • such' a test Berves a. useful pur- Europe(and' now of that trend), government for the inclusibn in theories do not apply. Whether streets. pose also for the Jews.. An inter- and anareorganized movement the state budget of the Hebrew we want it or not, we Jews de2. I do not believe in a State esting test of<, this land has now sprang up to exert pressure on schools in Carpatho-Russia and pend for our existence upon the Sales Tax nor in any additional " I m n made in Czechoslovakia. the Czechoslovakian Government for other similar concessions. But democratic principle of t & e taxes of any IJud. This test was least of all in- to-extend the newly proposed the general demand for national French Revolution of equal civil 3 . 1 believe that the efficiency tended for the Jews. It'was con- measure to Include Jews. autonomy for 'the Jews has been rights, not upon t i e more modern of our relief and ' work-relief cerned chiefly, and almost excluprinciples of "national rights. We It was, of course, natural that given up. Jews of all parties, are citizens of the states we live agencies can be greatly improved sively with the German'minority even of the most advanced naif a greater degree of control is in .Czechoslovakia, the so-called the Zionists should be the prime tionalistic program, have come to in, not a separate national group. vested in one agency. Sudeten, Germans who.-live in Bo- movers of the movement. A pro- the conclusion National differentiation • and septhat the older, 4. I believe ^hat at least'a behemia. Hitler claims - that they gram was prepared ,. which de- democratic status EQUAL CIVaro Germans and that they must manded. (1) That all the Hebrew IL. RIGHTS FOE.erf THE JEWS be Incorporated Into the German schools, "Chedorlm" and "Yethe . Jewish position in Hejch. But this - is not such an shivas" in the country should be suits Czechoslovakia better than the easy.: task. Czechoslovakia, with- made state schools and support- newer status of national rights. out '. the' coal mines and the iron ed entirely by the government. The new law in Czechoje of Bohemia: and without the (2) • that the government- should oslovakia nationality will, therefore, deal mountainous frontiers of- that launch a system of training- of with all nationalities, not BY INITlATiViii qountry. is, from the 'military Jewish young men-with a view •with-the Jews. With thebut consent standpoint, open • to German at- to preparing them for • economic of the Jews themselves, they A proposal to asasnd Settipa 24,-Artsde S cf t h e ' will tack on every side. From the positions, and employment, (S) be treated as equal citizens of the ion of Nebraska anthcxszijts: the legislatcre, that the government should supeconomic standpoint, it is an imnot as a distinct minorhy IBTT, to- Kcense sad to regslate the operation cf possible unit •' which would be port the Jewish communities to- country, dot machines and other coin operated 'devices and doomed to ^collapse within a short gether with-' their, elaborate sys- ity group. Part of Country period. The Czechs-have there? tem of ireligious. and social sermachines cf chance, exempting merchandise and sso I j The lesson of this incident is lore decided to offer-resistance to vices. The demands' seemed feasservice vending machines-; to provide that revenue ible enough and pressure was obvious. Czechoslovakia is the a Nazi invasion and to any atderived from license fees shall go into ths stats brought on the , Czechoslovakian classic land, of national minoritempts at an Anschluss of .Boassistance fund, the school district in which the hemia with the Third Reich simi government to bring :them into ties. In no other country is t i e lax.to that of Austria. Hitler, effect. £31 I I NO machine is located and for'administrative expanse; having realised that jthe Czechs ; . Ruin Faced to provide a.limitation on the amount of an occupawere In. earnest about their deBut it .was • at this time '•' that tion t a s any city cr vDlsgs. in ths state may levy cision to defend - their country, difficulties set' in. According. to pcs say OWSET cr operator ef sues machine. save way and postponed . th the underlying principle of na•putsch' indefinitely. -And in the tional autonomy upon which the meantime the' Czech Goverhmen new "measure of -the, Czech GovBrass, Bronze, , has decided to grant the Sudeten ernment is based, each - national'A KEASUEB ^ • ' .Soft Grey Iron and SemiGermans a great/- measure, of na- ity' in-the state is. to receive pro-" Steel Castings, Wood and AN AMENDMENT to ths Constitution cf the' State of Nebraska tional autonomy to satisfy their portionate representation in the Metal Patterns and Sa.sii relating to public assistance, -welfare and social security; to provide legitimate nationalistic claims. economic, administrative and cul- .Weights carried ia ctocli. -••' Question "of Autonomy • tural 'positions of the country. revenue for ths State Assistancs Fsmi frca ths proceeds of nn Bronze anil Cast Iroa But once this question ofsna Since Jews form four percent of annual t a s to be levied ©a owners End operstom cf" coin-operated Grilles a-Specialty. tlonal autonomy was .-raised f o the entire population "of Czechotho-Germans, other nationalitie slovakia, they . are therefore enIn Czechoslovakia such '.••', as.Lvth< titled to'fqur"percent of all gov-: ; 27th.; and Martha Sts. Poles-and the Hungarians, havi ernment positions" as well as of fiia Pespls cf fes Stats cf NeteEsia: 38 i t also raised claims to similar con agricultural, industrial, commerSection 1- That Seetioa 24, Artkle m , CoTifetitctisa of Nebraska^ ! lbs amended to.read as folio-ws; , •Sec 24. (a) Ths Legislature shall act authorise any game of ! .chance, lottery or gift enterprise; but nothing in this section shall, be ! construed to-prohibit the enactment of lav^s provided for ths licensing . regnlatioa of WEgering: ca the results cf horse races by ths parior certificate method,- -when conducted by licensees -within tha .Tace track enclosure st licensed horse race meetings; nor shall anything tin this section be construed to prohibit the enactment cf laws proridins for the operation, leasing, distribstisa, Eiaintenancs or possession. c£ any coin-oparated aaar'hiTif s, •whether said sisciikies are skill machines, aacHnss er trade machines .or providing for the licenses', {regulation and taxing cf said machines as-hereafter'provided, (b) No iperson or persons, corporation or corporations shall e'sni cr operate any 1 coin-operated device "nithcat first savins obtained & license therefor. For the purpose of this section, coin-operated devices are defined £nd ;classified 'as follows: (1) ' Coin-operated skill machines (coniraonly 'referred 4o as pin games, marble tables and siiiiisr devices cf this type -which snay have a EMU .feature) -^-Mca may cr may not pay a reward for sldllfnl operation, or upon. •wMcls. operation premiums may msy not be given for high score er ja&Hns certain combinations. •Snch premioms may _be s-wsrded either antemsticElIy by.the machine lin the form of checks, tokens or orders -which desisaste th& value cf tha or-premicais, cr raay be indicated by a. score -card, attached io tbe machine. He^Eafter, this type shall- be referred.to as ,'sldli jinacMnes'.- (2) Autoasatie coia-eperais^ versdisg aad aamsezaent machines -with premisin •features -^hich vend for eaek coin deposits! s. ;standard article of tisrchsndise cf a recognised retail valse eqctl to .•the coin deposited and in addition, may vend cHscis, tokens cr orders -rwhich jnzy be exchanged for additions! laereliEndise. 'Hereafter this .type shall be referred to as 'arftomsiic venders*. '(3) Trsds nschines .-which have no,merchandise vending festers, aithonga st istsrrals indicate that patron is entitled t» receive premiiSis ia merchandise or cash ^which the machine rn&y cr may sot vend. Eereafter this type -will bs •referred to as' 'trada machines': Provided;'soiMng' herein contained ishall be construed to zpply ta cny coin-opsrated anachine cr device •which returns amusement cr enteri&insent cr some service or article of value or a combination cf the. shore-uniformly ss to gssntity and ;qnalit7 upon each insertion of s. coin into the sasis nor is. any coinoperated telephone, United States stsssp machine or toilet locks.. Each istmer of aatomatic renders or'skill EsacHass cr trade machines shall •obtain an annual license from .and. shall pay in t'dvanca an anneal tri-S opcr^ij.r:^' cost — zner -occupation t a s to the Tax Commissioner cf the state in the suia-of pas' Thousand Dollars en t i e 2rsi machine-for -which-^i5"-ann\ial license is taken,xsll of said tax to bs credited ts tha. Stste Assistance Fond, and EB annTial occupation t a s to the Tas Commissioner cf tha state r i each additional Machine fcr -wMch En anKn&l license is taken in ths s-ani o£ Forty Dollars per year, payable quarterly in' Edrance, -Thirty Dollars of which shall bs credited to ths 'State-. Assistance .Fund £nS Tea Dollars, less ths cost ef administration, If any, shall forthwith b^ transmitted to ths proper ssicai treasurer for credit to the pab"c school fund of the particslar eity, to-sm, villags cr county in ^hich each of said EiscMsea is liesnsad, as the case ra.s.y be: Provided, Eti•withstssiding any ordinance or charter polder is tas contrary, n-3 city , ©ilisrs! A t ; •or-village shall impose any occupation, privilege, licsnsa,-excise cr ether Si •tax on the • business cf any licensed person, fen cr corporation otming •or operating'said eoin-cperated machines.in any sun C3;c.:adir.s T:n siccn op sale ^Dollars per annaa. .Tha provisions, of .this seetien.'do nst apply ts :maeiin6S or devices hexn^ displayed or demonstrated by'iaan-afactursrc, '/distributors, salesssea cr .their egsnts-for salss purposes. Tae Lecrlstlatafe by ..genera! !a«r shall provide tae aropunt ef application fees snd 'other rcgiilations to defray the cest cf administration ef and,t? carry ,out the intent and purpose of. this section,', and shall further provide it •it> be a misdemeanor psnishsble by fine nst exceeding Ons HundrrS 'Dollars for each cSense for any .owner cr person in charts of s.nlicensed machine kao'sringly to p-emii sny minor tts play therecn.*1
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Sam ICIaver Run
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LEGAL NOTICE AS T O RfE/iSURE
Paxton-Mitcliell - Co. Foundries
The above proposed measure ta .be-.voted -upon at the g-estrcl election November 3, 1S33, is published in accordance with'sest'.cn 1910, Chapter S2, Cii-spilsd "Stajatcs- 1223, State cf Ksbraska. S s r s j S. Zvr&mon, Eecretarj cf Ststa,
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THE JEWISH. PRESS—FRIDAY, JULY 29,-1938
PUDUI3MCD aversv FHIDAY AT OMAMA, NCEJRAC«A> JEN7ISE FBESS PPBUS^IMO .COMPANY Ona
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RA?C3 RJRNISHE© ©1*3" APPLICATION cblTorJAI. OPPlCCi C33 nRANbEIG THEATER BUIUOINQ V O?FICE»JGV.?ISS1 O?FICEJG.ISS .COMMUNITY •CENT.EB, C1QUU OlfV P N T CHOP CHOP ADPREOS—K ADPREOSKM 6O 84TH'STReeT-, 84TH'STReeT
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Bdfte? »s '•" ° • Coatrifeatlag -Elite? © " ©'_ . o ' ,/*;-:'-.Boois Editor Sloai City, Iowa,
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by the.'vicissitudes cf the econo- the mzxr tfe-t Eiiiiot the liumsip- BuEli be pent against Mas. Coughlin. to exercise a little more discretion in his speeches. A man. void if understanding, la. kind. mic crcer. If he were sincere he would seek to end the impression that TTell, I answer, if niy grett lie th&t. eirikeils hands and J>e» If h© couldn't pay the- rent ae would be out on the street -in t i egTEncsoE. Is s, Jew, lie vrlli at lesst comsth surety for hie neighbor.he goes out of his way to take little pokes at the Jews. • u ^ rain with- his several etiots cS his pain ths-t bas to. &o vrLih. his Ke ;h&t Jcveih transgreslon, On his broadcasts when he speaks of alien international he that exalteth'-hiB furniture and Ms children; .if t i e being Jewish . . . ' T o r being a loveU?. Et-11;e: ; relief voucher didn't cotae os JET, lor beta? faithful to tfce fjt.te, FPe].--e-,l'i fiestvuntion, bankers, it 13 the Jewish names that are always Eingled out for time there wouldn't bs anything things that are Jewlsb I £ra sufspecial attention. His enunciation of the name "Rothschild'1 fering this," fee B E T pay, "That's A PROPOSAL to eat in his house. Ol-.r eF.pep were Faying. "At all is as though he were»speaking the name 'Satan.' "When he was Dssr Mr. Segal: . Though no . Yet t e might sot bs a very 5"iCh times should man's disposition be 1 I s a & reader of your col- or a very poor seoteS-IrlsSrzan For other people there out to unionize labor, it was'a "Christian ' union,which by iikir Je\7, pl.eas&nt in associating ulna, yiilii utmost respect nsay I but inerely , -a modestly comforttlas.t plication wOuld omit eny Jews as members. These are not iso- ask you: Is there any good rea- able one in a rather humble house even their- pains Trtieli are sot. tc bs rmE vent to tlie colwhy the Jews shotftd contin- with a lawn ia the suburbs. He US.SsrftoosI r-"r.cs they inRfep rtc lated instances, but-are examples in a long; list. ^ son tv^e'.^e ves.rs there. ue to exist: as a alacrity people tvould be a salessan ^So would ser;se . . . The pain ot poverty, the returning home he er, he .. As ,& pedple we have no quarrel with the doctrines of aad suffer as they do? Aren't you be troubled every day on &cesu&t pain oE the righteous deJeated --o the lious&.ot-etudy of that his job, what with the sales •vrhile the vickjd fiourisli, the -went s-.iic Father Coughlin. Fortunately in America, no matter how cock- too clannish; holding yourself] cf fcent v^'orcl to hig bouse bfeicg EO arrogiat, as pais et disease . . . Mr srmt trom • otter groups. • By aVmanager , ha fcac t rr^-ecl. Rabbi Osheyed one's ideas, there is the freedom to promulgate them. But apart sales nanagsrs often are. sorptloa Into oth^r race £rm&&2n (if be is a Jevn v:5U on, immediately came his in times as these we can not look with indulgence upon a so- your problem -would be • solved "Ferguson . . (that laight be suffer nil these FESSS t u t . b e v-iii t,r.& {Incognito) occupied a seat the mixture'of bloods would my great grand-son's naiae). also feave the b;t of bairn. T.-fcioh tiffore Mm, lie began to question called man of God fanning the flames of intolerance, of anti- while serve to improve the so-called "Fergu*oa," the -sales saanEger comforts tfee psia. o£ being jevrish l-im eo-ncsri-lriE some traditions, Semitism. • Aryan breed. You would cease to •would say truculently, "You're . . . "Yes,fcecs.siEeI v a s f&ithful c.n£ sanlng that he -was sharp in
exist s s s people but the fine falling dowE, yen're falling flaws. I'ri suffering this," every If.vs. Kiibbi Chama felt disqualities of the Jewish people You aren't aakiag the sales quocoiirapen. c^rinfe- to himself, "If Oh.. Mr. E. *>. T., there is some The recent interview with Arthur Hays Sulsberger, pub- ' .•'•"•.• ' / '• - . . - T h e T h r e e B e n j a m i n s . . . . • would, by heredity, continue to ta this week. You s&sst sell 1CC0 eonsulation in that for e Jevr 1 ypre "icre I -would have had a flourish asnoag the peoples. refrigerators this week and you•rhiie a Scctch-Irir-fciaac. lias no son (c.: v.r cliiid I left) like this lisbfer of the New York Times, that appeared in the Jewish' . '--\ * By; Eabbi Frederick Cohn .'.'. - •. CM:." He tb.cn v/ent home. His la crfier that an example n a y have sold cn'y S55. 'Watch your expl&Estioc tc retiona-lise his sfir Prfecs.a short time ago has not gone without comment in the £,2sc entered. Rabbi Chama I have been feadirfg an. address on Judah P. Benjamin, de- b© set, I invite you (if you arestep, Ferguses.". pains. (i-nae-r the impression that he Aoglo-Jewish Press of the country. Repercussionsvafe still be : livered before the Law Club of Chicago on March 22, 1929, by not alre&dy married) to go court- My poor,, worried gre&t-grEncivaf c etrtneer) got up for him, and marry one of cur girls. sani Though he is a-Scotch-Irishing hoard, and it goes without eaying that most of the com- James H. Winston, member of the Chicago Bar, and privately lag Not t h l t I era rejecting your believing that he bad come to Judging by your intellectual qual- man inetfeafi of a Jew ht is ctf.ll >; caughtcr. I . txa. merely ttinkicg Bsi; hire something. Where upon ment has been condemnatory.•:. . V. : : ity I would not hesitate to let you unsafe and troubled. " what is best ror the bcr- I Eta" his v-i£e remarked, "Is theTa then printed by Frederick A. Fischel, an admiring colleague. marry ray own daughter. We ar* What I csi trying to say, my tir?1 further tl?.or,Ffct t.c tfee mat- eutfc Yet, Mr. Sulsberger, regardless of how erratic hjs views e \?,vr that one should get up Scotch-Irish. What do you-say ? ~ I t is a most excellent succinct account of the brilliant v dear E. D. T.. is that t i e r s is 'pain ter. Eo-rever, the problem is fur- 'pefore Ms son?" - might seorn, is hot an unwelcome voice. He conies aa- an anti- career D. T. for Scoteh-IrSehiaea as well &s fcr t i e r complicated fcr *fce fact, t t a t o£ th,e illustribos Jew who became 'distinguished at the B. Dear E. D. T.: I am, ot. course Jews and that there is en sscur- I am. alreafir marrlccl, hare best. Prom .the land of Israel they dotfi to the ferocity and extremism of the Lewisohn-Wise school. B&is of two nations.' Benjamin was an Englishman by birth, flattered by your -proposal ia be-Hy, unless one be of tha Kinshascr.t forth the following: "ObWe ore uS§d t6 the cello-v6iced self-appointed "leaders of Israel, being born on the island of St. Thomas in the "West Indies that half, of your -daughter. However, ha fox-hunters In red coats who gcrvf perfect cleanliness. Be care. | tx:l vrlib. the children of the poor ' rabbis, sponsors of organizations of one sort or another, Zion- belonged to Great Britain. His parents removed to Charleston, I may not on the epur of the n o - are.quite rare anyway. <And I say Tes but must give a y am not really ssre that I want er % \ i for from them -will the Torah ists, et cetera, .who by the very nature of i;he positions they SoUth Carolina,, and he became one of the most distinguished tnent mind to a soleiaa consideration of my gTeat granason to be o£ the i come forth." th© ttrhoie natter: Should I, for idle rich.) occupy are the exponents of a.maximum.Jewishness. _ T \ jurists. of the South, becoming United States Senator from the sake of the safety of xay gen- -So say problem is this:1 "Which Britain Bars Appeal Mr. Sulzberger, on the contrary, is a layman, a business Louisiana, and afterwards Attorney General, Secretary of "War, erations, give ray hand and heart pains shall I confer upon iny London (JTA) — The Privy to your daughter? great grandson — the . simple man, who it would neem had little time to; dwell on the merits and finally Secretary of State of the Southern Confederacy. Council refused to permit an apone -wio gives thought to pains of s Scotch-Irishman or the i peal in the case of Corporal Morof the American Jewish Congress or American Jewish. Com- "With t i e collapse of tha 'lost cause' that included the com-theAs•welfare even of ci« . grfe&t- more complicated pains of a. Jew ! aeohai SchWartx, a Palestina Jew. mitteO, on Sionipa, on the contemporary Hebrew: Renaissance. plete-ruin of his personal fortunes, Benjamin, with great dif- g'randchildren I s a indlafed to w&o suffers all the cosinon pains Pride goeth before fiestvuctioii ; 1st constable who early tlita year favor your proposal. If I married. and his own exclusive PEISS be- a"ad £-si ar~©£ajit spirit before £• ; v , u sentenced to death by the Surprisingly enough he is very well-informed on all aspects ficulty and danger, made his way to London, beginning life ens of the Scotch-Irisa tay £rfi&t- sides? It seeas j e n a teatter of j " P u a Criminal Assize court for sg OE® psiii for aaotfeer of f£.Il 65 Judaism. Despite his assertion which questioned the wisdom all over again and attaining highest rank and honor as onegr&ndcallSrea certainly woulfi t e ps-pmeclHated murder ot an A retielllcuE msiE ctcSetfc orAr ij the relieved c£ miay o t the problems Arab policeman in 1887. of remaining a Jow should Palestine become a Jewish state, of the fo?emofet jurists of England.. eril therefore P cruel messer-ger yhiefc. beset me, their Jewish troziss Our Advertisers ho does more than his oh. are in Jewish religious activities. Benaamin's career brings to mind that of £is brother-Jew, great-grandfather. Scotch-Irish great grandson His background has not been without its profound Jewish that other Benjamin, Disraeli, ^England's distinguished states- n l'My f. g i t aspire even for the presi•^s.^v..'y.ia..'i--ir^ .'^^•-^•wHcrrr-. ixifluencep. All Jews revere the. scholarship of Mayer Sulz- man and Prime Minister. They both lived in England and were dency of the United States, an elwhich Is far bsyosd the bairgqr and the role of the Peisottos, the de Maduros, the Hays famous together in England at the same time. Benjamin, hc$w- evation reach ol ray ambition, slice I aia in Jewish life. His wife is a granddaughter of the late Rabbi >ver, was a greater admirer of Gladstone than he was of his a Jew. Or, even more, he might rasabsrship In the Miaeha* Isaac Mayer "Wiae. ••'"."• : : . D i s r a e l i . -. ..-"'•' ' • . . •: • ' -.^IM-I attain ha Fox Hunt Club (-which is realBy; the most peculiar coincidence • the world is occxspied ly very swell, what -with the red Perhapa Mr. Sulsberger "goes to the extreme of his point thsy -wear on fos hunts.).!, of view. Yet he h&s presentedanother side to^a question, a at tho moment with the contemplation, of the life aM character coats as a Jew, is&y s o t even drfeaa of side whose vbice is usually lost in the oratory and apologetics of still another Benjamin, Benjamin Nathan Cardozo, one of •wearing a red coat In an exclusive the most distinguished jurists of the world, late honored and fos hunt. of th& btliers. • " . . .; : Or, on. top cf everything, lie It is time Jews realized there are certain attitudes that eloved member of the Supreme Court of the United States, could get intd the best Newport (H. 1.) hotel and delight his mu3t be co&ditioried, not by the fact -they are [Jews, :bttt be- whose untimely death his country, and all who knew him, men heart with .thfe awareness, that* he cauSe they are human beings. It is jimethat the militant Zion- £ the most diverse political and other opinions,' sincerely is paying ?1GO a &ay Jdr his quarters, and Is standing at the peafe ists realised that it is not hefiesy to disagree with them. Zion- mourn, not only because of his brilliant intellectuality and juri- of human elevation. ism and Judaipm are not synonymous.terms. There is truth in dical genius but also because of his sweet, loving personality. In thert; my Scotch-Irish great All three Benjamins -were Sephardic Jews, whose ancestors grandson would be an accepted , Ms. Sulzberger's statement that a Jewish state in/Palestjne unlike his Jewish greatwill place the Jew? of other nations in a compromising position. had been driven out of Spain, their descendants, achieving the man grandfather who can't even get •© There are angles to this being a Jew that must not behighest EUCC833 in the countries in which they were permitted into the Hiawatha Club -which is the Hineh&ha Club. overlooked because they are disagreeable. It is well to have a to reside and become citizens, many of them attaining the leE3Mythan descgndant could becessa deep abiding faith in everything Jewish but • blind faith is loftiest positions of honor and of influence, all of them add- even president of the General Corporation (capital not a true faith.' [ ' ing greatly to the' wealth and progress of the nations of which Doorknobs $1,000,000,000) which, as everythey were permitted to become a part, T7hile Spain which had body fenows, doesn't t&fce Jews even to be clerks. As president of : expelled, them, went .gradually down and down, until today tfes in. I t a l y "' • • -r- •:.. " -: General Doorknobs Corporation ha might swing .a- etosfe• Now that Italy has announced its intention of taking its. from a position of imperial glory as under Ferdinand and Isa- swindls which would get him into place as an "Aryan"nation, Italian Jewry with abated-breath ella, it has sunk in the political scale, shorn, of its possessions, jail but nobody would .say it was to his Sootch-Irisa ancesis awaiting the next move of the government. Is Italy to have power, and prestige, to a tenth-rate nation, in imminent danger all dasHe would be privileged to her vorsion of the Nuremberg laws? Are there to be ghetto if losing its nationality entirely at the hands of Italy and Ger- try. suffer hik sin all to himself. many; illustrating the truth of Ingersoll's remark that *when His Jewish sreat grandfather Is boaohe3 in the parks and window-smearings? / feeling troubled because There ia nolncthing very strange in-the promulgation of Spain expelled her Jews she blew her brains out.' Sultan Be- always ot being made to carry the sins this doctrine. It was done, not in the usual Mussolini-manner jazet said he did not see wherein the reputed wisdom of Fer- ot otner Jews; since the sia • clone Jew is visited upon all othwith il Duoe reviewing a great display in the ancient coloseum dinand lay who 'impoverished himself while he enriched him' ers "T~S, . . ." "That's the Jew fcr yoc," or in the plaza of the Palazzo Venezia and then announcing with the Jews who found refuge in Turkey. they say. " would think the Germans would learn a lesson from' Certainly, as my ghost looked tho policy ia stentorian terms. Instead a group of unnamed the privileges of lay Scetehprofcsaojrs prepared the doctrine. Since then only two Fascist this. The (Jerinans, as a learned people are presumed to know upon Irish great grandson I should voices have been heard, that of Roberto Farinacci, Italy's num- history. But the Nazis in their self-infatuation and fanaticism have to be grateful to'you, n j B. D.-.T., t o r having I&t rae ber one anti-Semite andYirginio Gayda, the voice of Italian do not realize that they are following inevitably in. the'. foot* dear raarry your daughter. Step3 of Spain. Many tragic suicides are oecuring among Jews Yet there is another sids. My foreign policy. '•_ — „':"••• a r r y i n g yotir Scotch-Irish Silont has been Mussolini. Silent has -been Count Ciano, in greater (?) Germany, including some of the formerly most m daughter doesn't guarantee that trusted lieutenant, son-in-law, and heir. And that silence is wealthy and prominent, because of Germany's inhuman per- rny great-grandson will be presi- ! of the United, or ascent to ominous. Anti-Semitism has always been one of Hitler's favor- secution of the Jew. Germany herself is committing slow sui- dent inetabefshlp in the Mlaehaha • Fox cide in the repression and forced migration of her upwards of - He topics.- Wore he or Goering'or Goebbels or Streicher or Hunt Club, or go to the elevaRosenberg to speak on Germany and its ship-building trade half a million Jews. "With, colossal folly, not to speak of crim- tion ef the Newport, botel, or besae president o£ Csneril Ds£?» it wouldn't talse long before anti-Semitic-; denunciations began inal wickedness, she is depriving herself of some of the best knobs. . '• '
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A small bundle of lightness •... a delightful porous fab-ric-that lets yoiar b'ody
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worsted yarns m a w of beantiful uattems.
punctuating the talk/ There are no German anti-Semitic pro- talent and genius in medicine, in science, in art, in the drama, Ia fact, ha may he a.pdor a a a ! WPA (as many a Ecdtch-Irisanouncements but that are boldly proclaimed throughout the in fimsic, in literature, not to speak of men of great financial on man is) and feel no safety at all and commercial ability, men like Einstein, Freud, Feuchtwang- in -the -world — no snore ti.au I, land. great-grs.n£ia.ther. -who &Ea & Yet in Italy louder than the pronouncement was the thin, er, Ludwig, the Zweigs, and innumerable others. She is stead- his Jew now feel. Oh, it ^rcald t® cse aging voice ot the Pope who from his summer retreat at Castle ily impoverishing herself, bleeding herself white. "We do notpaia after another for him end if stoaes cf prejudice os. Gaudolfo expressed not only his displeasure with nationalistic say that there are not men of genius and ability among the Irayreceive poo? head (as Jews of tea do) non-Jewa o£ Germany, but under the Nazis they, too, are reny Scotch-Irish grea,t sraadspa extermiam b^t denounced anti-Semitism as a relic, of barbarism pressed* caanot find full freedom for the expression of their would be bashed fa cth' and in essence anti-Catholic, • .;". -, .Italians will find it difficult to adjust to the new order ideas and energies so that, like Thomas. Mann, though 'Aryans' E® Our Advertisers of things. To thorn the castles and cities labeled, 'del Tedeseo,' they prefer to leave Germany and live outside her cruel shame- PCJ.ITJ3AJ. of the Germane, was the censtant reminder of the plunderers ful borders. Germany, for all her reputed, totalitarian --military iaight 6iak in the scale of nationhood unless, while there is yet who came, through the Brennerl On the other hand nearly evetyone of the Italian city- time, the true Germans rise in their might and prevent the » states has &oin6 Jew whom it- lias honored as a heroWVenice ruin of their cotlntry by the overthrow of the gangsters and its Daniel Mania, whose ornate^tomb in San Marco does not the maniacs who have gotten temporary hold of that fair, bishide his Jo\visb origin; Rome her Ernesto Nathan; Leghorn its torjo country. I t is a truth of history as of life that 'pride ! go^th before'destruction,and a haughty spirit before a fall.' Baron Sonino. . ; .. r Lincoln, previsioning the doom of the South, because of the We still maintain that Italy, is not Germany and while iniquity of human slavery, solemnly proclaimed the retribu* Gebnany has been capable of overwhelming hatreds, the Italtive justice of God, quoting;the scriptural -.words: "the judg, ians are not. Of the moment tHeymight subscribe to an official ments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether." The anti-Sdmitism. But there will come a day when even anti descendants of those driven from Germany will attain influSemitism will' not be able to stay the ravages made by' 6p ; ; : ence' and power, in other lands,'; and add to their enrichment pre33Of5 "' ~ " '' and glory; above all will refute the defamation and..vilification of the.Neais by becoming not only men and women of the greatest value and usefulness, but of thVhighest character, esFather Coughlin hda again gotten himself onto the front teemed and celebrated for the loftiest integrity and -absolutely g of the An^lo-Jewish press of the country. This time with unassailable honor. Germany's"loss will be the world's gain, tlio publication of quotations from the Protocols of the Elders when new Judah.'-..P. Benjamins, Disraelis, arid Cardosos will of Zion. Of cQurso, the reverend gentleman does not print this arise in all the lands, through all the centuries, to add imto feed tho flames o£ anti-Semitism. .He'.-himself abhors anti perishable, glory to the descendants of the original Benjamin, VOTC FC Semitism. Se merely psrinted the protocols to 'show-that a cer- of the sons of Jacob, to the name of him that was--'persecuted tain plot existed and came to a head in Russia. ; . . by hi3 brethren* bnt beloved by God—Israel! Ever ciiice Father Coughlin took it upon himself to curi ' - - Frederick Cohn. the eeoaoaie ills o£ the world, he has .befen getting hiiaself in bnd with the Jews by his utter bad taste.-Yet he eounta man JCV7C aiaon3 his followers. Each time Ms mad utterances b-osa broucM to "hh attention, ho hah protested that he nm CSSS-19S3 bcoa mira.2.fissu£<;cd end ia being attacked in the Jewish papor to? tbiaca ho di<c.'t sisac. , ^ EosE CHOS&JE M . M ^ „ Friday, July 23 To Dhow, bis isood. intentions, it would be -well for Father,Bfest o | 9 & of Ab...,u...,,«......,...u..«,.,.«.,.«,«.....Saturday, Augtsst .6
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. Z. A. Tourney ;es &JULOSI&M&. PARTY
Mrs. Rose Glazer announces An "All-Omaha" party was -the marriage of her daughter, held last week at the home of Jeanne, to David DvorMn, Eon of Mr. and Mrs. A. E . Goodson of "Mr. and Mrs. Louis DvorMn, on Berkeley, California. Guests' of honor included Mrs. Jnly 9. Tha marriage toot place at the Toby- Silverman and' daughter, home of ItaBbi David A. Gold- Elaine,- formerly of Omaha and now. residents of 1/03 Angeles: stein. The couple, are making their and Mr. Goodman Meyerson, Mr. Harry Dworsky and Mr. Joe home in O mah'a.
Housing for out-of-town A. Z. A. boys i3 needed for September 4 and 5 when the Cornbslt Regidn hold3 Its annual summer tournament here. - Any person wishing to give housing to one or more fellows may call or write Morton Margolin, 116 So. 50th street, Glendale 1985. t Ths Omaha A. Z. A..chapters have expressed their appreciation to those offering housing facilities. , . ' . ' . . .
and'write.-me if you Co. Don't forget I expect to hear from yoii soon. Affectionately, A. P. S. You simply must read Fashion la Spinach, by Elizabeth Hawes, a leading New York clothes designer, it gives you all the "inside dope" on t i e ' fastion racket and will also put you in the xaood to start planning yosr fall outfit.
ntire house for -opening night of "Pins and Needles." liaise..Raiser has pledged her help for a dozen erman refugees. Dr. Lea SeliulE a s has served EE technics! advisor on thirty-two pictures . . . his particular chore in "The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse" ws,s to invest a naina for a non-ezi£test poison. Frits Kortoer's story OK Beethoven likely star Paul :unL Vieki m andResell Ann "Three LittleB aPigs")
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3oy- Scouts* Meeting p. ige Room, Jetrfsh. have adapted i s English the op-1 center. ^ ; era "Martha" for presentation at j j ^ . z. A. No. 1 Sleeting, 8 p. rr.. | the Hollywood l a ths _gratiBoons C £r.d B, Jewish Comraui.- ' for csrvicesBowl._ reafiered He-j Kooi , 1 v ; cz brew Day Xursery o* New Tork ity Center. T r~ T 2. playgroiind after Sophie International Workers Orce-: Tucker. Bet it will have S p. in., Hoosis C aaa D, SeTricii Ciaplia turned dawn a half milfLLbl r.c. HCllywoofi—One chap who fis- lion dollars "by refusing to allow Goldware who are visiting friends SEEKING DATES FOR serves much credit for the good a reicsE© of "The Kid" . . . . figand relatives on the coast. : JOSLYN MESMOBIflli " . CONCLAVE .VISITORS taste -eiid Iavl3h baekground of ures it- is dated. Omahans present "were A motion picture film of the Dr.Other "Maria Antoinette" "is H u n t and 23x3. E..I* Kushner, Mis'Olympus Country' -will be shown ses Ann and Libby Meyerson, Na- Many girls are needed for'dates Stroabsrg. Too modest to take Jick Berny's. new b o a s is d h in the lecture hall at the Joslyn omi Gross,- and Dorothy Coren- during the A. Z. A. regional con- bows Is one pproducer who Friesfis and relatives of Kiel"- ' , "Busman's ScuSoir" . . . vention to be held in Omaha over supervises his Memorial this Sunday afternoon i pictures every step t 'cause there is a radio in every a el 2. "Wallace of Maywood, I".".- : Labor Day. Girls who wish to of the way, from the first script room! at 3:30 and 4:30 p. m. This pic- man. iaois, were shocked a t his sufhelp A. S. A. in this manner are to the final editing . . . concenture is one of tho educational cea d e a t i ca Vedsesfiay, JH: T - • C- -IT ' A H asked to call Irvin Nogg, dating films circulated by the United trates strictly on his work Z Irving Berlin returns unopened chairman, Ha. 3136. States Department of Interior. never misss In film politics all unsolicited ssng manuscripts, be r e a c i a b e r e d &s a former xes"- '' A program of recorded organ is. seldom seen socially. Although it was not an easy . . . ' to avoid aay possibility of ficrt.cf O^aaha and the BOB. at t i p f;. music will be presented in t h s task, bidding goodbye to Juliu3 late K r . -anfi K r s . K. E . TTO1OE:,E- j i v Joseph SeMldkraat la celebrat- plagiarism salts. concert hall at 4 o'clock. Bisno and Ben Barkin, departing siy. ".'/,'c ; ,. *c ing his tweaty-flfth year as s.n A. Z. A. executives, was made enEe is surviTed ty his wi£ov , ' r "'-. ^J- r- - v Lillian Soth's 'hubby, JcSge Selina; actor. He is' only forty . . . begsa ON COLOB&DO VACATION joyable for local members of tha £. son, Philip; £*id tv? ' ."^..'-..". his career as a bey protege of Ben Schalleck cf New Tork, ob- sisters, Krs. Effis CorelE.nS r e ' ' 1 , ' . v,J Mr. Louis Scholnick and son; A. Z. A. by a joint outing of the Mas Reinhardt in Europe. First jects . . . but definitely ; . . to her Mrs. Anna Frleciaas of ctic£f r. | __^ v ^T Cfeorge, left for Denver on a va- two Omaha chapters held last 1 s iAmerican screen appearance was plfcns for returning to the serssn. also formerly cf Omaha. cation . -which trill also include Sunday at Linoma Beach. Ap-. j ~c,V-_*,£,~" in -"Orphans of ths Stern' She promises to forget her career visits to Colorado Springs and prosimately 50 members of both t..ec. T h e i U n e r a l s e r r i c e V E S c o n - , ^iTtr'^'-1(1921) oppssits Lillian Gish. As at the altar, yet is scheduled -for d-jct&d Manitou. They will be gone for chapters attended. The main .By. Arfen© Solomon b y Hs.bbi B e r e z t - s c s i a n d • -^- *•- — an appearance at ths Tros tils Dreyfus ia "Zola," he received ten days. ' event of the day was the presenDr. Saffir.^' k.I''l~" this year the Acafiesiy Award Jor very week. tation of gifts to Mr. Bisno and Dear Suxy Q: V r. ~*. best performance of a s u i OBSERVE AN -N J.VKB-SAST : Mr. Barkin. \ -,- r.r. eci Elaine Frank ana I had a love- player. $20,000 To Leas Fizndz. Mr. and Mrs. L." 1/ondon of Bicardo Cortes' first directorTuesday night's meeting, the ly trip home. Sheldon Waxenberg Council Bluffs entertained one ial job is called, "A -Very Practi.under the newly-elected of- eturned on the same train after Pf f ;Hollywood Short Story: rc-rfe (JTA) — Jewish co- i ^ hundred guests at their home last first cal Joke." Ke hopes net . . . ficers, was very interesting. Past pending a week in Denver. It's 1OE.E funds ia Pol Dolly Haas catered ' t i s eisesia Sunday evening on the occasion Aleph Godol -Horris Arbitman the funniest thing, but as soon as recelrea a total of 8?,E0B z'a of. their twenty-fifth wedding an- gave a report on the work of the you get home, you hear of more sanctum sanctorum auspiciously Paradoxicslly . . . was relabelled, Lllli Karlowe ffO.fCC, niversary.' •'-.-••' TEs racst Is.aoas Japanese cr"&?prcsiiaatci:v convention ' committee. Aleph eople who had been vacationing . . . received a press b'uiid-up 3n 5E!5 June, Irora tfce epecl&3 "I , Many Omahans Trare present. Arbitman is general co-chairman: in the same place' at the same here&boats is Peter Lorra, a Hunthe Hollywood grand a a s a e r . . . garian. Fuiii" sent to Poland fcy Irv Nogg, dating chairman; Mor- time you were. For Instance, Sylcarefully shielded from ccaj American' Consiitee Appeal icr i VISITOR FROM CHICAGO A Germaa-safie film Ets.rrisg ton Margolin, housing; . Haskell via Katsman was in Manltou for was Mrs. Fay Spauldlng of Chicago Lasere, transportation; Dan Mill- everal days. I imagine we just tact with camsrai. At tha ea3 of a Jewish cossdiaa didn't lessea t i e Jfef-E ia Pclaiid. arrived Saturday to be the gues er, dance; Leo Sherman, public- missed each other. Sylvia also a y e a r . . . the studio . . . dropped the eajoyrsest cf TorkviUs citi.of Mrs. Sophie Katstce. She will ity; Haskell Cohen, athletic co- spent part of her time a t Estes her contract . . . with a thaa Estonia Bc.:x Rcfcroos zens. remain, two weeks. chairman. A full two days' activ- and Yellowstone Parks. Fasny Brice, showing her uaOn the other hand Hefly flnlEhed house to guests, served ' Mrs. Katskes will honor her iy is being planned for the conKiSS (JTA>—X: zzort revl:* ; At any rate, although I've al- LaMarr drew her salary checks them refugees rrom AuEtrla r~;. Crr-I fL" guest at a bridge to be given at vention over the Labor day weekin the only completed room, her home on Tuesday, August 2. end. All Alephs of the Mother ready returned from my vacation, for sis months without an assign- the sssisy will be adrr'tto; ' r T^'-rzl:h h kitchsa andd rot a herpec-pie are just starting on ment. Spent her time going to th k aeoorSing: to as. irtcr^Irf- vl.i. > chapter aro urged to take advan- other Eight! Monday morning,* Minda movies forced herself to Estoniaa lEizliizv cZ ~ e :j.rs C. BETCBN FROM CAMFOKNIA tage of this splendid opportunity theirs. RoseablooEi, playin the p y g Friedman left to join her sistfer, derstand the Americas fiialogrce KasS published icre. TI s ?CT-Dr. end Mrs. Herman Kully for good entertainment. in New York. In about two . . . thus learned-to speak with part cf an lrishris.E^ is stagger- lsa problem bsrtrr.eE r.ri.it c~:r and son, Bobby,' returned last The Mother chapter's game last Ruth ing eager a heavy load of "beweeks, the girls will travel to scarcely a trace of accent. Cassia In countries vicre fb? TTCF'I Wednesday from a two weeks vi& Sunday with the S. A. H . fratern- Chicago, meet their mother, fath- Walter 'Wasg?r osa da,y . . bor- sor-r-ras"! EUSivSr cf J e t r'.rct.r'.j" -.7"It to Los Angeles. ity was postponed. At 11 a. m. er, and brother "Willard, and re- rowed her for "Algiers" . . . and fluences eoonoc'r i-ff. it* I-I-IFa new star Is born! Her home lot, this Sunday, however, the A. 2. turn home with them. Good Siabbas. ter -declares. FORMER OMAHAN HERE Shirley Polsky of Lincoln is now aware of her bes-efflca valAlias Dorothy Abrams, former A. 1 team plays the Adlers at eaving tomorrow for a two week ue, ' will not Ienfi her cut again (Copyrlgiitsr Is Jewish Telsly of "Omaha, now of New York West Elnmood. . •; , ' . • • ' . . . through, her they,espect to visit in California. grepiis AS8SCJ, Inc.) ' I '" City Is visiting with her mother, I suppose ydw know that Fran- recoup their losses incurred on Jirs. Rose Abrams and family. ces Blumkin and Adeline Speek- other recent imports. >• The first mealies d the Ke- j ter leave Sunday for "Washington, brew peopls appears' ca ths triVISITS OMAHA BELACTVE3 A regular business meeting o£ Cupid's aim is 'setting sSa&y: Stele cf the FLcrncii Mr. and Mrs. P . H. Fine had a3 the Sam, Beber Chapter was held D. C. to work in the new AZAIn the past few weeks the Sari umphal p headquarters there. their guest over the week end last Menoptah (ISth ceaturr, rs. C> Monday evening a t the JewShirley Gjreenspan and Harriet Maritil-Saia Kits couplet split their nephew, Abner Warshaw, of ish Community Center. Aleph GoTha George E. Stca&s cisNewman will be at Lake" Okoboji White Plains, New York. Mr. Sacks named the various com- in a few" days. I Imagine they'll solved INVCTT CAF*I*-V, »." iC^UV IN tliestre-ownsr . Has Warshaw J s en route to Los An-dol .chairmen for the present have a grand tlme.Chotiner parted frba forcer acgeles where he plans to remain mittee administration.' "Went to the reception given for tress Alica Calhoun" Luis® .lor a month. ' ". _ Those selected are: Social Com- Mr. and Mrs. Joel Cherniss, Sun- Hainer disespoused Clifford OSets mittee,-Alepha J. Gusa and Trach- day. The new Mrs. Cherniss . . .. Jack B. Cohn applied for tenberg; Social Service. . Aleph looked lovely in a white printed bachelordom from Alice Day . ..» p s : t j n Sirs; Mrs. A. Mazie of Sioux City, Dolgoff; Cultural Alepa Shlfer; organza formal, square neck, puff and tha Chaplin-Goddard stiff is l e t — L v c r y T s c e cf Iowa, has been visiting her son- Membership, ^-y Aleph R. Lewis; and COBC» WrntBR, none too steady. sleeves, and a belt of royal blue in-law and daughter* Mr. and Aleph E p s t ein; velvet with streamers down the CAS.I. AT 7££7 cr WA E1E3 Mrs. David Blacker. She Intends Publications, Phone, Aleph L; I^ewis; Finance,. front. Saw more people there, for Cttjr FJnEnco &.. SnsBranes Co. . to remain a week. ;_ Saylan;' •'Executive, Aleph was especially delighted to bump Ican Dsaoeracy boiight cat the During her'stay Mrs. -3Iazie has Aleph Fo*; Athletlea. Alenh Kutler; into that aunt of yours, Q Tee. been extensively' entertained. and Parliamentarian, Aleph Weis- from Q Ba, who has been visiting here for the past few days. MOTORING TO COAST man. Dewey Field Other visitors this week were Mra. Robert Kooper and party theLast Sunday at Milder Oil team, defeated the Marjorie -Emanuel who returned of' three will leave August 1 to Century chapter team - by the home Wednesday, and Josephine motor to California, En route score of 13 to 5. Silk, both of Des Moines. they will stop at Yellowstone and Anne Arbitman left last Saturother points of interest. day for a week's visit in Chicago, HAZOMIR and on the same day, B.etty Rosen Ladies' Free Loan Meetings of . t h e Hazimoir started for her^vacation in Rock 'J J • Singing Society wil be resumed Island. Sunday A. M. Zelda Cherniss The Ladies Free Loan Society on August 8. The Society meets gave a brunch honoring the new •will hold their regular meeting on Monday evenings at the J / brides Pearl Osoff Gross, and Lilat the Community. Center Wed- ish Community Center. lian Perleman Cherniss. Another nesday, August 3rd. Mrs. Sam honored guest was Betty Kraus Klaver, president of the organiChecsd Shel Eraea who Is leaving for Chicago soon. zation announces that the organSuzy Q, I was just wondering ization is contemplating a picnic The regular monthly meeting in the near future and plans will of the Chesed Shel Ernes will be if you know Anita Falk of Canbe "discussed at this, meeting for postponed duo to the fact that ton, Ohio, who has been visiting ; the event. Mrs. L. Neveleff, president of t h here for several weeks. Be sure - A committee will also be ap- organization, is Etill on Her pointed to take charge of this af- tion. Patronize Our Advertisars fair. •;• • • ' . . ; - . • ;• • . "•:-. If you had a raillion dollars—
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PAGEANT—Atlantic City, N. J^ has'a tasic to .do,, for beautiful girls from'aU over, the United States are\ soon to invade the Atlantic coast resort to compete • FIVE-GAITED SADDLES — Outstanding among eastern show , • lor the title of "Miss America. houses' this season Is Janet Sue, five-gaited saddle mare, which 1938." With the. competition hiasbeen winning a number of championships. The horse is shown • there will ' be a" pageant, the \7ith her owner, Mrs.L. Victor Weil, pf Fair. City Stables, Elberon, • whole to be .held on Sept. $-13. . N. J. Janet Sue will appear in: shows in Ohio, Kentucky and other Here are some of- the hostesses Ic - states during the nest few months.. for the occasion. Left to right: Jean Garland, Phyllis Heaton, Eileen MacSherry (Miss Atlantic City), Doris Sheetz, Esther: Hyman'cnd Mary Prances Klein. Miss. MacSherry, chief hostess, Si is 18 years old.
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WOULDN'T APOLOG12E —. Clyde A. 'Armstrong, Weirtoa Steel counsel, refused to apologize to Trial Examiner Edward G. Sinlth, •who ousted him from a hearing of cjkrges that the company, used unfair .labor, practices. Suggestion that he apologise was made a t a hearing before the National Labor BoardtoWashington,"where be is shown; right, with Attorney Earl F." Reed of Pittsburgh. .
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WfiLCOME AWAITS—Thursday, Aug. 4, will be New York CityV' •': ||i big'dayfor welcoming Douglas Corrigan, Los Angeles flier who i m a d e a mistake in his direction and landed in Dublin. His plane , | ,a&eadyhas been shipped home and he will return on the American . " . . . liner Manhattan, according' to present" booking. He is shown above . . g j Q CHANCE—Charlie Fenske ^as^^stepped out'^f .his plane impublin. ••-•.- : - v ; : :;, :. .-•;•Wisi;orisin University's sis. c k :-^'.••.'-:•'•••• , ^ ••" • • •• ~ •-••"• -•; milerrwill have an opportunity . ' to improve" hisipositlon when he • meets Stanley Wooderson of : ; ^glan^o;,: World record miler, a t ' "' White .City, London, on August 1. ; FenS3ce,~above, has run a mile In approximately 4:10. • 1
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ES3C32VES STONGABIANS -r Reawakenins of Italy's-interest in tas-DaaUDiin region v;a.s foreshadowed by the visit of Premier Eofc Bnredy, left, and Foralgn Minister Koloman Da ffimyo, right, to-Premier Mussolini • center, in Rome. Il Duoe, v?ho willbo 55 on July-20, is shown v/ith the visiting diplomats as they reviewed an i u n r d of Hungarian Boy Scouts. .
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THE JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY, JULY 29,1938.
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("She founded the Orphan I too." j Bock to the Asyluni i The children'3 eye3 opened st> Q. | wide tbe. man looked frightsceci. " ' dcn't, he begged, "your eyes will pop." "Oh!" wailed Rachel; "We An Extension'of tlio Jewish. Oomjminity Center hould have known." "She's so bsiutiful," Sarah smiled, "like a fairy princsc-s. ruetle and "a whirr of skirts while down the quiet street? while .peo- And ws never guessed." "7 Good Shabbath boys and _ pt the Junior Jewish Pressl • the .children gazed at each -other ple looked up and down for a fire "And so fe!nd," erted Leafe, jFor'many weeka'we hayo had - timidly, then hopefully, then, ris- they might- ba running to see. 'like Rebecca in Ivanhoe." stories that concern famous in- ing from their seats, they rushed And at last, breathless, they filAnd nff they ran again, tearing » ed into the Hebrew Sunday cidents or famons men to J e w to the door. 3sb history. Bnt. this wee&. wo ; In Search of Bebecca '•"• School A man sat at a-table writ- hrough the streets to t t e Orphan Asylum. Thjey burst thsongh the - Wre going to have a story ebont "Let'g g o ! " commanded Sam ing in a book.' "Is a beautiful Rebecca here?" dodr.vthre.ugh. the hallway, and *oiie /of ou* famous women, Ke«' leading them down ' t h e * stairs. jbecca Gratz. Sho was one of the "We'll find -her. Sho can't be demanded Joe, " a .Rebecca- who into a large cozy room -where a founded the Female Hebrew Ben- lady as beautiful as HeSecca in many nohle women in Jewish here, In an Orphan Asylum." sat talking to Miss Wstory and started many pMU And they trooped out into the evolent Society and is-so lovely Ivanhoe about food and clothisg / anthropic movements and help- ' street and stood in a row looking that. Walter Scott put her into his Schmidt for the-children. - ' • •.' . *d further Jewish'education. - closely at each lady,that passed.- book, Ivanhoe!" "Nps© too blg> byes to small.'' . "Oh!" said .the. raan: gravely. I think thiy.11 nesd sweat' Much that we have today such as Sunday Schools and chari- JOQ called .out.the faults of each 'Rebecca! Yes, indeed. Arid she ers," EE6 was saying in a voice table Institutions are due to tho piling lady, "hair too straight, foun4ed this Sunday School, too." that ripplsd like crystal water. "to, keep them warm. And, of efforts of Kebecca Utats. It too fatj too -thiny hair too yellow, .."Where is she?" asked S a l t s course, ne-w shoes." xvab altogether . fitting tor;' Sir- Rebecca's Is black'. . ." • • . eagerly. '•..•.'"• : "Oh. dear Rebecca, Grats." "That can't be the way to find Walter Scott to make her -the "She just left. Just a iew mincried Lsaa. hugging her tightly. heroine of his /famous book, her," Rachel said, shaking her utes agb." '•' . - : "We should have known." ivanhoe, ; so that other people head mournfully. "We'll never 'Tiny Sarah's eyes blinked with "Known what?" asked Rebecca might lmow the beautiful char- find her this way." "Weir th,en, now?" demanded disappointment and, Rachel tossed Gratz In surprise as gbe looked acter of our Jewish women. head impatiently. ' : about, wonderiagly at the beam• Next week we shall' have a Joe, staring at three ladies who .her"BUt," the man went on, "You story about another Jewish wo- . came arm In.arm down the street. will find her, I think, at the Fuel "Too tall, too e&ort, too middlem a n . . • . , '. ' - ; . •, •-. ' ..-. - -. Society: That's where she Went." s l z f e d . " -. ••"' •-" .• • ' ' .' ... We hop® you enjoy them.- . "I fcnow!" whooped Sam, do- '"Thank you!" cried; the childYOTJB AUNT NAOMI. ing an Indian war dance with de- ren and rushed off to the Fuel Society where;they found a man Leali closed the heavy book on light. "I know! Oh! Oh! reading tags'on huge baskets-of her-lap,- shook the dark curte v "Welli stop dancing ana tell coal. from^her forehead, and sat back us," cried Sarah, tugging at his "Coal for Mr. Katz," he said, w i t h ' a sigh. The ring of little jacket. "A3, sodn da I can slow, up," he '•'for Mr. Silver, for Mrs. Segil . " companions Beatod about her puckered their brows" and sighed, gasped, looking at them teasingly • "Please," ./said Rachel -breathtoo. And all the' little sighs made from the. side of his eye. "It's lessiy, at.the head- 61 the Weary one big, heaving sigh.' that float- dangerous to stop a war, dance troop, "We're looking-for a.beautiful Rebecca -who founded- the ed through the comfortable room Buddenly." Benevolent Society -and i the He"Tell u s ! " •where • dainty • curtains. hung on "Wny don't wd go pplaces where brew,Sunday School'.-.." • ; ; broad; Bun-sprayed. .' he sdid, com- . "And the Fuel: Society," said " I t seems a Bhame,""Bald Sam, people are i h a halt. "We'll find but who h the man, to provide'coal for p66t rising from the circle and press- ing,to helps them most, and then we'll people." ing his "short \n03e against .the find "Where is she?" asked Joe, a \ Rebecca." •'.,. •window. "\\ seems a shame that "Maybe you're right," said Joe, little hopelessly. all very nice people live in books." sorry he h a d ' n o t thbught of It "Well, let me see," said the "Uke dear Kebecca in Ivanwhile the others gazed at man scratching his head thoughthoe," Leah agreed, passing her himself, In admiration. •" . ;- -'•• fully. "She was just' here, but.'.." plump little hands over the booK Sam "But where are.people helped?" -, "Oh dear," mpined Sarah. ; on'her lap. • "Will we never find her?" • Leah Impatiently. . : "If only they -would come to asked "How about the ' Female He^ "Why, of course!" sadl the l}fe," murmured tiny S a r a h brew Benevolent society?" Jod man suddenly. "I remember now. dreamily. y "If only y ^beautiful Re- wanted to: know. ^"Benevolent She said she was going to the Orwould com©- out of her means good, and if they're good, .phan Aslyum to see that thd chiland let-us see her." why. they hBlpvPeop|a!" . . . dren were getting proper care.'' !;"HQ wouldn't let l her," drawled I-.. To The Society ; .-"The.- Orphan Asylum!" gaspfreckle-faced Joe. . . the children trooped, ed J o e . " . , ' . . . . ' "•Who wouldn't let her?" de- hotAway on the scent, to, the Temale . • "But that's where we come manded, Rachel from; her snug Hebrew' Benevolent Society. And from!" said Sam. . c o r n e r . - " • . •- . ; ' " : ; .- • -. •.•• '•. they found a group of lad"Oh /yes," th© man, npdded. > '.'Did you. ever hear of. heroes thdre fitting around a table making and-heroines In a. book coming ies Ii3t of the people who must be to life?" asked Joe, staring at tho ahelped food and clothos. The CAKE" book. " I should say not! Why her childrenwith eagerly from face author would come: running over to face, dooked but none was beautiful and push her right 'back Into tho .book. Thdt'B what he would do!" enough to be Rebecca. f thin, too . . ." began Joe. ' A i d he sauntered around.-;tiro " H t o h l " whispered Rachel. ' room-laughing and muttering, "We're:.looking for Rebecca '•imagine that!">while tiny Ssr&h ia so very beautiful and good followed him with angry eyes. , who Walter Scott put her into his .""But they say/,' said. a voice that book," Said Leah politely. "Can from the door," "that thQ^beauti- you tell UB where to find her?" ful Rebecca of ivanhoe really "Oh!** said the too-thin "lady •does l i v e - I n o u r ;o w n. P h i l a d e l p h i a . " '.•'•-'. - .- •'-'":.".--. -» ••'• ••."'•-with.'twinkling eyes. "W© know Rebecca. InI The children.looked up,; startl- of a very beautiful: our Society to ed, at the'wonian standing Jn.thQ deed, she ; founded; BUBBUErUiP, i : ; : '' doorwayv" ~Tb&y ' hlfpkea- 'theijr l 4 hh e ' p ? o ^ o 5 t ^ ? ' : And o eyes and" opened' their inouths 'd'where is she?": clamored ; wide in aurprisa then they closed tlie children. 1 them again to let out" a polite" "She just left," said the lady. murmur which meant, "You can't "She went to the Hebrew Sunday. fool us'-' r— though they didn't School to see how things are getting.on there." really say it. • .-»'. ., •On the trail!" said Sam, de-1 "That's a fairy tale,"-said Joe lor all of them, hi3 eyes narrow- lighted., ing suspiciously.- "How can ReAnd off they* ran, clattering becca live in the book all the way back in the days of. knights and princesses and also now, in Philadelphia?" "No!" Bald Joe, edging his way closed to Miss 3chmidt. "Really," said Miss Schmidt. "Is she as,beautiful as Rebac' ca in Ivanhoe," gasped1 Sarah. • "Just as beautiful, * nodded Miss Schmidt. • 'And as kind?" demanded Sam ' who had taken his nose from the window tb come closer to the circle. - "And as kind. She helps the poor and nurses, the Dick, just as Rebecca does in the.book." The children looked at her very hard, but Mlsa Schmidt* looked right back at them just as hard. c&'l days to yoaz etiy ia fiat ; '<oh please, Miss Schmiat," glodoas vccaEin land. You'll begged Sarah. "Can't.. we visit lifco tio cool clsasliaesa esd her? Where i3 she?" zss&l quid of Usica Pacific " MiB3~ Schmidt arose, patted her ak<cadiHoa*:d traiaa. Travel pleats and folds carefully ^into LOQIO p&ta quickly i a the place and went to tho door. Smilcaait c!ui>!saago cars... the ing, she looked back. i "You've got- to find her for dbdora fiiTlrvma . ; . cr Ia yourselves," she sai£r 'It wouldn't -t]io clicsifal, rooay coaches do at all.If I told you where she d ia." ." • ' ,' 'ooate sad colt sight lights. ; And she disappeared with a ^Mealano la always jed ©real PQUTICAU ADVERTISEMEhiT \ . . and ca nbady all fraiaii a Ecgidstod Hozca la ia- attaadasco. 1
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Ing faces and at Kiss Schmidt's knowing smile. "TBst you were the Rebecca of Ivanhoe" said Joe graffly, ashamed to sound,to pleased. "But I'm not really, you know," laughed Rebecca Gr&tz.' " I ' d In Philadelphia and Walter Scott's Rebecca lived way back,, ia the days of knights." 'But you're Just as beautiful," s$id Sam gallantly.. "And just: as kJEfi," Rschtl cried. "And you are the Rebecca Walter "cott put into, bis book," whispered Sarah, snuggling into the arms of-the fairy princess. "So .they say," my dear," .said Rebecca . Grats, gathering the children, about ber, -vrhile sweet laughter played in her gloricas eyes.
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•Jewisli Orphan. Home Alumni*T£B.
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For Sheriff M. B. Parks, Republican candidate-for Sheriff, announces he is a 'Republican through a n d through' and that fee has s o political machine behind him. ' ' Parts is a'native c£ —ADV. Patrosize Our -Advertisers
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Personf .o lie c 1 or Vilftjin the severer r=^rs C j Home's existence. I«ore tis.il- £00 aln3nni and guests froni every section of the .1 country attended the three-day celebration July £2, 2S snd £4, which raarfced tfee sevejitietb anniversary 6i Bellefaire, Jewish Orphan Home,- and the fiftieth Berl * '• Mrlfefiay of the AlufiEi Associa- ing Cr-7 r ~~ tion. A tea tho"sar<fi dollar gift the B-«•-•-'• Z"n' to BeileJaire was ihe Alciani As- b y " J e v ,•••" r • Eociatioa's coatri'butisa on this doubly g&Sa occasion. ?red Lazarus, St.. of' Coltm- m o " t ! • - - - ( * btts, was re-elected president c? The '—v < •> the Board of Trustees &Efi Direc- f-xplaj ' "7 rr tors, TThile I. S. Anoff. o Ct?cr.go, the lr-f Ct general catirman for the ceSebra\ rr t!oa, vrzs elected president e-f the growi-t r e e ti Alumni Associate a to euocsed *or t s , p ? ' r>i Edward S. Kle-n. of Clerriand. HfiuSi^^ f : Kiihael Efc&i itt vrs: for bis sevecteentfe year as tateftdent of -the Koine, conterc.Pi At the 'annual meeting of the sound T *c-r— tjoarfi, Maurice Fcohrbeimer, D± fun. L f T! Cleveland, £.ad Cbamodcre Locls sale cC "• D. Seauincst, of Paris, former a*.£rn p : h •> r " r — Clevelander, -were -s,£fie tonrrary members of the board of directors catior rf
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.So widesprea'd and persisfeat has been the dbm.an.cl for another newspaper' in Omaha that we, -as-publishers, have determined to find out whether YOU will whole-hearted support to such an undertaking1.
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MANY BELIEVE that ONE NEWSPAPER - Omaha is insufficient. MANY BELIEVE that there way for a community to learn of its own s£falrsf" more ' ing or reflecting public opinion.
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With a Daily-Newspaper as o«r-oBlsctif e»-we - 5 to sis pisfellcation - - THE OMAHA POST - - which will, mirror intimate incidents, digest In liberal style the happening's a t and truly be the Voice "of the People.
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This publication will commence the miaute we receire 20^000 stabscrtptaoii© at • • •
.'250-to 30Q;b'oys - - 'from YOUR 0\7K KEIGESOFJiCODS - - - v.ill rrJjs. steady1 employment through delivering THE Ql'JJZX POST ic YOU. TDC ^y.izztior. of THE OMAHA POST will substantially boost Omaha payrolls, through augmented editorial, printing and office staffs. •
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mans (borla terits), 3 znoafhslisait. You may rciura by way o! Koz& ' Pacific Coast at snail csira faro' . . .'fox a HUlo noro you'can xia.1 ' YoUo\Mtono, Sioar Eiycb - Grass! Canyoa N&tlcaal Basfef Ilio ColJW-expcxao sido trip . orado EecHc3, Sun Valby, Idcio, to Eszdd&rSam C3 year 'roiuid sporfa center. - leir as $4.63 ' 1. 1 «
A HQI (famsnsfraScd MS fisnssJy and efficiency in"p3&!ie offieo by sar/!co as county "treasurer a&i oho sheriff .'pKPouglos county. Vots for him.'
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SKION PACIFIC n& Dtpt, mm CKs UcSet mtze, T3X 0.' ICS ZktzS Teat& -%3.i tlarcy E.s., Gsz&a, Neb. ^ C ? o£23co boors: 8:03 to @:C3 p. £2*. i=o ! m BoeHct sa£ fa2 £»tid t i i - i D &UJ?Or^?
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Pleaco cater my cub^crsplion fcr rTHE OMAIIA POST,, to be to ray home t.-cclilj' bct-Isriii*' r •.-;tli y e s first Iss^e» ces* I arjTC3 to psjr SOs pes* C2»l4>
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THE JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY, JULY 29,-ff)38
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is the Central .Jewish. Institi'.te of New York . . . Its summer cars? for children, near Pert* J-srvls,employs only refugees- as -ratters in the mess"calls . . . If you.have any religious literature to give a~ay,. send it to the United Synagogue of America, trhich is collecting such books and re^'gioas articles fcr 30.CC0 Jewish re^?gses from Germany- snfi Poland now settled In- Sao Pa.*jlo.- Brazil* .... German refugees, tere wai soon hare the . epporimnlr t.t? read their .favorite -authors ia the origins!? w£en the Alliance Bw's Corporation, an- affiliate, of i^ecgznans, Green, - will . put cut German books by famous non-K&si writers . . . Bid you knew t"hs,t Governor Herbert H. Lehman is the son of a refugee from G-ermany, his father.having.fled -here after the abortive -revolution of 184S? . . . .
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(Continued from page 1) | lisbec pivi'<r>s\y condemning p e r VIA STRATOSPHERE Louis, vre'll tell you that the reSere' demanded concete action Every war office in Europe-is cent pictures the Nasi E>?c'!ii*->ti o"' ."PVP in Germany a n d papers . Ej? Mr©. W l l l l t s s G r a j along racial lines. agog at the report that France published l.r,.r~"'A. ?!is lef.tpr was Bigned of beauteous * Fran National Council ha3 a powerful new anti-aircraft Schooling were taken from a. colDeny Book Ban fcr Lord I-.yi.ion, t h e bishop .of | Chiohestct, Capaun Victor Caza.New York (WNS) — A denial gun invented by a Jewish; scien- lection b* photos -made quite long 1 . ; of Jewish W o m e n that the Italian. Tovernment is tist who is a refugee from Ger- ago by-iLottQ Jacobi, a non-Aryan j let end other prominent Britons, For yocr t seeking t o Curb the circulation in many . . . French armament fac- who.now- is "aa- exile from GerI — • • •— K? -"wish, ceep end fie&r The local chapter of the Coun- Italy .of books by foreign Jewish tories.are said to bs working day many: . . . . • - - . ifiViN C. l.,rvm. Attorney Ss that yotir IKe niay bo alight cil of Jewish 'Women- has been authors was issued here by Dr.and"night to turn out' the gUns ?e" prtm(!«!« Theater Bldp, advised' that the National Council Andrea Ferrero, Italian consul In . . . Now tbat Italy has embraced ATtQt/2" -PEOPliE ' \ S\iih. lamps EEiiEr E.isd bright •[ Cantor Morris Pernick arrived wil sponsor a radio broadcast New York, in a letter to Col. Ben- Aryanism we wonder -wh^tHer • "Wcii&er ' who's- behind' that But- iiat .still roa m&r l^ear pRcr.ATr: NOTICE in Sioux City Thursday morning, Tuesday afternoon; .August 2, byjamin H. Namm, president of A.she'll read out of the Italian fold curious anonymous circular statTbe ES4 BOP.frti ot t,ne In the Matter o? the Estate of Alex ing that Shirley • Temple's * real Eddie Cantor, in behalf of the Jlily 28th, for an audition at I. Namm & Co.; Brooklyn depart- the late Gabriele . d'Annunzio, 1? is Pearl Smith CoHen . . . ffvpn: That tBe Sriaare'Zion Synagague. He will Jewish Youth in Germany. Eddie ment store. The consul's letter godfather of Italian Fascism, "who name Tfee w o r k TOM' chosen is creditors of said deceased will meet a lot of hooey- . . . Latest vicappear at the Friday evening Cantors deep concern over the was. an official reply from Fulvio was the great-grandson of a Jew- It's '' admlnlsirator iy~. said estate, hfenoble a n c jjood. tim of ,Nasf Aryanism is Nancy re m e > r un Service tonig'it again Saturday plight of the Jewish youth in. Ger- Suvich, Italian ambassador to the ess . . . Roberto Farinacci, Italy's Leishiaaa, - Pittsburgh steel lisirThs aealicr o£ iiesh. • and bone I £? " tr .Tmif-e of Douglas r many has prompted, him to pre-United States, to a letter from number one anti-Semite, is planmorning, July 30th. . i-. , • j r-our.tv. ><f?v>rnska, fit t h e C o u n t y es, "whose father, John Leishman, broadcast, which will be Colonel Namm,' stating he "was !ning five new anti-Jewish sheets ^TiO, DiOOa. . , Coui-t Room, in said Counts-, on the Cantor Pernick comes to Sioux sent this from 4 to 4:15, Eastern distressed to read" of impending to celebrate his triumph . . . . In- was one of ths ecWy associates AC© Vron'lBT Oi CriEgSEE e. SHI EH t"'Hi! f'Py of Pnr>t(?mber, 1938. «nd On h<3 City very highly recommended. heard of/Andrew"Carnegie . . . "While I J ' 8 t S 'fA^O-T "*' st d H Vo f K" v ™iier, 1938, a f » Time (3 to 3:15 Sioux antiiJewish decrees, and express- cidentally, Farinacci recently call(Cerrrljrht. iCCr, t y Seven A: Ho possesses a lyric • baritone Standard Leishman was' American Ambas^ , , "' U ' ^ * v _. . /.„ <"clock A. M., each &:y. for the pufTb h p PT ing the hope that the ambassador ed Leon Blum, Socialist ex-Pre- sador tos "Germany, shortly before Feature Syndicate) k ^e t,Efu<8a Oi e&C»iife i.ne way n,- pose voice and prepared himself for City time).o r presentinp: their claim? for mier of France, a Fascist, but re• t h e tomb. esamiUB'don. adjustment and allowEveryone is urged to bear thia would assure him "that the facts the Cantorate under the direction the "war,*-Nancy fell in love with ance. Three months are allowed foi e -of Cantor Adolpe Katchko of program and to send their letters are such as not to warrant the be- marked that as "a Jew he's cap- and married Charles Engelbert ! Let .'yo-ar,'life l u l l , —-IAV j ^ credito'K to creRcnf. their claims, f r- r f r New York City. He has had lour or cards of appreclatio . to. Mr.lief that positive measures are able ot anything" . . . Which re- Leon, 13th Disfce of Crby, heir to • Y -'-" j from the1 2<Hh d?.i-o-r Aumist 193S Vi* U. ii'U j , minds us that Blum is taking a years of college training in NewCantor, care of .-• the National being taken against Jews by your aov:er I . BF.TCE CKAWFOKD, ' L t 1 f <. rest cure . . . . Many swanky pri- a- fortune Including vast estates ..' • York Oity has studied at the Broadcasting Station "WABCv over country." v ^ t t t i • pc^*? 1 •viTnifr ! ~-"?'-"^-"t. County .Tude-e. vate schools in Germany and Aus- in France and Germany . . . A Yeshivah a-nf" also at the Jewish which station the broadcast will son and two daughters "were born The consul wrote: "His excel- tria are folding up because they With lore tafi frienastir Theological Seminary of America. originate. .-. of the marriage . . . Now " ths lency the Italian ambassador in have lost all their aristocratic vases llt'tr over " " ' i ?', •Tt L The members of the synagogue Washington has asked me to as-English pupils . . . Foreign visi- Nazis are "out-to grab the land FRO&ATF. N C ^ I C E With firelly and lightning and ? re urged to attend services this In t h e iVTatter of {he E«tate of PU sure you that the report concern- tors to Vienna insist they have holdings of Nancy's son, Charles, tbe E'vest smell oS clorbr. mor; Dikimev.-ica. Deceased. ' evening at 8 p. m. and. again Sating the adoption of certain anti- seen Dr. Ignatz T. Griebl, fugi- on the grounds that he's a nonNotice I? He'-fiby O i v e r : That t h e urday morning at 8:30 to hear Semitic measures In Italy, men- tive key witness in the American Aryan^ . . . Nancy, who is now i Go Into the house vliere 'ji creditor? of said deceased -will meet Cantor Pernick. It is the wish tioned in your letter of July 5, spy probe, living and practicing the wife of the' Danish ambassath d i i fif/eliE • • * * h e RdrniniBlratrsx of paid estate, bedor to . France, is seeking docuof the board members that the last, is wholly unfounded." J there , . . A new brand of cigars And hea M* the horror thit. agony SS?nt?%SSSE« ^ f thl ^County g membership make the final, deci; Boston (WNS) Blasting the called "Little Aryans" was re- mentary proof of her Aryan origtells. C o \ t y , on onthe the Court HOOTTJ,, in Co\inty, in . . . The records indicate that No Specific Reason Given; sion in choosing a Cantor and proposed/racial policy urged upon cently put on the German mar2rtth clay OK Pentemher, 193S. Bnd on 2 1 And ever help "riierever you can 193 d A group of Sioux City, women Italy by a group of Fascist-scien- ket, but the manufacturer was her family is Scotch-Irish for '. By 'Government for Musical director for the synagoth lIlft i el?.'l of f> >?ov<?ml3er, 1938, at 9 h heart o£ o'clock met Tuesday afternoon in the tists as "absurd," G. N. Longar- quickly stepped on by the author- generations back . . . Samuel J. To bring co-ara^e t» the A. K., ep.cb tiny, for the purgue. rose o" presc-n-'inp their claims for Jewish Community Center to publisher of La Notizia, Bos- ities . .'.-Once a Rothschild wed- Leve, the peppy general chairman man. FXP.niinp.Uon. a<-;,H<f>tmenl end allowmake plans for the establishment iril. of the Detroit convention commitnnce ton Italian daily, branded "all ding would, have been big news, pne - Thre^ months are Rllowed for of a Jewish home for the Aged in such conceptions of racial theory but not today . . . Hence the si- tee-of the. Jewish War Veterans, ' Rome (JTA)—-J. Dar5d Klein- MFiPFh eE tr-i l ir-r ne«srle IK Ohonf O I l e Oof l " *,- - - ' - ' i " j the creditors: to P-.-»=.-'nt tn^lr ol«lm«. Sioux City. This meting was the jas ridiculous," in an interview lence when ' Israel Rothschild, is being urged to run for the city lerer, for 14 years Rone corresm y Done . . . . , | from the 2ikh d*.y of Augriwit, 1838.' Friday evening services will be- initial gathering-and Mrs. ' Abe 1with the Boston Jewish World. scion of the fast-dwindling Frank- council . . . New; managing edi- pondent -of- the Je-R-iBi Telegra- And yet, you a?e not mine atone, I EKYCE CKAWFORD,gin tonight atM:30 o'clock. Sat- Silverbjrg was named temporary Longarini said he didn't think fort branch of the family, mar- tor of American Hebrew is Mar- phic Agency, -was ordered to* leare Yoa r - V t - r , - n i "rj— c<"r " " 2 ! J ! i ' 3 i - " Countv Judge.. urday services will start at 9 chairman, with Mrs. Sol Bolotni-I Mussolini's government " would ried Nettie Lehman, a German tin Panzer, who used to write for the country by tomorrow (Saturi iREMENTl kov, chairman. . ".,''•• day). ,Th.e order, served by. the Ken and Esquire . . . But-has no o'clock. To m r l e I ' t ' s cs^-f"rr HC sponsor such a movement. "Such refugee, in MilariT Italy . . . The Ministry ofPress and PropaganJewish background so far as we An election of officers of th,e ja decision on the part of the wedding took place in a home for Refreshments were served last Saturday by Mr. Harry Osnowitz, group will be held at a later date, Italian Fascist government would•< refugees built by the Paris and have been able to determine . . . fia,. ascr'Cbed no specific reason I Ever re:lr: 4n honor of the recent marriage when ^plans for the organisation be mere stupidity," he declared. London Rothschilds . " . The Nazi3 Rabbi Benjamin Plotkln, central for the' ECtion other than the correspondent's "general attitude." figure in that Jersey City synall be completed. - "Any one who Eas read history have changed the name of the anof his daughter, Bess to Edward Saoulc •• '" r r c knows that there is no such thing cient Austrian town of Judenberg gogue-center controversy, is re- • •Although Dr., Kleislerer is a J, Sperling. Ribbi S. I: Bolotnit s a pure race. Italy especially to Heimberg, but Judenplatz and ported-to be writing a book about Polish, citizen, the United States kbv spoke on this occasion. has so'many racial strains that •Judengasss are still the names of the dispute . . . Erich Mendelson, Embassy -was informed of . the indlng a pure 'Aryan' is prac- streets in Vienna . . . Austrian the" German-Jewish architect who case since" the J. T. A. is an Pe^-or ;: IVRE CLUB tically Impossible. In Italy one fuehrer Buerckel must have got planned the, Hebrew University- American-owned and registered Inds so many races -—Slavs, La- quite'a shock when he tried-to Hadassah .Medical Center in Jer- corporation. 'Members of the Ivre Club held tins, and so many others "Aryanize" the famous Viennese usalem, Jives in an old wind mill . Dr. Kleinlerer was decorstefi in their resulr-r meeting . Tuesday . Dorotho Saltzman~, ' . that "Czechs' t -1 r o.a racial program by the Krupnik dress shop . . . The Nazis in Rehavia . . . Hermann Hage- 18 3 7 .by King Vittorio Eca&nji-sle 432 C"-a' » evening in the Martin Hotel. Mr. The B'nai B'rith Lodge held a Italian government would be ab-took over the store in the usual dorn, director of the new organi- with the order Cavalier ViJiciale Meyer Shubb presided. Follow- meeting Monday, July 25. National Rededication, of the Italian Cro-scn, for'services Burd." fashion, and were all set to run A. sation ing the mect'ng the members adhas set out to figfct Fas- to Italy. Ke received the official prosperous business when all of a Jorncd to a socir.l hour and re-, There will be a' meeting of the Rome (WNS) — Introduction sudden they got a vigorous proand Communism by defendfreshmerts. Agudus . Achim Lodge Thursday, of tha Aryan race theory In Italy test from the British Embassy . . ing, democracy, -was a leader of osly four nioaths ago. Together AuEtsri, '.- ' , • t" F i i ' i ' o li < August 4 at 8:30 p. m. in thehas led to a bitter behind-the- Thfey were informed that Herr that wing of German-Americans with other foreign conrespon- A . M . . r . I ' '*. " s I ? » - - ' - . scenes struggle within the Fascist Krupnik is a Palestinian citizen 'w"hich' was mobilized against the Eaglea Hall. cents, he had been iJivitea to at- to tti* Y ,party, i t was learned in authori- —and had to return tbe stor6 to' Kaiser during the World War. tend a dinner • in honor c£ the ; °i—irr? r'v THIS AND .THAT tative circles Ss Pope Pius opened x T 1' i r ' , Dr. Jack Gordon returned Monhim . . . ' Governor of Rome, but at the last Miss Margaret Kriv, daughter day from Iowa City where he has the way .for a rift between the NAZO HOT STUFF Boc-. ;l o ^ :minute the invitation was vrith- cevcre' L r cf Mr. and Mrs. Z. Kriv, 915 Om- been • interning at the Children's Vatican and the Italian governThe death of Queen Marie cf cuied t " ' 7 ment by .denouncing all racist aha, street and her fiance, Max Honpitr-l., , . Rumania recalls the time when fcj- FTP. . .. Tho-correspondent was a* treilideas as anti-Catholic in another Ecusuly of Chicago, arrived in On a recent trans-Atlantic she attended the services in the contributor to Italian leg- on .thp Ts Ft i ~ (?• a Sioux City last Friday for a T: a .Misces Miriam Saks and public condemnation of exagger- crossing a Dr. Saklene, German Rumanian Congregation of Chi- known al -publications. In 1934 he wasix'ufs"; -• -- f « '" ' i T "~ ated nationalism. •week's visit vrith-Mrs. Kriv's par- Rhcdu. Krasne are spending the cago atvthe 'dedication of its new t ^f professor at Yale, was overheard given- an audience ty'Pcpe Pius Cf i ol eudn t :•>•>-C"-^ •..•C"t ents. Miss Kriv, a former Sioux week end in Sioux City. The- Internal struggle In thedelivering a vitriolic. anti-Jewish .-: ^^ - ' "* • Cityan has been studying nursing Fascist party Is between Roberto lecture on one of the Holland- to America . I .-A Yiddish taliiie at Mount Sinai hospital in Chi-, Mr. and Mrs. Horrid GroSaman ySirinaccit'_ leading anti-Semite, American liners . . . Saklene is a called "Yankele der Schmidt" is information -about -the-orgain-a- • Sa5& t ' •V 1" ' f " T ^ I C •*•"•* t Chief cato. r,nd family are leaving Sunday who Is demanding the Immediate leader of the. University -Travel being filmed on -the grounds of tioa and.w.ork o" the J. 7. A. Ke a n d *>i v . i . ; i r° . - <: i K r I r •Entertaining the couple are for a week's vacation in St. Louis, imposition ot a sort of Italian Bureau . . . Incidentally, passen- the 400-acre estate of the Catho- has lived here for 15 years. - - ~ therec The action vr?.s. not the first Hurdrt- * " ^ . c ?>•- • ; Miss Sally Weinstein, 1119 Villa Missouri. Nuremberg law against the Jews, gers using the Holland-American lic mensstery oirnsd by the iien. . ' . and; Count Ciano, Mussolini's son- ships report that for some rea- edict Fathers in Newton,'X. J. . . taken b y tfes Italian authorities iars i . : " 2" .avenue, and Jack Kriv, 1310 W. c 1 15th street, a brother of Miss Mr. and Mrs. Sam Meyerson an- in-law, ; who is foreign minister. son they are patronised very gen- A hundred and fifty Yiddish- ! against th3*J. T. A. "Last -Ncvem- costs Lrz't r " "" " ' s~• Kriv. % ' _• y . ' nounce "the engagement of. their "lano has ho objection to declar- erously by Nazis and Nazi sym- speaking actors are on locaiicn j ber postal authorities notified the ''.''.'• , : . : rr-cr j Paris office of the Egrsncy that ing Italians Aryans" bu,t he insists daughter, June, to . Mr. William pathizers ' . . . * " AH Jewish mem- there, and a complete..European Miss Pauline and Miss Esther A. Rotbstein of Kansas City, Mis- that Italy refrain from any anti- bers of the European-bound village has been .built . . There's the J. T.-A.-cevs bulletin would Friedman, twin daughters of Mr. souri, son of Mr; and Mrs. Nathan Semitic legislation. American Youth Hostelers have talk of having a Palestine Pavil- no longer be admitted into Italy. and Mrs. A^, B. Friedman are Rothstein of St. Louis, Missouri. ' Pope Condemns program been warned not to take that or-1 ion at-the San Francisco. Exposi- No reason for the action "Bras giTspending this week at Lake Okoi The pope's; new, blast, against ganizatipn's German tour' ....".* At tion ifcxt-year . -. . The Yiddish | e n . • Miss. Meyerson attended the boji. -' University of Ipwa "where Bhe-"^as' racism .was tna(ie'In a talk to 200the recent 25th reunion'of Cor- nevs-E papers" should investigate affiliated with I h e Sigma Delta ecclesiastical assistants of Italian nell University's class < of 1.9.13' some of the- ads they are pubMrs. H. Sol Novitsky departed Tau sorority. Mr. Rothstein re- Catholic Action associations. His the graduates sang the following lishing about toeaaty -paricrs and this week for a two week - visit ceived his Bachelor of Science de- reference to lad'sm came when he song,, now popular in anti-Semitic I masseurs. . .. . These ads all have A simplified system -of tax as•with friends and relatives in Chi- gree in / Business Administration said that1" "many people 'seem to circles . . .."Heigh-ho, heigh-ho J been' rejected by the English lanbased on honest values cago. -.'••-••'• at the "University of Missouri.- He forget that In the explicit article we've joined the . C. I. .O.! . ,. . .guage1 .dailies- . . . The "bath mit- sessment "keeping with present day conis now associated with the Kats of Credo, 'I Relieve in the Cath- "We've paid our dues .to the god- zvah* "ritual, feminine versicn ol' in will bring relief to thouMr. and Mrs. Alvin H. Lowe, Drug Co. olic church,' Catholic mean3 uni- dam Jews, heigh-ho, heigh-ho!" Bar Mitsvah, was introduced in | ditions .-.*•• ' *•; of PlalrJield, New Jersey, are in . The tune is the marching a Reform synagogue for the first sands of taxpayers in Dor.glas versal, and not racist, not nation; Sioux City, visiting with Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Kubby and alistic, not separatistic." "The song from "Snow White .and the ...time' when Temple Emanuel cZ | Cctnty End at the.. sarae * tis-.e j tring intothe treasury sn iaLowe's parents,-Mr. and Mrs. Max family of-El Paso; Texas rare vis- spirit of- faith-,". he said, "must Seven Dwarfs". . . ' . ' A.recent ad- .Yoakers instituted it for - the' crease in anual revenue. v ' H. Bergen. < • • •= • •. > iting -with relatives here. ' " ' ' fight"agairist the spirit of separat- vertisement in Editor and Pub- daughter of the synagogue's presThat is the. tenable position ism and against the spirit of ex-lisher, journalism's trade gaper. ident '. . . The Yiddish stage has Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. SperlMrs. Ben Kooler, accompanied aggerated nationalism, which are reads as follows: "Editorial writ- finally invaded ths borsclit cir- taken-by Al'C. Scott. I>stnoc?s.tic ing have returned to'Sioux City by. her two sons, Douglas and detestable, and which just be- er for independent Republican cuit, the first Yiddish summer candidate for 'County. Assessor, after a wedding trip to the Lakes. Harry returned last week from a cause they are not Christian, end newspaper in good city in the theatre having opened in the who is "basins t i s appeal to the East . . - . Salary ?40 a week . . , . Cats-sums . . . A new Yiddish the- votfers cs the need not orij" cf They will make their home In trip through Canada, Lake Louise by not being even human." references, religion, racial atrical company made ap of Ger- honesty but of efficiency in T-ubSioux City. and Banff. . . /He also- made a reference Inter- State heritage".'.--. . Every German- snsn refugees-is "bfelag fcriaed for iic office.—ADV. preted aa an attack on Fascism American organization with the fall productions . . . Is it true Arnold Bernstein of New York Harriett Kubby, daughter of when he said that the basis of coAsms, one of the leading'Arab City, visited this week in the Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kubby is nowoperation—between laity a n d word Bund in its name ia drop- tJ&t Uncle Sam is investigating home of Mr. and Mrs. Art-Kaplan, recuperating in the Mercy Hos- clergy underlying the organiza- ping it like a hot potato, as a re- the possibility of settling Aus- poetesses, was ordered .assassinatsult of the rising feeling against. triaa^ and .k German refugees Sn ed by Mohammed because cf her enroute from Clcarlake, South pital from, an appendectomy. tions of Catholic Action is a con-the German-American ;Bund . '. . AlEEliaT . . . . Among tfee institu- poem condensing the sl-aiing cf Dakota, to his home. Enroute he ception •• tjiat- is "greater than Henry Tiauck, one of the six con- tions -doing their bit for refugees I a Jewish post by t i e Kohani-edwill visit in Indianapolis. ' wonderful. And ia one of true victed Nazi Sam Shyken is "convalescing at leaders of Camp SiegN democracy In opposition to all the the Jenny .Edmunson -Hospital . /' ' fried on Long Island, has' been foolishness and blasphemy that is from an appendectomy, late last Members of the Debra Club met asked -to resign from the YapUttered inbwadays with such facile hank Wednesday evening 'with Miss Volunteer Fire Department, levity on thl3 subject." Giaela Pill, for thsir regular but has refused - . . . .Maybe be Mrs. B. Saltzman returned monthly meeting. Meanwhile, the general secrea chance-to help, put out WHOLESALE home Saturday, from the Metcy tary of tho Fascist party has, or- awants fire in the home of one of the Mrs. Philip Sherman, 1704 Hospital where Bhe recently un- dered a special registry of alljurymen who convicted him . . . CkoeeUtes Douglas street, and son, Eugene, derwent an operation. party members according to theAlthough J o e Jacobs, M a s ® Cassava Dry Gia&er Ala left this -week for a stay at Exnew racial theory. Similar in- Schmeling's non-Aryan manager, *Fl celsior Springs, Missouri. Mrs. Max Steinberg. ia recuper- structions, have been issued by went but of his way to defend ZIC To.. iDt!. Ctrcei ating a t . h o m e a f t e r ' a two. weeks the associations-of lawyers, doc. r i C L" tH Mrs. Ted Fishman of Flana- illness a t t h e Mercy Hospital, fol- tors, engineers and government his Nazi fighter and even excused •c ~ : Nazi anti-Semitism, he got noth; reau. S. D. visited in Sioux City lowing -an operation. • • - . . . . . , corporations. - Leaders of the as-ing for his pains . . .When Joo thk> -week. simllatiohist wing of Italian asked Mas for his 'dough, before -, yens Jewry- and representatives of Jew- the German returned home.after Mrs. Leah Baron, 606 Virginia ish .converts who called on thethe Louis fight, he got this restreet, returned from Omaha minister of the Interior received ply: "How dare you ask me for Monday, where she attended the assurances that adoption of themoney after all the trouble you funeral of her aunt, Mrs. Esther Arjran theory would not affect caused me, you non-Aryan, you!" Horwitz. • «vp CS9 Berlin (JTA) —'Synagogues their status. . . . Just to show you to vrh.it inGermany are "bandits' caves" extent Mas lost caste hz?\ in - Mio3 Joyce Marks returned to which should be rooted • out of POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT T7 -1J* 'i Nazlland after his defeat by her home in Omaha after a visit Reich soil, Der Stuermer, mouthELECT here in: the Sperling home. piece of Julius Stretcher, proclaimed. Acocrding to Stretcher's JQ. u- -i.~iiLiiLd\i<sD - Mr. and Mrs. Dave J.'Albert, violent editorial, the' synagogue in 103 Stellart apartments announce Nuremberg 13 • a blot "on what the birth of a son, at the Metho- pearl of German cities,'the meetdist hospial, July 22. ing place of the National Socialist . Party congress." The article Sherman Sperling is visiting described Jewish houses of wor•with friends this week in Omaha. ship as "prayer-houses for the s ray ra^i;;; Jewish criminal world clique." Solomon Etting and Jacob Co- The Berlin synagogue may soon hen -were immediately, upon the be torn down, presumably In line ratification in 1826 of the Mary- •with plans for architectural reorv- Us new land "Jew bill,' elected to the ganization of the capital, TBE? s Baltimore city council. synagogue at Munich, has: already%'.:.., - 5 been demolished to make piece Patronize Our Advertisers for a parking lot. ;'. ,i
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