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HerscheH Grynzspaa ' Non-Jewish friends of mine are disappointed In Herschell- Grynzopan. (He .13 .the Polish-Jewish . boy who shot the German -AsbasEnterca :oa Second Ci&£» Mail tlatter on January SI. 1SS1. atOMAHA, -NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 19SS sador'a secretary In Paris.) Pcatotflee. ot Omaha. Nebraska, under the Act of March S, 1879 They say: it vras GO foolish of • rf T him to -waste, a bullet on a GerBERNE STUDENTS TO • man ambassador's secretary or T!aerc t RESIST PROPAGANDA : even on the ambassador himself. ;.. They mean that bullets could So c[ * ' BERNE, (JTA).—A group of serve better to rid the "world of almost-wx.--..Berne University student corpothe ruling brutes in Berlin. *. « fc ! t ^ *,£' & the. Jewish Philanthropies cr.s rations unanimously passed a Indeed, any discussion of thla seat out an. appeal to r/.l esolution proclaiming their inii*,. % * - ' V*- - 'Vh-' . matter with non^Jewlsh friends TJ pledgers to make cash availention to oppose by all means at always leads to the question: Why able1 on their pledges prior to Lai v i. La'i L u l l I t I k ( L-J .heir command any Nazi attempts don't the Jews, fight? dne date. •..-.;o spread propaganda In the uni' My'friend, BIr. Dolan, asked me " •" When fifteen thousand Jews versity. . • • • . . this. Mr. Dolan Is mindful of the Dinner to Be Held Sunday, The resolution was an answer Disorders Coatlauiag as In Germany were fcogilj seized C valor of his ancestors In Ireland and her«S«E like cattle with but ra. Fro; December 11, at ;o • reported Nazi plans to propaArcay Pursues Arab nnder'.England. He has the proud tow dollars allowed for exgandize Swiss universities. The Paston memory of his great-great grandpense moaey' (oat cf which Rbl Jwisa government's political delather, who perished in Ireland each was compelled to pay railApproximately 300 new mem- partment asked the German govjlonial road • lair) and ' then . were LONDON, <JTA). Berlin (TOTS)—Uciess t h efie-| . TO. S! fighting for bis human rights. bers will be initiated by the local 3rnment to explain notices posted Secretary B l a l c o l c i MacDoaald (Jumped ir.io the snow-coverpd mocrscies 'evacsate . t h e German i ' "They hanged my great-great B'nai B'rith lodge at a dinner to !n Berlin University announcing told the House of Comntoas that fields in below zero weather on Jeirs a t vme a n 5 a t their' • o v a | « grandfather," says Mr. Dolan with held on Sunday evening, De- ;hat German students who wish discussions are being held with a the borders of Po'snd—-the re- expense, they will be star%'ed into j -\ -. c ii e the pride of a Daughter of the be cember 11, at the Hotel Paxton. o study in Swiss universities and view to bringing all interested "Iief • organizations, were canglit crime a n d then exterminated vrith • jfIe." American Revolution- telling about This class, known as the "Henry are "ready for action" would be parties into a round table confer"fire- &ad sword." This is t h e •;r without cash on baad. • 'a forbear at Valley Forge. Monsky class" in honor of the ence which may begia either bereason for this situation lurifi picture "of fate confronting! Indeed, as Mr. Dolan says, the organizations international presi- subsidized. fore Christmas or early ia the Js The Gerisan. Je-ws a s splashed across ' x«o' easily explalced. No one lot of the Irish In Ireland some dent, IS the large group to be New Year. the.frpEt page of i c i w a r z e Kc-rps, ; < — E« _ , could possibly, anticipate the 100 years ago was just about as initiated in the history-of the loIf this effort does not succeed, needs in Austria vrhen the year organ of the Gestapo (secret p o - j £ •unhappy as that of the Jews in cal lodge. he concluded, the British govern- 193 S d a w n e d . Emergency liee) and Hitler Elite Guard, j - - j . ""' ' r ' Germany today. They suffered An intensive membership camment will take full responsibility funds' needed for that area ex- 'srhich together cors.iss.te t h e ' ! .degradation and Impoverishment. paign was conducted by the lodge for the future of Palestine. A- hausted the treasuries of the German" cocsesiio situation. j r_T.r "But they fought," - exclaims the past few weeks ' under' the conference of the British Mis- relief organizations. t T h e . f i r s t step-toward .carrying | t • ' Mr. Dolan. "They fought 100 : s chairmanship of Morris E. Jarachl Organization conveyed to out t h e plan which t h e Na'si or- | ' > Now. fssads are desperately ' .years and many died in guerilla cobs. ^he British government its "grave needed. Xh& Jewisls Philan- gan o-utllses will be a new anti- ' ' ^warfare .and many swung on the An out-of-town speaker will concern at the suggestion ot furJewish decree' issued by Field gallows . . . Why don't the Jews give the principal talk of the ever rr ther concessions (to the Palestine thropies asks all to ' flo the!? Marshal Herman-'Goeriag under •
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share by paying pledges in adArabs> at the expense of the vance whom all .measures for "liB,m-Ca.dae-date. i f every Jews, even to the extent of en- pledger,ofwill tlon" of t h e J e ^ s — ROW being ismake the sacrifice visaging a change in the n a n - and send a cfaeck sued i n r a p i d succession—will be S for his pledge date." concentrated.• | ia foil, "fends can be forwardThe conference' demanded that ed. The cew- decree, i t is unaer- i the Jewish Agency paxUcipats in - Every aid given to the Jewvrill create definite ghettos proposed Arab-Jewish meeting ish Philanthropies to jaeet .this stood, —vr* by -coznpelliEg- t h e Jews to I've in only if curtailment of Jewish emergency w i l l demonstrate I certain ;— restricted 'districts in a • JMr. TJolan.. . . "At a secretary!" ranging the affair. Fewish Youth dances of the sea1 . rights is excluded 'fro_ the par- EolisJarity sad feeling for the restricted number of cities, probMr. .Dolan . is quite disgusted son will ba held Sunday, evening, ; ley's scope. . • Invitations are being .mailed ably £5. At' t h e same, time the?- ' •With the pacifism of .Jews Hq out to all' members of the local December 11, at the Jewish Com- Lord Strabolgl, prominent La- ssfferers. ' — Ihe J e w i s ' are to be excluded cntier pain ot says that if he were a.Jew in organization. '•'.. munity Center.' • Entitled, "The ''.'•'• borite. suggested the British govot Oiaaba. punishaiect from certain parts of ..Germany he would fight . . . "I Ice Breaker," this affair inaugu- ernment arm 100,000 Jews for o " cities i n which 'they Till be perMnlght "be killed . . . I most probrates . another year of 'an ever- self-defenss as' a .solution cf the -ee mitted to. dwell, sues.' £S Berlin's ably would, I would probably be popular series. Palestine problem. Tae Tisaes EDTernEieiit district, s c d from' torn to pieces . .;. but to die that Music for the dancing will be published a leagthy euintsary ot ether- cities -such ES Potsdam, •/way is better than, to live this urnished by Franklyn Vincent the Palestine situation by Its vresmar s,n5 Berchtesg-aden they "•way. To die fighting for yonr and his orchestra. A spectacular Serusalem correspondent,, w h o will be banned entirely. rights, is better Iban to live withfloor show Is also on the evening's declared there was little likeli"out any rights at all. To die that program. Business G5o«eS hood that the problem would be way is to win the • admiration of Tickets for this and the follow- settled by the forthccisiEg negoE'iEicEtioa cf JeirE from Ger-' i the world. That is better than ing three dances are free to mem- tiations because of the "hopelessrr.a-H business life is.being e"fsr,t. having merely the world's pity." bers ot the Jewish Community ly Irreconcilable" teras projected • ed.in a series o£ sweeping decrees I scarcely know - -what to anenter. All non-members may by Arab3 and Jews. swer him. I can think of many purchase tickets from any memi -V hich orders complete liquidation First Meeting Held at J. C. answers but none of them would ber of the Round Table of Jewish of .all Jewish retail stores. -rnE.il JERUSALEM, (JTA).—H e s iC. Last Sunday be satisfactory to Mr. Dolan. Youth. OT&ST- CEtsrprises. corn-mission tant attempts.at cooperation beat Cleveland to • I could tell him'of the amazing Afternoon The date3 of the dances as an-tween Jews - and Arabs in gatherhouses a n d handicraft- shops. •victories of pacifism that I, the nounced by Irving Nogg, chair- ing • and shipping this year's The fiecree, signed, hy Eccnom- ' Jew, have seen in the 2,000 year& After two months of organiza- man ot the dance committee, will bumper orange crop -were reits Minister Tv"alter Funlt &Ed , v "Oh. Mr. Dolan, even after the tion work, A. ZJ A. Chapter No. be: Sunday, February 5, "Ques- ported. At the next meeting of . .fce 3oArab rebel chieftains Justice KinSster Fraiis Gueriirer 2,000 years we the pacifists are 1 announces the formation of an tion Mark;" Sunday. March 5, previous orders cal lodge o£ B'nai • B'rith; to be- KBder t h e personal direction'• cf still a living. effective people, but Omaha Junior A. Z. A. club. This Purim. Frolic," a n d Sunday, countermanded held Monday, December 5; at forbidding native drivers to apGoerins, is espeotea t o be t o l the power-of all their persecutors club Is composed of boys .between May 7. ply to British authorities for per- S:15 at the Jewish Core: mnity "• by similar c r c e r s eliminat(except the current 6ne)-is in the the ages of 12 and 16 years. , _ „ 'Je-'rs . As In the past only couples will mits, thus enabling jsasy Arabs Center, delegates t o t h e next d i s - (iEg irc=i f i r , e ? r u ; I C - _ _ . . . _ dust. Look, Mr. Dalan! Even at At the last meeting of this club be admitted to these dances. obtain passes for transporting .trict convention c l t h e lodge v^ll 1 i - g IT'S t i r r s i - r l - E.S 1" *r ; this hour, these pacifists are on held on Sunday, November 27, at Hasfeell Cohen is the advisor of to crop. be elected. ' t r d ^ s T-; c'^-r"; i-rce. C: the front pag©3 of all the newspa- the Jewish Community Center, a the /Ronnd Table. The daces coia- their British' troops were coasting f""ei t-> r-"r FcVr.e= ". r . c Following this pers, addressing the consciences constitution was adopted which mlttea Includes besides N o g g , guard over hishtrsrsand rail•aictares will be sicvn cf rE:">-!i". of men. The might of their per- called for £• three-fold program. Paul Sacks, Sylvia Epstein, Esther ways, ' assuring protection for sebatoro is only a story in the yel- Activities of the d u b will be Steinberg snd Nathan Wolfsoa, .the Cleveland .evirr. C r - , ^ " ^ ^ r -^Tk^.-"T^!::/' shipment of -the fruits Jewish faire, * lowed pages qf history. You ses,along nV»n hn'nft ir>'--> is r-.T^r>r*ei ! '•.'"V —_ ' * _Jcultural, social cad athletic by ths B'nai 'S' farcaers.pls2. to sxpQtt 7.00?,GCO the,pacifists ore; the victors^ after. li g J cases of craasss Trtila ths Aral> The' IJOS.ES lia.es. ~! C -: ; to""^ offlccra 'cliarda espoct to ship 6,000,000 tizs cc£c::n January for E.C > —' ~1 •5 V i tTea,** Jli*« 'ISolaa-- probably at tha first cases abroad. ' . meeting. Albert V?hite i initiatc; cr. r>ccc In a drastic EIOTO to crush iild..answer,, "theppacifists are WC3 elected president; .George •The Brea-S-rrc-ie-E Arab terrorisia, the military auScfcolniclr, "vice-president; Bobby \A jrlagtlng k oil thepain." front pageswlth their Fromkin.= secretary; Norman PoE-iec - ; r.thorities have put all of Palestine grotip meets C-C-T I V ''Notice, too, Mr. Dolan, that lonsky,. treasurer, and reporter except the urban areas under an 12:15 at the " 5 - : r t Spot," l l t h ' the cni6I laws of the old perse- and sergeant-at-arms, C a l v i n 11-hour curfew for an indefinite and Farnara-fcor^.;^. FT>F-",'l V I " Over 250 per. -r. ctlc=Ici t i c cutors a r e . only quaint 'relics o Brelt ' period. The curfew is from 6 Starting their activities immehistory—the pathetic ; witnesses p. in. to 5 a. m. Local military i'n&i E'rlth £zl zth l£.:i " . _ . diately,- the Junior Aleph club evening .at TC:L ^ Icrac!. r d - CCC" of man's inhumanity to man." commanders TTIII regulate co g lotrlag talts '.\" ri 1 " "True, Mr. Segal I The pathetic heard members of the A. Z. A, 1 -' I' in ins urban s.ress. An Arab pon~Z ccr o' IT-r: Says No Formula to Aid ialice inspector vas shot dezd near. preslfleat of t>-^ ^ cruelties; of the old persecutors chapter speak on Palestine. Plans" are being made to enter have been succeeded by the - '••• " A r t o f . B e i n g • Lydda. A" Jewish driver was shot Rabbi r-it-.d A. T/ioe £e-streamlined brutalities of the a club team in the J. C. C. Midget and killed dead ca Mt. Carmel Jew" iBasietball league. • a ser^cn. en 'The ria=-' new ones." . ' , . . near Haifa. Trn> irell-& n o w a *-c The next meeting of the J-unior of- Israel." ' "But, Mr. Dolan! Cruel laws Americans, narro-n-ly e s c a p e d power There will r : ro rzcctlns cf t r c ' do die of their own venom, as we Alephs club will be held on Sun- For the Jew who seeks a for- death at the haaiis of Arab terhave seen. Yet the moral law of day. December 11, at "the Jewish mula for the expression of his rorists -who attacked a taxi in Lodge oa Deccr-irr 1?. the persecuted pacifists remains Community Center at 3 p . m . Any Judaism, there is no answer, ac- which they were driving from Je"bright in the world. It is in all Jewish boys Interested in Joining cording'to Meyer Levin, promi- rnsa!sa to the Dead Sea. the: churches, in all the ways of should get in touch with either nent novelist, who spo&o Tues- ESJIB'S KEPBESEXTVCATTTE civilized men . . . The Ten, Com- members of the club or A. Z. A. day evening at the Jewish COSJOne Jew was killed accidentalmunity Center on "The Art of Be- ly near Lydia, and nine other mandments, Mr. Dolan! , . . "Thsa No. 1. r " cr1 The Junior A. 2.-A.-. Committee ins «• Jew." shalt not k i l l ' . . . "Thou shalt not •were -woaaiie<i, Hire© of thera sevk. t fc . 6f Mother chapter was headed by ' f C . . v. r A great mind, like Jacob Was- erely, in a Haifa bombing. At steal'." liczr. "'Yea, indeed; .Mr. Segal. Yoar Stanley Turkel. Assisting him serEaan, according to Mr. Levin least 10 Arab rebels were killed T'J noble laws stand honored only In were Harry Goldstein, Morris Ax- sought to banish any psychologi- in a clash with British troops the breach. You've got to fight for bltman.and Irving Nogg. cal effects of Judafcna frosa Ma sad TrarpiB.nea near Ycrsa. One Charter members of the Junior mind EO that he might express plane was foread, down ia the them.' s-: r 1 • Mr! Dolan, what A. Z. A. are: Calvin Breit, Milton himself completely as s German vicinity of Mt. Kastcl' snd its A J i e s o r i d =sci:=- Till t r j ie-r-.-rr., "rr.: c it "Consider; 1 majesty of character Is in our Cackin, Herbert Dolgoff, Stuart and thereupon evolved the theory pilot was killed ia' the crash* held on Sander, I>occr:;er i, £.t,rr-- J -"."^ .' ~ % - ^ ". r r r " " pacifism. In all the yeara of Nazi Frankel, Bobby Fromkin, Sidney of the psychological effect o; 2:S0 p. a . at t i e Labcr Lrcc'jn. ]• ™ * c." !'c*. L C ; • , 5r" —c" i/' " '"T-murder and rapine only two Nazis Greenbaum, Bob Haykinr Bob landscape, that the landscape on AMAN. Traasiordan. (JTA)— have been killed by Jews. {There Haykin, Bob Hersoff, Bernari which one lives creates a differ- .transJordan's dels gate' to1 ths'Twenty-s 'c zz. < t "r was another pase In which a Jew Jonish, Daniel KaUman, B o b ent'type of physical person. London conferencs on Palestine for B. Vlsdek z.™^ - named- Frankfurter shot a Nazi Lazere, Richard Newman, Sea- - To explain statements • niaSe la tins to ba aa important official, rcri r in Switzerland.) Hot? beautiful it men Peltz, Norman Polonsky, regard to Zionism* Mr. T/snti is- Emir Abdullah named" Preniier Jewish o£ t h : :CETTcrk r_:rc~Is, .Mr; Dolan, that only two hands Leonard Potash, Georgre Schol. sued the following statement for Te'wfik Pasha Abd Huda to repd.Jsst n : " t ottfews have been raised against nick, lanton Soskto, Albert Whit publication in the J E W I S H resent this coastrr^ Loadoa and t ol t r ? c ~ • the. niultitude of murderous hands and Norman Wohlaer. PRESS: • ; : . - • . ' previously refused to accept esof-Nasis^ Th'e.law:of the pacifists . "There seems to fee -sorso rala- Brsmlsr- Hsrahaia Pasha Hse&esa resertatire ct tic Cer-.ri ;-,"shines dazzling in the chaos of a .Transjordsa Cosisjittes. intsrprstation- of my attitude ca lawless'world. Indeed, the Jews Jewish settlement" in Palestine. I editor cf tea l.Iilrh ~r .1" are offering: to the world an ezbelieve that this Eettlessent fcso emplar-of the Chrlstly Ideal." already created a most significant "But what does that get yon?" and important advanca in Jud-Mr. Dolan might ask. "Doe3 it . ism in our epoch. IXy reference lessen your pain? Does It soften was simple and only to its physithQ barbarians?" cal inadequacy in the face cf tio "Yes, Mr. Dolan, -it does , lesrs-l"- tho present mass refusee . problem. sen our pain to, stand with digBut as a world center ot Je-srlcii nity amid the -blows, to be faithT h e following lette? from ful to .our ideals In the shambles,' Patter' flanagaa . of Omana ap- life, Palestine is • c penaancri to keep clean haeds aasong taur- pears this week in Paul Peter' need of Jewry as against temderers. It doesn't soften the mbr- 'column "Between You and Me.:" porary needs of today." • Mr. Levin ."was introduced fey ders but we may hope that in a My dear Sir. Peters: for M5ads7:*liroiishi55it CSEthousand years, (you' sse, Sir. Do- "Mr. Carl Katlezsan of Los An- his cousin, Irvia C. Levin, Omaha ers sds Bad tha Halted States lor the lan, Jews have learned to count geles (ed. note, a former Oma- attorney, j&lrs. Milton Hsyper rrzs victims cf • Nazi.. persecution. The time by ages) in a thousand years han), ,yoar friend sad admirer, chairman of ths evening. Union also, proclaimed a-"Ka3:6- people will find something lovely sent me a clipping in whlcb. you D1FCC7 t e r ' KoJesV ' (reSe~pt!cn cf for their hearts in us. They may comment on "Boy's Town" picsoals) caEpaisa for tbe mcata Miss BIsrx' - " . say, T h e Jews remained civil- ture, and I want to thanfe you SHAW WANTS SANITY'' Kislev Tector ot e d v " ' — ized in a world that was descend- for tbls fine TTiitetip. It is dif•• '.'TEST.GIVEN REICH cl durisg -whlsh. all Je-a-s are urged ths Je^rtsh Cc—V ing to barbarism.'" 1 ferent froin others I have seen, IiONDON, ( JTA ) -. —George to 'give -cae week's TMLEes- to tii-s sssed feer di i °s r Sir. Dolan' would snort at this. and. I- have read hundreds of Bercanl, Sftaw .ursed tae X«easne Joint Elstribstiaa Corasiiies fer ' He would tell me that the little them from alf over the country. of Nations': to appoist s cosiniSt- relief of rsfagssa. boy Heraehell Grynzspan (who and this article has thrilled me. N which,-'yiib the assistaaee of shot tha ambassador's secretary)" You may faiow that toy associa- iee. psychiatrists, would determina ' AMSTERDAM, (JTA).—Air- ! - . X ^ / - - is the most dignified of Jews. He tion with your people has been a •whether tba anti-Semitio • ESCE- Eterfiata dlamoafi cotters decidel * ,- ^ * t , X made only -a futile gesture "of re- very beautiful one." su;e3 takes by Germany and sistance but (Mr. Dolan would "We. have been pals and asso- Italy constituted a'-legitimate de- week'sad desste theJr-pay to s-a " " "" "^ say) he belongs to tha saintly ciates for the 27 years of my pubi f frosi Genssay. | , T , p — » — company of free spirits who have lic life, and I belie-ro that "Boys cision e r a ^'pathological phobia." Writing la a special suppleeet their liberty and theJr lives To-sra" picture will do more good on the altar to be the symbols ofr to counteract the poison that is ment ea persecution o£ the Jews, Saiauel, a ' JsTrfsh real cstat: ! — — and .Tide, their protest. being disseminated in Europe in' the zaagazia'e, Tinas T_~ r :"jM said that if dealer, aaaoasced that.fce m-oall' the notea p "Do you repudiate thl3 t)oyl" than all the speeches could do. It pay tha. entire blllicn-iaar& r;- -V — " ~ ths. verdict was {or tha "phobia," Mr. Dolan would ask me. ' depicts a spirit of brotherly lo-e r -._-._I should feel embarrasses by among the races which is as it tfcfe. Fuehrer' asd, the Daee mast prisal "fins" imposed os Germc ~o" " — r 7 cancel tha measures or-stand, feeJewry with1520 la s Gerssas •weeli-?—but ia t l ' ! c-~\.z~ , C' " •-'• thls~question. What should I sayshould be,"" and •• oaly--"through carrescr. . ' of HerscheH' Grynsspan? Ought I •which this country can rise above fore Europe es'certified lunatics. Such payment. Sassnel elatee . > say. Ha must not be counted one the petty jealousies of individwouia fulfill to the . letter'• tl — , r *. of. us? Ho. has been faithless to uals and -nations.". - Jessie S-asspte G e r n a n govEransst's deraai the~ dignity that - Is required" of J E R U S A L E M . {JTA).—Miss that tho "tise" bo psia'la Ge Jews, untrue to our duty to bs Jessie .Sampler, Nev York-born man carreacy. . . Commttfeo civilised even among tho ezv- . T h e executive committee of t h e author' and ZiqnSst "crorSer,' fiiefl zses. True, ho la a s irrecpcanSblo Federation, of Jewish Service tvill st her honis in i the cooperative. A' direct quotation frc child but wo may EOliEowIad^o no meet Tuesday nooa a t t h e Jewish colony-of GiTat'.Brenaer. SIJS (Continued on Page 3) Community Center. ." , • . ' • • . . SB: years old; « g h t ? "
and. Mr. Monsky will re- Mr. Dolan has. been reading ning spond. l " .•about; the affliction of Jews In All members . of the B'nal Four Affairs Planned by Germany for five years yet this B'rith and their families • are inCenter Youth ; is-the first he has heard of anyvited to the dinner. Reservations Groups ,Jew firing- a shot. And it was are §1.25 per plate and may be only a half-insane boy who fired made with Dr. Leon Fellman, the shot and at whom? asks chairman- of the committee ar- -First of the Round Table of ;
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the 600 Jews who served in thotims, morally and spiritually, of contented that our words are not Czech Legion, a famous military the Munich treachery. We arethat of a voice crying in the desunit that numbered among its crushed and we must strengthen ert, and let us evaluate properly officers tho late General Josef ourselves, must heal the wounds the true worth of the friendly eea,lments of the men End vrossen of Urimt% I kit V<s.*urn fa'«j»B%l«iU .•• Weinberger. of our souls. Other Natiosa Thus all the protests and all;ood will. Let us find cousol&tioa Wo have now covered ten ofthe hollering are for us a means .a the fact that we are not alone Temple the sixteen countries that were to keep us from falling into deep .n the u-orld with our pains. }. t-l At services this evening Re*-, engaged in the war, eight on the and lasting despair. We want to HARRY MEXDELSOX. Robert Sheridan Killer, minister Allied side and two with the Cen- help ourselves aacl therefore we W A S K 1NGTON, -C.TTA}'.—Saof the First Unitarian Church, tral Powers. Tho remaining bel- talk and say as we do. If we can't •srill occupy the pulpit t-i Temple preme" Court Justice Ben.iF.mtn N J ligerent countries were Japan, help o u r unfortunate brothers Israel. His topic -will be "The Cardozo WSE sacldeEecl in his last Portugal, Montenegro, Serbia, across the sea, ws want at least Ends and. the Meats." He is bas- years over the persecution o£ th© Greece, Turkey and Bulgaria.'In to help ourselves. For us the proRebecca Predmetsky Jews, but his sadness v » s temJapan, Portugal and Montenegro tests and the good-will expresMrs. Rebecca Prefimetsky, 75, ing his sermon en. Aldous Hur- pered ."ty his confidence that erals, 17 lieutenant-colonels, 15 ley's boot, "Ends and Means." there were altogether • less than J This is tho fourth and last was tho Jewish lad. Josef Zlppe3, colonels, 48 majors and 611 other 200 Jews' so we can pass them sions of the ncn-Jewish organiza- died at the home ol her daughter, America wcult?. never e.bandon its Saturday jr.orcir.g Berrices v-ill "IIn a.'series.of ortlclsa -on. Jow« who was only 13 years of age in officers. A history of Austrian over for the purpose of this study. tlons'and individuals are very im- Mrs. Reuben Bordy, on Novemdeclared Judge great be hel^ at 11. portant, for they help us keep ber 24. '•fish participation in tho mill* 1914, Ho lost both legs in action Jewry during the war reported lining Lehman oC the New York In Greece and Serbia, which ourselves on our feet and not to Surviving her are two daugh]tary phases of tho World War, and died of his wounds in 1934. that by 1917, 400 Jewish officers Court oC Appeals, close friend,Jit fought with the Allies, there were lose our heads. J brought t o you by Seven Arts ters, Mrs. Bordy ol Oaaba and v.'b.ose home Mr. Cardozo.; spent Beth El Siegfried Ellaa of Krefeld was had been killed. 104,000 Jews in 1914—88,000. In through -special .arrangements only Mrs. Irving Light o£ Aberdeen, It would be a calamity indeed, when he was shot down The proportion of Jewish offi- Greece and 16,000 in Serbia. No Rabbi David A. Goldstein wUI j his last veeks, at a memorial with tho Jewish Veteran.— while 10 D., and four sons, Abe of Aber- base carrying food through an cers waj particularly high in reg- figures for Jews in the armies [ a great inner misfortune, were we S. his sermon tWs evening, meeting here. Xho Editor. deen; Israel oi Salinas, CaL: Dan "Tbe Life The jurist's last yeai'g 'wefiS onemy barrage. Alfred Apfol, iments from agricultural commu- of those countries hp.ve been com-' to feel that we are entirely de- of Yirork of Solomon Jaixsestown, N. D., and Esa of Schechter," and t f il!'•: •••••• * - G E R M A N Y •' . -'.' • president of the Federation of "darkened t y the linoyieage that sertsd l a this big world—sheep on. the recently-pubnltles because they were the only j n d b t t e n t i s h |S:'! For Germany we have exact wolves. Even if the vrolves Walthill, Neb. Jewish Youth, was an-ones who could speak German., ^otUlm lished biography ot Dr. Sehechter in other Irn.clf- mer vrtio are his there estimate that there among 1^ f'lgurcs regarding Jewish partlci- German The funeral was held on Fri-by NoriaaB. Bentvrieh. Solomon. kin in blood S.V.P. r.pirU ere being were not to rsolest us, the fear other volunteer. The author of Equally large was the percentage j , bjan e 120Q th Ser | | | i a t i o n In tho World War, thothe most popular German war NoTetaber 25, at the Jewish Schecfcter v,-ts the founfler ol driven froro their homes," Judge m the Greek of them, would in itself paralyze day, 0m i Central Associatioa ol German song, "Song of Hate," was theof Jewish officers in Galician and aP1 t,V and 4 400 4 luehrr.En tolc more than 100. of us. The fear that our neighbors Funeral Home. Rabbi David A. Conservative Judaism. Bukowinan regiments, the rank I ^ S y . Jewish cLu^lties in Thesb Si.yaws and the Association o£ Ger- late Ernst Lissauer, who died the country's leading lawyer* feel silently with" bur enemies and Goldstein officiated. BarSal •was i h COmDrlsed Next week Kabbi Max A"zt oi •who gathered io pay tribute..to. jS| ;aan Jewish liJx-Soldiprs having early this year a refugee from of Illiterate peasants. 1 ountries,, also ,, are be- not with us would surely bs aat Fischer Fares cenetery. ScrantoE, Pa., vrill occr.pr tie pi;l- Justice Cardozo. Resolutions of | | ubllslied exnaustivo studies on bbe 300 for Greece crushing feeling, would extinguish loved to and hlo native land. One of the most striking pieces pit at Beth El. m I Uis subject long before tho adsorrow and tribute v-eve bflered of evidence of Jewish -wartime 50 for Serbia A similar lack of In us the last spark of will to life, Sarah Lebendlg AUSTBIA-HUNGARY W3 iient ot the Nazi regime. Patrlotby Assistant Attorney. General and darkness would possess us. patriotism is the record of decoewish statistics confronts us with Mrs. Sarah Lebendig, 69, died Tho Austro-Hungarian Empire ijjfrim. vie.B a tradition In Germany John L,. O"Briar, as chairman o t ' a The knowledge that there are Saturday night at the home cJ | | »;mong tho Jews but their devo- of t h o ' Hapsburgs was swept rations awarded to Jews. Accord- egard to Bulgaria and Turkey. committee ol CC. S||| ilon under tne stress of war de-away by tho war that was pre-ing to figures listed in the offi- We know, however, that in Tur- still human beings on this earth her daughter, Mrs. Anna Tacnehad resided §ff! '-'(bite the social, economic and cipitated by the assassination of cial Austrian Bureau o"f Statis- key, where the 255,000 Jews, ex- that take to heart our pains, hate baum. Mrs. g III • olitical discrimination u n d e r an Austrian archduko a t Sara- tics for 1914, 1915 and the first ludlng those in Palestine, formed our evil doers, are our friends— in Omaha for the past sis years. ?li |;>hich they labored outdid in fer- jevo. In 1914 Emperor Franz Jo- half of 1916, there were more .2 per cent of the population, saves us from complete despair. till rOldtbU I lilSl^j FASCIST ORGANIZATION Surviving besides' Sirs. Ts-ane• or.. anything that had gone be- sef I I ruled over what is nowthan 6,000 Jews decorated for housands of • ews were conscrlpt- That is both a help aad a consola- b a u a ara a sister, Mrs. Harry bravery and heroism in the Aus- d for military labor service and tion without which we cannot g3t Hungary, t h e recently acquired Kelsigfors, TMr.lp.nd (WNS)-"of Buffalo, N. Y., and four ire. province of Germany, all, trian divisions alone. The decora- hat quite a few of them served along. Keeps alive in us the hope Given Providence, R, I. (WNS)—A The Finnish frcrerntTicnt has -BncIn 1314 there were 615,000 Austrian grandsons. tions wero awarded as follows; of Czechoslovakia, largo stretches as. officers in tha Turkish army. that tho time will come when the : i | %ws among 65,000.000 people in Funeral services were held Snn- public declaration condemning ceefied in carrying: out •withbut' what is now Yugoslavia, tho Knight's Cross of Franz Josef ewish authorities in Istanbul de- world will come to itself and day si? iermany, or slightly less than 1 of the Hoffman mortuary. Nazi persecution of Jews in Ger- disturbance its decision to disGalician provlnco of Poland and on ribbon of.valor medal, 104; laro that 18,000 is" a conserv- eventually call the Hitlers and Buriala twas many has been issued bj" the Cen- solve the Fascist party. wi Jor cent. In tho four and a half tho present Italian Tyrol with its Strong a t Golden. Hill. Wi j'aara of hostilities Germany mo- important cities of Flume and Signum Laudis on ribbon of Val- -tlvo figure for the number of Goerings to account-giving. tral Union of German Societies of support in this behalf lias beea or Medal, 1,060; Military Service Tews in the Turkish array and $i illzed 11,000,000 men, or 17 per Rhode Island, representiEg sev- received in Parliament and from Sally Ackerman In this vast empire of Cross, 3d class, 155; Gold Cross hat-1,000 may be accepted as the, It is well that we are not siS i Jbnt of tho; population. The rec- Trieste. eral hundred people of German pr.blic opinion. Police FX© watch- • lenced, well that our friends in Funeral services were held races and nationalities lived with crown, 321; Gold Cross on number.of Jews killed in the TurH | r<Js show that there,were 100,- many birth or extraction. ins the premises ot all Fascist' the world talk to us and console Monday Efternoon for Sally Ackpeople, of whom 2,- ribbon, 176j Silver Cross with kish aftny. For Bulgaria, which in l j ;001 Jewo in tho Gorman a r a y v o r 51.000,000 EeviewiEg the slaying of Ernst ps-.pers. 260,000 were Jews, or 4.4 ..per crown, 541; Sliver Cross- on rib- 1914 had 67,000 Jews, 1.42 per us, well that we are not deserted erman, IS, who died early MonWi {I. } per, cent of the Jewish pop- cent. Rath, German .Embassy SecIt 5s revealed, however, that . bon, 130;. Gold Valor medal, 2nd cent-of the total .population, the in our tragedy. Well that we can day morning a t a local hospital vom © ilation. Counting men and wornretary in Paris, the declaration, the government's interference free ourselves from the suspicion after a seren-week illness. class, 1,266; Bronze Valor Medal, best, information is that 12,000 p i , h, Infants and children, every Franz Josef, who was the emeighteen. Fascist-owned • or rather fear thai all bate us her are her parents, made public by the Union's sec- with «4t-_ sth Jew in Germany saw serv- bodiment of justice, often wont 1,575; Iron Cross, 2nd class, 32; Jews served in the army, ot whom and that the whole world is anti- Mr.Surviving retary, Ktsdolf Kiliacsky, assert- nevspapers has caused a good! ... and Mrs. Morris Ackerrnan; others, 134. 1,000 were killed. l i l je. At least 80 per cent of theout of his way to show his JewSemitic. That fear would have a brother. Dr. Fred Ackerman of ed that "certain groups in Ger-deal of criticism in that, it is-a*. «=••• awa under arms, or 80,000, ish subjects how he felt about Hungarian Divisions consumed us inwardly and pro-Seattle, and a sister, Mrs. Barney many" have been "incitedfcyun- legretl, it infringes the existing- „a Srved at the front. Nearly 10,000 anti-Semitism, especially In the In tho Hungarian divisions parprecedented .anti-Jewish, propa- press law. ••• • duced a wound that would surely Guss. ? \ tho 100,000 under arm3 wore army. Once during a military re- tial records show that there were ganda to attack, persecute- end poison our blood and minds. Kabbi Milton A, Kopstein conten i. blunteers. • view he noticed a corporal who 371 decorations awarded to Jews. Radio mentioned in the • Tal» . As yet, the quarantine with ducted the service at the Jewish maltreat thousands of innocent numerous decorations. The5 Among them were 8 Leopold Orav? | After tho war, Dietrich Eckart, wore, which the Nazis are surrounding Funeral Home, Burial v a s atpeople of the Jev.-ish religion." .mud? "The Rabbis have taughtfe ders, '84 Iron Crosses, 171 Gold Emperor asked the commanding "This barbarity," the statement 'Three sound travel from one end an f ilitbf of tho Munich anti-Semitic officer why the obviously worthy Medals of Valor, and 118 Silver themselves is only a moral one; Golden Hill. WE ARE NOT ALONE |oeltly, "Aut gut Deutsch," of- soldier,had not been promoted to Medals for Valor. continued, "has changed the good [of the ee.rtb io the other . .-.« but the time •will come, and per' §red a prize of 1,000 marks for a. higher rank. name and reputation of Germans '; Some Rabbis would, also include • haps the time is very near, when Colleges Plan Promotions wero another evi- To the Editor ot the yoof that a single family, had. In all parts of the Torlc! Trbo do [the sound of Katly?.." (Yoma 21; JewiBh Press: . the moral isolation will not allow The answer,that his name was dence of the large part taken by ^nt three sons into tho trenches not approve of these measures of §i?}. Rsd^s- is the name '•ot^au-' "What i t they do protest, BO it to spread its dark power any Refugees Aid Jjr a period of three weeks. Rab- Abraham Schwartz and he was a the Jews of Austria-Hungary In vengeance." further. The time will come when What i t they do con| Freund of Handver .immediate- Jew. Whereupon, Franz Josef re- the /world. Adolph Kornhaber von what? Cambridge, Mass., (JTA)—A "In tho Austrian army Pills and Karl • Schwartz von demn the Nazis for their atroci- from our words and their senti..; gave him a list of twenty fam- plied: ties, what good ore .they doing ments of good will will come acts proposal that Harvard provide beJea in his own community who there .are no. Jews, only soldiers, Schweitzer won barshal's batons. with it? . . . And what If they True and sincere words are nottween $S,000 and ?10,090 in free i n t three sons into the trenches and a soldier who deserves i t be- Other Jews promoted to high milfor from them radiates a tuition for qualified German refu%M; fT three weeks and more; Dr. comes a n officer." The Emperor itary rank were General Emil have recalled the American am- wasted, Isi round also • presented a list ot then ordered Schwartz, to step Sommer, Lt. Col. Max Ullmann, bassador to Germany, will that power, and it makes no differ- gee students was placed before i | ^ families from various commu- forward, and remarked to theLt. Col. Moritz Mansch, Lt. Gen. help the helpless victims? . , . ence that it Is as yet latent, stil the University Corporation. The l i | | |tles, some of which sent seven commanding officer:. "This BOI- Moirtz Feldman, Maj. Gen. Leo- Gestures, fine gestures, f i n e It will eventually manifest itself proposal vras advanced by the Harvard Committee for Refugees, i l l ' =id eight sons to the trenches dior ought to carry an officer's pold Austerlltz, Bridg. Gen. Julius words that's all they are!'-' such in all its might. Bauer, Col. Josef Neumann, Major are and might very well be the The fact that the Hitlers and •which said lt TV^S ready to raise •....., ;|s3i- id had lost three son' in -thesword." Daniel Bloch, Col. Emanuel reactions of many Jews in these s»?|: Jrvlee of their country. The fact Mussolinis cannot "take" the pro $35,000 to defray other espouses Today Hamilitated Krauss, Col. Leopold Deutsch, Lt. Ha | that there were 142 Jewish It was this well-known attitude Col. Adolph Fleischer, . Captain Hunnlsh.days. They might very tests and condemnations of their for "as many as possible." properly insist that all the con-opposition shows tbat they are | | ; i tallies in Germany which sent- of tho Emperor - that made t h e iiplir '5 mon to tho front; two .fam- Jews eager to. serve in hi3 armies. Slgmund von Frledmann, Col. demnations and protests are but afraid of them. The more they Swarthmore, Pa., (JTA)-—The Theodor Wolfner, Col. Joseph fine phrases, so much like that attack the truth, the mightier be- annual chest fund drive 813QS contributed • 10 each; one It is a far cry from the days of Kneber, and Major Adolph FleckMil Cnt nine; six contributed eight; 19T4 when tens of thousando of wo hear constantly from the de-comes the world's conscience that Swarthmore College is being held er. ?i ;i i t sent seven; and 39 contributed mocracies, while pointing at Fas- frightens them day and night. Jews fought for Austria, to the earlier this year in.order to use : *.il- :Sceach. . ' .• . General Sommer and Captain cism, Nazism stopping a t nothing; present when Jewish veterans ot It Is well that the voice of truth some of the funds collected in colFrledmann are now in a Nazi conoverturning worlds, destroying the World War are publicly hu; • ;;|] di Modalo Avyovded heard. I t serves as a balm to laboration with the drive to ficamp. Sommer, who nations, wiping out governments is Stiij tlTho figures for Jewish service miliated and thrown Into concen- centration our heavy hearts and minds and nance refugee students a t Swartncommanded the 24th Infantry on —find we and they talk! talk! . • |pfi estho German finny by provinces tration campa. help3 us hold our positions long more or other colleges in this Galician front and later tho fSgl ctre: Berllni 19v83Bj Pomeranla"; Official figures aa to tho num- the The.victims ; are struggling In and painfully achieved. Let us be country. . ." . . troops in Burgehla'nd, won three p l f FJ27: Silesia. Q.G44; Sasony, ber of Jews who saw service in decorations. - Shortly after tho the hands of .the robbers, murSfill G147; Sohleawig; 328: Hannover, thd AuBtrb-Hungarian army were,: derers" and wild sadists, their took Austria, he was or-wounds **?| T524;'Westphalia, 3.927; HeaSe- unfortunately, never compiled. Naslo crying out t o u s : "Help to clean streets. With tho ua! m$ Alssau, 9,8<54; Rhineland, 9,472; Tho.disruption of the monarchy, dered Save.us!" And we make noise dignity of an Austrian officer, ;tS'i{ Mat Prussia, 1,900; West Prus- the disorganization • of the Jewish he appeared for this menial duty with our mouths, with our pens:^f hi, 2,316; Brandenberg, 1,044; communities- and the post-war in full general's uniform. nies. And the world helps a s Wiil -•• iv.arla, 9,659; ' Wuertemberg; chaos made it' impossible to ob-dressed General Sommer was the founder make noise. Is it not a shame and ££$•.; pa32; Baden, 4,758; Hessen, 4,- tain tho statistics. From various of the Jewish War Veterans of an insult on the =part of the world Then I* No Substitute for Style and Quality ^—J nt3; others, 3,833. reliable - sources, however, facts Austria. to help with groans and sighs and g ^ | V&eQt all the Jews who fought for have been assembled which make statements in the press, humans, Captain Frledmann, -who also who are being tortured before its pg^X-craany, 29,875 were decorated, it possible to present an adequate •ylHI ; i Scludlng 900 who received the picture.of Jewish military service won several decorations and 1Lvery eyes in the-most sadistic | Sri-.'•• '-5 n Cross, first class, and four in Austria-Hungary during the now In a concentration camp, suc- manner? <K :j mio were awarded the rare Prus- World.War. In .1937 the Schild, ceeded Sommer as president of In one way those, who take the S^!| icta Gold Medal for Bravery. organ of the Association of Ger- the Austrian Jewish Veterans. To Make You Look Your above view, are justified in their Other prominent Jewish, war man Jewish Ex-soidiera, reported Dcout 23,000 wero promoted, to 9Z WST LtiZZ t:Zl7J Indignation and disgust rank, and over that there were 200,000 Jews in heroes are Captain Ernest' Stias vehement WORiFZUtQ LA pi jon-commlssioned with gestures and fine phrases, sny, wearer of six decorations, the Austrian . divisions, sof the 00, not including medical ofyet there is another angle to it. who Is now in this country; Baron Austrp-Hungarianarmy. bebrs, were commissioned. These :Dd£cer8 all received their comIn 1920 the Oesterrelchlsche Eugene von Rothschild, who won We must not forget that we Jews :: RiiSion for meritorious, .war eerv- WochenBchrift estimated , that the sliver medal for bravery; In America, and not only t h e 1A\- for, with the exception. of -a there were 180,000 Jews in theFlight Lieutenant Josef Sack, who Jews in Nazi and Fascist lands, ten decorations; and Colone' are victims of the black and fr|; in Bavaria; no Jewish offl- Austrian divisions and 120,000 in won Knerber, the first Austrian officer treacherous victory Hitler recentt&3 woro tolerated in Ihe pre-tho Hungarian divisions. In 1918 killed the Serbian front. Ref- ly achieved. We ourselves are in ; iijrir' Germany army. Over 300 of it was officially announced by tho erenceon should also bo made to need of help, for we.too are vic•rS 1 y Jewish commissioned 'officers Austrian military authorities that 'of: in battle. . . . . .. 76,000 Austrian Jews serving on „ ..^,, _...,...™.., ..........^ ,.,,..,, ,.;; i.!i affl&, : J : :iia 2 gc.\ particularly Interesting chap- the-Italian front had asked to be ; ins of German-Jewish war pa-provided with matzoth for Pass• ; GStism was written by the Jow- over. On the strength of these figGa fliers. In 1925 the Associa- ures it is safe to say that there WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS f ! I of Jewish Ex-Soldiers pub- wero at least 320,000 Jews servChocolates o r»"c7ic*, Cucsta Roy o Schrafft't, ing in tho armies of Franz Josef. -.ed a book called "Jowiah cas2 Harvests? Citrars ° Canada Dry Ginaor AIo ;;9rs In tho World War." by FeMany Officers ©Falstaff Beep f A. Thielhaber. This book 11stThere were 7,800,000 men AT 4292 31S So. 13tK Street' ; ]rrnearly 200 Jewish fliers -who mobilized by Austria-Hungary, or ;-• ]!'..seen actual.war service. Of 15 per cent of its total'populaFi^EE TKEAt ®FFWt"..;,; : •; so 30 were shot down. Among tlon. The figure for Jews under 1. v,~e put E sat o£ new ~U»::-.'-' ta was Barpn Manfred von arms la 14 per cent of the Jewish 3. Koyal Mapter Tirai ovi Jathofon, Gormany'o greatest population. The same cources fix Original ' your ca.r; Trsp tip . yowr,', •• dea who was partly Jewish.. An- the number of Jewish casualties FRAKCHOX isnar celebrated Jewish aco wasat 40,000 or 12.4 per cent ot the Salon d4^itenant Frankol,' who waa Jews under arms. Thl3 compares Tashions 2. Alter you've put Royil J e « d in action. Lieutenant Sio- with a total war '".cad tor AustriaMasters tfcroujrb their : Miei, a non-Jew who waa inupec- Hungary ot 1,200,000, or 15 per ; for S clays—come back i -oT;,of fliers' troops during the cent., give us the verdict! sick', wrote, in an Introduction to Because of the almost complete iiilialhaber's book, that "tho fig- absence j) Cost, of discrimination against Ei of Jewish bravery should bo Jews, the number of Jewish of•woranvincing proof to the undisin Frans Josef's services ity King anti-Semite agitators who ficers was extremely Contempoofecs Ctzi dayuld admit their own inferlorl- rary-Jewish warhigh. records • Tind admire tho, Jews, instead that among the Jewish reported officers Ha&urfing insults at them."' Dr. were two field marshals, six genin taler, German minister of war I.1IEE825, commenting on tho samo FONTENELLE "Tlit, said "It will fulfill its pur'Bo'td of proving to tho German TTili?lQ to what a great extent tho m\M AND BATHE IN THI CURATIVE'MINERAL WATERS laerja number of Jews in the GerowfSid cad tvjeuiscsj by lK« . Ualttd. St*U* Gevsrssenl inviV fighting, forcea , did' their 4> at the time o t tho great Visit o c r ne^p large plsril tnii » S?s ^''»» ' . . ..; let s s shew y e a o u r new e-tilp- *" *«K:J: ««««!»froa you* (Merits s?4« ia erisp, dssf iBo«ntsi» eu-pky 1 Germany's war dead numbered U «W1?», Mi, fii^fiftc Cf lad ftSea *(id rcrt. Hst Spring ment which i s capable ct r e - *^ | p '•'"4,000 or 16 per cent of tho and ! d S?gl dlfflitt WrtS tniy 4 treafiir.g c r receppieg fecy sia« \°V'Jis " -:'&\-mobllisod. Tho first member tbrpho Gorman R'ichstag to fall car c r truck tire. * ^V%^ Pre!%attlo was Ludwlg Frank', a S Tour vrcrz out tires skillfully - t e n 3 a t e Q r , perhaps the youngest tte?Jiis| phtt feTvUUetj is Hat Spriag^ rebuilt •with rse-w live &cLi-eki£ lacltaieer m ' t h o German army tJ iU kttd ef B»4 Hsass Raw, tti lUuttsd 8a i k IBMKSSJI *uit*
Letters to the Editor
N E W E S T F A S H I O N S •••
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THE JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2/1938-
By William Znkermaia '
'Having conquered most of Continental Europe, Hazism Is making heroic efforts to Inject Knglnnd abd France -with the AantWJemitie virus. Here Mr. Zakerman discusses the meth-. <»d» employed by "British Jewrj izi combatting this propaganda. • - — • Editor.
land follows '"osely the Nazi footsteps in this direction. The principle of Jewish defense is that wherever the enemy attack there should be a counter-attack. Wherever the- anti-Semites hold 3. street meeting, the Jews should bold one of their own in order to'
if a man is called a, thief and he has a chance to disprove it, he has ±o do it. Otherwise the accusation stands. Success ol Methods Having made *hese simple discoveries, these democratic Jewish . organizations began to urge the Central Jewish body to take the necessary action. To the honor of the British Jewish leaders it must be said that they did not persist long in their older conservative views; they quickly realized that new"conditions existed which required new methods, and the Jewish Board of Deputies is now strongly behind this particular movement of Jewish defense and it can be said with certainty that a" least in this particular respect, the Jewish defense -work in England is very successful.
Bgj. at the present moment, one Similarly, the inspired antiol the inost argent problems fac- Semitic Letters to the Editors are ing Jewa the world over. This Is emanate true especially in those countries • where Fascist and anti-Semitic | be left. unanswered. In short, forces have not yet reached po- every false accusation which is litical power and are as yet on the made against the Jews, whether defensive themselves. For in Fas- In print or In speech, should be cist and In -emi-Fa-cist states, up with r. reply giving Jewish' derense 1B either forbid- followed den entirely or it can no longer the true facts. With this in view, the Board N avail anything against the huge offensive measures directed by the of Jewish Deputies, (the Cen.tral Jewish Board in England) has I have myself attended many State. established a department where previously addressed by Bnt even in the democratic all the facts and data necessary meetings anti-Semites and afterwards by countries where the Jews are still Eor answering anti-Semitic accusa- Jewish speakers and have seen able to, defend aerena themselves themselves and ana can can t l o n s a r e t 0 b e l a d f o r t h e a s k . ; Almost in all cases do e& . . young men men are are the the • audiences which a t first were theseems question is iing. jJewish ng. e w I s h y0Uns not as effectively, simple as it to. be. trained as speakers to be able to the Jews because Defense? By all means. All agree to stand up on a platform and ; antagonistic of the anti-Semite's speech, oa Its necessity. refute anti-Semitic lies effec- i turned sympathetic towards the But what kind of a defense? tively. I Jews after the accusations had And how is it to be conducted? Every anti-Semitic street meet- been effectively answered and the "What are the exact means Jews Ing is followed up with a Jewish meeting ended in good-will inare to use in., their efforts to re- meeting on the same spot and, if stead of aniTiosity towards the. pulse the attacks of their ene- possible, to the same audience, Jews. There were certain spots in mies? Many are the answers to and no Fascist meeting is left the City of London which were these questions. Almost every without some Jewish speaker rapidly becoming hot-beds of Jewish community in Europe has rising to correct whatever lying anti-Semitism through a carefula different reply based on a va- statement ha; been made about riety of' experience and on the, the Jews. different - circumstances, social, Arguments Against political and psychological; in the Now, simple as this method is, siren country.- Anr exhaustice it met at first -with a strong opstudy of these various methods of position. A good many Jews sinJewish defense used in various cerely opposed it and even fought countries would make an inter- it strenuously. Their argument Moe than 500,000 suppliesting and useful boolt.' was that people who disliked cant voices in Catholic churches The 'writer of this article, bedid BO not on grounds of In twenty-six states and Caning a resident of. England, will reason, but of prejudice and emo- ada In which the Perpetual confine himself only to measures tion. Therefore valid arguments JVorena in honor ot Our Sorused by the Jewish community in against anti-SenJtism were of no rowful Mother is conducted Great "Britain. I do so not only avail. each Friday were lifted Fribecause I can impart this inforEven if you succeeded in con- day, November 18th, to the mation on a basis- of personal vincing an anti-Semite that he Queen of Peace for the cessaknowledge and impressions,, .but. was wrong in a certain accusation tion of the inhnman persecualso because . of the peculiar im- against Jews, he would immedi- tion of the Jewish people. portance of GrSit "Britain as a ately find another one, probably Reverend James B. Keane, bulwerfe against anti-Semitism at exactly the reverse from the one t h e .'present moment and because which..had been disproved, as a national director of the No- the experience of British Jews reason for --emaining an anti- vena, telegraphed the pastors of every chnrch in which the Nocan be of greatest use to Jews Semite. vena is in progress to make the overseas," in. English-speaking As proof of the futility of this countries and particularly ia the method, the case of German Jews special intention' of the Kovena that Friday a nation-wide prayUalted States. was usually cited. The German er tor aiary-a intervention oa ' England's Position Jews, as Is well known, conduct- behalf of the persecuted Jews. Anyone who has .followed Jew- ed a* very thorough and Btrong Father Eeane's sermon oa ish events in Europe during.the campaign against anti-Semitism a subject was broadcast over last,few years, cannot help, re- few years before the Nazis came this Station W.CFI* at 1O alizing thatEngland now: occupies to powerv- Theyr-pnblished thou- Kadio Friday evening Novema -key. position as far as the Jews sands of pamphlets, books and o'clock 18th during the program, are ^concerned.: And this not at publications, yet it did not avail ber "An hour with the Cneea of all because Great Britain is the anything. Heaven," direct from the Mandatory-Power over Palestine Another reason for opposition Shrine of Oar Somretful Mothand Palestine occupies a central to this type of defense was the er in Onr JLsdy oj Sorrows position for many Jews, but for ingrained belief on the part of qnlte -other reasons having.to do the wealthy and influential- sec- Church, Chicago. with the Jewish Diaspora, tion of Jewry in England (as in By Rev. James F. Kesue, O. S. M. Today, throughout the United "With Fascist and anti-Semitic every country) that the less spoforces having conquered practical- ken or written about the Jews, States, close to one-Half million Catholics prayed ferveptly for the ly: the whola.of.Central, Eastern the better for them. and southeastern' Europe,- EngIf the anti-Semites were an- cessation of the current barbarland, and France {and-England swered, these Jews believed, it ous persecution of the Jews. more; than Prance) are their last •would only tend to exacerbate the Since early this morning the speand greatest objectives. • If they •question, while it they -were Ig- cial intention of our Novena has can penetrate into England, they nored. been the welfare of that downd their i attack k would l collapse l win a key position for themselves by lack of interest. By paying too trodden race; and to the throne for the jnaitery not only ot Eu- much attention to the anti-Sem- of our God we have sent forth a rope, but of the entire world. ites, they argued, we only give mass Catholic prayer that the soEngland now stands' between them prominence and strengthen cial and economic boycott of the Jews—with all its ruthless opa • Fascist' Europe, and • the non- their position. .• • . 1 p Fa»ds£ rest' ol the' world, the Viewpoint of Jjeaders pression and its inhuman barbarlast, greatest bulwark against the The truth Is that the official ites—would cease. Because we spread- of fascist ideologies. British Jewish leadership itself j believe that far too many ChrisShould they_. win this island, was, for a time, also Inclined to- ] tJans are tainted with the dreadtheir' road lies open, not only to wards this view and refused to ! fnl poison of anti-Semitism, in the British Empire, but to the take any action. Its present de- the name of Christ, and in the entire world. British Jews thus fense work has been forced upon name of truth, we protest -this stand vigil now over the defense it by other, more enterprising and evening. not only of their, own Interests, more progressive Jewish bodies. Thoroughly to understand the but also .of those of entire .world These.bodies (in England it was problem of anti-Semitism in all Jewry- T-ieir action' is therefore the so-called 'Friendly Societies its phases, would require'a life«t Importance to all Jews. and the labor elements of the Jew- time of intense study. It is alThe exceptional importance of ish people's Council) have come most futile for us to attempt to England is recognized not only by to their conclusions by way of ex- do any lasting good in the few the;Jews, but also by the Nazis, perience; they have found that minutes of this broadcast. Howarid they are now concentrating whatever truth there might have ever, for the benefrt of those who their, greatest effort on winning a been in the belief of the oppo- have given no objective study to foothold in this -country. This As ponents of open Jewish defense, the matter, we shall briefly redone with the" aid of secret sub- is^no longer valid under present view some of the more ridiculous sidizing of various anti-Semitic conditions. fallacies upon which this racial activities, publications and orThe present situation has no hatred is popularly based. ganisations; of the latter the of- parallel in recent Jewish history Racial Myth—For today's conficial British Fascist party ia by and.experiences of other days and temporary wave of anti-Semitism, tar -not -.the. most important - and other countries cannot apply to justification Is frequently sought most dangerous. it. The fact that a. certain system in the elaboration of the racial "Mosley's organization is too of defense failed In a propaganda- myth. Racial hatred is a very anwell-known and too much suspect ridden Germany Is no proof that cient phenomenon, based on -a of official propaganda to have it is bound to fail also in Eng- dislike and distrust of foreigners too wide an influence. Of greater land. To ignore anti-Semitic at- in certain competi'ive conditions danger are the various bodies and tack in English-speaking conn- of life; but It has remained for publications, which are not known tries doe3 not mean to weaken it, modern man to perform the servdirectly as Nazi or Fascist and but to strengthen i'. If Jews do ice of dressing up this primitive •which therefore exert a greater not reply to accusations and instinct in an academic tinsel and influence. One hears-very "little-of- calumny," the anti-Semitic cam- labeling the result "scientific" the British blackshirts in Eng- paign will not collapse, but will That this appeal to science is unland of late. . be infinitely strengthened. warranted is attested by the fact Not only have their uniforms They have also found that that evidence gathered during a disappeared, but also • their pub- while it is true that a rabid, fa- century of study has disclosed >io lications and their notorious meet- natical, anti-Semite dislikes the basis for any doctrine of racial ings. Yet, anti-Semitic propagan- Jews Irrespective of logic or superiority based on blood chemda, both in print and in speech, truth, it is also true, however, have increased enormously during that not all non-Jews are rabid the last six months. One hears and fanatical anti-SemiteS. Many i . •_,__ • _ , more anti-Jewish speeches on are affected only by falsa accusastreet corners and in halls; reads tions, and if thes"* are refuted, more anti-Jewish propaganda in the reason for their antagonism l<etters to the Editors ajid in ar- to the Jews disappears. ticles in • newspapers which have If the accusations are ignored never been known before, and by the Jews, this in itself i3 proof cannot *ven now be branded,; as to these people that they must bo Oopenly anti-Semites. true, and their .antagonism There - is no denial of the fact hardens. Thi3 Is particularly truo that there is .ow more anti-Jew- in English-speaking countries ish sentiment in England than at where people are avcustomed to aay. time slice the Great Wari free and open discussion. In freo -:• * ••; • Coaater-Attock : . countries like England, America, Jewish counter-activity In Eng- Canada, South-Africa and others,
!, C, C.
that" should stand for a long time. records, the Clicquot Club 6o"f As a result of Lee's high scores, had t h e followi-ig scores; Dr. I> the Hainan Insurance team, who *C. P l a t t was top m a n v iih a «r, < , | have been winning right along Abe Venger nest vAL s T.'C tt>ri i By SAM ZWEH5ACK lately, took two out of three Captain Abe r e f r r ~ v h r »rn* games from I£oe Linsmsn's Ward- a E1E; Oscar :~-->-v -*- r l r - P STANDINGS OF TEAMS Jfaae of Tessa— ' W. I*. Pet. robe boys, the Wardrobes wincing spondee! with ' • " C " - w r J-r .. State Cos" & Gas Co_22 S .7E3 the first game by a 22-pin mar- then Benny Ste - ~^'~ \1 ' i «•" < The Smith " r ~- i- -'- ft <. Empire Cleaners SS I S .600 gin, with the Kalman's vrinni.ig the second by only seven pics, ClicQJiot Club Bskisio_I7 I S .567 and, dee to Kurvich's big third Yousens, vhc s i ;--,... Greeaberg Frsdt Co. 17 I S .5S" they smothered the Clothi-1 and v-as Kaisssa Inscsstace Co_.i4 16 ..4ST trie" T»"c ers t y a 141-pin The Wardrobe 12 IS a result ol th~ Smith Motor, lac, 11 10 .403 In the feature match of the eve- Clicquot Shrier Paint •& Glass.. 0 Si ning, the Empire CieE-aers, vrho the running t be were tied tor second place with second place The Jewish Community Center the Greeaberg Fruit team, estab- Cleaner team. bowlers this week experience!! lished themselves in second place some cf the highest scores so far all by themselves by winning- two this season, when most of the out of three games from the Fruit hr tfcf *i - " teams set new records tor them- boys. The Empires, vho were fer.turrc! it out. ""1-P <°r selves to Ehoot at for the rest of cheered on by the presence of lling State Coal r,nc T^ •<• the season. their sponsor, "Shrolly" Good- it out with the ">("Pri The highlight of this week's man, who WB.S itching- to howl cnot Ch-b EFI r-'-Kbowling was Lee Hnrwich, who himself, von the first game ty 41 really he s, tiirr-i. r-jr e ~'~ Jewish communities overseas has been bowling ss anchor man pins, bet in the second gam? the much being r Frank's State O T . • would do well to copy this sac- for the Kalman Insurance team. 'Greenberg Fruit hoys. L.ee got a good start when he shot cess of British. Jews. Jewish aigefi hy a TS-pin handicap, vro-n j advantage of E CU young- men usual..'" inalre good a 207 for Ins first game. by the slim margin ol 12 pins. J ever their opponez ,.' In the second game he carae public speakers. If trained propIn the last game Shrolly sent I match will h&-* t t i > erly and supplied with the neces- right back with another, good word to his boys to put on the | to the future cl — i sary information about Jewish game of IS7. But in the third heat, and they responded with an I league. The ce: . r life and history, they can make game he started oat like a real S65 scratch game to win hy 1C9 fast slipping; ^ r . f i v e pins. The Cleaners were topped shooticjr Egair-^ a formidable and effective arsny champion, by shooting '• straight strikes. At this time word by Goodman Fill, who shot.a 520 TGEU'E Empire n~ • of Jewish defenders. got around the alleys of his perAbove all it must be realized Eeries und was followed hr Cap- in toe Vkire. ~ -r i <that the theory of ignoring anti- fect start of this guzae sad fcy the tain jECt Melcher, who hag a. 45V ~nKtzrr.ii.re te~.r- -• time he Eliot two laore strikes, Semites does not work at the ~erie~. The F r u i t h e r - ware spain j oped wi-mSrp- T—"=• : present Juncture in Jewish af- making a total of seven straight, topped b r -"Tony" Cohn, vrho fceJ ing- the -p-orks at" ~ r fairs. This is no time for ignor- he had practically the entire a 46 4 series, while their nest best Fruit bo; •• ~ . P ing attacks on Jews or for keep- bowling community as «. gallery. was Harold Pollock's 446 series. berg of the evening "" . 1 ing <juiet Every attack of the In spite of his gallery, who bottom teams, LIT f anti-Semites has to be met, and were all pulling for hSra, L«e con1 1 In the third match ol the eve- tearc against t. " ~ - -ji can be met effectively at least in tinued to strike until he had hit Glass crew, % . ^ the field of speech aad print 10 straight, needing just two ning, Dave Frank's State Coal end will feature J~ o ,'CA i c ii te propaganda. We are as good in more for ths coveteS perfect , c ' „ ' . ^^ ^ ^ - ^" •" • this as anyone else and we have game. However,. on his eleventh the league the entire season, dern- , Brother Aaroi the advantage that we are fight- ball, he jest barely skiminesi the. castrated'their championship calif j bo~r! anchor —ip,ing for our lives. head pin and left two plus stand- her by wincing all three games | spectlve teamr There are other forms of Jew- ing- which spoiled his chances fir from Al Shrier's Paint acd Glass j . n — r r r - s . r p. ish defense in England now, and a diamond medal from the A. B. team, who hare been dropped to other problems arising from C. officials. the cellar position. them. Of these I shall write in Lee then got the two pins Ex.fi It must he stated at this time my next article. one more strike for a ESS game, that the Coal beys are on top *I ~~ • (Copyright, 193S, by Seven Arts giving him & 692 series, which is rcsi-Jy because they ha.ve demonfeature Syndicate) new single and new high series strated that they are practicslly for individuals in the J. C. C. the steadiest team in the league KOME, (~T — league ths year, r I also s score up until now, inasmuch as it is have been £c-i utf very ssldora that ther shoot i?e- deeds of sale i ~ . . low their team average, an a. that movable prop" . ' America as aitJewisls Ia • they have been steadily in.c-eo.sing Jews, renflir.-- r~T r fact, believe or not."project. there is no c c such thing BS a Jewish. Commu- it Ircza week to week as a team. l&tiOISE OIX dl '~'O t'-y r-r r -' " Dave Frank's Coal team, who property excc~' ~t nist. Commcaism is essentially istry. Superiority of one people carry a team average of 7ES. WOE allowed b~- l&v ~ r atheistic; Judaism 5s theistjc; ena over another derives, not from the first game frcre the Sfcrier heredity, but from cultural, so- Jews who remain loyal to their Paint boys t y a score of 8 3 6 to intended to religion are never found in the cial, and religious envorininent. 7 4 4 in spite of giving the Shrier L.rider th£ -«^p~ r r r There are no fundamentally in- ranks of radicalism. j team a £S-pin handicap. decrees, Jews -w e~e o*i Anti-Semitism has been the ferior races; and tie differences In the second game they sraotli- j 1 > f between races—particularly the chameleon of history. It is con- ereS their opponents hr a score j e r a lane word ~ o c 1 " e moral and intellectual differences stantly changing, and is constant- of 792 to 700, and In the last i lire (~£6S) o~ i \r~ r r assessed EhoT«= r r r re not nearly so great as those ly contradictory. Today we find which exist between members of the Jews condemned ES the out- game they demonstrated sorae cf j Florence police b r r r e t the same race. The Ideology that standing exponents of predatory the-c.ua.Utrs of the State Coal heat j Jewish -weekl-" . r .^£.1' Z^ the Aryan is the one perfect race capitalism; tomorrow they are by turning in s. £44 score to. the!organ of t h e I 1*^1. vcontradicts a fundamental princi- denounced as Coranninists— the Shrle-rs 764. The Coal te~~~! crctiOE Flic! p ' " " ~ '* ' ] arch-enemies of capitalism. Not tunsefi in a 2,4 71 scratch series j of ~e~~jsh COT TT ' n>~ ple of ethnology. which is considered very good Mean-while, •-> e The Jew is Radical. Perhaps ]even the Jews themselves are bowling in any Ban's league. Cap- _ I ZL d u s t rial " "k i- ~ i tJ,e agreed as to the causes o* the chief indictment against the ;,*! tain Sweiback was v,-as high man .ain Sam Sa~s Swelbaet inan | eominissioned "r f modern Jew is that lie is by na- rancor they have aroused. ture a radical. That's an old Semitism is • "m-Aiaeriean,. ta- for the Elate Cord ljc-r~ ~~itli a ] tier of .*r~-.-'- ""-^-•" r story. It is found In the pag-es of Christian, and anti-Catholic. To 5S7 E-rles which inclr.clea a. ZQ~ ' •:rr- r anti-Semitic literature in the days pretend otherwise is to indulge ia first game and a third gaiae cf • • m e •i o of the Roman Empire, even be- self deception. It is- not the Jew 2 1 4 . - • "Kifiget" EhEkert was secc alone who is involved ta.this Bitfore the'coming cf Christ, We frankly admit that there are cation, bat all that t£e Jew Ej-rs- higrh -~ItJi E ' « £ I series," vrkiie Fh" | . causes which predispose the mod- boli~es. It is a challenge to the KEtzxasn fell down- to & 4.7£' Tvc -t rr ern Jew to radicalism. Because he conscience cf the whole cf Chris- series fine to his sere left ear, as has been persecuted for centuries tianity. Anti-SeiEitisin is possible he -ays he was ccahle to hear the he inclines naturally *o take the today only because of the gradual pins fall. Captain Leo Weitz oC side of the underdog. A large per universal weakening of religiotis the Shrier bcrs VTES Egain higl cent of the Jewish population of bonds. It means the abaEdoEise-st nan with a SSI scrie- -rhile the the world Is entirely impover- of all that humanity has for cen- best that their nest man could fie ished; it lives from hand to turies and millenia cherished ~.ctl was a 5ES hy Solly T~,£fee. mouth. The situation Is obvious- held dear. The existence of a perly unbearable, and that some of sonal Cod and a moral law tranIn the -~ast jnatcli of the erethem yield to the Utopian entice- scending ail hsirasin power—as ning the two highest average ments of Communism is under- taught by the Jewish and Chris- teams in the league, namely the , standable. However, popular be- tian religions ofr over 20 cent cr- Smith Motors and the Clicquot' lief to the contrary, inly a small ies—is in Jeopardy. Let no Cath- Clch Eskimos, battled, it out, with | percentage of the total Jewish olic attempt to rationalize ia coid the Cliccunt Clab boys wincing- all i population of the world has em- language the Enffering- and sor- three games. The Clicquot Clubs braced Communism. Before the rows of these countless thousands detnonstrtted their high scoring coming of Hitler several millions of h-aiaan beings. It is a perverof Germans voted under the ham- sion of justice and truth; 3t sore- EbilSty ij ag-ain setting new j-ecmer and sickle. Since there were ly questions the validity cf the orfi3 for both high team eingl«» scarcely a halt million Jews in teachings of Christ as guides to game cad high team series. Br i Germany, it is evident that these happiness and peace. The teach- shooting a SC4 in their thirc voters could not all have been ings of Israel have deeply, influ- gsme for the high teaia eing3e ' Jews. The situation in America enced the civilization cf the TTest- game score BUG a series of 2,544 is analogous. Only a small num- ern World. T e are spirittis.1 de- which is a new tes.ro. series lor ' ber of the 5,000,000 American scendants of God's ancient chosen this -~ear In the first game they von by Jews have become communists. people, whora whom—accordingThe lists of Red membership in to the flesh—cazae oar' Lord s.63 only 15 pins, shooting TEG against the United States contain a fairly Savior Jesss Christ. - Before thls the Smith's boys* 741. In the seccadaveroas spectre of antI-Se~2i- oad game they came back v.i>h tista, before this great betrayal SE4 gsrse to thsir opponerstB' . of communists of the ethical verities of c5~ili- as 765, .and is i t s last game they in the whole country are non- zation, .the great %n& deathless hssted £.11 records br shooting a Jews. Browder Is not a Jew; Ford, ideal" of £.Tt~a_antty new lis prosthe Negro, is not a Jew; nor is trate; enfl I protest—-vrtthoct re- SG-4 game while the best that the Tint* every ©s« communist leadership predomi- luctance ana without reservation. Sraith bcrs cocld do was a 74S. Is settingthe xse-w teara series nantly Jewish. Marx was a Jew, made, BE cS'<;rE.ordit?j yes, in the sense that he was born centage deliver ESOTC iuia mam of Jewish parents; but at the ESS of six he was baptized a Luthertrotible-free s-irvicc thar, is ordinarily an, and from that 'time oa had expected. Now, too, they sell, for « • no connection whatever with Ju*-!" fc*- tea *^!! daism. Communist epp-sr- to All more than volume production Urm. oppressed groups; and it is slander to dismiss cc~:n-£:iis-s in
ly planned system of Fascist open-air .. meetings, and these have now been practically cleaned out by virtue of the Jewish counter meetings. Open-Air Meetings It is quite possible that the open-air meeting is a peculiar institution o* the English people and that in other countries the same system of trained Jewish speakers would not work with equal success, but in England it has proved effective, and it Is safe to assume that ia most English-speaking countries a similar success can be accozaplihee!. People of Anglo-Saxon origin, or those brought up on English culture, have a tradition of fairmindedness. They also like good public speaking and wherever a good Jewish speaker speaks with knowledge,*facts and feeling, he
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EDITORIAL OFFICCi 633 OFJANOCilO THEATER BUILDING 8IOU« CJTV OPPICS—JEWISH COMMUNITY CSNTEB • PRlNf SHOP ADDRESS—4504 CO-G47M 0THEC7
D&Vip' BLACKER '''<• » - ."'Business and Maoaslns Editor FIUNK R. ACKBRMAN • • • Edltoi LSUNARD NATHAN • • • • Associate ISdKci RABBI FREDERICK COHN • • ContrJbutlfls BdUOJ HABB1 THEODORE N. LEWIS • • • Book Editor PILL •* •"'•"••• • Eteus City. Iowa, Correspondent
For \Ve can always depend on two things every year: The •atlon Christian Century, usually the most tolerant of magazines, print'entra ^ g a harmless editorial once a year advising the Jews to abanJian"; don Judaism,: and an occasional speech by Father Coughlin in " b l I s "which the Jews come in for a roasting.
man government can dispose of a problem by forcing it on other nations, the world must .be prepared to receive not -only several thousand Jews, but millions of Catholics and Protestants. Catholic circles are already preparing for a conflict with the Nazis as the groundwork has been laid by Hitler and as soon as the Jews are completely dispossessed greedy eyes will look elsewhere. What is even of deeper concern lies in the fact that whenever there has been Jewish perseotions in the Third Reich,, a world crisis immediately followed. This has been a means the German government has used to pump propaganda into the people. It has been a means of coordinating national life. And what goes for Germany is of equal importance in reard to Italy. The American government is concerned, has a right to be concerned. Germany must know that the world is not her oyster.
THE mm OF DESTINY By BABBI FREDERICK COHN
Things are developing fast, in our relations with Germany, and in the world's attitude towards it. The climax is approachient c The radio priest's reassurances that he is not an anti-Semite ing, and will come to a head quicker than we perhaps imagine. 'fm ™ ring rather falsely as he continues to act like any other con- We cannot tell what particular act, or on whose part, will sud^ ° ventional anti-Semite. His record is not very convincing. "When denly parcipitate it. One indication of a climax approaching is the Lima conP l lie took it upon himself to interpret the nation's economic ills, ktich'r father Coughlin emphasised the names of the Jewish -intexna- ference. It ia not the conference itself, American meeting with l°*'-a[tiorial bankers.— the Rothschilds; Kuhn, Loeb, and Company. the twenty-one republics below us: as the precise character of f jto j Bernard Baruch became an ogre. Hundreds of other financiers this particular conference and the delegates, particularly our j a w s | aright exist and engage in the same financial operations, but own, composing it. Such conferences have now been held for ;{sr c|for some reason, evidently known to the Father himspiif, he a number of years to solidify relations among the American Republics in the general interest of peace and friendship, main* '•^^Jpicked on the Jewish name>. Wt c •^ or *^e P as * 6ey€ral weeks in his magazine, "Social Justice" ly among themselves. But by apointing such men as Alfred lo 3 j>k a n a s reprinted the discredited "Protocols of the Elders of Landon, a Republican, and his erstwhile presidential opponent, >r.7 i' Zion." And now when the fires of religious hatred are burning and from the nature of some of the other appointments, President Roosevelt has clearly shown that he wishes to present a ; jlatia: kigjjgj. than jn many generations, he does his best to souse the United Front to the world, a sort of American coalition certain-pc'th l blaze by pouring oil upon it. rp- 4 "We should be the .last persons in the world to accuse a ly as a warning in Germany and her Fascist allies, Italy and frved person of anti-Semitism, particularly when one who BO violent- Japan. Not only will there be a determination evidenced to yt h 'Jy denies the charge. Yet he does not hesitate to resurrect ev- protect this hemisphere from the encroachments economic, po> Aft,ei7 ^ e ? n ^ turl it at us. Suppose there were Communist lead- litical and moral of Fascism in whatever form, an expansion of Jewish origin, namely Trotsky> Zinoviev, and Zamenev. and strengthening of the Monroe Doctrine, but the union of the i ^ discarded their Judaism. Besides they were only three twenty-one Reublics will constitute a ma'gnificent championing of democracy in the very teeth o£ its pronounced foes. The roof on a long list of non-Jewish.communist leaders. irV Should Greek Catholicism be taken to task or be blamed prestige of Democracy will be raised enormously. ] F«f or Communism because Lenin was a Greek Catholic and Stalin Another straw showing which way the wind is blowing is ^ a theological student. Should the Roman Catholic church the meeting of the American ambassadors to Germany and Italy jnt tbe branded Fascist because Mussolini is a Catholic or should with President Roosevelt at Warm Springs, Georgia, to present n tt D e Homan'Catholic church be held responsible for the Nazi reun their reports to him of conditions in those respective countries, reun \ faioutrages because Adolph Hitler is a Catholic and his movement particularly as regards persecution of the Jews and attacks on minorities, including Catholics and Protestants. Something will ^ s t a r t e d in Catholic Bavaria. }a I Father Coughlin may not be justifying the Nasi pogroms surely issue as a result of these reports, of greatest significance, ^ the Nazi papers have recognized a certain kinship with him. and with a direct bearing on the peace and welfare of the is unfortunate that the world at large considers the state- world. of a priest, the official stand of the Church, because Thomas Mann's recent publication of "This Peace," &s a iother, more powerful, wiser voices have spoken and called his lie. companion piece and sequel to his magnificent "The Coming .1 Father Coughlin may not be guilty of anti-Semitism. But Victory of Democracy" though seemingly a mere literary event g y must we as a people pp be is of the highest political as well as human importance. Mann ho is guilty o£ a grave injustice. Why cc ^categorised ^ and forced to suffer for the sins committed by our is indignant at the "Pact concluded at Munich, he Ioathe3 aad : wayward while they others suffer only for their own errors! excoriates it, regards it as a treacherous betrayal of the democ: racies and democracy to Fascism, h certain that the peace gained at such terrific cost to honor, and mankind's noblest 3t Not often are we in agreement with Rabbi Stephen Wise, ideals, will prove no peace at all, but the very cause and inciteb« in his first talk since the Nazi outrages and the subsequent ment of future, inevitable war. He still stoutly maintains his Jf 3 2 plans of settlement, we find much wisdom. "We lift up our faith in democracy as representative of the dignity of man and Babbi Wise said, "in most solemn protest against any the highest expression of the spiritual which alone" constitutes *rm;3nd every thought of settling Jews in the German colonies Of the essence and true worth of man. A Thomas Mann will prove s in the end of greater influence than a Hitler. "God and one constitute a majority" and the future belongs to such as Thomas Having lived under the blight and burden of the swastika, ^ mus evet a ao Mann, the greatest living German, and the ideals he so cogently ^ gain be compelled to touch soil over which oui German flag has been lifted. Moreover, we Jews do not be- and so eloquently champions, for they have God on their side. in reprisal or in vindictiveness. We do not wish even the His words like Luther's are "half battles for the free." people to believe that we desire to possess ourselves of And there is a growing criticism of England manifesting r,i:ol^and o£ which they by war have been dispossessed." itself at this time, fierce and bitter as in Robert Briffault's s *£r i Many have suggested that it would be a form of "retribu- latest book (himself an Englishman) "The Decline and Fall of fir^ ^ive justice" for Jews to be settled in lands that were once Ger- the British Empire," manifested also, even if in a playful aad jmany and are today the objects of German avarice. Tanganyika, . i!in particular, is among the enumerated lands of refuge that deliciously humorous manner in Margaret Halsey's "With Malice Towards Some." If she has any 'malice' at all it is tooTere spoils of war. wards the English. There is a growing disappointment with As Rabbi Wise stated we are not a people believing in regards to England even on the part of her erstwhile greatest Go ii '^reprisal or vindictiveneas." Admittedly, laws of retributive jus- admirers, champions and defenders. The reasons for the phrase exist and prevail- But they are not lawg within the juris- 'perfidious albion' are being carefully and historically ex of man, and it is not for man to be tempted, amined, even with great sear chin gs of heart and feelings of a* Other lands have been offered, lands free of the taint of in- disillusion. In more ways than one, humanity is approaching j u s t i c e . British Guiana, Northen Canada, Kenya. It is the su- a crisis. There is a clash of ideals which, particularly when p r e m e tragedy that a people have been cast forth from nations bound up with material interests and political ambitions sad £ T?or which they.fought and for whose very soil their blood has national and racial rivalries must lead to physical conflict. j ^ r j e e n shed. The "Wandering Jew" ia once more upon his "road So the hour is heavy with destiny. May it continue to ba 3Cpf ages." There is little comfort in being a beggar people, de- the destiny of our beloved America, to be the champion of the . aendent on the charity of others, but the realties of the present just and the free, the Great Republic that shall 'Americanize,' / jituation cannot be easily escaped. < in the best and noblest sense, not only the sister nations of the L * ~" Perhaps we can take courage in the lot of exiles of the past. Western Hemisphere, joining with them in an inspiring AmeriPilgrims laid the foundations of a great nation, one greater can League. of Nations, perhaps the germ of a greater to be their homeland. The Mormons in their exile made a desert achieved later on a world-wide scale; but truly 'enlightening \V the world' with her liberty, her liberalism, her tolerance, he? The lands the Jews now must seek must be lands of real humanity which shall yet bring peace and blessing to a distract(pportunity. They must not be sent to ghettos. ed, a strife-torn, world. One need only look at the West Indies to see what one —FREDERICK: COHN. jj-ofugee people did — the Spanish Jews of Curacao and Surment was made, "Every student . Most of Our great Jews, American Jews, are descendants whose interior is not like his esGems of Slio Bibi© \ >f victims of the Spanish and Portugese Inquisition,' German terior (that he is not -what h pretends to be) shall not enter .•"ntolerance, or Russian pogroms. tbe academy." ^ In the present disaster the Jews of Germany are not seekKabbi Chiya said, "Although tbre! a S revenge. They are seeking homes, escape from the Swastika women do j?ot study the Torah. 1113 S
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A casual eavesdropper at Warm Springs last Sunday would Dun'riave received enough information to write a number of volumes an ^,T;|n the World today. The U. S. Ambassadors to Berlin and j'Tome had been ^summoned, to the President's second home to : iseuss American policy in regard to Totalitarian nations. Diplomacy, being what it is, it is doubtful if the world a3kc-:: ever know just esaetly what was said at the time. Amjassador Phillip3 is to retiiroi to Italy to continue ia his position, A i'liv Wilson will remain in Washington to aid the short-handed department during the Pah-American conference at JJim The President of the United States knows, cs well as every durii,5 'linking person knows, that the present persecutions presage Something more dire than pogroms. For one thing, if the Ger#
Wisdotn 1B better for s. country than the •weapon cE war, but }gnoranco even, among a small number is a great loss to a country. Train a child according to its tendencies and eves when lie is old ho will not depart from It. The \?ords o£ the wiso spoken In quiet are more acceptable than the cry of a ruler among fools. Whosoever - keepeth his mouth and his tongue, keepeth his- soul from trouble. • TALMUD Rabbi Elazer sa!d,'*;Nevcr Shall the blessing of even a common taan be considered j ^significant ia your eyeo." During th? administration cT Eabbi Gamaliel tiis announce-
they deserve divine grace because they bring their children to the Talmud Torah. to study." Rabbi Jochanan said, "He w has the power to protest (against wrong) in Ws house and does not do EO, he is responsible for (ths sin' of) everyone in his house. And the same is true of a city and even in the entire •world, if his protest would bs heeded and he does not protest, he is accountable for the wrong actlcji of tlis entire world." Batsbi Simon said, "If thou sseth a scholar who Is fcvca revengeful and angry like - a' serpent, be'cot afraid of*l:lm. but If an ignorant man looks to be pious do not Ihe ia his vicinity, for he kcovrs uot hovr to 1 3 picus and •will thus mako life very usp!eas» cat for you."
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BUFFUS. THE NACMXLLAS CO. SS5 PAGES. The tfceao of this book Is one of tbe most influential and best beloved women of America, Lillian D. Wald, who served for well nlgb. 50 years the poor and the outcast, the submersed, and the underprivileged, w i t h singular devotion aad matchless courage. Lillian D. "Wald was born to well-to-do Genaaa-J#wlsa pareats, lived the normal life of a girl of her social set till she suddenly decided to study cursing. Upon gr&duatloa, she settled, •where aer traiclagr could be raost useful and most effective, in one of t t s raost crowded and impoverished sections of New York, on the lower East Slde^—where xaaay races and creeds meet. With thai aid of a rellabla co-worker, Miss BrewEter, saa sooa established & "houso" at 26 Henry Street, which becaao world famous. The poor of the neighborhood fousd •withia Its walls not asly &a esampl© of cleaBlioess end decorum, but understanding tolersaca aad much seeded assistance. As a visiting curs© Miss W&ld catae Into the homes of the poor where sickness was a regular fead frequent visitor.. Th® poverty, tbe l a c k of sanitation, the crowded conditions, proved a fer« tila soil for all types of diseases. To the afflicted. Miss Wald brought a unique medical service, constant encouragement mad even financial - aid. Once Miss Wald began to understand tbe fundamental economic and Eooial ills that wera responsible for the poverty a>nd disease among ber 1 tn p o verisaed neighbors, she reached out In new, broader &S.S. m o r e controversial directions. Within a few years sb© fescaae one of the leadl&s ' crusaders in the movements for social reform and economic justice. All good causes, such as child labor legislation, factory Inspection, pl&ygroand "wofk, peace, tfeo tattle against inuni&pal corruption s,r«d numerous other worthy projects found la her a reliable and effective champion. Lilliaa Wald became one of the principal instruments In tbe country for the creation of a social conscience, for tbe development cf a sense of civic duty a n d responsibility. Nothing that mada for human betterment tr&s alien to ber. Tha a o s t distinguishing trait of this noble woman was that mysterious something wbicb goes under the term of personality. She was abls to touch, to move, to Inspire ell sorts of conditions of men—tba poor and tbe rica, the selfisb and tbs generous, tbe high and tho lo>?. She bad friends in all classes of society, fren presidents &nd prime ssinisters to humble fish peddlers, &nd in &1! corners ci the globe. The foundation of ber life and work was human brotherhood. The doctrine received a staggering blow daring the war and sines Hitler's ris« to power has been repeatedly and furiously assaulted. But ber faith in its ultimate victory has not been shaken. Patiently dees she wait for the triumph of tolerance aad uclversal peace. K:ES Wald caa look back and bs Justly proud of her achievement. Tbs institution sbe founded on Henry Street aboat 50 years ago hes grown both in else and In purpose. It baa tcd&y numerous branches in X£s? York and baa been the inspiration for similar agencies throughout the country — nay. throughout the world Like her Illustrious eollesgss. Jane Adams, sag fc&s'left'a permanent impression upon tbe life, thought, and social progress cf her generation. She is universally honored and loved for ber distinguished service to "WHAT WB MBAK B j E E •LIGION." USA J3ISEKSTSIN. BEHBMAN'S JEWISH BOOS EGUSS. 145 PAGES. This voiumn, subtitled "A Modern Interpretation of tbe Sabbath and Festivals" is a. simplified edition and a Bamsasry o Mordecai M. Kaplan's "The Mean ing of God in Modem Jewish He ligion." Tbe author tries -to <5o here wbat tie fcss for "Jodatsra as a Civilisation" ia "Creative Judsissj." Rabbi Efsesstein seeks to rja&e Dr. Kaplan's message svaiSafcle for those who ar not gives to difficult readies aad Intricate analysis. The interpretations of tbs Sabbath and tbe holidays sre provocative acd stimulating. There is little difficulty with a festive occasion like Passover or Yon* Kippur, wttb a holiday which still functions in the life of the Jew. fallen iato disuse, where it EO Where, 'however, t h e holiday longer answers a specific seed, the interpretation Ss forced and hollow, Sbesaini Azeret is a good Illustration. What the auttsr says aboct prayer in tb5s chapter ia splendid and belpful, • bat bis attempt to connect prayer'.with Sheraisai Azeret Ss Eimply uccoavlncing. He could fesre written tlia ss.ts.tt .paragraphs about say other holiday.. • H© Ignore^ the fact that there is .absolutely8 nothing distinctive • about Sbemiml Azeret. Erea Saccos presents serious insurmountable obstacles and no matter, -is-bat interpretation we "will .sire- hereto, Saecog will sever.. arouse estbesiastic celebration.. .Eut^'-w-hy was. Sim» cb.3.3 Ttsrah, a holiday c£ great emotional appeal aad valse, ignored? »: The author repeats tbe mistake that tbs early Reform leaders rssd® wfeen he emphasises something that is already dead, lUte SaeminU Aseret, Irat -wbiaa tradition compels hisa. to cites to aad rejects something that is emotionally powerful, but 'which
N. LEWIS tradition- bag for -diverse reasons failed to emphasize. Another practical obstacle to the wholehearted observation of our festivals is their duration. The first day of Passover 3s eigalficast—tut tbe last dsrc sxe not. And unless we fieal radically with tbe traditional rasnacr ot observance, all our bolSfisys—not excluding Roeb Kashacah and Vca Kippur, will faiil into disuse. Evidence of this tendency is not lacking even today. "Wb&t We Mean by Religion" is another volume in tbe increasing number of bcofcs dealing *witb tbe movement in Judaism wtjcb goes under tbe term Recoastnsc* ticnisia, tbe leader of wbicb is Dr. Kaplan. Tbs movement is exercising a tremendous influence upon tbs thoughts of many Jewish leaders and laymen. TbSs voluzsa will clarify some of t i e fundamental concepts of Reconstruct tion and belp tae£r fiissesination — s bfgfciy desirable goal.
RxgKt Now Every Mart Wants Nebraska 'A ndncts or to Sa JewiES literature fcy way ci current ccEnjsexrtt of tbe day's Jewieb scene of eveate ia zsagaxisee, backs, t a d Jewish tbacght: The. K&££Xines far this week offer t i e reader—COEterapory Jewisb "KECORD"—a review of events and a digest of opinion. An article, "POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT IN PALESTINE SINCE THE 1S36 EIOTS" by Abrabam Ravensky. On April 1®, I£-£6, tbe war© of unrest swept tbrocgb Palestine, and has otn yet ended. TThsn law and order will be restored botb. Jevs snd Ars.bg will have- learned much tress tbe present experience. Only friendship sad cobpe"aiion, among tbe two people can assure the progress and prosperity cf Palestine. A a u s t read. In tbe JEWISH SPECTATOR, "TERROR OVER HAIFA" (A novelette) by Rabbi Lees Sp2iz. The Boot Sbelf:. "THE GRAPHIC EIELE" by Lewis Browne, author cf "THIS BELIEVING Vv- O R L D," and "STRANGER THAN FICTION"— In "THE GRAPHIC BIBLE" Lewis Browne presents tbe story of the cIS aad new Tesiasreats, froa Abraham to Paul, ia a swift and unusually interesting etyle.Tbe tezt is accompanied by nearly a hundred "animated maps" to sbow at a glance not only wbea
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Community Calendar FROM BECE3EBEB 4 K> DECEMBERS Sunday, Decessber i—A. S. A. No. 1 meeting: 2 p. ra., G and H, Jewish Community Ccater. O a a ba Hebrew Club: S p. ES., Isdgs room, Jewish Comiscnlty Center. Jewisb National Workers' Alliance: 7 p. xs... C sxd I), Jewish Cosaraunlty Center. Moafey, Deceraber '5—Cfcesesf Sbel Ecses card party and luncheon: 1 p. in., lodge r o c s , Jewish CcEsmunity Center. B'Nal B'ritb meeting: S p. ra., loige room, *«srt$S Conciuaity Cestsr. tTor£nen's Loaa Association: £ p. 33., C and-D, Jewish Cosausitj 1 Center. KazonUr Choral Society: t p. » . , K sad L, Jewisi Ccar:cnity Center. Tussday, Deeesiber 6—CouncU ef -Jefrtslj TTosaen Cultcrs,! Cl&st: 1 p. 13., G and K, «ewlsb Community Ceatsr. Deborab Sscie: : 2 p. m., C snfi X>, Jewish Cosafecalty Center. Round ?&b3e d:aner: 6 p. is., C acd D, Jewish Community Ccater. Rsfcbi GolfiEtein's book review: S p. ia., acfi!t r i s a , JSKIES Cesunasity center; "Savage Ejiapfcosy" &z& "Tie Savage Kits Bs«k." TVedscsiay, December T—IfiterBations.1 Workers' Order: 8 p.
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Center. Jewisb Natiootl Fccfl: S p. 13., locnge room, Je-riEb Coraaaaity Center. Thursday, December S—Bey Scerts sneetteg: g p. m., loig® room, Jewish Cosisaslty Center. CGUIXG EVENTS Sat-urdsj-, Decetsber 10 —Oa*g £babSs.t5i tss: X>od&3 roos, TafcJ© iSaecs: 9 p. cs.jiufiitoriBia, CesiBjunity Center.
'SHOT AS IK DREAM,' PARIS, { ,TTA >.—K e r e c a e 1 Grjsjsspaa, 17-^car-old P o l i s h Jcir, "wbose ef z, tb secretary Js tbs GerEJ&E ^^^_-,,... lisre tcacbed off tbe Nazi Reich's worst -outbreak o£ suti-Seraitic persecution, ssid: "I did it E.11 EE thongh I -were la a dream." "I onl? Eivci:& &litf I pelted tbe trigger," the boy declared in explaining to an esarnlcteg n-ag-' jstrate liow Se phot Ernst reni Kath, the embassy secretary, en ' NOT. 7. Tie ides to go to the I Qerasa embasFj' catae tc r:r c''~ er I bccgfct i t s rere'ver," t c ES»&. "Frcia that EC T " ^ r. I sctcd as:tc-33£tlco.lly, o* p ©I sorae s that dioS.s,tc3 my acts.. : complisbed the 6®e-5 ="„ „..tFcre'Jn s bypnatic trr-r-.' Fs.trcaisa Oar Advertisere
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THE JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1938 column in the American Jewish The luncheon is being arOutlook relates the fr Hewing ranged by Mrs. Mollie Cohen. . . . "It htprere^," Lf V i ^s.. Reservations may be made by Th© regular business meeting A benetit card party and a des- of the GolcHe Myerson club was phoning her or the Temple. A] lr.dj£.iifi . . . li x a.: i sert luncheon will be given by ( i ^Li r ' i < . r ' c ' d at the Hotel Fontenelle Tues- board meeting •will be leld at 12 j tho Cheseg. Shel Ernes Society on o'clock, before tee sseeting. Mrs. j day, November 25, at 2 o'clock. tho regular meeting day, Monday, T December 5, at 1 p. m. at the A series of social afternoons have B. Lu Tv cl", president. "R"iiJ preIce J (— been planned ior the remainder side. Each of the Circle beads Jewish Community^ Center. il of the 'sinter season. T&e first will mate a report of the activiThe Society sponsors the only will bo held at tfce hone of Mrs. ties of the Circle to esJte. t i t Jewish funeral home In Omaha ANNOTJKCE ENGAGEMENT Leibovici, 4110 S o u t h JtOSEIJBERG-GOLDWABE ' and seeks the cooperation of the Henry Bess Mrs «5am Twenty-fifth, Tuesday, December Mr. The • tnarriaga of Miss community in this affair as it is 13, at 1:30. Coldware, daughter of Mr. and announce the engagement e 'necessary that fnnda Vn. A. P . Gold-ware, to Mr. Mil. All Goldie Mrerson members this timo to 0 Book Review too Aaron Rosenberg, eon of Mrs. are urged to attend. c H e "Non-Aryan" be;.' loves "Ary- s £" "Plans are progressing for th*s A. Horowitz of Chicago, -eras sol- neapolis, son of Mr. and public is invited to attend. . ,- ^ \ ~ ...„..of~#Minneapo»r- .,..,< maintenance of the Home. The Chanukaa luncaeoa to be given an"' girl, is the story that ceTily eamlied Thanksgiving day at the ~««««u_ Mrs. Louis»«»_ Schlern Mrs. J. Fin&el •' is chairman of by the Tv'omen's MIzrachi on TTed- patters through Pet«r MeccielB«lmont hotel in Chicago. is. No date haa been set for the the serving committee and will be Citizenship Aid ' cesfiay, December 21, at the BSOIIE'E brilliant core! "All That wedding. Mr. and Mrs. A. P. a assisted by the following women: ; Jewish Coamcr-Jty Center. Prin- Matters." . and daagbter, Evelyn, and Dr. Miss Greenberg a t t e n d e d Mesdaraes.D. Epstein, L. Epstein, Any foreign-born member cipal speaker at this sseetiag will Sreighton University. Mr. Schiern and Mrs. Bea Goldware attended S. Epstein, S. Fish, M. Bernstein, - , - - -r " RACE NOTE: "Jevs bacr-eS ba Mrs. A. Shapiro, cstioE&i presattended the University of. Min- J. Bernstein, M. Katzman, D. Co- of the community Interested in b* redding; p r o o u r i n g naturalization pafrom betting on the races in *- r ident. nesota and was graduated from hen, H. R. Milder, L Levin, H. pers is usked to call Mrs. Mor*F Hsicli"—Nc^rs it€tn . . . Xo1^ ENGAGEMENT TOItD the St. Paul College of Law. Mrs. A. Sciswaczkin is general Weiner and D. Finfeel. ris Stalmaster, HA 00X9. The that's race discrimination, cuips o" . J r chaiman of tne luacheoa. Mr. sod Mrs. H. JttlnmiU anthe office bangtail specialist Al '• Mrs. WllJiata Milder is chair- Omaha Section of tha Katioaal nounce the engagement of their COUSINS CLUB Council of Jewish Women is Richter . . . • I Ti f man of ticket sales. daughter, Irene, to Mr. Sidney G. Mrs. E. Weinberg, Jewisb NaThe Cousins- Club -will meet at preparsd to assist t&osa desirFeintch, eon of Mr. and Mrs. Joo the homo of A. Meyerson, 2302 ous of becoming American tional Fund ctairnan, Eacouncss' LANGUAGE NOTE: If Kus- vr Y i? fGirl Scouts of Dos Helnes, Iowa. P the following donations have beeis scHni IJEOWS Trhat's good for fcim, j rr- —.z «-.• Mandereon S t . on Thursday, Decitizens. The nest meeting of the Girl Miss Mirowits announced her cember 8. ' The Council fills out papers, made to the FUES: he'll resclEfi that baa on use of I Fr \-> -c Scout troop will be held on Sun- prepares the persoa for citie&g&gtt&ant Thanksgiving day at Mr. aad Mrs. Sara Flatt in hon- tho "pony" .«• "trot,"1 fcy Italian j 6- : '. ~r day, December 11, at tha Jewish z e n s h i p exaJalEatious, .sna • family dinner. Sao is a graduBIB2H or of the marriage cf their sos, schoolboys-" Bt-udying Cicero, T ; r - ; c ~ r j r r ate of Central High. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Fleischman Community Center. i ;— gives ai>y otcer necessary in- Dr. David Plait. gil end the other Roman lumin- I Tcn~ ."".? - No date lias teen set tor the of Bakersfield, California, . an- . At th* last meeting held No- formation. - . ^ r , , J,. '-r'r Mrs. J. Klein in memory of her aries Revolutions have wedding. nounce the birth of a son on No- vember 27 some of the members husband. started for lots less potent reaof the troop totd stories trail© vember 26. Sirs. Dare Croccse ia laesaory sons . . . Lnvv ether gave pantomime. The whole Council Study Grcap UBAVES FOU -WEST. INDIES of her saother, Rachel. iroop is working for the draTO ATTEND WEBBING . - Ltoaard Nathan trill leave toMr. and Sirs. Herman FrieSBIRTHDAY NOTE: Tv i. e E Misa Sarah Whitman and Mrs. matics badge. Tlio Council Study Group wbica lacder ia fcoacr cf tielr daug:l3- Prime Minister ChasbcrlaiB pets , morrow- .eveningg for New York Morris Katelman left Wednesday meets for lectures aad cUsccEsioss C i y from m where, e he h i c al DeDe ter, Lillian's, marriage. birthday greetings a e s - March IE, j ic-cr . c i.hi..r ;» call City on "Health Problems of Women" oember 9 aboard the S. S. Van morning for L03 Angeles, Cal., to Mr. aad.Iilrs. Bea Wine in hon- •wonder if h e l l be t h i a t i n s of an- j ^ "«-»• <•-""<-" " rb 9 b t attend the weddingof their will gather again next Tuesday, Hmueteer for Curacao, Netheror of their cMldrea's birthday. j land* West Indies, and Fort-of. nephew, Mr. J. W. Harris, Eon of A Chanukah luncheon meeting December 6, at 1 o'clock sSsrp at birthday falls en the EJES C.VJ-~ Mr. and Mrs. Ed Lincoln is Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Harris, forthe Jewish Community- Center. Bpain, Trinidad. KerFchel Grycsspsn, •wbe merly of Omaha, to Miss Lillian to welcome a large group of new Dr. L. O. Hoffraaa will deliver honor cf the Ear Uitzrah c£ their Tovas •will be IS years old oa ta&t dar, members to th& auxiliary will be the lecture end all council taexa- son, Allen. Stier of Loa Angeles oa DecemMI' 90BLYS MEMOBIAIi Sirs. SI. Brodkey la iosor of provided 'Ls.c.v- Gaillctine hasi't ni held on Tuesday, December S, at bers are Invited to attend. Tills ber 18. claiined t i n . . . Bound films of South Africa the birthday of her er&s.ddscsh1 o'clock at the Congregation s the second meeting of the Mra. Katelman will be matron rr- s •Will bo ebotm in tne concert ball of honor. ter, Marilyn Eice. B'nal Israel, Eighteenth sad Chi- series. APPKEdTATIOX S O T E: at the Joolya Memolari at 2:20 cago streets. "Kj- fisar Kr. Peters," writes p. sn. Sunday. The dra-R-isg for the silver cof- Father Flanagan of Beys Tcwa, Mr. Harry Mendelson will reAt 3:30 the E t Rev. James fee set will be held at the J view the book, "Roots in the XeSraska, "Kir. Carl Eatleman Uttgii Ryan, Bishop of Omaha, sry meeiizs. PJaas s.re b Sky," by Sidney Meller. This Is a (of i/os Angclcr), four friend! ' - r T"~ WU lecture on"Biography as an This year's edition of Mother book of definite Jewish theme. made to hold the Rnmsaage Sa.le A regular business meeting of and Efimircr, sent rae a clipping Introduction to the study of His- Chapter No. l basketball team sooa aad aayoae who has acy Community singing will be led tory." has succeeded in doing what sio by Mrs. J. Raznick, accompanied Sam Beber Chapter 100, A. Z. A., articles to donate is asked to call in -wbich jou comiaesJt' ca 'B-ojrs Town* picture, and 1 wast to was held last Scadsy afteraoon -. The Heflnwtn a Capella Choir previous A. Z. A. team has been by Mra. Al FtofeeL at the Jewish Coiasitinity Center. the chairman, Mrs. Joe Tuchman, £h««fr you for this Cise tcri£i»» jpnua at 4 o'clock this Sunday af- able to accomplish. Reservations xaay be made by up. It is different tn-om ctfeerf Cooperating with the Interna- AT 7552. ttaraoon in the concert ha!L Mr. ' F o r the first time In J. C. C. calling 0S87 or Mrs. H. Mar- tional A. Z. A. in tiefr meabsrI have seen, end I hsrc rcaS, r>! i.nTZ. esroon in the concert nsW. Mr. history, an A. Z. A. team boa suc-cus, ATJA 6539, before December 4. ship drive, threa pledges were luaitlreds of tftern trors all over J . LflRoy Hellman is the condgc- ceeded in •winning a Senior Luncheon will bs 50 cents. the cocntrjr, and this article lias given the First Degrees. They are Tc tm of this choir, and MlE3 Helen League Title. Last Sunday, NOT. thrilled me. TOE niay keow that Walter Hearst, Paul Nattaa sad Nelson is the accompanist. Guest 27. by decisively beating the my associstioa. vriih josir peoHarold Epsteia. artists en the program will ba Alpha Pi Tan five, 29-18, Mother By M r s . W m . G r a y ple has beers a very foesTstifu? Alepb Godel Paul Sacks apMarlon Ward Gillan, contralto, Chapter retained its undefeated one. We have been psls ETSC pointed the following' special record, and thereby finished on In cold, ia darkness and Gerturde Culbertson Bell, acThe Beth El Auxiliary is plan»S5»oci«tes for £7 j-ears of mj7 ing ITLS. top in the J. C. C. Pre-Season committees: Tournameat transAnd ia pain, companist. ning a Chanukah celebration on f r>cvr-t"i public life, au3 I J>elieTe thut cr-ir-rr Basketball League. December 14. Mrs. Irrin C. Levin, portation, Harry Fox, chairman, O Israel, you •Boys Town' pictisre vill do and Leonard Lewis and With this incentive behind chairman of the affair,' promises March again. more good to eoimicmci ths them, the Mother Chapter cagers a surprise program np to the Kuklin; possible Girls* Auxiliary. poison tfwst. Is E>e5n.5: dissemlGeorge Saafer, president, Paul Over hills -where snew propose to make a stiff fight for standard of previous years. natej in Ecrope thsu all the . . . t. and Norman Ruback; the regular season title, and also Is -vrhitely lain speeches could do. It depicts & Tables will be decorated to rep- Nathan 'ec c One hundred and seventeen new in the A. Z. A. Regional TourLapidus Memorial aad Youth AliO Israel, yon march spirit of brotherly love etnonc members were welcomed by over nament to be held in Sioux City. resent the hours of the day. The yah, Abe Resniek, ccairsssa, JC. With pain. • the races which is BS it sh©xa« program will be centered around 200 Bada&sahans at the annua At debate tryouts, recently the "Life of the Woman of To- Kuklin and Nathaa Berg; Conbe, snd os.1%- throKgrii wlilcJj luncheon given in their honor held before the newly organised solidation of By-laws, Walter Not drara and bugle . . . . . this country can rise «JK>Te the Wednesday, November 30, at the A. Z. A. Junior Aleph Club, day.", Greeaberg, chairman, H a r o l d petty JcaJonsiss ^J indiriSaals The choked, wild The. Beth El Auxiliary will ob- Oruch and Harvey Epstein. Jewish. Community Center. Pro- Harry Goodbinder and Justin and nations." . . . Crying of a gram chairman for the afternoon Prfesman won the right to repre- serve, its Oneg Shabboth on DeAleph Manuel Him el stein was Frightened child. -Uras Mrs. Arthur Room. Welcome sent Mother Chapter No. 1 in de- cember 10 jointly with the elected captain of the basketball ALFERT NOTES: Ccri Alpcrt. to new members was given by bating. . Hadassah. team. An old man's moan associate editor o£ t!ie Boston Mrs. Max Cohen. Reports of the The A. 2. A. Jr.Aleph Club The "Century" basketball team On finding his Jewish Advrc&te, em&E ia the itolS t Lenjs National Hadassan Con- Committee headed by Stanley will tangle with the Llacola A. Z. Refugee pack lowing Tistful of Tt-hatnotc . . . Tentlon were given by Mrs. David Turkel have announced the com- JEWISH COMMUNITY A. team at 3 p. si. Ssiaday afterToo heavy is . . . The Ben Akiba Worfcing Girls' A. Goldstein, Mrs. Albert Now- pletion of their organization noon. Home ol St. LcuSs, havicg outCENTER man, Mrs. Julius Stein and Mrs, plans, and that a Jr. Aleph Club These,, your marching. songs lived its ussfB»EfiSv. in. ths c o s has been brought into existence. M. D. Brodkey. Sound far / . mnnity, voted to turn ever about The club has 19 charter mem- Record Concert Ho. 6 -; Coltwal 425,000, its treasury, Jor rsfeges j Aad bloody rags bers, headed by Albert White, A 1 o'clock dessert luncheon work, and put iieelt cut cf cxict- j Your banners are. WEDNESDAY, DECE3XBER 7 their newly elected President. be held by the Great PerP cc*r ence as titnccssEarr • • • Tfce | "Lights of the Jetrisb. Year" is 8 P . JI. All' members who expect to trysonalities Study Group at the TEOOHP (cot intended tc- be i the title of the progrsra to be A son, O Israel, out for position as the Mother home of Mra. Sam "Greenberg-, read backwards) *s & Rochester, j 1. TSCHAIKOWSKY: O v e r - given Bloaday, Decenber 5, at Heart aflame 4324 Walnut, Friday. December Chapter representative in oraN. T., group . . . Tfe-s initials sizz& j ture "1S12," opus 49. the regular monthly meeting of And brain afire should be prepared by next for the Young Escmrasers ol Or2. Co-hostess is Mrs. Henry tory, Philadelphia orchestra, Leo- the Temple Israel Sisterhood. The "With our shame-. Sunday for preliminary tryouts. ganizing Eoiise Ps.rticE . . . {On r~r Greenberg. Mrs. Alfred Frank Pairings pold Stokowsky, conductwill be held at the Temchapter ping-pong second thought the initials vsr- \ ' will give a biography of Israel tournamentfor ing-. Ran with madness, pie and -will be preceded by a 1 are listed on bulletin haps should t»e read bact-rarfis!) j r > Zangwill. A review of "Dream- boards in J. C. C. recreation 2. SCHUMANN: Piano C o n - o'clock luncheon. Pulled a trigger . . . . . . An Anglo-JewiEh paper feeati- i ers of the Gretto" will bs g certo in Minor, Opus 54. Mrs. Sam Teper is chairman of And snade the woe room. All matches should be lined the fcc-uor'paifi to'John Ea,v, by Mrs: Sam Greenbers, Mrs. played as soon as possible. The London Philharmonic or- the program trhich yrflZ portray For cs grow bigger. L:. S. Secretary of State, &SJ_TG1Henry Greenberg, Mrs. Arthur next regular meeting will be held chestra. Sir Landon Ronald, in dramatic fashion the festivals IOTTE: "B"Eai Srith ECB.DTEconducting. Soloist: Alfred with particular reference to their O Pbaroah in Egypt's time, Romm and Mrs. A. A. Steinberg. next Sunday, Dec. 4, at 2 p. m. Cortot. Mrs. M. F. Levenson is sponsor. at the Jewish Community Center. O Nazis with your maniac eyes, of Kishinev ;•• . . . Another, in origin and to Chanuk&h. ApproA joint One? Shabbotb of notice, reports that priate decorations aad music 'will la rags and huager and far wanBtthel and Hadassah will be held dering Mr. acd Kre. — will dedicate a ba used. Participating In the pro2:80 p. m. Saturday, December Israel never dies. stone in SEE:cry ol gram irill be: Mesdamea William 10. at the J. C. C. when Rabbi loved laughter." , . . Feller, M. Bernstein, Sam BerkoMr. Rowland Haynes, PresiThe regular meeting of the witz, J. J. Friedman, Harry TnisArnst of Scranton, Pa., will Sive Thee Midrasb. dent of the Municipal University Junior Council will be held De- tin, Milton Mayper, H. Eosen- Joseph the address of the afternoon. EMBASKASSIKGKOKEXTS brought into Egypt s vres takes for s NOTE: Dr. Ashcr Isaac?, in t i c JuA book review will be given on of Omaha, spoke before members cember 4 promptly at 2:30. The blum, Ben Shapiro and D. R. "The Old Bunch" by Meyer Levin of the Council of Jewish Women Chanukah program will be In Cohen. by Mrs. Harold S. Barton on De- on "Modern Trends in Educa- charge of Ida Fine and Bes; Ne'w members of the Temple cember 21 at the home of Mrs. tion" at their regular meeting Bernstein. Israel Sisterhood -will be fceaored on Monday, November 28, at the Meyer Raben, 334 North ThirtyArrangements ^ H be made for at this meeting. They are: McsJ. C. C. fifth street. a supper to be held within the dames I. Brown, J. I.I. It was announced by Mrs. Sam The first class on " t h e Surnext two weeks. Harold Parber, Al Gilinsky, Stewlj; vival of the Jew in the World To- Joaephson that tentative plans The Board held a meeting No- art Gilinsky, Lasar Kgplan, Leaa-i' are being made for Council to day." being given by Mrs. David vember 28 at which time commit- ard iUein. Joseph Klein, Al A. Goldstein, will meet 1:15 p. m. Join with the Federated Churches tee reports were given and plans H. Loe wen stein. S. Kotkia the League of Women Voters, for future activities discussed December 15 at the Jewish Comand the "Douglas County Medical Members are urged to participate ward Kosen, Philip Romonek, M.!» munity Center. H. Rosenberg, Ed Schimmel, Hu- i . . . *.Auxiliary, to Eponsor Mrs. Ruth A new study group on "Hadas- Neuhaua in a new. series of lec- in the classes offered. The Jewbert Sommerasd P.zraczi Eill-rx "*' *"~ ish History class Is held £Ion<5ay •ah Projects" will bo organized tures to be given after the first tor new and old members un^er of the year. The organizations evenings, cooking oa Mondays aad leadership of lire. Morris M. mentioned above are working on Thursdays and bridge on Tuesdays Franklin. Further information tho project, and havs extended at the Center. •will be announced 6hortly. The benefit bridga was held an invitation to Council to assist ' All Information desired on at- them and to share in the pro- Wednesday night, p which went to the German Refa tendance to any or all study ceeds. , groups may be received from Mrs. Report was made at the meet- gee Fund. It is important tha Paul Veret, GL 3601. chairman, ing on the lending library for members who have tickets return or Mrs. J. H. Kulakofsky, cc-r the Center that Council 13 under- them at this meeting. chairman. WA 2952. New members are invited to attaking to supervise. Mrs. EIm#r Activities Greenberg and her committee are tend the meeting and all members A Bunco py party will be held for at the present time classifying p yg all are urged to be on time. bf h books b k on hand, hd and will the benefit of Youth Aliyah and off the HMO on January 18 at the Bran- very shortly make an announceLadies' Freo Loan dels Tea "Room. All members de- ment as to tho opening date and siring to.b& hostesses and raise the list of new books purchased The Ladies Free Loan society their donor luncheon money in for the library. •will have their regular meeting g W d d this manner may do so by calling Council members interested in Wednesday, December 7, at 2 Mr. Morris M. Franklin, chair- serving in tho library or in contributing books for the library man, GL,2857. The president, Mrs. Sam Klad t Minyaa groups for the Youth are communicate urges, all members Aliyah are being organized". Those with Mrs, Greenberg. -who wish to contribute for the children in this manner may do so by calling Mrs. Julius Stein. GL1948.
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SUFFERS HEART ATTACK—Fears were reawakened for-the life of Pope Pius; shown above with an aide, when he suffered a serious heart attack in his private apartment in Vatican City. Physicians administered oxygen to the 81-year-olS Pontiff, after which he rallied. His life was despaired of almost exactly two years ago when he was ill from varicose veins.
FIRE'S TOLL—^Biggest and most costly forest fire in years swept along a 100-mile mountain front in Southern California, burning over many thousands of acres and threatening homes of the Hollywood movie colony. Five counties fought the fires, with aid of 2,000 CCC and WPA workers. This is all that remains of a home in Las Flores Canyon, north of Santa Monica, where flames raged as in a furnace, along dry wooded ridges. Many cottages were burned.
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COLONIZING"LIBYA - Trpicsl cf the if.OCC Italian families that have left their native land to colonize Libya is the Ainadeo Maestri family, left center, emigrating from their horns in Pescara-di-Ferrara, Announcement that the gox-erarnent had chosen them caused Eueii interest in th? home courtyard, lower right, while Mama Maestri, lower left, got her idenUScatioa tag.
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PIGGIE WONT COME BACK—Eleven young adventurers are sailing on a brigantine out of Gloucester, Mass., for a 7,700-niUe voyage to Tahiti, but Dennis the pig, shown above, will be chops and roast pork long before they return. Above, with Dennis, are Larry OTcole, artistr Dick Hemingway of Crotcn, Mass., and Arthur Hanson, Boston newspaper photographer.
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SNICKiiBFElTZ THE, WINNEB — lie's just a' little fellow, 9 months old, but he became Grand Champion steer of the Great i Western Livestock Show at Los Angeles, when he won the coveted : rosette and blue ribbon over hundreds of the finest beef cattle in I th,e.west. Verl. Anderson, 18, of Treemonton, Utah, is his owner, who named the little fellow Snicklefritz.
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NOT; COLD — Safe from the wind-driven snow and the cold wave, that did widespread damage, recently, among the northern tier of states, Francis Harling strolls toward the surf at St. Petersburg. Fla. Her new swimming togs are among the latest at the beach.
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OUTFIELDER GOES A-FIELD—Earl Averill, widely known outfielder for the Cleveland Indians of the American Baseball League, is spending the winter at Snohomish, Wash. Recently he arsd Jhis sons went hunting a t the Redmond Gun Club and walked oS with one of the prizes. Son Howard is at left and Bernard a t right Averill was born in Snohomish in 1903.
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CON^EITEXCE OELEGATS— Anong Cnitod S^tcs CeLisfrss fr :ho Fan-American conference, op^r-in" >r> L;r_is, Peru, an Dec C. is Kathryn Lewis dcuchtcr and secretary of John L. Lewis. CIO chief. She is shown vnth her father at ths recent CIC cor.rcr.ror m Pittsburgh. She is a staunch fdvecate ot ccrcuri rr'FUorsf "cctween the United States and the L-et'-r A.nericr.r r,Ft'?~s.
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ALL IN THE FAMILY—It's a question whether Buddy Guldahl, 5. " j -» Is settin" pointers from his links starring dad, Ralph Guldahl, or "* 1 Is giving some. Anyway, it's all in the family. Guldahl, national -1 open golf champion, is shown at practice in Miami. Fla., in prepa! ration for numerous golf tournaments that will open soon, in the
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THE JEWISH PKESS—FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1938
JiUng. J Jis to sii. s J morning she was the first cae up. :torrent of words broke from her The nearer the hour came for the:lips. "I wanted to go to Hebrew. 'slorl. postman to arrive, the more wor- You didn't let xae. So I told Sarah. 3 1 ?• I ried and tearful she became. Per- Sbe wrote this. O mamma darlhaps,' she had not done the right ing, please fcrgire me. Please, thing after all. Perhaps, her forgive me. Mamma dear." And mother would find out wco had' the child sank to her knees, and written it, and she would be buried her face is tbe - gown of . . . K B S KeinlJfctxi Stuff angry and never let her go to He- her mother, sobbing as if her litNew York again American aviation circles cistlra. Cosixaazuty Ceatc brew school. That word "never" tle heart would break. tbat tbe rpason Nctsi Germany is a revival ot LIE "Eternal Ecac' \ "The jr.rort; n?ors seemed to cause a very panic oj Walter standing by, began to mating sues a bis plav to win cprocccticE ol a eclipse o; reaponF 1Vves?t\i: £•„ 71IP.1: alarm in her little fluttering cry, though he felt that it ^rasn't Lindberg's friendship is that the I e o * because of its t;roehres?s , , .\y.ony,_ t r „,. P > n T his wife allow themselves: as In (She would go along with Sarah heart. But at last, the waiting manly. «.C Pi" ' .Trnf Mrs. SSildien, as ES5 Nazis feel they may b^. t b l e to "USE . the days of tlieir "former wealth, to Hebrew, and see what it was. came to an end. stooped to take Lucille in ber E nJSt E n a composer i*>c Immediately the request came , The bell rang and Mrs. Miidren arms, found tbat there was a him to get tbe helium they -want j - Tnky was they gave liberally to .the needy a real from Uncle Sam . . . Welch reto her lips, "Can I go with you?" and never turned a stranger from . Once upon a time there lived I, „ T stepped to the door to receive tbe catch in her throat and a some- minds us that Lindbergh's home s a fiEE EIV their doors. And Tovie's wife Sarah thought a moment and mail. A letter addressed in a thing in her eye. a man named Tovie, a pious Jew, death last week ief in Serlin will tie the swanky kept a strict account of every then, happy and a little escited, childish scrawl attracted feer atand good to the poor. So generThen a footstep was heard In ous was he that in a short time gold piece they Buent, whether It she replied, "Yes, I can tell my tention. At first, she thought it tne hall, and Lueille's father aphe had given away bis entire for- was used for their own needs or teacher that you're my friend, was Lucille's handwriting. Sbe peared in tbe doorway, gating at and he'll let you sit with me. glanced at where the cnild was tbe sad picture. tune, and lie "and his family -were given to the poor. reduced to poverty. "While they The seven years passed very Won't that begrand?" standing, with her. back to the "To Hebrew" So Lucille set out on her window, wide-eyed and fairly •were rich, they had.many friends, quickly, and .almost before they "What in tbe -world has caused but. now, since they -were poor, were aware of it, Tovie and his strange adventure to H e b r e w trembling with fear.this goraom?" Stsca were his -first :: . .•. . their old acquaintances Beamed to wife realized that the good years school. Walter, who stood beside his droll words. Dr. .Mildes was a •They .stopped in front of. a modwere over. They could not "help forget about them and left them sister, asked her, "Lucy, what's happy-go-lucky sort of mas. He feeling that it would be pleasant ern three-story school building the matter?" entirely alone. . never worried, rarely WES angry, with, a large blue and white flag to continue wealthy, but their Tovie became a -wood-cutter Before • she could reply, ber and jnst went through this -worifi fluttering from one window and children had. grown up Indusand lived -with his "wife and their mother questioned her, "Did yes doing all tbe good be could and also of Ilersehe! j never thinking about either tofour.children, in a poor hut in the trious and worthy, and they were an American flag from another. write this letter?" :?E,E, t i e young Polish Jcvr \ ^ A group ot children were noisily forest ., One day as he was re- happy in the thought of all the the Siorrt anti-Sem: Lucille could not answer. Sbe morrow or yesterday. As be' Epcfee Ernst turning home, staggering under good they had done during the playing on the sidewalk, while just shook her head. lire. Sdilden and as be ssmilssi, be made tbe third secretary cf the Gerejs&r. j e,-eg th?,t hie ancestry others were -passing In and out tore open the letter, and read its others laugh, and dry tbeir tears. the heavy load ot wood upon his prosperity. non-Aryan . ra1 embassy i s Paris . . . Estii, iucS- I cioasly of the wide doorways. The two On the very day when the sev-j startling contents: "IF YOU Lucille's mother quickly es- fi en tally, -vrss en the point o* rehack, "he heard a voice behind girls stayed outside until the DON'T LET LUCILLS GO TO the situation to him. As signing when be W&E sbot . . . E e Nebraska has a rev/ Flngror It him r saying, "Wait, brother, and en good years came to an end, little time came for Sarah's class. They HEBREW, GOD WILL PUNISH plained the old man in the long cloak apshe concluded: "Sure, let her go was all fed np with Nasism . . . choir in the person ot the I will help *ypu carry your burpeared to Tovie in the forest and went in with about 20 more lit- YOU." Imagine Mrs. Milden's to Hebrew. Why not?" And All cf which leads us to , . year-old eon of Kabbi Shu ml; 1AT den, for it seems heavy." : tle boys and girls. L!**" 1 Eactensack. N. J. . . . Fsurprise. Walter" was glad,-Mrs. KilSen was you of our t i n t here Is-Et Trivia turned and saw beside said: "Your seven good years are over. Now go back to your hut The Classroom She turned to Lucllla and aslcea, glad, and • Lucille just kept on him an old man, -white bearded, jumping up ana Sown for Joy, -sinbat Still straight and vigorous, as poor as you left i t " Lucille found that the class- "Who wrote this letter?" til sbe remembered aad ran. outtecifiiat k *•""**" * c.v..E.fcg I V e o n ^ a f f i l . t e H r p r o - e m , fin "I cannot return the gift be-- room was just like those In pubTears and dressed in a long cloak girdSi? services v°i.p~ ptmrrinp The little girl went tip to her to tell her faithful friend anS •"* *"I^. " ed with a snaggy skin. The fore I consult my wife, as I con- lic school, except that instead of What Price a Refugee? j a t n e r tbat the b e - wot f7O3. She 1RS>S stranger took the bundle from sulted her before accepting It." separate seats there were long mother, and took her hands in ally, that the tattle Elijah Comes Those in the hecw are far from i v e n o n l v Etr i e ;>- keener her own, and looked up to her was going to Hebrew. benches. Tovie, and -vsrslfeed beside him, optimistic about the, vcrscus coi-' That night, Tovie told his wife sow.aad then asking him ol his When everybody was quiet they with dumb, piteous eyes. TSea YOUNG JUBAEAN. OBisstion schemes anfl tcrri.tprf.es j (Copyright, i s s s . fcr seven •wife and children and learning of of his meeting with Elijah and all rose and saluted a blue and tears came to relieve her, and a being offered to German Jewry j feature Syndicate) Tovie's poverty and his struggle she answered, cheerfully: "Let white flag which was fastened by tbe BritiEB government to support his family. Then they Elijah come for it "himself and I against the wall above tho door. Tne low-do-wa is that DOV.-E1EE j^mw* left the forest and came to the will give it to him." Then they 'sat down and t h e street consiSerE this 6 good cp- j The next day when Elijah teacher gave out reading boots. cross roads, the Btranger gave portrnlty to relieve jewiEb pres- J S1 Tovie his wood again and spoke: reached Tovie's home the woman When Lucille saw the queer charpi sure- en Palestine . . . Tbe re'a- j met him at the door. She asked acters on the inside of the book The Promise i i. gee question viji loam large on ; Bv KAI5K1 fc"T7-r ' him to be seated and rest him- she didn't know what to make of "Listen, Tovie, God will send self after his long walk; then she it, until Sarah whispered to her the asenda cf the Pan-American j you seven good years. During took from the cupboard a small that Conference opening nest month at j "It's Hebrew." Each one -in these ;years you shall have riches book and laid It upon the table the class Lima, Peru . . . Ttere's a good j read a few lines, some and happiness. It depends on you before him. ma? Ctance, too, that the Red Cross j £o"!otsac J.I quickly, others rather stumbling. _ shortly take a hand in the ! ish pseudo-messiali of i "When the seven good years shall "What is written In that ly. After that the books were- colrefugee EitKation caused by the j teentli center:', p,cct:n?.te:r lo-pbegin.: If you desire it, before book"? asked Elijah. ".' lected and the teacher began askthe day is over, you shall be so EDITOR'S NOTE: Arnold ! pentance to the ground, sees Gory Swastika . . . All shipping; | toM to pope Clement VU ifce "I have kept an account of the ing questions. He would hold up {:-,!-^Jj..:v,»i« IJX.- /;4 rich that you will be able to sup- way we spent the treasure," an- a ruler, or a pencil, or an apples, Schoenberg, famed modernist, them, and in seeing them, Is made companies Plying bstveen Ger- j o v e r n c r el tbe River Tiber In \ ' __,ll___^," port all the poor- in. the town. swered the woman. "Look it or a piece of crayon, and ask them aas written a daring setting for happy. This entire section is done many s.3d tbe United States t a r e j Rome (October £, 1ESC3-, zs. j in the forta of a. free recitative. But, After seven years of. riches over for yourself." taken special precautions to bait eE.rthc.iiE.ke in jporiu&'a! (.TanuaTr' I K'sv T'orl KV"t:i'.'i-. it, that ancient and holy raeJody, ;• to give th© Hebrew word, and the There follows upon this a third you- shall again become as poor The Accounts boy or girl would stand and an- Kol Nidre. It was performed part la which the narrator (Rab- •the wave o£ Btowa-wtys Erowiag £6, IES1), XEC. the p,rpes.T3i,ncp of j f>]r~ fn-r^ir^' x-vf.^h^ni. r' as you are now. If you desire, \ prrtior. o'' T'ou^b ;S«-.K-S Elijah read over the account swer with words that Lucille In IJOS Angeles for tha first bi) gives, accorfiisg again to tra- out of 2\"JUI oppression . . . Stev- coaspts. you may have the .seven good book. He saw him simply Tovie's couldn't undertBand, and yet they time last J-'oja Kippar eve £2& yearsclose your life and then you family had lived, and that they sounded pleasantly in her ears. hailed as a musical laadrssri dition, permission to the repent- montn . . . This brings HE to a i l E - s s ? ^ - > e n c^sii- Tte'ir-| rciarr ci: if-Wirii*' v ?;*!• ant sinner to -K-orsliip with tbe shall die a rich man." had not wasted their wealth. And This exercise continued for some and possibly a religions mile- community. This, too, has ths ac- Trisecract that has become current j m a E I l ^j.g a l a a o I tf/er'-e hf '•• Germ,-.!-- wiiiw.: rpffr.- • refugee eirclee liere&boiitE, bz\. Jv r o t e in a Hebrew letter to Ms i Ppmoc-p.tic' pr-rf,-,,^^; Tovie listened to his strange jhe was pleased to find that they Time. Then the teacher wrote stone. Mr. Geliaaa, rawsic critic coiapaiiinieiit c£ sn crctsstral ia vrMci you vrill bsve to read ovt j fcr-.cber Pol;olPTTl"r FS *~."CVF.: i rtrpri IE js>v r o - t TTI, words. Then he answered: "I do had given no freely to the poor some Hebrew words on the black- of fea Los Asgslcs Je^dsh background. load -ritb a genuine German &c- j ••Therefore jet us'rUse our- ptac- ! lenuot of he?mi\(v.s: a.rnot understand how you • can and "needy. "You have -used, the board together with their mean- Connatmify Press E S 3 himself Only after all this has been cent if yeu V E E ! to appreciate it jd~T& towards Sioa sine, lei UF. re- < cVAjm. s a i d ing in English, and the children a mtssiclEU c j note, ta the fol» make me such ah offer. I am treasure- very wisely," copied them in their notebooks. lowing article tells how T.Ir. • beard, does tbe actual Kol Xidre really: n h e .ocrs*^o£ recent; J e v - Jt . a n . t c , o u r f i m s t E 2 0 ^ ? r on vhese j l i e vi"; f.^ott lArnzrV. afraid you think me very simple Elijah. 'If God thinks we have not At the last, they sang a Hebrew • Schoeabcrg has successfully begin. It is divided "into sections, ish tistory, it etatee,, has T-"pR- j\ tuees v e vrere bom. V-~i:r phoc'ici I ITS. prft?f;riRt So-- iJ-.t, •;'»'. and are trying to make fun of the • Kabbi first speaking the ressed from Sis used It wisely," answered the wo- song and marched from the room. WenSed the sacieat heritage of ot' me." David to Alii- j Jewry and ths music of today words with nTiisics.1 background, davit . . . T?p \nr-\r I/ncHlo I>ecide3 j * "Tery well," answered the man quickly, "Let Him take it 0 t a r e p't^ on HE e.v-? into a new, vital, vibrant ccm» and then tbe chorus singing them. in TSiiu, Btranger quietly, and walked off away from us and give it someWhispicrssgs 1 i f,-pe" tf « ; When Lucille reached the street p a c e or r e F that is to be played by It is in here tbat tbe traditional into the growing dusk. Tovie one more worthy. But if my hus- she was so happy and escited that position •Wonder wbc'E back ci that £&l- | TiieT hs.r© all conE^r?,--; 'Ttip- XTcsuch renowned conductors as theme cf tbe Kol Nidre is beard, strained his eyes to follow him band and I have not wasted the she wanted to run and run and Otto styled secret organisation cauing Ure-w is fioomefi to c"p.r..tb.' Or^- ? Kletsperer sad others. the chores Einging it almost litertreasure, and have given freely as he.Tdisappeared-. He wondered m;.' run. ' I t all had been so fascinatally, while tbe orchestra embel- itself "Tbe 4.C0C" -rsich is cpon- j England can iis^-e nerr'- on to the poor, He had better let us ing, who: the stranger could he. . soring a movement to confiscate | "This letter ' wb-icb Erri-ic?j5=''e--" sha hadn't words to say anylishes it. This principal theme LOS ANGELES. keep it." •-. The Third Appearance thing;. Then and there she deWhat may well be a significant appears at fosr different times, property in America owvs& by j ^he" SSalfour Decier&uoE" ii 1c ihe "Your account pleases God," termined that she, too, like those The- * next - week "when* the event In the history of the Jewish always with elaboration, particu- foreign propsganfiists, tbe closing archives oE tl>e .TerisJb Ajre.ncr in "You hare other Jewish boys and girls, must stranger -for the third time answered Elijah. holiday services occurred here on larly in tbe orchestra. As It soes of the constlstes of totalitarian Jerusalem, "walked with Tovie to the cross made good use of the seven good go "to Hebrew." She- would ask States &£$. the deportation of EOSthe evening of YomKIppur. Only on, more and snore with -each ap- citiren Toads and repeated his offer, years that wfere granted 'you. her mother that -very night. propagandists* . . . The | pearance cf ths theme, the intime "will determine its n i\'i.-f:GTm Btrlfep?; Jr. Tovie replied: "If yon are really Keep the treasure for the rest of ' Only one thing spoiled her ad- canca as s. religions milestone, volved and masterfrf contrapun- rcnior is c u t that Governor Frank j . "TJiei" st~-pr,|Ti?i in earnest, and do not mean to your life." venture. It was getting dark al- but there can be no doubt as to tal style of Scncsnberg eoiles into cse-fi Hugh TTilsss a,E U» S. tta- I|I,s a i a h F C : T THE JEWISH CHILI*. make sport of me, I will think ready.. .She had had no idea that its importan'cs as a musical land- play, until a great climas is bassafior to Germany . . « In tx^r \ over "what you • have "promtserfc time could pass eo quickly. Moth- mark. The occasion marked the reached, and the work is coon event, yon can bet that TTilsos ! But I -never do a thing without er .would be worried and angry. first performance of Arnold brought to its conclusion. Here isn't going bsc&. to .Berlin . . . { first consulting my wife. Let me As soon as she entered, the Schoenberg's setting cf "Kol again Scnoenberg has told tts-Jiis •William Dudley Felley, Silver j talk "over matters with her and question, "Where in the world Nidre." One of the most import- ideas: Shirt Genertlissiffio,-tnmea anti-' then I will give you my answer." have you been?" was flung st ant composers of our time has "Today we befid melodies to a Semite because Eollyvoofi ProThe, stranger consented and "Walter, whom do you love her. made a truly great contribution, ducers rejected his scripts . . . Tovie j hurried home. His wife best?" It was his Uncle Nathan Hesitatingly, Lucille replied both to religion and to music, climax. There is none in tbe tra- Goebbsls became a Ilery Je^-gob- j ditional. Kol Nifire. Its closing is met him at the door of their poor who asked young Walter this fool- "To Hebrew with Sarah." for he has given ES a work wiich ineffective and unsatisfying be- bier for & Eim"ar reason- , . . j Mint. He quickly told her all ish question. The family group The Storm will demand attention and rehear- cause it has not been antjcjpatefl Don't be surprised if the cenven- ; about,the old man and what he around the table were all teasing Then a storm brokeforth upon had jfiFpmised, ending: "I'believe the ;littlec fellow and "his..smaller her head,"and she began to cry. ing. nor bnilt op to, nor emphasized." tion cf the Amateur Athletic J Popularity and general acceptthis coming; -^eeli-ciiu. iE the granger is in earnest; I do sister, Lucille. Kich Colorias She .was told in stern, strong lan. asaington ESopts a tot ccti3ibt itnow who he is, but his voice •: Slowly and. carefully came Wal- guage never to go "to strange ance may-be some time in comThe work Is scored for full or•was so -gentle and his eyes BO idnd ter's reply, "I love my papa and places" herself, and never to leave j, ing. Schoenberg has long been in chestra/cnorus, and narrator, and Nsz! resolution . . . And some c£ and, , ^ toTetrmVot modernists, rnodenristsTand! the same gentlemen \rho insisted that"!felt certain that he was not my mama, and grandpa and p its orchestra coloring is rich and makjjig sport of- me." the house without first EskingJ t h o u g ! l i a t h i s w o r b h e d e f £ r r e d •opulent. -Scboenberg's command on America's senSiEg s. team to j grandpa and grandma, and my permission. : ; tbe Berlin Olympic Games vlVi j p s s j-somewhat to tradition, he re• • - : '!-> V>: I t "Was Elij2tb ' sister, and my uncles and aunts, When ' it waa all over she mains very much Schoenberg. He of his orchestra and voices is be among its principal backers ]|; : Tayie-s wife thought for a mo- and my cousins." He stopped for washed thoroagb., and in nis use oJ them her face and sat down to has based his composition 02 the Hollywood is putting v.p- a stiff i fc' ment: before she answered him, a while, trying to remember if he eat supper. the "Kol Nifire" is given a ns-r . • ; traditional melody of Kol Nidre, battle to resist rresesre from j | ; **I :"tthink it must have been had-mentioned all his relations, During the entire evening she making an intensive study of life and vitality. Particularly is Etreet, -vrhich exposes film- j |i - JSHJaST Perhaps he will not come and he finished by saying, "But I wanted to . ask to let her go to seven or eight versions of it be- this noticeable in th© masterful Wall intention to pull cut of the j (i! agato> but if he does, tell him to love every one the same." use of the -wind instruments; in land's Hebrew school, but she was fore beginning to write. German ana Italian martetE be- i y the climatic sectic-ns. In tbs art Uncle Nathan turned and asked afraid, after that terrible scoldygive,%s the seven good years at I have talked "with Mm since the. E J I T Ic-djcrous re-'t I-'el•t the the same question of Lucille who ing. It was only at 9 o'clock the performance and have it from of tones,' the idea cf cleansing, of oncei" ' • bj- KiES. C£Iistrictions impoE reatrafeeaJng' tnrengji repsa't&ace, had; all this while been quiet and when her mother came to Kss her •: "JBut," objected Tovie, ? n o w l him that he has used two or is brought' forth T-iiira ne-cr and the ciciator Janus !uS . . . I \amjia'till young and strong, and thoughtful. Her large brown eyes good-night that she found the three of the melodies of Kol Nidre IncifientEJIy, some of tJioss Inres- 1 |i! can^wbrk hard. One day I -make gleamed earnestly as she answer- courage to ask her the important as the base on which, he has built. heightened meaning:. tigatlon bodies tfcE.t Ere f orc-rsr jrvve- j ; ' : They are clearly heard ia the mort, «ne day less, but I am still ed, "I love everybody, but most question. There is a, fascination in t i e ts-.i-sr-.r^. I j;]:. E-'soEt "£.ecl" pro'cssorE .: ; ableXtp work. But when, I am of all I love God. God .made you, Taking her mother's hands, she piece, especially in the parts idea of the most modern cj mod- sbocting might i a v e & look into th* case -oldier'.it will be harder to make and^papa, and mama, and Walter, almost begged, "Mamma, won't sung by the chorus. ernists bringing feis gsnics to t i e of Elisabeth SehraSer of ths C-erand me, and everybody. If God you please let me go to Hebrew?" a. living." p Harmonically the composer has most sacred ot traditions - - a n a a fiepartiscEt cf Cclm^bi?.. t " came Mrs. M ''True," answered his wife, didn't make us , we wouldn't be "Of course, not, gone back to an earlier period in tradition Trhlca has been ironclad •wbo openly admires Hitler -and 1 Slilden's firm answer. In her mind his " b u t ^ w e need the money rery alive." - - another bow to in its-muEie ES Sn all else. It thi£kE he's got tbe right hi writings iti •A murmur of surprise- went was a vague picture of a dark, tradition. took corrsge to fio tils, and It -where the Zevrt E.re bad3y; just now, for only today our' "children were sent home around the table. Where did Lu- dirty basement with an old beardFor those who know his CUEIC may take cssrag-s to accept, it. from school because we could not cille learn about God? Nobody in ed Jew standing with a strap over well, there is, In the opening, a 'There is a ?nesf bat -seemingly Judge Samuel Seaburj- is re- ) -small children -who were surprise in the conventionality c£ natural co3.blss.tlon. cf ths tra£i•'' pay i'ifor their,.tuition.. Learning tho family ever. told. her. They ported t c be the leading canfii-1 never sent her. to a H e b r e w mumbling silly •words. What did tional and' sc-fiern sifie by Elds. la vrorth moret than, bread, and it the liarraoaic construction. Howdate for tbs prcciCeair!- cf the j f is better for us to be hungry in school. The Idllden family didn't anybody in America need Hebrew ever, as tha work progresses, the The narrator spesfes Non-Sectsriaa Atti-Kiysi league | I believe in being "real Jews." for? It was all foolish. Anyway, our Old age, than for our children ths eiorss Elsg~s s irsamore typical csa of dissonance A Question Lucille had enough: to do with her and contrapuntal teehnisaa ba- tlonal nislsdy, ssd all tbe Trhlle . . . fTcen is K i t e Jacobs, czar f fi . to grow up without schooling." of bEdns, going i s rereal tbe j |; school work. It would never do At last, the mother, Mrs. MilVXou are right," agreed Tovie. coines evident. After a truly mag- •we hear tne ansie of today. And cb&ritable orsESisatloE to Trtic!; ' |r '•'-. "It. JB better ,to have the seven den, herself, spoke up and solved to .overwork the .child. Children nificent climas, the work ends on even ia ths m-asic. there Is a par- bs Trill donate tbe ?7,E0C; -which \ p the problem of where Lucille got must have time to play. So she a plain major chord. Scboenbsrs ados. It is" entirely snd eneqeiv- repres€iits ten per eest cf bis net j fi: •0 good years at once." : "•''•.- -"And what about the years of that queer religious idea. It must said, "No," ones more, tucked the himself gives us some illii! ocaDy SchOBZbsrg, bet tiers is profit on the SciEielirgr-Lotus j {? • * poverty that will surely follow"? be from that JosepTis girl next child in -well, kissed her, and left ing remarks when he says: the religious and fervent spirit o" light? . . . Tbose three English- I I ; "God will continue to keep us door. They're very religious, you the room. The" Kol Nidre suffers front Baca'la bis chnxea xnnsic side by sli •weetlies -within 3 c 0 miles She Sells Her Troubles ••""• as sHe has always done," an- know. Lucille plays with the girl, Eifle -nifii the prosranism s.n-3 es- of New York that vere Eivcrtised sentimentality and mosotos.. and she always keeps telling her . Lucille cried herself to sleep. largely to the fact swered Tovie confidently. oteric emotionalism asd color of it is 'writfor EE.1& in the N- i ov& nes j f\ The nest morning she rose dis- ten in a minor-liketbat • ' "Have your wish," assented the that this i3 a sin, and that is a church mode. Wagner. There are many things -week are tbe .Te-^islj I*? old man. "Go home and make sin. Why, just the other day, Lu-appointed, but still -rebellious. When it was originated, tbe emo- here and they combine to make last Hartford, New l i s t e n i_i i j . J r •• :good use of yo-.r fortune," and cille wanted to play hop, skip and After school she told her troubles tional effects of major and minor aa expression of today end yes- cf SprizgfielS, Cent. . . .The B'n&i jump, and she was about to mark to Sarah. The latter was sur- were not appreciated. \ he disappeared. " "terday end all days. This is truly To us, B'ritb. Kessenger cf Los Angeles out the necessary squares, on the prised. The' Treasure minor .expresses mourning and great music. and its arch-competitor, & s Jew"Your mamma won't let you go sadness. In earlier days it £?oke When Tovie /reached his home sidewalk, when the Josephs girl Rabbi Jzcoh- Soaderlinj, -&z:zs ish Community Press, vrl'd, fce he. found his children playing stopped her, saying, "You das- to Hebrew? How will you ever of dignity, awe, soleninitj'. We his o-rn very excellent arrange- merged in tbe nest coiiple of sent. Today is Shabbus. It's a know anything then?" . n e a r the door before the house, ot the present feel tbe opposite ment oJ the test, was a sincere yizv? T o r t J But, though she couldn't un- and cannot reooEcile t i e senti- s,nd Impressive narrator. AE or- weets** ^,-n. *. i.•<*-A •while: his wife stood waiting for sin to write on Shabbus." Lucille - n. •: ^ * dropped the piece of chalk as if derstand Lucille's strange story, ; him.. The children .were digging mentality of ths minor mode with chestra cf thirty-fire men, tss.de Ttp&TiT-s gefce-1 e it had burned: her fingers. It's she was s.11 sympathy, and began the solemnity cf t i e ' vsrds. EacJi up of some of ths finest muss- in;']the ground and one of them •p-r. -Rr( I suddenly started up and ran to that Josephs girl that is teaching Instantly'to think how to help would undoubtedly fcave com- elans ia Los Angeles, and a missd cs then. Kacj-'s t&s carriei a canned her all these things. r Lucille.his father. "See what I have chorus of twenty-eight, &:i led by version of tbis iasious ^ewisb. delposed it_ in niajor. Soon, she thought of a good Meanwhile sensitive L u c i l l e found!" he cried. In his hand ths compossr. 'ears an entirely icacy for years . . . Credit Hc.bbi g ths g n d was.% bright gold- piece.- Tovie slipped out of the room. She felt -plan. "See, LEcill9,**--Ehe said, satisfying and moviag perform- EbEpiro ci CalSwell, >r. J., witn s, T&e composition is divi and 3J1S. wife "hastened to the hole hurt that the people were speak- "I'll write a letter "to yoar a a n a into a number of sections. It aiios cf the zzv? -srorli. I risbt sintrt ides, . . . Ursry Jew ! . the children had dug, and sure ing about her in her presence. and then maybe•'' sS.e*ll let you opens with an introduction fcy orcommunity has tcresd to I enough, ^there was a . crock .of They would never have been so cotap'oaition osld assure its psr- i t^~T chestra alone. The- narrator, ia t-'cm shining gold pieces, too heavy for rude to one of themselves. They . . Lucille was enthusiastic. So this casa the RsbW, breaks into • one B M to carry. They poured seemed to forget that children the two hurried.. Into Sarah's this, telling an old leacad. "God," them ou- upon the kitchen table, were really just as human as house, and began to writs tbe let- ha Ears,.- "declared that there distinct contribution to the heritter. They found tbat they had should be . light.** With Intesss age cf tbs Jews and to tbe music : and- behold, the crock was as full grown-ups. over to tbe !7>C . . •. Otfcer tcpms littia to say,-end"they-found it realisa the violins cf t i e orches- of today. Sarah' as before. Tho seven good years p anfi org£4ii£S,tic2s could Cf. QUOTEShard to say even that But, finalhad indeed begun. Je-iriEb. TE'SShe stepped out to the streat tra are heard ia a grreat barst oi (CojrigliteS tj But neither Tovie nor his wife and met her friend, Sarali Jos- ly It was finished. I t contained sound. "We are Inclined to think . spent their fortune In idls living, opts. Sarah'-was a sturdy little just one sentence trritten in of llgfct only is terns of Eoslsg. nor did they -waste tho gift. They girl with a pair of bright blue Sarah's childish band across the Here, the brightness ag3 tiafcre Bent' their children to school and eyes that made her face interest- middle of the sheet of paper: "If of . the • sound fcrJag lig&t to cur you don't let Lucille, go to Hebought.better clothes and mored ins and attractive.. • . Into -a" more comfortable cottage, "Where are you going?" Lu- bre-sr,' God will pacisa • you." It "God crumbled it," tha issend York (END) — Skr •was unsigned. - ' "• '•' sat. Tovie continued to work ev- cilla questioned instantly. ?*" continues, and agaLa the lassie EWSJ frssa EusscsUas a nepsb iry day., for he.said: "If I.livo in "To Hebrew," answered Sarah. "'-•• .Saraa -farni3be2".the envelope, forms a perfect adjutant to tlis £2 catiilidJLt^ fsr jrssMent :m.M 'dieness'.tsow, my, children"...xrlll Several time3 before Lucille ana tbe two gave-thsir pennies to test. The story so--s ca to tell 1S4-S Alfred K. LtEtStr., 1526 • I i-C;.S.t';CI-.?> ! "-•rip';.tor despise•• labor, and had .heard that puzzling expres- buy'--the!"stamp..-;. Lucille's band ,we are poor again, they will sion, but. never had she had ths shook "as she put tbe important how God spread aboct the earth publican prsEiSsntisl sjeml pieces of t&Ss crumbled lisfct, csd picttirscl Gsrersor Lciraas as aot be -willing- to -work and earn courage to SHOTT that she did not letter Into ths man bos. Of how the tumble man, looking H i ^ j , o «»*«* ue%C iV .• S h e Day • an ^honest living. •'. •• know what it meant Today, how- .•V not with Eirosascs to ths heavTovie'a PMIanthrophy ..-; ever, her restless spirit made her . All that day, Lucille was very Only one luxury did Tovie and decide at enco to solve the riddle. nervous and restless. The- nest ens, but with humility and re-
By Harold Gelniaa
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THE JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1938
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R.- Rabinowitz. Cantor Morris Okun and the synagogue choir will chant the service.
Harry Welnsteln will read the Torah during the Junior Congregation service.
"Seventy-five ment met in - the Jewish. Community Center this week to form the Sioux City section of the Iowa Co-ordinating • Committee for assisting refugees from Germany. The organization •work of the'committee was completed at the meeting and E. E. Baron was-named chairman, with Arthur Sanfbrd and E. N. Grueskin, co-chairman. ;The Bum of $4,000 was guaranteed at this meeting, to.ta&e care of the number of refugees that will be brought to this community. This group of men have undertaken the work of finding occupations, jobs and homes for the refugees. They are also helping to secure affidavits- for the refugees. , , Mr. Meye.r Levitt was named financial and corresponding secretary of the group, and a financial, committee of the followirg men was appointed: A. M. Davis, Lawrence Davidson, S. Krjieger, Sam Cohen and A. \H. Baron.
The Jewish Art Theater Playera, won the lavish praise and applause of a large audience W inescfay evening, when they presented three "one-act plays. The enlarged and decorated stag© was used for the first time at this performance. The group raised the -funds and sponsored the work of-improving the stage and facilities. The plays presented w e V e "Prank and Erna," "When t'je Sun Rises" and "Why Hubert." The plays were 'directed by Rozena Sacks, Mrs. Morris Weisberg and -Mrs. Lucille Lavalliere. The Jewish Theater group will sponsor a partjr for its members Saturday evening at the Center.
Funeral services for Louis Herman, who died in his home Sunday afternoon, were held at the family residence Monday. Cantor A. JPHskin officiated at the service. • Mr. Herman had been a resiThe Ivre Club has started dent of Sioux City for many years. plans for a New Year party to be He is survived by the widow, and given at the Jewish Community two sons of Minneapolis.
Ivre. Party Proceeds to Youth Aliyoth
Center New Year's eve, with the proceeds going to. the Youth Aliyoth and the Jewish National Fund Golden Book. The party will be rpen to the public, and will take the place of the private party given by the Ivre Club In past years.
A.Z. A. Sioux City chapter of A. Z. A. makinB plans for the Cornbelt Regional Tournament, to be held hero December "25, 26 and 27, with the local chapter as hosts. Headquarters for the tournament will be at the West Hotel. The tournament plans are under the direction o£ Co-chairmen Sid Baumstein and Jack Merlin,, and the. work is divided up among six committees: Publicity, finance, transportation, dating, housing and banquet committee. Among the contests will be debate, oratory and athletics. Special committees are working on each of these. The question for debate will be: "Resolved that the Jews find a new haven of refuge beside ^ that provided by Palestine." The subfect for the oratorical contest will be "The Bright Side of Jewish Life." • A number of members of the local • chapter are planning to enter the debating and oratory contests and the basketball team is in training. Visitors at the tournament will be entertained at house parties to be sponsored by A. Z. A. hostesses. The names of the hostesses will be announced in a forthcoming issue of the Jewish Press. Eight chapters have been invited to the tournament, and a large attendance is expected to attend: ' .
X C. C. News The .Tegular meeting of the Youth, Council •will bp held next Monday evening in" the Center. . Pl^ns for the New Year party have been changed, and the first •Saturday night dance is scheduled for January 7. A novelty dance orchestra 17111 supply the music. Miss Ruth Singer was named editor of. the Council paper which -will be distributed on alternate Wednesdays' to members of the cluba affiliated with the council. Sylvia Herzoff and Miriam Barloh were named copy editors; Leo Blch, art; Lloyd Kronick, sports; Charlotte Levin, . society; Ann Kanofskyy humor; Sylvia Herzoff, the "We Salute" column; Adline Stern, the Clothes Line. The first issue will appear December 14. Morris Aizenberg has been named chairman of the book drive lor the Center library. The committee is securing books of Jewish Interest and on Jewish subjects for the library, in an effort Xo equip the Center library more Sully. Anyone having books to contribute to the-Center is asked to phone the office and the committee will call for the books.
At. a family dinner Thanksgiving day, Mr. and Mrs. B. Orlikoff, 1117 Villa avenue,- announced the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Miss Lillian Orlikoff, to Horace A. Greenberg of Minneapolis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Greenberg of Minneapolis. Miss Orlikoff, who has resided in Minneapolis for six months, was graduated from Central High school. Mr. Greenberg is a graduate of the University of Minnesota. . " Mr. Greenberg and his fiancee returned by motor to Minneapolis after spending Thanksgiving day here. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Galinsky and Dr. Delia Galinsky spent last week-end in Minneapolis, where they spent the Thanksgiving holiday, with Mrs. Galinsky's mother, Mrs. Celia H. Cohen.
Among the college students who spent last week-end In Slons City with their parents were Dorothy Davis, a student at Rockford College, Carolyn Pishgall of T h e Intermediate Dramatic Northwestern, Sidney Kalln and Club -will meet this afternoon for Charles • Schiiidler of Nebraska rehearsals on a three-act play to University at Lincoln. b given in January. " Rabbi Irving Malamud of ChiThe Council of Jewish Women cago spent last week-end in Sioux lias named Mrs. Jack Robinson City with Mr. and Mrs. A. H. chairman of the clothing commit- Baron. tee for the Center. The committee -will collect used clothing, Miss Ruth Ivener of New York have charge of the sorting, sizing City, who is associated- with the and mending of the clothes, and Walt Disney Company, visited in the clothing will be distributed Sioux City with her parents last through the Jewish Community week. Mis3 Ivener recently opened Center to needy families. Assist- an office for her company In ing Mrs. Robinson are Mrs. Reva Washington, after which she spent Sherman and Mrs. Morris Skalov- some time In Kansas City before returning to New York s k y .
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Friday in the Beth Abraham synagogue with Rabbi S. L Bplotnlkov officiating. Survivors include his TrtdoTr, IIrs. Alice Raskin, nine sons, Ben and Charles of Sioux City; William of Onawa, la.; Paul of Chicago, and Harry, Russel, Sam, Melvin and H. O. Raskin, all of Oklahoma City, Okla.. and three daughters, Mrs. Rose Schindler of Sioux City, Mrs. Minnie Tessler and Mrs. M. Magid, both of Oklahoma City.
George Galinsky and Sheldon Singer, students at Central High school, were selected to act as announcers over Radio Station K3CJ. Their selection was made by • merit of their work in the forensic department at Central High school.
Mount Sinai
Mrs. I. Marsh, 509 Isabella street, is visiting this week In the Rabbi Theodore N. Lewis will home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Forespeak at Mount Sinai Temple this man, Madison, S. D. evening on "A Solution ,to the Miss Fan Cohen of Minneapolis Refugee Problem." The service spent last week-end in Sioux City begins at 8 o'clock. The Temple- Sisterhood will with her parents. have it3 December meeting this Mrs. Leah Baron, 606 Virginia afternoon, following a 1 o'clock street, returned home after a twoluncheon in the Temple annex. week visit In Chicago. :
©rthodos Synagogue Services at Beth Abraham and Tiphereth Israel synagogues will "oogin this evening at 4:45 o'clock. Tomorrow morning the service T/M begin at 9 o'clock. RabW S." I. Bolotnikov will - speak at Tiphereth Israel synafjopue Siturday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. Hia subject will be "The Courage of the Jew."
Shaare Zion Synagogue
Miss Anabelle Emlein and Miss Dorothy London spent last weekend in Iowa City, where they attended a sorority dance. Mr. and Mrs, Herman Levy. 2010 Jones street, announce the birth of a son; November 28, at
the Methodist hospital.
Hyman Raskin, 75, died in a local hospital Thursday, following Prank Margolin will speak at a lingering illness. Ho was a l nShaare Zion synagogue this eve- Ident of Sioux Citj for the last 36 nlngV'ia the "absence of Rabbi IL years. Funeral services were held
Hollywood Meny-Go-Ronnd Dy DICi; CKAS2 Hollywood—Joo Penner's
birthday party was an Impromptu affair that took place backstage between broadcasts. A cake, airexpressed by Kate Smith to Holywood, v a s the "piece de resistance" .- . . it was topped with three yello-w ducks and a fourfoot candle. Joe ate the ducks . b u t stopped short, at the candle. . For-entertainment Joe contributed a violin solo. His music .- . agreed nis listeners . . . was . . enthusiastic!
Phillip Reed . . .-whose name was Milton LsRoy before that . . something else before that . . Louis Rodin, former resident of and is, we're Informed, one of Our Sioux City and father of D. L. Boys fs*m Brooklyn. Rodin of Sioux City, died Tuesday in an Omaha hospital of a Mala, the Esklmoses .whose heart attack .that followed a sickness of three weeks. He lived career seemel frozen, thaws out there in the home of a daughter, to act as an Indian brave for "Union Pacific." Mrs. Rena Wasserman. A native of Russia, Mr. Rodin Insiders : say: That Paillette. came to the United States in 1908 Goddard remains first choice on and to Sioux City the same year. He left here two years ago to the list of Scarletts. That that film, ^'Advocate «Tmake his home with, his daughter "French" Amour" is a German investment in Omaha. Invention . . . the French Funeral services -were held and story and players merely smokeWednesday in Shaare Zion syna- screen the backers. That recent oggue with Rabbi S. I. Bolotnlkov news headlines have lent Impetus officiating. to the production of "Concentra.Survivors beside Mrs. Wasser- tion Camp," with John Garfield man .are Mr. Dave.Rodin and an- as the central character. That other daughter, Mrs. Sophie Fein- Sylvia Sidney paid fifty thousand berg of Sioux City; and a brother, dollars to buy up her Hollywood Joe Rodin, of .Council Bluffs. contract.. That the Benny Bakers are vacationing - •• from each other. .
Dorotbe Saltsmsa Plans are being formulated for a dance to be given, by the Talmud Torah on Sunday, January 22 Th ill ;be held h l at 22. The ddance will Eagles Hall.
Pity those poor thespisns ^ho now have to check in oa the clock system. • Heretofore they conld flash that superior rapper-bracket air . . . but punching *he tinier, raarkr thesn as earning a thousand a week - - or less.
NAZI'LINE'LOSING BUSINESS . '. ' '
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.. Tnonga Leni Riefenstahl ve- year. hesieatly denies- any consectioa V.ARER 4 . FrsLECiska Gssl receives! Bj MSNSKY, between her arrival in the States COM EM. A«o-f!f»,y8 o and dissemination of propaganda, | bclky letter tfee &o t t e r Insiders believe thee purpose of !Mockers niarreie-w - •"•* en. iEREETl GIVEN that - • --••• E5e e r p ' a i s e d t h £ t her visit is the peSfiloi o-sr . . _ . ^ ! , ! , . ; r r let!*" irozc ECI i sx e, c«iv cenF-.r.mec meeting of 't«~_ ; , Ui.p«c-"'.J r,o_, {..r | Stocminici»-F or .'-or. & woiUF, neia epic," tfea that" niHUon-plus footage cBuczpesi. ^an cu-t, z.^ b,bi.^- • . . &j£ , g . t ^ . o , N< ., vernber> 1938> l t on the '36 O'jrispics. ' The film was unanimous'r efTcefi that the corhas knocked aboat here for zaors its o,Ct-»' meECCiE; TCES SB., nest Y"eefc. j pom.ion be dis=«oH-erj. than a rear, bat cone of tlie maDAVID p. reoER, President GOI.TTE FTITIFK, Secretary jor distributors will handle Jt be- (Cop righted *7 Jewish Teien-is-ss—st ""*'graphic Agency, Jao.) cause of the prevalent anti-Xazi feeling aaoEg movie-goers. . WEEE, EEFERTTcrUTrNIGK'A WEES. ECBER, KJ-UTHNiCK &, KELLEY, £33 Union E*st
in one scene hs says, 'Yes, mi- en Boy" and "Scarlett O'Ksra" are still usfiilecj. "Many are lord!'" called—bat nose is chosen." A .' greyish-haired, mild-mannered little raa.n trho looks more Good News Bulletin: Luis® like a school-ieaelier than a pro- Plainer . and Clifford Odets are ducer, 13 Albert Lewia. But then reconciled (at least for this efiihe was an English prof in precinetna days. Quitting that, he P<S!LTON R. FEOKM, Attorney became the late Irving Thalherg's 10iH Omaha Netiorszl S£nk Bid assistant for twelve years. Holds PROBATE NOTICE an M. A. degree from Harvard ta the matter of the estate of Isrs.eS . . . yet can produce such a rip- London, deceased. snorting thriller as "Spawn cj Notice Is heresy given: That the the North." creditors of the sai<i deceased will John Garfield studies ecreea roles like an author creating characters . . . fee carries a notebook in which he jots observations on'the personality he is to portray. Luise Rainer enriches the air lines, having taken thirty-eight flights' between Pilintown and
meet the executor of said estate, before me. County Jcfige of Do-agias County. Nebraska, a t the County Court Room, in s&H County, on the 10th day of January. 19SS. sn<2 on the 10th day of March. 1SS6. fit £ o'clock A. M., each day, for the pnrIK»«" of presenting: their claims for exara'nation. adjustment and allowance. Three months are allowed foi tlie creditors to present their claims, from the 10th day of December, 12S8. BSYCE CRAWFORD. 11-1S-SS-ST County Judge
iption to •*«B—^TUJ' tr~**
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New York c.ity (WNS) — Increased picketing of the Hamburg-American ILine-North German Lloyd as a result ot rising feeling of anti-Nazi senlimeat here already hurt their passenger business. Five' thousand pickets the Court may grant-tha same, enter protesting against fascist race and a decree of helrshtp. ssiH dec~ee that further stMnistraiion of said estate religious persecut'ons bid the be dispensed with. . Bremen farewell on her last sailBRYC22 CUAViTPOFiD. ing. . I2-3-5S—St. . . County
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is an investment -which brings ycz nca crccer^if Eiiy-two weeks out of the y e a r . . . deepening the Jewish consciousness and helping transmit the Jewish heritage to the rising generation.
Keep Up Your JEWI FREES: Sufescxiption
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• If )rou haven't already paid yonr 1938 s^bscnp!io2? do it today - - • Ir your children are no! subscribers, give them £ sisbsaJptioa as an appreciated gift — If your neighbor is a non-subscriber, make sure lie Is added to the Jewish Press Family.
THE JEWISH PRESS, DEDICATED TO' JEWRY, OFFERS..... Comprehensive' covering of local, national 'Interpretative editorial pollcj- wHcls. keeps th'ci reader abreast of .the latest devclopracats la ish life. - - •
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In the Ccninty Court o£ Douglas County, Nebraska. In the Matter of the Estate of Ida May Hardy. Decelsea. To the heirs-at-law, creditors, and all other persons interested la said estate: • You are hereby notified that a petition filed in this *Court on the 30th day ot November, 1938, by Arthur W. Hardy alleging that Ida May Hardy died on the 3rd day of March, 1934. Intestate; that a t the time of her death she was a resident of the State of Illinois and that she Tras. possessed of the following described real estate, situated In Douglas County, Nebraska, to-wit: South 6 f t of "West 87.6 f t of I/ot 5 and West S7.6 ft. of Lot S, In Block 6. Kountze and Addition an Buth's But A t n to the Cty of Omaha, a s surveyed, ' platted and recorded, and known a s 621-623 South 17th Street; £3 andd 24 and the South T a s Lots'23 11 ft. of Tax-XiOt. 25, and the South East S0.7S ft. of Tas Lot 26, all in Section, Twenty-two (22K Township Fifteen (15), Kaage Thirteen (13) East, in Douglas County, Nebraska, as surveyed, platted and recorded, and known a3 614-515-618-620 South 10th Street. That said petitioner has an interest la said real estate being the surviving spouse of said deceased; said petitioner prays that a hearing be had on said petition, that notice .thereof ba given as required by layr, and that upon said hearing a decree'of .heirBhip be entered and further administration of • said estate be dispensed with. You ere therefore cotifi<?fi that a hearing will be had-or. said petition i" at the County Court Eo-om" o* raid j County.' on the 24t3j day of Decojsbsr. > 183S, a t 3 o'clock,A. ti., &TK?, tfeaj if.I you fail to appear at said time ar.d place and contest the said petition,
KELLEY
S3P Union State "Bank Bldg.
Notice is hereby given tha' ICE, FV rUBUC-ATION OF P E . El,e 11th day c" November, 5S3S, &t a spe- j TiTtON ppe; SETTLEMENT OF *t-'s mee;4*!" o? the stockholders o' ADIV.iNIETFiATlON AC ji*£j-e.c,ji-j-"itel"-ell, tec, vrfiieT> r s ? S B K £t*~'ornsha!. Nebraska. Article iV of' . j n the Oeranty Cotirt of Douglas the Articles of lr,co:-poralior. of saic j Count;;. Nebraska coraper.y v a s c".a!y araeneee w rep.c. In tJie matter o" the estate of as follows: Coldie Berper, Deceased: IV AJ1 persons interested In said matCe.pSts.1 Etocfe fiT are feerpfcr foffHefi that on the *I^e Eiitfcoriz'&d cs.p^tE.1 Etock cf the j 16th d&r of November, 193S. Louis corporation ehe.1! be Q}1^ EUBSrec j Berper fiisc a potUion in said County Thousand ffiecnoo.OC) Ooliars. to be I Court, pr&rSne that h!f? final admlnfilricled ta*o one .thousand {10B0J 1 istration accoiint AIJC] herein be setof t h e v-Z-T ralua of One H u n - tled end Rllcpetl anil that he be dls(tOB.O';) DoJJare esch, all of i ensrpec! frcs-m. his tn.'»=t as executor which etocfe sbala be common. &nc | and that a hearine- will be had on said shall be faUy P£Ja fits •- non assess-1 petition before saki Court on th« lOtn &t)le vrhen 5ss"eS, Stock shsl! be Ss- flay of ^ December-, 1S3S, enfl t h i t if Eiied only np-on the vote o£ a majori- you faJl to app«s.r before eaid Court ty oi tlie £ioefc?ioi3ers. on the Fsjc ICfh «lar o? E>ecembcr, Dated at Omaha. • Nebraska, this iO3S, at P o'clock A. M.. and contest ss-ii" peiiiion. the Court may grant H i t day of November. 0BS8. . liTAXPON the prR.rer o ' pn)fl retUion, enter a Ev OKOX H.. HTCHEL.1* decree of heirship. and make such President other and further orders, allowances F. E. MA s.nd fiecrees. as to this Court may seem proper, to the er.c that all matters oertaining: to paid estate may be la {he Presence of: finally settled find, determined. PHIL.IP M. KL.TJTSNI Attest: ERYCE CRAWFORD. 11-18-SS-4T. U-18-3S-5T Coonty •
Orchids forThe two S'axies, Rosenbloom and Baer, who will stage a fight for the benefit of a mevie charity. Jack Benny, who will receive no royalties on the "Jack Benny Mystery Violin," which win soon be on the market as a trick gadget. Benny - allowed the use of his name to help a friend In need. Ben Bard,, who received special recognition for "services rendered the disabled veterans" at the soldiers' home. He has continued his late wife's practice of sending gifts, and turns his theater over to the men one night of each play.
WEBB, BEBER, KLUT2NICK KELLEY, Attorneys
Chattanooga, Tenn. (WNS)Lookout Mountain overlooking this city where the late Adolph S. Ochs started his journalistic career -will become the site of a permanent memorial to the man who built the New York Times into the greatest newspaper in America. The memorial will take the form of an observatory and museum to be known aB the Adolph S. Ochs Observatory and Museum, which -57111 house exhibits depicting the history, geography and geology of the territory to be seen from the mountain. The museum will be erected in Chattanooga a n d Lookout Memorial Park which wa3 created at Ochs* suggestion. The museum will cost $25,000 which will be raised by local subscription while the site will be -furnished by -thf! National Park Service, wHich will also provide the labor.- • •
An actual case is recorded la New York this year. Oh, yes . . . tion) . . • they nave bought a farm the Talmud of a turn that f M 6Xla New York state where they Ode's . . . ' ' e * *y atoning for plan to be together six mcntlis £
With "Muskeieesr" rolled up, the Ritzes are loose again. A.1 Harry Coin aad Darid Selzexplained to a pal that he has 'a dramatic part in the picture . . . cick announce the jobs of "Gold-
Everyone is urged to attend the A. Z. A. Bums' Brawl Sunday night at the Eagles, Hall. Committees are? putting forth their best efforts tb make this affair a big success. VD,4n't forget to wear your old clothes. Tickets may be purchased A continuous barrage of faked at the door for 75 cents per punches between John Garfield couple. and his 185-pound boxing • opponent for a scene in "They Made The next regular meeting of the Me a Criminal" finally got on the B'nai B'rith •will be on Monday, nervea of Director Curtiz. "Cut December 12. It!" he shouted, "A punch, on de nose is a punch on de nose. Vy Mrs. Max Harris and daughter, should ve do eet tvice ven vonce Betty Lee, spent last week-end is already too much!?!" visiting relatives in Fremont, Neb. Charlie Adler, t h e addled Miss Toby Katelman of Wash- Yacht Club boy, entered the suington, D. C , has for the past few pervisor's office, wearing a long weeks been visiting in Council Jace. ®'I want ;^y name changed Bluffs.. Miss Katelman is formerly of Council Bluffs, and Is now employed at the Capitol in Washington. • (Continued from Page 1 ) , Mr. and Mrs. Max Shostak and ions, Larry and Dick, are leaving part of him. soon for Le Mars, la., where they Should I say thi3 to Mr. Dolan? plan to make their home. tfo! • I would answer him:- "Well, Mrs. A. Gross Is planning to Mr. Dolan, Herschell Grynsspan is leave this week-end for Los An- the symbol of our despair. A little geles, where she will remain for boy raising his hand vainly agalnst^ruthless force . . . A child th'e entire winter. striking with his fist in a den . Oh, Mr. Mrs. George Steinberg, accom- of hungry wolves . panied by her daughter, Mrs. Joe Dolan, do you know . . . this is Radi ziner, and her' granddaugh- between you and me . . . someter, Sandra Raduziner, will leave times even I have crazy visions: I Sunday for Phoenix, Ariz., where nvent a bullet so cunning that merely at my bidding it goes . . . they plan to spend the winter. it goes over mountains and oceans ... .goes directly to the name and A regular meeting of the Coun- address I have written on it. Do cil Bluffs Talmud Torah will be you know where it goes?" held Monday evening, December "I guess, Mr. Segal, it goes to 5" at 8:30 at the synagogue. A special program has been ar- a certain big house, to a certain ranged for this meeting. Cantor heart in Germany. Yes, Mr. Do'an, but I mast Aaron Edgar of the Beth El Syna« of that. I,, the Jew, p gogue, Omaha, will present sev- not speak d in i the h high dignity eral vocal selections, and Mr. Ar- shall stand thur Rapport of the Omaha Tal- and valor of the civilized man mud Torah will speak on the pres- who knows from history that jusp tice marches to strike down the ent J e w i h i t t i ent Jewish situation. in good time. All members are requested to destroyer "But what of thi3 little boy, attend. Mr. Segal?" : . "My mind abjures him, .'jay heart embraces him." (Copyright, 1938, by Seven Arts Feature Syndicate)
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The third session of the Council Social Service committee was held Tuesday evening at the Center. Mrs. Harry Bailin Is the council chairman of the group. Miss :-Oda Edelman and Miss Frances" Kalin are leading the group.
. . I don't Jte it . . . in the cript it says I'm 'Dopey.'" Tlie uper looked hin over then slowsQoo& his heafi, "Can't do it." v'hy not?" . r-ezianded Adler. •Because you fit ths name!"
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