'
1E$. tine Interests of tHe Jewish People
By M i 8EQM»
'.'.'• Grave Matter
•' Now; having -wept these many SMraths, we-may pause and laugh a' bit.- In tact, we shall laugh on account -of two • • graveyards;. Entered, aa'Second C3as» Mall Matter on January SI, 1931« OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1939 thongh some may say, there . is foatofflce. of Omaha, Nebraska, under, the Act of March 5.1879 nothing to laugh at even in one graveyard and he laughs at two. ' Yet the traveling salesmen who make West Virginia do get some pleasure out of the two graveyards, even w-hen business is bad. Notable figures in Reform laWhen ordere are. so scarce that daisia will gather this evening in it's hard to make expenses, one Detroit io celebrate the fortieth traveling salesman will say to ananniversary of Rabbi Leo M. other. Have you heard the story Franklin's coming to Temple Beth of the two. graveyards? And when El in that city. the story has been told, the eveFor seven years previous to his ' ning is brighter. Followers of Mufti Present going to Detroit, Rabbi Franklin • Yes, in the West Virginia town Noted Rabbi to Address occupied the pulpit of Temple IsTerms oa Which there are two Jewish graveyards, Dinner of Beth El, rael here. Ee was also founder of to Confer «ven though the number of living Temple the Reform congregation in LinJews in the town is not many. coln. The two graveyards lie side by HEAD CHICAGOTEMPLE : HIT AT MODERATES During his stay in Omaha, side, though in one the number 1S92-18SS, Rabbi Franklin was of inhabitants is far more than Opponents of Mufti Scoff active in civic and communal afJoint Committee of Two thb other. . fairs. He was born in Cambridge t Congregations in at Rebel-Chiefs' •"• "When one asks. How is It that City, Indiana,.in IS70 and came a small community like this has to Omaha directly after his gradCharge Claims two graveyards? The matter is uation from the Hebrew Union elaborately- explained: Members of the men's clubs,of Cairo (JTA) — Back from Sy- College' There used' to be only one Temple Israel and the Beth El ria, where they had conferred graveyard until the unhappy con- Synagogue will hear Dr. Joshua L. New York X JTA) The greatest relief fund raising ventttr* with the exiled ex-Mufti of Jertroversy • ".; arose. This occurred Liebiaan, rabbi of the Congregausalem, five Palestine Arab leadin the history of American Jewry emerged this week from ife* when Mr. X died. Mr. X was no tion Anshe Maarlv of Chicago, ers revealed that three. condition tmifieation of the 1939 campaigns of the American Jewish Joint Jew, but he had married one of had been set for fulfillment beDistribution Committee, the United Palestine Appeal and £b* the Jewish 'girl?'and. a fine genfore an Arab delegation approvtleman he was. Everybody agreed National Coordinating Committee Fund into the United ed by the Moslem leader would tint" death certainly had made a Morris E. Jacobs William participate in the British-Arab•Appeal for Refugees a n d mistake-in taking Mr. X . Jewish conferences in London. — . -.. I seas Needs. At the election of officers of»k .. Mrs, X said her husband must The atmoimcement by the the Omaha Community Chest, ; They, demanded (1) That Britthat Morris E. Jacobs has been •fee buried among her own people men, Rabbis Abba Hillel Silw? William L. Holzman, who last ain recognize that the Balfour chairman of the Pubin the- Jewish-cemetery and so it and Jonah B. "Wise, mentioned -*a year served as second vice-presi- appointed licity Committee of the Chest. Mr. Declaration, under which she was was done with him. ' In- death as goal except to say that the dent, was this year named first Noted German Writer pledged to facilitate establishment t o Jacobs suceeds Frank - Pogarty, in life, Mr. X resided in the house imum requlrment was at leWC, vice-president of the Chest. Mr. of a Jewish national home in PalThe JewiBh Community CenAddress Hadassah, headed the publicity connaitof Iprael. three to four times the su»i* Holzman has for the past several who estine, had bene fnlfilled, Bince ter's dancing class, under ttie diB'nai B'rith by all the agencies durlnC years been a member of the Board tee in 1938. But there was a minority in 400,000 Jews had settled In Palrection of Miss Rosalie Alberts, raised 1938, but it was learned that * of Governors. Henry Monsky, long a. leader estine; and that Jewish immigrathe town; Is this a way? they talented dancer, will start on Fri- goal Dr. Josef Duenner. celebrated of $20,000,000 has beea nfli asked. To bury a goy among the • It was announced by Alvln in Community Chest activities, is tion henceforth be halted; ( 2 ) sociologist, will speak at day, January 27. ' 'Jews! Would it continue,-to be Johnson, General Chairman of the a member of the Board of Gover- that an Arab State, with a Jewish German These classes will give all chil- for 1939. a joint meeting of the Council a Jewish cemetery if a goy abided Community Chest Drive for 1939. nors. Allocation minority, be constituted; (3) that Bluffs chapters of Hadassah and dren the opportunity to learn the there? • adherents of the es-Muftl's op-: the B'nai B'rith on Wednesday, art of dancing, to acquire poise The first $9,500,000 ^ ponent, Ragheb bey Nashashibi, They were answered: Mr. X and grace, and to develop an ap- be used to meet present former mayor of Jerusalem, and was a fine gentleman and, being preciation of dancing. Because ments of the or^anicatlons W leader of the Arab moderate, be such a fine gentleman, he ' was of the emphasis oc individual in- lows: J. D. C, $5,000,0001 tj ?-« excluded from the conferences Jew enough for us. And, besides, f struction, classes will be limited A., $2,500,000 and (he C<W and that the Muftlsts be the sole he was married to a Jewish' girl. to 1C. ating Committee, f S.000,000. Palestine Arab representatives. And, moreover, he would stay A nominE.1 fee of 25 cents per remaining $1 P.fiOn.opo, or buried. • we?b for Center members and 50 ever part n' thf *»wount is To raise funds for its new projFormer Esiles " So there was a schism. The cents for Eon-members will be ect of refurnishing and redecoratThe Arab leaders, who were reobstinate minority said, No' our ing the Center reception room, released from exile in the bones will not rest at peace in the Women's Division of the Jew- cently Rabbi Joshua IJ. XJcbman Seychelles Islands, said to the exthis cemetery. And the upshot ish Community Center will hold a Mufti was prepared to go to Lonof it all was that they bought ad- speak'on Tuesday, January 24, at party at the Center. don himself if the conditions are joining land made a cemetery of a dinner sponsored jointly by the Objectionable Features of card The committee, headed by Mrs. accepted by the British Governit for the comfort of their bones. two ^organizations. Schacht Plan Said Julius Stein, chairman, and Mrs.ment. The conditions Are to be Well, dyins continued in the Rabbi laebman is often pointto Be Out William Levey and Mrs. Abe Yen- forwarded to London by the Egypcommunity -(r>s <3"tag must) and ed out as one of the few child ger, co-chairmen, has distributed tian Premier, Mohammed Mahthe most of th~ dead -went to theprodigies who achieved success in Berlin (JTA) — An altered hundreds of tickets and reports moud Pasha. old cemetery, and a few to thelater life. He entered the Hebrew new. From time to time Jews Union College when only 12 years plan to finance Jewish emigration the -returns are most prosiising. S Notes! Writer, Lecturer by the -V from neighboring towns came to of age and was ordained a rabbi presumably - designed to remove the Tl, ^« some of the features of the SchJerusalem (JTA) — The exilbe 'buried there, and they were at the age of 20. For two years v.'rmber selects h*. ed ex-Mufti of Jerusalem was rebedded in one cometery or thehe studied at the Hebrew Univer- acht plan which are objectionable f raerabere <»S a«* to foreign nations, was presented ported by Arab circle to have or- other, according to the orthodoxy sity in Jerusalem. to Chancellor Adolf Hitler by dered cessation of hostilities in ^f I f r o , yet On Tuesday, «'E.rrs," ot their survivors. n Now the spiritual leader of the Karl Blessing, Reichsbank direct Palestine- to create &- favorable atic« Sanwe', p.ofpJ v '.' (And I have.it o excellent'au- Oldest congregation in tor, and was the subject e l interTV, mosphere for the'••terthcoming tore, will epeftL. Tirf, thority that in one graveyard they Chicago,Jewish Rabbi Liebman is conministerial discussion. Londoa conferences as" British plcee «J the Crr rrested as--peacefully as- in the sidered of the country's outstando" ai« troops .comied tfaa. csuatrr, sziz"Paleelise X""..-i ." other.) Although details of fh9 flan kreport ing rabbis. He is personally acisj;.. .arris •sziS. -.arresting "srsspects. /^cc-i Now itlfgune to. pasa that In. a quainted with anumoer of cele- were lacking, it was believed that -Sam Seber Chapter p B'ESi Yisro-J 1,'V'g.£i± Je-srfe •&•&?& E!sis In eonlisIts insipiration' came from Brit* town not far away a man was run brities. Recently Rabbi Idebman t Jewish Wetrare uing Arab terrorism that belied 'oyetbjr.-a' train and mangled hor- visited the leading Christian The- ish sources regarded as friendly a jfcti£his. reports, tbat the exiled es-Msfti to the Reich. Informed quarters Federationribly, indeed.... Only one. thing ological. Seminaries and at the CofiinSttee j of noted of ,Jerasal«Si had ordered "cessaexpressed the opinion that the orco deemed certain to- the coroner as dnner Tuesday will relate some Of iicitfeHon c literary As Its social service program tion- of .hostilities. Two Jewish igin would be traced to Montagu iM r and Ani£?ll he looked at the mutilated fig- Ma experiences T wnilt: on this Norman, Governor of the Bank of the Sam Beber Chapter, A. Z. A.watchmen were killed- near Ban nre: The man was a Jew. tour. 100, will sponsor Its second anjAfter fleelns from ' Killer's ^ S f ^ ^ S K . ' Shcmen. A milkman was El£in ir. • This .was.apparent enough In ; A Joint committee of the two England. Blessing was reported to nual city-wide old clothes camGenaacy in 1SES, Dr. Duenner „""» ' ...a.v.a . ' the Yiddish . letter found in : one congregations Is arranging the af- have put the plan into concrete paign, January- 22 through Feb- Jerusalem. One Jewish supernum- became s. foreign correeponaent A U S e d ,r Recaptions erary was killed End another was for Swiss, French and Jewish pa-1 «<s^.;f> ' p omtrdctee, whenever possible, t© find » of his coat pockets. It, was: from fair. Reservations may be mads shape. ruary 5. The chapter is working wounded in Eaifa. A German oa: J J Ef tuti;. hornet. Tli.e J. 3 . C. ^fil! t a woman in Poland, evidently his at the office of either congregaInformed Quarters state that in conjunction with Miss Frisch Jewess pers and .has Just returned from ' --'^' ---•••• was slain In the attack on K . Samuel Irrefi in TeM"j c o n t i r a ; c i i p €-:itc-ns?vf- p r o g r a m 1SETT Kr. •wife, for she told of the bar Blessing, in his talk with Chancel- of the Jewish Welfare Federation a bus near tion* Haifa. Arab terrorists an -extensive tour • of " Europe, \ jYj,'e tncl 1E v e i l coQViE,iE.tec!. r~r-J>. j rfonri-trR mlrvah of his son that had Just p.ifi p.nfi lor Hitler, reviewed the entire and Mrs. T, Tully of the Wom-shot and killed •where he steeled current COEulj a Jew in Tiberias. | of. occurred, recited other tender deJewish emigration problem. The en's Division of the Federation tions in Eastern «.nd Cent s.1 E u - I >.' seajBoi;. tickets vill *£i-1 tails of Jewish family life: fact that the scheme was-discuss- for Jewish Service. rope and Palestine. mit. Individual tickets may be 1Eastern Europe a.nd Central . Yes, said the Jews of the comed at a conference of the Finance, A native of Bars.TiE.,' Dr. Persons having old clothes to procured at the box c'lice the | munity in which he died, this man Economics and Interior minisrties ner is the descendant o* a Israelis evening ol the lecture or f.t the S : was a Jew and it is for us to . The Tij.!i«?(I indicated that Hitler has shown donate the Center are asked to rabbinical -fainilx. Ke yras one call either Eddie Dolgoff, geaoffice of 'the JevcisR bury him -with all the decencies definite interest in it. of the first.to write a pamphlet eral chairman of the campaign, Center. and ^pftlprnent in Palestine •*•« -of Jewish burial. There were the Further Talks •vrarning of the growth, of- Nazi JA 4410. or the co-chairman, Joe many thousands who must I**-"* two Jewish cemeteries in the influence. Under the pen name It can be taken for granted that Guss, WE 2261. Members of the Geraiato sud oUscr couritria*- 3c. neighboring town and the more PARENTS INVITED ! of Germaincirs, he Trrote a-diary the changes in the new draft of chapter will pickup any contribufirdfr in PPI-?.T<P rtpptructlon, Ti- *>*• .• Orthodox said he must be buried of • his experiences in the Saar the Schacht plan affect most tion, BY HEBREW CLASS; FC jsnair. t^'TiF: exisUngr inBtJf.uS"*** In the .new one. What was there New members of the B'nai caffi.p2.ign. the financial angles of for t h e benefit o£ .Tews i n PuJpr-Alephs participating and their to quarrel about? It's all right B'rith were 1 honored Monday drastically The members ot the E c'c.locVr tine EEL for t h e thousands *•**••• There will be no admission the scheme.. The new plan is also with MB, every one said. nignt a t a stag- n e l d a t the Jew- believed to emphasize the need of districts are: South, Harold SlutzMembers of the Jewish, com- charge for the lecture. Hebrew class, taught by Arthur ]i»\-f. rprnp iiiprp tv recent y^^**. ~ The .letter showed that "he-hati ish Community Center. Three speedy emigration of Jewish kin, Paul Sacks, Gerald Bernstein munity, have been invited to atRapport, -were hosts to their par- prTT-?Tifi7ir tb.p npbnllfling ot s^>* Joe Resnick; north, Walter tend the open forum discussions been, a good Jew. indeed, what hundred members of the lodge ents and the 'board of the Talmud courilry through the promoting. "f»t and to.provide a Govern- and Greenberg, Nonnan Ruback, Ben . with hiB Bon having just been bar were present. On the : program workers Torah at Wednesday rJcnff " 3 ; - immifratioiL, colonization *•.*<£ guarantee that Jewish aged Miller, Irving Forbes, Lester held every Thursday evening in mitzvah and all that. The tiltra- was a ping-pong exhibition match, ment the club rooias of the Jewish Tum Ha-Sefer" in accordance iprif! pivrbanp finrt other aotjviita* and children who have to remain Abramson and Harold Nesselson: ' Orthodox felt that a man like him several boxing and • wrestlingin the country "will be adequately Community Center following the •with an ancient 1-Iebrev custom tc rniar—P tTip absorptive < central, Yale Richards, Norman . certainly belonged to the new matches and a dance review. that cotcmeniorates the coinple- o.i the cor.n'rr. broadcast of the Town Hall of cared for. Kukliu, Harry Fox, Harold Habcemetery. ~ ' . As a special feature 15 Sioux tlon ol s. book t y the clssr,. l: Indicating that common ground ler, George Shafer and Milton the Air. S. The National He had quite a funeral, fol- Indians presented a program of had Tea van? eeT'eC, by m.emberE ot CommiUce Next Thursday evening at S:15 been found for further disGuss, and west, Leonard Lewis, Fund, Inc., lowed as he was by a "long line war dances aud. songs. the Dcbor&b society. There are the subject for.discussion will be cussion, Director George Rublee tb.p p r f r y coifemod wltfe of autos, and there were mapy The Breadbreakers are meeting of the Intergovernmental Refu- Holland Lewis, Bernard Tracten- "Do • Monopolies Ketard or AdEC pupils in the class. pr-oblem v' German refugees more than a minyon at the kad- each Thursday at 12:15 at thegee Bureau, Assistant Director berg and Malcolm Tractenberg. vance Business Recovery?" Paring- to this country, will dish service that was held later. Smart Spot. Members of theRobert PelU Reichsbank PresiNorman Ruback is chairman of ticipating will be Andrew Welles, A basketball game -will be CENTER ORCHESTRA it?. y o " t o" lieipinp tbese • His- bones abided In the new cem- lodge are invited to attend. the Phone Squad. played at the Jewish. Community corporation lawyer and member dent Hjalmar Schacht and BlessMEETS OK MOKDAYS pc.iiiPf O-.pmseivFP to their ; etery to the great satisfaction of The next4meeting will.be held ing met a second time in an hourof the National Industrial Coafer- on Sunday, January 2P, betweee its .founders. -..-•• on Monday, February. 6. ence Board, and Tiurmaa Arn- the Omaha Jobbing- Cora?E.c.v and. long talk during which further, There was pity forhis wife who HehearBals the newl or- I ar> old, assistant attorney general o* the Eanini Brews to raise views were exchanged on the emi<as she Bald in the letter) was PROF. FINKELSTEIN Con- < for the Onraha World-: the United States. gration problem. The mission . counting: the days'', that nxuet, Shoe Fund. jI ter crclisctrs s.rr t c be bpM. pvt ''active though inforAmerica's Town Meeting oj theFree elapse before the:happy reunion WILL SPEAK HERE maintained A prelidSnery match Trill t e jMop-fi»y p-"-PT!*nfr p.t s o'cioct mal contact" with Schacht, deAir Is heard by over a. tcocsand iei method* wl^h her husband . in America. plsyed by the 'Hussell Sports Girls | the Center. The orchestra £ to pave the way for a third local discussion groups who gath- and 1P set bf They wrote to. her:' "It Is with - On; Sunday, February 26/ the signed last •week for the lirel time, the Kitty Clover Girls. | exchange of views. The er weekly to listen to the debate great pain that we must give you- Beth El'l synagogue will- be host form Finfcel, rrpmlr.cr.t O~->?. rr-v.Between games there vrill be a j amended plan. It was believed, is to a regional .gathering f c . and then permit the EuSiesce to progr£.m gircs by local radio ar- Eician, O on the sad news of the death of your directs the v,ev~ project. the Reichsbank's answer to Rubvoice their opinions concerning tists. Afimission "Brill be 25 • cents | [ PerspriB Interested its becoming husband. He was killed by a servatire Congregations for anlee's questions with regard to the all-day conference, _ • train. We ^are. happy to say that meznberE of the jrroup bp.^e beeiRabbi David A. Goldstein of the the broadcast. per person. he was-buried with all the decen- • The feature of the meeting will original Schachf approval. *r.rited Jo bring their iustrumentF Beth El Synagogue opened the The ' discussions opened at theDes Moines Jewish Welfare Fedcies that our faith, prescribes*!or be an address by Professor Louis to the rest reb.earEs.1, this, com•Diic.oe; settled i n utct ing Monday. .one--8offaithful as lie- was. Please Fihkelstein, Provost of the Jew-Reichsbank. A. 90-minute session eration drive at a meeting MonPi TI in the 17th century. was understood to have ended; day evening. accept -S.B a - gift from us this ish ' Theological seminary. with "Dr. Schacht saying In effect: • money, order. lor. $50. which.-.we For its 1939 quota, Des Hoines "I have got to talk this over with .have collected:among iis." BETH EL TO HOLD will raise $GS,C0O. Oiaaha's my colleagues." Despite the pess- Jewry • In due time there, was a reply last spring was 49,000. Des from Poland: CONSECRATION RITE imistic atmosphere in which the quota 1 day u.'J*>has about one-third the mission is workng, i n formed Moines pm ."br 1J~**What .are yon ',saying? Only X, IVi-oabJ'iw' >. w i j i». * Jewish population of Oraaha. ' The Vaad H'lhr is appealing impressive ceremony will quarters express the belief that today I received a letter, from my be An Forty-three institutions will to the Jews of Omaha to place all held on Friday evening, Febr- It is prehmature to predict its ' husband who is in Pittsburgh. uary s tofee*TEW;S3: FSS benefit. orders for J,l£tzo" and kindred at the Beth El services complete falure. When, he is alive in Pittsburgh, he when 3. e\rpA('i 5*i©xi • chiT'Inp' tli® This-year's campaign is under items -with thslr organixatior,. j 51 entering; students of the Jevrs Swindled . couldn't be' dead in West Vir- Talmud the chairmanship ol Ben Sanders. The entire profits derived from Torah will be formally ci -fif-trcents, be In recent months, it was learn" . ginfa- Go to this'addresa in Pitts- consecrated. these sales vriil be turned over to ed, Jews hare been mulcted four burgh and you will see for youragencies assis.lins the usiortuaate j given a OQfj of ''W'/rs v^\A *"-^-i^ ^V^™-,^^ '^: •US.*- iiOOii, %'»• ifcParticipating in the ceremony Belf that he iB alive. , I am.return- will be Jacob ;Kahz, principal of to five million marks by the BerJe^rs of Europe. .. lin police as the price of passing the ?50." This- book aisr^e is 'wcrtS: C-2.53, s o d the school,-Rabbi David A. Gold- ports. The money, which police Members of the community * i A*committee went' 'to •Pltts- stein, ' rt' *hp and Cantor. Aaron Edgar, have been asfced wbea solicited said would eventually be used la . hurgh. behalf of poor Jews, 1133 in a Thirty members of the Chevra for their order to tell the name "No," said Mr. Katzeneleabo- and put on Mr. Katzenelenbogen's special account to the credit of Kadisha of the B'Eai Jacob Anshe of the dealer with /whom the .or- j for SS.0C-' Sholom Synagogue n e t Sunday at der is to be placed, as all orders : gen (if that was his name),- "I : . . "Here, buddy, you can wear the Berlin police presidency wasn't killed by a train." Marked down for illegal levies the home of A. Hirsch for the or- will be filled through the regular mine home." Inr 1 dealers as far as possible. Only i "But this is your wife's letter, • That's how it had happened: are said to be Berlin's 900 weal- ganization's annual supper. in cases where the dealer is not isn't It? It was" found in your The thief had perished miserably thiest Jews as listed In the pub- Mrs. B. Shaftoa, Mrs. A. Jacob, and Mrs. A. Hirsca compris- co-operating in the venture, -rill coat pocket-" ' --• . •• wearing Mr. Katzenelenbogen's lished ^returns of the registration g Mr. Katzenelenbogen saw. ev-coat which contained the letter of Jewish property ordered by ed the committee arranging Uie orders be filled through another ifo(i source. .j erything clearly tnen: Several from Mr. Katzenelenbogen's wife. Field Marshall Hermann Goering dinner. Following the dinner officers days before Tils reported' demise Orders n a y be pboned in to j last June. The listed persons : on the railroad track, ho had been So, as .the traveling, salesmen must hand over a "Helldorf con- for the coming year were elected! the office of the Vaad,,JA OSS", j held up and robbed in Pittsburgh. say, each cemetery, the old andtribution," named for Wolf von They are B. Shafton. president; And what thieves there ""are in the new, now has a goy in it. Helldorf, Berlin police president, A. Hirsch, Tice-presidest, and C. QIEL SCOUTS the world! They take even a The less-orthodox of the. West before they are granted passports. Kaplan, superinteadent. man's; coat. But what can a man Virginia town laugh: ''But we No Jewish welfare or emigration Members collected $14.50 -which. do? He had tremhled in every have the .better goy in our ceme- organization has so far seen any was turned over to the Jewish The Girl Scouts of Troop 4 x"1' bone when the goy pressed the tery. He was a fine gentleman. of the money collected. National Fund. meet ou Sunday, January £2, at "be •>r>.fpre'ice.u » 4 elatott, pistol into his ribs and ;> said, And what have you? You have a the Jewish Community Center. ; tie'. r»-'-> f -V" "Take; off that coat." It was from thief." The first four American synaMesabers of the troop have be^n A section of Curacao settled by; 10*.*. va new suit, too. • (Copyright, 1939, by Seven Arts Jewish farmers is kno-sm as tlie gogues •were built by the Jews of requested to bring their needleon pas**.). Jodenwyk. Feature Syndicate) work to this cseetias. -, ' Curacao. The thief took olf his own coat
rra—
Former Ofnaha Rabbi Honored
Named by Chest
dered
Three Relief Groups Unite for Drive • to Raise 20 Million Dollars • During Cornier Year FUNDS ARETO BE DIVIDED
JOSEF DUENNER
WILL LECTURE IN CO,BLUFFS Dancing Classes
to Begin Jan. 27
1 1 PLAN FOR EMIGRATION IS GIVEN HITLER
CordPartyWill Raise Funds for J- C. C. Decoration
jEKH
TOWN HALL
'RlfH MEMBERS AT STAG MONDAY
THURSD.
PLAY BENEFIT
<*>•
DES I K S TO MISE $66,000 E
SELL
An Offer to
• JEWISH
m " ,
\"tr **^ -j \ V * » - ^
^tr^mm A V l .
IP< <ivn CM4U
^ ^ rV ^ " A-*s ^v^v*», t«.vi.<**-A*»*W*4
Chevra Kadxsha Names Officers
^ ^ *•
•**rf»»^™*M
fT^°i
^'!»^^ .^*ft^r; *f^V ^" "j -^*. ^J^
4
^T'-'^
.
fn^it^,,
, „ • " " f,»
THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1939
Page 2
pointedly anti-Hitler and exi»0Mf Ions la. Vienna. .One was that he Hitlerism. - -. . ,._ "LET'S SEE IF IT EXPLODES* By BRESSLEF had regained the help of MussoSEEK INFORMATION Mr. Bryan gt.ve *- private show*" lini—the other that, menaced by ing of this picture for President "Information is wanted of the Inevitable NaziHcatibn of AusRoosevelt and his family Decem* tria, Schuschnigg had made up JOSEPH BRAVERMAN, alias .her £7 et the time vhm the chief his mind to take a-last stand and JACK GORDON, who disaptjsrccutive -vas drafting U i n«H peared from his home In New fight for his country. March 10 York City in August 1938 and Julien Bryan, world famous re- sr.fre to congress on the threat ot porter', and cameraman, is to pre- dictatorships JE this country. Mr. I will never forget how Vienna since then has failed to comsent his latest motion picture, Bryan has appeared once before looked on that "morning of March municate with his wife, Anne, "INSIDE NAZI -GERMANY," ot in Omaha for the Ad-Sell league 10, after the plebiscite had been or to contribute to her support, the Paramount theater on Sun- several years ago. announced. If in general the so that she is now in great By Former Officer of the Austrian Army need. This man is 30 years of day, January 22, for-one day only The negatjx-os ivere- smuggled phrase that the "whole popula• , o . ' . I, i with two performances, one in the out of Germany during the nine tion rose as one man" is a com- age, -born In .New Yorjc City, This is tbe second In a series choren, all of which were willing monplace, in this hour it was the 5 ft. 6 in. tall, weighs 175afternoon and one in the eve- months of the making of the pic* of articles on conditions pre- to sacrifice their individual prin- truth—always, of course, exclud- pounds, his black wavy hair, ning. ture through several channels and ceding and following the Aus- ciples and ideologies in order to ing the Nazis. All the people I blue eyes, is an egg' candler were developed, and printed In This picture, which is the only trian Anschluss as told by a present a united front against the met. on- this or the following day, by occupation. Anyone aware New York. complete uncensored film of Nazi victim whose personal views Nazis. were they Liberal, Socialists, or of his location is requested to. • • ~' Ticket sales for the picture In and experiences are humanly Omaha have been very brisk for He. could have counted, • of Conservatives, Gentile or Jew— communicate with the Nationportrayed-In this gripping rev- course, no matter what their politics, race al Desertion Bureau, 67 West all the Jewish organithe two shows and a complete sell elation of fact.—THK K1>1- zations on who had only the worst or religion—thought of one thing 47th St., Few York City." out, with no standing room, U asTOR. ' and one alone—fight against to expect, and he was sure to sured by Sunday, January :2?, Kflr Hitler. find the Catholics solidly behind cording to headquarters of th$ A glaring mistake of Sehus- him. The army was in his hands, genuine exaltation engulfed committee at the Hotel Font** chnigg'a was that he did not seem also the Viennese police, who, al- theA city and the countryside. nelle. Tickets can be reserved to realize that in modern times though 20 per cent Nazi, were not Nearly every house in Vienna was now by calling .the headquarters, an absolutely orthodox financial likely to commit acts of mutiny with the colors of the Webster 2123. -and economic principle does not against the overwhelming major- beflagged republic—red-white-red. All pasnecessarily secure a favorable ity who remained loyal to the sersby were wearing the emblem public opinion. When he abdi- government. . of the Fatherland Front in their cated, the Austrian exchange was All Austria was expecting a buttonholes, many strangers practically without restrictions, a command from its leader! When were greetingand each for the Cossack Choir very high coverage of gold on Schuschnigg delivered his speech first time with theother cry, "Hell bank notes obtained and the bud-in Parliament on February . 2 4 , Austria." New York (JTA) — American get had been balanced for years General Platoff't "Don CoMMk said he meant to go "so far •From morning • until- night disapproval of Nazi treatment.of —-facts which meant nothing to and Choir" of twentyrflve, traj»|d and no further In his concessions crowds of people surged through Jews and Catholics has reached a people who—like the German to Hitler," he must have seen by the streets excitedly shouting, the point where 61 percent of the singers will appear In Oman* on peoples-had lost all their savings the enthusiastic reaction of the "Red-White-Red, u n t i l we're voters favor a boycott of GermanFriday. February 23, at the Tecbduring the "War and inflation, and populace that they were loyally dead." The officers and soldiers made goods, the American Instinical High School auditorium on* •who did not care a bit about a backing him and willing to fight. of the former Austro-Hungarlan tute of Public Opinion reported.der the auspices of the Oman* free exchange or a balanced bud- Still he did nothing, and where army were waiting for the mobilTeacher's Forum. The great majority see "eye to get—since 10 per cent of them everyone was expecting actions, ization decree; the workmen in The Choir, unique amonaT-museye" with Presiden Roosevelt In were already unemployed or on he ical groups, wan formed sieve* gave them only words. the factories who finaly had man-attacks on dictatorships, surveys relief and had nothing more to years ago in Czecho-Slovakia t4 No teader aged a compromise with the gov- show-up to the time of Hitler's lose. •' present the folk music of Fusala'a ernment, were hoping to be seizure of Austria early in 193S, People who know the mentality It is important here to point of the masses in times of great armed; and the members of the Dr. George Gallup, director of the famed Cossacks. Mrs. Anna Blumberg out another great error of judg- stress, know how changeable their disbanded Heimatschutz and oth- institute said. Tickets may be procured from Funeral services were held ment on Schuschnlgg's part—his moods are, and how they swing, er semi-military organizations, the office of the Forum in the Sunday afternoon at the Jewish Prior to that even, 62 per cent failure to arm the country suffi- within a short space or time, from went to their leaders from hour City Hall. Bryan Funeral Home ' for •' Mra. Anna Harry Greenberg ciently. He did not want to make the highest hopes to the depths to hour, asking whether the order of the voters thought the United Blumberg.who died"on Friday at States would be able to stay out Funeral services were held heavy expenditures' and thus un- of despair. It is certainly impos- to mobilize had come. Germany in existence, Is not antiof a European war, but after the Sunday afternoon for H a r r y her home. Burial was at the Beth- German, but is distinctly and Patronize Our Advertiser* balance the budget—but a large sible to say now what might have, Nazi Minority el cemetery. • ~ Austrian coup 46 per cent said Greenberg, 67, Omaha fruit comrearmament program would have happened if Schuschnigg bad actSurviving Mrs. Blumberg are: they thought the United States At this time it was obvious how mission man for the past 45 attained two important goals si- ed as a leader and as a man who multaneously —— it would have was willing to rl3k everything for much in a minority the Nazis would have to fight Germany years. Mr. Greenberg died early her husband, Samuel H.; a son, Philip H. Lincoln; two sisters, were — especially in Vienna— again within their lifetime. Saturday. built up a powerful ' weapon his ideals. where their marvellous organizaMrs. David Blum of "Washington, Every American can "lift his against the only probably enemy, He had been active in the JewIt is possible that despite any- tion had deceived the public as head" proudly because President ish Community Center, the B'nai D. C , and Mrs. Abraham Levin of Germany, and would have reBaltimore; and one brother, Harduced the number of unemployed, thing he might have done, Hitler to their real strength. For many Roosevelt has protested persecu- B'rith, and other organizations. ry Pelpert of Brooklyn. Tremendous Reductions on Winter Faa&iomai a reservoir out of which the Nazis would have marched, the other months before their constant pa- tion in Germany, Mayor LaGuardSurviving are: his wife, three very shrewdly, were drawing powers would not have moved, rading and shouting had given a ia declared at a testimonial din- sons, David, Dr. Sam Greenberg, and that thousands of Austrlans false impression as to their actual ner for Sidney Hillman, the labor and Dr. A. Greenberg; two daughGeorge Roffman most of •• their followers. would have lost their lives fight- numbers. leader. Hendrlk "Willem van Loon, ters, Mrs. Pearl Alberts and Mrs. George Roffman, 66, of Coun. Mistakes independence. But there But now, with hundreds of the author and historian, urged Ruth Grabols, and five grand- cil Bluffs, died last Saturday aftThis then, was the situation at ing for remained a chance, even if trucks" transformed into govern- at a luncheon that refugees from children. ernoon at a local hospital after the beginning of 19 3 8. There is still only a small one, of preserving ment propaganda cars roaring Germany and other totalitarian suffering a heart attack while at no doubt at all that even on such Austrian Rabbi David A. Goldstein conindependence and west- through the streets, the madly states be given temporary homos ducted the services from the res- business. .. • a fundamentally unsonnd basis, ern culture from Nazi barbarism in America pending what he callAustria could have continued to —and it must be to Schuschnigg's acclaiming crowds, gathered on ed the inevitable collapse of Eur- idence. Burial was in Golden Hill - -Mr: Roffman had been a resident of Council Bluffs for more ex(at as an independent state, if eternal discredit that he did not the sidewalks left little doubt as opean dictatorships. Cemetery. to -where most of the sympathy than 30 years. Hitler, with-his threat of annex- take this chance. . • 5 lay. Surviving him are his wife, ation had not appeared. Of course, one can say that a Fannie; two sons. Mil ton and Returning from a call at the Catholic monarchist -wearing the An unforgivable e r r o r of Harry Zisslin Robert; a daughter, Mrs. Ruth Schuschnigg'a was Ills negligence man of conscience cannot dispose Patriotic Front headquarters, to Hapsburg crown next to his redHarry Zisslin, 85, died Satur- Mezey of Council'Bluffs; a sister, and disregard of this external of the lives, of. others, and that enquire whether my class had not white-red ribbon, while the other menace. Since the War, Austria the paramount purpose should be been called Jor mobilization, and had pinned, under his government day morning at a local hospital Mrs. Ida Sachs of Council Bluffs; had weathered many worse eco- to avoid bloodshed. But history whether I—as a former Austrian emblem, the forbidden badge of after an illness of several weeks. lour brothers, Sam.- of Council A resident of Omaha; for thirty, Bluffs, Roy, Abe and'ieadore, all nomic conditions than those was never made that way—nor officer^—had not been ordered to the Socialists. None of us cquld report tor duty, I met an old believe that we had been -fooled years, M. Zisslin. is survived by of Omaha. "which, prevailed during the last ever will be! To my mind, the chief decision friend, whom I knew to be an arthree daughters. Miss Sarah Weis- • Services were held -Sunday at months of her Independence, and all these many days, and that ev- man and Mrs. Jacob Goldware of the Jewish Funeral Home. one can only repeat and repeat to be made was, whether the peo- dent Nazi.. He looked very de- erything was about to be lost. Omaha and' Mrs. Samuel Greenagain, that a true statesman ple were willing to fight for their pressed and when I asked him, Suddenly, at about s e v e n house of New York; two sons, Brussels (JTA) —Anti-Semitwould have been full cognizant ideals; and I am unalterably con- "Well, boy, where are your bat- o'clock, the rumor spread like Samuel Zisslin of New York and ism "is unworthy of a civilised vinced that if the call to arms talions now?" he admitted frankof the Impending danger. wildfire that not only the plebisbeen given by Schuschnigg; ly that the votes for independence Lt.-Col. Dr.- Daniel Franklin of nation," Pierre-Marie Cardinal For Schuschnigg to -go to had overwhelming majority of the would far outnumber the others cite was to be called off, but that Manila, P. I.; 14 grandchildren Gerlier, Archbishop of Lyon, deBerchtesgaden, was cerjtainly a the Sehuschnigg was going -to resign would have followed vol- ''if the plebiscite is held on Sunand one grest-^rairdBon. clared at a lecture-here attended mistake, caused by'_ .his _j?sycbo- country untarily—liot toi • pre9erv&--Au8- day." ^Little did I realize -at that and the Nazis-take over ,power. Funeral services were. held., on by. .King. Leopolld JII,- .Premlsr logical unawarenes3 in surround- trian. Then"suddenly a phenomenon Independence as so jre'cioua time that the phrase ("If the ple^ Sunday tfora the residence: Burial Paul Henri Spaak, and Joseph ing himself-with advisers who thing in itself—but as the. only biscite is held" would mean! ; happened, the like of which I saw was at Pleasant Hill Cemetery.. Ernest Cardinal Van Roey* ., were constantly tetraylng him— ameans only once before, -during the of not becoming Nazifled My friend, incidentally, was an'unawareness which' led" himand thus World War, when all at once, in mistakenly to believe that he freedom. losing all liberty and wearing the red-wnile-red ribbon the midst of a battle; the call reof the Patriotic. Front, and below sounded, "Save yourself—all is could trust Von Papen, the Gerit was the swastika badge. He lost." man Ambassador, and have faith Desire to Fight In Guido Schmidt, his own For- Only someone who lived in and most; of the other Austrian In ten minutes, the streets eign Minister, who had previous- Vienna during the last weeks." of Nazi officiate were playing safe, were empty, and bely shown himself receptive to her independence can have any and wanted to be prepared cause completely Nazis had not yet marNazi Ideology. • conception of how united the peo-against any-eventnality. If Schus- shalledthe their forces to make an Bat the visit to Berchtesgaden, ple were in their determination chnigg won, the swastika would appearance, the deserted Stefandisappear in a second's time, and to defend themselves against the and even his forced acquiescence platz and Kartnerstrasse looked to Hitler's ultimatum need not Nazi terror. What an anxious if Hitler came to power the gov- like a "no man's land." ernment emblem, would be put waiting for the word—-what a necessarily have meant the end I waited quickly home and of Austrian independence, had longing for an order from their away just as quickly—which is to called up some friends who told be understood when one realizes SchUBChnigg then and there' re- leader. Take, for instance, the fact that that it was a matter of life or me that five minutes earlier versed his policy completely and Schuschnigg had delivered his substituted one which held great- on February 23, 1938, more than death for them to bet on the right farewell speech over the radio, a million signatures were collect- horse. er chances of success. wherein he had declared that he ed in one day from Austrian Results of Meeting Rumours was yielding to force and would At Berchtesgaden, Schuschnigg workmen and employees for a The first Intimation I got that When I heard that his must have learned several vitally Resolution-of Independence. It is something was wrong came when resign. had been, "God save Important things. First, that simply incredible that Schus- I accidentally mixed Into a small last.words I could only laugh hysHitler had definitely decided to chnigg did not appreciate the Nazi group, and heard the leader Austria," terically, for I knew then the annex Austria, using any means, forces gathered behind him! to his followers, "Don't wor- truth of what Napoleon had said, But concilliation and vacilla- say fair or foul, and even going so comrades, this thing will not "God is always with the strongfar as to break every treaty or tion were the order of the day. ry, bo settled in Vienna and our est' battalions and not with the The police had instructions to do obligation that might stand In his Fuehrer will take care of us." troop3 of a weakling." nothing to prevent the Nazis, way. Second, that since the RomeI resumed my parading—we (To Be Continued) most of them boys under 18, from Berlin axis, Mussolini had lost his had been demonstrating steadily interest in preserving Austrian demonstrating in the main streets —and spoke to two men who independence, or at least was not and squares of Vienna, and from •willing to do anything to safe- threatening and molesting the were walking on either side of me FOR RENT—Six rooms and rest of the populatior Of course —men who seemed'•to symbolize bath. 1614 California. Rea> guard it. the rapidly growing solidarity of sonable rent. WE 5000. Schu8chnigg's only reasoning, all those people who were waiting the Viennese, since one was a under those circumstances, should to follow a call to arms, became have been that the best chance discouraged and did not know he had of saving Austria was to which way to turn. When on the unite everybody .willing to fight evening of March 9, Schuschnigg for Independence and risk a finally announced that a plebisbloody resistance in the hope that cite would- be held four days MONEY SAVING the" mere threat of war would later, there were only two oplnJANUARY SALE OF prevent Hitler from marching in. Bight now, vraca days hcrro so s n y hoars of Or he might have tried to induce darkness, is tio tisie when yoa need correct lightFrance and England and perhaps ing. Give fccppj, sparkling eyes in your homo the even Italy to come to Austria's assistance. The.fact that he had benefit 'of Better Sight Lamps end Mazda Bulbs . . . promised Hitler, after the Berchwith plenty oi soft, c/lareire© light for every seeing tesgaden meeting, to take Nazi t e a k . • • • - . . • . • • . . . . - . . ministers into his cabinet and return ; to the Nazi party some of Cneck your horns lor lighting comforttheir former privileges, should cnd projection: Fill every socket- with. not :have hindered him, particularly when he found out that he correct s3sa. Mazda Bulbs. For reading., •was dealing with a man of bad have ot least on© IGO-wsti bulb, two faith, and of no moral scruples. 60's. or three 40's in every lesap. BeLOW FARE® He should have played the same plcco oil. burned-out bulbs iraaodigame and'acted just as unscrupuFRIEND . . . . . . . . . $ 1 . 6 0 lously against his country's foe. FAIRMONT . . . . . . 1.85 ctsly. HASTINGS . . ; . . . . 2.6O : :; Desire for Unity HOLDREGE 3 . 5 5 Throw moro light on-Irifchen work. A Between t h e Berchtesgaden OXFORD . . . . . . . . 3 . 9 5 conference and the Anschluss a A Group of Higher Priced Furs in minlt-dyecl mu»knew 150-wott Mcxda B'^lb will taoke aicCOOK 4.85 month passed, and a lot could r&ts, sovereign seal-dyed coney, silver muakrats, a world ol difference. Why e-afler lioa WRAY ...6.35 have been done in those weeks. Brewer of Nebraska's Most Popular Beer dangerous eyestrcia wfcsa It's BO ecsr" marmots, Kidskioe, and many others. Here ar« F « « AKRON . . 7.3O Hundreds of thousands or Socialto have eno-aga light. .-. . you will proudly wear now end next season. IMPERIAL ..5.90 ists and workers, who at this cru':''•.:/.< Celebrates His 87th Birthday cial time had given up all their MOLYOKE ..^.60 Coat bears the GoIdetem-CisaprriEin's Label—Your Studying is so nsacH easier vrffli a.former radical idea's and were Present low bus fares mean big savings turance of quality &a<I v&lue. Gottlieb Stbn was 87 this week. The Better Sight Study Lc=? wiSb a 102 onlyj; concerned with serving the on your business, vacation .or shopping rear* have been good to him. He i» still cause; of independence, could have trip3. Get there faster and more comor ISO-watt Mazda Bulb. Banish fcs teen and active, head of the successful beeri mobilized, and the former fortably viaBurlingtonTraaways. Free dangers o! eyestrcda from stady end brewing business he started 63 years ago. BOXY AND FITTED- STYLES members of t h e Republican pillows-buses warm and well ventilated. leisure hours. - Mr. Stors has been steadfast through I Schutzbund could have been used ALL "SIZES '. the yean in his policy of keeping hit as a valuable increase to the Aus- Sim now to visit San Francisco'* peat 1959 beer the very finest. All Store Beer is all* trian armed forces-. WerliTs Fair, opening Fib. IS, A vmltrftl Us© Mazda Bulbs and Better Sight Leaps • - ' 'grain beer and is slow-aged in the way "The same is true of the erst- trip for littlt mimtj—ehi &Ux$mn Tain, that gives the smoothest and most to guard precious eyesight In your hose. • while partly-fascistic Heimwehr delicious flavor. and", the Ostmarklsche SturmsLOt? FARES TO LOCAL It costs so little with your cheap electricity^ •
TO SHOW ANTI-NAZI
My!E
As Told to
Frank
BOYCOTT OF REICH, GALLUP POLL SHOWS
Forum Sponsors
Deaths
GOLDSTEIN CHAPMANS
HAPPY EYES!
-Guard them weE Protection- is
•
•
•
-
Greatly Reduced to
$
GOTTLIEB STORZ
59
$
$
84 114
coLonADO-t*Ecnfls:tA POINTS
Spedal fares now In effect males it cheaper to co by bus than in your osn car. Aak esint for details.
Cair Us For
o Attics » Kitchens ° Basements i ° Re-rooflng o Insulation • Residing J.f-j® &QVJM PAW.1EF3T •'-." Easy Montnly Payments •
pjiimiM
LUMBER
19tfj & Nicholas Sta. •_.
cd
JA E00O
BUS DEPOT 15th & Douglas Sts.
Phone A T 2300
BEER
Sfep»ipto.Belter Living with Electric iafes
Fur Salon Third Floor
PageS
THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUATtY 20, 1939
question be had asked at the disall others who bad a band in the for fundB to carry on the research QUAKER COMMISSION work necessary to discover its putation. change are to be congratulated. REPORTS SYMPATHY cause and cure." "Ah," said Chatzkel Damkopp, "Omaha and Douglas County VISITOR: David Ben Gurion, "that's easy enough. I oace saw Philadelphia (WNS)—Ur. the words 'Ani lo yofiea' la the Palestine labor leader, has been medical men bave a particular in- fuB Jones, spokesman for th* terest in the new plan of this Chumosh. As you know, I'm not in these United States for the Commission which !**• whereby fifty per cent of Quaker a great scholar, so I went to Reb past several weeks—as a secret year, turned here from Germany wl»?* all money raised here remains Yankel, the shoemaker, and asked visitor . . . Has been holding im- here to battle infantile paralysis they studied the Jewish r©Tng«* him what they meant, aad lie reAn Hxtensios of tho Jewish Coismuoity Center portant conversations, in New said that his group m»«J* this immediafe community. The aproblem, plied, '•!• don't know.' I didn't comprehensive study of oppr*wYork and Washington with or- in remaining titty percent will be believe him, so I went to Reb minorities throughout O ganized heads. forwarded to the National Fonn* aed Zorach the tailor, and he, too, remany and one of the most was tragic. Wealthy Jewsi Bold •. Everybody was struck dumb by plied, 'I don't know.' So I said dation Against Infantile ParalyBUREAU: That Zionist politi- sis at Warm Springs, Georgia. We able conditions was the their properties and prepared to Chatzkle's - magnanimity. B u t to myself, said I, if neither Reb thetic attitude many Germans hoii cal bureau which has been talked eave at a moment's notice. Poor Chatzkel continued. Yankel nor Reb Zorech know TIP: Don't be surprised if Vic about for some time may finally all must do our share to assure toward the persecuted people. Jews, having no property to sell, the drive is a success." "Brothers," he said, "I'll hold what 'Ani lo yodea'" means, how Bernstein, JTA staff corresponDr. Jones added that "The spent their days in fasting and the what-d'you-<:all-lt, the dis — will such a plain roshe like Yag- dent in Berlin, cops the 1938 be established at Washington ia man people in large numbers prayer. And Jews who were the 'dissipation' wlch the roshe!" ozinsky know the meaning of Pulitzer Prize for the best for- the very near future. neither wealthy nor poor,-went Register Adoption Wish maintained a true For a moment all were silent, thoss profound words?" eign correspondence in American spirit toward the oppressed about their dally business fret- and MISH-MASH: Lou Rittenberg, --'• By Saniuel Xewenberg. then, despite the danger that newspapers . . . His dispatches trymen but they were afraJfl American editor of the London What the Words Meant Jerusalem (WNS-Palcor AgenAbout one hundred and fifty ting and worrying about the cal- was threatening them, everybody from Berlin and Vienna were tope show their' opposition to the w Jewish Chronicle has been, sericy)—According to a report issued years ago there lived in Poland amity that was going to overtake burst out laughing. "Chatzkel "Chatzkel," replied the Gaon, . All American correspondents elty and violence. * ously ill of .pneumonia . . . and today by the Hitacnduth Olei Gera shiftless good-for-nothing nam- them. Dumkopp wants to hold the 'dis- "I see that I cannot tsake a stu- are pulling for him to get the Maurice Bisgyer, B'nai Brith secmania, 5,600 families have thus ed Boruch Yeltels. It would have Now Boruch Benedictus Ignatz sipation' with the roshe!" "Chatz- dent of you, as I had planned. award and no less a person than •been difficult to find a more Yeitels Yagozinsky. was a sly old kel Dumkopp, the greatest block- The words 'Ani lo yodea' simply Vincent Sheean, who did some retary, is recuperating from an far registered their desire to Lower Rothschild Ransom shameless fellow or a greater ras- fox. He was careful not to go head, the longest-eared donkey mean 'I don't know' in Hebrew. post-Anschluss features from illness . - . National organizations adopt German Jewish children. London (WNS)—It was report* cal throughout the whole coun- near the larger cities where the the world has ever seen, to de- But I shall reward your public Vienna and knows the unusual are throwing a big feed January This U in addition to the requests ed here that the Nazis ha*» >*» 22 for Dr. Israel Goldstein, J. N. made by all the Keren Hayesod dttced the ransom for Baron try. He was always getting into rabbis were racking their brains bate with the learned scoundrel." spirit in venturing to accept the handicaps under which Vic has trouble, either with the authori- for the most difficult questions roshe's challenge. Remain here had to work during the entire F. prexy, in celebration of his settlements, which indicated their de Rothschild's release from Offer Accepted the Shamash of our Synagogue, year, is an ardent backer of the twentieth anniversary in the pul- willingness to - take as many ot million dollars to two and ties or with the Jewish Beth-din. to ask uim. But the Parness was. anxious as pit . . . Congrats to Cantor Harris the children as would be assigned half millions. The Baron hss and may God's blessings be with idea. It Is -said that he was once set He knew well enough-—rascal to die a natural death, as were Newman of the Manchester (Eng- to -them. upon by some Jewish beggars and that he was—that they had more the Gabbaim, and the other you." imprisoned since March. land) Great Synagogue, who oa beaten within an inch of his life learning and wit in their little townsfolk. So they all gladly acAnd so Chatzkel Durckopp befor^a vicious trick he had played fingers than he had in his whole cepted the kind offer and voted came a shamash in the Gaon's FUN: Credit this one to Dr.— his 75th birthday is still composupon them, and that thereupon, skull, and that he would cut a to commit Chatzkel Dumkopp to own synagogue, and married and Roback, our amiable "Panorama' ing his own musk; . . . The American Jewish Outlook now beadIn a fit of anger and spite, he be- pitiable figure in a contest with enter the lists against Benedictus lived to a good old age. colleague . . . When informed of lines friend (pheh) Coughlin as came'a "meshummad" and a vio- them. . . . • . Prof. Felix Frankfurter's nominIgnatz Yagozinsky. The market place of Klikolli is the Rev. Charles ••McCarthy" lent Jew-hater. ation to the supreme court, he Instead, he went to the most is right," said the Parness called the Contest Place to this Coughlin . ..Wonder bow Bergen Boruch was a crafty fellow; so out-of-the-way places where the at "He the close of the meeting, "let day, and the Inhabitants of Kli- dashed off a congratulatory wire crafty, in fact, that he succeeded danger of his meeting with for- him dispute with the roshe. The kolli s.till pride themselves on the to his friend which ended as fol- and his dummy pal like that? in'getting into the good graces midable adversaries was slight, Holy One can work a miracle memory of their famous' cham- lows . . . "Now you are not only . . . Peters dught to be ashamed of himself - for referring to of the clergy and in establishing and the chances for his victory even through Chatzkel Dumkopp. pion. Felix, but ge-ben(t)cbod" '. . Unto the Voice" in his a reputation among the ignorant absolutely certain. Which ought to go down as just "Hearken For nothing is beyond h i s week's colyum as Authored priests for sincere piety and great about the most feldtous pun of last power!" • The Town of Ignorance by Stefan Zweig'. . ' . When lie scholarship. . ^_ the year. , Near the Prussian boundary, And Chatzkel nodded MB head KING WINTER SITS . knows darn well it -was written by isolated from the rest of the from side to side, as if to Bay, "I ETH Doings Franz Werfel •—• an(d one of the UPON HIS THRONE He was especially fond of tak- world by great forests, lies the am ready against all comers. finest -novels in years, at that . . . LIT'ET NOTE: A globe troting passages from the Bible and Polish Jewish own of Klikolli, the Don't worry about me!" We didn't know until recently ting refugee dropped into Bay tne Talmud and translating them inhabitants of which have been The day-of the disputation, ar- King Winter.sits upon his throne, that Clifton P. Fadiman. New nello to • ns the other day . . So tall, so white, BO'still, •wrongly in order to get his for- renowned throughout the House rived. :,. ' .. ... boo"k critic and witty m. c. mer co-religionists into trouble. of Israel for their incredible igOn Purim morning the rosho He made' the- ice on yonder lake, Came from Germany, via Shang- Yorker hai, Manila and points east, south of Information Fleaae, appeared He .TTHS BO unscrupulous that he norance and stupidity. At the came in to town -with a big fol- Tne snow upon the hill. ' * north and w e s t . . . He is Max L. In prints for the first time under gave currency to the wildest cal- time this story treats of, there lowing of priests ' and soldiers. were about three thousand Jew- The governor received him pub-King Winter made the icy winds Berges, former, actor, stage direc- the aegis of the Menorah Jourumnies against the Jews. nal . . . Also. Jnrin« Fineman, licly and led him to the platform That whistle thfougn the trees. tor and writer* of Berlin . . No lie -was too absurd, no slan- ish inhabitants in KlikolljL Marvin Lowenthal, Meyer Levin, They had no rabbi;.but their erected ' in t h e market-place. That take the. hats on people's Readers of the Anglo-Jewish Anita der too obviously improbable but Brenner and a host of othpress may remember an article by There Chatzkel and twelve mem• ' h e a d s " ' '•'•-•• • ' , • • « • leader, the Parness, w a s a that he would vouch for its truth. ers now' well known to - literature. Berges, more than a. year .ago, in bers of the Jewish community Without a "may I please." • wealthy Jew who had^ once done Indeed, he prided hmiself on bewhich he described the plight of were already waiting. ' some business with tne governor lnjg an" expert in Jewish matters, an. authority on all questions af- of the town and who was thereThey mounted the steps of the K i n s 'Winter's •' helpers-stand a refugee in China . . .American readers will soon-have an opporfecting the relations of the gov- fore looked up to by everybody tribunal from opposite Bides and around ' •••• • - • • • — - • tunity to appraise Berges as a ernment, and the Jewish inhabi- in the community. faced each other. Waiting for -Ms.call.' tants of the countryAmong the Jewish citizens of Come, drivers of; the icy -winds,- - novelist • . . For the Jewish PubThe Disputation lication ; Society wQI publish his 'In keeping with this character the village was a black sheep, the Benedictus.Yagozrnsky, a hand- Come, come one and all. "That is Cold Pogrom," as transhe changed his name to Benedlc- shoemaker C h a t z k e l Shmuel, some man, with cold piercing eyes, tUB Ignatz Yagozinsky. thinking whom . everybody called Chatzkel and a pointed black beard, laugh- Yon, slick the ice on yonder lake, lated from the German . . . The J. P. S. editors took i n the -book that his sonorous Polish name Dumkopp, that is to say, "Chatz- ingly held' out his hand to Chatz- Yon. make the blizzards blow, The. annual fund-rasing camdespite the fact that their sched- paign You, lay the icicles around. sounded more impressive than kel the blockhead." kel ShmueL to be climaxed with celebrait was this city which Benedicule had already been filled for As you are ready, go. just Boruch Teitels. ."Well, brother," he said, "you of the President's Birthday, tus Ignatz Yagozinsky chose as don't want to admit that your *Ms New • Year's Eve, • the snow the year, so impressed were they tions Poland January 30 th, which will be held of this tour. with its punch and power. ideas are all wrong? Well then, falls. At the time our story treats fo, the starting point in the Omaha city auditorium, Panic let us begin the disputation at The wind blows a terrible gale, ' Poland was a priest-ridden counwas heartily endorsed this week As soon as the king's procla- once, and-carry it out. according And it whispers through the treetry. That is to say, the ignorant by leaders of local industries, laHEADLINOS: Add this to the bor, clergy were the real rulers of the mation was made public, the Jews to the King's command. - Only retops • women's groups and 'medical growing collection of headlines land. It.was they who appointed sent the Parness to the governor member the terms of the con- This old, old fairy tale. societies. that, give an. idea ot the cock• the governors of the town and to see whether anything could be test." Dr. Clande T. Uren. president Marda London, 9 years. eyed sort ~ of world ; we're living provinces. It was they who done to call off the disputation, Chatzkel cast a knowing glance C136 SpenC^r Street in today . . . MBNUHIN WALKS of the Omaha Douglas County promulgated the laws of the king- or at least postpone it until' it at the cobblestones down below Omaha, Nebraska. FLOORS . . . When MENUHIN Medical Society said of the camdom. Nay, it was popularly be- would be possible to get a learned and judged that the height of the becomes HITLER in that headline paign: "Omahr. and Douglas rabbi from a neighboring city to lieved that it was they who dicplatform must be at least ten feet County has no more urgent res"Sometimes I wonder if it's me or this delicious. w e l l know the world is seeing ponsibility act as the Jewish champion. Now tated the choice of the king, the from the level of the street. confronting it at the HOOVER URGES U. S. straight again—and not. before.. Roberts milk he likes »o much." the governor -was a friend of the appointment of his ministers and "Now ask," said the roshe, "I present time than to assure the councillors, the selection of his Jews, but he was afraid to do shall listen." TO ADMIT CHILDREN current campaign to raise funds queen, and even the number and anything that was against the :-CONGRATULATIONS 'to the to fight infantile paralysis Js a Chatzkel ^drew himself tip, king's wllL chaTactor-,-tjf-Jrfs-dally m e a l s . dosed bis ' eyes, opened th«"n g (JTA> — Former B'nai B'rith on the sprightly, glorious success. Infantile paraly"What the king says, goes!" wide, pinched his lower lip with President Herbert Hoover this springy appearance of lta publica- sis is the terror of medical men, To. these men Benedictus Ignatz Yagozinsky applied for help, he answered. "I can't do any- his thumb and forefinger, and week urged the United States to tion, now known as the National especially when it breaks out in asked: open its doors to a "proportion- Jewish Monthly'. . . Its Time-ized epidemic. We know so little about and', it was they who forced the thing for you." The Parness called a meeting "Tell me, Keb roshe, what does ate share" of refugee children format is well conceived and it is it at the preseEt time." king to issue a proclamation infrom Europe. In a. telegram to altogether a handsome job of tended to strike terror into the of the whole community .in the •Ani lo yodea' mean?" "Asifie froco. the necessity of hearts of every Jew and Jewess, largest synagogue of the town. "I don't know," answered the the Rev. Anson Phelps Stokes, typography and layout . . . Pres- caring for the afflicted, those canon of Washington Cathedral, ident-Editor Henry Monsky, Man- who have already fallen under its man, woman' and' child, from the Men/women and children stream- rosbe promptly. ed in. and their crys and lamenVistula to the Plnsk Marshes. In the twinkling of an eye he said that the refugee proposal tations rent the air. Finally the Chatzkel Dumkopp pounced "upon "should be supported by every aging Editor Edward Grusd and shadow, there is also urgent need Proclamation Parness called the meeting to him and bore him down to the American." One day the king's officers ap- order. floor of the platform. Then with "There can be no just criticism peared in all the towns and vil- He explained briefly the pur- many a punch and kick he forced that this action adds distress to lages of the kingdom, and posted pose of the gathering: To find a him over the edge of the platform our unemployed," Hoover said. the following proclamation: way of opposing the rpshe and and threw him down on the cob- "It benefits the American wish to VBy the Grace of God defeating him in public debate. ble stones below. Benedictus did aid the innocent and the sufferCaaimir, the~ forty-second, King He told how his efforts to secure not rise to ask another question. ing. It answers the appeal to evof Greater - Poland, Knight of a rabbi from a neighboring comThe Triumph ery American heart for the pro•the "White Eagle, Commander munity failed. "Now," he decidtection of children." The governor of the town of. the Green Dragon, Lord of ed, "we shall have him threw his cap into the air and the Mottled Horses, Grand Mas- ourselves. The termstoofmeet the con- cried, "Hurrah!" and the twelve ter of the Golden Sun. to all tests are rather hard, but I am Jews danced Patronize Our Advertisers like King David beJews 'throughout his kingdom, sure we shall find a volunteer fore the ark. The soldiers saluted Bendeth greetings: to uphold the good, name of who descended the ."Know all men by these here Klikolli. Who will step for- Chatzkel, steps of the tribunal with the digpresents that the learned and ward?" ••"... . nity of an emperor. The trumGod-fearing "citizen, Benedictus Not a person - stirred. pets blared, and the roshe quick:1 W« pa e tet of new V.S. Ignatz Yagozinsky, having recly disappeared, never to be seen •toyoi M<uf$f Tiro fin The Volunteer - ognized the error.of his ways • car; wrap up your p The Parness called on the first again. and abjured his former loyallook flm ties, has been received into the Gabbai (who also rejected the in- The fame of Chatzkel Dum'true faith. Desiring most ar- vitation), and upon the third kopp, the new Mordecai, spread dently to- convince his former Gabbai (who did likewise). Ni far and wide until it reached the brethren of the folly of their one cared to meet the roshe,.each ears of Gaon of Vilna./The Tabbi IN NEW SPRING SUITS beliefs, i e has volunteered to pleaded some excuse or other; a sent a messenger to Klikolli to teach them the principles of cold in the head, a bad toothache, bring the prodigy to him. When a sharp pain in the side. The Par-Chatzkel, after a long and eventour Church. th*t actually pamper yoar 'Tor 'this purpose he will ness stood on the platform chew- ful journey, stood before the venpocketbook«t visit your city and engage in ing the tip of his beard. -. It was erable old. rabbi, he was flustered for a moment, but -with characterearnest disputation, with your an awkward moment. Suddenly the kindly bleat of istic nonchalance he EOOO rerabbi or with whomsoever you far) 4 gained his -ease. choose from among you. The Chatzkel Dumkopp was heard. fltvt w 6w wfifitifl "Brothers," said Cbatzfcel. "I'll Yhe Gaon pressed Tifrp to exdebate Bhall be held in some plain how he had hit upon the .prominent place—on the city accept the roshe's challenge!" walls,' on a bridge, on a platform in the market-place, or in the fields on the banks of the Carl river, so that a i r inhabitants There is absolutely no cost or obmay come and see. If the Jewish representative; answers the ligation involved ia this Royal questions well, Benedictus will Master FEES Trial Offer! All we bestow upon him the blessings ask is that you give these amazof the Saints and leave the city, never to set foot in it again. ing new Royal Master Tires & But if the rabbi is defeated, all thorough test oa your own car! Jews will have to renounce Remember—NO COST, NO OEtheir faith within three days, or leave the city, • UGATION, NO SALES TALK — , "We alsd desire to warn our With' s New Style !• SOYAL MASTERS SELL THEMSELVES! loyal subjects that -we Will not Suits art malting their first Spring permit any evasive questions or debut under winter coets . . . stii-h answers. Woe unto him who answers one question amiss! with tailored fines, drawn vilit #> ^**' EXPERT RETREADING Woe unto him who tries to dressmaker's softer hand, YorT evade a query by saying, 'I Total Value $320 like the 193? Sarinq su^s r-rrm'«and RECAPPEHQ cannot answer,' or "I do not know.' One who answers thus ALL FOR Visit .our new large plant and shall forthwith be judged loser more femininr, let us show yon our new equip' and be cast into a pit, head m o s t iiK" f. rj"p-,t foromost!. ment which Is capable ot re?; vrp- \ "Given under our hand and treading or recapping any Else Tbo Oily Ccicpteta UnctsMTta F E n cf Kzd i v-'ithcn^ t- cor- t seal, the first of February in g t C a max of a Pfcmosa Caar car or trocfe tire. the tenth year of our reign." c ''» f {•->, v-es e purcheThe piano is one of our The effect of this proclamation best sellers, beautiful de- Your worn out tires skillfully rebuilt with new live anti-skid sign, marvelous rich tons treads, adding thousands of he . . . t h e lessons are strict- safe, economical miles. •. tA -firaaeiie
Edited Ey Aisnt Naomi
HOW CHATZKEL
SAVED THE
PREPARE FOR BIRTHDAY BALL
tSUNKLUSIB
LOW BOY
ra %m
r
Paxton-Mitchell Co. Foundries
Brass, Bronso, Soft Grey Iron-'and Semi* 5 Steel Castings, Wood end g Metal Patterns' and -Saab p Weig&ts carried ia otocli. | Bronro and' Cast Iron Grilles a Specialty.
27th arid Martha Sto. 1 HA 5523 1
VUj
AXX SSATS
tax
TICKETS M017 @U SALS
ly private (choose your own teacher).. .this offer •will save yon §85"...cosae ia this-weak.
" f f—i^.F t" tv PPI • rix Cj." cor- v.J
'
iwnr
ICa SfreeJ LsS&y.' Hotel &SB!SS2."33
PSR RESERVATIC7JS FKGXS'VE 212?
:r Iol6 Dodge St., 6th & Brosdwa3r, Co. ElsTs
il
fife
r*-,
«II«~^V «^JI
L a, %E Ls» «ij_ « ^ Be ik -to. L *4^f &ST
A T <T'
if-nor
. , .r . . , .
: n;
„„„„'.„
Ki'T-'i^ 1 *E E'W r » ' fiUff
' Finer—E««f
THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1939
Page 4
liVGRY FRIDAY Ai OMAHA. NGDRASRA, OY TUB JEWISH PRESS PUBLISHING COUPANS KUUttUKIHf IQr PRICb, Ono YOfli . . ADVERIIGING RA1EQ PURNIQHED ON APPUCAriON EDITORIAL OFFICES €03 BRANOElO THEATER BUILDING .8IOUX CITV OPPICE—JEWI6M COMMUNITY CENTER PRINT CHOP ADDRES&—«M SO. 84TH STREET
DAVID BLACKER • • fioalnesa and Managing Bdltot FRANK R. ACKERMAN « Editor LEONARD NATHAN - : • Associate Bdltor RABBI FREDERICK COHN • . • Contrlbatlni Editor RABBI THEODORE N. LEWIS . . . • Book BdltOl ANN PILL • Bioux City. Iowa. Correspondent
terms they will appear at the round table conferences to be held in London. Needless to say that if these terms are adhered to, no Jews will come because they involve everything for which the Zionist movement stands. If Britain capitulates to such presumption the cause not only of Palestine but of the world is lost. Munich was a sad example. The Grand Mufti, it appears, believes himself Hitler and the Jews Czecho-Slovakia. If only we had enough confidence to believe that maybe he wasn't right.
CHANGELESS CHANGE By RABBI FREDERICK COHN
Community Calendar By Dr. Theodora N. Lewis, KablJ, Bfocat Eisai Temple, Sioas City
"His Father's House. George Alexander Kohnt." By Hebakah Kohut. Tale University Press. 210 Pages. There are few more beloved Jewish women in America than Rebekah Kohut. and few names more revered tlmn that of the Kohut's. Those who have read her previous books and especially 'My Portion,' telling her life in her father's hone and of her marriage to Alexander Kohut, will find this book a delightful continuation of her previous narrative. The great love Rebekah Kohut had for her learned husband, Alexander, was transferred, upon his death, to his children. And a special portion of this went to George Alexander, the eldest of tie group. The opening chapter gives an Intimate and delightful picture of the youth of George, of his companionship, especially with Stephen S. Wise, and of the beautiful Jewish home in which be was reared, a home where Jewish learning, spiritual ideals, deep religiosity and intense love for Judaism, were stirring realities. Young George was a sickly child and his frail body continued to cause him and his relatives anxiety and troube throughout life. It brought his ministry at Dallas to a sudden end when he collapsed after preaching the inaugural sermon. Only the Ulents of the best physicians snatched him from the Jaws of death on several occasions. After this unfortunate end of * promising rabbinical career, and George would have loved to follow in the footsteps of his father, ho took up the profession of teaching. Though never a parent himself, he had a great fondness for children. With Mrs. Kohut. he organized a school for girls in the hope of attracting maiden*, who, In search of a first class preparatory «cn ool, did not hesitate to deny their Jewish origin and faith and even when they did not have to resort to this extreme lost all contact with the Synagogue and all inspiration from Judaism. Aftr a protracted illness of the male member, the partnership was dissolved, and George began "An Adventure in Paradise" namely, a summer camp at Maine which gave him financial security, keen satisfaction, and what he craved most, leisure for study, research and writing. His inherent love for teaching soon beckoned him again, and for a short time Identified himself anew with & prominent New York school. The outstanding trait of the character of George Kohut was a reverence for Jewish learning and a love for Jewish scholars. These qualities, inherited from his saintly and scholarly father, grew In intensity as the years continued. He not only rejoiced in scholarly work, but he was eager to provide facilities for Jewish savants of Europe and America to publish their studies, to make their immense Jewish knowledge available to the entire world. Since scholars, as a rule, are poor and unable to finance the publication of their own works, George Alexander Kohut in memory and in tribute to hi» revered father, established the Alexander Kohnt Foundation and richly endowed it with generous subventions. The first Foundation was established at Yale University in 1915, and branches soon appeared in Vieuna, Berlin, Budapest, and In New York City, where it is identified with the Jewish Institute of Religion headed by Dr. Stephen S. Wise. • Dr. Kohut not only established the Foundation but was continuously in touch with many scholars, whom he encouraged to continue their 8tudie3 with the assurance that they would be brought to the attenlon of the scholarly world. Mrs. Kohut is superbly correct when she writes that "Many of the most Important work of the Foundation might never have been written let alone published, had it not been for the inspiration and the enthusiasm for Jewish learning which George's nature radiated." Just how much he and the Foundation have meant to many a scholar and to Jewish learning, It is difficult to-imagine. This review hardly conveys an Idea, of the fascinating narrative embodied in the pages cf this voi« ome. The author touches upon tha friends of Kohut in all parts of th* world, friends of great distinction, and of much influence, and relates many interesting esperiences. It la reall a chapter in American Jewish history in the making, written by a noble Jewish woman. A genuine treat is iu store for those who will turn to "His Father's House."
Attending the meeting of the Thirty-Sixth Council of the Union of American Congregations in Cincinnati, the predominant impression, over and above any produced by the specific To Aid* the Exodus "With satisfaction we read that the leading Jewish philan- objeotion of the meeting itself—consideration of Jewish affairs thropic organizations are uniting to aid the exodus of Ger- —-is that of Change which is borne in upon one from every side. many's persecuted Jews. An unfortunate chaos has, and de- The years certainly produce their effect, the unrelenting March spite the co-ordination of philanthropic efforts, still is hamper- of Time. "Generation comes and generation goes and though the world stands forever' it does not 'stand,' but moves ceaseing any efficient rescue of Germany's Jewry. lessly, producing its inevitable effects. This was borne in on In our well-meaning attempts the machinery of emigration me when I attending the opening meeting, held in the.historic has become clumsy cogs that laboriously do what should be acPlum street Temple, which was the Temple of Isaac Mayer complished with order and speed. Unless an. immediate semWise, the sainted founder of the Union, of which he was Rabbi blance of system is given the direction of this forced exodus, ever since his coming to Cincinnati and from which radiated •we shall find ourselves swamped and beyond the ability to his tremendous influence as founder and organizer of American rescue. . What is most necessary at this time is a centralized bureau Reform Judaism. The Temple was practically the same as charged not with fund-raising activities, but an organization when he was alive with its gorgeous coloring of red and gold that will co-ordinate all groups interested in assisting refugees. and distinctly oriental architecture—but how different the peoThe Inter-governmental commission to a certain extent, full- ple assembled in it and that jammed it to the doors. So many fills this need, but it has not demanded the power to act as the of the old tried co-workers and fellow-leaders were gone. Those that remained were many of them bent and feeble, with the centralized bureau and recognizes all other agencies. Such an organization would provide for those individuals snows of many winters upon their heads, their steps tottering who will never immigrate. It will see that the present immi- —the young men of yesterday, the reverent aged of today. grants are provided for and not, as recently happened, sent to New men occupied the pulpit, new voices addressed the asa country only to have visas canceled upon their landing. And sembly, their very message was new. And, pf course, they as its most important function it would provide for future ref- dwelt in a completely new world, in which thought and action were revolutionized, the old dissolved and liquidated' in a new ugees. era, in a chaotic time that had not yet gotten its bearings in which order and security were far from having yet been estabPublicity-hounds have taken advantage of a people's mis- lished. One realized how change was indeed the fundamental ery to worm their own selves into the headlines by announcing law of the universe; that the old Greek philosopher Heraclitus chimeric schemes of settlement. Others, obsessed by a single spoke truly when he said 'all things flow'; change is. the funidea, are interested in nothing but Palestine. Money that could damental fact of life; the change from youth to age, from easily be used in the removal of refugees is being spent by self- strength to weakness, from one condition to another; laws, appointed commissions traipsing to Germany .to hear first-hand ideas, governments, religion, civilization—all changes. The from the Nazis what everyone who reads the newspapers call only unchanging thing in life is change itself; and, of course, tell. ,. :' .„ the'unchanging ground of all change, the Eternal, Almighty The existing situation is that close to a million persons God, that upholds the universe with all its changes, that directs are to be expelled from Italy and Germany and Czecho- it to its unchanging, Infinite Goal. slovakia, the last financing its emigrants. Within a few years, "The Times are the masquerade of the eternities," said the there is the grave possibility that Poland, Roumania, Hungary, and perhaps others may follow suit. The majority of us, safe wise Emerson. Time does, indeed, put on a mask, so that we and smug individuals seem unable to comprehend the terrific hardly recognize it. How often...do we hear people say that tragedy that has overtaken Jewry. We listen sympathetically groups and institutions with which they have been intimately and.weep with them in_their sorrow, but beyond that we are connected for many years, after the lapse of time come to wear a new countenance, create a new atmosphere that is wholly unprepared to go. The ideal would, of course, be to see these refugees go to foreign and strange. So transforming, so devastating is time lands already settled as Australia, the United States,. Canada, and its ruthless changes. But the goal of the unchanging God remains the same. It and other places where population pressure is not great. Moneys that would otherwise be dissipated in development could be is the goal of Judaism; the goal of the recognition of the One utilized for the more urgent purpose of emigration. But it God of the Universe and of His eternal and universal will of must be remembered that the welcome mat is conspicuous by Righteousness. To that the ages are tending, despite all their its absence. Most lands are involved in their own internal dif- crises and catastrophes. These are perchance but the birthficulties and a peculiar chauvinism looks disdainfully at an pangs, the'infinite travail, that usher in the new era—ever a added increase of immigration. Not only must the refugees 'new' and a newer era till the Perfect Era. shall dawn, the era be considered, but the already existing Jewries who have strug- that shall witness a new and a perfected humanity redeemed gled to acquire and maintain a status of relative security must from all error and evil, all its past mistakes corrected, its wrongs righted, its sorrows mitigated, its ideals realized. Man be protected. is, in Browning's beautiful words, "the heir of hopes too fair to turn out false." They shall not be falsified, they shall be Britain has offered certain lands for colonization purposes. fulfilled. Man's own prophetic longings will fulfill them; will Some, such as the former German colonies, are unthinkable be- inspire the energy and the will that shall bring them into beaucause no one knows what_they will some day be returned to tiful, blessed realization. the Reich. Others are wild, unsettled lands where colonization Life's changes are not for, naught. They are by their endat best will be expensive and which, by careful study might be less alteration to bring in the day of which man has dreamed, proved ..unsuitable. • for which he has labored, whose delayed fruition is the cause Only a centralized bureau can efficiently study each proof all his dissatisfaction, disappointment and sorrow but whose posed haven and direct the refugees there. Proposals for setfinal realization will constitute his crowning joy. tlement would be referred to such an organization rather than So let us not bewail the changing times. Times change and to the daily press. we change with them. And changed men and women will bring An intelligent, well-informed bureau would end the confuin a changed and perfected world in which all injustice, cruelty, sion regarding these refugees. It has been several months since and hate will disappear, in which ignorance and error and all the colonial schemes were first projected. To date we know manner of .evil will be" no more; in which century-old abuses nothing about the lands offered. As we write, before, us are will vanish like a forgotten dream, a hideous nightmare, from two articles on British Guiana. One refers to British Guiana whieh we awake to a morning bright with sunshine, calling as aB the only satisfactory place offered. The other considers it to healthful and noble activities, labors pleasant and agreeable a'mirage. Neither writer is acquainted with the country. Both that will be of service and helpfulness to. our fellow-men and quote, to prove their points, a report made several years ago fraught with everlasting blessing to ourselves. oh the suggestion of settling the Assyrians of Iraq there. In this, spirit we invoke the prayer of the noble Oliver Neither mentions the much more important preliminary surWendell Holmes i vey conducted by the British government six years ago for the "Build thee more stately mansions, O my poul, . purpose of encouraging emigration from the over-crowded isAs the swift seasons roll; ' lands in the British West Indies, namely Barbados, Jamaica Leave thy low-vaulted past, : and St. Lucia. Let each, new Temple, nobler than the last, ,-•" Due to a similar disregard of intelligent study, a land that Shut thee from heaven with a dome more va«t might prove useful, Uganda, was at the turn of the century TUl thou at length art free allowed to slip through our fingers. Leaving thine outworn shell by life's unresting sea." We must recognize the fact that the Refugee problem is not one of today. No matter what happens in Europe it will the age whose leaders you are, be with us in the future. There is a population pressure in Denies Rift with Hitler you do not know of the cares with Central Europe, that according to Walter Lippman, must be which the scholars are occupied Paris (WKS) — The father of . relieved before there is any consideration of economic readjustand whence they derive their live- Ernst vora Rath, German embassy lihood." attache, whose slaying caused the ment in those lands, before the Jew is to find his place in the Our rabbis taught, When Rab- drastic anti-Jewish campaign in national life. bi Eliezer became ill his disciples I Nazi Germany, denied reports of •
•-•
"
•
•
'
.
.
'
;
.
'
'
•
.
•
"
.
-
«
•
•
.
•
•
•
•
•
•
.
v
.
.
.
The Arabs Have Their Terms Once upon a time in the dear, dear long ago, pulling the British tail was a practice tantamount to playing with dyna mite. Many a petty king found himself without a throne for indulging in such a pastime. But the tables are turned. Pulling the tail of the British lion has become a recognized diplomatic practice among the so-called subject people. The most flagrant example—;and because Of the gravity of the situation it is not even funny—has been the dictation of terms of settlement of the Palestine trouble by the followers of the Grand Mufti. These men, until a few days ago prisoners of the British government and released not under pressure, tell under what
BIBLE Rejoice not when thine enemy talleth and let sot thy heart be glad when be stumbleth. Don't bo a too frequent visitor in "toy neighbor's bouse lest he be sated with thee and hate thee. Boast not thysell of tomorrow for thou knowest not what the next day will bring forth. Let another man praiso thes and not thine own mouth. To do righteousness and Justice is more acceptable to the Lord than sacrifice. There are friends that one hath to his own hurt but a loving friend sticketh closer than a brother. TALMUD Rabbi Joshua said, "Woo unto
came to visit him, they said to a rift between himself and Hitler him, "Teach us the right way of: because of his presence here. He life BO that we may deserve to 6aid that he intended to bo a parInherit eternity." He said to them ty to the prosecution of Herschel "Be careful to honor your com-, Grynszpan. the Jewish youth who rades, restrain your ch'ldren from shot vora Rath. frivolous thoughts, let your children mingle with learned people, ance) for the sake of learning the know what and to whom you pray Torah shall finally ba raised, bat and by these means you will de- he who ciuzzles his mouth (beserve eternity." cause he is ashamed to expose his Rabbi Charaa said, "Never ignorance to his teacher) will should « man 6how preference for nave to put his hand to the mouth one child over his other children." (when he in return shall bo QuesRabbi Juda said, "la a to..n tioned)." that is hilly and has slopes. and Rabbi AbJa said, "Be who valleys man will become old pre- forces time will in return be maturely," (because it is a great pressed by tiaa but to him wbo strain on the heart. gives v?zy to tins (yielding pntRabbi Samuel said, "He who leatly to' circumstances) time will give way to bin." lowers'Cti&seU.(expesd3 bis
FROM JANUARY 22 TO JANUABY 27 Sunday, January ;. A. Z. A. No. 1 meeting, 2 p. m, C and D, Jewish Community Center. Junior A. Z. A. meeting, 3 p. m., K and L, Jewish Community Center. Girl Scouts meeting, 3 p. m. room M, Jewish Community Cen ter. Omaha Hebrew-dab, 3 p. m. lodge room, Jewish Community Center. Monday, January 28. Cooking class, 6 p. m., third floor kitchen, Jewish Community Center. Photography class, 7:30 p. m.. lounge room, Jewish Community Center. Workmen's Loan association. S p. m., C and D, Jewish Community Center. Hatomlr Choral society, 8 p. m* K and L, Jewish Community Center. . Orchestra claas, 8 p. m., lodge room, Jewish Community Center Tuesday, January 24. Senior Hadassah Study group 1 p. si., room M, Jewish Commun Ity Center. Choir rehearsal, 8 p. m., K and Zi, Jewish Community Center. 'Wednesday, Jannary 39. Senior Hadassah, 2 p. m., lodge room. Jewish Community Center International Workers' Order 8 p. ra., C and D, Jewish. Community Center. Junior Council, 8 p. m., G and H, Jewish Community Center. Record Concert series, 8 p. m K and L, Jewish Community Center. Thursday, January SO. Cooking class, 6 p. m~, third floor kitchen, Jewish Community Center. Town Hall Forum, 8 p. m club room, Jewish Community Center. Boy Scouts, 8 p. m., lodge room, Jewisb Community Center. Choir rehearsal, 8'p. m., K and L, Jewish Community Center. Friday, January 27. Dancing class, 3 p. m., club room, Jewish Community Center COMING EVENTS Tuesday, January 81. Center Forum speaker: Maurice 8amuel. "Palestine Aflame,' 8 p. m., auditorium, Jewish-Corn
munity Center.
"The Center Library Corner" By P*BK'ftT-*f COHSX A minute or so In Jewish literature by way of current comments of the day's Jewish scene in magazines, books, and Jewish thought: The magazines: THE NEW PALESTINE — "FOLK SONGS OF PALESTINE," by Dr. Hans Nathan. "The Jews have given prophets, philosophers, scientists, writers and musicians to the world, but only now a folk music, in a sense, we have reversed the normal cultural development of a people Just as we have inverted the pyramid of our occupational distribution. It is significant that there are few love songs. This does not mean there Is only toll and hardship, but only that there is little leisure to glorify it in poetry." "MORE ABOUT PALESTINE* in THE PALESTINE REVIEW. "Helping the Middle Class" — "The Mifdeh Ezrahl, the self-help fund raised by and for the midfile-class element has issued summary cf its activity. Owing
to the fact that the small merchant, artisan, manufacturer and professional man, have no tingle
organization capable of protecting their economic and social interests, it was difficult to evolve a plan o£ systematic relief and constructive assistance. Hence the Mifdeh operated by granting loans either without interest or at email interest rates and under conditions of long-term p a ynents." A must read. On the book shelf: "FASCISM FOR WHOM?" by Max Ascoli and Arthur Feller mesabers of the graduate faculty, New School for Social Research written by an Italian s.nd a German from experience of the workings of these systems. The authors aaalyie the international character cf f&sdsn and its treat to world peace and to American democracy. A t>0Ck to be rsaS and studied —by people who ere lovers of desocracy..
Two RB—Radio and g before a Sisterhood meettag.^ Speeches by John Nevin S a y y Mr.. Villard, and Senator Kin* were broadcast from coast «» coast by the Mutual Broadcasting System. Other council officers chosen were: Jacob W. Mack, Cincinnati, and Karry N. Gottlieb of Chicago, rice-presidents; Rabbi G e o r g e Cincinnati (WNS) — More than ZIpin of Cincinnati, secretary, and 1200 delegates and official visit- Rabbi Louis I. Egelson o£ Cincinors of the Union of American He- nati, assistant secretary. brew Congregations and its affiliates, the National Federation of Temple Sisterhoods, the National Federation of Temple Brotherho6da and Youth groups met in Cincinnati this week at National Conventions. The National Federation of Temple Youth, a new affiliate, or the Union was organized by delegates of Temple Youth groups. National officers elected are: (Continued from Page I)' Richard N. Bluesteln, Cincinnati, O., President; Bernard Sang. Chi- and Secretary of State Cordell cago. 111., first Vice-president; Hull for their "historic role In Lewis Held, Richmond, Va., sec- safeguarding the Jewish rights ond Vice-President; Daniel Miller, which underlie" the Palestine Portland, Ore., third Vice-Presi- mandate. The resolutions expressed the dent, Lenore Cohn, New York, President New York State Feder- hope that the British Government ation of Temple Youth Groups, would facilitate "free and unreSecretary; and William Frost, stricted admission of Jewish refugees into Palestine" not only beEast Orange, N. J., Treasurer. cauee of the obligations "freely In keynote speeches at the op- and publicly assumed by Gnat ening service of the Biennial Britain under the terms of the Council of the Union and the Na- Balfour Declaration and the mantional Federation of Temple Sis- date, but because of the even terhoods and Brotherhoods, Rob- stronger moral basis arising out ert P. Goldman, Union President, of the desperate emergency conand Rabbi Edward I. Israel, Har cerning hundreds of thousands of; Sinai Congregation, Baltimore, helpless human beings." stressed the need for revitallzaSolicitor-General Robert Jack* tlon of the Synagogues. son, in an address broadcast "RevitaUcatiou of the Synago- throughout the* country, deplored gue la the primary challenge to- the lack of opportunities for Immigration of refugees in Pales* day," Rabbi Israel declared. "The Question 1B no longer tine. "The plight of the Jews Is "What can the Synagogue do?'; a challenge to Christian conscithe question is rather, 'What ence to make good the promise ot must it d o r " Mr. Goldman de- a Jewish national home In Palestine," he said. There is more room clared. for refugees in Palestine than in Alfred M. Cohen, chosen Presi- any other country in the world* dent of the S6th Council of the he declared. In the United States, Union, reviewed Its history during he asserted, "it is but Just that the past 65 years, declaring that the democracy afford shelter to over that period of time America's the Jew, who early furnished the Jewish population had grown vision of democracy to the from a numerically Insignificant world." He emphasized the congroup into the largest settlement tributions of Jews in intellectual of Jews in any one country since and other fields. creation. , "What a responsllibity Denouncing racial prejudice, ours Is," he declared, "what a Jackson upon liberal govprivilege ours is." No service ernment called -to 'provide sanctions to which the Jew may render to enforce our covenant to respect America, he said, "whether in pri- each other's rights and advance vate or official capacity, can be a measure to support the dignity too full requital for what Amer- of man." He addted: "A terrible ica has been and is to the Jew." debit is written in the book of In her address to the 13th history against the non-Jewish Biennial Assembly of the National world — the non-Jewish world is Federation of Temple Sisterhood*, earning for itself a day of retriMrs. Leon L. Walters, President, bution, leaving its children a leoutlined a refugee program in gacy of shame." which local units may co-operate. Masaryk Hits Naxls Oswald Garrison Villard, speakJan Masaryk, former Chechoing at a luncheon meeting of the slovakian Minister to Great BritN. F. T. S. told America over a ain and son of the late President nation-wide radio hookup that Thomas G. Masaryk, founder of "communist ideas are afloat in the Czech Republic, told the conthis country and as long as we ference that the world should are a democracy hav3 a right to take warning that "the Nazi propbe. We can conquer those ideas aganda machine should not be only by proving that our institu- successful in the case of the Arabs as it was with Sudetenland." tions are superior." World conditions in the Middle Dr. Kurt Wiihelm, founder of the largest reform congregation Ages were "not half so bad" as are today, Mr. Masaryk said. in Palestine, in an address before they "As long as I live," he declared, Brotherhood and Sisterhood meet- "my time will be with the oppresings on the Jewish situation in victims of terrorism." He addJerusalem said that the reform sed ed that Jewish reconstruction in Jewish movement was being stim- Palestine "not jeopardising ulated in Palestine by action of "the Arab was citing tho the World Union for Progressive small amountEmpire, of land held by the Judaism. Jews in comparator: with the huge Dr. Abba Hillel Silver and Arab land area. Dean Charles Gilkey spoke on Addressing the opening session, "The. Place of Religion in the Masaryk bitterly denounced tha Modren World." Munich pact and pleaded that PalRobert P. Goldman, Cincinnati, estine, which he said was the maPresident, called upon members jor "hope for Jewish refugees, be of the organization, representing not allowed to suffer the fate of S00 congregations in the United his nation. Since at the present States S,nd Canada, to "fight for time his country did not need American democracy against ev- him, Masaryk said, he was enlistery kind of foreign ism." Mr. ing in the service of helping the Goldman ss.l<3 the union had ten- Jews rebuild and settle Palestine dered its services to a national because like "the Czechoslovakia co-orfilns-tlng committee and urg- of a little while ago, Palestine is ed members to aid. In "integrat- today trying1 to preserve democraing- newcomers into community, cy." He termed the Munich pact "the latest step in Europe's humreligious and social life." Edward M. M. Warburg, Dr. iliation" but expressed confidence Louis L. Mann of Chicago, and In the ultimate victory of the Senator William H. King of Utah democratic forces in his country spoke on various phases of De- despite the fact that his people mocracy at the banquet meeting "were betrayed and their Ideals were trampled under foot by heaof the three groups. Franklin Dunham, educational vy totalitarian g o o se-Bteppinar director of N. B. C, spoke on the boots."
REFORM GROUPS HOLD MEETING
CAMPAIGN TO AID REFUGEES' BEING PLANNED
(Pictune crj a LADY RUNNING ERRANDS
BETH EL
At services this evening Rabbi David A. Goldstein Trill speak on "Plagues—Old assd New—T h a t Destroy a Civilization." Cantor Auron Edgar and the Beth El choir will lead the service. Services Saturday corning will begin at 8:45. Lee Bernstein, soa of Mr. and Mrs. Abe Bernstein, will chant the Kiddush tonight and tomorrow morning will conduct the eervico in celebmlon ol his becoming a Bar MItzvah. Mr. and Mrs. Bernstein will receive tne coagresatioa at Kiddush after the service tomorrow taornicg. Next Week Mr. and Mrs. Ben Newman announce the Bar Kttivah c: the.r £02, Rlcaard, on Saturday dornisgi Jsuuary CS.
TEMPLE
ToalRht Rt Temple tsrael. Rabbi DavSd H- ^"Sco will speak on "Liberal Judaism in Counsel. niHM Wico will discuss his SSJpYcMonet the U. A. H. C. coaveatsea &eld & Cincinnati.
W^wgWK^pygjww1
rT A M E R I C A N vrc? "v b~T irr-r^c ??* i«t the telephone n*Ti tr-~'~ ,»..—•—.-•- -* rrrr* there, eo much i
T h e United Ststcs pfco-:es fr.c t!:c btzt service sr th? v c~l".
L M L S ^ S>e vorld'c te!*> s : c etcrpert tel
KorrKvr?TTr.\ rru. T i x p * o ^
Pigtft
THE JEWISH PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUABY 20, 1939
Dominican Republic Major Fr«iWolfe and Mike Freeman. Mrs. etic committee is sponsoring a PIONEER WOMEN M. F. Levenson 1B leader of the asketball team in the J. <3. C. erick F. Sharles, Dominican group. . eagne which won over the A. P. The Pioneer Women's Organisul general in London, GWX FUND s Members of the Women's Miz- '., 33-21, last Sunday. The mem- zation will hold its Oneg Shaban organised plan of Mrs. M. F. Levenson, chairman rachi organization will conduct a ership,. publications, p h o n e , both at the home of Mrs. Samuel with financial guarantees fc? of the Hadassah Gift Fund, an- bake sale on Wednesday, January roperties and financial commit- Meiches, 3010 Franklin. An innounces the following contribu- 25,' at the Brandeis store. Chair- ees are also in full swing. which colonists would attmnpt «* teresting program has been planLondon (WNS) — It was re- establish new industries. tors: men of the event are Mrs. J. At a recent popularity contest ned. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Gorelick in Bernstein and Mrs. D. Crounse. held by tbe chapter, Joe Guss The members of the organiza- liably reported here that the Dohonor of the marriage of their A large assortment of cakes, as voted the ideal A. Z. A. tion are at present making plane minican Republic has offered to Patronize Our Adrertlwn Aleph, the most popular, and the for the bazaar to be held in tho accept 100,000 Jewish refugees BLTJMEXTHAL-GELINSKY and Mrs. Bernstein "will receive at daughter, Reva, to Louis Singer. cookies and strudel will be on most likely to succeed. George near future. Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Brodkey sale. ' At a Sunda yevening ceremony their home, 1011 So. 38 th, from as a means of establishing sew ;hafer was named the b e l t at the Paxton Hotel, Miss Flor- 3 to 6 p. m. in honor of their son. in memory of Rebecca Pred. A large meeting was held last dressed, IX WILL PAT TOO Yale Richards the best Industries without disturbing the No Invitations have been issued. mother of Mrs. Reuben Bordy. ence Gilinsky, daughter of Mr. Wednesday. The drawing for the scholar, Jack Epstein the best NEW COOKING CLASS Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Bordy in silver coffee service was held. and Mrs. Joe A. Gilinsky, became existing sugar, coffee and cocoa To OoBsalt memory of the mother of Mrs.Mrs. A. Sehwaczkin was chairman dancer, Ben Kutler the best aththe bride of Kussel J. Blumenthal, VISITS, DAUGHTER industries. ORGANIZED AT J. C. C. lete, and Manuel Himelstein the eon of Mr. and Mrs. Louis BluMrs. Hattie Nathan left Sunday Reuben Bordy, Mrs. Rebecca of the drawing. Funds from this most romantic Aleph. The Dominican Republic, which menthal. The ceremony was per- for Scottsbluff, Nebraska, to visit Pred. event and the bake sale will be occupies nearly two-thirds of the When baying A new cooking class is being Mr. and Mrs. Julius Stein In forwarded to the Tel Aviv Beth formed under a canopy of fern her daughter, Mrs. Harry Rushall. organized at the Jewish Commun- Island of Santa Domingo, the sec- DIAMONDS memory of Mrs. Beverly Ross. and -white pom poms aflanked on Chalutzoth, the Mizrachi school in ity Center to meet on either Mon- ond largest of the Greater Aneither side by seven-br .nched can- ENGAGEMENT TOLD Mr. and Mrs. Victor Elias In Palestine. day or Thursday evenings at tilles, situated between Cuba and WEBPINCS I5INGS memory of Mr. Harry Greenberg. delabra. Instead of a regular meeting Mr. and Mrs. A. Gold of Lin5:45. The class will be limited Porte Rico, with an area nearly WATCHES • BSLVEBWASK Rabbi David Goldstein assisted coln, Nebraska, announce the en- All contributions to commemor- next month, the Women's Miztwice that of Palestine anfi a popto 12 persons. ate a happy event or honor a lovunder 1,500,000. has be«r>. by Cantor Aaron Edgar and Can- gagement of their daughter, Rose, rachi will sponsor a large benaThe Council of Jewish Women Culinary art is taught in these ulation ed one are accepted through the tor Abraham Schwaczkin, officiat- to Mr. Albert Rice, son of Mr. and fit bridge. Mrs. M. Axbitinan will was one of the six Jewish wom- classes to a fsxe.ll group. T h e working with the Intergovp-r- _ ed. •.•..-.• Mrs. Louis Rice of Des Moines, Hadassah Gift Fund by Mrs. M. F. be chairman. en's organizations appointed to classes are free to members of dental Commission on Refugees. ' Levenson, WA 0850.. The bride's gown was of old Iv- Iowa. co-operate in President Roose- the Center. A nominal registra- Jewish organizations are said ..c 1 ory slipper satin. The bodice had velt's Birthday ball to be held on tion fee is charged non-members. be tivorably impressed br COJC : tlons of the offer. Acting for . w > a fitted waistline and the neckline January 30 at the city auditor- Complete information may be was ornamented with pearl clips. ium. gotten by calling the Jewish ComThe bouffant skirt had a deep An "Hour of Charm" program Proceeds, as in former 'years, munity Center. was featured at the Junior Ha- will go to the work of the Pretrain -and the bridal veil of net FREE! An Expert; Cowfw»eJ3er t>si Alpha Theta was very well repdassah meeting last Thursday, vention and Cure for Infantile •was banded with lace and was resented at the 40th Annual Zeta January 12. fashioned into a coronet of pearls. A linen shower will bs held at Beta Tau convention, held DecemParalysis. She carried a shower of Jo Anne 2 p. m. Wednesday, January 25, ber 28th to January 1st in New On the program were G. W. Mrs. Ben Silvers, chairman, roses. at the Jewish Community Center York City. The convention was McDougal and his daughter, Betty met with her committee Tuesday The bride's Bister, Miss Doris byjthe Palestine Supplies Depart- by far one of the most-successful Maitland, la Scotch folk dances; vening at the downtown head"FAMOUS F3Z FJI Gilinsky,' was maid of honor. Her ment of the Omaha Chapter of held In recent years —- particu- A Jewish reading by Sarah Tanb; quarters established for the projAnnouncement has been made gown of periwinkle blue taffeta Hadassah. for the benefit of the larly so for Alpha Theta, who and piano rhythms by L. de Vil- ects. Represented on the com- that the annual winter dance V— Oar E*sy Purment P!a»—Fmraam a t had a. bouffant skirt and the bo- Hadassab. Medical Organization came away with a large share of la. Mrs. Max Fromkla spoke on mittee are women from the Beth sponsored by the Beth El Auxil"Charm." Community Einging foland its 27 subsidized institutions El auxiliary, the Temple auxil- iary will be held Sunday night, dice -was fashioned with, puff the honors. Among these is a pariary, Hadassah. the Women's Di- February 12. at the Paxton Hotel. Bleeves. The neckline had clipa, in the Holy Land. ticularly prized possession, The lowing. Kalah Franklln.president, gave vision of the Jewish Community The Palestine Supplies Depart- President's Cup, a trophy awardone at each side. She carried yelMusic for dancing will be furment which was organized in ed annually by the former Su- the delegates to the thirteenth an- Center, and the Auxiliary of the nished by Freddie Ebener's orchlow roses. Mrs. Max Davis, sister of the 1917 by a small group of women preme President of the Fratern- nual southwest-regional confer- aad. estra. Two Contests, a Jitterbug bridegroom, who was matron of in response to a request for in- ity, Herbert B. Steiner, to the ence held In Sioux City January Contest and a Waltz contest, will honor, wore a. chiffon gown of afants' garments, has grown to its chapter showing- the greatest co- 13 and 14 a rousing eena-ofl. b* held during the evening. Mrs. Fred Slikan has been Eight Oinahans attended the coral shade. The gown was fash- present capacity of furnishing operation with the National OfMoe Lineman is chairman, g chosen chairman ot the annual andMrs. iioned d with ih a V d puff linens not only for the Hadassah fice. Of particular note also is the convention. R. H. Kooper, co-chairV-neck and benefit card pasty tofeeheld man Mrs. hospitals' 25 clinics, 20 Infant The next meeting will be held re-election of Edwin Sommer, Allong of the affair. sleeves and the skirt was March 27. Welfare stations and the Nurses January 26. pha Theta alumni, as Midwest Rell SIXTEENTH AT HARNEY and flowing. She carried TalisTickets are $1.25 per couple. Training school, maintained in gional Director. Among those repman roses. The Council of Jewish Women The three brldcsmaids, Mrs.Palestine by Junior Hadassah, resenting . the active chapter at has been chosen a member of the GROCERS NAME NEW Aaron Rips, sister of the groom. but are giving liberal quantities the convention were Stanley SloaCo-ordinating committee for GerMrs. Abe Shafton and Miss Bern- of linens to other Jewish institu- burg, Jerome Milder, Ernest Winman-Jewish Refugee Relief. This BOARD MEMBERS troub, Morton. Eisen, and Robert Ice Gilinsky of Sioux City were tions there. The f i r s t regular business Alpha Theta's alumni meeting of the year was held Sun- is a local committee through gowned alike, Mrs. Rips in shell The Oraaha Palestine Supplies Edelstein, New directors of the Omaha pink, Mrs. Shafton in raspberry, Department headed by Mrs. Reu-were represented by Herman Ro- day at the Jewish Community which all matters pertaining to Retail Grocers association -were German-Jewish relief are banand Mies Gilinsky in dubonnet. ben Kulakofsky and Mrs. Ben senblatt, Nate Levy, Edwin Som- Center. Harold Epstein w a s elected last week at a meeting The frocks of net were made with' Brodkey, Mrs. Jack Kaufman and mer, Lloyd Malashock, and War- named chairman of the properties died. held In the Sokol auditorium. puffed sleeves and skirts of twoMrs. Richard Wright announce ren Ackerznan. committee, with. Max Cohen to The newly elected directors Inlayers of net, very bouffant. They the following requirements needclude Ben Perelman, Sam RosenRobert Cohen was recently assist. carried roses the same shade as ed in Palestine at present: Sheets made One of the many activities of blum, Edward Gilbert, Morton a member of The Detoneer they gowns. . (sizes 81x99 inches and 72z^9 Chapter of the Society of Ameri- the chapter is the publication of a Llp»ey and Mark Polantky. The best man was Earl Ross i n c h e s ) , Crinkly bedspreads, can Military Eglneers, and has monthly newspaper. Milton Guss Sam Rosenblum 1B the organiToby Hertzberg Is chairman of and the groomsmen were Norman blankets (double and single)-, pll- been appointed to the committee has been chosen editor-in-chief, zation's out-going president. the committee in charge of the Rips, Ben Smith, and Dr. ~ Sam ows, pillow cases, turklah towels; in charge of Engineers Week for and Yale Richards, news editor. Morgan. face towels, wash cloths, dish the University Military Depart- Others on the staff are Manuel drawing sponsored by the Omaha Section of the National Counsil Open* New Barber Shop Mrs. Gilinsky, mother of the towels, dish cloths, table doth3, ment. Himelstein, Harold Orach, Joe of Jewish Juniors to be held at bride, wore . royal blue velvet muslin (bleached and unbleachGuss and Ben Miller. the March meeting of Council. Jack Sayian, formerly known gown trimmed in sequins and a ed) diapers, tooth brushes, combs One of the highest honors posgardenia corsage. and hair brushes, sweaters, allAuxiliary, Congregation of sible to secure from a local A. Z. Others on the committee are as Jack Selinsky, who operated Helen C&stleman. co-chairman, barber shop at 218 South Israel Mrs. Blumenthal, mother of the sizes; underwear for men, women A. chapter was gives Jos Guss a n d Harriet Wolsky, Mable his Fourteenth for a number of bridegroom, was in- Dubonnet and children, bath robesr~ pawhen he was unanimously elected lutskin, Ra.e Spar, Bernice Gare- years, announces a new location hoover The Ladies Auxiliary of the crepe, the gown ha\ ing silver Jamas, nightgowns, "to represent Sam Beber chapter Pearl Freednian, Isabelle at 103 North Sixteenth. Four eftrimming on the sleeves and a aprons, men's suits, top shirts, Congregation of Israel will hold In the annual district convention lick, Rosenblatt, Rose Mayerowich, ficient barbers are always in atwomen's dresses, girls' dresses, its regular meeting on Monday, to be held at Madison. Wis. He shoulder bouquet of gardenias. K&iinan, Ruth Goldstein tendance. A reception and dance was held boys' blouses, boyB* trousers, chil- January 23, in the assembly room has served twice as Aleph Godol Evelyn for the four hundred guests fol- dren's handkerchiefs and infants' of the synagogue, Twenty-fifth of the chapter, has been elected and Charlotte Mayer. The prize will be an upholsttrico shirts. and J streets. lowing the ceremony. secretary of the Corabelt region, Patronize Our Advertisers Plans will be completed at was twice chosen the most pop- ered bridge set consisting of The couple are on a month's Any of the above Items will be bridge table s.ad four chairs. •wedding trip to Califronia. acceptable for the linen shower this time for the card party to be ular Aleph, and at present i s The next regular meeting of or cash contributions. When held on Sunday evening, January head of the Round Table organi- Junior Council will be February 29. All members have been zation. Abe Resnick will serve cs JOSLYN MEMORIAL cash Is donated, linens Trill be 12. urged to attend. alternate. At 2:30 in the Concert Hall, purchased in New "York at wholeA new tdu.lt edccatiosal class Sunday, three sound pictures, sale costs and forwarded to PalA. Z. A. 100 will take part In inaugurated "Wednesday eve"Big Timber.' "Modern Eden," estine. the national drive to eeczre funds was GOLDIE MYERSON at s o'clock. All nesabers •nd "Rambles in Gaspesia" will for the Youth Aliyah movement. ning A tea will be served following invited to join this class be shown. A luncheon and bridge was At an executive meeting held last are the meeting by the social comDr. Palmer Findley will give mittee headed by Mrs. E. Meyera. given by the Goldle Myereon club Thursday at A d v i s o r Alfred which will tseet each Wednesan illustrated lecture in the lec- A program is being arranged by on Tuesday, January 10, at the Frank's home, plans were dis- day. The dr&m&tics group met on ture Hall at 3:30 on "A Journey Mrs. Phlneas Wintroub, Mrs. Ar- Jewish Community Center for the cussed concerning funds for the Tuesday, and plans were made Through Scandinavia. thur Romm and Mrs. A. D. Frank purpose of distributing tickets worthy cause. Harold Zelinsky, for Purim program. The group The 4 o'clock organ recital will of the- program committee. among the members for the club's past chapter and regional Aleph will aalso -r - / S present plays for future Godol, had the distinction of bebe played by Miss Esther Leaf. fund-raising projects. CULTURAL meetings. ing chosen by the Supreme AdIn the Library at 4:30 Mrs. The study group on "OrientaMrs. P. Crandell was selected WILU •f-.>fl| Council is originating a Town Jtena W. Murtagh -will review tion of Hadassah Projects" will as chairman of the ticket com- visory Council to lead District six, Geratle Mack's book, "Toulouse- be> held today at 2 p. m. at the mittee. The next social meeting the largest and most powerful Hall Fonim group for members district of A. Z. A., in the Youth who are Interested in this new Ltutrec." home of Mrs. Ed Brodkey. "Zion- of the organization will be held Aliyah drive for funds. radio feature. The first meeting on. Wednesday, January 25. at the ism and Its Place in Hadasaah" •was held at the home of Toby BARMITZVAH home or Mrs. Harry Kolnick, The newly appointed chairmen be presented by Mrs. Morris Flax. Mirriajn Kirschenbaum Last Saturday morning, Milton will 2424 J street. have their respective committees Franklin. "Jewish National was hostess on January 19, and Ruth McGlnnis, Women's World A. soskin, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. at work already. The cultural :r. J,c-.;-"i--.'t ^. Fund" will he presented by Mra. the nest forum will be at the Champion Pocket EiUi»rfi Plsvefj Isadora Soskin was Bar Mltrvah A. program will include intra-chapWed., Jan. ssth. £ «ntf 8 P. M. A. Steinberg-. Mrs. Lazar KapAuxiliary, W o r k m e n ' s home of Gertrude Greenberg. at the Beta Hamedrosh Hagodel ter debates and group discussions. LADiES ESPECIALLY INVITED is chairman of this group, asCircle, 1 7 3 Synagogue. He conducted his own lan The social commutes la planning Bistedjjy Mrs. Max Givot. Left: JLia service under the guidance of bis a chapter skating party and an Patronise Oar Advertisers The Hadassah Oneg Shabboih The Ladies Auxiliary of the teacher, Mr. D. Rifkin. annual spring dance. The retacked start. Ic liL&zL ci u~sy L v « « t . J:.-~*&.. be held Saturday, December Workmen's Circle, 173, Is spon- liffous committee is reviving inAmong the out-of-town guests will 21, at the home of Mrs. J. H. present were: Mr. and Mrs. P.-Kulakofsky, 114 Sfluth Fifty-first soring a card party on Monday, terest in Friday night services Right: Fine tuckisg mt&u ir,' J. Heeger and son, Allen, of Ak- street, 2:30 p. m. "Hadassah So- January 23, afternoon and eve- and the Boclal eervea committee ^^^'&K •kte of * tlim dras.. ron, Iowa; Mrs. Lester Heeger of journ Through the Northwest Re- ning, at the Labor Lyceum, Twen- •will soon put on a drive for old clothes for the needy. The athSioux City; qnd Mrs. A. Mallin, gion" will be given by Mrs. David ty-second and Clark'6treets. Proceeds will go to the fund Mrs. M. Grossman, Mr. and Mrs. A. Goldstein. The Oneg Shabboth Joe Grossman, Mr. Ben Soskin will begin promptly at 2:30 p.for German refugee youth. and daughter, Shirley Ann, allm. and all members are requested The board of directors of the SEE—HEAR—MEET of Kansas City. Labor Lyceum association is doto be on time. nating the hall for the occasion. "The Survival of the Jew In the The public is invited. THETA LAMBDA* EfTALLS BY World Today" class will meet And" His ROYALS OFFICERS Tuesday,' January 24, at 1:15 ENTERTAINING NIGHTLY The installation of officers of promptly at the Jewish CommunINVEST SAFELY, WISELY IN Theta Lambda took place last ity Center. This group is under IN THE Sunday at a dinner held in tho the leadership of Mrs. David A. Polo room of Dixons. The follow- Goldstein. Mrs. M. Lewish will Annuity, Endowment, Ufa ing were installed: Bess Lefitz, lead the review on the last of (HARK LBOft OF president; Ruth Miller, vice-pres- Chapter 2 and Mrs. William PolK.' : - • . Represent* 81 Strong Cempan» ident; Rita Marx, treasurer; Eve- lack will report on "A Resume of tea— Every Typa el inouranea lyn Wallman, secretary; Ethel Conditions In Palestine." and Benfla written. Kadis, historian; and Helen Min• OMAHA'S CALL AT 7CS7 or WA 81S3 The claBB ol "Personalities" kin, Reporter. WELCOME TO THE WORLD City Flnaneo a. insurancs Co. will bo held at 1 p. m. Friday, January 27, at the home of Mrs. BIBS. GOLDSTEIN RETURNS Goldstein, 322 North Mrs. David A. Goldstein has Arthur street. Mrs. Al returned from Kansas City, Mo., Thirty-seventh Fiedler is co-hostess. "Malmonwhere 6he was the principal ides" will be given by Mesdamea speaker at a Hadassah-Jewlsh Na- Morris Stalmaster, •William M. VALUED tional Fund celebration. S h e DV
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC OPEN TO REFUGEES
Women's Mizmclii
MALASHOCTS
COUNCIL
Junior Hadassah
Zeta Beta Tau
Beth EL Dance to Be Held Febr. 12
CARMANS
A. Z. A. 100
Junior Council
<-*.»i. "te-to -fr
_ / / • " •
^
'
<•'•*+•-,*-.<*•
*•
1 t fc-T
NELLY DON
Bombay Room
Hotel. Foatenelle
^H
c
spoke on "Earth and Heaven."
YOU'RE ALWAYS NEXT AT ANNOUNCE BAR MITZVAH Mr. and Mrs. Abe Bernstein announce the Bar Mitzvah of their son, Lee Aaron, Saturday mornSOS NORTH SGTH ing, January 21, at the Beth El Synagogue. MOST COURTEOUS SERVICE On Sunday, January 22, Mr.
K0SE3SB SflLflG! Keener
Us
KiiOlO ifliliQslikr.r/.l'.'.'.'.'.'.Lj. 2To BBEflKFASV BEEF t K ? ?*????" B5tSkus.\.iaL3
LjkaLaa
CJsouSsScr
K
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . U s .
63BQSB DalF Sa !f.T. SfBn@E3?^5
OTIS
FcBey
Lb H8Q SSSd* *.'.!!'.' /. \'. 1'.'.! 11'LJ.
5dUi4 KosJssp
WALTER WNCHZLL MAS GIVEN THIS SENSATiONAL STAR PLENTY OF AfSW YORQHIDS.
•*» Us.
KesSer .Crick «-*-*» lecftcr mils, . H ,-. $?"** -arcs Clze, c s e S s - — E s . . . . . . . . . <•* " ta—j iLSUtSLa^ Dernsstte Ostea U> .
i; u :\i f ,; i
c f 1-.r . « - • -
- i r v :,-:-•,• . ; ' : ; v h r a i d f e
na
r
Eleck pa'ent r Jeponica Tan. he ^Cunningesl" Shorn Ever
%,=-,. •>
'ns».U.S.Pct.O2.
i.**^*"
©tiers. I.SS to 14.SS
c^r-55,' &\-" SENSATIONAL DANCIfJQ
her:
A Soapsuds FashSon* that starts you on your w a y to Spring looking ever fresh and dainty! Tiny rows of lace , . triracollarand^ I cuffs . . . . liny price \ j stretches your bud- \; cet. Blue Belle, Blush Rose, Peacock, dses <w 12-44.
F* i
ET "CONNIE11
"ifey-b'fsy" pumplets v/itK innocent f t <o*«5n bowt, mekis ninietures of your feet! « ^ . IM . i^ heels! NEW AS THE DAWN! Can you resist them? . . . nrr m Mademohdl*. Ct>rm6!<ti>"-*-Sffo
and BOUSiAG STOEETG
.K
>
ci u urker Dam Pushes Water
T\~ v \ /vi ?m
WRECKERS HAVE THEM NOW—Another link in the chain of glamorous days on the Mississippi river appears to be broken with the passing of two of the few remaining picturesque excursion steamers. Above, the two boats have been retired and are being broken up for junk, near St. Louis, Mo. These boats have plied up and down the river for nearly three generations.
AT ST. MORITZ—Having fun at the winter sports center at / S t . Moritz, Switzerland, are Lee Tracy, American screen star, and •f his bride, about to take off on a sled for a run down the hill. * BJIrs. Tracy is the'former Helen Thomas Wyse. They were married \ t a Yuma^Ariz., on July 20, 1938, after a plane trip from lios /Angeles, and are on a honeymoon.
IN PRAYER—Gripping scene as some of the 1,000 sharecroppers, majority of whom are Negroes. join in prayer and sing campmeeting hymns as they camp in the open in what they term a demonstration against tenant eviction and sharecropper poverty, in southeastern Missouri. This picture was taken near Sikeston, on U. S. Highway 61. Sikeston business men said the demonstration was without cause, since many landowners had pleaded with them to remain on
farms.
lllStllllMlilli^1 ' - I
[
\s
*
-
**f
[\'V\ '^;v^-—'' '
LADY AND HER DOCS—Among recent arrivals in New York from a trip abroad was Gertrude Niessen, screen and night club singer. Accompanying her was her very companionable dog, Bunjie. When the cameraman prepared to take this picture, Bunjie considered him gravely, decided he might not make such good eating and eventually agreed to let Miss Niessen direct aSairs.
BACK FROM EXPEDITION—Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Lcgcndre of Charleston, S. C . as they arrived in New York from an expedition into Iran for the American Museum of Natural History. They collected 550 specimens of rodents and other animals including sheep, ibex, wild boar, deer and antelope. Mrs. Legendre said the women ran away from strangers.
FIGHTER — This caricature Is of Governor Georpe D. Aiken of Vermont, who asked the legislature for a defense lund to fight off encroachment on State property by the Federal government. Contention arises over proposed construction of a flood-control dam at Union Village, 50 miles from Montpelier. Governor asserted in his message the government proposed to take land without considering rights of the State*
/PREMIER'S KISS — So enthusiastic were the inhabitants of •'" Bastia,-Corsica, -when. French Premier Edouard Daladier visited • .thein, recently, that everything from flowers to that most typical s, of jCorsican gifts, the vendetta knife, were showered on him. Here \"a poracan maiden is about to give him a kiss, during his.visit. / Jslanders'sbouted themselves hoarse. / r - I ••
PROTEGE — Among vacationers at St. Petersburg, Fla., recently, was Miss Roberta Jonay, lovely ballroom dancer favored by Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, wife of the President. Miss Jonay presented a striking picture, as above, in her new bathing costume.
ONE IS BED-HEADED—These two men look so much alike that many persons in Washington have continuously confused them. At right is Senator William H. Smathers of New Jersey and at left is Attorney General Frank Murphy. Both have ruddy faces and similar eyes. One day they wore pink carnations and the confusion was awful. But Mr. Murphy's hair is red. /
,
fiifr-j'
•
^'-
''• t -'
/
> -
— —
!• t'i
!
V; *
1s "
.
\
-
I
A
J -•
i
-
i
•• ? > " 1
i
ft
i .
*
' •A ^A
-
i
1
\
i \ 1 i
'BISECTS FEOM SICK BED—Defying his medical advisers, Cecil B. DeMille directs film production from a hospital stretpher, in Hollywood, after collapsing from overwork. The 57-year-old veteran producer is being encouraged by Barbara Stanwyck, above. Doctors ordered him to bed for two weeks, but he insisted on
„.-„«
...
-
£;i,
ABOUT TO STRING JIMMY—Unique annual affair in Cheltenham Township, Elkins Park. Pa., is re-enactment of stagecoach hold-up days and mock hangings. This year Jimmy Foxx, Boston Red Sox first baseman, -was in the role of thief. Above, he is menaced by the rope—but he'got out of it. Former Governor Harold G. Hoffman of New Jersey is at right.
Sr/sSES TTATES nVS CriiIL£r—Senrli-:- Co'orado river water 032 rrulos ever mour.ts.:nt r.rsd icrcss deserts to Los Angeles and 12 Cvhcr c.tiCi. is the job of Parker Dcin. its siphons and punapi. one of the world's greatest engineering projects, first section of which was recently opened. Top panel shows the dam, on the Colorado river 150 • miles downstream f r o a Boulder Dam, whose
Lvi. F o . l o ~ . ir'.r.kc ^u:r,ii -x fro~ f i e &.". viv.li ilic C-s t!:roiu:.i "-.iv'-i ;.';.: vt la ::- .• .-
7 hpr i v o miles : - , cc\Ucv,
vaster flowing from tlie aoueduct o Gene Basiit reservoir. Right center. J. M M. Geviord chief i i h set the pumps ir motion. electrical engineer, who Cost of project completed is s?6'c 000 oon "
THE JEWISH PBESS, FBIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1939
we. c.
too State Coal team against their
arch encmys. the Cllcguot Club Eskimos. The next match will feature the Wardrobes and the Empires. This match should be By SAM ZWED3ACK i\; tho best match o£ the evening. -i- : STANDINGS OF TEAMS The third game will pat the Kal.Name of Team. TV. L. Pet.xnana against the Greenbergs and SUte Goal & Gas Co..81 20 .60Sthe final match finds the Shrier Empire Cleaners . . . .S5> 10 .604Paint team against the Smith MoGfreenberg Fruit Co. . S 3 SO .583tors. CHoqoot CInb 2 3 2 3 .540 The Wardrobe 26 SS .510 The league takes this opporSalman Insurance . . 2 2 29 .431 tunity of bidding Abner Kalman The Smith Motors . . .10 82 .373 'Bon-voyage," as Abner is-leavThe Shrier Paint Co.. 18 83 .353ing us for a while to witness the graduation exercises of his daughOnly three of the regularly ter, Elaine, who will graduate scheduled lour matches In the J. next month from the school she C. C. Bowling leagie •were bowled is attending at Los Angeles, Cal. off this week, due to the Empire However, Abner says, that after CleaneT-Greenberg Fruit match all he has brought his team up being postponed until this Sun- from the cellar position to withday morning. in, striking distance of the leadHowever, much damage was ers, and that upon his return he done in these three matches, espe- expects to find his boys a little cially to the erstwhile league closer to the top. leaders, namely Dave Frank's Also, your editor, Sam ZweiState Coal and Gas team who were back, will take a short leave of again on the losing side of ledger, absence from his duties, and by posing two out of threB gamea necessity forces blm to move to to the last place Shrier Faint and Joseph, Mo., for a Bhort term, Glass team, Jn spite of the fact if It will be any way possible, that the Paint boys were minus and will try and continue to send the sendees of their anchor man be in some kind of quips on" our an4 eaptain, Leo Weltz. bowling league, by malL If not, 'In this match, tho Coal Deal- ho takes this opportunity, to wish er* gave the Faint boys a 57-pin each bowler lots of luck, and to handicap in each; of their three apoligise for any remarks that games, which proved too big a may have been made in this colhandicap to overcome. umn in the past that just didn't .The first game was won by the suit every one. Paint boys by the slim marsin of 81* to 793. This loss can be attributed to the fact that each of the \Shrier boys bowled above their average, and at the same time being helped out by the fact Senior Jjeaguo Basketball that" the Coal boys for some reaStandings son or the other, just can't seem to get over the last frame, as in Sigma Alpha Mu w the past they have gone into the Omaha Jobbing Co. 2 last* frame with a lead, and then A. Z. A. 1 2 Dave Frank's boys get buck fever, Alpha Pi Tan : 2 and lose out at the crucial mo- Breslow Auto GlMS 2 ment. - In the second game, the A. Z. A. 100 1 Coal boys came bacls with a vengeance, and slaughtered the Faint Play in the J. C. C. Basketball boys by a 765 to 668 score. League last Sunday was. featured But for excitement, the last by three- serious upsets. The A. game took the prize of the eve-Z. A. 100 five won their first nniug. In this game the Coal game by defeating the Alpha PI boys lost out to Al Shrier's boys Taus 31-23. Norm Kuklin and by a 767 to 764 score. This game Ben Kutler of the Century Chapwas all even going into the last ter came through with 11 and 10 frame, and after the first three points respectively. " men on each team duplicated each others feats, Captain Sam ZwelThe Sigma Alpha Mu-quintet back of the Coal team struck ou to practically cinch this game, bu outdid the heretofore League not to be outdone by tbeir foes, leaders; the Omaha Jobbing ComBarney Abrams, who was bowling pany, In every department of the in anchor position for the Paint game to walk away with a decisboys, duplicated ZweibacK'B feat, ive 36-14 win. . ' Sol SatIe and Henry Riekes with the resulting score as stated were the main point-getters for above. . S. A. M.'B with three field, ,The two losses suffered by the tho goals and two free throws for a State Coal team, brings their to- total of eight points each. tal np ta-12 losses out of the .las 15-games. We wonder when their Tha last game on the card feaIdsing streak will end. If it will ever end. However, tured a tight defensive battle oa they- can't expect to be champs, the part of the A- Z- A, 1 cagers the way they have been shooting who defeated tho Breslow Auto
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL CLEANERS
J
BEAUTY SALON
i
SHAMPOO and FINGER WAVE
50c
PEERLESS
FEATURES
1
J. C. C. SPORTS
lately, but Sponsor Dave Frank Glass aggregation J.4-13. still inBlsts that his boys *will snap From tho openins whistle.to t out-of it at about tho camo time final game - t h e «ontestr was-iljr
s
the- weather will change, which and tucfe. Mort "Stretch" JJoref he- hopes will be real soon fo: led the attack for the Alepha with three, fields goals, but it was Leo many various reasons. Phil Katzman, who just re- Sherman's basket In the last for turned from his interrupted hon- ty-five minutes of play that turned in the victory for the youngeymoon.'was high man for the Coal, boys with a 539 series, fol- basketeers. lowed by Sam Zwelback's 501. Sol Yaffe was top for the Shriers After four games played, the with a 434, followed by Pug Fer- leagues seems to be more eve» er'a 430 series. than ever before. The League leading S. A. M.'s have been beat* In the second match of the eve- en by the Alpha PI Tau« who l a ning, the Kaiman Insurance team turn have been- beaten by the Omgot back on the band-wagon by aha Jobbers while the Omaha miking a clean sweep of their Jobbers were humbled by the selves with the fast coming "Ward- Z. A. 100. robes,, and won all three games, The Omaha Jobbing Co. has mutfi to their surprise and every- also ,been beaten by the Breslow one elses. However, credit should Auto Parts who were defeated by be^given where due, and it must the A. Z. A. 1. At the present be£fcaid that the Kaimstns since writing, anything can happen. the, addition of Herty Marks, hsxe changed aronnd into an entirely different team, and for the On Sunday the following schedfirst time this season they were uled will be observed: A. Z. A. 1 high, team for the evening when vs. Sigma Alpha Mu; Alpha Pi Tan vs. Breslow Auto Glass: and they rolled a 805 first game. Omaha Jobbing Co. vs. A. Z. A. Their first game was won by a 830 to 76S score being aided by 100. a 25-pin handicap. The second The J. C C. Women's Volleygame was won by an. 807 to 637ball team will play tonight at the score, and the Wardrobes were Benson Gym starting at 8 p. m. finished off by a 799 to 698 score. So far this season the J. C. O Herby Marks was top man for the women have not lost one competKaimans, when, he put together itive game. games of 211, 184 and 163 for a nice-'. 558 series, which- was also The Wrestling sport under high for the entire league. He was followed by tho diminutive direction of Dr. Abe Faier ha little record holder, namely Lee been proving "very popular with Harwich, who responded with a twenty boys reporting regularly at the Center for work-outs. 512 series. Sammy Horwlca, the erstwhije The J. C C. Physical depart cookie salesman, was top, man ment had the pleasure of lining for the Clothers with a nlca 586 up tho sporting acts for the B'nal series, while their next best man B'rith stag held last Monday. was Captain Paul Steinberg, who Dave Cbesnau, physical finally; dropped down to a measly director, was V inassistant charge of the '4 72. series, after flirting around boxing, and Dr. Abe. Faier arthe coveted "600 circle for theranged the wrestling matches. . weeks. The ping pong exhibition wa: under the. director.. of Isadon ' In"the fln&l -match: of the eve-Friedman, Missouri Valley Tennii ning," the Clicquot Club Eskimos Table Champion. finally broke back into the win column by taking two out of three games from the Smith M ^ On January 25 play will begin tor boys. The Clicquots, who have In the handball, singles tournabeen In the same class as thement, classes A and B. So far th State Coal team for the past following have signed up: Harol month, lost the first game by a Garber, David - "Werner, Waltei 727 to 698 score, due to Benny Kurs, David Gold ware, and Mor> : Stein, who forgot to practice last rle Adler. week. But in the second sam Finals in the J. C. C. Handbal' Benny responded with' a 126 score and this, helped out. Im- Doubles will be.played this Mon..'•'. mensely when the Clicquots won day at the Center.: this game by a 725 to 695 score. Benny says, he will thank Lar- ADVOCATES "WHITE ry Wagle, the City's top, ranking MAN'S COUNTRY1 bowler, as he coached him, and also loaned him his 47-dollar ; Washington . (WNS) ,— Advo"Bates" ball. The last game was the transplantation of Gerwon by a 765 to 689 score. The cating Jewish refugees to a "whttt Clicquots were topped" by Dr, D.man country," Mrs. Franklin D C. Platt, who continues-his high man's Roosevelt told members of- thi scores, and this week he respond- press that such-a place should b' ed with a 537 serie3. He was fol- selected with a view to obtainin lowed by Captain Abe Feldman, fertile land agriculture. II who ia still suffering from the should have iao r climate, effects of New Year's, resulting be "under propermoderate wit ia his: 485 series. "Plumbing" careful planningsupervision and adequat* Sammy Yousem was top man forhealth protection.* Mrs. Roosevel the Smith Crew with his 501 said it would be "foolish" to taki series, and Sponsor Harry Smith them to places htat cannot b was next high man with his 469made suitable for white people. series.
• •
•
••-..-.-
Next week's schedule will pit
Patronize Our Advertisers
SPECIAL
To Acquaint You with s Fiaer Quality of Cleaning . GARMENTS FOR
2
PERMANENT WAVES
at $3.50 and Up 716 Br&ndeis Tkea. Bid*. AT 4333
CLEANERS Florence Blvd. at Ames KE 1 5 0 0
FIXTURE SUPPLIES
TOLEDO SCALES AND ENTERPRISE MEAT U. S. SLICING MACHINES GRINDERS AND AND COFFEE MILLS BRKAD SLICERS NEW AND USED SCALES, SLICERS AND CHOPPERS SERVICE ON ALL MAKES O. D. EDDY A. J. STONER CON A. ANDERSON 117 No. 9th St. Lincoln, N*br. B: 0434 -.
DISTRICT MANAGER 314 South 13th Street Omaha, Nebraska ATLANTIC €200
704 Pierce St. Sioux City, la? 8-4747
LAUNDRY
BUTTER
HARDINGS QUALITY
AS THRIFTY AS ITS NAME And It Eliminates Washday Drudgery
Sweet Butter
KIMBALL'S
HARDING
THRIFTY SERVICE
CREAM COMPANY AT 6040
Wearing Apparel washed spotlessly clean, delivered Just damp enough to iron
BUSINESS SCHOOL
—ALL THE FLATWORK BEAUTIFULLY IRONED
VAN SANT
6 lbs. 48c
SCHOOL OF
BUSINESS
Additional Pounds
The KIMBALL LAUNDRY CO. AT 0 2 8 0
C. B . — 5 4 7 3
UIWELRf DIAMONDS—WATCHES-i-MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS TYPEWRITERS RADIOS ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES ™
1401 DOUGLAS ST.
"Say It With Flower.*'
27th and t. Always a Fine Variety cf
FRESH 'FISH SEAFOODS DAILY •Also tBo'Finest
GTEASi 'end - CHICKCti ;-.-.• DINNERS PRIVATE DINING-ROOMS AVAILABLE
EISA 4774 for Cesarvatfea
QHQC2AVING
SHOP Specialises in
O Center Pieces O Funeral Arrangements © Cat Flowers O Potted Plants O Corsages Main Floor Branciels Store
&S07 FARNAIV1 JA C37G
Advertising
YOU CAN HAVE NEW FLOOR COVERING IN A 9 x 1 2 KITCHEN
By t»HES*EAS J. BIKOX be privileged to have his guidance. He was chosen because of NtTTZl J.TETWS his leadership And ability . . Clap Germany can't afford luxuries hands for Gabriel Heatter, the i n c h as democracy (recently radio commentator, who resigned classed in this category by Gov-from the- employ of one at his ernor Karl Kaulmana of Ham-sponsors when that firm, worried burg) or batter or meat, but Ber- by complaints it had been receivlin markets are full of Italian ing from Nail and Italian FasBtra-wberrles and other fruits now cist customers, asked him to tone —which is Mussolini's way of down his attacks on the dictators helping Afioll kid the German , . A national essay contest on people . . . So acute has the short- the subject of "What Jewish Digage of good, solid food grown In nity Means to Me" Is being sponGermany that the New York Nazi sored by A. Z. A., the junior B'nal sheet Is carrying ads asking all organization . . . William sympathizers to send food, pack- B'rith Jay Schieffelin, head of the new ages to their relatives in the Christian Committee to Boycott Fatherland . . . Among other Nazi Germany, among his things the German public Isn't most cherished has an told-Is that many of the pilots ancient Bible that possessions first AmerWlien Natur* Riaas t o who fly the Nazi air armada are ican Schieffelin, the an Immigrant foat Men's Dream* . . . Be so poorly trained that accidents Prepared! Storm and Tor* are most frequent . . . But forfrom Germany, brought here two nado Insurance Is Your once we find ourself In agreement centuries ago . . . We don't know Protection. with the Nazi press . . . Since what percentage of butlere is JewLindbergh's report to America on ish, but 25 per cent of the pro- Write or Com* In Today I the Nazi air strength some papers ceeds of this year's Butler's Ball, in Hltlerland are demanding that attended by the domestic staffs of he return the medal with which the Four Hundred, went to Beth the Furore decorated him some David hospital, which provides months ago . . . Our heart goes hospital care lor needy member* out to those courageous German Of the Butler's Club . . • cabaret artists whose digs at high ABOUT P E O m Nazi officials have aroused the INSURANCE CO. A descendant of General von Ire of the barbarocrats . . . One Steuben, the German who fought 1 1 0 1 City Nat'L Bk. B U * of these Jokes, concerning Gory In the American Revolution aad Goering, we must relay to yon . . whom the Naris therefore cite a* AT 4 S 0 0 If seems that while a crowd was a reason why they should JM al- Lot Us ntumeo Yow Now watching the launching of a bat- lowed to take over the IT. S., 1* a or Roftoaneo Your tleship Goering. who was aboard, refugee from Germany now . . . Old Car Etuck his head out through a She is Frau Anne von Stenbea porthole . . . Whereupon every- Rosenberg, a s Aryan, but marbody shouted: "Look—they Just ried to a Jew . . . The greatest decorated Goering with, a battle- athlete of modern Unres, known ship" . . . as "The Great Gama." llvw In SURGICAL GARMENTS OVERSEAS CHATTEB India, cradle of t h e Aryan tongues, but Is only half Aryan A flaw that may causa an even- . . . The other half is Jewish . . . tual crack-up of the Rome-Berlin He has wrestled 3,000 matches axis Is developing because the In his 58 years, and has never lost Nazis now want to take over all a fall . . . Gary Cooper wants it the Austrian shipping which for known that not only is he no admany years has been under Ital- mirer of Nazism, but he detests ian control . . . "Certified luna- it, and that all rumors to the contic" is what historian H. G. Wells trary- are utterly unfounded . now calls Hitler . . . Diplomatic To make everything kosher, F circles are buzzing, at the rumor nie Brice will have & psrt i s that the Duke of Windsor may lie Chaplin's Cicte-tor film find-Ws- life's work as the-direc- Which reiaiaes us" to wcaaer tor of a huge new international whether Charlie will change his agency to succor political, racial traditional ccstaclie to ths new and" religious refugees . . Prague Hitler butterfly mods! . . . One ia seeing.the hirtk of a new club Jack Stem Is plannlcs a Broadof Czech Aryans afflicted with way production of "The City Hittlte probosci (otherwise known Without Jews" . . . Albert Einas Jewish noses) . . . They hare stein has fo-un3 Ms first Ameriunited in self-protection against can protege, sn eigfcteen-vear-old the expected racial lavs, and areyouth named Sidney Benson, who planning to wear special identi- before long- -w-iU announce the discovery of a.new chemical, isolated fying badges . . . unfler the guidance of .the Daddy A Camp Surgical ASIDE TO SENATOR BORAH of Relativity . . . Gcr best wishes 4«si(meil to lift and When you protested against to Governor Henry Homer o: bdominal the injection of the Jewish issue Illinois for s. speed? recovery . . . Gives front lieec a vtrr? Into the Senate Committee's hear- Jazz king Benny Goodman took e effect, ing on the Frankfurter appoint- a successful at classical Ia*3y ment by one Allen Zoll, you for-music the otherflingEight, playing fitting got to mention that Mr. Soil is oa clarinet in a serious Carnegie friendly terras with the Nazi the Hall concert . . . J. Edward BrcmBund in this country, and also is back en Broadway, lookwas the organizer of the Father berg ing for a suitable play . . . Kis Coughlinite picketing of radio years Physician*'. Nur»eip% HOBS' a' in Hollywood brought him station WMCA by a picket line a sufficient srtti Sick Room pr cash reserve ss that Medletl Artu Bldg, Om«»is that, carried anti-Jewish placards he can afford to be cSoorj EOW Fhon* AT»«ntle ease . , . The first wife ol Bryan GrovYOTT SHOUIiD KNOW er, the British flying Romeo who •. The ne'west Nazi impropergun- crashed into tee headlines by getda Etunt Is to send German Bail- ting his Russian wife out of the ors, oa shore leave in America, Soviet Union after many vicissito the movie houses, with instruc- tudes, was a Bnningham, Ala., tions to applaud Hitler's appear- girl named Jacobs . . . Irving . _ ances on the screen . . . "The Piche!, of the Cincinnati Pichels, American Way," the new show will be seen in Warner Brothers coming to Mr. Rockefellers Cen- "Juarez" . . . AEd the Irving Berter Theatre, will include passages lins are planning to settle down taken from Nutzi Fritzi Kuan's on a cozy little sixty-two acre pet speeches . . . Collier's maga- fana in the fceart of New York's 32nd and Hanr zine will soon be featuring some Sullivan County . . . hot Tevelations on Nazi concentration camps and on conations among refugees . . . Th© author PROJECT STUDIES will be Quentin Reynolds . . . As U. S. JEWISH FAMILY if-the refugees" weren't having a hard enough tine of it, the Nazis New York (JTA) — The Yidhere have evolved a new way of dish Grocp, a Federal vrritera' harrassing them . . They march project, is •K-orfcing oa a ttu&j of along' some of the Hoboken Jewish famllj- crgsxlsatlOEs in the steamship piers with signs read- United State to be entitled "The ing "We employ only refugees" Fanny Circles." The sronp reand intended to stir up anti-refu- cently issued the ^OO-p&ge "Jewgee feeling . . . ish Laadsmanshalfen of New THIS AXD THAT York," a study of Je^rish fraternHerbert Baj-ard Swope, whose al organisations in America. Editor oC both bocks is I. £ . . nephew John has just finished a book of pfaotoE called "Camera Eontcli, the Yiddish post. TheU Over Hollywood," is the head of landssianshaftez are ceEcribec as ! ' a group that is trying to arrange the first bedding cf Jewislt social a German As-It-Used-To-Be ex- life in the new world. hibit at the New York World's Fair < . . The Reverend- John Ber- Raise Funds for Tci..^. Nev.- York (Tv'NS) — Over a nard Kelly is finishing a biography of Patrick Cardinal Hsyes thousand dollars have been raisafi . . . Father Kelly, in case you for the construction of the Temhave forgotten, is the spiritual di- ple of Religion at Me New Tork rector for MaxReinhardt's "Ster- World's Fair by the Wciaes's nal Road" a couple of seasons Leagce. ol the United Synagogue, ago . . . The Washington Hebrew it was announced by Mrs. Samuel Congregation didn't have to go Spiegel, national presifient. Sisfar from home in its shopping for terhoods throughout tho cocntry a rabbi to succeed the late Dr. have contributes to 'the under- *.. Abrara Simon the first writing oJ the quarter Eiilllon 6oi- S > meeting of the Board of the lar cost of thsiEterdenonaination- \\ Washington Hebrew Congregation al Temple of Keligion, Mrs. since the death of Dr. Simon, 02 SpeJgel said. Monday, January Sth, the Board of the Congregation made the Dansig (M"KS) — The Danzij < unanimous recommendation that Jewish coras-nnity EOM its ceiseRabbi Norman Gerstenfela, asso- tery z'zi. Eyssgogrse lasfi to the ciate of the late Dr. Simoa, be Fres City of D&BEig to Ceirts in \ i appointed Habbi, and oa a long- part the cssts cl Jewiili cxr.isr'S- IJ term contract, so that tisy Trill
INSURANCE
HORROR!
ALFRED $.
MAYER
HEALTH SHOtS
FOOT HEALTH WITH Dr. M. W . LOCKS •HOES For Man and W o n n
Dr. M. W. LOCKI SHOE SALON
'
31» Secvrities BU*. AT 3»99
MOTOR TRUCKS
CK i MOTOR TRUCK HEADQUARTERS
largest Rtosk vt New nm<l
Trucks in Middle WMt SERVICE STATION. OPKN • A. M. to 1 A. M.
•UY WITH CQNFIDENCi
IMTlRNiTIOHAL HARVESTER COMPANY 15U» * Jon«> JA 70»Q We Do Our Own
©ft KENT
WOODSTOCK
I
TYPEWRITERS
*
pmcfc >
KEiETALS
'- $
t14 tO. mXH ST.—OMAHA COUNCIL, Pi,UFFi LINCOLN — E.'OUX OITV
tmktom 1060
^
THE JEWISH PRESS,- 'FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1939
Page 8
Prof. lUbercsaun WSE discovered terest of Eddie Cantor while en dead by his wife, his body slump- route to the United States on the ed oy«r a copy of the printed text Normandie a few months ago, made her debut at Carneigie Hall : ; of the bill. • The "press reported that,a league last week in a concret with 701 •to aid-the exchange of Hungarian members of the New York PhilMorris-Beechen, 67, a resident Mrs. A. Leibovttz returned Jevps'Jor--' Christians Hungarians harmonic-Symphony O r c h e fltr* of South Sioux City, died In a. lo- .. :• .<0orotba Tuesday with, ber daughter, Masin the United Steles will be es- under Mr. Cantor's sponsorship. cal, hospital after a lingering IllMISS ANNA PILL, conrespoadesi ine, from a week's visit in Sioux 5 " A .brisk: 6ale ofadvance tickets The actor, In a brief address on -tablisbed Bcortlr. Tbis fcogy will ness. Funeral service. !.were held for the dance, and carnival to = be City with relatives. request -tee Hungarian Govern- Introduction,- said: "It gives me In. Shaare "Zton synagogue ith In. Shaare y g lt g sponsored by the Council Bluffs Budapest (JTA) — The third ment and religiouB groups to ap- a -warm feeling to know that in Leo Meyerson, student at Drake, Rabbi H. R. Bablnowltz and Can-Talmud Torah Sunday, evening, Jewish within four days point . delegates and will urge this great democracy people may tor A. Pliskln officiating. January 22, Indicates that the af- university, spent the week-end in occurredsuicide here as a result of the'W&Ehingtaa to send an observer come to Carnegie Hall to hear Mr. Beechen was a Shrlner and fair should be a success, as re- Council Bluffs. great talent without regard to drastic .anti-Jewish measures be-' to Budapest, it was said. a member of Shaare Zion Byna- ported by Mrs. Etta Yudelson, race, creed or color." fore the Hungarian Parliament. Complete satisfaction of their Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cohen left Dr. Irtaa Szabo, 45-year-old wife chairman.' Tickets are being sold gogue. tv demands, -until now conthe widow,' rapidly both ia Omaha and infor Excelsior Springs, where they of a Budapest physician, took a fined solely" to the cultural do; Survivors .: Include Beechen of Council Bluffs. IRISH JEW SEEKS AID plan to spend several weeks. tatal dose of poison after-stating IBEJE, v-as extended to Hungary's A meetiug of the Senior" Ha- Cedar Anna; Rapids two sons,. FOR 'OPEN' PALESTINE andA. Marvin BeechFreddie Ebener's .orchestra will in a farewell note: "I cannot,reby Premier Bela Imredy, Uassali chapter will follow a des- en of South Sioux City, ana two furnish the. music for the. dance; Mrs. Albert Krasne left Mon- main Hungarian, so I .. choose Dublin (JTA) — Robert Briswhile Hungary's Jews, already sert-luncheon nest Tuesday aft- daughters, Mrs. R. R. Miller of amusement for the . non-dancers day for a two-week visit in Sioux death." The physician's •wife was faced-Vitii Clever -restrictions, were coe, Jewish member of the Governoon, January 24, in the Jew- Sioux .City and Mis3 Velma City. considered a Jewess under- ..--the placed iscder the threat of furth- ernment party in the Dail Eirann, will consist of a Bingo game, sevCommunity Center. The des- Beechen-of South Sioux City. Faye Cohen of Waterloo ish proposed law because she-did cot er repressive, jaeasures modeled sailed yesterday for the United eral card games, and Madame sert-luncheon -will begin at 1:30 have three Christian grandparents along the lines traced by the Nazi States on a two-month coast-toZorina, famous.'- seeress,. will' tell HYMAN, MANITOBA - Named Organization o'clock: Mrs. S. J. Slotsky and the fortunes of all those present. Reich. The semi-official Huma- coast tour during which he told Mrs. Henry Sherman a r e In President LEGISLATOR DEAD although she was born a The drawing for the electric Eyarsag, took the lead in this new he hoped to see President ROOM* ian and brought up in the Chrischarge of the arrangements. WINNIPEG. Man. (JTA) — roaster will also be held during anti-Semitic campaign, with othsr velt and Cabinet members in an tian faith. Mrs. "W. C. glotsky will preside Marcus, Winnipeg lawyer, has GROUP ENTERTAINS to obtain transfer of 6,000,. < died and will give .a report on the ac- T h e intermediate Dramatic the. evening. Dr. Geza Tonbovary, 64-year-old newspapers taking up the cry in effort at the age of 43. Born in 000 Jews from Germany, Poland almost full chorus. club will meet this afternoon at tivities of Hadassal;. Mrs. H. R. Ben Kubby, president of the legal adviser to the Jewish ComWilno and educated In England Excelsior Springs Chosen Rahinowitz will present current 4 o'clock for rehearsal on two Talmud,Torah, ,and Mrs. Yudel- at Oxford University, he was munity of Budapest, and Prof. and Rumania to Palestine. BriBcoe, wha.was understood to Place for 1940 events. A short business wlil playa to be given In February. son will be assisted by the follow- elected to the Manitoba Legisla- Leon L'bbermacn, 55-yesr-olfi eye REFUGEE PIANIST'S be acting on behalf of the New precede the program. ing • committee members: Benr ture In 1932 as an - Independent specialist, had earlier committed : , Convention DEBUT IN NEW YORK Zionist Organization, said lie . Monday .evening, January 23, Seldin, co-chairman of the affair ; Labor representative. He "was- notr suicide.- XJr: -Tonbovary ebot, bia-would go direct to Washington on self through the heart, leaviEg,.u '. Miss Faye Cohen of "Waterloo the advisors of the groups asso- Mrs. Richard Gordon ana Mrs. ed for his sponsorship in the "New Tort (JTA)—Ruth Hilde his arrival in the United States. •was elected" president of the ciated with the Youth Council Ben Kubby, drawing; Ben Seldin, Manitoba Provincial Legislature letter in which he said: "I owe southwest region of Junior Hawill.meet -at the Center. Sovel printing; Mrs; SanvRoffman, pub- of a bill making attacks on race nobody anything. I depart this Somer, 16-year-old Austrian Jew- He said he would make bis first dassah Sunday, the final day of Heshelow. w-Jlf speak on the place licity; Leo KHshe, Ben Kubby, or religion Illegal. life because .of. the Jew.. Law."ish pianist, who attracted the in- address in Boston. the 13th annual ccnference held "Mrs. Joe Gbtsdiner,; Mrs. Sam of the advisor in clubs. At a recent meeting Morris Alhere. ' .. Nathan Nogg and L. Katelman, bert was elected president of the -. • ' • . Other regional officers elected Sioux City Independent Farane. The cast, for the elocution class bingo. Simon Steinberg, A.. Baer, C. •were Miss - Dorothy Merlin of Other officers include Barney radio broadcast has been selected Sioux City, first vice-president; Rosenthal, vice-president; B e n and the-program will be present- Saltzman and M. Grossman, card* Miss Dorothy RIssen of Des Kaplan, secretary; M. Hall, treas- ed, this "month. Twenty children, rooms. Moinea, second vice-president; urer, and E. I. Stein, recording are enrolled In this group and the Mrs. Max Steinberg, Mrs. HarMiss Pradene Goldstein of Wichi- secretary. registration is still open'. to any ry Kubby, Mrs, Charles Saltiman, ta, Kan., third vice-president; Members of the board of trus- children between the ages of 5Mrs.- L. H. Katelman, Mrs. Ben Miss Minn Offnicn of Marshall- tees are Max Dervin, Max Hol-and 10 who are-interested. The Seldin,..refreshment booth. town, facording secretary; Miss land, H. Braverman, M. Kantro- class meets, each Sunday afterMax Harris, decorating. Goldle Rubin of Waterloo, corre- vich; Ml Resnik and I. Friedman. noon at 2 o'clock. Sam- Sacks, M. Grossman, Sam sponding secretary, and Miss MoJMeyerson; H. Meyerson, C. SalttIie Cone of "Kansas City, treasA Young People's Zionist Btudy mas, L. Bernstein and Simon urer. • group meets every other Monday Steinberg, wheel committee; Mrs. Members of the board elected evening In the Jewish Community A. Glllnsky, Mrs. Sam Sacks. Mrs. were Miss Ethel Berg, Cedar Center. Any .young people in- Scharf and Mrs. Sam Meyerson, Baccalaureate services for mid- terested Rapids; Miss Irene Cohen, Mason in attending these meetCity; Miss Rose Mendelson, Coun- year high school graduates will ings may call. Morris Alxenberg. bake booth. Mrs. S. Suvalsky, Mrs. - Max cil Bluffs: Miss Helen Lederman, be held this evening at Shaare Coha, Mrs.'Harry Cohen, Mrs. J. Denver; Miss Ethel Plost, Tulsa; Zion synagogue. The graduates Miss Ruth "Wolf, Lincoln; Miss in cap and. gown will have a 'pro- AID OLD PEOPLES HOME Gotsdiner, Mrs. 'Nathan- Nogg, Molly . Krisman, Oklahoma City; cessional at 7:55, with Paul HafMrs. Etta Yudelson,. Mrs. Sam Several patties have been given Roffinan, Mrs. Teperman, Mrs. R, Miss. Ruth Rautmari, St. Louis; fits marshall of the procession. ' Miss Lilly Friedman, St. Joseph, Morris Ginsberg will act as mas- during the past weeks with pro- Katelman, S. Shyken, S. Rosenceeds going toward "the proposed thai,'Sam Sacks and Ben Seldin, and Miss Kalan Franklin, Omaha. ter of ceremonies. A highlight of Sunday's proSylvia Friedman will offer the Home for the "Aged. Among those tickets..; gram was a talk at the luncheon" invocation; Dorothy "Wigodsky who raised funds with parties Those in-charge of ticket sellIn the Martin hotel by Irving •will give the class pledge. Mar- were Mrs. A. Wisot, Mrs. L Ru- ing at the door are L. H. Katelbinstein, Mrs. R. Kutcher and Xevitas, dean, of the College o£ tin Weiner will speak on "Educaman, Mrs. S. Sulvalsky, B. Seldin Jewish Studies at Kansas City. tion as an Antidote to Hysteria," Mrs. J. Lefkdvich. and Mrs. Max Conn. SReaklng on Zionism and the and Lawrence Slotsky will speak Several Junior Hadassan memAmerican J e w , Mr. Levitas on "What Is Expected of a Gradbers will assist In selling tickets TIPHERETH ISRAEL stressed the rebuilding of Pales- uate." Francys Maron will offer for concessions. . . . • - . ' tine as a. national Jewish home- the valedictory address and the All profits of the carnival will Services at Tiphereth Israel land.. Another feature was the benediction will be given by Rabbe used toward the Council Bluffs showing of motion pictures taken bi Rabinowitz. The ritual will synagogue will begin- this eve- Hebrew School. Tickets may be by Miss Offman during a recent be read byTCathryn Lass, Dorothy ning, at 5:15 o'clock and Satur- purchased at the door at one dolday morning at 9 o'clock. Rabbi trip to Palestine. • .'•• Wutkin, Sid Shapiro and Herman S. I. Bolotnikov will speak dur- lar per couple. A number of - cocktail, parties Levin. Others in the graduating ing the morning service. ' It was decided at the convenare being arranged before the aftion to hold the next conference class , include Isadore Bickove, fair. • Eva Borkin, Nathan Fishgpld, at Excelsior Springs, M,o. No - Members of the committees are Ruebin Hurwitz, Calmon Levich, date was set for the meet. asked to meet at the Eagles Hall • "Saturday afternoon the dele- Nathan Orlikoff, Eleanor RosofSunday morning to make final arga,tes were guests tf Senior Ha- sky, Stanley White. Cantor Morrangements. • ' d.assah. and the Ladies' Auxiliary ris Okun and the synagogue choir of; Shaare Zion at an Oneg Shab- will sing . special music for the . Mr. and Mrs. MV. Seff,, 312 meeting of the Council Bluffs •bbfc In - the Community Center. service. .-...: ,.. , . Twenty-fourth: street, - will - cele- A."AZ. AT wiir~tJB-helfl Tuesday. Saturday.evening,-a formal banbrate their, 50th wedding anniquet and' dance was held in the Refreshments at the Junior versary Sunday, January 22. They Norman Rosenthal has' cnarge of Martin.. •',. . Congregation service tomorrow will .hold open house on Sunday the Cultural Program tor this .At the opening business ses- morning- -will be served by Mr. from 3 o'clock: until 7,, itt- cele- meeting. Committees are . expected: to sion' Sunday morning, Mrs.. TV N. and Mrs. M. Seff In honor of their bration "of the anniversary. No hare reports prepared. There will Lewis offered the invocation and fiftieth wedding anniversary, . invitations. B£.v,&" been -issued. -~ be a complete report made by the greetings were given by Mrs. W. Amorig the guests will be Mr. check-room committee as to the C. Slotsky, Mrs. D. L. Rodin, Mrs. More than 100 women attended and Mrs. Ellis Levitt of Des H. K. Rabinowitz and Mrs. Lewis. the luncheon of the Ladies auxil- MoineB, M.r. and Mrs. Mark Krue- A- Z. A. proceeds of the Talmud Torah affair Sunday. •* • Business during the morning iary Tuesday noon and beard Mrs. ger of Wakonfla, S. D., and Mr. Aleph Gbdol Telpner has apJoseph Gordon of Minneapolis and Mrs.-Jack W.. Semsker. of Included the reading of the'minpointed the following commute* ntes by Miss Offman and reports speak on "The Jewish Woman In Chicago. to have charge of the checkroom: the Modern World." Mrs. Meyer by the following regional chairRosenthal, Vernon Fitch, The engagement of Miss MInda Norman men: Miss Franklin, treasurer; •Shubb presided at.the business and Mrs. Morris Rubin Friedman, daughter of Mr.- and Irving Cohen, Bob Passer. Arnold Miss Mildred • Schatz of • D e s meeting Mrs. J. J.. Friedman of Omaha, Lincoln and Advisor Meyer Maltz. •; Molnes, fund raising; Miss Dena introduced the speaker. to I. Llberman, son of Mr. and - Baron of Sioux City. Jewish NaA joint meeting of Hadassah Mrs. A. Llberman, 1115 Eleventh tional Fund; Miss Irene Cohea, street, has been announced by. the and B'nal B'rlth will be held -membership; Miss Offman, orWednesday, January 25, 8:30 p. parents of the.bride-elect. ganization; Miss Franklin, Youns the Chevra B'nai Yisroel Judea; Miss Merlin, Senior-Junior Miss Friedman is a former stu- in.,.at synagogue. . Dr. Josef Duenner,relations; Miss Blanche Kleiman dent of Stephens college, and Mr. The local chapter of the Coun- Liberman graduated from 'Cen- celebrated German sociologist, of Omaha, cultural fellowship; of Jewish Women is prepared tral High, school here send Crelgh- will be, the speaker* Miss Pearl Cqhen of Kansas City, cil assist those.desirous of becom- ton Members of both'organizations speakers bureau, and Miss Faye to university.- He is residing in ing citizens, by filling out papers, Flint, are urged to.attend. Cohen, bulletin. Mich. Their wedding 'date preparing them for the citizen' Miss Baron presided at theship examinations and giving oth- has not been set. Miss Rosa Mendelson, t h « luncheon, at which Jack Krueger er assistance. Any foreign born Council Bluffs delegate to the ReMr. and Mrs. H. -Marcus of presented musical selections. Of-member of the community intergional Convention ield in Sioux ficers were Installed by Mrs. E. ested in procuring their papers Omaha have announced the en- City January 14 and 15. was gagement of their daughter, Hiss N. Grueskin. The convention was may call at the Community Cenelected a member of. the board.' closed with a buffet supper at the ter Tuesday afternoon between Eva • Marcus, to - Thomas Ivener, The1 next convention will be held Community Center, at which Miss the hours of 2:30 and 5, or call son of Mr. and Mrs. I. Ivener, at the Elms hotel, Excelsior Ruth Friedman, Miss Goldio Leh- for an appointment on Tuesday 1918 Isabella street. The wed- Springs. Miss-Mendelson •will' reding date is March 5. man and George Felnberg pre- evenings. port-on the proceedings of the sented a skit, "When the S u n convention at the regular monthMr. and Mrs. Philip Sherman, Rises.' The' Council group on social 1704 Douglas street, entertained ly meeting of HadaEsah Thursday service work will meet for a dis- Monday afternoon In" their home evening, January ?6,.S p. m. cussion of recreation activities, In-honor of the birth of a grandMiss Rhoda Krasne,. program with Miss Ida Edelman and Miss son. Among the guests from away chairman, has prepared au^nterFrances Kalin leading the dis- •were Mr. and Mrs. Millard Krasne cussion. of Council Bluffs, Mr. end Mrs. WEBB. BEBER, KLUTZNICK . KELUEY, Attornty* Lazar Kaplan.,Mr. Sam Relsman, The Council of Jewish Women Miss Bella Sanger and Mrs. B. . S08 Union State Bank Ol with the Co-ordination committee Court of Omaha. * In' tho County •Court ef Soug!aa • The- annual T a l m u d . Torah Is collecting clothing and furniCounty, Nebraska. dance will be given this Saturday ture to assist German refugee In the -Matter of th» Estate of Ida : night In the Bellevue ball room, families who will arrive here. . Mrs..j.A. I. Sacks "visited this May Hardy, deceased. '. under the sponsorship of the He- Anyone having usable clothing or week > in. Omaha: with her sister, To tha. heirs-at-law,- creditors,"ana Mrs. A. I. Kay. all other persona interested in said • brew. Mothers club and the Tal- furniture to donate, may call the . • . Jewish Community Center office. . Mrs. Kay is visiting in theestate: mud-Torah board. You are hereby notified that »i.«ap. home of her • soft and daughter, Bill Franklin and his orchestra plemental petition hasbeen to Mr./ and Mrs. firnest Nogg, en this Court on the 31st ^day of filed will supply the music.for dancing The Contemporary Jewish Af- route Dercemfrom New York to her home ber. 1938, by Arthur W. Hardy, aland proceeds will go toward the fairs study group of the Council leging that Ida May Hardy died on upkeep of the Hebrew school. will meet next Monday, January in Los Angeles. the 3rd day of March, 1934, intestate: Mrs. Joe Kutcher and Mrs. MI1-23, in the home of Mrs. Robert a t tho time of .her death she was Newcomers to Sioux City, are that a resident of the State of Illinois and tonMushkin are in charge of the Sacks, 3315 Jones street, at 1:30 Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rothman, -that she was possessed of the followarrangements. o'clock. • . who have come here from Toledo, ing described real estate situated In Ohio. They are making their Douglas County, Nebraska • to-wit: South.6 ft. of West 87.6 f t of Lot CANTOR PLISKIN home at 4521 Country Club 5 and West S7.6 ft. of Xjot «, Ih-Block - Mr. Rothman Is-as-: 6, Kountae and Ruth's AddiUon to the PLANS CONCERT boulevard. sek'tJ .Overcoatsi Boclated with the T. ••:• S. MartinCJty of Omaha, as surveyed, platted company.!. -v. . The A. Z. A. chapter will cone kn 621 6M Tickets for the concert, to -be S2"S?ff iiSK ' ' in- vast array of palfegias Epd-xoior effects ». duct services at Mount Sinai tem- given by Cantor Pliskin on. Febcolor Lota 23 and 24 and the Southple this evening, with George Ga- ruary 12, may be secured from Mrs. Carrie ' Sampter of'-. Fre- U Tax ft. of Tax X«t 25, and "the South llnsky In charge of the program. the Cantor. His program will mont,, Neb., is..a guest st:ed • • overcoats belt back •overcoats v •'•• del • §In.^Ie«bre'ast:ed thiss week i l l ft. of the North 150 ft. of .the East g 'The service begins at 8 o'clock. consist of three parts—the first, in Lot 26, all in SecUon i the home h M and Mrs. H. 30.75 ft. ot ^-ax off Mr. r Twenty-two (22). Township Fifteen •Rabbi Theodore" N. Lewis is In opera selections, Jewish folk Fishgall; wesgl&ts frosta heavy, warm .. .. overcoats ia (15). Range Thirteen <1S) East, in Cincinnati this' week attending songs and literary music to" be Douglas County, Nebraska, as sur1 , the meetings of the Union of sung by Cantor Plisk. . ulsters to comfortable :fleecs" efercosfs • • -. rsclsa shoulder ' '' " • " Mr. and Mrs. Alex Lasensky, veyed,, platted .and recorded/ and as 6U-616-618-620 South l»th American;Hebrew Congregations. The second part of the program 914 Iowa, announce the birth of known Street. . , v ', will be cello music presented by a son, January;!!. overcoats«»» sei-ip sleeve orercosSs'»«•• tsssllsaitted sl^se range - That said -petitioner has an Inter. The Art Appreciation group of Mr. Gordon Kinney of Mornlngr est in said real estate beins the surthe Temple Sisterhood will meet side college, and.the third sectionviving husband of said deceased; said •to give every a s a the. overeoat he w&nts &•&& slsousld have.this afternoon at -the Civic Art of the program will be piano -mu- DENUNCIATION AIDS petitioner prays that a hearing be had F. D. ^ P O P U L A R I T Y on said petlUon, that notice thereof Center, with Mr. Roy Langley sic by.;. Miss Edwards Mets of be given as required by law. and that leading the discussion. Morningside college. •'...' - • said hearing p aring a decree of h heli'New-rYork; (JTA) — The blunt upon entred an.d d ffurther h d ship b6 entered adminli. denunciation .of Nazi, treatment of said estate ba dispensed LADIES'AUXILIARY DRAWING POSTPONED of minorities, by President .Roose- wtration ith. , t: • , ; t : .. velt and Acting Secretary of state PLANS LUNCHEON The Hebrew School drawing, Tou are • therefore notified that a SEE OUK Sumner Welles has served as a hearing will ba had on said petition SEE OUR The Ladles' Auxiliary of the originally scheduled for January factor In an'.upturn of the Presi- at tha' County Court ROOM of eata CORNER CORKER Workmen's Circle will have a. 10, has been postponed . and the dent's personal popularity in the County, on'the 2Sth day of January^' 1839, at 9-o'clock A. M.. and that if luncheon and card party Thurs- date will be announced in a forth- presidential Index of the Ameri- you fail to appear at eaid time and WINDOW WINDOW day'afternoon, January 26, in tho coming issue of The Jewish Press. can Institute of Public Opinion. place and contest the said petition; Jewish Community Center. The Proceeds will go toward the In- The polo shows that.58 per Cent the Court may grant tha same, ent*r luncheon will begin at 1 o'clock. scription in the Jewish National of the voters approve President B decree 6f heirship, and decree that administration of said estate Proceeds of the party will so Fund Golden Book. Roosevelt today, compared with further-, -' toward the funds for German 55 % -per cent In December — a be dispensed with. BSYCE CRAWFORD. Refugee assistance. ; rise of 2 % per cent in a month. Patronize Our Advertisers l-6-3J-3t» County J d
Death Claims ' '; Morris Beechen
talning program, featuring an original skit. This meeting promises to be an unusually Interesting one.
MEETING TUESDAY
J. C.C.News
M.Albert Heads Farane
Shaare Zion
CHOOSE FROM NEBRASKA^
Unusual Feature Value
ThreeGrwd Groups GROUP 1
Council of Jewish Women
(GROUP 2
MOTHERS CLUB TO
Mount Sinai
It's a iramatic deiilpnstration of great value overcoats .->-.. It's'-aii-'Oi^rtuhity that brings resell of all
^m—~
-
.
—
.
—
lfs an Overc&ai Buy '
iiiinin.il. .
-
-i JJ m,. J ...^..ii,.^ JJ .^.. J . J ..,^.«i,i,,-. J ,,..^- l ...... J ,_. J! u.;;;-».
.in
. ,
•
'
&f Overcoat Time!