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c MB. COUGHXJN'S CASSOCK The Rev. Mr. .Fletcher (Episcopalian) of our city recently gave a opeech on the radio answering Coughlin. He addressed • Mm as '•Mr. Coughlin."
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" Thus the Rev. Mr,. Fletcher difPPStpfncc, of Omaha. N^brasRa. onder the Act or March S, 1S79 ferentiated between the Cougolin who -wears the robes of a Christian priesthood and the Coughlin who.has spread lin-Christian antiSemitism, -whose follpwerSiJiave .been behaving lilce Storm Troop bullies on the street corners of New York, who has been projecting the Fascist ideals of European brutalitarians. The final week of Camp Jay-C- I t seems that Mr. Fletcher, like C has been filled with activities, all men of good "will respects the so that campers will enjoy their priestly cassock; so he gently di- Chairmen of Evian Group camp experience to the utmost. vested Coughlin of his ecclesiasto Meet a t White Monday evening there was a gentical garment before he put eral cook-out, with each cabin House Coughlin on the pillory of his cooking around its fires built by scorn . . . "Mr. Coughlin!" the camp craft class. SEEK ALASKA COLONY I myself have wished Mr. The following evening a gay Coughlin would remove his casprogram was p presented by p y the sock and appear in the garments Sec'y. Idses Sees Refugees various cabins i on the general of a business suit. The cassock Developing New theme "Mother Goose Ball." Wedi s Christian armor and one hesinesday night an amateur ~ night Territory tates to wrestle "with one who was conducted in addition to an •wears it, even though the wearer Washington ( J T A ) — The indoor Olympic tournament. may be profaning it by falsehood White House conference on refuElaborate plans' are in store and malice. ' gees to which President Roose- for Saturday night's closing proMy long experience has en-velt has invited the . director- gram which will be held around dowed, the cassock with something ate of the Intergovernmental Refof saintly attribute since i t has ugee Committee, has been postbeen -worn by kindly,-almost saint- poned to mid-October, • it was ly, spirits who were and are mylearned. friends. They make a long, bright Originally scheduled to be held row in my .memory. the first -week in September, the conference will instead be convenOthers : There was the lamented Father ed Oct. 16 and 17. liord WinterR . . . to-whom men of all faiths ton, chairman and the five comcould feel kin. His religion had mittee vice-chairmen representing Pre-Requisite of Democto do with all kindness; his tol-France, the United States, The racy, Columbia Parerance was not patronizing, but Netherlands, the Argentine and ley Told Brazil, have been invited to the the essence of his spirit which called all men brothers.,, My last meeting. New York, Aug. 15 (JTA) — Meanwhile, the Interior Depart- Racial memory of him is at a birthday and religious tolerance as party given for a Jewish citizen. mit political refugees to enter one of the prerequisites for the
Roosevelt Lauds Jews Patriotism.
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VOL. XYI—Xo, 42
OMAHA, NEBRASKA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1939
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who Alaska. Secretary Harold L. Ickes preservation of democracy was There is Father S, . when I meet him gives me a sense stated at a press cbnfernece. Two stressed by speakers addressing o£ being in the presence of some alternative plans will be offered, the Congress on Education for one divinely luminous. I my mind he said, one under which immi- Democracy, attended by more he stands as the ideal of clergy- grants could enter under existing than 2,500 delegates and regisregulations nd become citi-^ trants at Columbia University. man whom I picture as a man quota and another providing that finer than I can ever hope to be-. zens,I>r. Nicholas Murray Butler, "would enter regardless Father S's voice is the emanation refugees of their place on the quota and president of Columbia, in the pf his gentle heart. remain until they would be eligi- opening address, declared educaThere is Father O . . . with ble for immigration to the United tion and democracy could not rest •whom 1 used to toss medicine States. upon "brute force" and each halls in the gymnasium. His com"must have a moral foundation No Federal Aid passionate heart is concerned to The legislation wil call for no and an intellectual interpretagive to all men their just due and* Federal aid, Ickes said, but the tion." He defined democracy as to hurt none. In him is no guile Department would cooperate In "government by the people, in the but only the frank, sweet spirit organizing corporations like the interest of all the people," with of a generous boy. (Father O .• Old Hudson Bay Company to un- guarantee of civil and religious still is a young man.) dertake colonization . and the de- liberty of every person." And many others. Because of velopment of resources. Ickes* anDr. Charles A. Beard, thu hismen like them I have come to re- nouncement followed issuance of torian, declared that only "with spect cassocks as symbols the an Interior Department report on the protection of civil rights can line complex called Christian gen- Alaskan settlement possibilities American education 'defy powers tlemen. For the same Teason -the which stressed the vital role that that seem omnipotent' and span daily press respects cassocks and could be played by refugees from the full measure of its responsi• is reluctant to attack a man who intolerance i n ' European coun- bility." "Warnings on racial "hatred wears one, to raise even an ad- tries. were given by Dean William F. monishing h a n d against Mr. The report, the result of an ex- Russel of Teachers College, who Coughlin in the Christian armor haustive survey ordered by Ickes declared that one of the three of his cassock. I t respects the and carried out under the direc- attacks' on democracy was direct' church ol -which the cassock is a tion of Under Secretary Harry ed';" to the racial and national sign; it wants'to respeut the man Slattery, depicts enthusiastically minorities because they are disthe agricultural, industrial and satisfied," and by Representative o •wears it. . (as-J-conrmei^Sal-j>ossibilities.jo£ the ter- at X.arse.1. V. Smith of. Illinois, Mr. Coughlin ma who said that the doctrine that he did) that he might .favor tak- ritory. Without making specific recom- all people were educable, an esing up Franco's way in America part of democracy, could if things don't go to his liking, mendations as to the absorption of sential trusted "to frustrate anti-Sembut there is no rebuke for him in a refugees, the report throughout be bullies." The price of liberty the pres3 which, while it abhors emphasizes the vital role this cat-' itic is not .merely eternal vigilance egory of prospective settlers could Coughlin, honors the - garb he play in development of a region but also perpetual restraint. Lord Josia.li Stamp, British economist, (The righteous Tiand of t h e which is one-fifth the size of the told the congress in an address press falters a n d "withholds itself United States yet has a total pop- broadcast from London over an from smiting t h e wearer of a cas- ulation of 59,278, or a density of NBC network. one-tenth of a person for every «ock.) square mile. Aggravating Division Protected . Report on Dominican Republic Rabbi Morris S. Lazaron of BalMr. Coughlin may spew (as he In submitting the report, which timore declared that appeals to rais) <anti-Semitic defamation borlias) with the assistance cial and religious prejudice were rowed from the falsehoods of was prepared (Continued on page 7.) aggravating class divisions in this Goebbels, but his cassock protects country. "Anti-Semitism up \at him from the attack of the press these last few years a relatively' •which despises anti-Semitism and latent force in our country, is bewould denounce it in the mouth ing artificially stirred by those of any one else. who resist by any means the lib(Mr. Coughlin, wrapped in the eralization of. our social and'ecogarment of his holy office, stands nomic . order," Rabbi Lazaron de•guarded against the reproach that clared. "Call a liberal measure •would fall on other men who gave Jewish, point to tbe renegade public utterance to falsehood and Jews prominent in the Communinsult against his neighbors. The ist' movement and the resulting radio is at his command, though Johannesburg (JTA) — Pre- non-sequiters are sufficient to it would not lend itself to such mier G. N. Hugsins of Southern damn without further examinarevilement by other men.) Rbedesia, who is now visiting in tion by the huge numbers of our Mr. Coughlin may project Fas- Kngland, intends to seek convo- people who dp not stop .to anacism (as he did) and call for a. cation of an "African Evian Con- lyze or evaluate." "Christian corporative state," but ference" of the powers to discuss Baldwin Speaks the democracy-loving, liberty-lov- possibilities of refugee settlement There is no danger of Communin Africa, it was learned. ing presB, mindful of his cassock, ism in England but a potential There is a strong move in po- menace of Nazism or Fascism, holds back its wrath. litical circles to support such a (There would be short shrift conference and great efforts will Earl Baldwin, former B r i t i s h Prime Minister declared at a'dinin the land for some imported be made to persuade the British ner. Adressing an American audcrackpot who publicly threatened Government to take the initiative ience i'or the first time, Lord to have American events handled in c a l l i n g representatives of in Hitler's or Lenin's way-. The j southern "and Northern'Rhodesia, Baldwin asserted that "the worst newspapers would be !v\i of tho | tho UTTn' Africa. Portu Portu- danger from Communist propan j fonn n oof f SSouth o u t h Africa, righteous indignation of the press guese East Africa, Nyasaland, ganda is over," but there was a against anti-Semitism spread by Kenya and Belgian Congo to such dinger of Fascism when the "national improvements" in Germany radio by one who wore a business a conference. and Italy were contrasted with suit. Harry Bridges, who is only The view is held by t h e s e what people find "being done or suspected of subversive utterance circles that the British Governand activity, is being tried on de- ment's offer in 1903 to settle maybe left undone at home*" The Jews who have a great Jews in Uganda should be repeatportation charges.) Mr. Coughlin stands impervious ed. It Is pointed out that Ugan- stake in democracy's success, can in his cassock which all righteous da, trith • an - area of 100,000 offer Judaism as " a potent facmen and every decent press re- square miles, has an European tor for democracy" and to "counspect because of the many noble population of 2,100 and it is sug- teract the most vicious trends and gested that if the plan Is accept- assumptions of totalitarianism, or gentlemen who wear cassocks. able the Jews could be gristed a monocracy," . Prof. Mordecal M. Fair Fight restricted government. An alterof the Jewish Theological It seems to me that a fair fight native scheme is that certain por- Kaplan Seminkry of America declared. requires that Mr. Coughlin re- tions of North and Southwest Prof representing the move : this garb of his office— Kenya can be allocated for ref- JewishKaplan, viewpoint, spoke on a prothat he divest himself of.all offi- ugee settlement. gram with Dr. Henry Sloane Cofcial association with his c h u r c h fin, president of the "Union Theoin order that there may be a fair logical Seminary, who called for a exchange of blew for blow. In a 'common, spiritual front* of Cathodemocracy no public person lics, Jews and Protestants in the 1 Bhould enjoy protection, or exmaintenance of the spiritual founemption from criticism, and every Miami (JTA)—The patriotism dation of democracy and the liberstraightforward man expects to of American Jews is praised by ty "which democracy safeguards." get back as good as he gives, even President Roosevelt in a letter to Prof. Anton C. Pegis of Fordhain the President of the United States. the 44 th annual encampment of University -was the Catholic speakDemocracy comes to a, danger- the Jewish "War Veterans of the er. ous pass where.one man, wrapped United States, opening here AuDr. Kaplan declared that "the in the"garb..of holiness, guarded gust 28, which was made public Jews depend most upon the sucby the. jespect "which decent-men by National Commander Isador S. cessful outcome of this Congress hold for his office, can sp-read a Worth. Education for Democracy. There vicious propaganda -without re"From the Revolutionary War is nothing we Jews dread more straint by any voice of criticism to tho World War, Jewish citizens than the cry raised by totalitar. except the -weaker voices of some of the United- States have given ianism. "One People, Ons State, of the weekly perss. of their - services and money to One Fuehrer." There is nothins Mr. Coughlin, -wearing the cas- promote the cause of their coun- we Jews yearn for more than the sock as h e goe3 about with try," the message said. " I con- good tidings of democracy anthreats of Franco's way in Ameri- gratulate you upon the service nouncing, "One Humanity. One ca, with utterances of enti-Semi- rendered our country by your Divine Kingdom, One God." tism borrowed from Goebbel's members and by those of the Jewbook, serves no good to his ish faith throughout the years of : In 1711 the Jews of Netv York - church. This has been realized by our Republic and 'hope you may. contributed Four Pounds tor the have a very successful conven- steeple of Trinity Church. (Continued on page S.) tion."
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' U I 1;L=LV? i the camp fire on a high hill com- • manding a view, up and down the j Platte river. Members of the camp j M a n d a tes Commission will present a pageant and final Says White Paper Conawards/will be distributed. f trary to Obligations U*fc•'*-•• ""— •vSaccessfrsl ^ 'r~^"as proved far Car DECISION TO COUNCIL ran morei. . . ' -<vo;y ~~*' en originNew York {JTA}—The Amerially Plku^ .n.^''t;;v; '"""-»*irollZionists Hail .Decision as can Christian Emergency Council j ment has for Palestine has presented to "Moral Victory" fcr the three weeks. '---...., 'V'•••%?r^? Earl Baldwin, former British 40 were at the campus.,' '-" .V * prime minister, a memorandum week four more were adde^^ d urging that he transmit to t h e ; Ge neva. CTTAl the third week there were 43 Geneva (JTA) — Few Zionists British Government the view -of the Man date? C campers. Thirty-two of the chil-; v ^ i 7 "enlightened Christian America*" | dren attended three weeks, nine believe that the League of Na- that attended two weeks," and 13 ons tions Council which has the final held. the Palestine mandate be up- polic*- as a viola;:ion word on the Palestine mandate, date, the Ttst Wi?™lrl week. will accept the British White PaThe memorandum, signed by; this; week ;plF.n: Following is a list of those who per in the form offered by Lon- Dr. Guy Emery Snipler. chairman cress Pales tine immip attended camp during the season: don after the Mandates Commis- of the council, Charles Edward build ing as the Buddy Beber, Chucky Beber, sion has rejected it. The possibil- Hussell and Dr. Justin E . Moore Harley Beber, Barbara Blacker, ity is not excluded, however, that expresses "consternation" over ca1.- i SCilla v i . Dorothy Blacker, Jeanne Blacker, the Council, while taking no im- Britain's new Palestine policy, Trie Alvin Burstein, Ethel Burstein, mediate decision, will refer it to which it terras "a virtual denial Evonne Chesler, Marvin Chester, a commission to study the ques- of the solemn pledges given fcy Myron Chesler, Delores Cohn, Ar- tion, of whether the mandate can various British governments to lene Dansky, Joan Da Shield. Fay be flexibly interpreted in such a the Jewish people and to t h e re v." t r e i risi-Edel, Arthur Epstein, Martin way as to make the White Paper world." It was accompanied by Faier, Phyllis Freed and Richard acceptable to the League. It is to a facsimile letter in which Lord Goldman. win this point that Colonial Sec- Baldwin, when rrime minister in Also Jeremy Goldstein, Jona- retary Malcolm MacDonald is coin- 19 S 6, promised that the govern- continuing v.pMu'.n: ment would fulfill its mandatory possible while'EWR than Goldstein, Donald Green, ing to Geneva. the international si obligations. Evelyn Greenberg, Stephen GreenThe Jewish side, however, is Ben Gill-ion's extr berg, Gerda Hagen, Arnold Kaiman, Josephine Kleiman, Michael not remaining silent, and having Kulakofsky, Jean Levinson, Dita the decision of the Mandates Com'-,. UE Loewenstein, Elsa Loewensteis, mission to support it, is already Martin Nerenberg, Evelyn Pinko- preparing quietly for a battle at vitz, Natalie Plotkin, Rita Plct- the League session. For obvious kin, Helen Resnick, David Kiss reasons, few of the Congress parII i ticipant are aware of the details Ui and Joan Robinson, 11 Geneva of these preparations, and Dr. Others attending were: Ger- Chaim Weizinann, talking to thir GcTc trude Rosenblatt, Martha Rosen- correspondent, remarked that "it Criticizes blatt, Norman Rosenblatt, Harold would be n a c h wiser to say nothReply to Mti Rottner, Richard Segal, Manfred ing about it pnbiioly." Whatever Report Siegler, Sylvan Siegler, Bemice j Dr. Weizinann has to say.will be Geciceci to nm Sommer, Charlotte Sommer, ~ political tiecisi said quietly to diplomats of conn- I London f vfNS-Falcor Agencj an executive E.: tries which are represented in the i—In a leading editorial commentbudget. Tbe League Council. \ ing on the Mandates Commission tee t^ionist G Weinberg, Marion Weinstein and report on Palestine, the London Cheered by Report will remain i Herschel Wolfson. Times criticized the grovernment f Camp closes Sunday. Zionists were cheered by the re-j comments on the commission s port of the Mandates Commission I views, characterizing: them ss "prwhich (1) unanimously holds tirely unconvincing." and declarBritain's new policy contrary to ing that in the light of the F c - is1—r*"~ x m %z$ the mandate as it has been inter- garth message which was He-" e: Eif-ir t " preted by the commission, (2) by submitted to the League cr the a vote of 4 to 3 finds the policy Mandates Commission. Its r-rha violation of the mandate's fund- i lication atter years of official nec:% ? y n % t s ^ UN amental aims, (3) suggests that I iect coulfi not be expected, to impartition be revived at the appro- I press the Mandates Corcmissicn. Sisterhood . to Sponsor priate time. .he Times observed. The Jewisn "Agency for Pales• Ssries During .(EDITOR'S NOTE: The I--tine issued a statement expressing October garth F E ? fielirered gratification over the report and llSIS i -nessaere y Coisn i Eder Xs. G. l-oA 'series of lectures entitled voicing aope that the League i garth of the rab Sureau L Council •vrerald consider not only "Behind- the»-Worlfi's -C ! will be given by Rabbi David H. the political' conside'raSons—creat"nmcivi to I\ing Kv.sFe'T? of; Wice under the auspices of the ed by Arab • terrorism but also Keaj£E. Vital points of that mesTemple Israel Sisterhood begin- those bearing on the Jewish posi- sage were the giving ol guaran- ; ning on Tuesday. October 3. and tion in Palestine snd other coun- tees fcr tee safety of tae fc o 1 r • continuing each Tuesday through treis. Far from ending enmity of pieces in PeleFtine, snfi t t e ss- i the Jews and Arabs, the statethe month. said, the British, policy can Eurance that "no people shall be : The lecture series Is the first ment bs maintained only, by intermin- subject to another" in Palestine, j of the five projects which the Sisable exercise of force against the and the statement that."His maj- i terhood will sponsor during the est3"'E government c.re determiner;, i ] Jews. year. In each lecture Rabbi Wice insofar as is compatible with the ' The report will be acted on by freedom of the existing popula- ; will analyze the events of the prethe League Council which opens tion, bo La economic and political. 1 ceding week. its session on Sept. S. Dr. Chaim tna.t t o obstacles s i Quid l>e vvl ', t f i - •-• Ticket Committee Mrs. Harry Trustin and Mrs. Weizinann pointed out that the in the way cf the res-lizetic-n- of . i II . ! Sam Gilinsky are in charge of ar- Council -us-ually adopts the Man- this.idea"' (of the Jewish Nation- ; ! rangements for the series. Mrs. dates Commission's report and er- al Home ic Palestine). (Continued on page 7.) Morris Jacobs and Mrs. Harry Z. I n Edition to- the Time? the j Rosenfeld are in charge of ticket Manchester Guardian, the York- ! sales. shire Pest and the News Chronicle | ' Members of the ticket commitalso devoted their leading edi- j tee are: Mesdames Manning Hantorials to the Palestine Question. \ dler. Louis Hiller, David RosenThe Manchester GuE.rcliEn et- ; stock. Fred .Rosenstock, Harry • %& i %&> ft'% M. t SiJ" i * %gi 1 tacks His government's positio" • Malashock. Al Mayer, Hymie and points to ffce Ksufia-tes Com- i Milder, Raymond Silbar, Henry mission's observations regarding: , Newman, Sam Pepper and Sol the separation of Arabs and Jews \ Plotkin. as well as to tbe government's ! Also the Mesdames E. I. Rubin, of the posslbUitj- o' ; Newport. R. I. (JTA)—-Amer- suggestion Edward Rosen, B e n Shapiro, p e o p l e federalism. It contends that it is | " " i » C->T"f Julius Solomon, Hubert. Sommer, ica's religious-minded Joseph Weinberg, Sam Wert- should be united in opposing in- essential t t a t immigration con- < -eitcs accot heimer, sr., Sam Wertheimer. jr., tolerance and race hatred. Sena- tinue under Ell circv.r-si'v.csz. Coming to t h e Fupport oi | Isadore' Weiner, A. A. Greenberg, tor David 1. Walsh of MassachuDavid R. Cohen, William Feiler, setts declared reecntly ct cere- Colonial Secretary MacDonalcl, the ] Leon Fellman and Harold Farber. monies marking dedication of a Yorkshire Post, tbe newspaper | the politic:-"! views of! Mrs. Mose Bernstein, Mrs. Leo statue dedicated to civil and re- expressingE3sn. msir**"""!? that t.tie Un-ger and Mrs. Harry Chemisa ligious liberty which was Present- Anthony will be in charge of Council ed to this SCO-3-ea.r old city by the security o* ti>e Jews in Palestine is dependent upon ii:s security -of: Newport Jewish Congregation. Bluffs sales. "Wherever in the world re- England -which apparently takes ligion lies crushed and races are the view that it is impossible lo ; being persecuted, tyranny is en- continue immigration vr i t b c u 1 throned," Senator Walsh sssert- leading to eventual disaster. The News Chronicle expresses j ed. Denouncing "cruel and terrorizing persecution" in Germany, the hope the council of the Jjeacrite ' -he warned- Americans that many will consider the gecerE.1 political \ developments "may well give us background and view ths jrcvern- ] concern and cause cs to take t e e s ment's attempt to settle the Pales- ; Geneva- (JTA) — Zionist lead- rfo the need of eternal vigiis-cce." tine problem on a broader "basis \ ers discussed the possibility of v Highlight' of the ceremonies than the Mandates Commission.. \ Dr. Chaim Weizraann visiting the was the re-enactment of George United States soon after the car- Washington's visit to the Jewish rent Zionist Congress with im- congregation in 179 0, when : he I ; i 6 t i l II I V - f i - l . ' - t - H f «Si_V* poprtant missions, including the •delivered his famous -nesss/ge on raising of $2,500,000 toward the religious and civil liberty. Flank55,000,000 loan proclaimed by ed by a color guard of the Newthe Keren Hayesod. port Artillery Regiment in colonSimultaneously, members of the ial costcrse,' W. Seldea "SVEshingZionist Executive -discussed a ton, P r e s i d e n t Washington's project to be submitted to t h e Da* id great-great-great - grandnepheti", Congress for approval calling for was greeted by ElvarS J o n a s increasing the Jewish Agency's Philips, -direct descendant of budget from last year's $2,500,- Moses Seixas, who greeted Wash000 .to ?5,000,000 in the coming ington'149 years ago. ana repealyear. ed t&e first president's message. In this connection the Executive intended to submit to t li e Congress two budgets, namely a Arthur Co fin'to u minimum budge roo.ooo ponnds d and a masimum bud-get li on Kot of 1.000,000 pounds. This budget Table Progra when approved by the Congress - rt . would have no connection wiUi the $5,000,000 loan which t h e Arthur A. Coin trill be Jewi Keren Hayesod intends to raise representative this afternoon repayable within 20 years a n d the weekly Broadcast of t beaxins a 4 per cent dividend. Omaha Round. Table c£ Christia With half of the loan expected lo and Jews ever UOIL from 5 be raised in the United States, 5:15. the Keren Havesod will seek to Dr. J. H. Speicher will be Ca hraise the balance in Europe and olic narrator, Charles R. South Africa. Dh l , otDocherty will represent the Pr estants. Legend states the Jevrs of Worms -were descendants of the Valabreaue Kardocaee-Georgss. TTL_. tribe of Benjamin who had mi- a Jew of Carpentras, was in 1S05 grated from Palestine to Ger- made • a trigaclisr-seneral in the j Ki,rtlr, E^i ' p u v U p e-1 triw1 fti many. French army, i elected mayor I before G • dominate.
Christians Appeal White Paper Pcttcy
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THE JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1939
Page 2
County chapter, are being dis- Re*c!c life la America and in the world. tributed to the Center boys and In his message to Congress, last girls the past week. Over, fifty January, President Roosevelt laid Trees.' U . Mead' boys, girls and young •women are particular stress on the inextricto be recipients of these awards, able relationship between religion, The board of Genera, &s they passed their American governors democracy and international acof tine Hebrew UniverRed Cross tests satisfactory last sity in Jerusalem, at ?. meeting cord. It is high time for the remonth. ligious leaders and thinkers of presided over by Dr. Chain;. 'WeizVvThile Te are discussing swim- tnanr., re-elected. Dr. Jud&h Lelb America to make the influence of ming may I mention that Bucky church and synagogue felt in the Magnes, formerly of New York, Greenberir has not lost a Junior as press dent of t'se university and life of the nation. swimming event in the past three adopted a budget of f 510,000 for It will not suffice for organised years. Two weeks ago he wasthe institution. religion merely to echo the cursuccessful anfi still possesses an rent social strivings of the secular It V.-&S <Xee\i\.eS. tc establish an unblemished record u-hea he >ie-ediicsticn liberals. Religion must assume the department headed by President of the Rabbinical Aooembly of America feat&d the crop of jucior Rvrim- Nissim Tnrrcv.% responsibility of training our peoNew Tork. It taers frons Iowa at Red O&k. Allwas announced oithat ple to evaluate and to order life of these awards that Buck?- has ment of an iisricuituralestablish•'' Iu this poignant article, Dr. economic Interests but an attempt proletarian Ye have in accordance with, undying ideals adherents m college received during the past t h r e e Arzt, lecturer In Practical Theo- to crush "reason, liberty and jus-been nought, ye shall be all."of the prophets and In the pattern in Rehobotfc was assured years -were due him, as he is a building logy at the Jewish Theological tice." They all play on the w e a k e s t of the eternal moral aspirations of the co-operation of res.1 tree competitor, a hard, work- beoa.use, Seminary of America, presents Without entering into a discus- chord In our moral structure — that are common to Judaism and Federal Judge Julian M. Mack of er and a wonderfc! treicer. an analysis, of^ religion and Its sion of the merits of the Oxford on the mass self which declares a to Christianity. New York. Mrs. Samuel J. Koeenspecificjfuuctlons in combatting Movement, sch,n of Nevr Tork vras elected a we can u n d e rstand moratorium on conscience, charOne - of the most promising efthe subversive forces of totali- why Its slogan member ol the board represent"Moral Rearma- acter and ethical scruples in favor forts for the establishment of a tarianism, enemy common to re- ment" has gripped ing KadassaU, 3c place of the reunited religious front in America the imagina- of frenzied mob prejudice. ligion and democracy. When we give primary to reli- is being conducted by the Jewish tiring Mrs. Judith Epstein. ' '•••' —THE EDITOR. tion of countless people In all gion, we bring Into play just Theological Seminary of America. walks of life. Warsaw (JTA) — Bratislava At Crossroads « •• . . hose spiritual virtues and; moral It is enlisting the cooperation of A custom stiH practiced among In the" City of New York there advices said the Gestapo h a s very pious Jews is to rise at tho Religion is now at the cross- endencies which make us accept Christian Theological Schools and i3 being'displayed a World's Fair roads. It can-by default miss its personal responsibility for our at-of the leaders of Christian thought tortured to death the Cendsher Three Jewish boys, each essSeca years eld, who were released f.ftsr fire midnight hour tor prayer and which by every standard of judg- golden opportunity of reclaiming itude and actions. in the establishment of an Insti- •- months ia a German concentration camp, foutsd ssfety in England. R a b b i Jecheskiei Ealberstafit, meditation. The custom is very , ment and'• measurement eclipses man for God and for the spiritual Honesty, forgiveness, sympathy tute of Interdenominational Studwhose bofij- was delivered to Msold (mentioned several times in Thousands more remain in.Germany swaitiag emigration 'opportunievery previous exposition of man's life. Or it can direct mankind to and loving kindness then become ies. ties znd rccoisstructive sid offered throogSj the conssjcsiemt »geacie* family two fiars after his arrest. the Talmud) but since the 10th accomplishments and progress. In the task of building a new world, he springs of human c o n duct. cf the Ursited Jewish Appeal for Refsagee* and Overseas Neeos. The rabbi was a native of Poland centurr the prayers recited at This Institute -will bring togeth'a statement issued the other day, the world of tomorrow on the se-The sense of sin and moral self- er ministers and students of reand -was the grandson of the fa- this hoizr hare dealt with the the Mayor of fclew York declared cure foundations of justice, truth udgment then redirect our stepa- ligion for the serious exploration mous hea<3. of the Sendetier destruction of the Temple. thatnot in the next hundred years and peace. lead in the very first inning, and djTiasty of Chassidic rabbis. ;o the King's Highway of noble of. avenues of common religious , •will such an amazing array of hu- Weak and ineffective as It iving. When tho I n d i v i d u a l thought and endeavor. The Inwas-out in front by the score of Vienna (Esvas) — Satisfaction man achievement and progress be seems, organized religion has thus merges his being with the mob his stitute will place its major em1 to o, until t h e sixth inning ever the "imminent extinction oi: assembled.. . when the church lads pushed the Jewish race in the old Ausfar served as the outstanding ex- moral self dies. >,~ r , . v cv np« e n r * phasis on the general problem of across their three tallies. Nor- trian capital" waE expressed by Of all the multiple affiliations religion rather than on doctrinal r r ' P P i f P F c'eslring to I doubt, however; whether many ample of courageous p r o t e s t S O F T B A M J man Korney hurled for the Brescf fha-e expen«e the Neuesto Wiener Nachrichten. which determine our varying inamidst the cacophany of hatred visitors to the World's Fair will religious diversities. The implicar*ippp Co-iRf to Coast allow themselves, upon sober re- and bigotry -wihch literally pol- erests, only that of religion has tions of modern science and psy- A group of young men who rep- low's and allowed the visitors The newspaper pointed out that ? > P Em-eat!, HA flection, to be deluded by the op-lutes the air. In the lands of dark- he potential power to rekindle in chology for religious thought will resented ths Breslow Auto Glass only three hits and the Breslow's the noniher of Jewish births in E"C" ra-nam. Destln. turned in two double plays. The Vienna had dropped from an us the flame of conscience and tical illusion there presented, of ness and oppression the universitinsurance be carefully studied. A notable be- In the J. C. C. Softball league, of the J. C. C. league, average o' 650 in recent years TO Si' liPbffP If f"8 collosal achievement in every ies have yielded to their totalitar- moral judgment. It is not an acci- ginning was made last year .when won a major championship in runEers-up the Leavenworth Markets, are 54S in 1SSS and S9 in the Jirst dent that both, the dictatorships Center athletics this past summer. field of human endeavor. They ian masters and have drives truth Dr. Arthur Compton of the Uni-The of the right and of the left bend versity team was managed by Jake also entered in the city series and charter of 1SSS. are bound to ask themselves the from their cloistered halls. of Chicago delivered a lecchallenging question why man has The newspaper editors who inall efforts to destroy religion from ture on the "Religion of a Scien- Adler, who, by the way, was re-are scheduled to play this -reek. been so creative and so ingenious safer days • wrote flaming editor- he life of society. There is good tist" which reveals how modern sponsible for the team's victory Your correspondent has been in establishing his supremacy and ials pleading for democracy and reason lor their contemptuous at- scientfic trends confirm the spirit- in the last game of the season, control over the forces of nature, freedom have sold their pens and titude toward religion, for religion ual Interpretation of life. The lec- when they defeated the Leaven- informed that Jay Stoler, a fine harnessing the very atmosphere their souls to the master of "lying alone nurtures man's sense of per- ture has been published by theworth Market by the score ol 12 organizer and a booster of Cento 11. ter athletics, is leaving our city to his service and servitude, and propaganda.' The only dissenting onal accountability and warns Seminary in pamphlet form and Manager Jake clouted a circuit to go Into a business venture out yet has failed so dismally to es-voice is heard from the ranks of him against the surrender of his has received wide circulation. • wallop in the seventh inning with in the Pacific northwest. We sintablish control over the passions. religionists who refuse to he si-conscience. ON The time has"come for religion two on to win the game. T h e cerely regret Jay's leaving, but . the bigotries, the hatredB which. lenced and who prefer the horrors Primary Concern LACHTOE to ceass to be apologetic and hesi•wish hlra the best of lucfe In his Breslow's were slow in getting of the concentration camp to the _ seethe like 4 burning lava within Our primary concern as Amerirewards of selling their consci- cans is to save America for de-tant about its place In human started in their final tilt, being new enterprise. the human heart. . life. The weakening of the influ- behind 11 to 0, but after t h e Jay has been interested in CenTheir thoughts will r e v o l v e ence. They speak God's truth as mocracy. Educators, authors, col- ence of religion would mean the fourth inning the Breslow Jug- ter sports and activities f o r a around the disturbing theme of if it were a fever in their bones. ege presidents and men promin- breakdown of the morale of the gernaut's rolling and came good number o* years, and could Harvard's Tercentennary Celebra- They demonstrate thereby the lat-ent In public affairs are seriously people and their greater receptive- out on top.kept Breslow's, cham- always be accounted on to mantion which expressed modern man- ent power of a passionate religi- giving thought to this problem. ness to the false doctrines which pions of theThe J. C. C. l e a g u e , age, organize or lead an athletic kind's supreme dilemma: in these ous consecration which is ready to During the month" of August a breed hatred and' dissension. Ev- played in the city tournament last team for the Center Physical Dewords "Behold this creature man! suffer martyrdom — for the sake longress on Education for De-ery church and synagogue must Tuesday night, against the Ames partment. mocracy will be held at Colum- become a fountain head of InspirHe has made astounding progress of the soul's deepest conviction.. Avenue Methodist Church, a n d Basic Emphasis bia University at which prominwith his mind and has made for for the good and righteous lost a heart breaker to the church SWIMMING himself tools with which he has Religion's basic emphasis has ent men from America and abroad ationfor the spread of the ethical champions by the score of 3 to 2. The Red Cross swimming cerbecome master. Yet while he gain- been to assert the high worth and will consider this challenging pro- life, values which are implied in our The Breslow's grabbed an early tificates given hy the Douglas ed mastery with his mind"he has precious value of every human be-' blem. American Democracy and for the not been able to become master of ing as a child of God. Its belief I contend that the church and unification of all who believe that . his conduct . . ..his behavior lag3 in God Is predicated on the dog-synagogue must play a determinthe Kingdom of God must he realso far behind his mind." , matic, Inflexible and insistent af- ng part in saving America from ized and established, here on Cultural JJag •••.;• firmation that every human being _he moral collapse which is -wide- earth. Will there be a World Tomor- Is essentially not an economic fac- spread over Europe and Asia. Evrow if man today -does not over- tor, not a subject of the state, not ery church and synagogue must come what Professor Ogburn calls a tool for the furtherance of thebecome a fortresa of moral teach- (Copyright 1939 By Seven Arts Feature Syndicate.) tll3 cultural lag .— the abysmal ambitions ol the so-called super- ing. ' distance . between moral growth man, or of a particular class or Democracy Is more than a sysand material achievement? I re- of a system of government, but a em of government. It is a philoscsrvtly came across a . harrowing sacred entity. ophy of life based on the belief example of the moral degradation "God so fashioned the human in the dignity of human life. Only t->' which man can sink In the this belief takes on the naabuse of his acquired and accent- personality" say the rabbis, "that when no two people are alike." Every ture of a deeply rooted religious uated powers of destruction. human being can rightfully claim conviction can we withstand the In an issue of the Reiehswelir that he Is a rare specimen for he manifold influences which threatJerusalem (JTA) — Registramasczine •— the official organ of cannot be duplicated. "Every hu- en to uproot it. Only the church the German Reich Military Com- man heing has a right to say that and synagogue, by united and con- tion of British subjects for warmand, there appeared an article the world was created for his sake certed action can bring about the time military service and civilian defense was begun throughout moral renaissance and which on the use of disease germs in and tor his happiness." Palestine this week. modern warfare. In a wholly obThis supreme and incontroverti- make of America the saving remThe authorities also Instituted jective and dispassionate manner ble truth may not be scientifically nant of civilization. confidential Inquiries among phytab author treats the problem in a demonstratable. Tested proof of Accepting Responsibilities thorough fashion. He first posits the validity of this premise may There are hopeful signs that sicians, engineers and mechanics " and discusses the question of thebe as elusive as the attempt to the organized religious forms in concerning their willingness to type of disease "bacteria which prove the existence of God by lab- America are accepting their - res- enlist for war service. Replying \might.most effectively be unleash- oratory methods. Without this bas- ponsibilities -with the heightened affirmatively, Jewish physicians ed against the enemy. ic and burning assumption there sense of solidarity and consecra- are understood to have pointed After an analysis which takes is no valid oasis for the entire so- tion. There Is manifest a process out that many capable doctors into account expert medical opin- cial structure of human -welfare of inner purging which alms to were among refugees adrift oa ion, it is suggested that the con-and for our activities on behalf dissociate true religion from the ships in the Mediterranean. They veyors of bubonic plague or of of the underprivileged and theutterances of false priests' who urged t h a t the refugees be to Palestine where they cholera could be most advantage- dispossessed. teach, enmity Instead of brother- brought could be of use in the event of ously enlisted in human warfare Remove the dogmatic assertion hood and preach dissensions in- war. 3ince these diseases cause intense of the hallowed nature and prec- stead of love. suffering and spread "With the ious value of the Individual's BOUI A commendable. righteous ingreatest rapidity. and personality and you have no dignation on the part of millions "Geneva (JTA)—A number of But 'here a serious difficulty rational- basis for the exercise and of Americans who understand that Palestine Zionist leaders, includpresents itself. The proximity of practice of-love and sympathy be- true religion and bigotry are con- ing Moshe Shertok and Bernard the enemies' lines to the field of tween human beings. Only when tradictory terms, will yet banish Joseph, planned to rush home by military operations precludes the we implicitly believe in the su-these unholy purveyors -of hatred plane because of the war crisis. attempt to.destroy the comfcatant preme .worth,/of every human' be- from the altar of the Lord. The Others were to catch the Palesforces of the enemy by deadly ing can- we grasp the powerful National Conference of Christians tine boat at Marseilles on Thursgerms for there ia real danger truth of the religious historic em- and Jews which counts among its day, since it was regarded necesthat the d i s e a s e work havoc phasis, on the brotherhood of all directorate some of the foremost sary that some leaders be in the among the men in the ranks of men and the Fatherhood of God. Jatholic, Protestant and Jewish Holy Land at-this critical period. It was assumed by Zionist Conthe offensive army. . religion has pleaded tor leaders in America has earned for gress leaders that other delega. The author then cooly suggests Basically itself an enviable repute for its recognition of the^ rights of tions would leave without waiting that the dreaded disease , germs the one r^ce and that race is the consecrated endeavor to establish for the Congress to conclude. should be directed at the civilian only a feeling of human brotherhood Representatives of the Polish and- non-combattant' populations human race. among those of differing creeds. delegation conferred ins that conAll i n Danger situated at a safe distance from -1939*$ Quicker Sapping Safety Tires ' .' However, the doctrine of the Its appealing democratic slogan nection with, the Polish Consul the lines of combat. At this point dignity of human life is not one here. , is "make America Safe for Difthe diabolic objection is s t a t e d which calls, for mere avowal. We Endorsed Es Ccr Engineers that cities with modern hospital are all in grave danger of being ferences" and it has proven that only by being conscious of a unity When the Cossack uprisings of • QUICKER- STOPPING "BRAKE-ACTION**.! and medical facilities could ef- conquered by the diabolic trends fectively checli the spread of the and. forces which consider human of moral purpose and conviction 1652 sent homeless Jews swarmT R E A O . . .S."Cr rrs-rr j-"i"Fn!;£ eC£er onrr up the inttent disease. . life cheap and worthless. We be-can we hope to maintain undis- ing Into Lithuania, ths resident brftketsrr appr«"<T.,,f~> o">s"hp'i{ C'H Tr>c'...<5?rrcRrsquiok«rf turbed those differences - w h i c h J e w i s h householders were re- Therefore, the final conclusion come unwitting and passive allies add historic depth and emotional quired by their communal leaders •tnighter, «a£cr or rrec tlie E'.-riti^est. ol v--ct pavements. reached is that the deadly mi- of the pagan brute when we per-satisfaction to our religious life. to accept their respective quotas crobes; should be arrayed only mit ourselves to react with icy ©SS% K0E.E yCZ\*fK7? ?r.T \7* MILES Need of Religion of refugees for temporary shelter. against rural communities with indifference to.the fate of his outReligion is destined to be the rather inadequate hospital facili- raged victims. . © CHOSEN rcr, j2-:z~z a v s r:vr.rr; <\:r GARS savior of the democratic way of Patronize Our Advertisers. ties and only after all available We are all subject to the inceshospitals have been destroyed by sant stimulus of poisoned propar.ED TO II.VTC" \ J " n CAR bomb-fire. Then the ^civilians, the ganda from the air and through men, women.' and children will die the bigoted race hatred which OTof disease and consternation, and Iginates abroad and" w h i c h is F? r~-~ I - thus the morale of the enemy flooding this country -with menacarmy will be completely shaken. ing rapidity. As a result ol these •••-.•• Fearful of Tomorrow lurking influences, even high•; Do not such hideous machina- minded men and women have hetions of- bvercivilized modern bar- come callous to the Bufferings of ]•* — -••-''•r-^3.11 to us the biting sa- their fellow men. tire of a Jeremiah'who referred to They thoughtlessly join the. bate '_; ;.*;IM are' wise to do evil mongers, express opposition to th6 but who know not how to do efforts of those who would shelter ,• jcd." Eow can we .avoid being little refugee children on these t r c t^t vr doubtful and fearful about the shores until the European storm V/orld Tommorw when the World subsides. Peoplo wjio call themToday offers manifestations ^~of Fpivrs religious weigh the problem Z' r.*r such premeditated brutality. Is it of the salvation of lives In terms not almost slander against our of questionable economic disad1.1-imordial ancestors to refer to vantages or even with reprehen• t h e perpetrators of such schemes sible bias toward aliens. The most as modern savages? bloodless way of fighting a brute "Man's extremity is God's op- is to help his victim. portunity."" The nature of the pre- To withhold or to oppose that gant cvisis is such that a moral re- help is tantamount to effecting • awakening is bound to come. The an alliance wltn the enemies of If you haven't yet attended, do so now and streamlined idolatry of the mod-civilization. ern totalitarian pagans will cause enjoy tho Exceptional Savings. Convenient Function of Religion sucb. moral aversion as, to lead -The function of religion is t6 TERMS will; b® arranged. Liberal allowmen to a moral revaluation of the protect the individual from tho ances made oa old furniture. entire human scene. surrender of his moral judgment •••"" There is a vigorous moral tone and conscience to tho many colormanifest in current literature. ed mass appeals which characterA1 d o-u s Huxley's "Ends and ize our age. Fascism, communism, Means" is a passionate plea for aggressive nationalism, all direct the evaluation of the present hu- their Inflammatory appeals at man scene in terms of ethical some mob Belt of which we are a v a l u e s. Aurel, IColnai's "War part. The slogan in Germany 13 : Against the West" ;is only one of "You were "born to die for Germany stimulating books .which many.," stress the thought that what Is: The appeal of Fascism in Italy happening in Europe is not a bat- is that "Italy must have her place tle between opposed political and in tho sun." Communism tells Us
I© REFUGEES III ENGLISH CAHfP
By Dr. Max Arzt
Report Gestapo Kills Famed.
3
IN THIS GREAT
SAFETY TIRES
"Quick! Hide your bottle of Roberts! The only time this gold digger comes around ; • £s when her bottle is emptyl" -
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THE JEWISH PESSS—FRIDAY, ATJGUST 25, 1939 I wish, ths air selected could have f been one more as.imE.te5. J. J ^ 1 Tils as s o occasion for CETIU- S ins; and I am speaking only isysyelf; from past c—>cr-' iencs, I know ths.t many compos!- -tions which I find dull (including much of Trainer's TDOE.1 parts) are appreciated by millions, but I it may jse- that the Litanei ex- j presses iiiilfia eat e o t h c tl—»»=• EH artists, Who, by the way, are in "*>F *Sr By Henry W. Levy the background throughout the singing, have merely yielded .As 10,000 JewlBh "War Veterans 1 new group was an organization membership of about 1,200 vetchivalrously to the suggestion o* and their friends descend upon; ot "sons of veterans." en a formerly celebrates singer. erans. Miami for the 44th Annual EnGrim EL-cmor Thus ^in March of 1900 the Suceeding Colonel. Simmons as canrpnient of the Jewish War .Vet- name was changed to Hebrew Commander-In-Chief of the VeterA hundred years ago E.al>bi 0 0 ; erans of the United States, it is Veterans of the War with Spain. was David Solomon (1923Akiba Ei-ger was perhaps t h e j of j interesting, to turn hack the pages The two organizations did not ans 24), Morris J. Mendelsohn (IS 2 4most renowned Taint-a list ol his I me: of history and review the begin- merge but continued side by side, 28), and Julius Berg (1928-30). day. The historian, Graets, has \ ers nings from "which this great or- cooperating with each other in In 1927, previous to his becoming this to say about him in his raon- | sep ganization -with a membership of major issues'that- confronted Commander-in-CMef, Berg sugnnient&l work: "Akiba Eiger, j vici over 20,000 -war veterans develop- American Jewry. gested, that t i e name of the orowing to his astounfiingly irgen- j CF.t ed, lake the oak tree that develganization be changed once again. icus mlsd. an5 high virtues — J this Protests open from the proverbial acorn," among -which mo-Sesty was pre- the In 1902 the two organizations His suggestion -was adopted in the Jewish "War Veterans of the urged eminent — enjoyed almost divine C of State Hay to 1929 and the organization became United States grew to their pre- addressSecretary Eelssires e^or! across ths few fee* of wsier 80 &s £2? ref reverence from the thousands OL ; eve a note to the Russian known as the Jewish War Vetersent eminence from humble begin- Government tsrssdsd en the S.S. Si. Lcsis. Feribi&Sca to Ibsd la Csbs ead f disciples who came from nis auspices or t protesting against the ans of the United-States. nings. > Tenth Anniversary to rclom to Esrope, wbere Oasj were ssisimately given tesspossry academies in Friedl&nd and Po- cott Commit cruel practices carried on in RusThe beginning-of the organiza- sia against its Jewish minority. In refuge, tiieps refugees syralhsclaaa the tTKssdj cf Jewish ihoraelssssess sen. Ke was s. cuist IDEE, who ! Semitism as The Encampment this year thus thai has driven maay eleaipersSa saess Eafi « s s a to ssS sail cpss clhs tion of Jewish -war veterans in 1903 a resolution concerning the marks never toot the Initiative, &EC was | existence of the 10th Anniversary of high spas ia search at ssscteary. A«aiea hj tbs Jssai BisSr&sSica this country may be traced direct- Kishneft pogroms resulted in the averse to aggressive opposition." • asserted the adoption of the present name. Committee was vital ia BEVSE^ the refugees front Jseiag retersed! to ly back to several slurring accusa- adoption of a similar resolution the Only recently dia I learn that a ; concern for < The first Commander to serve theGermany. The fcnd-ralffliis c&SKs of the Joint '~ tions that the Jews were unpatri- by the New York Board of Alder- organization under its new name grandson of Eig-er was professor ! in opposing the Nazis in. otic and shirked duty to their men and an official protest to the was Harry Seidenberg of Boston. at" the University of j ceptrtictire jmtJ-Scmltic ver country In time of war. Mark Csar by President T h e o d o r e He was re-elected the next year That was -when the press this country." Oilier ere Vilno. Jewislt Appeal for Eefug^ss e a i Oversea* Keetis. Twain made this Insinuation in an Roosevelt. carried a report of his. death.. vrere Harry D. GJfieoD.se^ and served until 1S32. Then folessary he wrote "Concerning the There is, however, a strang post- dent oC Brooklyn collere. lowed J. George Fredman of JerIn 1911, the veterans called the Jew." (Twain later fully retracted Miss Frees Kirchvey, e£U. c-J lufie to sad ever It Eppecrs 'T' sey City, Post No. 10 whose work their concerts on special tours to that, asthe his statements made in this, ar- attention of the American Con- later during the Nazi terrors will Nation. in the" cass of msny deease the frightful situation 5s scendants from great Jewish rabticle). Such an accusation was gress to Russian discrimination long be remembered in the annals against American citizens of JewWorld Jewry. Nor must we foralso made by a clergyman writing Marian Eiger had held him- i The Committee or the Jewish war veterans. He re•get that in South America, t h e bis, in Harper's Magazine in 1894. ish faith in disregard ot the Trea- ot A. A. EOBACK self aloof .from the Jews, herin? Fight Anti-Si fused re-election in 1933 and tried ty of 1832. Because of this fact most talented diseuse, possibly on Still another, and this the most thoroughly assimilated to | that it has changs his refusal, to establish a prethe continent, Eerta Singennan become b 1 a t ant accusation of all, was the American Government abro- by j, Committee the Polish culture. , , . , , oil • . Cat Entertainers as Snstaisers cedent of only a single term for gated the Treaty with Russia until has undertaken a similar t a s k made by an Army officer writing Gentile, prob- I ^ n rights because " r e recoirIn the past we have had much with great success; and in some the office of Commander-in-Chief. all American citizens, regardless in the North American Review. id had it not | nize that anti-Semi'dKic is but one failed, for the very next Con- to complain of in regard to en- cases, it has been reported, she ably. a Catholic, an-d Ho stated that he had traveled ot religion, were allowed free, en- He tertainers. During the mediaeval was able to influence a high func- been for the goings-on in the Nazi facet of the new bF.rfear.ism vi-ic3mander, William Berman, of Bostry into any part of Russia. from Eaat to "West, North to South Post No.' 22, served two terms age, and the Renaissance, they tionary in one or another of the Reich, with its repercussions in inclufies anti-Catholiciem arsS all When, in the same year. Colon- ton and had not found a single Jew (1933-35). came in order were nearly all classed under the southern republics, to oppose a the world at large, the scion of a other selective hatee in lie clcr're who had served in the Civil War. el Garrard, stationed at Fort Mey- Abraham K rThen set iran IT; Egaicst ITIFE in o~cle" a d I t or (1935-36); head of clowns and jugglers. restriction against the eternally noted family would almost have | tc set er, refused the application of a Harry Schaffer (1936-38) the ensuing strife," Even as late as the Victorian era, forgotten that he belonged, to the j to profit Civil "War Vets and IsJew named Frank Bloom, the vet- ador Worth (1938-39). • ' TThe he /s nrr*. committee will continue to with few exceptions, actors s.nd oppressed people. Jewish people. The first Jewish war veterans* erans the matter to the atactresses had a stigma attached Charlie Chaplin's few publish its newspaper, The voice. At any rate in the organization, the' Union ol Civil tentioncalled As the Jewish "War Veterans of to them. In the Catholic coun- work on behalf of the refugees years he co-operateS with the of President Taft. As a "War Veterans was thus formed on result Bloom admitted into the United States, the organiza- tries they were looked upon as has surprised the world, for one community and participated in ! ^Detroit (JTA) March 15, 1896 at the Lexington the Army" andwas Colonel Garrard tion has developed, to the point outside the parish. They w e r e reason -because Chaplin's Jewish some of the more important ac- j c*vu . WET is m the raE.1Avenue Opera House in New York was soundly reprimanded by Pres- where it is now universally recog- liked by the masses, but masse3 descent has been questioned every tivities in Tv'ilno Jewr^. Upon America, Christian SOCIE.2 City as an answer to anti-semit- ident Taft. nized as •'& collaborator by such were often denied theza at their time it was referred to in the his death, his widow arranseS to | nionthlj• - ecu Ism. it has since Tplayed its part fellow veteran organizations, as funeral; and their example was press. "While it is true that the have him fc-uried in a Ch.ristiE.n ovrnec by Catholic I a y Fonght Discrimination in the American Jewish Scene and the American Legion, Veterans of not much of an incentive to the Numerous other cases of famous comedian has never been cemetery en the allegation that chErged. An article be£< dishas been a living refutation of Wars, and D i s a b l e d younger generation. keen on associating himself with he had been convertea to Chris- | confifientia such persons, who regardless of crimination against Jews were Foreign American Veterans. the Jewish, people, his latest step tianity. All was ready for the afC reced ed "~" Biaf truth, talk about the un-patrio- handled by the two Veterans' orThen came the glorification of ganizations. Throughout this enOf recent years the Jewish War the stars, flickerlights and glam- snows that he E a y have e c" isternient. The sealed coffin vrae spread c• r s £ tism of the Jew. tire period the membership of Veterans has compiled, a record or royal, and with the advent of gone a change ot heart. about to be lowered, •when the tironglio-jt the " The records of Jewish participa- both organizations remained com- that places it in the forefront of the film, fabulous salaries for t i e tic grDiipB. EV the It is poetic justice that the littion in the wars of this country. paratively small and the groups Jewish Organizations. The boy- possession of "it" or "uiapJi" — tle man in Berlin who has- laa'de orthodos relatives r ot course, should be a m were not really national organiza- cott against goods from Nazi Gertest ^ enough to any c h a r g e made tions but fust New. York groups. many was first instituted by the and no more. For all the admir- millions iinhapppy should "mous- the body for t i e Jewish cemetery ty Jewish Teleation o£ the youth, the stars did tachlally" imitate t i e little JUKI Nazi .tisra .was against the Jews in this regard. In 1917 the Hebrew Union Veter- veterans. by graphlc • Agency, Inc.) not seem to call forth much re- in Hollywood "who has rsaSe hunIn the "World War, for instance, ans Organization found it imposEIE the dirSrtin.r. Frop.*, Cht-irt^,|The organization lias been indreds of million* happy through spect in reflective circles. 250,000 Jews or 4.5 per cent of sible, to continue their organisathe Greater jcrw Tori? In its continued denunciaIt was during the Spanish Civil laughter. Incidentally I h- a v e Reich. Jews Fay bmci \Mobilizers, thg total mobilization of the coun- tion because of the many deaths sistent committee for Christian Action, tions of Communism, Fascism and War that we began to see another seen a picture presenting & view try, served in the United States ot their members. all other forms of totalitarianism. side to the Hollywood Colony. In of the real Dictator and the "Dic- InstdS.rn.ent on Fine the Christian InCss, i.iie «JilL armed forces. . . ' " - • " Ijabor Front and ;he Chr At this time the Hebrew Vet- In 1932 the War Veterans passed spite of the fact that as wealthy tator" as the inimitable Cb£.rlie As the Jewish population of the erans Vigilantes. ot the War-with Spain ofa resolution urging investigation will impersonats him. people, film stars would be excountry only represented 3 per- fered to make the members of the of all un-American groups in Berlin CVTNS) — German Jews Secret ineetinjri; f f r>- -r pected to show little sympathy "What a story the contrast tells! hare completed paying to per rations Ettecdecl ty cent of the total population, the Hebrew Union Veterans Organiza- America. One of the results of this with the underdog, we found that How can a lanxb impersonate d cent of their fortunes toward the JewB contributed one. one-third tion honorary membera of their resolution was the Dies Committhey were taking a greater inter- wolf? Just eocpare the melan- fine of |400,COO,C00 levied in more than their normal share. organization. In 1918 following tee to investigate subversive activest In world events and the politicholy and pensive, almost rneek vengeance for the shooting in And that the Jews did^not seet the close of the World War the ities. cal situation, than many a profes- "dictater" with, the bloodshot, Paris o" Ernst Vom Rath, em- FOB. KK?*TT — sinecures in the Army ia evidenc- name ot the Spanish Veterans OrThe veterans also have lent ensional or business-man, and that and arrogant dictator, bassy secretary, by a Polish Jewed by the iact that although the was again changed, couragement and aid to Palestine. their hearts beat in unison with bullying, o n e TOOSSC and you will need no further Infantry, the shock troops of the ganization ist youth. this time to Hebrew Veterans of They have timo and again protne pulse of the ordinary folk. mentaries. Army, represented only 36.6 perthe Wars ol the Republic. The tested against British restriction Most Jews ps..!3 the "ocrtli They were not so carefree, so cent of the armed forces, the per- whole unit of Hebrew. Veterans of immigration.. • final installmerit of the levy ECA AH Stsr Recor3frivolous and indifferent to the centage of Jews in the. Infantry of the War "with Spain became A ' further offering toward the Today the Jewish War Veterans misery of their fellow-beings, totalled 48 jjercent. In the Quartas Manhattan Post No. 1 of the United States have become here and abroad, as one night relief of refugees is the result of e r Master Corps, often referred known Jews who emigrEtec ot the Hebrew Veterans of the the symbol of Jewish patriotism suppose. There were even in- a record released by ythe RCA reached. to as the haven of the .politician, last November, when Katli that the original founders hoped dictments on the part of the re- Manufacturing- cospssy anc fea- since . 'there -were only 5.09 percent of Wars of the Repnblic. room. slot. paid, tfceir i. -.ares cf the This was. the real beginning Of for In 1896. As the representatives actionaries to the effect that Hol- turing Hnlda JJashatiEka, so- WEE jJewa, whereas the enlistment in fines as they left. jthlB Corps represented 6.02 per- the Jewish War Veterans of tne of the quarter of a million veter- lywood was a hotbed of Coraniun- Prano; Mischa Elaaaa, violinist; United States as a national organ- ans who served Uncle Sam during ism. Although there may be some Ernanuel Feuermann, cellist, and j jpent ot the entire army. . ization. In the years following the the World War, the Jewish War people who sympathise with. Rudolf Serfcis, pianist, in HanIn the Spanish American War World "War several new posts Veterans has a place in the eoun- film Communism, we know only too del's "Arioso" fron "lErsel ia •E000 Jewish, volunteers ansewered were,drganized, the Brooklyn Post cils of American Jewry and is the well that to reactionaries, Com- Egypt," and Schuberts Utaaei the call of their country. In the No. 2, the Harry Cutler Post No. recognized spokesman of Jewry munism Is a blanket term for all (RCA 1SS65—?S.00). All four Civil War, more than 10,000 Jews 2. These,three posts, still active, among non-denominational veter- that is liberal and progressive. virtuosi are turning their royal•were engaged in .combat in t h e are the forerunners ol many more, an and patriotic groups throughTlie "Knteie Yid" ia Jewish ties i o r this record- over to the armies of the Union or Confeder- some of, which have survived to out the country. . Entertainers refugee fund. acy. Going back to the- "War of this day and others have dropped In the world crisis, which has Uflhtdl this benevolent 1812 we find Jews-in the fceVvlceby the -wayside. enveloped the Jews particularly act will Tse paralleled by other of the country and 60 outstanding like a conflagration, the Jewish artists who realize that t h e y In February 1920 two posts entertainers have been quick to might have been in the ssjse posia hero as Commodore Uriah P. outside of New York were taken lend their assistance, though, un- tion of the harried refugees. ID in. These two posts, Philadelphia Levy. . asked, and are bringing succor to tins event, I hope that music and Cleveland, were the beginIt was even thus in the War of ning thousands ot unfortunates. There •which is not so fnnerally Blow is of a national organization. the Revolution when Colonel Issac Today there are two hundred and is E'ddie Cantor, whose rolling chosen. While the Litauei (prayFranks served as aide-de-camp to fifteen posts throughout the couneyes never impressed me, but his er) is on the surface appropriate Naples (WNS) ^ — As a result Ceorge Washington and at least of a Japanese communique issued moved and moving heart is rescu- to the occasion, an-d while the 46 Jews fought under Washing- try. . last weefc announcing that t h e ing Jewish children from the Nazi sorrow and resignation are beau• With the addition of the new velih KawrrecSoTCS- Kzw To!* ton, among them Major Benjamin Japanese-ruled sector of the In- clutches must instill E. feeling of tifully interpreted by Hulda LasiLNbneB of the staffs of Generals posts the Commander of the He- ternational Settlement at Shang- gratitude in those who have the anska, who is now scarcely a ED"Washington and Lafayette, Major brew Veterans of the Wars of the hai -wtjuld be closed to Genaan- inclination, but not the means 10 praso—Indeefi her lower register Xiewls Bush, who was killed at Republic became known es the Jewish Immigrants Au- do likewise. Cantor has turned reminds one of the late Madam Brandy-wine and Colonel David Commander-in-Chief. The first to gust 21, 30 Jewishbeginning on himself into an institution, and SchumaMi-Hei&k — something by Salisbury Franks who was sent to serve under this title was Maurice route from Germanyrefugees to China has induced many Je-srs to con- Mendelssohn, say from his Elijah SEC Phonc^tE-sfe Key • 1^Europe by Congress with mes- Simmons who served from 1920 were refused passage aboard the tribute to a cause which is no less oratorio -would have served the sach Draapcfw-cr Sneaker • sages for Benjamin Franklin, Am- to 1923. theirs than his. purpose a little better. Not resigJapanese steamer Haliasunraaru When Colonel Simmons retired f rcaihirtrucii Traia; KI-T bassador to France... • Miecha Elman a n d Tettsfli nation or despair, hut hope and • it sailed from this port. But these facts and figures had as Commander, the organisation when, Menuhin have rendered equally coarag-e should be the symbol 2a French and Italian ships, howsioa • s G-E Tsass • Via"been used often to answer "writers was composed ot six posts. At a ever, continue to accept refugee great services to the Gerraan ref- this connection. Kandels Arioss or speakers casting disparaging meeting held In the West 54th passengers for China. ugees in offering the proceeds -of is somewhat more cheerful, yet remarks upon the; patriotism of Street Curthouse that year, reprethe Jew. The people, it seemed, sentatives of these six posts, ManShanghai (WNS) — Starting as . were not statistically minded, and' hattan •— Cutler —>• Brooklyn — a Ii it the use of figures to prove a point Cleveland Post No. 14 — Phila- a •weekly. representing the interdelphia Post No. 13 — and Jer- ests of German Jewish refugees was of no way of great valueI Vi sey City Post No. 10, accepted the in Shanghai, the Jewish ChronEarly Work icle hegan publication last -week suggestion of the late Nathan A group of 67 Union Civil "War Veterans decided that the best Strauss to change the name of tlse as the first Jewish dally ne^s-. ff method of dramatising Jewish organization t o the Jewish Veter- paper in the Far East featuring news ol general interest in Doth ans of the Wars of the Republic participation in the Civil War was the organization ot a Jewish -war instead of the Hebrew Veterans English and German. Ossi LeTrin, veterans group patterned after the of the Wars of the Republic. At p. refugee Ifom Vienna, is pubgeneral run of veterans' organiza- that time the organization had a lisher. tions. I-**'- i ft » » » • ft f,*"1'*^^? p^^^r * The 67 Veterans, -with Isadore Isaacs presiding, -chose Joseph H. VI Stiner as - their Chairman. The |, -.„., i..:.m group -was incorporated in Febru-, ary, 1897 as the Hebrew Union ^Veterans Organization. FOR V I S I T S n ' One Of the first or their selfimposed duties was the fnaugration ot an Annual Memorial Servtann£ * AC-DC OjwEftitiijrj « t ice for their fallen Jewish comrades, a service which is now still 5 j ^ held by the Jewish "War Veterans of the United States, lineal successors to the Hebrew "Onion Veterans Organization. The first Memorial Day Service -was held at Temple Emanu-Eel oh May 26, | with tub. 1896 with Simon "Wolf • :as. the principal speaker. • - --•i showsr or g : Following the end of ih>a'Spanish "War thousands of new;-Jewish ff-JS's His© Krtsptes! •war;.veterans .sought to create an saop-crceilcs-ps?" organization ~-to continue-"-their -2 creases llctr ic3*crE:t •war-time contacts. The Hebrew Union Veterans Oraginzation saw p"c3 is so l in the Spanish American ytsx -veterans new blood with which t o perpetuate their organization, ii:ls rccii'-fs their aims tmd their ideals. Thus, in December. 1899, they appoint^s e ed a Committee to help organize the younger veterans in an organization similar to theirs. At the first meeting of the Spanish war if-Vt * : * ! * ' i« veterans, t h e name, Junior Hebrew Veterans Association of the "War with Spain, was chosen. Four IS e months later, however, the' tnem• .bera d a c i d e C'that this""natae sounded too much as though the I ^^^^
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THB JEWISH PRESS PUBLISHING COMPANY. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, One Year • . i . >: ADVERTISING RATES PURNI8MEO ON APPLICATION EDITORIAL.OFFICEJ GOD BRANDEl® THEATER BUILDING SIOUX CITY OFFICE—JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER PRINT SHOP ADDRESS—4504 SO. S4TH STREET DAVID B L A C K E R • • «. B u s i n e s s a n d M a n a g i n g E d i t o r LEONARDNATHAN - - . - „ . '- . . . . . . . Editor R A ? B l . F R E D E R I C K COHN - : > • Contributing Editor ElA^Bl THEODORE N . L E W I S D « > . . • B90& Editor FRANCES BLACKER "'• .'•»'..',"• • » . " ' . - . Society Editor M O R R I S A I Z B N B E R G •-.-• • • « «» Slpus City Correspondent D O B O T H E SALTZMAN - • • '-<*- <«* • Council B l u f f s . C o r r e s p o n d e n t
[TheEuropean Nightmare • •
ments of the government. It is unlikely the Council will point out that Britain seems to be favoring the Arabs since the "rel evant Consideration" regarding the necessity of curbing immigration, is the agitation ofa minority of Arab terrorists. The League decision is merely a *moral*" victory — and such it will-probably remain. The Zionists will have another argument for the growing list which apparently bears no weight with the British Colonial office anyway. Practical considerations — which; in. the long run may not be so practical after all — are in the ascendancy and are.prompting the British in their policy, » "When the Prophets of old told of the return of the Jews to Palestine, they realized there would be obstacles galore, but never that the destiny of the Holy Land would be governed by the Britons, with whom the Phoenicians traded glass beads. Nor did- they- consider the Swiss lake,, where Primitive men sought refuge, would oe the site of arguments affecting that destiny.
Like a: bad dream- the possibility of a rapprochement between Germany and Eussia has plagued European chancellories. . " Such a possibility has so long been in the air that before Hitler The Ominous CloiM In a general war, the ministers of two recently extinct nathe German war office was accused of aiding; the German Communists. Even stiff-necked Prussian militarists were .willing tions, Czecho-Sloyakia and Albania, see hope for their restorato coins together with Communist Eussia, pointing -out 'that tion: of =thelr homelands. A defeat of the Axis powers would Gemany with its great, industrial development was a comple- undoubtedly mean'independent status could once more be assumed by these nations as well as by Ethiopia. The new propament to the vast Eussian agricultural areas/ ' •'••' = Hitler's attacks on Eussia and his unconcealed designs on ganda issued by the anti-Semites would have us believe that the ^Ukraine and the Urals seemed to bring to an end any the Jews share this view — that the status of European Jewry hope for. such an agreement,, arid momentarily tHe. diplomats' would also be-hnproved by a war. Today two armies are poised to strike — thbse of Germany Ibre&thed easier. As the self-styled leader of. an anti-Communist crusade, Hitler was not to be suspected of maneuvering Russia and Poland. Between them, lies the most highly concentrated Jewish population in the world. Three and a half million Jews into her sphere. ' ", * —• : , But all this talk of saving western Europe from the bugaboo reside in Poland, the. greatest number in the old Pale of settleof communism was merely for foreign consumption. England ment. Once war would start, this area would be the first to be believed it. Anti-Semites utilized it for an attack'on.the Jews. devasted as it was in the last war. Although the position of the Jews nere has never been one In Germany things were different. A witness .before the Dies of.prosperity,"it is today worse than ever. TJnder Russian rule committee has testified that in Germany "Communism is never the region was subjected to the discrimination of the Czarist' attacked because National Socialism' is merely a higher form government, but there was hope that someday things would of Communism" and gradualy the Communist clenched-fist ges1 ture will open up into the Nazi salute." There is of course, equal improve, The war brought famine and; destruction. An indepenpossibility that the"Nazi salute may becomertfae clenched fist dent Poland — in which the Polish Jews placed their confidence without much difficulty, for Nazism, has .'been:' correctly styled -—repaid their patriotism by consigning them to economic dis• ' "Bolshevism by.'the back-door." Today no country is nearer .aster. •. \ V . War would merely complete the ruin &he Polish" governcommunism in theory than Germany... .... ment instigated. It would also increase disease; it would add to The signing of the Russian-German trade treaty is an inthe stiffering and devastation^ Each Polish defeat would ber'a dication that relations between the two countries are not as sigiial'for a pogrom—;*f or that has been-the Polish government's strained as the world; has been-led to. believe. As Mussolini, once the great defender against the Yellow Peril, has now be- #ay of covering over its mistakes. Each German victory would mean that another million Jews would come under the sway of come a bosom companion of the'Japanese, so vHitlgJF'ias; J>itri Hitler. the hatchet with Russia. • , I£-any Jew- is desirous of war,* It means th'at the travail The trade treaty between the two totalitarian nations is far abroad'has affected his mental faculties. If-we face disaster more important than their non-aggression pact. Both- countries now, war-wiUm(|an extinction. .._.,. have :on previous occasions signed pacts renouncing aggression. German disposes of her, at convenience, as evidenced by her jTinldng of the treaty with Poland. Russia has always in the past left a significant loophole in her non-aggression-pacts so KBXOK OOHH jthat she can withdraw should circumstances demand. : y i a Tbrie^-sojourn.on moutain and in" meadow we come ©
barren shingles "of the world, assured of calm at last with "perhaps the heavenly silver moonlight and Gods stars of hope a z i faith restisg peacefully upon the waves.
BIBLE Thbugii bis iatresl be concealed •with fleceit, U s •wickedness snail be revealed before the congregation. A lying tongue' hatcth tnose that are crushed by it, and a flattering month worketh ruin. - Sweet lips aad a .wicked heart are like an earthen vessel overlaid with silver dross. He who blesseth his friend with a loud voice, rising early in the morning, it shall be counted a curse to him. TALMUD Once Rabbi Meir, Rabbi Juda and Rabbi Jose were traveling on the road. Rabbi Meir paid attention to the name of the innkeepers,1 but the other two did .not pay any • attention to it. "When they arrived at an inn, they asked the host: "What • is thy name?" "Kidor," he replied. "I infer from his name that he is a wicked man,'* said Rabbi Meir. Rabbi Juda and Rabbi Jose intrusted the-inkeeper with their purses for safekeeping over the Sabbath. Rabbi Meir di<l not. On Sunday when Rabbi Juda and Rabbi Jose asked the innkeeper for their purses, ho answered: "You never gave them to me." Rabbi Meir then said to them: "Why didn't you pay attention to • names?" Why has the master not told us about i t ? " they replied. Said he: "I only say that such a man ought to be suspected, but I could not say with certainty." Noticing that Kidor had lentile
The pact is most likely Russia's attempt to force Britain's Land, to make her acquiesce to Russians terms for an alliance^ ffhe Russians, know that Germany has not given up her designs ion their,'rich f armlanas. Tfiey Snow that the'; very cornerstone (Df German policy, is thie "Drang nach Osten"—the'Driye to the jfast. The'assumption of the Protectorate was\.patt and*parcel 'pt this policy. The, agitation'for Danisig is not because'GerSnany wants Danzigjbut is interested in a strategic Baltic port $hat will enable h e r ' ^ ^ i k e out at Russia. #. .. ; - - . - --: the seal, with* its ceaseless sobbing, its unThe trade toa^ on _the:.other" hand, means concrete, assis-; fence to Germany.lt means,that for the tiifl^eingi at Itjast, phe has access to the Russian granaries and Russian, mines. Her ing wind falter" so much as thunder "forth a sorrow."It's voice shortage of raw materials and her declining financial situation is never still. It is the resounding^ "the. never silent sea" of now be aided by her supposed enemy, Russia. Homer and epic bards. It is the syipbol of the Infinite and of Sorrow. Infinite Ocean! Infinite Sorrow! of the finite human : Such has.the bulwark against Communism turned. Such is soul! • the defender of what the American Communists would have us As we. sit beside it in moody meditative silence what are believe is true democracy. Ideologically the two- states are not its wild waves trying to say to us hWhat do they whisper in far apart. Neither is concerned with building a state1 in which lisping, lilting waves as thunder in mighiy-heaven-tossed bilthe individual will have-the opportunity to growand develop. lows f What is the message of the sea? :' . Russia has ben the loudest in her attacks on the appeaseThe poets have.caught it with ^theij^hearts attuned to the ment policy of Chamberlin, but it is Russia that ^ has <- turned mighty pulse-beats pf_Nature. Who is not familiar-with Tennyput to be the greatest "appeaser" of them all. : • - . . . - . . son's beautiful and heart-breaking lines ?% • A
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pn th© cold, gray'stones, 0, Sea!; Zionists are rejoicing in what they consider a "Moral Vic- I n d I would that my tongns could titter tory" recently gained at: Geneva in. their, struggle .mtK the Tho thoughts that sriso in m©!. British gbvernment over the "White Paper." The League of '•?'Ahd the stately ships go oa Nations Mandates Commission has issued a unanimous opinion To their haven under, the hill; that the new British policy is not in accordancei with »the ui- But Of or ths touch of a vanishod hand : terpretatiori of the Palestine Mandate........ . sound of a voica that is stilll" Three members of jfche commission>— the representatives of France, England, and Portgual — dissented in a corollary At the foot of thy crags, O Sea! ' decision that existing conditions were not enough to' change the But tho tender grace of a 6&y thai is«dead policy. If the League Council sees fit to approve the new-policy, WiJI aever como back to mo!'* these three members felt no objections could be entered by inThe sea tells of the uninterrupted-flow of time! terested parties. ••"•'. •••.'.*"••-.•• The sea tells of the eternal tide in the affairs of men and In its report the Commission contends that the making of nations! .--..»•. • ;'v. oi' Jewish immigration dependent on Arab acquiescence was conThe sea tells .of loved ;• ones gone forever "sunk below the trary to the Mandate's requirements and that the administration v e r g e . " ' • , , . ; • , • • . , • was charged with facilitation of the Jewish Home. Prohibition The sea;tellsofprecious cargoes of love and. affection imof- land sales was condemned as contrary ito Mandate's provision mersed irretrievably in the unfeeling depths. that close settlement by the Jews be encouraged. And-thirdly, The sea tells of "vanished hands"; and though, it itself is the decision to make the Arabs the majority is" in,conflict with never silent of voices thatare forever still. the view that Palestine was to have become a Jewish Rational On the infinite pathos and passion of the sea that "cannot home. ' • • • - . . • • . ';••.' / <•'./••. \ ' \ , rest" and that "tosses up", the dregs and batteredieKcs of brokThe Commission also recalled that in 1,937 the British'were en lives and broken hearts! rebuked by the League Council for declaring the "mandate •But there" is another'massage of the sea that the poetic unworkable." By the declaration the mandate became so. heart:of Matthew Arnold- c^ugh when the sea was "calm" at the foot of the "Cliffs o£ Dover:"/ "...•••• In their reply to the finding of the Commission, the British claim that the suspension of Jewish, immigratibn after five sad truth, of eternal love, of undying years was based on the country's economic capacity. The pro. vision-has been interpreted by the government ?tO'mean that ^ a . - a a . d e s p ss the Ocsaa! immigration must-not esceedthe absorptive capacity, and does ©, grave.' -.Tk® oceans - cannot' dxowa it,-'csanot esnot exclude the possibility that immigration snight fall below '. tingoiaii'its* 'oaqu^nchs.'bb fire?."Asd thougla a .tasan life is that level on account o£ other relevant considerations. /The like a pebble, ©vsa the most precious personality that, sinks Colonial office went on. to argue that is is bound to consider into %W deeps of death,'' it leaves its inevitabls ripple'of the rights of both elements of the population. -^fmoty, that c?t§nds in'lovs-coussatric circles ;to "the widest In its rebuttal of t&o Commission's arguments,-the Britisft ;-Souad3r©^^ttboagh'f!siorbed al'lasS la the co-alssclig-waters show no retreat on their- policy..Early in September the Council of all eabrf^jjjg bli|s, of divice oblivio^t. . ' ' will-consider the report-pf-the Mandates, group and the argu- ; We listen to the "retreating. roar"-of-life's.tide over-"the :
Community Calendar FKOM AUGUST 28 TO AUGUST SI Monday, August s s . Workman's L o a n , g p. m., Rooms C and D, Jewish Community Center. Orchestra rehearsal, S p. m., auditorium, Jewish Community Center. •X.OGS«3aj'( Augnst 29. Choir, S p. m., Rooms K and L, Jewish Community Center. Wednesday, August SO. I. W. O,, S p. in.. Rooms C and D, Jewish Community Center. Thursday, Atsgast, 31. • Boy Scouts, 8 p.. m., l o f i g e room, Jewish Community Center. Choir, , S p. ra., Rooms K and L, Jewish Community Center.
-Arrive is* Tangier
Nazi Grousp H&G Felled to Register "w State ' Dept. WANTS FEDERAL AID Will Also Ask States to Revoke Group*© . Cb&rters Tvashington (JTA) — After bearings •n-fcich exposefi German pressure for restrictions on Jcv-s :n a college and etten-pts by the GerinaE-AmericaE Bnud to form a united front -vrith other similar crg-£rizations, ChalrirjEn Martin Dies of the House Committee OE un-American Activities announced this week he would ask federal and state governments to act against the Bimfi. Dies said he expected the Justice Department to file charges soon against the Bund £or failure to register with the State Department ss foreign agents. He said he hoped the issue could be tried in the federal courts so that if the leaders were guilty t h e y "WOTildl go to the penitentiary. Ke sdded ths.t he would ask state governments to revoke the charters of un-American orgEXizations. The German Consul Ft N e w Orleans attempted to influence the University of Tampa (Fla.) to engage an "adequate" German professor and to establish restrictions on Jews, Dr. ^ohc Karvey Sherman, president of the university, toSd the Dies Committee. The consul. Baron Edgar Freiherr Spiegel von una zu Pectelsheim,
Tangier (JTA) — A group of S5 Jewish refugees arrived here this week from Italy. Among them was an ailing S6-year-old woman aud her son of 63. Six Jewish • refugee physicians hare been licensed by the government of the International Zone.
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to the sea»rivrj;-~j Back to, sea-Ie||f! Sea level Ss the normal. 'All measurements,, even of the^highest elevations, are taken from the sea* So, too/the insasUrement of life.'How is life like a sea! with its'tmfsthom&j^dTclepths, its brooding* mystery-;'its ebb and flow, i^calmJand:sto1oji; the varied xraft that sails upon its bosom ;;jhej^odies":and sguls that have gone down in it, even whole ««nAii»i;(™knrt*lw.j—its beauty, its dangers, its terrors, its
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on his Eiustache, they took h i n to a store and intoxicated.: t i n with wines. Then they went to his wife and told her that her husband had instructed her to give them their money, and to prove their statement they told her that on that very day she and her husband ate lentils. She gave them their.purses. Consequently, all of them began to pay strict attention to the name of. a person. Later, when they arrived at an inn whose keeper's name was Bala they refused to stop there.
Boujrfct to exercise pressure on the university by tying conditions to a proffer or books to the institu* tior't- "r-Frr, : Dr. Sherman testi* :;<=•;", f,.f i.r -^at the consul had ,,.:.- q,. — j , r 1PC o f offering books /,~;.-'?-ef in other colleges to rir-ffp .'ne- study of German. Toe f-xany Jews Askefi W Committee Counsel Khea Wfcitler whether the Baron hac referred to Jews during their cocversatioR, Dr. Sherman replied: "The Baron told me he thought the fact that we had no restriction on Jews at our college asd ik&t we had Jews on our board of trustee? and on the faculty w&s a mistake, and that eventually we would regret it." Under close questioning by members End counsel of the Dies Committee i n v e s t l g a ting unAuaericar acti^-ities. Fritz Kuhn, leader of the Bund, admitted efforts to form P. united front with organizations having s i m i l a r aims. He said nothing had come so fsr r«r these efforts but he was still hopeful. Declaring he was seeking to promote an alliance between the Eund, the Christian Front s.f.d other "anti-Communistic" groups Kuhn said: "You call them Fascist, but I call them patriotic organizations." When Kuhn was permanently excused he told newspapermen ths,t the committee had not shown any proof that the Bond was unAmerican or had a connection with G e r m s, E y. He said the hearing was s. "waste of time," p.p.(3 v-ov.lc! post Chairman Martin Dies and Representative J o e Starnes their political futures. Kuhn admitted to the Committee thst he h?.rt ordered the or£s.niza,tior's membership lists detroyed. E. yes- aeo ic anticipation of an official inquiry into t h e JHtnfi'E Effp.Srs, "I destroyed the recorrlp tc protect rcy members," he ssifi, "It it is found out that they belong to the Bund, they may lose their jobs."
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Sec tHe clothes"leaders ,of 19431 Tic s T
of
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originality . . . Don Richards 'of FTC ^T*C ~-' . . HOES© of hicmer famed-li&iidcrsfted clotibes . . . Kart Schsffsser £k MOTS . . . the New Yorker qaslity fealties'. . . Mssterlriai g^psrlssire ric rallies . . • Tiffssay "Worsteds . . . Faslsica Park Csisrtcr Hcisse . « . Hsrgjywve Suits . . . Timely Oslaes »... zna .itsaa j-others* iS/j-sggag l?Ba;a'S§ii to• new fall clothes early. SEE QVR WINDOWS TOfiAY
COMPARE OUR VALUES ALWAYS
!THE JEWISH PBESS—WB.W1
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-"AUGUST"-23,-1333,
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Des Moines A. X "A. Build New "Meeting Plans.. Annual Dance Boom at .Center
TTnea'.-Lionel T.rr=s. £_r--"v: frora. t i e . Fcrcre, r c r cl-r~o; Members of the Des Moines Because of an ezpanding~s,ctivi(honorary) A r r t i r . c ^ - II I c Chapter, of A. Z. A. are present- ties program and a-need for inwould return, to t i t ~ t : : l tr c"ing their annual-dance on Au-creased facilities a t the "Jewish gust 27 at. the Waveland Country ommunity Center, the checSfobia . Hollywood — Mervrs LeKcy's rect tie-fiestirj c. V~"A. i-? c > club, Forty-ninth and University, near tho west.. entrance p i the production, " "Wizard ol _ Oz" clised ths Des Moines. lecter is being remodeled into a emerges' as a gs^uise piece of "wizardry. It is a superlative achieve- j A pithy,' ABRAMS-OSTBAVICH FAIER-COOPER Music for dancing will be fur-meeting room. nent on every score. For esthetic,' Miss Liberty J. Cooper, daugh- Miss Edith H. Ostravich, daugh- nished by Barney Barnard. Tables This will also give the first ter ol Mr. and Mrs.H. J. Cooper,, ter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Ostra- lor refreshments will -be. setfloor another much needed i c o n artistic, dramatic, and estertainr" At t c - T : -cT - r "c raent-values, i t is in a class, by became the bride of Dr. A. D.vich, became the bride of Arthur around the lawn of the country for meetings. led en fcis inability I C E T S T z r H.. Abrams, son of Mn and Mrs. itself.' Certain to" be compared Faier, .son of Mr. and Mrs...Max club. Arrangements are also, be- Cloakroom facilities will be proFaier, on. Sunday, afternoon at the ;Dave "AbTams; -on 'Sunday "after- ing made for a varied program of vided in the place of the check- with "Snow "White," it is greater lines,-he'retorted, " A r , v i r ccn't noon at a ceremony-performed at .... , it is nidre hmsaa ang coa-.you remember yo-cr cv— ', r r r . . Birth-woodclnbv Rabbi David A» entertainment. roonu taiss a delightful, satiric philos- you're not indelit":"' . Goldstein and Cantor Aaron Ed- the Central club. Rabbi David A. Alephs from the surrounding gar officiated. . . . • .'•-.-. Goldstein officiated. ophy. It will spell Prestige lor region are expected at this affair. t-e i The bride's-gown was tashioned Hollywood in every free corner of Jordan -on t i s ; - r c ' r Miss. Reva Ostravich attended gushea, "2Z.J, i-xii yrx're r-T 1 -, •with'a-full skirt of chiffon and a the bride as maid of honor Mrs. the globe. cions!" waist of lace. Her long puffed Dan Cohen "was matron of honor. Preceding a long chain cf spesleeves were tight at the -wrist. Attending the groom -were Bar"Slajjsis" says i e S-I~c: E LTC: cial events to be held during the With reziarkabis clairvoyance She w-ore a turban of shirred net ney Abrams and Dan Cohen. meeting of Mother Chapter was a United -Artists foresees the com-•nisiit • « « i^% s r ^ r i ~ ^r t v ~t •with pearls wound around. She The bride wore a gown of white Bee sponsored. "by Leon- pletion cf Cbaplin's "Dictator" WET." Plans for the year's activities Quizzer ESsf.ts t r - r r* *--: imported organdy featuring a ^.carried a Bible and gardenias. Uargolus, chairman ql t h e . . . U. A.'s 1S3S-40 sr.ao-jx.os- iFclsnr^ioKe at the Jewish Commun- ard; Z?3.vis £.re 4J«~E-vfCc"c^ e f Maid of honor -was the bride's round neckline, short - puffed program cultural .committee. The quesEsent carries a page ad 02 t i e a r e ; now being made sister, Ruth Cooper, who w a s sleeves; tight;. bodice and . full ity Center covering the fields of his- picture. We. began to think Charclasses will Jbegin meeting tions, g o w n e d in blue marquisette floor length skirt. A finger-tip and tory, nature and other.'-points of lie was waiting for Chaabsrlein after, the High Holidays. .' lives alone E.S3. "loots -it! ' trimmed with-pint. She wore a veil fell from her net tiara. She soon knowledge., were secured J r o a to appease Hitler into resigning. At the present .time a cooking KOIL. I'tSe "pleasart -ttriils" cl , short veil caught at the lop with carried a colonial bouquet of class, a charm school, a sewing "i&g"bo^Tss'oa helpless civilpink flowers. Her- colonial • bou- white gladiolas. Stan. Turkel, chairman of ' the A reception was held at the group, a dancing group and a social In lilecsico' John Gartield ; Is ians as-ii;tiis"..tely fiescribsfi I T quet harmonized with her gown. committee, announced a following the cere- photography club a r e being con- tennis tournament to be held Sun- known as Juan GorSL Back h o s e lluEsis, Jr." -rill-be the cclr'-rl Helen Greenberg, "Lottie Bloch Central club templated. Those interested in • and Dorothy Camel -were brides- mony, a t Beiais park starting at S on the East Side the kids called of-a'.t-sro-rseler/fceirg preps,rec Vr The couple left on a wedding any of these subjects are asked day maids. They wore peach mara. ia. and lasting through the him Jule3 Garfintls. register for them at the office day. Alephs gulBette gowns with blue jackets. trip in Chicago and Benton Har- to have been paired olf Of the Jewish Community Center. bor. Mich. They will reside in Their short veils were-of peach. to battle at successive periods. Strange will "be the . markings Omaha. They carried colonial bouquets of Irv Nogg, chairman of t h e for future tiBtoriacs to deoijsirer. ,roses and gladiolas.! dance committee, has announced A recent progresi cf cartoons carCOUSINS CIAJB plans rapidly progressing for theried the explanatory note, "Ger- • Snsie Ferer was flower girl. The Cousins club will hold a John Faier -was his brother's t>est farewell paprty for -Mrs. J. Hay- Mrs. Joseph Goldware, -510! largest AZA dance' of the year, man as of; pre-H." Achar Hataunis'dance; George iran. Groomsman were Ephfaim on Wednesday, August 30, a t North Twenty-seventh street, will the Marks, Ben Smith and Dr. S a m "kin Johnson and hi3 orchestra, havbe hostess at her home on Wedthe home of Mrs. Albert Simon, The "breaks" of Cinematown: Faier. nesday, August 30, at a benefit ing • Just finished • a long engage- After waiting three years to get 2901 North Thirtieth street. The bride's mother was gowned .bridge for the Women's Mizrachi. ment a t the Hotel. Paston, has before the. lenses, Dolly H&ss, & in a dinner dress of royal b l u e RETURNS FROM CALIFORNIA Mrs. A. Arbitman will be co-host- been-secured for this - outstanding who was a well-known actress in lace. The. mother, of the groom Mrs.Max Block, who spent sev- ess. A 1 o'clock dessert lunch- event, got her big chance—was wore an ashes of roses crepe din- eral eon Trill be served. Special plans for decorating the Europe, weeks in. California, has recast to play the lead opposite ner dress. The corsages of both turned to the Blackstone. Cards and bingo tables are be-Jewish Community-Center ball- Paul in ""We Are Not •were of red roses. ing arranged and all members room are being made so the eve-Alone."Muni good luck, together A reception for 400 guests fol- LEAVE FOR NORTHWEST and- their friends have been in- ning will be more enjoyable to •with theHer fact that the role called lowed the ceremony. Assisting vited to attend. ;. who attend. Danes tickets are Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Poska and •were: Betty Rosenblatt, H e l e n ' son, Members of the organization now on sale, the price of admis- for extreme emotional " display, Sherman, and daughter, BetSmith, Pauline Rbthkop, Bernice have also been urged; to prepare sion being ?1 per couple. Tickets was too .much, tor her. 'This "week, ty Anne, of Creston, Ia., and Mr. Silverman, Helen Moelier, Dorobundles for the rummage s a l e may be gotten from any Aleph of thy Sherman, Merriam Fiedler, and.Mrs. Jay Stoler are leaving which is to be held after the High Mother - Chapter. Jerome Grossfor Bellingham, Wash., where -YOUR INSURANCE B Louise Miller, Shirley Barish, Holidays. Mrs. Joe Tuchraan-is man, editor-in-chief of the KibitYoiz'lt knoT *bp "'•- r-." -• • r r Betty Soref, Ruth Friedman, Mrs. they will make their home. chairman of the rummage .sale zer," distributed Kibitzers to Moth•IT ri «• ' - r — — - ' •; Harry Ferer, -Ruth- Levine and and Mrs. Sophie. Rothkop, co- er Chapter Alephs^at. the j s a i cf VICE-PKESiDSNT the VCT 7 ST *r fcjda Lerner. . chairman. the meeting. " A dinner was held later for the • With the coming of the N e w fhat make xl-f n Immediate families and t h e Year, members have been remindNice (JTA) — French customs ; bridal, party. The couple left ed by the president, Mrs. A. Katz, Vogru9 and I-"1 Frpc*"* w r • "" " r P t t r i Zsr.z Cwp*Ble» 3 By Arlene Solomon after the dinner for a 10-day wedto contribute to the" Jewish Na- inspectors arrested 16 German ] A Complete insurance Sscvle* • ding trip in Minnesota! Mrs. tional Fund and to Mizrachi in- and Austrian Jews who entered j CALL AT 7SS? cr WA E155J French, territory near here fron-l "THE'SETTLEMENT Faier's going away outfit was a Dear Suzy Q: stitutions. COUNTS"' Italy. • ' gray dress with chartreuse polka College, clothes a n d cold The next meeting of the organidots and a matching redingote. weather are positive preludes of zation will be held in October. Her accessories were black; and the fall season. If we let t h e she wore a corsage of gardenias. weather stay in the hands of the jssrs—Jl A. i f . fa 5 f, 12. "sfepScss AT TSSf After their return, Mr. andweather man, we. have college and Mrs. Faier will be at home at the clothes remaining to. be discussed. ... Princeton apartments.. Last Monday night five n e w Clothes: Clothes are lovely, as Alephs were initiated into the all new "clothed afer and~even the AXCSOTTSCE ENGAGEMENT order. Norman" Rice,' Melvin Mr. and Mrs. A. Liberman of hats have' bustles. End of dis-Tatleman, Harold Kaplan, Albert cussion on clothes beginning Eioux City announce the engageNachman and Sol Epstein were ment of their daughter, Bernice, of lecture on college. Marg. ttie recipients of the impressive Krasne, Ruth Rosenstock and to Mr. Abe Polikov, son of Mrs. first degree ceremonies. At that Helen Jane Chapman plan on en-time certain secrets ot the-fra* Eva Polikov, of Omaha. ~ teringthe -University of IlliNo wedding d a t e has bcenternity were imparted to them nois, while Beth Kulakofsky is Although they do not become fullchosen. • going- to-Wellesley. Carl Fred- fledged Alephs until t h s end of ericks "starts the sxodus of "back a Eix-month probationary period BETRTHAIi TOI/D Mr. and Mrs. Victor Magid-of tocoSlege" kids, 4or he leaves to- they • will be given all the priv- i \ year, t y , at N. • Y. ileges, of the .fraternity. — • Chicago have announced the; en-morrow for another U iri New N Y York. k More M to t be b said id gagement of their daughter, Reba, U. Aleph Godol Joe Guss welg., ^ i . .future, to Harry Kuklin of Lincoln.;, • ? - - .about-college : comed -the new Alephs on behalf Ji& Ha'dassah h " get' t fo- of Sam Beber Chapter No. 100 Mr. Kuklin is a teacher of "* "Ti Jvmi&t .physical education at the-Lincoln -gether •• Tuesday night at Shirley The ceremonies were conducted Barish's'house was really" lovely by Walter. Greenberg, assisted by 'High school. .--,.. The wedding has been Bet-for and.a£lr>tVp£ fiifi,; There certainly Yale Richards and Harold Slutzwas a mob there. Seems appar-. kin, Aleph Leonard Lewis led December. ent that the Junior Hadassah has a very eventful year in front of it. the chapter in the singing of sevHONORED AT SHOWER eral A. Z. A. songs. Past Aleph Reva Gorelick Singer had a Godol /-' Mrs. Hy Rueben and Mrs. Hyguest Milton Saylan -was presentin from Kansas City the Ferenstein honored Mrs. Max ed -with a beautiful P . A. G. pin part of the week—Mrs. HarjSacks at a Stork Sho-wer last Mon- first ry Adreme—and gave a party for in appreciation of his services to day afternoon at Mrs. Rueben's her ' ^ ' • ;C«fi A'ens sjsf&rrs or wftatTuesday night. Sunday after- the chapter. KefresEments :were 'home. Among those attending noon., \ 1 then served, t Libby Meyerson entertained •were: Mesdames Abe "Wolfe, Abe for her sister, Hannah, who is "The first event In a full caleni i Kosenthal, Julius Wolk, Abe Colt- to be married October 8. tKrfs ere t".'Z 7??. net* dar of activities.will be a smoker t i off, Paul Nerenberg, J o e Berman, be held Thursday night,. Au Ben Elkin, Sam Hornstein, Mor- "Did you know that Ernie Win- toFifty-five Alephs; alum' ton Friedlander, Lester Pezzner, troub is in Florida? Brothers Ed gUBt.24. Joe Cohen, Al Cole, Joe Levinsky and Jerry Levy were in from Des ni and advisors, are expected to and Ralph Goldberg and , t h eMoines during the week, and Leo be present at Aleph Kuklin's resicsfeg ef ce"srs rc^c'ia. j Misses Rose Paperny, Evelyn Kolpac was" here from Muscatine, dence.- Card games, checkers, la.—Muscatine, where the natives bingo and ping-pong will be means TVolk and Margaret Handler. are called Muscateers. '. of entertainment. Highlights -o. Hear that Mort Soref ia work- the evening are expected to be a. WEEK-END VISITOR J r^Tr ing in Kansas City now. Pearl popularity contest and Milton Miss Frances Rutstein of Sioux Mendell and Vivan Kushner are Guss and Leonard Lewis' version \ City spent the week-end here vis- here from St. Joseph, Mo.,, a n d 'of that famous poem "Boots." iting friends. KS Mary Jane Rifkin of Davenport i3 Frankfurters, potato chips, pop visiting Frances Osoff. Oh yes,and candies will be served. / JOSLTftf MEMBIAIi Frances Rosenthau of Norfolk is The next meeting will be-ield be staying -with Bernice Bordy. T h r e e soundfilms Monday evening at the Jewish 4 Shown at 2:30 in the lecture hall . Must, go now. More next time. Community Center a t S o'clock* • *\of the Joslyn Memorial. They are, Affectionately yours, 11 r^'Holy Men of India," "Fakirs of " _. • ARLENE: Entry the East" and "Call b£ MohamP. S. Plans a r e being made for med." the annual A. Z. A.-l.Yom KipColombo, Ceylon •( JTA) —- The A recital of duo-art records pur sweetheart' dance -which authorities Tefused to permit diswill be given at 4 o'clock in the will night be September 23. Candidates embarkation here of 700 German concert hall. for A. Z. A. Sweetheart will be Jewish refugees who arrived on Srsesisr Super \^^ announced, vurry, vurry soon* aa Italian liner. Scotch Shetlzz£ ccrdigss (s! so. pullover) 12 xoJPatronize Our Advertisers. ors i u 12JSS-14SS. The Omaha Council of Jewish Shirt dyed Lt$. Women is co-operating -with the BL Hewmaa By Mrs. sisish o£ Gigs* Omaha Council of Church WomDes: Moines A. Z. A. thistle, tzreei , s en, the Young Women's Christian Present Their 14SS ' , APPLE CRISP DESSERT association, and the Unitarian Al1 *£ cups flour." liance in sponsoring this year's 'Above, 'right} 'This',J% cup butter, • ' series of lectures to he given by tle- tweed, sweater, • Stardust Serenade' ,i teaspoon salt, Mrs. Ruth Neuhaus. SS3 % cup sugar, Mrs. A. D. Frank is ticket . Music by Fsr Tight,,, . w 5 apples. chairman for t h e ' Council, and (not s V e t c b P f Barney Barnard Plzid wool Peel apples, quarter : and let Mrs. Phil Gilinsky,: co-chairman. siirt with and 'tis orcKestra stand in salt water 20 minutes. ,: Mrs. Neuhaus will give her lecr©b« 5.95 high -waist Cut butter in mixture of flour, tures on Tuesdays at 10:30 a. m. NEW WAVELAND (not sketched Use . i 8S3 a salt and sugar (*£ cup only), un-. on October 17, 24, 31 and NovemCLUB HOUSE til crumbly. Place apples in bak- ber 7 and 14, at the Brandeis i ~^ "(Air Conditioned)' PJghi . = 'da' ing dish. Sprinkle 1 teaspoon store auditorium. Last season gsra hi end 27th cinnamon over apples. Then the capacity audiences attended Mrs. •"•s? sweeter, hssd other % cup sugar. Dot with Neuhaus' series. sewn , . 4SS butter, spread dry crumby mixture over apples. Bake. Serve •with cream. /
J.C.C.PUnsfor Activities Program.
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BANANA PUDDING Butter a pudding dish and-line it with vanilla wafers (whole).. Then put a layer of sliced! ba-nanas and another of wafers;i-R.epeat the layers and make-a custard' of 1 cup milk, 2 eggs, sugar to &ste, 1 teaspoon v&nilla. -Pour this, mixture over the .bananas and wafers. Bake, set iiravpsn of hot water. Serve cold with cream. DATE JUMBBLSS ;; cup butter. % cups sugar. "'. .• ' H ,3 eggs. ->^--£-...~ J. 1 cup cut.-dafes.--', ..-,.. - . 1 cup chopped-pecsns. ••: 1 teaspoon vanilla. .': 7 tablespoons water. :H 3 % cups flour. -; 1 teaspoon baking powder. Drop by spoonfuls on buiitered cooky sheet in"_hpt 'oven-4Cj6"degrees. - - • - • -•--•-.-:.-.- •• .-• r ; r.~:: ;
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RULES WiE V7AVES—This remarkable photo Is first over ma da of England's r.cv/cst forpeda boat. The speedy craft carrios two torpedo tubes, ona on each side. Hero aro two torpedo: boing launched simultaneously whilo tho craft maneuvers at full speed into firing position.
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SUREIH30SRS—Moses Annenberg, second from left, millionaire head of racing news wire services, surronders to fedecal authorities in Chicago on charge of evasion of $5,500,000 in income taxes. Indicted with him were Arnold Kruse, loft; Walter Annenberg, his son, and Joseph Hafner. Bond of §175,000 was posted. | l l 1 1p l ^^/,;.%w.*.Sfff,^,v.;.y.v.;.v,:.;.v^.-,:^'';i;'.J?C'^Ty;':'' • ^*-t*/*.*-' '*'*i"i"tV '"*'-"A'i*-"»"- V^ ' Vi"/ »"*'^.v^^.-i'»>'^>^H;-
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Hg DIDNT SL©UC^—The cave man walked erect like modern man and not with an ape-like slouch, is verdict of Prof. Sergio Sergi, at the Royal University of Rome, Italy. Prof. Sergi holds the Neanderthal skull which enabled him to reach this astonishing verdict.
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-jnHwma*-*™. •>•——•- Shapejy 17-yQQr-oId Helen Schifano, East Orange, N . J.i schoolgirl, bends hsrsolf: into a pretzel while draining f o r 1940 Olympics in Finland. Rated on© of tho coun*r\»'s best dvmnasfs, she has spurned circus offers in order t o try gy
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:"^i Is PUS? S1SSSOM—Generalissimo Francisco Franco, ins Spanisli dictator^ is pfchnred! he-ro 1 with • o f C* as res iisted « s. cf his recently formed cabnet g g g , his rocsntly formed cabinet during their first meGting in Surges, Spain. So'far Franco ha C©I5€-S ess."He: fa cn
an iron-clad alliance with the Axis, fuming instead to domestic
8"
THE JEWISH PHESS—FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1933
fed oooo
By PHEffiAS 3. BIRCH
(Continued frcrs page I.)
Y M c r ry - G ©- R ou n <
UaSMMBi
By IRVIKG SOKOEES
Baroness Ton der Goltz, described FRO3I FOREIGN PARTS ingress was apparently pre-vel as a buxom beauty . . . Leslie If no . pared in Berlin -with the knowlAs a test of real showmanship, oped in Enrope before August Howard and Peter Lorre are both edge of the Nazi authorities. It the handling of Samuel Gclfivrn'E 27th. nothing very grave -will considering stage engagements on emphasized that German Jewry production '.'They Shell Have Ku- j (Continued from page 1.-) happen this year, is the latest Broadway . . . They want to forin its distress did no't want phil- sic" -vrita Jasehs, Heifetz, will hz.lt j anthropy but espeeted "national attention for some weeks, curing j prediction, of those in the know get the films for a while . . . assistance" so that t i e doors of . . . Lloyd's ot London are .quot- Hedy Lamarr, who for a while pressed the hope that it would not depart from this procedureat its WAR NOTE: There -was' a Palestine might be opened to the period of its national first rue. I ing 2 to 1 against a European was considered Hollywood's prize next session. release. . • bomb explosion in Jerusalem, the them. -war in 1939 at this" writlnij . . . -white elephant, has become an Interesting issues are raises fcr j other day . . . Among those seri"We address this appeal to the At the recent Pfague opening of assetB again, and how! . . . Her the presentation of Heifeta, outElmer Rice's "Street Scene," the "Lady of the Tropics" has the The representatives of-Belgium, ously -wounded was a pregnant Jengress," the German Zionists standing virtuoso, as the star in said, "in the hope that its voice woman . . . A t the new Medical line "Jews aren't such bad people critics' eyes popping out at the Switzerland, N o r w a y and the reach the ears of that power a iUia which will be exhibited at after all" was greeted with such sight of so much beauty . . • Fur- Netherlands on the M a n d a t e s Center, however, she was safely will whose hands rest not only the popular prices in cortrEEi. to the enthusiastic applause- that .the ther reports from Hollywood in- Commission said they could not delivered of her child by the in fate of Palestine but also our higher tariff which he has colNazi censor immediately saw to dicate that Joseph Sc'hildkraut feel themselves able to state that lamous gynecologist Prof. Bern- fate." • lected as one of the big-money- \ it that this line was deleted from will be boosted as an oomph man the White Paper policy was in hard Zondek . . . The child, thinks getters cf the concert stake, ftlii- j Keren Hayesod directors reAleph (Poet) Katz, should be comformity with the mandate, any . . . Scientific surveys seem to a«l subsequent performances . . . lions, who have never heard tics ceived a check for 133,000 pounds named Bombino . . . contrary conclusion appearing to But what gets us is the fact that prove that the ladies say that sterling from the British Czech will be charmed by his brilliant them rnled out by th& very terms ^Street Scene" was produced at Joseph has 'it" Yes, sir, Refugee Fund to be distributed playing in the film. Ke is by i s j TRAVEL NOTE: Rabbi Harry a m o n g Jewish refugees from means the first of top ratting ] fall in the Hitler-dominated Czech Chaplin's picture on "The Great of the mandate and by the fundamental intentions of its authors. Saperstein spends his summers Cseeho-Slovakia already in Pal- artists to attempt to bridge the city, Elmer Rice being as non- Dictator" will" come out this year Great Britain, France and Por- raveling abroad Aryan as any of our faithful read- . . . In this picture even-the dach. The Long estine. Trustees of the fund in- gulf between music, as as art, End, ers . . . The Nazis are very eager shunde lift their forelegs to heil tugal considered that the existing sland rabbi made the headlines formed the Hayesod directorate films, as popular entertainment, s Following the introduction oC | to reassure their populace that the "Furore" . . . Incidentally, circumstances would justify the the other day because, during a that an .additional 290,000 pounds the United States will not support did you know that Charlie and policy of the White Paper provid- tour of Palestine, he -was clipped will be transmitted as s o o n as sound oa film, there was a rush J ed the League Council did not opAdolf were both born in April, and slightly wounded by a terror- more refugees from Czecno-Slo- to bring to film audiences the England in case of European war . . . They reprint American cnti- 18§9, within four days of each pose i t The four members not ist ballet . . . . A friend reveals vakia leave for Palestine within best talent in cpera unfi concert voting were Spain absent from the British cartoons in German papers other? ... . But why do the papers Commission meetings, and Ger- that the good-looking young pul- the next three weeks. They stat- but it was not from these sources but fail to mention that these now insist that Charlie isn't Jew- many, Italy and Japan, who have piteer always manages to get into ed that the Gestapo.at Prague that sound films obtained their j a jam of some sort or another on has agreed to permit Jews to first impetus. Al Joison, who nevcartoons were originally published ish? . . . The latest on Pola Negri esigned from the League. his annual trips . . . For example, leave the country -without diffi- er was in the Metropolitan Opera ia 1915 . . . Really effective un- is that she's angling for a HollyIn its statement answering the -on the list of artists appearing derground anti-Nazi work is be- wood job . . . That's the real rea- Mandates Commission report, the one year he went to Mexico . . . culties as~sooa as they obtain Pal- or at Carnegie Hall, crashes the emAnd came back with asthma . . . estine certificates. ing done in ' Czechoslovakia— son why she sued a French paper ritish Government asked what Another year, he toured Russia Welzmana Hplds Center of Stage otional harrier that had held back that had called her a friend of •which proves it can be done . . . H •ould be the effect. In Palestine . . and contracted dysentery « . . «»-*•_• itler... "Warning that Intro Jewish con- •sound films, in the public mind, i The Bilent opposition in Germany if the Mandatory Power were to (7 «— fa. B?*as &n amusing 'and interesting flict over the methods of fightplease copy . . . iursue a policy -which did not Inv'. " technical novelty. It was Joison ing Britain's policy might create OUR NORTHEKN NEIGHBOR ARYANISM NOTE: Non-Jewish "a second Spain" in the H o l y then, who 'sold' the movie-going clude provision regarding immigration and other important mat- Italians who want to emigrate Land. Dr. Weizmann urged that j public in one- picture called the We didn't like the statement by ters contained in the command from Italy have to go to extremes the Zionists "not break abruptly "Jazz Singer." Louis Fitch, member of the Quelaper of 1939." The result would to get the necessary emigration the 20 years partnership -with bec Provincial Legislature, about >e the statement went on4 "con- passports . . . So many pare- England." Ths Zionist chieftain the recent anti-Jewish incidents Film studios Save experimentinuation of that u i c e r ' t a l n t y blooded "Aryans" register as Jews cautioned that a civil war might in the Laurentian Mountains . . . ibout the future which has pro- to facilitate their exit from Mus- result from differences over tas- ed, since then, with great success Fitch broadcast statements in the 'at tines, vrith musical cHeri uced chronic unrest and bitter- soland . . . tics is resisting the White Paper. ranging1 from cowfcey crooEicg French and English Press in Caness between the two communi"Many would like to see in Pales- light ada assuring "my people that and grand cpera. There ties in the country." there iB absolutely no reason REALTY NOTE: The Free Syn tine a second Spain," he said. no i "Tfc innovation in "This, however, would be our restrictions The Government, It said, had Natfc&nia (JTA) -whatsoever for alarm" . . . That agogue of Mt. Vernon, N. Y., has (Continued from page 1.) RiisiT\ he decision "with a fuil sense of just purchased a unique site for end. Therefore everything must Shall Have Music" Eimplj because "absolutely" and "whatsoever" make the statement a bit too of various government depart- heir obligations under the man- its future home. The site, occu be -done to prevent it." Dr. "Weizmann served notice at ments and agencies. Ickes des- ate to both Arabs and Jews and pied by the home of the late Judge It can't be denstrong for us ied that enough evidence has been cribed it as "an intelligent frame- in the light of their knowledge Isaac Mills who was counsel for a-tneeting of the American delethe country and its peoples Kip Rhinelander in that famous gation that he had no intention, of Woduced to. prove beyond the work upon which plans might be of his posts as a gesture Shadow of a doubt that the anti- developed." "Prospects for Alas- derived from over 20 years of gov- bit of legislation some years back, resigning most perfunctory demands of his the Govern- is one of Westchester County's of protest against the British histrionic abilities. In dialogue lEcholans. r.Iayor Cvet Semites in the Province of Quebec kan development are particularly ernments there policy. Revealing that he had acclaimed the arrlmi as are efficiently organized and con- favorable today," he said, "be- ment believe they are pursuing land marks . . . According to Rab- been advised to resign "with a and panto-mine, •„. " s h i p i n >Ta?.hEn;p. V.P31cause of the possibility of transfaithfully the fundamental aim of bi Max Maccoby, its three acre stitute a definite menace . . When he plays bang" Dr. Weizmann said he had i bor." Colonists sang the " " " " ' planting to Alaska for the benethe mandate." contain copper beach trees fron mass meetings of Arcandists and unique, no faith in such methods because i rah." shriek about the Jewish peril no fit of the United States, industries Britain May Submit Issue to Com- Valley Forge, oaks froia Tippe- "in a world where bombs are con- thing that film audiences never I ' " ~ n e r which were developed in Europe canoe and gingkos from Japan, stantly exploding, the slamming heretofore have experienced mons •purpose is-served by Mr. Fitch's but which have been broken up .he high seas for six clays vere proclamation that all is well . . . or diverted by current waves of London (JTA) — Official quar- in addition to magnolias, grape of a door is not heard." exhausted but otherwise in vine, apple and chestnut trees . . And what about the anti-Semitic intolerance." ,s said to have i physical condition end vere overters said that if the League of Charles Chaplin is Dr. Weizmann formally opened posters and the sermon of Canon Council agreed with the The house itself was built ia the Congress with a warning to the stcry cf "The Jictators" vrell \ jcred at reaching Pelestme's Responding to a request of a Nations IS OS, the first in Westchester Char land, Canadian provincial edof the Mandates Comthe British Government that the in hand and aspects to start pro- i shores. The settlers ec fine German refugee committee, the majority ition of Father Coughlin? -. . . mission's voting members that the County . . . Its attic, to be con- Jews would never accept the new duction within a short time. Paul- I ed the and British police Puerto Rico Reconstruction Adverted into a gymnasium, is huge, HOME FRONT Palestine policy providing for ette Goddard has a small part in * troops joined jr. Palestine policy was a violaministration in San Juan has been new vaulted and .contains a number of establishment of an independent the production and Chaplin is ans- \ with kindness. Lnter Poor judgment is displayed by instructed to make available all tion of the mandate or if it recTtmcveC to Sarafenc newspapers that devote prominent informational data in the resettle- ommended alteration of the man- rooms once used as slave quarters state with the Jews fixed as a. ious to be done with the space to whatever Fritz Kuhn ment of a group of German refu- date, then the Government would . . . The mansion will remain un- one-third minority. "The Jews in which she appears. The famous tion camp. Hitler's orders gees in the Dominican Republic, it submit the whole issue to the changed in appearance but will cannot and will not surrender to comedian has added Franco End says or does be converted into a community this injustice," Dr. Weizmann II Duce to h i s list of characters to hinv—and we have the evidence was announced by Ickes as PRRA House of Commons. FKEI These quarters did not, how- house, with the synagogue itself told the assembled delegates from and i t may be t h a t Jack O&fcie that Kuhn gets direct orders from Administrator. "I am pleased to all over the world gathered in the Fuehrer—are to get as much be able to assist, even in this ever, accept the view tliat the to be built on another part of the Geneva's Municipal Theater, but will play cne.of them, p e r Fuehr- ijjj er will b e known as •"Die Pfcooey." ifi publicity as he can, even if Its in- small way, those who have been commission had rejected the pol- estate. will remain "resolute, determined sulting . . . Be on the lookout for forced to leave their homelands icy, pointing out that only four of and united" in a fight for the inHungary's motion picture ina book entitled "Heil Hunger," by and seek refugee in the New 11 members expressed this view VISITORS: Language i s n ' t ternationally recognized right to three dissented. It was adddustry has been hard hit .by the It's World," Ickes said in a letter to while Palestine conducting this fight Dr. Martin Gumpert proving too much of a stumbling scheduled- for publication in Oc- the committee at Trujillo City, D. ed that in any case the commis- block to Wolfe Orzech, handsome not against the British people, ousting cf- all Jewish, producers : was merely an advisory body, but against the British Cabinet. and actors under recent anti-Jew- 11 tober, and -when it hits the public R. The committee, headed by Dr. sion and ihe Council would not neces- young Argentinian delegate to ths •~**We' cherish the friendship of ish legislation.... In. order to sare ! « eye -ft--wtii—destroy -a- whopping Brunner J3hrenhaft» - is known- as sarily forthebiaing-world-congress of-the agree -with the predominant llie that even anti-Hitlerites have the Centre de Imigrantes on la opinion. Federation of Polish Jews . . . On England," he continued, "and re- their flicker business the gcrerntain respect and affection f o r raen't ruled that twenty per cent ?F ?come to believe—-namely, that the Repnblica Dominicana. The Government, these quart- a visit, to the JTA offices with Great Britain in spite of efforts cf all feature pictures EI>£ thirty Toronto (JTA) — A bulletin Nazi youth is healthy . .. .'"Heii other members of his delegation, Hunger" proves that the Nazi boy issued by the : Dominion Bureau ers reiterated, does not intend to Wolfe reeled off a few English made by the present Colonial Sec- per cent of supporting prcthe Jewish national home retary and others to -destroy it. and . girl i3 a physical wealiling of Statistics, shows that 800 Jew- hand phrases he had picked up in his We refuse, however, to recognize gram in ..Hungarian cinema over over to Arab domination and has the lowest vitality of any ish immigrants entered Canada While it was admitted that the first two days in N'Tawk . . . the right of the Colonial Secre- must be produced in that country- ' Half the domestic feature film ' youth in Europe . . . We learn, in- during the first six months of policy practically meant Arab Among those he displayed most tary to promulgate decrees curcidentally, that the local Nazi 1939. Among these are several control over Jewish immigration, •fluency in was, "I love you" . . . tailing our essential rights before quota, "Under the new regulation. may be-produced abroad provided j greeting, "A. "V.," pronounced hundred refugees from the dicta- it was stated that it did not mean the issue, which is international, the synchronisation is added in • "Ah Fow," Btands for "Amerika tor lands. Many of the refugees subordination of the rights of the has even been brought before the ' ' i PICTURE: A refugee we know appropriate tribunal. Our QUar- Hungary. • Verrecke," which, in English, have been settled on the land in Jews since the Government was means "Down with America" . . . Ontario, and some out in Western determined that ordinary major- is selling post cards on the back rel is not with Great Britain, but Milton Shubert came. t r , A recent article by David Lloyd Canada. ity rule would not prevail in the of which is the most damning with those responsible for the Hollywood last seasoi plans, to anti-Nazi document available— present Palestine policy. T h e Geocge attacking Chamberlain's proposed Palestine state wherever devote only half his time to xacv- 1: appeasement policy is so strong the vital interests of the Jews one of the rare camera pictures British^ people understand o u r ies. He - may establish-a metier that even American newspapers were concerned. While not seeking showing a synagogue in flasaes grievance, otherwise loyal sup- picture unit soon using j have been afraid to print it . . . to prejudge its ultimate policy on November 10, 1933 . . . Oa the porters of the Government would Carmen producing Miranda. currently ap- ' YOU SHOULD KNOW the Government definitely favors blank side of the r.ard is the not so openly have revolted pearing in a musical show in NEV establishment of a federal consti- legend: "Document of Nazi terror against the injustice pf the White Ycrk, as lead A constituent of Robert A. tution, although it is ready to —-The burning Synagogue of Paper and the crowning iniquity to her talents. is. a picture -Eui:ec" Taft, Ohio Senator with Presidenof suspension of Jewish immigraconsider other suggestions, it was Troppau—Nov. 19, 1938." tial aspirations, informs us that tion for the nest sis months." the Buckeye statesman has exJerusalem (JTA) — The Gov- stated. Stories have emanated f r o m pressed himself as opposed to the ernment Is constructing 12 new MISH-MASH: Film you shoaldNothing in the policy alters tire Pledging a "clean fight" against Paris, as well as Hollywood, from 1. resolution for the admission of coast guard stations as part of position of the Jewish Agency for ntt miss in March of Time's "Met- the British policy, Dr. Weizmanu time to time, of actresses insvr20,000 refugee children outside an intensified effort to check il- Palestine which is included in the ropolis—1939," which gives most assailed "irresponsible individuals ing their legs. New we hear t r t t j legal immigration. The stations the regular Quota . . . WashingWhite Paper's reference to appro- graphic, dramatic presentation of or groups" for resorting to vio- Ned Sparks, sourpuss of zhc • ton may give thousands of refu- six of which have already been priate Jewish and Arab represent- New York and its melting-pot lence to gain their ends. "We screen, had applied too Ueyd's e l , completed, will be located at reggees a chance to establish themative bodies, and the Governmen millions . . . Treatment of various must and shall defend our livts London for a flO.PCC" insurers selves in Alaska, not only because ular intervals along Palestine's has no intention of elbowing out racial and national groups that and rights," he said, *'and trerk policy whereby i s voulS collect: 200-mile coastline. Each will be the Jewish Agency, the official make up the city Is superb . . . ••"St.is\ felt that their, pioneering manned by crews of six Englishwith all the strength at our dis- if at any time he was caught f r ! There are swell shots of the low- posal, but it must be a c l e a n . photographed smiling. Since T'i- j •work could build up that unde- men, and six Palestinians at- quarters said. Most of the Mandates Commis- er East Side, and one of Temple fight. Our restraint during the ing the application Sparks recsiv- | veloped territory, but because of- tached to- the mounted or motorficials are sure that a large refu- ized police. Powerful search- sion members disregarded the po- Emanu-El . . . The youthful son past three years has imposed a ed word from the inec-rae tax burgee settlement there would be lights will sweep the coastal wa- litical consideration which the of an American Jewish leader terrible strain upon- our people, eau that his deduction of several | invaluable in the defense of Amer- ters from these posts to detec Mandatory Power must keep in marched in the Coughlin picket but it was also a great test of thousand dollars, spent on a numica In the event of war . . So acute ships attempting to land refugees mind as relevant for the due dis- line in front of radio station strength. We must and shall fie- ber of sets o£ false molars, -will charge of their obligations under WMCA one day in order to get fenfl ourselves, but we must cot set be allowed. parks figures he has the refugee problem become illegally. the mandate, it was stated. The some first-hand information on it punish the innocent. Let us be doesn't nee sxyin some of, our more populous Unofficial estimates reveal thai British Government therefore subcenters that, in an effort to ob- more than 6,000 immigrants havi . . Martin Panzer, m. e. of. the guided by our own ethics and more. mits that the League Council, like viate ill will, these communities tried to enter the country with Pictures of the j So Tv'hat Dep' American Hebrew, has just sold a great traditions and reject what have dropped the word "refugee" out the proper documents. They the Mandatory Power, must take humerous article to Coronet Mag- we consider the law of the jun- Eitz Brothers al ys shew Barry j from their official vocabularies, came on, 19 vessels and 1,200 regard of these matters. azine . . . Scheduled for an early gle." i n the middle. Say—Now listen guys-s-through your ncse &nfi Dr. N GoMmann, Zionist j and speak only of "newcomers" were sent back on the same ships. issue,' it will be titled "Father . . . It was for the. sake of the In- About 4,700 "were arrested bu ich you Bound Knows Better," being the low- representative in Geneva, to;d I b e amarsfi how ternational Telephone and Tele- finally permitted to remain in down on bringing up the off- Congress that no other settlement n t e ard G. Robinson. Palestine. plan but Palestine could supply a | graph Company that the State Despring, concerning: which Martin The Government announced a partment made that . ?13,750,000 right- 1EES speaks from experience . . ES-gar definite solution to the Jewish {• seven Arts i and it was an insult, to j' Feature S; loan to Franco,-which had the re- regulation making illegal,, immiBnrman of New York is favored problem the history and tradition of the sult of encouraging the Fascist gration an offense under t h e to cop the presidency cf the Jew- Jewish people to suggest to thsn j OWB general to embark on his latest emergency regulations, as well as ish "War Vets at the annual con- 20 different "national hoses in *fi.T< Budapest (WNS)—It was re- vention -end of this month . lcoaa.— "purge" activities . . . The State under the immigration ordinance. various countries or remote is-1 Dept waited until Congress had The regulation published in the ported here that the Cabinet is His • brother, William Berman lands. When Jews hear or read i official Palestine Gazette, pro- considering regulations designed adjourned and Secretary Morgen- vides UT,—J for a summary trial before to enforce, the "drastic second anti- (they spell their names different- of suggestions ef this kia-S put J thau had left for Europe to put a British magistrate "who shall Jewish law and that the regula- ly) held the post some years back forward by their liberal friends | across this loan, to which both direct detention during the pleas tions, a draft of which was sub- . . . JDC leader James N. Rosen- who view the problem --as if it "Vienna (JTA) — Tiro practice K Congress and the Secretary had ure of the High Commissioner/ mitted to the Cabinet, will be -feerg is vacationing at Elisabeth- were purely a refugee problem fbeen violently opposed . . .-A Bos- Jewish circles interpreted ^the or- published in the Official Gazette town, N. Y. . . . Average .egg con- they are apt to woncsr which is Blr-rsiS "black-outE" seiseSuled ton office of the American Jewish der as obliging magistrates to im- if no opposition is encountered. sumption in German during IS"8 'more offensive the hatred cf their by the N&si authorities hare been cancelled after opponents of the -'- err. fir in Committee is being opened next pose indefinite detention as well Upwards of 23.000 persons was 11S per person . . . In Amer- enemies or the friends-tip of their regime had utilised g r e c e s t j month, with Henry Levy, well- as jail sentences on illegal immi- have already been affected by the ica it -was just twice that . . . . friends," Dr. Goldmann sai£. • known journalist and publicist, in grants. anti-Jewish legislation and be- Asked for biographical data in Torn Williams, Labor member "fclack-out" to put v.T' anti-Nazi j The largest Hebrew daily in tween 17,000 and 18,000 indus- connectJon with his picture "They of the British Parliament told the \ t charge '. . . ^r, fr—hrRr1;- G8.C- in Palestine, the Laborite Davar, trial employes, under the terms Shall Have Music," Jascha Heifetz Congress not to -despair because i,. Huge red posters appeared in ABOUT ^ .-a streets . asariEg tss icscrip-1 Have we told you that Dr. Hein- was suspended for a week by th« of recent anti-Jewish laws, will replied: "1 wish you'd keep it "no referee will count 10 ore: not even colonial seers- tsons "Gone is trig Jew; we are j rich Neumann, that world-famous authorities for publishing an edl be replaced within the nest two short Just make it: 'Bom ia Rusia a, stew!" Thousands of illeEE,! i Viennese ear, eye, nose and throat torial on illegal Jewish Immigra- and a half to four years. Approx- sia, first lessons at three, debut' ^ tion to Palestine. -The order als imately 45,000,000 pengoes in approximately C O O celeratss and specialist who refused to treat suspends i& x f to Inm em Heebie the reserve license for severance compensation h a v e in Hussia at seven, debut in 1,000 spectators, Williams ri5iHitler, Is being considered for the t h e . supplementary newspaper been paid discharged employes America in 1917.' That's all there culed the "muftis of Britain" asfi : liifis to ©penale yowc ehaop fcoas? ess;ls E position of head of one of the Omer, and shuts down the padismissal will affect 54,- is to say, really. About two Uses." ssserteti that "just as in Palestine ! , ^ great medical institutions in this per's printing press. Zionist La- whose . . . But even Who's Who gives 000 dependents, expected to bethe .Mufti was powerful three! AsJ'i country? . ' . . The collected papers borite circles pointed out that come destitute. Mayor K a r l the noted violinist 3S lines, reand addresses of Roger W. Straus they were thus deprived of an Zsendy. of Budapest declared vealing among <other thines that yeyars ago and has no-sr been, re-1 Scgs-pare being publisher by the Chris- organ for the greater part of the that no catastrophic consequences his recreations nre uolf, tennis, •dsced to nothing, the sanis s a y happen to ths. British Colonial I c e n t eor : tian Century Press . - . A Holly- Zionist Congress. were expected *'As long as 1 am horseback ridias, s inotoi Secretary because a secretary is ] men! c; wood producer- was so impressed holding o f f i c e . Nobofiy will Quatic sports, Teit.&ing anfi danc-not everlasting like Parliament. I c£srr»5 riii ice ^ i t h Jascha Heifetz* finger techLondon (JTA)—Otto M. Shiff, starve," he said in reply to an ing . . . A Detroit .Catholic taaga(Copyrighted by Jewish Telss?c: a i I I nique as shown in the'film "They prominent communal worker and inquiry in the Municipal Council zine -has changed Its naae from gTaphic Agency, Inc.) Shall Have Music" that" he wants chairman of the German Jewish on the effects of the second anti- The Christian Front;, which it held to make a feature-length movie Aid Committee, was appointed a Jewish law which went into-oper- long "before the anti-Semitic orPaul Wciscsrg, his \ to showing nothing more than close- commander in the civil division ation last-May. ganisation of that-moniker caiae vicious caricatures cf JSTTS in S.us- I firs. ups of Jascha playing the violin of the Order of the British Eminto being, to Social Action be- Eis.n periodicals, -was th.s EOS cf J t i s j . . . He claims that Jascha's fin- pire. Abraham Jeremy Raisman, The name of the Warsaw su- cause-it doesn't -want to be Iinke3 Jewish coETerts. ger motions are more ; exciting of the Indian Civil Service, was burb of Praga was changed by •with the Cousnlin outfit". . . tns than the Russian ballet . . . W a l - knighted. The honors were among King Stanislaus Augustus to the la 1S53 Jacob Wa lcy-ss it ter Winchell, who's •usually right, those announced for the king's Schniulevisna quarter in honor of (Copyrighted by Jewish Telse3 professor cf polit \says that Hitler Is in love with a birthday honors list. .a. Jew Samuel Zbitkoven. - graphic Agency, Inc.) at tits University ol lES Car fiver —T *
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THE JEWISH PRESS—FRIDAY, "AUGUST 25, 1SS9
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TO FREMONT Miss Beverly Krasne of FreTAMIUD TOBAH mont, Neb., returned hotne Sun"The reception" for Rabbi C. K. day, after spending several days Castle, n e w Hebrew instructor here. She was the guest of Miss here;; will1 be held 'Thursday,. Au- Bette Lee Harris. . gust '31, at 8 v. m.,1 instead .of August-29, as-was previously an- FROM DAVEJiTPORT nounced. '•> . • .. • Mr. and Mrs. David Cetron of On Sunday evening. August 27, • Invitations have, been: extended Davenport, la., are guests at the at 6 o'clock,-^ there* •will, be a- re^to sRabbi and Mrs. David 0old- home of Mrs. Cetron's parents, ceptton. given in honor of Cantor stein, RabM: and Mrs.;I»avi<i H. Mr. , and Mrs. Charles Saltzman. Morris Pernick at tha Shaare Zlon Wice and. Cantor and Mrs. Aaron They arrived here Tuesday and synagogue. There will be a din- Edgar, a l l o t Omaha. The rabbis are planning to visit for a fewner for wnlcn a nominal sum -will have been asked to say a few in-weeks. be charged, followed by enter- formal -words. cease using inflammatory tactics, Court. Magistrate Michael A. ' Rabbi Albert S. Goldstein, who tainment. . .-;" .„•-••»• -; ,The committee In charge Of the RETURNED it was announced by the Friends Ford fcini'". her guilty of disorhas served for the past two years The entire •• community "will at reception are as follows: Mrs. Democracy, inc. derly conduct Bed said: "He -who Misv Ileene Rosenberg has re-of L. M. Eirkhead, director of the instills such ideas ia your head, as the rabbi/of r the United He- that time be g{ven the opportun- Etta Yudelson, chairman; Mrs. turned home, after a two-week ity to visit with Cantor Pernick Friends, had wired Coughlin, folHerman FriecU Mrs. Louis Cohen, visit in Hastings, Neb. be he a priest, or anyone else, coes brew congregation, Vwlll become lowing the priest's repudiation of not belong in this country." In Sirs. Richard Gordon, Mrs. B e n rabbtr of the Mount Sinai tempJe, and also to hear, him sing. the proposed paratie, ?sking him the Bronx, police •guarding a Kiibby, Mrs. Sam Sacks, Mrs. L. HOME September 1. ' '; to repudiate the violent re- street corner., meeting of the Miss Florence Major is visit- H.' Katelman, Mrs. I. Sternhill. Floyd Yudelson arrived home also The new rabbi will: succeed ing for several weeks in the eas.t Mrs. Tepperman and, Mrs. Saul of his followers and their Christian .Mobilizers arrested Joearly this week from a two-week marks Rabbi Theodore N. l^wis,- who with relatives and friends. While Suvalsky- V distribution of "vicious and ObHartery, '41, when he began trip to Chicago, New York and scene ' anti-Semitic pamphlets." seph iao accepted a call to the Progres- there she will visit the New York denouncing Jews from the' ladcer •The receiving rline will consist Philadelphia. ; sive Bynagogueffli Brooklyn. Bernard D'Arcy, Coughlin's at- platform. About 1,0 00 persons : of the following officers: B e n Babbi Goldstein-is • a graduate World's Fair. - ' torney and representative in New attended the meeting. Kubby, president: M., Grossman, o£ Cincinnati of tthe Unjf ^ Refugee Industry York, advised Birkhead that lie college. ;', He New offleers .'• of the Sharona vice-president; Sam Sacks, secrehad received a telephone c a l l tary, and §am Rosenthal, treasYoung Judean/ club were, elected gationsin Cedar To Dissolve • Camp seryed Cape Town (JTA) — Reporting from the Detroit priest telling urer. . ' last Wednesday. ^They are, presiR p d s venport from 1932 Rapids and that two Austrian refugees were him that he had ordered Social dent, Thelma Shindler; vice-presiMrs. Sarah Gilinsky and Mrs. to 1937. 1937 Wjflle In ;the seminary Warsaw (JTA)—It was learned building a factory which eventual- Justice distributors to stop using he was ; editor of the Union col- dent, Annabelle Satin; secretary, R. Katelman will be, hostesses at ly would employ 2,000 workers, violent tactics but refusing to re- authoritatively that the refugee Malta . Heeger, i&nd. treasurer, the tea table. • . . . , g h y and since, has conthe Cape Times appealed for re- pudiate or disavow those things camp at the. Polish frontier sta, Everyone is invited to attend laxation tributed articles to religious and Estelle: Raskin.^: tion of ." Zbonszyn vrill definitely of red tape and restric- asked In the telegram. educationalperiodicals. i and meet the. rabbi. be dissolved with ' the-remaining 'Withdrawal o£ the application tions hampering refugee enterAt DaWnport Rabbi Goldstein Mrs. Sol Fallc: had a party last prises, and recommended appoint- for a parade permit was announc- 800 refugees to be 'distributed spoke . •pgekly. over- radio station Wednesday night for her cousin. E'LEttS.CLUB throughout Poland. T h e camp WOC,/and in Joplin he was a Miss Ruth Jacobson,' who has The E'liins club . entertained ment of a,small advisory commit- ed by Lawrence J. Gilpatrick, '19; originally bad a population of news ^commentator '.. for- . WMBH. been -working in Washington, D. Thursday' at: a steak-fry, held at tee to deal with such matters. organizer of the demonstration on about 5,000 Polish Jews detained of the "Social Distributors He also has participated in t i r e C . a n d i s visiting here. Kiwanis Point in • honor ot t h e The new - factory, situated near behalf after talking with Father there since their "expulsion from Synagogue o£ .the ~- Air .program birthday of their president, Miss Cape Town, will produce calico Club," Coughlin on the. telephone and Germany last October. and • canvas. over WLW, Cincinnati. ' Miss Lillian'Mirowitz of i Oma- Bette Lee Harris. ha, Neb., has been visiting for the past two'weeks? with Hiss Thel- TO COLORADO Orthtidbs Synagogues ma . Shindler, .'2009. Jennings -•• Leaving Wednesday for. a 10; • ; day visit In Colorado Springs were Services will be held tonight at street,:. Cqllman Yudelson, Al Harding 7:15 -and . in~<the morning at 9 and Leonard Krasne. o'clock.' Rabbi S^ Bolotnikov will Mr. Norlie, Feinstein of" Aberspeak, at • the ; morning .services of deen, S.iD., has.beea visiting for the Tiphereth; Israel synagogue. the past week with his relatives, VISITED HERB Mr.- and Mrs." Abe; Dikel and fam-' Mrs. Austin Lehmann a n d daughters, Sheila and Claire, ot ily, 1910 Nebraska street. Des Plaines, N. Y., were guests Morris * Merlin, 1710 Pierce for "a few days last week at the home of Mr- and Mrs. Max Steinstreet* 13 visiting-in Denver* berg. • A luncheon was given last WedMrs. Lehmann and Mrs. SteinRose Magilevsky returned after nesday ' afternoon, : for Miss Be- a two-month berg, high school friends, renewed visit in California._ atrice Levjtzky In . honor of her their" acquaintance after m a n y coming marriage to Mr. Nathan years of separation. Mr. Max Pill of Le Mars Is Cohen of Cedar Rapids. T h e En route west, the Lehmann s luncheon, w a s given by Mrs. visiting with relatives in Los An- are planning to visit in Boulder Charles Raskin, 3022 Stone Park geles. Dam, Colorado; Tia Juana, New boulevard. There were 24 guests Mrs. Samuel1 Terry and her Mexico.; Yosemite Valley, Calipresent. Bridge • and mahjong fornia; Berkeley.and Lake Arrowfurnished the entertainment for son, Robert Merritt, are visiting head, before visiting for a short here for the next month with the afternoon. • parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob time at the San Francisco World's On Thursday there.was a no- their Fair. '•"'.•• hostess luncheon given at .the Kaplan, 1611 East Fourth street. * Both girls are students at the Oasl'sin- honor of the bfide-to-be. University of Southern California. There were 16; •gues.ts present. This .afternoon; there will be OF LA MARS another h'o-hostess luncheon giv-. Mr. and Mrs. Max Shostak and enfor Miss Levitisky, Bridge'and family of -La Mars, la., visited mahjong will be the diversions for the afternoon. here last week-end with Mrs. Shostak's parents, Mr. and Mrs. New York (WNS)—A surveyOn Tuesday Mr. and Mrs. Ben Sam Gross. conducted by the Joint Boycott Shindler, 1934 McDonald street, entertained - at a family dinner Council' of the American Jewish IN UtETHODlST HOSPITAli Mrs. •William Bernstein is in honoring Miss Ethel Shindler and Congress and the Jewish Labor l e r fiance. Dr. Sydney Bergen. Committee shows that the anti- the Omaha Methodist hospital.. Nazi boycott has been "greatly inPlaces were laid for 11. ; ' : _Tqnight there will be a party tensified" throughout 1 Western HOME FROM IA&KES . "giv^n, for Miss Shindler by JJiss Europe in the last year as a re: i Returning home Monday from a Esther/Hirkin, 1626 Villa avenue. action to the Munich agreement •week's visit at Lake Okoboji vere ThereiwUl be; 16 guests present. and the d i s m e m b e r m e n t of Jack Lincoln, Irving Cohen, Bob A late luncheon will be served. Czecho-Slovakia, the council an- Passer and. £formafi Rlpps of Bridge and mahjong will be the nounced here. <Uvefsioris.: Nazi exports to- Western Eu- Omaha. Mrs. A. Friedman, 1722 Jack- rope dropped from 387.4 million XK.-ST. .IiOUIS Bon'Street, ;will give a, party to- marks in the corresponding peBob Yudelson left Wednesday morrow^ night in honor of t h e riod of this year, a decline of 17 for St. Louis, Mo., where he yiUl lirlde-to-be. There will be 55 per cent, the •• survey declared spend several .days' vacation, friends present. - Mahjong a n d The boycott was found to be most "bridgfe-will be" played and a mid- effective in Great Britain, France, RETURNED HOME Pight'lunch will be served.' the Netherlands, Belgium and Po- Miss Dorothy.Cohen of Harlan, ' ' .' •• '. la., returned home early this week ,Mrs. M. Satin, Mrs. H. Feinberg land. and MrB.' M. Holdowsky will en"Great Britain, which imported alter a few days at the tertain for, the bride-to-be and 3,170 from Germany during the home spending of Miss Evelyn Perlmutter. her fiance' Tiext Tuesday evening first three months-of 1938," the at Jefferson,vS., D. 1A" family" din- announcement Eaid, "cut her im-CONVALASCING ner will- be given. Card playing ports 'of ; German cars to • 20 in B- Saltzman is recuperatwilli be the diversion for the eve-the same period of J.938j while ingMrs.a t home from a recent operaning. her. total • imports for;: the same •'.' Arriving Sunday evening from periods dropped from 98.7 mil-tion* " Plainfield, N. J., is Mrs. Alvin lion marks to 74.7 million, a de- IN KANSAS CITY Lowe, fiiBter of Dr. Bergen. cline of 32. per cent. JMrs. Jack Steinberg left Sun-
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.after ccsIeTrin-g with police 'officials. ' Protest Psrade The Jewish Labor Committee (C-r' had sent out an appeal to all affiliated organizations asking that Jews stay away from the scene ot the parade. The American JewAlliance sponsored a demonDisavows Parade of "So-ish stration at City all in protest , cial Justice" Peddlers against *c tlie parade. The Socialist Workers Party, affiliated -with in New York the ' Fourth International, was planning to hold an anti-Cougtlin . New York (JTA) — F a t h e r rally in the form of an "antiCharles E. CoughUn, whose dis- Fascist" meeting in U n i o n v c r ' i' avowal o£ a scheduled parade of Square. his followers in New York had A 42-yyear-old woman, Kiss led to its cancellation, has also Florence Kash, who made a pubpromised to instruct distributors lic attack on Jews, received a soof his magazine Social Justice to day suspended sentence in Toinbs
day with her children, Donald and Jean, and her mother, Mrs.. A. Malin, for a few' weeks' sojourn in Kansas City, Mo.' .
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Rosh Hashonah Greetings •
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Mi*, and Mr«. their friends both far and near A Happy and Prosperous New Yea?. Mr. end Mrs. — and family extend to their friends sincere wishes for a Happy New Year. Mr. end Mrs. and family wish their friends hes'th, happiness, • and prosperity in the com* ing year. Mr. and Mrs. take this means of extending' greetings and hearty good wishes for A Happy and Prosperous Year to their friends far and near.
Call JEWISH
ir>OUBIS yoal~omo!dag- enjoyment with really JresB ILJ^ 'cigarettes—ia'a really canvsnisnt package! Not only t&5 Snent tobaccos mocey caa buy, but with their fresh Savor and &agrance doubly ssaled-tn by an extra jacket . of .Cellophane. Try a"2ip-top*'pack of Doabls-MeHow OldGolcbtoday—at anyjeigarette couatert • - •-• • ©U 7 H 3 AIR _ov«sry week: :"MeIody &-M .with Artio ^fea-vw'o Orchestra
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Your greeting problem is solved by. this convenient method of wishing your relatives and friends a Happy New Year • • . No danger of the embarrassment of 'forgetting; someone •..•'•--no trouble . e •. time and money saved. "These greetings will be published in our Rosh Kasli.ers.sli edition, Sep'.tember 13. The ••charge will be $2.00 for each greeting . . . Mail any of these forms, or phone your Greetings.
IS; Atlantic 1450
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