'THE DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE MICHIGAN'S JEWISH HOME PUBLICATION VOL. VII. NO. 10. 500,000 TRAVEL- WEARIED JEWS TURN TO PROMISED LAND great Britain's Mandate Over Pal- estine Realizes Age-Old Dream of Jew for a Homeland—Great Exodus from Europe. LONDON AND COPENHAGEN CENTRES FOR MIGRATION - -- Palestine Offers Refuge for Per- secuted—Agriculture, Industry, Commerce Flourishes — Mod- em Education. Longing to escape from the lands of bondage, the ey e s of th e Jews in Europe turn to Palestine, the age-old dream, now, for the first time, possi- ble of realization. The modern de- velopments and innovations have not destroyed the wonderful mysticism of a land rich in history and romance. Palestine in the course of a very few years will be equipped with all the best of modern Western Euro- pean civilization, and it is aimed to avoid the serious social errors which have been the cause of so notch un- rest in recent times. lore than 500000 poverty-stricken, persecuted • Jews are an ailing the time to leave war-ridden Poland and Russia for the "Promised Land." Centers for registration of immi- grants and scientific regulation of mass It have been estall- fished in London and Copenhagen. Artisans. agriculturists and other trained workers will be classified and referred to positions best suited for their individual talents. DETROIT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6. 1920. PLAN CONSTRUCTIVE RELIEF FOR WARSAW AND POLISH JEWS Nen ork--'The Counililtre fill" the Relief of the 1•ar Sufferers of \Var.- saw, consisting of the elected th•le- gales of about linty \Varschatir so- c,•tt,; lin New York and ebroughinit the country, comprising a uterither- ship of about ten thousand, began a drive on January 18, 1920, for a guar- her of a million dollars. This fund is principally to go for constructive relied SAGINAW MOURNS DEATH MEN'S TEMPLE CLUB BIG OF MAX HEAV ENRICH FATHER AND SON MEET: PHILANTHROPIST TEMPLE BETH EL, FEB. 20 Was Lgading Factor in C v ier-' Men's Club. Arranges Three Spe- dal' Prosperity or Saginaw— cud Monday Night Concerts by O rganizer of the Associated Detroit Symphony String Quar- Charities. tet at Temple Beth El, Feb. 16, --. — March 15, and April 19. In 'the death of Max Ileavtairn•li, • 74 years old, brother of Samuel It is planned that a major part of Ileavenrich of Detroit. the city ,., this loud will go to establish a Free Saginaw and the state of Luau, Institution on a suitable scale loses an excellent citizen, a duce tip it; Warsaw and open to all Jews the business world, a philatithr.pist taroughont Poland. This institution the extent of whose charities w ail will lie a constructive relief agency, nev e r b e entirely known, and a per and help our people in the best possi. sonality genial and 'maid, ble manner and at all times treat is to draw forth glowing testinn, them as self-respecimg i„odi dials front Gentile ■ 11111 Jew alike Death occurred Saturday afternoon. Ian. 31. Born in Lielitenfels, llavaria. Nov. 28, 1845 . M. r Ilt•avenri ch came to this conntry wham 12 ye ars old. At au INTEREST IN BIBLICAL LITERATURE REVIVING SAYS DR. MORGENSTERN I ,.,tunes on the program of the in. ling of the :Steil's Club of Temple th El to be held Friday evening, 20, hart been arranged with a I iew to furthering. the Father and 1110 ‘elltelll now bung oh , through, nt the country. Nleribei s oo Ili, club are invited to h, , it sous who are oven 13 years Runner will be set, e,1 in the demote g ■ numskull at to:30 p. nn ., fol- ed he a general get-together. Mo tidier...1Mo cards gill sere as ti, I. cIs ' Per Year, $3.00; Copy, 10 Cents ARABS ADDRESS POPE ON GREAT BRITAIN'S PALESTINIAN POLICY ■ ltffill,..--1.”1,1: doilict has received a memorandum nom Arabian tribes in Palestine unich protests against what is called the "prim-Zionists" policy of Great Britian and A. J. Bal- four's statement that "Palestine must he for the Jews." The memorandum denounces the report that Bolshem ist Jews have received permission to settle in Pales- tine, and declares that the Arabs will never allow Zionists to take posses- sion of then ,oiintry. UNITED SYNAGOGUE . OF AMERICA STARTS DRIVE FOR $150,000 Rabbi Cohen Says, Spiritualism Form of Idolatry—Convention Recommends Expulsion of Ad- herents of Christian Science. DR. SILVER PLEADS FOR PRESERVATION OF JEWISH IDEALS Neither Orthodox nor Reformed Schools of Thought Must Taint Contribution to American Life —Judaism Makes No Apolo- gies. - - "COMPROMISE BREEDS RELIGIOUS ANARCHY" Sense of Discipline, Assurance and Serious Viewpoint Needed In Evolution of Working Pro- gram for Future. "when the real program for Ameri- can Judaism comes to he evolved out of the glorious ancestry of Israel and the philosophy which impregnates American life, that program must bear the taint neither of the intoler- ant orthodoxy of Eastern Europe nor the pallid "reformation" of the tem- ples of the \Vest. Basic as are the ideals of the Jewish faith, holding as true now as they did 3.000 years ago, they must nevertheless have a local habitation and subject themselves to interpretation through the medium of locality and age," declared Rabbi Abba Mittel Silver, of The 'Temple, Cleveland, who on Monday evening, Feb. 2, delivered his address, "The Great Opportunity of American Is- ri al,et11 1", in the auditorium of Temple [red NI. liuVrl ,‘ ill vise a brief history oot the nimement, outlining Is piir000ses tool niethool of hinction- ADVOCATE FIVE-DAY Completes Seventh Annual Series ing \\*alter Fuchs, chairman of the WORKING WEEK. oro,:rain coin.mittee announces a of Lectures Dealing With Life, minider of tmole,ille stunts of unique Culture and Traditions of Jews Philadelphia—Representativ es of ❑ nd rest to he stZt.tell by members of Traditional Judaism in America as- From Earliest Times. t h e The parodies of popular sembled in Philadelphia Sunday, Mon- .00ngs which were received with day and Tuesday, to formulate plans The elements mitering into the ditorleed approval at the first club and to devise means for strengthen- mental, spiritual and cultural evolu- fleeting. Ian. 16, will again lie sung, ing the Jewish Religion and to bring tion of the people of Israel foriut•d Is well as many new parodies IVritter. it closer to the heart, the home and the subject of a series of six lectures ,o r t h e tieGisitin. the mind of the average Jew-. These delivt•red at Temple El, Feb. 2 lido the auspices of the 51eit's men and women came from all sec- to 8, by 1)r. Julian Morgnstern, for I huh, the Chamber Nlii•ic Soclety tions of the country to participate 13 years Professor of Bible and Sem- will present the Detroit St niplonim in the Eighth Annual Convention of itic Languages at the Hebrew siring Quartet in a series of thou.( the United Synagogue of America College. tinciunati. special concerts to be gi ■ odo F(lo. 10, and the Third Annual Convention of 1)r. Nlorgatistern began his course Mar. 1 , and Apr. 19. The Ouartet Justifies Reputation as Orator. the NVonien's League —the ‘Voinen's of lectures in Detroit eight years ago, which already t•lijoys more than local branch of the Organization. The con- Rabbi Silver, one of the youngest and, with the exception of last year, pidatiom is composed of Ilya vention lasted three days—from the cif American rabbis, came to Detroit when prevented by the influenza epi- Orating Ding, 1st to the 3rd of February, is prob- with the reputation of an orator, a demic. has been a welcome visitor. o Jaren( e F.voins and Philipp ably the most important as well as scholar, and a keen observer of all Agriculture. His eminent scholarship and ability 11 of „hunt are inernlit•rs of the 1)e- the most interesting in the history the currents of Jewish life in Amer- The largest industry of Palestine i s at interpretation bas done much to .,-,,it Symphony Orchestra and asso- tif the organization. Especial signifi- ica. He ably justified that reputa- MAX HEAVENRICH. o.f course, a gr i cu lt ure . m ,,,,, t „i t h e keep religious school teachers over es of ()Stijl) Galiril.INN itSrli. cance is attached to this meeting, tion. Ilis was the fourth in the series soil Of the country is tinctiltivdted, all the country in thorough touch with early age he started a store in IX:in - Tlic quartet, but slightly changed in since it is practically the first since of addresses arranged by the Intel- and raw materials, such as cotton, current thought in the field of Bib- sacs b u t h t ,.., sett l e d i n mi e hi gan , . , ,ersounel since its organization has .1inerica has gone back to a peace lectual Advancement Committee of leather, wood, etc., have to be import- lical study. coming to Saginaw in 1878. The whole . o•rm (A to foster a taste for Chamber basis. the I. 0. It It. Rabbi Silver came The lectur,•s, however, were well ed and manufactured into goods for 0, : ois his career was intimately 1,01111,1 , lusi c, w hi c h th e 5l en ' s Gl u t, i n t en d ; The United Synagogue of America under the auspices of Pisgah Lodge the local and neighboring mar k ets. attended by the general public whose ati with the increasing growth and . to further by its co-operation. It was organized ill 191.3 by the late No 34, and was introduced by A. But with the influx of trained banters imerest in the course was manifest. t.„,1,,,,m). of Saginaw. Ile allied 'las also secured the services of Sol o mon Scheeler, scholar and presi- Lapin-Cohen. from Southern Europe, agriculture Beginning NIonday evening, Feb. 2. himself with every 111,0%1 . 111•Q I Ila t i ,a I. Fi !,,,,.it ,,.1i, alt in ,,,,,. of the con- s . dent id the Jewish Theological Semin- Just as Spain, England, Poland, can be developed and these raw ma- 1)r. Nlorgenstern reviewed briefly the it good for the contiminii) ...efts will 11, heard in it Inlinte1, and ar• of America. Russia, France and Germany had left , terials can be cultivated in the coon- work of the pail year and laid the t• publicity Of everY kind, ii a sonata for the piano and violin alilt• s , miling In the short period of its existence, the indelible impress of their life upon the present series. ,.. try and thus a minimum of foreign foundation for s er had regard for the needy and, a uli \Ir. Sihkolnik. the United Synagogue has helped to the religious beliefs and practices of raw materials is ill have to he import- .fuestlay evening was given over to an orgamze many small Jewish co:tomtit- the Jews who dwelt within their As for irrigation, Palestine's resume of the life ;Intl book .of Jere- unfortunate who might he in nerd ed. is and I ities. It has encouraged the forma- boundaries in ages past, said Rabbi are particularly adaptive, cope- tidal); 1Vialnesday and Thursday to 1. TALKS ON IMMIGRATION ot Il hs conspicuous success in littilimq• thin of young people's organizations Silver, so must America inevitably chilly the Jordan. NVith modern, the study " i 1)"1"-I'ImmY: Fri d ay tip the firm of Ilt•avenrich Bros. PROBLEMS BEFORE LARGE for Jewish religious work. shape and mold the Judaism of the scientific method; of agriculture cm- and Siiiiini"` to the life "" ii teach ' Co. to a place of prominence in ill. In 1918 the Women's League of the future. Ile pleaded that this might INSTITUTE AUDIENCE ',toyed Palestine can again be made 4 .114,' III 11,“. prophet l'''•1`4 '1.1 ' A business world, was followed by United Synagogue of :\ inerica was or- be broad, tolerant, ennobling and in b eta! t mood a le ttiscussion for file file eX- land of milk and homey" ganized with the object in view to perfect harmony with ancient Jewish elusive benefit of the teachers at period of retirement, due to ill health, among Industry, n bl e nts conn e ct,' with the re .. f ur th er Jewish education Temple Beth El religious school was hut uhich nevertheless gave him the re traditions, with the indomitable phil- time he craved to devote to eharit •iriction of immigration were treated uometr, to create and foster Jewish osophy of the prophets. Palestine, taking into consideration also conducted. its central position and the character Iblr work. Ile was one of the organ in au address delivered by Fred 111. sentiment in the home; to promote i) ...lorgensierit NI ,,r. aims 10 give a Reaction to Environment. of the Jewish laborer, is more suit - ,I, id :,,o1 detailed picture of the con- , zees of the \ ssociated Charities and Blaze' before a Jewish Institute and- the observance of the Jewish dietary "III, Jew reacts readily to his en- "le for small industries, "IlicIl will (Mimi', surrounding the inception of at the time of his death was president l enee , s tni d ay even i ng. F e b . I . laws; home ceremonials: the Sabbath vironment, mot that he is lacking in America, he declared, welcomed and the festivals; and to strengthen be callable of employing 1,11 s of 11,0,1- Judaism, as well as the historical of the organi4at'on. To him was (1,1e originality of his own," said Rabbi sands of workers throughout the setting and political significance of much of the credit for amalgamating w ith omit arms desirable aliens „ho the religions institutions of the home. Silver, "but became his genius is not country, than it is for large indus- thidi ca l even t,. Inste a d of following the .\ ssociated Charities with the ditenolo d making America their loom Women's League and Its Work. to be discovered in original creations. tries, requiring tremendous capital.1 1 dist t tool axsimilating gradually the pre- One of the accomplishments of the tow or v of t he I (d, as presented \Vest End Charities. Ile was a His is the task of culling and select- Among the small industries, must of b e t h e ,,,,,,,i, bo o ks o f the 'tilde, rector in the \Velfare League and is thought an d mo d e o f lif e . League is the establishment of a ing and adapting Judaism to the course he included artistic work, such he has chosen to sillily these writings the Jewish Orphans and Old Folks . Rol it was lust, both in the interests Student's House near City College, vicissitudes and circumstances of wood . carving, Home at Cleveland. 0. the will long ,,f tho se .drearly here and for the New York. The local branches in as and ivffi. 1 bole - in their proper chronological order. works, etc. Decorative goods and ti e accepts without question the es- be remembered for the delight afford - „„ifa„. „f ,generat i mts t„ con, that other university towns and cities arc every land and place in which he has found himself. Life gave hint always '""yeill" 1.1. '" In' 11 " 1 ). Laud will tablished authorship and dates as- ed him in giving IV: annual Thanks some standards of admission be um- erecting similar students' houses. a mere lump of clay and this lie One of the features of the colleen- always lied a good market all over crilied to the books of the Bible, and, giving dinner to the thin children of h locr,l , shaped into 0 thing of beauty. Life the world. Those articles need not proceeding from that point, endeav- the city. •1...r a w h it, at I ma, l , sous e „f lh i tine will he an exhibit of arts and gave to lion crude and coarse mate- m•cessarily be produced by hand ors t o answer the question, " \\Tim At various times Nlr• restrictions in force during th e was handicraft work, which is intended work only. Tlit• use of machinery \till are the underlying Jew ish thoughts, was president both of the old Board h e co ntinu e d." shut 51r, But to suggest possibilities of self-expres- rial and this lie polished and refined, and activity ill Jew isli work for making it speak a new note in the produce cheaper articles and enable purposes, ideals, and what the par- of Trade and of the Merchants and zet. It is for t i, e go „,I o f t i n . come this particular industry to with:mild o cu l ar setting o f th e p eri m p" He sva''‘' t ry that th e tOov e rnmo lit has laid I li , mies and schools. This exhibit will world. Judaism is eternal because it Manufacturers Association. s in Charge of Miss Irene Langer, is adaptable. It yields only to main- European competition. "The ideal of Biblical scholarship a director of the Board of Comm•rci influx „f I t th,..„. laws sense The clothing industry, which is so has undergone a change: ” said 1)r. ,t the time of his 'math and was undesira b les. Oirector of the Jewish centre, New tain itself. \Vila( sort of Judaism are we go- i e d carr o successfully ir York City. n by Jews in Nlorgenstern. "Formerly the atten- formerly a director of the Bank of ,thd e d, idiots, insane pepains, most countries, could employ a great n on o f students was focused almost s. Sag ion president Another feature of the convention ing 10 have ill America? Eastern was Ile to ,lists and people itfflicted %milli Ms Judaism or \•estern Judaism? Neith- many hands, an d become, in due time, entirely upon tht• text, endeavoring 1 reinple Beth El and a member of e.,,,. w ou ld h t •r will be a series of paintings done by , . t 'tt .1 to one of the most important of the to chitin:tie palpable errors and to l t h e m a ,,,,,,,,, Elk s , th e Saginaw G,,,,,, ,. t, , in , .in ..t. 1 to the c country ' .1 Ie•ish children under the direction er! Because both of these are the l' great 'I Luc. .. ni the products of the "Golos." "Golos" , i ' c ti ',( f. small industries in the countrl. Le- 11 - V Clili,, the Saginaw Club, the Sagi ,den of 11 r,to discrepencit•s. P of Miss Fallen. Nliss Kallen is con- reconcile , g fur their care an• ' Farther stay be mentioned the pro- cause o f their in va luabl e wor k %ve are ,,.. i i,.. c anoe chit, and t h e 1 m' a • ll i n edeeNt nected with the Boston Free Library, means more than the 1,500 years of •o:. exile. The real tragedy is found not i h.t y. duction of tobacco, and the mantifac• enabled to goo forward, laying stress ...,, 'I lie speaker &dared his unwilllii"- and has won a world-wide reputation '' in persecution, ostracism—the real x .i r. tleavenrich 1 titre of mother-of-pearl buttons, the on th the spirit an d the broader inter- is survived by hi. , ; , (ss to .• , pt any ono .• ,. t o to ,... • unsure. by her work in training children of raw materials for which are onemht pretations of the \Void'. but still "In - ,,glow, a son, a daughter and three sus s plots for apportionment or to raw kindergarten age and upwards, ill tragedy of 1,500 years of exile is to he found in the sold of the Jew, in - the Red Sea and the Persian cerning ourselves with the lesser lesser Wef brothers and a sister, a resident of the brothers ,the regulation tit the tole iii lin .gra- on awing and painting. the manner in which these circum- t:dill, and the production of house sal details. 1 NI unich. , n ot. "But," lie said, 'the mot ision . it'ontinurfl tin Page 5,1 stances curbed and narrowed and utensils Inc the Oriental Oriental market. believe I can perceive a growing 1 ,,hibiting the entrance of illiterates stultified the spirit of the people. The fondness for Biblical study on the BURGOMASTER SCORES No "News Print" Problem. I oho should be especially enioneol. real tragedy is fount, when you com- Paper-making is an industry which part of the younger gener:ition, :Intl ANTI-SEMITIC GROUP lloi inean that immigrants should be CHRISTIANS OWE JEWS pare the far-sweeping vision of the _____ dile to read and write English. lom should find a place in the future Pal- an appreciation of its literary beans- MUCH, SAYS MINISTER prophet, the brave heroism of a Mac- estine. The raw materials exist in ies. The Menorah societies in our Osnabruck, Germany.--Burgoniaster they should at least have some rt a•I cabean with the confined, ugly, nar- co ll ege and university towns have sufficient quantities to warrant ex- row, ungainly life of a European pectations of success, especially as done much to stimulate this interest. Wertheim, at one of the recent ors- -lig and writing know ledge of On (. I.,, ,, i„,,.I „ 1 mi,ii,,n, at, iiidebt_ .wii language. It will then be ea-.. Ghetto, ...A n a dd e d i m p e t u s may well b e sions of the Town Council. announced '. them to aermire ours. Otherwise ed to the fews for everything worth these materials are certain to in- crease considerably with the develop- expected from the proposed Hebrew that anti-Jewish pogrom appeals are for Germany Demanded Sacrifice, wink in the(.1d.i,sti3n religion," ....... University which is to be built on the being distributed through the libraries these people would collie to us iron'. , standard o f be... Di "Reform Judaism in Germany be- meat of agriculture. l worth Lupton said Sunday ii,^0r.`,.. % stin t o f °h e , Ina reg i on w h ere of the town, and he advised the Comb- countries where tilt "lhe raw materials for paper-neck- c.. to take the necessary stens to cor - mg and education is lower than mos ing at First Unit arian church in the gan as an experiment. Its aim was ing are rice-straw, papyrus, reeds Ilehrew is still a living language and it not to Judaize the Jew, but to Euro- . disgraceful state of affairs. and it w o uld cost th e Government first of a series of f sermons on "What hat th e s p eec h o f the co mmon p eo pl e , it reef this s (bourne. etc.), and bagasse (sugar more to educate and maintain then, Can \\'e Learn From the Other Nlan's peanize him. The Jews wanted to I • • „Hie re f use. ) All t h ese are found in is expected that a sense of line dis- t • gain social and political equality. It Religion Egypt and with the exception of crinninttion for shades of meaning anti-Semitic group.attempted to deny than the task would be worth. . As .in example of sensible leg•sla- the accusation, but he was refuted by • Iliotogically we are heirs of 'feu- was a necessary thing, but in the bagasse, in Palestine also. Samples will develop and will manifest itself ts. ro•garding immigrant, Mr. Blitzel urgoaster, . who implied that I e m tons, Celts and Franks," he said, "but process of surrendering the non-es- in some distinct contributions to the the B of E,gyptian rice-straw have been Nleyer was not always to be depended cited the limitations placed upon the religiously we are the heirs of Jclvs,, sential, there began the process of tested at the 1.ontIon Imperial Insti- study of the Ilible• \Vert' this not done, he The founder of Christianity was a denuding the Jewish life of content. Chinese. Jerusalem should again prove the upon for the truth. tote and also in America, with re - The members of the Council de- said, t. i. 1 te country would be overrun Je•—a loyal Jew. Ile was the There evolved a starved Mosaic Juda- ecca for scholars, and them, our- Mecca : i coolies whose cheap labor would product of Jewish life and thought. ism that proved a prosaic Judaism. salts showing that if treated by rounded by the imperishable mono• sided to appoint a committee to in- with soda or lime process, they yield pulp melds of the past, and overlooking vestigate the whole flatter, greatly complicate, by its competi- When a young 110111 asked Jesus to They purchased their freedont and uf good quality suitable fur white and tion mv . tli American labor, an already state the es-entials of religion he did birthright. They sacrificed much for a region filled with historic signiti- brown paper or strawboard. perplexing problem. COLONEL HARRY CUTLER not talk about messiahship or vicari- it. carter, many of the rich traditions of "In America We need not purchase It is certain that t le are a under the past lutist receive a rebirth." ous atonement; he did not even use TAKEN SERIOUSLY ILL considerably increased in rice will be his own words, but quoted direct our freedom. We need pay nothing Dr. Islorgenstern is an authority on New Voork--.Colooncl Harry Cutler. Palestine, while it may also be antici- the Book of Genesis, and at the re- from Jewish law, 'Thou shalt love the for it but our loyalty and devotion. pated that the surplus straw in Egypt quest of a number of Detroiters has 'prominent Jewish social ,corker and Lord thy God and thy neighbor as We are not called upon to sacrifice and also of Syria will be available for placed at the office of Temple Beth former Chairman of the Jewish Con- anything in order to merit this free- thyself.' gress, is seriously ill as a result of a exportation to Palestine. "1Ve Christians have sat at the feet dom. On the contrary, America says El several copies of his work. the sudden paralytic stroke, which at- manufacture Soda and lime for the London — Kamel Ayu Iles, the lead- of a Jew. but hat e denied our ever- to the Jew.: "If you wish to serve J ewish Interpretation of Genesis," tacked him just after having left a of paper exist in great quantity in the lasting debt to a race that made America best, remain a Jew to the Dead Sea and in the very soil of Pal. peldished by the Department of Syn- committee meeting of the Jewish er of the Syrian Christians in an in- best of your capacity. All that Amer- agogue and School Extension of the Congress, called to discuss the con- terview by the correspondent of the t e s t is possible." ica asks is unity of purpose and de- estine. [Ilion of American Hebrew Congre- vening of a session in the near future. "London Daily News" in Cairo, order to help and promote the votion and consecration to the uni- In Colonel Cutler is now under the care Egypt, declared that the recent ap- small industries, an industrial bank gations" fying idea of American life. It says, pearance of anti-Semitic feeling in of physicians in New York, who give must be founded. The public institu- "Do not destroy yourself." America Syria is due to the Zionist aspirations to Protect hopes for his recovery. tions of the future Jewish Council will England may be compared to a beautiful Mo- to make Palestine a Jewish homeland. Austrian Jews in Hungary have to take the initiative in creating saic, made up of many pieces, all put Another reason which Kamel Ayu IMMIGRANTS JEWISH model factories, in instructing work- together in one glorious franie—the LONDON —Steps are being taken Bey gave for the opposition both to Prague. — The local "Judische ens in particular industries, preparing by the English government to pre- REACH PALESTINE the Jews and to the English authori- Volkstimme," in an open letter frame of American democracy. to the "We can serve the spiritual experi- laborers, and finding a market for vent front driving out of Hungary ties, was that the latter preferred that v . enresentatives of the Jewish Com London.—A ship has arrived at Hu, products. For this p urpose. qualified the country or placing in interment Palestine, bringing 700 Jewish immi- agriculture and trade in Palestine ment of America best not by deny- munity, emphasizes the necessity o men must immediately proceed to the camps the Austrian Jewish refugees grants from Odessa. The group in- should be in Jewish hands rather ing ourselves anything, but by giving o ne assay once and for all with the free reign to the varied talents of our U. S. A. to learn there the conditions There are over cluded the well-known Zionist lead- than in those of the Christians or antique, bureaucratic system of ad with now in that country. of thes;. industries, as America, ace, of developing them and bring- ' 30000 Austrian Jews now in Ilungary ers and writers, Dr. Joseph I.:taunter Mussulmen. Palestine according to ministration of the Jewish Commit its highly-paid labor, approximates to I who will benefit by England's inter- mil Dr. Glicksolin, and the poet, L. Syrian views ought to be united with : in g them as free-will offering and ity, and of introducing instead more the matter. in Page 4.) 'cession Syria. (Continued On Jaffa, modern, democratic methods. (Continued On Page 5.) I Beth Syrian Anti-Semitism Due To Jewish National Aims Recommend Democratizing Jewish Administration