THE DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE
VOL. VII. NO. 26.
DETROIT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY MAY 28, 1920.
Per Year, $3.00; Copy, 10 Cents
ANTI-SEMITIC DEMON-
NO JEWS AIDED IN
ZIONIST PARADE
STRATION IN MUNICH J. D. C. APPROPRIATES $5,000,000
CZAR S EXECUTION ABANDON PUBLIC
FOR
CONSTRUCTIVE
RELIEF
TO DECLARE END
DRIVES TO RAISE
Resolution Emphasizes Necessity for Granting Larger
OF WANDERING JEW
Amounts for Co-operatives, Loan Funds,
CHARITY FUNDS
Jewish Legionnaires Who Fought
in Palestine Feature of
May 30th.
JUDAEANS AND TALMUD
TORAHS MARCH IN BODY
Mass Meetings at Synagogues to
Wind Up Most Important
Demonstration.
"The Wandering Jew is No
More."
Headed by a banner carrying this
and similar descriptions, some 10,000
or more of Detroit's Jews will join
in a grand parade and celebration on
Sunday afternoon, May 30, in cele-
bration of the great Zionist victory
of achieving the object of the move-
ment which has for the last 24 years
worked to get the Jewish people a
"publicly secured, legally assured
homeland in l'alestine."
With Capt. Herman Wails, veteran
of the Spanish-American War, as
marshal, at least 80 local Jewish so-
cieties will join the line of march as
an expression of their joy of the ac-
tion of the Supreme Council at San
Remo, Italy, on April 24. Similarly.
thousands of the local Jewish Ironies
will be decorated with Zionist, Amer-
ican and British flags, while the finest
holiday attire will be thinned by men,
women and children, young and old,
on the day chosen for the demonstra-
tion.
Rabbi to Fall in Line.
Capt. \Vaiss and his staff 1s-ill he
followed in the parade by the execu-
tive officers of the Zionist District of
Detroit, who will in turn be followed
by the Jewish Legionnaires who
fought in Palestine during the
World War and who are more than
all others responsible for the Zionist
victory, The Legionnaries will in
turn lie followed by the American
Jewish ex-Service Merl who served in
the United States Army and ,Navy.
Then will come the Jewish Boy
Scout troops. The Rabbis of Detroit
will come next, and following them
will he the Mizrachi, which is the Or-
thodox Zionist organization.
The Mizrachi will be followed by
the Hadassah, the women Zionists,
and following them will come the
Young ludaeans and the pupils of the
local Talmud Torahs. The Young
Jullarans and Talmud Torahs will
make up an aggregation of about
. and are expected to form the
2000
finest part of the parade. A great
many of the younger children will be
taken along in trucks and automo-
biles. The children will be followed
by the seven circles of the Polacy
Zion and National \Yorkers' Alliance
Arbeiter Verband), the Congrega-
tions, the Ladies' organized societies
amid various lodges.
Young Judaeans Feature.
The local 14 Young Judaea circles
will merge the Talmud 'torah pupils
for effect in the parade, but will carry
their own banners and their special
inscriptions throughout the line of
march. Special costumes will he
worn by most of the Young Zion-
ists, while distinctly Young Judacan
badges have been printed for the
members.
At a special meeting of the local
Talmud Torahs and several Young
M UN I CI I, Bavaria—II ecause the
local newspapers reported that the
Jews received special wheat flour for
l'assover, a demonstration took place
in this city against the Jews. Dema-
gogues exploited this report for their
personal interests and began to in-
cite the population against the Jews,
especially the foreign Jews.
More than 50,00(1 Germans took
part in the demonstration. \'ery bit-
ter and biting addresses were made;
the crowd was in a very passionate
state: threatening indeed was the
situation. It needed, perhaps but a
single call to a pogrom by some fiend-
ish individual to have brought very
tragic results. Fortunately, no such
individual appeared at the moment.
Instead, a commission was picked
from the vast mass to inquire of the
ministry about the whole matter.
The delegation left the meeting and
returned later to inform the assem-
bled people that on the morow the
government would reply in the press
to their question. The next day ex-
planations by the Jewish community,
the city Mayor Schmidt, the Food
Administration, and by the Minister
of the Interior, Endros, appeared in
the papers. All these pointed out
that the Orthodox Jews were appor-
tioned the flour received MA as notch
as hut certainly not more, in food
values than the other citizens.
elucidation of the affair seems to have
pacified the sensitive inhabitants of
Munich.
Dallas to Have
Jewish Hospital
Institution Will Contain 150
Beds—To Be Non-Sec-
tarian.
Dallas, Tex.—Sponsored by the
Jews of Dallas, and with support of
the surrounding territory, a new 151)-
bed hospital is to be built in Dallas,
thereby adding further prestige to
the already well-established claim of
Dallas as the medical center of the
southwest.
The new institution, although fos-
tered by, and under the management
of the Jewish citizens, will be entire-
ly non-sectarian in its benefits and
will be open to Jews and nun-Jews
alike.
Preliminary plans indicate that of
the 150 beds in contemplation, the
great majority of them will be known
as free or semi-free, thereby dedicat-
ing the institution as far as possible
to the greatest service among the
poorer classes. Many other distinc-
tive features will he incorporated one
under consideration being a ward
fully equipped and specialized for the
exclusive treatment of infants' and
children's diseases. Another special
feature will he a fully equipped
"Kosher", kitchen and dietary system
for the use of those patients of the
orthodox faith.
A pledge of $100,000 toward the
one-million-dollar fund to be raised
has already been made from one
source, and several additional pledges
of substantial amounts of represent-
ative Jewish citizens, who recently
met and determined to put the project
into execution.
The London Jewish Correspon-
dence Bureau reports:—The Secre..!
tary of the Joint Foreign Committee
of the Jewish Board of Deputies and
the Anglo-Jewish Association- said.
in a meeting of the Committee, that
the accounts of Jewish complicity in
the murder of the Russian Imperial
family issued in White paper by • the
Foreign Office, have since been
proved to be false. Information has
now been received with regard to the
trial of 28 persons arrested by the
Soviet Government as a result of an
investigation carried out under their
instructions at Perm, on the charge
of having been concerned with the
murder of the Czar and his family.
Not one of these persons appears to
be Jewish. :Moreover, a full report
of the trial is soon to be published,
when all the necessary documents
have been received.
The Secretary further stated. that
he had ben informed in l'aris that
an investigation carried out by the
Government of Admiral Kolchak had
also failed to identify any Jewish
participants in the murders,
Tools and House Building.
New York—Toward the end of the
second week id the relief campaign in
New York the Joint Distribution
Committee made a decision which
will prove epoch-making in the his-
tory of American Jewish relief. A
resolution, unanimously adopted at
the Executive meeting of the Com-
mittee on Thursday, May 13, pro-
vides that the relief work be placed
upon a constructive basis as soon as
possible, and appropriates the sum of
$5,000,000 for that purpose.
There has been a constantly grow-
ing demand for constructive relief on
the part of the local relief commit-
tees in all the war-ravaged lands as
well as by the representatives of the
Joint Distribution Committee who di-
rect the relief work on the spot. Be-
ginning with Dr. Julius Goldman, Di-
rector General for Europe, and Dr.
Bogen, Director General for Poland,
every one, of these representatives
has emphasized the necessity' for
granting larger amounts for co-oper-
atives, loan funds, tools, house-build-
ing and other forms of permanent
relief. Moreover, the local commit-
tees, which have sole control of the
funds given them by the Joint Dis-
tribution Committee, have been using
increasingly large sums of money for
these purposes.
The justice of these demands on
the part of the Jews abroad cannot he
questioned. It is time that the war-
stricken Jews be enabled to provide
for themselves and their families as
soon as possible, so that they may no
longer he dependent (111 others for
their bread and clothing. To build
homes and to enable each one to re-
sume his former occupation is the
crying need of the moment, and this
has led Col. Herbert H. Lehman to
introduce the following resolution at
the C'unimittee's meeting on May 13:
"Resolved. that it is the sense of
this Committee that, beginning at as
early a date as is practicable, its
work of relief shall be placed, as far
as possible, on a constructive basis.
and that a committee be designated
which, co-operating with the Director
and agents in the field, shall
prepare plans to this end.
"Resolved, that the Joint Distribu-
tion Committee appropriate the sum
of $5.000,000 to be used exclusively
for the work of reconstruction and
rehabilitation."
''he resolution was enthusiastically
adopted, and Mr. Felix NI. Warburg,
the Chairman of the J. D. C., was
authorized to appoint a committee of
seven which, in co-operation with Dr.
Goldman, will prepare all plans for
constructive work.
$1,250,000 for Immediate Relief.
The adoption of a constructive re-
lief program, however, does not mean
discontinuation of palliative relief.
On the contrary, there has never
been a greater need for immediate
relief in Poland, Ukraine, Galicia,
Palestine, etc. Accordingly, in ad-
dition to the $5,000,000 for construc-
tive relief, the aforesaid meeting ap-
propriated $1,250,000 for the follow-
ing: $100,000 as emergency fund for
the territory made accessible by the
present I'olish offensive in the
Ukraine. $50,000 for Lithuania. $25,-
000 for Latvia and the Baltic prov-
inces. Recent reports front the Bal-
tic Provinces specifically asked for
clothing, and this amount was set
aside exclusively for that purpose.
$15,000 for the prisoners of war who
are still in the internment camps in
Western Siberia. (The sum of $250,-
000 has already been appropriated for
bringing the Jewish war prisoners of
Austrian and Hungarian nationality
home.) From $15,000 to $20,000 to
care for the Jewish prisoners of war
who reached San Francisco aboard
the Mount Vernon. $100,000 as a spe-
cial fund for rebuilding the destroyed
Jewish houses in Bukowina, Besse-
rabia and Rumania. $10,000 for Jew-
ish orphans in Bulgaria. $200,000 as a
special fund for food for Palestine.
$70,000 for Palestine for the month
of June. $5,000 for the same month
for the cities of Aleppo, Beirut and
Damascus. $200 a month for the tu-
berculosis fund. 4250,000 for food for
Austria. $200,000 for general relief
for Austria for the present month.
$10,000 for tools for Austria. $50,000
for those parts of Czecho-Slovakia
which are not reached by the Prague
Committee. $2,500 for the Jewish
students of Liege.
Two Women Elected
to Jewish Assembly
Palestine's First Election Day
Featured by Wide-Open
Suffrage.
New V.irk—Two women
W011
seats in the elections just held for a
Jewish Constituent Assembly in' Pal-
estine, the first popular elections ever
held in the Holy Land.
Reports received by the Zionist
Organization of America state that
the Labor group will control a ma-
jority of the delegates of the Assem-
bly, which will draft part of the
fundamental law of the Jewish com-
munities in Palestine. The two wo-
men chosen were colonists from
Poach 'Fikvall, the oldest of the Jew-
ish agricultural settlements in
Men's Council to Raise
Money.
— —
IS RADICAL INNOVATION
IN PHILANTHROPY
— --
Campaigns for Funds to Be Con-
ducted Through Business
Channels Only.
New York—An effort to eliminate
the "drive as a factor in
i raising
funds for philanthropic purposes was
announced on Sunday by Arthur
Lehman of the Federation for the
support of Jewish Philanthropic So-
cieties. NIr. Lehman made public
the appointment of a permanent
Business Men's Council whose mem-
hers have pledged themselves to de-
vote a definite time each week to
continuous propaganda for sporadic
"drives." The plan is expected to
prove one of the most radical inno-
vations in modern philanthropy.
Mr. Lehman, who is chairman of
the Council, said drives for char-
itable funds had irritated the public.
The new plan aims to stimulate the
interest of business men in the
work of institutions affiliated with the
Federation.
''It has long been known that busi-
ness men can best be approached
through their business," said Mr.
Lehman. "It also has been found in
many cases that attempts to enlist
the support of a particular industry
found- that industry involved in diffi-
culties of its own. This difficulty, we
hope, will he eliminated by the all-
year-around work."
The council includes in its member-
ship leaders in nearly a score of in-
dustries. It will be aided by the
heads of trade auxiliaries and mem-
bers of trade committees. The offi-
cers of the Business Men's Council
are Arthur Lehman, Chairman; Percy
S. Straus, Associate Chairman; Wil-
liam Goldman and .Manny Strauss,
Vice-Chairmen. The members of the
council include David Anspacher,
Benjamin Roblin, Ben Erdman, Dr.
I. E. Goldwasser, S. C. I.amport,
Herbert Lehman, Sam A. Lewisohn,
Herman Lissner, Dudley I). Sicker,
Henry F. Samstag, Fred Isl. Stein,
A. Van Raalte, Felix Nf. Warburg,
Edwin S. Lursch, Louis J. Robertson,
Joseph Cullman and Joseph Gutman.
Ty pical of the liberal government
which Zionist leaders have always
affirmed will rule in the Jewish Na-
tional Homeland when it is given
autonomy, the elections were wide
open for every Jew and Jewess in
Palestine above the age of 20, there
being no qualifications for voters.
The ability to speak, read and write
Hebrew was the only qualification
demanded of candidates for Assembly
delegates. Seventy-five per cent of
the Jewish population voted.
The Assembly, now that the man-
date over Palestine has been granted
to Great Britain for the express pur-
pose of establishing a Jewish Na-
tional Homeland there, will have im-
portant reconstruction work to carry
out, in connection with the British
Civil Administration which, according
to announcements by Premier Lloyd
Establishes Seven-Year Course;
George, will soon supplant the Brit-
Mortimer Schiff Presents
ish :Military Administration in Pales-
tine.
Famous Library.
PISGAH LODGE STAG INITIATION
AT ELKS TEMPLE, JUNE 7TH
Jewish Seminary
Increases Faculty
300 More Candidates to be Inducted into Order; Will
Make Detroit Lodge Largest in World.
Following immediately upon its !was made and unanimously carried
Community Class initiation at the ; that the secretary be instructed to
Shaarcy Zedek synagogue, on which acknowledge receipt of the common-
occasion over 500 members were in- ication and to express the best wishes
ducted into the organization, Pisgah .of the lodge that the demonstration
I.odge, No. 34, I. 0. 13. B., announces , be a success, and that those individual
another record initiation to take place members of the organization who so
Monday evening, June 7, at the Elks' desire, should avail themselves of the
Temple, at Lafayette and Cass boule- privilege of participating in the ccle•
,bration.
yards.
ganizations America. The Nathan J. Gould, member of the
mark
an epoch.
in The
the festivities
annals of will
Jewish
fraternal
or Intellectual
Intellectual Advancement Committee,
gave a brief but spirited talk on the
class, which is confidently expected . subject of "Immigration" at the Mon-
to number 300 or more, will bring day meeting. Mr. Gould called atten-
Pisgah's membership to the 2,500; 000 10 the fact that at present there
mark, rendering the local lodge the 'are 200 bills pending in Congress,
largest single B'nai Brith organiza- each one urging the restriction of im
New York Jews Organize Business
FORMER GERMAN PRIME
MINISTER OPPOSED
TO JEW-BAITING
New York—At a meeting of the
Board of Directors of the Seminary
it was reported that under the Chair-
manship of Mr. Morris Asinof, with
the assistance of Mr. Louis Marshall,
KASSEL—In the local city assem- Mr. Jacob II. SchifT, Mr. William
bly one of the members inquired Fischman, ht r, Joseph if. Cohen, Pro-
what that legislative body intended to fessor M. M. Kaplan and Mr. Joseph
do about the Jew-Baiting propaganda B. Abrahams a campaign for annual
which is spreading in the city. To subscriptions to the Seminary and the
this Ex-Premier Scheidermann, now Teachers' Institute has been con-
the Mayor of Kassel, replied that be ducted. Thus far approximately
NEW' YORK.—The Intercollegiate tion in the world. Ratnlah Lodge, of migration.
was absolutely opposed to propaganda $80.000 has been secured. enabling the
(Continued on Page Six)
Zionkt Association announces a sum- Chicago, hitherto ranked as the larg•If the present policy of restrictive of any kind in the schools, whether Seminary to make additions and im-
provements in its work for the com-
mer Agricultural Course of six est I . 0 .
It 13.
. lodge, has 2,200 nano , immigration were in effect fifty years it be social, political or religious. He
weeks, beginning July 11, ending Au- on its roster.
the Jewish population of this would adopt all possible measures to ing year.
It has been decided to increase the
country would be negligible," Mr stem out this vile influence.
gust 22, at the National Farm School,
To Be "Stag" Affair.
Bucks County, l'a. Social workers,
The ex-premier was answered by faculty by two instructors and add a
As a slight deviation from custom Gould declared.
Course
in liazantith for the students
educators, journalists, and senior
committee will be appointed to two high school teachers who de-
the latest Pisgah initiation will be a
students are hereby offered an oppor-
make a special study of the immigra- manded so-called liberty for the of the Seminary and the Teachers'
Previously the wives
"stag"
affair.
Institute.
tunity to farm during their vacation
problem and report means of schools. One of these declared that
London—Immigration into Pales- for either two, four, or six weeks. and lady friends of members and Ilion
The distinction between the Senior
Idfinite action by the lodge in the Scheidemann is an anti-Semite, and
tine will be controlled by a Jewish The course will be a combination of candidates participated in the cere- matter.
casually reminded the assembly that and the Junior Departments will be
body on which the English govern- theoretical and field work on the monies
abolished
and a straight seven-year
Myer Fink to Talk.
in a polemic with Maximilian Harden,
Nathan Rosenberg. to whose excel- I
ment will be represented. Dr. Chaim farm under the guidance of promi-
Scheidemann slurred his opponent's course established in its stead, thus
lent
management
the
unqualified
sue-'
Myer
S.
Fink,
former
past-presi-
Weizmann told in an exclusive in- nent instructors in agriculture.
welding the two departments to-
Jewish ancestry.
terview to the Jewish Correspond- Tuition is free, board and lodging. dess of the lodge's last initiation is dent of Pisgah Lodge. and one of its
Scheidetnann with much earnest- gether. Parallel courses to the after-
in a large measure due, again heads ' , earliest and most faithful members,
ence Bureau in London.
fifteen dollars a week. Inquiry should the entertainment conunittee. Mr. will address the organization next ness and passion said that it was a noon courses will be given in the
"Palestine can accommodate 0,000,- he made of Secretary, I. Z. A., 55
evenings, if required.
Rosenberg is enthusiastic about the Monday night. May 31, at the lodge libel to call him an anti-Semite. For
000 Jews and our first step will he Fifth avenue. New York.
The honorarium of six scholarships
rooms, 25 Broadway, on the subject, the last twenty years he has been
coming event.
to build at least 5,000 houses and go
carrying on a constant unmitigated has been increased from $250 to $750
"It's the greatest B'nai Brith event "What is a Jew?" Mr. Fink is an
ahead developing the vast unculti-
warfare against anti-Semites, and has per annum, these latter to be awarded
ever held in the city," Mr. Rosenberg ardent student of Jewish history and
vated spaces of the country," he de-
to students of merit who do not en-
declared, commenting upon it. The his address will undoubtedly prove of succeeded in totally annihilating many
of them politically. He admitted that gage in any outside work.
clared.
long-promised party for B'nai Brith timely interest.
"We are going to settle in Pales-
The library of the Seminary shows
in a polemic with Harden he remind-
members has arrived. It's going to
Military Record Planned.
tine no less than 1,000,000 Jews with-
ed the latter of his Jewish descent, an accession in the last six months
be a real "of-fashioned. hones'-ter-
For the purpose of compiling a fill but contended that he did not do so of 2,259 volumes by purchase and 303
in the next six years, but to do this
WASHINGTON—As a result of goodness" stag party. with real stag and complete record of B'nai Bri:h
we must have huge funds. I ant.
out of disrespect to the Jews, but volumes by gift, making a total of
assurances of the Joint Distribution trimmings. There will he good eats members who served in the great
however, confident that a response of
rather out of feeling for them. Har- books in the Seminary Library of
Committee for all Jewish funds that and entertainment. and in. speeches.
world-war, blanks have been mailed to den is a man who voluntarily de- 60,378, and the addition of 10 manu-
the Jewish people will fully justify
it would furnish the money for the
A very attractive bulletin, humor- all ex-service men. Members who nounced the faith of his people and scripts, bringing that number up to
our expectations."
Dr. Weizmann said that the Arabs purpose, the Government has decided ously announcing the stag initiation, are in receipt of these blanks are cast Off his Jewish name to mas- 1,849. In addition to this there has
to permit continuance of the work of which is being mailed to members, urged to fill them out fully, as di-
would not resent a large Jewish im-
querade under a new cloak. It was been purchased for the library by
the American Typhus Mission in Po- is the work of L. Bass, assisting Mr. rected, and to mail the data to
migration, but that on the contrary.
this dishonorable conduct which he Mr. Mortimer L. Schiff the famous
land. The mission was to be de- Rosenberg on the committee. Others Charles Rosenthal, 25 Broadway, at
desired to exploit in his polemic in library of Anglo-Judaica collected by
when the Zionists had commenced
mobilized under the law providing for on the committee who are lending the earliest opportunity. Members
the real development of Palestine,
order to stamp his opponent. Per- Mr. Israel Solomons of London. This
demobilization of all American troops their efforts to the success of the oc- who have served and have not re- sons who cast off their own birthright includes 1;800 books, 780 portraits of
the Arabs will quickly realize that
in Europe by June 30. The mission casion are Max Rubin, Dave Huber, ceived record-blanks are requested to
and individuality and masque them- prominent Jews in all countries, 240
Zionism is a blessing to them no less
will be discontinued as a military or Ben Kramer and Nathan J. Gould.
notify Charles Rosenthal.
selves can never hold the respect of caricatures and 80 prints of Syna-
than to the Jew and that it will bring
ganization, but such members as wish
The following were appointed by
honorable men, whether these be gogues. The latter portion of the
new and genuine life to the whole
to remain in Poland will be permitted President Leon Goldsmith on the new
collection is of great value for illus-
Jews or Christians.
east.
Degree Team to officiate at the June
trating Jewish history. Of the An-
The mandate has no fixed period to do so.
The mission consists of fifty officers initiation: Charles Rosenthal, Maur-
glo-Judaica there' are a number of
but will remain in force until the
ice Klein, Joseph Garvett, Joseph
and 500 enlisted men.
items not in the British Museum.
population of Palestine is ripe for
The decision to continue the work Gottlieb. H. T. Rosenthal. and Louis
Mr. Mortimer L. Schiff also pro-
self-government, the population. how
Munich—At the Prague University
of the mission was the outcome or Bass.
WARSAW—The Jewish Club in the vided for the preparation of a check
ever, having the right at any time
a number of Jewish students of
conferences this week between the
Spirited Meeting Monday.
to appeal to the League of Nations
Prague, Czecho-Slovakia, registered Polish Parliament received a tele- list of the manuscripts of the library
secretary of state, the secretary o
An unusually large membership at- as Germans. This act aroused so grant from Stanislaq that Jews were which when completed will be pub-
he explained. The Peace Conference war, Hugh Gibson, American Minister
will fix all details of the mandate
tended a very spirited meeting of much hostility among the Slovak stu- attacked by soldiers at the local rail limbed, thus making the manuscripts
to Poland, and Albert Lucas and Ful
May dents that the Jewish boys decided road station, were beaten and wound available to scholars outside of the
during the next two months, but Dr
ton Brylawski, representing the Jew- Pisgah Lodge, Monday evening,
Weizmann expects no further diffi
24, at its lodge rooms, 25 Broadway. to transfer to Munich University to ed. Many had to be taken to the hos- Seminary.
ish Funds Committee.
The plan for the Teachers' Insti.
Acknowledgement was made of a let- be among their own compatriots. But pitals. The Jewish population of that
culties or essential changes.
The United States Government ha
Dr. Weizmann believes a Jewish
Organ - when the authorities of Munich Uni- city is in despair since there is no tote for the courting year include; the
sold its extensive delousing machin• ter received from the Zionist
one
to
take
their
part.
Copies
of
this
appointment
of a critic reachist' the
ization
of
Detroit,
inviting
the
lodge
versity
discovered
that
the
German
Legion necessary for the protection
cry to the Polish Government, and
of Palestine, although the policing of the Joint Distribution Committee has to participate in a parade to be held, patriots were Jewish, they returned telegram were immediately forward establishment of summer courserrend
Sunday, May 30. in celebration of the their applications and refused to ad- ed to the Premier and Minister of courses for the Alumni, and- an- - -En-
the country and Jewish participation
rovided $100,000 to supply each for
War,. by the Jewish Deputies. tension Department
San Remo declaration, A motion snit them to the University.
in its administration are left to Great the plant and $100,000 for medicines.
;,..t
'
Britain.
COLLEGIATE ZIONISTS
OPEN SUMMER AGRI-
CULTURAL COURSE
IMMIGRATION INTO
PALESTINE TO BE
CONTROLLED BY JEWS
J. D. C. TO CARRY ON WORK
OF AMERICAN TYPHUS
MISSION TO POLAND
GERMANS DO NOT WANT
ANY JEWISH PATRIOT
POGROM IN STANISLAU