100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

August 03, 1923 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1923-08-03

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PAGE TWO

r, PETRorr, sn (hRom 'az

The Arab-Jewish Problem

The Restless One

By DR. DAVID J. SANDWEIS

By PEG

(Editu's Note :—The following essay was written by Dr. Sandweis as a
contribution to the contest conducted by the University of Michigan Inter-
collegiate Zionist Association and was awarded first prize. Judges in the
contest were Fred M. Butzel and lee A. White of Detroit and Professor
C. It ibbert of Ann Arbor. The prizes in the contest were given by Joseph
II Ehrlich sod Max Lieberman.)

"This fair defect of Nature." So,
"This is only partly true," she re-
I believe, Milton once defined woman; plied. "To be sure, woman has die ies
that
111811 has not.
and so I believed, truly or not, after
Hut this m•eiy
I had got to kno• Mrs. Behrens.
means that she has less time to di it-1-
She was a fascinating little crea- in, her individuality than has mai; it
ture in many ways; that is to say— does not mean at all that she 1. ed
for here. I must begin my qualifica- necessarily lose it entirely. Suni-se
INTRODUCTION
Cave dwellers and Ilittities, Amorites
tions—she was fascinating to the man she has but two hours a day that,re
and Philistines, Hebrews and Phoe-
who
looked for mind as well as mat- her own. She could devote one ...If
Prc-War Zionist literature contains nicians, Babylonians and Assyrians,
ter in woman. I can't honestly say or even one quarter of this time t ■ in
curiously few allusions to the Arab Hellenes and Romans, Egyptians and
that
she
was good looking. She really outside activity which interests t.,.r.
problem. Stray articles on the sub- Turks have in turn fought for the
wasn't. But she got to be good look- She may he able to accomplish I , :le
jece are le he found in some of the country and conquered it and left
ing,
if
you
appreciated a mind such per day, or even per year; but •.,.r
more thoughtful Zionist periodicals. their traces behind them.
object is not really like man's, a •e
as hers.
To humanity therefore Palestine is
On the whole, however, Zionists, or at
Ilex mind was forever active. She the desire is to reach the goal qu k
all events Zionists outside of Pales- a country of peculiar interest. But
ly; it is to have a goal."
loved company, but only because that
tine, do not seem to have been fully for the .lows it has a surpassing im-
• • •
gave her an opportunity to propound
alive to the importance of the Arabs portance. Within the geographic lim-
Them % came the cruel disappo....
difficulties,
to
hear
comment
and
to
its of that country they felt the first
as an element in their calculation.
mein to nu.. Deceived is I had I, • ii
air her views.
The situation assumed a different throes of nationhood. Under its spell
She was forever anticipating the time and time again with the pit:.
aspect, when Palestine passed with al- they grew and conceived the mission
ers who forever preach and nr. .t
future—or
trying
to.
Shaw
showed
to
he
"unto
the
peoples
a
covenant,
most bewildering suddenness from a
her the way, she said, and Shaw never practice, I felt certain that Mrs. ,.
distant vision into an urgent reality. and for a light unto the nations."
had a more enthusiastic disciple. rens could not belong to this chi-.
Whatever the visionary Palestine may From the very beginning of their his-
fo did. mrs.
When I got to know her this summer Yet she
have hen the real Palestine was not a tory they have regarded it with strik-
I found
Behrens was q,,
her head was full of schemes for co-
land without a people. It was indeed ing affection greater and more lasting
cultivated;
she knew lots of no, v
operative livifig. I must also add that
far from being populated, nor had it than that which any other people can
things;
but
she
had
no one grand,
these
schemes
had
troubled
her
brain,
in any sense an organized national have for their native land. For nearly
as they had Upton Sinclair's long be- aim in view. This thing one 11
life. It had nevertheless a substan- two thousand years it was the center
that
thing
another
--it
was all;c0 a e.
fore
we
had
reached
a
housing
crisis,
tial number of inhabitants rooted to of their nation and for nearly two
"Co into any New York district," less. She could see in others I,
the soil. Nor was this all. At the mo- thousand years more it has been the
such
a
life
would
lead
to a craving
she
would
say,
"and
look
around
you."
ment when the Jewish National move- center of their hopes and aspiration.
In every street there are hundreds of "excitement" and yet she fell victim
The idealist movement "Back to the
ment appeared on the scene. It was a
mothers,
with
hundreds
of
baby
car-
reality. Inchoate and incoherent as Land" had begun the very day when
riages, with hundreds of miniature he l r lil e . f c. ante aware of it in this win ;
it was it became in the circumstances Rome captured Jerusalem, long before
homes. One mother regularly meets During one of the intermissions at
of the war a force to be reckoned persecution canoe to spur it. But it
other mothers in the street, but it is the—not theater, but synagogue,
with; nor could Palestine remain was not till the nineteenth century
only for the purpose of idle gossip. It where the performance was long
wholly unaffected by what was pass- had nearly run its course in 11397 that
never occurs to any of them that in- dull (not at all due to the Almigloi,
Theodore Ilerzl, stung to full Jewish
ing in the Arab world.
stead of six mothers taking care of but to the rabbi and his flock,1 \Ir
We have then at the present time consciousness himself by the shame of
six
baby carriages one mother would Behrens, a mutual friend, and I u•r,
the
Dreyfus
case,
called
a
congress
of
on one hand the British government
suffice just as well, and give the other strolling up, and down in front of the
exercising a mandatory over Pales- Jewish representative men at Basle
live
women a freedom that they could synagogue, discussing 101 different
in
Switzerland
and
founded
modern
tine based on the Balfour Declaration,
be taught to utilize to their advan- topics, when the discussion turned up-
and on the other the Jewish and Arab political Zionism. The aim of the
tage.
Each mother could be on duty on matter of sex. Our friend deplio
peoples, the former making superhu- movement was defined as the "estab-
man efforts to establish in Palestine a lishment in Palestine of a publicly- to entrust to a mandatory the admin- live and economic conditions as will most active and virile commercial every sixth day, say, and have five ed the hypocritical view taken liy thy'
"law-arid-order" crowd, which tal•• •
afternoons
or mornings to herself.
national home for the Jews, the latter secured and legally guaranteed Home istration of Palestine and that the secure the establishment of the Jewish races in the world, which appears de-
"Then, again, take the matter of free discussion on sex matters. b u t
mandatory should be responsible for National. Home, as laid down in the termined to spare no effort in making
working with no less effort to oppose for the Jewish people."
it.
The immediate objective was to ob- putting into effect the declaration re- preamble and the development of self - the best of every economic possibility the home. True, we want a certain which encourages them behind ch.,
At the meeting of the Zionist Con- tain a charter from the Sultan, back- ferred to above,—but the mandate had governing institutions, and also fu ✓ which the country possesses." F:Ise- amount of individuality in each case.
rsfhat was not the view taken by
gress, the supreme governing body of ed by the Great I'owers, for autono- to he ratified by the council of the safe-guarding the civil and religion s where in the report he gives the Jews Possibly a common dining room is
the Zionist Organization, held at mous Jewish colonization in the Holy League of Nations.
rights of all inhabitants of Palestine , full credit for what they have already not always a success, and perhaps dthoeo"T o . tinders of religion, but rather
by misguided fanatics. And a man is
Carlsbad in Sept. 1921, a resolution Land; and the means to that end
done. Ile points out that the impor- even a common kitchen may give rise so apt to establish rules contrary to
the meantime the Jews started it- risme i%e of rate or religion.
was passed expressing as the official were: first the rousing and strength- on In their
Article 4:—An appropriate Jewis h lance of oranges as a commercial crop to differences. But surely, when there
way home. Aker centuries
.statement of the Zionist aims, "the ening of the Jewish national feeling in of wandering and oppression they re- agency shall be receignezed as a pub- 1"has been developed only in the last are perhaps 37 tenants in one apart- all Nature!"
With one of these swift passage:
determination of the Jewish people to every Jewish community and the or- turned to the promised land. About lic body for the purpose of advisin g 30 years and mainly through the ef- ment or tenement house there is little
live with the Arab people on terms of ganization of the Jewish people inter-
rhyme or reason why 37 tenants from one theme to another he nest
25,01)0 of them have entered Palestine and co-operating with the Adminis _I forts of Jewish agricultural colonies."
unity and mutual respect, and togeth- nationally for combined action; and since the signing of the Armistice and tration of Palestine in such economic "Thegrowing of grapes for a purely should proceed to buy 37 one to four- challenged me to maintain the asset-
thin of the noble husband that the
er with them to make the common secondly the establishment of a na-
social, and other matters as may af- commercial wine industry was intro- pound packages sugar; 37 loaves of
home into a flourishing community, tional trust, in the form of banking made themselves at home. "This is fect the e.stablishment of the Jewish duced about 35 years ago by Jewish bread, 37 or twice 37 pounds of pota- married is always, always true to his
the upbuilding of which may assure to cmopany, for purchase of land and our home" they say proudly, and they national home and the interests of the colonists on the Plain of Sharon." The toes, and so on. Thinlvof the economy wife. Ile emphasized being "mental-
each of its peoples an undisturbed na- the work of colonization. Beres call talk of a new Jewish culture, a new Jewish population in Palestine, and almond crop "is estimated at 3,000,- of time and the saving of money if ly" true—meaning thereby the ab-
Jewish civilization that will regener-
tional development."
converted the sentiment of the masses ate Palestine--the entire Middle East. subject always to the control of th e 000 pounds, most of this amount be- one of the r would buy for herself sence from the married man's mind
But no feasible agreement had so into an ardent enthusiasm; the efforts
and for the other 3ff, which means of all thoughts about women other
And on July 22, 1922, The parlia- administration to assist and tak e ing from the organized industry of the that each woman would lie very busy than his wife.
far ,been reached between the Jews of a few pioneers into a national striv-
part iri the development of the court Jewish colonies." "New experiments
ment
of
the
world,
the
Supreme
Coun-
and the Arabs; the tension between ing.
I very readily admitted that my
try."
in producing raw silk are now being once in :37 days and could do other
the two peoples does not grow less;
profitable work on the other 313 days." thoughts often wander, and I ventur-
Thirty years of successful pioneer cil of the League of Nations, confirm-
It was a day of rejoicing fur th e made by Zionists direction," he says.
and men interested in the political work had made an impression on the ed the Palestine Mandate which recog-
Being a skeptic, I asked her what ed to add that, judging from what I
For
nearly
11,000,000
of
Jews
condition of Palestine are not without world. And during the war the sen- nizes by international law and under whole Jewish people.
she means by "profitable work." Pos- knew, my experience seems to be the
worry.
On the faith if the pledges which throughout the world the rebuilding sibly my look gave me away, for her experience of every normal human
timent has hardened into a conviction international guarantee the right of
In this essay the writer made an at- that the opportunity for the Jewish the Jewish people to establish their the world has given the Jewish pen of Palestine is the translation of eyes grew angry with impatience and being, even after marriage.
tempt to compile all necessary facts restoration has come. In every part National Home in the land from which ple the Jews throughout the world are - spiritual values into terms of econom- her lips piffled uncommonly far.
"Then you admit that man is a
needed for an understanding of the of the world the Jewish democracy de- they were exiled over nineteen hun- already concentrating themselves t o ic reconstructlim. The Bolshevik re-
"Typical of the man," she said. polygamous animal?" he cried.
Palestine with an ardour and devo- gime in Russia and the ecwmic col- "You men behave towards women in
Jewish-Arah Problem of Palestine, manded that at the end of the war dred years ago.
"I
never denied it," I answered.
and he treats these, grouped as fol• Palestine shall he a Jewish country,
It was the Jewish Magna ('harts tion which sufficiently bespeak the lapse of Eastern Europe have reduced much the way that the capitalist class
"And you therefore admit that the
lows:
firmness of their resolve. Since th e to ruins half the Jewish world. The behaves towards the workers. The present life is unnatural?"
and the claim of the Jew to national and it reads in part:
long, the unavoidable, delay in the
1. The Jews and Palestine.
"Y -yes." Ile noticed my hesi-
home in Palestine was based: (1) by
"Whereas the high contracting par- British occupation upwards of two
rights over women that you men have
2. The Palestinian Arabs and Pal- right of the history of his fathers, ties, further agreed that the manda- million pounds have been poured into formal approval of the mandate, th e inherited from past ages remain with tancy. The instinct due to contem-
instability that so long obstructed
estine.
Palestine
by
Jewish
public
bodies,
to
(2)).by right of his own devotion to tory should he responsible for putting
peaceful progress in Palestine, th you and reason never invades that porary civilization was with me still.
3, England and Palestine.
I proceed rapidly:
,this'ideal of a national life, (3) by into effect the declaration originally say nothing of the large sums made sinister suggestions of an impending e part of • your sanctum. So the capi-
"But hold a minute. To begin with,
right of a persecuted people to have a made on Nov., 2, 1917, by the govern- available for Jewish colonlzatoin
renudiation of British pledges, which talist: to him men were made to be
THE JEWS AND PALESTINE
home of its own, (4i y right of the ment fo his Britannic Nta • e.sty, and Baron Edmond de Rothschild, and the ' will be referred to below, which hav exploited, and the large mass of work- the man who is no idler finds little
e
assistance given to the Allies in the adopted by the other Allied Powers, still larger amounts of capital brought
en, like the weeping of women, occasion for such stray thoughts,"
In consideration of its size Pales- campaign in Palestine by the Jewish in favor of the establishment in Pal- into the country by Jewish private en been constantly put ahout in interest- really
Ile immediately interrupted me at
think that such is their lot in
tine has certainly played an ample Legion, and, (5) by right of his re- estine of a national home for the Jew- toprise. With Jewish immigration - ed quarters, have added to the difficul- life. 'Profitable work,' indeed! Give this point.
ties
of
this
period
which
is
happily
ap-
part in the great movements that have cent successful exertions on the soil. ish people, it being clearly understood there came a visible quickening of the
"You
are merely saying that a de-
proaching its end. In face of all this, her the opportunity, open up her eyes
swayed and influenced the world.
And on Nov. 2, 1917, Mr. Balfour that nothing should he dune which social and economic life of the coun-
so that she may see, hinder not from liberate attempt is necessary to ban-
From the people that have grown up made public on behalf of the British might prejudice the civil and religious try. The Jews have built up some 50 the Jews have already to their credit
ish
such
thoughts from the mind. In
and flourished there have come forth government that, "it views with fa- rights of the existing non-Jewish cont. flourishing agricultural colonies. They concrete achievements in Palestine seeing, and instead of hearing obout other words, then, what comes natural
woman's place in the home we shall
the old and new Testaments. Yet in vor the establishment in Palestine of mynities in Palestine, or the rights have created in Tel-Aviv an urban which point to what may he expected
enough
to
the men should not he en-
the inverse ratio of the people them- a natural home for the Jewish people and political status enjoyed by Jews center with all the pleasantness of of them immediately the situation be- hear that woman and man's place is couraged?"
in the home and man and woman's
selves have suffered and bled. The un- and will use its best endeavors' to fa. in any other country; and 11 hereas, European civilization. Neglected soil comes normal. Confronted by innum- place is outside the home.
I proceeded without directly reply-
fortunate situation of the country is cilitate the achievement of this object recognition has thereby been given to has been cleared, marshes have been erable obstacles, obstructed by contin-
"A man when he marries begins ing to this interruption:
probably to blame fur this. In the it being clearlf understood that noth. the historical connection of the Jew- drained, and the stony hill-tops affor- uous misunderstandings, handicapped
"Then, again, our present existing
his
career;
a
woman
ends
it.
After
by
cross
currents
of
an
unstable
poli-
days during which warfare has ac- mg shall be done which may prejudice ish people with Palestine and to the ested, The school of agriculture near
order is such that putting into action
complished the policy of ambitious communities in Palestine or the rights grounds for reconstituting their Na- J affa and their agricultural experi- tical situation, but mindful of the sa- marriage the woman is expected to the stray thoughts that come to man
confine
her
attention
to
her
home
and
cred
associations
which
have
never
peoples and has played the fame of and political status enjoyed by Jews tional Home in that country—Hereby ment stations at Atilt are the only in-
her children and be interested in her would merely add the finishing
unscruplous rulers—front the iarliest in any other country."
approves the terms of said mandate stitutions of their kind in the coun- ceased to hind them to the soil of Pal- husband's work only, not in any of her touches to a world already three-quar-
time down to our own day—Palestine
try. So too were the model farm and estine, they are firmly resolved to pm-
Then came the Treaty of Versailles, as follows:
own. Her individuality becomes mer- ters demoralized. Besides, do we owe
reed on their appointed path.
has been crossed mid recrossed by the Conference of the I'rincipal Al-
"Article 2:—The mandatory shall schools of Art and ('rafts. The intro.
Such is the spirit in which the Jews ged m that of her husband's She is nothing to our children?"
those whom ideas of conquest have led lied Powers at San Remo, followed by be responsible for.41acing the coon- deletion of improved breeds of cattle,
"I, for my part am not going to live.
through its valleys and over its hills. the Tretay of Sevres. It was agreed try under such political, administra- experiments in poultry farming, to. are turning to the task if reconstitu- no longer of any consequence. Her d the , ii i• , a o y,a si t ,u i pid society orders me to
very name is obliterated
bacco planting and the culture of ting their national Home. In the
n
"
"Right here you will find much of
silkworms---these are some of the words of Dr. Chaim Weizrnann, the
I," said Mrs. Behrens.
r
"Neithe
home tragedy. With no aim, with
enterprises assumed by the Zionists. official head of the World Zionist Or-
She
had been silent for an unusu-
nothing particularly to look forward
The Jews lead the way in educa- ganization:
ally
long
time.
I looked at her, and
to,
a
secret
desire
for
some
form
of
"It is the attempt to bridge over a
tion and alone possess a complete
'excitement' talu.s hold of a woman. then I knew why. She had been try-
educational system from the kinder- gulf which has opened between our
suppress,
unsuccessfully as it
ing
to
Her
stivation
is
much
that
of
the
idle
garten to the technical high school, - selves and our past, to re-establish to t
now appeared, her pent-up emotions.
a system now crowned by a univernay continuity. To stride this gulf is a rich. This continual outburst which I looked at her and then at him, and
tries
to
find
relief
in
some
form
of
the medical department of whit h is tremendous strain and requires the 'excitement' would find amuch better I understood.
• • •
soon to be opened. On their total edu- endurance of a giant. It it only pos-
cational expenditure of Ef09,000 a sible to people who have an inspira- outlet if woman had a goal to strive
Mrs. Behrens left her husband. In
for which would occupy her as Mice-
year all but Ef3,350 is provided from tion, but we have the inspiration and
time
our
friend
left her. She is very
tively as the hunt for the husband
Jewish sources. Since the Autumn of we will conquer."
now occupies her before her marriage unhappy. She is wise, and yet not
1918 the American Zionist Medical
"1,11
wise
enough.
Are
we?
and her intellectual death."
, r.t.,;teery
Unit, maintained at a cost of some
THE ARABS AND PALESTINE
A friend of ours interrupted at this
Ef100,000 a year from Jewish funds,
point to observe that since woman and
While the son honors his parents.
UR first general reduction sale is meeting with such
has administered to the sick without
Since the signing of the Armistice of man bore children, the functions God holds it as if He were dwelling
distinction of race.
generous response that we urge all our patrons to
of the one could never be quite the near the child, and were Himself re-
about
25,000
Jews
entered
Palestine,
The
quickening
of
economic
and
So-

take immediate advantage of the wonderful values
ceiving the honor.—The Talmud.
cial life to which Jewish nubile bodies Added to the Jews already there they same as those of the other.
before it is too late.
have so powerfully contributed has form a small minority of the popula-
been materially accelerated by private tion. Of roughly a million inhabi-
Notice the two items we quote today—they are just
enterprise. The revival of the building tants official estimates show one sev
trade—the first sign of renewed eco- enth to be Jews. The Jews themselves
a sample of the good opportunities that await you during
From the President's Desk—Talk No. 150.
nomic vitality—is almost exclusively claim that the population numbers
this really authentic sale.
attributable to Jewish capital, which well under a million and that accord-
ingly
they
are
one-fifth
of
the
whole.
was invested in this industry last year
Hardly necessary to
to an estimated total of F:£ 140,000 in But whether one-seventh or one-fifth
describe this beauti-
Jaffa alone. The only mortgage hank the Jews form a small minority; and
ful reproduction of
in the country is that which was es- the Arabs stiffen when they think that
,early American
tablished under Zion auspices. Tht• the Jews in minority are aiming for
period. Both in Wal-
orange-parking houses at Patach- political and economic control of Pal-
nut or Mahogany,
Takvah and Rehoboth, the silicate- estine and that the firitish are aiding
and marked now
Bricks factory at Jaffa, the Waal them to see ure it. There is the root
fl our mill, the cemont factory, and oil of the trouble.
The Arabs look at the newcomers
factory at Ilaifa, the introduction of
Have you overlooked this expense
such industries as watch making, fur- with hate and suspicion as could well
in figuring out your family ex-
niture making, and weaving—all these be imagined. They are hitter. Ten-
penses each week or month?
enterprises are due to energy and sion grows, and now and then on" even
hears of bloodshed.
zeal of the Jews.
You are approaching, or have
In analysing the question of the Ar-
The economic future of Palestine
already reached, your highest
depen.ls I rgel • in the use that is abs and Palestine the writer will Ms-
earning power. After you pass
made of t • Its of the Jordan and •uss this phase under the fo'lowing
that point you depreciate in your
its tributari ., and of the River Yar- headings:
(1) The claim of the Arabs of Pal-
earning value to yourself and
muk which flows into the Jordan from
yi
the East. The rivers of Palestine if estine that Palt•stine is their home.
family.

(2) The claim that the Mandate as
fully utilized, are estimated to be ca-
You should be putting into the
pable of providing it with as much as it exists now is incompatable with the
bank each pay day a percentage
four million horse power of regulated pledge given to the Arabs during the
energy and with sufficient water for war.
(as much as you can possibly
s made of wrought iron
(3( The reaction produced by the
the irrigation of a million and a quar-
spare) of your income. You
0 and finished tastily in
ter acres of land. A scheme fur the Balfour Declaration on the inhabi-
should consider it as an absolute-
""
harnessing of these streams has loom tants of Palestine.
Dutch metal.
ly necessary business or living ex-
fully worked out by eompett•nt engi- The Claim of the Arabs of Palestine
The shades come assorted
That Palestine Is Their Home.
neers headed by a .fe•, Pinchas Rut-
pense.
When bringing their case before the
in five solid colors, Price,
enberg, who applied and obtained
Then—when
old age or physical disability cuts
from
:omplete, now
. the British government a con- sorld the Arabs of Palestine say,
down your earnings you will have a "reserve" to
(
cession for the generation of electric. "Palestine is the time of the Arabs.
fall
back
upon.
right have the British to prom-
a power. The .It.ws have been respon- What
li - V`t;
ise the Jews a home in our land?" and
Our park benches are filled with men who neg-
sible for it and no doubt it will revo-
.•
lected this strictly business precaution.
lutionize the industry of the country. they suggest that the .le•s have no
more
right
to
colonize
Palestine
than
As for the commercial field one can
refer to the report on the commercial have the Italian descendants of the
resources of Palestine issued by the Roman conquerors to colonize Eng-
U. S. Dept. of Commerce through Mr. land.
The Arabs in Palestine are a part
Addison E. Southard, the American
of the Arabian people of whom there
Consul of Jerusalem,
are
about 35,000,000. The 35,000,000
Mr. Southard believes that in com-
merce, as distinct from agriculture Arabs occupy 2,000,00 square miles.
They
are to be found in well develop-
and industry Palestine may well have
a considerable future, and he looks ed, autonomous settlements in Moroc-
co,
Algiers,
Tunis, Tripoli, Egypt, the
froward to its becoming an entre port
of the first importance for the trade Sudan Mesopotamia, Syria, Yeman,
DETROIT MICHIGAN
and
the
Hedjas.
They have their own
of Eastern Mediterranean. Ile has n,
hesitation in recognizing the impor• king in the Hedjas, which is the cen-
Visit owe permanent Better Homes Exhibit. Three complete floors-108 roarne
ter
of
Arabian life. So far as the
lance of the Jewish contribution to the
economic development of Palestine. Arabian nationality is concerned, they
lie states plainly in his introductory are amply protected and provided for.
Griswold aed Lafeyette.
Referring to the above analogy: If
chapter that the main factor in the
70 Years of Success .
commercial rebirth of Palestine is England were half empty; if it were
"the sentimental and material atten- inhabited by • people who had not
tion it Is receiving from one of the
(Turn to Page Eight)

THE JEWISH CITIZENS OF THIS
COMMUNITY MOURN WITH THE
ENTIRE NATION THE DEATH OF
WARREN GAMALIEL HARDING,
THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF THE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.
THE SYMPATHIES OF OUR PEO-
PLE GO FORTH TO THE FAMILY
OF OUR DEPARTED PRESIDENT.

0



110-edi
eiearance8d
Ifit

ttie,

1 1

la%

ustnem are Te

O

g.

Physical
Depreciation

Governor
Winthrop
Desk

This
Beautiful
Reading
Lamp
i

$26

Detroitfumiture$hops
%trot at topelie

IFILS
A BAN CAA- ir 1":-.44.11P

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan