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May 23, 1924 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1924-05-23

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

America legsk Palatial! _ eat

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CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

PAGE FIVE

ALE ikr
c itorr i ff_wissi&ordati

Om.,"

the sur-
he Jew-.
the lass
wish Ag
gine hits-
Palestine
ne as Om
I. If 1,,

li

j

of n' ,



link ta •

It
wine-po ,
i in of the
1 over the

t. was 11•
V. It h

'Is as it,

1 01INP

meant in a racial sense, that Rathenau
consented to continue with his work. I
' But for the remainder of the con-
, ference he ignored Stinnes com-
By JOSEPH BRAINI N
pletely."
A German editor, who was in more
(Copyright, 1924, by Seven Arts Feature Syndicate.)
or I .s constant touch with the iron•
as I Inlet with his full approval and sup- master for the past 12 years, claims ,
o December morning in 1923,
not only that Stinnes was by no
sitting with Professor Ludwig Pori
The oldest son of the financial means an antiSemaie, but that t
• of Berlin in his room at the y es
the Hugo Jr. I have men-greatest admiration he ever cherished

I Astor, someone ktua•ked at the
No visitor having been litt- tinned---has. moreover, officially allied fur any man was for the Jew, Albert
himself with the group that is most Bailin, the late director-general of
era by telephone, I expected to
active in persecuting the Jewish mmu- the Hambury-American Line. This
t an employe of the hotel. A
lation of the Reich; and his activities editor happened to be with Stinnes
.
g man in his twenties, shy of
's sumo
,iog, small of figure, dressed ill were never rebuked by his illustrious when the news of Bailin

HUGO STINNES AND THE JEWS

Often
ith the
makes a
agencies
lam, but
of the



e s l oth,
e s in D ,
:crept
'es at t'i.
our to ad

more fa
Jews and

ant

it

nqueta

le 6482

, 0

he

Est

tr

reported by wire.
ill-fitting overcoat, entered father

"Stinnes broke down, and with •
I have diseussed Hugo Stinnes' at .
ti room hesitatingly. Professor
blink
I' iwa ril the
Jews with
several
• tears in his eyes declared that he had
well-informed
Germans,
more
or less
introduced the unassuming
g man: "Hugo Stinnes, Jr."
was.
hint and
intimate ft nods of the industrialist. only
lost friend
his best
that Felix
the
left friend,
• ong Stinnes was at that time visit- Their
differ
One i lintools
of them,
a German business : Deutsch (another Jowl. It is a fact
the
United
States
as
the
plenque
.
1. representative of his father, the man, an
of Stinnes
Deutsch.
Of a
very
retiring
told at
into lb
"It house
is true that
that Stinnes
used
to frequent
the
L• elul ironmaster, and was neg.-
- Semitic, or, rather, the nature, taciturn, Stinnes shunned all
Was
!: og with the Sinclair oil interests
recognized pr. reaper of German anti-
J.•Jter Professor Stein told me that
va 1
ums, hsial ";-
a qi tnLs.' l ahintidtsesr lh "n'.i
Semitisin But he saw in Jew-baiting , a7,-,w)i,a1 functions,
o , young man, the third son, was only an etre lent mes for diverting ever, in a small and intimate circle
fiavorite child of his father, who
the anger Id the suffering m asse s that ' of friends, he used to speak quite I
e grooming him to become his sue-
This is , eas il y and frankly."
he exploited sa ruthlessly.
once
This sumo gentleman also told me
I , ,r. The old Stinnes had
why he freely gave his support a nil
and Rathenau had be-
... 1 that this youngster was more encouragement tithe Ludendorff
not ', that
t. i11111
w
than he, and would build what
not', t• me reconciled. . Only the night lie-
('With him it
II itler groups. W
assassination they
hi', the father, S d c qu ir ed.
e
passion,
but
a
calculated
business
Rath
n
hannae
The young
ti s h a d been . ex- move. T he in
had met as table neighbors at a din-
of this attitude I fare
pressing his indignation at an article
r
in
the
home
of
the American am-
te
ever
entered
his
mind,
for
he
over
n
of his father, which appeared in the
They had had a long con-
m
viewed n business proposition front
New York Times for November 25,
1
b"sader.
Iversation,
tete-a-tete,
and seemed to
the ethical angle, but only from the
itio,J, and was written by the Jew,
tt anti- get along very well together. Rath- ,
standpoint of its efficacy.
it.
Georg Bernhard, editor-in-chief of the
paitical
opponent
, "'au escorted
Setni tism proved effective as
Viosische Zeitung, Berlin.
akings against 1 home in his private car, and Stinnes 1
notion for his undertakings
The article in question, headed the increasing bitterness of the paw- I' is reported to have said: "I got to I
ea
Stinnes, Exploiter of a Nation,"
"II ugo
success
class,
it was
a business
And this
was
all that
mat- i know hint Never before did I feel I
perized . middle
caned the German billionaire the evil lured to hint." him so near as un that evening."
genius of his country. It charged
,,, These widely
means clear dsit;',7agen,t,ferhiea,ee'haasrbgy,
hint, among other things, of being
This opinion is contradicted by an- '
indirectly responsible for the assas- other German, a well known jour -- that he helped and furthered anti-
sination of Walter Itathenau, of nalist, who told me of an incident to( Stimitism. Hugo Stinnes was a corn.'
having been "one of the authors of which he was an eye-witness, and plea character ; he hail moments when
that savage baiting in the German which seems to prove that Stinnes j he was willing to sacrifice his own
nationalistic press that finally crazed
the calm, , taciturn business m an, did
some young men to the point of lying cherish a personal grudge against the)
e Ii interests
he understood
ta those them.
of his Even
country,
Georg
as
in wait for Rathenau one morning as Jew as such. I Bernhard, his severest critic, admits
he was leaving his villa for the foreign
s
in
Spa,
Belgium,
in
July,
that
Stinnes
had
reached
the
satura-
a
"It w
office and assassinating him."
1920, during the conference "f (he' tion point as regards the amassment
A certain French royalist sheet, Supreme Council of the Allies. Al ! of wealth, anal that he sincerely aimed I
controlled by the notorious anti-Semite
a caucus meeting 14 the German' to save his country economically.
Leon Daudet, has frequently called Delegation Rathenau had advocatedi n
a compromising attitude and the' these moments he may have regretted
the late industrial king of Germany
a Jew. Besides being the most straining of all efforts to make the Semitic
his passive
activities;
acquiescence
but he never
to made
anti-
flagrant nonsense, this, if done in coal deliveries. Stinnes, who ciao n move to react or change direction.
good faith, reveals a total ignorance sidereal the coal deliveries impossible, , He scan the idol of the People's Party, ,
o (Stinnes' characteristics and politi- and whose political and industrial in-1 which is always in the vanguard of
terests were always opposed to Rath-1 the Jew-baiters. He is therefore re-
cal activities.
Hugo Stinnes came of old Huguenot enau's jumped up excitedly,
g l sponsible for all the black deeds of
sa y in
stock, and his family had fur genera- aloud: This is the psychology of a this party—even if "some of his best
tions lived in the Calvinist spirit.
foreigner." Rathenau immediately friends were Jews."
Now the young Ilugo Stinnes, who
Politically he was decidedly anti- left the room, and threatened to Nvith- ,_
Scmitic. The owner of theDeutsche
unavoidable. It was only aft'- succeeds the old Stinnes, will have an
Allgenteine Zeitung, he had also large draw completely. An op
opportunity to clear his father's name
seemed)
interests
a chain Lokal-Anzeiger
of newspapers it of er Itathenau's friends had appealed to 1 of the well-founded accusation that—,
which
the in Berliner

serve
the Jewish
unity of statesman
the German
of German anti-
the leading member. Both of these the
great
to Pete-
pre- i Ihe was the protector
It is said that Stinnes,'
Sitisni.
has no political ambitions, and
newspapers are known for their JON-
baiting policy—a policy which, if not gation, and after Stinnes had de- Jr.,
that his interests are purely.of a bust-
wholly inspired by Stinnes, at least dared that his remark
had not
been nature. Will he, too, be an
--------
ness
-----
father
nee s i c ifoautsh
t VI k pernicious
r. nol t e the
i I I i eh ani , T 't tree
't . '). t ' ' n„". m
%Aratt."„‘arlsr%raratraraIr". '''''''''''''''''''''' fluence of the late Stinnes' political
. advisors, work hand in hand with the
1Z:
es;
(--.----,
e sa Mot elements of his country, without
/a/
rice or creed'
It is not one moment too early to place your
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PECANS

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1227 Griswold St., between Grand River and State

Telephone Main 0224

Eery' Norman, the "Creole Fash-
ion Plate," heads a bill of vaudeville
'0; at Keith's Temple Theater, starting
Empire 5391
We / Mond ay matinee. This delineator of
9138 TWELFTH ST.
acter has a new offering
Mas•WessaANNAANWINaVasaWssiVisaVsNaVa
ema le c h ar
/.4%,W0000410
WINVONWaWssaVsaslalsasaVaNasasaalsasiaWsWit f entitled "The Tuneful Song Shop,'
lasaWasaeaasae,,VaWas
in which he is ass ,staff by Zene Clark -
with the conditions of the age and
and Bobbie Simonds.. The production
in response to the spirit which moves
is elaborately mounted-. Mr. Norman
them. In consecrated moments of
brings exclusive song numbers and
human history when idealism rises
I gorgeous gowns. The "Creole Fash-
high, when humanity regulates its
" long a feature in two-a- I
life and law with the spirit of God
ion ('late,
By Rabbi Moses Fischer.
' day, recently scored an artistic
and of unselfish brotherhood, when
triumph in musical comedy as a star
nations and individuals are conscious
in the "Greenwich Village Follies."
The Hebrew word for freedom, of bonds of friendship and love,
I Others listed for the week are: Craig I "dror," is derived from the verb , when man glories in the fact that he
Campbell, a young American tenor, "dor," to dwell.
overcomes his baser self and receives
a cycle of songs, assisted by Allan
The creative genius of the Hebrew guidance for his social policy and po-
Stuart; Cansino Brothers and M
language asserted its insight into the litical conduct from God above —in
Stoneburn in Spanish dances; Eddie reality of things by establishing a such periods, the human spirit, moved
I Kane and Jay Herman, "The Mid- connection between the concept of by ethical idealism, is satisfied wth
night Sons," in chatter, songs and freedom and the right of men to not less than to proclaim liberty
new dance steps; Jim McLaughlin dwell wherever opportunity is given throughout the earth. But there are
and Blanche Evans, in a cameo of to pursue life, liberty and happiness. periods in history when the holy fire
New York life by Ben Ryan entitled The basic condition of human free- of humanity burns at low ebb, when
"On a Little Side Street;" Vol Har- dam consists in the freedom of man idealism reaches a low mark, when
ris with Vera Griffin in a travesty to choose the locality wherein he shall selfishness gains mastery over hu-
with song called "The Sheik of '61;" toil. It is as wretched for man to manity, when the bonds of brother-
the Keller Sisters and Frank Lynch, be compelled to live in a certain spot hood are broken. In such times na-
h

on the face of the earth as it is to be tions are apt to adopt the narrower
a harmonious trio pre.
"Spirit of Youth;" Burt Shepherd , handcuffed.
view in interpreting the Biblical
and company; the Australian whip
He who has studied human history command. We sieze the material and
king in amazing demonstrations; ' knows that the most disastrous die- spiritual benefits of the land and ap-
Aesop's Fables and the Pathe Weekly. ! turbances in the middle ages were propriate the fruits of the soil and
I due to the reatraints and restrictions of the soul for ourselves and in do-
placed by the law on the free move- ing so contemn the rest of the world.
On entering the harbor of New
1 menus of man, Of all the oppres-
sive measures imposed upon the serfs, York one reads the words,
• Ishalt proclaim liberty throughout the
none was resented with greater bit-
,,
The interpretation or these
terness than that limiting the right lanc.
i
' of man to move wherever he chose. I 1 words, as exemplified in the recently
.
The ancient Hebrew was not satin- passed immigration law, is of the nar-
fied to express in mere words his idea irower character. The conscience of
—cumuli-here
as to what freedom means. He ern- , America has decided to proclaim lib-
—anytime
If a slave erty throughout the land, no
bodied it in his law.
escapes unto you from his master, throughout the earth. America has
thou
shalt
not
deliver
and
give him made a momentous, historic deper

up to his master. With thee he shall tore.
sup-
Your florist has oily 0 limited
dwell, in the midst of you." What
ply of hlemm-ial Wreaths made up-
inspiring love and sympathy! The
Bible not only commands the freeing
, itch really a sample of his skill.
of the fugitive slave, but it bids us
also to grant him freedom to live
among us, not in segregated districts,
The demand evil- slues the world
'
to which we, in our selfishness, might Philologist Deciphers Original Ten
II-
sear for these wreaths has been
Commandments.
assign him.
The heavens and the earth have
reestively heavy at this time of the
been given to the children of men.
VIENNA.-11 T. A. t—What are
year
This striking thought in the Psalms believed to be the remnants of the
suggests that heaven and earth are original tablets bearing the Ten Cors-
in close relation and that possession mandnients, written by Moses, have
I of both comes within the range of been deciphered by Professor Hubert
Wreaths by Parcel 'Post c/tnyuhere
human achievement. The broad Jew- Grimme of the University of Mun-
ish conception is that the attainment
ster.
of heaven and earth, the admittance
"I was taken out of the Nilus by
into the bliss of the one and the bless- the Egyptian queen," is the sentence
ing of the other, spiritual happinas written in the almost forgotten old
and material abundance, are not lirn- Hebrew at the head of one of the
, ited to the members of a particular tablets, which were found some time
'faith or to the descendants of a cer- ago on the plateau Serabit El Cha-
tain race or nation. The Jewish darn, in the southwestern part of the
i heaven is not guarded by saints wield- Peninsula of Sinai, by the English
, ing a selective rod lest a non-Jewish scholar, Flinders Petrie. The tablets
spirit should enter the peace of the contain also the names of Joseph,
future life. The doors of the Jewish Menasseh and Moses, and prove that
heaven are always flung wide open
Hebrew was the native language of
to welcome the just who love God, the Sinai Peninsula 1500 B. C.
who helo their fellows and walk in
In an article published in the Mor-
1111. el
• ow • 1 • I MA the path of righteousness.
gen Zeitung, Professor Grimme, who
The earth, in line with this great deciphered the tablets from photo-
principle, •AJ also given to all the graphs, deplores the fact that no far
children of men, regardless of dis- only a portion of the tablets have
tinction. The earth must be free and been found and that no effort has
MAXIMUM PROTECTION
accessible to all the children of men been made to locate tne remainder.
AT MINIMUM COST
who are willing to devote their en-
"Their discovery would be a great-
ergy in the upbuilding of a country, er contribution to the history of man-
Thus company not only offers mew-
to conform to its laws and spirit and kind than the unearthing of King
l.. the utmost in ''''' sties but eines
it service to an ini•ual tiogree.
ideals.
Tutankham's tomb," writes Professor
In
'Thou shalt proclaim liberty Gnome. He also states that he is
In &Mine. rotes ars lower, all at
which maka. Central Mutual inane-
throughout the land and the inhabit- sure that further excavations would
anc• the best avnlable It Michigan.
ants thereof." The Hebrew word for locate pre-Mosaic Bible documents,
Why not investigate?
land, "eretz," has a twofold mean which would prove that Jehovah is
fog. It denotes not only land, but
derived from the name of the Egyp-
also earth. It tells us to proclaim tian god Jahu, and that the Hebrew
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liberty throughout the land, but i
A.
Woodwar
d
name for God, Shadai, is derived
Seventh Floor
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also
tells
us
to
proclaim
li'oert
at Sailer
DETROIT
from the Egyptian god, Septa. Both
Hafnium Bldg.
throughout the erath. And nation
Mats 3157.3106
of these gods were briery bush gods.
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