LIM
PAGE SIX
FAVORS ALLOTMENT
OF LAND TO JEWS
Government of Ukraine Orders
Census of Number Wishing
To Become Farmers.
MOSCOW.— The Ukraine govern-
ment has ordered all district and pro-
vincial Soviets to take a census of the
Jewish pooulation to ascertain the
number desulety to take up agricul-
tural work and settle on the land.
Special commissions which will be or-
ganized for this purpose will be en-
trusted with the task of acquainting
the Jewish population with the gov-
ernment project to allot land to Jew-
ish settlers free of charge.
The census is undertaken in order
to find out what amount of land will
be required. It is believed the Ckraine
state lands will scarcely he enough to
satisfy thy hints with the Ukraine it-
self and there is a project to appor-
tion land to Jewish salient in the
Crimea. The question already has
already been brought before the Crim-
ean Count it of Commissars, who re-
gard the matter favorably.
The Crimea has huge stretches of
free land and the question of coloni•
zation has for xi long time been discus-
Red by the Crimean government. The
Crimean Porters themselves are peace-
ful and rather favor the Jewish ele-
ment as neighbors, considering them
sober and industrious. A hundred
thousand families, it is expected, will
be able to settle in the Crimea during
the next few years as a result of the'
present negotiations.
Lack of Funds • Handicap.
Absence of funds is the only draw-
back to the great scheme, as the gov-
ernment is unable to find funds to put
the land in a condition suitable for
immediate settlement. Jewish organi-
zations are looking to their American
friends to come to their relief.
Noontime the Ukraine government .
has apportioned a0,000 acres of land
in the Ekaterinoslav district, where
3,000 Jewish families will inie.'t• this
spring, thanks to the support of the ;
American .loint Itt•construction Com-
mittee, which has advanced a loan of
$1110,0011 to carry out the plan. Simi-
lar Jewish agricultural colonies will I
Inc organized in Kherson 411111 Odessa
districts, which are assigned exclu-
sively to Jews coming from the Kiel!,
Pololia and l'oltava regions—places
where the Jews were subjected to ter-
rible pogroms during the civil war and
are now reduced to a new economic
hardship.
While the Orthodox Jews criticize
the new movement for Jewish agricul-
tural settlements in Russia, favoring
the program offered by the Zionist
movement, it majority of the Jewish
population are supporting the govern-
ment's etTcrts and looking forward to
a realization of the scheme which they
hope will insure safety, freedom anti
can tent.
JEWISII 01 RON ICLE
Pen Pictures of New Palestine
IMPRESSIONS OF AN AMERICAN TOURIST
-
-
By DR. JOSEPH SILVERMAN,
Rabbi Emeritus of Temple EmenusEL New York.
These sturdy pioneers are members of ■ co•operative girls colony,
en t dair y farm and have
e an excellent
an d
ti
Nachlat Yehuda, near Ris h
; done extensive tobacco cultivation.
..
"Not by years but by disposition is
Tel Aviv and here discovered the
I.
wisdom acquired."
"new" reigning supreme. It is thrill-
'
A NEW EXODUS
ing to find one's self suddenly trans-
-
--
i or
Th e editor
planted into this bright, clean, white,
Out of Egypt and on to the prom- modern city after the Oriental nar-
Daily News say that "the most hate-
ful alien is the one who accumulates ised land trudged Israel of old.
rowness and dinginess of Jaffa. One
But not like my ancestors did I feels as if the "new" had grown tired
money faster than we can."
travel; not for 411 years across burn- of the struggle with the "old" and
ing deserts, but overnight by the had decided to set up shop on its own
v l
shores of the Mediterranean, whose hook. In Tel Aviv, I found myself
hoarse waves mingled with the roar not in a Jewish quarter or ghetto,
',I. the car wheels. I traveled in a but in a wholly Jewish city with a
PATRICK H.
luxurious railroad sleeper, and with Jewish municipal government, mod-
the swiftness of the wind, from Alex- ern in appearance, in thought and
, amide to Jerusalem.
progressive spirit. No wonder the
I lay awake a good part of the
night overwrought with a sense of the
strangeness of it all. The God of Is-
rael had whirled not about the earth
With ten years' experience
for centuries and now Ile was whirl-
as Circuit Judge in the Up-
ng me home again. What mysterious
, ing
per Peninsula of Michigan,
destiny was Ile working out through
is a candidate on the Dem-
me? I felt 3,000 years of history
surging through illy soul.
ocratic Ticket for
And this homeland about which so
Touch had been written and spoken
%could I find it big with promise and
achievement, or only a mirage and a
delusion, such as the hectic vision
the thirsty traveler beholds in the
desert?
In the early morning my train
thundered into Luthl. Through the
vvindow I saw a group of stalwart men
WAYNE COUNTY
swinging down the tracks, ready for
the day's work. There was something
Your influence and vote, and
,
about their gait and poise which was
family
and
your
those of
not of the ordinary day-laborer.
friends, on Election Day, Nov.
"Chalutzim!"
flashed through my
4th, will be appreciated.
, mind and I spoke the word aloud.
"Correct!"
said
any neighbor across
JUDGE O'BRIEN'S RECORD
the aisle, a black-bearded man who
Born !ti Keweenaw County, :Michigan, March 15, 1801. Graduate
looked
like
a
merchant.
"Not hard
of the High School at Calumet, Michigan; admitted to the bar in
to recognize them, is it?"
1891; practiced law eight years in Superior, Wis.; six years Village
I
looked
intently
after
the
sturdy,
Attorney at Laurium, Mich. (lad large general practice in the
retreating figures. "No," I answered,
Upper Peninsula. Had wide experience as a trial lawyer. Success-
"it
is
not
hard
to
recognize
the
mos-
fully represented the defendant in many notable criminal cases. Was
, ters of the soil."
elected Circuit Judge in the Twelfth Judicial Circuit on the Demo-
Later in the day, when the train
cratic ticket in 1911. This circuit is overwhelmingly Republican.
pulled out of Ladd and was climbing
*reed ten years on the bench. Resigned in May, 1922, to enter
towards Jerusalem, I saw inure such
the practice of law in Detroit.
groups. And when I stepped on the
platform of the station in Jerusalem
two things filled my eyes and mind:
the station signs in Hebrew, Arabic
and English and the pioneers of the
homeland—the Ilebrew language, its
renascent spirit, the sturdy pioneers
its growing body.
"The reports about the new Pales-
tine are all true," I cried. "The He-
brew tongue--the chalutzim! It all
spells redemption."
O'BRIEN
bonds of Tel Aviv are listed in the
New York market.
Building, building, building! They
are building in Tel As-in and vicinity.
The streets of the city are moving
step by step towards the sea. To the
north and east new suburbs are
springing up. There are the Nordic
suburb, and the new Boruchov quar-
ter, where an excellent training farm
for girls is being conducted.
I stopped to talk to a portly-looking
Jew who was bustling about near a
house under construction. I soon
learned that he was to occupy the
house.
"Well, neighbor," I remarked,
"how does it feel to build a home in
the homeland?"
Ile smiled and wiped his forehead.
"It took me four years before I could
start," he replied.
"Until you got rich here," I
laughed.
"I am as poor as I was," he an-
swered. "The difference is that the
General Mortgage Bank was estab-
lished and I was able to get a loan."
In the establishment of this bank
American money had the leading part,
for it was founded with some of the
first funds which the Zionist leader,
Dr. Weizmann, raised in the United
States some two or three years ago
fur the Keren Ilayesod. Hundreds of
homes and other buildings have been
made possible through this bank.
They have been erected in the colo-
nies as well as the suburbs, towns and
cities.
My builder complained that it was
no easy matter to get a mortgage
loan.
"Perhaps the bank is not too over-
stocked with money," I ventured to
remark.
"True," he answered, "I suppose I
ought to carry my complaint not to
the bank but to the Jews of the world
and especially to you American Jews.
However," he added, "the money I
did get is really American money and
even the bricks that I am using are
being made here by Americans. I
suppose we need America as much as
we need England."
INSTITUTE NOTES
evening from 7 to 9, es
Frida y
nights. A supply of the
in these languages ha: I i. i ,2,,',., h , (‘'),',,' ndl
It 'y.
-- -
Women'. Special Gym
and Dancing Class:
A special class in gym, ,
for women willL
e open
nesday evening at Slioiri.
ger and Cameron, at 7 t•
Mothers Club:
The Jewish Institute Mothers Club
will hold its first meeting of the sea-
son Saturday afternoon, Nov. 1, 2:30
o'clock, at G87 East High street. The ,
subject fur discussion will be "The
Child of Pre-School Age," led by
1/r. Marie It. Salutsky. Current topics
will be reviewed by Miss Aline Solo-
mutt of the Jewish Daily Forward.
Speis alf l , o
Clue
, G
cr iy aGirls
m
l c l a a n sd , iDnagn:n
Immigrant Social Dancing Class:
Immigrant young men 111111 women
who are anxious to learn American
social dancing are invited to be pres-
ent at the weekly Thursday night
dancing classes at the Jewish Insti-
tute, 087 East High street, at 7
o'clock sharp.
in,g,,. dancing
for girls will be open eti
V,.,I ii ,
day evening at Dwyer St I.
ca me.
tr s ea nwt (1h, sotCsawbnio i
those
work in stores
' ■ ..,, an d
similar
sh'
ff n l a etnt7w.i' l'Il, . !mt e d
to this class.
Sewing, Gym and Dancing
A sewing, gym and d
data
for women is being held ,
day
evening at 7 o'clock t
A camp reunion fur the boys who
user
spent theii vacation at the Jewish School, corner of Mid!,
I Lin.
Fresh Air camp will be held 2 o'clock wood avenues.
Sunday afternoon. Nov. 2, at the Jew-
ish Institute, 6217 East high street.
Candidate for Circuit Judge
An interesting program, which will
Advocates Laws 111, , king
include camp songs, stunts and the
serving of refreshments, is being ar-
Divorces Difficult .
ranged by the cam/ directors and
counsellors.
Frederic 1'. Harward,
rant
candidate for circuit jut'•.
e,la,
Millinery Class for
sated at Williams Colleae
•t,,, l aw
Women and Girls:
department of Yale Cis •
Ile
A millinery class for women and
has been one of the lead, r. •
her
girls will be opened at the new head-
of Wayne county for 2l • •
is
quarters of the North End Branch
considered one of the ht • .
of the Jewish Institute, 579 East yers in the city.
Mn-I be-
Philadelphia avenue, Tuesday even-
lieves the divorce lea
be
ing, Nov. -I, at 7 o'clock sharp. Tui -
amended making dicta,'
,14.
tion is free.
cult to obtain. The fit.-:
..I, he
says, is growing apace and
a:
Library and Citizenship Class:
result, the American how.
Isstin-
Both the citizenship class for men ning 'a disintegrate.
and women and the library which
Mr. llarward has been t.'
r,-,1 by
were formerly located at 1111 West- such men as former Jul.' Angel,
minster are now being held at 579
Judge HurIburt and Hews ll liutzel.
East Philadelphia avenue. The citi-
ze nship class meets every Sunday
"The manly part I.
I.0 with
morning at 9:30 and the library,
which consists of Yiddish, Russian might and main what y”ki
and Ilebrew books, is open every Emerson.
Boys' Camp Reunion:
Joseph A. Martin
Circuit
Judge
He Beat Th ern ...
They're for Him
Every One of His Republican Opponents in
the Primaries,Have Endorsed and Have
Pledged Themselves—VOLUNTAR-
ILY—to Work for the Election of
JOHN B. SOSNOWSKI
to CONGRESS
From the
FIRST DISTRICT
(All wards east of Woodward)
These men, like true Re-
publicans and with
true
sportsmanship, place coun-
try and party above personal
pride. Read what they say in
resolutions adopted without
Capt. Sosnowski's previous
knowledge:
"We, the primary election opponents of John B.
Sosnowski for the Republican nomination as represen-
tative from the First district, do believe •
"That we can hest serve our party, city, state and
country by uniting our support and efforts for the
election of the Republican candidate for Congress.
"That at no time was there greater need of a united,
harmonious Republican party to preserve the Consti-
tution and the fundamental rights of Americans.
"That the voters of the First district can do no
more than to have their district represented by one
born in Detroit; who stands squarely for the principles
of the party, and who will support President Coolidge's
efforts to give the American people an administration
insuring prosperity and happiness to all.
"We believe that John B. Sosnowski, by virtue of
his military service, his successful business experience
and his demonstrated ability to handle large public
affairs, is eminently qualified to be our representative.
That John B. Sosnowski will represent the entire dis-
trict without fear, favor or prejudice.
"We, therefore, urge all voters who have the inter-
ests of their party and the First district at heart not
only to cast their ballots for him November 4, but to
request all their friends to do likewise.
"We pledge ourselves, in the interests of Amer-
icanism and Republicanism, to stand four-square be-
hind the candidacy of John B. Sosnowski for
Congress."
(Signed)
WILLIAM R. KALES
CHARLES R. THOMPSON
SOL BLUMROSEN
TAMES D. ROSS
FRED M. BREEN
CHARLES H. LOOMIS
ARLO A. EMERY
Remember—
Coolidge and a Repub . ;-.an Congress—
For Prosperity and a Full Dinner Pail
REPUBLICAN STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEE,
Burt D. Cady, Chairman;
D. E. Alward, Secretary.
AT HOME
I went to Jaffa, where the landing
of immigrants takes place.
Landing at Jaffa is an exciting ex-
perience. More than once your heart
goes to your mouth as the boats, pro-
pelled by the Arab boatman with his
. pole-like ora, dodge in and out among
the rocks which strew this so-called
harbor. I have been told that they
expect to build a real harbor outside
Jaffa, and the people's trust may soon
he realized. On the other hand, there
are other Palestinians who believe
that Haifa should logically become
the principal port of the country.
I made the acquaintance of a young
I halutz from Roumania. Ile spoke al-
most perfect English. Hu told me
'that he would rather break rocks for
road building in Palestine than live
in luxury and ease in Bucharest. I
knew what he referred to. I had read
of the merciless persecutions to which
the Jewish students of Roumania and,
for that matter, of other lands also,
were subjected.
The nunierus clausus makes a blind
alley of the lives of large numbers
of the best and most aspiring of our
Would this land, I
young people.
asked myself, reopen the vista of their
lives?
The following day, eager to know
what became of him, I went to a cer-
tain attic.. or bureau, as they call it
here, and they took me to a place
outside Jaffa. to a tent colony, where
I found my young friend. I found
him stretched out in the shadow of
the tent. He said he felt as Milton
did when he wrote "Paradise Re-
gained."
"So you hive regained Paradise,"
I remarked. Ile laughed and said that
they had promised him employment
with some labor group that was going
I out on Fl ddrainage job SOmewhere in
Galilee in a few days. "That will be
Paradise," he suddenly ejaculated.
I was inquisitive to learn who
"they" were, and what in general this
tent colony was. I learned that the
colony was an immigrant receiving
station, maintained by the Keren
Ilayesod, where the chalutzim stayed
employment for them was
found. It gives onea welcome sense
of security to learn of such organized
assistance.
"Well," I said to my young friend,
"you are then a guest of the Keren
Ilayestol."
"I am not a guest," he replied. "In
Palestine I am everywhere
at home."
_
HOMES IN THE HOMELAND
I will confess that In Jaffa I found
nothing to quench my thirst for nov-
elty. I have seen Arabs before strid-
ing through the narrow streets with
that poise and dignity which Euro-
pean clothes are unable to impart. A
curious struggat between the lazy and
dilapidated "old" and the feverishly
ambitious "new" is in progress in
Jaffa, but the "old" still seems to
I have the upper hand.
But to and behold! Today I visited
For MAYOR
"A Fearless Enemy of the Ku Klux Klan"
Protect your own interests by electing
JOSEPH A. MARTIN Mayor of Detroit.
He has bitterly denounced the Ku Klux
Klan and stands for every principle of
an economical business administration.
'
SENATOR JAMES COUZENS SAYS OF JOE MARTIN:
"I think that most everyone knows my confidence and belief in Mr.
Martin,̀ both as a man and as a candidate for Mayor, and my own inti-
mate association with him for a number of years naturally shows him up
to me to be the best candidate,"
Endorsed by Senator James Couzens and
Thousands of Prominent Detroit Jews
This ad donated by friends