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PAGE FOUR'

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—

VETROIT Ewtstl !MON ME

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Val °Wiwi...1

Published Wsolily by Th• Jewish Chronicle Publiahlog Ca, loc.

Joseph J. Cummins, President and Editor
Jacob H. Schakne, General Manager

Mg, et lbw Paetolleo at Detroit.
sterol a. Second•claes waiter March
MkIL, uader the Pat of March I. WC

General Offices and Publication Building
850 High Street West

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Subscription. in Advance

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eek oast roach this
To Mears publication, all correspoadenro and news natio.
°Mee by Tuesday evening of each

of liar",
correepo ridence ow aubiecte
the
Th. Detroit J J..1.11 Ch oalele Invites
to tho Jewish pooplo. but disclaims riestonelbility for as lationenowt _
view. ozproasod 7 the writitr.„

at

......

Fehtuary 13, 1925

Shebat 19 5685

Emergency and Opportunity.

.- 2 41?) -7 1fi ati,t

-larr'S

than to the leaders of the ()rt. They realize that no
matter what be the fortunes or the vicissitudes of the
Soviet government, the position of the Jew can only be
safe if he is trained to beyself-supporting as an indus-
trial or agricultural worker.
It may be a far cry to believe that the regeneration
of society will come through the vitalizing influence of
creative work, and that the motive force generated by
the creative impulse will eventually demarcate social
life and set up new standards of values and human re-
latiOnShipS; yet no one can or will deny that through
creative, useful work the Jewish people in Russia will
acquire a dignity and sense of respect which it has

heretofore not known.
The Ort is dedicated to this form of social regen-
eration and seeks to enlist the support of all those who
•
from
f
,
value . which
appre c ut to the spiritual
lied, creative, productive labor. When you contribute
your share to the emergency fund you are doing your
part in reclaiming a part of Jewry in the joyous enter-
prise of building a new world out of the chaos, ugliness
and insecurity which has been Russia for centuries.
The Ort does not want sympathy or charity. It
gives neither and seeks neither. It trains for useful-
ness and it lends so that the recipient may become self-

—

Contemporary
Comment

MONUMENT FOR SALOMON

The Federation of Polish Jews in
America has set out to raise the sum
of $100.000 which is to be used for
the nurpose Of erecting a monument
to Flavin Salomon in Madison Square,
York City. Ilaym Salomon,
New
5 who
llied in Philadelphia in 178, was
probably the first Polish-Jewish im-
migrant to America. lie was a lin-
guist and financier and aided greatly
the American colonies during the
Revolutionary War. After his ileath
it was s discove red tha he had lent the
government $350 000 which was
never returned to him, in spite of the
efforts of his heirs to recover the
money. Nor has the attempt to make
the government recognize in a formal
way the services of Ilaym Salomon
ett jeerwfsatien.
ofetthwelthpoalibsh
h h'se c to4tyinotrrt y, m
to T

America to erect a monument to their

, ir .
1
Jewish Tragedy In Eastern Europe

/

(Copyright, 1925, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.)

By DR. ARNOLD MARGOLIN

(The author of the article, formerly Supreme Court Justice in
the Ukraine, who is thoroughly acquainted with conditions in the ter.
ritories comprising the former Russian Empire, voices the views held
by many Jewish groups in Soviet Russia with regard to Jewish solo
nization work. While not in agreement with all the views expressed.
believe that the arguments presented here merit attention.
we
E utbol

W here would it J ew, living under
the Sovie t regince, prefer to be at the
t
present time—in
tuba Cherbourg,
Bremen or in Kieft, Minsk, Tiflis?
Ile would prefer to be in Havana,
Cuba, because there the Dias or the
the would take
Council of Jewish
care of him. If not Havana,
he would
h
li:r to be in any western European
li!,,?-rIt
where the American Jewish
Emergency Committee is taking steps
to help him. In Russia, the Ukraine,
Crimea or Caucasus he would he for-
silken, as the Joint Distribution t o m-
miller has ceased to support our
brethren arid is engaging in agricul-
tu ral experiments.
Would the east European .few pre-
far to be amanual laborer or a peas
ant in the Uni n of Soviet Republics,
. mer-
or a teacher, lawyer, writer, Jr

tierience of Russian Jewry in
e mergencies has shown that the -.um!
ten of those who have lived for a I .i:c
time in their localities, who kn.,
local dialect and have old
among the non-Jewish populate, !-
safer than would be that of newly
In these uncei tam
rived settlers.
days, 110 one s ould advise a Moic.iitc
Jew to emigrate to Armenia to. :h i .
Ukraine or Crimea. If they are c
pelittl to make a new start in life ,oval
1,0me agriculturists, let them lit
in their own localities, 'lid far II: le
the cities and districts where they
"Here I am; here I remain," imed
I think, the slogan for those who
not leave the country. Especially dd.:.
gerous are the transmigration, I,. ih..
Ukraine, Crimea or Cauvasus,
the possibilities of national
against the Mi scoW domination nee
obvious. This ought not to be fir
gotten I y the supporters of the aim
fur Jewish agricultural settlemen:,
a large scale in the Ukraine and

illustrious compatriot is laudable and
The drive by the United Jewish Emergency Fund
worthy of encouragement. It is ap-
or emergency relief work will open
$1
50,000
f
Protiriate at this time when the coun-
ect
to
try is being fed up on talk about the
on reflb.
Fe 15.
supporting.
Nordic superiority and the foreign-
The money is to be used for Jewish refugees, for '
ion, of the Jew. 'The revival of the
I
the Ort Reconstruction Fund, the United 'Hebrew
memory ilf Ilaym Salomon will re-
mind our hyper-patriots and I00 per
Schools of Detroit, the Young Women's Hebrew Asso-
centers that the Jew is no alien on
elation girls' camp, the Hebrew Free Loan Association
the, shores and that he has at all
The child labor amendment, fo r the present defeat-
chant in the same country?
times antirociated fully the meaning
and the Jewish Chautauqua Society. None of these
i
w
Ile would prefer to be a manual
activities is included in the Community Chest and con- ell,, will, when passed, be known as the tth
of his allegiance to this country. We
s.
fabIllYr, for then the Ott would help
cybh the Federation of Polish Jews
our contribution there does not cover the amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
him by providing tools and credits. If
in Xnuirica godsneed in its enterprise.
sequently y
Two special reasons are behind this amendment,
he were a teacher, writer or lawyer he
Chicago Sentinel.
present emergency undertakings.
What can and must be done by Am-
would be allowed to starve without
Reasons why the fund should be subscribed—in- the decision of the Supreme Court declaring unconsti-
—
erican Jewry for their eastern Eiwie
any attempt being made to help hint.
SHALL
JEWS
CONTRIBUTE?
deed, oversubscribed— are as many as the agencies tutional the act regulating child labor in relation to
titian brethren?
The
situation
of
the
Jewish
intelli-
fail-
; second, the legis-
—
Before the war Jewry was di, :did
m o
which are represented in the campaign. Jewish life, commodities in interstate commerce
genzia under the Soviet regime is a
Orr Catholic contemeorary, Amer-
into two points of view concert:we Om
enact child
tragic one. I quote the following front
ha take , Catholics to task for eon-
whether approached from the purely local standpoint ore of the Southern States t
system and character of the sooperi
a letter received front a Jewish coin-
triboting to the creel on of the Ca-
of the less fortunate. The !MI mdali.
or from the point of view of the troubled situation the lation.
total worker in Kietf :
thedral of St. John t he Divine. The
lished Jewish institutions recouri.i.-ii
The opponents of the child labor amendment have
"The rumors that the general situa-
editorial takes a .trictly doctrinal
world over, is a many-sided phenonemon. Jewish
only one way, that of charity. Jecci.-1:
Don of the Jews in the Soviet tern-
slant and warns true believer , atrain•t
s, by virtue of the circumstance that the Jews are raised the ancient argument of states rights as against
democratic elements insisted on gic ice
tories is good and that they need no
bethink! to spread "heresy." "Heresy,"
need
Federal control. The states' rights position is as illogi-
constructive help.
more assistance from abroad are false
more intimately affected by the changing situations in
it declares, "is nut a figment of the
Now, when the former Russian Em-
it is antiquated. Its upholders do not realize
as
and absurd. The lack if a means of
imagination. It is as real as cancer or
y country
of
the
world,
are
multiplied
in
an
almost
cal
pire is in ehaiis and future ilecelep-
an
t
livelihood aiming the Russian and
that the historic political and economic reasons which
smallpox or murder. 111111 infinitely
ments are still uncertain, the .Lod
anner.
The
logic
of
the
situation
calls
for
but
Jewish
intelligenzia
is
very
great.
The
noire dangerous. No sane man would
m
Distribution C. ininittee adopts a
one thing—and that is constructive statesmanship. And at one time gave it a validity no longer obtain.
misery if the intellectuals has never
contribute in any way to the spread
policy. It has ceased its chant:dile
reached such dreadful proportions as
The
13
colonies
along
the
Atlantic
seaboard
were
of
direase
in
a
community.
Nor
can
work
and prep ses it constraitice
statesmanship in the field of Jewish philanthropic ef-
at the present tinw.
any genuine Catholic contribute to
up-
to 0111111111 .1 ewish
scheme
fort can only be expressed in cohesion of purpose and •;overeign states jealous of their own authority, indus-
"Due to the 'reduction of stalls and
the strepethenine of any group or
1111 - rIl.
in
the
Ukraine and Crimea,
trially autonomous, with but the crudest means of corn-
'house-cleanings' in the Soviet institu-
society pledged to thach heresy" We
ante with the protect of the Si,,mo
unity of effort.
tiens, thousands of families remain
cannot become excited over the tUf-
The emphatic and interesting aspect of the United munication, and dependent more upon England and
government.
without bread; all bourgeois clerks
ferences in theology which are con-
.th
doubt
la
Manv
.v Fund drive is the fart that it calls Europe than upon each other. In the formation
of the
out It is
.
by
anY
estabhsbed
church
as
and
empl , yes were thrown out.
merg
•
L
ripe tf u r
Jewish
-.Were('
of
a
Federal
Government
they
were
loath
to
relinquis
t
t
h
thee
.ef
tlicien
o
e
eu
-
o sq
heretical. M anY roa d s lead tiva
only tmih•
for a marshalling of all the forces in the community m
it
n
is
n
qucstu
,
T
h
e
Ill'iSt.
I
or 0 a altary sway to
:um .
'bt
lo use
of their authority to the Federal Government and
tion. B ence we feel t t-at any aid we
nre than anyt h ing i C-.•
me al: A
order to make the campaign a success not only in a fi -
jiband be classed am ing the
jib
may extend to either the Protestant
litical t is I mkoow the RU S Sillli a llil
po.
agreed that only limited delegated authority be vested
‘thse l es se tl,' that is, people without any
nancial but in a moral sense. The drive might triumph
or the Catholic faith, any funds we
uhl td.
v
s .wi ltfrythet-x. tei...t
siarntt.a
eititi, , rii,ian peasants.
Uikasee
in it.
r ,,y. in
rights s I , but ,,,v:n• iiti ) h 1 , , all( 1 t ihse gduties.
may raise to help either iotes ., ..f yai'nlii g
in an avalanche of dollars and yet fall short by virtue
g every'ngr
function
n
a
deeper,
more
sat
i
hop
e-
they
„d ernoc ralW
by ifvo
With the development of means of communication
a
of the fact than only a part of the community gave
day and help is urgently needed."
spiritual if among thr• i ie whit are
or parliament, to give land to .h.•
Ilow can the dreadful situation of
and industry in the Northern States, the dependence
handsomely, while the rest indifferently stood back.
for
the
time
being.
the
beneficiaries.
..,,
Jews. But I doubt whether they te
the eastern European Jews be ante -
u non Europe decreased, while the interdependence ''
We flail' with rejoicing the many con -
give their sanction to reforms made ii
The success of the drive will be gauged by the sir -
(listed?
tributione being made toward the
.
-
This
diminished
the
militant
this field by the Soviet governmer ,
cumstance that not a few, but all. Jews of Detroit, pre
the states increased.
It is clear that e.:ery Russian or
building "f the Cathedra
Protests of peasants against I!,
Ukrainian Jew who can leave his na -
state's rights theory appreciably and brought to the
the Divine. Had the drilv'e'fftiSrt-fiu'n'hd'S
sented with a situation which the organized conscious-
scheme of Jewish colonization work d
tive country and emigrate to Pales-
e
r-
n Catholic venture, we should
states
an
attitude
of
dependence
upon
the
Federal
Crimea and the Ukraine have alreah
ness of the community has deemed an imperative em
t, cn
i o e,Atrhgee rli t li, iut,e ds S.at la ors, Canada, Mrx.
t c :% t n e i,,b ne eo rnf teiclu al i l ligyh,h raphpeyr.esy0 jusr i,c,to,t)i:
, ,overnnient as a regulatory agency among them. The
icin voiced
cy,
bande
themselves
together
to
perform
a
task
(.
d
galley,
.
' l
.
t .o
Australiaoug' ht to ' d'o so. Itu t̀ a Wl
sovereignty among the Northern
(-ranee, meanness and hatred. As far
j
theory of jealous
quickly, eagerly and in a
i,,e ,,,, ar ,, e r ,„1 n , ribu 'ie n g dgI e Cr r iIa t u hn te Ts lith F r i ls . tg tii r:
•
t
i
sir`t
i (Ty s '
, et- co tati t tt
n-xni
a q et existing
,k,nn i iyw a t511, 1t111u In, d
ion at t(h(r,;ts.
t h i t el jyrt feel
t i i ii ne ti .i: l t i a. a iin iiii t v : ,f.cnuonntec,tt: cr.) n a t - h itl ,nt r:
or elsewhere
does
•
States has all but vanished.
not a thinking Jew in De troit
methodical
way. who
There
t
- wi.tsh(omust;h(lictto,,,..
might
.1, 1.,thitnuritohw aA, Tieterti.eicitai n.ltw
nn; (thrr,aetr:n, tr i al
For many years after the formation of the Federal
ttirt i rucait:fflf ,rott
not, in the recesses of his heart, wish that Jews
s.lows
another brick to the ever - grbwing,
dwell together as brethren in understanding and sym-
Government the Southern States were closer to Eng-
the
way
in
which
the
money is t I,
in eastern Europe. Those who are
but never completed, House of God.
pathy. Here and now we the Jews of Detroit, have
land than to the Northern States, and consequently the
compelled to remain within the bound - spent.
—American Hebrew.
Lit
the
Russian
and
Ukrairile
aries of the Union of Soviet Republics
an opportunity to make communal history by working
idea of state sovereignty was accentuated to the point
Jews be more independent and alit , -
must find another solution.
DOOM OF YIDDISH
and giving, by thinking anti acting, in a spirit of Jew-
where the Southern States seceded front the Union
The main thing is to know that they mous. Consult with them and ti, di
—
success in
them with more confidence and I
when they felt that the North attempted to deprive
ought it do. I have done my best to
IA comradeship, knowing that tic
Before the war it used to be regard-
epect
calling
warn
the Jewish leaders in this coun-
the drive we are performing necessary duties
them of their inalienable state's rights.
iS iagl . 1
n
e(I as blasphemy by adherents of Yid-
I
' TIM S ov i et goverment
tryagainst
encoura gin tc at this tim e
ns for
a
...-
dish fur any'one. to venture the
for immediate attention and laying the foundatio
see Ame ri can lidla rs clime into
ible at this time whether the
r-
within
the
Ico
rati
on
It is very questionable
sh
transmig
Jewi
- _,,,,.,
inion that the Yiddish has no future
tpulilies
op
l' i
is merely a sio -
ders of the Union of Soviet Re mbli s
even greater undertakings which the community will state's
or
right
doctrine
has
any
virility
's
i in this country. In fact, the lovers of
smn h'i c f ihi S tr ielt i
thrtu
hat the (.1 I etto .
Let' us nut forget that
be required to assume in the days to come.
ot half 'as fanatically
Hebrew were not
gait in the South. The peaceful penetrati on of intlus -
l' rpecl, ' thel raef'icire., atilian tdsCle- US:
be
e 'mem will
guarantee that the Soviet ret,ri
jealous about Hebrew an
zeal od
us an
l
ug
,t).ah,,,,,,,nrizittit,i t,gisothhu,,li l,f,eancoria, t , itzhste- ,1 ! ,ty,, t ;i:: .
ii,i
onu
t
i
i
td
at
i
d
e
ur
try and communication has gone on for a half century
t
tence.
One
is
af
tr emain in xis
d
;sere the Yiddishists about Yid ish
ha
ii n t,
v edi
h
but the traditional theory of state autonomy still has
°vf Yid d ish
inf it' these
brethren
m
an
)
(
I
x
'
,
1
kl7
admitted
l
is
;ra
Yn
'
nutny emotional champions in that part of the country.
for the distribution of nvini!i 'Y li;ci C••,
became again the scene of civil war
writers themselves. It is taken for
are to be the benefiejar-
erican .lewish organizations.
and national upheavals. The sad ex -
Of the organizations Which
eals For a Northern state to object to an amen dment which
t ,etl iTbytasnogme d,t,hee% one hot
g2n
lea of the emergency drive, that which perhaps ap p
affects the whole country on the ground of depriving
neel
m he see ss co nnvim
of cha' nges which
least to the emotions is the Oct. It is not local or even
the states of their legitimate authority is quite absurd•
are imminent for the Jewish masses.
national. Its urgency is not immediate and its non
The regulation of child labor is not a particular state
,,Ju enwsini rfio xr-amrai :
o
i ri-i rft.e.ietao. i n, g
function; it is something which touches the whole
, I t R a. t!a l lit s °f
r
st uctive program has none of the elements of the spec-
lion on the decline of Yiddish as the
Neither. This fur-seeing, enlightened organization pro-
country in a most vital manner. But there is a serious
language of the Jewish masses. In
mitted that living conditions '
tel
advance
industrial
training
and
agricultural
When the news of the death of
objection
to
the
amendment.
though
not
insuperable,
poses
certainly were 'susceptible
Samuel Compers reached Holland,
r found out inns
.
settlement of Jews in Russia. The aims of the Ort were and only the actual enactment and enforcement -will l abo r r lueras ("
improvement, but that at least
Ilenri
Polak,
editor
of
the
official
or-
Americanization process is not lim-
and light were to be found in -
praiseworthy at all times, but at this time the wisdom
prove its goodness or badness.
ran of the Diamond Workers' Union
ited to the change of language on the
.
streets, which were wide and ree
and a prominent Dutch labor leader,
of its policy must be apparent to anyone who has fol.
part of Americanized Jewish immi-
The really serious objections come front the South-
"I pointed out that the 141 l
wrote an account for Het Volk of Am-
lie
grants. They also change their oc-
lowed the course of events in Russia since 1917.
ropean cities had nearly all been t.'
stardom
of
an
experience
with
the
Despite the shortcomings of the Bolsheviki experi- ern States, where child labor statutes have not been
li
cupatione and social status.
resses
and that it had been twee--
American labor chief. It read, in
passed. in these states the exploitation of children is
; plectrneleeatiln trade
quneAs
to he sparing with the room 0
part, as follows:
ment. one fact is that, no nuttier what cataclysm nuty
ouinreenx
lI' oPef°m
their
walls,
while the traffic ,,, .
befall a people, if that people has a large number of a black page in the industrial history of America. The
: set
fht,a
have
i,;
eex shall
theanlna
"It was about 12 years ago, when
shows
, :o ft o t t t ta .ht jeleN ,i
,paersanh,
union
t s . cin.:elaiiie
Ilas the
olden days was light and in the th ,
question arises anti is rather perplexing:
masses
Samuel Gompers, accompanied by his
speaking
cities in particular, was mostly .
d in the industrial arts. equipped with tech-
slave-holder attitude greater strength than.the author-
men trainee}
wife and daughter, made a visit to
red on by water. This was ne-i
broies which
the language
Amsterdam. I noted as his guide.
arise, they can over come all the diflthich
of the Federal Government For it must be remem-
nic al skill
him, but he justly observed that ..'
,
i
e
t
e
hr
e
aitninn
,
:kb
ti
does.
unbi
rte
e
.
a:T
o
„,
,
I.,
,
(a
i
tit,,artuS.
Ile
took
great
interest
in
the
city
ni
b
yi
,
h
land, ,tliz
arise.
The
picture
of
Russia,
with
aficu
in the olden days there was no '
bered that the fifteenth amendment emancipating the
may
where his father had been horn and
for such conditions, nowallitY ,
indtistrial system, devoid of artisans and technicians,
n
s
enjoyed
looking
over
the
old
quarters
has brought home to many the grave dangers which negro has been a dead letter in the South since its pass-
were under the obligation to
'
become
employers.'
and
the
stately
canals.
He
asked
me
age. NVith the aristocratic contempt of a superior peo-
away such junk and provide la .
to take him to the street in which his
"Thus it seems to me that 1 have
lie close to the surface in all countries which have
dwelling places. I had to agree
Pte the southern white has made it practically impos.
found the key to the cause that drives
father had been born and had grown
I told him that a beginning h., I
neglected their human resources. The most neglected,
our people to give up the Yiddish Ian-
up. I inquired Which street it Wan,
sible for the negro to vote.
ready been made, right near i,
guage. The change of occunations
and he answered ',darken,' meaning
and consequently the nmst.genuine sufferers, are the
Valkenburg street, and I add'
What will this same state's rights, aristocratic in-
people
and
t
i o n [ o, business
from i ' , workers
the Valkenburgerstraat. Did I know
Jews. The political, economic and religious reasons
then fantastic remark that M.,
- holder do
er
the place? I replied affirmatively.
for discrimination against Jews in Russia are common dustrialist with the psychology of the slave
would
probably soon have its t ,
-
d
occu;
And wasn't it a famous island?
ThcPc cluing:es in language ane
in the event this amendment is passed? Will he ignore
Prophecy
that, thanks to the
ro
-
lion
parallel
each
other."---Jewish
knowledge. But the grim fact remains that the piti
"I informed him that there certain-
ties of the Social Democratic 1
it
with
the
perfunctory
recognition
and
disobedience
Ledger.
ly was a 'famous' island called Mar-
men, probably will be fulfilled
ful conditions of our people took on an added serious -
--
ken, but that his father had nut seen
ness when the last shot of the war and revolution was that has characterized all of America toward the pro-
a romparatively short time.
A SENSIBLE WOMAN
the light of day there, but in the quar-
"While we were talking I had
hibition amendment?
Russia.
-
platio n called
A
new
standard
of
values
emerged
in
ter that the Je wish opu
rd Gonmers into the Roode Le.. ,
fired.
Among enlightened, socially conscious people no
A
t he most capable tw, riters lo-
the same thing. And I added that he
Ile looked around. ga.
There was a transvaluation of all values. Social posi-
gang.
S.
W
valid reasons can be urged against a child labor amend-
e.r r i c a . it t. p usbelviec
must not anticipate too much from
fO ir leln;h°l f
the worn stairways, equipped
hereditary prestige, property anti money lost all
ral fait:
h s Mitrken. Whereupon he answered
Cather, ' aumtl
lion,
meat,
with
the
possible
exception
that
the
age
is
too
shiny
ropes,
and through the e •
novels of western life. One of the
that his tattier came from thP Jewish
value and only the capacity for productive labor count -
i nto the houses, wandered 1,,,, ii
t
o-
,,i,,,
, ti. s t.nt
ht n .r ,ai . x kiii
main
proletariat, had been a poor cigar-
canal and stared in stupefx..
ed. The members of the nobility and royalty, the high.
it
i sense. Her o
maker and therefore must have been
Will the hard-bitten. narrow-minded mill owners
the decaying, dirty surroundom
; st:',
well and delicate-
does the statement
reCenily
horn anti raked in a poor quarter.
Which
r
forme owners of vast properties. the
this had already attracted ate
ost precarious state. of the South set to nought a Federal amendment
an interviewer who asked her whether
Then I asked him if he knew in what
It
m
ly bred found themselves ill
and 'OMP women began nutting
population
latrie
n:
,
enjoys the moral support and the enlightened self-in-
atr
h
teis
a
wet'
u
nt
i
a
n
eg
.
ettin
t i, hceofn atrie .ii i if
house his father had lived. Ile said
heads together. More or less angel
They had not been trained in the industrial arts. They
he did not. but that his father had
terest of the whole country? It is only for the South
marks were heard, whereupon I
t i) the
c untry. Her reply to
f the
,
had no special training in the crafts and were unfitted
sion
oo
him that it stood in Red Lion
praically
ct
order to prevent a street distert
h
(!,i, unntriLa t , ,i ., w h
court. I burst out laughing at hear-
labor. The whole that such an amendment is needed. for it is
spoke to the women in Jewish.
to do an, y necessary or productive.
nh
-
w
c
oit
certain front present observed tendencies that all the quf.,
ing this translation of the Donde cured them that both of us licho
outside of Russia was very sympathetic and
tribute? The' x: art- a s
World
Leeuw..ngattlr, that miserable alley
Northern States will enact state laws Which will give
to their race and that the f ,
something to sel; they are not gyp-
.•
over the entrance to which a red Dori
ci.i 'tor had merelv come to ,,
ma ny stories calculated to touch the hearts of human-
nc to grow up to healthy,
the children of America a chae
sies. They have come here to live in
had
been
carved
in
stone.
ity were published depicting the hardships these
hirthn`are of h'e. father. That '1
thesense
that they lived in the Old
t
The
next
day
the
visit
to
Marken
I
took
a'
"The
ght.
yerything all right.
princelings and aristocrats endured, the sordid lives joyous manhood and womanhood.
World, and if they were let alone
tr- of the favorable sentiment
Despite all that may be urged against it, anti with
c7hi.
e b. e i f ruku t: was made. It was gloomy worst er
it ticioat
th :tuor n r neh oi m
yn, omt
their lives
they led anti the menial work they were compelled to
with occasional drizzles of 'chilly rain '
th
1 . anvb•dy knew anything ab"" .
shed a tear over the predicament of a a knowledge of the fate of the fifteenth and eighteen
The initiated know how Valtenbur:
1,0nirers family, bet no tele •
ng
. l et
we have the feeling that this enabli,
t e1I f eu ere
do . Rut I10 one
eerstraat Lailis on such a day. I
ame n dments
glee es any information.
- call thern 0 at xos
a
ers. missionrie
people which was equally wretched. t ourthroug h
not attempt to describe the long.
•hall
freedom-giving amendment should receive the support
"Gomners Caen won the w.,,
will - -go aft er them, hound them and
Jewish people
narrow street, with its filthy, tumble-
hearts by saying a few w ,r'
fault of its own. That people Wits the
devote
their
days
and
nights
toward
of Russia, a people prevented from engar(ng in many of every state that has any concern for the future of
down hovels, it. pavement riven.
Dibeh.
after which we turned
the great task of turning them into
with a layer of mire and all kinds of
America.
hare's upon Marken. Gomper-
etupid reolicae of smug Amrican citi -
useful occupations, degraded by callings which Russian
it.
lively
but
shabby
in-
i
taagnet,and
,ahIc
he
never
wanted to see it a-.7:01'
This is not an amendment violative of any racial
'
zn ens.mT n Itt e ton ssiond foz. ‘ Azepcsniz -
aristorratic stupidity had imposed upon it. If the Jews
prejudices. which tieprives of personal liberty, but is
Two
thousand
children re''
menschen, speculators, money
s t f
u
of Russia were luft -
n Pli
fi :irer'dt hatnnol'airn
prgees recently for attend:ewe
f aht'dbcfs
a
cele.
- based upon the broadest humanitarian principles which
' h m i eintaypii,
".. )nui.tn itf: o:Ii
yl.‘S:preees edd:ig
itoh.u' sitsos..ar
lieg'e rueil d'. h
lenders, parasites, it was much n-ore the fault of
Czar
the
New York J.
touched, my companIon looked
looked around
.chnlarship at
the de- make for a humanity of better quality. It is entirely
wasn't
so else matters..
,
dispatch,
c.hit
religious schools Samuel D
that t°f-uht na :1:hen silt
ails
ism than their own fault. Be that a s it may,
in line and wholly consistent with the fundamental
jrdge of the C,ildren's Court.
our neighbors were l o oking at was much wo • etrlii-an , hde
was a child
pressing fact remains that the precarious condition of
principles underlying all those amendments which have
h a d expected. More or l er,:se
• 'ded at the pre:catation, all
alt ody paid any atten -
forners.
Nob
ei
I replied that what I had read iiit eni
dre•Se. were given by Dr. Da,
I
freedom
and
enlarged
the
liberties
of
the
peo-
outside of the attention
the Jew- equalled, if it did not surpass that of the de-
t
them
th
.
1
•
.
t irnb,1mei st.
--aristorracy.
t'-e
tenement
houses
Pnal,
nt
the
vetarl
-
alone."
ra
nerk
S
naelnd c
t.e
am
m
lis
d n1 DIr.. Br Icam
e
t
i
h
h
t
royalty
anti
c
ie
,ve
l
they
plc. It must be borne in mind that just this was the
classe groups of ex -
an
where the proletariat ' of
enntseiable. iN
This shocking condition has had a salutary effect
v
n
i d ( ' Yellin.
t7
e
Da
.
h
o
Chicago
Thinkin
other
American
cities
tact
r.gitehh,7c:::;Nnontrodnicsennosnesenre.vi.it
upon those who appreciate the fundamental requisites purpoFe of the original 10 amendments, inasmuch as - that,
with er
tshutea.
mayor of Jerusalem, gave add
e•actly convey the im -
of human existence under all conditions. Anti to none the people of the colonies refused to approve the con
pre
,
sion
of
ideal
conditions.
lie
ad-
in
Hebrew
and
English.
Exponent.
has the lesson been more profoundly brought home stitution until these amendments were added.

The Twentieth Amendment.

h ' e t■

Significance of Ort.

WHEN GOMPERS SAW AMSTERDAM
SLUM, HIS FATHER'S BIRTHPLACE

Ze3'57.-

/611114

- -12>I'n'OY

"qx

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ssttaeai.)
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