Americo .wish Pcriedieal eater eurToti annul • entwines's 20, OHIO 1927 \ Man Pursued l's; for s and L yet it way be K. IfEbETROIT EWISII 11 -ROXICL All Jewish News All Jewish Views WITHOUT BIAS THE OLDEST JEWISH NEWSPAPER PRINTED IN MICHIGAN DETROIT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1927 T E m VOL. XXXII. NO. 7 RABBIS DISCUSS MODERNIZING OF RELIGIOUS LAW "I FRANKLY CONFESS---' I Proposed Revision of Jewish Customs Debated by Convention. Present Written Apology to Jewish Doctors Whom . They Attacked. NO DEFINITE ACTION TAKEN ON QUESTION INVESTIGATION BY MAYOR CONTINUES Louis Ginsburg Leads Right and Mordecai Kaplan Left Wing. 0 in i ins r e 0 1 ' V IA. 4 e 162 mom SIX KINGS COUNTY INTERNES RETURN TO HOSPITAL DUTY hone laa snue ma can teat slimes. tat it Is not in • • actin t , ton t let twittle urn alai to occasion pa In Rabbi Gross Indignant Over Unexpected Turn of Proceedings. to tht t tt n e teen 0.'• et tort to Tree !emit fra. pre .Ju_lee. Sera - se ASBURY PARK, N. J.— (J. T. : fsene4 cont... that A.)—The issue of the so-called : tove to ti mewls shorten .. a rtel.1 or ey etasty and ex- "Third l'arty" in American theo- ..tutmil or 'ilea nr to. Dearborr Irde, ■ eooent .red o. logical and congregational life was the subject of a broad discussion at the pamphlets stales *The Interrhtirosi led . . t de— the twelfth annual convention of it to be It; euty es In hentrehle elan to en, ....oh. Cc, the Rabbinical Assembly of the Jewish Theological Seminary here. weeny, tIone to the Seat as felloa-aen end brothers, Although the meeting was in the nature of an executive session and nein, tmeir foriiverase tics the tees that tr.•• unirls• • 110 official statement was issued, the ttentLy. "Omitted, by retneettny SO err es Iles stthtr correspondent of the J. T. A. learn- ed that the various trends among ism. the of , endive marmot laid It bete ten. by Iss.. the rabbis affiliated with the as- isatiwitssis, by Oviter t , em t3 ,1 un,uell leVe emir sembly were thoroughly debated with an effort to ascertaining the net nehoefoetb they may :oak to no :ah ohettex,ht, and ro.ee. status of these rabbis and to obtain a definition for this type of Jewish ecclesiastics in relation to the ul- tra-Orthodox and the ultra-Reform. The debate was aroused by a pa- per read to the assembly by Rabbi Israel Goldstein, who asserted that with the Reform congregations be- coming more conservative and Or- thodox congregations becoming more modern, a revision of the place of the Conservative party in the American Rabbinate is neces- sary. Above is a facsimile of a portion of Henry Ford's repudiation of "The Rabbinical Assembly has the anti-Jewish articles which have appeared in the Dearborn Inde- put Conservative Judaism into the pendent. In addition to the letterhead and Mr. Ford's signature, field of American vision,"' Rabbi one paragraph of the statement, which consisted of four typewritten Goldstein said. "Formerly that sheets, is reproduced here. field was regarded as the exclusive preserve of Reform Jews. It used to he thought by the American pub- lic that there were two kinds of Jews: Ghetto Jews and Reform Jews, the latter adjective being taken as a synonym for American. Why was it so? Because Reform Judaism was the only Judaism which was organized and therefore "Forgive and Forget," Say Some "Forgive and Remem- visible and s. ' , ber," Say Others, But All Agree Jew Should • ever thanks to the Rabbinical As- s•mbly and the United Synagogue, Grant Forgiveness. the field is no longer monopolized by a minority section of American Detroit Jewry this week was unanimous in the opinion that Henry farael and the position of Conserva- tive Judaism is recognized and re- Ford's apology ought to be accepted. Opinion was divided, however, spected," he declared. on the question of how fur the Jew should go in granting Mr. Ford's "Heretofore, our chief purpose as plea for forgiveness. The views of representative Jewish leaders in a conservative party has been to this city varied on this point all the way from full and unqualified stem a tide, the tide of Reform. In forgiveness to a demand for further retraction and the dismissal of fact, the very label, Conservative, I those responsible for the policies of the Dearborn Independent, Sen- probably originated as a qualifying timent on this mooted point rallied around two conflicting slogans: adjective with reference to Reform. "Forgive and forget" and "Forgive and remember." In line with its Our role was essentially, I take it, policy to present all sides of the many-sided truth, The Detroit Jewish to guard against the danger of un- Chronicle has solicited the opinions of representative leading Jews of modified reform, while accepting Detroit. The views of those who were willing to express their opinions the principle of progress via inter- are here offered to our readers without comment. pretation. "Now, however, there is a visi- MAYOR JOHN W. SMITH: I ant very glad to inform ble retrenchment in the ranks of the Reform movement in this coun- The Detroit Jewish Chronicle that I consider Mr. Henry : try. The president of the Reform Ford's recent statement an extremely fine and courageous Seminary, in an address a year ago, act. It ends a misunderstanding which is best forgotten as said that the complexion of Reform rapidly as possible. Judaism in America will change This country is founded on tolerance. It is as important and he indicated, as I recall it, that the change would probably take the as patriotism, and Mr. Ford in making this move has taken form of a greater emphasis upon great step forward towards the spreading of tolerance.; the beauty of ceremony in the syna- With his great influence both financial and personal it has , gogue and in the home. Reform Judaism which bids fair to retrace been extremely unfortunate that he has been placed in many of its steps. If it keeps up position of decrying a race which has contributed so much in this way, it may yet encroach to culture in the United States. It was absurd to think that upon what w'e a - c please rail a man of Mr. Ford s wisdom and standing should place Conservative Judaism and thus possibly dispossess us of a good himself in opposition to a peope from which sprang Nathan portion of our rationale. Strauss, Professor Albert Michelson, David Belasco and' "On the other hand, there is the Jacob Leib. I am happier than I can tell that this situation Orthodsx party which has become has been brought to an end. agressive in recent years and is 1 - e HENRY M. BUTZEL: I'm will - -- fast learning lessons of r,rganiza- ing to forgive—but not to forget thin. having sloughed off their man- the tremendous wrong that has nerisms, having changed their ver- been done. Mr. Ford's attention nacular from Yiddish to English, has teen repeatedly called to the they now represent themselves as fact that h e wa s e ngging in cilium- the exponents of the true American ' nies and li es b u t hi' c ont inued in Judaism. The age-old Judaism pursuing his policy. The harm and which they claim can thrive in mischief that it has caused, partic- other lands, and, having learned Sternberg Is Inaugurated Atli tihteiy in Europe, is Si, great that the lessons of organization and of . President; Appoints !it is hard to forgive and imposible ritt wity, they are marching ahead to forget. However, his apology Committees. with menacing strides. Thus, I is so complete that I think we ought some), the danger of losing on both Pisgah Lodge No. 31, I. 0. B. II., to accept it. I know of no way that wings, on the right, on the left. he can make amends for the great Reform becomes chastened and Or- held its semi-annual installation of ro,,s dune, i , i - officers Monday night, at thodox becomes preened. :Ir in ngohf ethheaag libels will thelp. "Indeed, there are some who are time Samuel Sternberg and his ad- Puzzled to understand wherein we ministration were duly inaugurat- MILTON M. ALEXANDER: conservatives differ from this re- ed. Adolph Freund, who was him- Afterr seven years of desultory vamped Orthodoxy which permits self installed as president of Pisgah g. the sponsor of the P• decorum in the service and English exactly 50 years before, was the Bernard Gins- Dearborn Independent admits his in the sermon. There are men in presiding officer. error. Henry Ford deserves no the Rabbinical Assembly whose burg, who was installed as presi- • points view and whose congrega- dent 30 years ago, addressed the thanks that his anti-Semitic cam- paign met with failure. It is no tions would never be tolerated in new officers and the large gathering the Orthodox Union. Neverthe- of members, as did I). W. Simons, fault of his that it did not result in misery, loss and discomfort to the •ss, are there not some men re- Louis J. Rosenherg, A. Jacobs, and garded as quasiheretic by our own Joseph Wolf of the Jackson Lodge. Jews of America. It certainly caused great damage to the Jews ,, slesiastical authorities and have In his speech of aceptance, Sam- of less enlightened nations. Who W, nut heard from our own com- uel Sternberg, the newly installed can question that Ford's anti-Semi- mittee on Jewish Law that an or- president, declared that he will at- gan and mixed pews are abnormal tempt to continue the work of the tic article were calculated to arouse loan the viewpoint of the Rabbini- lodge that has won the praise and the populance to hate d nat• the Jews. That they failed cal Assembly? co-operation of the community. "There is no room in Detroit for in their objective was due to four 'It is a confusing situation," he causes: said, "which is hound to work to the a division in the house of Israel," 1. The flimsy character of the detriment of the Conservative Sternberg said. "It is to the best material printed. party. As Orthodoxy becomes more' interests of all that the Jews should 2. The evidences of bitterness and more Conservatized, what will unite to promote their highest in- be left for the Conservative Jew terests and those of humanity. Pis- and prejudice with which it reeked. 3. The valiant championship of to do' How will he be distinguished gah Lodge, and all B'nai It'rith, fr,. rn the other two?" should serve as a comomn meeting of able defenders, Christian and Dr. Adler urged the greater cul- ground for Jewry, where we may Jewish. 1. The inherent fairness of the ikation of Jewish scholarship and' gather to discuss Jewish problems. research work by rabbis. Laying solve them, and in evefy other re- American public. Unseemly haste in taking Mr. aphasia on the scholarly achieve spect strengthen the glory of Is- Ford to the Jewish bosom is both. m eads of the members of the rabbi- Tact and protect its good name. 1 had taste and bad jadicy. Let us In addition to President Stern.' rate. Dr. Adler also warned against over indulgence in one as• berg, the officers installed were: forgive—and remember. pet of the rabbinate. Henry M. Abramovitz, first vice- JUDGE HARRY B. KEIDAN: I In the rourse of his paper, Dr. president; Morris Shatzen, second Adler alluded to the recent attacks vice-president: Henry L. Lieber- ant glad that Mr. Ford made this p mole on the rabbinate in certain man, third vice-president; Phili move, because it shows that he has intellectual quarter'. "I have an Ettinger, treasurer; Harry Yud- seen the light. He undoubtedly has idea," he said, "that some of you koff, secretary; Abe Lenheff, ward- a great many follower, throughout have grown a little uneasy this en; Rudolph Meyersohn, guardian; the country, and this statement year by reason of attacks made up- and Silas Feinberg, assistant moni- should net these people eight. on your own body and upon the tor. The term of the trustees, FRED 1117TZEL: I am very glad clerical profession in general in Adolf Freund, Herman IVeiss and Publication, that call themselves Bernard Ginsburg, will continue the statement has been made. I hope that the Jewish people in Kra' literature. This I would like to dia- until the next election. ls-I from your minds. Your pro- Announcement was made that Prat will accept it at its face value fession and yourselves are, of the next class, for which applies- and forget the entire incident. General Opinion In Detroit Is Divided On Ford's Statement Of Repudiation a and LLB R A beau- ever nuke• hors, BUY• r(' w. a ,EVH, Ia Ael• week ;MT, AND, and 111.0 Mahe Mahe Es a FREUND INSTPiLLS PISGAH OFFICERS, (Turn to last page.) (Turn to last page.) (Turn to Page Following Editorial) NEW YORK.—(J. T. A.)—The charges of assault made by Dr. Hyman U. Soloway, Dr. Louis Bo- row and Er. Edward Katsbee when they, three of the four Jewish in- terries on the staff of the King's County Hospital, were hazed by a group of their Gentile colleagues two weeks ago, were withdrawn by them in Flatbush Magistrate's Court. They dropped the accusations on condition that the six Gentiles, all suspended by the hospital ad- ministration, apologize and express their regret. This the six—Dr. oduairL,Bnr.Azsitiraomngiv k Hamm, Dr. Kenneth Clough and Dr. IV. B. Stratton--did, and their apology was submitted to Magis- trate Joseph J. McGuire in asking for the dismissal. The letter addressed to Soloway, Borow and Katsbee and signed by the six Gentile internes read: "Gentlemen: We regret the treatment to which you were sub- jected on the early morning of June 20, at the Kings County Hos- pital. Whatever motive inspired it, be it either prejudice or intol- erance, must be abhorrent to good citizenship and we deplore any participation therein by any per- son connected with Kings County Hospital. "We sincerely trust that noth- ing of the kind will ever be re- peated in that institution and that neither prejudice nor intolerance over social or religious differences will ever be known there . "Our support to this end can be counted upon." The formal reply of the three Jewish internes was: "Gentlemen: We beg to acknowl- edge receipt of your letter of even date and to thank you for the ex- pression of regret contained there- in. We assure you that no ill feeling on our part arising from the occurrence referred to by you survives your letter, and we trust that we can regard the matter as a closed incident." Thus the quarrel disrupting the hospital for several weeks is re- moved from the realm of the courts. In place of this, the whole ques- tion of religious prejudice will be gone into at the mayor's hearing, which recessed that Commia one r of Accounts Iliggins may deter- mine whether Jewish internes in other city institutions are the vic- tims of discrimination. Following the dismissal of the case, the Gentile internee' made a move that stunned the Jewish internes and their advisers. They trooped right back to the hospital from which they were suspended after the criminal charges were preferred, to report for duty. The Gentile doctors held that their suspension covered only the time they were under charges. Rabbi D . G r oss, of the Jewish.' expressed ' i ,i his indignation promptly. "We were tricked," he said. "We should have had foresight enough to include this situation in our conferences. The internes should be kept away from the hos- pital until the mayor's hearing. are concluded. This will look like a whitewash for them, and it is no whitewash. EUR OPEAN PRESS SKEPTICAL ABOUT FORD STATEMENT BERLIN.-13. T. A.)—The Eu- ropean press still continues to comment on Henry Ford's with- drawal of the anti-Semitic cam- paign of his Dearborn Independ- ent. 11 r. ord s recantation called forth a variety of feelings and conjectures. The Vossische Zei- tung, German liberal paper, treats the Ford statement ironically. "The auto king was compelled to abandon his cheap product and now is getting rid of his borrowed opinions," the paper states. The Berliner Tageblatt urges caution in accepting Ford's state- ment. "Only a short time ago," the paper writes, "Ford in an in- terview with the representative of the Berlinner Tageblatt, urged the German people to free itself from the slavery of Jewish capital and of the Jewish League of Nations." The German nationalist press states that with Ford's recantation international anti - Semitism has lost a source of financial support.. The Voelkische Beobacht•r, an anti-Semitic organ, and other anti- Semitic journals do not comment on the Ford statement. VIENNA. — (J. T. A.) — The Ford statement was widely com- mented upon by the Austrian press. Some of the editorials see the reason for Ford's recantation in the probable outcome of Aaron Sapiro's libel suit against him. Other papers praise Ford for his manly art, although they term this • rather belated recogniltion of the truth. Still other editorials advise the anti-Semitic leaders is look for new sources of financial support. Some say that the Ford statement was nothing but a pub I licity stunt. GOVERNOR WIRES VIEWS ON FORD The following wire was re- ! coked yesterday from Governor Fred AV. Green: "Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 525 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mich. "The high regard that I have held all my life for the Jewish people has made the Dearborn articles unthinkable. I have n•Vtir been able to recognize in them a single semblance of truth. I am delighted beyond measure that they are to cease and hope they will soon be for- gotten by all own. It was a most unfortunate incident in Michigan history. Mr. Ford has come to the front with his man- ly apology. It is most hearten- ing to find him big enough and broad enough to acknowledge his mistake and I have only the highest praise for his action. Let us hope that our body po- litic will not bear a sear from this regretable lack of under- standing. FRED AS'. GREEN, 1-0-4-0 Per Year, $3.00; Per Copy, 10 Cents MARSHALL, PERLMAN, BRISBANE AND PALMA TELL NEGOTIATIONS WITH FORD ON APOLOGY LETTER Congressman Perlman Says Ford Should Influence of Son ! Former Follow His Apology by Getting Rid of Cameron and Leibold. Ch a nges Ford Edsel Said to Have Favored "JEWS ACCUSTOMED TO FORGIVE," SAYS MARSHALL IN HIS REPLY $1,000,000 Investment In Palestine. Palma Says Ford Regards The abandonment by Henry Jews As "An Essential THIS Ford of the anti-Semitic campaign People." carried on by his Dearborn Inde- ----- pendent for six years was traced BRISBANE URGED FORD to the influence of his son, Edsel, TO STOP ANTI-SEMITISM in circles which claim to be well informed nun the subject. As a proof substantiating this assertion, the fact is quoted that as far back as a year ago negotia- tions were in progress between Ed- sel Ford and a prominent Detroit Zionist for securing the co-opera- tion of the Ford for in the work carried on by the Zionists to rehabilitate l'Ideetitie as the Jew- ish national home. It has been disclorie6 that the, in- vestment of $1,000,000 in l'ales- tine mortgage securities was ne- gotiated by Edsel Ford a year ago Over 300 Lives Lost at Maan, with spokesmen of Zionist invest- ment corporations. Morris Fried- 80 at Ludd, 25 Around berg, a prominent local Zioniist, is said to have beer. responsible for Jerusalem. those neeotiations which, although viewed favorably by Edsel Ford, AID SENT BY PLANE did not culminate due to criticism TO DEVASTATED AREA expressed in certain Zionist quar- ters of the enlistment of Ford's co- Flier Saw Hills Crack Open operation in the Palestine rebuild- ing work. And Buildings Topple In This criticism was based on the Tranajordania, fact that an avowed enemy of the Jews, as Henry Ford was then con- Reports from Palestine indicate sidered, could not be permitted to that 1,000 lives were lost in the re- co-operate with Zionists in the re- cent earthquake, including 300 at building of Palestine. Mean, 80 at Ludd, 30 at Amman, and 72 at Randal, while the town of Nablus was half destroyed and ninny were killed. The hospitals are full and the au- thorities have telegraphed to Cairo for medical supplies, which have been sent by airplanes, including, a Withdrawal Of "Internation- !arise quantity of chloride of presumably for burying the dead. al Jew" Seen As Blow The earthquake is said to he the To Anti-Semites. severest experienced in Palestine in a hundred years. LONDON—(J. T. A.)—Tens of The earthquake produced consid- thousands of copies of Henry erable alarm in Egypt, but there Ford's "International Jew," which was not much damage here and no loss of life. The antiquities au- represents a compilation published thorities are becoming perturbed at in his name in the Dearborn Inde- the increasing frequency of earth pendent, translated into practical- tremors in this country in view of ly every European language, will the instability of many monuments have to be withdrawn from circu- of antiquity which wouldl.' don- lation, it was sstinuited here when gee from more serious seismic dis- the news of llenry Ford's retrac- tion of his anti-Semitic charges turbances. Reports from l'alestine, which and his promise to withdraw these publications was received in Jew- was the center of the earthquake, indicate grave consequences. Un- ish circles here. The impression that llenry l ike previous earthquakes in tha t region the tremors ,a•curred in an Ford's influence backed the vari- ous branches of the anti-Semitic eastward direction from Transjor. denim end not northwest. In Trans- movement in European countries jordania the loss of life and prop- was a source of deep sorrow to many Jewish comniunities on th e erty was considerable. continent where Jewish leaders JERUSALEM—(L T. A.)—The watched with despair the increas- Old City has the appearance of ing number of translations made passing through a military siege as of llenry Ford's "International Jew," in which the charge of an the result of the earthquake. The streets were filled with international Jewish conspiracy to crowds, the people hesitating to en- dominate the world commercially, ter the houses in fear ,if a recur- financially and politically was ex- rence of the earthquake and a pos. pounded on the basis of the so- QUAKE KILLS 1,000; RUIN WIDESPREAD IN PALESTINE AREA Europe Welcomes Ford Retraction (Turn to next page.) TELEPHONE CADILLAC (Turn to next page.) Opinions Of National Leaders On Ford Statement Cover Wide Range Views Range From Flattery To OuLspok*uspicion; Mayors, Judges, Clergymen, Educators, Hans, Financiers Issue Statements. Varied comments, made bv national leaders in every section of the country, greeted the Ford repudiation of the anti-Semitic attacks made during the past seven years in his official organ, the Dearborn Independent. The opinions of both Jews and Gentiles covered a wide field, rang- ing from flowery praise of Mr. Ford's courage to frank and outspoken suspicion as to the motives behind the entire action. A group of the most representative comments follows: MAYOR JAMES J. WALKER of New York, in a statement to American fair play should inspire the Jewish Day: It is very grate- Mr. Ford to impose upon himself the has solemn duty of taking steps to F ord t ying to know dictated a change in the editorial counteract that influence with the policy of the Dearborn Indepen• name energy and enterprise that dent, a policy which, of necessity, was employe,' in his name to s was offensive to a large group of spread the ideas he now acknowl- the has world's our citizens, and which was rem- edges edges were man, false. Ilesry As Ford the dared doubly offensive because it was attributed personally to one unique opportunity of making an whose success in life is due to the amende honorable to the Jewish free opportunity which the Amert• people by sponsoring a world-wide can Constitution guarantees to campaign of education against na- ca sinism, re igiousirsot. every citizen regardless of race or creed. Mr. Ford's disavowal ofy r and racial antagonism. It is , personal responsibility is equally only in some such manner that F gratifying. Possibly this incident Mr. ord can, to a alight extent at least, atone for the suffering may influence certain other men 0 public life to see the light and t caused by his campaign. eliminate religious and racial ran RABBI ISAAC LANDMAN, edi- cur from their utterances and pub . tor of the American Hebrew • heat ion. Henry Ford is the first man in his- tory, beguiled by anti-Semitism, DAVID N. 1110qESSOHN, edits ✓ who has made a public recantation of the Jewish Tribune: It wa ? and apology. The significance of with a feeling of profound sari et his statement lies not in any effect faction that I read of Mr. Ford' S it may have upon the Jews of apology for the terrible mistak e America, but in this: that the he had made in permitting th e world will become aware of the publication in the Dearborn lnde - fact that the international Jewish pendent of the scurrilous article ▪ conspiracy is a fiction; that the slandering the Jews. The Jews ar e Jews neither control world finances a long-suffering people and, be - nor make and unmake wars; that later' though the apology be the y the Jews are not at one I th e will welcome it with deep-fel same time capitalists, Bolsheviks grat itude to Fat ' he ✓ the Heavenly and revolutionist,: that the Jews of all peoples. But the baleful in - are not the corrupters of the press, fluence of the anti-Semitic article S the theater, the morals of the which, in book form, have bee n world. systematically circulated by th e Mr. Ford has spent a fortune to tens of thousands in many lands • publish these libels. He now finds and have been transltsed int • that they are false and that he many tongues, cannot be effacte d • has sinned against a whole people. y • mere ape I ogy owever h wel. come that may be. The spirit of (Turn to next nage.) Henry Ford's repudiation of the anti-Jewish articles which have appeared in his official organ, the Dearborn Independent, during the past seven years has caused world- wide comment, and each day's de- velopments seem to indicate more far-reaching results. Events during the past week have moved with such speed as to leave the average newspaper read- er in a jumbled confusion, How- ever, from the mass of "state- ments" and "explanations" which have been issued during the past week, the true story of the entire proceedings seems to emanate. Former Congressman Nathan D. Perlman, a vice-president of the American Jewish Congress, in an ' interview Sunday, demanded that LOUIS MARSHALL llenry Ford dismiss E. G. Leibold, his general secretary for 17 years The noon who, in a sense, may and vice-president of the Dearborn be said to have represented Amer- Publishing Company, and W. J. Wan Jewry in the negotiations Cameron, editor of The Dearborn with llenry Ford's personal repre- Independent, as the men respon- sentatives which led to the motor sible for the seven-year anti-Jew- magnate's repudiation of his own ish campaign conducted by that magazine. Mr. Marshall is said to journal, which the automobile man- have dictated the required con- ufacturer has just repudiated with tents of the Ford statenient a retraction and apology to the PIPP EXPLAINS . .. FORD ATTITUDE Owner Forced Views on Staff, Former Independ• ant Editor Says. je lS"11:. Perlman asserted that Earl J. Davis, Detroit lawyer and form- er Assistant United States Atter- General, ro? Mrn,Ph. j Ford's Palma sentatives in the negotiations lead- ing up to the retraction, had agreed with him that Mr. Ford should let ulssts.patr Lei .et.i bold i and and orttr. tos C aem t e hrion sego lf right with the Jews and the rest of the world. Identifying Mr. l'alma for the "You fellows are afraid to print those attacks on the Jews. Now, first time as the head of the field 1 1 force of the United States Secret I want them print will . Service in New York, as well as an take full respoliTsi ll,til'i(iy.a'n" . Mr. Such were Henry Ford's verbal intimate personal friend of Perlman also threw new orders in 1520 to the editorial slag light on the negotiations between of the Dearborn Independent, Sc- Fon!, 11 r. cording to E. G. Pipp, former edi- automobile manufacturer turer , and Mr. tor of the magazine and now edi- Mr. Davis and Mr. Palma for the mti•t P rtl ee ma, n and rle.soeunistinhg larshAani ll,erpirceasn- tor of Pipp's magazine. Henry Ford, Pipp charges, per- sonally ordered the publication of edam of the American Jewish Com- eywrwy.aslIperedciesdedmeiblythfaoturthceonafe porl.- ( y an i-. milk_ articl e appear- (.1),, ing in the Dearborn Independent. encee, beginning on May 20. Ford said last week in his pub- How Negotiations Started. lic apology to the Jews: "Had I a',prec•iated even the general na- "I received a telephone call from Lure, to say nothing of the details, Mr. Davis on May 20," said Mr. of these anti-Jewish articles, I Perlman, "and invited him to come would have forbidden their circu- to sly office without knowing the lation without a moment's hesita- subject he wished to talk to me about. Mr. Palma came with him. st u ioen.:" ,"f Me says in the current is- They said they were personal friends of Mr. Ford and had re- Pipp a American Hebrew: "The first direct discussion I had cently discussed with him the Dear- with Ford about the Jews was born Independent's antiJewiah when he was a candidate for the campaign. They quoted him as United States Senate in 1918, two saying that he had no animus against the Jews, that he employed years before the launching of the a great many Jews and had the magazine attacks. It was follow- ing the Ford-Chicago Tribune libel kindliest feelings toward them, that he Was not personally responsible suit that we began to hear much for the Dearborn Independent's an- more about the, ews, both from ti-Semitism and that he wanted to Ford and hby tary, ' do something that wculd put him In quite freque same expres- I the proper light on the subject. shin coming from both of them. They asked me what I thought he "By midsummer of 1519 the at- could do that would make it clear- mosphere became very much anti- lay understood that Mr. Ford had Jewish. The Jews were blamed r, r ee li ng against the Jews and had for almost everything, Ford ex. in, Fart in the anti-Jewish cam- pressing himself and Leibold tick. „,,ign ling Ford by repealing the senti- ' "My reply was that he should do nwrit if not the wont,." l'ipp said he does not believe two things—make a public apology F'ord's apology is based on politi- and dismiss the respmsible for the slander sf attacks upon the Call'Orl,tih7. s.p,ints out, figureal on Jews that Lail appeared under his getting a strung Gentile vete by name. Thee- r 1, I understand, Davis his attack "n the Jewe. Eventual. are Leibold a Cameron. and I alma as. • with me, both Iy he learned, however, that it is , s "'th respect to tat apology and the to elect a man to the dernisaal of Cameron and Leibold. , impossible Presidency who is opposed by the all thought that after the spots t three strong J Jewish 'h t ').y WAS made, they should either New York, Cleveland resign or be dismissed. This, how- and ()cri tical i. America, ever, did nut eventually become Ford 's ennaunroment of his ill- part of the formal agreement, icy against the Jews through the which extended only to the apol- medium of the Dearborn Independ• ogY. and I do not recall whether we was one of the prime reasons for discussed it in the subsequent con- Pipp's resignation, the ex-editor ferences with Mr. Marshall. says. Pipp was succeeded by Wil- Marshall Joined Coal liam J. Cameron, now in charge of the magazine. "I suggested to Davis and Palma that We call in Mr. Marshall as the rept:emanative of theAmericas A nimittee. eo that with me, as a representative of the Ameri- can Jewish Congress, the two lead- ing national Jewish organizati n in the country would be represent- ed. Later in the day I telephoned WASHINGTON.—Henry Ford's public apology for the attacks ate Marshall andput the matter up to him, with the result that on made on Jews through the medium the next day, May 21, we oil four of hie .1,i)tebarbaorgn ra linndeipien ,a deln is took the met in Mr. Marshall's office. Mr. tt by Marshal! um, positionn as 'Was hington Jews. I had taken as to the necessity for Delegates attending a meeting a public apology and retraction by of the Orthodox congregations Mr. Ford of hie slanderous attacks ,afn isan iz avtoi toensi t h2e3 laIrgi sat irbi s c tt upon the Jewish race_ dColumbia 37 t o "We asked Davis and Palma for the resolution introduced to coin- assurances that they had authority mend Ford for his retraction of , peak for Mr. Ford and arranged charges made in his magazine to ' to meet them again later. About against the Jews. June 6, Mr. Davis telephoned from Although Rabbi J. T. Loeb of Detroit that he would like to see us the Ohev Sholem Congregation aga i n, an d we had another confer. pleaded with the delegates to ex- tend the hand of forgiveness to ante in Mr. Marshall's office about that time. We went over in detail Ford, a majority was obdurate, ex- is,mtavt tetminertntthtehactha Ford of the pressing the opinion it was better pu blic . to wait and see if Ford by his fu- to make, and Mr. Davis wilt boa tore actions pro. he is actually to Detroit for another talk with Mr. sorry for the calumny heaped by Ford. The final conform" was his magazine upon the Jews of the world. (Turn to last pew.) WASHINGTON 1„,,,,,..h ri JEWS DOUBT FORD'S WORD