ritEVencoryftwon Gi RON ICLE TtFEbETROITJEWISR ARON ICLE - Published Weekly by The Jewish Chronicle Publishing Ce., Inc. JOSF.PH J. CUMMINS JACOB H. SCHAKNE PHILIP SLOMOVI1/ MAURICE M. SAFIR President Secret•ry and Treasurer Managing Editor Advertising Manager Entered as Second-doors matter March 11. 19111. at the Postof11;;Ot Detroit. ktich.. under the At of March IA79. General Offices and Publication Building 525 Woodward Avenue Telephone: Cadillac 1040 Lon don Office: Cable Address: Chronicle 14 Stratford Place, London, W. I, England. Subscription, in Advance $3.00 Per Year To Injure publir•tion, all correspondence and news matter must reach this office by Tuesday evening of each week, When mailing notices, kindly me one side of the paper only. The Detroit Jewish Chronicle invite. correspondence on subject. of interest to the Jewish people, but dioclaims responsibility for an indorsement of the views expressed be the writers. Sabbath Readings of the Torah. Pentateuchal portion—Ex. 10 :1-13:16. Prophetical portion—Jer. 46:13-28. January 18, 1929 Shvat 7, 5689 Welcome, Mayor Bloch! • What the Free Press Hasn't Learned. Last Sunday's editorial in the Detroit Free Press, ignominiously and ungraciously titled "The Failure of Zionism," reveals that there are two things which this newspaper hasn't learned : It is yet to learn editorial accuracy, and it should take a few lessons in being nice. The Free Press bases its editorial on a statement by Dr. Stephen S. Wise that "Zionism is dead," By ac- cepting this statement as a fact, without reading the complete address of Dr. Wise, and by interpreting it further to mean that the Palestinian movement is a failure, it has committed the worst error possible in journalism. In the first place, Dr. Wise (lid not speak of the failure of Zionism as such, but of political Zion- ism in the event the present Agency pact is accepted. Secondly, Dr. Wise merely expressed an opinion on a question of policy in connection with the establishment of the Jewish Agency, the coming into existence of which is in itself a triumph for the cause of Jewish un- ity for Palestine. We could quote innumerable achieve- ments in Palestine to show that the Free Press has erred. It is enough, however, that we point to the fact that the Free Press based its editorial on the quotation of less than a half dozen lines from an unusually lengthy address, thus committing a grave journalistic error. be () ' 0 'T( a -t-d a T5 81r al AS . CSEP Here is a letter that arouses me from my lethargy. While it refers to something that is specifirally of Pitts- burgh interest, yet it suggests a subject that is of general interest to us CO Jews: A Valuable and Welcome Addi• tion to the Study of the Book of Isaiah A Review of Professor Charles Cutler Torrey's Bril- liant and Thought-Compelling Book, "The Second Isaiah." Dear Mr. Josepth: • I notice that whenever you mention the Falk Clinic (for the benefit of readers outside of Pittsburgh, the Falk Clinic was presented to the University of Pittsburgh by two prominent Pitts- burgh Jews, Maurice Falk and his brother, the late Leon Falk.—C. II. J.), you warm up to the sub- ject; in fact, get real hot under the collar about it. The reason is this: A couple of weeks ago I happened to speak to some I'itt students and we mentioned this subject. They said in their opin- ion it was a shame to have given the money to the Pitt Medical School as the doors of that school are practically closed to Jewish students. When any Jewish young man or woman wishes to study medicine, he or she must leave home and go are- where; sometimes hundreds of miles away to pursue their studies. Is that correct? You ought to be in a position to know the facts. If it is true, as these young students stated, then the donation was surely mis- placed as there are other medical schools that are more liberal and whose faculties are too broad- minded to take a cue from Rumania. By RABBI A. M. HERSHMAN THE SECOND ISAIAH. A New Interpretation, By Prof. Cheek, Cutler Torrey. Published by Chas. Scribner's Suns, New York WI. The second part of Isaiah, cum - even this escaped remnant is fat prising Chapters 40-66, has had t from safe." Side by side with this disinte- curious fate, a peculiar history. A gration of the iirophecy, there generation or two ago, this divi eion was held to be the work of a has also been a marked deprecia- single author, conveniently styled tion in the valuation placed upon "The Second Isaiah," who, by com- It. The estimate of III Isaiah, mon consent, flourished in Baby- consisting of Chapters 49-66, is low. Nor does the once "Great lonia and addressed his message to his fellow-exiles about the year Prophet of the Exile" fare much 5t0 13, C. better than his imitators, "The was the "Great Prophecy of Lrael's Restoration." glowing predictions of the poet, seeming to include nothing less His mission was to comfort and in- spire the Jews of the "Babylonian than is renovated world, and yet exile," to predict their release by supposedly based on the advent of Cy rus, and the 'restoration" of a heathen conqueror, certainly were not fulfilled under the Per- Judaism and ;Jerusalem, which had been unoccupied since the sack of sian regime. The II Isaiah was the city and the destruction of the an enthusiast, a dreamer, we are Temple by Nebuchadnezzar. The told; the predictions were the pro- unity of authorship and the liter- duct of his temperament and es- ary homogeneity of this division sentially hyperbolic; yet it is evi- were not seriously questioned. dent that he was credulous enough to believe in them." Well does Even chapters 65-66, which bear Professor Torrey say, "A great marks of a Palestinian origin, were assiened by most Bible book has been cut up into a basket- scholars to the same prophet. ful of little authors." They were regarded as "the fruit In his "Second Isaiah," Profes- of II Isaiah's ministration in the sor Torrey has set before himself Homeland," a continuation of his the task of restoring the "Un- message after the return from known Prophet" to the position of Babylon to Judaea. pre-eminence he once occupied. while this theory was current, Ile adheres to the old theory of the general estimate of the pro- the unity of authorship and the phet and his utterances was high. literary homogeneity of the book. Ile seas not only the "Unknown Ile argues with much force and of the exile" but also the "Great cogency that Chapters 40-66 are the work of a single hand. lie Unknown." Ile was "the great exponent of monotheism." "lie also ascribes Chapters 34 and 35 stands upon a loftier pedestal than to the same prophet, "The poems I Isaiah and pierces further into comprised in Chapters 34, 35 and the future. He has a more distinct 40-66 were composed and written consciousness of the greatness of within a brief period of time and Israel's mission" ("Isaiah, His in the same order in which we now ife and Times"—Driver), find them." But Professor Torrey is theory of the unity of au- takes a new departure. Ile offers •• ■ ,'Srd the literary homo- "a new view of the prophecy." Hie main thesis is that the II Isaiah ' the book is now dis- was a Palestinian, and the scene ind rejected by many es. They have subject- of the prophecy was Judaea. "Ile long process of dissec- wrote in Palestine, presumably in he course of which the Jerusalem, about 400 13..C. The suffered at their hands people whom he addressed were in Fier incision, curtailment their own land and there is in his ailment. First Chapters word no hint that they or any por- oe•oo • ere removed from it, and tion of them had ever been any- where else. The Temple had long declared to be the addition of a been built and an elaborate ritual later hand. "By a further appli- cation of the knife," a much larger was a matter of course." In fact, slice was cut off. The book was the II Isaiah knew of no recent reduced to 16 chapters, i. e, 40-55. restoration, or indeed, of any The paring process went on, and restoration at all except the one Chapters 49-55 were cut off from from Egypt. Professor Torrey contends that neither "the Baby- the "genuine prophecy." "This lonian exile" nor the return from work of the 'Prophet of the Exile'," says Professor Cheyne, "is it had any profound significance for the Jewish people "We have to be looked for only within the limits of Chapters 40-48"—nine no credible record of the return of any considerable company from chapters in all. Moreover, front the Babylonian exile. No writer these nine chapters, conceded to prior to the third century B. C. the genuine II Isaiah, we are told, shows any knowledge of such an there are also to be removed many event, whether under Cyrus or at sections, such as all polemics against idolatry, denunciation of any other time. There is, moreover, not the Israel and the "Servant" passages. slightest evidence either in the It is argued, for instance, that the known history of Palestine or in II Isaiah could not possibly have the development of Judaism that written the "Servant" passages. • In these passages, it is Israel as a would tend to make such a return whole or its representatives, those plausible. Every indication speaks strongly to the contrary. The de- '1, who exhibited the truest and most portation in 586 was a small affair genuine characteristics of the na- in point of numbers. It included tion, who will usher in the age of the royal family, however, and righteousness and peace; while in the kingdom was at an end. In the II Isaiah's scheme of salvation, all probability, Jerusalem was this task is entrusted to Cyrus, abandoned only during the brief "the anointed of God," the instru- interval while the Chaldean army ment of His will and the mouth- remained in the vicinity. If any piece of Ills word, The conclu- of the villages and cities of Judaea sion now reached by many exegets of the advanced school is that were much depopulated, it was cer- tainly for a short time only." The Chapters 49-66, as well as the nu- burden of the l'rophet's message merous and extensive accretions in is the return of the "exiles" not Chapters 40.48, represent the from Babylonia, but from the ends work of imitators, men of a later of the earth. The II Isaiah may generation, who "composed dis- be called "the prophet of the dis- courses patterned after those of persion." In his time, the Jewish the 11 Isaiah." The book of II migrants from the homeland were Isaiah has thus shrunk in size. "Instead of 27 chapters, we see k n every quarter of the then- nown world (Isaiah 49:12; 60.8; only the equivalent of about seven assigned to that prophet, and (Turn to Next Page). Detroit, the youngest among America's most dy- namic cities, welcomes during this week-end the mayor of the youngest and perhaps most interesting city in the But the Free Press goes on to state in its editorial : world. I have published the letter er practically in full. I The Jews, at least in this country and in Great Britain, have (lone this with the deliberate purpose of bring ing The coming here of David Bloch, mayor of Tel Aviv, appear to be too well satisfied with the way things are this criticism, which is merely a duplicate of hundreds of the first all-Jewish city since the Dispersion of Israel other similar criticisms, out into the open. Some p er- going to bother about a national home on the shores of from his homeland, once again throws the spotlight sons like to discuss these things in whispers. I don't . If the Mediterranean. They find it simpler to merge into I have anything to Si(y I sae it loud enough for every- upon the center of the New Judea, and once again calls the nations among whom they have found asylum than to body to hear. Now let's talk this over for a moment. for admiration of the almost miraculous way in which recreate a nation of their own. The Folks who gave the clinic, always had the interest of its progress has been achieved. the city of Pittsburgh at heart, and they wanted to do something for I'ittsburgh, and through its university. If, by dubbing us "too well satisfied," the Free Press Numbering only 3,000 souls in 1919, Tel Aviv has They believed, and quite properly, that they were con- grown in less than a decade to its present population intended to pay us a compliment, it made a poor job tributints definitely to the physical welfare of the people of it. Because by implying that assistance on the part of over 50,000. It has developed from sandy lots to of Pittsburgh by making this gift. It is likewise true that the medical students of the university would be of American and British Jewries in the efforts for the become the Garden City of Palestine, serving as a pic- benefited and, again Pittsburgh would improve its stand- upbuilding of Palestine calls for divided allegiance and turesque contrast of Zionist modernity to the back- of medical service. In both respects, the Folks were right, in my judgment. (the editorial speaks of re-creating "a nation of their wardness and 3,000-year-old methods of its Arab neigh- bors. own"), this paper would make it criminal for Ameri- So much for that. Now for the criticism. There can Jews to assist their less fortunate brethren over- Tel Aviv, however, has done more than that. It were some 65 students admitted to the medical depart- ment of l'itt; of these 11 were Jews anti 54 were non- seas. This strikes at the very root of Americanism has interwoven the modern with the ancient. It has These figures may vary by one or two, but in the which had its foundation in offering succor and refuge Jews. built itself on the strength of the traditions of Jewish main they are correct. There were some 250 or 260 for the oppressed of the earth, The Detroit Free Press, students who applied for admission to he medical depart- history and law. A stroll through its streets is like a ment; of this number about 65 were 1 11ws and about 200 as a consistent advocate of restrictive immigration stroll through the Jewish ages, every avenue's name were non-Jews, again I ant givi , , , proximo proxitra, r laws, should at least be gracious to a movement which carrying with it some Jewish significance. David, Ze- bers but the variance is - ow me, . should have been admit' aims to care for many thousands who would otherwise rubabbel, Isaiah, Rambam (Maimonides), Jehuda Ha- 'leper to ss, eliminate the charge e have been compelled to seek a haven on the shores of levi and other Biblical and historical names of the department can only the United States. students have been streets of this first center of the New Zion link the old of them, which W0 with the new, pointing to a glorious future. Had the Free Press editorial been based on serious eluded all the Ge In the building of Tel Aviv, Jewish labor has played study of the Zionist movement, and had its writer then practical what, the a pioneer role, and it is therefore doubly significant come to the conclusion that this worldwide Jewish Should the name'. of whether an appl that the visiting mayor should represent the labor ele- movement is a failure, we would grant him the right to what would have h: ments of the Jewish Homeland. As a leader among the 200 were Gentiles, an honest opinion. But that he has not done. He has should have had hi Jewish workers in Palestine he represents not only his generalized, and very ungraciously. Therefore our ad- students, and on the ss.s.. . own city, but is in a larger sense to be considered as the vice to him for the future: admitted and not a single Jew, what then? You may emissary of Jewish labor of Palestine. Be nice! say that that wasn't possible. It was possible. In welcoming Tel Aviv's mayor to Detroit, it is well Please remembev I am stating these questions trying that our community remember the purpose of his mis- to answer them in my own mind. And I ant just a' The Jewish Don Quixote. sion. Mayor Bloch comes here with a plea to Ameri- eager to arrive at a correct understanding of the whole situation as is my correspondent. Should there be can Jewry to continue its support and encouragement Cervantes' Don Quixote is finding serious competi- a Jewish quota? If not, then what is to be done? What of labor institutions in Palestine, and to supply Jewish tion in this country. would YOU do, considering the whole matter PRACTI- CALLY if you were the head of a university that derived workers with the articles they are most in need of— Dr. Stephen S. Wise, the great orator, the fine rab- a great deal of its support from public spirited citizens tools and agricultural implements. Let Detroit Jews bi, the defender of Jewish rights, the lover of Zion, the and you excluded EVERY GENTILE APPLICANT and greet Mayor Bloch with a liberal response to Jewish admitted only Jewish boys and girls. I am merely stat- truly beloved among the masses of the Jewish people ing these things to suggest the difficulties that present labor's requests, if its welcome is to be proper and fit- in this country, has, undoubtedly to the serious regrets themselves. It so happens that I know the chancellor of ting. the University of Pittsburgh very well and I know that of his many thousands of followers, made such serious Mr. Bowman is absolutely without prejudice. If he had blunders in the past few months that he threatens him- the room to accept every worthy applicant I am confi- What About Our Youth? self to wipe out the prestige he has built for himself. dent he would take in every Jew as well as every Gen- tile. But I am just as quick to say that I do not believe We have called Dr. Wise a "lover of Zion." We Dr. Israel Goldstein, noted New York rabbi, pre- this is true of every other university. But what is to be should modify this statement to read that he is one of done? I don't know. But this I its know and I wish sented an able and justified statement to the Home my correspondent would read this statement very care- the greatest lovers of Zion of all time. His orations Mission Council at its annual meeting in Atlantic City fully. I would like to print it in capitals. will go down in the history of the modern Zionist move- last week, pleading for the cessation of their proselyt- One fault with the Jewish youth is that if he fails ment as the finest appeals for the upbuilding of Israel's to pass in a test he immediately accuses the examining izing efforts among the Jews. One of our editorials in hoard prejudice against Jews; if he is denied admis- cradle-land. But in his zeal for Zion, Dr. Wise has in- sion to of a university last week's issue has already, we believe, sufficiently he blames it on the fact that he is a jured himself and threatens to injure Zion. In his Jew. His parents agree with him and so do all his other touched upon the importance of Dr. Goldstein's state- anxiety to help in the upbuilding of Palestine, he ap- relatives. That is one of our weaknesses that help to ment. There is, however, one portion of Dr. Goldstein's the situation. I do not say that some Jewish pears to have had his vision shortened, and is making complicate statement which calls for further comment. Dr. Gold- boys are kept out of certain colleges because they are stein said to the Home Missions: himself ridiculous in his opposition to the generally ac- Jews but I emphatically assert that just as many and more are denied the opportunity because they its not cepted strongest instrument for Palestine,—the Jewish qualify. Some of our people are quick to blame their Jewish feeling is especially offended by those Chris- Agency. OWN SHORTCOMINGS on all Jewry. And I for one tian missionary activities which bring Jewish children not permit that sort of thing to be put over without under their influence. Dr. Wise has followed his far from complimentary will a protest. With reference to the adult, it might at least be offered actions at the Pittsburgh convention of the Zionist Or - as an argument that he has the right and the power to ganization with a period of comparative silence. Sud- The Day, an influential Yiddish daily of New York, choose the religion that he may desire to follow. What is urging the appointment of Julius Rosenwald to the justification, however, can there be for taking children of denly, however, on the eve of the Berlin meeting of the Hoover cabinet. I understand that it is a Democratic Jewish parents, and without the explicit consent of their World Actions Commitee, he announced that he was on paper but I do not know this to be a fact. Therefore, the parents, predisposing them to a religion different from the only basis of its appeal must rest on the fact that as a the way to Germany to fight the Agency. Arriving in faith into which they have been born? That such situa- Jewish paper it is urging the appointment of a Jew, a tions do exist is indicated by evidence which must be as Berlin about an hour before the balloting on the ques- situation with which I am not in sympathy. In other well known to many of you as it is to many of us. tion, he delivered an address in which he picures what words, I do not believe that Jewish journalism should advocate the selection of Jews as such, to public office, he called serious dangers to Zionism in the proposed Which is all right as far as it goes, or, to be more neither do I believe that Protestant or Catholic journals 6 peace pact between the Zionists and the non-Zionists. exact, as far as the non-Jews are concerned. But can should pursue a similar course with reference to members It is reported that there was intense feeling and anxiety of their own denominations. And just because that was this possibly satisfy the Jew in answer to the problems done during the last election is one of the reasons why among the assembled Zionist leaders who eagerly affecting the training of our youth? May we hope even a religious issue was injected into the campaign. Julius in the remotest cases to hold the interest of our young awaited the New York rabbi's coming to hear his dis- Rosenwald is an able man, as the world knows. But when a Jewish paper urges the president-elect to make closures. The result is well known, Dr. Wise was by securing the consent of our non-Jewish neighbors to him a cabinet officer it does so on the basis of his being sadly beaten at Berlin. leave them alone and not to proselyte them? And, Selected by Rabbi Leon From. a Jew, which to my mind is the wrong attitude to take. truthfully speaking, will not the Jewish youth itself Although the truly great rabbi's adversaries in the "THE LEGEND OF' THE Rabbi Coffee of Oakland, Cal, Rabbi Manheimer of pie destroyed, and through hin have a comeback to Dr. Goldstein's statement in its de- Agency battle proved to be only windmills, he came MESSIAH" Des Moines, Rabbi Feuerlicht of Indianapolis, Rabbi will it be rebuilt. Take some o Once upon a time a man was back to his pulpit to renew an attack on windmills, and, mand to know what its people is doing for it to educate Callisch of Richmond, Va., Rabbi Wolsey of Philadelphia, these children's linens," he coon plowing, when one of his oxen be- Rabbi Langman of For Rockaway, L. I., and many others !wht "and after some days I shal is to the tenets of the Jewish faith and idealism that it like Don Quixote of Carvantes, he is emerging from his gan to cry aloud. An Arab hap- were the friends of the late Walter Hurt. conic for the money." So she took may not want to follow another faith? battles in pitiful sight. The mighty, kind-hearted and pened to pass by and said to him, some and went away. In a personal communication a few months before "Who are you?" and he replied, It all simmers down to the same old answer that our great lover of Zion has taken a false road on his mis- his death, Walter Hurt makes this comment: Days passed and the man said, "I am a Jew." And the Arab said, only defense is in our having a thorough knowledge sion of knight-errantry. In his zeal for Zionism he has "I'll go and learn how the child is It is quite within the power of the Jewish peo- "Unyoke your oxen." The Jew getting along." So he went to her ple to erase anti-Semitism from the earth. Take become blinded to the existence of Zion. Surely, Dr. of our own people and our people's ways and traditions. asked, "Why?" The other replied, my word for it, there is not on the part of the "Because the Temple has been de- and asked, "How is the child get- If our children are to be kept away from the proselytiz- Wise ought to know that if Zion should triumph, Zion- ting on?" And she replied. "Didn't non-Jewish world, as many suppose, any funda- stroy- ed." Whereupon the Jew I tell you that his fate was an evil ing efforts of Christian missionaries, they must so be i sm will be victorious; but if Zion should be permitted mental dislike of the Hebrew race, bitter as the asked, "How do you know that?" one and pursued him? For since existing enmity undoubtedly is. What is anti- And the other answered, "I know trained that when they reach the stage when they have to sit solitary and in ashes, Zionism will have failed. that time winds and storms came Semitism, anyway? We—both Jews and Aryans, it front the crying of your ox." As "the right and power to choose the religion," they must And if Jewry can be united, in the Jewish Agency, for and carried him off." are in a state of comparative savagery. It is a uni- the Arab spoke to him than the ox versal law that antagonism begets a reciprocal an- —MIDRASII know why they should retain the Judaism which their Palestine's upbuilding, why fight windmills? again cried out. And the Arab tagonism. Anti-Semitism, therefore, simply is a said to the Jew, "Put your oxen parents prevented them from abandoning in their There may be an explanation for Dr. Wise's actions WHEN SIIALL MESSIAH COME natural reaction of primitive psychology to a back into harness, for there has youth. And if we are not in position so to train our i n the possibility that he was misled and misadvised. Lord, tell me when manifest Jewish hostility. Let their better breth- been born the redeemer of the Shall come to men ren suppress Jews of a certain type and silence youth, then we have lost the moral right to battle with Jews." Whereupon the first asked, On his mission to Berlin he took with him, like Don their malevolent utterances and anti-Semitism W M.117ni"ohahll i"Ttby rare "What is his name?" And the Ar- the misisonaries. Quixote of Cervantes, a squire, in the person of Mr. nix couch prepare will disappear—not immediately of course, for all ab answered, "Menahem is his To be me garret. S amuel J. Rosensohn, This Jewish squire, like Sancho There is no denying the fact that our greatest prob- evil effects arc disposed to linger—but within a name." "And what is the name of To niece on e golden bed, lem is our inner one; that we cannot hope to solve the reasonable time, and it instantly will perceptibly P anza, at one time sought a "governorship" in his o - his father?" He answered, "He- In my palace rent. diminish. zekiah." And the first asked, problem of the outward pressure upon the Jew unless wake , osition to the American Zionist leaders. Having "Where does he dwell?" The Walter Hurt still remains of interest to Jewish read- SI ak f o the h y" spe e lt, we fortify ourselves inwardly and guarantee for our- ailed, he and his group are taking their battle to the other answered, "In the Arab dis- Nor slumber POD, ers. This week I received a letter frdin Dr. Israel Brasil Dawn like • flair trict of Bethlehem. in Judah." selves a position which spells knowledge and acquaint- Vorld Zionist Organization to fight the Agency. Dat- of Philadelphia. who enclosed an appreciation of the Surmounto the crag And the man sold his oxen and late author. The following excerpt will be of general since with our own being and with the reasons for ' ng back as this opposition does to the defeat of their interest: Of Tabor'. hit, his plow• and bought linens for And its flame it unfurl. o'er my retaining our own identity. children, and wandered from one Hermon, the hoar and shill. ilent leader, Justice Louis D. Brandeis, their battle This keynote of the entire situation, covering town to another, from one land to not alone the Jewish people but all races, has Dr. Goldstein happens to be the national president s avors of selfish motives, and honest Zionists dare not From the wild4too brood another, until he came thither. All never have better expressed than from this keys To the orare renewed of Young Judaea, the American Jewish youth move- t olerate it. the village women came to buy of Of Thy dainty roe, student and champion of righteousness—Walt er 0 Lord.return. Hurt. ment. He has spoken a great deal about the needs of his wares, but the woman who was Dr. Wise has been of invaluable service to the Zion- Our lboevheoldtow.ehoy.e•rn the mother of the child did not buy Thus, Jewry in this country and throughout the youth, but we have. thus far, seen little action, if we is t movement, He can not be spared now. There is of him, So he said to her, "Why the world has lost in Walter Hurt a most powerful And rear out with Thy soul at are to judge by our own community, in stimulating ac- s till time for him to remove his false armor and to don one as of yore to know. do you not buy linens for your ally of broad-mindedness and justice. Ile has child!" And she answered, "Be- given of himself in the cause of universal brother- tivity among our youth. He has the weapon with which a gain his Zionist cloak. Nothing would be more wel- Thrice welcome he cause my child's fate is an evil Who COM , S to me hood, more particularly in the elimination of anti- to remedy the evil conditions about whin' he spoke to c ome than to see Dr. Wise "return" to the active effort of David'. line. Semitism, to a far greater extent than is dreamed one." And he asked, "Why?" Me the Home Missions Council. Let us therefore have f or Zion, to the elimination of his present ridiculous of by those who were not fortunate enough to Whereupon she replied, "Because have been intimately acquainted with this great at his birth the Temple was de- 7W 4 i • t h5P.ahi 11:1 1a some action on behalf of our youth, Dr. Goldstein, t " rtFil's e , fi ght on the Jewish Agency. benefactor of the human race. May his rewards troyed." He answered, however, Me pomegranate.cinnamon. 'pie.. ■ n/.1- Gems From Jewish Literature 1 be plenteous in Eternity. ).c 7.Q . Q. A.9 • 9.9.949. 9 ., 0 0.9 .C.R 4 "We must trust in the Lord of the world; through him was the Tern- and the jar. of my old meet :0 1 7 • 0 MO7i 113N CAIHROL •:41:1 14A