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WiElETROITJEWISII el-RON 1CLE

Entered mi. Second - class matter March 8, 1918. •I the Postollee at Detroit,
Mich., under the Act of March 3, 1979.

Publishad Weakly by The Jewish Chronicle Publi•hing Ce. lee.

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525 Woodward Avenue

Telephone:

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A

The Detroit Jewish Chronicle invites corrmpondenre on subjects of Interest to
the Jewish people, but disclaims responsibility for on indorsement of the views
,
esti eeeee d by the writers.

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Shabuoth Portions of the Law.

Pentateuchal portions—Deut. 14 :22-16:17; Num. 28:2G-31.
Prophetical portion—flab. 3:1-19.

June 14, 1929

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Sivan

6, 5689

The Festival of the Torah.

Shevuoth, the Feast of Weeks, the holiday marking
the anniversary of the giving of the Law on Mt. Sinai,
derives its greatest significance for Jews because it is a
season for renewing faith in the Torah and the Ten
Commandments.
As the holiday on the occasion on which thousands
of boys and girls are confirmed in the faith of their
fathers in liberal synagogues, Shevuoth becomes a land-
mark on the Jewish calendar. It is an occasion for
inspiring the young that they may be worthy of their
heritage. It is a festival for renewing faith, courage,
inspiration, in Israel's ideals.
The confirmants are the chief actors in the Shevuoth
play. To the thousands of boys and girls who are being
confirmed this week we offer encouragement. To their
parents we extend greetings, that they may continue to
inspire and teach their young; that they may make their
homes sanctuaries out of which their children may draw
joyous courage for their Jewishness, for without the
influence of the Jewish home there can be no true Jew-
ish life.

The Community Loses a Devoted Leader.

In the death of Esser Rabinowitz, founder and for
10 years president of the United Hebrew Schools of
Detroit, this community loses a leader it cannot easily
replace.
Mr. Rabinowitz is the type of leader for whom his
major cause was his life work. For more than 10 years
he devoted 10 an 12 hours daily to the cause of Hebrew'
education, and it is due to his efforts, more than to any
other influence, that the schools have progressed as
they have.
Mr. Rabinowitz came to the Hebrew schools not out
of mere fancy for an avocation. He was himself a man
of great learning. As student and Ilebraist he devoted
himself wholeheartedly to his cause, making it first his
avocation, and upon retirement from business his voca-
tion, as a volunteer worker for life to the schools to
which he gave his time, his energy and his money,
The United Hebrew Schools, and through them the
entire community, lose a devoted leader who combined
scholarship and idealism with untiring effort for educa-
tion. His death is a loss which this community can ill
afford. The spirit which he has instilled in the cause
of Hebrew education in this city will long live in the
hearts of his own and the second generation.

Making Jews Jewish

J.

Under the caption, "Making Jewish Clubs Jewish,"
the S. A. J. Review of New York, published by the
Society for the Advancement of Judaism and edited by
its rabbi, Dr. Mordecai M. Kaplan, calls attention to,
and derives a moral from, the proposal made at the
annual meeting of the Unity Club of Brooklyn that
social eligibility of applicants for membership in the
club be determined by the applicant's interest in corn-
munal affairs. The new criterion for membership, pro-
posed to the Unity Club, demands from the applicant
an annual contribution to the Brooklyn Jewish Federa-
tion equal to the club dues. The S. A. J. Review edi-
torially rejoices over this new tendency which it believes
would help make Jewish clubs "Jewish," and has the
following to say among other things:

The idea is an admirable one, and translated into prac-

tice would go far toward justifying the existence of such

organizations as specifically "Jewish," a justification which

they have in the past frequently lacked. Jewish clubs

have too often been opportunities for Jews to satisfy their

sence of Jewish responsibility in the easiest and most use-
less sort of way—by forming associations that do not par-

ticularly welcome Gentiles, and holding that to be a suf-

ficient satisfaction of the claims of Jewish communal

needs. So that the social intercourse of Jews, which ought

to be the mainstay of Jewish communal life, has some-
times been the most serious rival of the latter—and, in

is

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strive for genuine Jewish ideals in life, thus assuring a
return to the honored tradition which has made the
Jewish people the leader among law-abiding elements
in every land. By making the Jewish clubs Jewish, by
instilling in our youth a Jewish idealism to counteract
the street idealogy, our people will be saved much dis-
comfort caused by adverse publicity which comes as a
result of Jewish names becoming associated in news-
paper headlines with crime. Yes, the surest way of
lighting such conditions is by making Jews Jewish, and
their clubs truly Jewish.

A New Synagogue for Shaarey Zedek.

Because Congregation Shaarey Zedek was for a
number of years handicapped by the lack of adequate
quarters and of a modern center for its members and
their children, the community was robbed of activity
which would have benefited all Detroit Jewry. The
assurance that comes with the present campaign that a
new Shaarey Zedek synagogue in the northwest sec•
tion of the city will be built in time for the coming High
Holy days is therefore very glad news.
There was more color to our Jewish community
when Congregation Shaarey Zedek was among De-
troit's most active centers. When, however, as a result
of the change in its neighborhood's population, the
synagogue on Willis and Brush streets began to be used
less and less for educational and social activities, the
community was robbed of that color which helped to
give strength to every Jewish undertaking. When the
new synagogue is completed, the new life that it is to
give to Congregation Shaarey Zedek will also mean
new strength to the Detroit Jewish community.

Indifference—the Worst of Sins.

In the second act of George Bernard Shaw's "Devil's
Disciple," a sentiment is expressed which is fittingly,
even though tragically, applicable to our people. To
quote G. B. S.:
"The worst sin towards our fellow-creatures is not
to hate them, but to be indifferent to them. That's the
essence of inhumanity."
A typical instance of Jewish indifference was dis-
played last Sunday, on the occasion of the election of
delegates in this city to the sixteenth biennial World
Zionist Congress, which is to convene in Zurich, Switz-
erland, beginning July 28. Serious and important prob-
lems were at stake. After years of uphill struggle anti
effort to organize the Jewish Agency, which is to
include among the builders of Zion all elements in
Israel, this work stands a chance of being pulled to
pieces and ruined by an unfriendly congress. Yet the
party whose delegates are pledged in favor of the
Agency and whose membership numbers more than two-
thirds the eligible Detroit voters, failed to poll even as
many votes as one of the minority groups. Of the 1,900
eligible voters in the Zionist Organization (including
the Zionist District, Hadassah anti Junior Hadassah),
only 102 cast ballots for their ticket, against a vote of
182 cast by Mizrachi, whose local membership is
hardly one-sixth that of the Z. 0.
How else is such an attitude towards the most vital
problem in Jewry's most vital movement to be described
than by the term "indifferent?" And indifference
surely is the worst of sins.

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Charles ff. Joseph

I'M SORRY that being at the moment about three thou-
sand miles from the scene of the testimonial dinner
given for David A. Brown that I can't give my impres-
sions first hand of the occasion. But I can say something
about David A. Brown. First of all I know of no one
in American Jewish life who so richly deserves such a
tribute from his fellow-religionists. He has made an
extraordinary contribution to Jewish welfare the world
over. A contribution that is beyond calculation. It is
said that every crisis in a people's life brings to the sur-
face a leader capable of meeting the situation. And it
does seem that David A. Brown was the man of the hour
when European Jewry was stricken helpless and hopeless
by the war. Ile showed himself to be a leader who had a
genius for organization. With uncanny ability he built
up one of the most efficient human and humane money-
raising machines over created in this country. And David
Brown was the human dynamo that gave it power. And
it functioned so successfully that millions and millions
were poured into Russia, bringing to declassed and de-
spairing Jewry a reason for continuing to live.

I

HAVE occasionally written in a light vein concerning
Mr. Brown, calling him the world's greatest super-
salesman and giving him other affectionate Rotarian pats.
But beneath it all has been great respect for the world's
most successful "schnorrer" for worthy causes. Be not
alone has had the job of raising the money but he has
been forced to map out the campaign of collecting much
of it. For there is frequently quite a distance between
the pledge and the payment. He has been harnessed to
these tasks of collecting huge sums of money for relief
that I question even if he retires to other fields of en-
deavor, whether he will be able to resist the call of duty
when it comes again to hint. I was very much interested
in reading an account of a meeting to launch a campaign
for the relief of 57,000,000 persons affected by the
famine in China. I noticed that David Brown was chair-
man of the board of directors of the China Famine Relief.
So when the meeting was called only 150 persons out of
the 8,500 invited were present. This angered Mr. Brown,
who in characteristic fashion, said that if we had the
power to call a fast of just 72 hours then we would
understand a little of what starvation meant. He said
the suffering of the children was so great that in many
instances they were put to sleep by a father or mother
who cannot stand their suffering. It was direct heart
appeals ilke these that made hint so successful in arous-
ing groups to a realization of the suffering of others.
Because in truth, only the fewest of us have the imagina-
tion to appreciate what these terrible famines mean when
we are far removed from the scene. David Brown is a
great leader and he has rendered his people a service they
will nver be able to repay,

A

READER living in Brownsville, Pa., sends me this:

Dear Mr. Joseph:

Your comments are always interesting, and I

would thank you for your opinion on the follow-

ing incident:

A high school teacher embarrassed his Jewish

students recently by telling the following joke to

enlighten his class on a point in "Problems of
Democracy." He said: "The captain of the ship

rushed about frantically, and speaking to a Jew
on board exclaimed: "The ship is sinking!" But

the Jew calmly answered, "Let it sink, it ain't

mine." As soon as the teacher finished telling the

ANOTHER element in the In-
terior Department which at-
tracted our attention recently was
the economic stock-taking of the
work of the Reclamation Bureau
of the department which will be
carried on all summer, according
to the statement of Secretary
Wilbur.
The survey will be in charge of
the commissioner, Elwood Mend,
who will be remembered by Jew's
as the reclamation expert in the
Agency Commission appointed by

Marshall and Weitzmann las
year. Dr. Mead's words concern
ing reclamation in this countr,
bring to our minds the fact tha
his work in Palestine is so closel y
analogous to the work in thi,
country. Doesn't this sound like
comment en the newly buildint,
land of Israel?
"Reclamation requires more
than canals and reservoirs," Dr.
Metal said. "The qualifications (of
settlers, the kind of agriculture
which should be followed and, in
general, those factors which de-
termine earning power and well.
being and contentment of the peo-
ple of the communities created ore
as important as the engineering
factors.
sults of a majority of the
"Then
federal reclamation projects fully
A
justify the tuitional policy.
great wealth of land has been cre-
ated, farmers are prosperous and
the. payments required under the
contracts are being. made. There
are other projects, however,
where development has been slow,
where seniors are struggling in
all stages of discouragement and
hardship, and where delinquency
in payments has been an inevit-
able result.
"'she making of this investiga-
tion at an early date is regarded
as desirable because the data
which it is proposed to gather will
be most helpful in determining
what can and should be done to
improve conditions and in aiding
Congress in enacting desirable.
legislation."
Remember, that he is speaking
of the good out U. S. A. and not a
land neglected fur thousands of
years.

YOU

would be surprised to no-
tice how many of the present
members of Congress still recall
Ilenry Si. Goldfogle, who recently
passed away in New York City.
We thought that his membership
in Congress had been forgotten by
those who are now seated in the
]louse, but we were amazed last
week to have so many of the Si.
C.'s comment on Goldfogle's
death. Only a few are still left
on the hill who remember his
early terms in Congress, but quite
a number recall his last term in
the Sixtieth Congress, 1919-1921.
Gold fogle first came to Wash-
ington as a Democrat to the Fir-

(Turn to Next Page).

IN THE REALM OF
SONG and LAUGHTER

School?"

INSTANCES like these are being brought constantly to

my attention. They represent in the main merely an

evidence of poor taste on the part of teachers. Of
course it also indicates a lack of common sense. Some

teachers are so thoroughly stupid about everything except
teaching that they fail to understand that children are

extremely sensitive to ridicule and to being singled out in
an uncomplimentary fashion. The instructor in question

village and the only Jewish pupil in the room, it made me

feel uncomfortable to hear the class sing "Solomon Levi,
Solomon Levi, with his coats and vests, etc., etc." I

can't recall the teacher but I know that she had no preju-
dice in her mind and no malice in her heart. Yet she
didn't think. If she had she would never have used such

a song as a regular part of the class in singing. But I

hasten to assure the young lady who wrote to me that
anti-Semitism in the college does not begin in the lligh

School. It begins in the home. And at a very early age.

EDDIE CANTOR, who whoops it up in "Whoopee," is
somewhat of a philosopher. Ile's going to retire next
year from active stage work and to devote the remainder
of his life to leisure of a constructive kind. Ile says that
he is interested in philanthropy, and expects to give con-
siderable time to that field of endeavor. lie is a director
of the Brooklyn Jewish Hospital. Cantor is only 37
years of age, which is rather young to retire. But when
he says that he has five daughters and he has never seen
one of them graduate from school—when one gets caught
in the wheel of dramatic performances death is about the
only excuse that will go with the management or the
audience if the actor fails to appear. So this young man
has probably lived and worked many more years than 37
figured in terms of wear and tear on the nervous system.
One thing about Eddie, he isn't ashamed to tell the world
what he earns. Really it's nothing to be bashful about
when one makes $5,000 a week and gets it, not in stage
money, but in currency of the country. Then he casu-
ally mentions that one afternoon recently Nathan Jones,
of Brooklyn, who handles his (Cantor's) investments,
presented F:ddie with $140,000 as the return on some-
thing or other. Perhaps the next morning friend Jonas
wheeled over to Manhattan another load of money for
Eddie. Of course it really isn't so hard to retire when
one is tired if one can retire on a mattress stuffed with a
million dollars or so.

IF DAVID BELASCO and ',fortis Gest were religious
Jews they could never have brought the Passion Play
to this country. Maybe they are Jews by race or nation-
ality or just by birth. I just don't know how to classify
Here co,
some Jews. They belong and yet they don't.
hove two well-known Jews producing the Passion Play
which has been condemned, to my own knowledge, by
foremost Jewish rabbis ever since I can remember. I
have never seen the play, and for that matter, never
xpect to. But I have talked to some who have seen the
play in Europe and they assure me that it has a tendency
to keep alive the prejudice against the Jews . Now Gest
and Belasco knew this. at least they were advised of it.
Yet either through stubbornness or ignorance they in-
sisted on going ahead with it. They are both leaders in
their art, but after all there is something higher than art
which neither Mr. ()est nor his father-in-law, Mr. Belasco,
seem to have discovered. Wherever this play is adver-
tised to appear the Jews should at least protest to the
local management in an effort to prevent it.
•
-
F COURSE Einstein isn't much of a scientist. Car-
dinal O'Connell of Boston knows that. And I am
astonished that the University of Paris didn't consult the
learned Prince of the Church before conferring an honor-
ary doctor's degree on Einstein. the first, by the way. that
has been awarded to a German since the war. I am sure
that scientists associated with the University of Paris
have been completely fooled by the claims of Einstein
that he is an outstanding scientist. When they want to
know who is a scientist and who isn't, they should go to ■
churchmanlike Cardinal O'Connell or is it O'Donnell? I
hope that the cardinal will not have his sleep disturbed
over this new honor that has been conferred upon Ein-
stein. You probably do not recall that the cardinal thinks
that the evil spirit is concealed in Einstein's theory and
Yes, Einstein is a
that it is a menace to Christianity.
very, very dangerous man and no wonder the cardinal
trembles at the thought at what might happen if the
world ever grows to understand that theory.

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The Observer

DR. RAY LYMAN WILBUR,
who has been described in the
words which pictured King Saul
as head and shoulders above all
his brethren (6 feet 6 inches tall)
made up his mind recently that his
Department of the Interior needs
advice front leading educators in
the United States. Ile thereupon
appointed a committee, compris-
ing college presidents, deans of
educational institutions and other
experts in the field. There is only
one Jewish member and he is a
Washingtonian who has been inti-
mately associated with Jewish life
here for the past two years.
Maurice Bisgycr this week at-
tended the first meeting of the
advisory committee on education
and found his companions to in.
elude such IMMO as Dean Russell
of Columbia, William Green, presi-
dent of the American Federation
of Labor, and Dr. Norman Angel,
r.
president of Yale CII iVvrsit p. Mr.
is executive director of
the Jewish Community Center in
the capital and he is also national
secretary-treasurer of the Asso-
ciation of Jewish Community Cen-
ter Secretaries. lie is a former
member of the faculty of New
York University and a pioneer of
the field of adult extension edu-
cation.
During the Republican campaign
last summer, Mr. Bisgyer was asso-
ciated with the National Republi-
can Committee in its headquarters
at Washington while on leave of
absence front the Center.
The committee on education
will meet for a while in Washing-
ton and then break up into smaller
committees that will specialize in
problems facing the educational
forces of our country. Dr. Wilbur,
by the w ay, is not in favor of a
separate portfolio of education to
be assigned to a cabinet officer.
In this he agrees with President
Hoover.

anti-Semitism at college begins in the high

The Hebrew Union College at Cincinnati has always'
been looked upon as a center of anti-Zionism. The
bitterest opponents of the Zionist movement have been
the rabbis who have graduated from this college.
Among the Jews who dared to appear before a hearing
of a committee from the United States Congress to
oppose a resolution which expressed sympathy for the
Zionist movement were graduates from this college.
That this institution should award the honorary degree
of Doctor of Hebrew Law upon Dr. Chaim Weizmann,
president of the World Zionist Organization, is testi-
mony of a change in attitude on the part of leaders in
Reform Jewry, and is a triumph for Zionism.
In reality, however, it is a triumph for Dr. Weiz-
mann, whose genius has made possible the efforts in
behalf of the Jewish Agency. It is due to the genius of
this great leader that the first really successful steps
were taken to create unity in the ranks of Jewry.
Through him, Zionism has triumphed. The victory
for the Zionist cause is made doubly effective in the
award of the Hebrew Union College through these
words of tribute to Dr. Weizmann:
"Consecrated to the exacting and idealistic task of
the economic and cultural rehabilitation of Palestine
and official leader and spokesman of Zionism for many
years. his policies, activities and utterances have been
characterized by breadth and tolerance, and by a sym-
pathetic understanding of every other interpretation
of and movement in Judaism."

.

By

sneer at the Jewish children. Is it possible that

they might be embarrassed if he recited such a story.
When 1 was a youngster going to school in a country

The recent death of Lord Roseberry recalls one of
the first instances of intermarriage in the noted banking
house. Lord Roseberry was married in 1878 to the only
child of Baron Me•er de Rothschild, Miss Hannah de
Rothschild. This marriage caused a sensation at the
time. It was a prominent intermarriage among Chris-
tians and Jews of the nineteenth century, and one of the
very few Rothschild intermarriages.
Lady Roseberry, however, did not sever connections
with her people. On the contrary. she remained active
in Jewish welfare work in East London and was a mem-
ber of the Central Synagogue. She founded a club in
Whitechapel for Jewish working girls. She was buried
in a Jewish cemetery. with rabbis of the Central Syna-
gogue officiating. The London Jewish World recalls
that Mr. Gladstone, who was present at the funeral
ceremony, "took away with him a copy of the burial
service." "A further copy was, at Her Majesty's per-
sonal request, sent to the late Queen Victoria."
As Lord Dalmey, son of the late Lord Roseberry and
Hannah de Rothschild, succeeds to the Roseberry title,
it is interesting to note that his late brother, Neil Prim-
rose, who was said to have been inspired by his mother's
religion, died in action in Palestine in 1917. together
with his cousin. the Hon. Evelyn de Rothschild, son of
Mrs. Leopold de Rothschild.

"

story the other students turned to stare and to

should have considered that he had Jewish pupils and

A Rothschild Romance.

'

WASHINGTON JEWISH
MIRROR

1

A Triumph for Dr. Weizmann.

fact, its very antithesis, draining energies and resources.

If anything, the S. A. J. Review did not paint the
adverse side of the picture black enough. It is no
secret that Jewish clubs are measuring eligibility for
membership only by the size of the bankroll an appli-
cant is able to display. Which, of course, none has a
right to object to as these clubs measure eligibility
according to the financial standing of their members.
But it is from such clubs that has come aversion on the
part of Jews to Jewish causes, as evidenced by the
opposition voiced in Detroit circles during the United
Jewish Campaign to the cause of Jewish education.
Our own experience causes us particularly to subscribe
to the hope expressed in the S. A. J. Review editorial
that the Brooklyn club will extend the idea proposed
to it and that in the future "the measure of social
eligibility in Jewish clubs will come to be not merely a
man's capacity to match his check for membership dues
with a check for the Federation, but much more than
that—a man's participation in the synagogue life of his
community, his support of Jewish education and other
interests."
When Jewish boys turn gangsters, their actions
react against the entire Jewish people. When Jewish
clubs tolerate a prejudice against Jewish education,
which is the surest remedy against an increase in gang-
sterism among our youth, they virtually encourage the
gangs. Let the clubs inhabited by our rich turn more
Jewish, and they will set an example for others to

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By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ

GETTING THE POINT
George Robey, in a recently pub-
lished volume, "In Other Words,"
tells a story which reflects on the
philosophy of prejudice. His tale
follows:
The point of my story is that
the waiter was a Jew,
Aunt •Flora was distressed.
"A Jew!" she murmured. "Of
course, I ant not really prejudiced
against Jews. There are some
very nice Jews in the world—"
"This one isn't," I said, "but
the Scotsman wasn't a very nice
Scotsman either. He gave the
waiter half-a-crown and—"
"But surely that was nice of
him, George! interrupted Aunt
Flora.
"And the waiter died of lead
poisoning," I concluded. I looked
at Aunt Hort hopefully. Her face
was grave.
"Dear me, how very sad," she
observed.
"I don't think you've quite un-
derstood the joke, Aunt Flora," I
said. "Listen: The Scotsman gave
the Jew half-a-crown—and the
Jew died of lead poisoning.
"Yes dear, I heard you the first
time," said Aunt Flora. "I can't
help thinking the Scotsman must
have been so glad he was kind to
the poor Jew before he died."

TO THE GLORY OF THE VINE-
YARD

In these days of padlocked
speakeasies, Volsteadism and bad
hooch, it is relieving to read about
the better spirits of our Hebrew
humorists of the Middle Ages. Dr.
Solomon Solis-Cohen, in his "When
Love Passed By and Other
Verses," published by the Rosen-
bach Co. of Philadelphia, offers an
excellent translation of "The Bal-
lad of Ephron, Prince of Topers,"

L

by Immanuel ben Solomon ben
Jekuthiel Sifroni, better known as
Immanuel di Roma. Space pre-
vents reprinting this masterful sa-
tire on prohibition, written in the
thirteenth century.
Another excellent verse, dedi-
cated to the glory of the vineyard,
is the following translation by Dr.
Solis-Cohen of Judah ben Solo-
mon Al-Ilarizi's "The Daughter of
the Vine," also written in the thir-
teenth century:

Come. friend, with me, into the garden'.

shade,
Myrtle and re.* round thy brow
twine,
And to delieht us, see, the only maid
Charms most in see—the daughter of the
vine!

A year with God is nothing—so they

s

thousand
and years with him are but a
day:
Would 1 mieht linear with the winecup
here,
Until it seemed to God about a year.

VEILED CURSES

A man and his wife quarrelled
so consistently that finally they de-
cided to ask the rabbi to arbitrate.
"Why do you quarrel?" asked
the arbitrator.

"Because he's always doing
something to annoy me," answered
the wife, while the husband re-
plied, "she's always cursing me."
"Well," said the rabbi to the
wife, "the next time he annoys
you, instead of saying '1(10 curses
on p u n, say '100 blessings 011

you!' "

Harmony reigned between hus-
band and wife thereafter, but it
wasn't lung before the woman was
again annoyed.
"One hundred blessings on
you!" she cried, "but you know
what 1 mean!"

We Observe That---

0. 0. McIntyre, in his column tells us that they are call
ing them "the Yiderati" instead of the literati. Which make,
it unanimous that the children of Israel are not only tht
people of the Book but also of the manuscripts.

The Oxford University Press announces that in the future it will
publish its Bibles in gay colored covers. l'utting on the many colored
jacket of Joseph, as it were.

The former head of the Indiana Ku Klux Klan was sen-
tenced to imprisonment at Leavenworth on the charge of
stealing an automobile. With so many Kluxers behind the
bars, they ought to organize a new society entitled the Kon-
victed Kulprits Klan,

With the Brandeis-Mack group obtaining a concession to the salt
of the Dead Sea, it is expected their arguments in "opposition" to the
Z. 0. will be pretty spicy hereafter.

National Fund Blue Boxes serve other purposes outside
of collections for land in Palestine. They helped collect the
murderers of a Jewish family. Moral is, always keep a
Blue Box on hand.

The Jewish Undertakers' Association of New York is under investi-
gation by the Attorney-General on the charge of being • monopoly.
Here's where the Attorney-General will have to do some deep digging
for evidence.

car

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