A merica ewisk Periodical Cada All Jewish News All Jewish Views WITHOUT BIAS - - IfEbETROIT LWISH utRONICLE ,asst DR. VAYDA VOEVOD ADMITS CONNECTION WITH ANTI-SEMITES ■ ille. G. D. ART IANO 1003 THE ONLY ANGLO-JEWISH NEWSPAPER PRINTED IN MICHIGAN DETROIT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12,, 1930 Guest Speaker of Jewish Congress Refuses to Take Severer Steps to Suppress Their Activities. AND NE O LIN LE irmony tax • for m for fenders _ . X II MEE ir man 0 Of Way3e County I Elimination of Eastman's Plan Asked by Dr. Moses Jung. elected to parliament. My tactics Association, and the African So- did not succeed because of the ar- ciety. For a number of years he rests of Codreanu and TazIatianu." was a member of the London Coun- ty Council. • Objects to "Too Much Noise." GENEVA.— (J. T. A.) — The question of calendar reform, which is Oft ',for consideration by the League of Nations, will he placed on the agenda of the next general session of the League's advisory and technical committee for com- 1 munications and transit in October 1 1931, it Was decided at Saturday's' session of the committee. The committee also voted to suns-, mon a preparatory conference t' of discuss the calendar reform ques- tion before the committee meets to consider the reports of the various national committees. The esmmit- tee will not study the calendar re- form question from a religious point of view, it was agreed. Against Eastman's Proposal.. (J. T. A.) —The American Astronomical Society is the logical body to express an au- thoritative opinion of the problem of calendar reform and it is the privilege of the scientists to pro- pose a calendar which would im- prove the present system, if thought necessary, without at the same time causing great perturba- tion of conscience, economic loss and civil disabilities to many that the proposed Eastman Plan would, Dr. Moses Jung, of the school of religion of the University of Iowa told the annual meeting of the American Astronomical Society which is in session here. Calling the attention of the so- ciety to what he termed the "pres- ent propaganda for the adoption of the 13-month calendar," Dr. Jung, who is opposed to the Eastman plan which contains the blank day feature, pointed a number of rea- sons why it is not desirable to ac- cept Mr. Eastman's scheme. Among these reasons are: It in- Mr. Snell received his early edu- Turning to the Jewish cum plaints and protests, Dr. Vayda cation at a village school, and later Voevod declared that "the Jews attended Nottingham University, are making too much noise, espe the London School of Economics, cially with regard to the events in and the Ileidleberg University in Borscha. The Rumanian peasants Germany. volves a breach in the age-old con- have reason to believe that the He has had a long and distin- Jews themselves have committed guished career in British diplomat. ; tinuity of the week with a result- arson in order to obtain the insur- is service. lie was a member of ng "migrating" Christian Sunday, ance. The Jews forget that their the Parliamentary delegation to Jewish Sabbath and Mohammedan emancipation is only slightly root- South Africa in 1921, of the Brit- Friday, it would bring serious con- ed in Rumania and is only of re- ish Guiana Commission in 1926, fusion into the life of many devout. cent date. Ti Is therefore better and of the Palestine Inquiry Com- ly religious people and fs•therefore not to make exaggerated demands. mission in 1929-30. His reserva- arousing growing opposition of re- i gloos organizations all over the I appeal especially to the visitors tions in connection with the report ligious from America not to exaggerate of the Palestine Commission were j world, because it has been sub- events as Mr. Smolar, the repre- heralded throughout the world for n ected to severe criticism by recog- sentative of the Jewish Telegraph- their staunch support of the Bal- t ized leaders in the field of indus- ic Agency, did. I should have had four Declaration and the restora- a ry, commerce and science, partic- larly astronomy, as well as by him arrested and deported because lion of the Jewish National Home- g everal go v e r nments; because he insulted Rumania." land its. Palestine. a ublic opinion in this country has! Referring to the Jewish refu- Mr. Snell has ken a lifelong ad- s o or not expressed itself ode. gees from Russia now resident in the Rumaxian cities in Bessarabia, vocate of the Ethical Culture move- mutely and is not aware of the im- Dr. Vayda Voevod said it would ment, and is the chairman of thelp lications of the Eastman Plan and British Ethical Union. Ile has re- b ecause there are other plans avail- be better that they should not re- cently received from the King of a ble which would give practically main "because of the overcrowd- England the Order of Commander t he sane benefits without involving • ing in the cities, the result of if the British Empire. its disadvantages. which can easily be foreseen." At the same time the organ of Zelea Codreanu, the Iron Guard is again making its appearance. The current issue contains an editor- ial manifesto outlining the pro- gram of the order for the "na- tional salvation of Rumania." The Rumanian press asks whether Dr. By A. H. FROMENSON Vayda Voevod is still financing .) Codreanu's activities. Attacks Jewish Press. Thursday, Sept. 11, was the firstleistance as lies in his power an Dr. Vayda Voevod then launched yahrzeit of Louis Marshall, that ; to carry out and vivify and real into a furious attack on the Jew- l'rince of Israel—leader and ser.j ize the dreams of those who have ill press, accusing it and the Ru- vant of his people—whose name dared for centuries to dwell again manian press as well of a cam- and memory are enthroned in in the land of their fathers. paign to oust him from office. In every Jewish heart throughout the A Er•y of Joy. this connection he said "their day world, and whose passing will be h "After all, the time for dream- f reckoning is coming." lie said mourned ill increasing measure as ing is over. We need ideals, but 'hat Mr. Smolar's interview had , the years go on. we have arrived at the point damaged Rumania's foreign credit ' His death left Israel truly be- where we have got to work. We position, which is essential of the I raft. Something great, something have got to the point where talk improvement of economic condi- inspiring, was taken from as when is valuable at times, but where he was taken away. That ardo r (Turn to Page Opposite Editorial.) work is valuable always. We for Israel which dominated s Disputants in Paterson, N. J., to Appear at Din Torah, NEW YORK.— (.1. T. A.)—A committee of 20 New York Ortho- dox rabbis, chosen at the final Res- don on Wednesday night of the HENRY BEHRENDT HENRY BEHRENDT ELECTED SHERIFF Triumphs in Republican Primaries; Unopposed For Election. FRANKLIN RETURNS, ardor TO TEMPLE PULPIT I a firt tl t I soul, and swayed him to champion every y ri g hteous Jewish u se—a n whic h inspimade red m en to ha it , him a t lea der and the m ea gs •r Ito serve side y side b with him, is ley tt lithc okinnisi .,,alo.rlionsgo.t t oon o, t all skies, and in travail. needs him most sorely. 30 have different ideas and ideals. God has prospered us, and there- We may have different concep- fore we believe it to be our sacred tions of what should be done and duty as Jews to share of our sub- of what should not be done, but stance with our brethren every- of one thing I am confident, that where. We have done it in East- as a result of the organization of ern Europe and will continue to the enlarged Jewish Agency. Pal- do it there. We will be guided estine will be rebuilt. Nobody by that one ideal of duty and obli- shall be expected to surrender any gation. We are practical, and we conscientious belief. Everybody shall always try to do our work in , shall be given an opportunity to do his utmost to render such as- , (Turn to Page Opposite EditoriaL) trict, and vice-president of the Central Association of German Citizens of the Jewish Faith, hail a narrow escape from ser- ious injury when a political meetinb he ma s std a res.sins was interrupted by an armed gang of National Socialists (Fas- cists). The Fascists attacked him as he was leaving the meet- ing hall. Dr. Weil, an outspoken app in- out of the Ilitlerites anti their anti-Semitic program, had vig- tirously attacked anti-Semitism in his campaign address ahe n the National Socialists attempt- ed to break up the meeting. As he left the. hall the National So- cialists, ninny of them armed with knives, surrounded him and hurled cures at hint. In his en- deavor to break away from the menacing crowd, Dr. Weil threw ground. The crowd then threat- ened him with death. The time- ly arrival of the police prevent- ed serious injury to Dr. Well. fulfillment of his great life-ideal, Dr. Leo M. Franklin occupies ! the unity of the Jewish people. he Temple Beth El pulpit Solar.' So, at least he believed. when at day morning, Sept. 13, speaking on ' the close of that historic confer- the subject, "Some European Ob- ence in Zurich he witnessed the ervations." The services will take birth of the Jewish Agency for !dare in the main auditorium. The Palestine. His Last Great Address. full choir, under the direction of That day, when men of light William Howland will resume sere- and leading, representing practi ices. On Saturday, Sept. 20, Rabbi cally every Jewry in the world, of Leon Fram will occupy the pulpit fixed their names to the "pact o and give a pre-view of the numer. glory" as the document creatin ', US holidays which begins Monday the Agency was called by him, h hailed as the happiest day of hi night, Sept. 22. life. The address he delivered o For the High Holy Days the tem- that occasion, Aug. 14, 1929, wa " THE LATE LOUIS MARSHALL ple will conduct three distinct sera- one of the greatest of the man y have got to a .vs at every holy day. They will • twh ere e held in the main auditorium, in great addresses delivered by him • most be a practical outlook upon I he Brown Memorial Chapel and in This is indeed the most extra - everything thatis to be done in the social hall of the temple. The orodinary assembly that I hay c Palestine. And we must work with 1," he declared • that idea in view. Men who know rabbis, Dr. Leo Franklin and Rab- bi Pram, will be assisted by Rabbi "There are gathered here Jew one another never hate each other. Philip W. Jaffa, the regional rabbi from four continents, from many , Let us therefore study to under- countries, and of every kind o , stand one another. We have great id this district, p orshippers who are not regular. oinion that the human mind can practical problems before as which a dlOW. We have come to must be 1 Y affiliated at Temple Beth El will possibly great, broad, gether to witness the union of practical, business-like way. be welcome to these supplementary Zionists and non-Zionists for the "We American Jews services provided they write and fl esh upbuilding of Palestine. We may and blood. We are human beings. a pply for the proper ticket for ad- mission. This procedure is neces- s ary because of the limited copse- tip of the temple and the huge de- mands made upon it during these special holidays. The Religious School of Temple Beth El open,' Saturday, Sept. 20, for the Junior High School stu- dents; and Sunday, Sept 21, for the elementary school and the Tern- ple High school. BERLIN.—(J. T. A.) — Dr. Bruno Weil, Jewish Reichstag :"andidate of the new Constitu- tional Party for the Berlin dis- two of his attackers to the Will Speak Saturday Morn - I Only a few days before this in- ing On "Some Euro - ,consolable bereavement was visited !upon Israel, he had realized the peon Observations." Vaad Haralionirta the federation If orthodox rabbis of Greater New Yolk, will seek ways and means of putting end to the kosher scan- dals in New York City whereby kosher butchers and delicatessen lealces have been able to sell non- koshei products for kosher. The convention also adopted res. dutions condemning the delivery ,1 kosher meat from the slaughter. houses to the butcher shops on Sat- urday, protesting against those lealerm in kosher products who keep their stores open on the Sab- bath and calling upon Orthodox Jew's in New York City not to buy kosher foodstuffs in such stores. The five-day working week, which would give Orthodox Jewish work- ers a chance to rest on the Jewish Sabbath, was strongly endorsed by the Vaad, which at the some time mndenined those Jewish employers ' in New York City who take advan- tage of Jewish workers who are Sabbath observers by paying them shot was termed at the convention as "starvation wages." Henry Behrendt will be the next sheriff of Wayne county. Conduct ing a campaign of opposition to the practices of the incumbent, Sheriff Ira Wilson, whom he charged with allowing gamblers to invade the county outside of De- troit, Mr. Behrendt won the Re- publican nomination, which is tan- tamount to election because the The deplorable situation of the Democrats have no candidate in ilder type of Yiddish-speaking Eu- the field. ropean-bred Orthodox rabbi in the Mr. Behrendt has an enviable United States in general, and in record as a capable law-enforce- New York City in particular, was ment officer. In 1906 he was ap- discussed by ninny rabbis at the pointed chief of police in Lansing, closing session of the Vaad conven- where he reorganized a demoral. tion. Rabbis in this country, the ized department so effectively that speakers said, were really no long- President Wilson appointed him er rabbis in the sense they were in federal marshal for Eastern Mich- the Old World, but 'had become igan in 1914, a position he held magiddim, preachers. In New York until 1922. Then he served as a City especially the situation of the member of the Federal Jury Com- older orthodox rabbis is bad, be- mission until last fall. cause here rabbis are hired by con- Ile was born in Detroit in 1869, gregations instead of by the whole and he has made his home here, c ommunity , except his years spent in Lansing. ; n other cities. The older type of Ile was a member of Company E, Orthodox rabbi is apparently Thirty-first Regiment, Michigan. Volunteer Infantry, during the doomed to disappear in this coun- try, and even in European coun- Spanish -Amen , anti or tries his status is weakening, one many years he was associated with speaker stated. the International Association of Police Chiefs, before whom he Kashruth Dispute at "Din-Torah" read several papers on vice control PATERSON, N. J.—(J. T. A.) and efficient police administration. Mr. Behrendt made the follow•, —The vigorous dispute over Kash- ing statement: 1 ruth now waging among the ortho- "While I naturally feel that I dox element of this city has reached must express my appreciation for t he stage of "Din-Torah." Rabbi the indorsement given me by the „. .eisor Shetland, leader of the people of Detroit and Wayne orces which is seeking to oust Rabbi 'William Wittenstein as sup- (Turn to Page Opposite Editorial) , e rvisor of the Vaad Ilakashruth, , a nnounced his willingness to ap- pear before a "Din-Torah," thus acknowledging the demand of the Reichstag Candidate Has A Narrow Escape First Yahrzeit of Louis Marshall New York Vaad Harabonim Picks Committee of 20 to Act. ABUSE OF KASHRUTH HIT AT CONVENTION TO STUDY PROPOSAL VIENNA. — (J. T. A.) —An- nouncing that he will not adopt more vigorous measures against the anti-Semitic agitators for fear that such a policy may result in even greater anti-Semitic disturb- ances. Dr. Alexander Vayda Voe- vod, Rumanian minister of the in- terior, in a sensational interview published in the Rumanian press, declares that in the future he pre- fers to follow the tactics he has used hitherto, namely, to influence, the anti-Semitic leaders in a peace-, ful manner. Frankly admitting that he has' been associated with the recently acquitted anti-Semitic chieftain, Zelea Codreanu, as well as other anti-Semitic leaders ever since he RT. HON. HARRY SNELL, M. P. entered the Maniu cabinet, Dr. Vayda Voevod explained that his The lit. Hon. Ilarry Snell, C. B. nnti-Semitic connections were the E., M. P., who will be the guest of result of his being "a conscien- tious friend of the Jews" in which the American Jewish Congress at capacity he asked "Codreanu to its convention in Washington D. dissolve the old anti-Semitic or- C., on Sunday, October 10, has been ganization and to create a new as- a member of Parliament since 1922. sociation, the Iron Guard." Pointing out that Codreanu had He is chairman of the Labor Party "always been honest in keeping his in the (louse of Commons and is a promises and that his meetings and member of the National Executive demonstrations would be orderly" of the British Labor Party. He is and that M. TazIadanu, the re- cently removed chef de cabinet in a leader in various British Nation- the ministry of the interior, "had al Organizations including the Fa- also kept his word," the minister bian Society, the Royal Empire of the interior said "everything Society, the Empire Parliamentary changed when Professor Cuza was 1 Wittenstein forces. Representatives of Hakashruth last week moved to lave Rabbi Rosen, of Passaic, act- i ng as an impartial party, summon both sides to a Din Torah. Rabbi Bureau Asks Employers' Co-Operation. Britain Admits Frantic hordes of unemployed, men and wawa boys and girls, are knocking daily at the doors of Jewish modal agencies, asking for aid in securing any type of work to tide them, taxer the present period of depression. Many of the unemployed have applied at the office of The Detroit Jewish Chronicle. and the oM of the Jewish Social Service Bureau, 60 Blaine avenue, is literally besieged by them. Mandates Body's Right to Criti- cize Mandatory. ADMISSIONS ARE MAD! BY ARTHUR HENDERSON Contention of Duty to Safe. Immediate aid is needed for hundreds, if people who depend on guard Rights Is Drop- some type of work, temporary if permanent is unavailable, for their ped by Britain. sustenance. To help in the present situation, The Detroit Jewish GENF,VA.— (J. T. A.) — Sup- Chronicle joins with the Jewish agencies here is an appeal to em- porting the report of the PerfIlA ployers to co-operate in relieving the situation. ent Mandates Commission on the Any type of work for men and women and working boys and girls Palestine outbreaks of 1929 to tl et eatreteeusro extent, ar h the ja c t fullp over 16 will find appreciative applicants. For every job thus far rr. lm oa u rr nc i rortp e, io secured there were dozens of applicants. Anything, from janitorial Is' to executive work, will be welcomed. Cooks, housekeepers, maids, 1 N-e gt e il i tef t h is N o use nsrvaotnionMsano dnattel st: seamstresses, and any other type of work for women ; messenger. , Mandates Commission's report to thioenodpneyninnigorse office, stenographic, sales and other work for boys and girls; any t:iopne :1t. nsi sni gon of i.he oim otin er,cil, i ilia C flume and report were unanimously adopted by the Council after a brief l of al•P:iPulili'l.,ai y'tt•r% are urged to co-operate in every way possible. Fur declaration by Arthur Henderson, whatever work they are in position to offer, they are appealed to at tpritirs e ehfo pre serenitgantivsec secretary, es of jn,iav once to communicate either with the editorial office of The Chronicle the or by calling the Jewish Social Service Bureau, 50 Blaine avenue, T d h P e e fir s i a t ' question on the Agend a Madison 4785. was h1. Procope's report re which was divided into three parts, first I I of work for men, carpentry, masonry, plumbing, etc.—will find le, I. GILBERT VICTIM OF HEART ATTACK Dead In Argentine Revolt Three Jews Are BUENOS AIRES. — (J. T. A.)—A careful check-up by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency shows that 10 of the 160 per- sons who were wounded Satur- day night when members of the now ousted Radical party fired into a crowd of revolutionists gathered in front of the build- ing of La Epoca, a newspaper Di- supporting ex-President goyen, were Jews. Of the 17 killed in the same incident three were Jews, among them Chaim Rosenblatt, a former po- liceman in Palestine. _ Former Beth El President Dies Suddenly at the Age of 60. Isaac Gilbert, former president of Temple Beth El, died suddenly on Tuesday evening, following a heart attack. Ile was found by LYNCHING OF FRANK ECHOES IN GEORGIA Case May Hurt Governor Who Pardoned Him at the Poles. brief review of the work of the in Commission, second a reply to the British government's remarks on the afandate's Commis. sion report, and third, Procope's conclusions and resolution. we h i t nil that ti the various o!,7 set forth would be sufficient to ap- pease the certain anxiety which is J. T. A. Correspondent Given the Best Seat GENEVA.—(J. T. A.)--In view of the tremendous interest on the part of world Jewry in the action to be taken by the Council of the League of Na- tions on the Mandates Commis- sion's report on Palestine, B. Smolar, the correspondent of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, was assigned seat No. 1 in the first row at the sessions of the Council. Mr. Smolar was sin- gled out for this distinction by the secretariat of the League of Nations from over 400 of the world's most noted journalists who are here for the sessions of the council and the assembly. apparent in-the comments of the to the surface on a number of oc- Mr. Gilbert was for 20 years gested by the M andate Commis- casions during the warmly corn- active in activities Jewish religious and sion's observations on the Palestine batted campaign and several times comm,,oal in Detroit. As government's annual report for recently has demanded the cogni- PISGAH'S SMOKER MONDAY EVENING FEDERAL RESERVE to Important Posi- tion by President Hoover. The practice of exchanging New Year Greetings through the columns of The Detroit Jewish Chronicle has in the past decade been substituted for the old custom of mailing New Year cards by the vast majority of our readers. Greeting cards in The Detroit Jewish Chronicle will this year take the following form: Mr. and Mrs. Israel Ben Israel and Family 7007 Taylor Avenue Extend their best wishes to their relatives and friends for Happy and Prosperous New Year a MAIL THE COUPON BELOW AT ONCE PitikmonjonsnaIRONICIE 625 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Mich. Gentlernen: Enclosed find $1.00 for which please insert my New Year Greeting Card in your Rosh Haahonah (5691) number. ADDRESS . - Per Year, $3.00; Per Copy, 10 Cen is 1929. The Council approves tho Rosen was one of the rabbis once of Mr. Slaton, it was not un- directed activities which led to the conclusions of the Mandates Com- , who recently helped settle a similar tit his last speech that the former president of Temple Both El he mission regarding the petitions er- governor felt obliged to review the erection of the present magnifi- 'controversy in St. Louis. Both a cen t house of worohi amined by it and instructs the sec- sides have pledged themselves to incident in explaining the part stone and {Woodward. Ile was a retary-general to bring them in 'abide by the decision of the "Din- played by himself. leader in many organizations, each case to the notice of the Man. era h." The Frank Case. served as president of District datory Power and of the petitioner The Frank case involved the Grand Lodge No. 6 of the Inds- concerned." trial of Leo M. Frank, prominent , pendent Order of B'nai B'rith, Capitualtion before the Mandates member of Atlanta Jewry and ex- I served tin the executive committee Commission's report was evident ecutive of a local pencil factory,iof the Union of American Hebrew in Mr. Ilenderson'a declaration in for murder of a young woman rm.: Congregations, and was a member reply to M. Procope, Mr. Header- ployee found dead in the factory. I of the Phoenix Club and the recogn ized t hte. chirs itn i • An interestirT g program has been The star witness against Frank Franklin Hills Country Club. i dates Commissions isains duty arranged by the program commitee presented by the solicitor general, Born in New York City in 1869 cite the Mandatory Poster and th of Pisgah Lodge No.:11, I. O. IL B., was a Negro of criminal record Mr. Gilbert moved to Kalamazoo changing the tone in which the for the smoker to take place this who was watching for the factory. with his parents in his early youth. ceivnetneirn. g.D,tixer (Turn to Page Two.) e tr. 1.54, 1 at M a ny prominent Atlantans ex- He came to Detroit 21 years ago Dexter ('enter, L aw- pressed confidence in the innocence and became president of La Azora rence. Miss Rhoda Goldberg, so- of Frank and questioned the pus- Cigar Company. He later soli prano, and Mr. Gregory monolog. tale guilt of the Negro watch- t out his interest in this company 1 and at the time of his death was ist and comedian, will he featured. man. The case was carried to the high- t vice-president of the Webster .re Smokes and refreshments will be eft courts of the state and nation Cigar Company and vice-president At the meting last Monday eve- after Frank was found guilty anti and treasurer of the Kleiner Cigar ning, addresses acre delivered by sentenced to death. Angered by Manufacturing Company. outside influence enlisted to save Mr. Gilbert is survived by his William Sultan, president of Dia. Frank, an element of the local pop- wife. Blanche Levy Gilbert; a Named trict Grand Lodge No. 6; Julius ulance took part in a considerable two sisters, tset• er.MiTrs N oo Barbara Gilbert; Kahn, past president, and Otto G. display of anti-Semitism and local Felton, secretary of the Grand political office holders indicated Mrs. Rosalie Gates, and a brother, Lodge. that they felt it unwise to take any . S. T. Gilbert, all of Detroit. Funeral services were held from WASHINGTON.—(J. T. Al — steps that might be misinterpreted as favoring the friends of Frank. Temple Beth El at 2 p. m. Thurs. Not since Louis Brandeis was with Rabbis Leo M. Franklin named to the Supreme Court IT It was in the midst of such pop. day, , Leon Fram officiating. Burial President Wilson has a Jew held ular hostility that Mr. Slaton, then an! AO high an appointive office in the 'governor of Georgia, cemmutisi the µes in Woad mere Cemetery. GREET YOUR FRIENDS ON THE NEW YEAR THROUGH THE DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE 0 —a Mandatory Power, Mr. Procope A TLANT A.— (J. T. A.) — prosed to the Council the following Shades of the Leo Frank lynching, resolution: which 17 years ago aroused Amer- Mr. Henderson's Capitulation. ican Jewry, were thrown into bold "The Council of the League of relief here when former Governor Nations, having considered the re- John M. Slaton wound up his cam- port of the Mandates Commission paign for the United States Sen- and the observations of the Brit- ate with a resume of the sensation- ish government, decided to instruct al incident in which he played a the secretary-general to forward to leading role. the British government the ?port Since Governor Slaton began his of the Mandates Commission, the campaign against the present in- report of the rapport•ur as well as ISAAC GILBERT cumbent, Senator William J. Iler- the minutes of the present meeting ris, several months ago, the tinder. D e hn on Fritz, residential pa trol. and also to request the British gov- current of comment on the historic ernment to adapt such measure§ as murder-lynching outrage has been C man, in the yard at the rear of his home,sed hems 2050 Glynn Court, having it thinks fit to effect the mammon. Steadily oil the increase through- ,lapsed es p ragfter locking his car in dations and conclusions contained out the state. .".'though hough it has r!Strl hi therein and to take the action tug- the Vaad s The Only Way in Which to Reach All Your Friends NAME ._..- _ 1-0.4-0 ORTHODOX RABBIS IMMEDIATE AID ASKED COUNCIL OF LEAGUE BY JEWISH UNEMPLOYED SEEK WAY TO END UPHOLDS CRITICISM Women, Boys, Girls Apply for Any Type of Work to OF ENGLAND'S RUL KOSHER SCANDALS Men, Tide Over Period of Depression; Social Service The Next Sheriff ASTRONOMERS URGED Anti•Religious Drive Is Re- newed by Yiddish Com- munists In Russia. le 3550 xidivadd CALENDAR REFORM UP BEFORE LEAGUE IN OCTOBER, 1931 Placed on Agenda of Next Session of Technical Committee. NEW DISTURBANCE IS REPORTED IN RUMANIA 30 • TELEPHONE CADILLAC { VOL. XXX, NO. 16 111 - ...NUS - CINCINNATI 30, OHIO death sentence of Frank to life im- prisonment. There ensued an out• Asurst of disapprmal that finally led to the seizure of Frank from prison authorities and his lynching by a mob not far from Atlanta. BAZAAR OF J. N. F. TO BENOV. •23-27 Slaton 's Explanation. In his talk Governor Slaton stat- saotnteinnoocoh m y o m nouttoidngstrl'e rtal)nk,:ns P t Worker s t. atn7d . etith h a n i o rf at the merits of the case as revealed by by impartial investigation and up- on the advice of the trial judge. The Jewish National Fund ba- It was predicted at the time that is to be held this year begin- the performance of what he re- zar ning Sunday, Nov. 23, to Thor's- as his duty as governor of a 27, Thanksgiving Day, the State -.you'd result in his po- day, litical death. In 1911 he ran for and will be held in the B'nai Moshe Synagogue auditorium, the United States Senate, but was Dexter and Lawrence avenues, defeated and 'until now has been Rall Moshe, Federal Government as Eugene Meyer, Jr., who was appointed goy- oiier of the Federal Reserve Board. Few appointments made by President Hoover have met with such wide-spread approval in busi- ness and financial circles as has the naming of Mr. Meyer as head of the Federal Reserve Board. A native of California, Mr. Mey- er established his own banking bus- iness in New York in 1901. Ile ahndoned it in 1917 to take up a government post during the World War when he was named technical adviser on metals to the Advisory Commission of the Council of Na- tional Defence. During the war period he was also a director of the War Financial Corporation, Aaron Kurland, J. N. F. chairman technical advisor to the War In- without political office, although announces. dustries Board and a member of regarded as one of the leading law- A meeting of all volunteer the National Committee on War yers and best speakers of this bee- workers and organizations has tion. The solicitor general who been called for Wednesday eve- Savings. As director of the War Finance persecuted Frank rose to the goy- ning, Sept. 17, at the B'nai Moshe Corporation, to which office he was ernorshin of the State. , Synagogue. Mrs. H. II. Prenz- appointed by President Wilson in Althotigh the Frank case was lauer will address the workers. 1919, Mr. Meyer did much to or- thought to be a dead issue when Rabbi A. H. Hershman and Rabbi ganize the resources of the farmers Governor Slaton entered the petit- Leon From have also been invited and insure credit to them. Ile made teal arena to oppose Senator liar- to address the gathering. a successful fight for the continu a rift this year, the resentment of his The Jewish National Fund be- leniency to the Jewish manatee- zaar is expected to be the out- ation of the War Finance Corpor- ation after it had been liquidated turer 17 years ago has been gain- standing event of Zionist work in by secretary of the treasury bows. • mg strength since the outset of the , campaign. I (Turn to Last Page.) (Tarn to Last Page.)