7i1E/itTROTIIEW1511060NICLE EVEFROITIEWISfi et RON ICIL Pubbehed Weekly by The Jowl.' Chronicle Publishing Ce.. fat. Entered as second-clue matter March I, ISM•t the Poets office at Detroit, Mich., under the Act of March IL 1379. General Offices and Publication Building 525 Woodward Avenue Telephone: Cadillac 1040 Cable Address: Chronicle 1oo4en Offmc 14 Stratford Plate, London, W. 1, England Subscription, in Advance..._ $3.00 Per Year To Insure publication. all correepondence and news matter must reach this, glee by Tuenday evening of each week. Wh .n namlIng notices. kindly WI/ on• Sid. of Om pep. only. The Detroit Jewish Chronicle invitee correspondence on tub- 4ects of interest tt the Jewish people, but dischtims responsi- bility for an ladoncrunt of the •leem •xp ..... d by the •rtters Sabbath Re•dinn of the Law. Pentateuchal portion--Gen. 47:28-50:26. Prophetical portion—I Kings 2:1.12. January 2, 1931 Tebeth 13, 5691 EZRZIVIVIZ MTAMIVERAMIMMIRS5t310 . A Prince Is Lost to Israel. An irreparable loss for the Jewish peo- ple is the death of Lord Melchett, the form- er Sir Alfred Mond. An industrial monarch and a noted dip- lomat, Lord Melchett's name will be espec- ially connected with the story of Jewish ef- fort for the reconstruction of Palestine. His name will be linked with those of two other great giants in finance, Baron Edmond de Rothschild of Paris, whom Jews through- out the world affectionately call "der Bar- on," and Felix M. Warburg of New York. Baron Rothschild wa3 the man who laid the foundation for the old Yishub, the first set- tlement, in Zion, Mr. Warburg practically financed Jewish effort in Palestine this year. Because of the countrywide failure of the Allied Jewish Campaign, with some excep- tions in which Detroit is included, Mr. War- burg alone this year spent $1,000,000 for Palestine. But Lord Melchett's work is di- rectly comparable with that of Baron Roths- child because he has, in the past five years, spent millions in developing orange groves in Palestine, placing them for sale among Palestine Jews on long term payments in parcels of 10 dunams. Tel Mond, the set- tlement bearing his name, stands as a mon- ument to his efforts. Lord Melchett's reply to the recent Brit- ish White Paper, on account of which he re- signed as chairman of the Council of the Jewish Agency and as president of the Eng- lish Zionist Federation, was one of the most excoriating of all Jewish criticisms of his own government, and was remarkable evi- dence of his devotion to the cause of the Jewish National Home in Palestine. Jews everywhere will mourn the death of this great leader with the traditional dec- laration that "sar v'godol nofal b'Israel,"— "a prince and a great man has fallen in Israel." A Catholic Replies to Dr. Pool. We are very grateful to Rev. George W. Pare of the Sacred Heart Seminary of this city for his statement replying to Dr. David deSola Pool's attack on William Thomas Walsh's "Isabella of Spain, the Last Cru- sader." Even if it is not to be considered an official reply, as it can not possibly be, it is a fair indication of what a Catholic scholar thinks about the matters involved— the Inquisition, the ritual murder lie, etc. It is clear that Reverend Pare has tried to be fair in his reply, even if he did call Dr. Pool's review of the Isabella biography "too violent." Nevertheless we are disap- pointed in some of his statements. He states, for instance, that "today, both ritual mur- der and the Inquisition are unthinkable. Five hundred years ago they were not. In such matters perspective is everything." If our learned correspondent refers to the sen- timents of unthinking masses, then we do not have to go back four centuries to prove when both the Inquisition and ritual mur- der were "unthinkable." Even the enlight- ened twentieth century Jews are suffering such bigoted "thinking." But we are dealing with the high councils of the church, and we are surprised to hear that at any time, even in the most bigoted periods in the story of mankind. teachers of religion and ethics should condone the existence of such a "re- volting accusation," to use Reverend Pare's own words, as the ritual murder lie, and such horrible instrument as the Inquisition. In Jewish life such an instrument could never be excused. And official Catholicisni never did either, as was emphasized by Dr. Pool when he made reference to the disap- proval of the zeal of the Spanish Inquisi- tion by Popes Sixtus IV, Innocent VIII and the Borgia Pope Alexander VI, who plead- ed with Isabella to be more merciful. Reverend Pare writes us that "if Mr. Walsh's book can be discredited by an im- partial and painstaking refutation, it will be disavowed by every lover of justice and truth." But every lover of justice and truth has already disavowed the sentiments of the book. History has condemned the Inquisition and the efforts to pin the ritual murder lie on the Jews. And joining in the condemnations were Catholics as well as Protestants and Jews. We continue to hope that the official Catholic Church will disavow this biog- raphy of Isabella. Dr. Pool's attack on Walsh's book was tempered with a feeling of friendship for the present Catholic beb ' ' Church, and his attack was limited to the cruel institutions which were created by fa- natics and which were as abhorrent to truly religious Catholic souls in the fifteenth cen- tury as they are in the twentieth. In all fairness to our Catholic friends, we quote the Catholic explanation of the Span- ish Inquisition. A devout Catholic friend has supplied us with a copy of "Catholic Answers to Protestant Charges" by G. El- liot Anstruther, organizing secretary of the International Catholic Truth Society. The answer to the charge on the Spanish Inqui- sition reads: The Inquisition is an institution, still in existence, for the purpose of investigating and dealing with heretical teaching. It is needless to say that it never inflicts capital punishment nowadays, or imprisonment, or any of the other penalties which followed from its action in bygone centuries. The Inquisition, as acuh, should not be confused with the Spanish In- quisition, with which this note has to deal. The Spanish Inquisition was founded in 1481 by Ferdinand and Isabella, and its severities were condemned by some of the Popes them- selves. No Catholic would desire for one mo- ment to condone its excesses; no Catholic na- tion would nowadays permit them. But we must remember in order to judge even the Spanish Inquisition fairly, that in the days when it was in operation torture and death were inflicted all over Europe, including Eng- land, for an enormous number of offenses, and heresy was then adjudged, especially in Spain, to be a serious crime against the state. As a matter of fact, while the Inquisitors decided as to the heresy of the accused, the state exe- cuted the sentence, the Inquisition being a joint tribunal of church and state. "The History of the Spanish Inquisition," written by Llorente, on which most Protestant writers rely, is full of statements and statistics which cannot be reconciled with those from other sources, and it is significant that he burnt the official records which would have enabled his figures to be checked. The Spanish Inquisition was not more cruel in its procedure —it was indeed more just—than were the civil courts of that time. Llorente gives the almost certainly false total of 6,024 victims of the Inquisition under Torquemada during 14 years; according to a yearly average computed by Sir James Stephens, there were in a similar period 11,200 executions in England under Queen Elizabeth. We believe that the above speaks for it self. Only the uninformed and the very naive will justify the Inquisition on the ground that it "was not more cruel in its procedure—it was indeed more just—than were the civil courts of that time." Our argument at this time, however, is that the Catholic Church ought not to be a party to such aspersions on the Jewish people as are contained in Walsh's "Isabella," and we again join Dr. Pool in urging the Cath- olics of this country to disavow the volume. Bigotry in a Season of Good Will. Under date of December 22, on the eve of the great Christian holiday which is hailed as ushering in the season of good will and peace among men, the Jewish Tel- egraphic Agency received the following cable from Prague, in Czechoslovakia: The publication of an article in the Christ- mas issue of the Czechoslovakian Y. M. C. A.'s organ of an article repeating the legend that the Jews are responsible for the crucifixion of Christ has aroused great indignation among the Jews of this city, and particularly among those who have actively supported the work of the Y. M. C. A. The article in question also points out that a number of reference books on the subject are axailable in the Y. M. C. A. library. This serves to remind Jews of the story of Pat, the Irish friend of a Jew whom he suddenly attacked as a Christ-killer. His Jewish friend, amazed at the sudden ha- tred, asked for a reason for Pat's action over something that happened nineteen centuries ago, and Pat's reply was: "I only heard it yesterday." How else are we to describe such inbecil- ity and such stupid way of fostering ha- tred? Because such things recur every year at Christmas-time, Jews are not sur- prised by them, but they nevertheless re- gret that bigotry should continue to rule the earth. Better Not Vow, Than Not Pay. To those who made pledges to the Al- lied Jewish Campaign fund during the Spring drive, there is a warning in Eccles- iastes: "Better is it that thou shouldest not Vow, than that thou shouldest not pay." The appeals to contributors to make im- mediate payments, published in the last three issues of The Chronicle, reveal anxi- ety on the part of Detroit leaders for the causes involved. Anti they are justified be- cause Jewry everywhere is experiencing one of the most serious crises in our history, and more fortunate American Israel must honor its obligations if the structures of re- construction overseas, and the communal agencies in this country, are not to crumble. Samuel Johnson, in "The Patriot," is- sued this interesting warning against the making of false promises: "He that raises false hopes to serve a present purpose, only makes a way for disappointment and dis- content." Certainly pledges to the Allied Jewish Campaign were made in good faith, but even the slightest delay in their pay- ments may serve to make "a way for disap- pointment." It is better not to make any vows at all than that the pledges should not be hon- ored, and the contributions made to the Al- lied Campaign should be paid at once. IWIWT2VPU, 619 ' ' • b• • „ , i7V,y4VA'AyiyinOWX sl- '' IP • 'a'°' s t VV V.....„, .1441:,' $ BY-THE-WAY '1 Charles H. Joseph Tidbits and News of Jew- ish Personalities. By DAVID SCHWARTZ DIARY OF A DAY Up, breakfast and board the sub- way, reading more on Einstein and marveling that people make so great ado about something they do not understand. But perhaps, that's just it. People are always moot enthusiastic about the incom- prehensible. Consider religion. It's the inscrutable that explains its lasting grip. At the office meet X, who asks if I have heard Einstein's latest definition of relativity. "I devoutly pray you are not going to spring the one about when you sit on a red hot stove, a minute seems like an eternity and when you sit on a pretty girl's lap, an eternity seems like a min- ute.'" "No," retorts X. This one is bona fide from Einstein himself. Asked what his theory was, Pro. fessor Einstein told a friend. If my theory proves true, the Ger- mans in future years will say Ein- stein was a German, and the French will say no--a mind like his was international. Whereas, if the theory proves unsound, the French will say Einstein was a German and the Germans will say he was a Jew. That's relativ i ty."' That, too, X, I have heard be- fore, but I can use it in my busi- ness—what, with the depression, what it is— "HEAD CHECK" GINSBURG Promenading with Jewish Tri- bune Wallach, came upon Louis Popkin, who now and then is heard of in a publicity way. Popkin told the one about "Head Check Gins- burg." For those who may not be in the know, so-called "head- checks" are merely checks dated ahead. When Ginsburg was con- fronted with a bill say on Dec. 23, he would sign a check as of, say, Jan. 5. Well, it appears that Ginsburg. who was eternally writing "head checks" died and his friends placed on the tombstone: Here lies Jacob Ginsburg, Ile died June 6 as of July 2. —)— THE DIXIE JEWISH POET And so, an anthology of South- ern verse is planning to devote some 16 pages to the works of Robert Loveman of Dalton, Ga., who authored, among other things, the "It Isn't Raining to Me" bal- lad. I have been told that some cousin of the late Dixie poet, a lawyer, is president of a Brooklyn synagogue. Let those who think of Jews so frequently in terms of the revolutionists consider the case of Loveman. Here was a poet of "sweetness and light" in all its glory, particularly of sweetness. A cousin of this Robert Loveman, by the way, Sam Loveman, if I recall correctly, wrote things of a more acid constitution. He Was a friend of Ambrose Bierce. MENCKEN AND LOVEMAN But going back to Robert Love- man, my private detectives inform me that Robert Loveman was the idol of H. L. Mencken in his youth, and that the l.oveman family still possesses a number of letters which the youthful Ilenry wrote to Loveman, telling him how much his poems meant to him. Prob- ably, today, Mencken would give a small fortune to burn up these letters. In his youth, youthful Harry was quite as sentimental as the rest of them. There used to be a little book in the New York library, containing some of these adolescent and sentimental effu- sions of Mencken himself, but the book is no more to be found there, and gossip has it that II. L. Mencken may have been respon- sible for its disappearance. It would not do for the votary of the Dionysian outlook on life to ever have been known to applaud ecstatically such a serse as this of Loveman: "It isn't raining to me, It's raining violets. On every dimpled drop I see New flowers on the hills. It isn't raining rain to me, It's raining daffodils. BUT WHO CAN WRITE A TREE? To the Civic Repertory, where slaves Miss Steinberg for Eva Le- Gallienne. To our query for news came the response: "Nothing— no runs, no hits, no errors." But nevertheless our suspicions came true. She is writing a book, as who is not; for, as the poet ob- served, anyone may write a book, but who can write a tree—or something to the same purpose. Anyway. Miss Steinberg's opus is to be a history of the Fourteenth Street Theater, and being an insti- tution where such actors as Booth, Laura Keane and other celebrities of the years that are no more played, it should have plenty of throbs. AFTER THE BALL IS OVER Newspapers report the passing of Charles K. Harris, author of "After the Ball" and "Break the News to Mother." Saw him only recently and he looked good for at least another 20 years. If all the couples who have waltzed to his melodies since Harris wrote them were placed side by able, they would reach almost from here to the heaven, to which I hope Har- ris has gone. Harris, by the way. began his musical compositions as the result of some unhappy boys episode. Song writers should always be unhappy. Consider Irv- ing Berlin. As long as he wan un- satisfied he wrote songs, "What'll I Do," "Remember," etc., etc.. but now that everything is hunkydory, his muse has been silent. FIGURES AND NOTES Music and mathematics — the Jew appears to have a strong ore- dilection for both of these. Ein- stein is not the only great Jewi+h mathematician. He is the great- rot, perhaps, but the Wolof, are full of prominent Jewish mathe- (Turn to Next Page) ..ves4-4-Qs4W-4— s.v•Attt•t• Wanted: Jews In Politics 1101 1 (1 ta$ IT IS interesting to see just how close a person may get to being generous without quite reaching the line. The late Harvey G. Woodward, the Birm- ingham, Ala., capitalist, is one I have in mind. Ile left a trust endowment of $7,500,000 to establish a chain of boys' schools to be operated on radically new lines, in the state of Alabama. An unusual provision which shows that he had sonic imagination is that for the first 25 years every teacher must be drawn from the United Statt., north of an east-west line through Cincinnati. This was done to show the boys of Alabama that the people of the North are not unlike the people of the South. Thus far Mr. Woodward showed himself to be unhampered by prejudices. Ile adventured into new fields and ap- parently determined through an unique method to prove once and for all that the time had come to do away with childhood hates between the North and the South. BUT only Caucasians will be admitted to the ward schools. And even they must have been born in the United States of parents who are either natural born citizens of the United States or are of British or English descent. The will specifically excludes Jews by a clause that "no member of the Ilebrew race will be admitted," which, it is naively explained, "was not meant as a slight," but "simply reflects the necessity of limiting the membership." So you see what I had in mind when I said that some folk never quite reach the line of generosity. If Mr. Woodward had sought to establish a religious school confined to Protestants there might have been some excuse for excluding Jewish boys. But to single out what he calls the "Hebrew race" and closes the doors shows that in some respects he must have been touched by Klan influence. You will notice that he stresses the children must he of British or English descent. Now I am not quarrel- ing with the donor of the Woodward Schools, but merely pointing out that he was not quite liberal enough to be a liberal; that he was influenced by those prejudices that show him in the final analysis to have been narrow in his social outlook. Those Jews who continue to insist on identifying them- selves as Jews by a religious tag will be surprised to learn that tSeir neighbors, including the late Mr. Woodward, insist on separating them into a "He- brew race." I HAVE before me a copy of the "Tribute of the Seven," written and read by Rabbi Edward N. Calisch, of Richmond, Va., representative of the Jewish Welfare Board Army and Navy Committee, at the tomb of the Unknown Soldier on Armistice Day. The "Seven" are the seven welfare organiza- tions of the World War. Dr. Calisch has struck such a high note of Americanism in this brief ora- tion, and has done it with such beautiful expression that I must bring it to the attention of the readers of this column. Beneath this marble there rests the body of the Unknown Soldier. Though called unknown he is better known than if his name were bla- zoned on a memorial tablet in every city of our land. It is only the accident of his physical being that is unknown. The thing that he was himself, and the thing that he symbolizes is the common possession of us all. We know not what was his color, or his creed, or his condi- tion of life. We know not whether there wept for him a solitary widow in an humble cabin, or a proud family in a palatial mansion. We know not whether he prayed to Jehovah or Christ. We know not whether he came from Cavalier or Puritan stock, or was an humble stranger who had been received within these gates of Opportunity. But we do know that he is the token of that union of racial and na- tional cultures, in whose fusion is the making of the future of America. It is necessary that a people, who compose a nation, who partici- pate in a common government and a common enterprise, shall have a fund of common mem- ories, common traditions and ideals and a com- mon vehicle of expression. These common ideals and memories were consummated in the war. The common vehicle of their expression is here in this grave. Speechless and unknown though he is, his very silence and annonymity are eloquent of our common country, our com- mon love and our common loyalty." After reading this one can easily discover whether Dr. Edward Calisch or the late Harvey G. Woodward (to whom we have referred in the first paragraph) interpreted more truly the spirit of America, • - SO WE are going to have two drives in 1531. Well, that's a good New Year greeting. The Joint Distribution Committee will start a cam- paign to raise funds to continue its program of re- construction, cultural, health and sanitation, child care, credit and industrial aid in Eastern Europe. Then funds for the work of the Jewish Agency for Palestine will be raised through a drive to be known as the American Palestine campaign. Until the close of the year there had been held in many communities an Allied drive to which two and a half millions were pledged. But it was decided that: The increasingly pressing need for immedi- ate funds for the activities of both organiza- tions, the differing budgetary requirements, and the advisability of permitting as much freedom of choice and support as possible dur- ing the present trying economic period have made it desirable to separate their fund-raising activities. It is hoped thereby to enable each organization to emphasize its own requirements in those quarters where it may meet the most sympathetic response. statement translated into plain English T HAT means that by having two campaigns you may choose the cause nearest your heart. That is if you have a hu, art-interest in either. If you don't want to help Palestine help Eastern Europe; if you are less interested in the troubles of the Jews of East- ern Europe than you are in the welfare of the Pal- estine movement give your money to Palestine. Of course you may give to both! THE book, "The Great Betrayal." written by Rabbi Stephen Wise and Jacob dellaas, tells the story of the rise and development of the Zionist move- ment in its relation to Great Britain. It is splen- didly written and every Jew, whether he is a Zion- ist or a non-Zionist or an anti-Zionist, should read this well-documented history. At least, when one has finished reading the book he will have an intel- ligent understanding of the Zionist movement and the part that Great Britain has played in its real- ization. Of course the title itself, "The Great Betrayal," indicates the purpose of its publication; and the authors have made out such a strong case against the Passfield White Paper and the Labor government generally that one is inclined to be- lieve that the Zionists have been "let down." I commend this volume most strongly to every Jew who wants to be well informed on the progress of events in Palestine. are exactly 11 Jews in the freshman T HERE class of 630 at Princeton university.—Benja. min Cohn, head of the Independent Oil Company in Altoona, Pa., gave a hundred thousand dollars to a foundation, the income of which shall be used for the relief of the needy of that community.—A number of Gentile employes inherited the business of a Jewish employer in Pittsburgh, Pa., and every Yam Kippur the store is kept closed out of respect to his memory. Jewish stores all around them are kept open.—So for as Eddie Cantor is concerned, talk isn't cheap; he is credited with an income of over $300,000 a year.—Rabbi Stephen Wise and Jacob dellaas must have worked overtime on that book yr theirs, "The Great Betrayal," because it takes the reader right un to the Passfield White Paper.-1 understand that Dr. wise is back in his pulpit after his severe illness, and thousand.; will rejoice in the news.—Mrs. Rebecca Kohut is still the "grand old woman" in American Israel. By CHARLES EDWARD RUSSELL (Editorle Notei—Charles sell. noted historian and econonitat, whose most recent work is • biography of Ilayin Salomon. the Jewish financier who made possible the American victory in the war of independence. believes tha t rhoen,J still joerilottr,i uif in . i, erg of pullout to their longsuppression in Medieval times. Ile declarey that the Jew+ are h in the political life of the United Statee, in an article written for the Jewis Jewish Telegraphic Agency, omen then, t i , i ,,,, c,:m oe,e,vilon rottisly forward . r enir d uf 101, r ei r r t conimunitY.) What I am going to write here is attended with a certain grave risk. As soon as I say that Jews ought to go into politics, 99 in ev- ery 100 persons will leap to the conclusion that I am press agenting for some party, some candidate, movement, organization, clique, boss or job. I mean nothing of the kind. I am not a member of any political party, I am not in touch with any candidate, I have not seen a po- litical boss since I quit reporting, I am too old to be myself a candi- date for any office. I think the Jews ought to vote, but I haven't the slightest inten- tion of suggesting whom they should vote for. They do not now, as a class, take much interest in politics, be- cause, as nearly as I can find out, they do not feel perfectly at home in this country. You will understand that I am speaking in general terms—most general. Many Jews perform to the full their civic duties. Many Jews have taken a vivid interest in politics, some have achieved promi- nence therein. The late !odor Raynor of Maryland, long a sena- tor from that state, was a notable example of a Jew that achieved success in a political career that lasted many years and was full of honor. I have known other in- stances equally pertinent. Negligible in Politic.. But the fact remains that in pro- portion to their numbers, intelli- gence, business importance and demonstrated capacity in other di- rections, the Jews in politics are negligible. They are just noth- ings. Nobody regards them, in the mass; nobody counts on them. Great numbers of them have not been naturalized; other great num- bers do not take the trouble to go to the polls. This is an error for them, and a defeat for the public interests as I can easily show. I think they abstain from an ac- tive participation in politics partly because they take too seriously the medieval prejudices that still strangely survive in a part of the population. There are still cave dwellers and troglodytes that go Jew-baiting as in the jungle their ancestors went bear-baiting. True, they do not now burn a Jew at the stake or tear him apart with wild horses or break his bones in that highly civilized and gracious in- vention known as the boots. But they black-ball him at clubs and they try to keep him out of hotels and they spare no good chance to torture him with sneers and covert insults. In this way he gets an impres- sion that in free America there is still the spirit of intolerance and bigotry that darkened Europe so many centuries. These forms have changed, the spirit remains the same, essentially it is the same cruelty. You can cause a sensitive man to suffer more through his mind than through his body. S•ys Jews Useful Official., Yes, but don't you see that by isolating themselves from public affairs the Jews are playing direct- ly into the hands of their enemies? The customary argument against the Jew is that he is not an Ameri- can. Students of history know how preposterous this assertion is, but it goes unchecked, neverthe- less. Historically, Jews have always been closely interwoven with America, from the first move- ment to finance Columbus down to the present moment. But the cave- dwelling spirit says the Jew is un- American and for proof points to the fact that he refuses to take part in public affairs, "Jews haven't any interest in this coun- try except to gouge all the money they can out of it," gays Neander- thal. I know better and so knows every other man that has imparti- ally surveyed this matter, but so long as you people stand aloof you will be putting this club into the hands of the elements hostile to you. The intelligent and reasoning part of the community has no such prejudice as you think is common here. No considerable number of voters will reject a good candidate because he is a Jew. As a rule, Jews in Ake have been, in my ob- servation, exceedingly capable, diligent and useful public servants. What 1 am plugging for is to have more of them there. No sane per- son, however prejudiced, would doubt, for example, that every Louis Marshall we could get into the public service would be a dis- tinct public gain. Or suppose a ;rajority of the New York Board of Estimates was composed of men like the late Simon Sterne. There would be something doing for houseeclean- ing about this time, would there not? Jewish Code of Morals. The Jews are just as much in- terested as anybody else that the government shall run cleanly and well. They are not aliens sojourn- ing for a time in a strange land. This is their home and their chil- dren's home, and will be. They suffer as much as the rest of us from slipshod government, corrup- tion, incompetence, graft and waste. But I cannot recall that in the three great uprisings I have seen in New York against these evils the Jews have taken any part commensurate with their propor- tion of the population's total and their share has been still less in proportion to the influence they might have exerted. It is so in all parts of the coun- try; but not because the Jews have a slacker code of morals or less in- spiration toward righteousness; on the contrary, taking them by and large, I think they have rather a better standard about these things. Certainly, there is no higher code of public affairs than the deco- logue of Moses and the methods of governmental uprightness revealed in the Book of Judges. At a time like this, when we face the worst conditions in municipal management that we have had since Tweed's days, there is no better recourse than to the plain principles of honesty and ethics laid down by Moses and cherished by all the generations of Jews ever since. A man that has been thor- oughly grounded from his youth up in the stern notions of personal honesty and public responsibility taught in these precepts would hardly be likely to betray a public trust. ' " "o'etb'elf Need Strong Jewish Asset. I don't mean that the Jews should come forth of a sudden, trumpet a grand righteousness and announce that they know how to run the machine better than anybody. That might be in ac- cordance with the fictitious Jew that prejudice and malice have imagined but not in accordance with the real Jew as I have known him. I mean no theatrics on the civic stage but only that in every movement everywhere for better conditions, a purer government and a truer democracy the Jews should take the full part to which they are entitled as citizens and Americans. They need never fear that to do so can be in any way deroga- tory to their religion or inconsist- ent with its exercises. The story of Haym Salomon shows that a man can be an ardent patriot and a devout Jew, careful to perform every religious duty. In truth it seems to me, reading the Scrip- tures, that to be a good citizen is clearly taught there and no man slothful or negligent about his public duties can truly be called a good Jew. We need in public affairs in this country the strong asset of the Jewish ethics and we need at all times the spirit of democracy that breathes through the Jewish sa- cred writings and is apparent in the Jewish history and traditions. I recall that the ancient Jewish es- tablishment was always free from the deadly corruption of caste. Against this insidious foe democ- racy must be incessantly on guard and never more than now. The absolute rejection of case is de- mocracy's keystone. Under the influence of that faith, wherever there has been a struggle against oppression, Jews have been on the side of liberty. They were so con- spicuously in the immortal con- flict that founded this nation. They have been so elsewhere. Therefore I say that the addition to American politics of great num. hers of people that have this back- ground and this tradition would be an asset of inestimable value. I hope to see it realized. (Copyright. 1931, J. T. A.) [VIEWS OF LEADING JEWS DR. NATHAN KRASS, Rabbi, Temple Beth El, New York: "The supplementary definition of fear is shame, which means the dread of doing something for which you will later have to suffer remorse. Fear of God is still valid in this century. It does not mean an emotional state which is iodated, but it leads to wisdom and to an ultimate state of civilization where poverty will be abolished. Judaism is pre-emi- nently a human religion, and not merely a collection of dry formulae and documents." • • • EMANUEL NEUMANN: "The Arabs were promised Syria, Iraq, Transjordania, the Hejaz, a whole group of states of which Palestine forms a very minute part. The Arabs received almost all of the terri- tory promised to them. We rejoiced then, and do so now, at this tre- mendous recognition of Arab aspirations. We ask only that they look upon us in the same spirit. In Palestine it is we who are destined to build. Co-operation between these two great branches of the Semitic race is impossible if one of them insists upon imperialistic expansion with a total disregard of the minimum rights of the other. chief problem is now, and has always been, to secure enough land Our on which to base our national home." • • • MENACHEM MENDEL USSISIIKIN: "Our work now is harder than that of Moses. Moses led the Jews out of Egypt. We must lead them out of many nations. He took them from hard work to compara- tive plenty. We must lead then, from soft seats to of hardship. We are Jews, we reverse all things, and conquer. Otter colonizations go from small poor countries to large rich ones; we go from large rich countries to a barren, tiny place. Other people go from the country to the city. We move from the city to the soil. But stone by stone, dunam by dunam, we must keep on building. We must have our feet firmly on the ground—and first we must own the ground to stand on. God has created a political crisis in Palestine at the same moment that he created a financial crisis in America. The American Jews must remember that when a man has an only child dying, he pawns his very coat in order to buy medicine for the child. Palestine is our child. Medicine is needed at once. There will always be Jews to go to Pales- tine, but we may not always be able to get Palestine for the Je•s." rritn