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June 19, 1931 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle, 1931-06-19

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

-

HE MOM EIVISii

74;31,4 Is
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isakij sek,

fi

ThEbEIROITAWIMI (ARON ICLE

Pubh•hed Weekly by The Jew eh Chroomle robbe ► lut Cw Ise.

Entered

betond•class metier March I. 1919. at the
sit I.• snit . Mieh., under the Act of Merck t. 1879.

General Offices and Publication Building
525 Woodward Avenue

Telephone: Cadillac 1040 Cable Address: Chronicle

Lames Office•

14

Stratford Place, London, W. I, England

Subscription, in Advance

$3.011 Per Year

To inf. publie•tion. all correeponden. •nd nes. matter
mo•t reach this, oilier by Tuesday eve nine of each •eek
When tent.. rotten, kindly .• one shle of the paper only

The Detroit Jeol , h Chronicle invites currespondonce on sub.
Jetts of interest P
Jmelsh people,but
b
disclaimo re .p nse
iv
bility for se Mdorsemart of the lie... pressed
.
07 rh•

Sabbath Reading. of the Law.
Pentateuchal portion—Num. 16:1-18:32.
Prophetical portion—I Sam. 11:14-12:22.

June 19, 1931

Tammuz 4, 5691

President Hoover and Immigration.

s

ss

In the course of his address Monday
night to the Indiana Republican Editorial
Association, President Hoover had this to
say with regard to immigration:
"We are rigidly excluding immigration
until our own people are employed. The
departures and deportations today actual-
ly exceed arrivals."
It remains the chief surprise in the dis-
cussions of the existing depression that one
group of people should continue to be mis-
led into believing that by keeping out 50,-
000 immigrants a year, the problem will be
solved for more than 7,000,000 unem-
ployed ; and that another group should con-
tinue to capitalize on this argument in or-
der to create a false spirit of confidence
and optimism.
It is just such a view as propounded by
our President that was responsible for the
reaction that ushered in an alien registra-
tion bill for Michigan and is arousing ha-
tred of the alien in the hearts of natives.
That President Hoover should give ere&
ence to a view such as he pronounced in
Indianapolis Monday night is a cause for
sincerest regret.

Capitalizing on Tragedy.

The alien registration issue has again
brought to light the fact that there is a
certain group ready at all times to capi-
talize on some one else's tragedy. A court
battle is in progress in an effort to have the
law as adopted by the Michigan State
State Legislature and as signed by Gover-
nor Brucker declared unconstitutional. To
prejudice such legal action would mean the
defeat of the efforts of a sincere group of
lawyers who are opposing this legislation.
But the Communists and other extrem-
ists are evidently not concerned with the
fate and security of millions of aliens when
their own political views can be publicized.
Therefore they have decided to propagak
for a public demonstration against the reg-
istration of aliens. Than which there can be
I nothing worse and nothing more undesir-
able. Because it is of great importance
above all else that the courts should not be
prejudiced and that the false impression
should not be created that Communists are
in any way involved in this issue.
A timely warning is therefore served
upon the millions who are interested in the
present fight against this legislation not to
be misled by agitators, but to place their
faith in the sincere efforts of the able lead-
ers who know what is at stake and can be
trusted in what they have undertaken.

a, at

't 'ts'CV

'

mination and discipline, according to Mr.
Lipsky, will become the slogans of all
parties.

This is one side of the picture, on the
other side which appears, in prominent dis-
play. the Revisionist Party, out for blood of
all who disagree with it. With a numeri-
cal strength exceeding 35, and with the
help and encouragement of sympathizers
from other parties, possibly a majority of
the Mizrachi delegates, the Revisionists
represent a strong group to be reckoned
with at this Congress.

It is too early to predict the outcome of
the Congress, although it is certain that
no one individual party either possesses
the strength to win with its own numbers,
or has as yet offered a platform acceptable
to a majority of the rank and file. One
thing appears certain: that a victory for
the Revisionists will be a most undesirable
thing, such a victory threatening the worst
dangers to the entire movement. All one
needs for proof of this contention is a per-
usal of the resume of the article by Dr.
Wolfgang Von Weis!, as written for the
Hebrew Palestinian periodical Haam, and
as reviewed in the Jewish Agency Bulle-
tin. Such fantastic statements, for in-
stance, as the one he makes to the effect
that "when the Soviets set out to break Eng-
land, Europe will need our help and we
shall have a chance again ;" and others sirn
ilarly fantastic reveal an attitude not to
be trusted.
And there is another reason why Zion-
ists must be on guard against the extreme
views of the Revisionists. The current
Jewish Agency Bulletin, reporting on the
Congress elections in Palestine, states that
a number of candidates were struck off the
lists for two reasons: Non-consent of the
candidates or "because they had not sub-
scribed to Keren Ilayesod this year—an in-
dispensable condition for election as a del-
egate to a Zionist Congress." And the Bul-
letin informs us: "Ten Revisionist candi-
dates were disqualified on the latter ground
alone."
The condition mentioned here ought to
be made indispensable everywhere. Peo-
ple must not be permitted to criticize con-
stantly without themselves participating in
the work. That was the fault and the sin
of the so-called Brandeis-Mack group dur-
ing the Lipsky regime. And just this is
what helped to provide us with consider-
able amusement when we read in Dr. Louis
I. Newman's column, "Telling It In Gath:"
"What the present leaders of the Z. 0. A.
accomplished at Cleveland in 1929, should
be transplanted upon an international
scale to Basle." Dr. Newman is known as
a spokesman for the present American
Zionist administration, and these words are
evidently intended as propaganda for his
group. Unfortunately, there is so little to
the credit of the present administration,
and it has so sinned in its leanings to Re-
visionism, that it will take a greater amount
of persuasion than this to convince Zion-
ists that the present leaders at 111 Fifth
avenue, New York, are the sponsors of a
plan which will save the Zionist ideal.
World Jewry will be watching intently
the results of the forthcoming World Zion-
ist Congress, out of which must come a so-
lution to the present trying problems.

Historic Vengeance in Spain.

1

1.

' b•6

'66'61466' b'6b .6



rsnmrsi.....A.,pc....ilrobtias,-....

ao../tiom

BY•THE•WAY

Tidbits and News of Jew-
ish Personalities.

.411.1.1c7:'-r-4*
,

ENGLISH WAS GREEK TO
THEM
You have long ago heard th at
story of the girl who was awl m-
ming in Coney Island and w ho
drowned although she cried f or
help and despite the fact that the re
were many expert swimmers abou t.
But she called for help in Engli sh
—and so was not understood.
A similar motif has this on e:
"My girl lives on the Grand Co n-
course, but she speaks English."
Of course, both of these a re
high exaggerations. You will ha ve
no difficulty in being understo od
on Coney Island even if you ape ak
a purest English and the girls of
the Bronx, I dare say, know on
an average six or seven times as
much English as they do Yiddish.
But there is a kernel of tru th
in these stories and that is—t he
immensity of the Jewish factor in
New York.

DEAN INGE ON THE FUTUR E
And one never realizes it SO
mucp as when one has been abse nt
from it for some time. Upon r e-
turning to the village and seei ng
all these Jews (Sullen sie gesu nt
Nein), the almost blasphemo us
thought came to me, that perha ps
Zionism was superfluous. W hy
cannot the Jews of New Yo rk
hang their harps here on the ,v il-
lows and sing the songs of Zio n?
There are no willows in New Yor
you say. All right—must y ou
have willows? Can't you the ck
the harps at the Grand Centr al
station?
More seriously speaking, haver
we all been over-emphasizing th is
business of political stages?
noted the other day that t he
"Gloomy Dean" Inge—in his pro Is-
nostication of the future sees t he
state gradually shrinking. Accor d-
ing to hint, we will in the not d is-
Cant future approach a conditi on
of things where the state will ha ve
few things to do. Jefferson, to o,
entertained a similar ideal. A nil
I might as well cast modesty asid e,
and say, that for long I ha ve
caerished the same opinion. L et
me cite just one thing. Suppo se
the age-old dream of the sbando n-
ment of war as a means of se t-
tling national disputes shou h'
come into vogue. I think that at
this day it is fair to believe th at
war will go the way of piracy a nd
the due. At least, you will agr ee
with me, I believe, in the feeli ng
that there is a possibility of t he
abolition of war.

J '6

(Continued from Page One.)

JUST A LITTLE PHILOSOPHY
Well, now, suppose it does come
true. It seems to me that this one
reform in itself will almost work
havoc with the political state. For
remember, that something like 80
or 90 per cent of the present in-
comes of government go for pur-
poses of war. In other words,
virtually all of the machinery of
taxation would almost be done
away with. Besides, you would
do away with all the military es-
tablishments—in all of its various
phases, military, naval, veterans'
hospitals, etc. Without an army,
with little taxes--what will the na-
tional government be like? I
think it would tend to go back to
the condition of things before the
Civil War, where patriotism was a
local affair--where one was a Vir-
ginian, first, or a man of Massa-
chusetts, first—for the national
government would scarce be more
than a foreign representative of
the states.
—.—
ORANGES, NOT MINISTERS

challenge at his co-leaders and co-

workers: "There is none of us so
hard hit but that there is some one
else in our midst who is not even
harder hit."

ALFRED M. COIIEN, national president of the
B'nai B'rith, makes this statement: "I shall
comply with Mr. Barton's request for the dates of
the Jewish Holy Days that fall in September and
October of next year and this office will hereafter
undertake to furnish such information from year to
year." Mr. Cohen is referring to James F. Barton
of the American Legion, which is to hold a conven-
tion in Detroit on Yom Kippur. That explains why
a protest was made by Jewish leaders and why Mr.
Cohen intends to clarify the situation hereafter.
All of which leads me to the conclusion that we
would save a lot of useless protests if there was a
central committee to look after just such business.
This college announces an examination on a Jewish
that holiday; that state has a primary election on a
Jewish holy day! this organization to which many
Jews belong holds a convention on some other day
that conflicts with Jewish religious observance.
After the dates have been fixed then everybody
starts to write and to talk about it. The news-
papers carry stories about these conflicts of (fates.
And then some readers begin to believe that the
Jews are making a nuisance of themselves. Surely
with all the efficient experts that we have among
ourpeople, with all the highly developed organiza-
tions and with such intelligent leadership as we
have, one would imagine that some way would be
found to file with every college and school the dates
of Jewish holy days; that such information should
be conveyed in advance to organizations that intend
to hold important conventions. and that national,
city and state authorities could also be advised to
the end that elec'ions might be arranged to meet
the demands of the situation. Let's begin to do
things ahead of time so we won't have to try
everybody's patience in getting others to change
their dates because we have been inefficient. It is
hardly fair to expect the American Legion after
planning for a year to open a convention on a
certain date, to change a couple of months ahead.

Tribute to Hi. Leadership.

His challenges brought results.

Ile did not let his army of workers
rest until every one had pledged

to co-operate to the end that the
campaign be made a success.
When the drive opened more than
2,000 responded to the call of serv-
ice. The aid of only half this
number was utilized. It was a
loyal army which paraphrased a
famous song and, on the last day,
sang, in commemoration of the
drive's victory, "We're bringing
the corned beef back home."

If ever a famous saying in lit-
erature was applicable to a suc-
cessful man, the line from Scott's
"Lady of the Lake" (c. 2, 19),
"Ilailto the chief who in triumph
advances!" is a deserving tribute
to the leadership of Aaron DeRoy.
Throughout the preparatory as
well as the campaign periods of
the Allied Jewish Campaign this
man did not rest. He was an in-
defatigable leader who worked on
a par with the humblest in the
ranks. If a meeting was called
at breakfast, at Hotel Stotler, at
8:30, he was first to come. Ile
was first to come and last to leave
at all meetings. And where a
humble worker failed to secure a
large subscription, Aaron DeRoy
used his personal influence.
Foremost ■ Sportsman.

NOW

that Adolph Lewisohn, the well-known capi-
talist, sang three songs in Hebrew the other

Aaron DeRoy's triumph is per-
haps primarily due to the fact that
he is first and foremost a sports-
man. In the realm of sports he
has acquired those traits which
have made him a leader of men,
and have led hint to success in the
business, financial, social, philan-
thropic and sports efforts which
he has crowded into a very busy
career.

night at a dinner tendered him by the City College

Club of New York, other co-religionists may be able
to view a kosher sign without feeling too alien or

self-conscious. In fact they might become embold-

ened to see a co-religionist reading a Yiddish paper
in a street car without becoming embarrassed. I

spoke for a few minutes at the convention of Jew-

ish educators which was held recently in Pittsburgh
and said that if Jewish education could only be

made fashionable like philanthropy that their finan-
cial troubles would end. We are influenced, of

course, by the mob. We dislike to be conspicuous,
but if everybody's doing it, especially those who

set the pace for styles, then we are more comfort-
able about it. Zionism is doing pretty well because

it was fortunate enough to get a few representa-

tive leaders to go along. If it wasn't for that
"break," I think Zionism would not be nearly as
advanced as it is today.

THEY

are still debating that Jewish university

question. I am in constant receipt of requests
for information for and against by ambitious young
orators. The other day a young lady came to see

me and when she suggested that our wealthy Jews
would quicker give millions to a Jewish university

than hundreds of thousands to other colleges and

universities. So I made the happy suggestion (at
least I thought it was a happy one), to put the idea

to a practical test by selecting the wealthiest Jews
in the country and put it squarely up to them.

They might ask them to what extent would they be
willing to support a Jewish university. If those

in favor of the establishment of such an institution
could get 40 or 50 millions of dollars pledged of

course the question would be taken out of the
realm of debate. I have my own idea of just what
such a questionnaire would result in. I think that

I could live comfortably for the next four or five

hundred years on the pledges they would not
receive,

WIIEN President Calles was in the middle of his

troubles in Mexico and every effort was being
made to win favorable comment for his position,
this writer, as well as many others, co-operated with
the :Mexican representative in this country to place

.-3

AARON DeROY .. Leader of Men

Charles fl. Joseph

By DAVID SCH WARTZ

What has all this got to do with
the Jews, you ask. Well, I think

.14Z.V4VicAlYt WaYbly
,

Mr. DeRoy has for years been
active in many banking and auto-
mobile enterprises as well as in
sports. He is president of the
Aaron Denny Motor Company and
is a director of the Union Trust
Company and the Michigan In-
dustrial Bank. Ile is a member
of the Downtown Club, the Stand-
ard Club of Chicago and the Friars
Club of New York City. Ile is
also a member of the following
Yacht Clubs: Detroit Yacht Club,
Bayview Yacht Club, Internetional
Yacht and Country Club of Am-
herstburg, Ont., Chicago Yacht
Club, Cadillac Yacht Club of De-
troit, and the Croatan Conntry
Club of Virginia Beach, Virginia.

Gave Detroit Two Giraffes.
Ile is a leader of the Board of
Commerce and of the Union
League Club. Mr. DeRoy is also
quite active in Masonic circles,
being a thirty-second degree Ma-
son and a member of the Mecca
Shrine. Ile is chairman for
Michigan of the National Farm
School at Doylestown, Pa., and in
this capacity has shown a deep in-
terest in the movement to encour-
age young men to study farming.
Ile first came to the front in De-
troit Jewish philanthropic efforts
in 1930, when he was treasurer of
the oversubscribed Allied Jewish
Campaign, to which he personally
contributed $10,000. As chairman
of the successful 1931 Allied Jew-
ish Campaign for $215,000 he was
primarily responsible for the
quota's oversubscription by $4,000.

.

Mr. DeRoy has also attracted at-
tention with his civic pride and his
interest in general communal ac-
tivities. In 1025, while in Ger-
many, he purchased two giraffes
for the Detroit Zoological Park.
The giraffes were valued at $3,000
each. Due to the tact that the
giraffes were each over 27 14 feet
tall, the problem arose as to how
to transport them from New York
to Detroit, since along the railroad
route there are many low bridges
and tunnels. Finally the federal
government was appealed to and
made available cars which were
used for transporting cannon dur-
ing the war. With this equipment
it was found possible to so route
the travels of the giraffes as to
avoid all tunnels and low bridges.
When the giraffes arrived they
were the subject of front-page no-
iety, and the Detroit Free Press
conducted a giraffe-naming contest
for boys and girls. Among the
entries were "Hans and Helena,"
"Neck and Neck," and finally "Cleo

and Tony" were selected as the
winners.

Chief among Mr. DeRoy's sport-
ing activities is yachting and mo-

torboat racing. Ile has won the

Greening-Duff trophy in the Junior

Gold Cup races, has held this tro-
phy for several years and has

never been defeated. Ile won the

Packard trophy as first prize for
Class G cruisers. This prize was
won by the yacht Yoreda wh i ch is

DeRoy spelled backward.

Ha, Three Yachts.

Mr. Deltoy also won the George

Harrison Phelps trophy, a time

prize for the fastest lap in

the
Detroit Gold Cup regatta, won by

Aaron DeRoy's Lady Ilelen I with
a speed of 32.3 miles per hour.
Another trophy to his credit is the
Pennzoil trophy for the lastest lap
in the Junior Gold Cup races, won
by C o m mm odor e DeRoy's Lady
Helen II, with a speed of 43.413
miles per hour.

Commodore DeRoy at present
-3
has three yachts: Yoreda, 106 feet
long, costing more than $200,000;
7 3,
Lady Helen I and Lady Helen II.
Lady Helen III is now being built
and providing its speed measures
un with his expectations, Mr. De-
Roy plans to take the boat abroad
to enter it in two races in Eng-
land, one for the Detroit News
trophy and one for the Duke of
it
York trophy. Ile then plans to sh
take it to Venice to race for a
trophy which will be offered by
Premier Mussolini. These three
races are to be held in July and
August of this year. The Lady
Helen III is in the 325 cubic inch
displacement class, and Mr. DeRoy
confidently expects it to make 65
miles per hour.

Commodore DeRoy has given
what is known as the Aaron DeRoy
trophy and every July sloops,
yawls and cruisers compete for it
in a free-for-all long distance race
from Detroit to Mackinac.

The spirit which has distin-
guished Mr. DeRoy in his sports-
manship and in his desire to win
the race he has participated in has
been injected by this born leader
into the campaigns to aid human-
ity's less fortunate sons and
daughters. Ile has succeeded in
stirring men's souls for philan-
thropy as he has in sports because
he is the possessor of a will to
succeed which does not know de-
feat, and because he is able to in-
spire his followers not only with
his own determination and untiring
zeal, but also by his ready wit and
humor and his cheerful and friend-
ly spirit.

The country may well watch
Aaron DeRoy, fur a national
leader looms in him.

"A Jewish View of Jesus."

The Bloch l'ublishing Co., 31
West 31st street, New York, has
reprinted Dr. II. G. Enelow's "A
Jewish View of Jesus,' ($11., first
published by the Macmillan Co. in
1920. Rabbi Enelow discusses the
Jewish heritage of Jesus, the Jew-
ish environment and the Jewish
element in the teaching of Jesus,
Jesus and Jewish history, the mod-
ern Jewish attitude to Jesus.

Dr. Enelow states: "It is impos-
sible for Jews to ignore the most
popular, the most studied, the most
influential figure in the religious
history of mankind. Jesus was a
Jew and no sensible Jew can be in-
different to the fact that a Jew
should have had such a tremendous
part in the religious education and
direction of the human race."

Tales From the Histories of

Herodotua.
One instance after another of historic it has a lot to do with it. If Dean the government's position properly before the
Seven to nine year old children
vengeance is reported from the new repub-
Inge is right about nationally
country. I have always believed in the good-will of
will find enjt yment in reading the
lic of Spain where, since the revolution, the shrinking in the future, if Jeffer- the Mexican government to the Jew. There was
tales adapted from the histories of
son was right—and lastly and, oh,
The Forthcoming Zionist Congress.
lieredotus by Hope Brister and
grant of religious freedom to all elements so modestly, if I am right, then never any reason to doubt the honest intention of
published by the Macmillan Co.,
Since the last World Zionist Congress, in the land appears to have restored to the in the talk of Zionism in political giving our people a fair opportunity to get along.
under the title of the first story,
So I cannot bring myself to believe that the pres-
terms,
we
are
colliding
with
the
held in Basle in 1929, simultaneously with Jews the rights they enjoyed four and a half
"The
Magic Leaves." ($2.) The
ent anti-Semitic outbreaks in Mexico have the sup-
future.
illustrations by Harold Minton help
that historic gathering which ushered in centuries ago.
port or the sympathy of the leaders. And late press
What we should do is to forget
to
add
interest and color to this
comments confirm this opinion. But every Jew
these academic terms of state, na-
the Jewish Agency, the Zionist movement
The most striking and most romantic
fine children's volume.
must feel disturbed nevertheless over the unfavor-
has been tried by many fires. The riots, the instance of how, after centuries of banish- tion, etc., and just send people to able attitude of all the Latin-America people
There is magic, adventure, deep
Palestine, build up the economic
White Papers, unfavorable rulings by the ment and persecution, the Jewish will-to- and cultural life. That's all, that toward the Jew at this time. Demonstrations are
interest for the y tungsters in the
stories "The Magic Loavem," "The
occurring which are defini.ely anti-Semitic in
is
important.
The
state,
whether
British Government—these have led to the
live has survived the tyranny and persecu-
character.
The only information is that which
Red (leak." "How the Phocians
Arab, Jewish, British or what-not,
present condition of chaos which has tion of Spanish bigots, is the wedding on will
Were Tried," "The Adventures of
reaches us through the news bureaus and it is not
be taken for a ride in the fu-
very
reassuring.
Cyrus"
and "The Plough, the
created a crisis unparalleled in any Jewish June 10 of Moises Cohn and Raquel Venti- ture In other words, I have
Sword and the Flask of Gold.'
movement.
turn, members of the Sephardic Jewish com- given a prescription for the re-
Hr pa Brister, young teacher, has
moval of all our worries about
RYING to discover what has caused this appar-
ri
Weak in leadership, handicapped for munity. It Nvas the first Jewish wedding Zionism. Don't worry about par- T
very ably retold the tales of Ile.
ent sudden change about toward the Jew in
m
rie d nod t (u:
d. for youngsters, and this
lack of funds, considerably disorganized as ceremony in that land since the edict of liaments, rights—just plant orange countries that for years have been friendly, I
sur-
juvenile stands highly recent-
groves there and everything else
expulsion in 1192.
a result of too much internal strife and
mise that the cause is in the present depression.
will take care of
lf. Oranges
L se
When times were good, and many immigrants were
demoralized in some quarters as a result of
The historic fascination contained in this and not ministers of parliament coming
into Latin-America to work on the land
the unfriendly attitude of the British ad- report caused the correspondent of the will decide where the future of or to engage in other forms of labor, everything
Pale:tine shall rest.
was all right. But lately, it seems that immigration
ministration in Palestine, the Zionist ma- New York Times, in cabling his report of
instead of going into the channels of labor has gone
RUTH AND FANNY
chinery is in a sad plight. The only bright this wedding, somewhat to editorialize in
into the channels of trade. And there has been
Ruth Bryan, daughter of the
spot on the Jewish nationalistic horizon is the following paragraph:
PROFESSOR CHAIM TCHERNOVITZ: "Since the Land of Larne
created a large number of Jewish vendors, peddlers,
r•erless leader, William Jennings
was chosen for the People of Israel, their inner life, their laws, their
merchants
and others of the trading clas s ,
Palestine itself, news wherefrom is of a
Pos- customs, their national genius, their psychology—in short, the sum
"Observers viewed it as, perhaps. a com- Bryan, and Fanny Hurst are go-
sibly this wouldn't have aroused much feeling but
total of their nature is closely bound up with the land."
ing gYlisaiiIng through Denmark.
n:ore encouraging nature than from any mentary on people and history that the ex-
as business, has been getting worse and competition
cently Ruth, who, by the way,
other portion of the globe.
keener, the first thought of the natives of those
pulsion of the Jews from Spain, which af-
is a representative in Congress
BENJAMIN WINTER, President of Federation of Polish Jews in
countries has been to reduce competition by re-
Placed in such a sad plight, Zionists are fected hundreds of thousands and, in the
front Florida, gave an interview
America: "Polish Jewry is literally starving to death. We most exert
ducing the number of "foreigners" engaged in
considerably worried over the outcome of opinion of many historians. finally led to the in which she explained why she trade, and also insist on more stringent immigra- all our energies to the end that every society, lodge and congregation
prefered Fanny Hurst above all
tion laws • So we find in that situation
hearing the name of a home town in Poland shall organize a relief com-
the forthcoming seventeenth World Zionist
the begin-
end of domination by the Spanish race, others as a companion on these ning
mittee and where such are in existence already that their work be
of the trouble. At least that is what I read
getically
prosecuted."
ener-
Congress, which opens the end of this should find its sequel in an almost unnoticed Gypsy trips. The reason, said between
the lines. Because we find the drive



Ruth, is that Fanny's style of
month. again in Basle. And it is generally and unimportant event.
being made against the Jewish trader. Something
DR. JOSEPH TENENBAUM, New York:
humor and Ruth's perfectly match.
will have to be done about all this and whatever is
ment
"We feel that the govern-
conceded that the most trying problem.
"It was in 1192 that the great Queen Isa-
There is a hint here, perhaps.
of Poland has a rare opportunity to play an historic mission by
done 1 feel reasonably sure will be to the disad-
exceeding in seriousness even the question bella. from her all-powerful throne, signed I n choosing your friends, see if vantage of the Jew.
slowly and deliberately bringing about a solution of the Jewish ques-
p our style of humor match. May-
tion. So far, there is little that can satisfy even a modest conception
of Zionist principles and policies, will be an edict that expelled the Jews. who had
be some day some psychologist will
of Justice and fair play. If anything, the new legislative measures
that of leadership. With Dr. Chaim Weiz- helped to put Spain in a prominent position c ome along and reduce it to a I INQUIRED the other day if any rabbi had de- wSich the government has submitted to the Sejm for deliberation
veloped a workable plan whereby congratulations
science. They will adjust a laugh-
seem designed to cripple and depress Jewish production and commerce
mann determined not again to be placed at among the nations.
beyond
human endurance."
could be extended to a hundred confirmants and
°meter to your ribs—tell the story
the helm of the movement, with several
"In tears and cruelly beset, they left. of the traveling salesman and the their parents without spending nights and days



RABBI JAMES G. HELLER:
traveling around. Rabbi M. Nlachtei, of the Beth
contending parties out to battle to a bitter Thereafter, Spain's colonial power waxed
farmer's daughter—and if your
"The
America must be
Judaism of the future in
David
Congregation,
Miami,
Fla.,
tries
to
give
me
a
liberal in creed, but warm and human in content. I:
finish for control of power in the world
irightly for a time, but her golden age soon girl's ribs vibrate in the same ratio solution. He says that at the conclusion of the
as yours—well, she's the girl for
must conserve as many of the customs and rites of our past as possible,
executive, the situation is not a pleasant ended."
confirmation
exercises
a
reception
is
immediately
you.
for the sake of historic unity, and for the sake of K'lal Yisroel, the
community of Israel."
held in the auditorium of their Talmud Torah build-
one.
There is a popular Hebrew song which


ing, where congratulations are received and ac.
THE WAY TO THE STAGE

Louis Lipsky. former president of the hinges mostly on the three words "Am
knowledged without inconvenience. There were 20
They say that a stage-struck
DR. ALEXANDER. LYONS: "I have discovered why some rabbis
Z . cr'il Or anizadon of America and now I srael Chai"—the Jewish people lives! girl once came on the late Charles in the class. In Pittsburgh Roder Shalom has over are more generously paid than others. it is not because of superior
hundred. An effort was once made to hold a
ability. One reason is, that some rabbis have more cheek, commonly
president of the Judea Life Insurance Com- Nothing else better explains the triumph of Frohntan when he was in an irrit- a
reception in the evening in the assembly MOMS but
abl, mood. "Oh, Mr. Frohman, I
called gall, that they convert into gold. Another reason is, that while
pany, on the eve of sailing to attend the
he Jewish spirit over intolerance in the do so want to go on the stage "
when you multiply a hundred by parents and other
some congregations pay with compliment.% others pay with cash."
relatives, plus a thousand friends and well-wishers,
Fro"man looked up, and grunt-
Congress sessions, expressed the belief that S pain of the Catholic bigots. And there is
some congestion arises, which makes for confusion.
ed: "You will find the stage—
HARRY L. GLUCKMAN, executive director, National Jewish Wel-
all Zionist parties would amalgamate ss a n o better commentary on the power of a
Then, too, it seems to be an unwritten law in same
through that door, then turn to
fare Board: "While it is true that contributions during the period of
result of the existing crisis and that a P eople's determination to exist in spite of the left." He had given her the eommuni lea that parents and children are "at economic deflation have been reduced, constructive enterprises such as
home" and like to add a little touch of social inter-
community centers have been maintained because of
leader who would continue the policies o f a II obstacles than this triumph of right literal directions to the stage.
■ planned
and
est to the occasion. Rabbi Machtei's suggestion is
A somewhat different story is
systematic application of economy. To remain satisfied,
however,
good, but I am afraid not good enough to get us out
Dr. Weizmann would be elected. Deter-
nder the rule of Spain's Republicans.
would be less than intelligent in the face of the extent of depression

VIEWS OF LEADING JEWS

Re

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of our difficulties.

*AR'W.4ii$

3

from the consequences of which the country will continue to suffer for
some time to come."

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