&I)EruorrimusuefRomaz and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE The Faultless Curtain Laundry (4 Cleaners Are prepared to you, as usual, for your Passover work. Skilled Operators, Modern Machinery, Prompt Service and Personal Supervision All help to assure you of the "Faultless Always" Service GET YOUR ORDERS IN EARLY Call Madison 4580 and your order will be promptly called for and delivered. • GEORGE G A LVA N I --BARI1ONE--- SOLOIST OF TEMPLE BETH El. Available for Concert Engagements, Banquets and Radio Programs Will Accept Serious Pupils in Voice Culture and Coaching PHONE GARFIELD 9730 EDISON HOTEL and Kosher Dining Room MT. CLEMENS, MICH. Newly Decorated and Refurnished R ions Must Be Made Early for Best Accommodations SPECIAL FOR PASSOVER WEEK Entire Week of Passover, $25; Room and Board per day, $4; Children (4 to 16 years), Half Price; Children Up to 4 Years, Free The preparation of all foods will be under the direct super. vision of Mrs. Sseinbah, personally. CALL MT. CLEMENS 9021 TODAY r • Treat your family to a real rest and pleasant Pesach. Science has not discovered a better means for keeping your home KOSHER and SPOTLESS than ROKEACH Towle Mark Reg. U. S. Pat. Office. Household Products KOSHER FOR PASSOVER *ROKEACH KOSHER SCOURING POWDER *ROKEACH KOSHER ALUMINUM CLEANSER *ROKEACH KOSHER SOAP ROKOH —for porcelain, enamel and the *ROKEACH KOSHER SILVER POLISH In powder or cream OTHER ROKEACH PRODUCTS KOSHER FOR PASSOVER •Rokeach Kosher Nyalat forfrying, baking and cooking •Rnkeach Pure Honey 'Reattach Koeber Pas Oil •Rokeach Pure Fruit Preserves For Sah at all Groceries BEWARE OF IMITATIONS II you cannot obtain these products In your vicinity please write u• and we will see that you are supplied I. ROKEACH & SONS, INC. BROOKLYN, N. Y. Listen to the Rokeach Radio Program Every Sunday, 7:30 P. M. Station THE STORY OF FAMOUS WMCA JEWISH COMPOSERS `Trade Mark Reg. U. S. Pat. Off. Their lives—in words and muds. 526 Meters 570 Kr , Anti Semitism in Spain? - A Leadership Won by their Taste ... For 48 Years HOROWITZ MARGARETEN MATZOHS The Matzoh with the Taste" have been a favorite through- out the world. Now crisper and more delicious than ever. Ab- solutely pure and KOSHER for PASSOVER rs Also ask for other HOROWITZ.MARGARETEN tr n- 0 r it of rat rd rd at RS da he do In ke ht >s. iS. ve u1 -a id, sh At rat .re or in. et- re!' to sty no SO me PASSOVER PRODUCTS. Egg Matcohs, Egg Noodles, Egg Barley, Matsch Meal, Cake Meal, Potato Meal, Farrel, Hy- gienic Matta., Passover Spices Tune in on the Horowitz Margareten - JEWISH PROGRAM "SONGS OF ISRAEL" Every Thursday Nile at 8:30 STATION WMBC 1420 K. C. Local Distributor J. KAHAN 908 Westminster Detroit, Mich. (Continued from Preceding Page.) forward to defend the Jews, of whom there are only a few in Spain, without any press of their own to defend themselves. Among these defenders are the treat Span- ish authoress Concha Espina, and the great author, Miguel de Una- muno, whose name became almost the symbol of liberty at the time of the persecutions under the dic- tatorship of Primo de Rivera. Con- cha Espina published a series of very fine articles in a number of papers, under the heading "Israel," and Unamuno wrote a fierce con- demnation of anti-Semitism as something that deserves only con- tempt. Forty years ago, he said, there were in the town where he has spent the greater part of his life—Salamanca—a group of peo- ple who attended lectures by Ed- uard Drumont, and were convinced of the imminence of a Jewish peril. At that time he could not under- stand the fantastic ideas that moved these people, and he laughed at their fears, but today, the same superstitution has been revived under the Christian banner of "Viva Cristo Rey" (Hail Christ, the King!) He goes on to denounce anti-Semitism as • survival of the sinster superstitutions of Medie- val Europe, comparable only with the belief in witches, fairies and people possessed by devils. The ides of Jews indulging in ritual murder and poisoning wells, he says, is no less barbaric than the medieval practice of burning witches. There Is undoubtedly a resur- gence of anti-Semitism in Spain, but it would be premature to say that the movement is One that must be taken seriously as threatening difficulties 'for the small Jewish population that is now living in The present republic's Spain. But it regime is philo-semitic. would be foolish to underestimate the strength and the influence of the parties of the right, the cleri- cals and the monarchists. Bolshe- vist ideas are spreading in Spain, and the growing clash of the Liber- als and Conservatives on one side and Bolshevism on the other, may lead these two parties, at present in ger, and If such • unification Is effected, the monarchists will prob- ably have to renounce anti-Semit- ism as the price of the support of the Liberals in the fight against Bolshevism. For the moment, how- ever, anti-Semitism has certainly DRUNKEN POLAND! (Continued from Preceding Page.) shot in the back . . .! But he still walks slowly, A bullet hisses over his head, another buzzes dose to his ear, hitting the core of a tree in front. In one mad leap Paul is behind the tree. Ile runs from tree to tree, fleet of foot and terrified like a hunted hare. The bullets hiss through the branches . . . . Ile returns home panting, with bloodless face and terror- -stricken eyes. Albert yells at him savagely, "You cowardly little snack! It's craven pups like you that make the Polacks trample on us! If we Jews would learn to stab and kill and torture like they do, the — Polacks would grovel at our feet!" The pogroms begin on a stu- pendous scale. Each town is islanded in the midst of a rag. ing stream of mob passions. The Jews cannot travel on the trains, where they are kicked, beaten, wounded, killed, robbed of their possessions, their beards ripped out, frequently hurled out bodily. There is not a hole for the Jews to escape into. The ground is burning under their feet. They cast their eyes in all direc- tions, imploring, imploring, hid- ing, only infrequently fighting back . . . but always imploring. The great Polish nation with its 19,000,000 people, its peas- ants and workers, mechanics and artists, intellectuals and professionals, soldiers and priests, all join in the Jewhunt, all want to have a hand in the annihilation of the cursed Christ-killers. . . . If there is a Polish voice that protests it is not heard in the land. Humiliations and outrages against the Jews pile up thick and fast. What is most terror- izing is the news of slaughter elsewhere in the republic that spreads like a prairie fire. The gleeful tidings of butchery are skilfully disseminated among the Polish masses to serve as an incentive and patterns. The Jew.thirstysinasses are converg- ing closer and closer, the noose is tightening. • • • Yesterday the frightful massacre in the Jewish quarter in Lemberg; to- day the carnage in Stanislawow, Minsk, Kolbuszowa, Vilna. Coming . . . coming . . . com- ing . . .! A, group of Jewish young men, released from the army after the collapse of Austria, organize a Self-Defense Unit and parade the streets day and night with fixed bayonets. The police grumble and threaten; The Defense group, to the Po- lish guardians of law and order maintain, is illegal, has no right to carry arms. The young Jews retort that they had four years of constant warfare in which they learned to kill and gut bel- lies as well as their Christian neighbors and that they are pre- pared to protect their families and property with their loves. The long-threatened pogrom takes place today. At sunrise peasants armed with pitchforks, bayonets, spades and axes, but with few firearms, and peasant women pulling light carts in which to store pillaged goods, stream into town in- an endless procession. They are quiet, ominous and stealthy, acting on a preconceived plan. The Jews seek shelter, hiding their pos- sessions in cellars and holes, barricading doors and windows. A stormy silence is in the air. The signal is given; the mob, like a burst sack, pounces upon the houses. . . . With shouts that rend the air'and strike terror in the hearts of the concealed Jews, the mob surges and smashes and robs house after house . .. surges ever nearer and nearer. . . . And then, from a narrow street, two, four, six, ten, twenty soldiers, wear- ing the Austrian uniform, carry- ing guns with fixed bayonets, trot into the square. It is the Jewish militia. They grip their guns nervous- ly, points them above the heads of the seething peasants and fire. Volley after volley they fire in quick truculent succes- sion. The mob grows panicky, drops the loot and flees in con. fusion. The militia trots after the fleeing peasants in admir- able soldierly order, loads and fires, loads and fires. There is no resistance. . . Paul's relatives gather in the stone house of a friend. The building faces the square and is stoutly shuttered and barricad- ed. About 30 persons crouch in one large room; those more hardy watch the looting through slits in the shutters. The wo- men are cowering in corners and on the floor; they moan and look fearfully haunted. The men are pale as sheets. From the victorious bawls rise to the gloomy room like subtle emana- tions from a deadly swamp. There is something haunting in,4he articulate passions of a victorious mob. Each yell sounds like a death knell to those exposed to its mercy. The voices dissociate from the bod- ies, fly on swift wings and find their object with impersonal and deadly effect. The memory of it grinds itself into the brain and accompanies one to the grave. The heart bleeds and palpitates; one feels sharp ham- mer blows on the head; pincers tugging at the heart; one hears one's blood dripping, dripping, and each drop weighs like • ton. And time crawls and crawls, silently, agonizingly, mockingly. Paul is at the window, his eye reared its ugly head in Spain, and while it is true that as long as the Jewish population is as small at it is at present, there is little to fear, it would, however, be inadvisable to have any considerable increase of Jewish population in Spain, be- cause the anti-Semitic movement would thrive on any Jewish in- crease, and the result of that might be more dangerous than we can now foresee. CENTERS TO OBSERVE 7TH ANNIVERSARY OF HEBREW UNIVERSITY The Jewish Welfare Board has recommended to its constituent societies, consisting of the Y. M. H. A.'s, Y. W. H. A.'s and Jewish Community Centers in the United States and Canada, that they ob- serve the seventh anniversary of the opening of the Hebrew Uni- versity in Palestine. The board has issued a bulletin entitled "The Role of Learning in Jewish History," in which an attempt is made to cor- relate this outstanding event in Jewish history with the Jewish zeal for learning. The main facts con- cerning the history and founding of the Hebrew University are pre- sented in this publication, as well as material for a series of club programs for juniors, intermediates and seniors, on the historical Jew- ish attitude towards learning. The board has also featured the -- Hebrew University in its lists of subjects fur debates, discussions and oratorical contests. glued to a chink in the shutter. He hasn't eaten anything but a piece of unbuttered stale bread and that he did not digest. It lies a hard clump in the bowels and what with the terror, and excitement, his intestines knot up and cause him stabbing pains. He rolls up and grope for breath, moaning like a wounded animal. The ache comes in periodic waves, and every time it goes he raises himself to the window. , . . A terrified young Jew with a red beard is running for his life with a pack of peasants at his heels. lie is headed off, a club is raised and with one swift powerful swing descends on the Jew's head. A crash, a scream- ing rattle from the mortally wounded man's throat dying short in its career, and the Jew crumples in a bloody heap. The terror of those eyes ...! knees sink and he falls back from the shutter as if his brain had been clubbed out. . . The sun sets and still the looting and shouting goes on. The peasants light torches, run to and fro like frantic shadows, bellowing and singing hoarsely. Of a sudden a voice roars, "Let's burn the town!" A thousand voices take up the cry and send it floating across the dark penetrating a thousand rim minds, providing a thousand aimless wills. with a purpose. Merciful God! Fire! There is no escape from fire! "Burn the town! . . ." Paul forgets his colic, his terror, the crompled, mangled Jew under the window. . . . Hot violent blood dashes against his temples, rings in his He is con- ears, blinds him. vulsed by a mad passion for murder. He trembles visibly and his mother puts a spasmodic arm around him, her chest heav- ing. "Mother," he gasps, his blue lips tight and his small fists clenched so that the veins swell, "I wish I had a machine gun! I'd climb on the roof! I'd mow them down! I'd reduce them to bloody pulp! Bloody pulp! Bloody pulp! Bloody pulp!" And outside like a Bacchana- lian song the words "Burn the town" pass from drunken mouth to drunken mouth. Except for the flickering torches it is pitch dark. In another part of town, in a house protected by the mark of a cross on its door, sit the post- master, the priest and the police inspector. "Burn the town" is ringing in their ears; they are pale. This is a hitch in the pro- gram: burning was not on their list. The town, to be sure, is largely Jewish, but fire has no perceptible patriotic prejudice. There is the postoffiee building to be considered, and the nice tall Catholic church, and the monastery, and the school, and the courthouse. . . . Frantically the postmaster begins wiring neighboring garrisons for help. At last one garrison responds. About 10 o'clock, not a second too early, a special train arrives. The locomotive siren keeps on emitting shrill sounds for about 15 minutes. It is to warn the peasants to make off with their loot. The soldiers do not enter the town but fire several shots in the air from the station. Again as.a warning. The peas- ants see the point. They load their wagons, fill their bags and carts and go home. In the morning the town is desolate. The streets are strewn thick with damaged and trampled wares and furniture. Feathers from ripped feather- beds and pillows decorate every wall,-every roof, every alley and street. Mournfully, broken- heartedly, Jewish men and wo- men and children stalk through the waste, many anxiously searching in the debris for lost property, o there conversing tragically in bent-backed cir- cles. . . . The Jews live in constant ter- ror. A hundred times a day do they scurry to their houses and cellars and barricade themselves. Their terror is at times ridicu- lous; they read menace in every Polish face, and menace there undoubtedly is; see their doom writ large in every roistering soldier or drunken peasant. Has and humiliation persecution quenched the spark of manhood in their harassed bodies? Not so the Jewish youth. At first the young men fight bark, but soon they realize the hope- In lessness of their struggle. Poland they ate able to live neither In peace nor in self-re- spect. Every avenue is closed to them; in school, government and army they would be hunted like wild beasts in the forest. Only petty trading if.left to them. But those yoUrig men have traveled far from their ghetto ancestors. No black garbardine or yellow patch for them who have fought and bled on a hun- dred battlefields. . . . And so a wholesale exodus begins. Poland does not let them out But the Jews had two thousand years in which to learn to meet force with guile. Lacking passports, the Jewish youths resort to bribery and smuggling. They slip through the boundaries swiftly and noiselessly as eels, their aim be- ing any free port, and civilized haven. The Poles are aware of this and it gives them pleasure. The fewer Jews the better! Those emigrants are the best blood and brain in a mediocre land, but, then, they are only Jews.,.! OUR FILM FOLK Jowl eleanvo & (Continued from Preceding Page.) Official Wife," and Clara Kimball! Young played the leading lady. • • • Did you Itnow that Sidney Fox once wrote fashions and advice to the love-lorn for the Associ•tml Newspapers? 1 tw11106 le And, by the way, she's the tin- The crowning humiliation of I Wet grown-up star on the Coast, the Jews in Poland is inflicted measuring 4 feel II inches. by the American Poles, General • • • Haller and his braves. The regu- Perhaps you'd like to be in- lar Polish soldiers, who fought in the war side by aide with the formed that Irving Plebe!, native Jews, are somewhat restrained of I'ittsburgh, entered Harvard in their atrocities; but those with the full intent of becoming a doctor. However, the require- American Poles who volunteered ments of the medical course left to "fight" for their newly no time for outside work, which founded republic conic to Po- was necessary to finance his edu- land as on a spree. It is indeed cation. Ile transferred to liberal a spree, a national holiday, for arts and majored in dramatics. it is a hundred years and more • . • since the Pole has held a whip Ahl Here's on e for your scrap- in his hand. . . . book. Come. th e report from one In their harrying of the Jews who knew her when she was • lit• the liallerites combine the tech- tie unknown girls in New York- nical ingenuity they acquired in Jetta Gouda!, the exotic, the glam- the United States with the alto. orous, is ■ member of our race. gether Polish genius for brutal- That ver-r-ry Fr-r-emh accent? ity. So persistent are they in She was educated in France. their persecution of the Jews, • • • so much of their time do they The Yiddish theater as popular spend in tormenting their vic- entertainment is showing signs, tims, that it seems as if their unmistakable signs, of resuscita- only purpose in coming to Po- tion. . Praised be the talkies! land was to join in the nation- Yiddish talking pictures draw a wide hunt for a people that is, good-sized audience to the Califon. so one would think, already suf- nia Theater, and usually have a ficiently trapped, sufficiently run of two weeks. Independent wounded and bleeding to need producers are now cultivating this no additonal hunters. ... trade in earnest. The Hallerites inaugurate in • • • Poland the national sport of We witnessed this little scene. Jewish beard-cutting. They A man and • woman were gazing' catch any and every Jew wear- •t the lobby pictures in front of ing a beard, make him go down Warner's Theater, where the on his knees, tell him precisely "Heart of New York" was being how to babble for mercy, and so shown. One glance at the homely kneeling they either pluck out mugs of Smith and Dale, and the the beard with their fists or jag woman said, "Another gangster it with blunt bayonets. Fre- picture!" And Warner's lost two quently pieces of flesh come out customers for their hilarious com- with the hair. edy. Besides the systematic cam- • • • • paign of beard-slashing, a cam- Sid Grauman, showman par ex- paign which has the approval of cellence, celebrated his birthday the authorities, for often officers by serving beer to his patrons HERE I. Good News! Now MEN'S HATS of highest rank watch the ope- from an old-fashioned bar in the . . . You Can Have Your Up. Demi eel Bunt rations with amusement, the fore-court of the Chinese Theater, holstered Furniture, Rugs and 50c Hallerites carry on a guerilla where "Wet Parade" was being Carpets Protected by Our S- MEN'S SUITS system of looting and destruc- premiered. And were they thirsty? Year Guaranteed Moth-Prool- 1.11tothlb Rinsed, Putted lad battiest tion. In passing a town, their hip Process. Our Moth Expert We spied Roberta Gale, slinky SID° train stops for 15 or 20 min- will be glad to inspect your in black velvet . . . and Groucho utes, giving them enough time furnifws without cost or obli. MEWS TOPCOATS Marx was there seriously discuss- gation. to leave their cars, run swiftly Cloasta sel Prowl mid ing—prohibition, maybe? Itthetet MNrtilallr and unexpectedly into the Jew- • • • $1.00 ish quarter, pluck out as many What • business man is this beards as they can in a hurry, LADIES' DRESSES 1111 • weal WO) knock down Jewish women, Charlie Chaplin! He makes "City t oad—Fl.baed by nal Lights" silent . . everybody overturn and trample pushcarts, $1.50 up laughs ... what can a silent do in stands, wagons. . . . The whole talkie days? He supervises its die LADIES' COATS sortie is over in a few minutes, ISHONIS Cluutl-flinsttd tribution in Europe and Asia. leaving the Jews helpless, te Extort Heels Thus far it has grossed between whipped and demoralized by as $1.50 up three and four millions... Who's lightning-like persistent and LADIES' HATS laughing now? Charlie. "Michigan's Largest" ruthless tactics. e..suley cowed aed • • • 1105,5 In a few months of maraud- They were giving odds out here 75c ing the Hallerites succeed in so terrorizing the Jews that the that Ernest Lubitsch, ace-director, mere sight of a four-pointed would not sign that Paramount Gifts to Old Folks' Home blue soldier's cap is enough to contract . . . but they were all wrong . . lie signed and will cause a spontaneous panic. make three more pictures. Nate S. Shapero of the Eco- Mrs. Meyer Levy •nd daughter, Ade• • • 4, (side, are in Saginaw, visiting Mrs. Levys nomical Drug Co., 1927 Twelfth B'nai Moshe Victory Dinner- Eddie Cantor says that when he uncle, aunt and cousin. street, made a gift to the inmates Dance Success. runs for president, his slogan will Louie Wolf of Detroit I, visiting his of the home of 1,000 cigars. slater., the Mies.. Wolf. The victory Purim dinner-dance be, "A job for every man's wife." Mrs. Wm. A. Fellner, 17385 • • • given by the Sisterhood of Con- Mrs. G. M. Baer of Chicago is a guest Woodingham, distributed among gretaion B'nai Moshe, on Sunday of her sister, Mre. I. M. Dark. inmates of the home gifts of can- Are you there? evening, March 27, proved a still S . t 6 e1 ,I, a r. Lid I. filChtLit ho . Is •Isit• dies, cigars, drugs, etc. greater victory. The Sisterhood, Mr.. Joe Weiss, 2516 Market street, It is dangerous to mention ropes ins her on behalf of the congregation, in the house of a man who was contributed to the home vegetables Rabbi Folkman's sermon Friday evening thanks all members and friends for hanged. and fruit. will be "Devotlonsl Preparation." their support and co-operation. MOM? in Detroit Dry Cleaning at Its Best The name FOREST bears The same relationship to quality in dry cleaning that the word "Sterling" applies to silver ... It's the BEST. Only at the FOREST do your clothes get the benefit of the EXCLUSIVE CLOTHES PRO- TECTION PROCESS which removes all unpleasant odors, preserves the life and style of your garments, restoring their natural beauty and freshness. "'COlumbia 4100 FOREST CLEANERS and DYERS 533-547 t.701E.A. JACKSON NOTES a TIME mileage TO RI-TIRE 617 A FISK/ 451 nag 111•111.141*M" IS THE MOST ECONOMICAL! Our prices defy all competition! Let us show you the biggest values in brand new tires in all De- troit. Special demonstration today. Come in! This new-type tire, as you know, is the latest development of the Fisk Technical Staff. It is the remarkably easy-riding, low-pressure tire so many motor car owners are talking about today —the last word in comfort. NOTE THE REDUCED PRICES LISTED BELOW SIZE 29x4.40-21 . . . 29x4.50-20 30x4.50-21 28x4.75-19 . . . 29x4.75-20 . . . 29x5.00-19 . . . 31x5.00-21 Rug y 'remier $3.55 3.87 3.93 4.61 4.68 4.86 5.15 $4.31 4.82 4.89 5.70 5.79 5.99 6.29 OTHER PRICES CORRESPONDINGLY LOW OUR PRICES DEFY ALL COMPETITION TimeTo Retire GET A fISKI Citrin•Kolb Oil Co. 4 r 4 L FOUR CONVENIENT SERVICE STATIONS aLIVEuN RN . 24 06I" S LINWOOD I FENKELL I LINWOOD I Corner Rochester Corner Dexter Phone Garfield 5630.W . Phone University 2.9570 Corner Buena Vista nos. Arlingtoe 2122•/