▪ America lavish Periodical eater CLIFTON MINUS • CINCINNATI 30, OHIO limperaorrlaisn) News ARTZ dling the is played of gam- )le. Jews ed about es. And old, still point of mbling- 1 estate? are far r reason. t Jewish -almost City. Its another ding the ach city. off with ers pub. ter than Sean for oncerts, Jewish library on his that the at him to the Jewish? ct me," that to peace, n read- javelin inanity squires in the th him. 5, it is, :ity in- :es are yet we -love- there- is idea arked: thus: r that. human Inman ker is f this [7;11: !. Go es, or m the mir- years e and he do, penal emple them they aking If the it to ed it MO- f the f the II edi- ories irst's ither 'ark- an- uded ches, rker W. ood, I S. bert Ibbs, ngs, ous w. JOS- % lir the net. Zu- res- the ere- nrk ant thy 10r. of in P ' 'l• ire ca- the !cli- ent .he the !ti- the 'al- e ir he rt- ial me he ne of of an sh tll he he and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE by d head. Labor, which is eh d plentiful, he a f PLAY SCHOOL MENU OUR FILM FOLK the character . . is married . . . until two o'clock this morning!" the hour o r ve- wife, Bella Finkel, is also ■ pro- "Never mind, never mind," shout- I DIETETIC SUCCESS day week. If it bad it wo ld (Continued from Preceding Page) fessional, ed the irate manager, "don't try smile, for except during the at rasa • • • to change the subject!" (Continued from Page One.) (Continued from Page One.) of the ploughing and harvest . . . Is not yet 37 ... was born in versity students, under the lead- It wasn't on the program ... • • • (Continued (Continued from Page One.) riods little work is done by he ership of the late Israel Belkind, Palmer School for the last three that Vicki Austria . . . came over when four with the muezzin's call to prayer, men. Women still go down to t he a student at the University of years. She has been a fellowship lM other e e lleB;12y th e in s!iyc it yu ia picture, s finally defeated, however, by the r e Sittly s and closes shortly after sunset village well to draw water for borne onrrt! Charkow, banded together in a assistant in that organization's years old ... son of trouping Bowl concert. Excitement over to no one and retires at eight " larger forces of his opponents, thanksgiving. T h e fields a r e household, and they carry th air society named "Bilu"-formed food laboratory for the past year. era ... was initiated into the thea- t h e applause accorded her o'clock . .. when not working, ploughed by oxen and camels, and earthen jars on their heads as t hey and died a soldier's death. from the Hebrew words "Beth Previously, she was connected ter at the age of 11 .. playing spouse, Conductor Lert, Tisha b'Ab in general seems she Is likely not to go to bed at the crops gathered and winnowed did in biblical days. Modern fa Yaakov Lechu ve-Nelcho"- with the experimental Garfield the role of an old man ... educe- the upset . . . her two caused sons all. ions have not yet led them to ell°. "- "House of Jacob, Let Us Go 1Nursery School conducted by the s- to have been marked as a day of picked her a a • • • misfortune for Jews. More than card the flowing and picturesq ue Forth." The result was the foun- ' Detroit Board of Education and Hon acquired piecemeal during Off to the Olympics! robes of their ancestors. Worn an 600,000 men, women and children dation of the colony of Rishon le- the Merrill Palmer School. At the parents' travels . . . his ambition Ray Wise, latterly dubbed Chee were on this day, in the years is still the passive property of her Zion and the beginning the Pel- nursery school she acted as as- constant to become a great actor Ak ... the better to fool you, m father or husband, and sbe v eils 1492, driven from Spain by the estine colonization movement ' sistant director and supervised the . . . arose to fame from Yiddish Ye BOOKS AND AUTHORS horrible Inquisition. Many were A rt Theater . . . discovered there dear . .. will be featured in which has grown to such large preparation of food. in the presence of all men who are Grand Weer at 7.Mile Load film of the far North. proportions in the past decade. not very near relatives. The qu es- forced to embrace Christianity As part of the parental educe- by Sam Harris, the stage producer and thousands gave up their lives (Continued from Preceding Page.) BURY WOODEN SWORDS tion program of the Play School, . . . acclaimed a Broadway sensa- Detroit's Finest Road- tion of her marriage remains o ut- on the Auto tla Fe. aide her province and, general ly, It is an old Jewish tradition 1 a small group of mothers are in- tion in "We Americans" and The Joosh head man at a cer work deals with two subjects: 'The Curiously enough, the World house and Night Club she sees her husband for the fi rat War, one of the results of which among Jewish boys to go to the vited to attend each day, assist in "Four Walls" .. is an accomplished tain independent studio is a ter Attitude of the Rabbis Towards the time after the wedding cremo sty. was the issuing of the Balfuor cemeteries on Tisha b'Ab and the kitchen, eat with the children violinist . . . reads a great deal ror, but knows what he wants and Am lia-Aretz" and "The Dignity FISH . FROG • STEAK In regard to men, old age at ill Declaration and the establish- of Man." In the first is given an bury wooden swords there. For and study the procedure in hand- . . . prefers heavy literature and rules, and the voice of youth re- ment of the present foundation it was on this day that Jews ling food problems. At the end classics . . . takes to all out-door gets it. He recently laid down excellent portrayal of Jewish love buried their swords, although of each week, the mothers who sports except tennis . . . enjoys the law to his writers . . . They for learning and the contempt for mains silent. As in the long a go, for the Jewish National Home, Per Plate hospitality is the treasured pri vi- broke out on Tisha b'Ab of 1924, they never gave up their battle have attended are called to an in- good plays, symphonies, and prize- must be at their desks by 10 a. m. the ignorant. The latter treats with No Charge bas Childrise the subjects of exposing one to lege of every house, and a in an while the Jews were in their for existnce. The Jewish sword formal meeting for a discussion of fights yen to learn to is buried, but the Jewish fighter food problems, food habits, and coo , but scrambled eggs is the Next day a writer came straggling shame, abasement of the poor, Peppy Music, Spacious Dance may still travel from Dan to Be er synagogues reading the Book of in about noon. He was greeted abasement of the ignorant and pre- lives-the fighter for justice, for budgeting. Sheba as the honored guest of t he Lamentations and mourning over Floor, Private Dining &ore height of his culinary art . . . with, "What's the meaning of social ideals, for equality and in- tribes and villages through whi eh their historic misfortunes. The Upon request, copies of the spends much time experimenting this? Don't you know the rule?" vention of humiliation of sinners. Exceptional f•cilitleo far After- This volume is worth having and he passes. dependence. The unquenchable menus which are being used are Tisha b'Ab of 1914 may be said with make-up ... dislikes appLense etc., etc. He finally managed to 000t1 Bridge Partial, spirit of Judaism in face of dis- provided for the mothers through . believes it destroys illusion of blurt, "But, Mr. C - , I worked reading and is worthy of the efforts "On the other band, and p a „ to have marked one of the great- aster is once more evidenced b of its late lamented author. Under Per•nal Managemmat et Mrs. William Brown, who is in baps only • half-mile away, on s est of all tragedies in all Jewish the old tradition in Tisha making the charge of parental education at history in that close to three mil- JOHNNIE NEBIOW sees a Jewish village where Saturday following b'Ab comforts of urban life are in ge s _ Jews are estimated to have a day of consolation-Sabbath the }lay School. Phone Redford 2604 or 4206 for "" been sacrificed either on the oral use. Electrical energy ■ nd w have found that the chi!• Nachamu. Forgetting their suf- Reservatloos. machinery ■ are allied to menu al battlefields or as a result of the feria gs and tragedies the Jews d rest w h o attend Play School are labor. Movies, radios, social a , famine that followed the war once more place trust in their fed an unbalanced proportion of and the horrible series of no- debating clubs, co-operative sec old hope and read from the for- meats and fatty foods in their sties, good roads, hospitals, Ech Do ls grows in the Ukraine, Poland, tieth chapter of the Book of Isaiah homes," declared Mrs. Sheridan. Galicia and Rumania. water supplies, sanitation and As a result we have taken this ac amu, nachamu 'Com- ANNIVERSARY OF 1929 RIOTS fort ye, comfort ye, my -- cal government are no longer r" people." into account in our food planning na exclusive privileges of the town 5. Another sad co-incidence which Even as in the darkest days and and we have built our menus r f: people. (For the aro time in ki • marked the Ninth of Ab was the the deepest gloom of exile, the around fresh fruits and vegetables tory the town has ceased to bo la outbreak of the bloody riots in Jew once more becomes heartened in order to suppllement the home Palestine in 1929. At the remain- superior amenities of life as co by the promise of the Prophets foods. We try to emphasize min- ..q ing Western Wall of the Temple pared with the village.) A fe that they are again to be return- erals and vitamines. in the past centuries come to be ed to their land. minutes walk from the •rch• is known as the Wailing Wall, "Parents have frequently mar. mode of life of the East we 6 nd .began a dispute which proved the Having outlived the Babylon- yelled at the readiness with which • western city growing outside t he ions, the Medea, the Persians, our children eat the foods fur- inefficiency of the British force g the Romans, the Jews congregate nished them inasmuch as these old walls of Jerusalem. Here a re then in charge of affairs in Pal- every Tisha b'Ab to shed tears same children are often feeding comfortable homes of the res Hundreds of Jewish and dent., and ■ few modern hotel s. estine. over the numerous tragedies of problems in their own homes. Watch for this label when The King David Hotel which was Arab lives were lost as a re- that day, only to rise up again Children are taught to eat at Never before in the history of the furniture industry sult of these outbreaks, numer- you purchase your BEEF- built two years ago is the last ous as hopeful as ever that the tradi- stated intervals and the food is restrictive statements have have prices on the finest furniture manufactured been ENETTE or Delicatessen word in luxury and is the most sinci been issued, but as a result tional homeland in Palestine is varied as much as possible. The - to be rebuilt again as a Jewish good eating habits of our children up-to-date hotel in the near East. British rule is more protective, products. as low as they are today and never again will they be so commonwealth. And 2,518 years may be attributed, in some meas. "The tourist traffic provides an Jewish lives more safe, and a ser- This assures you the best in after the destruction of the First ure, to the fact that they see other mportant source of income, but ious effort is in the offing for low. . This is an opportunity for every home-loving per- quality sold in Detroit. Our Temple and 1,862 years after the children about them eating the Arab-Jewish relations. products are made here in De- it he backbone of Palestine lies in griendly destruction of the Second Tem- identical preparations." son to secure the finest in home furnishings at unheard- Tisha b'Ab as a Jewish red- s orange groves. Both Arabs and troit under supervision for ple, the Jew is now more than Play School is conducted by letter day was not altogether one ever full of hope that the promise the The Kashruth. No chemicals or J ewe are successful in this highly of of low prices. Our selection of fine furniture has never Jewish Centers Association of sorrow and mourning. It was echnical branch of farming. The is soon to be fulfilled. The foun- coloring but only the best of a before been so complete. rea under oranges has expanded on the Ninth of Ab of 1882- dation for this fulfillment was which Nate S. Shapero is presi- materials are used. dent; Mrs. Meyers, Play School rum 10,000 acres in 1917 to 40,- exactly 50 years ago-that a laid 50 years ago when the first 0 00 acres in 1932. An orange group of young Jews once more group of colonists-thirteen men chairman; Mrs. Philip Iloutz, Play During this great August Furniture Sale you are sav- gr eve of 25 acres contains as many turned Eastward to the Land of and one girl-created the first School supervisor; Samuel Levine, a s 10,000 trees, each of which is Israel, with the idea of re-estab- Palestinian settelment The pres- executive director. ing from 20 to 50% on all new merchandise. DO NOT e xpected to yield one bushel of lishing and re-building the Jew- ent growth is the best proof of or anges a year. The planting of ish homeland. On that day a the invincibility of the Jewish HEBREW FREE LOAN FAIL TO SEE OUR DISPLAY! number of Russian-Jewish uni- 2380 Twentieth Street SU ch a grove costs about $50,000 spirit. ELECTS DIRECTORS sp read over a period of six years Lafayette 2908 at the end of which time the grov (Continued from Page One.) is productive. The annual incom RABBI CHOFETZ CHAIM SUPREME selves up in small businesses, on this investment varies between AUTHORITY FOR ORTHODOX JEWRY The Abram Katkisky Fund of Using your own rollers-- 10 per cent and 30 per cent. Ac- $8,500 has been very active, having cordingly orange growers are WINDOW SHADES: prosperous, but they fear that the (Continued from Preceding Page) the sculptures and inscriptions loaned out $6,000 of that amount. Formerly Now This is a separate fund, maintained 60c vast increase of the crop, from from Palmyra in the Jacobson in honor 39e of its donor, Abram Kat- 85e two million boxes in 1920 to ten of the great Dutch educationalist, collection in Copenhagen. Since kisky, and loaning sums up to 49c Guaranteed Washable Shade million boxes in the near future, Jan Lighart, and the Hague owes 1917 he was joint-editor of the $500. Through fund, respon- 1.25 69c must result in lower profits un- to him its school union, the Neth- "Danish Journal of Jewish His- sible parties are this enabled to start These somata prices include nteuur- le as new markets are developed erlands High School, and The tory and Literature." ing and delivering. • Hague School for Girls. business ventures of a much more W ater is scarce in Palestine. It Plain window shades cleaned substantial nature than would be • is pumped from artesian wells, and possible by borrowing from the as- and- reversed, including ring th e large number of additional LATE PROF. SIMONSEN LOS ANGELES JEWS pull sociation proper. All future dona- 25c we Ils is considered to be a serious COPENHAGEN.-(J. T. A.) WHO WENT TO BIRA tions and bequests of $5,000 or Linoleum, good quality, 29e per me nace to the existing supply. -The death of Professor David more are to be set up as separate Simonsen, last former square yard. Inlaid linoleum BIDJAN DESERTING entities, "The statement that the water Jacob to perpetuate the name of at special prices. chief rabbi of Denmark, last of the Jordan has been brought month, removes from Denmark the donor, (Continued from Page One.) into Palestine is premature. As Jewish life one of its most inter- we know the Jordan still runs into and versatile personalities. sires," anti-holiday infidel's edi- WINDOW SHADE CO. the Dead Spa, which is nearly 1400 esting Professor Simonsen was born 6424 LINWOOD AVENUE feet below sea level, the deepest in Copenhagen on March 17, tion. Phones Garfield 1220•31 The edition is devoted to de- depression in the world. The 1853. His father, Jacob Simon- mouth of the Jordan is about sen, was a big Danish banker. scribing ways and means of com- batting the Jewish holidays. 4000 feet lower than Jerusalem. After graduating at Copenhagen Bidjan One of Thirty Regions. " Still, this river serves almost University, he studied at the The Jewish region in Biro Bid- the whole of the Esdraelon and rabbinical Seminary in Breslau coastal plains with electrical pow- under Frankel and Greets, and jan which the Soviet Government er. The Ruttenberg network of when he completed his studies contemplates rendering autono- distribution runs wherever the there in 1879, he returned to mous by the end of 1933 is only FUNERAL HOME rose - of Sharon blooms. Copenhagen, and became assist- one of twenty-nine national min- "Palestine's past is the heritage ant to Chief Rabbi Wolff, being ority regions already in existence 81 DELAWARE the first Danish-born rabbi of the at present in the Shabarovsk re- of the whole world. Its present Copenhagen gion, according to figures in a re- congregation. Trinity 2-3211 and future belong to the Jews When Chief Rabbi Wolff died port received by the Soviet author- Formerly EDMUND G. LEWIS and Arabs alone. Let us hope in 1891, Rabbi Simonsen was ities here from the Far East Edmund L. Gilbert announces ■ that they will forget their present unanimously chosen to succeed Soviet. substantial reduction of rates. enmity and that their cooperation him as chief rabbi of Denmark. He was chief rabbi for 11 Costa of Complete Funerals and united efforts will make Pales- years, HAGUE MEETINGS resigning his office in 1902 tine once again a land flowing with in order to devote himself ex- , Quoted Without Obligation. milk and honey." OF WORLD UNION clusively to scientific work. King Christian IX conferred upon him (Continued from Page One.) the honorary title of professor on the occasion of hie resigna- 1 and, and in the evening a reeep- tion. ion will be given by the Dutch Although no longer the official L iberal Union in honor of the head of the community, Profes- v isitors. sor Simonsen continued, however, On Sunday afternoon, in Am- to be the spiritual head of Dan- s a round table discussion NATHAN KOLB ish Jewry, right up to the time wi terdam, ll take place on "How Progress- JACK CITRIN of his death. When the pogroms iv swept Russia in 1905, and 11\rge W o Judaism Can Combat the rang Kind of Assimilation." numbers of Russian Jews passed D istinguished American and Euro- through Denmark on their way to America, several thousand of di can leaders will take part in this Our Great Trade • In them remaining behind in Den- b scussion. A public meeting will Offer Extended a Few mark and nettling there, he threw ev e held in Amsterdam on Sunday himself wholeheartedly into the lo ening. The whole of the fol. More Days wing day, Monday, Aug. relief work on their behalf. 8, will Sensational allowance. on your It was due to Professor Simon- be devoted to the meeting of the oIJ time brought such• trespout-I sen and Moses Melchior, who was go verning body. otte response and in order not t• then president of the Copenhagen by The meetings will be attended disappoint some of our patrons] w• tenths,. this event until- visitors from America, Jewish community, that King Fiance. Frederick VIII, of Denmark, who la ermany, Great Britain, Hot- was an uncle of Czar Nicholas II. nd, Poland and Sweden. Similar Allowances on all sizes. Exchange I, 2, 3, 4 or 5 tires. FREE In addition to a number of lead- intervened in 1907 with the Czar .r■ MOUNTING on behalf of the Jews of Russia, in g laymen, the following rabbi, ■ as a result of which the pogroms ar e expected from America: Dr. which were then threatened were . Rosenau of Baltimore, Drs. Ge rson B. Levi and Felix Levy of averted. ALLOWANCES ON ALLOWANCES ON When Copenhagen, as the capi- Ch icago, Dr. Philip Bookstaber of tal of a neutral country, became Ha rrisburg, Rabbis S. J. Levinson during the war a center of Jew- an d E. Trattner, Drs. Alexander SW Each Tire Set of 4 Sire Foch Tire not of 4 ish relief work, Professor Simon- igy ons, W. F. Rosenblum and S. S. 4.40-21 $1.95 $7.80 nen stood at the head of this 'e desche of New York. 1.40-21...-51.55 4.50-20 2.00 8.00 $8.20 work, and when the Jewish Re-' 4.50-21 2.05 8.20 4.50-20 1.60 6.40 lief Conference was formed he 2.35 9.40 4.50-21.-- 1.65 was its first president. 6.60 SU MMER SCHOOL ENDS 4.75.20 2.40 9.60 He was also a member of the 2.00 8.00 5.00-19 2.45 9.80 AT SHAAREY ZEDEK executive board of the Alliance 6.00-20 2.45 4.75-20.-- 2.00 9.80 See What Your 8.00 Israelite Universelle. 6.26-18 2.75 11.00 4.75-21...-. 2.00 The Summer School at Shaarey 8.00 Worn Tires are Professor Simonsen was one of 5.25-19....- 2.80 11.20 5.00-19-- 2.10 8.40 the early members of the Cho- Ze dek, Lawton and Rochester av- 5.25-20 2.85 11.40 en ues, closed for the season on Worth- 2.10 8.40 veve Zion movement, and when Fri The exchange f o 5.25-21 2.90 11.60 the Zionist Organization trans- gin day, Aug. 5. Students were 5.00.21.--. 2.10 5.50-17 3.10 12.40 8.40 tires go on sale to you Look at these ferred its central office during bac en an opportunity to make up 5.00-22.--. 2.30 5.50-18..._ 3.15 12.60 9.20 the war from Berlin to Copen- wo k work, to take up advanced 5.50-19 3.20 12.80 5.25-18...-. 2.25 Generous Allowances 9.00 as fast as they are hagen, under Leo Motzkin, in co rk, and quite a few made a 5.20-20 3.25 13.00 5.25-19-- 2.35 mplete grade. Thomas J. Gunn, 9.40 conjunction with whom he found- 6.00-17..._ 3.50 14.00 taken off and inspect- 5 2.40 ed the Jewish World Relief Con- pri ncipal of the Durfee Intermed- 9.60 6.00-18 3.50 14.00 Reductions as high ference. he placed himself at the late School, was in charge, while ed. Come, take your 5.25-21 6.00-19..._ 3.55 2.45 14.20 9.80 ANY persons who arc "on call" for either Phi lip L Rosenthal, chairman of head of its service. It was the the as $35 on large size 6.00-20.- 3.60 14.40 5.50-18-- 2.50 10.00 temporaryorpermanentemploymentfind pick. Depend on us Copenhagen Bureau which re- of Foreign Language Department 6.00-21 3.65 14.60 5.50.19...-. 2.55 10.20 worn tires. Ask us stored communication between dn. the Mackenzie High School, was 6.50.17 that their telephones give them an advantage. 4.30 17.20 to treat you right on 6.00-20 3.30 13.20 ector of the High School de- the Jewish war victims in East- 6.50-19 4.40 17.60 about it. For employers often summon dime persons ment 6.00.21.-- 3.40 13.60 ern Europe and Palestine and prices. 7.00-18 .._ 4.50 18.00 6.00-22 3.55 firat whom they can reach eazil• and quickly 14.20 their relatives in England, ' n the Intermediate Depart- America and. Canada. It also me nt, the faculty was composed by telephone. co ected funds, and most of this of Mrs. LaBeryl Hayllar, Miss money was sent by the Copen- Ela ins Henry and Miss Florence And in emergencies, such as fire, accident or hagen Bureau to Palestine In Ere II, all of the Durfee Interme- sudden sickness, you r telephone Is PRICELESS gold, and this. owing to the low diet e. In the Senior High School. value of Palestine currency, was Roy a Ellis of Central High had PROTECTION, enabling you to summon aid the one thing that saved the Pal- char re of mathematics; Miss Eva immediately day or night. estine settlement from • catas- M. Kinney, head of the English trophe. He also actively assisted deP eminent at Mackenzie High Few things that you buy offer so much the work of the Kenn Ilayesod Sch eel, taught the English courses: Professor Simonsen wrote J. B. Rorver, chairman of the useful service and protection at such many theological, historical and sec] al science department at Per- low cost as the telephone. bibliographical treatises, and was shin g High School, taught history Cor. Lyndon. Cor. Buena Vista Cor, Dexter Cor. Rochester • prolific contributor to Danish and civics, and Mr. Rosenthal University 2-0600 Arlington 2122.W University 2-9570 Garfield 5630.W at Park Grove and foreign Jewish periodicals. tang ht courses in Latin and Span- Amon( his works is a study of ish. PALESTINE VIEWED AS LAND OF MANY DIVERS CONTRASTS T ISHA B'AB-RED LETTER DAY ON I JEWISH CALENDAR an of t EVERGLADE INN • • • Dinners . . . . $1.50 _ gamminninimminollumelloffimmommonominum., .._ . . . i Schor's Great 61- . g _. _ . August Furniture i . .m. „,. SALE--IVow Going On! 1 Gunsberg = Packing Co. • CH E FUMITUIV. COMPANY • MAdison 5891 8928 12th Street ri 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 11 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111ffla LaSALLE Jack Citrin Nathan Kolb 1 LBERT'S announce The Biggest Allowance For Your OLD TIRES $6 to $35 MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE CO. on your worn tires for GOODYEAR All Weathers 11 Pathfinders All Weathers The telephone is a valuable aid in securing Pathfinders Saturday, Mid- night, August 6 Used Tire BUYERS-• r M Citrin-Kolb Oil Co. FIVE CONVENIENT SERVICE STATIONS LIVERNOIS I LINWOOD I FENKELL I LINWOOD I ?thqX.M.