PEDeritOnjEWLSiiffiROMICLEI and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE rii.V ErRonjEwisnetRoxian; The Major Issue of Education. For the sixth year in succession, the and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE United Hebrew Schools of Detroit just con- PubILONA Weekly by The Jewish °m•ekl• NMIM ► log Cm, Wm cluded the traditional observance of Edu- the Post+ Meowed as Second-clue matter March 3, 191C cation Month. It was interesting, in the *•ee at Detroit, Mich., under the Act of March t 1, 139. course of the current observance, just con- General Offices and Publication Building cluded, to hear and read the sentiments of 525 Woodward Avenue Telephone: Cadillac 1040 Coble Address Chrooicle the community's leaders, all of whom ex- London Office; pressed the view that the question of Jew- 14 Stratford Me., London, W. 1, England Year ish education is one of major importance. Per Subscription, in Advance.— ...... It may have sounded paradoxical at first eorreayondence and news matter • Maure publication, ni meet reach this office by Tuesday ••ening of each weak. only. thought that a major issue should be made When mailing notice., kindly use oue eld• of the tons of the question of education, especially of To Detroit Jewish Chronicle invites correspondence on sub- ject+ of interest tt the Jawleh people, but dieclairas rmoonsi- salt, for an Indorsement of the Mews alp ..... d by the writer. Hebrew education, in the present hours of want and suffering. It is not a paradox Sabath Readings of the Lew when we consider that in spite of hard- Prophetical portion—I Sam. 20:18-42 Pentateuchal portion—Gen. 1:1-6:8 ships no one would dare to suggest the clos- Rosh Chodesh Chnhvan Readings of the Law Sunday and Monday, Oct. 30 and 31: Num. 28:1.15 ing of our public schools, our colleges and — — Tishri 28, 5693 libraries. These must continue to function October 28, 1932 at all costs, at all times. For if we permit the soul to become starved it will be so The Zionist Conference. much the worse for the land and the peo- •Delegates from many cities in Michigan are expected at the Michigan Zionist Con- ple now so critically afflicted by the evils ference which takes place here this week- of the depression. For the Jew, and for those who know end. and understand the soul of the Jew and This conference is important in many re- spects. First and foremost, it is an expres- the history of the Jewish people, this cer- sion of a successful effort to create a great tainly is no paradox. Dr. Chaim Weiz- center for Jewry in the Jewish Homeland. mann, noted scientist, until recently presi- Representing as Palestine does the oasis dent of the World Zionist Organization. in •It desert of Jewish life, and by summed this question up well when he virtue of the loyalty the conference ex- stated on the occasion of the laying of the presses for the great reconstruction move- cornerstone for the Hebrew University on ment, the present gathering is unique in the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem in 1918: LEHMAN AND HORNER Two Gubernatorial Candidates from New York and Our Film Folk I By-the-Way Tidbits and News By DAVID SCHWARTZ (Copyright, 1932, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Inc.) By HELEN ZIGMOND HE MIGHT HAVE BEEN You recollect the Gilbert and Sullivan piece which runs to-wit: HOLLYWOOD.—An energetic Ile might have been a Roos-ian, little busybody during the past French, Turk or Proos-ian, Holy Days was Benjamin Warner, Or an Italian; the father of the Warner broth- By HENRY W. LEVY But despite all the temptation ers . . . he's president of Temple (Copyright. 1532, Jewilh Telegraphic Agrnr1. To belong to other nations, Bethel a Ilollywood schul, which, He remains an Englishman. he says, was packed to'the doors • • . the war years, 1915 through . . . half the Warner Studio was The news that Lieutenant Gov- 1919. there . . . among the celebs was! BRET HARTE'S ANCESTRY error Herbert Il. Lehman has The words came back to me, as I was reading in one of the been honored by the Democracy POINTS OF LIKENESS George Sidney. Mr. Warner, usu- A survey of the backgrounds ally called "Pop," gives much of Hearst of New York State with the gub- papers a little sketch by Havelock Ellis on heredity, in which I of the gubernatorial candidates his time and a good deal of his Ellis writes that Bret Ilarte wrote to him, in answer to a query of ernatorial nomination of his reveals many points of likeness. money to the affairs of this achul. his, that on his mother's side, he, Harte, was of Dutch ancestry, party has been received by Jews Aside from their both being affi- Sometimes when a members is in while on his paternal side he was English. That is, to the best of all over the world with no small liated with the Democratic party, need, "Pop"' gets him a job as his knowledge. display of pride. The selection thty are both 53 years of age, extra at the studio. Which is a very remarkable statement for Bret Norte to have of this distinguished and recruit and both, while in politics, are to the political arena as the Demo- Warner has lived in many made. His father might have been an Englishman, as the verse goes, not politicians. The lieutenant- cratic party's successor to Frank- . . . Maryland, Canada, but he was actually a Jew. And Bret Harte certainly knew it. Ile governor, in fact, has been active places lin D. Roosevelt focuses attention Ohio . . whenever he himself used to tell of his being taken by his father to the New York in politics only in the last four Virginia, on the unique and hitherto un- had money he bought a ticket and Stock Exchange to see his grandfather, Bernard Hart, a leading Jew years since he received the nomi- precendented phenomina of hav- of New York City and secretary, I believe, of the Stock Exchange nation for the office he now holds. travelled to new places. His nine ing Jewish gubernatorial candi- children . . six sons and three at the time. previous to that, he was known dates in the two most pivotal and And he, of course, must have known, as all his associates knew, only as a banker, philanthropist, daughters . . . were born in al- that the marriage of his father and mother had given great dis- important states of the Union, successful arbitrator and social- most as many different cities. He New York and Illinois. For it minded humanitarian. From a finally settled down and lived for pleasure to the families on both sides. His Christian mother's folks was about six months previous, political viewpoint, he was known 31 years in Youngstown, Ohio, wanted to throw their Jewish son-in-law out, and his Jewish father's on April 12, that Probate Judge principally as the brother of from whence the boys brought him home threw their Christian daughter-in-law out. Neither side liked Ilenry Horner was chosen the Judge Irving Lehman of the New out to Hollywood. He and his the intermarriage and boycotted it. Democratic standard bearer of These are such well known facts that it is hard to see how York State Court of Appeals. wife have celebrated their fifty- Illinois. Now, with the Maine Judge Horner was removed from sixth wedding anniversary . , . the novelist, Bret Ilarte, could have written to Ellis what he did. In upheaval in mind, both men— fact, if Harte did not know his father was Jewish, a glance in the "and," chortles Pop,, "you tell 'em the active political arena by rea- especially Lehman in the gener- mirror must have revealed the Jewish blood to him very quickly. For son of his high ranking posi- I'm just a kid of seventy-six!" ally prevailing Democratic New • • • his physiognomy was decidedly Jewish, as many of his friends truth- tion in the judiciary and the po- York, are conceded to be almost litical immunity that such an A new one for our Yiddish fully told him. certain election day winners. I can't understand the letter of Harte's at all, except on the album . . . Ethel Kenyon, who office affords its holder. Since That their respective organiza- plays in Ben Lyon's latest pic- supposition that Harte, when he said his father was English, was 1914 he has served continuously tions, and the people of their in- ture, "By Whose Hand," is of possibly referring to his having been of English-Jewish stock. —being re-elected every four dividual state at large—Judge • • • . . years, despite all changes in the the Jewish persuasion llorner was nominated in a state- political head winds—as head of though she's often taken for SCHWARTZ FOR PRESIDENT wide primary, while Lieutenant the Probate Court of Cook Coun- The more I read some of the utterances of some of the presiden- Spanish nowadays. The nem. Governor Lehman was named at ty, the county which encompasses tial candidates, the more I am disposed to throw all caution to the was Genyon. a state convention—should have • • • the city of Chicago. Annually, winds and announce my own candidacy for President.. so much confidence in the two his court handles estates valued Did you know that Lewis Mile- If I could only get a good name for a party to run on. The men is especially gratifying in at around $200,000,000. His job stone, heap big director, entered name is very important. You remember the old time Whigs had these days of stress, Ilitlerism, is that of presiding over the larg- the movies as a result of the war? pretty much the same principles as the present time Republicans, nationalism and general anti- est court in the world composed Was in the camera division of the but that name Whig proved a liability. When they changed it to Semitism. of only one justice. U. S. Army ... afterward he came it was an entirely different story. And I imagine that Not longer ago than four years Both men seem to derive their to Hollywood ... as a cameraman Republican, nothing hurts the Socialist party so much as its name. The old time back the ugly head of religious greatest pleasure from•working. . , with directorial ambitions. Populist party was not so very much less radical than the present intolerance played an important Before entering politics, the lieu- that it affords an opportunity for rejoicing "It is true that great political and social Socialist party, but the name Populist did not conjure up the specter part in the rendering void of Al- tenant-governor led a strenuous Harpo Marx was in • small problems still face us and will demand their of free love, atheism, bloody marches and all the rest that the tag fred E. Smith's presidential as- life as a member of the banking over actual achievements. the populace was solution from us. We Jews know that when of Socialism somehow conjures up in the mind of the average dweller town where pirations. And though this be the firm of Lehman Brothers. His the mind is given fullest play, when we have a at last catching, up with the As a state convention, it is also import- on Main street. land in which any native son may working day more often approch- , center for the devedopment of Jewish con- "The Cocoanuts." ' He bought aspire to the presidency, it is ed 12 hours than the generally ant in the sense that it serves to knit to- ticket and went in to see if his sciousness, then coincidentally we shall attain • nevertheess a fact that Catholic- HOOVER ON IMMIGRATION prevailing eight and numberless old picture was still funny. The the fulfillment of our material needs. In the But to return, one of the reasons that makes me want to run ism was a liability to James G. gether the scattered communities through- off hours were devoted to one man in the next seat seemed for the presidency at this belated hour was the recent speech of darkest ages of our existence we have found Blaine 60 years ago just at it form or another of philanthropic out the state and to bring together the very excitable and jumpy. When Mr. Hoover in Cleveland. Mr. Hoover, in telling what his adminis- protection within the walla of our schools and was to Smith four short years endeavor dear to his heart. He it came to the scene showing tration did to preserve prosperity, pointed to the reduction in immi- colleges, and in devoted study of Jewish sci- ago. And it, of course, hardly has particularly been interested Zionists of Michigan in discussions in be- Harpo eating a telephone, the gration, achieved by his administration. Said Mr. Hoover at Cleve- ence the tormented Jew found relief and con- need even be mentioned that no —serving as a director and trus- next seat neighbor punched him land: solation. Amid all the sordid squalor of the half of their common cause. , Jew ever so much as been sug- tee of many organizations—in en- violently in the ribs and blurted, Ghetto there stood schools of learning where gested for a presidential nomina- "Had the net immigration taken place, which took place two terprises catering to the under- For Detroit Jewry it is a holiday occa- "Say, do you know that there years previous, we would have had 400,000 jobs taken from our numbers of young Jews sat at the feet of our tion. This, no doubt, in accord- privileged. Workman's compen- guy is actually crasyr Harpo teachers and rabbis. Those schools served as ance with one of those unwritten sion because our community is to act as people or had just that many persons added to our unemployed. That nation, child care, widow's pen- large reservoirs where there was stored up laws with which the United found th e nearest exit before might have been worse." sions and old age assistance were host to the delegates, and because of the States seems to abound in. during the long ages of persecution an intellec- the lights went up. Now in the first place, the immigration laws were pretty tight passions with him in his days as • • • tual and spiritual energy which blossomed a private citizen; since taking PREVIOUS EXECUTIVES long before Mr. Hoover came to the White House. Immigration was opportunity we are to have to welcome forth for the benefit of mankind when the public office, he has helped write Irving Pichel's father was a virtually completely restricted to a small quota from the so-called Of course, it is true that two national and state leaders who are to be walls of the Ghetto fell. The sages of Baby- and direct legislation furthering newspaperman. He worked 47 Nordic countries. Jews, Louis D. Brandeis and lon and Jerusalem, Maimonides and the Gaon their causes. In Illinois, Judge years on the Pittsburgh Gazette- Moreover, I doubt very much if any additional tightening of the Benjamin N. Cardozo, are valued guests on this occasion. of Vilna, the lens polisher of Amsterdam and Horner has similarly been an ac- Times. immigration screws by Mr. Hoover accounted for the subsequent members of the Supreme Court • • • Karl Marx, Heinrich Ileine and Paul Ehrlich, The event has additional significance tive worker in social work. The decrease. For the fact is, that for the past couple of years more of the United Stater Neverthe- Judge has allied himself with are some of the links in the long, unbroken Molly Piton, famous Yiddish immigrants have been trying to get out of the country, as any ship- less, their appointments have because the convention is to close with the hospitals, nursing homes, lodging chain of intellectual development." stage star, is planning the pro- ping company will tell you. than to come in. been occurrences of this very houses and such. In addition he duction of 10 Yiddish film mu- celebration of the thirtieth anniversary of generation and in the matter of It is in order to prevent the breaking of Justice Cardozo's appointment has served on the executive com- sicals in the East. IMMIGRANTS HELP PROSPERITY. the Jewish National Fund and the fiftieth mittee of the Chicago Boy Scouts. • • • is a nasty re-echo in the re- And then again, I just wonder if the effect of 400,000 coming this mighty chain of intellectual Jewish there And both men peculiarly have cently published "More Merry anniversary of the Bilu movement which At this season much forecast- in would be altogether so adverse as Mr. Hoover suspects. I know an aversion for holidays. After development that Jewish leaders are look- Go Rouod' which charges that the long and arduous primary ing is indulged in concerning the that most people--most Democrats, probably most Socialists—would was inaugurated with the founding of the Cardozo'a appointment was op- to be voted upon next agree with him. But I am presumptious enough to question it never- ing into the future. It is generally admitted posed from within the court it- campaign, which won for Judge awards first Jewish colony in the present era of Horner the nomination, It was ex- month by the Academy of Motion theless. Indeed, I think one might build up a pretty good case, that the that the world today suffers from a dearth self on the sole ground that the pected that he would vacation at Picture Arts and Sciences. On court be not "afflicted with an- Jewish reconstruction efforts in Palestine. the list of nominees this year are reason the depressions of former years, of 1873 and 1893 and of of great leaders, that the most serious other Jew." It is also true that French Lick, or one of the other Josef 1907, were less protracted than the present was that there was e von Sternberg for directing nearby resorts, where Illinois po- In view of the truly great achievements by the governors of two other states world-wide quest today is for able leader- —the litical figures are wont to spend "Shanghai Express" and Samuel constant and huge flow of immigration into the country at the time. Democratic Arthur Selig- When hundreds of thousands of immigrants come in, they need the Jewish National Fund, this is indeed a Hoffenstein for writing the screen leisure moments. Judge ship. For the Jewish people, the conse- man of New Mexico and the Re- their in. Horner was different. He pre• version of "Dr. Jeykell and Mr. clothes. That gives the tailors work. They need homes to live and great occasion for celebration. publican Julius Meier of Oregon That gives carpenters, painters, contractors, lumber dealers, Hyde." Our Boys seem to have ferred to "relax" on the bench The Detroit Jewish Chronicle is pleased quences of poor leadership are much more —are Jews. of the Probate Court. Ile wanted a genius for directing . , . Lewis lawyers work. It gives railroads work. It gives Ilebrew teachers Nevertheless, the fact remains to be certain that "everything Milestone won the award in 1926 work. It gives rabbis and doctors work. They need to eat and that to • be among the institutions extending serious than for other peoples. Every- that never in the history of thid was running all right." Only in and again in 1930 and in 1931 helps farmers. where a minority, driven from pillar to country has there been a Jewish this way, But Mr. Hoover would say: These 400,000 people that would he said, would he have Norman Taur . og took the prize. greetings of welcome to the delegates. It executive of so important the piece of mind to reax. Lieu- have come in have no money. post and suffering from bigotry and prej- chief a state as Illinois or New York. is to be hoped that the conference will And I answer, "My dear Herb, no immigrants of any conse- tenant-governor Lehman, like- Eddie Cantor has been given And that our past history has numbers that ever came in brought any money with them. succeed in strengthening sentiment for udice even in most enlightened countries, been studded with but five Jew- wise, does not believe in vaca- the air . . . he'll broadcast for quential In fact, the poorest, the most proletarian of all immigrants were tions—at least for himself. coffee company at $2500 per we are lost without informed leadership, ■ ish governors—one of whom was Palestine and in assuring the continued the earliest colonial immigrants. All men start out empty-handed. Though Governor Roosevelt took yodel, which . . . figured on • a half Jew and another who frequent leaves of the state capi- and uninterrupted loyalty of the people of without the guidance and generalship of but flat scale crescendos to the The wealth is in the natural resources of the country. That is, the was appointed governor of a tal during his four years in office, raw material is in the natural resources. And the labor working on tune of • couple bank notes Israel for Eretz Israel. men and women who know and understand Federal territory. his co-worker, his "right arm," wealth." every third beat. Oh, pahleesel this raw material produces the • • The first Jewish state executive • —as one of the newspaper cor- • • • their kinsmen's problems, who are trained or record was David Emanuel of respondents termed him—seldom SPECULATION AND DEPRESSION It happened in Australia. Joan to know the approach to a solution of these Georgia, who took his oath of left Albany except on state busi- If too much population is the cause of the present condition, I office in 1801. Then came Mich- Public Opinion Against Prejudice. ness. His vacations, as a mat- Blondell was 18 and playing the ask you to explain the great panic of 1837. Surely the country was problems. ael Hahn of Louisana who was ter of record, constitute ttvo one lead in "Girl of the Golden West." not over-populated at the time. A burly ranch owner in the audi- The National Conference of Jews and But it is not for the training of leader- elected in 1864, but who resigned week fishing trips. What is the cause of the present condition, you ask. I don't ence took a sudden fancy for her, Christians, organized "for justice, amity ship alone that we are so seriously con- the following year to take a seat SAVED DETROITERS profess to know. But I think it might not be so foolish for Mr. in the United States Senate. When In the first winter of and sent a note back-stage. The Hoover to consider that previous to the panic of 1837, for about five and understanding between the groups that cerned over the problem of Hebrew edu- From 1870 to 1874, Edward S. Lehman's official resident in Al- note was speedily returned, torn everybody was getting rich or thought they were getting rich comprise America," has issued an appeal cation. The Jewish people, so often re- Solomon, an appointee of Presi- bany, the City Trust Company neatly in half. Insulted, enraged, years, on paper profits in land speculation, and that previous to the present Grant, governed the then failed in New York City and its he dispatched his men to shanghai one about the same thing occurred. When people try to get some- for financial support, the organization now ferred to as the People of the Book, de- dent Washington Territory. And at resident committed suicide, her to his sheep rancho, miles out. facing the question of where to get the rives its greatest pride from its intellectual about the same time, 1873-75, a Roosevelt called on his assistant's The sheriff was informed of the thing for nothing, as the speculator does, there is likely to be trouble. can get something for nothing only on the condition that the means to carry the work over the winter. aristocracy. We are anxious for the per- half Jew, Franklin J. Moses, was banking experience to save the kidnapping, but he couldn't work People has to pay for the something. governor of South Carolina. depositors of the bank the five up any enthusiasm for it. Then others get nothing. Somebody • • • It is pointed out that the central office of petuation of this aristocracy. It is well to the The fifth of the series, previous million dollars in deposits which someone explained that it was the this movement for good-will among Jews, remember that a people, like an individual, to the present incumbents, Moses they stood to lose. After a few girl who had given his daughter REVENGE FOR WINCHELL Developments seem to be following in the Winchell plot thick died this year. He Protestants and Catholics spends $20,000 to survive and to live honorably, must have Alexander, (Turn to Next Pagel and fast, recalling the Passover story of the dog that ate the cat (Turn to Next Page.) was governor of Idaho during and the wolf that devoured the dog and as on. a year for its entire national program. something more than bread and the mater- - — — You recall, as noted in this column previously, that the editor A quotation from the letter addressed to ial things necessary for life. There is need of the Mirror recently wrote a volume called "The Scandal Monger," the editor by Everett R. Clinchy, director for a little bit of romance, and for young painting Winchell as the villain and himself as the hero. Well now of the National Conference of Jews and Jews especially there is need for such inter- there has come another volume from the press called "Circulation," in which the young woman who was formerly the secretary of the Christians, will no doubt interest our read- pretation of Jewish history that will intro- author of "Scandal Monger" paints the author of "The Scandal ers. Mr. Clinchy writes: duce a joy into Jewish living by Jews. This Monger" as the villain, and Winchell gets off pretty well. And the With an exceedingly small investment this gossip goes that the young woman has done a very good job. is not a myth. In the ghettoes of Eastern Conference program is gaining, the voluntary Now if someone will expose the young woman secretary, the job BOOST FOR LEHMAN f I reel was fact that the house of Is Europe where Jews knew their Jewishness; EINSTEIN IN U. S. research work of university professors in the I am very much interested in the should be complete. denied this privilege in the days social sciences; it is engaging the attention So Einstein is coming to live of his glory. attitude of most of the New York in Western European Jewish centers and of religious educators and clergy; it is af- America. Thanks for this are toward the candidacy of in this country among informed Jews, our in "Mr. Munger points out that the papers fecting editors and writers; it is enlisting civic Licut-Gov. Lehman for governor. due to the extraordinary group people relived and re-acted by their very who compose the Board of the love for music and the business de- Regardless of political affiliation leaden and church officials. Probably at no time in the 1900 years of Christian and Jewish being the great romance of Jewish history. Fuld Foundation created by the I termination are earmarks of In- there is a note of great respect for adjustments has an effort to genuinely sincere Bamberger, the Newark gull's Jewish heritage. This being his character and his record as a Our people might never have survived Louis and so intelligently mature been exerted to merchant, and Mrs. Felix Fuld. the case, we'll be obliged to agree public official. The New York without this romance. create just and rewarding relationships. The By M. A. TENENBLATT There is to be a sort of super uni- that the German masters, as a mat- World Telegram Is supporting Mr. National Conference is forming a public opin- versitylocated near Princeton, to ter of fact, the entire German peo- Lehman and the following excerpt Whittier, when he wrote ion against prejudice. be known as the Institute for Ad-j ple, have Jewish blood in their from an editorial should be pleasing (Copyright, 1532, Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Ise.) vanced Study. Dr. Abraham Flex- veins. For are they not musical? to us as co-religionists of one whose No one will deny that at no time was Tradition wears • snowy beard, g hl re g ard- CHA RACTER is so hi ner is the director and, according Professor Theodor Innitzer, the respect the ancient Jewish values, there greater need for the creation of a "As for the business determina- Romance is always young to his statement, this is to be a tion, the Jewish race has never ed: Archbishop of Vienna, and as which we Jews are trying to per- "When Mr. Lehman describes the new strong "public opinion against prejudice." where they will produced a Henry Ford, and I am professor's Utopia such the head of the Catholic petuate. One of the essential social welfare program start- There is no doubt that the present "effort" must have been thinking of the Jewish be freed entirely from financial , sure he would bitterly protest great Church, to which about 94 per cent tanks of the Leo Society it to see ed by former Governor Smith and people. That tradition which has arisen worries (Heaven, indeed!), and of the population of Austria be- that Catholicism does not slip away against the accusation that his carried on by Governor Roosevelt Is the sincerest that has yet been made to where the students may pursue - grandfather walked the as a new kind of progressivism in ings, has always been a great from its moorings in the Old Testa- reach the desired understanding, but un- from our being the oldest surviving people the purest ideals of scholarship great friend of the Jews, and the Jews ment, from the rock on which it is streets of Jerusalem. Possibly his this state he is describing some- consequently delighted at his built and without which its leaders fortunately prejudice is so deep-rooted that on earth has never been shadowed by the in their own way. The Jew again protest would be lodged with more thing he not only knows in detail are hoary beard. On the contrary', it has appointment. Jewish organizations believe the new Testament would emphasizes his deep interest in vigor and force than his condemn- but knows as an expert active pro- it is impossible to visualize actual accom- both religious and nationalist, have be left floating in air, without all things educational! ation of the Jews a few years ago. moter. plishments. Instead of seeing bigotry up- gained in influence and importance by the messages of congratula- foundation, without historic back- sent him And what of the business determin- "Likewise when he talks of state ground, without derivation. ation of the Morgans, the Hills, the measures for relief of distress in tions, full of heart-felt sincerity. rooted we are witnesses to an increase in romance which has kept is ever young. THE INSULLS In every public office he has held, the present economic depression he I The new Archbishop is an au- discrimination, to continued elimination of Every page of Jewish history, every age, In answer to my request for in- Rockefeller!, the Vanderbilts and Professor Innitser has been a con- of many more outside the pale thority on Biblical research and speaks from first-hand knowledge regarding the statement Jews from industry and the professions, to practically every generation, gives evi- formation sistent friend of the Jews. of the problems and from first- ' on the archeological excavations in that the Insults are Jews, I am in Judaism r In early days, when he was en- vicious discrimination against Jewish appli- dence of a mixture of achievement and receipt of the following from S. B. hand experience in dealing with Palestine, and the Bible is the in- spiration of his life. He plunged tirely devoted to learning, his con- martyrdom, of a stoic determination con- Komaiko, editorial contributor to them. cants for employment. "'Human and liberal govern- into life, into politics and adminis- tact with Judaism and Jewish tra- Jewish Morning Journal of New WORDS This increase in discrimination should in tinually to remind the world, in spite of the ment' is not for him • science to tration, he became a professor and ditions was only abstract, book York. It is a copy of a letter sent Words are much be learned. He is already a part of rector of the uinversity, • leader knowledge, but when he began to turn increase the counteracting efforts in obstacles and persecutions, of the message by Mr. Komaiko to the Chicago Like glass bulbs by night; such government. His career, pub- of the Christian Socialist Party, take part In the administrative side behalf of the good-will movement inaugur- of Jewish ethical and moral law, of our Daily News: At the poet's touch lic and private, has been a notable and a member of the government, of the work of the university and passion for social and economic justice. "Royal F. Munger, in his first ated by the National Conference of Jews They fill with light. contribution to the advancement of and he endeavred to introduce the he entered general politics, his con- in stallment describing the dramatic humanitarian aims and ends. He teachings of the Bible and of his tact was with living Jews, Jewish It is in order to be able to carry on this rise and Christians, co-chairmen of which are Samuel teeI, in- in- Shade and shape is far beyond the thinking stage. Christianity derived from the Bible individuals and Jewish organiza- is l reader e r that :Ir a orms Newton D. Baker, Professor Carlton J. H. traditional mission that the young Jews of f . He has long been on the job, do- into the Catholic political and ad- tions. It soon became known that In words are hid; of Jewish blood somewhere ministrative life of the university this' new professor at the meetings They only escape ing the work. Hayes and Roger W. Straus. Bigotry must today must be given that training and strain in his ancestry, which, perhaps, ex- of the academic senate not only "Could New York find • better and of the country. At the poet's bid. not be permitted to travel over this land scholarship which is the sacred heritage plains in part both his love for did not Join the anti-Semitic profes- man to be its governor at a time Ceesisteat Fried of Jews. and his extraordinary busi• unchallenged, and the challenge must come of their people. In our own community music more when human needs were never Dr. Innitzer was the secretary- sors in their attempts to prejudice And things obtain ness determination. Insull himself urgent and acute, when there must general of the Papal Leo Society, Jews, but used every opportunity to State and name: from a group in which the Christian forces the United Hebrew Schools are the torch- i e , t t h raat be wise, experienced adjustment which is one of the most important oppose them, to defeat their efforts Rhythmic as rain, dominate. The National Conference of bearers in the present important intellec- 17,1) ; s n .t cer his family know; h of the Catholic learned societies, and to condemn the practice and between economy and relief! Fulgent as flame. antes- ha ces- I far enough. His immety liattreeean tual pursuit. We have faith that the re- "We think the state is fortunate and it is • remarkable fact that it the teachings of anti-Semitism. If Jews and Christians should receive the e not m of the Jew- ton fwetr h embers to have this able, liberal, tested sults of the educational efforts will be to is among the scholars of the Cath- anti-Jewish disorders broke out, or But none shall see support it asks, and it should be a very easy i,i faith. friend of humanity, specially fitted olic church that one finds most un- Jewish students were in any way The magic start: "We are at a loss to understand natter to raise the comparatively insignifi- give worthy leaders not only to Israel, but why, by his terms as lieutenant-governor, derstanding and friendship for th e treated unjustly, the Jewish stu- wthmataelienstuoll i f tal:,ei n, an I The battery now to take over the duties of the go.. Jews. It may be that their Bibli- dents knew that they could always Is the poet's heart. cant sum that is needed to carry on its also to the peoples among whom Israel I. cred it cal studies have taught them to ernorship." —Philip M. Raskin. (Ton to Next rage.) dwells. the Jewish race, In view ofm tre Illinois Whose Chances Are Highly Rated by Competent Observers. . RANDOM THOUGHTS j a r Ch arles / seph I/ICJo Jews Welcome Appointment Of New Archbishop of Vienna Program: