I EM7ritOtT, IEWISII al ROM ICIZ

and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE

litEPLIIWIVEWISII 01 RON IDLE

The Situation in Germany.

While it is imperative that Jews
throughout the world should not become
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
panic-stricken over the most recent occur-
1. 7:10-i - shed Weekly by The Jewtok Chronicle Publishing Ca, Ines
rences • in Germany, it must be admitted
von. at the l's-t•
Entered as Second.,a.. r,ot,r Mat.o
that the situation is far from encouraging.
h
A.. I March a, I•:,
oak< at Detrun,
The German Jews themselves are display-
g eneral Office and Publication Building
ing remarkable courage, and the confi-
525 Woodward Avenue
Telephone. Cadillac 1040 Cable Address: Chronicle dence they express in the justice and tol-
London 0thie
erance of the people of Germany is partic-
ist Stratford Place, London, W. 1, England.
ularly commendable at this time. But the
-- -
$ lett Per Year
Subscription, in Advance
early apptiintnii nts made by Chancellor
+•-• runner
To Insure pubh,s,,,
,
Adolf Hitler and the III•IIMIStratiOliS of
Milo( reach the, e'te,.
,
.
hi, .1
holy.
When cratilica
hate that are evidenced wlicriever groups
of his party meet are to discour-
The Detroit Jra, h
age even the most tuailident.
.
Minh for an ;ad.
The fact that Itector Prockelman of
Readings of the Law for Chaniisho Osor
Breslau University yielded to Nazi de-
b'Sheve1 Sal•bath.
l'entateuchal portion Eyy. I ; 17 17:1
nuted t vii l suspended Professor Ernst Cohn
I
Ist•oehetical pordon
is a Ii oat tlilieitrietling instance. The ac-
t
- 11 aj., ;,01 , 1 r /*I
Shevat 14, 5693 1
.:1.0
aken
February 10, 1933
Cohn is a
blatant i•xample ol the extremes to
to go. Th e d en ,.
the N01.1,, al ,
U. S. Embraces Brasol.
1 ;2:LiiHt Drulnssor Cohn are the
Commissioner :1/2Iyron I'. Cohen reipieled
L.. • pinaT
1hr.
Strong itnti-
that he be released from conducting hear-
.-entimcnt in iennany. If •there
of
Claims
in
in
the
United
States
Court
ings
are any who Gill believe that reports of
New York City, in the case of U. S. vs.
eSeinit isni in (ler:mint' ;ire exaggerated.
Russian Fleet Corporation, becan, a jew. lot thorn read the following extract. from a
ish issue was involv,•il % ■ hen the credita cable to the New fork nines regarding the
• witness was ques- rccent demonstrations at Breslau Univer-
bility of Boris Bra :, :lii •- a

tioned, Judge William R. Green, who re.
placed ('ommissioner Cohen, has ruled that
Brasol's anti-Semitism and ant i-Soviel
does not impeach his veracity as a wine-s,
and his testimony is being heard in :Tit..
of protests.
Thus, Uncle Sam embraces Boris Brasol,
notorious anti-Semite, who was the dissem-
inator of the Protocols of the Elders of
Zion in this country and who was among
the witnesses against Mendel Beiliss in the
famous ritual murder case of 20 years ago
—a case which, with its witnesses, b e longs
to the darkness of the middle ages.
Six witnesses testified as to B•itsol's tit-
ness aM a witness before his testimony was
admitted, Dr. Abraham t'oralnick of the
Jewish Daily (lay, 'Loyal J. Int ■ .is of the
0(1113r1111 staff of the New York Evening
Post, and Sidney Howard, plitywrit4lit, one-
time newspaperman associated with h t he
Ilearst publications, testified to the "bad
reputation" for veracity and to the anti-
Semitic record of the Russian monarchist.
William E. Sims and S. Lawrence Miller,
attorneys, and George Albert Simons.

COMIC MARXISM

The Story of the Five Marx Brothers, Their Eccen-
tricities and Their Rise to Screen Eminence.

By HILDA PASSELL

It't

Hail, Alas x. Ile to the little
ft•Ilow. with the red wig you see
on the screen chasing all the
beautiful girls. In real life the
beautiful girls ukase hitn. And
m l o 11 he emetics them'.
11. 11 , 1111•, of course, is derived
•• I.
ability to wheedle tan-
. rows from that regal in-
t the harp—which even
Inc he cannot dignify
al , musical terms.
I
in the front-
x domicile— a
hi- maternal par-
'
mg days in (Ser-
e Otto impiahl
•.. was then called,
' • dn.,- into rendering
st." as though
d o ant it.
[id days when the
\t
was quarters in a

,,„

tt

fnoii

,th

and where,

rating regu-
larity that the tiorkoain deliver,(
the 11,1 ily
II , lady in the

tt it,

:III,

].,

I. - 1.

1 ,

Prof.• - d Cohn I, 241 years old,

;a•

.7i n•ly

I .

1
"dar
• t • t,. lt. r

Ach such

(t)lore are five
-1 into this noel(
oltervals in rapid
IIai poi making his de-
, - G -I S• Chico, the eldest.
(
y
general belief,
Iii ,,,•1,.. Is not the oldest. Ile
was only a babe in arms when
Zemin, the youngest was born.
Actually, Grourbo is son No. .1,
dinil was initialed to the name of

l••

fah. ,ful tlIght" in such sartorial
deWlls as a derby (borrowed)
and il fashionable top-coat with

a %idiot iodiar made over from
papa 'diary's discarded one by
I 't.I• le AI, till, v.a. the 14•st pants
11)%ington street be-
h, lawaint.. the famous Air.
rl . an in partnership with Alr.
1;a:higher.
SPEAKS NOT A WORD
To toll once again the eircum-
•aides of Ilarpo's first public
via Aran., on the stagy, is to
it a , 41 joky of all its flavor
rnestant repetition. But no
.•ilthrocle of the g•ntleman's life
at .1 work can be complete with-
ut at least a passing rt.ferenty
I , that bright .tune day. Harp°,
bing very fetching in a bell-
hop:. uniform was employed at
that time by the 110.1 Seville,
notch to mother Marx's chagrin.
After all ahotel was no place for
an impressionable and suscept-
able y•oung man. Three of his
hr, -(hers were already cavorting
(lend , ram's stage iii ('oney
Island under the beguiling name
of "The Three Nightingales."
Hat po was just returning Cissie
Loftus' spaniel front his daily
-•-•nstitutional in Gramercy ('ark,
for whieh services he, (Harp.)
received the munificent sum of
a quarter a week, when his moth-
er, in a grande (hale manner
(triode up in a dilapidated-looking
cab and tittrieved her precious
son. She had a white-duck suit
and a paper boutonniere in readi-
ness for him, and with the same
Vralltle dtuno notion-1. that she
ordered the vash to take them to
Cony Island, she clothed her son
in raiment !refitting a Marx. They
reached Ilenderson's just in time
for the bewildered !Lupo til by
P1.141141 1111 the stage, where he
Was so embarrassed that through-
out the act he kept his eyes glued
on the back drop. In fact, his em-
hart•assinent took such a definite
fou n t that it was a happy coinci-
.b me that a Mr. Harry Finkel-
stein believed in advertising en
threat:it-al back drops that he
da y-cleaned and pressed 111111'S

r

Our Film Folk 1 :By-the-Way

H E LEN

HOLLYWOOD. — Peeping int
filmdom's past we found a bran
new member for the Jewish ('in
tuna Circle . . Anna Sten, Gold
we'n's latest importation, is Rus
sian . . . and Jutish. Her talkie
appearance is being delayed by
Goldwyn because she has had to'
learn English since arriving in this
country.
• • •

Oh! and here's one that
howled us over . .
know
the big bugaboo man? .
the
one who keeps little children
awake nights? ... oh, huh, Bela
Lugosi, Well, he' s a a half•
Yehude. Probably Jewish an
the maternal sid e , as he claims
a Hungarian baron for a father.
Lugosi, by the way, took on
matrimonial shackles the other
day. He is 50 and his bride,
also of Hungarian descent, is
21.
• • .

Tidbits

By

and

.V(z.vj

VI SCHWARTZ
DAD

ICanyriaht. loTt.Jewhh Teleirsaahic A,- nee.

Dear Ed:
Harry Hershfield was speaking the tither night a .
The dinner was in honor of Lord Marley, who has a .
as you know, with the ()II project. And Hershfield. .
the war medals that beglittered his Lordship's co a t, ,,
he, too, Wan a veteran—of three exemptions.
And then Hershfield went on to survey the c o r e
country and, addressing his Lordship, remarked e .,
,
our forefathers ill 1 7711 could have foreseen preterit od,
they might not have given his Lordship's people such

Well, that's the tray, Ed, I feel just now--or rat ,
now—for a hot bath and a cold plunge which I have
initiriats1 my attitude sionu•tvhat. I read somewher e rid d
I
of steel-making was founded on the pritnuoi.- •
beating and freezing the raw metal. So I thought m
process would eve( nu. in the same way. So I
Wi I
i b,,aut illy to
cold !nail and then reversed the proces s , It -I
int o
but it
to keep me from j o i n i ng

\v,- humans are funny beings, Ed. 1 sometime: II..
nldst Illogical of all the animal kingdom. For
artist last night—a .lewish artist - -and he was rat ....•
Jew. as so many Jews frequently do. But the fro
1.a. only recently returned from Palestine and 13,.
Thine is a saying in the Talmud, I believe, th a . •.
Palestine makes one smart. It missed out, Ed, on h..,
one
thing
that he told me about the Palestine atmos;
Why all the hullabaloo about
Marlene's trouser fad? Sari )tar- nit:. Ile said that the atmosphere of Palestine is tot ..1...•
s
ee there with the naked eye over much greater di
itza began weaning boyish Eton
suits when she teas
batS The , o ust in ding work there must adjust hint-elf t
dOnnI , 1 trotl , f , t
sports, home IerspyeUte that
Pale - one, it seems,
' . 'tuit tS . is as full of artists as New Y•
and studio attire etc]. since.
And Ralph Wilk, movie news- inen, iteconling to hind In an exhibition held in II,
man, says thrifty husband. will small city. of hid Aviv, he told me there were e lo.. •
take advantage of the style by one hundred artists. In New York, I understand, hi.-
purchasing two-pant suits and p o l ice=men, or ohe for about every hundred of th e
presenting the wife with the ex- Palestine, Oleic is shout the same ratio of artists.
Donald Fried,. of Covina Friede, the well - known
tra pair as her newspring outfit.
.

thtlatt

d

ay'

In t I

i ' tt the
fl an
t th e

'nun

an

weed

has hind returned ft itt Majorca, the Spanish noh-,.

In

late this becalm'
rendezvous for arti s ts , and he
expatriated American intelligentsia spend their to. .
,-. • , .•
lo •• o•
parties, where the main objective besides drinking is t t
W..1-
..' n .1
!enlaced by the
the peacock suet-ch. 'fhe difference between that a
1.11i I I II , '. d„b
1.110 then Chan-
account for by the fact that in l'alestine they are w,.
po se by a mission, if you please. And cynical as ee
ti. 1110 Breslau University
ot los nanoe liNt. among those sub
nossions, there i- something to be said for any . tIond •
life
with a purpose.
l
ling
the
for ti
raoatea
1'14e-sot. Cohn had made
But a hat I would like you to tell nie, Ed, thirds,.
.
I h
limp in lay,- at t he
of this arti-t just returned front Palestine, why; an, ;
THEIR BAR MITZVAHS
I
conscious
;Ohm(
their
III, tiherr no objection
There is still much rivalry and
art.
Why
do
they
want
you
t.•
They do tell that Harry Cohn,
tel he is ton-
dis, Lessem among the brothers an
head of Columbia Pictures, nine admiration at their works? writers are not like the
to who had toniuitted himself
t•arned his bread and butter as painters lit. so?
must honorably tin his liar Alit/-
I 1.I
.1 4 . 1 \ I I
I CII II t 4111 , 1 r,11t
When you visit the home of a writer, he
a street-car conductor.
• • •
tab No 11,41,ian can be rettethed
L,
bum, es-
completely lost darn fool, ask you to read the clippie.•
1. ,, atl'i• all ay.. of (hem spoke the
Il'hy
.10, a painter feel chagrined if you fail It. d•
(VI ,
he Ilis not given
A snow-storm in the mountains
same pirse, et im posed by the same
pro-
of "sunny" California stranded niasterpiem , s bedecking his walls? AVhy does a pa,,.
rabbi,
whe.t.
imagination
and
i f
several thousand, including Junior a distinction between minum•reial work and pure art
rary ability reached such ether-
t n it;:t
Latitund e and th e German consul. thought that should paint anything but the dicta'.
.;(1
hint N there would
eal heights as:
way of doing so.
All roads %cert. . . . but 'ost writer h, on the contrary, even if perchance Ile
"Dear parents, relatives and
In I ele1, thl.
Ili 11E0'1' 110 point
Junior had to get back to work cork front highor mot ices , are d little embarra.-eel Irt, •
honored
t, et., anti - Semitism and of a noire unadulter-
'rodily I robe
and the consul had it dinner ell. and if you ask writers . alninsi universally they ty :ell
itt - lf in the garment of Juda-
tht; ann u lar ithel'inns olablansks al
hriaheillent With
Prof. Einstein. did it in.ritil-r I Ilcy 111 - 1,14,1 the money.
1S',.11, th a t' s ,orottgli about artists.
end At last I am a Bar :Bit-t-
Ihr l e, t•iincr.ity, such
against Professyrs
There Was bill one way out
. .
suit, for 50 tents.
urd,
For
long
days
and
nights
GunGI -I aunt Leasing.
'(' hear
There was an inti.resting article , Ed, the other
and slid down
fs,attuhre.
since then Harpo has never they put on
I hilo r e el for appropriate words
day.
I.:telling
Post by. Carolyn Wells, the humorist.
the
mountain.
Wh'd
like
to
hae,..
:1101i , II a viuril on stage or screen.
to ex pews the tender devotion,
' Professor
to N'azi sentiment.
seen
Junior
is
l'h
long
as
he
doctors
Intsting
t"
lire.
t"II
What
,
Rumor, ungarnished with •ny'
h- •
the loving kindness, the heroic
frith the two years?
coin, has done nothing of the sort--he has
is tall.
Soviet propaganda, had somehow
sacrifices that you, my dean' par-
• •
'turk to in, law.
The question was also raised, as you remember, in \
filtered through to MOSISiW Of
mm's
ents have bestow.ed upon me."
"Grand
The friendly enemies, Cantor
Miss Brody, at the New York Public Lilo , , "wish
the panlumimir genius of this
Nevertheless, it is Harpo who
and Jesse!, are making a tour
There are other Jewish professors at
di' l'itot. Put
.Intilfir question the other day to a to..
tousled-haired clown. The Ales-
'..,ugly
enjoys a slight advantage over
together. They're playing one-
Jewl-lt young man a Ph. H., and an able young fellow ...
row Art Theater incited hint to re-
.uml,
Methodist Episcopal minister, defended Breslau, but their names are not directly
his other brothers. It is not out
but One who has somehow had a very difficult time,
night stands . and sick box.
eal his talent before the Mosco-
Brasol. Rev. Simons is the gentlenian who • descended from I he Jewish priesthood--
much the fact that on the mem-
to economic conditions.
offices are smiling again as, from
%nes,
if
only
as
it
happy
intt•rluile
orable occasion of his Dar Mitt-
initial indications, th e gross in-
"Whitt would you do, Doctor," she asked hind "It y
from their pre o ccupation with the
in 1919 testified before the ( hernia" sett - the K„hanim. Nevertheless, the other Jew-
(new
tali his mother tellloVed the
take will average $50,000
you only had half an hour to live?"
Eiyi. Year Plan. The name Of
, N110•1111/111 .
dishes from the
atorial Investigating ronintitt ye 1m radical- ish teachers itre certain to suffer as a result
weekly.
Marx alone, Ifarpo thought,
Ile replied that he would summon together all throe •t..o had
wash-tub and gave her soli a
ism and sedition and made anti-Semitic of the anti-Cohn incidents.
•
•
should have given hint entre into
refused him jobs and tell them to go you know where.
thorough and much-needed scrub-
allegations w h ich brought protests from
it is evident now
if it
George Burns and his squaw.
the country, but through some
suggested, Ell, that he would have to hire 'ladle I , Spare
bing, but it is the . testimony of
hit
queer process of Alarxian reason-
Graci• Allen, are Hollywood-bound Garden for the occasion.
the late Louis Marshall and Judge Aaron who is involviid, oven a traditional rule may
, t surviting photograph that puts
ing,
he
was
refused
admission
to
appear
in
another
flicker,
"In-
That
reminds one that the late Joseph Pulitzer of the World it
Harpo indisputalily. in first place.
Levy.
Into A1r. Stalin's domain.
ternational House." Did you know said to have built the Pulitzer Building on the site of a torn-down
lie broken, and young Professor Cohn is to . Taken on the stoop of the Third
(Vr
wonder
with
what
cryptic
that
they
ranked
fifth
among
all
building,
from which he Was once ejected.
That the United States Government be (lusted. It is Professor J'ohn's "inisfor- avenue apartment house, one can
isomment Harpo's friend, George the air pr•ograins of II)31!?
That idea of revenge always appealed to Ine, and 1 used some-
readily see that the 13 years lie
should not only accept the testimony of a tune" that his father did not change his
Bernard
Shaw,
esq.,
received
this
Another broadcaster g ir i n
nines to indulge in the thought that 1 would like to do a- Pulitzer,
spoke of so eloquently in his
notorious anti-Semite and a vicious num- name for him, as was the CBS(' with F:mil speech had indeed "taken their
but after a longer stay, 1 decided I would have to
(Turn to Next Page)
many
(Turn to Next Page)
buildings.
archist, but should also embrace him as a Ludwig, svhose father. the oculist Dr. Iler-
I see, Ed, that Gustav Lilienthal of Germany has pa o .1 away.
worthy advisor, is an unfortunate occur- mann 011111, NVilti professor of ophthalmol-
Was he or wasn't he a Jew! I)r. liloch of the library on... t•1.1 me
rence in an American court. It is impera- ogy at Breslau rniversity. \Vi' LISP the
that he wasn't. Alorris Goldberg, an authority on the Jew in c enee,
:risk. that he was, and the Jewish E:ncyclopedia lists hint a, a Jew.
tive that the testimony of a Brasol should term "misfortune" because it is so ovitiefil
Whether he sou , or wasn't a .lew—he, together with hr. brother.
be impeached and that tvitnesses of his that the young professor's name has made
Otto, were the hi-al pioneers of aviation.
caliber should be discredited in American the Nazi demonstrators see red, but we also
Frisch of Alinneapoli s tc;t: here the other day, Ed, and h.• wat
,.:iyintt at lunch the other day to a neighbor that the red Anprics
institutions,
place this term in quotes because Emil •
was in the middle west or northwest.
Ludwig. even though no longer a ('olin, has 'USSYFOOTING HITLER
'That's right, E d, but it i. also right that the real Iiki]l•
statement of Mr. \Veisgal's that SYNAGOGUE FORECLOSURE
west
ttl
is in New York. Just consider some of the following New
returned to the fold upon witnessing the In.,.1...i ii,t!li :,,,,r, tt,,- :, : p.,7k,,
, iini tow he,f,rt,f„,,..t,. 1,, i tii: he is in the (Midst of ' repaving a
drds:
Chamisho Osor b'Shvat.
Bankruptice. ani1 receiverships
Fannie Hurst comes from St. Louis.
t
gigan
ic.
spectacle
to
be
i
pi•esehterl
It is an unusual commentary 1111 the outrages practiced against his people. and
are common enough these (lays in
Ben Hecht is from Chicago.
t hieottgiu.scis.tnii,i,tni c ir i. gran
Jewish will-to-live that although our people ryas at 0110 time eV ell reported as planning Ise a
Max Lowenthal, member of the Wickersham Commission, is
")1'.trf"..,"((itVi i a it ire.- the business world, but it is a sue-
rem ain s ds ?lain" i 'Phtt. "Tritri':tet:i'ITI consist
have been estranged from their native soil to tni hack to his old and honored family .ii,te,l. Hitler the Dictator has pie, and it it-ill be held at Soldier'. prise to find a Jewish temple in from
Kenneth McKenna is from Cincinnati.
o do s o m e pussyfooting' 01. lin Field. :\n attendance of upwards such
a situation. According to a
B a ffle
for so man• centuries w nevertl l el
e
4(
Edna Ferber is from Wisconsin.
,Aie.,-ted
4.11111 II1VOIVI.
I prenume
erman y •
1111 _!. • If 100 Um"
Other discouraging elements ill 1 his Ger
brate typically Palestinian festivals thou-
Governor Lehman—at least his parents—from Alabama.
111 ,,, he might mak e .
Isis it will dotal with oone thane of statement in the dYwish Daily
Bulletin,
Temple
Sholoni
The Untermeyers are from Virginia.
of
('Ili
-
.
life'
titterl,
1
0,
30
Jewish
sands of miles away from Palestine. The man situation art. the inclusion of Ilermani
or Itt•Htlilt. with the
F. P. A. is from Chicago.
ti n,
„sp tirtniid t •
,t t !F it
has ( urine involved in a
;ire history of the
weather may be very bleak, frigidit y d om . \Villtehn Ciiering and Dr. Wilhelm Frick
Robert Scold is from some small town in Illinois.
i
O
rti
r
lit.ia7(n
''fidiit% be- trirg:.'elos'usrt. 'suit liecaus•• of al-
notorious anti-Semites, in t h e
Koenigsberg of the Hearst services is from Texas.
\\ ' N.,
muting the air, nevertheless we observe •
• • orse such a SillTtarli should
at- lilted default on interest and prin.
I
George
Kaufmann, I think, is Iron, Pittsburgh.
'Girt Jews front all over the coon- . ,
Chamisho Osor h'Slivitt as the Jewish NeW "H 111311
I 111. aMmrinlInent
it it, .int.
eipai payments day tin a nowt-
Jack
Lait is from Chicago.
try
Year of the Trees. The link between the other notorious Jew.hater _c oun t !hip
gage held by a Life Insurance
, N.., great feat ure: Of the Fair.
New York, as you see- for the list could be indefinitett •
Carlin. fun,!
people Israel and the Land of Israel ap- ' dirt
the chief
is really a symposium of all America—the most •Att
company, This brings home with
•
all
vine,.
I ought to know --I come from all of them
the choice of, Paul Josef G....binds. head
pears strongest on just this festival.
added force the price congrega- I
Anil by the way, Ed, did you know that the very fans,
Proposes Leane Zugsmith's
Even in t h e present h„iir
in tit
have t„ pay for unwise ex- Jacob Epstein, first went to Europe via
despair fur the Perlin Nazi panty and vicious anti
a cattle boat.
"Never Enough" for
pansion. Yet, after all, one can- returned. even for it visit, until Ir. years later, when he son:
more than half of Jewry throughout the . Semite' as head of the government broad-
Pulitzer Prize.
tionally
famous?
not expect to have any noire fort.-
world, with more than eight million Jews :
systeni *
i.
sight than the best managed bu•i
assurance of the press bureau of
living on the edge. tit. a spiritual. physical
By BERNARD POSTAL
11 on.
ness
institutions of the country,
and social abyss, Chainisho osor b'Shvat the r' entt "" ut'vertilipt"t at Be r li n that
It in perhaps tuo early to begin and when they are in the same
conies to cheer up the gloomy ono:. Esp t i. I t tws11"" n o thing t " fear serves '"Ine‘v11"'
electing the Pulitzer Prize Novel fix due to the same lack of wis-
d '.
-----
0
assuagelit
S.
Int'
new, when Palestine radiates the 1" allay fears and
'‘. oc ILI!. ,
I
1
and fon-sight perhaps tit Some Interesting Observations by the Son-in Lan,. of
' for 1933, but in the opinion of this .0in
on l y happy gl u
es tin t h e ,newish horizon, those concerned titer the late of Israel
shouldn't
blame
the
Chicago
group
ht". 1, 1y
,,,..
nitt.th.yr ,1 1.,,:n(iiruig
ith,
•I) ,•taitt ., %%,:erz.. g.," ,N
Professor Albert Einstein.
so nosh.
llowtwer, one simea-
y over rhea
Chatnisho ()stir er\ s es to encour- must entertain extreme an
l''lillh't.•'
age
(area a% III WIlethel' ' this forttelos.
um hum , status of our unfortunate brethren in Ger
our people :toil tu
ley RUDOLF KAYSER
, .!I.
is „'groin to lot among the tire business is likely to spread to
many.
t .. , is. ...,,,,,,,,,i,. ,.,, iisi d,.,. t .it (tit. t hi s r.: !it! . i ,i. geor).1 ,g..ni,.tfaa,thioti, sf w
in the hearts of the grieving.
fi. ihnodi.,ariti.. spualy:-
.
•
—
ons h -ought aft. r literary ser er-
An interesting
The Alexand. 1 Platz has long 'street fill you with ;co.,
told Ile 1114.
.
pi , intere s
t, let alone their pay- been the center ; f 1: , rain Cdr. The since only a few st. v.
tile. "N., er Enough" is a meaty
drell of Palest ine about ho (lower Cy
"Birds of a Feather."
' (.0.k that interprets through eight melts on the mortgage principal. traffic is iii• - ' .. ht - Aril heir and is the hub of the i r...
;
Clanton:
National Hemocratie Deputy \Vier, /al,.
es, in, t«, we hate become much the long 1 ,, ,
' • harat•tt rs emanat ing from eight en-
. r, ,, f motor cars life at its sprasli. - •
speakinj::: in the l'olish Seim, demand...I
t ironments the spirit and social chastened and subdued these lust end train
.
. t I,, , tint - Paging. In the Grenadier ...
twit "n three years
onplii•ations
of
the
vomplete
iyide----
_
. L.
"Wie o
. te a crush the shops are shut
SLoinon a•rended the throne.
I •
th;it hews lit. expolltuf (*non Poland "l.
Wealth 34111 pliVerly, vie
and ills-
• ...
I .(.1
eared before hi m and
.•
so sparse that on.
h ut. rid,
,
.
twit.
a ,
,• a h . that all
•
Pole's it
\
lusi.donent, intlorence and •ophis- GALSWORTHY'S "LOYALTIES" '''' '" It ' l ' '
said, 'hi. "t • I I
Isignst
I:I' ,...
arehs tit '
•,ratio -of Amerwan life during
•
The death or John Galsworth.
I ' ; ', .17111'): a, la] Yll'cuiltni zst.. n" ruuttrItyh• ea
'I his 44 1 - 1 . :41 Polish patriot was disturb e d 1 is--
1•.111. tt111 . !ht . !! fol
h":11. I, l ;
•tre deeade from I:"0 to 1030. 1'01 sh.-aa- to mind hi play. "1......it
you
:o rig only the vharacti rs. The -I.
ttot,r,
ill. -
I ;Ili,. 1,( 1 00.11014 h oW
-
S is It great a !minion
ing as the haekereund of her brit • , " which introduced a .1, .,.
field,
the roost
1 . 111 and ras111,11 11
for traffic and are tiny and I
. 14 1,
.
ant. and signifivant novel the out
I t. , '.1:1, after the mostly situated dot ,
. ;1' arousing con•iii.. r .
crown df to its •h .1•••
• t I
•
- -an- n whet ha th
. . . iscitus ACHIEVEMENT
•tntilling event< of that unique dec. a.
.- II 111 the Jewish pri•
t Ir , t 1... Ir. r to, . Ity lats. Only one solitar t
and saw the 1'■ - r1.1... i
I
hurl
I1 this fellmv 1Vierczak knoAr wt
.
risetc.nt
a
IctIor
front
\1st
Aliss
Zugsmith
has
saill•n
,
Nile,
.
ht.r
ti
-.
a
e .r.ae.:t• at the tim e ,
Its flower Ihhhud. •••
re .. ,
11, \ l; I; \ thl 11! l ' "land
, 1;;,.,
(h.
haracters into a powerful and in- t hed .
nit•ibt:1 1 "
' a :end 'it. the IiitaitrtI
he commanded I
loit-'oL I
look
,' n Idiirh
Will doubtlr.s r,
• e
i.,
..,
it
i
d
tense
narrative
whieh
shows
her
to
- -t• rni?, ° i Illiiz at ter of the empty
.., dt . 7
the plat arel the ehar •t .
crown in t .
.\11(1 why should
'
.
I„ not only a gift ,il noyelist, but a IlUeSilor - It dealt
..
ii.
dill,
..
•
Now
there
two
Sabbath
...atoll..
t .
Cyclamen r. ..
to a I:IN.!, 0\
'II' i:ii •ll!ilil lila, .11 - 14 -•
; apable histunan. for each of her tent wot,
Io
a nu l. inner Itg 1,t
i):::::i.,i,..w,ti,h(laii odnint g ,tr:1„tt
After mart i.- ii.. i
, '.l iliscrialinatp.n and
.h
.
a
,
rini
o
t
pn
ris
o
.
,
:,
hug.
':I
,,rfa
c
A
t
m
e
r,s
:
ni,t,ta
y
riln
efi
t
n
h
(
i
leIts.i2
t
r
ort
.
,-
i
dnit;,,
,
rt,,
,
,•
,
,
,
In
the
.
tout,
tt.
:di
IT.•
,
„
,
t,,,
.
i.t,itilt,
e
g.r.
,..7
,t,h,
,
,
i
,,
,,r,:a
j
,
,
,
;
You
(till
dOWn Illi• ,..i4t . ,.
a
ii ,., \ ,,,I ,,, i( i , t , \is ., i .,,
tln
treasuly .
„mi
%volt site and sure
0 t o ' lgi' o' sh i h .. and the country is
It isOnErtihileaySaribibgahtth, ! E . ' •
'
Judea ti t ! '
'
trek.”'
:,,,,.,,,.;,-,..l
, ie ,,, ,f , ,,i: ; i if: irn, , r i , g
she
d".1 tital three milliitt
tS
t'i ti ti tntt,dt .• ,, .'iliritit; ,ii,II'.,,,"Yr.''',dleaiorit inn ,..../:,,,,.:,
I% .
, IA , linked these ebaraeters and the
I r
.
i inhi , ti ti
a: ; _i. the'
h Sabbath.
itslth.
i.a t
The G re nadr •
roomer! .•
I
he
verge
imrcil e.1 ,8 .1- of t he pla y but in i .... •;,1 war
of starkation7
:
is ohs, twin s; the Sabinil....
Fretz L.
::.ao.. it' tr o is'11. to
1. "t ' t1 7•Uant i hlY
I: ,• lt,
h!.
forts
i own sake e . ub
er dif n t it for
t. has nut this I remember that tld ..r. t • i d are d there is an alb . get hfe,
s 1101 t ht. only 1.% II spirit
''" and ha' kh "" n that one, m
hich,
gin b y the e ap- hustling business s world tt . •
,
quite will by an actor nanit .1 Dale world, which,
illy, Herr hull , lead. •..•
and startlingly fxa ' t are
:.”
inh
a
"''
t
bitant,
was the subject or th•• ninny iI,s-
head of .. •
•' I.,
tiracterizat ions.
\ , '
the i r
' Soil:di -I Ink mein 44 (lie
f-
thou:
again a. c 0
agna•alile incident: reflecting upon
E. r each t harm ter there is a
•
osi ud id r il.e
s tnc
ht ( that
wt rt td
see k: to deprive .li•‘‘... it(
Inw .r. a Jew. I have not route ands of kilornetno away, a differ
; re or less it
nib nt narnd ti , ,.
i
nt
P'
P'
and
a
diir
rent
age.
Very stranger.
plays
The flowers ,ii P,c.,....11.
containtng .newish few kno w
en V
. e and th r autho r ..i R. 1,, tit
• r.
CI. . ' itt
this part of Berlin. ' b
•cr , rct. ently.
Some year ,
ing to hold their in ails , r :
an d deftly f rom o n t . ' • ' . • t •
( Hi t
r. o
I I is de b ''fl't :II'n1:h g' ll'r) i ta.: IrS tk'tu'l:t n: r
I, together."
..1.4 1i a number were prnsent • go by II as u - net. t i e gly .
i t it';'
lY a't'::.aait'•' •
• un s the paths of s. • ; .
a small world, and its Inhabitants
any ihno'r utti aff in 4 me dire, t ion.
of a re in\ (mat. .1 1.....ple. 'X , . ..,
I :II,:
•
..
-sing
t
h
e
oirelc.
rather
stmt
(
. • .•. eross. Two met,.
ran till (h err III` '
0 ritleynanly. hut always the
about the reslci a. :: of a yr.
.1 . c the story of ...
Well I d"
) i . no• ..... .1 narrow stre e t their walk.
Ii see
that the the di
.
• ru... dist met. IVII,• •
head of a kin.,'..
st, rirlp on with a CI rtion i.'
r :ir Pi.
I li , an
l.. \ ..,
:
. ._.: • !..., ,. fiein
i producers and the playw i • •
.,::..i,...h,.,h . , .1:::.f(fit , i . ttur
. .,h,Ir.:Ih
,:p.::: :, n h u y n:. y li
th
,
There is a .
ce.
I
cient soil 111I n. .
I-
el sud•lenly derided 'I) pet ,, ,
‘ ,i. ;:i ha,,,,,tiTt ,:,,t.it:i. :fir.i:,. ,, i.,,(1,:tnntsfruaialnlitpoatititi„,..11,h0l:i ttri,y1 IT . 1, . , , , ,
- ...t..11 p ains t w . ot.
.. . • 3 e yaudeville Jew and ' - ,
the return id' 01,0 p.
;. ,
„.),.
.ini
1
,G
f h e r ca
h carte r-
r
'1 t• "
pl.' are rue r, SO they %%nth .. ' r
h 1111 ■ -l• tics
• chine
new and much
h
,
.ry
hangs
t
at
't
"
""
I ,t• pe „jibe's
erl
type
But
someh
,
'A
•
I. t
.. :: 1 ,::,1”1"" t ' 1 : . , . ti. .1,. ';' , . a I ta.hto:Nisti ihs - it 7 . 4' ,.i.:. n. t
achiex. erent in Pal. •
tt
It . 11:1IniShil
.
I
. '. „di l„. a si mpl e tak
r rt altvt;■••, .etnled to me t. ,
/ .
' he Prits•irt'l
■ • !lie N.,
la t e'
fiolire.
•
•
I wasn't quit.:
f •
to 48441- ea. h
Osor b'Shvitt it t
4 , ssur:n.own
r .1t . 1% ish " l'! \ s Ill In • • • s
11- CO (nun by guff. ring 1
:
reioice
“v ,
', arrant es and
•
'
'
T T
, and weary .
that in the face of Inman( 1.,
he
it g
a
iis
r the pn rpose
ir., lall
.) "at the
' 1)11 sue nov els
• .
• h .
" • h. derby-on-the-ears
a": 11msTatn'n't rIm
s al i P ntlittle
k agowi a.n y'I n.; ' •
is. a ...
of the
.
•
d
ataeler
remnant is found courag.:
d,
d%
rut stri,ng w e, d11 • • •
f
ratite
consist
of
hw nr the
(ca sing
" t1l11. W a , defeated. \
they shousd not milk, nn Y
\
t
'
''''•
-
'
'hi
'
street,
which,
them.
I
see
them
atm-
-•
.
enough to build where nth' r- .i..‘troy The the
•
r■-, " • ,
.,
acorn
of
it,
are not yet the
p.,nr
u,y
;.1}'. .
7 eInn
l g•• a k t ‘ i Y 0. t
as drawn by Vie authors
into a dark cour*Y.......
new flowering life of the .1(• ■■
it s III Palestine fill and there is still sonic hope for r,
. n from the glanterous Chin , - a nd growth of the ind,:ilual h• r• I hase c .me to the vonrlusion that Purr ...u . t'arts and its atmos- doorway
enly
men
and
brri
n" ' , -
nht re of fear a-d anxiety, bears ,
r as lights "
, m
is the crown of Israel's future.
or heroine throughout the 10-year the Jewish character is better off
to rule in this world.
the military name Grenadierstrasse., There is a faint light c-n)1^,: 1
i was alga interested in the period.
the stage.
The silence and the darkness of th.
(Turn to Next Paget

if 11 o'

\I

itO of

Fdltica

Five writers are collaborating
with the Four Maroon on
"Cracked Ice," and all the other
occupants in that wing of the
building have asked to be moved
on account of the noise A
story conference with these
maniacal comics is as multi-
sonous as a political convention.
• •
8

arles
RANDOM THOUGHTS by II. Ch
Joseph

The Grenadierstrasse in

Berlin

