/nEVgniorr./Ewatt(ORONICIIE
and
----
WIEVLIROVEWISii ORM IICLL
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
Published Weekly by The Jeiet•h Chron.cle PoblIsh.ng Ca., Inc.
Ma. a !.
. • t
office at
general
Office and Publication Building
525 Woodward Avenue
Telephone: Cadillac 1040 Cahie Address. Chronicle
London cohir
14 Stratford Place, London, W I. England.
Subscripti.n. ,h
fear
r
1 ,1 Pt
.‘
,,,•
mat',
each week
r.h
'
When ma. ,...
the Pet! •
■
ieet• of
tidos Toys ,
adoption of the principles of the Jubilee
Year, There are several basic principles
‘vhich rule this Mosaic law. Its founda-
tion lies in the rule that "the seventh year
shall be a Sabbath of wlemn rest for the
land."- the land in lie fallow dur-
ing et, L. sniffiatical
• n
;mnomplishing
:
By
GEORG BERNHARD
,nt app. arame of the
• . . -Leviticus— of "Pen-
Ilaftorahs, - edit,-,I hy
f the lint ',II 1-,1-
1
II. Ihrtz, helps to
'..!ion an important
scholar. Thos. ,
such - subunit
,
And :•,,
• of
Win
is accorded special
hoI
ol
I 'he land: "Anil I, '
..1
I
onto his 1 , -,essodi,
-.hall return e\ ery
111011 11111.0
lij 17
of the Law
Rosh I hodeih Filo!
,,
11..11.1'
tt • ,
Ii11
1110111
'boa H
Li.
Mosaic Law Remains Superior.
'
noral mu,
idonc.
July :', 1. Donald It.
sel of the National Po.,
tion, made the follo\vimr
.),,inaninia-
d, lonicade
high this
e.
I,
I
in ,
\ f!ini I•
his
is that land is
Ab 26, 5693
August IS, 1933
w
pt1SSUSS.-
look for-
. the next two
;,-h.
so of it libertN . is
r
To, s
Third Volume of Pentateuch and
Haftorahs Edited by Chief
Rabbi J. H. Herta.
Darker Days In Store for German Jewry
pr
of th
• 11'11 ..1
n ¢ , of 1hr Law
COMMENTARIES ON
BOOK OF LEVITICUS
Can Hitler Check Ili• Revolution?
the
duction
•
Salt ash Re
THE LEGAL CHRO.IICLE
p
''" 1-
unit
`sa
I c a
1)1- Asl
II
The other day, one of the New York dada.. carries:
from one of its Washington corr•spondents, to which e
but little emphasis in the way of headlines or position.
It was the story that Gerard Swope, the big eleorica1
who incidentally is Jewish, had agreed with Green, presi•l,
American Federation of Labor, that he W , u1(1 permit tit.
his industry, but on the condition that it be a union
inda., :ry, and not a number of craft unions. The
teat Green Was enthusiastic about it and had taken the •
with the various craft union leaders, who had immediateb.
idea. They feared that if craft divisions were abeliLaul,
lose their jobs. And so the plan fell through.
'1 1,
it
j.,
,
was
applied wider Ilel.rau law to prevent the
n-lav ing of po-4Prity Ih•ough
Wi tho te o i
, , k11
celitive
not
a vc
war of
1 '
„ f guar
J11":1111-!
the !In!,
..
t.1 1 .11111
:i.';!,1.••• • ,
I i I ,,
!J
,, 1,,•
11 :If
•..
...mi..... • •
J.J , .4
j. ,
I•
•
.,
. , •, 1
1 , -'
n, •
\‘
of
Bernard S. Deutsch.
the
American Jewish Congress, ever alert to
such situations w h en Jews are attacked
and Jewish Law abused, wrote a protest
to :11r. Richberg and demanded a public
disavowal of the statement just quoted.
Informing him that many listeners pro-
tested against his remarks through the
American Jewish Congress, Mr. Deutsch
wrote to the NRA counsel:
"Such a star , •!, ,•!
j ,
comes
I
, • ".1..
that "I,.
principle- of social
In the tr.!
, •
1 ,
`,1 • a •Law, as it
Testament and froo,
.1!.. Titiall and
perusal of the
others will bear me out, and
rei.erated in
the Sermon in the Mouru
"1 take the liberty of atbioling that public
disavowal of any desire on your part to east
animadversions upon the %YAM(' Law and the
Jewish people is in order.
"Surely you. a spokesman for the President
of the United Stated, who has it ?lumber of
Jews among his most trusted friends and a d-
visors, would not have it appear that you re-
gard the Jews among the -,1,01,tiv, forces
within our own Nation .."
While we naturally share the sentiments
and resentment of ,11r. Deutsch, we find it
difficult to be aroused to anger by Mr.
Richberg's culpable statement. After all,
Mr. Richberg is only a novice at this game
of comparing the Old and New Testaments;
of belittling the Mosaic Law at whose ex-
pense he seeks to exalt the Sermon on the
Mount. The Nazis in Germany, under
Adolf Hitler, are going a step further in
their attacks on the ()Id Testament by de-
manding the erasing from religious adher-
ence and observance even those elements
in the New Testament which were au-
thored by Jews. It is well to remember
that for generations the 31,)saic Law which
is so reprehensibly condemned by Mr.
Richberg has been similarly minimized by
theologians who are today forgotten and
who will for centuries to l'01110 be survived
by those principles which rightly belong
under the heading of the :\losaie Law.
What Mr. Richberg needs is not censure,
but a thorough lesson in the ethical teach-
ings and commandments of the Great Law-
giver, Moses, Nrhose economic code stands
to this very day as the supreme law ot so-
cial and economie justice. Had the world
adopted and observed these laws. we ,,o:1,1
not have had the rrisi \11111'h
humanity tolla•., Why not study this Mo-
saic t'ode. Mawr, and attempt to
apply it to the , ,I , nomic sores which pro.
vide so noidli pain to the body of the
American pe
A few lessons will C. 1 1I-
Nt ince you th:.'
'ore the Sertnon on
. -
the Moult
Nloses gave to
the world a
than w filch none
has yet been ;
he s ;
1,1,, e could n
' !catch the
complete I , -
S
1 tr. Itichiler; •,
disposal. S•rd ,•u , bow,
to mend a
.lowish
into pract I! •
Year. it is well that we understand that
principles to
•c., space at our
hand, and that if man sells his labors he
returns to his family, to his land and to
the natural rights on the fiftieth year of
re-division of wealth. By causing capital
;Ind labor to begin anew' during the Jubilee
Year, a new hatse of life is given to human
efforts, and in the long run man is made
The results of many of the world's r•vo-
lutions have liven that men gained their
freedom. But what made them faulty
-1 nI 1 . 4 1
1..0
in ti
•
f
big
a
th., , .
•• -.11\114;
, I 'iaheil
cool
in
I,.
to get out of
',,'
I .1 !.
tli build
!evolution.
id
• an d h o pe , .
FAL
upon the Preussische Zeitung of Koenigs-
berg. East Prussian official Nazi organ,
miblished the following statement under
the caption "1t , \%ishi Insolence":
Ilt-rt7
I !1N'
21,101'
(Turn l0
I
',II 11,4 . .
jjjj ! ji , ijtj ,,j
I
n
11,
by Charles
I,
II. Joseph
•
ill I'
than ti I m
took
II j
h
\ •
1a
11
bread and
"'
s.■ ;11::1111.
CONTRIBUTION OF
GERMAN JEWS TO
MODERN CULTURE
ale-tit
,1, :her
"ney draw. .. it salary at no ••
...t ionning a \vity from mice.
out called "The
.
I
the
,
-ur friend,
.1,.1f
Ntad
Dog of Ettr!'l
.at•
Tht•
clomeh, whorl' American Z aruts
. 1, I . 1,1' would remain tilt r, •I! least
tl ,,•,,,• back. It has been
.•
one of the major -
IIJ a;..:• ■ • of 62 tlou
irrepre,ible ch a np.h,
. modestly look- of it" aprimilip flu "eh:
life of mottunam-
.
alibi ein•i•it
the
h!,
. hi, fly . . . as a
i..••
-
IL
`A nl ,,T;J: .11 a •1) 111111 • 1011ty 4.11 !114 I I '•
!he firm.
• •
I 1.it l 7:111j1,111 11, in design.
111 IHTITO1 I
.
c
out
f hi- ,..
mark .!
''hat ..
:. ,Ill • lao-Gun
• \Ian's Land he was poi
Planned Economy for Palestine
,
By DR. ISRAEL GOLDSTEIN
Rabbi of Congregation Wnai Jeshurun, New York, and Member of
Administrative Committer of the Zionist Organisation of America.
-
the
hop. thct •
mu- pp. !. a fully
h h
be:pa:wit
:I..
allertime, arh,
n deaf ems. F
,
which noel 1,,
...lied and o
ooportant have the .,
111E HARDSHIPS
r
.
•
I. In protect the inlet ,
Jewish labor in Palest,.
FIRST PHASE OF
HITLER'S REICH
I t I I\ M WARM RC.
Oh,-
that it may continue to
special place in the rem,.
the Palestine "Yishub. -
2. To seek to regul.o,
sale and purchase of land
dividuals.
3. To restrict the invest , .!!,
of capital and the e o.i ,
',lent of business enterprio
unproductive and purely c;
"
!alive purpose., and to s!•
draw capital and busine,
rot into productive enterc
In
Social Idealism.
'th,
ef the re,,
..f a I .,,
J
-au"..".
in it "nut-lit
• V, I
)I
•Lr.
1' .
ams.
t`i:! I
it hello!
to ad ij
as will guaiai,'•
cr
. .•
•
,
I n
;il
c t e l-
Nat I , .nal So-
o of National
•• l.t.' , ..T.
Zionism since its in,
rat ior's ago.
\
THE GERMAN SHIPS
I'
.•.
I ierlini n s
! J O, hal.!...!
the
eountra
, he policy
"b uss.
"rticved i n d i c',l
.1i wish
it ;Whey
•
1,
/
that P.ale osat r ine d"clo Yes to nostee be t" " ':
-hag"
comes there with capital
s a ou elul
or
:Id:.
and
ita l lixe , the toil _of others .
•
.
r thipt -bond • .
!To r te.
What a hilt!
is for German
Jewrya: colicessionists too swallow!
And
what a lesson this is for the -holi e r than
Disf ranchised.
robbed of
their economic rights. hounded on all sides,
these "National German Jews" neverthe-
less choose to be the lickspittles of Adolf
Hitler. Will they never learn!'
.
- •,, 1 e111111-
c , i - , 11111
In
Ii , Iu:,I,y
!JI.j.
.
• !
THIS AND THAT
Described in Book by Prof. Mira
ham Myerson and Dr. Isaac
Goldberg.
,
I
.
'ands
l\,
P.
,
.11■11111
Or is it that
!hau tl.•- om.
1.cs
' Fla. 1,,
111r1.—,
•
C ONSIDER MICKEY
he iivaiah,
M ,
It
it !Ile old block, eh?
•
•
- --
I I...,
WOMEN AND MICE
Next Pact,
t
I„Ilhlita-
ht that
w
. ■
lit.
-ldent
-1.1ent of the
. of Nov York . .
,
. a
.
of all , ,, innainity
'
!!; It:,
•
:,
I
,
Ilia \
WI ft. ,
!
, •
.11111y.
Rebuke to Concessionists.
receiimi It stinging rebuke, not at the hand-
if their fello•-ita‘s, but rather from those
whom they sought to appease.
The Union of National Gentian .le‘vs and
their leader. 1)•. Nlax Naumann, went on
record endorsing the !litter regime. Where-
I
replied: "Why should
Cljt111111.!. So n ny
IL
.ohentul-
Atoll 111/1V \Ve ft•l that we have the right
to say to 31r. Richberg that ‘ve are sorry
for hint that he should have made the state-
ment he did, more than we regret that i'
should Faye affected our sensibilitie- as
.Jews. True. I:Milberg has ;Ipabanzwl
But we hope that NII.Vs counsel ha-
learned a lesson. Let hi n t. ;Ind those \vh
think as he does, learn the important les-
son that while capitalism says that a f i -i■
shall have property and Sm - ialisin says that
no one shall have property, Judaism de-
clares that everyone shall Imve property.
providing man with the self-reliance
w hich the lea n ' of the existing order's
tin
certainties rah him.
Thi s i s th e alos:tie rode. 31r. Iticiffierg,.
Study it, and ye shall profit by it.
w h o saw It to make
ti
rid Illally
Canthr , eriainly "has a
II-
...Ins able to
hilt. trimly
"Two-lion
t,•.1 11,
t.. our •
rho-
-
I id tot cents and lost three cents--
[RANDOM THOUGHTS
EDDIE CANTOR'S WAY
f„t
- :11 !he flolilWyn holm. Ow
-!■,1 that he try hi. boy ulth
: - , the relobrity says to youn g Gol d wyn'.
life en
• hppointP.II
.1. •
In ancient Judaea :t silent revolution \vm ,
experienced every
YPar- Land ‘va'
\ '1
redistributed. making men fret , and prop-
erticil. It dealt a death blow to capitalism, r " ''
but it also put an end to the class st•ugglt.
try eliminating the possibility of creating "'I'
a permanent proletariat. It. declared to •
the people that social inequalities are i P
wrung, It hindered the Hell from Jammu- "
ing ric h er ;Ind the poor from becoming
punter, but it did not discourage private
initiative.
,•\ concession to their oppressors hat
•
i, ,, ' I u!. I,-
thing
justice in the Jubilee Year because this in-
ie rin a II
Sam lialdwt•ti, the moving picture producer, i-- very pr ,
Goldwyn i.- especially proud of the boy's ap•
, h.an
now
! , I1 their
co
II I a I'
,I1
..,
!1i.!
,1 1111 - lu•
MATHEMATICAL PRODIGY'
.1!!! •
,
Ow,, 1111• about
0: for the \VIIShillgtlin Herald
hit
:tit
j „ j i
•tore to the World liureau, which I had
I
,red myself lichelson would use in tot,.
and told me to leave U.
I saw it -c, , , .
..,: , din about three ',enteric, of his re gul ar \\'„
It
fare pale?
,..any and
In all
of earning a livelihood. There is greater
stitution recognizes that property is as
niuch a natural right as is personal lib-
erty. And what is perhaps its greatest
advantage is that \viol, it a‘onts many of
the evils of capitalism, it at the same D1110
makes use of the most powerful weapon
wielded by capitalism: Self-interest.
1
timidity that
I manb.ely,and
toe l o ok ic •
-hall lift: ,
r ONTROL
, .
\I.! la 1 ,, il
I
I! !I•ii,•
it
I, .
CAI'l I Al Isis
that it did not provide them with the mean:
id for us inerek
tc hicit. if put
age, solve
,• , nogg '
t•
refer to th, inn
Jubilee Yea' - .
pr , -- •
Jewish cures for our cri-- -
The struggle for
between the
must natura':•
d
that there
•
r
among those IT • I ,
,
ena,v ti;, •
th o
wealth; and
ciple that capital must be go% erne,' ,•
controlled by the community. that egos'., ••
efforts shall be for use and not for prod - .
that all privileges shall cease in order that
the working class be assured of a liveli-
hood and of its natural share of leisure.
We contend that this age-o1.1 struggle
for domination may come to an end by the
Id:, I 1
the Jubilee 1'var stresses the fact that maul
is entitled to personal liberty as well as
to his natural right to land. The Jubilee
l',ati• emphasizes that the two go hand in
to recognize the sanctity of human rights
and the naturalness of every person enjoy-
ing the bounties of nature.
a public tiguie,
Administration..
grain of recover...
reprehensible ar.:
doubly rer:e,
complete
by you.
I think a il,
Old or New, will rer.!•!,
order that his children or grand-
children shall not suffer servitude.
.ind
'ad
-tory this Michelson could W .•
ymirs, he hiis been ilk.
I.
Before that, he was La
the New York World.
,•
eh
in
To understand the advantages and great
oriel and economic ideals of the Jubilee
u
Old Test.... n” . S. !,1
l, I. ca
against the. \I
a1111i, ,l
•
Michelson in- tea,
11,-11, put oa. ei• the publicity 1...
lati%, , acts of the parents.
It
,,,,t in
,neite-
pitrt
II
t hat
•I.,. in-
-1 Ow
up
al ,.. incidentally, was the one Ainereal,
1, rit his whole life fighting this ciaft
'.suited t h e one big union, and 11 , 1,, II,
.411 , 1 1411.01' unions had turned it doaan.
I . en would have shrieked and car,,1
Y.-.
-
Float ecru being contmenGol upon,
1.1. .1..10;14
the S1'1011 of Murano Jea-,
o: II., mb , . the ceonomist.
•
•
•
\ , •
f
[he specii-
It' the parent
sold his birthright, the ideal that "ye shall
r, ..1T11 very man unto his possession" NVIIS
ird
the
Ill
PRESIDENT CALLS MICHELSON
I
, v
l.,J1.
That Charles
.1
t a!
I
Is I
I today?
r-
•
the
IN I)E LEON'S DAYS
I . .ald flat help thinking what a fuss the one tuna-
. <
Daniel Ile Leen, would have madeale.,
,
1. I.1, :14 /,,
•-• of a poor
pursued by ill
.Ildider Year
Copyright. 19:4 Jealiti TeteetaphIc Arran lw I
I
In the
II his palm-
Tidbits and ,Vezt:1
VI SCHWARTZ
By DAD
SWOPE AND GREEN
0
,
Ruts IOK JI
By-the-Way
nhne ho are
• I!
MESSIAH
1
JJI
I. Japan
a. If a!:.
,
I.
• 11 l'a'.
•. I
,
11a
ud
.•
-or.
:
all to mc : 1 eetialt
•
such a per- in the Pal. -•
•
11' ar -a w of
.. • .
,
!
-
"
.
• einpl..y•rc of , lief,r,• • • P
er,
every ad- meat:
the
• a ntiddle class- take thongs into their
h the profit- let the economn- pattern .4 t '
I out ofplaeo
Pah...tine be determined •
',p.m which Jew- those who are in a position ,.f
-
ooh idealism had been focused.
• teal respewsniility.