▪ ME/WNW:M/01M eiWOMICLE and THE LEGAL CrIROolICLE TREPLTRorrinv Ro2s ictic and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE 1, ▪ Vella W••kly by The Jewish Chronicle Publishing C•, Inc. Wintered as Second-class t11•11, Mn, ■ h t, 1914. at the Po•v- sate at Detroit, Mich.. ■ Indr, the Act of March 3, Ir,!. General Office and Publication Building 525 Woodward Avenue Toleplson, Cadillac 1040 Cable Address: Chronicle London come . 14 Stratford Place, London. W 1, England. Subscription, in Ad vance r 'i ear Te Insure put/1.V. n •1i cwt.-peed. rn• or of c • • Moller _..t reach thin office lo 1 ho.otni ef er ,Inc et each neck. When 'nailing nifty/e-, kohdli nor he, Jar 1.1' the paper only e,s1 , • The Detroit Jewoh Chew, Jefeteof infect...! to the Juno h /Lilly f or an oehormeteri 1 el Ih , 111,■ vendene• ot off ohs., fe•l000nT- the writers Sabbath Readings of the Law 16 It, 21 4 I h 'at l'entate'uchal port NM I 1.2 I.' I. Prophetical portion August 25, 1933 Need for Practical Measures. Ellul 3, 5693 German Jewry's Haven of Refuge. Approximately (IT 101 1 ( lerMan Jews no means enthused over the spectacle that is being enacted by the Nazis, Responsible Jewish leaders have on nu- merous occasions expressed and reiterated the hope that such friendship between Jews and Germans be cemented, with the ulti- mate hope that reason and peace may again rule in the Reich. It is to be hoped that nothing will occur to mar this friend- ship between Jews and the sane elements in Germany and among Germans •lse- where. it is also to be hoped that this friendship will not only be strengthened, but that it will serve very soon to give a death-blow to the disgusting political trag- edy 111)W being enacted on German soil. set- tled in Palestine in the past five months, and an additional 210100 applied for xisas in the same period. Eight thousand Ger- man Jews joined the Ilechalutz movement to prepare for settlement in the Jewish Homeland. To give emphasis to the fart that Palestine is German Jewry's most im- portant haven of refuge. WI . now' 11/11he the followng cable from Jerusalem: As the immigration quota granted by the government of Palestine to the Jewish Agency for the half-year ending next October hats al- ready M•en exhausted, the government has granted 1,000 certificates for German Jewish refugees in advance in the schedule for the six months ending in March, 19:4.1, although the new quota has not yet been tided. There is every indication that Jewish immi- gration this year will be the lure,. t. ut snail' time and will approximate the ficorti of 30,- 000 set during the peak year of 1 925. It is estimated 10,000 laborers and persons of inde- pendent nieana arrived between January and June on certificates and several thousand more on tourist permits. I;. c,,,ico,,rg. "dun-mist of t h e Jewish Dittlx Oat • ri ceolc made some interesting comment- on the German-Jewish situation, in the emir-, of which he stated: d .1 too iii it the Zulus in if a Haman like Ilitler suddenly re-, ..•., -t I hen, It is probable . that they'. t. hove called mass met•t- o• co , lit, tz. and d.... anything nil th e , pot un ilermand tai t-, ..• face- oat, . !, -lapping and • ,..... r. the VOW pogrom 11 It • I., • ,1 , ■ • 11. ■ '11111 and at the • ./•.I I mild:, lei 0•1111111 . 11 Gin• when heir 11adison Soo.o. (mob, and shouted ••./11," I 1111 III - ', ell I 1H1 . 1, Ihr 11111 , .11,11It Zulu it-t - n. f Olt land ,,,1111 have In -1/1111 1 1 , 001 III a hotel ion! holmied on as vonmete plan for the nr - rue et the Gels in JeW•. I 1111,111 :1 plan ulsulc io f prove. calling Hullo name-. or wailing in Hie end o f f his reign( for after all he is oni) human and heir to all human ills/. .And them , plans, dd holier mating to emit- vtalist] m semerittion, wou ld n,rrell y hayt, bwat brought before the leading Jews of Germany and, in accordance with their loriVately-0011- \'1 , yed 'omit Of view, the world tounnittee, with live supreme Zulus ..f the time, woul.1 have taken this plan to the leaders of the five great- e st nation., of the world, trading to some definite disposition of tht• problem of the Gloom.] Jews. Just think of it, evem Spain permitted the Jew, to go forth; but naw. 5011 Years later. ,Ira's are nut permitted to go out of tht• land and are bring crushed on the loot. Even the l'resident of the United States would not hon.*. declined to receive such a committer. This is how the Zulus would have dealt with the matter. But who are the Zulus, and well, are we? It is certain that, beginning with Octo- ber, there will be a rush for Palestine visas by German Jews, and the responsibility that will then face world Jewry will be It is amazing that even at this hour, six to create economic possibilities for absorb-months after Adolf Hitler assumed the in the many thousands of refugees who I chancellorship of Germany, Jewish public have already fled from Germany, as well opinion has failed to unite on a practical program for the saving of the half-million as the tens of thousands still trapped there Jews who are being crushed by the Nazis. who desire to get out and to seek new The viewpoint of the German Jews them- homes. selves is of primary importance at this time. The sentimental reason is not the only When the storm of protests first broke out one which must motivate the German- against Ilitlerism, Jews everywhere mar• Jewish refugees to go to Palestine. It must \Tied that the sufferers themselves should not be forgotten that the Jewish Homeland have pleaded against too many and too provides opportunities for pioneering, As violent indignation meetings. But even to- an undeveloped and neglected country, day, with the situation daily becoming Palestine is the ideal center for the estab- worse, German Jewry continues to plead lishment of colonies of Jews who must seek for it cautious course and for non-too-rabid refuge from their persecutors, Hounded be- expressions of indignation. Word was re• cause they are Jews, these refugees can ceased from Germany in Prague, on the look to only one spot on the globe where eve of the protest meeting held last week they will find solace for their wounded with Rabbi Stephen S. \Vise as the princi- Jewish feelings, and this spot is the Jewish pal speaker, pleading for restraint. National Home in Palestine. On the eve of the opening Of the World The question that must now force itself ' v'ongresS, now in session in Prague, upon Jewish communities throughout the the Jmidisehe Rundschau, organ of the world is whether our people realize their German Zionist Federation, directed a simi- responsibilities and are prepared to honor tar appeal to the Zionist leaders. urging their trust. There is a double challenge to the concentration of the Congress on prac- the honor of Jewry in the present situation. thud measures for the settlement of Ger- In the first place, there is our duty to the man Jews in Palestine, and pleading for a persecuted German Jews who must be refraining front dinse discussions of the saved from the degradations that have been situation which would tend to turn the St's- heaped upon them. Secondly, there is the MODS of the world conclave into a public great opportunity to build up the Jewish meeting. The Itundschati's editorial states 1 with the aid in part : National Home .n Palestine of the additional brain and brawn which 1 V .1..e 1 ' 1 not rNI , ertinu anyone toidelo ale the comes to Zionism ati a result of the Nazi Gerutai Jewish situation. at the ,111111i t ime is not the duty of the Congress to ileclare w ar, but in a Zionist spirit. through practical measures, to tiring :dont spiritual encourattio. tAtzn, ;is r et f t iintmth thesituation. n ar,iied to outrages. Because of the limitations placed upon the amount of money which one may take it tiers will, of necessity, have to be placed in the category of the pioneers who will have tackle this out of Germany, the German - Jewish set - matter succes•fully: This is the reason why German Zionists urged that the Chart tit t h,‘ should 1u• postponed. Sine,-, however Cenglah•s was not postponed, it is the duty of Congress management and executive to to be settled on Jewish-owned land, and who will have to be provided with means of colonization. This emphasizes Jewry's a responsibilities to the public funds which ';','„"1:,la"kh. d i, a"11: tae. main str ve to purchase the land and to provide stint' work and the German Jewish situation, i adopting pra•ticai inea,, uccs to enable Jewish the means for the development of such mass •emigration from Derma to 1 alestine. land. The Jewish National Fund and the American Palestine Campaign are the The views of German-Jewish leader , agencies which serve these purposes, To most be given some consideration, espe- strengthen them and to provide them with cially when these sentiments are expressed enormous funds is the first task facing our not by the assimilationist groups, but by people. Having accomplished that, it will the Jewkh nationalists. Furthermore, the be the duty of our leathers to pact- the way I results of six months of protesting and for private investments on a large scale, in shouting our indignation should convince order that new industrial developments us that what we need is practical effort may pave the way for new pioneers. and a wholesome progra m, rather than ex- It is not enough that we merely meet to cessive shouting from the house-tops. A condemn and protest against persecutions. partial solution to the problem must come We must begin to think in practical terms, i from the Zionist Congress. In view of the Palestine proposes the most honorable solo- m fact that German Zionists will not partici- tion to the problem of many thousands of ' pate in the sessions for the first time in the German Jews. Therefore Palestine must history of the movement. and because Ger- become the primary objective in the solo- man Zionist officials who were in Prague tion of the German-Jewish problem. even left the city in order to avoid Nazi reprisals for any action taken there, much greater emphasis must be placed on cau- Our German Friends. Leaders in the German colony in Detroit tion. have expressed their opposition to the Hit- The demand must go forth everywhere ler regime in Germany and have con- for practical, nut demagogical action, in demned the anti-Semitic excesses of the behalf of German Jewry. We dare not Nazis. fail because of being hot-headedly swayed Similar expressions of friendship for the by our emotions. cause of the oppressed Jews in Germany have been made by German-Americans in 11 Popolo D'Italia, Premier Mussolini's New Jersey. newspaper, proposes the establishment of In Syracuse, German societies adopted a Jewish state. with it Jewish army and resolutions protesting against the anti- navy. as a solution to the Jew ish problem. Semitic outrages of the Ilitlerites• Mussolini's spokesman supports the pro- It is such sentiment that gives Jews cour- gram of the Zionist Revisionists and de- age to believe that the horrors which are dares that a Jewish Palestine should have degrading Germany today must come to an a population of 5.000,000 Hebrews. Now end. Added to these are encouraging re- the Labor Zionists will have better ground ports from certain quarters in Germany, for charging that the Revisionists are the offering assurances that all Germany is by I Jewish Fascists. WHAT IS TO BECOME OF THE GERMAN JEWS? The Crisis in the Schools of Palestine By DR. ISAAC B. BERKSON Moe her 01 1 • rl ilotontan odeno under be el lest. .ten., oniponohl. lo. eclui•loon .era tn rAni•itio lb. ...Ail i•tir•llon tiomnotioi ••hith of the tad Low .110•111, vh,r. herd .s, At the la•trinning 1-f the 'ores. eon m hisil year, October. 1932, the. Hebrew educational system in Palestine Was transferred no t ho Valid teurni ( National of J'alf,. CioL, o ..• II/I , I oluo- m m .mm n under ontrol ouganiza- . id, its Illy im or m.--1 .41111nelit ”1, Ile iu. I oh. 4 rt. o i-lo hao coif non aoigh •he l', I of Imo' already' 111411 by the Jewish Agency hanges in the powers of the haol IIuhinurh lboard of edu- L .11.1 Of the Other 0 111111iiteeS. Important see- 1., Ls in the community. regard of the change. imposed L. .nfr ingenielit of the Jevvish autonomy. ahach POOR ( I 1 1.1.) AFFECTED • 1. a had were ' „ and , • /low YrIonlent if o to obtain the M- O the -1111:11 Ion l , 1 .•1 lie Mild' 11111010i if ; 1 .1 0 All :01111(1On:11 fa,umu vvotilml aiadahle to the end of this school oar, as Sinn W Inch would h onll - lie-tenth of tin aunt o /oat 1.1/ do licit. difli,itiit y , of cow-c, is not confined to ',dam.- Mg the Midget for this year; Ihr essential problem is to plate the edu;tional orgimization on a sound financial basis beginning. Id•ol, the next school year -Oct, her. I leh:O. In the effort to •Urtlill exprudi- t urc • during recent years, bv-sitle , rm diming salaries., ceirtairi ,•durui- til , mll services:, particularly kind- ergarten and heelindary sr hoots, loot- been eliminated from the budget of the ilepartinent of oho cation and %cher,. these ;tend it le. l • SI maintained they are sup. moted almost wholly by tuition co.-. It should la not e d that net all , holdren receide the bent , tit cf a full eight-ye:el' course for f.lo went:it y 11111,1t/on. In fait, mot hirit of the children drop out before the end of the third elementary grade; only :final( its integrity, its direction and its standard Li partner in the task tie-fourth of the children receive the full eight years of instruo lion; and 0 .1114• children dc , not atteral school at all. The poor child in l'ale-litU• hums nothing like the olucat mitt! opportunities otriiiit•.1 to ,,,• hT leashed Sots. DIASPORA FUNDS NEEDED Tho is straining itself ontriloute to roaxituttiii, but despite li e -mooned "im.sperity" Palestine, the l l.hui ,annot maintain Ili olueation o l -d•stem ithout 1• , 1-1,111 ■ - ■ • fllgll ■ ,, Hd •h •,, ■ Th, neddei mel het - o f " '`I' Iclr - r,•1 .1,1,- and rotten of the tennis nI the ',rang e n1,11,011.'1 .list riet Flo 'tinnier need help from :thread. The 110 require 1141S, in former years, hilt still constituted a rtin , iderable 'hart 01 iile ii•o0,1:1111, lint the 11111111 10 , 1111'111 Is 111 the 01i1 mat t. •Ivrti-alcill, Salmi and of the oltivational budget. Hod the .kozen•y been able to meet this commitment, the transfer would had, been crowned with complete success and toltit•iitional work set on the road of sound deVeloalnent. The near eilut•ation- al administration had Stle“Inlol, TrImeria-, and to oofollle extent Haifa which lino not .folfhstilh I ogling cot hf•r with ref11,111 . 1. too 'heir gt einonotio of . III t hvIr • dlIcatitI/IIII !h., mit development, in l'al•,• tine have emphasized the danger alloddote..•holdren and youth to lamorne pi.) to, the intim inoe, Of oillu,Sit11111 and seepticion, t., obtain the co. operation or sac ioun sections of the tommunity and to deinom ltut the vely great falling off in Koren ILaye sod receipts, m.,- pecially in America, made it im- possible for the Jewish Ageney to Meet its plovlgr. By th, noddle 44 the year it Was (01'1,14, that only one-fourth of the :Agency commitnient would la• sail bee during the present school dial. defieit of approximately. I, 1 ■ 4111, ■ , .1 It 1-1,11111 . mare ur- Vent tt , Ihr 111 ■ 10114 . Of the .ledvish gent strati. the VishIll h s aloility to manage Its own school system. I el 111111Iy t,, r. I • On`Ideralde anent the JeNlsh Agency and cooper:it Mg, turn- m..mma i i pm annum, provid- ertarn reforms w ould 11 i n to the count n , nal The ...ulljeet of t grant-in-aid and onditimod to it have .e:tet for dismission few youtr, The ,.f t no govtgainent have • mot more strict and 11101, Ill2 • f, 11.4. IWO/tow sellind system .Meant Orally passed over to its hIlri-Bie l The IIli 1 -frt of the educational despite . . rmhent for assist d for ant met gen , 'y e tn. gedcrumen! ' e, l. ma reftistvl this uts intention 111 the iegu• o -Winning with Zionist Organization which ail- Milliste, osl the schools if ut.n ■ un- foul-1y IllItler t he 111 , Iniet loll of the g, vrrnme tit department of eilu. ration. \\ *Oh the formation of the enlarged Jewish Ag ! Ltl - y in of developing the schools. in the spirit of Judaism and Hebraic culture and in harmony with the needs of the upbuilding of the National Homeland. The Jew- ish Agency will continue then to participate in the administration of the educational work and to assist the Yishud-- in su far as financial means allow'--in the maintenanc e of the unified tido- vatiemal sy•stent" $200,000 APPROPRIATION To assist the Vaud Lrwui in maintaining the educational s)s- tem the Jewish Agency voted an appropriation of 1:10,o10 I almost $21111,1100 at par) This sum was less than the Jewish gency had appropriated for education Flue- retort- :our months . teach- . I • Ile! to II , a.. ho h000 •o., n1111111711, ol o 'rile go,. lomat gmairt was transmitted in it Mock sum to the AttelirY dm , dem-ed and Incle practical do It h t he g rov ■ I It of finan- cial sup po r t 1'1,111 11,11 source s , and with the strengthening of community tr ganizat ion in towns and colonies of the new' Yishud'. LETTER OF TRANSFER 'The transfei• was intended, among other things, to lead ulti- mately to a reduction of the Jew- ish :\gene yes appropriation to the Nine/Ilion Work. In no way, how- ever, was it the purpose to sep- arate the. Agency' entirely from the todueational administi at Ion or to withdraw' financial support im- mediately. In the letter or trait,:rt, rr,,,,, th e Jewish Ageney to the Valid Lemont this point wa s elca•ly stated, as follow's: "The Jewish Ageticy., sent ing World Jew.ry and ',spoon. 'Ode to it, will tontinue in the future, to s.e.rve as it partner in the responsibility of the Jewish community for the Hebrew edu- cational system in Palestine, for Inc inatell %Filch ! 1,, oI the Ile- pan a- S., -oval, wo r k to the l'ishod. nun 'k, a tut long omit in the gum th of indepondeni, c.n the ism of Pal. est ire Jewry. This change in control had het, 4l1. 11 , Sell for h no i t °- clouted potal hook oh .ate , , ant. enly grant 11 Sora, oio denato h. oef the cc! and too the props gamin !of political foot Ions. Nor Is It In In. forget too that florist tale oluiation in Palestine is gener- ously suppoi led fl ou r abroad, and Thai the missionary ', I II ■ NPI, ;ire open for those w ho tind nn puttee Itl the •11 - ,1,11 `1 • 11 , -01,. Th.. sum t5,,iital loonno t o $125,- mall ,...nulled to assist le.dviy in maintaining Its -.Li-h.,' system would nut appear tO I,. a Inc mom ft. vvorld Jewry stn in tl o d:t111 . 1.11t tinier. NAZIS I N,;IS Inteltstel in a colfy right, d e.. rvieta appearing in it chain of new spapers, with a "German ,.r the old regime:• one who ,% I t molly ti II itIvrite lout yet , mold s ee possilillitie, in tht Nat, ; 1, 011111. lint What attra, ohl net .ol /ention was the ', tattoo this .••1:, !al that Germany we , '••. the time toeing fron, were being spread . • :ultras. In other word- ., -I- t,, !'s anti-German campaign mt- •:. I way and untruth, about HUI,. and the Nazis were being indus- triously' circulated. Now this sold of thing is becoming very annoying to Ill• and knowing that what., t I say or write will never reavh Ger- many, I challenge Nazis to th,. country TO POINT OTT THE LIFTS that are being spread. • . LET'S HAVE A SHOWDOWN Let's have a showdown. Was any body killed or injured at the one Hitler Na- railroaded into oft", through strong arm methods!' Were Jea's spot-whin' s•leetell to be va- unts of attacks! Did the Nazis order and oarr• out a boycott against every Jewish storekeeper in Germany! I/id the Nazis deny most Jews the opportunity to earn a living in Germany.' Did the Nazis prevent intermarriage? I old the Nan refuse Jewish artists in the theater and opera, the oppor- tunity to function? !lav• .less tern thrown out of the universities as professors! Have Jews been do nits! the right to practice law or nohlicint.7 Are Americans, Jews or Gentile?, subject to attacks in Germany! Did the Nazis burn books written by Jewish authors! Ire the Nato TEA I IF:ItS spread- ing th, propaganda of hate and ' W- ittier against the Jews? Are the Nazis accusing the Levis of all Ger- many's misfortunes? • . • WORSE THAN WE ARE TOLD Now I hallence any llitlente in r those guys- . • - 11.-• . • • .. may b ans. 'THE GREAT REFUSAL" x Novel of the Life of the Pales tine Pi From Palotio, o. me many nit-s- ag•s and masse WO,- hut few are -me tales of lov e and of the inti- macies in the IA,s of the pioneer.. - The Grtat Lt Imisal - by Henry Pine (Bloch Publishing Cii., Ne w York, tl.5ui is one of the few ro- mantle tales published about the tiA• Judea. As a matter of fact. • nee Meyer Levin's "Yehuda" it is Imam first mat I in English dealing with Palestine fift Henry Pine spent several years among the Chalutzim in Palestine and upon his return to this coon- , • entered Liberal Arts College. f Syracuse of which he is an alum- nus. In "The Gr. II! Refusal" Pine twints an int... • c= ocas,. of the struggle of'-, • m. r.m, their likes and &silk•, •:, !ovations and F interests. this story is . it love story h stands out for l'a unselfishness. "The Gnat Refusal" is an inter- , sting tale of modern Palestine and it helps to introaltiCe the Chalutz the English reader in a manner • • cause the latter to understand hum. nd A Rezv z a :d pA b V it ID m a n W DA H A T I By a German Jew who has for I many years been active in a . oCopyught, I933 Jes.sh Teletraehle Arm, leading position in the principal A WORLD TONGUE Jewish organisations. German newspapers, according to the New York Times. tic.", r. of ephyht Iii) J T A ately ignored the world convention of Esperantists, which took recently in Berlin, despite the fact that 1.000 delegates, reopre.•.•to„,, on July 1, the laws affecting non-Aryan doctors and certain :12 different nations, were present. Obviously, this was to be expected, in view of the Nazi re.zone. other professional men came into and force in Germany. But the date Esperanto is it link for internationalism. for world brotherhood is only it matter of form, for in to a cncernmcnt cononitted to war and Aryanism. E•14-ealito •,,, appear odious. Indeed, it is surprising that !dlr. I a reality great number of Jews were deprived of their livelihoods executioner, the gentleman who cut, off heads while tiros, ' months before that date, and the evening clothes, did not cut titT some of the Esperanti•ts' h ea d anti rewash boycott had made the ecotionlIC •ituation impossible for ZAMENHOFF AND HERZL tens of thousands of German Jews. I/uring the first few weeks. the self-help of the Gei man dews found von IrOLI, eXpre-ion. Thel I' oho - ono thing, and in Many town• wits a Ileter1111111it ion to lions were made to assist the Joia- isli members of the profession-. In Ili. -l a g, ror cx ample, enough to pity tic. lent lio'neY t.ltuatt niai,l,u;•,.rf,i,ra,t, • 11,• ,1 10,olt i:, ti is, But the next month, iu III city, this spontaneous inovenient had all ead -!owed down. >tany it• -1.11 had Mooney must hale rtlo,t ed that they them- selves we., facing an rut use, and load better save their money 111 older to Vt. off the dreaded clay. The Elimination of Jews. , It is IIIC011testable that t,I1 , 111.111.il Or the Nat the Sc. has put a' •top to isolated action s by individual membei, of the National CI i 1st 1':rl y. 'There ;ue still ilrl hell' 111111 there, but 11/1 t he v, hole t /111112 suer Met cat icc. III the i ■ IV That Espelanto in this late day min attract Loom th it phenomenon which matest, to some thing. vt•ry vital in I: If I :op not mistaken. Ur. ZainenhotEs Esperanto ❑ 111dC mace 111 . 1,1% tI111 . 1,, titItt e, mi Pt•I !,,,, That It has slIt'VIVeil this long IOCriont and t., mining strength Means -.ono - Ill/lig. In Japan. ' I Hors neimits, the is in ',articular it great deal of errhusuas o • I a', r. Perhaps, -tone day. it will travel front Japan to China and n - I Le terribly complex dialects of that Oriental land. If it could • It s'o'ul ,remingly be a boon to civilization. Rota is it possible that civilization in China should L. letundled ahem the at .rage Chinese dialed has ten to twenty tit characters: in its alphabets, The problem of hut- printer to I ram, • ZAMENHOFF A ZIONIST It is an interesting fact that the word "Esperanto" • language me•ans hope. And it will be recalled that tr, -p u nk t a h" a l• 0 mean s hope. And the connection ito. , there, for Dr. Zamenhotf was a Zionist. • • oe ZAMENHOFF'S AIM Zantenholf was a Lithuanian Jew, Bing in 11Mb-stook, p„ .,1 ,, troubled in spirit, he once said, by the seeming failure of the v , grouips in 111• toa n to understand one another. They ,puke i m languir, , , Ito •sian, Polish, Yiddish, etc. Anil it a•as the 'i that a •iiiiple language .Inch :all could ea•dy learn %Gould do - this mistook! standing and mistrust that set him to \sod. erect . interim t Iona! language. • • • EASILY LEARNED F-poritotl-Is toll ow t bat the gramma] of their language But for that very reason. the learned in Moo n! tile minutes, and that, mired, after all hour • /wove-- Ilf Chin inat Ini..7 1,1•1),1 hillt: ■ ,114 . Call ha, I . a reading knowledge of it, and after seven 0: Jew ish 1. 1,111 every lorano 11 of ,II- ill-Ill's oar can carry on It conversation in it fluently. , cial and toomonic lifo• in German) . The vocabulary, it appears, consist, only of 2,11110 root . m I. I he more horrible III 11 h cold 1111t1 (Oil, wor ds one mad e by solutes and ' , relive-. Anil Imo; df calculated i 101dt-sties,. Ili the ' root wort] , are 11111.1111y fallli 1 illr hi tlet-i. who kn o w the po declarations made by the govern- international curds oof an ordinary moth-in language, !tient In the country and abroad, 'flu Esperantists /to not propose to replace any languages it is claimed that apart from the merely %%rant Esperanto taught as a supplementary language. le • official,' law, which affects civil country, so that anyone visiting any foreign land, for instant.. .. sera ants, lawyers : o ld doctors, and immediately have it medium of intercourse. Inasmuch ns the learnirmv which Is intended to bring. (Ion, of this language world require only about as 111UCh time as seeing a the e \ 4 . 1,,ik, numbers of Jew shot). at Ito \ y's Or (WO show's at the ordinary. mov ie house-it •••I . 111.- ■ .1111.10 iyell III these proles-ions, I, Ille till' it . Is IllUeh to Vonimend the idea. • • • Owl , :ire no restrictions against Jews mn the economic held. Timse OH, YEAH? declimrations are ileilibt•rate•ly hypo. I don't understand how some of our liberals get that may Take critical. The government has un- our distinguished friend and popularizer of liberalism, I/r. Harry restricted power, and nothing Elmer Barnes. Writing in the New York World Telegram the other happen, in Germany today with- day, Dr. Barnes declared that the world has misjudged Ilitlerism nut the ../ooverfunent's henevolt.rit because or secondary things, tole!' ill iIIII. ir it ,i,„,, not iiIittiiiil y Secondary things forsooth! Does Bar n es ',resume to say that fo s ter it. If the governme n t did the barbarous treatment of 00,000 Jew's which has no parallel in not wish It. I IleSe things cold,' not history is a secondary thing? And what are those first or rimary happen. Pick up any Jewish nett'-- thing, which Hitler has done and which Ile. Barnes thinks so smc••r paper from Germany, and SI, 111.W • • • 111111111 - .1, arc t he acts In 1 1 '',' STERILIZATION !doodle,- poi:loin aga111-1 olewisn lir. Ilarntis goes on to say that Ilitlt•r has done. it mardolou. • on: Ii't'ilh." 1 - . Th..' 1, "" i'r"fen - molt his sterilization proposal to eliminate the inebriates, the I'llo!• ■ IoIl Mill no Hai. , which Is left un- and the unfit, scat fled. Jew loll Market traders But just imagine for a moment Hitler, of all men, exercising this are kicked out, uSlielly in the 'Mlle noWerfUl lorerloglitiVe•! way as are Jewish Nobel 'wiz, Ask Einstein, ask the seven or eight Jews out of Ge.rntany's total men; Jewish cornmeteial traveler- i of 1 2 Nobel prize winners dello should he the first to be sterilized. "re .1 n . vr". 1 “ 1 as le" than ' 1 `. ". 'h ' Hitler or the idiots, and they will tell you in a chorus-Hitler' lb "cultural Bolsheviks," The n' h'. ' is by far the greatest menace of any of the idiots. On ltIty,111111 n111111111111 hatred of e1. 1 .- . eothing that is Jewish. Past ex- A DAI N I, GE I, ITUS ,Ip0 .4 W , E hR zation ,h,, Perim.. has taught us that it is periee sho uld only be entruste st tl atnoc,thea ,wi . t she ; 11 ',. 1 '" mu.r,h Ile a,' 1 1 “ . 'H i tt and sanest id' statesmanship. Eden then it is questionable. hat dec1111.5 t h e :1191,1,01011 of Solioloosio they sterilize alCoholle inebriates, for in legislation. -11.1 ire spirit of all 1 ,,,,,„..,.. If they had done that in years gone by, there would have' the "11'"51111' which the 1 I 11 h ' r been no G.o.cozei Bermod Shaw, for his father Was it drunkard. There government has taken tilt 1141W. . ‘,.,,,,Id 1,,,, I„.,.,, 1 ,„ Iv al;,,,,, Lloyd Garrison, for his father a '1,11 1° '1 ' lit ' j ''' ' is ' n g"" 1 " . " 1 "1 111'1111k:1rd. There would have been no Jonathan Edwards, re.gardos it feeling of hatted against ii -1 - Ill some a- Ole g r eatest l• at u•I Mind A 11110•11 . 11 over produced, for his tam." I.t. rYthlitt that 1 for ' .1.'"dth• that tears. along with its getillise•, blue someII f 1 Ile trust antliZillg e \ ample- • ' been preached depravity that Orli, country has . ei -Cell. Refuge in Illusions. • • • .And •1111, hi v e III `111'11 :III alum.- WHAT A PROGRAM ,ther• ha; become :III tildlearaldt. Secondary things, Dr. Barnes, forsooth again' What (•conoie toorluent particularly ler . 1 e//s who program has Hitler offered? That women should go hack to tl , are ,en , ittde, they take refuge in 1,,,,,e and lo red children for soldiers, and that men shall be give,. ollilsiool , They make Ihmln`vidu- employment on a neutr-•tard'ation dait as has been recently revealed. belied.. that e"Ii'l'I , Ii - "di I in soldier camps! Is that MI eelin..1111, proirrain? ',rode, that the good old times will • • • come back, at least pa lip. tip. liut DR. ANTHONY EXPLAINS what are ire to do ll I he .\ 'sting And then there is that other great liberal, Dr. Anthony of tic' condi" ions imi li•immtn do toe of- 1, ,,,i,•,,,i Council of the Churches of Christ's Commission on Good Wo Ire a panicle of t-"lid • I” , !!'l l.. " lithsv•ell Christian and Jews. any -itch Inipest Dr. Anthony. according to the .1t•wi•h Daily Bulletin, recoil... I n d yet th e organs of the tile expressed himself to the effect that it is 110 wonder that comm.- real German Jews, issue atter is - , people are irritated at Jews, seeing that Jews so fre.tluently ta. sue. keep on publishing the -aloe' about Jewish nationalism mg. Zionism. told declarations and affirmations That any intelligent person in this duty and age , can fail to had. ailth•essed to the present German •yntioathy. for the Zionist ideal is to me unintelligible. What, le rulers. They engage in Brad... Anthony, for in,tanee, are the .1eVes of Germany to du! Where ni. geties- the•y repeat ad nauseum they to go? would you done these and other oppressed at leo . all that the Jews have done for I the little loophole of refuge that Palestine affords? 'German vulture and German Imo- From the plague and from commissions on good will betwo . flown' life, how many sacrifices lea.. and Christians headed by Dr. Anthonys, good Lard, deliver us* • • they had,- !mole for Germany. Pro- • Ple deceive themselves by 11111 , 14. 111. PALESTINE AND THE 18TH AMENDMENT ing that such proclamation, will •iit , 'Tofu! of prohibition may prove it stimulus to Pale•t:re. Gook the heart of llo•ir enemies. \Vine production, which, in later years, lots greatly decreased the?' • Crum to Next Pagel RANDOM THOUGHTS CHALLENGE B the-Way T B by Charles II. .loseph . with everybody taking to oranges, may obtain it new lease of life. Palestine can produce good wines and, if you'll take my won' for It and other good Jews such as Saint Paul, who recommend,. "a little Wine for your health's sake," wine is the ideal drink. Wine is the happy medium. It gives you it glow and sometime• makes you write poetry, but doesn't make you beat your wife. • • • ANOTHER REVOLUTION IN GERMANY? Walter Winchell quotes someone to the effect that the fooro.her trade I Cermany has fallen off In per rent since Ilitlerism began. or no. If the ansat.t, I have heard (other reports that it has fallen off 20 per cent. cawed ,, TM•• reports lend substance to the statement of Edward A. arc "nn" /hen its hat' he's Pn lh i Filen,. the noted Boston merchant, who has just returned from by Germany's (inclines. If they are Europe, that a second "radical revolution" will soon come off ,, i l ‘ , t , n ii r " 7 1. • .:. ir i zi " E ■ i l : i I ' A . il - k t i I ; I ...IU . t t : : I . N n itl : tail h :; 1. 1., c ,U I r . :T h l l t a h ,:.:i;l i I ::: 11. 1 :1::: k)iiild . Filene is right, that ultimately the Communists will : coo many, but it does not seem to me that it can i . i.'""" someone friendly to the Ilitlerites ;,.. mu .. !. ..- F Ilene expects it. For, after all, the one thing that •).. please tell me? There is no need Hitler 1...- do know is the business of soldiering and shoo' • ...• to lie because the TRUTH about and at red., • on now must fact- a terriffic amount of bleindshed. Hitler is had enough. It certainly is the truth that an American citi- zen, not a Jew, was attacked and injured the other day litnlillfie he forgot to salute the Nazi gag. One outrage after another is committed Samuel ii 1 iarrieon . . Novel Is an Excellent Tale of • Jewish and ont apology follows another. The truth of the situation is that Master Builder. conditions are A C T U A I. I. Y The It st of a ,tory . s, greatness II. mminerge, among the giant d.i...1 WORSE in Germany than we are told. You can easily imagine the is that once you have commenced . r- mmf the great state. The r, a a . undercover, hidden assaults and to re•ael you are unable to stop. soc- enfolding lamfore him the rr.tud• annoyances to which J ews any s o,. "Yonder Ties Jericho," Samuel ,..I picture of great developii• , jelled that never see the light of B. Harrison's first novel, III. Ap- of it state's rise out of wilder). ,s. day and are never heard of. The' pletan•Century Co., 35 W. Thirty- and of the part played in it I'd only int ident , that you and I hem , second street, Sea York, 521, has pioneers. of are those that are tint serious to withstood this test. and by virtue wh Aargo rn . ::nrrui p es, thast,,ont•a sep111„.%:, ::Iff... it:- hidden. I et any Nazi disprove of this stands highly recomnmended the statement• I have made; THEN as one of the finest stones of the he can charge the nations with IT- Year. and as reuse a friend of • •-•.' ing about Germany. Here is a story of pioneering, for and Laury Talieferro a- r 4 • • • and of changes in three generations father was of their father. IT:' •or of Jews, what)) deserves to Ise read he grows up to win the ban' • BRISBANE'S VIEWS and to ht. commended as an excel- Jenif, r he learns of the deep-r-' . Arthur Brisbane ti, beginning to lent piece of writing Mr. Marra- (41 prejudice against .Jews In •Ivr "needle" the Nazis in earnest and son, native New Yorker who studied heart of Irnifer's grandfather. 11 , when he starts he keeps on going. in leaves home, later tocome back .rd w fnrriet 'intrgy :durterti isinngn ,w has selected to become the , guiding genius of ht The (other day . amon p g many other for S. setting T ‘ , Titih,,, e v iusaty prhaei ri leo,okf sitrierraBhuirpreull;st4clems,teinaedgrunattleir, .Z.it paragraphs criticizing Germany he T"t rwahs' rh r g ,s .t.l .r, t h h eh l ``i .1aron II u r r e I I- Aaron Berrie' tution. 'Nnien:•teenth Zionist Con- Ilochstein whose name was shorten- Another generation grows LIP. 'm P rague will diseusa the ed for him by Captain Anthony founders of the dynasty pass aw l- 'fate of the German Jews.' The Talieferro whom he befriended and the store is sold. From cover 1 '' ideal arrangement. if it were pos- both whose lives are so closely in- cover "Yonder Lies Jericho" is ,A sable, would he to move all of the terknit in this story. 00.000 Jews in Germany to some I Aaron, who "dug the store out tmhue vinnfost'threrY thienines°,n +" ; rdarkitabel°e nta of the prairie with his bare hands," 1 has the possibility of even further (Turn to Next Page) comes to Texas a total stranger, developmenL -,-.. Great Story of Pioneer Texan ■ SWI (C( perms paper Aft Hem' real to the deelai almns rt sal !inns any ment "TI Cher. Nazi stick, a re, afr It all many safe. the %hen Punt: After Tfliet /vent Ea while if GI Nazi, This son. C , nsu Inter Wry' Ca tic " the I 11y brew Ycrk f0/7, Rout toss lawn TI Rog i 'In trap, and that