THE ONLY ANGLO•JEWISH NEWSPAPER PRINTED ETROI IN MICHIGAN LWISR IIR01 ■ 11C1.4- and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE VOL. XXXV. NO. 18 SECTION DETROIT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1933 TWO REVIEW OF THE YEAR 5693 By HARRY SCHNEIDERMAN -loarnele ,, , if that were pie-slide. p1 illii auula infuriated the Nazi than the tituperationa of the pa-t. Hiders, and the patty announced In the mantime, the goce r tonent that I , let, rill fur the "atrocity publicly rears-or e s the •eu• of agitation" and 1.11 1 • 1/I t MOVernellI S ot her tan(; that thoos• of Ger- :(lotmol, th , ie would be a country- ,,f all Jetta-do business, ' many had nothing to fear font the new regime. The ,vein shoal . odidoimillg, not only leaden, but that these declaration. Werein. 1"(—Iimo 1 sapling a , well. This sin. to begin On Saturday, tended for foreign cousumptian Apo II I, ionol no continuo. until the only'. part red it to Is , ,topped. Hitler's Dictatorship. The world-shocking catastrophe which has befallen the J e w s of Germany during the past five months is of such m omentous s ignificance to Jews everywher e that a0 other events affecting our people appear to be comparatively of s light importance. The present review, therefore, will be concerned chiefly with events in Germany and their repercussions in other countries; in • special section the most important happenings and trends in Palestine will be briefly ,ketcbed, and another chapter will he devoted to the few U , ' currences unrelated to the tragedy in Germany. PART ONE The Crisis in Germany. ! ■ in- vigooroon nice-- tires to prevent these disorder,. gin)• to take any The Many Complications. So confused was the political ,00 ugh the rrapid changes iu situation that the nett Reichstag government during the which tint on Aug. 311 was olis- T ceding the Nazi revolution the fr"vernillonl on Sept. 'I a political crisis winch 12, when a Coonimuni.1 (notion of he met by it dictatorship, a elevation of Adolf Hitler. no confidence in the von Paper yhd •..o , goot'oornintont 31 II, earried. .• chancellorship of the Iteich b. Ths'l'e followed woollier election a surprise (oven to (loose ;atom Was not am violent ,olo- , r crs of the German scene, campaign is hIch as its 1,1'1,14,in-sod The re. tilts of and, probbly, also to Hitler and hi, 1,,Ilto•ers. But the events which ensued, the widespread nets of s ,!once against all the option- en' ,, f the Nazis and their lollies, tho. atioinalists, and, later, the pro ,,• , Mated elaboration of a net- f laws deliberately intended , Move the political, civil and :oh ,h1 degradation of the Jetts of Germany and their economic ruin, cation! even greater shock and amazement. And yet, when the history the preceding 13 years is studied, it IN discerned that these event, were but inevitable links in a chain, the forging of which was begun with the then scarcely no- ticed launching of the National Socialist movement in 1920. I t is now evident that the (nurse and propaganda of that movement dur- ing the succeeding years mould have led to no (other result, espe- cially under those eireunistano•s which attended the accession to peWer of the leaders of the mae- ment. An Evil Augury. at Nov. C. I ap- peared to furnish a real loasi, for the election a feeling of relief among republi- can elements and Jews, for t h e Nazi popular code, turned out to be I I ,7110,11110,a , l'oelparell 3 , It 13,7:M1,111111 palled by them at the July elections, and their reproosent• atioon In the Iteichstag dropped 'Phew' results fioin '230 to 1:15, hailed in anti -Nazi circl e : ar we re 1,1.111 to theit I i lloagio's the harm dune tl t•i, when the hostile lIgi- " (i ""'" I"1"''' I 7,d:domino voto , r• rout their loll- i ttotioni in foreign land.; Storm Id. for the Nazi .tale, giving that ices ty 2" , .eats ill the flew Ittoich- ho 11, added to the •12 won .1ag, grit, the coal- by the Nat ition a 'eta' of :1311, a clear niaior- vot( , required ity. Th,• the constitution and government dictatorial gl II. tall tkils simply Obtained by the at re-t of all t h e !Ionian's elected on w, oo o•olertal to picket ,t ts :11111 warn would•loo , u • I., ale . flora entering; of int•trtings were to •' I•ed, and these were to soli pt o I a hair of ' (a. ,,,ten , yet ern• that or ion. demanding It Innn , I tae, I'tr. , the ,•, I o • to universities aim! fl, ' -Ion.; the boycott onoortnnt I,- 'el up by every' h e al s,1 , I ul weer Inalvcted to per. gun t, y German who ha. (oda- 111.1 , 111ess 1 . 1111111S - I his abroad to ' nt to, Ills " , I 'it'll by write, telephone, or 1,11 t all 111 II rietto,t discipline was to be I illII 111111,11 ..I of on- rt. elm1111101411 °I the Imo.. •hith %ie.. intended to trighlen flitelen .11,11e opinion o lain leme. Lad the Cl le.] the II•ndell herbs., of 1,11111! the 1••• of liernmni ionisers roe the ',PA brnolm ail the outraged hunmaill tenoned al rrrrr1,1•1111/ ind.tnatior, toe eign lArfflmee. made mia•tions and the le• mend, otiose rood ▪ 1,1,11A111 hAd AV. inlet., Alien.. nrote•ted throurii thMr iim simal And lemi• .1.11f1A ■ 11011% AA net nmd aped , e r ne .e ermesentnlions Alldmotes.. •nd &while.. ANA. the minim, id brm.. boner. And indwarl•114, mom. O. ham for ire lind ll,, roierninent Announcing • M• dAm before 3 pril I. the borioll would be tontrlited to that one but (hal•outd be rene•ed 13,1dr...dm %era 1 the Moto" ••• rondo. ted In an orderli roomer on blond,. 1 huonem vom mooned on uut•ardli nornml lines and .1111.....ch noble' opinion .,road did not bi- AtAieliArd menu room .Male. • a. not resumed an weaned... spill The it haol loam going on before April 1 and it was resumed after that day without any blare of trum- pets, but with (badly effectiveness, A,rompanying the nonetheless. boyoott mot ontent Was a process of uthlo... elimination of Jews and Mho bearers of Nazi animosity front all int-dime( 1 if honor and dignity. April 11 c.a. issued the first ordinance for carrying this law into effect, which defined non-Aryan descent as "desoent from non-Ar- boyeOtt1111; did nut cease; I ITill to Pave ticket Ile' I ', 111111LIIIIst This cie tory appear s to bare fa' la I•elebrat nor by the VietOrs form of nets, i I lottrlairitY, ino• of which were unsimak:iloly lorutal.So ,o and:khan: olio! these alareh that on oontbi•omk. 1 2, l'Ininc••lhor Iliticr i.stied it re- in Ile .cript whirls i, of as lir cilell , h a 1111111- time on that day over the t.t , w- erninent radio in which he made t fallowing guarded /Omission: , rhio hilli core- an indication that the movement tt a.' definitely declining. .1r, however, the election result, were indeed-ice and, dime- , oilier barn', ehlMed rosst teem- fore. meant a roc, IlIllat loll of tile • Goering's Anti-Semitism. Top,. days . , :orlier, in a speech crisis. Whir, This ca u se less than two weeks at after the election \chef) the rem. ter of Ow ono, o hot of Proi..ia. de- Odds and Bavarian People's Party clar,oil: tor Mused to back von Papyri, thus ., e I ,ila roll Mlle Jew sl ron trunting the Reichstag or re- • ;whye. It lino. M81, 11111 veil !I tiring von Papen. nr, hurl I , Into n 'Hindenburg, chose the latter enure II' , nation is nolused rind began negotiations with the TTI people' •Yoii ou r leaolers of the principal part le-. . Online.' We Mond C011fasio ❑ Saurae ill• later, lead to II are beam retina including Hitler, with a view- to Finally, in :1 telegram dispatch- , creating- a cal , injt of "national ,oil on :11areh 2n, to the heads of ' the fa il ur, .leivish organizations „ t, th„,„ outing chiefly to American The Jews of Germany had been Inol preciously invoked the 'Mown many "signs and portents" Ititle•'s uunrrrptai al' demands. the goad ollices of the government of of what was to come, in the Se- President appointed Lieutenant- with, had the 1 lilted States, the Hon. Cor- General con Sehlrirhe r, quence of events from the time of dell fluff, secretary Of state, made the elections in September, 1930, h o o e n alinistet of Defense in the the . conniving statement upon the when 107 National Socialists were coon Papyri s;overnmentment, l'han- 'oasis of a report received by him elected to the Reichstag which 1-ellor of the Reich; the latter at Annqi "in erni ' n ' sY in on„ reappointed the ndie von frnin had, until then, not more than 1 Berlin: representatives of that party. Papen cabinet, with a few minor A (rely Ile, nun been reemien Indicating Eton) that time 011, "Wing 01 a eXeel/thillS. This oiunnonie appears amt h 7d ' 1,71.. tr:Zroter,C i fateful combination of internal too have satisfied none if the lead. this nisi.. MAY IM unnmdered vatiallv and external factors which served ing parties, and after a brief e a- naled. tVt' r ne 's " n1 P I(I'Sk to heighten heighten the despair psychology !shine!' Of only two months. the government resigned pretea.hoom datmain•tion 'mete manifest.- nt the German people, the Nazi Schleicher th r;;;;LItt , r . ts thr movement grew from strength to and President von Hindenburg an- W I leader of the 31sm purtv i.s(o el t a ' ao, '° ‘r', Vooloo strength, with more and more Ger- pointed Hitler to the ('hancellor- mans corning to regard it as the ship (of a new roalition governmtont ,,,,: in ri;]nn,:,:t? panacea fur all the ills atlilicting of 12 members, including only two t,(,,os,,,,,,,, rboat o tijairfn,t,,a,zolo,,,:i5,,,,i,:oftl,.(tt;::•, r's'r'e: But I I Nazis in addition no their country. one of these, Dr. Wilhelm Frick, no ahtdi he tmt onl) heilerated tilderIs a h. p ‘ Z.v1 , 7 ,31. 3 p id It will be recalled that the re- was made Minister of the Interiof cults of the September, 1 930, on•iirthi mt. or rinenNe and oolenre h and thus placed in suprenie „Mimi electioons caused a panic among ct apain , s, , ,, eit , T,tt . itt the of policy. 'The os some sections of the Jewish pope- Hermann (Meting., Minister With- latien of Germany, resulting in a Limitations of space du not per- out Portfolio., was appointed to (tut thto consithrrable exodus. the equally important post of trait the recording in this review of sukequent ludicrous tactics of Deputy Commissioner for the In- any of the numerous reliable re- of the Nazi deputies in the Reich- t o.h ot t•, prip,sin, th e v i r t ua l I lk. ports of these excesses. The inter- ne hand, and the stag, one t h,, , o ,,,.1 important ested reader is referred to the tiles reassuring faith of the leaders of ,t,,a,to.rshilo Of the leading- daily nwspapets, the Jewish community in the sane- 'la'. especially the Times of London, The First Five Weeks. lily of the Weimar Constitution the alanchester Guardian, the N o • and in the determination of Presi- ecks of Tools Tiino. ho l ' irt Ifurim: the first live weeks h, ,,i,o t ento e , a cts o f th e (WW re- TC11 , 11/1•, ii.31.1l t the Ni Iv dent con Hindenburg to safeguard ; it, ,I,servance, , tin the oother hanol, gonie ring 1 ., ' , ! . -el f 1 0 appeared III '41111/ nt„,;,: r. „ t h t ,r in i soon dispelled, or at least quieted, absyrcrrs w h o had .sires.( t h e pli I . , „ !Nth.r f mould pope, iiii been published in "The 'hose fears. orces view that Fay- Events, however, proved that not canny' out the More fantastic Jew, ni Nazi iropes were illusory, because planks o f their platform. This teal It , nnrd of their persecution (■ the premises upon which they were Ill,rd h a d fa il e d t„ g ic r crow was Well civil: Weight to the desperation L-.1 '3- C1'111110W. " put by tho London by the National Serialist s;' issued Roily T e l egrap h . -N o t said fr o , r1,,-; in .luny, a by the Annotican Jewish Its A Wave of Protests. the vaguely of the m .' to the tarot lanaeecol col u mn-, The Ili s of tiro,. et. nts shark dit•tator- of the NaZitt, to the ruthl•.sites. w, tool the ,ono. and aroused ,hip. rho. attack on banks and the ant truculence of Hill, ;ono! • 1'1 evi- -` moutenants, and, last, but perhaps hour , es, the anti-Jew•ish l000groin.. am ''"'' of the ''• mole than all other fac- which are the nearest approoho • .olot ., t a ,,, • . ol. This • to the inoldrerence of German too anything oletinito , in the " f I".• Herr Hitler In otlio ,, • neld.1.,,, both rank and file, lay outlook. I, • 10'01111' and , lerical, to the fate of run,-.eery far from being the • ono .1, s o firmly had Nazi anti- and international peril thrir Iro Into him-hilt to • Jew 1..1 opaganda taken root in In en the chance. - the fable nail of the birth-land If t r.lern anti-Semitism. pointed rests-uringly to the , o that the 11111 government Could Hisk e i en, Have B een coaliti.n a n d that Hitler Checked? would la. curbed be the I' the „aboo,t, ..: lie the task o.f histoorians'„, ot,n month. such . linc whether the Nazi • ,,light ,ight not have been lie- born a p peared 'n be , "I" b !Ile germ if it had not Looking hack at th—o. the fact,. Il I , indifference. tile t 11013, 11 IVel . t. tion ,„ t o„t„„t et, aais , o• i„,„, dissolution on il t l' ,32, of the Reichstag p ort , sombarking upon any si •i Nlivernher, 1 930, lie- policy of -nation:dization.- CT, , Inc lion campaign which Fousoy ; to feel out the eye , ic • . • led by unprecedented the popular Step, vier ,. o • • ' i'..1 violence, resulting in ,111„11 III „t• tactic - . le nd I I•o•Iled to forbid all out- few Hoot, during these first Al- weeks, but ant and meetings. Nazi campaign in the were, including a cov of ii b ee n o I the -oleirly. him I Ii '/ .1 • mar arm- , odignati, I: o Of all those material possessions which bespeak a man's place among his fellow men none is more instantly recognized than his automobile. Wherever he goes and whatever he does, his car has come to be accepted as a symbol of Ills tastes, his standing and his business success. Because of this, there has grown up about Cadillac and LaSalle a degree of respect which is unusual in America's !'usiness life. Men who have given the problem serious thought will have no other automobile; , • I '. of ionoteod s,, hl in many o ,.no which had ht. blow- r 1•. .1' A f! nimi.ter Of' and prop, „ I As :duo - , intimated. HI , I 'h os ": „f1 7i.st r k . al Tinni, '9I government found Germany wer• singled out 1,,i ' A man and Zif motor car Anierilan .lois• to \ 1 .1 oil Min , 11 27, Itel.1 ••I ' i*Ii, tar here is the "Standard of the World" —the car which has stood, for a quarter of a century, as the emblem of all that is fine. They know, when they drive a Cadillac or LaSalle, that they have le ,h , uht that whi. sadistic I:I'll Were Ill.i"etol at the I(..-ults of the election of d n no , rman inter ' 1. „ T 11:11MIK, • :II. 1 932, showed that so frequently onomplaineol to-tilting fr. 1,1 'I hi. Ihitiollal ...on 230 Nazi deputies, ing the following three 3, to•:notion of public opinion, ens ,o • double their number in government eaplooseol the p• that this alarm explains the parliament, had been toe s o f expelling ali e n of the goi- o,,- no , denial. by mentl/1r.1 ' Jews found a basis found such expulsioons would rit-; ernment and the veritable flood of ,• ..mment in two facts.-- broil it with foreign governmo by leading anti-Jewish eXprert- the federal radio odation began to; messages sent atonad , ocietie, insisting moat in the campaign' be used, not only for pro-Nazi inditioluals and s admit. in Germany ti some of his leading election speeches. but also for at-1 that all was oof atrocities an.' that second. that even in tacks on Jews; the expulsion of of s " n". 1. " With the German Na- Jews from office was carrionl on ' il l "' fal ' e * -ant in gossl (act .° rtY of Ilugenberg, the extensively, but not systematic- that ti. not be able to muster ally; and, following the Reichstag ;" the public , and acquire control of lire, the sensational raid on the nocity agita- headquarters of the Central Ver- , ' ' dnt. • doo1 was irkopir- i . nor r ■ f Germany, and o ' o ouraging feeling d id I' I ft oboutscher Staatsbuerger jued- ,., I very long, however, be-, ,when Glaubens, on the trumped. t h at . d a, outside of Germany ' •„! t be la r-tt. in order, f,i;r eveuse that there were groounds haoi - o f violence by Nazis, u suspicion, later acknowledged (o. . i of ' •'-t Socialists and Com- . to have been baseless, that that or- p„b .. r • -: l' ” 1 r :it ; • , T. It T TIJI I I:I.I /III • •agi., •, ti also against Jews.: zanization hall had something to ...., . t duress, for it is' While Jews in , f political affiliation. o lo with that fire. ao e. unt in any other nahated and showed , the largo cities wens unmoleded, stmt!. o. ro'mil of being part of I the lot of the small-town Jews way f • is me , sago A sent by Jew- !las v irulently the masterpiece itself and that it IS given the recognition which a masterpiire always inspires. ' •■ it ions which II . rtain!y , led than to create aleas not always so happy daring t ,.,, " n that outrages i h would force President I hese first five weeks. During this But all these, . ur I '' ,1 (g to give the Nazis i period. the Nazi Torras. now he- d l f3 ..1 to coons ince any . ,, the unofficial spokesman of lod•-•,,,: - the ' , government. Dis- .nme , ..• • . a, was the apparent he government. indulged in anti- section of the public. re,„.,. The failure of their counter- i 'of the von Papen re- Jewish diatribes, more virulent and ' -. LaSalle lit mei h.- :n at $2:45.1: ooh l)etToit. . . Cadillac at $:10)). .. G. M. At. tams ahnlahle on any model CADILLAC 1 r 4 Ir.( T it I I ;, -I 4,1 NI it' .1 I MII: