T l s Vertconjoisn RoNlcuE

and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE

THEVEIRO1 ijEWISii ORM iCLE

and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE

ic sii.hed Weekly by The Jewsh (Ion , ....e,blishing C•., Inc.

general Office and Publication Building
525 Woodward Avenue

telephone: Csddla, 1010 Cable Add. ett, Chronicle
mak, ,
14 Stratford Place, London, W. I, England.

Per Year

Subseriptior,

s
To
met roe I. II, air.•
Piller

The United Hebrew Schools of Detroit
are to be congratulated upon the choice of
a new president.
Aaron Pregerson has for mane years
now linked his nano( with the most im-
portaut
causes and institutions. Sin-
cere, devoted and understanding, he has
the additional quality of being steeped in
Jewish learning.
Mr. Pregerson's election should mark
the beginning of a new period of progress
for the school-.

I .,

October 13, 1933

Tishri 23, 569 , 1

We Rejoice in the Law.

Benjamin

(.1 "Tam osi
(Oft of the inw:

IS p , r h ,al..
interesting comment. ol :
elevation from •xtr , m , inisi•r ■ tee •IM!'
AV'c quote' t
spirituality.
"The vineyards I , f Israel have cea.--,si
exist, but the eternal law enjoins the clot
dren of Israel still to celebrate the viulage.
A race that persist in celebrating the vin-

C011taIIIS What

tage, although they have no fruits to

gather. will regain their vineVa•ds. Wha!
sublime inexorability in the law! But what
indomitable spirit in the people!"
Here is a tribute which finds an echo a
half-century after thy death of its author.
It is still applicable to Jewry almost every-
where, and for many the prophecy that
the people will "regain their vineyards"
has come true in Palestine.
This indomitable spirit is evident wher-
ever there are Jews, in spite of the horrors
that are being visited upon them. In Ger-
many the Jew lives under the lash Of the
brutal Nazis. But on Simchas Torah the
German Jew and the Palestinian Jew are
one when they rejoice in the Law. The
race persists in celebrating an ancient heri-
tage in the hope that one day Israel will
be able to enjoy God's free air on a basis
of obsolete equality with the non-Jews.
It is a remarkable transition from gloom
to joy. Jews may he living in danger of
death at the hands of brutes, but when
Simchas Torah arrives they rejoice that
they should have been chosen to receive
the Law. It is a most emphatic way of
defying all the horrors and dangers that
have been visited upon our people, It is
the Jew's way of saying HIM although he
is persecuted and hounded he will not yield
but will persist in holding on to life for
the sake of the great mission for which he
has been chosen.
A great Jewish poet has aptly described
this spirit in a Simehas Torah poem, of
which the following is one of the verses in
translation:
"Lechayim, my brethren, Lechayim,
say!
Health, peace and good fortune I wish
you today.
Today we have ended the Torah once
more,
Today we begin it again as of yore.
Be thankful and glad and the Lord
extol,
Who gave us the Law on its parchment
scroll."

of Iii,

this

I hg L. n the custom of
111, all pc•rsons
1.
n or an-
.1.
".1, te , " But
,
Itoluc-
oeek's

a but r allege-die xx•ritte ,
"dew Itathenitu" ti t ht
ri. rinait tnineeter
ertain 1.,. utenant
ireh
told
t' ain't... re 111,-1

311114

11.11 tor,

1

1, V,

I

Ii ■

I) I()

t

of

I l.11

fi

And
'1, , it , cht-sitications.
the three ate in league
i.Cher, and their aim i.,
ha- been, the de-
., ..f Germany.
At that
Ver,ttilles, for
t
,
ii
Ili:en
nor cent

' an alien

1I.,•

in

T in

t he- -,,,

1';I

III ■

, •!1,,,,t

I

I
'. tc
the :-I n lay of
tett,r . Pale,-
t , tcontl Heat it is Itn.
IMItre., but k t\tll al es
I Old II,. e Nialltaga••-
111,:k I
they are
ie I as, a Iloilo Lid r I their own,
.
they may steal and

V

•155 5 .ti t

t!

I

III

11:0111

Ind
impel dol-
t .1,1, had
delib.

It h,

Ililaire 'tenor
and Gilbert N. Chesterton have been rated
as being among the outstanding anti-

scene,

Semites in the world. lInt today these

according
•
, vin,

4,,

Simibuly ironieal are the historical jokes
that are played upon individuals as a re-
sult of the Hitler menace which today af-

world

MASONS

It

•

. - ns in Poland, and several \ mirs ago
I:•J!.:ona's Jews were among the mwt nw , -
ir,awd. But now these two 1 , 111 111 fII•S N1 . 1 1
11 1 41 1 1111111g the majority right, of Jew, in
Germany!

the enlirn

Ii

If W...

I

!::

prote:t against anti-le ‘t ish discrim-

t ers

Marx.

'lloZil.
I 1,6-4."

-. Many who were at one time rated
a- anti-Semite are today among the d•-
,. Hier , ot krael's human rights. Conn
- ii 111 , 11 11,1 so long ago were considered
I barb. because of their treatment of the
-lice today anion); the humane de-
m Europe.
Mill and I:nmania stand out as glar-
w
Only two years ilgu Jews

two

of letters are among the
authors of the strongest denunciations or
llitlerism and the Nazi anti-Jewish bar
barities. A short time ago Mr. Benue wrote
what proved to be one of the most excori-
ating condemnations of Ilitlerism in Amer-
ica, leading Catholic monthly. Now comes
CileMe11011, turd in an interview with
it representative of the London Jewish
Chronicle has handed down a verdict on
Nazism which should cause Hitlerites
everywhere to sit up and take notice.
We quote Mr. Chesterton's statement:
"In our early days Hilaire Belloc and
myself were accused of being anti-Semites.
"Today, although I still think there is a
Jewish problem, and that what I under-
stand by the expression 'the Jewish spirit'
is it spirit foreign in Western countries, I
and appalled by the Hitlerite atrocities in
Germany. They have absolutely no reason
or logic behind them, and are quite obvi-
ously the expedient of 0 man who, not
knowing what to (I() to carry out his wild
promises to a sorely-tried people, has been
driven to seeking a scapegoat, and has
found, with relief, the most famous scape-
goat in European history—the Jewish
people.
"I am quite ready to believe now that
Belloc and myself will die defending the
last Jew in Europe. Thus does history play
its ironical jokes upon us.
"Hitlerism is not the real spirit of Ger-
many, which is, for the most part, a coun-
try of reasonable and friendly people, pa•-
ticula•ly in Bavaria and the Rhineland. But
the Russian and the Prussian spirit are a
menace to Europe, and always have been.
"The mark of the barbarian, as it seems
to nw, is that he accepts no judgment out-
side himself. If opinion on his actions is
not as he would wish it to be, he appeals
to force. Most of us are anxious for the
"Jews of All Lands, Unite!"
good-will and approval of some person or
Upon his arrival in this country, Emil body other than ourselves. We are anxious
Ludwig, eminent German-Jewish author, for the knowledge that ice have heen held
suggested the formation of a World Jewish to have done well. Whether it is human
Congress as the only solution to the present ity or our friends, or the Catholic Church,
German tragedy. In a prepared statement or the press, we are anxious to hear and
issued to the press he said among other willing to profit by their verdicts. But the
things:
Prussian does not ; he lover has. Ile has
"If the catastrophe which has befallen the arrogance and the truculence of the
German Jewry should prove the Illeang of self-righteous. It would be amusing were
at last uniting all Jews the way other pen- it not fraught with so much danger to harm-
ples arc united, then indeed good might ' less people.
come out of it.
"By treating harmless and. in scores of
"I hope that the Jews will on this occa- cases, valuable and distinguished Jewish
sion put aside their internal differences for citizens of the German Reich as he has,
the program is so simple:
Hitler has forfeited all claim to the label
"Jews of all lands, unite!"
statesman. Ile had a great chance to do
It is nut a new appeal. The one thing incalculable good ; all he has done is the
we have been missing in Jewish life was worst possible mischief. The real evils in
unity. Unfortunately, the nearest we ever Germany are still there. more rampant
come to it is during a crisis like t he present than ever."
one
What strange bedfellows truculent
Will posterity learn from the trials and Prussianism has made, with avowed anti-
tribulations of the present generation?
Semites now battling for justice on the side
Will Jewry respond favorably to the cry: of Jewry!
"Jews of all lands, unite!"
But this ironical joke played by history
The present crisis carries with it a chat- merely brings out in glaring light that there
lenge which places all Jews to the test. Our are different grades of anti-Semitism. Iii
people must nut be found wanting. . the instance of Belloc and Chesterton we
have proof that the two Englishmen have
' not been robbed of all human sparks and
The Community Fund Drive.
The Jewish community must be :Pinion - of honor. For the Nazis, however. both
ished to remember in terms of liberal con- honor and humane feelings are dead. It
tributions the forthcoming Community ' is no wonder, therefore, that Chesterton
Fund drive which will take plate begin- should believe that he and Benne "will die
ning with Oct. :10. defending the last Jew in Europe."
This is not an ordinary appeal to Jewish
benevolence. It is an actual obligation to
"Mankind will not permit itself to slip
the important Jewish agencies included in hack into the Middle Ages." said Sir Her-
the fund.
Bert Samuel referring to Hitlerism in an
If the work of these agencies is to be address before the English Speaking Union
carried on uninterruptedly and without. of the United Stales, in Ne% ■ York, under
sacrificing the standards they have set for the auspices of the Carnegie Endowment
themselves and the community, Jews owe for International react'. Unfortunately,
it to themselves to help make the forth- mankind has to be reminded not to make
coming drive a success. this slip backwards. Otherwise it would
The North End Clinic, the Jewish Social not become nece ss ary constantly to express
Service Bureau. the Jewish Centers Asso- faith in man's inherent goodness,
ciation and the Young Women's Hebrew
Association, the Jewish Child Placement
The unveiling of a monument in Wash-
Bureau, the Hebrew Free Loan Association ington in MeMOr• of the great labor leader.
—these are among the important Jewish ; the late Samuel Dumpers, is the first in-
•
groups which demand unstinted Jewish stance of the construction of a monument
support for the Community Fund.
in honor of an American Jew in Washing-
•
Detroit Jewry's response in the forth-ton. The tribute to this noted American
coming campaign must be a liberal one.
is a source of pride to Jewry.

O

Ptil Of the J,at

Id

Readings of the L a w.
t.. t
II .,
I

Lc

By the Special Correspondent Of the Jewish Telegraphic Argue),

It 1

Federal lie-
hank tin-
In this

f.1

tlo

relehT/11( . 11 Men

!lc of the

handed
.I.•5‘,..1 bank-
Io,
.5 handed it
. I, 111 I:.. . i.. for the. pur-
po r t • ..i the .1. 33 I -I. . onspiracy !
ABOUT ZIONISM
Near the Volkomt! piddishen
001110 eery inteec, , mg fie t, 111,tit
the Zionint Miganizattri, Which
is al , Palon1U int InlY a -uhdivis-
ion Of the "BIM
Zion-
i-on. how ixet
morel • a ntask
for their teal anti, which is •Iti•-
i,li %%hold I/mutilation. It is in
fully' I:ut r e of the Ginn , 1100111. 11.
iltg to II, V olk 3,111, that there
has tin erill • In a seelet meet-
in g in !tux at, a small spa nettr
Ilme 11101 I III - leaders of
the 5 ..iispiraey, the Trot -
zky, Liteintitr, Baruch and Sur-
it,. Anti it I. in coin, ctein with
t hi-, too, that the
Iler-
riot and :upland, have recently
cone to NItt ,e•toe.
A , proof Ia.-HIS!' Of this "Jew-
inh
h.11-1,11 art'," the Volkwart

■

■

By-the-Wa j,

Our Film Folk

Psst! Do You Know Baruch and Gandhi?

History's Most 'Ironical Joke.
N:lz] anti-Semitism has played its cruel

cilia I.. at .

1

The Hebrew Schools' New President.

I.. their heart's etintellt.“
Illt L . .11111(1 , 11 attached Iti

this magnanimous gift s hould

that all the jeev, in the world
,hould Lax, to go there. The ar-
ta!, atd• ith the proini,, , of
rot th.•i• -,n,ational disclosures.
11a , !glee attempted to give it
fair Idea of the text of this ter-
tad, It is ditlicult to imagine
that even the most violent hot-
head , of the Nazi nmvement
should really beilit , ve such rub-
bish. It is in truth such rub-
Linh that it is extremely dillicult
to treat it seriously. Its very
alt-intlity would, indeed, make it
I am
Wert. it null for the fact
that the palter lit the satie tittle
pull)-he, a c o mplete list of th,
Ger man 1 . 111-1';110,111)0 rominjf.
■
a,k, readers "10 ,end it
all the detail, they ear, ,Ii,t..vet•

about (11,, personage. " That
ut `laa1111
incite the
Mot, tini1111 . ..t a greiir of people,
lo a 11...t of VI 11 0 -e 11,11111•• 71 while

page of the pap
;11111
to end tip with nut 11 amm obvious
incitement, throts, !Tamils:11de
light on the "nittral" background
of the Nazi movement.

,pecitically forbidding
but spies are everywhere, and
el the chief duties is to detect
ieport pea sons Speaking for-

:-.1111: ne laW

R• D.

B.

Speaks

By RALPH D. BLUMENFELD

NI, Blumenfeld oo.■ for 30 tear. editor-
.. 4.1 of Inc Bain !tote.. In Ion-
don. }Wand'. num celebrated ion,
nalul and .norman ..f the Hoard of
lager ear, of the London Dail, F x pre,

/..

MORE MEMORIES—AND CONFESSIONS
il.1.1•W()()11. - Its been oven
1\I •
Itrun , w- ick, Georgia, -tin; playe of we hitt',
,tars since I'lliVet,a1 made of the 11011111, 0 Of nature and the poverty' of man'.
Boat" antl .losenli Schild
in th e -treets in December. the ocean Providing it %er g
played the leading rOle it
101.1 pen 03•01' yN1 here the pall of stagnation.
Even
apItearillive (in thy fallen victim to the glamor of the , !deice tend now mid
,
. NO1V the latemntle's there. .1iitt what a wonderful place for
decided to remake the. pie tree , , nine tret, and pine trets.
,
.0111 S11111,1131 . 111.11 her1I001-10
•
•
•
',urn to the squeek.e-, 1,11'
I remember t he git I ilia( came from Itunnia ;its
its I
.11 1.11111 pie( ure . . . Ilefort
Li
eiine„,t,I 1„. ,
shortstop,
ae at her, I'd call hue a
. you'll -et. hint its one et•
--inuthing tit that st.rt, and -lm', not ktousang the '
o Villa' , bandits in "V.v,
\1'01•1,...“
111111killt!
We),
t." and then for the \ I lit.

he Will till hi , 11e)V
w ith (*olundoa.

•

•

•

l':11111

I

tefuge.
other
a an,

•

..111,,

'

'." ha'
eau

the litle kr:it in --haul - N ha!,
P'aPli ," itn worth. , arid once, \C t.
tem. , recitine the Lord', Prayer, he, instead ta
in 1ft .t, en." :mob it "Our Poppeein 11,.rav e n,"

M.,

I
the brilliant demagegite, da
becolnr a Ku Klux cltainition, hot o he
If he had ott.
tl
t• for Pie,ident.
•-.
hat a leader lie aright hut , la
1.111 1110 1,,,II•i1/11 whim, in the nod-. et me-
di-agreed with him.
:It man ai o •
! if any

I

•

o

'

I

•

Though hi. Picture got only
two oars in the Liberty review,
Al Boa•berg claims it is a four-
star picture as far as he is con-
c.-rued.
He bought Iwo copies
of Liberty.

11

.t

ilt,teteenient.

I :1111111,

tilt Tani,

eSeINSi

one

yeti' nerve, but damn your Ind ! orad.'

•

•

•

tl

imminther \chill my little niece-._the
ittlit•
coming Inoue and 116 .01,..'
•
)11,1 .1- Is. arrived at her 11 11 1110, II 11,
I11110 colored girl might I n .
i.
1 . p,
5., , lie linked the. little relate,
'it He r mother
while ilke went in to break the new , .
lit•iinght a little plume t.•
Ilother." -h
, •ud,
-aid Vier mother tiny site i
"Gime her in
"lint -1••••-
.'ampler le
11.i .
- 11.• 1•.
SO art you."
..tie-ed. - h e !trough' t h e little colored girl in
ith her Southern uttbringing,iimil Ix. fain.
inethet,

I

du,
1111k - het. I
!h•n to Work, a,
\V(1111er tilt,, filet
to assist in an

on the script
t,
It.. t a t,
te Inch will be Etlo
tl
non', next . .
Ludo
i- an autlimity on the Ithi-t Con-rd.
e
.
•

Looks as though Ann Dvorak
and her husband have seriously
taken up agriculture. Last
week they purchased 30 addi-

•

S11111• 1•111.O1 .10—c I.. I.,ky
:Announced that In intended to
find a title fur
puppet .h et
picture in the Mille . .
The pi,
It 1,
tare was titled la , t wick.
"I am Suzanne"
MoVieVille
ha, its own particular type. of
Bible -depending upon the octal-
-ion,
.
•

Sally
Eiler's grandfather
owned the first
bathtub in
Cleveland . . It aroused no
much interest he scarcely . . .
well, he practically had to bar
the door in order to get a chance
to use the darned thing.

•

.p,l

I remember being fired from my "oil'', e Lot" joh •
fence, tend then getting at p o sition ns edamr of a weel.l y
I There', alway, plenty of room at the top, ,,h, what'.',

tional acres of orchards adja-
cent to their valley ranch.
•
•
•

•

remand, us
Sally
Filers has become temperamental
since her Yuma trip. She reilti,m1
her role in "Jimmy and Sally."
claiming it didn't do her jo-tire
S o Fox ups and
. .
her
to at western picture, which i- rust

M'hich

(Turn to Next Page)

{ RANDOM THOUGHTS

I ean't believe that Hitler has a,
yet modified hi, attitude toward the
Jews, yet at ewer}' point I find sig-
nificant news items thatpuzzle. me
For example, readers of this to.!
sun Imet. noticed I have tia , -.t1
along frolll time III time stateim
to the effect that Jewish big l ii
I11,11 IS Still tieing permitted. 'fleet
statements have , Lein quest iitned,
yet I find in the Sunday edition of
the New York Times this state-
ment f rein Eugene .1. Young, which
I submit without comment:

By DAVID SCHWARTZ

tContruht. 19.0. Jenish TeletraOtile Atet,e,

By HELEN ZIGMOND

•

PUZZLING NEWS

bdbils and Nat i

by Charles
H. Joseph

•

•

I n . 1110111.9' 10..11 I lieSt ..litauled the nr,,,,j,„ of

,

paper in a 1111dIvestern town: it sta- only after I I
the editor (who Iva, a .I•W
that I would Fenn.,
cditnr thought that it he [dared any or- , .1.t.
Baptist.
nf race faveraisoL)
he would he
etually, howl vet.. 1 never represented myself othei
I nh
indeed, in the light of my countenance, it mu wild have ..•
hti.
fiaulbl•.
And though, in addition to lily 01111 1 1 . 111010-, I
tha d,
religion editor and had to deal with all the , preacher tt:
wr
I found the Christian preachers were not at all ;Meta,
all, th• dealt regularly with a Jew, too—one named .1,..
•
•
•

1 renienther when up in North Dakota -at the tint, tic ...tan
was in the control of the agrarian Non-Partisan League I asket:
Jennings Bryan what he thought of that litilditoik stet
And h e told me he liked it, and further, he went ahead to 11xlatt
statement to Inv, giving Wall Street hell.
•
•
•

I teniember, when obtaining a position on another paper. I us ,
cautioned by the city editor to lay off one of the edit. •
t-
&tern'', like Jews." I immediately went to see the an' >••
borrowed
from him.
•
•
•

,
I rent•rrlare at Camp Meade, when a Itunsian-Jewid.
knew little of the language, asked me to write it love letter fey huff.
.hnif I promised to meet hint the next day at the Jewish Welfare board'
headquarter,. And When the next day I made my way Dam thi
barrack, to the .1. W. B. I was irked In come in for it minyan to ear
Kali-h. The boy had died—one of the first victims of the flu en-
demic.
•
et

THE JUNIOR PRAYER

ratios with a rabbi
dull and hit
ver the head any dinrennpr•ctful
liritish . .r American student or
knot. who failed to give
,man
the For scout ,alute

; to , t th p,t)hbekn17 and

further that the council should
'.only to sup , r
vote fund, which private or public
l'ii . .i•s : 5,7,51 moguls
,ifi as , r ieif ti h
Is : . 5 "is . 5.
I would probably read in the cen- t
, rgantzat ems may , , ntrilmte 10 the
-env] papers that the whol e world
oa,Ex ased in th.• dm.: „( tb, , . ,, ,
relief nmvement. This is definitely
adm-
ks,awn ithh! rw ,,, natl,:[! , nd, tyil le:: oittnud ,u
,. , ic,setm
Ide t f..,,, ••,.. n, t„ 't„, md.....,
s for the. Jewish group
victory
, iii:t itiid .lows trio „,„ hd. f. ,, ,, i miration at the gyrations of the a whichha
, forced Germany into th•,
1- ws , h rellgy
a, is as much .• • • /pen and brought at least indirect.
ion
well at the contereplatom 14 these , ,,, ,
the ban toda
C hrlvtlan;tv. air! '
tiihi,. A.,,e‘i,ii...-u
,e,ito}f. Nfiartamtseg
au
tt.erndt ii no;
to i
m Pthh t . jui st't"hueld reP.vrer'isliehi tYs n
th': the welfare of the siieti„ of
l erniousti
‘dei
n , ' h .. i' e .t.-
u t; 1."c
I heard
it
elsr
da PgraT n
:1....1
on I*:
the
streets , f Moscow. There is to be
(Turn to Next Page)
. LI:NAZI.

I

On

of

pro

Co.

An

Se<

1 remember when. as edit
eor Id a little country pacto In Sts
Jersey, I received word one day that it prominent Imola. r ,
coininunity--ft lady, wished to see me.
I saw Iwo.
And she said to Ili•: "Are you the editor o f
Gazetee.
I replied that I Win, .
r inn languages, especially to for-
"IVell." , Ile said, "I don ' t want that paper in
•igners. \Viten, after the late war,
I don't want any Ku Klux paper in my house."
the Poles began organizing les
And then I understood. 1 had given an accoull,
groins and the Jews of their coun-
meeting that had taken place there.
try took flight, the exodus was n e t
I pointed out to the good lady that, as a new-it:tin •
to Russia but to Germany. It was,
the Hews, it Inv duty to give an account, irrespecto,
alas, a had choice, but certainly the
I liked it or ma. I asked her to look me over and she s
Polish Jews must have had what
that I certainly could not be a Klan sympathizer.
appeared to them to be good rea-
.
•
•
sons fur making it
Even today
I remember when I obtained a position in the %jot, -
the fugitives from Hitler show no
e agerness to trust themselven to tine doing publicity that I took a photograph of Rotlat!.
Tel :kyle, to the newspapers and tried vainly to get it I
Stalin."
vt as S11011 a nice-looking street, too. I was heart-broker....•
Mentiken may he right but I have
thought of an idea; 1 sent it out to• the syndicates 1,11,
heard no complaint, at least, of
Boulevard,
and I explained that it was named after Pre- •
anti-Sonit ism in Russia such as
exi-t , in Germany or Rumania, or --and fur months newspapers all over the country wci,•
(What
a
liar
I used to be, but then in such a good . t, .
even Poland. It 1 , tnlit, true from
a religious standpoint that the Jew after all, why not a street in Palestine named after It
certainly
did
much
to get the League support for .Itoet
of Itus,ia is far sVorse elf than his

th e Reich, too, there
1)33 itt the J I 1.
hair been striking evidences of op-
ponition to Nazi extremism. Dr.
It is now generally conceded that
Kula Schmitt, the minister of eco-
nomics, hits \earned against a con- so long as the control of (fermany
tinuation of the boycott against remains in the hands of the Halt•r- brethren in other countries. But
I remember another time that " I took a story about
.1. wi,h buninens men. Herr Hitler ite gangsters, the position of their aside from that 1 can see no good
has put out stringent orders unfortunate ,lewish victims otters reason why fugitives from Hitler mineral deposits to the Associated l'ress and I was told 17 7 7
against fuither interferences with little chance of amelioration. Ger- should not seek it haven in Russia, story but that I had not enough facts, And where coulti
many facts?
department !wort, and 2,000 Pret. many has been completely doped if it 1, possible to obtain it.
• • •
Finally I looked into the Encyclopedia Brittanica and ...5
entant clergymen have united in with Halm:ism, make no mistake
about
that.
The
policy
of
the
big article on the subject. Dill I copy?
protest against Nazi control of
LEHMAN'S ILLNESS
And then I took it back-- and the editor was tickler
Ibndestant churches. 11r. Schmitt Swastika swizzle, although ex-
The wide-spread interest and
and he told me to get pictures, plenty of Weizmann, of 11.•••• ,,
Who was nude minister of et'OT10111- tremely erratic told capricious, is
concern for Governor Lehman (fur-
enormously
popular
with
the
peo-
t•tiatf"
versify, etc., the
by agreement between ('Mined-
And the story went out to the length ai
frig his present illness indicates the
Inc Hitler and President V.11 Ilin• ple, who love to take orders, who
of the country.
high regard and affection in which
of
dream
of
soldiers
and
goose-
denberg. after Dr. II ugenherg wan
But the next time I came to the Associated Press, tht
he is held by' all elements in stailety.
forta•l out of oflice, is gaining pow- steps and who have as murh poli-
to me: "Say, the next time you copy from the Encychtpeolia I;•.'
Governor Lehman has demonstra-
er and prestige. In the recent clash twat sense as a pack of rabbits.
be sure it's the latest edition."
lid that ht. is it sound, common-
between radical Nazis (Intl the big They accept Hitler. Goering and
"I don't mind it," he continued, "I do it right alma. ••
on- 11 eXel'SSiVe sense businessman, with an under- but I wish you had told me."
business and financial leaders of
valuation
at
their
valuation
and
believe
fervently
and
•
•
•
the main it was he who led th,•
e‘itt t'titis"tiiitnugen' t f, . thleit-han' el•evenre"iin'akiefis hias
Winning tight. A significant ovi- enthusiantically that all their pile•-
spectacle of hints, If, does
ne not in- HEGEL AND HITLER
dreams
will
come
true.
At
any'
den,h• of his strength is the fact
es, hatitsd makes
I have always had a prejudice against the German ; ••
that his de tunnel for modification of rate they consider themselves bet-Ielulgi in
IS
proven Hegel, and had it long lx•fore Hitler embraced the idea
the. anti-Jewish latycott is now. ter (IT than they have been since t
that stupid Versailles Treaty sit his fitness for leadership of the totalitarian state." To sic, the idea of the state being the
counter-signed by Herr ftoebbels,
ahor'n''
,
show
and
always
right
is
as
absurd
as
to
make
the
sant
one of the creators, of that policy.• up its machinery of world de,true-- Empire state. .
•
•
• • •
thin and SO they are.
about individuals. I am not quite sure which has done ntt-
states run rampant or individuals run loose. For instance. •
could In d have been "LUNAZI"
POLAND'S BOYCOTT
orally
stone fool idea of "stateisni" which has generally be,:
i,c,•h;,in
i•,-.
h
ile
f.N
.rar
a
f-asr
i
-
-
k
r
t
ai:,
,
n
I
,',11
wiews
T hei. t. 'gsa' y the C ermans. Hitler at ,i,.,!'i,hti',1 ,v ,n'
It is further significant that ne
Bible for the holocausts of war.
least has given them a beautiful
sec rec y in made of the fact that Po-
that
would
indicate
the
mentality,
But
hit us go back to this fellow Hegel. I was speakirr • •
picture. bock full of German ideal-
land', boycott of (*.Truitt .' tones, for
ismus and lh utst hland tuber Al- and thegeneral make-up of the fol. day to a teacher of science, and was talking of things a •i
ether than Jetwi,h ha,
lowers
of
Hitler
and
Hitler
liar
and he casually remarked that Hegel had written that tr.
,
!•
t
it dintut bed minds.
vaunt .1 Germany to make a -Ia. •t•
Sit I think that the tveld seven planets would ever he discovered, and a few year, L. •
Ill • '',Itter , 41 them with the web neIf.
plea for the comokal of that I.
1.1 • NAZI" might apply. Luna , y, named Wolff, by himself, discovered 30 new planets.
. I:'.
el lion that they err the
•ott.
Itegaidlt.ss of what
e . ,f course, is a more familiar sped.
I have a -a.nicion that Herr Hegel made mistakes et • •
agent -tort( circulated in Ginn.
mein!
. pare and undefiled a, ling. But if newspapers instead 1,f the realms of a tr•nomieal speculation.
the fait is indisputable
referring
to
Germany
would
say
a race anti that all alien races, par. "State of Lunazi." it might he
Nazi g...t•initient is seriiiusls
ticularly those. wicked Jews, maid
turbid by the universal ill f.. •
he crushed ruthlessly, as in the
•
•
•
hich has been created
• •
osal old Wotan way.
• .
drastic intia , ures against
SELIGMAN'S DEATH
Sor•ialists, and 1..i' •
• The death , , f Arthur Seligtnan,
ParenthiletitIenalT
lyo,
g"ur•th.s. me niti,
10.1-I. • -
SO
•
at thin distal,.
A Review by Louis Minsky,
aniuseint•nt to think of the 12 per (iovernor of New Ylexico since
. •
• Ill , that thet t• is a
rent
illegitimate
children Is.on 19:11, bring , to mind that he was TI1E JUNItilt r its I-11 ROOK
.•lang. to countera, • •
•
• • Sabbalss
reunc•
yearly to the purified Deutche one ..f four Jews honored with such
1,1 I
ar 0.555 01.-o
Orr/100n,
,..errn•t1 01 Hartford, coon
•
an work. to
United Oser/
tl
Amens New
1 - ,I,
ul Amer
I had
\lichels and thin hear nightly on an exalted political office.
ft,
el. tawny
re
vi.
known
much
of
the
late
go ,
•
•i a -,• • .5. th e radio the asseveration , of Ger-
man purity of race and soul. As ernor until he was elected to that
Rabbi Sikennan has presented aI la.,ks Which have no
•
the • • •
the. Eton, i tity, it is to laugh. llow position, as his interest in Jewinh Junior Prayer
which
is than to instill into
Pn'Is
wei id.
Ind II
•
I
affairs nationally apparently was rerorrnmrnd, , ,I a , a pedagogical pro- youth a mass of kit
s o.
.'nn.5
up
wrtien, that !
limited.
' the
His family was closely je•t for sc hords and synagogue to United Synagnge has :el.
-141,1!
•
•I 12 per cent of your
may be taker,
um,. w i t h , ret,_ identified with the development of inculate in the Jewith child an in- use
xt
1.
of religirus t e
It would be sal. 111111 to e 1011 ,•: I
••! . 11t="
t,?
lint all this New Mot ivo and he himself plav5
telligent Jewish consciousness for have as their oliiect 1 ,,
plate -itch a thing. SO If
an important part in the poidical Jewish living in America. The ola of character in the
t me can only
et , • '
in thin dark hour the Jew,
and business life of the state.
stand
;
•
•
.
nthusiasin
for
it-et
of the prayer book is not mere- and the impregnate.
tied Intia , for the near dawning f
•
•
Hit!.
.•roc Juju prom -
ly to adumbrate to the child a con- values. "The Junior hr.•
it brat, t day.
•
•
•
•
If 1
, a German Aryan, JEWISH CAUSE WINS
catenation of religious phrases is a religious text bnok 1, •
that which hair ne other purpose than gory. It is postulattni
' for wh''
JEWS IN RUSSIA
to la , uttered on various occasions lief that the Jewish chr
I. o, ken review- in the
II
!
ha , been approved by the and promptly forgotten. The ser- derive permanent and •
.robablv l ;
••
he \merit art M.
i •• .
that
he
an Wont- I
vices art. brief, traditional, in Eng benefits from his prayers
lish and Hebrew on corresponding prayers should teach him '
P...
.
!Eng to the report which pages, simplified and paraphrased, good Jew, a good Astern , '
' • ' • . In with .1 • ,
tt mg
. reliable that Cowman 116 . - With t.rin. :nal pray, rs which aini good human la ing.
'", .•-• • ' • !
-A ,
ltroidert
, •
.
x-rien to the League of Nation's to in, abate in the Jewish child a
I WI.u!,1 l . .
•'
Arm.
The prayer lutok gontai•
he (lea-per appreciation for the Jewbh ices for the Sal•Itath and •. .lea ,-
Council he.
,
f the rank , of

• t•f the .1 , to •. •••
ta • Ito— a
,I
r..- utuleirtitken in g
o (Italie. for mac..

h.

name a cove e

r

BOOK

a,hievernent ,
in Palestine, the i-h Holy Day, and, in 0
pre -sung need for world co-opera- special prayers ft.r the r
Don and p0 , 11 - 1 - , the evoking of re. holidays tu , h as Armi•t •
ligiou, sentiments appropriate to Washington's Birthday, I. • •n'
Jewinh youth in Anwrira, the mak- Birthday and Independent • lay
ing more articulate and meaning- There are also detailed suv't
a Junior :•••:• ,-4:.
fun Amrnean patriotism, economic for
and s,n tad iuu-tics and other ideal- ,
i-ale objet, iron.
-31'11
"The Junior Prayer Book," like should dbe .uhslinni - by
i y alI P rtahYo.. r f .

"The Progressive School," which weighed down with the pr '!em'
has also recently been issued by the not only of keeping the , J.' .
United Synagogue of America, is youth in the synagogue, bat al!".
an attempt to get away from the of employing the synagogue ae
antiquated idea of writing religious) mean,' of character building.

d

