TREDLTROWEIVISflaROPIICI4
•
sad THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
74EVEFROITAWIS/1 ORM inr,
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
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.i. rc d 1, e• matter
I
sible Redemption of t 'nail parcels of land 1
through private initiative is not sufficient
for our national program.
-- -
The Jewish National Fund must be
Article Appearing in Das Neue Tagebuch, Published
strengthened, and its purchasing power in-
in
Paris
by German Refugees.
creased. In order that this should 1w ef-
I
festively accomplished, it is imperative that
the atoceraration camps in
The
I,r o at att•ntiotts"
"
this fund should not 1w forgotten when Ia., many, cram•nburg is not the
must fern' up and
1pr . ' I
campaigns for the relief of German Jews word. TVIOSI . at Sonnenburg,
"est, .1 at attention" for ems two
Kislau
and
elsewhere
are
still
hours.
If anyone moves
.
(li
t
are conducted.
Concentration Camp Hell
Dragging Jewish Issue Into Politics.
The Jewish issue has been dragged into
the New York mayoralty campaign.
Resorting to old political practices of
no. Delo t .1•• ■•■ ii i •
. . Mini , rocnonei
buoy no. io. is s,..,,,,, • ■ , —. —. , , 11.r the writers raking up as much damaging evidence as
-
to character and policies against opposi-
Sabbath Readings of the 1.,W.
tion candidates, the opponents of Joseph
Pentateuelal ooro'ho ran o, tt 11 32
Pro o losoaii :a Is s, V. McKee, independent candidate for
Tishri 30, 5694 Mayor, revived the charge of anti-Semitism
October 20, 1933
that has been made against him and have
caused the creation of an issue over state-
Suppressing a Riot.
ments McKee made in an article in The
The Palestine gse, r t ails rt 11HI week
Catholic World in May, 1915.
demonstrated that it is l o 's-isie to prevent
The article in question was the subject
bloodshed and rioting, provided the gov- of an issue in the American press at the
ernment is determined to guarantee the time it was written. McKee, then a teacher
peace of the country.
in the DeWitt Clinton High School, called
An attempt to instigate disorders in Jeru- I upon Catholics to take advantage of the
salem failed because the police was pre - 1 educational facilities of the City of New
pared. It is to the credit of the present I York, and deplored the fact that less than
regime in Palestine, under the leadership : 2 5 t per rent of the students in the city's
of Governor Campbell and highis- ' high schools were Christians and more
stoner Wauchope, that law and order is than 75 per cent were Jewish.
being enforced.
One paragraph from McKee's article is
It was perhaps to be expected that being particularly quoted to brand him as
trouble should occur at this time. The an anti-Semite. McKee wrote:
rapid progress that is being made by Jews
The obligations of the orthodox Judaism of
in Palestine, the large influx of new set-
their fathers and mothers prove irksome in the
tlers and the unprecedented •activities made
competition for material advancement and are
soon 'Rio] aside. In all discussions on such
possible by the settlement of large numbers
topics as "Is lying Justifiable?" or "Is Is
of German Jews—these are not to the
Wrong to Cheat?" their words consistently
liking of Arab leaders and agitators, who
show that they recognize no code of morals
and are concerned with no motives higher
are rapidly losing hold of the Arab masses
than those originating from fear of detection
who are benefiting by Jewish colonization.
and consequent loss of money. Surely we
cannot look for ideal results from such ma-
Under weak governments, riots were
terial.
possible. Under strong leadership, during
the terms of office of the late Lord Plumes
Mr. McKee has given the lie to charges
and the present high Commissioner Wau- of anti-Semitism. He maintains that he
chope, disorders are impossible because has criticized only those who abandoned
the country is ruled firmly, with an iron Judiasm, but not Jews and Judaism. He
will and with a determination to assure calls the charges against him "an un-
peace and order for all the inhabitants. founded and scurrilous lie," and states that
Under men like Plumes and Wauchope, he is "filled with loathing and contempt"
Jews have nothing to fear in Palestine.
at the "despicable effort to bring race
prejudice into this campaign." And in re-
National Fund Must Not Be Ignored. ply to an attack by Samuel Untermyer that
Although it reaches us three weeks after his article sounded like a reverberation of
the World Zionist Congress closed its ses- }iitlerism, Mr. McKee said that the late
sions, the resolutions of the Jewish Na- Louis Marshall, law partner of Mr. Unter-
tional Fund Commission of the Congress myer, had become convinced in 1925 that
are of sufficient importance to be given he did not intend to attack the Jews as a
thought and consideration. The resolution race or religion.
This controversy, which is now being
as adopted by the Congress reads:
given liberal space in the New York press,
I. The Zionist Congress calls upon all Zion-
is particularly regrettable at this time,
ist parties, federations and groups, as well as
when Jewry is burdened with such terrific
their members, toi place the work for redemp-
problems. To revive an ancient issue, and
tion of the land in Eretz Israel in the fore-
front of their efforts fur the reconstruction
to pin the charges of anti-Semitism upon
of Palestine. The Congress declares that the
one who denies it is a wrong which may
money collections for the Keren Kayemeth, no
do the Jewish position incalculable harm.
one of the central funds of the Zionist move-
ment, take precedence over every other money
The wrong is all the greater because the
collection, except the Keren Ilayesod, for what-
issue has been created during a political
ever objects. It demands that all parties,
campaign, causing it to smack of selfish-
federations and groups shall respect the tradi-
tional collecting campaigns as well as the
ness.
methods that are a monopoly of the Keren
This controversy, as well as numerous
Kayemeth.
other Jewish issues, serve to convince us
2. The Congress calls upon all Zionists to
insist that in all special camitaigns conducted
again how much We are lacking in leader-
in various countries for the German Jews, at
ship. We miss the powerful voice of the
least one-third of the money collected and
late Louis Marshall, who was great enough
intended for Palestine shall be used for the
acquisition of land in Intestine. It is the duty
not only to intercede in behalf of his peo-
of all Zionists to demand that the lands to be
ple, but also to silence stupid voices when
acquired out of these means shall be pur-
the occasion called for such action.
chased through the Keren Kayemeth and de-
, ' 'I" racer "sty.
clared to he its inviolable property.
3. In order to enable the Keren Kayemeth
to redeem the land at a speedier rate, the
Congress addreases Ow urgent appeal to all
Jewish communities and institutions to trans-
ferto the Jewish National Fund on deposit
endowments and similar funds in their posses-
sion so far as ouch transfer is compatible with
the laws of the country in question.
The
National Fund undertakes full responsibility
for these endowments and for paying interest
on them.
4. The Congress recalls to every Jew the
duty of remembering the Keren Kayemeth in
his last will and testament and calls upon all
rabbis foil Jewish lawyers to co-operate nt
this sense in the interest of the Keren Kaye-
meth.
6. The Congress culls upon all 'Zionists ener-
getically to support the Keren Kayenieth.
which has for years suceessfully served the
reconstruction of Palestine by its insurance
work, in the further development of this or.
tivity and safeguarding its unity.
6. The Congress prorlaims it large collecting
campaign for the founding of a settlement in
the name of Chaim Arlitsotreff. Of th e mo nk,
to be raised by this campaign, one-third shall
be devoted to the purchase of land through
the Keren Kayemet h.
Is Hitler's Fate Sealed?
more frightful. Perhaps the
nearness of Berlin has a "hu-
maiming" effect.
The Cranienburts camp is at
the disused Schering-Kahlbaum
works. The dilapidated machine
rooms have been converted into
dormitories for the prisoners.
They sleep on straw scattered on
the stone thaws and rotten from
the rain that pours in through
the holes in the roof. A large
courtyard and a meadow, enclos-
ed by herbed wire, surround the
buildings. During the night S.
A. guards are posted in the dor-
mitories and on the roofs.
Searchlight , illuminate the whole
place. Flight is imposhsade.
Whoever is shot at Cranienburg
"while trying to escape" has been
murdered.
Various articles of "gymnas-
tic equipment" are erected in the
court at the back, among them a
ditch five yards by seven filled
with refuse. This must be clam-
bered Over by means of a thin,
slippery pole. Whenever an S.
A. man finds time hanging heav-
ily on his hands he erders, the
prisoners to "drill." S. A. men
stand in front if the obstacles
HMI help the prisoners across
with blows and kicks.
A part of the Mum is set out
for Jews who are forbidden to
speak to Christians.
SHUT UP IN LAVATORIES
Near the lavatories, which are
Pelted (tally by over 2,5011 men,
there are five "bookers," that is
confinement cells.
These con-
sist of W. C.'s which have been
hoarded up, and are in total
darkness. Prisoners charged with
"obstinacy" are condemned to
days or weeks in the "bunkers."
Some prisoners have been con-
demned to fourteen days in these
pestiferous dens, without light,
and only allowed a few minute's
freedom for meals.
Up to June first there Were
only about 170 prisoners in
Cranienburg. After that new
hatches came almost every day,
until in August there were 2,10o,
A special group consist of the
Jewish students front the agri-
cultural training college at Wool.
rip. They were raided last May.
'There are JO of them, aged 1.1 to
Is. There are also many pro-
fessional workers-Ludwig levy,
a lawyer from Potsdam; Hans
Rosenthal, ex-mayor of !sicken-
walde; it rabbi of Rathentw and
many more.
WHAT "PHYSICAL CULTURE"
MEANS
At 5:30 a. m. a trumpet call
gives the signal for rising. The
prisoners have to get water for
washing. At it an hour's "drill."
At 7 breakfast—a cup of load
coffee and a piece of dry braid.
At 7:30 the work is given out.
Some are set to clean the boots
of the S. A. guard, clean out their
mans and wash their dirty
crockery. ply 11:30 e verything
must be sptless. A few pris-
oners are ordered to wait on the
officers, and another dozen ant
set to peel potatoes. Another
group does work in the camp,
pulling up grass from between
the stones of the court, removing
all stones from the meadow,
cleaning the lavatories, and srI
on. Beyond that there is no
ether sort of work to do. The
prisoners who it not work stay
in the meadow until it 14•Ours
to an S. A. man to summon them
to "drill." Besides the method
already described, there are two
sorts of "physical culture" In
favor at Cranienburg. One 1-
1
or to. , • not stand straight
enough or collapses through
weakne-s, he is kicked or clouted.
Another type of "physical cul-
ture" has be e n intralucal by
Steno Leader Page, Wt. came
hen• on JIM' firs t its second in
' command. Page gets the prison-
ers to "knees bend" in four naive-
meats, of two minutes each. If
they collapse or fail to raise their
his there are more kicks. This
oft e n gilt., nn for two hours.
NIGHTLY TORTURE
So 12 tie is is dinner, pea soup
it II soup alternately, with
y, soh, a We never had meat.
, oahately—otherwise prison-
, to amid die of unolernoturish-
these who have means are
it ,
al.: , to get a little extra food.
A common form of punishment is
• to forbid prisoners to buy foal
for a certain number of days.
After dinner comes a rest until
2:3o. Then more work is distri-
buted. Those unoccupied must go
' to the courtyard or meadow and
stay then. until an S. A. man
orders them to "drill" or "knaves
bend" again. "Supper" conies at
7, consisting of bread and drip-
ping. Then comes a roll-call,
and at 11 a tattoo° and bed, Every
night prisoners arc taken away
for "examination;" that is, tor-
ture. A prisoner who gees for
examinatittn returns to his straw-
, bed moaning with pain.
Th., otoncentratiotri camp is the
S. A. domain. No authority botth.
eta almut it, no oarial ever takes
node of what happens there. The
(limp is run by S. A. tromp 208
of Berlin. It provides the com-
mander and the guard and raises
the expenses. Prisoners with
1 means are systematically compel.
led to pay for their stay. The
commander presents the bill to
his dependents-1 marks a day.
For those without moans the au-
thorities of the last place they
stayed itt pay 1.50 marks, but
only for prisoners interned by or-
der of the police. In the camps
are thousands arrested without
any order, often without the
knowledge of (ht. police. In Aug-
ust thont, were 70o such prison-
ers in Cranienliurg. Their "up-
keep" is provided by the Berlin
S. A. Ford.
"SHOT WHILE TRYING
TO ESCAPE"
No official or lawyer appears
even when someone "commits
suicide" or is "shot while try-
ing to escape." On the night of
June 28th four persons from
Bernburg—Hans Kramer, Wil-
helm hlunck, Leopold Moses and
Estill Graupner—were shut. The
ether prisoners heard the rattle
of the machine gun fire between
1 a. m. and 2 a. m. Next morn-
ing, at roll-call, they were in-
formed that the four men hard
been "discharged." Towards mid-
day the commander decided to
revise this version and informed
the police briefly that they had
been "shot while trying to es-
cape." The police, without fur-
ther investigation, removal the
bodies. At the evening roll-call
all prisoners were informed that
visits would be banned for seven
weeks, in order not to spread
false rumors, and that they had
only the would-be "fugitives" to
thank.
The commander at Cranien-
burg is Storm-Leader Kruger,
who has the supreme authority.
Ile is an ex-student who failed in
his examination and was unem-
ployed until he succeeded in mak-
ing his was' in the S. A. Now he
rules 2,100 priseno•rs • Next 1•01111,
f
Our Film Folk
By HELEN ZIGMOND
II01.1•YIVOOD.—Eddie Cantor
his prime th e other nigh
as the master-of-ceremonies a
"The Bowery" premiere in Loa
Angeles Iten toilets from Holly
wood where most premieres an
held I. His compliment to Joseph
Schenck and Darryl Zanuek fn
their speed in organizing 20th,
Century and completing and ex-
hibiting their first picture in it
little over three months was
brought about by contrasting their
actions with those of his buss,
Samuel Goldwyn.
When Eddie arrived in Movie-
ville for "Rootlets Scandals," he
said "Hello" to Goldwyn at the
train. Two weeks later, Goldwyn
gave hint an answer. He said
"Hello."
Eoltlie's "Roman Scandals" start-
vol shooting before 211th Century
was organized. 'twentieth Cen-
tury now has four pictures ready,
for release. "Roman Scandals'
is still in production;
wax III
Sylvia, Sidney returned to the
studio and Paramount said
never a word about her walk-
out . . . as we predicted.
In-
teresting, though, her next pic-
ture i s to be "Reunion" . in
more ways than one,
•
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•
Tidbits and
By-the-Way
•
Xszt i
By DAVID SCHWARTZ
(COIntlett. lilt. Jecsh Telegraphic AmeY,
THE LEAGUE AND PALESTINE
It ss.enis to me that the decision of the League of
to
appoint a ceommission to take care of the matter of tlo
from Germany marks a turning point not only in the o iugerr
tsry
of
Jewry but in the history of Palestine.
Alt along we have been asking that the League of Sr
in the work of settling Jews in Palestine, just as it dal
Inoue;
of repatriating the Greeks from Turkey.
Dealing with the Jewish refugees from Germany, tt t• 1,,, ttga
will now have to take up the Palestine question. First. ,
affects the German refugees, but once it has put its hale: 'the
Palestine matter, it is not at all unlikely that it will f,.,'.a with
Polish Jews, etc.
I ant beginning to believe that Sir Herbert Samuel ea. nght
in his prediction that within 30 years the Jewish population " Pales.
tint. will he about 3,000,000, or about the same as that
King
I /grid reigned.
•
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THE GERMAN AGREEMENT
Jacob Delimit: furnishes some interesting light on
_,.tilled
agret•ment of Germany with regard to the withdrawal 1 , 1*
the shape of goods or in exchange for German goods.
Ile points out that the deal was first starlet' long Ian to Hitler
assumed power—and that it was really an effort to g,.•
Prohibition of taking money out of the country which pre sta. and
prevailed not only in Germany, but in many other European ,• Jatories.
The way it started was this Several thousand Goan., S awa
when Gruelling was Chancellor, haul registered with the nolestie e'
Bureau in Germany for emigration to Palestine, but they ware
pre.
vented from going by the fact that the law stopped the Taking of
money out of the country.
It is not a Hitler agreement at all, at least was not ,•,gi ga n y.
And personally I ant entirely in favor of it. In fact, onething
like this will have to be done in various ether Europeite a•a n t rt,
which forbid the reinotval of money from the country.
It does not seem to me to be any violation of the boy,
The
German Jews are merely withdrawing their own money on tile farm
of goods. It is merely a form of liquidation of their owe property,
Mr. Lipsky has pointed out that indeed Ilerzl in his datloonstaat
had elevated some space to this question of "liquidation" and that
the Jewish Colonial Trust was in part created to assist in ill, very
thing.
Ann Ronne'', better known to
her friends in Omaha as Ann Ros-
enblatt, is now writing the title
song for "Alice in Wonderland"
. . . One of her recent hits just
can't he tuned off the radio. It's
•
"Who's Afraid of the Big Had MELAMED AND MUSSOLINI
Wolf?" . . . You've heard one of
Dr. Mt-lamed and 'Mussolini, Why do I put these two names
her songs a lot, too — "Baby's
together, you ask me. I answer, I don't know, but that it sounds
Birthday Party."
•
• •
alright, and who knows but that in the ultimate essenc e of things,
sound may be a just criterion,
One of our Jewish agents took
But really, 1 suppose, I put these two names together because
■ play to three studios in suc-
I can never think of Dr. Mehtmed without thinking at tho• shin s time
cession and each returned it
of someone else. And the reason for that is because of the influence
without comment. Finally the
of Dr. Melarned himself.
fourth story department called
Do you recall the out Reflex which Melamed edited". Never
his attention to the fact that
did Melamed write of one person without lot the same tinte cot/a m ai n,
the third act was missing . . .
him
with
another, There was St. Paul and Trotzky, for instance.
The play is going the rounds
And now we have a new book by hlelarned and it continues in
again now—all intaxt.
• • •
the same tradition. It is a book on Spinoza and it is called "Spinoza
Arthur Tracy hopped in, sang and Buddha."
Si I say: Melanin] and :Mussolini, and though I myself see no
his song for "Mating Time," and
immediately hopped right back points in common between the two names, I am quite sure, if I were
East to keep his vaudeville dates. him and he were me, he would.
•
•
Ile becam e a featured picture
player in one week—most of that LENIN AND SPINOZA
time was :spent in airplanes.
Dr. hlelatned is always an interesting writer, t u rd this hook
no exception. Lenin, hlelani•d writes, was more a follower of Spin-
Crowd, packed every wayside oza than of Karl Marx. Saint l'aul he describes as a sickly, tmilepti,
station across the country to
levantine Jew, the greatest organizer in history; Jesus, a simple
. get a glimpse of SAvia Sidney
villager, a dreamer of the ghetto.
as she sped across the country
"Judaism is the spirit of the desert where man was :Mote. ff'•
. . . That's why so many movie
more intensely his owns personality and the will to live."
people fly these days, we'll bet.
.
The University of Chicago Press is publishing the
• • •
•
•
•
Jackie Cooper spends almost his RESIGNED FROM THE RACE
entire time in "Parolners" playing
I heard this one the other day. A negro applied for aid I'' slur
having the time of his life. Play- Jewish charities.
, ing cowboy and Indians—and get-
"I am very sorry, but we must help our own. Why Mona you
ting paid for it.
apply to the charities fur the aid of colored people?"
"I have resigned from the negro race," said the black fellow.
Here's ■ cute one .
Baby
"Has your resignation been accepted'?" asked the Jewish charity
LeRoy has finally received a role
worker.
that fits him perfectly ... He's
The story is equally good for the Jew. It appears that Mr. Haler
, to be the "Two of Hearts" in
refuses to accept the resignation of many that's who hay,• resigned
, Alice in Wonderland."
horn the Jewish race.
• •
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•
*
Josef von Sternberg has the MORE BOOKS
'largest selection of neckties of
Speaking of books, as I was a couple of paragraphs hack root
•anyone in Cinemalanol.
Ile re-
places dozens at a time—import- I mention that Jacob De Haas's one-volume Jewish encyclmoloa tea
soon be Oat. Some seven hundred pages I believe.
. ing many direct front Paris.
Also out soon: History of Jews, but written from a different
slant for adolescents by Leo Schwartz, former Young Judea leader.
With "Duck Soup" all com-
pleted, the four mad Marxmen
got the idea to include another
sequence, an the laughie went
back into production for a few
days. The new part of the pic-
ture is a deep secret, but we'll
wager it has something to do
with th e "Three Little Pigs."
•
•
•
"The Mad Dog of Europe" will
bark morass the scenes of the coun-
try's theaters and expose Adolf
Hitler in his true light, after all.
(Turn to Next Page)
(Turn to Next Page)
A SAD REFLECTION
I met the other day Barnett .tanner, the English Jewish repot•
sdntative in the House of Commons of the London Whotoohapel,
corresponding to the New York East Side.
And a sad thought came over me: I compared him with some
of our own elected Jewish officials and, it seems to me, he stands
heads and shoulders above therm More genuine mire cultured, better
in every way.
Why is it we American Jews elect such and suches, Nov
when it comes to Jews who are appointed to office, such as some
of the men surrounding Roosevelt, we can make a better -lamina.
But, by and large, our elected oflicials are nothing that ssei want
to write home about.
•
•
•
THE STORY OF A BEARD
Some men wear beards because the Bible says you should wear
one. Some men wear beards the better to hid e a sneak chin. Some
Commenting upon Germany's attempt to
men wear beards just for ordinary ornamentation. I once know an
suppress the rights of minority groups, an
by Charles
woe a
old queer figure at the library of Congresa--a non-Jttw
editorial in the New York Times suggests
beard because he said it was the masculine thing to, do and, more-
.lose
ph
/It
over,
it
was
healthy.
Ile
wrote
an
article
trying
to
Prove
that
beards
the drawing upon English history for a
keep pneumonia germ away.
better lesson in the relations among peo-
•
There are beards and beards—but the strangest beard of all I
ples. The Times suggests that the follow-' EWS AS FARMERS
here are more difficult than yeti ;Wiring his friends the most famous came across the ether day at the Cafe Royal. I saw the man and I
ing sentence from Samuel Taylor Coleridge
A reader sends me this clipping suppose. We are being watched names in the city's development saw the beard and Jacob Fishman, editor of the Jewish al ornine
might have been apposite in the discussion from a Chicago tinily newspaper anti must he careful . Send us ... among these Wile, Andrew ear_ journal, recounted to me the story of that heard. And the story was
appearing in the "Mail Bass:"
a young lady of good appearance negie. who held Judge Cohen in of at beard—not of hygiene, not of esthetics and nut of religihn.
on minority rights at Geneva:
was a beard of revenge.
"M. F.: Can you tell me whether who is very reliable. It is best if high esteem.
• • •
"When i first read that Bonaparte had there ant any farming se•tietris in her Mothers and her father are
We shall call the man Goodkind, because that is not los name.
A. Istorm tromp•rs). She should TOO MUCH CONFUSION
If you have ever been to the Cafe Royal you have seen litt•lkindo
declared that the interest of small states this country where the oomph. art- S.
'Teak
SIMI('
1:tiglish
and
Russian
I
confess
that
there
is
tta,
much
and
you
couldn't help but notice hint. Ile has black gleaming cam
roust always succumb to great ones, I said, 'generally Jewish?"
"ANSWER: There are 4,1110,- fluently and must take the pla c e confusion of stitem•nts as to the and generally he is without hat, and there is something ahem him that
of our agent in the Atmore; She real renditions in Germany to en- makes y o u think that either he is an anarchist or a Yiddish peel
'Thank God! Ile has sealed his fate: from 0u0
Jews in the United States and
And the fact is that he is a Yiddish
et. But let u- ao hark
this moment his fall is certain.'"
2.000,00o of them are in New York should vane (leer on the Bremen able net to sift error from truth.
or the Europa as at hair-dresser, But I am passing along to nay ts his beard, for that is the first thing you will notice al, to' hint.
City.
The rest are scattered. The
Perhaps even more apt illustrations
then
well
send
another
persim
back
readers
without
comment
the
state-
It
is
the
kind
of
beasd
that you would expect to develop in a -.Mot
Jews in this country are not
to Germany on the ship, thus evad- ments made by Ralph D. Illumen. for the growing of the most generous beards.
might have been drawn upon from Jewish ISlturiil people'."
ing the immigration authorities= fetid, for :PI years Editor of the
I have said that this beard was a heard of revenge, but r. TTIO
history. Look at Spain. Witness that
My eorrespendent objects ill that and avoid a cheek-up by Unter-
Daily Express in London, consider- also a beard of sacrifice and a beard of martyrdom.
country's decline with the adoption of j a ws form of answer, Iteli•ving that un- inyttr."
NI as the neat celebrated journa-
am+
Anol the story is this Goodkind is a Yiddish poet and a
• • •
intentionallly the wrong impression
list in England, He is writing in ton per cent Yiddishist.
persecuting and expelling the Jews.
•
has been given to an earnest seek- LATE JUDGE COHEN
the Jewish Daily Bulletin. Draw
Rut past experiences. applied to the pres- er after knotwleslese. In other
And loving Yiddish, he hoped to raise his only begot , '
" tr
I was residing the new hook, your own conclusioms from the fel.
read
treasure it even as he does. When the btoy was five and SI,.
ent political upheavals. need not necessar- instead of the Chicago daily stres- "Melton's hlillions," dealing with lowing:
awn
sing matters such as half the Jews
rise of Andrew W. Mellon' alter
toatj H a n, see m to point ti, at to him for the gems of Yiddish literature. Ile read to him of I,
ily be taken for granted as indicating the are in New York, and all the rest the
Yiddish
poems
--and
he
Mean]
forward
to
the
day
when,
ot.
I.,
aro'
beau :testa, this buno.
oo
hf
the
Nazi
war
against
old, his son would rise and raise high the Yiddish harmer, '
The motivating reason for quoting these approaching fall of Adolf Hitler. Too of it the reply should have (teen
"Judge Thomas ". ■ 1,;.•r,
s -
The German Federal he flit!.
more stettodie in relation to the of Andrew)
Wr1111,0
III
o, of Justice made a cleclara-
resolutions verbatim at this time is the con- m a ny observers of the German scene agree quest ital. Then , ARE theusanil, o1 the courtroom was
One day wilt, .1„ ta h t.• •• La week 'Wettober 5th) at the
The son grew elder and, little by little, the father begs , • -re
sideration that is 110W being given by con'- that the German people are united behind Jewish farmers in this eo,untry anti 0• hen, a well-known Pitt-a-oath Le., as conference of Jurists, in- that a new generation had arisen. whirls knew not ittsee!'
in
certain
sections
there
are
im-
anernoty.
approached
him
with
it
munities throughout the land to the priM- !filler. Most unfortunate of all is the fact
Scriptures tooth] put it—which knew not Joseph and did • , •
portant Jewish-farmer groups. I pe t Inert for a Jewish burial ground. of, •• .na a slowing flown process want to know of him.
jo , aly begun, though great
lems of suffering German Jewry. In con- that Hitler has united the youth of Ger- renit•rnIter that a certain Dr. A.
Amigo hlotlIttn was very notch at-
t•f
having
alrersoly
been
ac-
This t•odoln•ss grew until one day the sell came Intro.. art' ' •
Less.. a resident of Chicagat, wars -''Shed in his work and waht , ti•
ducting campaigns for the alleviation of many in support of his platform.
, • Ijo-hed, there appear sand proclaimed has complete separation and independence ttf
of the most active workers in lo o king up asked Mr. ( ' when
these sufferings, and for the saving of the This is not the time for overconfidence. one
no
hope
of
complete
cessation.
As
for
dish.
Ile didn't like the language, he said. lie would
an organ Itation known as the Jew- hr want•d. rpon learning that it
hundreds of thousands of persecuted Jews We =St be on guard to protect our po s i. ish Agricultural Satiety, whose was 'a 1 , 181'e to bur• .leas' Judea' t h e status quo we MOS( makt. up commerce anil no dealings with it.
our
minds
that
this
ran
never
be
w Si to encourage farm. Mellon answerol 'with pletasure.'"
"A filthy jargon," the eon exclaimed, "a language for II ,
through emigration, considerable import- tion. because even the most impressive ex- program
regained. at least not in the life-
ing einem; the' Jews. And the re•
ished, unkempt. I hate everything Yiddish."
throughout the country
time of this or even the next gen-
ance will lie attached to the Palestinian amides from history must not influence us stilt, were amazing. The nest time ' :II Readers
I need not go into all the details of the heated conver,a•.,' 'hat
to-anise in this young lawyer eration There is only one thing
angle. It is well. therefore, that the fund into believing that Hitler's fate is already the Chicago, newspaper ro•itivl • norms! n• hen, the late .fudge Jo- to say about any modification of ensued except to say that it wound up as follows: The faller -ald .
Such a query it shttuld he rove-ti- ' .toth c• • , h noted throughout Jest-1
which served as the foundation for Jewish sealed.
"You can't stand Yiddish. You can't stand the Yidolish •alteasee-
gated and answered n .`1••
I is t , •11en "grew up"1 Hun Ruthlessness. namely, that a
,
You hate dared even as the very scum of the streets to rt..]
long as the usurpers of Germany
•
national rebirth should not be forgotten.
gently. I shouldn't ' t • •
•,
,
,1 he numla•ro-ol refuse to restore Jewish victims 'sheeny' tongue. I'll tell you what I will do.
No Room for Jewish Fascists.
The mono s 3 go
Without having tht
otoss • t •
When we think in terms of German-
1. full and indisputable right. away (rem it, the closer f will get to it. I sill take in no It: ,
The stinging rebukes given to the Re- manor' at nip•dist, that
paper
in
my
house.
I
will
speak
no
word
of
English.
The 1, . r
7enship,
so
long
will
Jew
y
Jewish settlement in Palestine we must not visionists at the recent Zionisf Congress in hundred thou s and J o ws a r e .1 ,•. • THE JORDAN'S WELCOME
• ;chow the world resort to the will throw nut and I will grow the beardiest of beards. I w:•; he
forget the poor Jews. The wealthy Ger- } '.ague should have served as a warning tans] in turning.
o
methods to combat them." everything you hate. I will be that 'sheeny.' and everyone a
• • •
By P. M. RASKIN
o • sou }MV• the story a- see—that 'sheeny' is your father.
man Jews somehow will take care of them- to Jewish reactionaries that t h ere is no
Ila-ha-ha. I will smile. a- Y"°
"HERB HOG"
, t
I'd ,- keenest journal- will he eaten up by the disgrace."
selves when the time and need arrives for room for Fascists in Jewish life.
,
Gast morning. Friend. of
ist•nt Iso
• , - •
And
now for years, the beard has grown into the broi•
their emigration. It is the poor Jews we
• •
•
/••
Nevertheless. delegates at the confer- New G, romny' That
beard of the beartly East Side.
the t ra.mosation
.•
DEDICATED
TO
LUNAZI
must think of, and poor Jews cannot be slice held in Warsaw of the all-Polish Brith !hi Lola shoo init. in •
And the ;met patiently carries his martyrdom.
I Is.e he, n
f• •t oleo' without
settled in Palestine unless the Jewish peo- Trumpeldor conference. the Revisionist th,
•
•
•
But if ' •
'ye th .
.n that hash
pie possesses the soil of Palestine.
I.
drt•n
youth movement, were dressed in brown roans -sty systean
igheut the THE QUESTION OF EXERCISE
the
prior b , .•
•
-h. ult1 Itke to see science make a thorough study of tat •,'•
rin
p t
ri,,
„ • st, tither
Na
It is here that the Jewish National Fund shirts. The more symbol of the brown
pa p-
lotn 1.( exercise. For, obviously, Oa re is much that 1, et -
steps in to demand the preferred interest shirt. which stands for Nazi-ism in Ger-
.•
I I Inc
.
oast
eel, I y
t•koatase whoeh dtte , not appear to la
t
•
I
V.I. In view
of our people. If Palestine is to be the many. should have sicHed these young
, it asep r,,ttn , even when sitting, seems to be e st to
h nt itt lhhi,,,g,,r,,,,,,,e
• ri
.1... flue
than
type.
Jewish homeland, and if considerable num- militaristically inclined Zionists si doff
investigate
"
-• fi .r
.•
I
imaisine that all thinking and even al worrying--whio 1 -
hers of oppressed Jews are to be saved such clothes.
th e
ant ofmak.
a twrv•rted form of thinking is physical e-ereise of a natuo
ae
I.
•I
o
t
o'
,
1.
1;
•
••
.
1
•
within this Jewish cradieland. its soil must
But they have not learned the le—on ail-
i • t_ftu
l,orn, e iwf
smut ,1 see that your lowly or parte of it s e go s' -
of 'i f ,
1 ,
are drat, •
become Jewish. Without the Jewish Na- ministered to them at Prague. Therefore
ate as
a'
• ing to IS
1.1 f
mrcol
tional Fund such acquisition of Palestinian I they should be reminded again that there
lent Nth..
m
da :sten oar, r lake Ida,•• a- tat
, at it exists taday is g,ten Mr. Hit- right,, 1 11. 1. ':-Ir'hi als11'nfuotfuree." nTaI nte a'rell'Id'atam
SieP le errht, 211 1 ;
dt "Consider
in. setae o, ,, -r•tsed Pod.,
y ore ot'ai
land through, lawful purchases is impos- is no room for Fascists in Jewish life.
ly as you de-Ire since Confht
vales •hd urea hie levered rues.
I per a severe headache.
sluggard," but rather, "Consider the sluggard, thou ant, and be w• , •
RANDOM THOUGHTS
,
"
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9