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December 22, 1933 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1933-12-22

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litEVerRorriensnetRoxiaz

and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE

11y;1111S•al

LiEperKorriLwisit (ARON ICLE

o: I

° fru., ,/

A

• 0..

,

'M..h

f

Mar, h l,

Inc



Cable Address: Chronicle

endol 01- 11,e

..$3.00 Per Year

, • r rterse



In

and new

el,. r

, •f ate paper

ih

61:0,

,



, •

Fast o t Ihi

Penla•,

Prophet

of the Law
1; 27
41.J
:-
! • •
.t the 1.41W.

,„111 ■ 101,

ti 1 ,•1111

t

'

• •



ai



I

I

Tebeth 4, 5694

December 22, 1933

The Refugee Problem.
The deliberations at the ses-ions of the
refugee relief body of the League of Na-

SW it Zeliand, prt,vide

tions, at Lausanne,
cause fo r serious concern over the future
status of German Jewry.
The situation is serious enough for the
60,000 refugees who have fled from Ger-
many. But what makes the obligations of
the Jewish people much more pressing is
the prediction that many tens of thousands
will be compelled to leave Germany in the
near future.
Even if we are to forget about th- occur-
rences in Germany, and the tragt•dy which
accompanies the degradation of Jews to
the status of second or third class citizens
under the rule of the Nazis, the plight of
the refugees ohst concern us seriously.
Furthermore, the status of the Jewish chil-
dren in Germany is a matter of grave con-

the cry 1 heard

wherever I went, a t fruit underlying every
conversation.
h11,1411111 !Wilt s a name dis-
"A WOM1111
tinguislied in Ilavarlan . .lewry for generations
said to iii : 'trait time imitienierial we Jews
have prided ourselves on the fact that we man-
aged to keep liar fUillilieS 1111,1, To have our
children near its was our greatest. passion.
And lm, OUI. sole thought is centered en what
countries there are to which we might send our
It no longer matters it lieu coun-
children.
try, just AO we may save them the humiliations,
„pi er
the agonies and cruelties to which we
ildre
people are resigning ourselves. Our childrenn

would never become a burden 1111 1.111 1 111 . Charm-
TheY have
ties.
They are well educated.
character. They possess family .
"And others said, in sum, this: 'We %Valli 10
remove our children from an atniespliere which
gives them a frightful sen-e of inierioritY.
which is so destructive to their morale. We are
not asking anything for ourselves. We olilutr
people will (tutu 30 remain here end suffer.
. '
But our children . .

• r •

, •



culties placed 111 the path of the Jewish
builders of Zion?
Is it possible that snore JeW'S Ili fit fault':
l0111l111111111 in these
Sonic time ago
columns on the activities of th e dir ec t o r o f
Palestine's Department if Immigration. and
took occasion to criticize him for the man-
ner in which he placed obstacles in the
road that is being trodden by Jews on then'
V . ay to progress in Zion. l'Aidently the
uncomplimentarj things that have been
said about Mr. Ilyantson are not all un-
justified. judging liy an attack that was
recently launched upon him by a reader in
the Palestine Post. To quote this communi-
cation:

once a 1,111
lived
Jeru•
salon who i*a: eery feed .,f hi. wife
Ile
praised her to hi- f.iaiols. h,. was ii., tired
extolling. her q u ill •1.-ill 1 in los
she
She we ,
lacked rib it .!
't !t• •
,
perfect.
day oh. 11 l'•• fill in
love with a
.• in
P.- %Oft : a
!. pl.,
o -nem a s far a- the
Ind Bien there , 1111 , .. 11
.' ..•. In t ,
tIi.
I. , 1 ,. -
111'
1 • ■ 1
.!..
;' •
11..
l'.1 fault

There is. 1.



...I

he

Ugly Duches-.
• • • it genii when
I was t11n.lt ti i
I read the fout-coluit.. the "New
Jerusalem" in "The Neal FA ; and India" writ-
ten by that everwerked official, Mr. Albert
Montefiore II twin. director the Depart-
ment of Immigration. He was o nce a Zi on i st,
but now the Palestine Government is his love,
and he cannot Tint enough to say in dispraise
of his former 5wevtlwart. If the ZIoni,ts do
anything, the work must be had. If they Fay
any-thing,us hat they sey must he incorrect.
If they build anything their buildings must be
ugly. This conscious or unconscious Max on
the part of Mr. Albert M. Ilyarnsen is to be
found in the article I have just mentioned.
He praises everything. He praises Rat
Bey, he praises the Edison, he praises the po-
lice who have improved the buses (!), he
praises Princess Mary Avenue. he praises the
Clock Tower—his path is strewn with praises.

But when
c..ines to Zionist buildings or
buildings occupied by
then the tale is
far other. For example, Mr. A. Montefiore

i IS S mu naldn,

is an in-
opt 'mist.

,

1'11,4

,-

sio fmu

III

ilS

p

It

.111.1•

C1•1111•1' l•111110W-

11,11 To lend the periphery nor

I

1,11"W

organizaticils cannot 11 , iffil" . .v -
visell, ttt Ica,I Mot under Olt' ettn-

eur di., ish geography.
1,rganiz,it mmmv. gioNs

,11111e-

body who is busy :it Harbin or

the

way, the Zionist party to which

I humbly belong, tried to *ug.
gest, at the last Zionist e uirigress,

t in

for the Zionist ‘1'orlil

Orizanizatitin to adept that nen,-
went Its 11111. 14 its paramount
fain t ions: but I 11,11 not quote
II
got. It
leeks as if Stolle. Other
lilt ntmlti a i-lit m-rlumm I a peri-
phery already
will

mac 1111, t. Ii 11•A Anti ltss11111O 01:11

Thar,. is only

f

—lid fact

-1111alion,

1 • 1111'11

ri,
' 1.1
.! .1. .1 .

; s 1,


•,,.

ll,:11

til.

■ •

.

Hifi, t„
,It
it,
1,1,1.0111y, but

1 .

ihm. iii

t,



'

'

entitle! ; •

emote!,

11 ,, l1-1,

, •

. And

ican-bip: the
tottle unless

. in ".I.
1,11 t'

TIIT ishol.

l•


if I iii-re
m ten suggest

'.

him "h 0 Y-



the boss I
t

.------



• -

r

,1111l to

tile

r'

• •

••



'

.011. e for boycott
lc.I ic.11 , .1,1 ought to lisik and to

while Arabs destroy. \Viten Jews desire
to gain a Point with the l'alestine ).Tovern-
IIIVIlt, they talk. argue, write their griev-
alliTS. Cut the Arabs pillage, riot, destroy.
J ews \t - ill c ontinue to follow an ethical,
civilized and humane method in battling
for their rights. And the Arabs must
It entually learn from tilts imithial find give
1111 their own destructive Policies.
It is unfortunate that there should have
1)1.01 slut exception to the Jewish rule in the
demonstration s t a ged by th e lIevisionet
ill II Aviv on Ilut the severest

lung



1r

rll .t

1111.11i,

••

1

Is

I. the l• , • of tli•

clization

It

'her

. .. .

. .



1

.

'

I.

'



'

I



'

I I

• .

h

Ti,, ,

• .,• iinly in

a.,

,

J.

• .'.11

- •
:al
..• dis.
iincortitriCe Of the f um t
hargit
The Palestine police are the lee , Ai is of the
ueuntry's set.urny and are often called on to
fotni unpopular acts when enfoleIng law
and order. But any attempt to tetallate
a,tainst indisblual •on.tables g, n o t worthy
of a civilized community and must it sus 1T1
the present ease. with the ,trongio:1 condetnna•
ti, n mv all reSpen-Ible .lewi-h circles.

the Jel,1•11 1. 1111111111111tY t'11 1 1 11.1

We shall continue to battle for our nat-
ural rights in Palestine. But our battles
will he conducted by just means and in a
dignified manner. as befits a people of
peace and social justice. Riots and unlaw-
ful demonstrations will not be condoned in

Jewry.

• ...;

• dri-t

'

I , - Ii mis tv tI t tails wert .

'

.
IL
1.... s

I .1

I; •:.!

t

,.
!I

'

:he

X. , 113-

.1
.1
and in
.•
I.
...
...mmittee, a--
- -• o..1 It • m
1-10 rn m111!'. Ja-
'sit
o ter tif the .1
i id. Land
T•legrapi • Izt my, and Edward
A. Nortrat ..mber of the Amen
an }.,on. mmittes. for Pal-
patine.
The bread outlines of the pr'
letwill be to win the concurrence
of alarge sport organizations wuch
as the Amateur Athletic Union of
the United States and the Ameri.i

n, - .111111

ilIhInlimIll .atilt I alt
14 take Einstein, as anothei

St gl

a mat Mona! [Ilan, musician, philosopher. and I tit,
in \- ented a ritindier of things.







ONE THING HELPS ANOTHER

I den't think the explanation fee all of OH.
- • • r
1111 . 11 any or were exceptiewilly greilt 111i1111,, ,
I should imagine that if a
Ilt , something to that.
mind has acquired some success some mastery in .-
I. • •
much simpler for him to delve into another Ihi'tlb
that in in:1st-ring one

lmitt ;11,0
il S ,, v.,v1Ilial In
of relationship het \.:•con all fields.
The great de.ve eeie , , says \Viiitelleatl, h a le been
by 'nen who knew a little about many. t111111..i ...
0111` Of the troubles about knowing too much In •••
e,
field is that in such an intensive study we are apt to
accumulated errors, us %Veil as the accumulated 1.1,, •

happens that a fresh mind, coming ft.
Awl
is apt to pereeive the new truth much quicker than Is
strung by all of the inherited errors.




!

JOB OPEN
At a time m hen Ill i 't l itSl l much untimpleynietd. d 1,111 P. A

ft.eshing noes Ill many !lett there are still some wool 1 , '--'t''- ii I.!
tiling, I understand that (hi' Anierican Jttwish Cis,.
and is ready to pay $ttAitio I , minue
for all executive sccretai
..
The ii, uirt meats are: That the person lie tal..
c
,.
1,..:11,111.•,.. -marl, it gaud speaker, alit, to go out and
.• 1..
dollar- to brill Hitler, and able, after tht. million
II so that Hitler is. rightly matte ',lotto.

one

1111111 W110 1114;11t fill his

111.1111ili , 1!1 I

he i' iii 111, Whitt , House and is vetting mare than

Still, tipsy,. may he anothim loose --and it iiic



1..



THE TEMPERANCE PROBLEM

Kansas Senator who Nan:irked •

I think it in. :v.,



I

1 ,

:HM1,1111111( he lope :11,1, hill the lelIlle•lallve 1 , 1 „i , l ,

I

, t•

- , 1

,

ill 0 0 •

I

lool:07.5, my own solution. Awl It o •
it lei nuttle mandatory that liet.i, i
- .al'_-
s mid that he make it "liertiella“ I
k required of the pious Jew no
11 lilt ' . - I
that if 11111. 111111 Ill
o i ■ ouldn't take more than thrit

1





I lit. dig

"

,, I



, 11 ■ •

th e

BRAZIL'S FIRST JEWISH LAWMAKER
STAUNCHLY DEFENDS JEWISH

RIGHTS

hitt,'

n

stubs',

By ISAAC RAIZMAN
• One look at Sally Rand
with fans I reminds us faintly of
Itelmeca.
That's a geed one about Nlervyn
s
11 I t 1 1 t Ill. re
t i ll'(iT ii. ii: 11 as - t
LeRoy . . . he's having' his heels
\
1:, l..1
•1111 any te..-'
built up the request of the
it .i, t,.
mm
was their im
he
haute niissus
-o 's he
! • ! Jou,' to ti—till . •
Dr. IL • 1
I simile!. than she
,
I i, I
:• ,
. •.
IN, lie.
hold
I
• , olony of II,-

By ARTHUR SE1 I I I

1.afer, it
NVII, tilt
.1.'01,1 ill 1'11 . .1'1 , 1 . 11i the .11 . W , , 11 , 0

by a

i•11
elevinfl by a

%VII*

Tm ,,

piirty, lint
,
lepreot •ctiies of the

. I

41,1

Ile

111.1r • • le

, 1

ho , t , .11 '.•
Ill'aZ11.
1 - .
NI.%1.1•1111•!.
lit

A here regai

Lafer

,I





I

.1 '
lila/ II.

,t1..

'1 n. oealthiest.

1.,,

it,.,

5510

., , 111 , 111 ,
11 , •

1

1%11110_

vit's and ten ,
hit Iona! .hou 11
1111.
active in the Jewish visits them often.
umminm I- and still defends the
In I 929 DI 1
.1' ' l • r
1
1 wiis
r

1 1 '
,, f his people whenever first didegato t,
1
.11,1
f huild •
Nations and 2.
in l',.
• ,
Before lb'. lafer left for the in a number of
.. 1 the great
. I . : i —evil! , i • ,.
1.• • .... Illymic. ,:tii..
the pion- constitutional assembly, which tintt t•cononlic and t.
, ..
, i' II, imaellir /It 1111 11 ttl Us e fer the first time since 193 0, when as number of yes ,
the revolutionaries overthrew the associated with '
• • '•
• ts effort sin that many ol.-
con-titutomal president and hi , la•ague, which
...tild he hurdled.
111)11111.
the deputy talked spread campaign' !
I
1 .1,1iuni had te he built in
l',, • 17• ■
Players had f 0 he *e1,1 Asith a represe nbitive of the Jew- Mien tif the
ish
Teliataphic
Agency ibout
the the Brazilian pe i
s
,
.
1
,
..
,,,,,,
111.Zeil
I .1
f r-
I.. • I , '
I ., . fo r line Ili•W con-1,/tlf 1. , 11 and as bearinr • 'zed and was the 1 r
had
upon
hauler,
affecting
the
Jewish
ous industrial and ,
/....' '' ' I, ' • m . ' ' .. .1 ad m . Funds
residents of Brazil.
ganizations and o ,
i• •onized to be rim -, •:
,, , „.1,.„
:.:.,5 ..., .,. , ,. ..„,1,.,1 f rom m e ,ip
I/r. Later, who is himself a mem- in the foundinr ..!
,
,„ , • .
„ .., . - ... ■ , tho al h- tier if the younger.11'WiSh renera. ian 1 n il u s t r I a I .
,,1 . -----------
, ,,,,,,beg ,,t• tion to have rrown up here, is
hi h I
Ai. t ..
. „ i t,. "try optimistic shout the future t"he
....e indl'UnsYtr'it'i ' l ' I''Ii

I3r11/ /1.

.tk to

1111%111.

1 . '

'11 11 1 114

, •ii

...:..,:



'

1' .'i !In,. of the Jew's in Brazil.
Ile ritual
t- „re. the liberal tendencies of the pro- ish h t.).ri .rjit8.sr.'r llise cliIi.I,' •
.‘
li.,, us t,, ,d,.,
..
...: ,,, 5
I
5 ...
,..,
, , ,
the jecp,d constitution
a , pr011f if r h,ir,uh itschifulobl is"lelfi luti , s
i , • ,
I
%., . m
a this, 1 . 11U merntinv enthusiastically
-
•• ■ ,:tr? What nth at ' ..- - .... ..'. - „...t..,
-and cariouspedits of the pr o je e t, holdinr. children
Ii membership?
11w stadium .•• . . H , k.,.., .. - ,
the separation of if age to stutlY 1. ''
''. i• • alas. Unien have its dunes of o . Holy I .. . • s. i in- ameng th , '
I ! •
II ith pi.; ,- t . - . om. church al,: ' dc; equality for all was modilledt I ll. '
struocil.
etipsru ,,f ieligions; ..., • P tom regarding re- threat of liquida -,
In a spo 'al nie“age to the Alm, plebs! anti with •,..
at
boll betil te - the Der,ster trial Britain sub:, A - .i. represent- llrbills in-1 c 'ion in the schools: over all the Jewist
11,4.1. L. mien. July I. Lord Mel- s .d b y it !„,:,, „ ..,: ...,.: ,,,,,;, t h, freed , ., • - 1 ning religious mar- state of Na'' P.i l
,,,,,,
Hat: , ,. ,•
.., - . :
V.
wuht,tbn, aaminuairntbu, ti ,-
,•liett stated that t he two points first Kr, .m•
, . (1 I ad
r. h
Tf,, , .• `, 1 .iencies are an inhe
whloh are "highly indieative of went iii,
•i . -lit that ii ent part of the old tradition, of Later aided in l'• .
the spird and purpose tif the move-
Mr. le .... . :
fluent" a, the success the Jews it he. n,11 , , •- - ,,,, A , , . mea a refl. Brazil, from which the Brazilian a special cone,.
have attained in creating a national ter f. 'rInlet natielial work among People will not depart. Dr. Later written by Pro' , '
hi imeland and the "medieval per- the Maccaltee athletes.
does not doubt that the projected about Jews. TA.
secution off Jewry which has flan.
In an intemiew he discussed pro- constitution will shortly become ceeded in silenell -
'
ed out in Germany.."
jetted plans fiir the second Olym- the law of the land.
. wg- ah iant ,etirs3. „I„,. -
t, t ti ae n dlea
Ile then went on to say:
pistil to be held in Palestine in
When questioned about the im-
'The redemption '1 Israel must lell. The events U111 1111 . 11.111C sW1111- migration of Jests, tfl Brazil, the iniz
the
intellet . !'
be atettniplished by Israel . ..The nung. cyrling. tenni: : boxing and Jew ish deputy assured the inter- Brazil.
physical side of this task is in wrestling, fencing', football and viewer that a new set of generalDr. Later hope-
--
St.111*. measure n o I, s, important basketball. The final day will be imrnigratian regulations will soon of his work in t---
than the mend and intellectual; devoted to social event.. Maccabee he released and will be very favor- assembly, he will by ' ' ,,,i...1
the
f.pe
and in its determination
physi- organizations throughout the %esprit] able to the Jews. In the present service to the Jew ,-!,
in t*
cal renaissance Jewry has turned have already started training and governmental circ:es there are of Brazil and thus r .";
.
iot
to the Bible, its own history btoik, planning for the event. Judges are many people clear-sighted enough Jews are • positive !ern I :to
fur inepiration."
being trained and the Lelewer to realize. Dr. Later said, that the , growth of the coo .ry natr; ati net ow
From events and personalities
, chool
S for Instructore is to be es- Jews were instrumental in the, are to be given f e
who lived 2;100 years ago and on a ' tablished in Palestine,
progress of Brazil and still are, the land.



tle.

II,. per uhar at inespher
hui t ing. and contrails

.1 dine
ntal

ill

to,t a .

A

t.. '•

1 ,

Agency, ill the form

'1

i

I\

Just plain gie--„I;

di 1

-

of lilt following statement adopted in

.1111lly

Ma rcoreta Hellman, do II gilt er
of a prominent Los Angeles
banker, is breaking into cellu-
loid at $35 a week a s a stock
actress. Her sciaen cognomen
will he Margaret Hallam, and
her first appearance will he in
"Gambling Lady." An cm!),
snit Jonah Garbo, who knows?

r" and nothing to
utzike" except iiorld--hattering
blows unless the Illtoeton i. loet•n-
erly t , infined am! prop..,1 . ,. 11,-
ann.-m1; mum. h then i. I‘ 1110.
will ha‘ e to do, whetia r llmhlmnmtr
er riot \‘',. .i - t, have an uphill
task in liehtinr the Third Reich
tin y , m dot ml i- a Stlee

etindetnnation of their irresponsible action

can, front the Jewish

gel1 , 1•1.1' ,

w

IN THE OLD TIMES

1-

1111.

:11,41 the 11,4 al Chi),

i

11111,'n.m'b 1,1,l111
curate. !lot just funny.

• •

•.

'

1.t•onard., mia

till`

1,1. s i

Those confusing Rosy thea•
tens will he no more . . . the
name Boxy on the Radio City
theater has been adjudicated U.
legal . . Henceforth will he
known as RKO Center. Only the
old Rosy will continue as Rosy
... or Maybe we'd better skip
it.

• ',id

appl y d
can II
fuet, 411111
h i t
11
t11
win ther

,...•

n1 , 1

it

lil lyRoy

• •

shit is Il ■ — ■

,•

111111L

George Gumpul, the
and uimmllim rmrI - rnmfD1110-
Wieck, i- suing her for fees
due him.

WORLD MACCABEE PLANS TO ENLIST
THE JEWISH YOUTH OF AMERICA

1

;WI', 011111Y. 1111V1 1 Illy doubts INhet111 . 1'

Jack of all trades is. of eourse, 11 1111,1..1 . of

1, ,,,nlative

1 - :

r• 1

titicoliers

'

There is, of I-liars i',litort of
can't be much good in any. There is a -1 ,, • .,
which
with it

Inally Calling-

thca

in

construct,

ittelitotig. Jt'WS

s

,„•„

• '1,1111 . 1111111

till.



".1,-1, of all trades"

Doug. Jr., on his return to
cinema town, denies the rumor
that he will become a British
subject, but admits that Holly.
wood is only a temporary stop-
ping place for him now.



-----

- - --

-

lt -11111/'•1111.

JACK OF ALL TRADES

\\t1111 11111.111. his stage debut
at Ili in something called "Ameri-
can Grit."
Adolph Zukor emigrated front
Ilunrary. to America at the are of
I ti . .
sweeper111 a
fur store in Ne \v York . . his ad-
vancement Ii mum hastened financial-
ly by his invention of a patented
fur clasp.

'

11 , -;

.

S

B„, is katzmann, the great Zionist leader, I I ha - . .. , = ,, : ,,, j , ,,,,I.: ,r , ,driget„ , , . „ ,.
of a intuit If many law'.
I
11
or wa',
agriculturalist,
a chemist, and his plan for ii,:,
all
raleSlille 1A . A1•111111 11611 as an ecumenist ids,.
But most picturesque of all of Ear/cumin's cii,
waiter. This, however, was forced upon him by ,,, , ,
,i,t,:iitti„,. , :. , i:,..... a,,,iph, ,,
iii,1,1(. ■ gutl Ill t. i t;opitiet a ,S
Ii.
I i,,, snt ti:tly ini,• ,11, il .al,itst ,iy,,• , i1,11. i. f ,Ci1



[11

ly that the
tny

s

l'alc , lille. W11- ,, , , IIIVIllillg

11110 1110

I 1- nil

'

s

tl - 111•11 N1.1111'.

111 Older tin sI

there c

IlIrt• •

thin)! 1-1 as 111.11 hete:ItIri:ill and II liilliiiiuil 111111

many Il i1 s I.
rik c; and

get at...•'

Ilit

Sl1110I1, Ill. ,

picting Palestine history since
the war.

'mm t i:11Ii .

-

llo , n lit

e

of

Ittl-

l

Lp

task of liasion service.
MATTER OF SALESMANSHII'

the

1.

Saint

The Habima, world - famous
Hebrew troupe, is making a
talking picture in Palestine de

l'ecf

bit.

I

Het.

iiin

ri

that

KATZMANN—WAITER AND SCIENTIST

Jesse Lasky is a California pro-
' duct , . . Was 01„ , of the first. to
. go f tor,
It , \ la`ka
mliii mutt 1111l gold 11.1,11 . . . tins
anion the lied hundred people to

rrIl " A" , 1 "
r:r rrIr r i ri:r1 !, say.
ti., tril ii ii that
....lei many
Cod many

,01110Wilcnv

\VIM( fields did his Mind 1101 penetral c''
hg
Am e ri c a), history, we have ill
ll.:
• ,,r • :ir .
.1,•ir,•,•-..,, ml iimim \kilo cArellell in a

• *

later.

le• sit

1-;141

I In

,,,,iiali,r philosopher, to equip himself for life, i,
:, \ Ar i r al dWiri r 11 1 1 ith r Illit ill] I I Mr ..r .
1 &ICI k 110W he,. • •
worked out, hut it must have hall its points.

A few 1' 111111 the note-book:
Louis Alayee, at the peak of
his success, is only 1g years old.
Sally Eilers' hair is naturally
auburn, not blonde . • . and she is
just past her twenty-lifth surnuttut-
i winters included 1.

Inc 1,111V1ileS, The "efrvi'l," Will

boyeott movement the backing if

Tla.11

"i i.

)111,

"A WINNING FIGHT"

that the best way to give the

tinmittnt I.

of

II:, ..

enc.

To

pet led

11.1111111

1.1)1'1

i 1111.11 - 1'

obey orders coining from London

l'hicago. That is Why, by

t11111'.

. 1. -.

Ali this eets into the statistical
the nitwit' of "ex-
port," and h,ok. like Germany's
gain, is hiltst it actually is Ger-
many's hiss, and loss for t r im cr.
SO 1 - 11t1111 the
Egyptians of old
chi., tinder "exports* . all the lug-
gag!, eat•riet1 away hy the dopart -

takes time to
aceustiou people in WIll'S/INV tO

but SIPWly, 111111 it

and too keep abreast with

e

1. 11111t.,“

tan
at once !effected
11. .
af liernian ex-
mm -
p..t
Tle.o. stcti-to s, by the
wt. are
ii lastly amounts to the
\it At
(mow:Ilion tif capital from Ger-
many; hundreds if not thousand:
of substantial people are jil-t
now removing frail the Tin cml
It, icli's :Aegis their inau.liinery,
thoir I Iml' 111:1(1 . 11111 stouks Or their
11.111,1 m 1 , 11 under the form of
itemufs. timli ml g« ■ ,,ds, in order te
-t.i I t elit here.

I.. II, aVali.

I' ri•ri
CSttlS SU!
dr.. 14 ' ad

Ire

o ,t11/1 , 1

trot gr.

Ill

But 111 Lli'llt•nal, 11 seellls Iro 111,', 11 Won't'
sa mpl, ,1 Heir, easily A,111011S canines.

a ,.

world_ his original tag was Jack
Ktihel,ky.

•lit , r
.-11 ■ 11

"failtirt• -
1111 , 111 , 111

H. I ------_\

, r t h a I 0 t

i7 ( n: S; , i , ti , s si-, h, .ilt
I, 1,:( ir 1:1::: ,g
lali, ,,.- r t - , h ,, : . , i ti : ,I i: m. l I . I, 11, ,, .j
t. n ,,Il 'i . , i ,i1:1,s1r,t, , r I li ir ii l i,N i: ,1 1 i i,,r , 1: 1.1 : . .iNt, I.: ): 1 t is ::1:
it ; ,1 ;b
l i i"l'
,1 u' '1,1,::::,al: i ,l''l

I

1•1111 • 111 lee

,pn the delicate sub
t et all this talk of

Inimal

•ii.

After all, one expects that there should be a .. • .
flow from the rabbinical tield to the theater.
ii,.
intrinsiealb theatricalabout the rabbinate.
I ain I : •

We just ,Ii•a.,veted that when
Javk Benny. iimh, amid ',Teen

11111111M ,
.11 y, m-ilt I..y
Inc 1• 1, ■ ,11 .1:11111g plainly

I '

described mu.. 111(11 . -

all
The to 1. still no

and

espet.uilly in Flaw e
to he
, s
..., they will talk to .you about
1 draft or an advance.
icly far from
ti. mon to pay ,ornpliment,
1.. o- I, is- ;Is 111.y...1i I ..1 s; 011 liii

..ptimistie 111.

11:1i list1

1 -

• LI,,l

1

Loyeott efforts is concern-
ed. l'here is still no leave of any
real uverld-liasion in that respect;
the sairieus oorninittees created
ill several countries for this pur-
pose at•u. tieing their voirk in
perfect watertight ignorance of
eaeli other'. activities, successes,
fm miii
er exiierienceS. There
Etna been fully three different at-
t,topt:. ml 1 1 -1 1111 , 11-/11111.1' -•111111 . kind
three

ditions mf

mimlmt

Iit

CHANGING OCCUPATIONS

Years ago Louis B. Mayer
began his theatrical career by
operating a small theater in
Haverhill, Massachusetts. Believ-
nig that a new attraction would
house business. he prevailed
upon a famous opera star to ap•
pear on the program. An un-
usual occasion ... he would pre-
sent the singer to the alldlenCe
so elated was he that he
. .
forgot himself ... spoke on and
on ... and when it finally was
the star's turn, there was no
time left for her to sing.
«

I,. I,

,J1.11•

The former rabbi of East Orange, N. J., Rabb I
now a 'limiter of the chorus of "Let 'Em Eat Cal., •
Gross abandoned the rabbinate some yea' s Iv'
• .
tin interlude in business. And now to the stage.
.\ nethei equally 1111Vel trantit11111 is that of I11, -
Abraham Feinberg, who now, as Anthony From,.
,,•
p,
times a week for N. IL C.




Wits fOlid I ii Vat.




/I

- - 1111111'rClal

.1

,1'.

al, ,, iv - InvIlti„nnd

• •I.1



In

tof

111lool'It•l •

.1,11

Illleellrell111011

•,,,

.lt: %vs build : thiilu Arabs :',1,titute to mi-

rr 1, 1 111,•11t.

trl

.1.

Tel .%

to11•11, 11 to n

i!1it HZ'...

.11.

------

11 . ..li

A CENTRAL BODY
kir lie It from my intentions
to pay an ■ .•ompliment to

of illegal

llers` tlt

I

I-

The rea,,ori may he that isorIll

t. ,r

.

I,

shit, everything

only

'1 ,

1..

entry, it fails to frown (11)011
similar illegal entries of Arabs.
But aside from this fact, it vvould he
NVeli for those \vimfire S11 all XIMIS ill defend
the poor Arf dis to take into consideration
the great benefits that itre derived by Arabs
front Jewish investments and Jewish efforts
The bulk of Jewish money
In the face of such tragedies. it is (hill-
poured into Palestine flows into the pockets
cult to understand why so many American
Fill'ilwrnittre. Arabs benefit
Jewish communities have failed thus far, " 1 th''
culturally and socially from Jewish inind-
after ten months of Hitler ride, ill p rov ide
grants..
even a minimum of relief for the unfor-
Pl'("'t it this is hi he found in the fol-
tunates--the refugees outside of Germany,
g "InP"rativ' tivws items from Pales-
ll
'
whi
the persecuted within Germany. and a
ch i '. tine, both coming to us from the columns
haven of refuge for German
of the Palestine Post:
dren.
It is certain that Detroit Jews will, be-
The Jewish Class..
The Arab Case.
fore long, be asked for their contributions
toe , statienerY
to the German relief fund. This C01111111111-
items,
IN pewrituir
ity has the traditional reputation for living
, •
I
up to its national and international as well • bons, turi n paper, ink,
confident paste, etc., will be mann
41
i
W e ;re
as its local id& ,gaons.
that %%'hen time arrives for the planned factored in a mete 5 ork-
111,
111 ,

appeal that our people ililer ■ li in sh ■ qo about to be 4 . Stall.
1'
1 1 ,
1.1,1
l'•
lished by a group of
fulfilling their duties.
.
ti

Mr. Hyamson of Palestine.
Who is responsible for sonie of the diffi-

,

-I finance

--

i/1 1 1'.

I 1.11It

rr rr Irk,

11, ,

,le WS VI10111 it suspects

m



1.t• • ,

d

the excessive illegal entry of Arabs into
Palestine, and that while the Palestine goy-

vIi1111. ,

.1.

r • 'I

It teas rightfully pointed out liv spokes-
niell for Jewish Iftbor in Ptilestine that the
' cause of increased Arab unemployment is

in

---- - -

.1 ,

• • liement seem ,
lust
the
, eisiter: in the

,

,,,,1
• •
ti, .•

of those activities of the past few
which niarked the rounding up of
tourists who over - stayed their Ail-

Moto... rant

FINANCE AND CREDIT
.1,t11
of replacing
i
thing mole

if :ill
thuiti
ills-
tit' "nil

;

;.,

,

Sir Arthur (..rvilfell W 1 ' 11 ' 110 1) 0 . High
Commissioner of Palestine, continues to
make concessions to the Arabs. The rea-
sons advanced for his present attitude
toward Jewish demands fur an increased
immigration schedule. and for the cessa-

people, mostly German

1,1

III one

H.mflmm , 1111t I IIs,

I

t

Comparative Cultures in Zion.

i1 . 111111 . 11t luuTsiuul tm

it

1,1

I

lilted time in Zion, is the increasing un-
employment among Arabs.

;

1.11

,

I

Weeks
. ,
ISI1
' ,

,

af-
menthly
• . .11,11: lint]
1 1.ele
is no
, tendency

The

'Jr I I ,anison's case presents a glaring
the manner in which a Flcitish-
official in Palestine has learned to
e ■ eit holier than his superiors in inter-

li011

s I exactly like a commercial
As to the
'.1-ing agency.
,.•
salt. of the busines.,, , to
'don't"--no need for us to
I
the Third Buda itself is
tal.mg care of that, every Berlin
every if any daily.
I ii
.se enough to keep Ull the

n the
Ger man

All'.
now' being l'0111illeied in Pa le>1
Ilyamson certainly has a lot of explain-
ing to do to vindicate himselffor his au-
Dons against t u rd Itttitinle toward Jewish
I mmigrants to Palestine.

cern.
I/r. Jacob Ifillikopf, president of the
National Conference of Jewish Social Sim-
'
vice, who recently returned front a visit
Germany, submitted a report to the Arneri-
can Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, !
in which he relates the following:

"'But our children,'

1101.1.MOOH:- -Did you know
that all the flax Brothers are
of note? Grouch° is a
wizard at the guitar; also plays
the piano, harp and mandolin.
lInt in, who took his name front
his favorite instrument, the harp,
is also no mean pianist, flutist and
trombone player. Chico ... well,
you know how he (. 1111.:**Ils 1110
pion keys . . . and he's g.oil at
the violin cornet and zither, too.
Zepim is an artist with the *1.1xo-
and flute.
phont•, piano, ',Till,
Their mother poured all this mu-
sical education into them with un-
relenting zeal . . They had to
have their leSS011, WIlell1V1 - or Ilof

r

T A

tilt . ling the law to the (lisitth.fintage of hit
fellots .1ti‘vs. Which is evin more tragic
than non-,Itiwish uttfriernIlines-i,
In it statement to an audience of 2,000
1111,11aSSail woolen ill NettYmith, during his
United States, Sir
recent visit in
Herbert Samuel, first High Commissioner
of Palestine, stated that leaders in the
government %cert. - exceedingly
,. vm p a ih e rie " to th e of Palestine's
doors to the Gerntan-Je \visit refugees. l'er-
haps 'Alit. Ilyarnsim will lake the cue and
will himself become soniewhat "synipa-
tlietie" to the historic efforts of his own
people.
In view of the latest occurrences in Pal-
estine, lt. 11vitinsiiirs guilt us mare aggrfl-
N. ated, more serious. Jews wilt be justified

11 I I; :IA 1 in
•t,

NMI
By DAVID SCHWARTz

A RABBI JOINS THE CHORUS

mil. "A. AL Ily , arnson, author of
Rebirthof an AncientPee-
il to his own aesthetic standards.
o h:mt I ..fl1 . to think of a critic who cle- •
!he buildings outsid e the Jaffa Gate
a,ei the outstanding strueture of the
Is it a
• "not very handsome."
•!, ■ • "Ugly Iluchess'?

• oi
imt

p!.

Tidhits (in/

1CopYrIeht. 1913 Jewish Teletrauhle Al•n,* lor

By HELEN ZIGMOND

By VLADIMIR JABOTINSKY

j„ i i ii the next sentence:—
not very handsonie
"Fuld,ii ,. -t . .
builthog ha, 1,0 11 put up by the Jewish Na-

14 Stratford Place, London, W. 1, England

By the-14/ay

Our Film Folk

hut y 1milling?

General Offices and Publication Building
525 Woodward Avenue

Telephone: Cadillac1040

sau•

Jabotinsky Urges New Boycott Strategy

i' l„ad
•ne t ,;.,•'ril'Oist"
k'g
b: s t.h' e first ?nun they have
Them is absolutely nothing about
i,o,ding-
to
strik
e the e)e or to satisfy
ii vi.
the ae•thito nse. Is it mere poverty of
l a n tomei. 'list has led to this description of

and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE

rublished Weekly by The Jewish htona le Publishing Co.,

that, at the Jaffa Gate, ti.
have been replaced liv
afe, )0 1 .1 ..111-.PS

1•S

.

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