AtEVerRorrikwunetRomax
■ and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
El ROrrjEWIMI (ARON ICLE
rffE LL_
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
Publisdied Weekly by The Jewish c hronale Publishin g C. Inc.
Entered as Seeond.ela.o. matter March 1. 1918, at the Prat-
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Sabbath Readies. of the Law
47:2$.50:203
Pentateusted
I Is as 2:1.12
Prophases! p ,•,
December 29, 1933
Tebeth 11, 5694
up land from the fellaheen, thus net only
making them landless but, by buying their
water right., depriving them also of a living?
....rant Arabs were bribed by
t,
the •
to "demonstrate?"
,. Setter than cure, and it is net
• 1i. 11 1 government, forces should
era , I. •
,suble s crop up, the cause of
sa be eradicated.
,
sat is that the trouble-makers
, • of the benevolence of the
tals
Brit id
di•; but there is a limit to pa-
.ssarance. The good of Pales-
an end b e put to an larder-
,. Inch places the whole well-
, entry at the mercy of a few-
tionaries who make their living
I. agitators by merely destructive
- .•10e incapable of any construe
or policy.
he Worst feature of all is that
are receiving official salaries.
on that should he dune is to see to
, of them acting against the govern-
• •.•11,1 at Once cease to receiv e such
.
.Herr a Jew nor an Arab, but I belong
mall band of British residents who
title interests of Palestine at heart.
Injustice in Palestine.
Pecause Palestine is the only country
Thousands of Jewish tourists in Pales- which provides the possibilities for the set-
tine, having found opportunities for in-
vestments there, had decided to make
their home in Israel's cradleland. By es-
tablishing themselves in the holy Land,
which is supposed to be rebuilt as the Jew-
ish National Home, they brought prosper-
ity to the entire land, The industrial and
agricultural projects they have financed
have created employment opportunities for
Jews and Arabs. They have enriched the
land.
But the progress for which they are di-
rectly responsible appears not to be to the
liking of the liritish authorities. A tourist
hunt has been instituted, and in cruel and
stupid fashion suspects have been rounded
up, justly or unjustly, and many are threat-
ened with deportation.
What makes this "hunt" doubly unjust
is the fact that Arabs, who have come to
Palestine from Transjordania, Syria and
other Arabic countries, in the tens of thou-
sands, remain unmolested. But Jews are
singled out for prosecutions.
A recent issue of the Palestine Post con-
tains an interesting communication from a
Don-Jew who bitterly assails the new Brit-
ish policy and who points out that "the
blind cannot lead the blind ;" that the Jew-
ish contributions are being ignored and
that without them Palestine would remain
a desert. To quote this interesting state-
ment:
It is high time someone spoke straight out
and opened the eyes of the Arab leaders and
of their followers.
The biggest asset of Palestine i, its tourist
business and thousands upon thousands of the
Arab population depend upon it, directly and
indirectly, for their living. These are the
boatmen and porters at Haifa and Jaffa, the
customs employes, the railway porters, engine
drivers, guards, taxi drivers. guides, hotel
staffs, the growers of fruits and vegetables, the
shopkeepers, the guardians of the sacred
shrines—in fact there is, when one considers
all the ramifications, scarcely a single class,
with the exception of the government officials,
which does not in some way benefit from it.
Yet the self-appointed Arab spokesmen,
without any popular ballot to justify their be-
ing the arbiters of the interests of the Arab
population, are simply killing the goose which
lays the golden egg.
They are preventing tourists mining to Pal-
estine. Every time political trouble breaks out
and lives are lost, the press of the whole
world gives us great prominence, and the re-
sult is that, literally, thousands of would-be
visitors to Palestine are discouraged front
coming here.
The yearly loss to Palestine by this suicidal
policy must run into seven figures, nearly all
of which would otherwise go eventually into
the pockets of t he Arabs, down to the lowest
class, for money, like water, tends to find its
own level.
But unfortunately, for fear of bodily in-
jury, to put it mildly, none of the thousands of
Arabs who live on the tourist business dare
protest to these foolish short-sighted "leaders."
Surely it is not beyond the bounds of possi-
bility for .11, not merely the big agencies, who
are directly interested in seeing more and
more tourists come to Palestine, to form a
league or union of "Tourist Workers" which
would he so strong that it could protect its
members from sinister pressure and eventually
take charge of the true interests of their fellow
members of the league.
It would have to be done in secrecy at the
beginning, otherwise the present ringleaders
would leave no stone unturned to try and stifle
the movement at its birth, both by misrepre-
sentation in the reactionary press controlled by
those influences, and even by direct action.
The government itself speeds money on ad-
vertising for tourkt• t.. come to Paleaos
but unless it takes s. ss eery drastic step
stop, once and fee . . tI., ..•
artificial unrest ale. L.
10 simply wastin• a ,
Th e gilVerliti;i• II' .
.•. 111t. 1•Ight
line in deportiii.- • ,
throe, and
now there is peak,. ;t1• ■ I
It :01.1 111• , 1 . 1.• tauress
go there.
My sympathies are en, ,e
with the fella•
been and the 1.111loh ot'.
\ • 1
rectly and indirectly s. •
,end
it is largely this chi— ... •
witting tools of the ta• ..•
can had( after th. ,•• ,
sa •
effendi, but it is art
is inarticulate.
With a league ouch a• I
classes would ta, able .
.t sat,'
heard, and from what I
directly from them it %,., 1 ,
•'
that they
are very dissatisfied with • .
the trouble
makers are behaving.
If permanent peace c..s.
o• secured to Pal-
estine, and the hest a as - - ems Li he that
adopted by the got eraser I. of Cyprus, the
cost of governing the vouni, y would be enor-
mously reducer!, apart from the innumerable
other benefits which would also accrue.
Suppose that the British and the Jews left
Palestine —what would the Arab population
live on? Only a relatively few pilgrims would
come here and thousands upon thousands o f
Arabs who depend upon tourists for a living
would starve unless they themselves became
agriculturists---and who in going to teach
On the other hand, are they, by na-
them?
ture, a manufacturing nation and have they
the technical skill? Could they. for example.
build and run an hotel such as the King David.
or have they enough knowledge and capital
to conceive, build and run such an undertaking
as the Palestine Electric Power Corporation,
which is supplying cheaper and cheaper electric
light and power so many Arab busines•es.
From a careful study I have very iltfini'dly
come to the conclusion that at all the in linen.
*of money that the Jews have put int.,
tine, at least 75 per cent ha- eventually found
its way into the pockets of the Arabs.
As for landless Arabs, there has been n re
nonsense talked and written about tin- sub'
jest than any other topic. Who ja the agent
• who sold most of the Arab land to the Jews?
Row many Arab capitalists today are buying
tlement of .1,- \k:: in large numbers, this sub-
ject assumes sufficient importance to jus-
tify its being given a place of priority on
the agenda of Jewish discussions of major
Jewish problems. It must be remembered
that there has been misrepresentation; that
the Jewish contributions have been be-
littled; that there has been exaggeration
of Arab claims and underestimation of
Jewish demands.
Arab leaders are doing a lot of shouting.
If they were to succeed, their efforts would
first strike at the Arab r asses in whose
name they purport to speak, but who are
the first to benefit from Jewish investments.
Not only has Jewish money poured into the
pockets of Arabs, but in instances where
Arabs have benefited by funds supplied by
the government for relief, educational or
reconstruction efforts, such allocation of
funds was made available by the fact that
Jewish enterprises have made it possible
for heavy taxes to swell the surplus in the
treasury of the Palestine government.
A grave injustice marks the present pol-
icy of the Palestine government. Jewish
communities throughout the world, under
the leadership of the Palestinian commun-
ity, are justified in demanding a change in
policy. We are creating a new life in Pal-
!
estine, not at the expense of Arabs or Brit-
ish, but through Jewish efforts and with
Jewish means. .Naturally, Jewry will not
rest until justice is restored, and until we
are in position to redeem and rebuild Pal.
estine in a spirit of justice.
Evolution of Anti Semitism.
-
Is anti-Semitism becoming more ruthless,
and is the position of our people in greater
danger today than it was half a century
ago?
Not so long ago this question would have
been considered ridiculous. We had taken
it for granted that conditions had improved,
that mankind was becoming better and
more human, that the millenium was just
around the corner.
But what are the actual facts?
Letthe following comparative state-
ments speak for themselves.
In 1880: Hofprediger
Stocker in "Da, Mod-
erne Judentum in
Deutschland:"
"The Jewish ques-
tion culminates for me
in the question wheth-
er the has who live
/tinting us will learn to
participate ill
t h e
whole German waste,
even in the hard, bitter
work of handicrafts,
manufacture, agricul-
ture. More we shall
not demand f ram
them."
November, 1933: The
Landpoist of Munich.
organ of the National
Socialist Landesbund:
"Jews must not think
of adjusting themselves
by becoming I a n (I -
workers on German
soil, on the lines of the
plans discus- , ,I by the
German -Jewish Con-
structive
Relief and
Aid Organization.
It
will be better for the
Jews if they give up
their plan of settling
on German soil, and
instead clear out of
Germany altogether.
German sail is for Ger-
mans only, and any at-
tempt by Jews to Re-
quire German land car
only be regarded as an
act of Jewish provaca-
lion."
In 1880 they blamed us for not being a
part of the agrarian and proletarian class;
in 1933 they prohibit Jewish participation
in trades and agriculture. In ISSO they
blamed us for not assimilating; today they
dig open the graves of Jewish grand-
mot hk.rs and visit their "sin" of Jewi s lmess
upon their "Aryan" grandchildren.
Such is mankind's progress,
Flow Shaw Would Get Rid of Jews.
Georg,. le'as'ed Shaw, the great Wit.
humorous soul that he is, has learned
perfection the way of being contrary. But
on at least (111e subject he always display
a consistent attitude: in his proposal t o get
rid of the Jews by means of intermarriage.
In a recent lecture before the Fabian So-
ciety, in London. .Mr. Shaw heaped praise
upon the world's dictators, and incidentally
extolled Adolf Hitler. On only one ques-
tion did he disagree with the Nazi chief-
tain: on the Aryan theory of race purity,
Said Shaw with reference to the race pur-
ity ideas of the Nazis:
"That is the kind of thine I want to Stiock
out of Hitler. What Bitter should have done
was not to drive the .Jews sat. What he ought
to have said was, 'I will tolerate the Jew•
any extent on comfit:on that no Jew mama,.
a Jewess. on csnilition that he marries a Ger-
man." .
What a kibbitzer! And what a world-
, saver!
Imagine littler coupling his anti-Semitic
policies with the command to his people to
marry with the very scapegoats they are
supposed to persecute!
We got a great kick out of Shaw's advice
to the Hitlerites. What a huge joke it
would he to force Aryans to marry those
terrible Jews. But then we reminded ion:-
selves of the horrible spectre of the Jewish
grandmother which haunts several million
Germans—the joke was on Shaw.
Our Film Folk
MISSIONARY ACTIVITIES
IN PALESTINE
By HELEN ZIGMOND
Abstract of Report Issued by
Vaad Leumi (Jewish
National Council) of Palestine and Made Public
Recently by Miss Henrietta Szold.
l•
i ll,
the
Sas IP(.1. ❑ said above ap-
, fly to porents of means.
, or Moot her, Of the cora-
',Ike the same chances
• .lewish souls of their
The ilitf• - •
,•
'bat
,t!eoi afford
• .t le
.
1,t •
/1L11111. ,
1
of,dt 1,
inter' ••
rest,' t
nu nil. 1,
I
,
onary
with
I ne Jews
-
great
ru! IS Offered
,
S . Charge, while
1 1 1 . 11 , •
• dis ;dulls only the
very 5. ,
a patients are ex-
empt t , ot the payment of a
fee.
1 •
isaien Of charges
is, how,
, • the only Neter
that ea. ,
, I.• frequent resort
by Jew •
eon-Jewish hos-
f
.t
ell known, cer-
tain Chi- s. • '" patients do not
ceisest
with the min-
1-11;C,,
.di• physician or
urn' d,ioat-ory. They take pleas-
ure.11 ■ • • , 11 -. unine as many au-
a rr a•ce , sible, wan-
dering from di-isms:try to dis-
pensary, from to hos-
pital. 'Phis tendency is a char-
acteristic of a considerable part
of the Jewish population of Pal-
estine.
Educational missions are con-
ducted by English, French, Ital-
ian, German and Swedish asso-
ciations. They limit their ac-
tivity in the cities of Palestine,
Jerusalem, Sated, Tiberias, Jaffa
and Haifa. They have nut yet,
so far as is known, penetrated
to any of the Jewish rural set-
tlements or the villages. l'he
investigation of the number at
children coming under the in-
fluence of the missions is at-
tended with peculiar difficulties.
In most cases the institutions
refuse to give information re-
garding their wards. The esti-
mate is that about 500 children
come within the purview of the
mission schools. It is interesting
to observe that there was a no-
table drop in the attendance of
Jewish children at the mission
schools after the excesses of
1929. The number of Jewish
children and young people fre-
quenting them in 1929, during
the period preceding the riots,
was estimated at 700; in the
year after the riots it fell to
460. It is now again on the in-
crease. In 1930-31 the estimate
was 850; and, as stated above,
(luring the current year there
are about 800 of whom 510 are
in Jerusalem. In Haifa alone,
due apparently to the efforts of
a single public-spirited commun-
al worker, a reverse develop-
ment took place; in 1930-31 the
number of children in its five
mission schools was 125; in
in 1931- 32 the number was re-
duced to 50. In the Safs•d Scots'
College there were 27 Jews.
CHILDREN EXPOSED TO
CHRISTIAN INFLUENCE
In compiling statistics on the
subject, the Jewish investigators
in l'alestine looked upon every
Christian school as a missionary
institution. No distinction is
drawn, nor does public opinion
allow a distinction to be drawn,
between the educational institu-
tions conducted by Christians
with purely academic aims and
those established and adminis-
tered by Christians for the ex-
plicit and direct purpose of
proselytizing. In spite of the
general attitude towards Chris-
tian .schools, a section of the
Jewish population, desiring the
sort of education that is avail-
able in the schools conducted by
Christians, of its own initiative
enters sons and daughters in
Christian schools. 'They volun-
tarily and with open eyes incur
the risk of exposing their chil-
dren to, Christian influence.
le ootit•
in,'
flu
or a
By DAVID
SCHWARTZ
Alert,
HELLO, NINETEEN THIRTY-FOUR
HOLLYWOOD.—A couple more
We are entering a new secular year, and, I lioli. , •,•
of our Brethren are readying, for promising conditions. Despite all of the proble
m .. r ,
the reels ... Eddie Rubin, brother
manity today, it seems to me that there is a silver limns •
of Benny, the dialectician, will
And even if the problems themselves are no nearer
y cry likely appear in Francis Led-
repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment we have at l as ,
erer's next flicker. Arthur Fac-
drink away dull care,
tor, son of Max Factor, the cos-
•
II
metic king, is another camera
THERE'S A SILVER LINING
candidate.
Na people today is so enveloped in black cloud, ,t
•
*
yet it steins to me in one way the situation of the .1,
Some years ago a certain
promising that it has been in 2,000 years.
showopened
on
Broadway
I continue to see a silver lining in Palestine.
I
without much eclat, but John
despite all difficulties there, we will get through, un ,i ,-
Barrymore viewing it one night,
most radical change in the Jewish proldem ,ince tlo
WAS au impressed with the per•
Je wry.
formance of a 70-year-old man
in the cast that he went back•
DR. BERNSTEIN ON PALESTINE
stage to speak to him. There,
I have just been taking to Dr.
chit
much to his amazement, he
Bureau of the Ziotidd Organization, who has 111 ,1
found a youngster discarding
t
others the
the white hair and beard . .. it
, the books and
was 18-year-old Paul Muni.
•
•
•
et
that are lavished
:ells are irresistible
ups'
"Junior" Immunity dons a uni-
not ., •
• ; car the curriculum,
form to play basketball on the
pat .
the teaching of Ian-
Universal team. Rah! Rah! Rah!
gun
ii-truction in trades,
Isl . dear old alma pater.
is
o !inn.
Itt addition
to t '
is enumerated above,
the
You'll hear that "com'up
- several missionary in-
sometime" drawl on a national
stit •• s- that concentrate their-
att. •
hook-up
. . • Mae West is to
ti upon clubs and so are
dirt
broadcast from WEAF in Jana•
.1 primarily to the adol-
ary, re - enacting scenes from her
The numbers of
Fri • otors cannot be aster-
Plays and pictures.
•
•
•
tail • s sr estimated.
number of actual conver-
Naturally the succession .of
sita • - -mall, but the influence
Henry Mrirgenthau, Jr., as acting
eto •
d upon the pupils, if nut Secretary of the Treasury was
pr
11' in the direction of
food f
th,i, newsreel fellows,
1 '1 , • •t 1,11 Y, is calculated to
They lined up the departing Mr.
, them (Milli their homes
W oMlin and the incumbent Mr.
am; • .
Jewish life in general.
Morgenthau,
rehearsed
their
n
The
ew up in ignorance of speeches, posed them, and then
Jew
gustoms and Jewish his-
gave a s igna l t
h Mr
ai) oluVto oNdlirn
tor,.
', , .y have no connection
pretty
eitlo • with the synagogue or
Morgenthau . . . the latter made
• wit r.
forms of Jewish com-
a likewise pretty speech about his
munal life, and they have no
imerlecessor. . the newsreelers
knswledge of the Hebrew Ian-
yelled, "Cut!" The cabinet Mein-
guns,. Religiously' and nation-
her`, beamed and asked, "How was
ally they are more or less de-
it, boys?" "Lousy!" the answer
tached from the Jewish people,
came back. And they had to do it
and In the worst cases, though
all over again.
they do not accept another faith,
•
s
•
they are inured to hypocritical
Chico (of the Marx quartette)
practices which affect all their
play s bridge with "wim and
dealings detrimentally.
vigor" . • . just a friindly little
JEWISH SCHOOLS SUFFER
I
game
at 25 cents a point! He
FROM RESTRICTED BUDGET
is a wizard at it ... beat Cul•
There are two Jewish organi-
bertson
onc e . . . now has left
zations that (occupy themselves
for New York at the latter's
with campaigns against mis-
invitation to play on the Cul-
sionary influences, the B'not
bertson team.
Writ (Women's Lodge of the
•
•
•
B'nai nail) and the Merkaz.
The Italian version of "Prize-
The Alliance Israelite Univers
fighter
and
the
Lady"
will show
selle, though as a rule it de-
Primo Camera knocking out Max
mands a tuition fee, accepts
Baer . . . the American edition
free of charge pupils who are
depicts th e tight as a draw . . .
removed from t h e mission
hence, the Palestine print should
schools through the good offices
either of one of these two or- ;surely give Maxie the upper hand.
ganizations or of individuals.
Along with thesu organizations
It was through her dancing
should be mentioned Rabbi
ability that Ann Dvorak was
Baruch Yehudah Blau, who in
first launched on her celluloid
floe year rescued 43 boys from
career, but she has never been
the perils of street life and
given a chance to dance in a
mission schools and placed them, • picture,
with the means obtained through
•
•
•
direct appeals to hie circle of
It seems no one recognized Ed
acquaintances, in Talmud Torah
Wynn, the "Fire Chief," over
schools and other Jewish insti-
there . . . and he was awfully
tutions.
burned up about the lack of pub-
The Jewish school in Palestine
licity accorded him. One evening
is far from being the perfect
while he was strolling, about Lon-
instrument the Jewish people
don town a lady of easy ways ac-
should wield in its national cen-
costed him with, "Watcher loin',
ter. A survey of all the Jewish
dearie?" Ile answered vehemently,
schools in Palestine—the Yeshi-
"Making a picture at Elstre• .
vot, the Talmud Torahs, the
Thank heavens, somebody asked
schools conducted by such agen-
me!"
cies as the Agudat Yisrael, the
• • •
Angle-Jewish Association, the
Speaking
of
the
English,
Alliance Israelite Universelle
to
Tidbits and Xrzz,1
(Copyright. lea lewnh Tei.t AUhlc
•
la t Iv
1.111
By-the-Way
11
• • •
• • •
r fairly
, et hu
cloud.
the
• lb
A
6 w,
most
that
1' the
o, of
•
'tale
Paltol
Omagh a devoted Zioni s t, ,h asa s t H a s; ,,
Ile sees all the black spats.
And Dr. Bernstein has returned convinced that
going affair, that it cannot be stopped.
•
•
•
You
lie
Fleur
ea 1
of ftl'
Ito
ladle
7.50
Snea
et,
ST
moo
vom
The doctor,
•
GERMANS IN JERUSALEM
There is a tremendous housing shortage in PalestIll,
',,, d„.,,,
declares. And there is altogether too much land spa,
a , , i i i. ii
u '
Yet building is going on, and Palestine is leapin g
s , 'aid. In
Jerusalem, the German-Jewish refugees are crew no' i,,, citie
Beautiful homes are being built. A water system is bein g .0,„1,,,,, d s 1
Jerusalem is a picturesque city. It sits on seven I .11,
And on
these hills have walked heretofore Yemenite Jews, It .1,••.• •
'A ha earn,.
to worship and die, devout Christians who came to uvol,-1,d• d motley,
picturesque gathering—but after the eye for the picture- ,ss a sated,
a somewhat depressing spectacle. .
lint Jerusalem that sits on the hills is being trine:id:210 by
young Jewish blood, and it is beginning to pulse with rat life and
beauty which must have flowed in it when David reigned.
•
•
•
JEWS SAVING ARABS
Dr. Bernstein does not underestimate the Arab problem. But a
"mottos vivendi" will be found—an agreement will be toilehed, he
holds. For th e Jews, says Dr. Bernstein, are saving the Arab horn
extini-ti
In Iraq,in Syria, in Trans-Jordania, the Arabs have been rapidly
decreasing. They have been decreasing by starvation, alil by the
lessened fertility which hunger brings. Only in Palestine, where the
Joys dwell, have the Arabs been increasing.
IF IMMIGRATION STOPPED
Were the Jewish immigration stopped, the doctor states, the
Arabs would suffer, and England would have, in Palestine, an elephant
on its hands—a country that would soon be running in the red,
instead of being one of the few provinces over which it hold- -way,
which has a surplus in the treasury.
The Iligh Commissioner, says Dr. Bernstein, is friendly to th e
Jew. Make no mistake about it. Only he wants to go ,low. But we
Jews, of course, have a terrible problem in the acute stale of the
Jews of the world, and want to go fast,
•
•
50.000 A YEAR POSSIBLE
Palestine is capable of absorbing, says Dr. Bernstein, 110,000
Jews yearly.
The government at the present rat e will not allow such an immi-
gration, but assume that 30,000 enter a year. At that rate- and here
1 am not quoting Dr. Bernstein—Palestine in five years will have a
Jewish population of 500,000, assuming for the normal rate of in-
crease of the existing, population.
In other words, in five years there is no reason why Palestine
may not have a Jewish population almost as large as that o f Germany.
•
•
•
FIRST MILLION HARDEST
The first 500,000 are the hardest. After that, it should come
easier. Trans-Jordania, larger than the part of l'alestine which Jew,
taro now settling, has only 200,000 Arabs, with an area larger than
Palestine proper.
•
•
•
THE EXPERIMENTAL VALUE
(tut there is no necessity for carrying the prophecies further.
It will be enough when Palestine has a population of 5olism0 Jews
That is to say, the experimental purpose of the settlement of Pales-
tine will have been met.
What I mean by experimental purpose is this: When we talk
today of what the Jew is and what the JOH' is not, we are really talk-
ing without any substantial basis. We don't know what the normal
Jew is and we can't know what the normal Jew is—unless we find a
Jew who lives under normal conditions.
•
•
•
WHAT IS A NORMAL JEW?
It may be said that the Jew living in any fre e country, such at
the United States, is a normal Jew. This may possibly be true, bot
we cannot be sure of it, for the only way we can find the normal
of a race is to examine a member of that race living under normal
Louis Golding' s "Magnolia
and the Vaud Leann of the
conditions. And the normal condition of a race is a condition where
Street" will be screened by a
Ki•neset Yisrael (Zionist school
the
race is dominant, or at least where the race is in a condition of
British company.
system t--would reveal that very
•
•
not only political or economic equality, but of psychic equality.
few are in a position to com-
We can know what the normal Frenchman is like; we can know
ply with the requirements of
Vital statistics in Fliekerville:
what the normal Anglo-Saxon is like, but we cannot know what the
modern pedagogy with reference
Ann Ronnell, who mothered the
normal Jew is, for the behavior of any minority, no matter how free
to buildings, equipment, educa-
"Big Bad Wolf," is the promised
tional material, etc.
bride of Lester Cowan, former ' the land, is conditioned by the fact that it is a minority.
And further, the attitude of any majority towards any minority
From the kindergartens up to
secretary of the Motion Picture '
is likewise conditioned.
the highest class of the elemen-
Academy.
•
•
•
tary schools, the system of pub-
The Warners, en IllaSue, will
DOESN'T KNOW HIMSELF
lic Jewish education suffers from
witness the Doris Warner-Mervyn
The
Jew
today
does
not
know
himself,
and of course tout non-
LeRoy accriuplement in New York.
the restricted budget allocated
to it, and similar lack of funds
The wedded pair will take a round- Jew cannot know him. Let me give just one illustratien of the
experimental value of Zionism, insofar a s it relates to the nsn-Jsa
hampers the development of so-
the-world trip.
cial opportunities for the adol-
Incidentally that Kenneth Ms- understanding the Jew and the Jew understanding himself.
There is a feeling fairly prevalent attiring the non-Jews that the
Kenna-Kay Francis slicing is a
escent youth, for whom no eve-
ning continuation classes, no singular instance of a Imo ic couple Jews by themselves could not build up a civilized state. This they
parting before rumor :separated will contend, though they will not admit, that Jews have played an
clubs and no recreational social
integral part in upbuilding many civilized states.
It is probalMy.
centers are provided.
I them.
true that if you asked many
the Jews, who are responsible for half
•
-
of the imposing skyline of New' York, you would find that 11 any of
n ant o f
them share this same feeling. That is to say, that no am
building which the Jews may do in the Diaspora will counteriail that
impression, but once let Jerusalem that sits on its sever, bdis be
transformed into a beautiful modern city, and the old lass is
B y PUHA It' MACK. J. T. A. Staff Correspondent
forever gone.
So it is that I do not know who will share most of the b , refit of
let:p..710f. J T A .1933
t hi. success that Palestine may have—those who go up atsi actually
take part in that building of Eretz Israel, or those of us Jess. n he wi!,
re m a i n wher e we are rooted.
Prominent among the most re
Ile would likewise be at' government," he said. "I have
gent organizations rapidly gamin-
.11 the shabby little farm been telling my men that the time
strength throughout the country
11 Ihe Ilesnlate wind-swept
will :aeon copie when we shall have PALESTINE WINDOW CLEANING
A number of GernianJ•wish young men coming 1 ,,
• 'Lir.'
in a
:11,011d ,11V1 1 Uf HM111 . 11111'
, 1,, of Kansas.
to arise to defend this nation
1111 , 1 111 ,
11 1 ...1
the Order
a !cal estate office the estab- against the challenge of Fascist lacking work, organized a window cleaning brigade, and •,•••.•
tine
windows
are
being
given
the
cleaning
of
their
lives.
Igild•n, lead , •
Silent is as good clipping bureau. and Communist organizations. We
A young woman who visited Germany s om e years az , . ',••1 me
the .
odd -scoring of td.
I outing the arrival of the "big art. not in the shirt business, so
•! at she could not stand the German immaculateness t• g they
nt ally, the new
asy" or the opportune moment," we won't be known as the pill
• !mead.
sued more concerned about their daily soap than their
k .•
a real entigo •i, ,
when the Order of '7•1 will ascend shirts, or mauve shirts, or any
Real ••, ,, ilom
Well. I can sympathize with that point of view.
iit 1 S:ast
•.. its rightful place at the head other kind of shirts."
- to go with a little dirt, :Is may be attested by any r, • " 111 `h
L. office, null;
Drspite his statement, however
the nation's affairs, the organj-
also
t
:La s e rendezvous of sans-cullotisni.
Yet there is sens.
• attire. I t
on tippears to be biding its' :t1r. Gulden and his Order of '76
to
I..•
for soap, too, and I 11111 glad that its LI, is i • ,. ■
pro: ,
;toping new s o f Fa-cast are recognized as One Of the most
oo
Ile is
in the United States, ilangemus forces operating in the
o red I. , , 1, of the t
••,it circulars to members, raked States in the interests of
• • v under the C111—.1
g applications for men, F'asci•in and anti-Semitism. It '-
, C1
estate: the only in .••
reliably related that this group ha,
• door Of his office is it :
•
, nio, go the shears quietly begun the process of e a
•
oum-crilied by an
ugh tho
papers. They erdinating all Fascist elements in
and • . •
•nlence points d• •
wielded
.• dainty hands the Cants! States, eXclUSiVe of the
fits • 11-11 11,11 estate with Mr.
buxom yid
By JULIAN L. MELTZER
the main office Pettey Silver Shirts, whose wide-
den .• a Slti•
the Order
"Dickstein spread publicity is regarded as
A large office divided into -
I ..aches 11111U11. 1i' Capital, " snip, sufficient to bring to public scion HAIFA HARBOR
imminent
or seven reams is frequented by a
:faulty shorn of its elaborate riteiamnmd
and the -•
l ,, softies his- and official suppression any motives
heuxgP:: ni'i le' l 'II • ; I na'efda
ln"Ilt'S aggregation of humanity.
.. In the hrs. • ;
ceremony, and bereft of the large commercial development •'io1 is
hook of they may entertain.
It is also understood that the crowds Of guests invited to wit- promised. With the .1•••••-h share
Olen With shabby shoes, men with
Order of
- Siianknoebel
spats, men with fur coats, men In acted," snip. snip. "Griebi Order of '74 has established an in- n•ss the spectacle of inauguration, in the expansion of lia f I ade"
ever/
wah patched jackets, men who Ttotifies Before Grand Jury," snip, ternational link with Fascist forces the official opening of Ilaifa liar- quately safeguarilisl, there
smoke. expensive cigars, men of snug "Captain Schmitt Ilere To abroad, which suffices to make them for by the High Commissioner, prospect of that further it false
formidable from the viewpoint of General Wauehope, was a purely in the values of Jewish up' Ii I
the type who "shoot snipes" in Lead Nazis," snip, snip.
the gutter.
r- Pee'
While Mr. Gulden stated that support, both moral and financial. official affair. The curtailment of the of Palestine which is
Mr. Gulden presents an appear- lie wanted no publicity for his
Perhaps one of the most perilous arrangements was ordered by him dieted in the signs and •,••
ance somewhat renuniscent ■ •f a organization "yet", he did admit elements of the Order of '7f. is their a, a token of sympathy to the fam- fronting us.
well known German patriot called that his organization, expanding enlistment of war veterans, men Wes of those who had fallen in the
• • •
Adolf Bitter. There is a note of every day in all parts Of the coun- capable of ittiering organized armed disorders. And an event much FURTHER AGRARIAN RI LIEF
abstraction in his cenversation; at try. had attained a membership existence. Icy virtue of this factor
ked forward to in all circles WAS
True to Ins pulley of o -1- 1 "ng
the
times a far-away gleam of ambi-
tt11 in excess of 11111.0110. -O ne the secret conspiracy of the order thus minimized in character, if not Palestine cereals-farm , r,
'
tion and righteousne, rione s into hundred thousand men we can against the United States govern- the actual signticance of the ewes'- utmost, the high come ,
his rather bulging eyes. IIis v oi ce , depend upon," he said. "Finest ment is regarded by the few "in ion, owing to the happening's of now granted them a furits •
(•dored somewhat with the New fultows in the country."
the know" as the greatest menace that week.
ure of relief. This tone
Yorkese accent that transforms
official inauguration of Haifa ernme-t has approved
For those who take the Order to the present government of the
Third atrillie into "Tail av e noo" of '70 seriously. there is some- country. Gulden has taken a leaf Harbor must stand out as an ems of 55mel pounds to be .1
and Jersey into "Joiney," carries th , ng ominou, about this snip, f ran the mar e u\er sheets of Euro- chal feature in our history of post- to cult!, ators wishing b'
conviction which neither tolerates
i•
. . a foie.' odowing, perhaps pean , i , Mussolini , Pilsudski war I'alestine. The 300 acres of age for feeding anima:- (eau , '"
,t'hf•
:inding about him sheltered water, provided at a cost to work lands for wino r
arstuteent nor hesitates for view. a- fateful as that of th e „du, h and 11 • ! .•1
O.1 - •
'
to the contrary.
The history of all of a million and a quarter pounds This year the high cstss'
-ditch icat the day reader s of "T1-
post-war uprisings in- and making Haifa the largest port remitted 10,000 pound-
•
,;,1
As chief of the Order of
Tit'i• of Two Cities" daring
', o• power has teen gained in the Eastern Mediterranean Sett- Vent of • he winter e rt p- •
Mr. Gulden is a ver-atile f•
VP..•nch Revolution, a c all will rt
•
•
By hi, own adni,sion he ran miN
1,1•11
men
trained
in
blood-
and
only
to
Marseilles
around
the
1.5,000
or
I00
per
coo
O)ber
w ath all e l a s se s of members to his
oceanboard,
, xecuted the revolutionary or- .r!ire
mark,
an mar crop tithe, surely
- •
Br. d ;olden p•r••nally refuses
is.•l ,evement not only for British- of his abiding interest in
argisniratien.
.1..coaling to his to he classified as ,t P a scist. ••e
., ise, on the issue of anti- enterprise, but also for Jewish tunes—car, misfortunes—tas ar,m"
story he is at Imam in the "pala- :,re defenders f oui Republican, „,
tial Park avenue apartment-s" in or rather Democratic (since Roose-, ' '
am, it is understood that foresight; the Jewish National cultural come•unity. The ,drplo
Fund has acquired vast areas along in the government treasury
which his group mitts in New velt became president) form of
(Turn to Next Page)
the Bay of Acre in anticipation of i permitted this remission.
New Order to "S aye" Country Bars "Jewish Influence"
•
•
•
PALESTINE TOPICS
De