•••••••••••MWOMMeMs. PIEVErRotrjaisn (ARON 1013 and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE WIEDLTROFIJEWISII etRON ICLE and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE Published Weekly by The Jewish Chemist. Publishing Co., Inc. Interest we Smond•clam matter March I. 1916, et the Post- al. at Detroit, Mich., under the At of March 3, 1879. General Offices and Publication Building 525 Woodward Avenue Telephone: Cadillac 1040 Cable Address Chronicle Landon Officio: 14 Stratford Place, London, W. 1, England $3.00 Per Year Subscription, in Advance To Insure publication, ellcorrespondence sad news matter must reach this office by Tuesday evening of each week. When mailing notices, kindly use one side of the paper only The Detroit Jewish Chronicle invites correspondence on sub- jects of Interest to the Jewish people. but disclaims responst- Indorsement of the viesws expressed by the writers Willy for an Sabbath Readings of the Law Pentateuchal portion—Ex. 21 :1-24 :18 ; 30:11.16 Prophetical portion—II Kings 12:1-17 Rosh Chodesh Adar Readings of the Law, Thursday and Friday, Feb. 15 and 16 Num. 28:1-15 February 9, 1934 Shevat 24, 5694 Lord Marley's Detroit Visit. Lord Dudley Marley ranks among the world's outstanding liberals who have done a great service to the cause of human rights by enlightening mankind on the dangers which must come with a spread of Fascism. As chairman of the committee which sponsored the publication of "The Brown Book of the Hitler Terror," for which he wrote the introduction, Lord Marley has earned the gratitude of the Jewish people. The findings of his committee were re- sponsible for winning many sympathizers for the cause of anti-Hitlerism, and have therefore gained friends in the battle for equal and just rights for the Jews in Germany. Lord Marley's visit to Detroit is there- fore an event of importance. His message to the Detroit community should be a means for strengthening sentiment here against the Nazi rulers of Germany. This liberal champion of justice deserves a very warm reception in our community. Annual Federation Days. A commendable step in the right direc- tion has been taken by the Jewish Welfare Federation this year, with the arrange- ment that the annual meetings of the Fed- eration and its affiliated agencies be held at four separate gatherings, rather than that they should be grouped together in a brief discussion period lasting an hour and a half or two. It will be recalled that for a period of three years, following the annual Federa- tion meetings, The Detroit Jewish Chron- icle advocated the separation of the differ- ent meetings, in order that more people interested in specific problems should be in position to participate in discussions over issues affecting the specific agencies. We consistently adhered to the view that the convening of 80 or 90 people for an annual meeting, in which about a dozen agencies are expected to give annual reports and elect officers, approaches the farcical and does not do justice to the best needs of the community. The change effected this year is an ef- fort in the right direction. The purpose of annual meetings should be to create an interest in the community in the various Jewish agencies, and to arouse a desire for an understanding of our communal prob- lems. We are coming closer to this real purpose as a result of the new policy that is to be inaugurated at the four meetings to be held beginning with this Sunday afternoon. "Lucky England" — In Palestine. At a time when Jews are compelled to think in terms of protests against the Brit- ish administration in Palestine for curbing Jewish development by placing a partial ban on immigration, it is impossible for us to forget that from England, after all, has come the greatest comfort and encour- agement for Zionism. The outstanding Christian supporters of the Palestine re- demption movement have been English- men. And whenever Dr. Theodor Herzl and most of his forerunners in modern Zionism spoke of a government which should be entrusted with the task of di- recting the rebuilding of Palestine, they in- variably gave first place to Great Britain. In spite of the difficulties which beset the Zionist road, with the British often carry- ing the guilt, it is in English sources that we continue to find encouragement for our great historic project in Palestine. An in- stance of English friendship comes to us through the columns of the London Sunday Times. On the eve of Christmas, "Scruta- tor" wrote about "The 13011A of Bethle- hem," of "their sacred mes s age today," about "Palestine's past and future" which, he emphasized, is "haunted with great his- tory? , "Scrutator" reviews the religious back- ground of Palestinian history. Calling Pal- estine "both incredibly old and surprisingly young," he makes the declaration that "when one speaks of Palestine in any but the merest geographical sense one always means Jewish Palestine." He writes about "history's ghosts" and here he makes ref- erence to the world's debt to Israel in the following paragraphs: There has been a change in the past genera- lise, and the Bible is ao longer read to dill. gently, but for millions it was, generation after generation, the poor man's university, his school of history, of poetry, of ethics and metaphysics. How many orators has this university not formed, how much matchless prose has It shaped, what wise philosophy of life and poli- tics has it bred in our bones, what balm brought to wounded souls, what strength of resolution to overcome all trouble? An older generation, at any rate, feels towards Jewish Palestine as it feels towards a revered schoolmaster or an Alma Mater of learning. Until 15 years ago we did little to repay our debt. Among the great Gentiles who, up to a century ago, had befriended Palestine and the Jews—Cyrus, Alexander, Julius Caesar, famous Popes, Moors, Turks and Napoleon— there is no Englishman unless it be Cromwell. But the nineteenth century produced many Englishmen who remembered that the Jews once had Palestine for their national home. Conder, Oliphant, George Eliot (in "Daniel Deronda"), Kitchener (who gained his knowl- edge of the East through his work on the Pal- estine Exploration Fund), and the novelist, if not the politician, Disraeli, are names that come at random into the mind. It is when he writes about "The Jewish home" that "Scrutator's" article assumes special significance in the present moment. Those Jews who have learned nothing from history, and who continue to be blind to the present great achievements by Jews in Eretz Israel, have much to learn from the following comments by "Scrutator": It was reserved to Balfour, Lloyd George and Allenby to make perhaps even greater his- tory in the Near East than the great pre- nineteenth-century men who have been men- tioned. Our people, in their dislike of a scene or an attitude, often slur over the big things they do and encourage even amongst them- selves a false relation of values. After all, what is the most solid result of the Great War? Nearly everything in the settlement has either gone or is threatened. The one thing that keeps on growing is Balfour's idea of a Jewish Home in Palestine or, what that idea really amounts to, of a new Palestinian nationality which can have neither body nor soul without the Jews. Fifteen years ago, this was to many people only Balfour's fad; five years ago it was, in spite of artificial difficulties, doing so well that the same people who once thought it a silly fad now regarded it as a portent, like the Loch Ness monster, that should not be allowed at large but had better be kept in confinement and on show. Is it generally known that Zionism now com- mands international contribution rather more easily than the League of Nations? Or that Palestine entirely escaped the economic de- pression which began in 1928, and was the one prosperous country in the world that had no unemployment, no difficulty in balancing its budget? That was due no doubt to the trib- ute which Palestine was receiving from inter- national Jewry, through the Jewish Agency, and our Mandatory Government in Palestine contributed precious little except sound finance and pure administration. But if the ideal that was being served was a religious aspiration two thousand years old, at any rate it was English genius that put it in the way of prac- tical fulfilment. It was rightly considered a great compliment to our country that it should be chosen by the Power, as the keeper of their conscience in Palestine, where every rock is fossilized his- tory and every breeze soughs with precious memory. But a great past is a call to a great future, and the eye of imagination can fore- see such a future for Palestine. That the country is no bigger than Wales is not against such a prospect. The greatest con- tribution of Palestine to the world in the fn- . ture as in the past will always be in the ideal domain. It may be that Providence chooses a small country in preference to a large as the medium for Its messages because it is not so far to pump from heart to brain. But even in the material sense the smallness of Pal- estine will not prejudice its future. The advantages of its position are up- equalled; whatever the old regime in Germany hoped for in its project of Empire from ham- burg to the Persian Gulf is destined to be diverted to Palestine and the nearer sea. Haifa will one day be a greater Alexandria. Nor will bells of Bethlehem sound less sweet when Pal- estine has a population of five millions, as it once had, and with the aid of modern science might support again. For apart from intensive agriculture and industrial development, there is a great future for Palestine as the Empor- ium of the East. As Mussolini based his hopes for the future of Italy on the greatness that was Rome's, so must we on Palestine. For a thousand years Palestine, in the political and economic sense, has lain under a blight.. Nor can anyone make these dry bones live again but the Zionist, who is at once ultra-modern and ao Easterner, and whose.devotion to the soil of Palestine is part of his religion. And let not hope be discouraged by the fear of racial enmity between Jew and Arab. Such enmity is artificial, not natural, as his- tory has shown, and Its appeasement will be in the material and moral advancement of the East which only the Jew can bring but the Arab will share. If we had imagination to realize our bless- ings, Fate has been wonderfully kind to Os. We have now placed in our hands the master key to the future in all Southwest Asia if only we know how to use it. In mere economic ad- vantage it may well be Oie equivalent to the discovery of another, if smaller, America. And Fate, accumulating its benevolence, has given as the chance of development without cost to ourselves, thanks to the tribute which the love of Palestine draws from Jewry all over the world. And. as though that were not enough kind- ness, Germany, by its oppression of Jews, is exiling keen brains and rich minds by the hun- dred thousand. Whither? While we deplore the cruelty and hardship of the oppression, we may well see to it that Palestine has the full benefit of this second Exodus. Within five years there might and should be a half-million Jews in Palestine, diffusing the enrichment of their energy and science among Arabs and the neighboring peoples. Lucky England, if she would only think it! When British authorities, under pressure by the Arabs, stand in the way of the com- plete fulfilment of the pledge made to our people for the creation of a Jewish Na- tional Home, we naturally protest. We insist upon the sacred adherence of the Mandatory Power to the guarantee given to Israel. But these protests are made more emphatic because we knew the back- ground of English tradition which favors Jewish regeneration in Zion. We have faith that when the complete Zionist story Is written, Great Britain will have earned the confidence which our people placed in the traditional friendship of the great Eng- lish people. The Seventh Anniversary of the Death of Achad Ha•Am Our Film Folk By HELEN ZIGMOND By-the-Way Tidbits and Newi By DAVID SCHWARTZ (Copyright. ISA Jewl$11 Telteraohle Agency. Inc.) 1 There is one synagogue in the place passed by probably more HOLLYWOOD. — Don't let i people than any other spot in America—maybe on earth—and it is spoil your pleasure ... but Male yet the least known synagogue. the native hero and star of "Es I refer to the Jewish Theater Guild Synagogue, tucked away on kimo," is none other than Ray Broadway in the building adjoining Keith's Palace. Wise, former Hollywood corners Sonic of those who occasionally "haven" there are Eddie Cantor, By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ man . . . and a half-Jewish lad. George Jesse!, Lou Holzman, Daniel Frohtnan and David Warfield. Nevertheless, he's a real Eskimose. It was suggested the other day that the synagogue crone forth On the seventh anniversary of speak of Ached Ha-Am as an . . . born in Alaska and brough from its obscurity—that the bright lights in front flash, for instance: the death of Ached Ila-Am Eddie Cantor in Schacharith (Morning Prayer). antagonist of political and prac- up among the natives; he know Eskimoese. (Asher Ginsberg), Jewryagain tical Zionism. It is this fallacy the customs and speaks Or: Jessel in Mincha. • • • s pays tribute to the phi osopher which, in justice W the man who At least three of the "Eleven of the Zionist movement who had was responsible for much of the And speaking of the stage, did you know that one of the famous Most Beautiful Girls in the I given a soul and a cultural as- grad accomplished in Palestine Rothschild family, Baron Henri of Paris, is a dramatist—and in a World," selected by Earl Car- addition to that is a physician. His pen name is Andre Pascal. pect to the effort for the up- needs to be smashed. roll for his flicker "Murder at building of the Jewish Home- THE PEOPLE'S WILL • the Vanities," are Yiddishe land. Ached Ila-Am worked on the Not that it has any relevancy • here, but David Resnick, who does annadlach . . . two are blondes, the publicity for the associations for the blind, writes in to gay same principle as Herzl. Ile In the philosophy and teach- synthetic or otherwise, and one that tears are very antiseptic for the eyes—that it has been proven maintained that where there is ing of Achad Ila-Am, everything is a gorgeous black-haired, scientifically that they are the best eye-wash. a will there is a way, and that that was Jewish, all things He- brown-eyed damsel. • • • the more difficult the way the braic, every element in life af- • • • more ardent must be the desire. fecting the Jew, found an expon- It may interest you to know that Haaretz, a leading Hebrew Between Ricardo Cortez and What Ached Ha-Am charged is ent. In the works of Asher daily in Palestine, has a sport page. • • • that the Zionists assumed this George O'Brien exists a friend- Ginsberg are concentrated a desire to exist, whereas he main- ship such as is seldom heard about search of everything relating to And that "Mutate" may mean umbrella to you. At any rate, tained that with the overwhelm- outside of story-books ... It hap- that's what it means in Hebrew, but in Palestine it's the name of a the institutions or persons or na- ing majority of the Zionist rank pened thus .. . Years ago both theater that has been proving quite a sensation. It goes in for light tions under discussion. To Ached and file it was a conviction that O'Brien and Cortez did extra take-offs of the current scene. Ha-Am the typical product of lacked feeling. What the philoso- work (when they could get it) • • • • • • Hebrew genius was the prophet- pher of the Zionist ideal charged One day a director, looking for ic, which is able to enunciate Was glancing at the Neue Freie Presse of Vienna the other day. was that where failure met Zion- two men to stage a real fist fight, It was the newspaper on which Theodor Herzl wrote. If I recall moral laws based on spiritual ist enterprises it was because of asked them what they would do ccrrectly, his Zionist meanderings endangered his job on that paper. truths. The spiritual creations the lack of desire and the weak- for $1,000 apiece. "As much as and cultural possessions of the Well, it would have interested Herzl to see the paper now. In ness in the feeling for the nation- I like Cortez, I'd kill him," said the particular issue which I had, the largest advertisement was that Jewish people were to him there- al aspirations of the Jewish peo- O'Brien. Cortez agreed he'd do of a shipping company and it was headed: fore the supreme expressions of ple. the same. They fought . . . no the Jewish existence, and the in- "Go to Palestine for Purim." fluence that his philosophy had To the student of Zionism pulling of punches allowed . . . • on the rebuilding of Palestine Ached Ha-Am was not an anta- for three hours while 4,000 feet So Einstein met Roosevelt and talked about sailing, the hobby has found root in a system which gonist but one of the most con- of film ground through the cam- of both the President and the professor. affects the growth of Jewish na- tributing forces in the national era. Cortez was the first to drop Einstein is very proud of his sailing ability. It might have been, tionality, a system in which the homeland movement. In spite of from exhaustion. O'Brien went to it seems, "Admiral" Einstein. prophetic plays the part on a par the pessimism of his predictions, pick him up and he too fell over, And oddly enough, Prof. Michelson, whose studies of light were with the diplomatic. the leaders of the movement ad- bleeding and winded. It was the • mitted the truths he expounded, most exciting fight ever seen on the first practical demonstration of the relativity theory, was trained A PRACTICAL MAN for the navy. You remember that story they told about Michelson, the screen. And, believe it or particularly when he maintained Ached Ha-Am was above all who was a graduate of Annapolis. that it is of no avail to attempt not, that was the beginning of a , else a practicai man. His good One day, after Michelson bad won the Nobel prize for his re- to cure the national organisms lasting friendship. business sense and powerful ad- search in light measurements, he was met by an old buddie of his with plasters and drugs as long ministrative ability which he school days. Leo Forbstein, orchestra lead• as the heart of the nation was demonstrated in his own business "Too bad that you didn't stick to the Navy. You might have er for Warners, was given • cold and weak. affairs, were reflected in his been an Admiral by now," said the ex-schoolmate. bit of dialogue to repeat in the Ached Ha-Am proposed a • • theories affecting his moral Zion- picture "Hot Air." Four times foundation for the Zionist struc- ism. Ile declared that the Jew Unofficial estimates give the present Jewish population of Pales- the scene was shot ... each time ture to make it strong and se- cannot be himself either in the he "blew up" in his lines. The tine at 300,000. cure and to transform it into a Ghetto or under conditions of A total of about 400 books were published in Palestine last year. part was finally deleted from the powerful agency. lie has net emancipation but that what is script . . . Leo will stick to For a 300,000 population, that's a pretty good record. It's more down this maxim which is to needed is a combination of un- than one book per thousand. music. this day among the truth-giving adulterated Jewishness with the • s s If that proportion of books were published in the United States— elements in the Jewish national freedom of modern life. To make Al Boasberg claims that when goodness gracious jumping Jupiter! Where would we put them! movement: thispossible he urged a fixed cen- • • • his new "film-cpus" opened down ter for the Jew, a soil of his own "The concentration of the it broke a 23-year-old hiss- And by the way, the Soviet government is issuing an edition of where the Jew could concentrate Jews in Zion must be nee. south, ing record! the works of Mendel' Mocher Sephorim. his national life. His conclusions ceded by the concentration of • • • • • • were not dissimilar from those of the Jews in the love of Zion." Claire Myers, newcomer to the In the wake of the Dykaar tragedy, comes the painful news Theodor llerzl. Ached Ila-Am, In the long run, Ached Ha- screen, will be seen in "Finish- to this country that the famous Jewish sculptor, Jules Butensky, now the philosopher, like Herz!, the Am's philosophic teachings and ing School," Mitsi Green's neat living in Paris, is being hounded by the same big bad wolf of poverty. diplomat saw the only solution ideals complemented the practi- picture. • • for the Jewish J problem to be in cal and political aspirations of • • Palestine. That his theories Dr. Herz' and Max Nordau, Michael Schaap, head of Bloomingdale's great department store, Through the Cinema Looking- should become practical the re- Ached Ha-Am demanded a stron- Glass: With her mop of red hair, who has just accepted a prominent post in the American Palestine turn to Palestine was essential. ger foundation. He charged the Grace Bradley looks like Clara campaign, changed his occupation at the age of 43. He was a Yet, in spite of his having Zionist malady to be of an in- Bow ... Al Jolson was mawtified lawyer till then. Also a member of the State Assembly. ternal spiritual nature and de- when wifey Ruby received an in- made Palestine the basis of his Decided to go into business, and became director of personnel mended the remedy to be made vitation to the President's birth- for Bamberger's. From there, to Blootningdale's and is now the teachings, Ached Ha-Am was one equally internal and spiritual. head of that business institution. day party and he wasn't included of the most misunderstood men in • • • Zionism and Ached Ha-Am both ... but next day his invite arrived the movement for Palestine's re- demanded the restoration of Jew- Another interesting new figure in the Zionist world is Emil and everybody's happy . . . Nat generation as the center of Jew- ish life in Palestine. What Carr always wears batwing col- Hilb, friend of Einstein. Hilb was the conductor of the orchestra ish 'life. There are many even Ached Ha-Am feared was that lars . . . Arthur Caesar is very of the German Crown Prince. Ile was captured by the English unto this day, particularly among Zionism would concentrate upon sensitive about his polo playing... during the war, and organized an orchestra among the German the indifferent to Palestine, who prisoners. fallaciously and unreasonably (Turn to Next Page) (Turn to Next Page) Some time ago he came to the United States and did musical work in Hollywood. Latest reports are that he will soon return there. • • • A Column of A Jewish Book-of-the-Month Club has been formed in Germany Frank Speaking. and seems to be making quite a go of it. • • • By ALFRED SEGAL A. Almi, the Yiddish writer, suffers from one obsession— namely, that the control of civilization (is there still any of it left?) THE BLESSED HITLER come back to our lodge. There is 000 and what did the future hold will pass over to the Chinese and other Eastern peoples. • • s the power of Israel!" for him? He must be careful, must OUR LODGE, Anshe Giborim But Mr. Shabbsodeckel said cautiously look after his revenues, Choneh, the clown of the American Zionist movement, is said Yisroel (Strong Men of Israel) "No!" holding every dollar. How could he to be anxious to return to America. Choneh doesn't look like it, but had been languishing. Aye, the He was down to his last $100,- afford to pay the dues of the Strong he is a lily of the field, who toils not, neither does he spin—yet he Strong Men of Israel (prior to Men of Israel? sees all, tells all, and misses very little. Justice Brandeis, it was 1930) had been strong in the stock "And besides," he said, "I don't rumored, once sent him away when he was sick and maintained him market and strong in real estate for months in fine style. Louis Lipsky and many other prominent like Ginsberg and I don't like and little of their strength had I ORIENTAL RESEARCH Goldberg that are in it." Zionists have continually aided him. lie and Prince Mike Romanoff they left to give to Israel. ought to tour the world together. . Only on Yom Kippur was he Explorations Reported Only on Yom Kippur did they Important • • • marching strong for Israel, but i n Annual ofA ' march in their strength for Israel even in the holy place his mind was of Oriental R That movie of Palestine featuring the late Cantor Rosenblatt, h. on his remorse . . "If I had only which will shortly be shown, will have one very interesting scene. and even then when their minds erc; to It is an authentic picture 'of some Chaluzim digging up some ground Important results achieved as a kn own owh should have been on the holy Le vy when et: million ' '" dol- for settlement. While doing so, they uncovered a great archaelogical things they wandered from the result of exploration work of out- lars profit on the skyscraper I find—an old synagogue of 2,000 years ago. standing Orientalists in the Near sacred edifice . . . "What is my East have shed much light on Bib- should have taken it." . . . "To • General Motors doing today?" . Acel questions, and are instru- think I had a skyscraper!" So if our lodge languished when "If I had only waited a while long- mental in adding to the interest er I could have had $100,000 pro- which is universally attached to the strong men of Israel prospered Near Eastern history, and espe- it now lay in the devastation of fit insted of only $50,000 on U. S. cially their adversity. Only I (who had to life in Palestine. A New Collective Undertaking. Steel." ... "Should I sell that sky- The American School of Orien- I never had anything to lose and, therefore, could suffer no depres- scraper or should I keep it?" By RABBI MORRIS CASRIEL KATZ Research has just issued its Saginaw, Mich, So it went among the Anshe annual, Volume XIIII for 1931-32,, sion) attended every meeting to with the pleasure of being a Giborim Yisroel. And what minds edited for the trustees by Millar glow Strong Man in Israel. About 16 miles southwest of enterprise. Most likely they will Burrows and E. A. Speiser. The were not wandering in those But one day I asked myself: Saginaw it • huge 8,900 acre farm not take advantage of it since it times' Somnambulists! ... For volume is published under the "How strong am I really?" run on a collective basis by about does not appeal to them to eat in every one was in a dream and to- Jane Down Nies Publication Fund, and the Yale University Press of I had gone here and there, ask- 80 Jewish families. It is known a mess hall, to keep their children morrow a man might wake up rich; as the Sunrise Co-operative Com- a special children's home and, and even an Espicopal bishop New Haven are the sales agents. ing this one and that to join our munity Farm. Almost all of the in f urther, to work and live only Corporation members of the lodge, even as I had asked Mr. might stand with one foot of his workers are newcomers from New among Jews who, to them, have mind on God and the other on his American School of Oriental Re- Shabbosdeckel. York City. Amongst them are very queer ideas. search include Dropsie College of "What for?" they asked. Sears-Roebuck stock. Philadelphia, represented by Prof. This large collective farm com- "Oh," I answered, "to be a strong found former painters, paper- And many a one resigned from E. A. Speiser; Hebrew Union Col- hangers, cloak operators, store- prises three villages. The main the Anshe Giborim Yisroel to join lege, Cincinnati, represented by Man in Israel, to carry our Jewish keepers, etc. one is Alicia wherein are located ideals, to be a conscious Jew, to.. " the Minnehaha Country Club in- its president, Dr. Julian Morgen- The enterprise was started the most of the colonists' homes, the And one and another answered: stead. What did the Anshe Gib. stern; Jewish Institute of Religion, latter part of last June. That children's house, the health Cen- orim Yisroel offer a man? The New York, represented by its "That's bologny." ter, the large dining room, the How strong was I then? Where strength of the Anshe Giborim was Dr. Stephen S. Wise; was this power of Anshe Giborim , same vast tract of land was oper- postoffice and the school. At pres- no more than a figure of speech, but president, ated for the last 34 years as a Theological Seminary, New Yisroel? ent 72 children attend school. The in the Minnehaha County Club Jewish • • • co-operative farm known as the Saginaw County government per- York, represented by its president, , were power, prestige and influence. Dr. Dr. Morgen- BUT THIS is all of the past; for Prairie Farm. It wax originally mitted them to have their own Cyrus Adler. There one could pick up a chance stern and Dr. Adler are among the I am happy to say that our owned by the Standard Oil Co teachers. Instruction is conducted tip nn a stork any time and if hr trustees. Mrs. Morris Jastrow, lodge has commenced to flourish The Owosso Sugar Company about in English and Yiddish. In this derived no more than $5,000 pro- Jr., of Philadelphia is an honorary are also found stalls for fit from it, it was enough to pay the member. Dr. Nelson Glueck oof again after the desolate years of 34 years ago then bought this fer- village tile land mainly to grow sugar 20 Holstein cows, for 60 Belgian dues of Minnehaha Club for a Hebrew Union College was direc- prosperity and adversity. horses which are noted for their The other evening we initiated beets. It was something new. year. and strength, and grain ele- What was there then for the tor of the school in Jeru talem in 200 new members and the lodge Hence, the above-mentioned com- size room seemed to vibrate with the pany decided to raise sugar beets vator. lodge of the Anshe Giborim Yis- 1932-33. The second village is known as The present annual includes the new power of Israel. I gloated: by having many men work on a roel' I myself (who was born poor and will die poor) was content leading article on "Some Glean- Now I was really a strong man in co-operative basis. But the rais- Pitcairn. where there is • very expensive distillery— with the poetry of power that was ings from the Last Excavations at Israel, my own feeble strength be- ing of one crop was not success- one of the peppermint six important ones in in the Anshe Giborim , and faith- Nuzi" by Theophile James Meek ing united with the strength of ful financially. The owners then the country. Toward the end of ful I was at all the meetings and of the University of Toronto. The these 200 additional Anshe Gib- introduced the planting of other crops. They also added other September, one-third of the pep- article is a scholarly work which! orim Yisroel. lonely as well . permint oil was sold and it There sat even Mr. Shabbosdeck- features of a farm and the rais- The strong men of Israel were includes many references to Jew- in $11,000. The ma- making powerful strokes on the ish derivations of important ref- el among the initiates. Mr. Shah- ing of cattle and sheep. For many brought chinery is used only six weeks erences. A detailed description is bosdeckel sat in the front row. years during the summer months golf links. during the year. Preparations are • • • given of the objects found during About his neck Mr. Shabbosdeckel at many as 500 men worked. wore the pure white ribbon of our The ownership of the farm went being made to build a laundry, a BUT A SAD TIME came when the Nuzi excavations. 1 Professor Speiser of the Univer- i lodge. with the thread of deep red later into the hands of the Pit- Turkish bath and a grist milL The everybody fell out of bed. Mr. Dropsie running through to signify our city of Pennsylvania and cairn Bros. of Philadelphia and the president, Ely Greenblatt, lives Shabbosdeckel fell out of bed and there. lie is • former Detroit awoke and lo! his skyscraper was College writes, in an article dedi- strength Mr. Shabbosdeckel sat be- Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. One r al estate man. tween Ginsberg and Goldberg. man by the name of DeGens was rated to the memory of Edward!, gon e. If there was any consolation My heart applauded the one who manager of the farm for 20 years, a e Nearby Pitcairn is a sty for f or Mr. Shabbosdeckel it was that Chiera, about "Ethnic Movements bout 200 pigs. It seems that he was not the only one who had in the Near East in the Second had brought this about. What a but left nine years ago. He now even radical Jews have a dislike Millenium B. C.." Ile writes about man! What power! He had united takes charge of his apple orchard lost • skyscraper. toward pigs. Most were sold al- of 6,000 trees Connec- "The Turrians and Their which is relatively the strong men of Israel, had But if it was sad to see Mr. ready. It will not take long be- Shabbosdeckel losing a skyscraper, tions with the Habiru and the brought these 200 here to unite near the Sunrise Farm. Ile has fore the rest of the piglets are already sold to the Sunrise Farm their strength with their breth- it was even sadder to see him issue Ilykaos." Prof. W. F. Albright, of the ren's! I could not bring even one Corporation all the apples that the also sold. desolated from the Minnehaha In this village there are not a Country Club, stripped to his last American School of Oriental Re-; Mr. Shabbosdeckel to the lodge but later will need for the winter. His few old wooden houses which are $100,000 unable to pay the dues any search in Jerusalem, writes on he alone had brought these 200! son worked many years on the vacant. Winter is soon to ar- Prairie Farm ■nd is now ■ resi- 'The Excavations of Tell Belt' W ho is he. Mare. and heating apparatus has We must be just: On account of dent of Saginaw. Both say that rive "Oh," I exclaimed, "all the strong Mirsim: The Bronze Age Pottery not been installed yet. A central men of Israel are coming home, of the Fourth Campaign." Ap- Hitler the lodge of the Anshe Gib- the workers were usually always heating plant is being erected at satisfied. However, during the a set of orim Yisroel marches in its seeing where the real strength lies. pended to this article is last seven years the number of present SODA we way have a quorum again plates of the discovered pottery. strength again. Clatuidale is the third village. Blessed Hitler! By the pain he workers dwindled. Last year only Nearby, The concluding article, also in the Aright Goborim Yisroel." 4,000 sheep roam about. The strong men were coming supplemented with illustrations, is gives Jews he causes them to feel . 35 families remained. (Consequently, the workers are On June 28 was the name was home from the skyscrapers which by C. C. McCown, dean of the Jewish where their own spirit served mutton every day.) had blown away like yesterday's Pacific School of Religion, who not enough! He causes the breth- changed to Sunrise Co-operative Of the 8,900 acre farm, 3,000 Community Farm when the own- dust, from the country club which writes on "The Goddesses of Ger- ' ren to be united in affection! Israel, are now cultivated. Six languished and was sick but by his ers sold out Some of the former acres was lost even as last summer's golf ass." hundred acres are in sugar beets, ball. The Annual is available from own hand Israel's blood flows full non-Jewish families are still re- 460 acres are cultivated for pep- maining as sharecroppers, but will But what came of this? the American Schools of Oriental again. are woods. In permint; 600 acres I went to Mr. Shabbosdeckel: ' Research, Box 25, Bennett Hall,' Heil Hitler! Recruiting officeri leave sooner or later. They were given the right to join the new for Israeli (Turn to Next Pairs) "Mr. Shobbascleckel, you should Philadelphia, Pa., at $2.60. Y•hrseit of the Philosopher of the Zionist Movement Fr Recognition of His Teachings of Spiritual Zionism as Nec sssss y Complement of Practical Effort for Palestine's Reconstruction. • PLAIN TALK Sunrise Co-Operative Community Farm