•
‘rsismrssvviirns
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PEVerRorrionsnffiRONIC1/3
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
A
Chaim Nachman Bialik
1
Our Film Folk
Jacob Dellaas's Monumental
History of Land of Israel
BY-THE -WAY
Jewry sits in mourning.
The death of Chaim Nachman Bialik
Tidbits and News
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
By HELEN ZIGMOND
robs us not only of our greatest poet since
liadal Ce. Ins.
%
Weekly by The Jewish Chronicle IN ►
By DAVID SCHWARTZ
Jehudah Halevy, but takes from us one
HOLLYWOOD. — When Vera
=neared u Second-eta" matter Hiatt I. 1914.at the Post.
Hugh S. 147 9.
(Copyright, Ma 3. T. A.1
of the great Zionist leaders who has been Gordon is on her vaude tours, her I
ogle* at Detroit, /belt.. under the At
an influence for unity and national inspira- dressing-room is open to all vis-
This is being written at Atlantic
General Offices and Publication Building
itors .. . she estimates having'
A review of "Palestine: The Last Two Thousand Years," by
City, on the floor of the Zionist
tion in Palestine.
525 Woodward Avenue
spoken to about 10,000 mothers
Rabbi Milton Steinberg of the Park Ave. Synagogue, New York.
convention, in the 18th year of
Telephone: Cadillac 1040 Cable Address: Chronicle
Words are insufficient for tribute to this who have sought her advice, prin-
Rabbiinberg
is
the
author
of
"The
Making
of
the
Modern
Jew."
My
the Balfour Declaration.
I.ondoo Office
great man. It is the obligation of the Jew- cipally on whether to send their
friend, Harry Fierst, treasurer of
Stratford Place, London, W. 1, England
daughters to Hollywood . . . her
14
the Zionist Organization, espied
1914. Jewtsh Telegraphic Ayeh
.. MOO Per Year ish people throughout the world to build in answer is invariably negative.
me today on a spot not where the
Subscription, in Advance.
• • •
ter his honor the type of lastmg monument
waiter
deliberations of the convention
Theda
Bara
lets
it
be
known
Insure onturation, au corresooartenre and a oosra
each w k.
T.
which
would
have
been
his
own
desire.
Tuesdayevening
the
POP.
are being held.
that she did not select her name
, only•
mast reach this ofBe• by Tu
tics centering about Palestine during the World
E WHO sets himself to write the history
When mailing notices. kindly use tin* sideof
"Are you attending the beach
A new colony in Palestine, or a new forest, from "Arab" spelt in reverse, as
cob-
War make fascinating reading. Even his best . or the convention?" asked Mr.
-
of Palestine undertakes in effect a minia-
Detroit Jewishricl* itHites torteso oder.*
was
is
popularly
believed.
She
took
should be planned at once, in order that
sclaims responsi-
The
informed
readers
have
much
to
learn
from
Mr.
Fierst.
jects of interest to the Jewish people. hats
ture history of Western civilization. For
from "Barranger," the
• • •
for an indorsement of the views expreed by the vriters
the name of Chaim Nachman Bialik may "Bari"
WIRY
de Haas, especially when he treats of obscure
surname of some relatives,
the story of the Holy Land is not the tale of one
Well, I must plead guilty to the
• • •
be honored for all time on Jewish soil.
Sabbath Readings of the Law
and
neglected
periods
such
as
the
Ommayad
and
people or culture. In its telling are involved,
accusation implied, but there are
Pentateuchal portion—Num. 30:2-36:13
When we speak of Bialik today we re- I We note that 46,000,000 peo-
Abhaside Caliphates and that long stretch of con-
other things one may learn on the
in varying degrees, the records of all the nations
ple PAID (in these times!) to
Prophetical portion--ter. 2:4.28; 3.4
fer not to only the author of that great and see Mae West's "She Done Him of the Occident. Its historian then must be a fusion from the thirteenth to the nineteenth cen- beach, too. In fact, I am not sure
5694 touching poem, "The City of Slaughter," Wrong" and "I'm No Angel" . . . cosmopolitan, familiar with the tongues and ways turies. In brief, Mr. de Haas has compiled an but that many things of the con-
Ab
1,
July 13, 1934
vention—as of most conventions
which was written after the Kishineff soo-o, we assume "It Ain't No of all these impigning peoples, if he is to describe encyclopedia of rare and unfamiliar information, , —but
are decided on at the
•
which
is
also
a
saga.
massacres. We think of the eminent Zion- Sin"!
•
beaches
instead of the halls of as-
the land itself.
sembly.
Maybe this time I didn't
Welcc >ming the German Children ist, the Palestinian leader to whom all of Writing for the Saturday Eve- Nor does this extraordinary circumstance ex-
Several Inaccuracies
This is not to say that "Palestine: The Last learn anything on the beach very
Quiet ly, without much ado, a Detroit Palestine looked with great respect and ning Post, Eddie Cantor reviews haust the difficulties which confront the would-
significant,
but I heard a good
jw
his accumulation of relatives:
committ tee authorized to accept this coin- admiration ; to the great man of culture "When I earned my first $2 on be chroniiler. He must reckon with the fact Two Thousand Years" (The Macmillan Co., $3.50)
is h story on the beach.
s
quota
of
German-Jewish
children
that
the
earliest
history
of
Palestine
is
lost
in
Lying
in
the
sands, I heard a
does not suffer from limitations. For all its care-
munity',
and learning who presided at Oneg Shab- amateur night at 'the old Miner's
ful scholarship, it is sometimes inaccurate in de- story about Secretary Hull and
on the Bowery, I was alone
the confusion of myth s—a confusion further con-
to be admitted to this country has per- bat gatherings in his home in Tel Aviv, theater
theALeowrsd.ing
the world, an orphan. By the
founded by archaeological findings. Ile must
tails. The following are typical instances of the
fected t plan to find homes for this group and made this traditional observance an in
to my informant,
time I was starred in Ziegfeld's
grapple with recurrent "Dark Ages" in which the
of youn gsters and to arrange for their care. event t9 be looked forward to from Sab- productions I had a tidy little materials from which history is written are frag- trivial inaccuracies which occur front time to when the Jewish boycott of Ger-
time.
They
are
unimportant
save
that
they
are
many
was
first
projected. Secre-
family of 14 relatives. My first
It is not so easy to appreciate the corn- bath to Sabbath.
mentary or lacking altogether and must survey
disturbing in a book so obviously destined to be tary of State Hull protested to a
t al king picture, "Whoopee,"
&
manner
in
which
this
work
is
id o
ec
sreee.
Jewry
loses
a
great
son
whom
it
may
saets
brought me 32 pairs of uncles
mendat
a vast secondary literature. In the light of all
a standard reference. For example, the Latin Jewish leader who oca m
aunts, 212 cousins and a
these considerations, it is easy to understand why
carried on here unless a comparison is take generations to replace. It is an obli- and
phrase
quoted
from
Dio
Cassius
on
page
57
is
It is preposterous;'
brand new grandfather — as a
made. Shortly after the war, a group of gation so to perpetuate his memory that bonus. When I went on the air, no adequate general history of Palestine existed obviously incorrect; the decision reached by the hi tay
T . Ilull, "to think of boycotting
Why, consider the
is
misquoted.
Germany.
60)
women organized for the purpose of bring- every thought of him should be a blessing the second cousins began piling until Mr. de Haas published his work.
Lydda
(page
rabbinic synod at
masnuyeceo ewde.s,
Amnioeurnict...of umtohneeyboGyceor tt
iropean orphans to this country. for all generations to come.
up, and on my vaudeville tours
Authoritative History
It is inexact to say, as does Mr. de Haas (page a
ing
third
cousins
once
removed
on
Mr. de Haas is to be congratulated on his
62), that Justin Martyr was executed for heresy.
They trumpeted their work, had their
it means that America will not get
my aunt's side appeared in each
achievement. He has done successfully what no
Latin syntax allows for a "religio licita" but not
any of these debts paid."
town. None of them demanded
achievo ments heralded from the house-
The New Center President
• • •
one has dared attempt before him. Equipped for
nd
on
one
occasion
called
a
mass-
much
except
the
rent,
trips
to
a
"religio
licite,"
and
no
account
of
Eusebius,
tops, and
-
The story is particularly good
The selection of Judge Charles Rubiner Hollywood, suburban homes, week scholarship, he has devoted 30 years of pains- however brief, can afford to omit reference to
g
at
which
several
of
the
children
meetin
now that Germany has indicated
the like."
taking research to the study of a huge and be-
for the presidency of the Jewish Commu- ly checks, and
his "Praeparatio Evengelica." The final sever-
• • •
that she will pay no American
brougl It over by these kind ladies were dis- nity Center is a laudatory action on the
wilderingly variegated literature. The result is
ance of the Easter from the Passover by the
bills. And Secretary Hull himself
i
to
the
curious
throng.
It
was
a
steaming
for
Europe,
Before
played
a
monumental,
authoritative
history
of
Palestine
has come to the point where he is
Christian Church took place not in 193, as Mr.
of the Center's directors.
Georgie and Gracie (Burns and
humili acing spectacle, and a grave wrong part
Germany—as he did in
It is common knowledge that all has not Allen) had to have their daily from 63 B.C.E., when Pompey subjected the. Jews de Haas asserts, but at the Council of Nwea, lecturing
his recent note to Germagy—on
was dl one the children.
skirmish. Gracie announced.
to Roman domination, to the issuance of the
been
well
with
the
Center
in
the
past
few
in
325.
her
Nazi
policies
bringing
about
going to keep moths for
Churchill White Paper in 1922. The choice of
The committee acting in the present weeks, and that there has been a definite "I'm
Other limitations might be mentioned: Mr.
her financial collapse.
ets " To which the weary
• • •
the
points
of
departure
and
conclusion
are
a
bit
on,
under
the
chairmanship
of
Fred
situati
de Haas' failure to exploit fully the wealth of
need for leadership to guide the commu- George replied, "Why moths?
On the beach near me was Carl
M. Bt dzel, is not only practical, and is nity clubhouse out of its state of despon- "Well, they're practically no ex- arbitrary. In his preface Mr. deHaas explains material found in Talmudic literature; the fact Sherman,
president of the New
pense
.
.
.
they
don't
eat
any-
his
reluctance
to
treat
with
either
Biblical
or
that he sometimes so crowds his text with facts
guide( I by a sane sense of social standards dency on the road to healthy community thing but holes!
York Zionist region—and my in-
' immediately contemporary events. He wisely
•
that the reader's interest, so well sustained gen-
formant told me a story about
• •
and human decencies. It goes about its effort in behalf of an educational and
argues the difficulties which are implicit in both
him that I think deserves record-
erally, is relaxed; and the glaring omission of any
News and notes: Charlie Chap-
work without being moved by hysteria. recreational program for youth.
these extreme limits. It is regrettable, however,
ing in the archives of this column.
lin is said to have accepted a role
trace of a map. Compared, however, to the
Its ap ■ proach to the problem is in behalf
Judge Rubiner is perhaps the best suited in "Midsummer N'ight's Dream," that in the interests of completeness Mr. de Hass vastness of the achievement, these failings are
Carl Sherman, it will be re-
group
of
children
who
are
as
human
served as Attorney General
of a
person for this post, in view of his excellent • scheduled Max Reinhardt did not open his narrative three centuries earlier insignificant. He who has cleansed and ordered called,
of
the State of New York.
as
normal
as
our
own,
and
who
must
Shakespearian
production
for
the
and
with Alexander the Great.
judicial
temperament
and
his
traditional
an Augean stable of history can be pardoned for
Dif you ever know," queried
Hollywood Bowl. Winchell ... in
be pr.( wided in homes on a basis of equality sense of fairness and lack of partiality.
The major emphasis of the book is on political
my beach informant, "how it hap-
person ... is playing to capacity
stray straws which have escaped his broom.
with those among whom they are to live
movements but, wherever information is avail-
pened that Sherman was nomin-
business in San Francisco. In
Judge
Rubiner
deserves
the
co-operation
Author's Services
ated for that post?"
and I whom they are to befriend. They of his board, the membership of the Cen- France Max Baer's flicker, "Prize- able, accounts of economic and social develop-
"No," I replied, "I am full of
It should be observed finally that Mr. de Haas
and the Lady," is called
ments are included. The text is carefully docu-
must not be displayed either as objects of ter and the entire community. This is not fighter
sand and attention. Go ahead."
"One Heart, Two Fists" . . . oo-
has performed a distinct service not alone to the
mented throughout and is supported by refer-
charil y or as subjects of curiosity just be- the project of a handful of people. It is la-la, cherie!
"Well," said my informant,
general cause of scholarship, but also to Jewry ‘the job was first offered to Beg-
• • •
ences to a diversified bibliography. This book
cause they have been saved from the Nazi one of Detroit Jewry's important agencies,
its
land
an
and
in
particular.
Between
a
people
A. Rosenblatt. Offered to
nard
should prove to be the definite history of Pales-
David Rubinoft (Cantor's thorn-
hell. They are human beings and as such rand it must be fostered to become a
organic relationship exists. The land determines Judge Rosenblatt by Charley Mur-
owns a $100,000
tine. It should take its place alongside of those
they must be given a place in the commu- healthy element in local Jewish activities. in-the•side)
in great measure the character of the economy , ply, the old Tammany Hall boss.
Stradivarius, which once belonged
authoritative texts which serve as standard books
nity without vulgar displays of emotion-
and policy of its inhabitants, thus molding theirabRotsentblatt went to see Murphy
to the Romanoff family. It was
"
"
alism
Be cause it avoids hysteria, is practical,
and is therefore fair to the children who
are t( ) be given homes here, this committee
des* r ves high commendations. It is to be
hope 1 that a large number of Jews will
aPP1: 0, for these children in order that a.
suffic ient number of homes be available for
the c ommittee to choose from.
lost during the Russian revolution
of 1917. Three years later it was
found in Paris in the possession
of a former Russian prince. The
Wurlitzer Music Company brought
pur-
it to this country. Rubinoff
. T h ys p;nr:
t c i h ea uste a d r iin c ot d r:imw a t h a e mmade
of reference.
cul ure. It is, in brief, a determinant in the
t
As a Lover of Zion
d'uc' hl, bauPt
career of a nation. The sin of geographic deter- I pre?.cMiarte
yo
.M uurrphoyir hveersyaim
Mr. deliaas, however, is no pedant and his work
Mendel Beiliss, whose death at the age of
minists like Buckle and Ellsworth Huntington is !I cannot accept it. I am going
is no dull table of facts. He approaches his sub-
62 recalls the famous trial in Russia which
not one of falsehood but of over-simplification to Palestine and expect to spend
ject with all the intensity of a life-long "lover
more than anything else served to make the
and over-emphasis. some years
there."
"Well,"
said Murphy, "we want
of Zion." He is acutely aware' of the romance
government of the Czars ridiculous in the
a Jew for the post. Whom would
In the case of the Jew, the land played a typi-
implicit in his material. He speaks of "the glam-
you
suggest?"
eyes of the world, earned the right to be tonio Stradivari in 1731 when he orous thread which easily obscures the duller cal role. It molded the early life of Israel and its
Whereupon Judge Rosenblatt
was 87 years old.
culture. During the Galus, it continued its in-
reality." He closes his text with the assertion:
referred to as a martyr for Judaism.
• • •
called up Louis Lipsky and rec-
fluence both as an object of the imagination and
"The lure of Palestine has not waned, it waxeth."
The Russian government was deter-
.y,
m
Osculation may be just a kiss
gaot. more
as a physical reality. In writing "Palestine: The commended Sherman.
And votes
h
In consequence, the book is aglow with life,
mined to make a Jewish issue of the death ' t o you ... but it's sound "tzurus'
Years"
Mr.
de
Haas
has
done
for
the
job
of
Attorney
General
of the Russian child at the hands of a band to Mae West. They were shoot lucid and graceful in style and animated by a Last Two Thousand
other candidate on the
than any other
A Path Stained With Blood ' of criminals. In spite of the proof ad- 'toff., The first kiss hit the mic sense of drama and poetry. It intrigues as much more than write a fascinating and objective Democratie
slat .;
book. He has also helped define and clarify a
as it instructs—and it is richly informative. The
When Adolf Hitler first assumed power vanced by the local police, the government ropho
ne with a resounding smack
But let us get away from the
in Germany, he boasted, especially when was determined to find a Jew upon whom . . the sound box was moved accounts of the Roman Era, of the Crusaders and factor which has molded the Jew in the past and
gives promise of remaking his life in the future. I
the Latin Kingdom, and of the international poli-
(Turn to Next Page.)
(Tura to Next Page)
denying that there were outrages against to pin the guilt, and Mendel Beiliss was
Jews, that his revolution was a bloodless the victim. As such, he ranks among the
martyrs in Jewish history.
one.
It is unfortunate that he should have
But now the horror of, the bloodbath
Youth Finds a New Spirit
which shames Germany before mankind is struggled as he did in the last days of his
By JULIAN MELTZER
life.
It
will
be
recalled
that
he
toured
the
evident in all its gruesomeness.
Palestine School Children Take in the Harvest
THE LABOR DEARTH
Germany's path is stained with blood. larger cities of this country, including De-
By ERICH GOTTGETREU
And when history records the tragedy of troit; in an effort to sell his books. But it
The government has an-
or &oak xabric
nounced its quota of 5,600 per-
the present generation, Hitler, Goering, will also be recalled that he was settled
Goebbels and their clique of butchers will in Palestine before he came to this country, lCi VENTS IN Germany during to the rest of the world should he mits for Jewish labor immi-
JERUSALEM.—The last weeks or the desire to escape from les
past two weeks have re- forgotten. For "the wrongs of the
grants in response to a request of the orange harvest in the Jew- sons. It is prompted by a deer
be credited with instituting a policy of and it is to be regretted that something 1.Crthe
i suited in speculation in official past cannot be corrected by pres-
by the Jewish Agency for a ish settlements in Palestine were attachment to the soil—possibly
degeneration which overshadows in grue- was not done to make him happy in the !quarters here as to what the next east or future wrongs."
• • •
little over 20,000. As a protest positively exciting. As usual because for centuries the soil has
someness even the worst periods in medi- Jewish homeland, rather than that he steps will be.
been withheld from his parents.
Senator Tydings may be right. against this restriction, the Jew- there was a dearth of labor, and
Despite all the bloodshed. Ger.
should
have
been
compelled
to
peddle
his
the ripe and luscious fruit could "Soil" and "fruit," "seed" and
eval times.
many today is no better off eco. But, much depends upon Germany
ish population observed a gen- not be taken off the trees quickly "harvest" are no abstract concep-
The present government in Germany is published works in America.
nomically than she was before the herself. The wrongs of the past ish
cann o be forgotten. They may, oral strike of all phases of its enough, although for the most tions, but part of the life in which
In any event, Jewish history will not "purging'
prxess started. Not cannot
being weighed in the balance. The opin-
part it had been sold already. the child is rooted. He is a pro-
that the bloodshed was meant to however, be used to good advert- activity on May 23. Except for
forget
his
name.
Nor
will
his
sufferings
ion of the civilized nations must brand it
Labor was at a premium, more duct of the soil even though he
restore economic stability. After tage in shaping future policies. the regrettable clash with the
in
the
di.
especially Jewish labor. Greater may be residing in the city. Often.
as ruthless and cruel. The verdict is that in the Russian jails be blotted out. They all, as far as the masses were con. The world will not move
(dice
at
Tel
Aviv,
against
which
P
number of Arabs than ever be- enough has he explored the coun-
affair reflected rection Senator Tydings advises
Hitlerism must be uprooted wherever it will remain as a stain upon the history of corned, the whole ranks
of Ger- without Germany's making the no stronger condemnation was fore came from Transjordan and
(Turn to Nett Pagel
Czarist Russia, and as a mark of great strife within the
may show its ugly head.
made
than
by
responsible
Jew-
first
step.
the Ilauran. But even they did
The drastic
means leadership.
• • •
ish elements throughout the not suffice.
Unfortunately, Jewry in Germany may respect in our own history.
means used by Hitler to quell the
The Jewish Labor Federation THE FOUNDER OF
In some official quarters here, land, and minor incidents in
upheaval have sunk deep in the
be doomed to suffer for many years to
minds of the Germans as well as there is doubt as to whether the Jerusalem, the strike was di g- issued an appeal to save the Jew-
CHASSIDIC SECT
come. The seed of hate has been implant-
world at large will be willing to
An Invigorated Zionism
the rest of the world.
completely trust the Hitler leader- nified and unanimous proceed- ish labor front and the harvest.
• • •
ed, and the traditional scapegoat continues
A careful perusal of the reports of the
It
called
upon
the
building
work-!
Life of B•al•Shem Described in
Senator Millard E. Tydings of ship without some iron-bound as
ing, demonstrating the solider-
to be the world's worst sufferer. But the Zionist convention held last week in At- Maryland,
Volume by Descendant of
who during the last sea- surances of the course that may I icy with which Palestine Jewry ors to lay aside trowel and spade!
Miracle-Worker's Secretary
hour of reckoning is coming. When that lantic City provides a sense of extreme sion of Con
gress introduced a reso• follow.
and go where they were most
This
will
involve
correction
of
faces
a
common
issue.
hour arrives it will be our great satisfac- satisfaction that the American movement lotion calling upon the Senate to
The dearth of labor caused urgently needed, namely, in the THE LIFE AND SAYINGS OF THE
protest the persecutions of Jews many of the criticisms stated in
C ompiled
tion to point to German Nazism with the for the upbuilding of Palestine as the Jew- in Germany, believes that to • con- Secretary Hull's note. This note, by the throttling-down of immi- orange grove. On every wall poster I 1 .1:11L
to
e' =at by S
from lea Germs. be
same finger of reproach as we today point ish National Home has emerged invigor- siderahle extent the world as • by the way, is expected to play • gration is an extraordinary one. displayed this appeal, your first TranalateA
mrobaum. Edged by
V17
HI. Puhllohed by 114.Irelr
whole is responsible for what has leading part in the near future.
glance at your daily paper con-,
to Spain and the horrible Inquisition.
ated and strengthened.
taken place there during the past For the time being, the "purging" It has caused the infiltration
Co. • 533 Broadw•y, New York.
fronted
you
with
it
and
it
was
activities in Germany have drawn into Jewish enterprise, mainly
New forces have aligned themselves year.
repeated at every meeting. And
Much is said about Chassidism,
"While the world put aside the attention from the sharp message.
agriculture, of cheap labor at a the building tools were thrown but little is understood about it.
with American Zionism. Men like Felix
• • •
"Hitler Knows Everything"
cannon and the machine gun on
time when hundreds of thou- aside and the building laborer be•: A great deal is mentioned about
M.
Warburg
are
lending
encouragement
once
Dr. Mordecai Ezekiel, economic
November 11, 1918, it at
Just before "Putzy"—Dr. Ernst F. S.
came an orange picker at far: the Baal Shem Toy, but few know
equally deadly
in- adviser to the Secretary of Agri-
which must not be underestimated. The embraced
struments the
of opnression
in the
Hanfstaengl—left this country to return
give all to settle in Palestine. lower wages than he earned at his the interesting incidents of his
lace
has
evaluation
of
the
movement
as
embodied
Henry
A.
Wal
proper job..
life.
in- culture
to Germany and to his great Fuehrer,
form of greedy national and
Important works, construction,
The present volume, in spite of
The carpenter followed suit.
policies," Senator Tyd- been nominated for the Hall of
agricultural expansion, are be-
Adolf Hitler, he was asked if Hitler knew in the address of Ludwig Lewisohn is an- ternational
its brief 120 pages, presents con-
And
then
the
locksmith,
the
Mrs
said.
Under
the
terms
of
the
Fame
by
Vanity
Fair,
a
national
i
other
encouraging
element.
held
up
for
want
of
skilled
cisely
an unusually interesting
ing
about the Roehm conspiracy before he
painter and the clerk.
agreements, Germany was magazine.
A number of convention resolutions are peace
In the citation, the publication and unskilled men; industry is
inaga siotrasigit- jacket
virtually
Their example was imitated by description of the life, aspirations
p.
9t:
acted to suppress it. and his reply was:
and
achievements
of the Chassidic
of outstanding importance, particularly
says, "We nominate for the Hall
to obligations
scholar, the lawyer, the doc-
"Hitler has knowledge of everything. the ones calling for a national conference of fulfillment. This, Senator Tyd- of Fame, Mordecai Ezekiel, because hampered, undertakings find it the
founder—and half of this number
tor and the student.
hard
to
get
adequate
staffs,
let
of pages is devoted to the sayings
as economic adviser to the Secre-
He knows what is going to happen and he
hat
alone to proceed on develop- LABOR MOBILIZATION
of the Baal Shem, his letters, ex-
a;•. ° the tary of Agriculture he has helped
rm
lein
c m
i eev ae :u. re; iwn
takes precisely the steps that are fitting. to deal with immigration problems in Pal- idnra s t ibe
Needless to gay that the roes- planatory notes and a glossary.
- ,
estine.
and
the
resolution
inviting
the
co
• • •
give the farmers information on ment schemes.
sage penetrated into the schools,
Everything that happens is inevitable."
The notes and glossary prove
The Senator says, "It is wrong prospective supply and demand con-
It would seem that the de- ' too, and just as naturally was of great value to the reader of
ditions; because he is thoroughly
Now we have the secret for the great operation and friendship of the Soviet gov-
orever doom the
,
enthusiastically
taken
up
by
the
this
volume. The Hebrew words
velopment
of
Palestine
is
based
errtment
for
Jewish
national
efforts
in
Pal-
Ito
f
habitants of Germany to a life experienced in his field, having been
Nazi successes: Hitler knows everything.
pupils, who• figuratively speaking, , are
translated,
the numerous
more on politics than economics
of economic slavery for in truth assistant economist of Hoover's
!
fought
for
the
orange
scissors,
events
recorded are annotated
"To the many wondering questioners who estine.
he
assisted
Farm Board; because
victims
so far as the Mandatory repre- whilst certain of their teachers
Mention
must
also
be
made
of
the
man-
the
y were the
a .L)rought
system
Agricultural
Ad-
and
historical
facts,
with
dotes
h
as
.I
in
drafting
the
th
ask—Will Hitler retain control? How long
sentatives are concerned. Seen showed decidedly less enthusiasm, and an understanding is acquired
nor in which the convention definitely con- C'h tenhtTi'hr:irtharrn th etY
justment Act; because he comes of
which is comprehensible on peda-
will he remain in power'.—the answer can ! demned the obstructionist methods of the hei Taking
in
the
light
of
pure
economics,
a
family
which
has
been
resident
in
the
s
range
eg
view,
the
piety
which
motivated
s
oe
n
n
of
the !Ong
gogic grc :rids. Moreover, the
nose be given: Ask Hitler. he knows every-
efforts of the Baal Shem.
may be much to what Senator America since the eighteenth cen-
there never was a time when
Revisionists. The path is strewn with there
natural,
but
to
the
minds
of
the
tury;
and
because
he
is
devoting
at
t
r
e
s
r
mta
hn
7; syd reinagl i itysa ge. He leindoifcac
A descendant
opportunity existed in greater children exaggerated, caution of Shem's
thing.
secretary is of the Baal
enough obstacles without permitting an ir-
his youth and abilitf to a nation
the author of
And what better authority for this state-
extent than now, if it could only their teachers demanded guaran-
qualities."
responsible group within the movement are to he , pitied7"They have been that needs both
• • •
lie uses much of
be seized; nor has there been tees regarding the accommodation this volume.
ment than "Putzy" himself—the same I further to check progress.
misled by a leadership which re-
and
care
of
the
pupils.
The
mob-
Since
Congress
adjourned,
there
Chassidic lore to spice the book,
used to be frank with the rest of
t he
a time when the fall effect of
piano-playing entertainer of the Fuehrer
ilization of labor worked most anda i t e
it is to be hoped that the decisions of ,
world. As Secretary of State has been much speculation as to
sam e time, does not
who shouted hurrah when the Lusitania this convention will serve to stimulate Hull pointed out in his note on ,,,unstthwehyTytdhe,,pSen
n ac t political pressure upon Jewish smoothly in the Jerusalem gym-
resolution whicch activity in Palestine was more nasium. which has already estab- permit anything to dilute the
the
deb
was sunk and who sampled his gin at a greater effort for Zionism and for Palestine 1
lished • tradition in this respect. sense and motives of the Chassidic
e would have placed the Senate on strongly felt.
Vl I
gth te ruipdoi ner'i tse
New York Club with the boast that it is the throughout the country. We are confident - G E t r:h . n . a t s brought
This to its pupils went to Gi- teach ing s .
record as protesting the persecu-
wo rld.
DAY
BRITISH
EMPIRE
•
• •
lashloshah. • settlement
vath
only drink for men, upon his arrival for that the Detroit delegates will be eager
Baal Shem means Master of
v
And yet, as bitterly as the near Petah Tikvah.
ve nnea zn py l.nation is
j th w Oriit n atC i'e
ticA
s nof ane
the Harvard reunion last month.
The (God's) Name, and while
to
impart
the
enthusiasm
they
have
e
est
t
7
th
2:13xi
hngles"
h
e
r
!
effect
,
Germa
n
y
a
nd
Jewish
community
has
felt
the
that
some
of
the
members
of
th
e
The Palestinian schoolchild's there have been others who, be-
Well, "Putzy" is gone—and we have a brought from the convention sessions to ' world shouldn-at aone t for what has
l
h a . committee who favored the repau-
government's immigration pol- zeal to assist in gathering in the fore the founder of Chassidism.
harvest is not prompted by a ban-
n it. doubtedthe wisdom of acting'
suspicion that Harvard authorities are 1 their constituents in the Zionist Organiza- I be" due in the Past' virtually, the (ion
, kering after change, or romance,
(Turn to Next Page)
persecution. of Jews in Germany,
I
(Tara to Next Page)
breathing easier and ale happy to say: lion of Detroit.
(01,Tellat. 104. J. T. A-)
land all of the heartaches resulting
riddance!"
A Martyr for Judaism
I
GHIA A COI II I\ T
1
thr
Shi
Grl
ant
pie
ica
pir
of t
Am
of
act,
ing
be
alo;
ide.
Cot
col
tho'
den
try'
tic(
yea
nec
fin
sen
Ian .
era
Pal
out
caw'
1
pre,
bar
him
Vat
are
Palestine Topics 1
Jewish