z• American ,Nlish Periodical airier CLIFTON AVENUE • CINCINNATI 30, OHIO ~ fiEpErROrIZJ Elf MON= and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE BY-THE-WAY • By DAVID SCHWARTZ (Continued from preceding page) Gee 409000 back of you Now PAY LATER • anything happen to you. But you want it now. Not 30 years from now. How are you 'ming to get it) Do you realize that simply by securing • GREAT-WEST Double Protection Policy and making your first depot you can actually create an estate of $10000 Isonsedistes.)•—and take twenty years or more to pay for it? It given you double protection at the time you need it moat—foe the lowest cost. Compared with ordinary life tonswonee. should death occur before age 60 it pays— twits the amount of insurance at much less than twice the cost. Protection" wt11 cod you only 37c • day at age 35. Writs today for interesting details. 810,000 'Double MOE LEITER another Amos or Isaiah had come thundering his message to Israel. JEWISH YOUTH FINDS A NEW SPIRIT It was interesting to watch Lewisohn sitting by the side of (Continued from Preceding Page.) sleeping quarters, in the tent, the the son of Felix Warburg, the barrack or the packing house. Ex. banker. And the young Warburg try; every excursion has been an citement and anticipation inter. very evidently was happy at being fered with the first night's sleep, thrown in such close contact with unforgettable experience. Ant his and when the alarm was sounded holidays are spent with friends in the great writer. at 5 a. tn., most of the children some agricultural settelment, more • • • had only gone to sleep. How for- But these are all, after all—not correctly among the horses and tunate that the size of Jaffa or- cows, in the poultry—and vine- yet the bottom reason why the ange and its golden sheen make it convention will go down in his- yard, in the branches of trees and, above all, in the orange grove. visible to even the sleepiest eyes! tory. The second day found everyone considers him self an ex- It can be stated very simply. Thus Since nce there i s always a an expert. The scissors were It was because of the presenta- wielded with the skill of the tion of a new policy of expansion shortage of labor during harvest- ing time, he is naturally proud of trained gardener. Ceaselessly the d • by the Zionist organization. The being sought after. No longer is g program formulated by Morris he a niece amateur, but a real the , packin g sheds, where they Rothenberg calls for the Zionist factor to be reckoned were sorted, wrapped and packed worker, a Organization to become some- with in the economic scheme of by eager hands. Sonic of the chit• dren were assigned to prepare- thing more than a fund-collecting things. tory work for next year's harvest, , organization—calls for Zionism GALORE in anticipation of which tools had !assuming a place of paramount EXCITEMENT 1512 Union Guardian Bldg. DETROIT, MICH. 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AMTORG, Nil Fifth Ave., N.Y. les deep sibly has rota. and icep- hich pro- h he Men oun- at MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE CO. )F CT id in Just How Are You of Your Business Methods? smptions were founded on re- u (Continued from Page On• .) ports and were contradicted in - the local authorities, however, and every detail by unfortunate 1 , ' LONDON. (JTM — Ludwig 0 the chief of police of Kieff re- licemen, who were promp1 °Y . Vogelstein and Rabbi Samuel , signed after the arrest, saying thrown in jail for their truth-tell- Schulman, both of New York, ' he had found no evidence against ing. Pranaites shone as a wit- were the main speakers at the 2 Beiliss and that he was still con- ness, not against Beiliss, but concluding session of the Inter- 3 vinced of the guilt of the woman against the Jewish race, with his national Conference of the World 4_ associate of the gang. Further- proclamation of the existence of Union for progressive Judaism. more, the chief of the Kiel detee- the "blood dogma." Liberal Judaism is able to con- . 5 During thetri al tire bureau advanced more proofs bins a 3,000-year-old tradition , of the innocence of Beiliss, and months preceding it, the Russian with the mental and spiritual re•; u was arrested for "manufacturing government ignored petitions from ; 7 of the of day and evidence." After one acquittal he many lands asking for a cessation t quirements scie ce with Vo- he received a year's imprisonment of official the prosecution. All the semi- organs contained articles' gelstein said, adding that religion .., stands above race because all reli- i S from a higher tribunal. No greater judicial farce has condemning the prisoner in ad- gious people have something in common. ever been acted than the Bellies • Yet when the case reached the trial. The Russian government Rabbi Schulman asserted that i used every power and stratagem courtroom, truth triumphed. The to arouse Russia and the world case against Beiliss crumbled to the heritage of Judaeo-Christian i against the Jews and the defend- dust at the outset. The govern- civilization will continue. Is its system and the methods you are using the best there is? Do your records give you the correct facts so that they are an aid in solving your problems? Accountancy correctly applied can het p you in your 1 2 business. 4 5 6 7 8 9 CHARLES K. HARRIS COMPANY CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS 1317 GRISWOLD BLDG. — CAdillac 3338 Cherie. K. Hurts. C. P. A. 5 of ry THE (Tn.. Pauro Irene Itur• ublI6h• Levant Fair, at which Sir Iler- bert Samuel, M. P., who was visiting here for the first time since he quitted the High Com- missionership in 1925, and four other British M. P.s, including the Jewish Member for White- chapel, Barnett Janner, ad- dressed a large gathering on the necessity of fostering recip- rocal commerce between Eng- land and this country. The fact that the Jewish pop- ulation did not allow its adverse attitude to the government's policy to interfere with its dem- onstration of esteem to the British Empire aroused favor- able comment. THE LEVANT FAIR The Levant Fair has now closed down its 1934 display after 40 days of continuous ex- hibition. Over 600,000 visitors entered the fair grounds during its six weeks of existence, and contributed to the material suc- cess which it has scored. Opened by the High Commie- sioner on April 20, the fair v- as importance in all channels of Jew- . Instead of satchels, copy books, I been brought along. ish life. drawing pads and pencils, the pia- At night there was dancing. • • • pits turned up one morning with Which Jewish boy or girl is ever I have mentioned I.ewisohn's blankets, toothbrushes and a too tired to join in the Hersh? speech. He told a couple of good change of underwear. Then the At other times there were debates, stories. One of them was told waiting buses were boarded. When on social questions, when, for in- anent the argument generally just about to start, nervous moth- stance, the children of Ben She. framed so: "Let us not be Jews ers arrived out of breath with the men proposed to strike in order to so much—let us be men." breakfast which the children in bring about the reinstatement of Lewisohn recounted a fable their impatience had forgotten ft Yemsnite worker wrongfully die- apropos of this—a fable of a num. to take along. Poor mothers, for missed. Once a deep shadow fell ber of animals which had come their part they waited impatiently over the jolly camp life, when the together at a meeting. There was for letters "from the front." But news came that a schoolfellow of a lion, a cow, a horse, a gazelle, do you think that their offspring theirs had met with sudden death closed by the government tress- etc. lever wrote at all? The last they through falling down a precipice urer, W. J. Johnson, on June 5 And one of the animals got up heard of them was their jolly when climbing the ancient fortress and brought its activities to a and made a great speech, ending surging all along the road which of Massada near the Dead Sea. temporary stop until 1936, when with the exhortation, "Let us be 1 sted up to arrival at their des- Then and there the children con- animals." tination. ceived the plan to apply part of I it will re-open. As Mr. Dizen. The moral of the story is that The settlements, ton, were im- their earnings in the private I golf pointed out in his address, all this talk of being men first and patiently awaiting the **rival of groves to a memorial to their lost the buildings are indaequate to Jews afterwards is silly. Willy reinforcements. It did not take comrade in the form of a safe house the many intending ex nilly, all of us will and must be long before every one had been path nn that dangerous spot cher- assigned his part in the work ished by the youth of the country hibitora at the next fair; Mr. men. on account of its heroic associa- Johnson also remarked in his ad- • • • and tools had been distributed. dress how schemes of develop- Maurice Samuel related how And everyone was shown his tions. when Bialik was in this country, ment in Palestine rapidly out- too, should be glad to play a he had complained to Bialik about ALLIED CAMPAIGN grew their initial conception, part in this heroic endeavor. the necessity he (Samuel) was and cited this as an example. ASKS ADDITIONAL Consider carefully what this under in making no many speeches! PLEDGES TO FUND means. A few dollars mete The Jewish National Pavilion for Zionism. will not hurt you; but will help had as its chief feature a re- Bialik replied by asking Sam-I (Continued from Page One) you by giving you the con• uel: markable piece of sculpture by sciousneas that you have helped "Do you doves?" a Palestinian artist—Ben Zwi. your people. secured. .But — the total was "No," replied Samuel. It represents Jewish National far short of the mark. Why? "Did your father doyen?" In case you were out of town Capital (the Jewish National "Yes," replied Samuel. during the recent campaign or The answer is that the com- "Did he enjoy it?" continued munity ■ s a whole has given are unfamiliar with its purposes, Fund and Keren Ilayesod) as Bialik. the enclosed card will indicate inadequately because it has ap- the Sower of the Land of Israel, "No, I don't believe he did," to you the causes and the ex- parently failed to realise the the donations of the people be- replied Samuel. tent of their participation: importance of the cause. It is ing the grains of the country's "Of course he didn't," heplied Please fill out and return it so important for you and every Bialik, • "but to him damning member of the community to red share development. The figure is that you may have a served a purpose, so he did not know the facts and to judge in this campaign of Jewish larger than life size, and at- neglect it, and you. Samuel, since kelpfulneo. We Jews must take them for yourself. tracted much comment. you don't dares, you can afford care of our own. There was a time when it THE TIBERIAS TRAGEDY to make a lot of speeches for was considered "fashionable" to Sincerely your., That Palestine is a land of vio- Zionism!" Jewish Welfare Federation give to others less fortunate. • • • lent diversity of climate has long of Detroit. Today it seems suddenly to been known: but that a cloud- Apropos of the talk occasionally have become "fashionable" to burst could occur with such dev- heard, that the German Jews do be indifferent if not antagon- astating effect in mid-May in one not deserve the sympathy of all istic to every helpful Jewish of the warmest spots of the coun- the other Jews, because they were project. try was most unexpected, al- so far removed from Judaism and Our Gentile neighbors have though similar weather freaks in things Jewish, Samuel told a very long given us the grudging trib- May have happened before. The (Continued from preceding page) good story, which he credited to ute that "the Jew takes care Tiberias calamity in which 33 the Midrash. of his own." Are we now to According to this story, when sacrifice our right even to this were called Baal Shem, the coni• people lost their lives and consid- monly accepted title now is for erable damage was done to prop- Pharoah oppressed the Jews, he I modest distinction? bibs alone. lie is also being called erty, was followed by a relief ef- attempted to defend himself by The time will never come Baal Shem Too, the Kind Master fort, and lorry-loads of provisions pleading with God that even God when there will not be excuses of God's Name. Born Israel the and clothing poured into the town had said that the Jews were a "alibis" available for those and son of Eliezer, his life story is a few hours after thousands were stiffnecked and wayward people. Do briefly summed up in one of the rendered homeless. The floods de- who do not want to give. And God replied: "What I said not make the mistake at taking notes to the present volume, as molished a large section of the or did is My business. You have them too seriously. You will congested lakeside quarter, and follows: no right to oppress them." notice that the men who talk ••11nrn between StS0.51511 111110-10111 the majority of the' victims were And so that the German Jews In Okup, • Ware on the south... tern o ld people, women and children, most about their "losses" and may have been remiss in the past ts.. bz nodrna,r.y .n.sonnstniutut:ht who were the only ones at home "assessments" to avoid giving hydrr. Lome hin falh m emir. Attends is none of our business. It is our air g Ily the ones who not at noon when the rushing torrent business to see that we are not ■re M edic. me rrily min hemblimb. down least where their own per• night. Firm marries,. folloord ohort iv swept down the hillside towards now remiss in our aid to them. a ge. twnsitsr nd ' Lake Kinnereth carrying all be- sonal indulgences are concerned. be the awn or moue 1"...1 t" In ea " .fore it, and tumbling down im- 'sensuous,' ta The failure of our drive has Mar ries the Meier of w ern Galicia riots- moose boulders on its way. eminent Itebbl Abraham Oershen meant • serious loos to those in Lonely stn In the l' le er of Brody One result of the disaster will need at home and abroad. It has m( KehliovIts. Pert ar- Phlans shohet at (Continued from Preceding Page) to ti. brother-In-lave In Brody inn. be the reconstruction of a large, meant a troublous problem for tem+, and Imo. near Tluate. p art of the old town, a compact national Jewish charities that back . . . again the kiss shocked counted on our support. It has and ult.,. publIrly m a Baal Arab and dilapidated quarter along the the recorder (the machine, of s o h e a n tn: hi e Z. .fiti4,01,7ts.",:uis•hsi,";stIst western shore of the lake. Al- caused dismay among those en- muse course). At last the sound man '„1,7 1: „1,','„".1,nt,"„4, though 60 per cent of the resi- trusted with Mg on our asked Mae to please muffle the own local Jewish activities. It ts st, eor. 1e 4 .ty7bn ent s of Tiberias are Jewish, . w ir soli n eesuss 04 resonance. But Miss West, a bit there were e more Arab than Jew- meant an impairment of our o la. shoe • out s province of nonplussed by this time, declared has IMO). PO. In S320 (1760). ISM ish fatalities, and it speaks well own self-respect. Finally, it has is at Kleedyhos as going to lugs as she was for the proverbial humanitarian the eyes of our This little book is highly recom- spirit of the Jewish people that would . . . and let the sound degraded us in mended. It makes instructive relief was unstintingly offered to tracks fall where they may. Re- neighbor.. The records of the campaign signedly the cameraman tied • indicate that you have not given reading and provides the most il- the other community. A fund is luminating material about the now being raised and will be spent piece of silk around the micro- aar. damped the vibrations northing or else in an M • t founder of Chassidism. on rebuilding the demolished area P hone . We know th in our ears from the