Thelpritorr,/msn (ARO/41CW
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
PA(
ort h
m er of stud ents h as e nrolled fe
a nub
evenin g course . It is a very poor way of
popularizing the language of the Bible and
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
' the Prophets, and it does not speak so well
Published Weekly by The Jewish Chtentri. Publishing Cs., lee.
for those who are anxious that Hebrew
Metered La Second-clefts m•tter )47.:ch C. 19II, •t te Poet.
become one of the courses recognized in
March h 1t79.
°Mee at Detroit. hitch.. under tb• Art /
the high schools.
General Offices and Publication Building '
If the movement to make Hebrew one
525 Woodward Avenue
of the high school courses is to bring con-
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crete results, it is the duty of those propa-
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gating it to make a thorough canvass of
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Ts Detroit Jewish Chronicle invites eorre•pondenre on cub-
/eels of Interest to the Jewith people, but Mitcham. resoomis
proached, will be anxious to enroll for the
bully for an Indorsement of the •Iews expre•red by the writers
study of Hebrew.
Sabbath Chol Hemoed Succoth Readings of the
It is to be hoped that this movement to
Law
Pentateuchal portion—Ex. 33:12-34:26; Num.
I have Hebrew taught in our schools will
I
29:26-34
i meet with the success it deserves.
WiEVEIROIVEWISii0ROMCLE
At
Le
FRI
Ste
EVI
Hoshanah Rabbah Readings of the Law, Sunday,
Sept. 30
Num. 29:26.34
A Jew Heads the League
Sbemini Avereth Readings of Torah, Monday, Oct. 1
Pentateuchal portions—Deut. 14:422.16:17; Num.
29:35-30:1
Prophetical portion—I Kings 8:54-66
"I'
in
the
di+
fu
m
Simchas Torah Readings of the Law, Tuesday,
Oct. 2
Pentateuchal. portions— Deut. 33:1-34; Gen.
1:12-3; Num. 29:45-30-1
Prophetical portion—Joshua 1.
September 28, 1934
Tishri 19, 5695
Rejoicing in the Law
i $ ,
In spite of the general gloom that per-
vades Jewish life everywhere, the faithful
will rejoice on Simchas Torah, next Tues-
day evening and Wednesday, and will de-
rive a new lease of life from the knowl-
edge that they are the guardians' of God's
law. The spirit of the Jew, which refuses
ever to be vanquished and continues I stub-
bornly to triumph in spite of suffering and
oppression and because of an unquench-
able faith in God, is described in an old
folk song:
"Simchas Torah! skip and hop
On your feet till down you drop!
In your mouth a merry jest—
And a burden in your breast."
0
The great Yiddish poet, Morris Rosen-
feld, of blessed memory, perhaps best
caught this spirit of Simchas Torah in one
of his great poems, which concludes with
this verse:
By HELEN ZIGMOND
{
HOLLYWOOD — Another He-
braic star shoots acroes the cine-
matic sky . . Joseph Ileinsfelt,
English matinee idol, signed the
dots for a major company. Heins-
felt became an actor in the army.
'Twas this way . . . serving in an
English regiment, he was cap-
tured and imprisoned in a Ger-
man camp . . . here, to amuse
the prisoners, he produced plays
and acted in them . . and so
taught himself the art of drama-
turgy.
• • •
Things I didn't note'll now:
That Al Jolson. and Emil Jen-
nings are the same age-48.
That Eddie Cantor was a mes-
senger boy in Wall Street . . .
and was discharged because he
made the other boys laugh.
That Director Mervyn LeRoy
spent eight years in vaudeville.
That Paul Muni began the
study of the violin at the age of
;four.
That Sari Maritza learned to
ice-skate when she was 7 . .. to
ride horseback at 9 . . . and won
medals for skating at 13.
; That the sleek and dandyish
dance-master, LeRoy Prinz, was
a war ace . . . and met with his
twenty-sixth, and last, plane crash
at Chateau Thierry.
Rickard J. Sandler, the Jewish Foreign
Minister of Sweden, a Socialist, was elected
president of the current session of thb
League of Nations Assembly at Geneva.
What a great opportunity this is for the
anti-Semites! Think of it! A Jew heads
the League of Nations! Does it not proye
that Jews control the world? And this
Jew is a Socialist.. Does it not provide
• • •
additional proof that all Jews are Marx-
Tragedies are none the less
ists and therefore the destroyers who seek real in the land of make-believe.
' There is one . . . Sol Simon . . .
to control and ruin the world?
who works as an extra for $10 a
This should be a busy season for the ene- day—when he works. He was
discoverer of the Kern County
mies of our people. The presses will be the
oil fields . . was a
working overtime grinding out millions of
. . . then lost his tortune in
additional copies of "The Protocols of the developing another oil field that
failed to gush. Claims he is happy
Elders of Zion." Other forgeries and falsi- in being able to make a living In
fications will be distributed, and crazed his old age . . . chose the movies
him.
men, among whom are today to be found !because they • fascinate
• •
leaders of what was once a great European
Dorothy Parker and
Hubby
nation, will be whispering warnings against Campbell had a difficult time l o-
rating
a
Hollywood
abode
. . .
a poor and defenseless people.
tvheery
y finally
pinaacle. came upon just the
And in the meantime Jews can only sit
to sign a long lease. The lady
by and hope for two things:
liked their appearance,
That the sane elements In the world will ;owner
wanted them for tenants. Upon
once and for all put a stop to this insanity. (discovering their identity, she
in the agent's ear that
And that bigotry and idiocy, instead of whispered
she would let them have it with-
gaining worldwide control, will, after all, out a lease—if they would invite
Ah, fame!
carry with them the seeds of their own her to dinner!
• • •
destruction.
Reeling About Town: Reuben
Anti-Religion in Russia
The following special cable to the New
York Times throws additional light on re-
ligious attitudes in Soviet Russia:
MOSCOW, Sept. 19.—Yom Kippur was cele-
brated in Soviet Russia today but in a fashion
unlike that anywhere else in the world, be-
cause here religious observances, although
permitted, are in disfavor.
In Moscow, where there are a half-million
Jews, five or six thousand of them worshiped
in the four synagogues still open. Perhaps an
equal number of former Jews celebrated the
day with anti-religious meetings in their clubs.
The majority ignored the day altogether.
Most of those who worshiped were elderly per-
eons.
A Jewish workers' club is next door to one
of the largest synagogues near the, center of
the city. While services were going on in
the synagogue all day, jubilation was going
on in the dub. A jazz band played, drowning
out the voice of the cantor, and eandwichee
and beer at bargain rates were liberally con-
sumed.
Here is definite proof that the anti-
religious sentiment dominates in Russia.
But in the instance of Jewish anti-religious
demonstrations there is also this to remem-
ber: Jews are the ones primarily respon-
sible for such offenses. Evidently the
spirit of the Yevsektzia, the one-time Jew-
ish Communist section, remains the ruling
element among the Jews in Russia.
In speaking, therefore, of religious op-
pressions in Russia, we must make this
reservation out of fairness to the non-Jew-
ish members of the government. There is
good reason to believe that if it were not
for the influence of the anti-religious and
anti-nationalist Jews there would be an
entirely different story to relate with re-
gard to the oppression of the Jewish reli-
gion and the Hebrew language in Russia.
Hebrew in the High Schools
Several years ago it was our painful
• duty to point out that the reason there are
no courses in Hebrew in our high schools
is because Jews themselves fail to enroll
for such courses.
The issue threatens to be revived again,
but this time we hope that it will end
much more pleasantly and constructively.
, A course in Hebrew is at the present
time being offered in the Central Evening
High School. It is stated with some de-
gree of assurance that if this course proves
successful—meaning that if a large num-
.* ber are interested in it—it will be the fore-
runner of similar courses in the day high
schools.
It is unpleasant to record again that the
old problem remains. Entirely too small
Tidbits and News
By DAVID SCHWARTZ
By HANS CURT
, °es right. We Jotleh TelegraPhit AC...
PAIN is one of the few countries in the world
where there does not exist a Jewish prob-
lem. But for the Jews themselves, Spain
has remained a problem since the yeir 1492 when
they were driven out of the Hispanic Peninsult
to all four corners of the world. Only lately,
influenced, without doubt, by the conditions in
Germany, this old problem seems to be nearer
its final solution. The anathema that the Jews,
tortured, pauperized and driven out, once hurled
against Spain and that is still a vivid part of
the consciousness of the "Spanioles," direct de-
scendants of those Spanish Jews, the German
Jews fleeing from equally cruel persecution have
cancelled and wiped out in our days.
S
For Spain is no longer the old Spain of Ferdi-
nand and Isabelle, but a young republic which
has officially invited the Jews back to the coun-
try and which has facilitated immigration for
the descendants of those who once were driven
from Spanish soil. Since January, 1933, 2,000
more Germans have settled in Barcelona, and
these Germans are mostly Jews who, suffering
under the intolerance of another country, have
accepted sanctuary from those who centuries ago
had dealt their race so deadly a wound.
Mamoulian tossed a cocktail party
for Max Reinhardt . . . Max
Baer's man, Friday, suffers under
the name of Kettles. . . Helen
two
alaepsarz
t at ieef
lyl n ws eret
We Are in Good Company
"0 great and happy feast day, Simchas
Torah!
An interested and kind reader sends us itreck most en ua
High above your head thy bright star a clipping from The Rail Splitter of
a
the circus last week . .. A a baby
flashes
Ill., which we take great pleasure in re- just born in Brooklyn was labelled
1Myrna Loy Goldberg!
To win such a feast day, one such feast printing herewith:
day,
On his recent tour of the coast,
PRESIDENT TURNS U. S. TREASURY
Ten we spend fasting in sackcloth and
Max Baer met 7-year-old David
OVER TO JEWS. The American people wale
I
Holt,
new child star. The young-
ashes."
astonished to read in their daily newspapers
It is no wonder that on this day the
usually temperate Jewish people makes
merry with song and laughter and with
sumptuous feasts. Because it is the day
of rejoicing in the law, which gives the
people strength to carry on.
BY-THE -WAY
JEWS' RETURN TO SPAIN RECALLS
TRAGIC "NEVER" OATH OF 1492
Our Film Folk
ster, unafraid of the champion
'boasted that there was only one
I person in the world who could
lick him. "Who's that?" asked
startled Baer. "My dadl"
The scars of that wound still throb in the
memory of Orthodox Jews. When in 1452, soon
after the discovery of America, Spain, drunk
with the gold of the New World, decided on its
terrible edict against the Jews, not a man, woman
or child of that faith remained in Spain. At
that time the spurious race theory of Hitler had
yet to be evolved out of warped and twisted
minds, and Spain objected to the Jews merely
from a religiou's point of view. Baptized Jews,
even if baptized under duress and called Mar-
ranos, were permitted to reside In Spain and
later ongained important puulic influence and
often distinctive honors.
Pres. Zamorra Is Marranos Descendant
The president of the modern Spanish Repub-
lic, Alcala Zamorra, is a descendant of those
Marranos and would be considered in Ilitlerdom
as tainted by Jewish blood. The Jews who were
driven out, looking for a haven East as well as
West, straying toward Turkey, Asia Minor and
even India, settling in the Netherlands, drifting
toward Poland and Russia, all united in one
solemn oath never again to return to Spanish
soil even if—impossible and fantastic as that
seemed in that tragic hour—even if Spain should
ever call back those who were so mercilessly
driven from their beloved homes. This oath,
this anathema against tolerance, ended with the
thrice repeated word: "Never." Never, never,
never again would the banished return; never,
nver, never again would Spain be a home to the
Jewish people.
Centuries passed and though individual Jews
lived in one or the other Spanish city, no de-
scendant of the original Spanish Jews ever re-
turned to his old homeland. The main settle-
ment of these Spanish Jews was located in Sal
recently of the resignation of Woodin as treas-
urer of the United States and the immediate
appointment of henry Morgenthau Jr. Those
who are familiar with the Jewish tie-up of
President Roosevelt are not surprised at the
appointment. The Jews and the Roman Catho-
lics are in control of this country today. The
Gentile Protestant people who helped put this
twin evil upon themselves by voting for a
"change" are responsible. They have done
themselves irreparable harm which will take
years to undo, it ever. The depression, brought
about by Jewish financiers, have accomplished
the results they planned for. The depression
A' /a/744',4• AVEN/6
worked such a change on the public mind that
it unwittingly played into these Jewish hands
ESPERATE efforts are being , While the congressional cam-
and has put them into supreme power in this
made by the German govern- paigns are nearing the heated stage
country. N ow• that they have control of the
ment to increase its foreign trade. in nearly all sections of the coun-
United States treasury our system of Jewry is
Representatives of that govern- ! try, there is one campaign which
complete. The Jews run business; we pay
ment are sounding sentiment in 'I is being conducted without any pub-
money over to them for things we need; we
other nations in order to determine licity and behind the scenes. This
work under them for miserable wages and now
their attitude toward trading pacts particular campaign is in full
the President has turned the treasury of the
to move greater quantities of Ger- I blast! It is the fight among the
government over to them. Now their scheme
man-made goods into exporting Democrats for the speakership of
of skinning the Gentiles is complete. Next
the House.
channels.
thing to do is to tax them to death. We '
Many names have been brought
While talk of a trade agreement
thought Mellon bad enough, but a Jew is a
between the United States and into the ring since Speaker Rainey
thousand times worse. If the people do not
died a few months ago. Among the
Germany has been current for quite
rise up and put these political pirates out of
ou tstanding ontenders are Repre-
office within the next few years this country
some time, it was only recently , sentative Byrns of Tennessee, Ray-
will go down in financial ruin. We are allow-
that official representations were burn of Texas, and Bankhead of
iv? the Jewish financial suckers to ruck up our
made to this country. Washington Alabama. Although he has prac-
national life and leave us in starvation and
tically declined the honor, the name
has it that Dr. lions Luther, Ger- of Representative Adolph .1. Sab-
poverty. They have put more than sixteen
. .
rot
man Ambaeeador to the
millions upon the relief rolls within the last
ath' continues to come up in var-
few years. Shall we allow them to put the
States, discussed the matter with ious discussions. Another possible
rest of ue there too?
Secretary of State Hull and George! candidate being mentioned is Rep-
resentative John W. McCormack
N. Peek, president of the Export- } of Massachusetts, chairman of the
_ •
Our reader and contributor asks us what
we think about this outburst and we take Import Bank. • • •
pride in informing hint that we now, more
Germany is interested in obtain-
than ever, are convinced that we are in ing cotton, wool and other raw ma- ,
pretty good company.
serials for which she is in dire need. I
Franklin D. Roosevelt is not such a bad Financial and economic difficulties
fellow to be associated with. Even his ii- ,;;;,t have forced Germany to seek AO, I
rabid "Protestant critics" credit him with stitutes ter these raw materials,
being a very sincere man who is making but apparently without much suc-
cess. With a hard winter ahead
an honest effort to solve the country's of her, Germany is making every ,
problems.
effort to obtain the much-needed I
Even if we are maliciously grouped to- materials.
In exchange for these raw prod-
gether with the Catholics. we believe it
it was suggested that the Uni-
will generally be granted that there are ucts,
ted States might import beer, sur-
some mighty nice people among the Catho- gical and optical instruments, elec-
lics. Here again, therefore, we are also in trical supplies, chemicals, dyes,
I novelties, and other manufactured
pretty good company.
products. Because of Germany's
And there are Protestants without num- depleted financial condition, the
suggestion was made that trade be
ber in the Roosevelt official family and carried
on between the two coun-
among his lay supporters who are not bad tries through a bartering arrange-
ment.
people.
•
•
•
We do not have to apologize for such an
Indications are that Secretary
illustrious fraternity, do we?
dull IS not very keen about an
with Germany. at least
And as for Jews and Catholics being "in l agreernent
not at the present time. The mesi-
control of this country today." it i8) only bilities of barter with that country
necessary for us to remind the poor and are, however, being studied by the
Department. But, Secretary
misinformed chap who wrote the drivel State
Hull has made it clear that up to
referred to that the Protestants are still in now, no basis has been found on
any formal negotiations be =
the majority in the United States and that which
tween the two governments could
they elected President Roosevelt.
proceed.
In the State Department and
Our reader need not be alarmed. We
nment circles there ie
other Government
are in pretty good company and together a feel i ng
ba r .
with those we arc classed in so horrifying ter between two countries would he
more
of
•
hindrance
than
an
aid
to
a manner we shall no doubt be attacked
The extension of
world trade.
time and again. But poor bigots must have credits to countries in a critical
their say. Let them. As long as we are financial condition is out of the
When George Peek enun-
not singled out as the only destroyers of questien.
u tdichope
thce.
caxtedrttlienipp:Irticiellaurrewrow
society, and as long as the President and
oper-
the Catholics are branded as our allies, the ate, made it pain that the bank
encourage business only with
good citizens will only laugh at such would
those countries with ability to pay
tommy-rot.
for goods bought.
,
onica and when the young Republic of Spain de-
cided to recall the edict against the Jews, and
to invite them to settle again in Spain, the gov-
ernment sent a telegram to Salonica offering
important inducements to the descendants of the
former Spanish Jews. One promised them im-
mediate citizenship, complete freedom of occu-
pation, all civil, political and economic rights.
Yet, that "never, never, never" of the old oath
Was still echoing in the hearts of those whose
forefathers had suffered under Spanish injus-
tice and after long and heated deliberations the
Sanhedrin decided to refuse the invitation of
the modern, more tolerant Spain.
That was in 1931. But since then the menace
of Ilitlerism has come upon the world and the
old memories have been wiped out by the tragic
events of the present day. Germany has turned
back the clock four centuries, and has made
herself the heir of old Spanish intolerance and
bigotry. Germany is now persecuting, driving
out and defaming its Jews, not learning from
history the significant lesson that since the day
on which Spain expelled the Jews it ceased to
he a world power, while these countries which
showed hospitability to the Jewish people flourish
politically and economically.
Ancient Resentment Is Forgotten
And in view of this new menace the Jews have
made their peace With Spain. Before the new
terror the old memories become paler and dis-
appear, the old echo dies down and more and
more Jews now turn toward Spain in the search
for new homesteads.
They find there a very favorable soil. Just
now the new immigrants are to be encountered
mainly in Barcelona and Madrid, because Bar-
celona is the industrial and commercial hub and
Madrid the cultural center of Spain. Into the
inner Spanish provinces the new arrivals have
not yet ventured. Tarranirona, Gerona, Saba-
dela, even Valencia and Saragossa are for the
present not being considered by the immigrants
as possible homes. But there exist already in
Barcelona many Jewish stores, cafes, pastry
shops, Jewish laboratories, stamp dealers and
hardware merchants. And even greater and
bolder enterprises are courageously undertaken
by the new arrivals. As, for instance, the new
Iberian Film Company, Limited, already pro-
ducing its first Spanish-language film with Span-
ish actors, although the director, the stage man-
ager and the production manager all speak no
word of Spanish.
The Spanish government in no way hampers
the immigrants in any of their activities. In
fact, state and civic officials do everything pos-
sible to make all these new ventures a success.
Thus the ancient sorrow, the ancient shame, the
ancient resentment is forgotten. The turn of
the wheel is complete and in the full circle 01
historical and economic events the Jew has re-
turned after 400 years to live and prosper on
Spanish soil and to help in the upbuil4ing and
the flourishing development of modern Spain.
Geneva Generalities
COVERT
D
■ Cup ■ rIght IBA A T. A ,
By BERNARD G. RICHARDS
MODERNS AND ANCIENTS
One of the greatest errors i, our
belief that we live- in a modern age.
Every day in every way, this
phrase—modern limes—is repeated
again and again.
It seems to me that if tee would
recognize that we are ancient—as
ancient as Babylon anti Egypt, as
liammurabi and Nero and Cleo-
patra—we would learn a little hu-
mility; and a little humility is the
beginni ng of wisdom.
This idea of how ancient we
truly are was impressed on me just
• now by reading an account by a
Jewish philosopher who lived in the
days when Christianity was just
bursting forth from its chrysalis,
some 1900 years ago.
The philosopher was Philo Jo-
i daeus anti he wrote an account of
I a visit of a delegation of Alexan-
; drian Jews to the Roman Emperor,
(linos, to intercede against the op-
I pression of Jews in Alexandria and
to protect the rights of citizenship
of the Jew, of Alexandria.
• •
.
I IN OLD ALEXANDRIA
I Alexandria was a great city at
, that time, and the Jews were a
highly prosperous element of the
!community. And that it was a
I highly cultured element, we may
I know by the fart that it produced
!a Philo Judaeus.
indeed, the community suggests
I very much the German Jewish coin .
I munities of today. Instead of Dr.
Rosenberg and Dr. Goebbels there
were Apion anti isidorus, the lead-
ers of the anti-Semitic [tarty.
' I don't know whether it was the
!Egyptian Jewish Congress which
'sent Philo to plead with the Em-
peror, but, if they did, they sent
I a worthy representative, even
though the Emperor's reception
, was rude.
, Philo tells how the Emperor re-
, reived hint in his garden, and gen-
; erally when he asked the Jews a
question, and l'hilo began to ans-
wer, the Emperor rushed away to
,another part of the garden with
•the Jews pursuing. In other words,
the old Emperor was, if not a Nazi,
quite as Nasty.
The anti-Semites opened with the
charges that the Jews refused to
Worship the Emperor as God—
that they refused to place his image
in : air synagogues and refused to
hilts down to his image.
'
S i, youare,
ou see, the old Roman e-
in
, perors were a little worse than
the Hitlerites, for, though I have
, read that some of the Nazis claim
i that hillier is as great and nuiyhe
I a little greater than Jesus, in gen-
eral, Jesus in Germany still has the
edge.
Well, what did h'hilo answer the
I Emperor?
Ile said to the Emperor that the
IJews had thrice brought sacrifices
, for the Emperor, once when the
!Emperor ascended the throne, once
e wa
was sick, and once when
he was s
the Germans.
"But ah!' replied the Emperor.
"You offer sacrifices to another for
(Turn to
Next Page)
Refugees Find a Home in Palestine
How German Jewish Children Are Received
In the Jewish Homeland
The Jewish World Confer-
ence in Geneva has come and
gone and left, trailing behind,
EDITOR'S NOTE: This descriptive article it made a•ailable by
a cloud of confusion, doubt and
speculation. It has givea us the United Jewish Appeal, which is engaged in • nationwide effort
to raise $3,000,000 for the relief and rehabilitation of Jews in Ger-
the task of holding Democratic
many and for settlement in Palestine, A very substantial part of
elections for delegates through-
the settlement program in Palestine will Ise devoted to German-
out the world, at a time when
Jewish children.
it is difficult enough even to
There are 43 of them, 18 girls ravenous appetites had been only
hold our positions in a number
and 25 boys, arriving at the re- p artially stilled by the sandwiches
of countries, whether it be in
cently opened port of Haifa on b rought to them while the cus-
an economic, social or political
one of the steamers of the Lloyd toms requirements were being met.
sense. We have to suffer our-
Seated at the long ,f-table, they
triestino Line. They are Jewish burst spontaneously into Hebrew
selves to introduce universal
children from Germany destined song, the gift they had brought
suffrage everywhere. We have,
for settlement in the colony of with them from their youth or-
despite present tendencies in an
ganization's training.
Ain Ilarod in Palestine.
opposite direction to bolster up
The plan had been to have the
The
arrangements
at
the
dock
the system of self-government
were in the hands of the director group spend the night at the Bet
throughout the nations and we
of the Haifa branch of the Immi- Haolirn (Immigration Station) of
have, despite the high costa and gration Department of the Jewish the Jewish Agency, situated in
impending complications of Agency. Ile was assisted by a Bat Gallim, the seaside suburb of
such an election, to do it all by group of volunteers, among them Haifa. The intention could not
representatives of various pub-
August, 1935. It is now up to
be carried out because the station
lic bodies, such as the Central
House committee investigating the Jews to vindicate democ- Bureau of the Jewish Agency for was filled to the last bed with
•
•
racy as a philosophy and plan the Settlement of German Jews immigrants who had arrived front
ganda activities in the United of government. We must sac- in Palestine, the Social Sevrice Europe on several of the preced-
States.
Burealu of the Haifa Kehillah, ing days. At the last moment
rifice, ourselves on its altar,
• • •
the Haifa Section of the Ilitach- emergency arrangements had to
whatever betide. Is not this
dot Olei Germania and, above all, be made. Happily they turned
His Washington friends have
the old theory of the Jewish representatives of the Kewuzah out to be most acceptable. Eigh-
lear ned with regret that Represen-
teen of the young people were
tative Isaac Bachrach of New Jer- mission, long cherished in Cin- ,Ain Hared, the future home of the entertained as guests at one of
sey, has recently been confined to cinnati, which is now entering I young people. Everything from the hotels on Mt. Carmel, the rest
a hospital in Atlantic City with a Jewish life again through an- quarantine to customs and from at two of the new children's
(customs to the first meal on Pal-
heart ailmen t. Representative
other door?
, estinien soil moved flawlessly- houses recently esetablished, also
Bachrach is completing his tenth
Its new advocates display the ' except the weather. The vessel on Mount Carmel, by their Ger-
consecutive term as a Republican
I
came in under a heavily shrouded man compatriots. The crowded
the
House,
and
has
been
same
zeal
and
extravagance
member of
nominated for another term. Next which has in the past become I sky, driven by a gale with the Immigration Station is to be
rain
pelting down steadily. Good thanked for the opportunity thus
January, he will be 65 years old.
no obnoxiously familiar to us.
humor prevailed nevertheless. The granted to the new Palestinians.
For a number of years he has been
Insisting
that
we
must
do
or
merciless wet could not dampen in the first moments of their so-
a potent member of the Ways and
in the land, to view one o f
the enthusiasm of the young tray- the most
Means Committee, and is one of
die for democracy, they over- the
beautiful spots of
thei r
elect nor the
the leaders of the Republican min-
look entirely the diversity in
joy of their grand- new home, the ravishing combine -
ority in the present Congress.
parents, brothers,
sisters, aunts, non of
governmental practices that pre-
sea and mountain of the
and friends who were on hand to Haifa headland. Fortunately, early
vail throughout the world, the greet
them. All of them, travel- on
Those who lay claim to knowing
. Tuesday
y
the
sun
hard and baffling conditions
erg and relatives, apparently for- broke
through morning
the pall of
cloud
what they talk about tell this story:
,
got
their
in certain
discomfort, and swiftly
General Goering, Hitler's right- which confront us
and allowed the beauty of the
adopted
the
point
of
view
of
the
hand man, is the butt of jokes from countries, the pressing claims Palestinian farmer, who was re- unique scene to emerge for a
his countrymen because of his in- I of other duties which have long
joking in the blessed downpour, short space. The rest of the day.
ago been assumed. and the old a welcome change from the devas- indeed the rest of the week, the
satiable passion for brilliant uni-
obligations which have to be tating drought of the three years rain, interrupted by spells of hail.
forms and show. lie is the most
came down in torrents. On ac-
preceding the winter of 1933-34.
decorated man in modern Germany maintained.
Th e l uggage heaped up on the count of the change in the lodging
and does not mice an occasion to
The dictum of the rabbit,
and the necessity of divid-
dock was a formidable pile. Amid place,
wear all his medals, ribbons and
ing up into three sections, the
that "the law of the land is
the suitcases of every conceivable
stars.
planned medical examination had
not
seem
to
be
the
law"
does
shape, rise and material, there to be
Recently, when he had to make)
postponed until after settle-
taken into consideration, and
stuck up flagpoles and cellos and
a speech in Berlin. Goering donned
one of his flashiest uniforms, but
his valet els in despair. He could
the indissoluble association of
the communities of our people
with different countries and
customs are held very lightly.
We have to spread a network
of democracies from pole to
mandolins and, first and foremost,
bicycles. In addition, some of the
ment in Ain Ifarod.
At the railroad station the inti-
boys and girls had chunky ruck- mate scenes of the dock repeated
not locate the decorations. A thor-
themselves--relatives
more or less
sacks
and
the
strapped to their backs. In
ough search proved futile,
spite of the careful preparations acclimatized to Palestine mingled
police were informed of the loss.
with
the
new
recruits
made beforehand and the numer-
and, as at
Shrewd detectives immediately de-
ous willing and expert helpers and the dock, good cheer prevailed.
cided that this must be another
Jewish plot. Goering went to the
the courtesy of the officials, the
Through the foresight of the
meeting with only • few decora- pole, whatever's the obstacles, formalities stretched out over Ain Herod hoets • a special car had
tion..
whatever the costs. Doctor Har- hours. from the early afternoon been secured for the transporta-
when he returned, he was de- i ace Kellen wills it so and Mr.
until lone after seven in the eve- tion of the group and ■ eonrider•
jected and ill-tempered. But his
Finally, in the dark and able part of its belongings.
valet was all ensiles. "Your Excel- I Israel Thurman, with a fervor 'through the rain, stimulated by the railway journey of about one :
lency,' the valet beamed, "I have I that he could not voice in the the hope of the first square meal ' hour and three-quarters, tclere
ii
was
i,, i l much craning of necks an
ftreynd., your medals." "where were Menorah Association, but which of the day, the troop trotted gaily'
d darting
Goe ring
would be appropriate in Young actoss the wide expanse of the !from windows on the one side of
pajamas
His
on
the
"They were
new wharf to the Workingmen's i the train to windows on the other
Excellency wore last night."
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Kitchen facing the above. Their
J T. A-)
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marneges.
i