PIERLTROITIEWISft RONICLE

and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE

workers of her own where she can no
Today, the Jewish Child Place- and who knew it. She hated her- away. For six years two
of the bureau reasoned with Jen- properly care for baby , inter,
went Bureau and similar agencies self and the world. She couldn't
The Jewish Child Placemi
ny. They advised and placated
are concerned not only with the remember her own mother. She
won her Bureau does not feel that it
kinds of food, clothing and shel- had been forced to play mother and calmed her. They
(CONCLUDED FROM PAGE 1)
trust. Examinations at the North pects the impossible. It is su
ter that a 'dependent child re- for the baby sister who had gold-
though, that the inipossible oft
care in boarding, foster homes by ceives, although these are im- en curls and a dimple. Casual End Clinic proved her size to be
due to a glandular condition. happens. Great strides hare le
Mr.
Phillips
told
them
that
the
I
the
Jewish
Child
Placement
Bu-
portant
factors;
but
also
consi-
strangers
wanted
to
adopt
baby
most
PAGE
ONE)
(CONCLUDED
resolutions against German goods."
With the proper medication and made in the care of depend,
ders the social relationships, and sister. But it was difficult to find
children in the last 82 years; I
After investigating the published request would taken under con- reau,
sideration but did not say whether ' Jewish Welfare Federation and the character-forming influences a paid home for Jenny. Foster subsequent loss of weight, Jenny much remains to be
anti-Semitic propaganda were a dispatches, Mr. Birchall writes:
done bet
I
a protest would be made to Ger. , the Detroit Community Fund. ■ which surround the child. The mothers tried to be kind. But began to take pride in her ap-
affair.
"The
Berlin
bureau
of
INS
pearance. School became a pleas- all the children of our own Ji
P
Ilanfstaengra denial of Mr. categorically denied to the Berlin many. Ile told the delegation that The children are taken to these Child Care Placement Bureau em- Jenny was suspicious of every d ant place. With a job in sight ish community have anything
Fry's statement was followed by bureau of The New York Times he received their views with great foster homes only after the arm., ploys a trained worker to in- motive. She swore and screame
home proximating a fair start in lit
sympathy and appreciated their ly's condition has been thorough-. vestigate the homes and families in temper tantrums. She ran Jenny plans to establish a
another sharp statement by the I that these dispatches, as published,
s S o- of the foster mothers who apply
. ly investigated by the Jewish
feeling
in
the
matter.
had been supplied textually by it,
American editor.
The delegation was presented by cial Service Bureau and discus- to the bureau for the care of
"In my conversation with Dr. and comparison of its filed copies
lIantataengl, which took place in with the printed text amply core- Representative Sol Bloom of New sion with the Joint Committee on children. These foster mothers
York
and included Carl J. Austrian ' Child Care has revealed that cir- must perforce love children and
his Berlin office two days after l borates this denial."
and Sidney Wallach of the Ameri- , cumstances make it impossible to want them, for the money paid
the anti-Jewish demonstration on
Bremen, LaGuardia Incidents
can
Jewish
Committee, Louis Lip- allow the child to stay in its own to them, as compensation does
the Kurfuerstenadnim and which
While the incident of the Corn.
lasted an hour and a half, he munist atack on the Bremen. and sky and Dr. Samuel Margoshes of home or in the home of relatives. little more than cover the actual
the
American
Jewish Congress, The Joint Committee on Child • upkeep of the child. Thus the 1
made a number of statements the destruction of the Swastika
child is welcomed as a member
about his own career in the Na- flag on the German boat, is being Louis Fabricant and M. D. Rosen- Care consists of professional
berg of B'nai B'rith and Joseph workers and lay members of th e lof the family. If the weekly al-
tional Socialist party which he generally condemned, many are
ALL PROFITS PAID TO POLICYHOLDIL RS
Schlossberg
and
Nathan
Chapin
of
boards
of
directors
of
the
Jewish
lowance paid by the bureau does
asked me t okeep in strict con- praising the action of Mayor La.
Bureau, the Jewish provide some small luxury for
Assure with Assurance
fidence," Mr. Fry said. Guardia in refusing a masseur's the Jewish Labor Committee. , Social Service
Home and the Jewis
Jewish the family, it is one in which the
Seeking to develop appropriate ,Children's
.
"These I have been careful not license to a German.
il d Placement Bureau.
foster
child
will
also
share.
A
precedent
of
far-reaching
im-
channels
through
which
a
protest
I
Ch
to reneaL I shall not repeat them.
Homes for the Poor
Such a family can provide a
o Oler 11 %cur.
But what he thought fit to tell me portance was established by Mayor might be made to Germany regard-
Iteproolalog Cr
ing the "persecutions" of Jews and' It was Queen Elizabeth who sympathetic background which
DAVID STOTT BUILDING
about the origin of the demon- LaGuardia when he upheld the re-
Catholics by the German Govern- first recognized poor relief as a will enable the child to com-
fusel
of
License
Commissioner
stration and about the methods
ment Senator William II. King in- pr inci ple of publi c
pletely adjust himself to his new
used by the National Socialist Paul Moss to grant a massage
1601 she enforced an act collect- surroundings. Here he can in-
party to provoke it I thought operator's license to a German alien troduced a r e a o I u t i o n pro-
posing
a
Senate
investigation
of
ing
taxes
for
the
relief
of
the
tegrate himself in family-life, dig
privileged to repeat to reporters on the grounds that the American
poor, including children, who his roots deep in normal exist-
the whole subject.
because he did not ask me not to . citizens had been unfairly discrim-
The measure was referred imme- could not be supported by private ence. Even though brutality has
inated
against
in
Germany.
When
"Dr. lianfstaengl's denial is a
diately to the Foreign Relations benevolence. For more than two made him a stoic; and neglect, a
routine denial of a governmen t the German counsel-general pro-
centuries in England and the cynic, the child who shares his
official who has been indiscreet tested that the Mayor's action was Committee which would be the in-
in violation of the German-Amer- vestigating agency under Mr. American colonies such children foster family's troubles and good-
and who wishes to recall his
were supported in publically fortunes, who plans and fights
ican
commercial
treaty
of
1925.!
King's
proposal.
words. The newspaper reports of
The draft sets forth the purpose maintained alms houses. These with the other kids of the neigh-
my conversation with hint are which gives German citizens equal as promoting the cause of toter- alms or work-houses were homes boyhood, who thinks he'd better
perfectly accurate as far as they rights with American citizens here ance and religious freedom.
for the poorest of both sexes, of bring home a good school report
Mr. LaGuardia pointed out that
go."
s hie r would of all ages, good and bad, sick and' card 'cause, "Mom won't like it
g
o
n hn a
In announcing
the treaty should be reciprocal and
Green Urges Boycott
King ox well in both body and mind. As if I don't", can face the future
declared specifically that "it is for such
lained that his purpose was to de- fast as such work-houses were with calm and shoulder his bur-
Willi/11D Green, president of the well-known that American citizens
American Federation of Labor, of Jewish faith have been discrim- termine whether there were pot built, poor children were gathered dens with good humor.
called on the government to take inated against in Germany." The grounds for the United States sev- Into them together with aged, inn- This is an ideal not easy of ac-
"appropriate action" against the Mayor's decision was made in over- ering &plumate relations with the potent, diseased and derelict
oss u i 4 b eise l adults. After a few years in these complishment. The workers of the
Hitler regime in Germany to stop ruling an opinion of Corporation I i n i e ll. no Th re efe m re c a n s c u e re toat s hi l :tp rod
institutions even young children Child Placement Bureau keep in
"brutal, inhuman treatment" of Counsel Windela who had held that
were indentured as apprentices or constant touch with the child and ,
the laboring class, Jews and the License Commissioner was un- course.
—
"farmed out." An early report the foster family. Occasionally
Catholics.
justified in refusing the license.
sums up: "the children grow up the foster home must be changed
Seek
"In behalf of the American This is the first time that the chief
.
,"'
n
I
C NIIITr e()N I) . C.
in filth, idleness and disease • • . because the child and the family,
S I II
executive of an American city has
Federation of Labor," Mr.
Emanuel early candidates for the prison or in spite of the most careful plan-
—While
Representative
Green said in • statement, "I
taken such an action against the
Celler of New York was organizing the grave." ning, are totally incompatible.
protest
official
citizen
of
foreign
country
in
rela-
i t s
repeat
In 1853 the need for super- But, with patience, with care,
against the most recetn action
tion for discrimination against a non•sectaria ncommittee of mem- •
hers of Congress to draft a yeti- vised foster homes for dependent with advice and practical assist-
of the Hitler government.
American citizens.
tion calling upon President Roose• children was realized. Foster ance a home is usually found
"Surely the governing na-
volt or the State Department to homes in those days were found where the child may develop to
Jews Protest to State Depart •
tions which make up the civil-
protest Germany's persecution of by distributing circulars of appeal the fullest of his personality, and
meat;
King's
Resolution
world cannot longer re-
religious groups, Representative in likely communities, by pleas where the family is happy in the
W A S II I N G 0 N. — A protest
mead indifferent to the •ction
Samuel Dickstein of New York in- from church-pulpits and rostrums. love and affection of the child.
against
the
persecution
of
Jews
in
of a tyrant such ■ s et-titter, to
InloyahappyvecatIonat"ThePlaygreundef the Greatlakes”—JunelStoSept.2
Germany was made to William troduced a bill making it a penal The appeal was primarily to the Sometimes it takes years. But the
his excelling in brutality and
Phillips, acting secretary of state, offense to send through the mails sentimentality of the prospective results are completely gratifying.
fiendish persecution the rulers
WERT DUOYMENT AWAITS YOU. HAPPINESS AND HEALTH HIRE HIGH SUPIDATI
any publication or literature "de- foster parents, pleading for homes
Take Larry for instance. Larry
by
a
delegation
representing
a
of a bygone pagan age.
number of Jewish organizations signed to cause racial or religious for "these poor little waifs". The is beyond the age of supervision,
Largest Hotels on the Great lakes, 1000 cool, outside rooms, at mod-
"The time ha, arrived when
hatred or bigotry." The Dickstein printed circulars however clearly by the Child Placement Bureau. ,
who referred also to the "reign of
Germany ought to be boycot•
erate rates. Finest Bathing Beach in the world, so gradual In slope, a
law would make such a felony emphasized that the child would But Larry still lives with his fos-
terror"
exercised
aginst
Catholics,
ted, not only by labor and its
child can inlay It In safety. There's Fishing, Golf, Tennis, Dancing ...
Protestants and liberals by the punishable by a fine of $5,000, five in personality and service pay for terfamily. Seven years ago ins:
friends but by all the people of
years' imprisonment or both. Mr. any additional kindness done for terested neighbors asked the bu-
endless attractions for young and old. Our Midway is filled with the
Nazi Government.
the United States.
Dickstein
said
that
his
measure
reau
for
help
for
Larry.
The
I
reau
him.
One
circular
reads,
"There
The delegation asked that the
"Furthermore, in the light of
latest, clean, modem, enticing novelties. Moderately priced, appe-
was aimed against the circulation should be no loss in the charity. worker found him dirty, sullen,
United
States
Government
"take
historical events it would ap-
tizing meals, as formal or informal as you desire, even to Picnic Grounds.
all steps consistent with interne- in this country of Der Stuermer, These boys are many of them browbeaten by a drunken father, (
pear that the hour has arrived
day,
tional practice to inform the Ger- Julius Streicher's paper, and also handy and active and would learn tortured by memories of a crazed
MHO MM. plea your looney whit a dal Ig MU stay at Coder Polo. Ideal tor •
when our own government
6000 can. A• al. gams. space .
man Government of the outraged against the Storm, organ of Ray- soon any,common trade or labor. mother. Larry didn't want to
• treekAtord error *Who vocalloo. frw parking spats for
ought to take appropriate ■ c•
leave
the
ramshackle
farm
house
mond
Healey,
who
calls
himself
The
girls
could
be
used
for
the
sentiments of the American peo-
by sofa, Ohio taste 2.
tion which the exigencies of
Sosobori by rell, Womb.. er bows to Saadotity I or
where he did as he pleased when
the "American Hitler." common kinds of housework."
ple."
the present situation demand,
U. S. Iona 6, .e by stommor.
his father left him alone all, day.
The J. C. P. B. Efforts
providing for • ion of
Yet this procedure was a great Ile was surly and mean and un-
MAIL THIS tPICIAL COUPON AT ONCI TO
the brutal, inhuman treatment
step forward in the care of the cooperative 1.,c months in his
being perpetrated upon the la
foster
home.
But
today
Larry
dependent child. First, the com-
boring people who wish to pre-
ma O. A. basal's. Es, Griot Poitot,140.11101, Ohl..
munity had become responsible gladly contributes part of his
their democratic trade
son is hot enough without that. for the children which were placed salary toward the upkeep of that
obligotlem, yew mew folder o• Coder FOIL
(CONCLUDED FROM PAGE
Plow semi raw,
uions in Germany, and upon
Quite hot enough...
in foster homes. Second, it was home. Ile brings his girl to Fri-
the Jewish people and the
S
t' a )
IC.1,)riala. 193A
recognized that although some day-night supper. The foster fam-
rants, cafes, hotels. Op it and on
Catholics."
children make progress in institu- ily are his folks!
Mr. Green said that Reichs- the broad cross-streets, named BERLIN OLYMPICS
Address
Or Jenny — Jenny, who was
tions, others can only develop in
fuehrer Hitler's 'further drives after the great philosophers and
BOYCOTT
FAVORED
a home that at least approximates absolutely anti-social, who was
against the Jews and Catholics"
BY A. A. U. HEAD a normal family. - • big, ungainly and unattractive-
had "vindicated" the A. F. of L.'s historians of Germany—Kant,
action in "declaring a boycott Ranke, Dahlmann — are apart-
CONCLUDED FROM PAGE 11
against German goods and Ger- ment-houses of singular spacious- Jewish Sports Association, which
man service." Ile added:
ness and splendor. I used to tell has over 1,000 members through-
"Labor in the United States
my friends (professional people out the country.
will Join with others in taking
appropriate action which }sill en- by no means rich) that it gave
Brundage's Stand
able it to voice its indignation me a new sense of the dignity of
CHICAGO—There are no ra-
against the tyrannical and in- human nature to dine in their cial or religious reasons why the
human policies pursued by Hitler "baronial h a I I" dining-rooms. United States should not partici-
and the Hitler government of
pate in the 1936 Olympic Games
Well, these apartment - houses
Germany."
at Berlin, Avery Brundage, presi-
Nazis Conduct Worldwide Anti- came to be occupied largely, dent of the American Olympic
Semitic Campaign
though by no means exclusively, Committee, said here. "I haven't
• That the Nazis, under the lead- by Jewish people. In the eighteens heard of anything to indicate dis-
ership of Julius Streicher, plan eighties and eighteen-nineties, crimination against athletes of any
a world-wide anti-Semitic cam- when all Berlin joined the "Zug race or religion since last year,
paign, is revealed in an article by nach dem Western", the Westward when there were reports that Jew-
Rev. L. M. Birkhead, pastor of move, the more or less "arrived" ish athletes might not be permit-
All Souls' Unitarian Church of and Germanized Jewish families ted to represent Germany in the
Kansas City, Mo. This article, left the Alexanderplatz and, say, games," he said. "That question
which was written for the As- the Prentzlauerstraase and made was answered by assurances from
sociated Press, tells of the Ameri- and have made of the Kurfur- German political and sports leaders
can pastor's visit to Stretcher's stendamm quarter not only, not tht there would he no racial, re-
"secret office" in Nuremburg where chiefly, a somewhat Jewish quar- ligious or political interference of
anti-Semitic literature from all ter, but that quarter of Berlin any kind. I know of no reasons for
over the world was displayed for where German culture flourished questioning these guarantees. The
him. Anti-Semites and their news- most intensively. Here modern strength and importance of organ- .
papers in this country, of whom he Germany poetry and drama and ized amateur sports comes from its
had not heard while in the United music and the plastic arta were independence. It will not tolerate
States, were recommended to him patronized and appreciated; from political, racial or religious inter-
by Paul Wurm, who operates here they set out to influence ference Of any kind. It cannot,
Streicher's "secret Ace."
and, at times, to conquer the therefore, with good grace or pro-
Rev. Birkhead writes that when world.
priety interfere in the internal po-
, he protested that if Jews are driv-
litical, religious or racial affairs of
Jewish books? There weren't
en out of every country, including
any country or group."
any. Jewish memories? They were
Palestine, there will be no other
repressed. The Jewish problem?
place for them to go to Wurm
Brisbane Urges Shifting 1936
replied: "That isn't our problem. It was not good form to admit
Olympic Games from Berlin
that there was such a problem.
That's the Jews problem."
NEW YORK (WNS)—Removal
Until 1933. From then en dark-
Distort News from Abroad
of
the 1936 Olympic Games from
successful ness fell. Violent extrusion; un-
The Nazis have a
mans of keeping news of the re- speakable humiliation; deepening Berlin to some country that "treats
sport as sport, not making it ■
action abroad to its pogroms from poverty. And now there are po- matter of politics or religious per.
the German people by presenting grows on the Kurfurstendamm. secution" is advocated by Arthur
a distorted picture ist what is tak- For years and years these cul- Brisbane, famous Hearst editor and
ing place among indignant people tivated, sensitive, dejudaized Jews
writer, in his daily editorial col-
In foreign countries. Frederick T. have frequented the Cafes Bris- umn "Today," which is syndicated
Dirchall, writing in The New York tol and Kranzler and dined at to hundreds of papers throughout
Times, gives a few illustrations of the Ilotel Eden. I can see those the country. "The Nazi Govern.
scenes before ate. I can remem-
this technique.
tier occasions on which we sat ment forbids continuation of a
Nazi newspapers, he Si rites. our-
Catholic group, organized to de-
chase reports from International then' with the great critic Alfred velop sports as sports are developed
G er-
News Service, a Hearst organize- Kerr (in exile), the greatest
in Fordham University, New York,
man
musicologist
Max
Fried-
ton. fie then goes on to point out
or Notre Dame, Indiana; 'he said,
how the Nazi newspapers handle lander (happily dead) and others, "Apparently an athlete must not
the dispatches received from this many others—with, let us say run a hundred yards rapidly, jump
the directors of the
news service. For example Der symbolically,
Theater Guild, and the Jewish a hurdle, make a high or broad
Angriff featured a dispatch, credit.
jump unless he does it yelling 'lleil
supporters
of
chamber
music from
ed to INS, which begins as follows:
Hitler,' with one arm in the air,
'The entire American press con- the East sixties and West seven- • swastika on the other arm. Those
some
ties
of
New
York
City
and
tains columns of reports on the German Elmer Rice and some that disagree with these methods
German government's fight against
(flirting should keep away from the Olym-
presumptuous Jewry and political German Waldo Frank
Pic Games scheduled to be held in
just like their American analo-
Catholicism. Exaggerated reports gues
with the "Soviet Father- Germany next year. Better still
from Berlin of Jewish persecution
if the authorities controlling Olym.
land
I")
and
all
the
well-known
have resulted in the adoption by
pie games would transfer the •P-
various Jewish organizations of aesthete and ultra-ultra familiar proaching Olympic Games to some
resolutions calling for an acceera- Oh yes. It was • very fili
c ountry that treats sport as sport,
And now these gentlemen,
tion of the boycott against German world.
and these ladies have been not making it a matter of politics
Picture of Turkish
goods." In speaking of the newly
dragged
out into the street by or religious persecution."
organized Refugee Economic Cor•
drying racks where the
poration, the dispatch alludes to hoodlums and beaten with rubber • TRANS-JORDANIANS
Felix M. Warburg as "the notori- cudgels until their bloody and!
tiny leaves of Turkish
REFUSE TO APPEAL
unconscious forms covered the
ous Jewish banker."
AGAINST THE JEWS
tobacco are strung on
Another dispatch in the same broad side-walks of the Kurfur-
paper reporting the meeting of stendamm.
long threads and hung
teGNCIA - torto FI(011 PAGE ONE)
Why?
Because
they
are
what)
American
Jewish
Congress
at
the
the Hotel Pennsylvania on Monday for years and years they them-, been recalled to Berlin, allegedly
up to ripen.
selves
tried
to
forget
they
were.
1
owing
to
the
Jewish
parentage
of
night, read:
his wife. it was revealed here. The
"The demonstration proved to be Jews. Jews.
• • •
local German colony. including
failure, for despite elaborate
Jewish news is more than news. the Christian Templar' and the
propaganda only about 2,000 per-
sons attended. One of the Jewish Firstly: it is usually bad news.' more recent German-Jewish refu•
speakers openly admitted being • Therefore most Jews don't like I MI, was shocked by the- news.
Communist and proceeded to de- it. Therefore they try ( veryl Consul Wolff had won the con-
popula-
velop • program for communistic many of them) to avoid it. Yet fidence of the Palestine
activities in the United States, they hunger for it. Therefore tion, even of the Jews, because of
and •
his
proverbial
courtesy
whereupon nationally minded Jewish news is more than news.!
Americans proceeded to stage a It is • problem. It is part of the scholarly background.
The German-Jewish refugees
Jewish problem. It always has a
violent counter-protest.
him co-operative in ar-
"The communistic and Jewish moral. Oh yes, everything Jewish ; had found
participants in the meeting were always has a moral. That is our ranging the transfer of property
left
behind
by them in the Reich.
shall!
I
hooted out of the hall. Presently blessing and our curse.
free-for-all fight ensued, which not draw the moral of pogroms) Wolff was %pointed to his press

NAZI HORROR CONTINUES TO HOUND JEWS IN
GERMANY IN SPITE OF NEW ORDE RS THAT NO
PUBLIC ANTI-SEMITIC ACTS BE PERPETRATED

le

CHILD CARE WORK:
82ND ANNIVERSARY

NORTH AMERICAN

LIFE

JACOB MILLER

SOLID 4,5 THE CONTINENT

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