piEVEIRDITAWISII ROINICLE

end THE LEGAL CHRONICLE

DR. HIRSCH QUITS
CHILDREN'S HOME

World's Window

writes: "The Jews are always here, "it" in question. Let us, let as at
and the party by tradition and Ben- least do that.
•
timent regards them as fair game
It is hard. But we shall endure.
(CONCLUDED FROM PACE ONE)
always." Fair game for projec- It is the paranoiacs who will crash.
wasactimircei FROM PAGE ONE)
tion! And H. M. Tomlinson, the Knowledge does help. It may even
rectly or indirectly. We apologize;
thanked him for his efforts, espe- we retract; we send flowers and distinguished British writer, de- spread. An English physician, Dr.
scribes Nazi Germany thus: "We Edward Glover of London has writ-
cially during the trying years of toys.
can provide places for unfortunates ten a book called "War, Sadism and
CO./CLUDED FROM PAGE 1)
able with the Nazi "blood and soil principles" and threatened the the depression which found the
But there are people who have who know they are the reincarna- Pacifism." The book is an applica-
offending farm holders with legal injunctions under the new land home in a very critical financial lost all insight into the character tion of the Virgin Mary or Na- tion of Freudian principles to po-
condition. Mr. Cohen lauded Dr. of this process and who really be-
considerations of an economic nature. For instance, Jewish business laws.
poleon; but when a nation goes litical and social phenomena. It
Hirsch for the manner in which he
is still ao vita a factor that the immediate elimination of the Jew
Warns of Housecleaning
lieve that those on whom they take that way the matter is more per- is of crucial import. The 1. 41g
in commercial concerns would draw in its wake the dismissal of thou-
A warning that the Nazi housecleaning is not over came from served the institution and helped it out have caused the "it" in ques- plexing." In brief, the Germans are hard bitter road of knesl! cde
sands of non- Jewish workers.
Heim Diehl, Nazi chieftain in Southern Westphalia. Writing in the to place it on a sound financial tion. Such people, who live in that living by delusional self-exculpa. stretches on before us....
There is, further, the feeling that a Jew who fought in the front Westfaelishe Landeszeitung, Mr. Diehl said there were "still too basis.
particular kind of a delusional tory mechanisms and are led by
(Copyright. Mt, by
A 1'
navy,
or
whose
father
or
son
fell
on
behalf
of
the
Reich
Dr. Hirsch's Activities
lines for Gen
many reactionaries, sabotaging fellows, in leading Nazi positions who
world, are neurotics or paranoiacs. dangerous paranoiacs.
in the World 1 IVar, deserves special consideration. But that is not felt abuse their authority for their own despotic and selfish purposes."
Dr. Hirsch was born in Hungary, They burn helpless old women and
Well
...
It
is
always
the
pres-
cots.
Dr.
Paul
Joseph
Coebbel
s
Ministry
of
Propaganda
ROOSEVELT ACTION
in all departm
At Stutgart, Samuel Scher, a Jewish metal worker was unable near Klausenberg, 62 years ago, call them witches; they lynch ne-
sure of life that drives men to
does not recoi gnize war service as an asset, as is indicted by letters to obtain a certificate to marry a Christian girl and the couple, re- and came to this country in 1920. groes; they persecute Jews.
URGED BY McLEOD
neuroticism or madness. That is
from the Min istry which an Associated Press correspondent had an fusing to part, were sentenced to a week's imprisonment. Proceed- He comes of a rabbinical family,
• • •
a
tragic
and
universal
fact.
The
examine.
opportunity to
( CONCLUDED FROM PAGE I )
and has in his possession rabbinic
ings also were taken against Mr. Scher' * mother for procuring.
I have before me a particularly weak are driven by less pressure;
Author's Plea Rejected
diplomaas of his ancestors dating
A Jewish couple named Mandelbaum, with their daughter and
striking and clear photograph of the strong will look within or for
letters was a reply to an author who, on receiving
One of these
1
Congressman's protest, Secretary
back seven generations. His broth-
notice that he ! was ousted from the Reich's Culture Chamber, which three other Jews were arrested for alleged "racial turpitude." The ers are in the rabbinate in Hun- Adolph Hitler and of Julius their own errors and sins and Hull writes:
Streicher, the chief of the Jew- seek a new adjustment and stay
meant his tic ense to write was withdrawn, appealed on the grounds same fate befell Karl Samuel of Eisenschmitt, near Wittlich, for the gary.
" I desire to assure you that this
baiters. Hitler is gazing upward sane. The Germans are weak; the
same alleged reason.
that he had Si trved in the trenches.
Department is following the situa-
Dr. Hirsch himself studied for with a rapt and dreamy gaze. You
ng. Under not as-
i
"Hitler Oaks" planted two years ago at Dortmund, in honor
Jew s are strong.
"You ne , ed not think," the Ministry's reply read in effect, "that
n- tion most attentively with a view
the rabbinate until he was 16, hav-
s-
the mere fact of doing your duty by your country entitles you to special of the Chancellor was found to have been sawed off and muti. ing attended the Yeshivas of Kol- have seen that gaze in asylums. lie pert of eternity . . . Is it
to being helpful in every way it
has the delusion of grandeur: he is tolerable that we should be hound- properly
laded. One of the trees bore an inscription which police said pointed
can."
consideration.
ozsvar and Pressburg. He then saviour, leader; he is Baldur. The
ed by the crack-brained and the
There a re, also, considerations of a foreign political nature. Ob- to Communists as the culprits.
went to Berlin and studied in Gilde- paper-hanger has to compensate
mmany's
600,000
full
Jews
and
the
estimated
1,500,000
weak
and
the
vicious?
But
it
is
GI
viously, if
Apprehension Over Olympic Games
sheimer's Rabbinical Institute, but and over-compensate for having
Harcourt Braco Si Co., publish-
only such people who hound at all
half-Jews and I quarter-Jews are to leave Germany, some other country
An important cable to the New York Times by Mr. Birchall abandoned his Talmudic studies for been a paper-hanger.
All his or anyone. The strong are tolerant era of Prof. Morris Raphael Co-
must take th em over. But the other nations have intimated that in describes the apprehension that exists over the possibility of the the study of philology.
former humiliation s an d {rostra- and merciful. The strong need not hen's books, have taken over from
these times o f a world depression such a large number of foreigners Olympic Games being taken away from Germany. Mr. Birchall points
A Ph..D. at 23
tions have to be transformed into project. They need not take "it" the Falcon Press a book by his
cannot be abs orbed,
out that while the Nazi Olympic vow is being kept technically, and
Dr. Hirsch studied in Germany the very madness of self-glorifica- out on the innocent and physically son, Felix S. Cohen, called "Ethi-
Besides, the violent measures against the Jews resulted in boy- that in theory Jews may try out for the team, in reality all except
for two years and then continued tion and also into hatred for some defenseless. They grapple with the cal Systems and Legal Ideals."
cotta in other countries
Ilitlerites are handicapped and the team will undoubtedly be an en- his university career in Hungary, one who once inflicted on hint his
Expedie ncy, therefore, demands of Hitler that he proceed eau- tirely Nazi one. Mr. Birchall writes:
receiving his Ph. D. degree from humiliations and frustrations. It
tiously with I tis anti-Semitic program. The masses, however, have for
mlioweyer n111411 the 11er
conitililltee may tleplort• the Intend. of 000ut•
the Royal Hungarian University of was, of course, his fellow-Germans
n
taught
the
Nazi
dogma
that
the
"Jew
is
Germany's
.1deo
conskierullo. Into the where of the Olympic limn. there
14 years bee
no
that liwitle
connidendlonn ore yery mike looleed In the bunineno Kolozsvar, in Kluj, formerly who did that! But to take it out
misfortune." From time to time Hitler's disciples grow restive at what 41.151
In Iry
y. For thist mann, un Impartial ilea tof the situation au It now sawn
Klausenberg, at the age of 23. He on them would ruin his leadership
seems to then n to be too slow a tempo. They want to see direct action. may be of Inlet-mt.
–ens team that .111 reprewnt Germany In the 01).4(14 x111 be a 1,4,1111.11 then became professor of languages and prick the bubble of his delus-
Brunswick Ban Ordered
Mom
representing
not
lornonny
on
the
oulodde
world
has
roticehed
her,
but
the
at his alma meter, teaching Hun- ion of grandeur. So he takes "it"
An ordi tr published by the peasant leader for the Free State of Third iv,-
Reich that In Mai ms,
on emlnaged In Germany. A. In etery other am
garian, German, French and Latin. out on the defenceless Jews.
Nati stole claims n monopoly right In kpoortn. Ti,,,, the. uloole It
Brunswick ir idicated that the Nazi policy may now be definitely di- titity.
Streicher is a coarser and lower
and preparation ore a gmernment olfoir. Ti,. German tenon without Prior to that he studied for a few
rected at der !riving the Jew of doing business with Gentiles. Hitherto, orgonlmtion
will be expected to mine II. right Cr,,, end hell M
II
he wholly months at the Sorbonne, in France. type. He is a fat man. Ile tries
Nazidom has maintained that the Jew was not to be interfered with under National
it Sochilkt control wool tulrloge and it will probably be wholly Noel.
In
1909
Dr.
Hirsch
turned
to
law.
to
look stern and succeeds in look.
mitut,
may
be
.Red,
wontobout
the
Gennun
pledge
thot
In
the
...Moo
commercially •
of II. team German Imo.. In 'Accordance with the Olympic Matuten, shall recog-
Ile received the degree of doctor of ing stupid. His eyes are the eyes
Gustav Giesecke, the Brunswick peasant leader, issued an order nise neilher race, color nor tormloan ttttt Minns of seryllude—w pledge that
ti, Mr. jurisprudence in 1911 and in 1912 of an angry animal. A slave-na-
Goa
Tnclonnotier
°Oen Natl. .111 be rigidly tohnehed? The anomer In
declaring:
11
being olnentol—leclonicolly. Nobody Is being excluded 1.1011cally on any of
was awarded the degree of doctor ture come into power. Now no one
"Whoo rer as a German peasant engages in trade with the Jew, In
throe around,
of political economy. He began the is so brutal as a revengeful slave.
"In theory etrn J..., who by the lime the Olympic
or otherwise maintains a connection with him, commits treason to his
t.
(Wales are held will
no longer he German citizen. or at any rate
Otis..., are ad- practice of law in 1913, and con- But he has the astuteness of the
blood and gi ,ves comfort to the deadly enemy of the German people, prolmbly
noloodole to the Owen. IN
as
It nutYee n happen, that In to tat) It
tinued in that profession until he delusional and the vulgar. If one
t ae
the Jew."
I. pomade In lieu of oil thin outnide gelation, that al the lost moment the Nulls
left for the United States. In 1914 knew his history one would be sure
owe to it Ittot there
u concemion of Jess, on the leant. In such a case Ilmy
Mr. GII asecke said he would remove from positions in the Nutra- will
will
fouml
I.
rotenone. lu
Gen.ny slands Might chance of soircem be-
he married, in Hungary, Lillian to find that he had risen from a
sei
ta
6
I
tOV
tive Guild a ny found guilty of dealing with the Jew and instructed e...
Jewinlo ,
would Ittleut Weloto. problem., Croquet and chew,
Goldman of Hammond, Ind., who very low psychological and spiritual
hum been satirically nuggested on mailable eateaorleo.
aubleadera o report on farmers' commercial relations with Jews.
'moll. It in no. Onto. thot any athlete who I* not a thoroughltolnle was then on a visit from the United stratum, that he had been afflicted
Report 5 from Saarbruecken indicated anti-Jewish action there in Nail in "In
tinder tooth practical ond pnycloologIcal handicap. In making the team.
,N's
States in the land of her birth.
by intolerable fears and maladjust-
., Otts%
e 1:•% %1 S
"Ilow that uorlut out
violation of the pre-plebiscite agreement at Rome, and that a new
loot week In I he case of Greta Ilemononrt,
'Is
ments and perversions. Now he is
high Jumper and Olif Jew left In liernmoy who 1.1 a tole chance of reaching
His Activities in U. S.
plebiscite we iuld be asked. This was denied by Joseph Buerckel, goy- Olympic
alloothiedn. She W. excinded f
porticipotion
the Gennan Meld spor t
fat
to
bursting
in
body
and
cram-
oa,
c o
Dr. Hirsch experienced the immi-
ernor of the Saar, who said the agreement was being observed loyally,
011e of the mood Important national contesho held In pr./aeon.
ots 6 . eil
ion Olympic., of Imcnu.e mile moo Jewloolo but became Ole wan not a member grant's struggle upon his arrival med with delusional projection-
klo , tt
and that par ty divisions should leave the Jewish question entirely open., roe
0
%°
'
I
coonlinuttol German Light Athletic Annochotion, which pod on the eorttent.
s
e', '
At Gruenstadt large signs were put up, Jews Not Wanted Here.
in this country. For a time he mechanisms to the brim of what
Nor could oh. he a menthe, becoune of her ancestry
1 11. techninally the German pledge In being kepi. One f the Nall train- even worked on Paige motor cars he calls his mind. lie is one mass
o
In Windsheim the mayor, in keeping with the movement sweeping the
of hatred and rancor for a thou-
in the Iasi three week* of Ill exiMence non men lh ttttt open to Jews
country, forbade "Aryan" salesmen to deal with Jews. A demonstra- ing Campo.
until,
in
1921,
he
became
the
di-
If lim y cared to apply for training. But practically It will .1 matter; the Ger-
rector of the B'nai B'rith Boys' sand reasons that he himself (so
tion took place at Pirmasens, where a Jew accused of "racial turpitude." man team .111 he
amt In all probability wholly, Nazt
mllososwer, the handicop airrmly referred to will apply not only to Jean but Club in Chicago. He held this po- shameful are most of them) re-
A Catholic priest at Fichtelberg was ordered to discontinue re
ohm In certain mem..
rontItteett 0411101k, a n d Pnolentonts who are loyal to
presses, drives out consciousness. If
ligious instruction because he allegedly incited youths against the Nazi their , bathes Ogainnt which the golenonnot in ROW
tt‘g
'4°1 ‘c\ t%
conducting a Kultunkampf. sition for three years and then, for
00
61k CO fisilCif e thine .
movement. The police ordered the disbanding of a Catholic group in Jean hate leer perfidies! lo maintain noel, awn marl organization. f ythieh another three years, was the direc- he could no longer hate and be-
Olympic candittaten own be toe/noted for further 'separate training under Nml aus-
devil the defenceless Jews he would
ph
Muenster District for allegedly distributing pamphlets derogatory to pice..
tor
of
the
social
center
of
the
South
countti until that dole only. they mood be eontent with almleyer
°Istt
go
raving
mad
or
commit
suicide.
04 it
otrgregated training
ng their limited mein* run mottle.
Side Hebrew Congregation of Chi-
. C CS hose
the Storm Troops.
"011111 Catholic and Prolmo tont r oodidole. the nItuati. In different, h a d It
In brief, he would burst with the
Unrest
Visit
Arouses
cago.
During
the
past
year
he
was
Streicher'. Berlin
en to I he none thing Inn he end.
e
Ponuerly Catholic Undl Protestant Whirl.
accumulated
inner
poisons
which
The visit of Streicher in Berlin for the address on Thursday who werenot thorottahrolna
n-ere organized In confroodonotl yolltil moieties, the director of social activities at
he could no longer take out on
fontered moo. ti Well MR .11.101111 and cultural actilitien. l'heee modelle. Temple Mizpah in Chicago.
evening aroused great unrest and created nervousness. It was feared which
where they lot
not loom prohibited entirely are
• restricted to
those who cannot hit back.
and
that his speech as well as his visit will be a signal for a new outbreak. religloo. aork. They ham been enpresnly forbidden to manic
any nport. l'herefore
Mrs. Hirsch came to Detroit
Aintorg Trading Corp.
These explanations have been
they
are
110
longer able to torment Olympic candidole.,
Foreign correspondents were told that no seats were available
with her husband to serve in the for long and are now in the very
261 Fifth Ave., N. Y.
mAII or any of their membern who are ambition. to ottaln the Olympic
for them at the secheeluled Streicher address.
team ore free (unlike .Ira
capacity of matron of the Jewish atmosphere of our time. The Ber-
lo Join Nast connolidated sport dubs and Ono rc
hti ttttt re (mining. They will lime Io hell littler with great regularity, of course,
Anti-Semitic newspapers are being widely displayed and the
Children's
Home.
lin correspondent of the Times
population of Germany is warned that any one dealing with a Jew but ei ery Gent,. lo do that. nut the) are .1 asked to take nay o ath or

HITLER'S PERSONAL APPROVAL OF ANTI-SEMITIC RIOTS,
COMMISSIONING OF 1,500 YOUTHS TO SPREAD JEW-HATRED
IN 50 COUNTRIES ADD TO HORROR OF GERMAN SITUATION

G o GIFTS

TOYOUR RELATIVES

-in,

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\coy ° i 6
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Particular creed—alprexent Amway. Mummer, the churches

proves that egotism is stronger in him than the voice of blood.
Ilietnnelten no. Ling loom of the matter. Being Obliged to eschew sport la
their
organizalboon, they are not righting objection. Ito the adherence of IM
The week-end brought the rumble of trucks through Berlin of
their nnl
niebern to Nati coonlintited von dodo,
streets, carrying Storm Troopers and signs that warned: "State ene-
"Neyerthelmon, for any who are dental!) relighoun tool loyal to their elitirehe•
It r idea of Joining the nook. of the olatonento of
church,. In not easy. There
mies beware, the Storm Troop is on guard."
automat. arise psycloological 10116111o. and quoin,. of ronnclence that may be
Reports from a number of resorts said Jews had been banned ett.led
to keep quite a mord.. linom making the switch. It will be In effect •
apparently as a result of complaints by "Aryan" vacationers. Duerr- choice behmen rellgi. and *ports.
•'Itut
pledge Is being kept — technically. Any Catholic or Protestant
helm in the black forest and Bad Oorb in Spessart received special othielen mh ,, the
reinnia fn. , biol.( NMI
Huhn after the suppremlon
theIr
III1U11. 11 sport elubot Ione their eitunt•ea of getting on the Olympic
attention front anti-Semitic visitors.
but of Ilmle
011
free will. An Indlyloluoin the otnernment loos .1 no hindnowe in their may.
Several hotels and boarding houses were obviously reluctant to
"The German out 11.11 les a.m.. yileatiollo about on thin by nom log that
lose their Jewish customers, but the fashionable Jurhaus at Bad Orb .0elt a n11.11. cannot be helped; the ahole complexion of the National socialist
intimated it would no longer accommodate Jews. Vigorous anti- State cannot be tolossnonl to milt a few rent.lention. odojeclown on farce m, Ohmple
hr deft manipulation It IR hoot becoming an
conlemic rather
Jewish pro y mganda likewise was reported from several mountain !!!!`”'"
Imn • "es'
proclIcal question ornmol•
•
"Th. nem ,PoPer Parlionoir points u lifl.onftz
n
out athlete* who mode
resorts.
I
old
of
the
nm.
ohm .11h
ii"‘"
"' kw!' .1f-rent.•lIng
in the "id Germany
A sod lety newly formed at Leonberg, Wurttemberg, "for cons- I other
n oon sod
women of the Jexinh faith and ancestry. It Out*
lllll ng them molar. fo ,teen former famousGerman olidelen. They Include
bating lies, hatred and strife, was objected to by the local Nazi
Relent Mom 01.mple fencing elmolpion, who IN nw
e
In the
state.. but
leader as "se uperfluous."
ne beothrr, at. a noted fencer, h. fwell ktriekr o from
the Gennon ronking
cal Nazi chief at Waldenberg took umbrage at the leas- lintm Erich Seelig. fon lllll ot middlearight honing champion, who in Mom In the
Mateo; Daniel Prenn, fmmer tennin Clift1111,1 llll l 010
now In 111
.11011, ond
lag of mead low lands to Jews. lie said such dealings are irreconcil- Inittol
on thnough • long Ind."

TIRTY-EIGHT YEARS LATER

The

lo

(CONCLUDED FROM PACE I)

your hair has silvered, it is not
with years, but with the anxieties
you have suffered for our people

and for their future."

Our hearts are flooded with
memories. The First Congress
rises before us—a dream of our
springtime and our youth, when
the nation which had been con-
sidered dead, breathed new life
again.
There rose before us the image
of our leader, the pride and the
splendor of our movement, the
embodiment of the yearning and
the hope of our people.
Esile of "Schechina"
Here in this place, not far from
our table, which sonte loving hand
had decorated with flowers, I sat
at the First Congress. My neigh-
bor was the young and charming
Vasilevsky, who died only a few
months after the Congress. From
his hand I had received the Basle
Programme, and copied it with a
pencil immediately after it was
read from the platform.
!remembered the words of one
of our colleagues at the close of
the Congress, who left our move-
ment some years later. When I
asked him at that time about his
relation to our work, he replied:
"I am mourning the exile of the
'Shechina' "-
I remembered the words of one
Congress he said: "Now we must
wander away to be alone in some
forgotten corner far from the
tumult of life, without contact
with the outside world, to live on
our memories of the Congress.
They are enough to illuminate
our life and to fill us with'
strength and beauty until the end
of our days."
The same feeling prevailed in
all of us.
We returned home to our
towns. When we spoke about the
wonder of the Congress, about
the first meeting of the repre-
sentatives of our scattered na-
tion, of Herzl, of Nordau's speech,
of which one of the Congress
delegates had said: 'Like the
words of our ancient prophets, so
his words should have ended 'So
the Lord has spoken'", our voices
trembled, and tears sprang to the
eyes of our listeners, a light was]
kindled in their hearts .. .

• • •
Wounded Souls

Difficult days came to us, days
of distress and disappointment.
All the burden of the suffering
of cur nation fell upon our
shoulders, we were consumed with
anxiety and trouble. Not only
were our hands hurt in the mould-
ing of our nation, as the hands
of • sculptor are hurt in the
moulding of his bronze, as Nor-
dau has put It, but our souls too
were wounde
During all that period of stress,
the light kindled by the First
Congress glowed in our hearts.

hisapt

Stil

id
ower.
l
ofur
o
COMMENTATOR ON
' gre
eal, of our
thsues.
e lightro mance,
SPORTS OPPOSES
glowed in our hearts.
BERLIN OLYMPICS
The Fallen Leaders
Without those memories we could
Many had fallen front our
not have lived through that dark
(CONCLUDED FROM PAGE ONE)
ranks. Nordau, the modern proph-
hour, beneath that heavy yoke of
et of Israel, sleeps in the ceme-
care, through all that weary la-
cease my recent rather forced si-
tery of Tel Aviv. Ile died in lone- t
once i n t h e matter at issue; compel
bor.
•
visited
me to believe what I've always
• • •
in Paris a few weeks before his suspected—that Hitler promises
At the 12th Congress
death. I found him living in pov- not to discriminate against those
We met again at the 12th Con- erty, on the third floor of a of Jewish faith in regard to the
gress. The years had torn us tenement which had no lift; he
apart, war and destruction had was suffering from heart disease. Olympic Games are but further
'scraps of paper.' You all have
descended upon us like an unend- I could not see him; he was in read what has been happening in
ing nightmare. Wolfson, the friend the paroxysms of a heart attack.
Berlin and other German cities the
of Herz! and the guardian of his He asked me to wait a few days,
past few days, so let's not go into
heritage, was no longer with us. but I could not. I was sailing for
that. Enough to declare . bluntly
Adolph Stand, the warm hearted, a distant country, where I heard
that Sport and its spirit of fair-
the fiery tongued, was gone.
some weeks later of his death.
ness to all, can no more be found
Again we talk of the first Con-
Not far from Nordau lies Ahad in present-day Germany than it
gress, of the triumphs we had Hum, his opponent, the teacher exists in the jungles of Africa,
won, the hopes that had been re- and philosopher, who passed away where the law of tooth and claw
alized, the love that had with- in Tel Aviv. How would he now
repeat his warning of the need holds its horrid sway. Enough to
stood all trials, the sacred mad-
declare that by sending an Olympic
ness which had possessed us all.
for the preparation of the genera- team to compete in a land where
One of the delegates expresses tion!
!sport is a mockery, this country
the hope that every Congress
Gone too is Davis Tritsch, the blots its own escutcheon and goes
would be for ua a renewal of the strange dreamer, who until the back on its ideals. And I can but
First Congress, in freshness, in last moment of his life guarded wonder what our kids are going
courage, in its holy spirit.
his golden dreams, which for him to think about it all. in one breath
A new delegate of the younger were more real than the realities we endeavor to instill in their
generation speaks of the strong of life. minds the idea of always playing
spirit of the Jewish youth which
Motskin, the president of our the game decently and fairly. And
is rapidly occupying the place of , Congresses, has left, who, at the in another we talk of sending a
the old.
First Congress, urged upon us a team of our athletes to compete
Again the wish is uttered that 1 radical form of the Basle Pro- in a land where playing the game
the young delegates might attain gramme. Ile was the devoted! fairly is utterly unknown."
the happiness of the vision which, watchman of our movement, the
fell to ua of seeing as in a dream! fearless guardian of the heritage
OLYMPICS FUNDS
the springtime of our nation to of Herzl.
ARE HARD TO GET
light our path until the end of I Vladimir Temkin is dead, who
our days.
for 50 yearn was known to the
• • •
(CONCLUDED FROM PAOZ
Arabs of Palestine as Ras el Ye-
A third time we foregathered, had, the Prince of the Jews, man athletes. "There are no Jews
30 years after the First Congress, whose voice, falling like a caw- on Germany's team of more than
in solemn conclave, in the little cede, echoed in the First Con- 200 men and women because non-
Casino in Basle. In the atmos- Kress.
Aryans in Germany do not possess
Benami, the vivid, the restless,
phere of routine work and daily
care, echoed words of youthful- burning. with a holy flame, and s and in the trials for the games did
nest and romanticism, uttered by Ber Epstein, the young and the not
Aryan
team
show competitive
themselves as
good spirit
as or
the delegates of the First Con- dreamy student of Heidelberg, better than those selected to rep-
grms, the spirit of which des- are among the miming.
here.
Germane
are
not
resent us
cended upon us.
The Spirit of the Leaders
so undiplomatic as to prevent Jews
• • •
In the
shadow
of
our
old
mem-
and our dreams we gather from participating either here or
Meeting in Jerusalem
sties
they
Games
We met once more, not long together. Sokolov recounts his better
jst
than other candidates." In
ago, this time in Jerusalem. A personal recollections of Hers!- the same breath, however, Fischer
different spirit prevailed than Buchmil narrates how Herzl sent conceded that various devices
that of years before. We felt the him, a young student from Mont- been employed to preventJet!
throbbing of life, the pulsating perlier, to Russia to prepare the from showing at their best in the
activity of work and effort. Of sRussian Zionists for the Congress, various Olympic trials, even when
those few remaining who had be tells of the scepticism with they were not entirely excluded.
been present at the First Con- which he met, and of the hearts
gress, a number were now rea - l that responded to the call of Histadruth Boat Service Opens in
dent in Jerusalem. Others were Herzl.
on pilgrimage to Palestine for the
Ehrenpreis tells of his work In
HAIFA (WNS—Palcor Agency)
Passover festival. There were 17 the preparatory committee with — Jewish tourists and immigrants
of us. Two were too old to come. Herz!. He was a Rabbi in Xis- landing at the port of Haifa will
The aged Alexander Siskind Rabi- hover, in Jugoslavia. Together be brought to shore in three large
novitz sent us his greeting. Only with lierzl, he signed the first' motor boats operated by members
one of us raised his hand in re- , call to the Congress, as a Deere- of the Histadruth, Central Labor
sponse to the question as to which tary of the committee. Ile had Federation of Palestine, it became
of us had been present at all the the proclamations printed on a known here.
Congresses, and only two when printing press where Jewish type
The new shore motor boat serv-
we were asked which had been . was almost unavailable. Ile and ice follows successful negotiations
present at all except one of the' his friend Berditchevsky, who was between the Histadruth ■ and the
Congresses. We resolved to meet his guest, had to collect the Heb- Arab boatmen who have had ■
in Jerusalem every year. rep type from the lettering of monopoly on lighterage wqrk in the
We had grown old and grey in' invitations and Jewish New Year Per tun to now.
the long struggle. The years had card.
I
silvered our heads and bent our
Again there hovers over us the
the veneration which paved the
shouldereBut we all still stood spirit of our great leader,
whose way , which struggled unaided and
at the post Still we guarded the, call we still hear in our hearts,
misunderstood for the ideal which'
standard that was raised at the , Is hose message we brought to the
was taught by our great leader.
First Congress, each according to' new youth who know so little
e 0 I I - s tt'ot•yr•ghl. WS by a A F. A I
I

BOOK CHAT

Robert McBride' has scheduled
for October publication Ernst
Glaeser's "The Last Civilian", an
account of the rise of the Nazi
movement,
Louis Untermeyer will have
two new volumes of poetry, "Sel-
ected Poems and Parodies" and
"Rainbow In the Sky" published
in the fall by Harcourt Brace.
Lewis Browne, whose new no-
vel, "All Things Are Possible",
will be published by Macmillan at
the end of August, is working on
a cultural history of the last seven
centuries.

(Colo.Ight. 1935, by

A P. 81

SOLID AS THE CONTINENT

NORTH
AMERICAN

Save and be safe through Life Assurance

JACOB MILLER

IteprenentIng for come Si year.

DAVID STOTT BUILDING

A Thoughtful Legislature
has made an earnest effort
to lighten your tax burden

E

VER since the immortal Gettys-
burg Address, the accepted stand-
ard for American government has
been "of the People, by the People, for
the People."
This applies to the matter of taxation
no less than to other functions of gov-
ernment.
So it is entirely natural that the Leg-
islature of Michigan has had the People
of this great state in mind when it has
taken certain measures to lighten the
tax-burden of our citizens.

It is now the part of good, loyal, co-
operative citizenship for the tax-payers
of Michigan to take fullest advantage of
the provisions that have been passed for
their benefit.

Not only has the Legislature made
generous concessions in the matter of in-
terest and penalties, but it has also pro-

vided a convenient plan whereby taxes
for 1932 and prior years may be paid over
a period of time. There are indeed few
tax-payers who can not now protect their
homes by paying their taxes.

You can now pay up this important
obligation just as you pay for a home or
an automobile or furniture; putting aside
a little each week or month, and then
making an annual payment equal to one-
tenth of the amout of your delinquent
tax. On the ten-year plan you pay only
a small carrying charge for this privilege.

Get in touch with your County Treas-
urer right away. He is prepared to ac-
cept payment of your back taxes either
in full or on the ten-year plan. Bring him
your old tax bills or the legal description
of your property. But don't wait until
the last-minute! Act now and avoid the
last-minute crowds.

ORDER OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE BOARD,

Governor,'

1

