-Axed= yeksk &dotal! eater
CLIFTON AVENUE • CINCINNATI 30, OHIO
Ti EDEPRO1TAWISli RDNICUI
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
PAGE THREE
CENTER MAKES MOTHER A-
ND DAUGHTER HONOR AWARDS
lick, Winslow Hall, Burton A. Jastrum, Edward F. Jennings, Helen
lin kehillah, at a meeting of 700 Invited Jewish leaders. Because
E. Johns, Donaldson Kelly, Caleb R. Kelly, Charles M. Kieffer, W. F.
the Jews have been officially excluded from the government's winter
Kneip, Jr., R. A. Kiesel, Millard T. Lang, Robert E. Pierce, George H.
relief
fund, Germanjewry is forced to raise its own relief funds. Dr.
Roth, Lee exton, Douglas II. Stone, Emmett Toppino, John L Turn-
Stahl also disclosed that the Jewish community will not only have
hall, Karl D. Warner and Frank ‘Vykoff.
to care for the Jewish needy but for the needy among the Christian
Emphasising that "'if the Olympic Games come off in
non-Aryans who have also been barred from receiving aid from the
The Iled-Aid Basketball team,
Berlin a, arranged, the event will be hailed as • wonderful Nazi
official winter relief fund.
member of the Mid-West Basket-
demonstration and triumph," the New York Times editorially
ball Conference, announced that
declares that "it ought to be possible to arouse and direct •
Universalist,' Sympathy with P
tentative dates with the Celtics and
ted German Jews
feeling not only in the United States but in other countries
WASHINGTON, D. C. (N.C.J.C.)—A resolution expressing Rennalssance teams have been se-
against participating in • great sports meet under the aus-
cured. The Celtics are due here
sympathy
with
persecuted
Jews
In
Germany
was
adopted
by
the
pices of a goverment which disregards and denies true sports.
Universalist General Convention as the convention neared its close. Nov. 29, and the Renaissance Dee.
manship . . . This would be the application of ■ moral sanc-
"Whereas we have read with sorrow of the persecution of the Jewish 15. With the Kautsky Club from
tion which could not be hidden from the German people and
people in present-day Germany," the resolution read, "therefore be hem Indianapolis playing here
which they would not fail to understand."
it resolved that the Universalist people express their sympathy for Dec. 1, the Red-Aid team will be
The forthcoming meeting of the Canadian Olympic Com- these unfortunate victims of racial prejudice."
starting the season with some of,
mittee is expected to reconsider the acceptance of Germany's in-
the strongest teams on its schedule.'
vitation to the 1936 Olympic Games.
An
effort is being made to have a
Ex-Naxl Leader Repudiates Anti-Semitism
The number of regional A. A. U. groups on record asop-
basketball game played on donkeys,
PRAGUE (WNS)—Otto Strasser, one of the earliest fol.
posed to American participation in the Berlin Olympics increased to
lowers of Hitler in the organization of the Nazi party, but now a similar to the baseball game which i
10 when the annual convention of the Pacific Northwestern Associa-
so popular. All games will
refugee in Czechoslovakia because he opposes Hitler's policies, ha, proved
be played at the Naval Armory
tion of the A. A. U., held in Seattle, instructed its delegates to the
announced that he opposes anti-Semitism. Strasser's brother was
national convention to vote against sending a American team to slain during Hitler's blood purge in June, 1934.
where all the home games of the
Germany.
lied-Aid Club will be played.
By a vote of 16 to 7 the Pacific Assciciation of the A. A.
Program of Extermination
U. joined the South Atlantic, New Jersey and Allegheny Mountain
In an address by John Haynes Ilolmes, minister of the Re•Election of Constable Fok
Associations in pledging its delegates to the national convention Community Church, before the Fee Synagogue in New York, on
J. Harrington Is Urged
in December to vote against American participation in the Berlin Sunday, he declared.
Olympics.
..The Germ. Jews are the saddest people I have eter secs, store they
Fred
J. Harrington, constable of
are • people without hope. Ibex are the moot I male
lomple I hate etre known,
Olympic Issue Delays Enacting of New Anti.J.wish Laws in Reich
slime they are the strain. of the supreme tragedy of our day. More terrible the Sixth Ward, has been president
tin.:moltin g huppetreal during
the War in (Ms cold-blooded savagery of of the Constables' Club of Detroit
BERLIN (WNS)—Fearing the effects of new anti-Semitic the Naas In dooming a Indfanfillou of their
own fellowaillsens to torture and for 12 years and leader of the
legislation on the delicate Olympic Games situation, the Nazi cabi- ultimate extinction.
movement ridding Detroit of legal
emenee Of the Jenish horror le not slolenee, thongh violence or.
net is reported to have postponed until September, 1936, a month
racketeers.
...tonally uptowns Mira we hnin la lierninny today Is .1 a 1.orrorn
after the Olympic Games, the new anti-Jewish economic laws which wt a pnwram — pros of slow but surn rrrrr InInntion, (in the surface
at an,
A committee of Mr. Harrington's
11,11111
an
1110111111
were due to be announced tit month. The new legislation is under-
Jeuldi life neer going nn wIthont rinich inlerniion or
friends and supporters, urging his
Injury. I slated the Jewish restanninte In the Jewish foe district In
stood to have been framed but is being held back in Order not to loaprig,
rte. the Jewish 111111,1.r
re-election,
made a statement, de-
In Marti:berg, nod sus, nothing unusual. Ilia
further exacerbate world public opinion. Among the repressive undrretratb—Undemnalt—ntnon g Ilie Jewish friend. I sidled, In the Jewish claring:
Into which I .101 fl14,1 111,11, 1 111111' 11111 111r11111, of
measures already drafted are decrees forbidding Jews to acquire homy.
the wheels a an na sal,
entlilenn repression xhich urn grinding the Jean
"It
la
hoped
that the people will
to It Instend of killing
real estate, providing that all Jewish business establishments must 111. Jewn, 1Iw Rusin are erenting noillions which make
It impossibl e fo e them to-operate to the extent that they
Jews are thus rising by 'Inch.. hyaena of all at once.
be marked with distinguished labels and sharply restricting Jewish to Ile. The
'Pliyelcully the c
will
be
unusually
careful of the
boon In bird enough, but II In worse epIrltuntly, The
trading rights. The cabinet meeting is reported to have been Jews of Germany are mare:411.1y
potiel.t mei self...landed In their
men they select to represent their
marked by a stormy debate between Dr. Iljalmar Schacht, minister of .depritutions and danger They run endure R. we their ...Mors did m aterial
before
respective
wards
on
Nov. 5. Wo
therm their children min perhopn 11 .1.111.41 It, by getting
out of the 1•1 nIntr) I
economics, an dthe radical leaders of the party, headed by Dr. Wil-
••1 is Mt Mollify of the Jewish crisis In 1.er nuuty that Is pert..
Ms hope that the people of the Sixth
helm Frick and Joseph Goebbels. Schacht is said to have argued that worst feat., If thin were inily one re mad outbreak of peeludine,
It might
Ward will see to it that Fred J.
eub side. The Nark. might gel tired, lllll I relent. The Pullenee1111111 courage of the
the enactment of new anti-Jewish measures atthis time would be Jew.
might lair the compose!. es., 14
Harrington, who has been their
such enenam. Ma thispenwcution In
catastrophic to Germany. His contentions, however, carried little re than a prejudice: it Is a sr.111.1 plIllmodary
ra lire.
The !insie hate worked constable for the past 18 years, is
0111 a theory of race of blood and Inherilanee, which excludes
the
Jew
as
a
bio-
weight. The radical leaders consented to a year's breathing spell logical 111111
cultural defilement. This theory Is Iwing rimeloped Into religion, nblch returned to office again so that he
fofr the Jews only because of the Olympic issue.
&banns to the Jew the role or Satan and his
may continue the good work he has
1111[1. 111 hi the old theology. The
Sluts are dedicating themselves to a entry minks
German Jews to Fast One Day a Month to Aid Needy
or racial nallorwll.a, and the been so successful in accomplishing.
•
upon the sitar of tawninnie gods. This Is the reason,
—Cut C ourtesy Det roit Free
All German Jews will fast one day a month during the Jew lo the bk.!sacellien
Pre..
Mrs. Hyman Drapkin (center) and her daughter, Belle,
why Chetah.. are loringpersecuted alum milli Jetta. Hut the Jews We might add that Mr. Harrington
■ are pinning on each other medals coming winter and the money that would ordinarily be spent to nulferIng the find aml the worst..-03111 11111 continue to puffer until Ike
end hal. has the endorsement of every judge
awarded them for outstanding work at the Jewish Community Center. The awards were presented
by provide food for that day will be contributed by individual Jews to r . Thew I. no hop., shirr Ihr Nati mind In nsell—Iixed an
Miss Hannah
any yens,. Wad on the bench, together with that
Is filed. Therefore in their nothing to do but
get the Jen, out Of I.ermany.
Fund Agency. G. Ferman (left) in behalf of the Kovod Society Sunday at the Center, a Community the separate Jewish winter relief fund. This means of raising the
°Such Jen. as must rerouln In Germany will hide them:whew behind
of hundreds of business, profes-
units Iready being reared. Iltrre they will punk. as their (wt ren. alas
millions of marks needs to care for 36,000 needy Jews in Berlin ghetto
sional and workingmen, manufac-
shed herom therm nobody knows how. And
at Nat will rum. 11 day, God grant,
A mother and daughter honoryears, and vice president of the an active club leader for three and thousands of others in the provincial towns of Prussia was of litters:lion, allf11 siolence unit terror will be no more, and man be freeagnin • turers, clergy and the good wishes
adopted following a suggestion by Dr. Stahl, president of the Ber- This tiny Hilo grnendlon may not see, out It will runlet For Cod Is not
award was one of the outstanding same group five years.
dead. of all those who want clean-eut,
years, and Hrry
nor ran his law of Ratak.. End his win of lover be flouted forever.•
a
Seli g son, fome
events of the Senior Kovod dinner.
r r
honest law enforcement officers,
Miss Belle Drapkin has been an educational di rector of
the Ce nte r.
dance at the Jewish Community active Center member for seven
The Kovod Society is a national
Center on Sunday, Oct. 27.
years. She has
worked with the honor society for Jewish Centers.
Mrs. Hyman Drapkin and her Senior Council for a number of
Its aims are to recognize those
daughter, Belle, were among the years and is president of her so- Center members who have shown
five who were awarded Kovod rority.
s
outtandi
lead ership and p artici-
Keys for outstanding participation
Others honored at this time for pation inn g
cultural activities. Each
in Center activities.
outstanding leadership and service year members are elected to the
Mrs. Drapkin has been a member were Morris Linsky of the Phi society. The presentations of the
of the Mothers' Clubs for the past Kappa Iota Fraternity, who has keys and certificates were made by
15 years. She has been president been a Center member for eight Miss Hannah G. Ferman, a member
of the Oakland Club for seven years; Robert Mazer, who has been of the society.
Hed-Aid Team's
Basketball Dates
L
URGE RE-ELECTION OF
COUNCILMAN BRADLEY
"Let's look at the record," is the
slogan adopted by the friends of
William P. Bradley in their cam-
paign for his re-election to the
Common Council at the election,
Tuesday, Nov. 5. Mr. Bradley's
record as a public servant, they
point out, is one which merits the
careful consideration of every voter
at the polls next Tuesday.
William P. Bradley has been a
member of the nine-man council
ever since this improved form of
municipal government has been in
existence. His public service hag
been given in two of the most
critical phases of Detroit's exist-
ence; when the city was outstrip-
ping every other municipality in
the United States in growth and
expansion and during the commer-
cial and industrial depression.
Councilman Bradley's record is
one of experience, they say, of re-
peatedly demonstrated business
ability and foresight, of honesty of
purpose and a high sense of duty.
When the city was threatened
with bankruptcy, his friends say,
Councilman Bradley was a leader
in the efforts to refund the munici-
pal debts over a period of years,
for lowering taxes to the point that
those for 1935 are $21,000,000 be-
low the 1931 levy and in the reor-
ganization of government generally
to provide the high mark of effi-
ciency and economy which the city
now enjoys.
Elect-
fAxme
LlRIffIELD
to the
Common Council
Forty years as ■ Detroit
business man, serving terms in
the Common Council and on the
Board of Supervisors, he is fully
informed on the business, indue.
trial end governmental problems
of the city.
He believes:
That citizens are entitled to
an improved municipal trans.
portation system with seats for
everybody.
That overlapping functions of
government should be abolished
whh the interests of all em.
ployees fully safeguarded.
nit the greatest economy
should prevail in city govern.
ment with the adoption of a
"psy.seyou.0" policy.
That educational (smithies
should be of the highest order
consistent with economy.
That any inequality in tax
assesements should be corrected
to secure equal distribution of
the cost of government.
That all citizen, should be
clearly Wormed on matters of
city government.
He Is FullyQualified
To Serve You Well
Be Sure to Vote, Tuesday,
No, 5
ew 19
lymouth is on
Display Tod
Battle Lines Sharply Drawn As Fight
Continues To Keep American Athletes
Away From Olympic Games In Germany
(CONCLUDED FROM PAGE ONE)
munistic antecedents," Avery Brundage made public a statement in
Chicago declaring unqualifiedly that the United States would be
represented in the Berlin Olympics.
First hand evidence of Nazi discrimination against Jewish
athletes was brought from Europe by Miss Stella Walsh, Polish Olym-
pic sprint champion, on her return from a summer's track competi-
tion in Central Europe. Reporting that "the Jews have to compete
against themselves in their own clubs" and that the athletic situation
of the Jews is "very bad indeed," Miss Walsh told of protests made
by German athletes against Miss Mary Freiwald, a Jewess, who is the
Polish hurdles champion, before a meet between a German and
Polish team in Dresden last August. Although this protest was
smoothed over Miss Frelwald was greeted with insults after the
meet, Miss Walsh said. She also expressed the opinion that Gen.
Sherrill "'saw only one side of the story, and I believe he is prejudiced
in Germany's favor."
Gen. Sherrill's statement also drew • reply from • large
body of prominent Catholics and Protestants who not only called
for American withdrawal from the Berlin Olympics but repudi-
ated attempts being made to represent the issue as a purely Jew.
ids matter. The statement was circulated over the names of Dr.
Henry A. Atkinson, secretary of the Church Peace Union; Dr.
S. Parkes Cadman; Dr. Samuel MacCrea, general secretary of
the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America; Dr. Henry
S. Leiper, Dr. Fred B. Smith, chairman of the American section
of the World Alliance for International Friendship Through the
Churches, and Michael Williams, editor of the Commonweal.
The New York University chapter of the American Asso-
ciation of University Professors has announced its unequivocal stand
in favor of withdrawing the American team from the Olympic Games
in Germany, The New York chapter formally went on record in
opposition to American participation because of discrimination
against Jews and Catholics in sports and called on the American
Olympic Committee to meet the counter-charges which Germany
has made to condone any similar discrimination in this country by
investigating cases of discrimination.
The announcement from California and Berlin that
Helene Mayer, German Jewish fencing star who won the 1928
Olympic fencing title for Germany, had accepted an invitation
to join the 1936 German Olympic teens, and the action of the
National Council of the Y. M. C. A. in adopting a resolution
favoring American participation in the Olympics at Berlin were
widely dad •s stunning but not fatal setbacks to the move.
ment to have the United States withdraw from the game.. These
developments were counteracted to some extent by the militant
anti-Olympics stand taken by the American Federation of Labor
and the announcement by Bernie Bierman, football coach of the
University of Minnesota, Big Ten gridiron champions, that he
was opposed to American participation if the games are not
free from discrimination.
Any hope that the Y. M. C. A. might join the forces op-
posed to American participation in the Berlin Olympics was blasted
at Niagara Falls, N. Y., when the National Council of the Y. M. C. A.
adopted a resolution favoring American participation and opposing
efforts for Americn withdrawal.
"Dishonoring dead heroes on tests they were not required
to undergo when they were asked to die is proof enough that there
is not enough chivalry in Berlin to justify our team in going there,"
said General Hugh S. Johnson in commenting on the new Nazi de-
cree ordering the removal of the names of German Jewish war
heroes killed in action and on the drive to keep the United States
out of the Berlin Olympic Games.
The Trojan lodge of Masons went on record as favoring
the removal of the 1938 Olympic Games from Berlin and, if such
, removal is not possible, the withdrawal of the American team.
Taking direct issue with General Charles H. Sherril's warn-
ing that the agitation to get the United States to withdraw from the
Berlin Olympics would lead to anti-Semitism in this country, Mathew
Woll, vice-president of the American Federation of Labor, declared
that he objected to making the question of American participation
in the Olympic Games an exclusive Jewish question. The 65th con-
vention of the A. F. of L. held in Atlantic City this month, in pass-
ing unanimously a resolution against American participation in the
Olympic Games, was not guided by Jewish persecution alone. The
Hitler government has disbanded a number of Catholic sport or-
ganizations and many Protestant sport organizations which did not
permit themselves to become catspaws for the Nazi party. As for
labor sports organizations of which there were thousands throughout
Germany under the Republic, all of them were 'reorganized' with
many of their former leaders killed. exiled or confined in prison or
If the committees in charge of the Olympic
concentration camps.
Games can endure and connive at the crimes of Nazism in the man-
ner it does, ay, if it can go so far as to show Mr. Hitler how to get
out of his predicament by a nest little scheme, then real sportsman-
ship is dead and the Olympic Games may as well not be held."
Avery Brundage'', emphatic pledge of American partici-
pation in the Berlin Olympic Games and his attack on those oppos-
ing such participation were answered in Albany, N. Y., by Jack Shea,
1932 Olympic ice-skating champion, who declared that if he were
■ candidate for the 1936 Olympic team he would not go to Ger-
many and characterized Brundage's statements as "un-American,
untrue, unsportsmanlike and thoroughly vicious." Ile ridiculed Brun-
dage's charge that those favoring' American withdrawal are Commu-
nists, citing Judge Jeremiah T. Mahoney, James W. Gerard, George
Gordon Batt'', General Hugh S. Johnson, and Dr. Henry Smith Lei-
ner. Shea also scored Brundage for injecting race and politics into
the Olympic Games, charted that the American public is suspicious
of Brundage's ■ bout-face from the position he took in 1933 and
named the following 24 former American Olympic champions as hav-
ing petitioned the International Olympic Committee in 1933 to move
the 1936 games from Germany: Carmen Barth, Lillian Copeland,
Hector Dyer, Evelyn Furtsch, Edward Gordon, Jr., George J. Gu-
4 THINGS PEOPLE WANT:
Important Improvements in Ride and Performance .
T'S
the room-
most beautiful Plymouth we've ever built.
The 1936 Plymouth is again America's most eco-
nomical full-size car. Evidence indicates 18 to 24
or more miles per gallon of gas ...low oil consump-
tion...extremely low upkeep.
Among 40 improvements, the big Plymouth
frame has been made 100% more rigid ... bodies
newly reinforced at five major points.
I
HERE ... the best engineered ...
Eleven new comfort features have been added to
Plymouth's famed floating Ride... inches of ex-
tra leg, elbow and shoulder room. New sway-
eliminator and twice-as-rigid frame provide the
riding smoothness you'd expect in this big car.
With a new steering design, there just isn't any
trace of road shock at the wheel. More power and
pick-up than you'll ever need ... vibrationless
Floating Power ... easy clutch and gear shifting.
You've never driven a car so easy to handle.
The new Plymouth Safety-Steel body is the
sturdiest and quietest we have built. The 100%
hydraulic brakes stop you quickly and safely. It's
the safest low-priced car!
See ... and drive ... and ride in this beautiful
new Plymouth.
Your Chrysler, Dodge or De Soto dealer will put
a new Plymouth at your disposal, quick. (Ask
1 ECONOMY—All evidence indicate,
18 to 24 miles per gallon of gas.
2 SAFETY—Plymouth's body is Safety.
Steel... brakes are 100% hydraulic.
3 RELIABILITY—Now 15 added long.
life features ... less upkeep.
4 COMFORT Plymouth's Floating
—
Ride plus 11 new comfort improvements.
'510
about the official Chrysler Motors Commercial
Credit Plan ... payments to fit your budget.)
MD UP, UST AT FACTORY, DEMI!
PLYMOUTH DIVISION 01/CHRYSLER CORPORATION
SPECIAL EQUIPMENT EXTRA
PLYMOUTH GREATils