rifE195YRODIEMSBaiRONIGIA5 salli ■ 1111Maassnsssanwsanwsn Ill PINIWITJEWISti (ARON ICLE Century's Towering Personality and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE wanly by 71. Amish awe his Pu►tiakinit Ca. Ina. Csurod as garood-clan Ratter Mush Ma ths Tan* Marsh I. oars at Detroit, IMO. ander tim f at a General Offices and Publication Building 525 Woodward Avenue Toilopiso•a. C•dillars 1040 C.U. Address; Chromic!. London Otlical 14 Stratford Place, London, W. 1, England .$8.00 Per Year Subscription. in Advance --- natter es Inter. geblIcallon, all oormspoodones and urge ma wash. sses. meek this eel. by Tun., cr.!. •f wIne mailbag noilata, kindly gas ono gide of the Mew .11. l ha baron J..th Chronicle Melt. sofroopondenco a anis. Dm Jewish Poolde. bnl dischant. r•Winn 41- of lb* •Iews erpmssed bl the meter. _t. of Int.n• to 111ty for Chanukah Reading, of the Torah, Saturday, Dec. 28 Pentateuchal portion. ,--Gen. 41:1-44:47; Num. 7:54-8:4 Prophetical portion—I Kings 7:40-50 Eighth Day of December 27,1935 Tebeth 1, 5696 The Legislative Council Thirty years ago Henrietta Szold already earned the distinction of having her name recorded in the Jewish Encyclopedia. Which is an interesting element in a res- ume of the life of the great woman whose 75th birthday world Jewry honors at this time. The facts that she had made sign- ficant contributions to Jewish culture when she was in her thirties, that she displayed great qualities of leadership three decades ago and that she had won recognition from the American Jewish community in her youth, provide proof that it is not work for Palestine, or the formation of Hadas- sah, or the work she is doing to settle refu- gee children in Palestine, that is causing her to be looked upon as a great woman. On the contrary, it is the good fortune of these movements that this eminent leader is their champion—and it is fair to con- clude that her genius and her understand- ing of Jewish life led her quite naturally to devote her major interest to these causes. . Exactly 15 years ago, on the occasion of Miss Szold's return from one of her trips to Palestine in the interest of the Hadassah Medical Organization, she was accorded many honors, among them a rare tribute by 3,000 women who gathered at a recep- tion for her at Hotel Pennsylvania in New York. A writer for the United Synagogue Recorder, describing this great tribute, thus evaluated Miss Szold's qualities as a leader: Jews— in and out of Palestine—have survived so many crises that we would dis- credit our long history if we were to be- come panicky over the promulgation of the Legislative council in Palestine, by High Commisioner Sir Arthur Grenfell Wauchope. In spite of the White Papers and the various obstacles placed in our paths in Palestine, we have doubled the Jewish population there in a period of five years, trebled our possessions there and enriched the English treasury. The regrettable thing is that in spite of the great benefits brought by Jews to Palestine the govern- ment treasury which has been enriched by our efforts uses these funds for all pur- poses but those which would be of benefit to Jewish reconstruction efforts; the gov- ernment has from time to time hindered us in our work by occasional decisions such as the present; furthermore, the gov- ernment has not even been appreciative of Jewry's good-natured yielding to fate in proceeding with our work independently, without the aid of the British adminis- tration in Palestine in such efforts as health and education, in which a larger .hare of revenue is rightfully due us. On top of it, the Palestine government now proposes to legislate us into a posi- tion of an unimportant minority, despite the dominance of Jewish efforts. Natur- ally, therefore, the Jews in Palestine, and the Jews outside of Palestine, reply to the new action with the declaration that under no circumstances will we recognize this legislative council, or participate in it. Thus, Great Britain is legislating with- out our consent and against our interests. It is .a decision which is not only ill-timed —in a period of our history when we most need the encouragement of the great na- tions of the world in solving the horrible refugee problem—but it is tantamount to an expression of ingratitude on the part of the great British government to whom we have devotedly entrusted our lot and our destiny. Those devoted to the cause of Pales- tine's reconstruction must under no cir- cumstances permit the decision for the promulgation of a legislative council to discourage them in any sense whatever. It is unfortunate that this decision will lend comfort to our enemies—to the Com- munists who have declared war against Jewish hopes which are built on a basis of national reconstruction of Jewish life; to the Revisionists who have been a de- structive group in our midst; to those who, because they happen to be in oppo- sition to the present leadership in the Zionist movement, may utilize the occa- sion for an attack on our leaders rather than lending their wholehearted support for the Palestinian work in defiance of the legislative council. We need courage in this hour of stress —and we are not losing hope for even a single moment that we shall attain it in spite of all the difficulties on the road of Jewish redemption work in Eretz Israel. Dr. Masaryk's Resignation The resignation of Dr. Thomas Garrique Masaryk as president of the Republic of Czechoslovakia is a most regrettable occur- rence in present-day European politics. For Jews it is particularly shocking news, and liberals throughout the world deeply regret his exit from the political arena. Dr. Masaryk, aside from being one of the outstanding political geniuses and lib- erals in Europe, was directly responsible for keeping Czechoslovakia's doors closed to Nazism. He surrounded himself with a group of able statesmen who created in Czechoslovakia a center for liberalism and tolerance, and the one encouraging hope in his resignation is that his political proteges will follow in his footsteps and will guar- antee that their country will remain an oasis of freedom on the European field of reaction. For Jews the name of Dr. Masaryk will always be associated with the noblest in Christendom. On more than one occasion Dr. Masaryk staked his own career in ef- forts to secure justice for oppressed and persecuted. Jewish history will never erase the name of the first president of the Republic of Czechoslovakia, who, as a 27-year-old professor, defended Leopold Hilsner against a, ritual murder accusa- tion, and on many subsequent occasions showed great interest both in efforts to secure justice for Jews and to rehabili- tate refugee Jews in friendly countries. It is encouraging that a disciple of Dr. Masaryk, Dr. Edouard Benes, who was his predecessor's cicsest collaborator, succeeds him to the presidency of Czechoslovakia. This rives us assurance that the liberal will be fol- and THE LEGAL Lights from Shadowland By LOUIS PEKARSKY Reproduction In part or whole forbid. den. without permIsaion of the Seven Arta Festive Syndicate. Cop/lighters of this feature. CHRONICLE 1935's NEW JEWISH FACES Strictly Confidential Tidbits from Everywhere The Past Year's Newcomers to the Front Page By PHINEAS J. 'IRON 1Copyright, 1036.. 8. A. F. II By BERNARD POSTAL POLITICAL PLOT (Copyright. S. A. F. S. 1135) The New Deal has turned Copyright. 1936, Seven Art. Feature Syndeute DID YOU KNOW DEP'T? thumbs down on Governor Henry Jack Benny's recent increase in Horner of Illinois .. . Roosevelt One of the primary axioms of journalism is came active in the work of the Joint Distribu- salary makes him top-price man leaders in Illinois have informed among radio stars. He gets $7,500 that names makes news: the bigger the name tion Committee, to which his father gave so and tops Cantor's salary for broad- many millions. Young Marshall, who had prev- the Governor they will not back casting by $500. Joe Penner says the bigger the news. Frequently, however, men iously made a name for himself as campaign him for renomination ... But Hor- he prefers to stay in Hollywood and women who are not what the press calls manager for Mayor La Guardia in 1933 and as ner is determined to defy the Demo- and in the movies and is said to "big names," make big news. No day passes but cratic bosses and intends to seek be holding out on radio for $10,000 that some hitherto obscure person flashes into a member of the executive committee of the re-election without their backing American Jewish Committee, continued his climb a week . . . David 0. Selznick is . . s Jerome N. Frank, one of the in line for the Motion Picture Aca- headline prominence overnight by virtue of one toward the top when he was appointed to the original members of the so-called demy Award with two productions event, deed or word. Of course many of those "Brain Trust," will celebrate the which he completed for MGM this momentarily catapulted to fame or notoriety are New York City board of education and the city new year by bidding farewell to year before he started his own in- quickly forgotten as their contribution to the charter commission. the New Deal ... He's giving up dependent compay, Selznick Inter- his post as assistant counsel to the Justine Wise Tulin, daughter of Dr. Stephen national Pictures, Inc., as an- news of the day becomes a newspaper clipping railroad division of the RFC to S. Wise, belongs among the new Jewish faces nounced here a few columns back and is buried away in newspaper morgues. But return to private law practice ... . George Cukor, who will be as- some of the newcomers do remain in the glare of 1935 because during this year she was ap- Washington's newest cocktail, the sedated with Mr. Selznick in fu- of publicity, and by retaining their hold on pub- pointed judge of the New York domestic rela- "Virgin Island," is credited to ture film productions, is a candi- Mike Straus, director of public re- tions court, the youngest judge of that rank in date for the Academy's award for lic interest become "big names" in the sense that lations for the Interior Department the beet director's work during the they have important news value. Any newspaper the entire country, and the first woman in New ... Politics may go musical in • past year ... Sylvia Sydney will reader can list several dozen people whose names York State to be given a court position more big way next year if George Gersh- go to London after the tint of were unknown in 1934, but who through some notable than that of city magistrate. As the win is serious about his announced . next year to appear in a single intention to try his talented hand Gaumont-British picture on a loan happening in 1935 became and remained front vice-president of the New York Times, Arthur at politics ... Did you notice that from Walter Wenger Productions page figures. In a year studded with events of Hays Sulzberger, son of the late Cyrus Sulz- Dr. Francis E. Townsend, author . Hollywood today faces a seri- major import to the Jewish people, 1935 yielded berger, avoided the limelight, but he could not of the Townsend Plan, wears a ous beauty shortage! This alarm- escape it when the death of his father-in-law, Hitler-like moustache? . . . Out quite a crop of Jewish newcomers to the front ing statement was made by Mark Adolph S. Ochs, made him (Sulzberger) publisher in St. Louis a certain William Sandrich, director of film musicals. page. Schneider has organized the "Moses The shortage is in quantity, not The following, in the opinion of the writer, of the New York Times, a positkin which entitles Organization," which has as ma yrk o uan dded .. E . Rs are those Jews who, by virtue of their achieve- him to a place in the gallery of new Jewish faces. Wing LETT IT ou H sA iiN tyks gieF is o , R its motto "every man a Moses" and its goal the guiding of Amer- Examples of Previously Unknowns ments during 1935, deserve recognition as the I This column asks to be excused ica out of the wilderness of eco- Miss Ssold is not only a scholar; she is for taking a few lines of space to new Jewish faces of 1935: Louis B. Brodsky and Leo Y. Chertok are nomic depression . not only • great Jewess and • most ardent say "thanks" for many kind words the perfect examples of people previously un- PERSONALIA Zionist; she is not only an indefatigable and good wishes from Ruch readers Hugo Bergmann, rector of the Hebrew Cohen.); known to fame who became internationally re- Elsa Wise, daughter of Rabbi worker; healing the body and the spirit of of "Lighths From Shadowland" as: Heart Bodmilleinter, world president of the OUT; nowned by one utterance or deed. Magistrate Jonah 13. Wise, is to be married her people; she is the towering personality of Philip Slomovitz, editor, Detroit Magistrate 1.0116 It. Brodsky; Leo, Y. Chertok, pro- the century, the greatest influence on Jewish Jewish Chronicle; Nathan Krems, moter; Rudolf Graslank Italian general; Otto Ilia., Brodsky was a liberal attorney who had been a in January to Melville Hertzberg New York, a banking company womanhood in the world. Her name and work associate editor, Seattle Jewish aminean of the Relchtertretung der Deetechen Jude.: New York magistrate for several years, but of executive ... If you want to do are echoed from shore to shore, in America, in Transcript; Arthur Weyne, the Maurice Leith, department store magnate; Georges beyond the confines of New York he had attracted a mitzvah drop a card to Mrs. A. Europe, and in Palestine. All of the tributes Brooklyn Jewish Examiner's good- 31..1, Frank nankter of rommunIcathms; James II. Fromenson, widow of the late no attention until his now historic opinion that looking managing editor; Henry and all of homage which she has received have Marshall, member of the New lork City Board of Abraham Fromenson, publicity W. Levy, New York, publicity not affected the sweet simplicity of her nature. PkIneatlen; Helene 31uyer, fencing champion; Cliflord the swastika was a pirate's emblem made him wizard, who is in Beth Israel Hos- director of the American ORT She is the sweet, modest, tireless worker in (Meta, playwright; William Itesenwald, philanthropist; an international figure and the subject of diplo- pital, in a plaster cast as a result Campaign for $500,000, who is ex- the vineyard of Israel. And well may the Bele ticellg, boxer; Emanuel ShInwell. member of matic correspondence between Berlin and Wash- of an accident ... Nathan Belth, pected to be in Los Angeles this Hadassah apply to her the well known verse British Parlksment; Arthur Hays Sultb eeeee , pub- former publicity director of the winter in the interests of the big ington. Chertok was an obscure promoter with of Proverbs, "Give her of the fruit of her lichee; Justine Wise Tulin, Jurist; lama Werfel, om- drive; Julius Bisno, Omaha, Neb., hands, and let her own works praise her in en:Lie; tee iu patents, attorney general of New no claim to fame before he startled the world National Council of Jewish Women, is now handling press relations for national executive secretary of the the gates." Jenny. last September by announcing that he had an the Joint Distribution Committee Fifteen years after this was written, we Aleph Zadek Aleph, junior B'nai exclusive concession for the exploitation of all the . . . Dr. Jonah Wise is up and B'rith order; Bernard Postal, With the exception of Franz Werfel, all of oil, gold, silver and mineral deposits in Ethiopia, around again after a siege of ill- doubt whether a single person will be managing editor of Seven Arts found who will question our being justi- Feature Syndicate and Worldwide the names included in this list were virtually an announcement that made him a figure of ness ... Judge Jonah J. Goldstein fied in substituting for the Hadassah" News Service; Julius M. Cohen, unknown to most Jews before 1935. Some of world-wide importance in view of the Italo-Ethi- is the new president of that famous East Side alumni group, the Grand in the above tribute "the Jewish people." associate editor, The Jewish Ledg- them did enjoy fame in a small way, but none opian war. Street Boys Association . . . Jus- Rochester, New York; Yasha She has not only served her people well, er, Frank, Publicity Director, Los had ever made the front page in the literal or Last year the sporting world's contribution tice Brandeis brings his lunch but has been the inspiration of outstanding Angeles Tuberculosis Sanatorium figurative sense of the term. The list includes from home to the Supreme Court educators and leaders in American and at Duarte, Calif.; Miss Muriel people from the United States, Great Britain, to the gallery of new Jewish faces were Henry every day . . . It consists of two Greenberg, the baseball star, and Max Baer, sandwiches made by Mrs. Brand- Palestinian Jewries. Among those who Vernon, Max Reinhardt's personal Italy, Austria, France and Germany. It also in Los Angeles and world's heavyweight champion. In 1936 Green- eis Josef brae's, II, son of the have served in various capacities under her representative contains the names of two women. Among the late Mrs. Henry Moskowitz, Al Hollywood. and many others. tutelage, when she was the director of MORE HONORS "new Jewish faces" are two who are the sons berg retained his place on the front page while Smith's one-woman brain trust, Sid Grauman, veteran showman of men who were "big names" in the Jewish Baer became a has-been. The Jewish newcomers has gone his mother one better ... the Department of Education of the Zion- to 1935's sporting front page were Helene Mayer She was only director of publicity of Hollywood, is the newest Ken- ist Organization of America, were Miss world throughout their lives, one who is the colonel in America's film and Eric Seelig. Miss Mayer has been in the for a governor and potential presi- Jessie Sampter, eminent poet, now in Pal- tucky capital. The governor of that state daughter of a "big name" in Jewish life and limelight since 1928, when she won the woman's dent, but her son is now "publica- estine; Dr. Alexander Dushkin, distin- has just sent a commission tied another who is the son-in-law of a "big name." tion counsel" to an emperor—Em- guished educator, who was recently called with lovely ribbons to Grauman, How many of these 18 will be "big names" so fencing crown in the Olympic Games of that year peror Haile Selassie ... Dr. Joseph but in 1936 she achieved international promi- Rosen, head of the Agro-Joint, manager of the world-famous to an important post by the Hebrew Uni- far as Jews are concerned in 1936 remains a Theatre, whose accomplish- nence for the first time as a result of the ques- slipped into town without any fuss versity in Jerusalem; Dr. David de Solo Chinese ments in the motion picture busi- question, but for 1935 they are the new Jewish tion which arose over whether Germany would being made about his arrival ... Pool, former national president of Young ness make one of the most thrill- faces. invite her to join the German Olympic Committee POTPOURRI Judaea, rabbi of the Spanish-Portuguese ing success stories that has ever If you get some matzoth with a In the United States and whether she would accept the invitation when smoky come out of Hollywood ... Great Synagogue of New York; Emanuel Neu- smell you can be sure they In the United States the most important and if extended. Eric Seelig, who was exiled came Britain's mighty, new submarine from the Horowitz-Marga , mann, able leader and scholar, former has an honorary "shipmate" in the Jewish newcomer to the front page was un- factory in New York, which member of the Palestine Zionist Executive, person of lovely Merle Oberon, questionably dapper, youngish David T. Wilentz, from Germany after being stripped of his title reten was the scene of a fire recently ... who is also making his home in Palestine, English star appearing in Gold- who, by virtue of the fact that he was attorney as Germany's light-heavyweight champion, re- Gordon Selfredge, London depart- places Max Baer as the most important new Jew- ment store magnate, boasts that he gyre Studio Pictures. Notification and many others. • of this honor came to the Londoner general of the State of New Jersey, had the spot- The Palestine that benefited from Miss in the form of a large photograph light thrown on him as the chief prosecutor of ish personality in boxing because of his successful once bought a Chicago department it store from five Jews and sold Szold's services and which in turn con- I c the undersea fighter, with of- Buno Richard Hauptmann, convicted murderer record in this country. to seven men at a profit ... Eric Overseas the number of new Jewish person- Seelig, the German-Jewish refugee, tributed to the elevation of Miss Szold to ficers and crew lining the decks, and kidnapper of the Lindbergh baby. Prior to inscribed "To Merle Oberon, alities was even more meager than in the United who is the latest boxing sensation an undying place in Jewish history, rises and with sincerest admiration—from the sensational Hauptmann trial, Wilentz was to honor her on her 75th birthday. And her shipmates of IL M. S. Sub- unknown outside of New Jersey, although he hue States. Notwithstanding the phenomenal prog- in America, always visits a rabbi he goes into the ring .. . the Zionists throughout the world, whom marine Oberon." This nautical a brilliant record as an attorney. As a result of ress of Palestine, the only really important Jew- before Must be a good idea because he Miss Szold helped to inspire in their work friendship began when Merle was his key role in the IIauptmann case he has be- ish newcomer to the front page in that country hasn't been defeated yet ... Gov- London recently and received a was Dr. Hugo Bergman, the new rector of the ernor Herbert Lehman of New for Eretz Israel, are making this celebra- in request from the sailors of the come as well known as the principals of that tion a worldwide holiday. For American Oberon for an autographed picture. cause celebre, and therefore unquestionably be. Hebrew University, who climaxed a lifetime of York is getting a Christmas tree, Zionist service by becoming the administrative whether he likes it or not The Jewry the occasion becomes an event of The star responded, not only send- longs among the new Jewish faces of 1935. State Conservation department. her picture, but a case of rum as head of the famous institution on Mount Scopus. has cut a handsome balsam for the great significance. It is rather unusual for a playwright, espe- well ... The third film notable to The tragedy of German Jewry was equally unpro- executive mansion ... Mrs. Dionne. hit the headlines with honors this cially a new playwright, to become a national ductive of new Jewish leaders, although Dr. Otto mother of the famous quintuplet', week is LeRoy Prinz, Paramount sensation overnight, but that's exactly what Clif- has nothing on Mrs. Minnie studio dance director, who has been ford Odets did to crash the front pages in 1936. Hirsch, head of the Reichsvertretung der Deutsch- Schwartz. Mrs. Schwartz gave Reporting on the address delivered in named a member and major of the Not since Eugene O'Neill set the critics shout- en Juden, the representative body of the German birth to a baby girl four months Internationale des Aviateurs, Jews, made the front page when he was arrested ago that weighed only 23 ounces, Berlin by Adolf Hitler upon the inaugura- Ligue an international group of aviators. ing hosannas more than a decade ago has Broad- less than Marie, the smallest tion of the National Socialist winter propa- Membership in the league gives the way acclaimed a new playwright with such encom- for signing a Yom Kippur manifesto read in all five quintuplet . . . They said the ganda campaign in Germany, the corres- pilot permission to fly in and over iums as greeted Odets after the presentation of German synagogues. Schwartz baby couldn't live, but nation in the world. Prinz was The halo-Ethiopian war introduced to world she's still very much alive, and pondent of the New York Times cabled the any attached to the Lafayette Esca- his "Awake and Sing" and his two one-act plays now weighs 4 pounds, 6 ounces ... following observations of the reaction of drille during the World War. "Waiting for Lefty" and "Till The Day I Die." fame General Rudolf.) Graziani, the Italian Jew- Lena Levy, sister-manager of ish general commanding the southern front in speech: the audience to the Fuehrer's CAN'T GET AWAY FROM IT One of the most vigorous personalities Kingfish Levinsky, the boxer, has Once you are stamped with a Perhaps the most interesting phase, how- Ethiopia, where Mussolini's forces have made been committed to an insane soy- trade mark, you never lose it, Joe among the new Jewish faces of 1935 is Maurice their greatest progress. Georges Mandel, minister lum ... The bust-up of the United ever, was the reaction of the mass to his Penner has discovered. The former Levin, who won dual fame by his striking mention of what he called the three main Jewish Appeal will be hotly de- Detroiter hasn't used his "wanna achievements in the business world and in Jew- of communications in every French cabinet dur- bated at the January pow-wow of achievements of his regime. There was • buy a duck?" line for a year now, ish philanthropy. As president of Hearn's De- ing 1935, and a veteran of French politics. the National Council of Jewish sprinkle of applause when he referred to the but he is still known as the "duck destruction of "Marxism." Exactly one pair Store in New York he became the talk entered the gallery of new Jewish faces by virtue Welfare Funds in St. Louis ... man" to everyone at Paramount partment of hands clapped when he mentioned the anti. of the country by converting a virtually bank- of the fact that France expects him to be the next FOR READERS Studios. The radio star has just Jewish racial laws although • few more hands New York's Zionist Club is plan- completed a picture here. He ar- rupt business into the most progressive and premier because he is the only leader acceptable got busy when he added that these laws had rived without any ducks and de- unique department store in the country. At the to both Left and Right wings. Emanuel Shin- ning the publication of a series of the overwhelming majority of the German pamphlets, the first of which is to termined to let by-gones be by- same time he succeeded in galvanizing Jewish well's sensational defeat of former Prime Minister people behind them. But when he came to contain Prof. Franz Oppenheimer's gones. But to no avail. He is "duck rearmament behind which, he said stood the lecture on "Race" delivered at the man" to everybody—including the fund-raising efforts by his uniquely successful Ramsay MacDonald in the British Parliament whole German people, the entire hall shook fan mail dinner recently tendered him by he gets—and now he is achievements in behalf of the Jewish National elections stamped him as one of the coming po- with the evening's biggest ovation. resigned to his fate. the Club ... We hear that Amer- Fund and Yeshiva College. litical figures in England. No stranger to fame, Here is exceedingly interesting proof SHE'S PARTICULAR Will Rosenwald and James Marshall, the sons Franz Werfel clinched his place among the new ican Jewry is soon to have a new that all Germans do not approve of the monthly journal, to be edited by Marta Eggerth. Universal's bril- Nazi anti-Semitic program; that, in fact, liant Hungarian-Jewish opera and of Julius Rosenwald and Louis Marshall, respec- Jewish faces of 1935 by the phenomenal success Stefan Zweig, Dr. Abram Coral- nik and Dr. Rudolf Kayser, former movie star, who is now at work tively, are included among the new Jewish faces of his novel, "The Forty Days of Must NO," the vast majority may at heart be op- on her first American film, refuses of 1935 because they made their public debut, and by his monumental dramatic work, "The editor of "Die Neue Rundschau," posed to it. which under his guidance wen Ger- to sing any musical composition, But Germans are determined to build except opera, introduced by an so to speak, during the past year. As one of Eternal Road," shortly to be produced by Max many's finest literary magazine . . It seems to us that we have up again a military power, and in its in- artist other than herself. She has the national co-chairmen of the United Jewish Reinhardt. Henri Bodenheimer, world president had 140 songs written for her voice Appeal, young Rosenwald, the youngest son of of the ORT, is a real newcomer to the front been hearing of this new monthly terests are prepared to sacrifice all hu- by composers of nine different the famous philanthropist, appeared in many parts Page, because it was not until he visited this off and on ever since Zweig's visit man elements whom their leaders hate. countries and she can sing any of to these shores last year—let us It is apparent that the Germans are these numbers in seven different of the country in behalf of the German-Jewish country in 1935 that the Jewish public learned hope that it actually is approach- relief and Palestine reconstruction. He also be- of his achievements in Europe in behalf of ORT. ing realization ... today, more than ever, submissive to the languages. What Do Germans Approve? rule of the dictators who are out to ac- complish their ends at all costs. Nazi bigots and perverts know that in order to retain the country's interest in their program it is easy to stir up hatred against the mythical enemy: the Jew. And the Germans, even when they demonstrate op- position to the anti-Semitic program, are lacking in courage to demand a cessation of the campaign against the Jews. Germans may at heart disapprove of anti-Semitism. But their leaders dictate otherwise: therefore submissive Germans approve of anything to which Hitler and his cohorts ask them to shout: Ja. A Nazi Truce Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels has ordered a one-month truce in the Nazi fight against the "enemies of the Third Reich." Thus, the propaganda machine of the Hitler government will not go into ac- tion until Jan. 15. The reason for this ac tion is not given, but we suspect that it is a desire to stop propagandizing in the hope of stimulating holiday business. Per- haps even the Nazis will soon begin to see that the more they spread Nazi hatred the less trading is done by Germans, in and Has Your Home a Jewish Book Shelf? By J. SOLIS.COHEN, JR., President, The Jewish Publication Society of America A love of books and learning has the principles of the Jewish reli- always been • distinguishing char- Rion, history and literature. The Jewish Publication Society acteristic of our people. Today, perhaps more than ever before, we zation is • non-profit educational organ- supported by nominal dues need the epiritual stimulation of from its members and by funds our own rich tradition and eternal donated by individuals in sympathy faith In this direction few organi- with its aims. Because the publication of books rations have contributed more than the Jewish Publication Societ of upon distinctly Jewish subject's of- y fered only limited distribution and America which during the forty- little possibility of profit, Jewish seven years of its activity has authors writing in this field had, made available in the English Ian- before the formation of the Society, gunge books of inestimable value. almost no opportunity to have their Since its formation in 1888 the writs printed except by private Society has published many note- subscription. In America as well as in other worthy volumes and has made available in the English language English-speaking countries there outstanding classical and hi.tori- were almost no translations of the cal books. It has encouraged re- search, stimulated creative e.Tort Jewish literature which was (mei- and provided an organizetion liar to our forefathers either in through which both translations the original Hebrew or in their and original works have beed die- native tongues. And original works tributed throughout the world. It of fiction, poetry, essays and his- was organized for the publication tory could not be expected to inter• and dissemination of literary, est commercial publishers. It was scientific and religious works, and the realization of these facts that AN ALMANAC FOR 1936 Zionism's First Lady Jewish Anniversaries of the Coming Year A Biography of Henrietta Szold on Her 75th Birthday By TAMAR DE SOLA POOL By BERTRAM JONAS Annher.riee ...label with great men and esent• in Jewish history ill be plentiful In 1934. In thin limeir m- ina of the forthcoming mlebms- 'ions Mr. Jonas present. a Jewish almanac for the rowing /esr. The year of 1936 will be a full one for those interested in Jewish anniversaries, which, for the purposes of this review may be defined as commemorative observances or celebrations of a day separated by 10, 25, 60, 75, 100, 150, 200, 250, 300, or 400 years from some past event of special import in Jew- ish history. The coming 12 months will be the occasion for scores of celebrations marking the anniversaries of the births or deaths of famous Jews and of great events and landmarks that loom large on the scroll of d sad concluding part of Mrs. David de Sola Pool's brilliant biographical study of Henrietta Szold, whose 75th This is the birthday is being celebrated throughout the world. The year is 1895. In the court, yard of the Ecole Militaire in Paris, in the presence of a jeering throng, the stripes are ripped from the uniform of an innocent man, his sword is broken in dishonor, and the innocent victim of ugly forces is exiled to Devil's Island, hearing the cross of his people, Israel. The curtain falls upon the first act of the Affaire Dreyfus. The drama reopens upon a world rent and confused. But above the turmoil and the din, two cr ystal- clear voices ring out. One is Zol a's, the voice of justice and honor of France, the other is Herzl's, the voice of prophecy and age-old vision of the Jew. Herd entered the court-room along the banks of into, litterateur, Bohemian boule- vardier; he emerged • statesmen and of his assimilated existence. With dazzling lucidity, Ilerzi ap- prehended the agonizing anomalies of the position of the Jew in a heartless world. With equal clarity his master mind came to grips with the Jewish problem and with Promethean courage he wrested from the hands of history the torch of Zionism. In 1894, Ilerrl sees Dreyfus hounded, he ?learn the whip of anti-Semitism crack ACM. the face of the Jew. In 1897, Herzl presides over a world Zionist Congress, defies the bitter opposi- Nun of the sseimilationists among the Jews, and sky-writes the Mogan of the Basle platform. With the dexterity of a diplomat and the vision of a prophet, he launches