E9LTROM AWLSii OWN !CIE •and = A TI r COMMITTEE ORGANIZED TO CONDUCT PASSOVER RELIEF CAMPAIGN HERE (CO N C L UD E D F RONI PAGE ONE) submitted by the committee's auditor: RECEIPTS From Iteeeneal Available from 1131 loiend-Smith-Boclilialter lyly Reams° Arct. Dividend-MO'. Chillm Co.] Acct. fontribulle.: From Individual. From II Organization. From Jewish wet. Org . Total available 11,10.1, Cash to 1,240 families Cash to 111.1 Foundation. Ann Arbor 25 096 Doc Matson to 1.103 Cl,,ill. 260 lbs. Matz. to House of Shelter loll its. Mots. to Jewioli Old Hume 601321 100166. Mats. to Farnsworth eynagog. rapenoent 19.97 Bank Charge Peonage 1,1111 61 Printing 1.172.10 to foloiPPIles 131.16 11,100.37 14,045.31 DISBURSEMENTS The World's Window (CONCLUDED FROM 1'AGI7 ONE) Total DIshurtoementol rush in hank, 13.199.50 35.00 2,013 60 20.75 11 60 30 37.70 7.15 1.30 - - - (6,104.41 Dee. 31, 1135 ..5 631.62 DR. HELLER SPEAKS HERE ON MARCH 10 (CONCLUDED FROM PAOM ONE) THE YEMENITE ARTIST ON HADASSAH ROLL 'OF HONOR EVENT WEDNESDAY NIGHT! ROOSEVELT URGES J. D. C. CLARIFIES ASSOCIATIONS OF ITS ATTITUDE ON GOOD NEIGHBORS BRITISH PROPOSAL (C'ONCLUDED FROM PAGE it (CON, !AIDED PitoM PAGE ONE) a' rat • And et e ra In Iola min way . ,Id his oen lotlfehti gift Moon one rm. millonsal life. them in self-supporting work, ti not 1• uar ao elleiell the Oft Dial each. boa then all ' co-operating with all existing ale gained. agencies, public and private. to troake capital oat °Vole f religious disagreement, however Both Jews and non-Jews have lime, rather, to make I la o ne.. It is received this aid. 6. In addition the Joint Distri• i ; Itit.:10 . 71 a t ve'ffalThigi'Von „ 1" Vf7r1titgli llll g ourselica. The tory state of amens bunion Committee will con• I " he oor)) Is atommoorla to to ac time the vital work it alone °seiner. 1 or no I owe it, the chief in not loclueen 0110 lei'. has been carrying on, of aid r elIgiou• beteeen belief and hellefor It and reconstruction among the nhellef . Jews in Poland, Rumania, •11 it tool sour sperille faith or mi. efiheeltlied into oprestIon-bal Ituil Ir Austria, Hungary, Latvia, nil faith. Religion lo vide arrow of the Lithuania ■ and other Eastern earth In being confronted with irrell- It European countries. This work g1011; m,r foilths are beteg rhallensed. Ili hero.. of that Gomel that yon and includes maintenance of free I mod 'roach no•ro. the lines be loan ■ sod credit societies, ' our creed, clasp hands, ond 'nuke co is aid through loan., training b I for •noel and trade tr•ining, hospitals •nd medical-unitary institutions, child care and cultural-relig• ious institutions. February 28, 1936 LEGAL CHRONICLE 11•011 1. 1111re. (CONCLUDED PROM PACE ONE) by its founder. Henrietta Szold. Rabbi Leon From said recently in the Detroit News, "The current flood of immigration into Pales- tine would have been impossible if the healthfulness of the coun- try had not been secured in ad- vance by Henrietta Szold and her Hadassah Society." Sarah Osnath-lialevy, who has been hailed by critics throughout the world as one of the most fas- cinating artists of the century, will present the following program during her appearance here: °T,.00duf that e Ill do reedit to the beet PART I I. Ancient Yemenite and Schalialy Songs -Folklore. (al "I IMPLORE THEE, 011 LORD" A young Yemenite man implores (loot to deliver him from the in- 0 llll 00 ft Ion ton ant 0101110s, from which he "Yet i lie hot look opon the. united suffers mithout respite. Stale, no finished loatiort• we ore Oa "I ASK OF THE ETERNAL" otill In the ,",king. The vision of the "When shell the Meosialt deliver early door otill require., the tan. 5.- all peopleor7" • 110i. of faith In God sot 111110 for Ito "When will Ile come)" fulfillment. "Tell me 11110, eh Lord. and if I to our "No greater thing round c he unworthyof Thy reply, tell Isnot Polo) than a reilial of the oplett It to our patriarch." of religion-. millet that mould swee p 5. Sephardic Song* Folklore thronah the homes of the millen an (a) "1 HAVE A BEAUTIFUL GAR- oar Ike heart. id men and women of . DEN"...,Wurols by Ch. N. Bialik all fniths to It rearme.flues of their he A young Spank11 girl promenades lief to pod opol their d eleotion to his of an eVening In her garden whkh I to; IJ world. ;111,110f , o i r . , t liro i t:o l f i o ro 11,1111.1 la In full bloom. All things are tiny already asleep. All alone she en- rial, pollti nd or ecoommiefIlliit"nwoul I Joy. the ellence and restfulness. It, ) 11AMAI5'IGL Folklore Prayer at the clone of the Sab- "I know Of no better way In kindle bath. As usual a new week begins ouch a the than thronigh the to-110..111p again full of hope. that an °roml. like tills make. pos. J. Aroltion Monts Folklore llole. For Brotherhood Day, after till , (al My FIANCEE HAS SUCH TEN- a nit experiment In onolerstamilrog, DER HANDS. veld.e in emighloorlin.s, A young Arab dreams of his fian- cee who has left hirti. One eve- "I like to think of cur country a. one honor 10 milicit the hoteresto of each mins im sees her again arcont - member ore lip with the Iowan- panted by a stranger. Ile Is fas- neom.of all. we ought to know by now cinated by her grace and beauty thoil the orifore of ) 0 0 , fatiliir or nine and singe of the chorine at Ills en 1111).0 be bought ot the ...rake of our unfaithful one, her siert°o1 black eyes, her so charming Pia, and .igloloor'e fend]) tied ouraril-being depentle, In the long pal, opon the well- her hands eo tender. !wing of our neighbors. Do) SONG OF MOHAMMED (Arab "file lout Neighbor Idea-no lie are satire) Music by M. Daniel tiling to practice It in International re. An Arab very proud of his land, IntIonships-I.als to he put into taws but very naive from sheer priori'. Tire In'ur comm unity reloillonehlpo. live.., declare, hiadislike for v (Recover that the When S the Jews and his love for Jewleh nowl to underolonoling nod fellowohip gide. For this latter reason he I, .1. Hoerend to s piritual owakening. antis to remain In Palestine, and rm find r eighbor'. fireolde we iy Al ou n lso because he can obtain hie new fuel for the fires of faith at our tnerchandlae cheaply there. He unzt locor la o es. then oIngo of the Sabbath day '•It oinoId be • filling thing for an on whio h he can dispose of hie ors•niroition morh aft the National Cori- merchandise advantageously, ference oof Jena pod Chriolloins to 1111 - which ea.ea hhn to dance and be dertelm this kind of a project In neigh. Joyful . bowline., I whoosh] like le ace Assoc- INTERMISSION Iloo. Of t end Neislohors In elery loon not city and In every renal community PART II of our land. I. Felahl Songs. °Soch ossociationa of sincere citisene, (a) "WHEN TIIE SUN RISES (Fitel, oa lo the eillierl)ing prIn• hordes. Song), kluale by Naftali: elide* and Ideal., world reach acros• arranged and harmonized by J. Ike lines ef creed or of economic) otatua. Oorochon, It would faring together men and women A young oloepherdess happily of all sloth,. to ahare their prodder. watches over her sheep In prop liod their hot.. Red to/ tillteOlte .05 Lure. Suddenly her favorite Iamb of m11111111 Dee neighborly belpholneoe. disappears. She search.. for It, "here, perhape, is a nay to pod our crying, but cannot nod It. Fin- opIritimi remelt-rear 10 find common oily she opleo her lamb and run- slot.)n11 od us of oil faiths g round ning to It joyfully, carries It back ism slued; ond thence lo 'e for. to her flock. want no men and lllll en coneenied for 31usle (b) SONO OF WORK the things or the spirit." by Walbe, arranged and harnion• ised by A. Talisman. This otong glorMes work which Committee campaign in a large alien liberty, nourishment And joy. Folklore number of cities now organizing 5. Penton Songs (s) AT THE GRAVE OF FATHER. and developing their spring ef- A woman weeps upon the tomb of her father. She would like to forts, it has been necessary to n or '.on tr o Alsoleirt Icodno of etlit, .1::,4liortle t tnoe•rl' adillen. 'Ille spiritual forebear. hale brought n o long „ay loaned the groat net before the nation at Its ohich h --- • establishing a sure if modest live- 1892, in New Orleans, La. His The plan and scope committee, lihood for themselves. Herrmann father, the late Dr. Max !feller, asked one of these gentlemen, a although a Reform rabbi, was a after hearing the statement from professional man and a non-Zion- pioneer American Zionist . In spite Messrs. Baerwald and Ilyinan, ist, why he had come to Palestine. of the early animosity of his elected the following national of- And the gentlemen answered: school of Jewish thought to the ficers for the Joint Distribution "Everything in Germany had sud- movement for Palestine's recon- Committee 1936 campaign for denly lost its meaning-profession, struction in the early days of $3,500,000: work, society. So I thought to my- Zionism. Felix M. Warburg, chairman; self• Perhaps there may still be Educated in the schools of New honorary chairmen, Dr. Cyrus a meaning to life in Palestine. Adler of Philadelphia, Max Ep - In his fine, tolerant, profound way.' Orleans and under tho tutelage stein of Chicago, Louis E. Ker- Herrmann adds: ''It seems to me of his father, Dr. James G. lief stein of Boston, Hon. Herbert II. the are of suet, I received his A. B. from Tulane Lehman and James N. Rosenberg that in Germany life for us had her no meaning, no genuine meaning, University in 1912; his M. A. from of New York, Aaron Waldheim of even prior to 1933. How terrifying the University of Cincinnati in St. Louis, Hon. Max C. Sloss of that we Jews, whether in Germany 1914, and was ordained rabbi by San Francisco; co-chairmen, Paul Union College in 1916 or elsewhere, have to undergo a Hebrew Baerwald and Dr. Jonah B. Wise ore we set out on Ile then continued his studies in of New York, William Rosenwald catastrophe bef the post-graduate school of the the quest after the meaning of life of Philadelphia; vice-chairmen. University of Pennsylvania. • James H. Becker of Chicago, Sal- to us." .• • I During the war Dr. Heller was mon I'. Halle of Cleveland, Meyer The whole problem of Jewish chaplain . with the American Ex Prentis of Detroit; national treas- life, at least for certain Jews- peditionary Forces in France in urer, Leon Falk, Jr., of Pitts- and they are many and their num- 1918-1919. Front 1916 until he burgh; secretary, Joseph C. Hy- bers are growing-is there, in that Joined the A. E. F. he was rabb man of New York; comptroller, single observation. Even In a fav - of Keneseth Israel Congregation Morris C. Troper of New York; orable and free non-Jewish land , in Philadelphia, lie served as campaign director, Isidor Coons even in a land like America, to rabbi in Little Rock, Ark., in of New York. which we are bound by many ties 1919-1929, and since 1929 has Message from Warburg of justice and of good, even here served as rabbi of the Isaac The following telegraphic mes- the meaning of life is not, deep Wise Temple of Cincinnati. sage was received by the meeting From 1929 to 1931 Dr. Heller enough nor one nor integrated from Felix M. Warburg, national enough. That is it. That is where was chairman of the executive chairman of the campaign: the shoe pinches. For life and liv- committee of the. Zionist Organ- .1 greet sou as leaden oho have come ing do not consist in doing. Action ization of America. Ile is a mem- Si co.iderulde per•onal sacrifice from parts of this country In- is both sedentary from this point ber of the board of governors of different ceellee lo solemn .11.101. on. the of view and second-rate. The es- Hebrew Union College and of the J ews of the burst Mateo mod Canwho regret Drat 1 • be pre.. sence of life is in being. Right national governing board of the Sly deep you is tempered by the knzi. action will arise from right and Hillel Foundations. Ile served as ent edge 11 nt Str. Iler.old %MI help Ile harmonious being. What are we? president of the Cincinnati Peace you in your oirlibenitiona I 111.1 not I!well open the Imporlance of your How are we? That is the immeas- League from 1927 to 1929, is a lank of promising ArnericoNrespo urably deep question. In the an- member of the Metropolitan Y. lo Ile at l•rikle ewe in Cent C. A. board, was a member of Jund Pastern Europe hale had to face swer to that question lies the In modern 11,5,.. meaning of our lives. And life is the Cincinnati Board of Educa- "It is yoor .elf-hoposed lask •■ the hollow without a meaning. You tion in 1934-35, and is a mem- nationul rohilllittee u, Si,,, and Scope Ike national olliceno to allot can silence that question by bustl- ber of the faculty of the Cin- to oppolnt to the intim. Otte% Mid le art ing and by fads. Business is its- cinnati Conservatory of Music tit an othimory and guiding capaelty which recently awarded him the to the Joint DIstelhortien ,,,,, inittee'• proving ... Practice is good 19:01 tuitional campaign for •1,500,000. Mortimer is doing well at college degree of Doctor of Music. It Is a nork that should and, 1 am enlist eery seneronts sod ... Sure to make Phi Beta Kappa In addition to his distinctions In ontident, toopalar. of (limo to min. 5. ... Better vote for Roosevelt ... as lecturer, teacher and author .111 make sour appeal. I , t .It you But look out of the window at the of many monographs, Dr. Heller /: , doped and a full moos are Of establish quotas for several hun- beautiful land. You perceive its is winning distinction as a coon The following quotas were dred communities of lesser popu- beauty perhaps more keenly than poser of secular and religious Rogers, your neighbor. But its music. lie was the winner of the recommended by the plan and lation. A feature of Sunday's meeting soil is not yours. You have no re- prize awarded by the Society for scope committee for the 12 major lation to it. Your grandfather the Publication of American Mu cities contributing to the J. D. C. was -an address by Rabbi Jonah built no road here ... Mortimer- sic in 1929. Ile is the writer of 1936 national campaign for the B. Wise of New York in which I he outlined the emergency that you have a sudden pang-is going notes for programs of the Cin $3,500,000. Jeulsh tem, city quotas with a Aiken . . . Admirable girl cinnati Symphony Orchestra, and 1,706,000 New York city 11,500.000 had confronted the Jews in Ger- 101.151 Chicago in every way-brains, looks, char- since 1925 has not only written 350.000 many, with the unforeseen need 147.000 Philadellohle 110.000 for rebuilding their lives, finding acter ... The pang remains . these notes but has occasionally 56,000 Post. 110.000 15.000 Christmas comes ... The world is been called upon to give explana Cleieland 135.000 new occupations, retraining them- 71,261 Detroit 126,000 selves, providing special educa- vibrant with it The radio plays tory addresses during Cincinnat e6.0011 Baltimore 115.000 Adeste fidelea ... Snow is on the Symphony Orchestra programs. 45.000 Loo Almelo, 100,000 tional facilities for their children 50.000 St. Louls 50.000 and emigrating when possible. ground . . . Either you let your- Mrs. Samuel N. Heyman is the 16,000 Pittolourgh 41.000 The major part of the help that self slide and betray the souls of president of the Ladies' Auxiliary 34,000 San b•ratociro o 100,1100 13,500 floe 1011. ❑ 75,000 had to come to the Jews in Ger- your children by letting them love of the Jewish National Fund. Beyond the 12 cities enumerat- many had come from the Joint something in their most hnpres- ed, and to establish a definite ob- Distribution Committee in Amer- sionable years which they most jective for the Joint Distribution I ica. not love if ever their lives are to YOUTH CONFERENCE be integrated and not slovenly or AT CENTER SUNDAY ignoble lives or else, carefully you 1 CONCLUDED FROM PACE I1 abstain and withdraw and dccl, despite your better knowledge. that eminent organisation. summery there is something sullen and un- Proceeding,. Rel. Ira Eieenodeln friendly in that withdrawal . . . New York City. Adlotornment. . gem Cmiference dance, 1,11 p Big things, little things, aU are 6. nasium of Center, Harry Mos.' or problematic, pain-fraught, every- o•heetra providing the now.. thing divides, nothing unites. But Chairmen of committees arrang the soul is one. Being is one. ing the details of the conference Though you be orthodox and Zion- are: Invitations, Anne Manson ist, the environment of the national speakers, Esther Etkin; dance life amid which you live, incon- Charles Wolok, Bernard Sands ceivably strong, inconceivably im- luncheon, Eve Rosen; advertising perious. It takes a high degree of Ilannah Ferman; financial, Mor • knowledge and of discipline to ris Winslow; general arrange resist. You must waste so much ments, Joseph Colten, Ilarry Selig of your inner substance on resist- son, Jack Rom, Theodore Baruch ances, compromises, problematical registration, Ethel Rom, Sally Co- details. How can you come upon hen, Esther Etkin; permanent or meaning-meaning which should ganization, Irving Glucklik, Leona blossom like flower from soil? You Lewis, Lester Silverman. have no soil. You are on an ever- The registration fee for organi moving, changing, shifting ele- rations participating is $1 for two ment. Billows rock you; winds delegates, which entitles the or alter your course. ganization to two votes at the busi • • • ness session, and gives the stele There is among Jews as among gates the privileges of attending other peoples the moven homme the luncheon and participating in the average man who the round table discussions. For SC7Uftl el, lives by his senses and not by his individuals not representing organ- reason or his soul. He makes the izations the fee is $1 per person, thousand compromises and endures which entitles him to one vote at the thousand falsifications; he the business session, and the same needs neither past nor future nor privileges. The sessions and lunch- meaning. Ile "makes his living eon in the auditorium are open to here ...There are those who must delegates only. The round tables live by and through making a are open to the public at large. All youth groups whose age living; there are those who cannot sell goods or plead causes or build minimum for the average of its houses except to some farther end membership is 18 for women and than the mere action. That farther 21 for men are eligible and wel- end must be a larger thing than come to register and participate. the individual; it must have some- The deadline for registration is 1 thing to do with a community of p. m., Sunday at the Center. men that will eternally be his, from which no historic catastrophe Burton Holmes Lectures can ever exclude him because he was born into it, because he exists Burton Holmes, world's most through it and it through him ... famous travel lecturer. and Rich- Of such men and women are made ard Finnie, intrepid young Cana- the Zionists, hungerers for per- dian Arctic• explorer, will present manence and meaning, oneness and next week's motion picture trav- health, elogs at the Detroit Institute of (Copyright, I136, S A. F ) Arts. At 3:30 on Sunday after- noon, March 1, Finnie speaks on "Wandering Through Fr e n e h ADOPTION OF KERR Canada." "South America-Up BILL URGED HERE the East Coast" will be Burton Holmes' illustrated subject at (CONCLUDED FROM PAGE ONE) 8:30 Thursday evening, March 5. Richard Finnie, veteran of nix tion Bill. An appeal is being made to the members of the lodge to Arctic expeditions, last summer communicate with their represent- threw his movie camera over his atives in Washington. The COM- back and roamed French Canada mate° also issues the call to other from Montreal to Gaspe. lie pho- local organizations and individuals tographed the historic landmarks to join in this endoresement by of Montreal and Quebec City, the communicating with their Con- Old World peasants of the Island of Orleans, the quaint villages gressmen. Harry Yudkoff, chairman of the and fishing ports of the St. Law- entertainment committee, states he rence. In "South America-Up the will shortly announce the social event to take place ,on Sunday Coast" Burton Holmes pictures the gay life of Buenos Aires and night. June 14. Nathan D. Rosin, chairman of Rio de Janeiro, with many color- ful glimpses of the pampas, the the intellectual advancement com- mittee. is Manning a special pro- lofty Andes Mountains, and the cram for the meeting of March 16. rivers and tropical jungles and This meeting will tee open to the picturesque inland cities of Brasil. public and one of the lodge's oldest Max Baer is talking about a active members will be honored. twin come-back. He's in training for a return to the ring and also Irvine Jaffe, former Olympic • ire-skating champion is now menu- planning a new invasion of Holly- 0 1956, L./WM • Mrru Toluca, Co. wood for cowboy roles. and roller skates. ■ I • eph II. Ehrlich, .Mrs. Ilarry L. Jackson, Mrs. Laurence Crohn, Mrs. Ralph Davidson, Mrs. Carl Schiller, Mrs. N. Spevakow and Miss Jeanette Steinberg. Hadassah announces the plant- ing of trees in memory of Sidney Frank by the Detroit chapter of Iladassah and by Mr. and Mrs. Ilarry L. Jackson. Mrs. Samuel Kavanau, Town- send 7-1054, National Fund chair- man of Iladassah, should be called for the planting of trees. Junior League of She Zedek Plans Program for Sunday .,• A delightful program has been prepared to for the next meeting of the Junior League, to be held at upon Holy ground after a long , and arduous trip afoul and throws' the synagogue, ill room 202, at reamer before then himself duo n 3 o'clock on Sunday. Jerusalem. the linlyselly. gate, Philip Rosenthal, principal of Ii , ) PRAISE AND EXALT TEL AVIV. (Avlsolor 110..01 Folklore the Shaarey Zedek Sunday School A young Yemenite escapes fremt and head of the language depart Yemen. Ile tells of his and him' people's sufferings there and is ment at Mackenzie High School, iery mad about R. Finally he ar• will speak on the subject "The rives In Tel Aviv and the liberty h he tind0 there wakens lu 51 Jewish High School Student." Ilion aentiments of joy and grati- Louis Weisenfeld, instructor at tude. Tel Aily is the new, yet THE JEWS old Homeland. the Sunday School and a teacher 31I00 Elmo Fiedler et the piano in one of our public schools, has (Tribute by a German-American) offered to take charge of a study The Oneg Shabat this Saturday a fternoon will be held at the home group. By V. MOEHLIG of Mrs. Louis Savage, 1736 Bos- 466 S. Phillips St., Detroit ton Blvd., at 2:30 o'clock. Mrs. Moses P. Epstein, national first vice-president of Hadassah, and Permsuted and controlled fur tioousando eLON1AL HOTEL chairman of the Rothschild Uni- H untel f IT-'o 'in". place to place, a life of fearo. versity Hospital Building Fund, MINERAL BATHS will be the speaker. Mrs. Epstein, Wrath. lounger, I"'tllenr e 11,10 hod to a woman of unusual executive In spI t 'e 'od all, they ootdol not kill the 11131.1NL CI IMENzi, MICRO AN flee ability, is a compelling and in- teresting speaker. She is well tied of their fathers, and net the ~ ove gold, known to the Detroit chapter. All Held of them together, pattern of one members are invited to attend. •mould, They face the future fearless and serene, The Toledo chapter of Iladas- room munehine, Morn, came or pain sah will be hosts to the Central States Regional Conference of Those ruler. of today, oho are preach- Hadassah to be held in Toledo Will Ilieog fehrTcto'Ren, Wale them to ohmic fate. March 1 and 2. The opening ses- One thing is ..males, sure rut love and life sines will be on Sunday at 10 a. The Jewioll Holds : rare will flourish and will m. There will be a joint Senior- mole I /mhos Lairs first . 1:tlna Junior luncheon and a banquet ooliS. GI 1111 1, SR Jim Braddock's manager, Joe in the evening. The closing ses- sions will be held Monday morn- Gould, is now legally Joe Gould. The courts granted him permission ing, March- 2. Among the Detroit members to change his name from Joe Bei- who will attend will be: Mrs. Jos- gel to Joe Gould. WOW ANOTHER STRIKE/ARE WE GOIN'TO TOWN TONIGHT/ a see him 011eesgaln and elite. 4. Ills hands, but in rain! Tears are her only conoolotion. (h) BUCSA NA REND( (My Love) A popular Permian song, harnion• toasty corniolnIng satire, humor, desire and chastity, and 'Mowing how a dominating woman finally Plieet1mho through love. (I. Palestinian Children Kell., let TILE DOLL IS ILL-. Music by Waibe. The doll hos a cold and coughs badly. The little girl Is afraid and calls for the bear an a doe( tor. but unfortunately cannel reach loom in thole The doll dies. The little girl lift• her yoke to heaven. (b) THE AEROPLANE. An aeroplane approaches and the c hild , who Nees it, is happy. Sud- denly It (Reappear. and • . Musk 7. Popular leminIte amigo, by Zeiss. (a) TI1b) ()ATE OF THE FATHER• LAND (Mids. liaineloW A young Yemenite boy arrives • aroma ... it's as much a part of Chesterfield as the taste Did you ever notice the diference in the aroma of Chesterfield tobacco? • Every person who knows about tobacco will understand this . for to get a pleasing aroma is just like getting a pleasing taste from fruit. Mild ripe tobaccos, home- grown, and welded with the right kind of tobacco from far-off Greece and Turkey (Samsoun, Smyrna, Xanthi and Cavalla). . a that's why Chesterfield has a more pleasing aroma. . . . ... with that pleasing aroma