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Come up where the air is clear and crisp. Come up to the Inn— where you'll find rest, excitilitnent, ro- mance, sport, fun ... And that new appe- tite will surely be tempted and delight- fully satisfied by the incomparable dishes prepared by our famous chef. WRITE - - • WIRE - - PHONE • THE INN • CHARLEVOIX, MICH. El eafiamseeseskeessmeosnePsees,11,essmeeillemosesiltremoreskesomosVir Schisms in Jewish Life YESTIRDAY— TODAY A TOMORROW Alter hoer INC IAMI GOOD MI THE ()c.f../ BEER IN THE GREEN BOTTLE ARGO URNACE OIL LA 4500 The employees of a ritzy Long Island club that excludes Jews from membership have invoked I. swell Ides to bring their boss to terms . . . After the employees were unionised they began picket- ing the club house and carried signs proclaiming their demands in English and Yiddish. WORKERS ENLISTED FOR $25,000 DRIVE FOR POLISH JEWRY (CONCLUDED from EDITORIAL PAGE) (CONcLUDED FuOU Patiel one) patriotic ones, who put the interests of France before everything else and "traitors like that female camel of a Blum who are sold to Germany." What the other gentlemen-discover- ers of a world conspiracy by the Jews to gain control of the universe are saying now that a Jew is prime minister of France, I leave to your imagination. Tons of propaganda-material are being poured out every week. The anti-Semites have a new argument or rather they see their warnings coming true about the Elders of Zion wanting to destroy France after having failed with Germany. However, anti-Semitism is not deeply rooted in France, less so than in Germany where, it has Gi be admitted, it is not rooted in the masses either. No not even now, after the years of systematic hetzing. Leon Blum will not be judged by the French people on his Jewishness, but on his ability to create conditions for a peace- ful transition from the capitalist to a Socialist one, his avowed intention. Anti-Semitism is but one of the weapons the reaction is going to use in resisting the advent of the new order. Other, perhaps more potent weapons will be: financial panics, in which the manipulators will not be non-Jews exclusively; political assassinations; foreign scares and such-like tactics. But be- hind Leon Blum stand the millions of the United Front, and those millions are in a revolutionary mood, as the recent wave of strikes shows. Com- mittees of vigilance and action are being set up in every community in France and a Workers' Militia is in the course of formation. The work- ing-class of France is determined to bar the road to Fascism and its twin-sister anti-Semitism. There are sonic lessons to be drawn from events in France and the first lesson seems to me this: that you cannot talk anti-Semitism out of exist- ence by good neighbor conferences or interde- nominational :allies and that sort of thing, but that you must recognize that capitalism breeds anti-Semitism as it breeds war and the fear of war, because it cannot live without them. Jews, DEPENDS That little youngster of yours—so innocent, so trustful, so unaware of the struggles he must one day face. THE JEW IN LEON BLUM cosclA•DED Mist EDITORIAL CAGE Zionist movement or some agency which speaks through something thaat approximates democratic in- stitutiors. The Congress should, and no doubt will net up appro- priate machinery for such a pur- pose. And since this Congress has al- ready been decided upon and there is no way to retrace the steps, how much more statssmanlike Amer- ican Jewish opinion would have been to have sought to achieve a maximum result by co-operation? Instead, time good minds will de- vote themselves, as they have al- ready done, to the sabotaging of the cause, and then later in de- lighting in the I told you sos. The Congress Must Not Fail But the Congress will succeed in spite of this. It cannot fail, even if it leads us but a hundred steps out of the present wilderness and despair. It will no doubt develop schisms. But it is bound to develop a better technique of co-operation for greater unity in improving the lot of our people where such im- provement is a matter of life and death. The Balfour Declaration was the war offer of Britain and most other nations to our people for our co-operation and good will—the support of sixteen million of as. It was their selfish plan, perhaps, Judaism a Reality to Him Ile is a quiet man, Leon Blum, a scholarly type, not a leader in mass-action. I asked him once what brought him, the son of a wealthy Lyon silk manufacturer to Socialism, for Leon Blum could have selected another road in life. He is a brilliant lawyer, a fine litterateur, a con- noisseur of art and a devotee of the theater. "I became a Socialist very late in life," he replied. "If I may indicate one specific moment I must say that revelation came to me one evening as I walked through the Faubourg St. Martin (the worst slum-district in Paris). Suddenly I was seized with the horror of social injustice and the staggering humiliation of poverty. Why is it, so I asked myself, that these poverty-stricken and miserable masses do not revolt, why do they not shake the yoke of degradation from their shoulders? As I walked along the answer came to me: poverty and destitution, I realized, had become part and parcel of their lives. They looked upon it as something natural, something inescapable, an act of God, you might almost say. And then I asked myself whether it was right for me to join these who were trying to awaken these masses and point them to a better life in new' society. I asked myself this because, as you remember, Spartacus was told that if he cut the bonds of slavery, he would endanger life itself. Spartacus tried nevertheless. I, too, decided to try. I had to. An inner voice com- manded me. It was stronger than I." The still, small 'voice! M. Leon BluM is extremely sensitive on the subject of his race. Ile seldom makes a speech without mentioning the fact that he is a Jew. Ile does not apologize for it, but he does not glory in it either. llis opposition to chauvinist nationalism has kept him at a distance from militant Zionism, although he is extremely sym- pathetic to the work of Jewish national regener- ation in Eretz Israel and even calls himself a Zionist. "I have never," he said speaking of his outlook on Judaism. "I have never seen any value in conforming to the ritualistic aspects of Ju- daism. The outer, more ostentatious mani- festations of Jewish life have never appealed to me and really have no meaning to me. Juda- ism is not expectation to me, but actual reality. It should be a Jew's life's content, his motif- power in every decisive act he performs. 11 Frenchman, Socialist, Jew "To many Jews," lie` went on, "Judaism is a vague, messianic dream, which awaits ful- fillment in some ultimate fullness of time. To me it is fulfillment all the time . . . a living' stream, a way of bk. So is Socialism to me: a way of life, not an inflexible doctrine that must either be accepted or rejected, but a means whereby man can demand his rights, all his rights, an instrument through which the human personality can deploy to its full status and assert itself, and especially the human personality of the proletarian, the underprivileged, the down- trodden." "In your life's struggle for the liberation of the human personality in the proletarian, have you felt your actions motivated as by your Jewishness, or?" ... I asked. "That question," came back M. Blum, "has often been asked. My answer is both. There is no doubt that blood plays a role. There is no doubt that sub-consciously the accumulation of Jewish experience in my blood is a factor in driving me onward. But it is also true that this instinct finds an outlet in the conditions that are peculiar to French democracy. I might say that I am a Frenchman and a Socialist be- cause I am a Jew. Socialism calls for the whole man, his whole life. To confess Socialism is not enough, no more than it is to confess Judaism. It must be lived, every hour of the day. It is a ceaseless struggle in which a man has time to think much of his antecedents, whether they are Jewish or otherwise. It requires all his strength and devotion and energy. Fer once he has felt the urge to speed mankind on towards its destiny, towards a real, human society, to realize hu- manity at last, it becomes a passion with him to introduce something of truth, some good- ness, some justice in the lives of his fellows." Thou shalt love Adonai, thy God, with all thy heart and with all thy soul, and thy neigh- bor as thyself! ARMING JEWISH COLONIES FOR SELF-DEFENSE URGED BY DAVID LLOYD GEORGE IN HISTORIC DEBATE IN THE BRITISH HOUSE OF COMMONS (CONCLUDED FROM PAGE ONE) jured, 54; Jews killed, 28; seri- ously injured, 65; slightly injur- ed, 84. The Christian casualties includ- ed one British constable killed; three British constables seriously injured; five British police offi- cers and one army officer slightly injured. The arrests and conviction were as follows: 1,823 Arabs tried and 1,206 convicted; 418 Jews tried and 238 convicted; 336 Arabs ac- quitted; 284 Arabs awaiting trial; 24 Jews acquitted; 76 Jews await- ing trial. Collective fines have been im- posed on 20 Arab villages and 81 Arab leaders have been de- tained in concentration camps; 122 Arab leaders are under police supervision. Two Jewish and two Armenian active Communists are under detention, and 60 Jewish Communists are under police su- pervision. The Royal Commission, he em- phasized, will visit Palestine after the restoration of order for a full and searching investigation of the causes of unrest and the grievances of Arabs or Jews. It would bean impartial and author- itative body, he assured the House, and he would not submit the name for service on the corn- mission of anyone previously con- nected with : Palestine or having known, preconceived views. Dis- like of the projected Royal Com- mission was voiced by Herbert Morrison, leader of the London County Council and labor leader, who said that "the Government knows the position and ought not to take refuge in a Royal Com- mission." Feeling Artificial The racial feeling has been ar- tificially stimulated in Palestine, he charged, the promises of the Allied Powers during the war per- haps were in conflict but the agreement between Feisal and Dr. Weizmann is not disputed. The strike Was primarily for po- but have we not some right to ask, nay, insist that our rights as hu- man beings be respected in times of peace as well? Will these na- tions not be likely to respond more eagerly if they think that there is some chance to publicize their cruelties by • solidarity of purpose and of plan? The Congress most not fail. America's delegation will bring to its representatives the encourage- ment of our moral participation in their problems. They will bring to us some of the world wisdom and solidarity that we, too, can use to great advantage. And if our voice turns out to be but • voice in the wilderness, because those who should have participated stood by and did not heed the cry of our brothers, theirs will be the regret afterwards whatever they plead in justification for their coldness. prompt acknowledgement will be made. Do it TODAY." Women's organizations are working enthusiastically for the success of the drive. The Wo- men's Auxiliary of the United Hebrew Schools, through Mrs. A. B. Stralser and Mrs. S. David- son, brought a pledge to the last meeting, as did the Eastern Lad- ies Society, through Mrs. Mierel, its delegate; the Yeshivah Beth Jehudah, through Mrs. Holzman; the Jewish Women's Mutual Aid Society, through Mrs. M. Fried- man and Mrs. Betrlia Koren; the Women's, European Welfare So- ciety, through Mrs. D. Silverstein; the Monday Afternoon Club, through Mrs. Krauss, president; Michigan Jewish Ladies Aid So- ciety, through its president, Mrs. D. Solle, in addition to others pre- viously reported. Added to the list of active are N. Koren, A. Zeff, N. Nakol- ski, Nathan Epstein, Mdrris Es- trin, IL Goodman, Mrs. A. Kat- zin, Dave Baker, Cantor Jacob Sonenklar, Samuel Zuieback, as- sisted by such* veterans as 1. Mel- lin, Sam Dronzek, A. Greenbaum, I. Burnstein, H. H. Davis, Jos. Mikofsky, Rabbi and Mrs. Joshua Sperka, Nathan Rose, Judge Jo- seph Sanders, Maxwell Black, Aaron Kurland, A. Glicksman, 1. Adler, Albert Goldberg, Harry Zolkower, 1. Trambka, Leo Fried, Harry Weinberg, Mrs. Mollie Dar- vin, Morris Weinberg, Mrs. Sper- ling, Mrs. S. K. Slobin, Mrs. D. Silverstein and many others. WHITE CLOTHES TO 1.10K LIKE NEW ON YOUR VACATION . .. SEND THEM TO FOREST NOW...FOR DRY CLEANING Going away? Then avoid the rush and have your white clothes cleaned NOW. Just remem- ber that Vitalize dry ,:leaning restores original life, lustre and fresh newness. • MEN'S WHITE LINEN SUITS OR BUSINESS SUITS.. Vitalize dry cleaned and hand. finished. 0 e I 90 . I LADIES' PLAIN WHITE DRESSES' COATS OR SUITS.. sloo Vitalize dry cleaned and hand. finished. ' ....... Prices inciude pick.up and delivery. Radio Appeals Radio time is given generously by Hyman Altman, who makes touching and effective appeals on his Jewish hour each Sunday on station WMBC between 12 and 1; on Station WJBK by Aaron Kur- land, who is co-operating whole- heartedly on the Jewish Forum Hour Sunday evening between 8 and 8:30, and by harry Wein- berg, conductor of the Jewish hour over the same station each Monday evening between 8:16 and 9:15. Mrs. Joshpa Sperka, wife of Rabbi Sperka, made a fine appeal last Sunday during the broadcast conducted by Mr. Kurland. Organizations who have not yet pledged financial assistance are urged to do ao at once and to send their pledge to Joseph H. Ehrlich, treasurer, 237 Gratiot. They are also requested to solicit individual contributions from among their members. Those wishing to volunteer their services in this important work are asked to send their names and addresses to the drive headquarters, 504 Griswold Bldg., Cherry 0715, c)12aeolimibia 4200 CLEANERS & DYERS 533-547 EAST FOREST •Systems 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Bookkeeping and Costa Installed, Simplified, Re- vised. OL • AllditS Monthly, Quarterly, Annually, Industrial and Embezelement Investigations. oTaxes 2 1 3 4 5 6 7 Tax Service for All Forms of CHARLES K. HARRIS CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT, 1317 GRISWOLD BLDG. — CAdillao 3338 8 9 INSTITUTE VIEWS FUTURE OF JEWRY (CONCLUDED FROM PAGE 00E1 with the great majority that is still liberal, in a common effort to keep America true to itself and its ideals of tolerance and freedom." Must Maintain Social Security Mr. Lowenthal stressed the great importance of the fight to maintain social and economic jus- tice and security for the majority of the American people in every possible way. He said that the Jews of America can protect them- selves against anti-Semitism by analyzing the mistakes made by the German Jews. "The Hitler brand of anti-Semi- tism," he said, "is inconceivable in America, but if our economic depression continues or a worse ensus, there"is enough latent feel- ing here to produce an American brand which would be hard enough for its victims." The Jews in America, as every- where else, must base their lives on the accumulated wisdom of Judaism, said Dr. Gutkind, who contended that Jews are not pre- pared for the future. "The way out," he declared, "does not lie in mere organization or politics. Of course, organization and political influence are useful, but they can be easily torn away. There is only one way: The Jewish people must base their lives on wisdom, upon the eternal wisdom of Judaism. There can be no survival of the Jewish people without Judaism. Jews are weak only because they lack the knowledge of their Jswish teachings. This tradition forms the character of the Jewish people and is a precious contribution to the general civilization of man- kind.'" litical ends to cause the Manila- Zionist convictions that the re- tory to stop Jewish immigration demotion of our people through. and land sales. After reminding out the Diaspora is linked with the House that a strike had been the consummation of our ideals specifically prohibited in England here. We face a severe testing, in 1927, he remarked that the as the Jewish community under- strike in Palestine was accom- goes the dangers threatening panied by assassinations, assaults the future of our work. We desire and murders, and he could not to warn against unwarranted help feeling that the government panic and complacency. May our in London and Palestine knew national will power be exerted to who the ringleaders were not the utmost in an energetic but only in the strike but in the mur- well-balanced political effort and ders. He could not understand e t r e n gthened constructive en- why the High Commissioner did deavor. not, at the beginning of the "The Jewish community, which troubles, make these leaders re- has been keeping uninterrupted sponsible for the happenings. This vigils at its watchposts during the would have been more effective past two months, and our coloni- than the elaborate military now nation work, require the mobilize- necessary. tion of all sections of Jewry for Taking up the suggestion by an immediate consolidation of ef- Lloyd George that arms be put fort. Our victims and our losses into the hands of Jewish colon- only strengthen our determine- ists for self-protection, Ormsby- tion to hold our ground and to Gore said that such arms, if un- carry on our work with redoubled controlled by the British police, vigor so that we may render the would lead to further racial structure of the Jewish National trouble and a vendetta in the Home impregnable. The distress future. Ile said that the High of the Diaspora makes it impera. Commissioner had greatly increa, live to launch a political offensive ed the number of specially en- to establish the right of free set- listed Jews for the protection of tlem•nt in Palestine for large Jewish colonies under the control numbers of Jews against all re- of the British police. "The Brit. strictive tendencies. With the help ish Government is going to u ,e of the entire Jewish people, we its special powers fully," he prom- are confident that we will emerge For Scientific Approach ised. "There will be no concession from our trials invigorated and Judaism, because of its uni- to violence even if we have to we restrengthened, resolutely strid- versality, Dr. Gutkind said, is not harsh measures. I regret that this ing onward toward our goal." antagonistic to the international- should be so, but such measures ism of American culture. are unavoidable for the suppres- Dr. Cohen, the concluding sion of disorder." The Colonial speaker, lamented the exaggerated Secretary concluded with the as- influence of anti-Semitism in surance that there was no doubt America. "It is unwise to exag- of the authenticity of the signa- The most picturesque out-door gerate it," and to worry too much ture of the late T. E. Lawrence, I of "what others think about us," which has been attacked to the party of the summer season. was h e declared. Th e J ew must an disputed t r ea t y of friend-hip that sponsored by the good cheer eigned in 1919 by Dr. Chaim committee of the Women's Au- American and adapt himself to an American way of living, and he Weizmann, president of the Jew- xiliary, Jewish Home for Aged, ish Agency for Palestine, and the last Monday afternoon i n the must face life with the viewpoint of an American, and not that of a late King Feisal of Iraq, chief gardens of the Oriole Terrace. Mrs. Jack Kavanau, chairman Jew, he contended. Neither Jude- Arab representative at the Paris Peace Conference, who recognized of the event thanks her co-workers ism .or Zionism, nor assimilation are the ways out for the American Jewish rights in the establishment for their untiring efforts. of the Jewish National Home in Approximately 800 members and Jews, he said. The study of Hebrew and Jew- Palestine in return for Jewish friends attended this gathering. recognition of Arab aspirationS Luncheon was served at noon and ish customs were advocated by Dr. Cohen, and he concluded by asking for independence in A r a I, i a n was followed by varied card games. that a scientific approach to the Prizes were a warded states Jewish question in America be The following received prizes:. studied and applied to the current World Jewry Mobilization Asked Mesdames II. I. Wine, Tillie Ger- and future state of affairs. matieky, Molly Romer, Albert Cur- Women's Auxiliary of Home for Aged to Protect Palestine Jews JERUSALEM. — IWNS-Palest tis, Anna Deutsch, II. J. Goodman, Agency)—The Jews of the is -rid Moe Ehrlich, Mary Richmond from were called upon to mobilize their Los Angeles, Ruth Jacobson, Dora forces for "well-balanced political Leiter, Shirley FiFshman. Morris effort and strengthened construe- Baker, A. Curtis, Betty Homonoff, tive endeavor" to protect the G. Isaacs, Ralph Paul and Nor- Jewish position in Palestine in a man Rosenberg of Wisconsin. The Auxiliary gratefully at- message from the Jewish Agency Executive addressed to an extra- kncrwledges the donations from ordinary conference of Polish Mrs. B. Waterstone and Mrs. R. Jewry in Warsaw to consider the Giesler in memory of their mother, present disturbed situation in Pal- Sophie Goldstein. estine, at which David Gurion is Jim Braddock. world', heavy. the principal figure. The message read as follows: "We greet your weight champion, has taken under conference from our defense po- his wing Sol Ileum, a promising sitions in our assailed stronghold. Jewish heavyweight from Union We appreciate your rally amidst City. N .J. Flaurn is a pious the trials and tribulations of Po- Jew who wears • hot everywhere lisp Jewry as evidence of your except in the ring. AVOID THE RUSH! IF YOU WANT YOUR Halevy Society Sings at Es- peranto Convention The Detroit Ilalevy Singing So- ciety has been selected to open the Esperanto Convention held at the Fort Shelby Hotel, July 2. They will sing the Esperanto hymn in that language and several num- ber, in Jewish. A. M. Koliner • a patron and as- sociate member of the Halevy, is , a former vice-president of the Es- peranto Association of Detroit. He has been an Esperanto speaker since 1912. At present he is a mem- ber of the Esperanto Congress committee and in charge of the program book for the convention. FACING GRAND $2 CIRCUS PARK • IS THE BOTTOM IS THE TOPS' . NO HIGHER HOTEL TULLER FOR 800 ROOMS \ CLIFFORD ZOOMS WITH BATH Ittir n A 9 7; Here it is—the greatest offer in the hotel world — you cannot pay more than SZ 1250 or 13 for a single room with bath. Just one of many reasons why experi- enced travelers always choose this modern up-to-the minute hotel close to everything worthwhile in Detroit. DETROIT The Second Shoe (CONCLUDED FROM PAGE 1) have broken out during these dis- turbances in , a violent form. For those of us who were not in Palestine in 1929, it was our first actual contact with the savagery o (some of the Arab population. And yet, despite the uniquely precarious position of the Jewish population, there was not one jot of nervous hysteria. There was no need for analysis. here were 400,000' people facing bombs and bullets and destruction with the calm, self-possession and self-re- straint with which 'pacifists the world over have learned to face the destructive forces which they could not combat. They were normal people facing an abnormal situation in a normal way. PANAMA HATS BLEACHED CLEANED TRIMMED Expert Service ocerznama Hass Our flatters Understand the Treatment of tine Braids. Est. I0113 HEraccoHATTER ROI ORATIOT7.14i MICHIGAN Di1AolTc fXCILSIVI MATHS Z.1.1553 1/ 2 DAY SERVICE Refrain From Retaliation Therefore there itlittle need to describe their behavior. No doubt the English and French populations behaved in the same way during the war. Despite the Arab strike, the closing of the Jaffa Port, and the dangerous conditions of the highways, the Jews tried to carry on their rou- tine work as usual. They waited anxiously for the broadcast of the official communiques. Little knots gathered on the streets in front of those shops which had radios. First there was curfew in Tel Aviv. Then there v-as curfew in Jerusalem. The Jews remained quietly indoors after seven o'clock in a most unhysterical manner. More often than not, in recent weeks, the quiet Jerusalem nights have been punctuated with shots. A few nights ago a bomb fell near • house in the Jewish quarter of Rahavia, tearing a hole in the ground. There was no hysteria. It has not been easy for the young bloods to turn the other cheek while their barley fields were being burned, their forests razed and their college students stoned to death. But orders had, come from high authority that there was to be no retaliation. of nomilag FR Eats Scalp Treatments Specializin g in HARPER METHOD SHELTON TULIP OIL PERMANENTS FACIAL TREATMENTS Margaret Greenough BEAUTY SALON Toroterly with Nancy Tan wren EINPIRE BLDG. CA. all ale And with a discipline and self- restraint of normal people. these youths refrained from retaliation. In America I learned much about complexes and nerves and ■ hysteria of Jewish people. Rut in Palestine I observed them wait- ing for the second shoe with calm, quiet dignity and aelf-re.. straInt that noods no psycho - atia lysis.