TfileDLTROMAWLSRefffirfiCLE
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
STORM OVER PALESTINE
*CONCLUDED from EDITORIAL PAGE)
J. D. C. AIDS 18,824
Independent Protective As-
TO LEAVE GERMANY
sociation Annual Picnic
Sunday
(CONCLUDED FROM PAGE ONE)
July 31, 1936
Major Florea Dies
NEW YORK (WNS) — Major
Morris Florea, who was credited
with selling $100,000,000 worth
o“ bonds during the World
War, is dead here at the age of
60 from injuries received during
a hold-up. A former alderman,
Major Florea was once comman-
der of the N. Y. department of
the Jewish War Veterans, and •
member of the New York War
Memorial Authority.
that when their numbers rise from
The Independent Protective As-
falls to be fixed. One may pre- the present 28 per cent to the Hyman pointed out in the report,
some. that their leaders were neighborhood of 50, the Arabs was greater than the aggregate sociation will hold its annual pic-
will
acquiesce
in
the
accomplish-
aware of the plans now being
contributions from all other coun- nic on Aug. 2, at Ileunrich Park,
Rochester, Mich.
made to settle large numbers of ed fact. It may be so, but the tries to Jews in Germany.
the younger generation of Hit- Arabs think in terms of a vaster
The plans as announced by Pres-
Significant Results
ler's victims in Palestine. Arab unit. If ever they can link their
The report tells how the Jewa ident David Weiss will include
nationalism seconded Aryan bru- destiny with Syria or Egypt or
dancing
to a five piece orchestra,
Germany, during the year uni-
tality in refuaing • home to this both, • the Jews will be a helpless of fled,
within the framework of the amusements, a ball game, running
•
Unhappy race.
races
and
numerous novelty games,
On general grounds it is easy Reichvertretung der Juden in all winners to be rewarded with
There is no need to neck out
Deutschland (The Reich Repre- prizes. Refreshments will be
with
a
clear
-conscience
to
de-
avail-
elaborate reasons for this hos-
sentation of Jews of Germany)
Maurice N. Weyl, Author and
tility to Zionism. The Arabs fear fend the Mandate. A backward and its operating agency the Zen- able.
Printer, Dies
The committee appointments
that they will be swamped, in a race has no right to monopolize tral Ausschuss fur Hilfe and Auf-
PHILADELPHIA ( W N S ) —
land they have held for 12 cen- land of which it makes no ade- bau (Central Committee for Re- selected by Vice-president A. Bal-
quate
use.
Mankind,
where
it
is
Maurice N. Weyl, president of
lurid, by an alien race incompar-
lief and Reconstruction), the var- ser are: General chairman, J.
ably their superior in culture, organized, must have the right ious agencies dealing with the Spiro; refreshments, N. Cohen, I. Edward Stern and Co., printing
wealth and organization. That is to override tribal nationalism, special problems created by the Ileinian, A. Balser; tickets, B. and publishing house, and secre-
explanation enough, though it if in the process it attends to the policies of the National Socialist Schwartz, C. Hotter, D. Freid- tary of the Philadelphia Record
Co., is dead here at the age of
may also be true that they dis- welfare of the tribe whose ignor-
The J. D. C.'s program of aid man, E. Hart and I), Greenwald;
like the quick tempo of the ma- ant will it overrules. To the to the Jews in Germany was car- entertainment, Dr. A. W. Lowen. 67. Ile was noted as an author,
Jews
mankind
owed
this
repara-
composer, and authority on print-
stine
and
Mrs.
A.
Heiman.
. chine age that the Jews have
ried out through the channels of
brought with them. There is no tion, and Hitler has increased our the Reichvertretung and the Zen-
Directions to Heimrich Park ing and typography; his music B-
already
heavy
obligation.
One
leary
and collection of phono-
valid economic ground for their
tral Ausschuss, which the J. D. are: North on Woodward Ave. to
opposition. On the contrary, they may write this and adhere to it, C., with the co-operation of Jew- Main St., Royal Oak, where a right graph records are famous among
even
when
one
knows
all
the
awk-
music
lovers throughout the coun-
are striking against prosperity.
hand turn is made. Follow Main
ward facts of the case. The ish leaders in Germany, helped to St. through to Clawson and follow
try.
.Palestine was in 1919 one of League was not the disinterested organize in 1933.
the most backward and poverty- tribunal of all humanity: it drew •The resources the J. D C . the signs from there.
stricken regions of the East. The this Mandate to the victors' spec- placed at the disposal of the Zen-
Central 15th Democratic
Jews, bringing capital and sci- ifications. The British nation as- funds
tral Ausschuss,
er
raised by the
Club Picnic Sunday
ence, made it even in the years
Jews in Cr- Yeshivah Beth Judah Auxil-
was moved by a sincere
of slump the one corner of our sympathy
sympathy with the Jews, but its many, enabled that organization
The Central 15th Democratic
iary Picnic Aug. 2
planet, outside Soviet Russia, that rulers had sundry subsidiary mo- to achieve significant results in
Club, which has its headquarters
thrives and progresses. They tives—to win the good will of five major fields of rehabilitation
The Ladies Auxiliary of the at 11633 Linwood Ave., announces
brought electricity: they intro- Jewish finance, to defend the —emigration, welfare aid, eco-
duced flourishing industries where Suez Canal, to utilize Haifa for nomic aid, education and voca- Yeshivah Beth Judah will hold a that it will hold its annual picnic
picnic at Palmer Park, near the at Plymouth Riverside Park next
industry was unknown: they the pipeline from the Mosul oil- tional training.
casino, on Sunday, Aug. 2, from Sunday, Aug. 2. A fine program
taught such Arabs as would learn field.
Chief Emigration Centers
has been arranged, including base-
their own technique of irrigation
The emigration of Jews from 10 a. m. to 8 p. m. Signs will be ball, volley ball, races and other
history presents the usual
and made available the new
Germany during 1935 through or- placed to indicate where the pic-
breeds of plants and animals per- cross-web. One gains little. now ganizations operating under the nic is being held. The general pub- genies. Prizes will be awarded to
the winners. There will be plenty
fected by their research. They by retrospective judgments. The Zentral Ausschuss reached a total lic is invited.
Luncheon, dinner and refresh- of food and drinks. The Central
drained the marshes and fought thing has been done, and while of 16,524, The total number of
the
British
Empire
remains
an
ments will be served. Games and 15th Democratic Club is a Jewish
malaria. Out of their taxes the
emigrants helped by the organ-
British administration has built Empire and a League survives in izations subventioned by the J. contests will be held for men, organization and invites the public
made, railways and harbors, and Geneva, the experiment will go D. C. during the period 1933.35 women and children and prizes to join in the festivities of the
day. There will be no charge for
will be awarded to winners.
provided for the Arabs modern on. It is justified if in the end is 65,144.
Proceeds from the picnic will go admission. Those in charge of ar-
schools and hospitals. Unemploy- it makes not merely a Jewish
During 1935, 3,982 persona to the building fund for the future rangements are Samuel Fried-
Home,
but
a
happy
land
out
of
ment is virtually unknown, and
were assisted to emigrate to Pal-
Arab labor flocks in from Syria Palestine. It is proper that some- estine; 9,998 persons of foreign home of the Yeshivah Beth Judah. man, Milton R. Atlas, Assistant
Donations of food or services Prosecutor Maurice Schwartz,
and Egypt to enjoy wages that where on this earth this race birth were helped either to leave
should
have
its
cultural
center—
will be appreciated by the commit- Samuel B. Collier, Dr. Harry
stand at three times the level of a
Germany
for
their
native
lands,
university built among orange
tee in charge. Donors should call Friedman and Louis Oppenheim. A
those countries. That, indeed,
or native Germans were helped
is part of the explanation of this groves and wheatfieles tilled by to move from one city to an- Rabbi S. Fine, Trinity 2-5976, or large attendance is expected .Di-
Mrs. H. Rottenberg, Townsend rections to the picnic grounds are
hostility. Arab society is domi- its own hands. It is right that s other; and 2,544 were assisted to 8-7995.
as follows: Take Plymouth Road,
rutted by a feudal landowning refuge should be found in th e emigrate to European and over-
eight miles past Rouge Park to
land
they
love
for
some
hundreds
caste, which regards high wages,
seas
countries.
Of
these
927
were
Newberg Road, turn left at sign
the eight-hour, day and the be- of thousands of fugitives from sent to other countries in Eur-
which says Plymouth Riverside
German
and
Polish
intolerance.
ization
Association,
also
supports
ginning of labor unionism as the
ope
and
1,617
to
North
and
South
Park,
then follow paved road for
co-operative loan societies for the
most pernicious of all the Moo- But mankind and the Jews will America and South Africa.
aid of economically distressed two miles to picnic grounds on the
'vation.s the Jews have introduced. alike pay a heavy price, if the
"The chief obstacle to large Jews throughout Eastern Europe, left near the baseball and tennis
It is significant that in order to Arabs remain bitter, violent and
These loan banks, operating in grounds. Watch for the ,igns.
rouse the masses the gentry have unrecopciled. A home is no home. scale emigration," the report
The following guests if honor
if
one
must
guard
it
with
a
ma-
points
out, "was the rigid immi- Germany under the supervision
had to play on their fanaticism,
gration laws of those countries of the Central Bureau for Jewish have been invited: County Treas-
for on this occasion, as on the chine gun on the doorstep.
urer
Jacob P. Sumeracki, Register
offering
the
best
prospects
for
Loan
Banks
have
a
total
capital
What might be done, while re-
last, the Grand Mufti has preach-
of Deeds Harold Stoll, Prosecutor
ed about an imaginary Jewish de- taining the Mandate, to promot e permanent settlement. Of all the of RM 1,200,000, and are design- Duncan C. McCrea, Judge Thomas
overseas
countries
which
became
ed to give small loans to Jewish
sign to re-erect the Temple on first acquiescence and then recon-
ciliation? My first suggestion emigration centers only South merchants, professional men and Murphy, Judge D. J. Healy, Jr.,
the holy places of Islam.
County Auditor Edward Williams,
Africa did not offer grave ob- workers.
may
seem
paradoxical.
I
think
The reader may recollect Arab
stacles."
During 1935, it is estimated Sam Leve, David Gordon, Judge
propaganda to the effect that the the process of Jewish settlement The report declares further that that 62,000 Jewish families rep- Ralph Liddy, Judge Charles Ru-
Jewa are driving the Arab peas- goes too slowly. If it could have with European countries still suf- resenting approximately 45 per biner,-John C. Lehr, United States
ants off the land. Broadly, this been done by shock tactics in the fering from the economic depres- cent of that population in Ger- District Attorney, Leon Nowicki,
charge is untrue. The mass of early years the Arabs would have sions, the emigration movement many sought economic aid from George Welsh, Judge George Mur-
the Jewish immigration goes into adjusted themselves the sooner. of Jews from Germany became various agencies of the Zentrai phy, Recorder's Court Judge, Con-
Indtistry' and not onto the land. This gradual annual infiltration is largely an overseas movement. Ausschuss.
gressman John Dingell, County
The really distinguished ,part of the most exasperating method that Palestine, North and South Amer-
Auditor Ray D. Schneider, Dr.
76,000 on Winter Relief
the Jewish achievement is that could have been chosen, for it ica and South Africa became the
Knobloch, Coroner; Dr. Albert A.
As Jews were barred from the Hughes, Coroner; Jacob Schakne,
sand dunes and marshes, unin- tempts the Arabs to believe that chief emigration centers.
general winter relief provided by Philip Slomovitz, Major Howard
habited and untilled, have been they still have a chance by agita-
Trade Training Center.
the state, Jewish communities A. Starrett, head of National Re-
converted by electric pumps into tion to slow it down, if not to
To meet the exigencies caused
orange groves and wheat fields. stop it altogether. The settlement by the barring of Jews from pro- were forced to set up a special employment Bureau, Frank Chris-
In other cases the Jews, by pur- should be completed as rapidly as fessions and many other occupa- winter relief program, which dur- tiansen, U. S. Marshall John Bare,
chasing part of an ill utilized finances permit, for the cage is tions, the Zentral Ausschuss ex- ing the winter of 1935, aided 75,- Peter Schoenherr, Road Commis-
Jews with food, fuel and sioner; Collector Internal Reve-
Arab estate. provided the owner as urgent on the German as it tended its vocational retraining 000
clothes.
nue Giles Kavanaugh, Dr. John
with capital which enabled him Is on the Palestinian side. In the centers during 1935. These cen-
In concluding his report Mr.. Slevin, Mr. Bradley, Collector of
to irrigate the rest, and so to second place, the British have at ters serve the twofold purpose of
furnish a better living for a much times betrayed a very evident training German Jews ousted Hyman pointed out that the J. Customs.
larger number of Arabs than the hesitation. To go on appointing from their regular occupations to D. C. has spent in behalf of the
Jews of Germany almost $1,000,-
royal commissions of inquiry after
God often comforts us, net by
land had formerly nourished.
every outbreak is to suggest an learn trades still open to them in 000, from 1933 through 1935.
One must have seen the mir- infirmity of purpose that the Germany, and to retrain .youths This does not include the sum ex- changing the circumstances of
our
lives, but by changing our at-
acles that Jewish intelligence and Arabs are quick to perceive. between 18 and 25 for emigra- pended in behalf of German refu-
titude toward them.—S. H. Mas-
devotion have wrought, above all Again, it is not edifying to note tion that is to meet the vocational gees in other countries.
terman.
in the socialist communal settle- the restraint shown in dealing requirements of overseas coun-
ments, to understand what this with the more distinguished lead- tries where they could settle per-
process means. The fact is that ers of the Arab revolt. The Grand manently and become useful citi-
the-ooming•of•the Jews has starts Mufti, the chief preacher of fan- zens.
Since countries offering the
ed a general development from aticism, goes free, while humble
greatest emigration possibilities
dry farming and domestic econ- rioters are duly punished.
were largely agrarian, farming
omy by the methods of the Bronze
But the chief way in which the
Age, to scientific agriculture by British could contribute to the and agricultural training became
irrigation for export. This bar- happiness of Palestine would be the predominate course in the cur-
ren land can sustain a consider- by tackling the agrarian prob- ricula of these institutions. For
ably larger population both of lem. I should like to see this done this reason 72 per cent of the
Arabs and Jews, and on its on socialist lines, but short of men and 80 per cept of the wo-
fringes there is ample room in this why should even a Tory gov- men undergoing training in Ger-
the still undeveloped Trans-Jor- ernment hesitate to do for Arab many chose farming. In train-
•dania. In fact., the Arab popu- sharecroppers what their fathers ing centers outside of Germany
lation has doubled since 1919. If did for Irish tenants? An ill 84 per cent of the men and 55
the British administration had nourished, illiterate peasantry, per cent of the women chose
more creative imagination than it sodden with malaria, can be per- farming.
At the beginning of 1935 there
has yet shown, it would hasten suaded that the Jews are the au-
this process by providing the thors of its misery. End this were 4,005 persons undergoing
Arab peasants with the means misery, and it will be Increasing- training in the various centers
to irrigate their land, and with ■ !), difficult for them to blame the established in Germany and in
disinterested marketing organize- Jews. The British have done Denmark, France, Rolland, Italy,
ticM for their produce. But little much good work for the Arabs Jugo Slavia, Lithuania, Luxem-
can be done for them until they t hrough education and other so- bourg, Poland, Czecho-Slovakia
are freed, above all the share- cial services, but they have so and Memel. From January
croppers among them, from the far shirked the central problem through December a total of 2,133
had either completed their courses
'exploitation of their usurious of land ownership.
or were enabled to emigrate.
landlords.
The Arab laborer,
Finally, in some measure the
On Dec. 31, 1935, there were
since the Jews came, has seen Jews have their fate in their
4,768
under training, 3,637 with-
his standard of Jiving swiftly ris- own hands. It is difficult for
Germany, and 1,131 outside of
in
ing, but the tenant and the small them to mix with Arab peasants
owner are sunk in a subhuman and workers. The gap in culture Germany. •
An increasing number of Jew-
misery. If the British --would at- and in social habits is too wide.
tack this agrarian problem in a But they might try a little harder. ish children were forced out of
state
schools during 1931. Twenty
large way, they would find their They do learn Arabic at school,
political difficulties eased. For by but few ever master it.. They thousand Jewish children between
the
ages
of 6 and 14, double the
liberating the sharecroppers they have done something to organize
would break the social power of the Arab workers in labor unions number cared for in 1934, at-
the feudal gentry, who are the and co-operatives: they ought to tended special schools. The
school committee with aid of
leaders of the Arab opposition.
do much more. Finally, can any
from the Joint Distribution
When one has seen the condi- happy society arise in Palestine, funds
tions under which these two races so long as the two rates remain Committee, expended RM 374,-
028
out
of total educational ex-
dwell side by side, the main im- entirely isolated in education?
penditures of RM 543,650 for the
premien is anxiety that wrestles Unless the lesson of co-operation education
these children. The
with hope. As one moves from and mutual understanding is remaisder of
was expended in adult
ore Jewish settlement to another, learned at school, it is rarely education courses, publication of
one forecasts • brillialt 'future learned in after life. This means, text books and the training of
for this experiment as Muth on nt doubt, that Jews must modify adults as instructors. For the
Its cultural as on its material side. in :orne degree their Zionist na- last purpose RN139,487 was ex-
But fielow it and around it is the tionalism. They must become pa-
Arab mass, ignorant, impoverish- triots for the common Palestinian pended.
The school committee of the
ed, the prey of much preventable motherland. In it, and not mere- Zentral Ausschuss is now faced
disease, aloof, hostile, untouched ly in their own isolated settle- with the problem of caring for
as yet by the ideas that the Jews ments, they must strive to realize
the entire Jewish elementary
•might disseminate and, for all its their social ideal. There can be school
population of 440,00 chil-
propinquity, out of reach. Be- no happy Jewish Home while an dren who, according to a gov-
cause these Arabs will not wel- Arab alum surrounds it. ernmental decree, must be re-
come or even tolerate the Jews,
moved from the general public
this country must be governed
schools during the present school
•by forte. If the British 'garrison PLAN COMMUNITY
yer. The report declares that
were withdrawn, the Jewish Ns-
CONFERENCES AT
the school committee will find it-
. Coital Rome would soon be a
'
self further hampered by the gov-
CLEVELAND
MEET
bloody ruin. The consequence is
ernmental decree, announced in
that outside the municipal sphere
(CONCLUDED PROM PAGE ONE)
the fall of 1935, which allows the
there can be no advance towards
establishment of a Jewish school
self-government. The Colonial Fort Wayne; Rabbi Meyer H. only when at least 20 children
Office wishes, indeed, to set up a Simon, Lafayette; Sam Feiwell, can be in attendance. Of the
representative council. It would South Bend; E. S. Tachau, Louis.. 20,000 children to be absorbed.
be unworkable, so long as the vine; Julian H. Krolik. Detroit; however, 13,000 are scattered
Amiss retain their majority and Ben Holub, Akron; Harry Her- over some 3.000 small communi-
persist la their uncompromising srer, Canton; Louis S. Bing, Jr., ties in many of which there are
resistance to Jewish settlement.
Cleveland; Justin Stillman, Co- not 20 Jewish children of school
The British will doubtless con- lumbus; Joseph Thal, Dayton; age.
Linea to administer the Mandate, Lee J. Goldman, Toledo; Jacob
60 Loan Bank. Organised
but they will do it without en- Klivana, Youngstown; Mrs. Fran- To • network of 45 free and
thusiasm or conviction. That, 1 eel B. Ostrow, Erie; William K. co-operative loan banks for eco-
think, and not anti-Semitism or Frank, Pittsburgh.
nomic assistance to Jews in Ger-
any excessive enthusiasm for the
Others expected to attend the many 15 were added in 1935.
Arabs is, on the whole. the at- Cleveland meeting are: Jane These banks operated largely with
titude of the responsible civil see- Fisher, Dayton; Mrs. Siegmund the funds of the American Jew-
rants, whether on the spot or in Herzog, Cleveland; S. P. Halle, iab Joint Distribution Committee
London. It is a weary, anxious Cleveland; Joseph M. Berne. and the American Jewish Joint
and thankless task, but honor and Cleveland. Reconstruction Foundation. The
prestige. to say nothing of strat-
Foundation, which receives its
egy. forbid the Empire to relin-
Broadway will have three Yid- funds from the Joint Distribution
quish it. • The Zionists will say dish theaters in the FalL
Committee and the Jewish Colon.
NO4, tax.rrt a it
Toga= CO.
WHERE LIFE MEANS DEATH
(CONCLUDED FROM PAGE ONE)
beds and leave a narrow passage
to the stove. Chaya Palland and
her three children are at home.
The fourth is in the summer col-
ony of the Joint. The girl just
had double pneumonia, and there-
fore was the first selected among
the children. It happens to be
Friday eve, but the cold stove is
untouched and empty. No thee of
food or smell of cooking.
The father, we learn, has been
an invalid for the past six years.
Ile was taken to a hospital a few
weeks ago and is not expected to
live. "Final stages of T. B.," the
woman whispers, as if keeping it
from her brood. She is worn out
herself, ill, and has been the sole
support of the family for years.
Her sister helps her occasionally,
and furnishes the merchandise she
sells. Fried herrings, There is
not much demand for such luxuries
lately. If she is lucky and has a
good day she may earn 17 cents.
The rent has not been paid for
months; the landlord had mercy
on them. But it cannot go on for
ever, and they are fared with evic-
tion.
"What will they do?" She does
not seem frightened. "I have no
otrength left for any feelings any
more," she said to me.
Too Hungry to Eat
The children looked ■ with curious
(yes at a bag of food I held in my
hand. Sandwiches and candy.
"Would you like some of it?" and
I offered it to the children. Only
the baby took a piece, smelled it
and started to cry. The older chil-
dren did not touch it. "Tell them
not to be bashful, to eat," I asked
the mother. She looked at the chil-
dren mournfully and assured me
that they were not afraid or bash-
ful. "They are good children," she
said, "only too hungry to eat." And
she went on explaining that they
had had a piece of bread and her-
ring already, and could eat no
more. The herring filled them up,
they got it only once a week, on
Friday. With quiet dignity she as-
sembled her children on the bed
and allowed us to photograph them.
"If you wish to photograph our
misery you are welcome," she said,
and added wistfully: "The help will
coins too late for us—but some one
elce might benefit ... "
We left her home and proceeded
to the house across the street. By
that time a large crowd assembled
downstairs and followed us on our
way. Children, grown-up men—
women and old people. There are
so many people in those quarters
with time on their hands. The
slightest exitement is welcomed as
an escape from dreaded reality.
No escape from crowds once you
enter any Jewish quarter in Po-
land. The home we were looking
for has been on the list of the
Child-Care Department for a long
while. At Krochmalna Street,
Number 8. The head of the house,
Chayem Borg, was not at home
when we arrived. He is a young,
prematurely gray man who spends
his days looking for employment
he cannot hope to find. His wife,
mother of three children, lies hope-
lessly ill of tuberculosis in the
Sanatorium Bryjus in Otwoek.
One child, a daughter, was sent
away to the Medem Sanatorium
for two months, which may give
her a new lease on life. The child
was very undernourished, and on
the verge of tuberculosis.
We found the two remaining
children alone in the house. In a
desolate attic room, bare of all
living furniture; there they sat
amidst carpenter tools and wooden
shavings. "Where is your father?"
we asked. "Looking for work,"
answered the little girl, and her
brother whined: "Mother has been
away a long time." The little sis-
ter comforted him.
"Who takes care of you chil-
dren?"
What a cruel question. I regret-
ted it • the moment it passed my
lips.
"Grandmother," said the little
girl, and added that the grand-
mother was very old and weak
herself. The little stove was cold
and the dishes unused for a long
time. The girl walked over to me
and said apologetically that the
dishes had not been washed in a
long time because they were not
in use. The children refused the
sandwiches, but they did take the
candy. The little girl saved her
piece, while the boy chewed on his.
Finally the child took a sandwich
for her father. "He is very des-
perate," she said "with mother so
ill, and unable to find any work
for no long."
We inquired where the grand-
mother was selling her pickles, and
went looking for her. It started
to pour in the meanwhile, and like
the rest of the people I ran quickly
into a nearby doorway for shelter.
It was already crowded with peo-
ple. The only one who did not care
about the rain was an old woman,
selling pickles. I stood there for a
long while even after the first down-
pour stopped. No one bought any
pickles from her, and she stood
there, as if carved in wood, her
eyes no helpless and her hand so
ready to serve. The sole support
of a family—against whom war-
fare is being waged.
Bees in their hives are origina-
tors of air conditioning, says Dr.
Frank T. McFarland, University
of Kentucky botanist.
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a4k A
General Meier. Nader,
tell me...wh y are they
MILDER...why do they
TASTE BETTER
Well, first off, all cigarettes are
not alike . . . not by a long shot.
Now Chesterfields...they are
milder because they are made
of mild, ripe tobaccos ... both
home-grown and Turkish.
They age these tobaccos for two
years to take out all harshness
These tobaccos are not only
blended but cross-blended...this
brings out the better taste of
each tobacco. It welds the dif-
ferent flavors into one better
flavor. It helps to make Chest-
erfields taste better.
Whenyou smoke a Chesterfield
you realize they're not like
others ... They Satisfy.