A merica Amish Periodical Carter CLIFTON AVENUE • CINCINNATI 30, OHIO THE ONLY ANGLO•JEWISH - NEWSPAPER PRINTED All Jewish News All Jewish View: WITHOUT BIAS 4 IN MICHIGAN , TELEPHONE 11- EbETROIT LWISR R.ONICIA CADILLAC 1-04-0 and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE DETROIT, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27,1936 Vol. XXXVIII No. 27 ISRAEL HIMELHOCH Emma Lazarus---Great Forerunner A. F. L. REAFFIRMS WILL HEAD PUBLIC of Dr. Herzl in Modern Zionism STAND IN SUPPORT OF NAZI BOYCOTT RELATIONS GROUP Will Be Honored at Banquet on Sunday On 60th Birthday] By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ Named Chairman of Educa- tion, Publicity Commit- tee of Service Group PERSONNEL OF CHILD CARE BODY SELECTED It is impossible to conceive of a history of the forerunners of Zionism without listing among them the name of Emma Lazarus, This eminent Jewess's name figures very prominently at the present time in contemporary, sus," which remains prominently affixed to this day on the tablet of the Statue of Liberty. So touching is the tribute which she pays in this poem to the "Mother of Ex- iles" that this poetic expression stands out as one of the finest Holds First Meeting Under Chairmanship of Mrs. A. J. Levin Israel Ilimelhoch has been named chairman of the public relations committee of the De- troit Service Group. In announc- ing this appointment, Simon Shet- zer, chairman of the board of the Service Group, expressed satisfac- tion over Mr. Ilimelhoch's accept- ance of this important pest. Point- ing out that the public relations committee has charge of the edu- cational and publicity work of the Jewish Welfare Federation's fund- raising activities, Mr. Shetzer said that the guidance of a leader of the ability of Mr. Ilimelhoch is certain to be a great asset in com- munity work during the coming Year. Child Can Committee Announcement was also made this week of the personnel of the child care committee, under the chairmanship of Mrs. A. J. Levin. Mrs. Edith B. Bercovich is secre- tary of this committee, which is • branch of the welfare council of the Detroit Service Group. The child care committee held its first meeting at Temple Beth El on Monday evening. Mrs. Berco- vich addressed the group on "The Philosophy and Technique of Fos- ter Home Placements." The child care committee is composed of the following: Sidney J. Allen, Mrs. Sidney .1. Allen, M. Alpiner, Dr. Emil Am- berg, Mrs. Emil Amberg, Mrs. M. E. Bachman, Harry Becker, Mrs. Harry Becker, Theodore D. Birn- krant, D. Bolotnikoff, Mrs. H. C. Broder, Mrs. Arnold N. Brodie, H. Burstein, Fred M. Butzel, Martin L. Butzel, Mrs. Celia Citron, Miss Ellen Coff, Louis S. Cohane, Mrs. Louis S. Cohane, Miss Leila Corn, Mrs. Martin Cowan, Jacob V. Dunn, Mrs. Emil Eckhouse, N. R. Epstein, Mrs. Aaron Farbman, Harry Farbsten, Mrs. Harry Farb- "0.4 .ten, Ben B. Fenton, Mrs. Ben B. Fenton, Isaac Finkelstein, Mrs. Isaac Finkelstein, Joseph C. Fin- sterwald, Mrs. William M. Fleisch- man, Mrs. Ralph E. Folz, Mrs, Joseph Frank, Lewis C. Frank, William II. Frank, Mrs. William 11. Frank, Bertram Friedman, Morris Garvett, Mrs. Morris Gar- vett, Peter P. Gilbert, Mrs. Peter P. Gilbert, Mrs. Eva Gooze, John Graff, Mrs. J. R. Greenberg, H. Cuss, Louis Hamburger, Samuel Hamburger, Mrs. Samuel Ham- burger, Julius Hartman, Irving L. Hirschman, Max Holtzman, Dr . ;CSC, NEW CONGRESSIONAL INVESTIGATION SEEN I HOSPITAL COMMITTEE IS FUNCTIONING HERE Jewish Agency Has Indicated That It Wants Its Witnesses to be Heard Publicly, Not in Private Business Its Dinner-Meeting on Sun- day to Be Held at Hotel Statler IMMIGRATION, HEALTH POLICIES SCRUTINIZED AT FIRST MEETING TAMPA, Fla. — (WN) — A resolution reiterating its pr e - viously expressed stand in support of the anti-Nazi boycott is ex- pected to be adopted by the an- nual conventien of the American Federation of Labor which is in session here. An ekhibition show- ing the plight of labor in Nazi Germany is being shown here by the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League. The exhibit contains ma- terial showing the destruction of the Gerynan trade union move- ment, the murder of labor lead- era and the conditions of labor in the Third Reich? Warning labor that the work- ers of the world must "stand like a Rock of Gibraltar" in defense of democracy, William Green, president of the American Fed- eration of Labor, told the annual convention of the Federation that the organization will continue its anti-Nazi boycott. Bitterly attack- ins Fascism and dictatorships, Mr. Green said: "The church may fail, the chambers of commerce may be impotent and the civic leaders may lack the power to deal with the tyranny of dictatorial rule. But the trade union movement— at which dictators strike first— has the strength to prevent the rise of dictatorship at any time and any place. Democracy rests in the keeping of trade unionism. And if freedom comes again to ' the nations now under an iron rule it will come through rebel- lion of the working people. We learn with indignation of the persecution of the Jewish race in Germany. We protest Shaarey Zedek Oneg .Shabbat on Frida 'i --Cul (burl exy e Magazine. LAZARUS American history, on the occasion of the celebration of the 60th an- niversary of the dedication of the Statue of Liberty by President Grover Cleveland on Bedloe Island in the New York Harbor on Oct. 28, 1886. Miss Lazarus was the author of that great poem, "The New Colos- tributes to America as a land of refuge for the oppressed of all nations. It is this tribute which makes "The New Colossus" ap- plicable today to Palestine, who opens her arms to the exiles of many lands throughout the world. In this poem Miss Lazarus 'I, / TALE Tr Iv I, I APT TAM:, The late Friday evening serv- ices at Congregation Shaarey Zedek on Dec. 4, will be in the form of an Oneg Shabbat. A brief address will be delivered by Rabbi A, M. Hershman. Cantor J. 11. Sonenklar and his choir will lead in the singing of liturgical and folk songs. The speaker at the services on Nov. 27 will be Mordecai I. Sol- off, educational director of Shaarev Zedek, LOUIS LIPSKY TO HONOR LIPSKY'S SIXTIETH BIRTHDAY The importance of and the need for a Jewish hospital in Detroit will be discussed here at a din- ner-meeting to be held this Sun- day evening at 6:30 o'clock, at Hotel Statler, under the auspices of the Detroit Jewish Physicians' Hospital Committee. Dr. Morris Fishbein, editor of the Journal of the American At Dinner to Be Held in New York on Sunday Evening NEW YORK—Louis Lipsky, dis- tinguished Jewish leader, will be honored on Sunday evening, Nov. 29, at a dinner arranged at Hotel Waldorf-Astoria in New York City on the occasion of his 60th birthday. The dinner is being arranged under the joint auspices of the Zionist Organization of America, the United Palestine Appeal and the American Jewish Congress. Mr. Lipsky has been a leader in both Zionist and Congress movements in the United States since their inception. Through his pen and on the public plat- form he has espoused the causes of the rebuilding of the Jewish National Homeland and the fight to defend the rights of Jews in the Diaspora. For more than 30 years, he has been identified with the demo- cratic movements in Jewish life and is recognized as one of the outstanding communal leaders in this country. For eight years he has served as the president of the Zionist Or- ganization of America and has been active in its councils as a member of its governing bodies since the termination of his ten- ure as president in 1931. He is national co-chairman of the Uni- ted Palestine Appeal. Mr. Lipsky is an important leader in the World Zionist Or- mt.r.nu: TURN in LAST PAGE) TO PAOE OPPOSITE EDITORIAL) (PLEASE TERN FLINT CELEBRATES CAMPAIGN TRIUMPH Peiser, Silver, Warren, Fine- berg and Berger Are The Speakers FLINT. — Approximately 300 men and women gathered at the Jewish Center in Flint on Sunday evening to celebrate the success of the first united fund-raising effort conducted recently under the chairmanship of Ellis II. War- ren. The campaign quota of $11,820 was over-subscribed by close to $2,000. Mr. Warren, who presided at the dinner, thanked his co-work- ers and especially Kurt Peiser, executive director of the Jewish Welfare Federation of Detroit who was the advisory director of the campaign, for their untiring efforts. Speakers at the dinner included Rabbi Elmer Berger, Rabbi S. Z. Fineberg, Mr. Peiser and Har- old Silver, executive director of the Jewish Social Service Bur- eau of Detroit. Rabbis Berger and Fineberg both lauded the unity that was achieved in Flint, and urged the the continuation of efforts along the same path to guarantee fu- ture triumphs in Jewish commu- nal work. Mr. Silver congratulated the Flint community on their success- ful campaign and expressed the hope that Flint will remain a united community. "As you de- velop a spirit of Jewish loyalty. so do you also develop a spirit of Jewish unity," Mr. Silver' de- clared. Mr. Peiser, in his address, em- phasized what can be accom- plished through unity when every- thing else fails. Ile lauded the efforts of Mr. Warren and praised him for having accepted the re- sponsibility of heading the drive and in making such an outstand- ing triumph of it. Ile voiced the hope that Mr. Warren and his co-workers will succeed in draw- ing in a group of young leaders who will be trained to take over the responsibility for community work in the future and expressed confidence that under Mr. War- ren's leadership, community achievement will not be curtailed for many years to come. Mr. Peiser also expressed the hope that other measures for commu- nity unity will be undertaken by Flint Jewry in efforts to create • Jewish center in which all groups, regardless of affiliation', will be able to meet under the common denominator of Jew. ROYAL COMMISSION NOW IN SESSION Will Discuss the Importance of a Jewish Hospital For Detroit (PLEASE TURN TO P COE I) EMM ? FISHBEIN SPEAKS DR. WEIZMANN TO BE FIRST JEWISH HERE SUNDAY FOR PHYSICIANS' GROUP WITNESS TO APPEAR BEFORE BRITISH Green Pledges Aid of U. S. Labor Against Tide of Fascism Italian Jews Hold Nation- Wide Demonstrations to Prove Patriotism %%VI' Per Year, $3.00; Per Copy, 10 Cent. - , "TcLtra i to- m95, G ter Zionists Honor Brandeis With Nation-Wide Membership Drive; To Press Britain to Honor Pledge JERUSALEM (WNS-Palsor Agency) - Dr. Chaim Weizmann, president of the Jew- ish Agency for Palestine, who has just re- turned from London, will be the first Jewish witness to appear before the British Royal Commission, which is investigating the ad- ministration of the League of Nation's mandate for Pal- estine, are touring various parts of the country. They will go north to the Lake Huleh region, which Jewish groups are now reclaiming after centuries of disuse. Tiny will then visit the Haifa Harbor, inspect the Nesher cement works and the generating p ant of the Palestine Electric •Corporation, managed by Pincus Rutenberg, at Naharaim. It Is believed that the Jewish witnesses will begin offering their evidence next week, after the problem of the acquisition, sale and avail- ability of Palestine land is brought up. The Jewish Agency for Pal- has indicated that it wants M. W. Childs to Speak; "Co- estine its witnesses to be heard publicly operative Movement" and not in private session. To Be Theme Professing to reveal tho secret testimony given before the Brit- Marquis W. Childs, author of ish Royal Commission by Sir Ar- DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN 'Sweden—the Middle Way," will thur Wauchope, high commission- Medical Association and of Hy- ecture at the Temple Forum, er of Palestine, Al Jamie at Is- gela, will be the speaker at this Temple Beth El, Woodward and amia, Arabic organ, reports that dinner, which will be attended by Gladstone, Tuesday night, Dec. Sir Arthur told the Commissioners the Detroit Jewish doctors and 1, on the subject of his book. his belief that Arab fears of Jew- Published by the Yale Univer- i sh immigration prompted the re- their wives and a select group of sity Press, Mr, Childs' book on c ent disorders. In giving the all- friends invited by the doctors. The Detroit Jewish Hospital Sweden quickly became a national eged details of the evidence of- f ered by the High Commissioner. Committee is composed of repre- best seller. It t he Arab daily describes Sir Ar- sentatives of the Maimonides is now also a Medical Society, the medical staff beat seller in thur as having added as an addi- tional cause of the -iota the mur- of the North End Clinic, Phi der of two Arabs near Petach Delta Epsilon Graduate Club and England and Tikvah, a Jewish colony, on April Phi Lambda Kappa Graduate is being trans- 16. Attacks on Jews started in Club. Dr. S. E. Gould is chair- lated into ev- man of the committee, the per- ery language the Arab town of Jaffa on April sonnel of which includes Drs. of Europe. It 19. The High Commissioner is as- William II. Gordon, Harry Kirsch- tells the story serted to have explained the Pal- baum, Charles Lakoff, Harry C. of how Swe- estine Government policy during the disturbances and to have ad- Saltzstein, A. M. Kohn, E. D. den overcame Rothman, Sol G. Meyers, IM, the influence vised the establishment of a leer. lative council in Palestine. "This E. Bachman, Leo Orecklin, of its extrem- Raphael Altman, David Caber- ist neighbors, would lessen the animosity be- tween Arabs and Jews," the High man, Edward R. Robbins, David Russian Com- M. W. Child. J. Sandweiss, Sidney Beigler, munism and (PLEASE TURN TO PAOLI 3) (PLEASE TURN TO PAGE German Fascism, by cultivating IIPPOPITS) EDITORIAL) its co-operative movement. The book has exerted a power- ful influence on President Roose- velt. After reading it, he ap- pointed a special committee to study the co-operative movement in Sweden and other countries. As a result of Mr. Childs' aim- ' ulating volume, the Scandanavian Will Be Addressed by Dr. method of dealing with economic Samuel Margoshes, problems now holds the attention Editor of the Day of economists and political and social scientists. Mr. Childs will tell the story of Jewish organizations affiliated Sweden and how it Came by its with the Detroit section of the remarkable social organization. It American :lowish Congress will will be the first opportunity for meet in conference this Sunday, Detroiters to hear an authorita- Nov. 29, at 2:30 p. m. in the tine description of the co-opera- Henry II room of Hotel Stealer. tive movement and to participate Dr. Samuel Margoshes, editor in a discussion of what it might of the Jewish Daily Day of New mean to America. York, will be the guest speaker, Sir Wilmott Lewis: who was to and will outline plans of the have spoken on Tuesday night, American and World Jewish Con- Dec. 1, is unable to come due to :tresses aimed at the solution of serious illness, the economic and political prob- lems facing Jewry. The conference will also be ad- dressed by Simon Shetzer, who will speak on the relationship of the American Jewish Congress with existing or planned Jewish community councils. Mandell Bernstein, chairman of the fin- Membership Drive to Cul- ance committee of the Detroit minate in Initiation chapter of the American Jewish Congress, will report on the prog- on Dee. 6 ress made thus far in securing the co-operati rati jwi on local organizations The drive for membership con- Jewish oeno: Congress move- ducted by Pisgah Lodge No. 34 I inent. meat of Bnai Brith will be celebrated with an initiation and dinner at the Detroit-Leland Hotel on Sun- World Jsvrivis Congress Was da hy. Dec. 6. Rabbi h Charles E s Welched A: by he" Naafi Agent, North i Shore Con- GENEVA: the gregation Israel, Glencoe, Ill., will World Jewish Congress has JUNE (PLEASE R TO .: public the instructions is- OPPOSI POSITS E DIT ORIAL) AL )a sued from Germany by Col. Ul- rich Fletschhauer, Nazi leader, to his agent in Switzerland, Herr Eisenegger, calling upon him to have a Nazi agent attend the sessions of tho World Jewish Con- gress which were held in Gen- eva, Aug. 8 to 15. "The Mystery of the Priestly Col. Fleischhauer, with char- Blessing" will be the subject of acteristic feeling for accuracy, in- Rabbi Leon Fram's sermon Fri- thereby enabling more thin 20 day night, Dec. 4, at Temple forms his agent that the Congress is scheduled to begin on Aug. 15, Jewish women to earn their liv- Beth El, Woodward and Glad- the date on which it actually eon- ing. The J. D. C. has helped stone. The services begin at 8 eluded. He asks his agent to get o'clock. This is the third in the for him the answers to 13 ques- the town in another enterprise series of sermons which Rabbi also. Twenty machines were From has been giving under the tions, all of which pointed to- ward proving the falsity of the bought for the knitting of socks general title, 'The Beauties of Protocols of the Elders of Zion. and an instructor was sent there the Jewish Ritual." The first was Colonel Fleischhauer was the to teach the workers. In War- on "The Meaning of the Shema." chief representative for the Nazis The second was on the "Secret saw the products so manufactured of the Kiddush." at the Berne trial a year ago are sold in the shops, as it is George Calvertl and the choir where the falsity of the Protocols was exposed. The text of Fleisch- considered a duty to enable the will sing Mr. Galvani's original Jews to hold out in the pogrom- composition of the priestly bene- batter's letter follows: TALK ON SWEDEN AT TEMPLE FORUM CONGRESS PARLEY SUNDAY AFTERNOON SHULMAN TO TALK AT PISGAH DINNER Fram to Interpret Priestly Blessing at Friday Service Few people in America realize what it means to the Jews of a small Polish town or city to have a pogrom. I don't mean merely those who are killed. or those who must carry on their bodies the marks of brutal violence inflicted upon them. There is an aftermath to these terrible outbreaks of fomented hatred. That aftermath consists in the destruction of the local Jewish economic life after the pogrom is over. Even if the shop or workably of a Jew has escaped direct at- tack the artisan or the trades- man cannot continue to work normally. It is possible to re- store business in the town to a normal level only by providing pew turnover capital from out- side, as was the case in Minsk- Mazavetsk and Skala. EDITOR'S NOTE: Alexander Kahn. chairman of rmt.h lonek for I. Joint Die. " em epee' from a that le Poland. In thIii tN en fee the setts. Art• Feature Iiyrsdirsle he roillel. 0,515415 airline writt ollnollon after Ike pAgrnin. et 1.1 wrist. and sarvet• the 1. Jrn1Ah ettent of the help rendered by Ameetess Jewry, iropyrtght. lilt. Seven Arta Feature .511, The problem becomes even more difficult and the situation wore in towns where the eco- nomic organization of the En- deka is carrying on its destructive experiment of anti-Jewish activ- ity with the object of obtaining control of all Jewish workshops and shops far non.Jews. The Endeks are spending large cams on picketing Jewish shops in the towns as well as along the roads leading to the towns. And the acts of boycott terror are not confined to Jewish victims. They are also committed against those Christians who dare to buy from or sell to Jews. Pickets are pa id three zlotys • day and the organ- ization also pays for the installa- tion in such towns of non-Jew- ish workshops and shops. Hunger Blockade of Jews Non-Jewish artisans are im- ported from distant localities for the purpose, and the Endek news- papers publish that these towns have been chosen as a laboratory to convince the public that they can get on well without the Jews. The result is virtually a hunger blockade of the Jews. Now what can be done to de- feat this campaign of extermM- ation and to enable the Jews to hold out against the blockade until the peasants. who have dealt with them for hundreds of yearn, resume their buying from them? To permit the Endeks to succeed in one place would be to cause ■ an extension of their program elsewhere. It is the duty of the Jewish people to see to it that their program fails. It is in this direction that the Joint Distribution Committee has been working. For example, in the pogromized town of Prnytyk, the J. D. C. enabled 30 Jews to ob- tain cows which furnish their familiz3 with the means of ex- istence. This solves the problem of milk for the children. for whom none had been available at any price. A factory in Lodz transferred its sewing of shirts to Przytyk, ized and in the threatened towns. For the Jews in Sarum, who are in the same difficult position es the Przytyk Jews, the spooling Of thread has been Introduced and an instructor was sent to teach basket weaving. The soft. int of bristles, which will give employment to 10 Jewish famil- (PLIC ■ 111 TURN TO LAST PAGE) - A. Is .Itestly Polak kets1Ple., the diction. in addition, they will arm woW .k.r1.1 Case... tat_ pl.. render Lewandowsky s famous es Avg. Is. I. s/stell "Psalm of the Sabbath" and Sol- teas en Ow commies Oita ph. ezeep- Ter's "Hashkivenu — Give Us ''•• hroe 'flu P" d"" Cessitot Sc. t Peace. " -0. T. .it tM attertt. Pt Me The service will be followed by wed. S. tM oeisinelinc protalppt. sI ann. (*serve a reception in the social ball of EL. Q J... ,plarii sae ppro 1e mow. the the Temple. The general public e1 5. f Jew. I. O.. ...GU. is invited to attend the Sabbath (PLIttlIS ATMS It PAO. CI.ITOSIAL Eve service'. moat