February 12, 1937 iEt VALI SCftHciti rICEI 4 E j fin AFTER THE POGROM ARABTOAM EnmAr a T ER ROR (CONCLUDED FROM PACE ONE) maker. sad 3 to carriers. Forty two fanalle. of tradesmen and peddler. were bl e d t o is on with their former Were phindered. We now fare sterna- ena lion. Artione _ and shop /metro. who PYZDRY is • little town • in the dis- area Hat. of Lode with CO J•with families t.tzurt__mmuytImerr r•Lv engaged chiefly sit tradeemen. In the hart- readjotment proems 23 tradesmen were died soula an left help.. e imitable credit. to enable them carry on their buminess. Flo fam• The fate of the inhabitants of to Mee were eatabllehed o carriers em- this little town was no different ployed by • Jewish miller. Five mm- olio. were enabled to reopen Illen than that of the Jews in Przytyk their of workshop., 1 were atinnlled with or in any other of the 13 towns towing machine. for underwear pro- nthe Opocrno district, five towns duction. Three famIllo were eetablIthed In the production of knitsood• and • in the Csenstochow district and family of helms were enabled to re- three in the Lodz area that were pair their bakery. BY8ZEW la • small village pogromized during this period. near Wareaw with 11 Jewish families. In June, 1936, a new attack was Lane term; credits were Mon to these families to enable them to deal In dairy made upon a town that is one ;moth ts. fruit and poultry In the W ► r• hour's ride from Warsaw, a town saw and Radom markets. (CONCLUDED FROM PAGE ONE) defended all outposts In the brav- est manner, not deserting even the smallest." Ile added that Pales- tine Jewry "must mobilize to strengthen our economic and phy- sical edfense." "The next decade will be a decisive one in Jewish history," he continued. "The principal ques- tion before the Royal Commission is whether immigration into Pal- estine should be regulated accord- ing to economic or political fac- tors. If according to the former it will depend on our ability to create the possibility for greater These are simple, unspectacular absorption; if according to the with 7,000 Jewish inhabitants. The situation was appalling. Seven facts. But to the Jewish victims of latter, it will depend on the grace thousand persons were left help- pogroms they mean a new chance of the mufti." In order to insure communi- of life given them by the Jews of less in Minsk Mazowiecki. America through the Joint Dis- cation throughout the country A cable from the Paris of- should an outbreak of violence tribution Committee. fice of the Joint Distribution hamper telephone service, the Committee came to New York Ro headquarters: "Require urgent relief meas- ures. Fifteen thousand dollars needed." The reply was immediate: 15th Anniversary of Carmel School The Carmel Hebrew School celebrated its 15th anniversary "Agree fifteen thousand." The arm of mercy from America Friday and Saturday, Jan. 29 and had reached out and taken these 30, at Congregation Beth Tephilah homeless, stricken people under its Emanuel. Twenty pupils conduct- ed the entire Friday night and protection. The task in the towns which had Saturday services. Rabbi Joseph suffered from the violent anti- Semitic outbreaks was not only to bring immediate relief to individ- ual cages, but to organize quickly a system of redistribution of work and of vocational retraining adapt• ing the Inhabitants to the new con- ditions. Without this aid the Jews in the pogromized towns would not have been able to continue earning a living. To enable them to withstand the pressure of boycott and violence and to prevent their abandoning their homes thus creating a ref- ugee situation, the Joint Distribu- tion Committee undertook the task of Increasing financial and economic aid and enabled the po- grom victims either to continue in 1. W. LAWTON their regular occupatIons or to adjust themselves to the changed conditions. In some instances It was possible to provide employment by bringing in piece work from fac- tories located in large cities. In other cases employment was pro- vided by the manufacture of goods which were dispatched for sale in remote districts so that the ar- tteans were not required to dis- pose of their goods in their own towns In face of boycott and local competition. Thus the Joint Dis- tribution Committee breathed new life into these communities. Here are the case histories of nine such towns in which the J. D. C. brought order out of chaos. Eisenmsn spoke and congratulat- ed the school and Its principal, I. W. Lawton. Three pupils deliv- ered fine speeches. Sidney Baron translated • whole chapter of the Saturday readings, under the aus- pices of Young Israel, lIyman Woifman spoke in Jewish about the Sedrah and Haftorah. Abra- ham Cohen, Bar Mitzvah, spoke In English. Mr. Lawton spoke briefly, and cited the 20 pupils who conducted the services as examples of the ability of his pupils and the caliber of his work. The Carmel Schools are lo- cated at 8752 Linwood, corner Carter and 9428 Oakland, cor- ner Westminster. RABBI ISRAEL FOR S1T-DOWN STRIKE kings, $4,650,000 QUOTA ADOPTED FOR 1937 DRIVE BY J. D. C. (CONCLUDED FROM PAGE 5) GUARDS AND YOUR V BE EYES • SAFE one of the vice-chairmen of the 1937 campaign. 1936 Contributed $2,801,000 Jo Isidor Coons of New York, national J. A. C. campaign direc- tor, reported that 1,100 cities and towns in the United States and gross Canada had contributed a total of $2,801,000 to the 1936 campaign. A number of authors and writers. including Marvin Lowen- thal, author of "The Jews of Ger- many," and Leo W. Schwarz. com- piler of "The Jewish Caravan" are now touring the country and the Joint Distribution Committee now has in active circulation 100 units of a sound-slide film telling in pictures and recorded voices the story of "Twenty-Three Years of Human Salvage." (This film will be shown in Detroit at many gatherings beginnings with next week). ed this year than in 1936, to help these impoverished populations to maintain themselves on the ex- istence level of an irreducible (CONCLUDED FROM PAGE ONE) Mrs. Louis R. Lightstone is minimum of nourishment and working on novel table decora- be held Feb. 24 at Carnegie Hall tions. Assisting her are Mrs. J. necessities. "Specifically, the tasks which New York. Albert Spalding, vio- Ellenstein, Mrs. J. Hayman and lie before us may be summarized linist, Harold Bauer, pianist, and Mrs. L. Schlien. in their main outlines somewhat Emanuel List, basso of the Metro- I Dates are still available for as follows: politan Opera Co.. will be soloist rummage. Mrs. L. Miller, chair- "We must help to retrain those on the program. The project has man, can be reached at Euclid younger men and women who can gained wide support in musical 0516-W. leave Germany, and emigrate and music loving circles. The pro- Mrs. J. Deytshe, chairman of them. gram is being arranged by a mu- "We must help to provide edu- sicians committee of which Ar- reservations, University 2-5293, tur B o d a n z k y, Serge Kous- announces the following addi- cation for the 60,000 Jewish chil- dren excluded from the general sevitzky and Otto Klemperer are tional pledges: The Mesdames: Harry August, E. schools of Germany. chairmen. Mrs. Israel Goldstein Abram. J. Ainbender, 1. Arkin, J. B. "We must help the majority heads a group of prominent men Baruch, A. Begun, H. Becker, B. Ber- and women who are sponsoring kowitz, 11. Blutuneld. Ft Ballo, B. Can- of those older people who by rea- 134 New Refugees Bring Dutch son of their age cannot now leave Committee's Registration to this enterprise, which includes D7 ■ 1, ' !.'nbe1is:jvl hel. Isidor Achron, I. A. Hirschman Dinitc M. Dushkla E. Edelson. J. H. Germany and who must continue 1,110 for 1936 Ehrlich, W. Elaon, J. H. Eneteln. R. and Dr. J. F. Neuberger, who is Falk. H.',Mica A. M. Fero, 8. Foten• to remain there until they die. Palestine government Is install- NEW YORK. — Registration must help to open up new "We Frankel, B. Frank. J. Freed, of the United States Navy. Co- stein, J. ing radio transmitters at stra- of 134 new refugees in December Charles Friedenberg, 8. Friedman. D. trades and occupations for the tegic points, it was learned. A operating with this project is the Garber. 8. Geoer. J. Goldberg. 8. Gold- Jews of Poland, Rumania, Latvia, 1936, with the Dutch refugees manifesto by a Haifa Arab la- New York chapter of Mailamm, berg. J. Goldfarb, 11. Goodman, B. committee in Amsterdam, brings Lithuania, and other countries of J. Gorman. It. Greenberg, A. of which Rabbi Ira Eisenstein is Gorelick. bor union a ffiliated with the Greenspoon, J. liarwith. B. Heiman. A. Eastern Europe and aid in the the year's total so registered to Jewish Confederation of Labor chairman. Other members of the M. lierehmen. M. Modena..., William maintenance and extension of 1,110, according to a report re- Horwitz. D. lwry, E. Jack- musicians committee are John Hordes, denounced the renewed cam- ceived here and made public by n. B. aeobs, B Jakont, J. Kabob., trade training. paign of terror in the country- Barbirolli, Hans Kindler, Myra . Kaplan, B. Koplowitz. E. Koatt. We must support the chain of the American Jewish Joint Dis- Hess, Lawrence Tibbett, Arnold A. Kaplan, S. Kernel. 9. Kobeeker, M. side, stating that such riots tribution Committee, 7 Hanover hospitals, orphanages, religious and ore Kulloky, F. Lamde ri. Mri Schoenberg, Joseph Lhevinne and Kutioky, merely ruined the economic Levin, T. Levin. N. cultural Institutions, schools, child St., which aids the refugee work It. Lefka, Sol R. Levi Joseph Achron. Levio. B. Levine. S. LahowIts, L. Lipnik, well-being of the Arabs them- with funds. Lurie, Fred bfaldover, M. Maidover, care and medical aid organiza- selves. As a case in point, the This is the greatest number re- The principal speaker of the e. Maldover, Joel Mandel, F. Margolies,. tions in Central and Eastern manifesto mentioned the ex• bfatoff. A. Mo. M. Mendel non, Me- corded for any month during luncheon of the Ladies Auxil- mo, H. Ostrow, E. Phillips, J. PalM• Europe. ample of the town of Jaffa, iary of the Jewish National "We must help to continue and 1936. sky. J. Rabinowitz, H. Rott, L. Rubin, which has lost much of its 8. 8chnelder, M. Schwartz, J. Schwan. expand the work of the network Among the refugees were 44 Fund will be Mrs. Israel Gold- H. Steinman, S. shelter, to &Mosel, business as a seaport to the stein, nationally prominent as of more than 1,000 free and co- from Spain of whom 37 had to E. Stark, L. Tohin, I. Torrick, neighboring all-Jewish city of Warelmoky, B. Weiner, and J. o p e r a t i v e loan institutions be registered for relief. a speaker and leader in wom- Weleberg. and the Misers Beatrice Gold- Tel Aviv since the outbreak of During the same month of De- en's circles. She is the wife of through whose activities hundreds farb and Rae Goldfarb. riots last year. cember, 71 persons emigrated, ac- Dr. Israel Goldstein, president The luncheon is scheduled for of thousands of people are en- cording to the report. Of these direct result of the trade As a of the Jewish National Fund of abled to continue self-supporting 12:30 p. m. at the Shaarey Zedek and out the economic abyss of 24 went to the Argentine, 11 to pact entered into in December of America. New Zealand, 8 to Brazil, 5 to the 1935 by the Swiss Government Synagogue, on Wednesday, March beggary and destitution. • Mrs. Maxx Goldberg, Town- and the Jewish Agency for Pal- send 5-2879, urges that donors 3. A strictly kosher catered meal "These activities make up the United States, and small numbers estine, the amount of trade be- call her if they desire to have will be served. Mrs. Joshua Sper- structure of Jewish economic and to other countries including Eng- tween the two countries has ma- their savings boxes collected. ka is luncheon chairman. welfare service. Without such a land, France, Belgium and else- terially increased in the last year structure, the great bulk of the where. Mrs. I. Goodman, Townsend The report to the Joint Dis- thotid imports from other even The mining town of Broken 5,500,000 Jews in Poland, Ru- 6-3578, chairman of the souvenir countries into Palestine have de- booklet, will be glad to receive Hill, Australia, which has only 30 mania, Lithuania, Latvia, Austria, tribution Committee states that since the advent of the Hitler creased. Imports from Switzer- ads by phone. Assisting her are Jews, boasts the world's most iso- and other countries, are doomed land during 1936 amounted to 1,- Mrs. Max Hayman, chairman of lated synagogue ... And speaking more and more rapidly to physical regime in Germany, some 4567 refugees have been registered in 300,000 francs in 1926 as com- memorial ads, and Mrs. Harry of isolation, we hear there's only and spiritual destruction." pared to 1,575,000 francs in 1935; Meyer L. Prentis was electe d Holland and have emigrated to one Jew In Tahiti. Kraft, chairman of darling ads. and exports during 1936 were valued at 675,000 franca as com- pared to 398,000 francs in 1935. In answer to allegations that members of the Betarim (Young Revisionists) were not receiving immigration certificates, the Jew- ish Agency for Palestine emphat- ically denied that such is the case. With Health-Lite GI examined, gl fitted by registered specialists at • price yon can afford to pay. Eyes MURRAY'S 1119 GRISWOLD ST. sell to Mod% nr. Michigan Ave. Special Week-End Hates Washington's and Lincoln's Birthday at the COLONIAL HOTEL & Mineral Baths N New Toscaninl Orchestra to Play i in Palestine 31ILAN, Italy.—(WNS)—A large number of the celebrated I German musicians who have been ousted from the Reich because of race or religion are expected to become members of a new phil- harmonic orchestra which Arture Toscanini, celebrated maestro. has agreed to organize for radio broadcasting in the United States under, the auspices of the Radio Corporation of America. In mak- ing the announcement of the new orchestra, Mr. Toscanini and Sam- uel Chotzinoff, music critic of the New York Post and brother-in- law of Jascha Heifetz, who acted as intermediary for David Sarnoff, president of the It. C. A., made It clear that Toscanini would be free to select whatever musicians he wished and that he would be able to take the new orchestra to Palestine for an annual con- cert. It was also pointed out that although the new orchestra is to make its debut in December Tos- canini would conduct the Pales- tine Symphony Orchestra in Pal- estine in November as scheduled. MINSK MAZOWIECK1 Is • town In the district of Wereaw. The Jewish o fillio or population number. 900 about 60 per cent of the total popula- tion. The Jews of the town,ere chiefly tailors. hawker. market Mall keepers The boycott against and tradesmen. (CONCLUDED FROM PAGE 1) th eJewinh population Drought Jewish trade to • .tandstlit After the riots more than 1.000 zloty. sure rather than by any abstract relief In were distributed se emergency addition to clothing and other items Tory dogma of property rights. A repair Mop was set up In which 13 There was • time when business POMO Jews were employed to Mei , were men were unanimous in proclaim- the destroyed housed. Loans ( rooted for carrying through OWm ing that any sort of picketing of storee and workshop• About 11,000 was • violation of property rights. mot for thin potion were stotys A vomotional readjustment VoleCt I would not be surprised if the has bon begun. A Moemakera coopera- majority did not still feel that ilehed. Dahl*. and tive I. bolo eate ► workshbps for artisan. Sr. Mao being way, despite the fact that the set ult. courts have established the right In the meantime 106 families were establiabod alt corn chandlers. 31 as of peaceful picketing. This right tradesmen. 11 RIO shoe:platter., It as was gained because there was a tailor., 15 • butcher.. 11 as hawker. It as bilker. I as carriers. 4 to turner. definite social and economic pres- I as watchmaker. one as • moon and sure which could not be withstood 43 in verious craft. PRZYTYK Is • town In the dintrict even by the most conservative of Radom. The Jrwish population num- jurists. It was something the ber. 600 Damian. or about 50 Per rent of the total town imputetIon. Moot of same force which caused the lat- the heads of the families are crafts- est favorable decision with re- men. among them being 10 tailor. and gard to the validity of the New ehoemaker. About 5.300 Mot), (the zloty is worth York unemployment law. •shout 30 cents U. 8. A. currency) were From the ethical standpoint, soul in emergency relief to Przytyk •fter the anti-Semitic disorders, follow- there enters the old question of ing which work was begun In reistir. the comparative emphasis of. hu- log the demoilithed houses and work- tholes New industrial outlet. were cre- man rights over against property •ted, ea sie to Moore Independence from rights. The entire struggle of the local market and the surrounding non-Jewish population. Workehops were the human race from bondage to- set up for 33 families 00 milliner., 11 ward freedom has been a constant wore otebilithed In ORO. •sod 11 in twittery production. Loot term tired LIP battling against vested interests. were further granted to help 13 families When people started to protest engaged In shoemaking, II engaged as tradesmen, IC We tailors. 11 as butcher.. against the so-called divine right 15 as •..metro/les, 10 a w eeeee 1 as of and to insist on some carriers, 7 IS furriers, 1 go c•rpenter. participation In government the Three famine. wee* given the OW - lolly to .11 their product. In other chief attack on the liberal forces r•rket• than the local ones, thus avoid- was that they were intruding on Ina boycott action, The directors of • large cloth factory wen Mao prevailed certain property rights which • to provide .. home work' for 15 were vested in the kingship. When women, and special instruetors ars now enraged to Mach the population new the struggle took place to over- crafts—to Mhos. who ore workless. throw the feudal system and to ZAGOROW I. ■ little town in the release the great masses of the dletrict of Lads with • Jewish Popula- tion of 200 familio, the majority of people from serfdom, the opposi- whom are tradomen, tailor• and shoe- tion stated that this movement maker. Th• plight of the Jaw. In this town was such that • complete at...- was an interference with the prop- Goo! readjuntment of all famille• woe erty rights of the overlords. urgently needed. The readjustment ef- When the first efforts were made fort 'wooded In settles up 17 fernlike. as shopkeepers. IS as hawkers. 11 a. at labor organization and collec- t•Ilorn $ a. dairymen, I to kniitind tive bargaining, the cry was hn- production, I In sandal making. of LOCAL JEWISH NATIONAL FUND EVENT WILL AID THE OSSIP GABRILOWITSCH MEMORIAL GROVE IN PALESTINE 8 Revisionists to Be Tried for Raid on Palestine Office WARSAW. — (WNS) — Eight of the 42 Revisionists arrested after a gang of 100 armed Jabs- tinsky followers invaded the Pal- estine Immigration Bureau's of- fire here and wrecked the place will be tried for their hoodlum- ism. The others have been re- leased. It is understood that the accused Revisionists will predicate their defense on the plea that they were out to break • Com- munist cell which had its head- quarters in the bureau. A com- plete check of the damage done reveals that the Revisionists de- stroyed the list of names contain- ing the membership rolls of the Polish chalutzim organization. Alarmed by the resentment their act has created in all Jewish quarters, the Revisionists a r e blaming the raid on Abe Achi- meier, militant Revisionist chief- tain. REST — RELAX Dietary Laws Open All Year Round Management: Max Elkin — Albert Grossman various countries in all parts of the world. A special grant from the Jew- ish Joint Distribution Committee has aided 10 German students in the Yeshiva Kneseth Ben Isaac, Kamieniec-Lit., Poland, it was an- nounced by Joseph C. Hyman, ex- ecutive director. A monument to Belgium's Jew- ish World War hero, General Bernheim, has been erected in the main square of Brussels. Real Puzzlest..Puzzlesthat will ChallengeyourWits! $ 100,00 NO0 1st PRIZE IN CONTEST OF SKILL! to-win-$100,000.00? Or $30,000.00? Or IN $10,000.00? Or any one of 1,000 big cash prizes? WTANT THIS IS A SAMPLE PUZZLE Get the Official Puzzles FREE! 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Or, if your dealer's sup- ply is exhausted, mail the coupon below. Get started now! Win $100,000.00 First Prize. Czech Government to Aid Hebrew Schools medistely set up which we still PRAGUE. — (WNS) — Ex- tippet maker. 1 as • cotton winder, 1 In cement production. I its • earrier. 1 hear reverberating: "Nobody is tension of government financial o a ohoemeker and I as • fuel stone to tell me how to run my aid to the Tarbuth or Hebrew otomato, TRINIKOLAST • small tom is the business." schools maintained by the Jewish diatrIct of Czenotakowa. Th. Jewish Social Conscience community was promised to a population roolet• of 74 fsmille. 47 of whom were hawker. 11 •rtieens and Jewish delegation by Minister of The ethical issue in the sit- 11 Oopkopers. The tok of readied- ment with • view to making the Jew- down concerns itself with the Education Francke. ish popelation independentof the sur- rounding pezontry, molted in the right of an employee to his job. setting OP •f If famine. a. bristle According to the average stand- Says Bible Predicts Jews and &sort.... 1 In hosiery production. a$ British Will End Power of ard of wages in industry today, dairymen. 1 In brush production, 1 OO Negative Nations practically every working family motors. NEW YORK. — (WNS)—The ODRZYWOL Is a little town In the is only • few days removed from district of Opoceno. having • Jewieh destruction of the British Empire population of II Menthe• entered a. starvation. We must therefore artisan.. Mottkopeo and dealer. in ask ourselves whether the right at the hands of Germany, the farm produrts. (ten again the prown recognition by the British that M readlustment wan made to TIIIIrnlse of hiring and firing, at a time the oronomie dependoco of the Jeere when jobs are at a premium. can they are the Lost Tribes of Israel, upon the surrounding non-Jewieh popula- possibly be construed to be sur- a reunion and the beginning of a tion Several workshops for hosiery tad new era of peace and prosperity millinery were ot•blleh•d. • w I nr rounded by such absolutistic and machine. were purch•sed and given to unassailable property preroga- in the world under a universal the families concerned who will P•1' government ruled over by El for them Is south ladAlimente ever • tives that it can literally place per1.4 K yenta A elimerial Inetructor woe within the hands of an. employer Shaddai after the conquering &mneed le teach the now crafts- (earth the power of life and death over powers of Europe under German and horseswere benefit for oilier 1• amiable them to Nor. rod. to the men who work for him. No. leadership have been frustrated Warsaw for 011 le. A Mettle, peony wu social conscience will grant any in their attempts to destroy the provided with delete. and fend. Owe granted them far the porch•s/. of cattle man such a right. By the same Jews and other Israelites in the sared fodder As a result of the read- token, the worker has certain Holy Land by a world-wide earth- )ustmot effert• II familia. were &date are the events predicted to Head M the hosiery prodotion. 3 in rights in his job. If he feels that quake minlnery tvedsmioe. •s And collective bargaining through a happen within the next 20 years rar•lory. 1. additioa t ramble. national labor union Is necessary by the Society of the Bible in the Were tatehliehed •e .hoernither. tu Hands of Its Creators. tenor. / se botcher. 1 • carpenter. for the preservation of those 1 s• • homemaker. and ens to a weaver. Founded by Moses Cuibory, a definitely entitled to Thew fawn** were sires the poselhility rights, he IS Talmudic scholar now resis'nt in pursue such orderly methods as M ...Pew their preduet• I. ether Milo In •Mini. Oman.. of trade/nos and may force the employer to meet Palestine, who is editing a ;sew new ef market atoll boon were enabled on his alleged dis- Bible based e• term ma their week In nelehborine with his representatives in collec- covery of a hitherto secret code markets Four fmnillee were entelowd. tive bargaining. who the (oral miller was ere. Mktg. interpreting a large part of the An employer can no longer take Mt foto In opair their Immo IfLWOW hi • MB* town In the dim the attitude that if a man does Old Testament, the society has trlet (Mom.. with • Jewish ToPe- not want to work at a certain as Its American representative /Ohm ef 7. femme. Moot. ehomakoe David Horowitz. In explaining the dowoomp.o. toddler. After the ante wage, he can go elsewhere. The OWN. onlreok Inlet fsmtltes Vero ever-increasing complexity of our society's prophecies Mr. Horowitz 8 ► 0 to ersurn 1e tear wokowo but said that "the human race, as it of or-emoting 0.• Om to modern economic society makes now he •• a Is • famine. were the relationship of employer and is today, can be traced to three set•tet•ete4 holoy and In ...Moo laborer a much more involved one. distinct sources, involving Posi- omMotte.- ••• merlon. TeeAlltiee ...toe memo. ermete4 to oil Certain essential methods of dem- tive, Negative and Neutral pow- ea,• le dtotant Meal ocratic dealing, as are represent- ers. The first two have been in rierowlore 1. e Pole too In the conflict since the beginning of At et re. at nemootor. TO loam% woo- ed by national unions. become vi- Mite. ote gee tenet.% fetetIte. Wee ebOry tal to the preservation of democ- time, and in our generation are hewn,* drAoltow wtorekop... arselo- decreed to come to a final and when economics are nem owe weemaNs... ...A to he ow - racy In an 04.4 bo • bore yet of atm rowelatio rather than politics is the funda- decisive clash." Mar ewe ...woo gag.. I No Ogneeler• mental emphasis. Unless those M the re.steeenteM. IS Psentthee demands are heeded by industry, Ea jay DOUBLE • MELLOW Old • 0.$ •. e.-'.hoe It o e•emeiirsteu • te wonsolo M ay. kilns coLli Cliarottot visit our dhow political democracy is doomed. Mount Clemens, Michigan going t (Establisher . 1 4.141427 761 1) 1 Makers of This Puzzle Represents a Familiar Name. You Solve the Puzzle by Picking the Correct Name from the List Below: John Adams Elmer Gantry John Hancock Ponce de Leon no above pads Is Not latio4od Is tie coatest. It Is a specimen *sly. Double-Mellow Old Gold Cigarettes GET THE OFFICIAL PUZZLES FREE AT ANY STORE WHERE CIGARETTES ARE SOLD. 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