i
r_pgria.gr,kwisnalRoxicts)

...a

BLASTS IDEA JEWS
AS UNIT FOSTERED
REVOLT OF SOVIET

(CONCLUDED CROW PAGE 1)

tributed a good deal to the ewe-
cess of the revolution, and many
Jews have climbed to the top
rungs of the Soviet bureauracy.
But to deduce from these facts,
as some observers have endeav-
ored to do, that the Russian revo-
lution was the result of a 'Jewish
plot' is to overlook many other
relevant facts in the situation."
Mr. Chamberlain then presents
the other side of the story-
Jews in exile, in concentration
camps, in prison. "The Jewish
shopkeepers," says Mr. Cham-
berlain, "was expropriated along
with his Gentile competitor; and
42 per cent of the Russian Jews
before the revolution were en•
gaged in trade and commerce."
Yagoda, Jewish head of the
secret police, would like nothing
better than to lay hands on his
co-racialist, Leon Trotzky, says
Mr, Chamberlain. Further, "the
grand inquisitor of the Commun-
ist party, Emilian Yaroslaysky,
whose real name is Gobelman,
and whose task as the head of
the control commission of the
party is to expel dangerous think-
ers as fast as they arise, has been
no easier on the Trotzkyist or
other heretic merely because he
happened to be a fellow-Jew."
Disposition to Extremism
"In short," concludes the wri-
ter, "there has been no identity
of fate for all Russian Jews, and
the question as to what 'the
Jews' are doing in the Soviet
Union would require as many an-
swers as there are types of Jews."
Mr. Chamberlain believes that
the high percentage of Jews
among revolutionary leaders is
traceable to the predisposition of
the Jewish younger generation
to extremism, as the result of the
Tsarist policy of systematic race
discrimination. Mr. Chamberlain
does not find it surprising that
"the result of this policy was to
inspire in many younger Jews a
sentiment of fierce revolutionism,
in which there was an element,
conscious, or unconscious, of ra-
cial revenge."
Mr. Chamberlain finds that the
pronounced predominance of Jews
in some branches of the present
Soviet state service is partly due
to the fact that the revolution
created a vacuum In Russian of-
ficialdom, and partly due to the
fact that while Jews did not hold
high office In Tsarist times, they
did constitute a large number of
Russia's lawyers, journalists, phy-
sicians and other professional
people. The writer further ex-
plains that generations of per-
secution had made the Jews more
adaptable to whatever circum-
stances were imposed on them,
and thus, when the revolution
became an accomplished fact,
their suppleness enabled them to
adapt themselves to the new or-
der in Russia, and thus paved the
way for progress upward through
the ranks,
"Finally," writes Mr. Cham-
berlain, "a factor that made it
much easier for a Jew, even
though he was neither a revolu-

tionary of long standing nor a
manual worker, to throw his lot
in with the Soviet regime, was
the racial hatred which charact-
erized the civil war. The anti-
Bolshevik forces, especially in
South Russia, were ferociously
anti-Semitic."
Of the future of Jews in Rus-
sia, Mr. Chamberlain thinks it
possible that, in view of the abo-
lition of race discrimination un-
der the Soviet regime, they will
always play a part in public life
suited to their natural gifts and
capacities, "At the same time,"
he says, "as the Russian masses
become more educated and train-
ed and as the peculiar circum-
stances of the first years of the
revolution change, it is likely that
the extremely high proportion of
Jews employed in some depart-
ments will tend to diminish."
In conclusion, Mr. Chamber-
observes: "The revolution, while
with one hand it destroyed the
Jewish trader and business man,
with the other opened up possi-
bilities of advancement for other
types of Jews. But the idea that
'the Jews' acting as a solid unit,
'made' the revolution is nonsense;
and the sooner it is relegated to
the exploded myths of history,
the better."

Priest Denounces Fascists for
Seeking Catholic Support for
Anti•Jewish March
LONDON (N C J C) - British
fascists were sharply rebuked by
a Catholic priest in the East End
of London, a section largely
populated by Jews, in a reply to
an attempt to win the favor of
the priest for a march through the
East End. The priest, Canon
Timothy Ring, long known as a
friend of the Jews In the East
End, rebuffed the fascists in re-
plying to a letter from their
propaganda administrator.
The British Union of Fascists,
planning a march through the
East End, had written to Canon
Ring, and other Catholic priests,
calling attention to the fact that
the fascists had postponed a par-
ade so as not to interfere with
a religious street procession.
Canon Ring replied that he had
already heard about the march
and that he intended to denoonce
from the pulpit "any men calling
themselves Catholics" who should
take part in it. Recalling several
such processions in the same dis-
trict, he declared that such a
march would be a public menace
to the peace of the district.
"I bear grateful witness to the
kindness . and helpfulness of my
Jewish neighbors," he said, "and
I am annoyed at the attacks on
them by political tramps and
strangers to the locality. I; is
an outrage on the church to as-
sociate with it the repulsive isms
of fellatio champions, or to imply
that it has any sympathy for race
hatred."

Dreyfuss Elected
To French Senate

PARIS.-(WNS)- Louis Drey-
fuss, eminent Jewish banker and
sportsman, ha abeen elected to the
French senate.

Try Stroh's
Bohemian Boer today.

You'll like the delicious,
smooth, satisfying flavor.
Stroh's Beer is Fire Brewed.

A State Without Territory

3,000 square miles in size. Compared with this
piece of land are the following:

fate

Area to 2101. Mil .

Rhode bland

Population

Delaware

1.248
2,310

687,491
218,330

Connecticut

4.963

1,606,903

New Jersey

8,124

4,041,334

blawschowelt•

11,248

4,249,814

New RampsIdee

9.341

463,293

Vermont

9,51R

339,611

The states with the smallest areas were select-
ed in order to show the divergence in population
figures. It is Important to note that the states
with the largest populatiorts in this group have
become highly industrialized centers in the midst
of wealthy sister states upon which they can
draw for their farming and other necessities. The
District of Columbia, with an area of 70 square
miles, can accomodate its population of clone
to 600,000 because it is not dependent upon its
own population for agricultural development. If
Jews, however, are to make a • similar sardine
box of Palestine, the inhabitants and their
"state" would be smothered. •
There are • number of countries comparisons
with whose areas and population figures present
an even more interesting contrast. In Chile, for
example, on 285,133 square miles of territory,
there reside only 4,433,000 people-less than a
third the entire Jewish people of the world. (We
are offered a piece of land exactly 1 per cent
the size of Chile!) Denmark, possessing 16,586
square miles of land, has a population of only
3,560,000, a little more than one-fifth of the
world Jewish population. The whole of Ireland
has a population of 4,251,000 on 31,876 square
miles of land.
We could go on referring to dozens of other
countries possessing large tracts of land and
possessing comparatively small populations. But
the Jewish people, hounded, persecuted, driven
from everywhere, is told that it must stifle its
rights and most compress its unhappily op-
pressed hordes into a strip of land where they
can have hardly more than elbow room.
Lord Balfour must have turned over in his
grave a thousand times at the sound of the tear-
ing into shreds of his Declaration which was
once misjudged to be an historic document!
•

We Are Unjustly Dealt With

We are most unjustly dealt with not only by
the British but by many others who call them-
selves our friends. There are enemies within Jew-
ish ranks who yield too readily to the great be-
trayal by advocating acceptance of the Royal Com-
mission's proposals. We are also unjustly dealt
with by the news agencies in their analyses of the
Palestine situation. The U. P., for instance, in its
cable from Jerusalem speaks of giving "one-third
of Palestine to the Jews and two-thirds to their
Moslem enemies." Reference to the Moslems as
our "enemies" it not only a grave error, it is a
grave injusticd. Nowhere 13 there to be found a
Jewish expression of enmity to the Moslems. We
have bargained for an opportunity to meet with
the Arabs for round table discussions in the hope
of arriving at peace. It is only a handful of Arab
agitators who have been arousing the Palestine
Arabs to riot and to plunder. We have had innu-
merable proofs of Arab expressions of friendships
-and we know of dozens of friendly Arabs, many
of them heads of city governments, who fell vic-
tims at the hands of Arab assassins because they
dared to advocate a policy of peace and of friend-
ship with the Jews. The Royal Commission report,
in its citation of Arab terrorism, on page 135, de-
clares: "The novelty in the present situation is
attacks by Arabs on Arabs. For an Arab to be
suspected of a lukewarm adherence to the do-
tionalist cause is to invite a visit from a body of
gunmen.'"
It is also painful to read that a man as
fair-minded as W. K. Kelsey, "The Commentator"
of the Detroit News, should make such a rash
statement as: "It has been shown that the Jews
and Arabs are unable to live together in peace."
The contrary is true. We have, and we shall con-
tinue to live in peace with the Arabs. The new
Royal Commission plan, in all its unfairness, ap-
parently hopes to accomplish the end of assuring
eventual peace between the two kindred peoples.
We maintain that if the Royal Commission had'
given the Jews the chance we pleaded for-the
opportunity for a round table discussion with the
Arabs-we would have attained more than a sem-
blance of peace and would have avoided the neces-

site of setting up stupid boundary lines between a
sham Jewish state and another vast Arab terri-
tory which should, because of historic connections,
be inhabited by Jews.
•

Need for Some Other Territory

We are indebted to Mr. Kelsey for the following
very pointed paragraph which touches an impel'.
tent angle in the Jewish problem:

The Commentator womellmee wonders, hours., why

the British Government dues not net apart tome other
...ion of the stoot emPlre no a home-land for Sewn.
There mind be s•M numbers who would be tied to m -

eek, ether land than that which Is within a dare
Journey of Jeroboam. Wouldn't the Jeolsh agricultur-
ist. be just a happy It they were given land In

Ithodeola? Or would 31r. Chamberlain tome to ark
Mussolkal's permission emit

Mr. Kelsey might as well address this question
to the world at large, to Christendom, to the great
powers who will not tolerate the presence of the
Jews in their midst and at the same time will do
nothing to help create a home for millions who
are being crucified in Germany, in Rumania, in
Poland, in the Orient and even in some democratic
countries. If the United States were to net aside
a portion of Texas for Jewish colonization our
problem would solved, Texas, or Rhodesia, or Peru,
or Anatolia can never take the place of Palestine
which will always remain the symbol of 5,000
years of Jewish existence. But a territory for the
settlement of Jews will at least save Jewish bodies
and may heal the seriously wounded Jewish souls,
•

Quoting Israel Zangwill

Zionists-all Jews, for that matter-must not
become discouraged by the Royal Commission's
report. We are hurt and humiliated, but by no
means defeated. Perhaps the battle for our na-
tional rights has only just begun.
More than 30 years ago Israel Z a n g w ill
scored an interesting point about Jewish preserv-
ation: "A people that has learned to live without
a country is unconquerable. Never will the com-
bined peoples break into an attack upon the Jews.
There are always plenty of other Jews elsewhere,
vigorous and prolific. Here, indeed, is the secret
of immortality,"
Jewry and Palestine are older than the British
and the Mandate. Therefore every new obstacle
in the path of Jewish national rebirth is not an-
other defeat but is just a new challenge which
we shall meet with dignity and with honor. Be-
cause we are an unconquerable and an undying
people, we reject any offer of a pittance that is
thrown out by a richspower as if we were beg-
gars. That which Zangwill called the secret of
our immortality will also prove the secret of our
eventual triumph.
•

We Want Peace With Arabs

For the sake of the record, let it be known
once again that we favor peace with the Arabs.
Ameen Rihani, who has been touring this coun-
try for years, adding fuel to the fires of distrust
and condoning murder by his Arab co-nationals,
now tells us that he favors peace between Arabs
and Jews in order to defeat the British proposals
for partition. Where was Mr. Rihani a year ago,
or during the 1929 outrages? Then, as only
recently, instead of condenining murder from
ambush by Arabs he encouraged the disturbances
by failing to join in the pleas made by Dr. Chaim
Weizmahn and other Jewish leaders for a peace-
ful round table conference of Jews and Arabs in
an effort to reach an amicable solution to the
problem.
Nevertheless, we endorse Mr. Rihani's plea-
with the hope that those who previously incited
to riot may now be trusted to help create peace
in a troubled Ind.
•

Our Answer Is NO!

In the meantinle the answer of the united Jew-
ish communities throughout the world to Eng-
land's proposals Must be: NO! We cannot accept
what has been offered us. We have waited for
2,000 years for an opportunity to create an hon-
orable Jewish existence. We can afford to wait
a while longer. For the sake of a sham state
we must not permit England to break a pledge
that has been endorsed by more than 50 nations
of the world-including the United States. We
have had enough false Messiahs. We shall not
permit the making of a new Golem to smash our
hopes and to break the Jewish people's back
which had only just begun to straighten and to
stand erect.

JEWISH STATE IN PALESTINE

enosa

PAGE ONE)

eon, amend. ed sovereign end indepen-
dent Ando and Jeoish State. Mora

Interlude.. for the Protect , . or minor, '
review of the history of Palestine tie. In tsoch Mute sod military MIIITH-
lions denting with lite maintenance of
during the past 4,000 years and nalel, military and air force., the us -
and n. of ports, nods and rail.
tracing Jewish and Arab connec- her'.
..y• and the security of the Mosul oil
tions with the land since 2,000 B. pipeline.
3. Great Britain Is to ondertake to up.
C. E., the report analyzes Zionism, pert
an) re m.. for adm1.1. to the
of Nation. by the Jewish and
Arab nationalism and their politi- Leanne
Ando state.
cal relationship without Injecting
4. A new mandate Is to be framed to
any British point of view into these ester.. the holy places of Chrlellsos,
Jew. and Ana.. 'Ding Eoglend re-
problems. The only case the report sponsibility for their Protercl. sod con .
tries to build up for Great Britain tr. tar Jerusalem, Nazareth and Beth-
lehem through the establishment of an
is one of political helplessness to recta. in sold. oil peoples outdd bale
deal fairly with Jews and Arabs emu) rights.
n. The divisionof Poleoline nill
under the structure of the present
thenature/ principle. for the estoh-
Mandate. The Royal Commission lIstoment of a frontier eeparatinr the
frankly concludes that the Balfour arra wherein Jews have enquired land
and Nettled from the arras wholly or
Declaration was a mistake because mainly occupied by Arabs.
of Great Britain's committments
6. A notch fine of demarcation Is get-
to the Arabs. The conclusions that titled Marc. the Jeloish anal Anth
but the altlointmeot of • from -
the members of the Royal Commis- Nate.,
Wee rem ,Isla I prolmsed for settling
sion draw in their unanimous re- the perch. frontier.
7. The minted Iowa of TilorciAs. bated,
port are, in effect, that palliative Half*
oral Aere will he tempo-oat, un-
measures will not permanently der a British mw ate for the mot,-
of the minority population; Jaffa
pacify Jews or Arabs and that the Wm
will tarot part of the Arab Mate, but •
partition plan is the only solution mender front Jaffa to Jentealem Is to
for a situation created by the he administered under • British non.
date.
promises of England to Jews and
a. Amens 10 Jaffa foe commercial por-
and
r...,t; J oe , so r
t. jeelLty nn., Mmg for
Arabs during the world war.
A great portion of the report is the Annslate and ;lairs will he' nerco
taken up by a justification of its Bated olth the Jeau while the An d,
hale similar treatiee prooldho for
final recommendations. The survey wIll
free Ipotesi' of weeds our the rallony
of the growth of Zionism and Arab beteeen Ilse Jewish Nate and the E./op-
nationalism is submitted as a back- tion Crueller.
9. An eneita In the Norland reflon
ground to the series of riots which of the Gulf of Akatesoill loe retained tin-
rocked Palestine in the last 10 der the admInietr•tion of England. hat
IM Ara. will hare • treaty allowing
years. There is little doubt that for the transport of goods between Ihe
the report was written with a view Jeolsh sl•te ond this mato.
lg. rye Jeoldt state Amid pay • sub-
to answering in advance objections vention
to the Ando Mate when parti-
by Jewish and Arab nationalists tion, Is effected henna. the Ando ...aid
otherwise be aide to taint.. their
who see in partition a deathblow not
mobile isersiees no the high level to
to their maximalist aspirations. It chich they nee anni cos the nutit of
ren.e, %Idle Parliament shanld
is characteristic of British diplo- Jewish
nuke • anon( of 1116,084.006 In the
macy that the report praises the AM late.
II. Is the period M traneitien before
champions of Zionism for their
lomoomes effective the molding
view "that a Jew released from an partition
Mandate Mould cootie. 11 be the gov-
anti-Jewish environment and re- erning hoimment.
Daring this transition period the
stored to Palestine would not only penile.
of land by Jews within the
feel free as he has never felt be- preircied Antb stalc or hy Amt. in the
fore but would also acquire a new proircted Jew' state should be pro-
hibited. Them shoold toter ritorial
self-confidence, a new zest In liv- restricli. on Jewish Demigod.. olth
ing, from his consciouness that he no Jewish insmitnotion into the Aro),
and the ...lame of Jewish bemire,.
was engaged in a great construc- area,
thoe I. be modeled M the economic
tive task." The Arab nationalists ehomPtire moronity of Inkiest!. min.
Arab and Jewish representation.
are told that Arab nationalism O.
hat If either Fart, Wotan to ...me the
"is inextricably interwoven with rooncil either mallow at percent
17. Stem Sr. to be Mk. foe no en-
antagonism to the Jews and that is close.
of howl and
pooundaot. for
why it is difficult to be an Arab framfeerion Andn owner. of Mod In the
patriot and not to hate the Jews." Jewish Oat* and vice soma.
14. Arroomeats ore to be drool OP
PARTITION
Mims. the Arsh and Jewish *Owes re-
grarding
RECOMMENDATIONS
nom% oofitoolity.
and Important Indattial tonne.
Stripped of its diplomatic lan- service
Oen. *he. renters am Is be tmasferred
guage, the commission report very hem ewe Ord• te another.
13. The nonna•rie..4 the Jewish erste
clearly enumerates 16 fundamental MII
monprire the whole of Galilee, up-
points under which the proposed per nark Mar, the whole of En.k
the greater part of It. Bel..w arca
partition plan would be carried rm.,
•ml the tootln easel.1 pests fru. RNA
nut. These points are:
el Naito. In the North In Beerc•via In

mr i

WoPs,0,, 4

4 .

SIGMUND FREUD
Rainbow, DeMolay GEORGE GERSHWIN
CALLED BY DEATH
SERIOUSLY ILL,
Campfire July 18

(CONCLUDED FROM PAOE ONE)

(CONCLUDED PROM PACE ONES

(CONCLUDED

ty

July 1. 6, 1937

THE LEGAL CHRONICLE

1. Terminal.. of the per... Weahore the alb. Tbe wort., bowler at the
and Its replarmae. tor • sm., ugh. rewhoto eisi• will fellow the
median
In ercordasser oith the preetelowt rel boggier
Palestine •I0og tM ...hem
la Ino .4 9rcia.
►aomboy el leharca Si,.,,, the Motif,.eo.
2. Nemettallea of Hoeft, of altI•nee moo. le theta. The freetlee motions..
by Gad finals with Trona).P.. sod Mown the me.. loondsry of arc.
repensesttativm of the Arabs . the env Ogee Ike re.. Rive, men the ug
h...•4 with
•••••
1••
the ether. the. teratIes to pee.. fee 1"."•^'k
t• Tor
• ••4•
bora of PO4...
...dam

at sotsansassees se woes we

ern Mr. of Emek Jecreel to Megiddo,
then run. south •dory' the edge of the
coastal 'loin In the foothilin, with .
are excluding lite Arab city of Tab
Lamm. Jewish settlements In Trans-
Jo rdan, namely the two Delronlog. Orc
Nit handm •nd ethers, .111 be In.
eluded In Ii, Arsh slate. The Intportant
horbor oily of Malta will helong to the
Jexish etate, The Montt of bated. Acre
and Morias out al. he included In
the JesIsh elate enclosed by these
boundaries.
In. The new British mandate area
olil Include a corridor from Jerusalem
to Jaffa. towering the arca beloncn the
Jaffa road to m Jerusalem onol the
Jemuleen-Jaffa r•I I way. Jenualem.
Bethlehem and bar►reth no w II no the
Arab tonne of 1.11.1.1 and 'Iamb. .111 be
included under this mandate. Part of
the Nene, region !ordering o. the Calf
of Akoho .111 shoo be under ItAllelt
adminiotration. The rest of the country,
together with Tr...Jordan, all farm the
Amb stole,

In contrast to the partition rec-
ommendations, the commission's re-
port submits palliative measures to
remedy the present state of affairs
under the existing mandate. Among
the most important of these are:

1. Preelamation of martial law and
disarming of Jews and Arabs In the
meet of new disturbance.
t. Prohibitionof land transfers to
Jews In any stated area and the onus,
alion of rights of Arab tenants and col-
Orators In the event of further land
wales by Ando to Jew's,
3. Restriction of volume of Jewish Im-
migration In the het Doane. to the
rconomie M000rpthe minority of Pales-
tne- hat 1110,sh;:4,1,11,„

Immigration of all eategorim:lhe high
Imp In be nod for the next Co. years

4. Area rtrHne napitalist Immigrants
Pesreoint 110.000, oho most prove that
there In room fro the non., for mem-
.), of profeselons, trede and losInese.
6. Estwhilshment of an Arah Agency
to counterbalance the Jewish Are.Y.
e. No ettemOt should be made to re.
vire pmpowol legislative council, loot en.
lercement of the sdoleor, nooneii a,
midair,. of unofficial member.
recom-
mended.
7. Ad option of a more rigor.* arc.
ordnnce.
i a
R. More mongol .1,Mo of civil serv-
im a well as administrstlre and fiscal
reforms, Inflecting onnotheile remade.
ll. for a substantial tern to Paleoline,
nrothening of localcouncils and wtep-
t10.1 of n em.ge municipalities ordinance.

his first musical comedy commis-
sion. The result was the 1919 hit,
"La La Lucille." This triumph was
followed by innumerable tethers,
among the best known of which
were "Lady Be Good," "Tip Toes,"
"Song of the Flame," "Strike Up
the Band", "Girl Crazy," "Of Thee
I Sing" and "Let 'Em'Eat Cake."
Although most of his composi-
tions were in the field of popular
music where his musical comedy
and dance tunes made him su-
preme, Gershwin was also the corn-
poser of the immortal "Rhapsody
in Blue" composition for piano and
orchestra, which was first heard in
1924 in a concert by Paul White-
man's band. Five years ago he
again stirred the musical world
with "An American in Paris," a
brilliant orchestral piece first per-
formed by the Philharmonic Sym-
phony Orchestra under the direc-
tion of Walter Damrosch. His
greatest musical work was the
opera, "Porgy and Bess," which
cieated a sensation when first pro-
estine. The text of this conclusion duced in Boston in 1935. In recent
months he had been working on a
follows:
"Considering the attitude which both new musical comedy in addition to
the Arab and the Jeolsh reprosentailves doing songs for a musical picture.
adopted to riling evidence, therollindo-
He had five of the latter finished
ohm think It Improbable that either
party oat be eatisfled at find sight olth when he suffered a brain tumor,
the ProPmols sUirmilled for the ealool-

Rainbow girls of Purity Chapter
No. 12, and members of Perfection
Dehloley, will gather around a
campfire Sunday night and cement
their friendship with wienies and
marehmellows. The hay truck will
pick up the members at the home
of Virginia Lichtenstein, 2446
Clairmount, at 5:30 p. m, on July
18.
Miss Rose Freedman was initi-
ated Friday night, at the Masonic
Home in Dearborn, by the Grand
Assembly officers. Mrs. Hattie
Weiss, mother advisor, accom-
panied the representatives of
Purity.
Initiation of prospective mem-
bers has been postponed until Aug-
ust. Mrs. Eva Mann, acting treas-
uerr, will be hostess at an ice
cream social to be held Aug. 10. •
Helen Katz and Goldie Taff, co-
chairmen of the baseball party,
urge volunteers to call Tyler
6-1971 as soon as possible.

own' of their rhal flail.. 5, , , 'million
mean. that neither will gel nil It smote.
It means that the Ansib, must e.t.d....re
In the cielesion from their emereigntY
of • Piece of lercitta, long oectuded and
once ruled by them. It moons that the
Jew. Mot be content nith less than the
land of Ismel the) onee
on ruled and have
hoped to rule gal But it seeing pox.
able thot on reflection both parties .111
come to realise that the drool... of
partition are o by
, Its man-
tares. tor, If It offers neither lode ail
It wants, It offers each ohal 11 anta
Most, namely, freedom and .nurity.
"The athantares to the *nibs or far-
tillon on the line, a have proposed utay
be Yuntotarlzeda» folloom
"IL Theyobtain their national inde-
pendence and can cooperate on An equal
footing 'Oh II.e Ando of the neighbor-
ing (melet.; In the rouse - 0f Arab unity
and progress.
"2. They are finally delivered from the
fear of being ...wooed. by the Jew•
and from the posibilit) of Oilman. sub-
jection to Jeosish rule.
"3. In particular, the final limitedon
of the Jewish National Hon. within
a fired frontier and the enactment of
a new mandate for the protection of the
holy Phooey solemody guaranteed by the
tongue of Nation. re ttttt tem ail anxiety
imt the holy plow. should oar tome
under Jeolsh control.
"4. As . set-off to the lose of territory
the Arolos regard no theirs, the Ando
stateoill event", • sublentlon from the
Jeoloph Mate. IV will atom. In oleos of the
bankoaninem of Transjortlan, obtain a
grant of 5'2000,000 from the Britinh
Treeserli and, If an &cerement eon be
Marked as to the exchange of land and
plopulatIon, a further grunt .111 be mode
tot the coMeesien, Ike far no ma, prole
possible, of uneuillontrie laird In the
Ando stele Into produetive land from
ohich the .1110110r. and the stale alike
,,ill profit.
The salient.. of partition to the
oleos may he summarized es follows:
"I. Partition maw, the establishment
of the Jeoish Notional Mane and re-
ileoes It from the Possibilitr td It. being
suidrited In the future to Arab nde.
"2. Partition enables the Jews In the
fullest wine to toil their national home
their oat: for Ittomer. It lotto • Jew-
ish state. II. citizens .111 I. able to
ntInolt ninny Jew. Into It as 0.7
themseirce believe tan be emoted. They
.111 attain the primary objection tot
Itom-to Jewish natl., planted In Pales-
tine. gloing its nationals the some Blatt.
in the world no other natione rise theirs.
They wild cmse at 1511 to It' s a 'minority
life.'
To both Ara. and Jews partition
offers a prospect-and there Is none In
Soy ether neNey - of obtaining the In.
estImahle boonof peace. It is sorely
.00h some nominee on both sides It the
quarrel Odell the mandate started
could be muted ,iii Ito termination. It
Is not n mitas or old-standing feed.
The Arabs throughout Woelr history have
nor only been free /non anti-Jewish
sentiment but love also shown that the
ephit ,f compromise Is deeply rooted In
their life. Co.idering .hat the eon.
elbility of findingn refuge In Palestine
means to many thonunda of suffering
Jew., la the 10116 oermioned by parli•
lion. great as It Wel11.1 he.more Bon
Andy generosity can bear? In this, to In
pm much elta eenneeted .Ilk Palestine,
II Is not only the peoples of But coon.
try oho have to he considered. The
Jealsb pnoblem Is not the least or the
many problems ohleh are disturb!. In-
ternathonal relation. at thie cativo! time
end obstructing the path to Pe., and
prosperity. If th e Arabs at MM. torc h
ace eollid help to stolle that problem .
they would morn the gratitude not of
the Jens alone but of all the western
world.
"There was • time .hen And, stale.
toe. OereOinion to concede 11110 Pal-
estine to the Jean, preohled tut the
rest of Arab Asia are free. That COn•
dition 0. not MIMI. then• but it Is
en lite eve of fultilimerd now. In peas
than three seers* lime all the wide Ara/,
area outside Palestine between the Mol•
Itrerallevin and the Indian Ocean win he
independent, and. If partition Is adoeted,
the greeter tort of Palestine oill be
'Independent too.
"An to the British people, they are
bound lo honor to the otmmt of their
tomer the oblIrationstloy undertook
In the evictor', of war too.. the
Arabs and the jeM n. When the. Paoli.
reilono were incorporated in mon.
date they did not IttllareaIlse the
ruffles of the task It laid on them They
have u g h
orcomme them not al-
ways ugh surer. 771. dculties hose
steadily biome greater till now they
seem almost Insuperable.
"Partition offer. n oomibilit of find-
ing a ay through them.
peerthillty
of obtaininc • final soggiest of the
problem doe. Pollee to the fight.
and o.P1Mtlons of both the Ara. and
the Jens and discharges the 0111041ot.
andertaken tons. them 50 year. ap.
to the fullest extent that Is prowthoble
In the circumstances of Ihe present

MIDSUMMER DREAM
Stook.. MAJESTIC Cigars

ordsurci by

NATHAN NORMAN • TY 4.61135

tio
toecreole Jewish gate tan weal akar II. math-
On

Sale at All Better Deale rs

Martin Buber has been appoint-
ed to the chair of religious sciences
at the Hebrew University.

Ford Charcoal By-Products
Reach Highest June
Sales

Ford charcoal briquets, a by-
product of the Ford Motor Com-
pany's lumber mills in northern
Michigan, reached a total sale last
month of over 2600 tons, the larg-
est June sales volume yet recorded
by the company.
Although railroad dining cars
and refrigerator cars, foundries,
meat packers and copper refineries
have been the largest volume users
of briquets, an important new re-
tail market has been developed
through Ford dealers among pick-
nickers and camping enthusiasts.
The latter group probably account
for the high volume sales at this
season, Ford executives reported.
For 13 years charcoal briquets
have been made from hardwood
cuttings, producing at first only a
few thousand tons annually. Nor-
mal daily production is 125 tons.

Major Cohen to Avoid Reich on
Tour of British Legion
LONDON (WNS) - Major
Brunel Cohen, treasurer of the
British Legion, the organization of
English World War veterans, will
not go to Germany with other mem-
bers of his organization during
their tour of Europe. Major Cohen
made this announcement after the
itinerary of the legion tour was
announced.

Save Your Eyes

WTTII

HEALTH-LITE GLASSES

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Examined, Glee Fitted by
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oOpen Evenings Until

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PHONE MADISON 7395

RICHARDSON'S

DRUG STORE

PRESCRIPTIONS

9053 WOODWARD AVE.

Cor. Clainnount
DETROIT, MCP.

OPEN ALL NIGHT

MONTEITH INN

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Rooms with bath - Room service
KOSHER Meals, unexcelled
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A•IIIIIIJTIJAIL C01•111PA11111(

SOLID AS
THE CONTINENT

For over 51 years North American Life has
justified the vision of its early founders who
laid the foundation of this Company upon
sound and conservative lines. Since 1881,
a the year when the Company was established,
public confidence has been won and retained.
Over 60 years ago the Company's financial
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d

It is of course subject to inter-
pretation whether these palliatives
are set forth as an alternative to
the partition plan or whether they
are merely presented as a matter
of record in accordance with the
commission's study of the work-
ing's of the mandate. he British
government's statement endorsing
the partition plan, however, very
definitely points to the determina-
tion of Great Britain to advocate
before the League of Nations, re-
gardless of Jewish or Arab oppo-
sition, the partition proposal and a
new mandate.
PARTITION
CONCLUSION
The conclusions of the Royal
Commission's report on partition
are presented in the form of an
appeal to reason to Jews and Arabs
to accept partition as the only 1.3..
sibility for • lasting peace in Pal-

VIENNA,- (WNS)
posted attacks of angina pectoris
are reported to have seriously im-
paired the already failing health
of Professor Sigmund F r e u d,
world-famous father of psycho-
analysis. Professor Freud, who is
81, is reported to be in serious
condition.

•
•
•
•
•

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