PEPLITOraWini ROMICIA THEDLTROITILIVISfl et RON and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE Published Weekly by The Jewish Cie...dela Peiasides Co. tea. 'tutored be lissoo ■ -class matter Norsk 1, ISM et the Pod- olia* at Detroit, Mists. ander the Let of Nora lin. General Offices and Publication Building 525 Woodward Avenue Teil•plsones Cadillac 1040 Cable Addrimei Cismel•le Loud. Oaks. 14 Stratford Place, London, W. I, Enghula Babscription, la Advance.............---.18.00 Per Year T. baser* petlisetiou, all torrosposdosee and ems Senn Nest web this oaf. by Toordsy *seals' of seek snook. Whoa moiling sotto**, kindly es. cassia. of the paper may. T. Detroit Jewish eltroniels Invites *err...poste.' ea nab. Pats of Interest to the Jewish people, bet earlobes miscast. batty for an ladorssesost of the •Ions esuressol by tko writers Sabbath Readings of the Law Pentatetiehal Portion—Deut. 26:1-29:8. Prophetical Portion—h. 60. August 27, 1937 Elul 20, 5697 Journalistic Courage Those who permit themselves to be de- pressed by the views of journalistic tour- ists who, not unlike other travelers, be- come authorities on economics and politics after a two-week visit in some foreign country will find consolation in the news about the courage of the older corre- spondents. Provincial journalists—the vacationists abroad from our local newspapers are no exceptions—become enthused over condi- tions in Germany and prove gullible ma- terial for Nazi propagandists. But the older generation, especially those who have been in Germany since Nazism began to rule there, know better. Fortunately the observations of the latter will survive because they know better. The views of the former will die overnight because they are the impressions of tourists who hap- pen to be journalists at home. , The most interesting display of loyalty to an honest newspaperman, since the ex- pulsion from Germany of Edgar Ansel Mowrer, was evidenced last week when every one of the British and American col- leagues of Norman Ebbutt, for 10 years chief correspondent in Germany of the London Times, and many continental jour- nalists went to the Berlin railroad station to bid him goodbye. Mr. Ebbutt had been showered with abuse by the Nazis which could not be printed in a family newspa- per, but the foreign correspondents in Ger- many are unanimous in lauding the con- scientiousness in reporting news of the British journalist who has been forced to leave the Reich. Apparently there is a wide difference of opinion relative to the color of news in Germany. But future events will undoubt- edly prove that the more profound student —as the longer resident in Germany must be—was right in his interpretation and re- porting of news, and that the two-week-in- a-lifetime reporter and tourist merely ut- ters passing judgment, which will die as quickly as his words are uttered. 333,000 Trees Replace 54,000 Where Honor Is Due Colonies bearing the names of Miss Henrietta Szold and Leon Blum are soon to be established in Palestine. The names of other outstanding participants in the Jewish national cause have already been similarly honored—among them being the names of Dr. Theodor Herzl, the founder of modern political Zionism; Menahem Ussishkin, world president of the Jewish National Fund; Arthur James Balfour, Jan Christian Smuts and others. In every instance the honor was and is deserved. General Smuts of South Africa, for instance, earned the great tribute given him because of his consistent efforts to se- cure guarantees for the security of the Jewish position in Palestine. In the present fight for justice for the Jew in Palestine, he was one of a mere handful of Chris- tians who raihed his voice in protest against the proposed partition of Palestine. There are others whose names will live for all time in the record of those who helped in the Jewish,national rebirth, and there are two men whom we especially recommend for honors similar to those ac- corded the leaders listed above. We refer to Dr. Stephen S. Wise and Col. Josiah Wedgwood. It is needless to enumerate again the services of these two men—one a great Jew and the other a great English- man. Dr. Wise is the unchallenged leader of American Jewry, while Col. Wedgwood is the best friend we have in official British circles. Dr. Wise has dedicated his life to the cause of the redemption of Palestine by the Jewish people, and Col. Wedgwood has been an outstanding defender of Jew- ish claims to the right of creating a na- tional hearth in our cradleland. We commend for consideration by Zion- ists the proposal that among the new colo- nies to be built there should be two in honor of the great work performed by Dr. Stephen S. Wise and Col. Josiah Wedg- wood. It would be splendid if Detroit Zion- ists could initiate efforts for such a move- ment in behalf of these two great leaders. Jewish National Fund woodlands in Palestine are more flourishing today than they have been a year ago. During the 1936-37 planting season, 333,291 new trees were added to these forests. These new trees replace the 54,000 that were uprooted and destroyed by the Arab van- dals during the outrages of the past year. This is typical of Jewish resistance to danger. Arabs destroyed what we built; Jews, undaunted, carried on the historic task of reconstructing and reafforesting the land. Vandals uprooted saplings that help make the neglected land fruitful again; Jews continue to build for the good of themselves as well as their Arab neigh- bors. It is no wonder that many Arabs are already pleading for peace with the Jews, for co-operation with us, for the contin- tinuation of the great work which has Nazi-Inspired Hungarians made Jewish effort in Palestine stand out as the most significant colonization From Budapest comes the following project in all history. cable: It is right against might. Why give up A campaign to forbid Hungarian Jews to hope that right will triumph in the end? use any language but Hebrew in schools, Mr. Justice Hugo L. Black We are not in the least impressed with the arguments offered against the ratifica- tion of the appointment of Senator Hugo L. Black as Justice of the United States Supreme Court. The cry of horror raised by his opponents who maintained that he had been associated with the Ku Klux Klan was like a red herring drawn on a lonely trail. 'To disprove the charges made against the new Supreme Court Justice, Senator Bankhead of Alabama read into the Con- gressional Record a series of statements of commendation for his colleague from Jews, Catholics and Protestants. These laudatory proclamations, which include one from a Birmingham rabbi, are impressive and convincing. It is clear that the oppo- sition was based strictly on political lines rather than those having some bearing on the new Justice's qualifications for the im- portant judicial post. We join in congratulating the new Su- preme Court Justice. The Palestine Partition Problem Differences of opinion on the question of the partition of Palestine bring to light some very interesting facts. It is interesting to note that opponents of the proposal within Zionist ranks ob- ject to the small size of the area offered for a Jewish state, but that the non-Zion- Ists are primarily motivated in their oppo- they fear the rise sition by the fact that entity. August 27, 1937 sad THE LEGAL CHRONICLE they control the purse-strings--that their group should rule. "Till the Jewish State is established the Jewish agency rules," was the declaration of Felix M. Warburg at the Zurich meeting last week—and he rapped the table as he said it. It is extremely regrettable, of course, that the present historic hour could not bring about greater unity. It is unfortu- nate that Mr. Warburg, while invoking the name and the memory of the late Louis Marshall, should have emphasized that the latter agreed to work with the Zionists for Philanthropic Purposes, and emphasized that Americans always understood that the Jewish Agency did not aim at a Jewish State. It is our personal opinion that Mr. Marshall, had he been alive today, would have opposed partition in order to demand that all of Palestine be included in the Jewish territory, but that he would not have stood in the way of creating an au- tonomous Jewish center, which is the only hope of salvation for the Jewish masses In lands of oppression. Happily enough, the sessions of the World Zionist Congress and the Jewish Agency for Palestine ended without a rift in Jewish ranks. The responsible Jewish leaders recognize their duty to the entire people and are prepared to forget personal grievances for the sake of the welfare of all Israel. Those of us who oppose parti- tion to the very end will continue to work for a redeemed Palestine. Time will cer- tainly adjust all differences—and time alone will prove whether those who be- lieve that the present time is an Aschaltah d'Geulah (the beginning of the Redemp- tion) are right in their interpretation of the significance of the great events which are being enacted into historic fact in our lifetime. newspapers, public meetings and documents has been launched by the Hungarian anti- Semites. As a first step in this drive they are seeking to prevail upon the educational au- thorities to force all Jewish children to attend only schools where Hebrew is the language of instruction. This bit of news is of more than passing interest. It serves to convince us that most of modern anti-Semitism is Nazi-inspired, and that the Jew-baiters throughout the world take their cue from the philosophy of Hitler and his cohorts. In his very important volume, "The Spirit and Structure of Gertnan Fascism," Prof. Robert A. Brady makes reference to the language question in Germany in the following paragraph: Dr. George Norlin, president of th• Uni• •ersity of Colorado and visiting Theodore Roosevelt Prof f American History and Institutions at University of Berlin In 1932-33, tells of in episode i ■ which the Rector of the University of Berlin was forced out of office because he refused to allow the Hui student federation, the Stodentenschaft, to post ter. twin theses on the walls of the university. On• of them read: No person of Jewish blood can think German. Therefore, when • Jew writes German, he lies. Therefore, wh h•nee- forth • Jewish professor or student publishes • book or a piece of h, he must write oo the title page: 'I a rem Jew, and this is • translation from the Hebrew into the Gar. manic langu•se.'” The Hungarian and German philoso- phies match completely in their stupidity. It is clear that the Hungarians are copying a page from the German antiSemitic text- books and are mimicking the Nazis in their game of hate. The number of students studying He- brew in the New York schools is reported by Dr. Harold G. Campbell, superintend- ent of schools, to have increased by 50 per of a Jewiah national contro- cent. The trouble is that the number was Of importance in the current versy Is the demand of the non-Zionists- FO 'Small at the outset that the increase is who are in a position to dominate because not much of a triumph. Lights front Shadowland By LOUIS PEKARSKY THE RISE AND GROWTH OF THE HEBREW UNIVERSITY ADDIIrgitEfl OF THE CHANCELLOR OF THE IIETIEEW UNIVERSITY. fly Dr. Judith Is Matinee. Hebrew University Drama, Jerusalem, reissone. In the addresses of the Hebrew University's president—until 1935 for 10 years its chancellor— the reader will find data and facts that virtually HOLLYWOOD HOBBIES recount the history of the great school on Mt. Harry Einstein (Parkyakarkus Scopus in Jerusalem. to you) says his pet hobby is col- In these addresses are related the story of the lecting old American silver ... He founding of the university, the gradual growth in is considered an authority on this student population, the manner in which new de- subject . . . He is an inveterate partments were created, the means used for it, etc. radio fan and likes to play golf, Dr. Magnes reveals that the first efforts for the swim and to watch football, track Hebrew University were made many years ago. He and hockey events ... For pets he tells how plans for it were studied as far back as has a parrot, which he claims 1912, and earlier. speaks Greek ... At the time Ein- Included among the addresses incorporated in stein left his home in Boston in this interesting 308-page volume are the speeches 1933 to take up entertainment delivered before the journalists who visited the uni- work, Parkyakarkus was the high- versity, at the opening of various departments and est salaried retail advertising ex - buildings, at commencements and the openings of ecutive In New England. new school terms, and at receptions tendered Dr. 13innia Barnes enjoys riding Magnes by the Zionist Organization of America, swimming, golf and tennis .. Sh the American Jewish Physicians Committee, the has dark brown eyes and her fea American University Committee, the Jewish Publi- tures are more Latin than typical - cation Society, the American Friends of the He- ly English She is a London lass t brew University—all in this country—and at you know. other receptions in Palestine. Vince Barnett's hobbies are fly - There are three in memoriam addresses—in ing and amateur photography ... memory of Prof. Joseph Horovitz, Chaim Nachman He collects photographs and auto- Bailik and Dr. Schmaryahu Levin. The address in graphs of famous fliers ....Barbet t tribute to the latter is a particularly fine expres- has two brothers who are physi- sion. It reveals the fiendshin that existed between cians and two sisters who are mar - Dr. Magnet and Dr. Levin and relates some inter- ried to physicians . . . His wife, esting facts which throw light on the character of the former Genevieve Meier of the great Jewish scholar and propagandist who died Detroit, is a non-professional on June 9, 1935. Irving Pichal loves music . . Sally Eilers is fond of music, too, besides being a fine ballroom danc- er, rider, swimmer, golfer and tennis player . . . She always dreamed of being an actress. TIDE EDUCATION OF )1•Y•31•A•M K•A•F•LeA•N, By Leonard 0. Rose. Harrold- I, Brace and Co., 353 Matti. June Clayworth's hobbies are eon Ave., New Sorb (13.). swimming, diving, horseback rid- ing, singing and playing the piano There is a laugh on every page in this unusual She speaks Italian, French and book which is a compilation of the stories about Spanish . . . Boating and swim- Hyman Kaplan of the beginners' grade of the ming are Jerome Cowan's favorite American Night Preparatory School for Adults. diversions. Originally published in the New Yorker, these hu- Luise Rainer, who they say is morous tales relating to the use of the acquired making the great Garbo look to her idiom now form one of the most entertaining vol- laurels, is interested in farming umes published in years. and hopes to live close to the soil Ilyman Kaplan loved to sign all his essays in red, when her film career ends ... She green and blue letters, interspersed with stars, is planning to buy a farm in the thus: 11•Y • M'A•N K•A•P•L•A•N. He explained East, possibly in Pennsylvania or that "de name is by me pot pf mine composition," Connecticut, and before he began to expound his philosophy, in LEROY'S LUCKY NUMBER defense of the underdog, in rebuke to an enemy or Mervyn LeRoy, film producer, in defense of a friend, he at once jotted down the consider 62 his lucky number. multicolored and multi-starred moniker. Kaplan's "lieu Kay!" expresses his goodnatured Years ago, when in vaudeville, he and his partnes were given $20 acquiescence to fact when he learns that for a day's performance. Once a he is wrong. He is not afraid to try anything when theater manager, unaware of the it comes to giving an exhibition of his mastery of amount they had been getting, of- English. The opposite of new he labels "second fered them $62 for a perform- hand," and the verb "to fail" he declines "fail, ance. Since then they demanded failed, bankropt." The plural of cat is "Katz" and $62, at least, a day, and they nev- the conjugation "die, died, funeral" is merely an- other of his natural Anglicisms. er received less. Mr. Parkhill, the teacher of Kaplan's class NEWS BITS ("soch a fine Weber"), stands in awe of his pupil, Playwright Ben Hecht, whose unable to fathom the unusual personality who stag- new writing contract with Samuel gers him with his new creations weekly. To Kaplan Goldwyn is said to call for the he is Pockheel, a much admired man. The very biggest payment ever recorded in concluding sentence in the book, a postscript to an an individual writing contract, is essay, indicates the esteem in which he is held: to return to New York early In "ps. I dont care if I dont pass, I love the class." October to start rehearsals for his There are some truly fascinating gems In the new play, "To Quite and Back," in book. For instance: "By Thinking is Humans mak- which Sylvia Sidney will be starred ing big edvences on Enimals. This we call Frog- by the Theater Guild ... Hecht will ries." Here is another perfect example of llyman first prepare the screen play for Kaplan's mastery of his new language: "He throat "Sweet Land of Liberty," a musi- the ball real fast." cal picture based on the Federal And each of these masterpieces is signed with Theatre Project . Speaking of the snany-colored, starred and provocative by-line: Federal Theaters reminds ua that "By 11•11•M•A•N K • A • P•L•AsN." Yasha Frank is enjoying tremen- Thus a new character is created in American dous success as a producer with literature—and the language is used as she has the Los Angeles Federal Thee- never been spoken before! ter Project . . . His productions "The Education of Hyman Kaplan" offers a Rood at the Greek open air theater and evening's enjoyment—whether read alone or for a in local theaters are winning the group. And it makes a very fine gift. acclaim of critics Yasha form- erly was with B. P. Schulberg in the movie business. Edmund Golding, one of Holly- wood's topnotch film directors, has been rewarded for his outstanding work with assignments to direct JACKSON, MISS.—(NCJC)—Completing several four additional First National fea- years' research into the funeral practices of the tures ... Goulding has an enviable world, Robert Griffith, a young Jackson historian, re- record as a director of heavy vealed that only Christians and Jews manifest no money-making films. • outward signs of fear when someone has died in the Grand National Films has signed house. Bennett Cohen to write a treat- "That does not imply, of course, that people have ment for a film based on a Collier not become martyrs in other religions. Islam has of- magazine story, "Wallaby Jim," fered its share and the Jains of India, forbidden to which Bud Barsky is producing ... take life, have deliberately starved themselves until Felix Bernard and Irving Bibo are t hey died, but in all cases a tabu has attached itself writing the musical score for like a spectre to the body, "Wallaby Jim of the Islands" for "The Christians and the Jews, free from super- Barsky ... From Grand National, stition in their regard of death, do not have any we also learn that a romantic com- fetishes or charms that will ward. off evil at the edy, "At Your Service Madame," grave Take any other religion you might name by Albert J. Cohen and Hans and I can point out hundreds of tiny exhibitions Kraly, has been purchased for early of genuine fear. filming. • "Throughout history, the Jews have been the same Just as Arthur Alexander, co- way. I would like to find any other people who have nroducer with his brother, Max. left open the graves of their dead for several days left Cedars of Lebanon Hospital after death has occurred. Usually the ancients could after treatment for a kidney ail- not close them quickly enough, And you find no rec- ment, M. II. Hoffman, another ord of them binding the legs of the body. Their be- GM' film maker, entered the same lief in a resurrection has been pleasant, not a night- institution—and for the very same mare. The same way with Christians, Catholics and reason. Protestants. (Copyright. 111). e. A. F. &) ENGLISH AS SHE IS SPOKE BY 1-14 Y*M"A*N K*A*P*L*A*N Praises Funeral Practices of Christians, Jews Heinz Liepmann's Best Book POISON IN THE MR Dr HO. Lief , - mann J Lippincott Co, rhiladeL phia. (15 SOL Strictly Confidential PURELY COMMENTARY Tidbits from Everywhere By PHILIP SLOMOVITZ By PH1NEAS J. B1RON Jewish Automobile Manufacturers (CopyrIght. 113/. fl. A. Ir. •1 News of the death in Chicago of Oscar J. Fried- man is accompanied by the comment that he is "believed to have been the only American Jew en- gaged in the manufacture of automobiles." This pioneer is said to have made gasoline-driven cars as early as 1899, and later switched to electric auto- mobiles. He abandoned the automobile field in 1901 when he sold his interests. This pioneer may have been one of the few Jews engaged in the manufacture of automobiles, but he was not the only one. Detroiter** will recall that the late Bernard Ginsburg, who was one of the most charming Jewish personalities in Detroit, manu- factured auto trucks at the beginning of the present century. It Is true that his activity in the auto- mobile field did not last long, but he nevertheless was a pioneer auto-maker. SCOTCHING SCOOPS That "sensational scoop" in the Yiddish press about secret nego- tiations between the non-Zionist American group and Arab repre- sentatives is not a betrayal ea the part of the non-Zionists; but a be- trayal of confidence on the part of the so-called acoopsters . . There were conversations between several Arab leaders and non- Zionist gentlemen on the subject of a peaceful relationship between the two races in Palestine . . These conversations were private talks, a mutual sounding-out which might have led to a con- crete proposal . . . he premature publicity destroyed those peace- ful prospects . . . There is. how- ever, an ironical climax to the Zionist cries of horror at these negotiations . . . Just when Dr. Weizmann threw up his hands in- dignantly about these "separate and unauthorized negotiations," something happened ... The Lon- don Jewish Chronicle published a "secret document" written by none other than Dr. Weizmann, telling in detail of the Zionist leader's conversations with Orms- by-Gore a few weeks before the Zionist Congress convened . . . In that document Weizmann ac- cepts partition provided a few boundary lines of the Jewish State be changed . . . For the Zionist president to accept partition in a conversation with the British Colonial Minister before the Con- gress had expressed itself on the subject was anything but straight politics Weizmann's face must be red now whenever he speaks about the "Arab negotiations in New York." TIPS TO YE EDITOR • Yiddish-Speaking Negress Mrs. Emily Maynard, 45-year-old Negress of New York, has enrolled In a WPA adult education proj- ect in Yiddish in order to be able to converse with her Yiddish-speaking friends. This is not as exciting news as the releasing news agency's report would paint it. The truth is that there are many Negroes who, by association with Jews, have learned to speak Yiddish fluently. Much more sensational was the class in Yiddish conducted about six years ago by the North End Clinic of Detroit for a group of non-Jewish nurses and social workers. In a class of 12 only one young lady was Jewish. The students in this class were motivated in their desire to learn Yiddish by a need for understanding the Jewish-speaking patients. There was splendid progress shown by the non- Jewish Yiddish students in both the written and spoken word of the language—thanks to its able instructor, Abraham J. Lachover. • The Philosopher on the Fairways The Pessimist on the golf course the called him- self the Philosopher) must have had a bad break- fast. lie upbraided us for being too. serious, for hav- ing faith in humanity. "Human nature is bad," he shouted. attracting an audience, "Why take people seriously? Humans are no good anyway." This Philosopher on the Fairways will appreciate our favorite story about our cousin who made his annual trip to New York around Chanukah time. He went to his favorite tailor and ordered himself a new pair of pants. When the week of his stay was up, the pants had not yet arrived, and he returned home without them. The following year one of the first to greet him on his return visit to New York was the tailor, and under his arm he carried a pack- age out of which he drew the pants ordered 12 months earlier. Whereupon the cousin elided him gently: "What sort of tailor are you, anyway? Does it take a whole year to make a pair of pants? Why, It took God only six days to make the world." "Yes," admitted the tailor, "you are right. But let us be frank. You say it took God only six days to make the world. Well—look around and judge. See for yourself. What a world! What a rotten world! And now, look at this pair of pants!" Our Philosopher must not become too morose. Look around Chaver, you'll find a few good things worth cherishing in this world. And you can help make things just a bit better by tolerating your fellow man. • We have it from reliable au- thority that Senator Royal S. Copeland has a brother in South Africa whose name is Caplan. Amid all this palaver about Senator Hugo L. Black, new Su- preme Court Justice, having been a friend of the Ku Klux Klan, no- body seems to remember that he is the same fellow who exposed the anti-Semitic Sentinels of the RepUblic and threw a panic into the pseudo-patriotic biogtry spreading groups. Is it true that the Non-Sectar ian Anti-Nazi League spent $8,- 000 on advertising in the Catho- lic press and got only 85 replies Homes on Cooperative Plan and practically no cash? . . . Complaints about the spread of discrimination Speaking of the Anti-Nazi League against Jews in the rental of homes continue to reminds us that our managing pour in daily. It is a frightful situation, and if we editor is laughing out loud at were to inaugurate a campaign against prejudice Boris Nelson, executive secretary every time a justified complaint is made, we would of the League . . . A week ago have to fight half the world. Nelson raised holy hob because One of the complainants makes a practical sug- our m.e. reported in • news dig- gestion. Jews, he insists, should band together when- patch that the G-men were inves- ever possible and build homes of their own on a co- tigating the Nazi camps ... Nel- operative basis. By grouping in accordance with son had a letter from boss G-man their social and financial standing, he maintains, Hoover to deny it . . . But did an amicable partnership, can be created by groups you see the papers? . . . Laugh ranging in numbers up to 50 who can live in har- that off, Boris ... Which reminds mony, and without being driven by the dreaded us that some organization ought landlord fear. to look into the reports that the There is much to be said in favor of this pro- Raymond Whitcomb tourist people posal. The cooperative colony idea for the building are refusing to take Jewish pass- of apartments or homes on the cottage plan is not engers on the Normandie, which a new one. There are a number of coperative apart- they chartered for a South Am- ment houses in New York owned by Jewish groups. erican cruise .. , Whitcomb, if Some have succeeded admirably. Others have failed. our memory servo us aright, spon- It is an idea that is certainly worth experimenting sored a Jewish cruise to Palestine with. a number of years ago There • is also a charge against the Swed- Rental, Employment Discriminations ish Shipping Line to the effect It is easier to counsel calmness In face of the that it doesn't want non-Aryan rising. tide of discriminations than it is to practice business. Sidney Hillman and John L. it. We are flooded with complaints: Owners of a ewimming pool in the northwest section will not Lewis, big bosses of the C. I. 0., are at odds over what attitude purchase supplies from Jews. although Jews in the C. I. 0. should take toward hordes bathe in their waters; insurance companies Roosevelt ... Hillman favors con- refuse to employ Jewish girls and will not give tinued support, while Lewis is in- Jewish agents the better beats; owners of one of the best known dairies In Detroit were frank In clined to be less friendly. informing Jews who came to rent a home they HALL OF RELIGION own that they will have nothing to do with Jews. The rabbinate, which bitterly These instances can be multiplied by the dozens. opposes calendar reform, is heart- It is therefore easier to speak of boycotting the ily in favor of any reform that offenders than it la to pub into practice such re- will prevent Rosh Hashanah from taliatory measures. We have a fight on our hands coming during the Labor Day because bigotry raises its ugly head so often. But week-end, as it does this year ... we hope it will never become necessary to pub- Because of the early High Holy lish the list of discriminating American firms. As Days there'll be thousands of long as there is life there is hope that the bigoted empty pews in urban synagogues, will chess* their tactics. The oblective is to while the Jewish summer resorts achieve fairness for the Jew, not to find means of will do a rushing business. retaliation. Speaking of Women Notes on the Jewish Feminine World scribed. Mr. Liepmann refers to the Invention of gas warfare by Fritz Haber, the eminent Jewish By DIANA KLOTTS Heinz Liepmann, well known scientist who won the Nobel prize Women's Editor, Seven Arts for the synthetic production of for his previous works dealing ammonia which is of enormous Feature Syndicate with Nazi activities, has written value to agriculturists through- his best book. "Poison in the out the world. Though he disputes SIXTY IS YOUNG Air" is a work of research, and is the claim that Haber was the In- From the delicate threads of at the same time an impassioned ventor of gas warfare. Mr. Liep- plea to peace lovers to fight a cherished but distant dream mann maintains that he "is cer- against the horrible danger of the is woven a comedy conclusion tainly its spiritual father." lie forthcoming poison gas wars. It writes: to the simple, creative life of is a well written book. and it is "The facts notwithstanding, Mrs. Esther Moskovitz of Phi- couched in a style that reads like a romance—the romance of the there will always cling to Fritz ladelphia, who, though 60 years development of a most horrible Haber's name the horrible charge old, has only recently discov- scientific era as a result of which of his having been the inventor of ered her latent ability as an human safety has been endan- gas warfare. "Furthermore, Haber suffered artist gered. a fate akin to that of Schwarz, Born in Achokov, near Odes- Mr. Liepmann. who Is known to Detroiter** not only through the inventor of gunpowder, and sa, she was 17 when she came his books but because of his dra- that of Nobel, the inventor of dy- to this country, and soon mar- matic appearance here three years namite. Being • Jew and driven ago. when he described his suf- from his country by anti-Semitic ried. Two boys and three girls furies, he perished by his own kept her busy, so busy that she ferings in a Nazi concentration camp, traces his theme to the dis- hand." had little time to Indulge her- Haber warned against excessive covery of gunpowder by the self. Deeply rooted was the Franciscan monk Berthold use of poison gases. But the Ger- mans committed the error of using vision, the hope of • lifetime Schwan and the alchemist Con- stantin Anklitzer in the 14th cen- it extensively. Mr. Liepmann re- that some day there would tury. lie relates how Belgrade— lates how the Allied generals met spring into blossom product of and Christendom—were saved by to . express their indignation the surging creative force she the invention of Hunyadi, and rainst gas warfare, and how they makes reference to the fact that decided to repay the Germans in harbored in her bosom But always It was "tomorrow" — all early discoverers of poisonous kind. In a descriptive chapter on gases and ganpowden died vic- surely there would come some "How Europe Will Perish." Mr. tims of their own creations. Llermann lists gases suitable for less occepied tomorrow. There The author makes it • point to warfare. Ile warns that were stockings to be mended, prove that many of the discoveries chemical suck gases are being prepared to hungry stomachs to be fed, • came as a result of a search of slaughter the populations that bruised knee to be bandaged, means of making gold. lie ails will be affected by the coming how Johann Friedrich Boettger. a tear to be appeased. Esther out to make gold for Augustus of wars, and relates the horrible ef- Moskovitz had no time to be fern of the terrible gases. He Saxony, instead discovered the fa- warns that poison gas experi- an artist .. . mous Saxon porcelain. ments will begin on animals and But as the children grew up, The beginning of the use of will then be tried on humans there appeared manifestations poison gases by the Germans dur- There is a description in "P011- ing the last war is similarly de- ( maim TURN TO NEXT PAGE ) (1'110%1 TERM TO NEXT FAARt The First Guggenheim How an American Dynasty Was Born By HARVEY O'CONNOR The fascinating story of how Meyer Rnerenbeim, an immigrant Jew, Marled the world famous (Ingsenhelm indostrial empire with • nnadirr's yea I. told In ihi• And of font articles taken fans Mr. O'Counoris book. "The Gossenhrime,. wilich the Kr.. Arta Feature steeliest. and The Detroit JenivIt (bre/nide preaent by exclude, encasement with Cartel-11'6.de, r•blishers. Along muddy lanes from shack to shack in Pennsylvania's dark and grimy anthracite region trudged young Meyer Guggenheim. Tee wind blew and the rain soaked through his brown beard, trickled down his neck, sopped into his socks. His pants sloshed against his ankles. On he trudged, stooped under a heavy knapsack, bent to the ele- ments, like his ancestors for cen- turies in Switzerland and Germany. At doors of wretched shanties he beseeched, in meager English: "Shoe strings, glue, lace, ribbons, stove polish, everything for your home I have with me, very cheap." The rain blew into the barren room. the baby whimpered, the miner's wife frowned and banged the door. "The dirty Jews," she muttered, as had Christian house- wives in Switzerland and Germany. The plight, twenty-year-old youth sighed, walked down the path, and headed for the next door. By Friday night he was back in the crowded little house in Phila. delphia where lived his father, his three sisters, the Widow Myers— now Mrs. Simon Guggenheim—and her sons and daughters. In the glow of the candles he sat down to the ritual repast, next to his fifteen- year-old stepsister, Barbara. It was good to be back, sheltered, sur- rounded at last by friendly faces, cheered by the sound of a language he understood. Good, too, to be sitting next to Barbara, confidante of his hopes, whoee warm faith in his worth buoyed him against the sharp realities of his working life. On the long voyage across the At- lantic they had planned their fu- ture: ■ nice house, friends, chil- dren, music, an end forever to the haunting fears and the starved life of fettered Switzerland. And what was happening? Over there, the Guggenheim family had escaped from peddling, the badge of the race, to a shop of their own. They sold it for a song to come to the land of opportunity, and here they were, back where they started. Pack on back, knocking at doors, scratching out • living. True, they were alive, and shackled only by lack of money, not by laws and rigid racial barriers. They had arrived in Philadelphia nearly penniless, knowing no Eng- lish, dependent on the helping hand of sympathetic fellow-countrymen. There was food on the table, for which all bent their heads in rev- erent gratitude. There was fire on the hearth. They had never had to take charity, except for some cere- monial matzoth given to Father Simon by the Hebrew Relief Asso- ciation for his first Pa.sover in the strange land. But after a year's onerous work, with Simon at fifty- (rIAARE Tres TO NEXT PAGE)