4 .NTROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and the Legal Chronicle Detroit Jewis h Chronicle and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE Published Weekly by Jewish C hronicle Publishing Co., Inc. JACOB H. SCHAKNE President Entered as Second-class matter March 3, 1916, at the Post- office at Detroit, Mich., under the Act of March 3, 1879• General Offices and Publication Bldg., 525 Woodward Ave. Telephone: CAdillac 1040 Cable Address: Chronicle Subscription in Advance $3.00 Per Year JACOB MARGOLIS Publisher and Editor MAURICE M. SAFIR....Advertising Manager ro insure publication, all correspondence and news matter must reach this office by Tuesday evening of each week. When mailing notices, kindly use one side of paper only. The Detroit Jewish Chronicle invites correspondence on sub- jects of interest to the Jewish people, but disclaims respon- sibility for en endorsement of views expressed by its writers. March 6, 1942 Adar 17, 5702 Our Way of Life There are many facets to our way of life. Some of them have persisted from the day the Republic was founded ; have been tested and' found to be good. We naturally take many of our bless- ings for granted because we have always enjoyed them. Who among us examines the connotation of the phrase "The United States of America"? There has not al- ways been a United States of America. In fact, it is unique. Now Australia and Can- ada have followed our example, and Russia theoretically. And from 1791 when the Constitution was adopted, to 1865, the end of the war between the States, these United States of America were in the experimental stage. The only internal war in our history was fought, among other reasons, to maintain this indivisible union of the United States of America. European rulers, Tories, Bourbons, Hapsburgs, Czarists, ridiculed the idea of a Federation of States. Even its well wishers had their serious doubts. But the men of vision and imagination who found- ed the Republic believed that the States could retain their sovereignty and still repose certain powers in the Federal Gov- ernment. This arrangement did not al- ways work smoothly, nor were the Fed- eral Government and the State Govern- ment always in harmony. It is working today as satisfactorily as any human in- stitution can be expected to work. In this country persons and goods flow freely from one end of the land to the other. There are no fortifications or cus- tom houses separating the States. There is one currency and one postage stamp. No State or group of States complains of lack of lebensraum or living space. Every. State has access to that which the whole country produces and grows, and whether completely land-locked or on the seacoast or lake front, the States can send their goods everywhere without tariffs or duties levied on them. This is done in a country that is poly- glot, bilingual, where every creed, race and nationality is represented. We want to preserve this aspect of our way of life. In fact, we have ended an era of isolation and joined in the war against those whom we believe are threat- ening our way of life. When this conflict is over we shall have something to say about the peace. Let us hope that when the peace conference is held that the men who will make that treaty will be men of vision and imag- ination, men who will not be moved and swayed by those who have always in- sisted that Europe cannot be federated. *there are no good reasons why persons and goods cannot move just as freely in tile European continent as they do on the North American land mass. The difference up, till now has been that certain groups in europe did not want a United States of Europe, while we here have wanted it and have had it. If there is any group in Europe that should and no doubt would welcome such a change, it is our own people, for there is no one so purblind among us who does not know by now that we are first victims of all the nationalist and racial rivalries of unhappy Europe. Mr. Deatherage Loses His Job George E. Deatherage, national com- mander of the secret organization known as the Knights of the White Camelia; promoter of an American nationalist con- federation for which he had selected the swastika as its emblem, has officially been designated by Secretary Knox as "undesirable to have access to the work and /or materials of the Navy Depart- ment", and consequently removed from his position under a civilian contractor at the Norfolk, Va., operating base. Obviously, gentlemen who exchange literature with organizations in Germany, and consult the German consulate in San Francisco and the Embassy in Washing- ton, must expect to be classed as un- desirable. Mr. Deatherage was obsessed with what he called "The Jew Problem." Psychiatrists may be able to discover the causes for such an obsession, we only know what cruelties and barbarities such obsessed men can inflict upon helpless, bewildered people. The dismissal of Mr. Datherage may hasten the withdrawal of some of our bitter anti-Semites from these anti-Semi- tic organizations. If they do it will be well to watch their activities for it is not a simple or easy matter to get rid of a deep-rooted obsession. • Disaster The sinking of the steamer Struma in waters close to Istanbul is a tragedy of the first magnitude even in a world that knows the tragedy of every day bomb- ings of cities; torpedoeing of ships ; kill- ings of thousands of troops in the frozen wastes of Russia and the endless deserts of Libya. Eight hundred Jewish refugees were aboard this unseaworthy hulk when she allegedly struck a mine. All are reported dead. These are the cold facts. But what is behind the facts? The refugees aboard the ship were Rumainans who were anxious to escape from Rumania but had no immigration certificates for Palestine. Everything hu- manly possible was done by the Jewish Agency to persuade the Palestine Gov- ernment to issue a sufficient number of certificates from the current quota to take care of the Struma passengers whose plight was desperate. The Turkish Gov- ernment refused them• refuge insisting that Turkey was not a country of refuge but o41-yill \_tiansit. linormal times we would brush aside these legal technicalities as mere trivia and would un,*rcifully castigate all gov- ernments th'at may have been responsible for this disaster, but these are not nor- mal times. These are times that tax men's ingenuity, patience and judgment to the utmost. It cannot be repeated too often that this is a global, total war and that catas- trophies will befall the non-participant as well as those at the fronts. However, we must extend all our ef- forts and use public pressures to persuade the British Government to formulate a policy in the matter of Palestine certifi- cates that will reduce to a minimum the possibility of the recurrence of such dis- asters. In the matter of public pressures, it must be borne in mind that the British Government is still responsive to public opinion, when that public opinion is predicated upon a sound policy ; is united; is reasonable and above all persistent. The wide shake-up in the British Govern- ment is proof of this. Then, too, we should not forget that we are most fortunate both here and in Britain that we can still bring public pressure to bear if we are dissatisfied with the actions, methods and policies of our governments. • The spirit of the coal miners of France during a recent strike in the Herault and Gard departments is convincing proof that the French workers will not die as peace- fully as Chinese peasants. Despite numer- ous arrests the strike continued. The au- thorities were compelled to make con- cessions by appreciably increasing the food ration. March 6, 1942 •° •Heard in the Lobbies.'. By DAVID DEUTSCH THUNDER IN WASHINGTON Did the Turkish Ambassador to the United States eat his breakfast peacefully the morn- ing he got the news about the Struma disaster at Istanbul, especially when he remembered that he had just turned down an American-Jewish request that he intervene to urge his Government to permit the land- ing of the '750 Jewish refugees? . . The Zionist technique of using the Congressional Record to insert speeches favoring Pal- estine has at last been taken up by the anti-Zionists. Wonder if Rabbi Morris Lazaron of Balti- more had anything to do with the insertion by Senator George L. Radcliffe of Maryland of the New York Times editorial on "A Zionist Army," which set world Zionists blazing mad . . . After years away from the Jewish field, handsome Jim Wise has been persuaded to serve as the Washington representative of the World Jewish Congress and the Inter-American Jewish Coun- cil. Best bet the organizations could have made . . . The rea- son that University of Pennsyl- vania graduate Robert R. Na- than heads Donald Nelson's "thinking committee" of three is largely due to his prediction in the summer of 1940 of short- ages in basic war materials like steel and aluminum. Insiders say it was the thirty-three-year-old six-footer who got the Presi- dent's ear on the "Victory Pro- gram." . . . Judge Samuel Ro- senman has been so busy lately with national affairs that friends say he sometimes feels like re- tiring to the simple life led by his brothers Max and Meyer, who own a string of loan shops in San Antonio. BANANAS AND ZEMURRAY The old-time national favorite, "Yes, We Have No Bananas," threatens to become a grocer's anthem because of the submarine menace in the Caribbean. And that is a headache to Samuel Zemurray, mysterious head of United Fruit Co., who shuttles between homes in Boston and New Orleans keeping track of one of the greatest enterprises in the world. As the price of bananas goes up, because bottoms are not as plentiful to ship the yellow fruit, Zemurray must remember far worse days in his career, espe- cially in the early period when he had just come to the United States from Rumania. Zemurray started life again as a stevedore. He kept his eyes peeled and his brain clear. He noticed that great boatloads of bananas used to arrive from Latin America and that they had to be dumped. So he went to the ship owners and offered to buy all the bananas that arrived at Gulf ports. The price was low. As far as the shippers were concerned, any- thing was better than nothing. But then Zemurray organized a system of distribution that rushed the bananas to grocery stores inland so fast that they became great table delicacies for imme- diate consumption. His fortune started. His competitors saw the light and tried to drive him out. That was the United Fruit Co It wasn't long before he was the United Fruit Co. Then came his ideas of refrigeration—and still faster methods of distribu- tion. United Fruit Co. is today an empire. Zemurray is probably the least- known and most modest Jew in the land. Many enterprises have his secret generosity. They say he reads voraciously, hates the inanities of public Jewish life and is particularly immune to flattery. Strike him right and the cause gets thousands. Strike him wrong and there is only si- lence. A case where silence is not golden—and all because of the golden fruit which the ship- ping shortage now makes spot news DEFENSE FRONT Roger W. Straus, Christian- Jew Conference leader, is super- vising a big defense construc- tion job at Corpus Christi, where his American Smelting Co. is putting up a huge electrolytic zinc plant. Not since he joined the company 25 years ago has Mr. Straus been as busy. Carl Laemmle, Jr., who man- aged to squeeze into the Army as a private despite his 63-inch height, must be sore at the re- vival of "All Quiet on the West- ern Front", the anti-war film which he turned out for Univer- sal in the clays when the world was "safe for democracy." If you happen to be at Fort Dix and you see a lot of boys staring at a piece of paper, which a fellow pointing at it with ges- tures, you're probably in the neighborhood of Harr y 0. Teltscher, the great psycho- graphologist. Herry, a refugee from Austria, who has his first citizenship papers, had to cele- brate in the army the publica- tion of his first book, called "Handwriting: The Key to Suc- cessful Living." In short, Herry tells character from handwriting. And can he be embarrassing! His book teaches anyone to do it. Or tries, anyhow. Best wishes to Hy Hurwitz, sports writer on the Boston Globe, who has joined the Marines. ODD BUT TRUE Congressman Arthur Klein lets us know that George Washing- ton's famous letter to the He- brew Congregation at Newport, R. I., is in the possession of Gordon B. Hirsch, of New York's Grand Street Boys Association, in whose family it's been pre- served as an heirloom. Do Not Balance