-
el MAMMY
Friday, January 5, 1945
DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Le al Chronicle
Page Four
Detroit Jewish Chronicle
and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE
Published Weekly by Jewish Chronicle Publishing Co., Inc.
Pres.-Gen. Mgr.
JACOB H. SCHAKNE
Editor
JACOB MARGOLIS
Advertising Mgr.
CHARLES f AUB
General Offices and Publication Bldg., 525 Woodward Ave.
Telephone: CAdillac 1040
Subscription in Advance
$3.00 Per Year
Enteric' as Second-class matter March 3, 1916, at the Post-
office at Detroit, Mich., under the Act of March 3, 11379.
JANUARL 5. 1945
TEBETH 20, 5705
Restoring Confiscated Property
Word comes from all the liberated
countries that the problem of restoring
confiscated Jewish property is becoming
more acute and complex.
The troublesome and vexing knot could
be untied with a single blow by declar-
ing that all property belonging to Jews
before the war be returned to them. Such
action, however, could result in hardship
and injustice to those who in good faith
paid a valuable consideration for the
property they purchased.
If such drastic measures cannot or
will not be used, then we shall probably
have to wait until the end of the war
for large scale restorations. The makers
of the treaty of peace can, no doubt,
find some formula which will serve for
determining to whom the disputed prop-
erty belongs. Until then the Jews of the
liberated countries will have to use the
legal machinery of their respective coun
tries to recover their stolen and confis-
cated property.
The inability of many to recover their
property will place them in dependent
and even beggared categories. Thi:.
means that the burden of the relief and
rehabilitation agencies will be increased.
This means that the Jews of America,
who had hoped that many of their for-
mer well-to-do co-religionists in the lib-
erated countries would no longer need
holp, will have to dig clown deeper than
they had expected.
Then, too, the peoples of Europe may
solve the problem of confiscated Jewish
property and all private property by
socializing it.
have been disillusioned and overcome by
, c .
pessimism when they learned of
British . C.119m ,
..I
interference in - Italian internal affairs
and the armed support of the faction in
/1:1
,014
Greece that was pro-British.
i Vkii 1 45' HAR k sr ,
They may have been a little surprised
when they read that Mr. Churchill had
gone all out in support of Russia's claims
to Polish territory to the Curzion line;
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but to say that they were disillusioned
and depressed by pessimism is overstat-
ing the matter. We believe that even
the less critical were not disillusioned,
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i
but were rather chagrined and disap-
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\.
pointed by the violations of the Atlantic
HATE
1 \ : /, IM' . //
Charter.
*THOU(
The American people do not know
/.///,
HATE
.4,
if c. c..,
,,.. ._
what was agreed upon at Teheran. It
APIT
seems that Russia was given carte
"A
blanche in the Balkans to the borders of \.,)
old Austria, and the British given an
HATE
equally free hand in the Mediterranean
JE WS
and the Adriatic. Apparently Russian
t\\
/
claims to Polish territory to the Curzon
///
/
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7
/
,
line was not discussed, and if discussed,
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was not agreed upon.
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Obviously the British people were not
4:TE
apprised of all that was agreed upon at
for BolIN /
/
"!fi-
Teheran. If they had been, there could
N, \I 4
hardly have been such violent protests
against Mr. Churchill's actions in Greece
.---\‘I
and his approval of Russian territorial
''':1 ' ....",- 7
•
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claims. These protests compelled Mr.
Churchill and Mr. Eden to go to Athens,
and upon their return from Athens, to
pe rsua d e King isGeorg e to a g r
t ao a
re gency which
tanta mou nt to
l al n di- • •
cation.
by Phineas J. Biron
The widespread protests and sharp
criticisms of the British and American LISTEN HERE:
now a major in the Women's
peoples have no doubt had something to
The Gaelic American, Father Army Corps . . . Major Spivak is
do with the refusal of their respective Coughla's New York organ, i s a very charming young lady
Ines revitalized
MacDermott
the
governments to recognize the Lublin Lib- being
. . . with
Edited
by . • whose soft feminine eyes hide
1 a determined and super-efficient
eration Committee as the e Polish
• P • 1•o- 1 "
personality . . . She is stationed
sistance of Rev. Edwar I Lod
e
g
t
se
-
I
visional Government recognized by Mos- Curr an, d the papi . • c .( is bei ng . at Washington and occupies the
I t seems to us
e n e u rtro
po tait post of executive offi-
at the tough-mind 1 gro(
groomedf o r a I a ii •g e r s role
the deputy
r of
n staff
It seems to us that the tough minded
m le mded f t t i h oen i cr t evived crusade foi l ' oliesoli.tn
a'bo.ut. We likethat news for operations 'Pu otiv the Arm y
and critical sections of the peo p le • s s s inu
The story l c Y an A
no ilt:
o story
Hubert sWmillsleialn,eison Forces
sil o ln a e ii n and America are in no pe 0
bF(o. ct(O:1,d (1 ) in ( * i n we :,c t but
b ( ,(u i .Ruth
.
is i n t i -
I Rapids,
pessimistic mood, but rather tion;,faci)1Ggthinva's th ings $10 r -ni, saying matel connected with very sen-
t ,s by y our intrepid
about the h ea d sational doings
an a angry
c n
determined mood. They 0 ,. a ti 11 ,
flyers . . . Some (lay she should
"friendly"
will insist and the promises made be ' viz., elltitlefrrien." government
ini arns,„ i s be able to write a fascinating
kept, even though those promises have now Ann; for . a . rebate,
on the book about her present activi-
• W
T beeh - signed, sealed and delivered. grounds that the judge who ties.
They know that all agreements do nol fined him should at last realize The continental edition of the
Nov. 5 issue of Yank features
have to be reduced to writing in order that he. Hubert, was right.
a most unusual Woodcut, the
2
DETROIT
WINNERS:
to make them binding.
. v n e(i
.
work of your good friend Sgt.
Th e ' '
our auit nzr t aic ilo ie nti € David Lax, who bids fair to
The agreement to make this a better, test, who received
. l
e i . 1 g iret i , t a
happier, freer and peaceful world does copies of Pierre van Paassen's emerge
as . the ivaila'em=sltatT11-1
"The Forgotten
Ally,"
are: Dr. honoring the late Sgt. Meyer
not have to be in writing.
Olken,
Cambridge,
I I
1
-.:.'
II
I . V . t.
R
S T
ICTLY CONFIDENTIAL* a •
—
This may seem to many of us over
Harry G.
Brooklyn's first major
here as a remote prospect, but from the
Mass.; Lillian Kaplan, Bri
Brighton, hero
ip ero of World y War II, is pro-
Mass.; David C. Gross, Brook- h
reports of increasing communist lean-
Speaks Again
lyn, N. Y. Arthur M Bobrick, jetted by the Jewish War
ings on the part of the masses of the
erans
Mattapan, Mass.; Lillian S. Gur-
people, it should not and cannot be easily
Adolf Hitler spoke to the German peo- vitz, Brookline, Mass.; mary BOOK NEWS:
dismissed.
Fitzgerald, Boston, Mass.; Bei..
Since arriving in this country
pie at five minutes past midnight on nice
Y. Lewis, Mattapan, Mass.; its a refugee, playwright Ferenc
Whatever happens, the urgent needs New Year's day. Most of the wretched, Leo Sadow, Roxbury, Mass.; Mrs. Molnar hasn't been idle . . . The
of the Jews in the liberated areas places worn out Germans must have been asleep Nathan Minkoff, Detroit; Mrs. spring will see the publication
Lud man, Baltimore, Md.; Ann Of two books from his pen . . .
greater responsibility upon our relief, re- at this hour. It was just as well, for H.
Parker, Detroit; Frances L. Hut- From the other side of the foot-
habilitation and refugee agencies. They
witz, Boston, Mass.; Helen Melt- lights conic two new authors,
are meeting these responsibilities and ob- they would have heard nothing new. It zer, Mattapan, Mass.; Ruth both making their literary de-
ligations in the efficient and kindly man- was the same old story of fighting to the Greenfield, Chicago; Musician 2c buts as autobiographers . . . We
D. Weisiman, Constitution Base, refer to Alexander Granath, who
ner that has characterized their activities last man, in order to save the Third Mass.;
and Wave Pearl Gurvitz, used to be one of Max Rein-
since they came into being. Reich from dismemberment, enslavement Floyd Bennett Field Naval Air hardt's favorite actors on the
and deportation of 15 to 20 millions of Station, N. Y . . . As for th e pre-Hitler Berlin stage and now
initials the
innners correctly is clicking on Broadway in "A
her population.
identified: J.R.C. stands for Bell for Adano," and who has
Are We Disillusioned?
Hitler did not forget to call upon the John
Roy Carlson, A.E.K. for written a volume called "From
armed forces to carry on a "life or death" Albert E. Kahn and H.II. for a Childhood in Galicia ;" and to
We have very serious doubts that the fight against the Jewish international Henry Hoke.
Sophie Tucker, who writes about
disillusionment and pessimism that al- world conspiracy.
MILITARY INTELLIGENCE:
See STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL
legedly swept the country over the Greek,
Our hat is off to Ruth Spivak,
There may be some Germans who be-
I
—Page 9
Italian, Russian, Polish boundary matter lieve this idiotic talk of a Jewish Inter-
.
were as engulfing as the commentators national World Conspiracy. If these be-
and special feature writers would have, lieving Germans only knew the present
us believe. !state of world Jewry. If they could go
There has always been a large section I to Poland, Romania, Hungary, and even
5705-1945
of the American people that was critical , to liberated France and Belgium, and
Rosh Chodesh Shebat
January 15
of both Russia and Britain. When the see with their own eyes what had hap-
Chtimign o Oser B'Shevat
January 29
India-British episode involving the arrest I Ipened to this menace, called by Hitler,
Rosh Chodesh Adar
February 14
and hunger strike of Ghandi took n1
ce the Jgish International World Conspir-
'Fast of Esther
.....................................
..
February 26
- -a-
Purim
February 27
their criticism turned to suspicion, and acv, they would go mad from shame and
Shushan Purim
February 28
when Mr. Churchill announced to the chagrin.
'
Rosh Ch ,,,lesh Nissan
But a nation that is hermetical-
March 15
world that he did not become the King's ly sealed against any news from the
Passover, first (lay
March 29
Passover, second day
first minister to prescribe at the liquida- outside world can he told anything by
March 30
Pas: over, ieveath (lay
April 4
tion of the British Empire, the suspicion its vicious, mendacious and lying propa-
Passover,
day
April 5
changed to the certainty that Britain gandists
.
Rosh Chodesh fiat
to belie , and they have no choice but
April 11
was determined to emerge from the war
Lag B'Omer . . .
May 1
e
believe
what they are told.
.. ..
Rosh Chodesh Shin ..
with her empire intact and her spheres
... • May 13
We are persuaded that Hitler was
Shevuoth, first da5.
May 18
of influence undiminished.
right when he said that the Germans will
Shevuoth, second day
May 1:1
These same critical Americans were , fight on until the last soldier is killed
Rosh Chodesh Tammuz
June 12
aware from the very beginning that Sov- ' and the last worker drops from hunger
.
Fast of Tammuz.
.June 11
Rosh Chodesh Ab .
iet Russia was a land closed to Amer-
July 11
and exhaustion. They will not fight
Tishr. B'Ab
July 19
Rosh Chodesh Ellul.
icans. They knew since the Moscow con- on because of the reasons given by Adolf
August 10
ference that the matter of the Polish Hitler, Goebbels, Goering, and the rest
706-1945 *
frontier was not one for discussion. They of the gangsters, but because the Ges-
Rosh Hashonah, first da d
September .8
knew that the Baltic States, Bessarabia tapo and the S.S. formations are there
Rosh Hashonah, second (
September 9
and Buchovina, were considered part of to see that they fight and work until
• Also observed previous da
the Soviet Union by Josef Stalin.
Knowing all this, they could hardly
(Continued on Page 5)
Calendar of Jewish Dates
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