City's First Jewish Citizens Here are some of the first Jewish citizens in Detroit, who were listed in Irving Katz's recent article: •-,--,,,,,,--02 .:,./../..::, 4 .4'4,X,,,,,:l.• „..,;3:: /;:,,,:„. < 4 ;,', ,,,,,P',,,,,s,,,,..44f ,,.. • • , • i .4 .22;4.)r, 44 7.,Y, oki 4. 44:1, iet.....,.,..4 , t,...: su.: :et,. .i.tfj.,;) 4'4 ),.q. . pt. , At#8,...,,,,- ..trul A:7 ...w,, ...fit:4`6.7.,.., t.o.....ki . 46. --",....;,..,4-.....* iGazos i Competitor Israelis to Grid And Beer It NEW YORK (AJP)—Israel's traditional favorite beverage, the cool refreshing. "gazos," faced the prospect of competi- tion from a popular American brew, the lamented 10 cent beer. A company comprised of Israeli and American business- men disclosed that construction was underway in Tel Aviv for a 'new, completely modern brew- ery. The new brewery, Louis Hertzberg, president of the Met- ropolis Brewery of New York, disclosed, will have an adjoining cold storage and ice plants and will be equipped with modern American machinery. The Aiew Israeli premium beer will be produced for Palestinian distribution and for export. Louis randeis and the Labor Pains of 20th Century Capital employer and employee a r e necessarily hostile—that what is good for one is necessarily bad ''',Vt'.'"'?""-'. ..:- , lts.e:i .. , e,,,,A,714, hr. ith .. .,,,,„ :„.,,, ,f.,,, ......1.; ...Nlie for the other. The opposite is .. " : fe" ..S 1 more apt to be the case. While Ag."'"..' ...,2,... ........,..,ra they have different interests, \,-...,----1('777.71, :4 . 7,,,,,. ' .... si. .x.,„,,,, , .... they are likely to prosper or suf- 4 I, P;;X,,, ,:.1.4.. ..\\ Louis Dembitz Brandeis, the fer together." rizofr,,,,,,.. cr-drirlr̀*A.1:v.y . The situation in the New York first Jew on the United States Supreme Court Bench, was a garment industry in 1910 was SIGNATURE OF CHAPMAN ABRAHAM, THE FIRST JEW IN strangely contradictory figure. that of an immovable body and MICHIGAN His liberalism was heavily an irresistible force finding scented" with conservatism; his themselves partners at bridge. attitude of non-participation Manufacturers were plentiful, smacked strongly of partisan- competition was acute, and eco- ship. In fact, Brandeis defied n o m i c unrest menaced em- classification just as he defied ployees and employers alike. The the New York, New Haven, and workers had not yet developed Hartford Railway in 1906 and an effective and unified organ- Chaim Weizmann in 1920. The ization. Such flimsy organiza- reasons for his enigmatic incon- tion as they did have frightened sistencies c a ri be understood and antagonized the manufac- from a study of his varied turers, who were already watch- Propaganda Leaflets career as an advocate, jurist, ing the weather for signs of the red plague of Marxism. and American Zionist. Lead to New Expose Brandeis in his young man- Since conditions were so, and The propaganda leaflets aimed hood was something of a Boston the manufacturers safely held at disruption of national unity Brahmin. He had attended Law the upper hand, the garment with which the vicinity of the School, and came to be quite in- workers found themselves on the Detroit Tank Arsenal was bom- timate with the "better" fam- wrong end of a half-Nelson neck barded from a mysterious plane ilies in and around Boston. Not lock, and they determined to are identical with leaflets carry- too long after his entry into the break the uncomfortable hold ing the imprint of the so-called legal world, however, he began as soon as possible. And so, July Patriotic Tract Society, a litera- to be interested in certain so- 7, 1910, found the garment ture distributing branch of cial causes which his wealthy, workers squaring off for a gen- Smith's hate-mongering organ- conservative friends found little eral strike, and the employers EDWARD KANTER, first Jew- SIMON FREEDMAN, one of ization which he labels the to their liking. The rights of on guard with a Cloak, Suit & Temple ish banker in Detroit and first the . early presidents of labor, problems of the working, Skirt Manufacturers' Protective Christian Nationalist Crusade. Detroit Jew to become a member Beth El, who is listed in the classes, and similar considera- Association. Brandeis, the chair- Smith's last financial report, City Directory of 1845. of the State Legislature. as filed with the Clerk of the tions were hardly fashionable in man of the arbitration commit- House of Representatives in the society in which Brandeis tee, found as the chief bone of Eddie Cantor Children's Washington, listed the following was accustomed to mingle. They contention t h e issue of the Home Opened in Israel were particularly inappropriate closed shop. Nothing seemingly JERUSALEM (JTA)—An "Ed- Detroiters as contributors dur- for an up-and-coming corpora- could so inflame faction against ing 1950 to his Crusade: die Cantor Children's Home" tion lawyer, but he did not let Ted LoGrone, $145; M. Herri- that stop hiM. As Brandeis's faction as the question of who was opened in the collective set- - . J. Fackler, $110; corporation practice grew, so did was to be employed in garment tlement Maale Hamisha, near man, $127; 2 factories. Jerusalem, in the presence .of W. Anders, $512; T. & F. Kramer, his sympathies for the laboring After a number of skirmishes $120; L. E. Zink, 2525 Fifth St., U.S. Ambassador Monnett Davis, classes. and considerable front line ac- leaders of the Jewish Agency $225. In time, Brandeis came to This report listed the follow- be known as a stalwart cham- tion, Brandeis attempted to pro- and of the Hadassah. The institution was named for ing as having received funds pion of individual rights, a vide the basis for an armistice the American Jewish actor in from the Crusade for services righteously indignant prophet with his "pieferential union recognition of his efforts in the performed: George Sadowski;, exhorting the people against shop." Truce talks bogged down, United States on behalf of the 'attorney, $25; Graphic Arts stifling controls of any kind but after a clarification of Bran- Hadassah and the United Jewish Service, 1345 Broadway, $5,703, ("bigness," as he called it), deis's basic plan, and a renam- ing of it, as "protocol." by Louis for printing and paper. Appeal. particukrly the lurking dan- Marshall, it appeared that the ger of no much money tied up war was over. Under this plan ill too few hands. But, thanks standards were to prevail, to a prosperous legal career union and preference in hiring was to and judicious investments, be given to union workers where Brandeis was worth well over three million dollars at the their qualifications were equal to By NATHAN ZIPRIN those of non-union workers. (Copyright, 1951, Seven Arts Feature Syndicate) time of his death in 1941. The plan which Brandeis was SOLOMON BENDIT, the first Despite an excellent upbring- vice president of Temple Beth Clipping From Israel ing and a most enlightened instrumental in formulating was . a time, for but event A Tel Aviv court recently handed down a decision which awareness of what Was going on effective -. - El, who is listed in the City brought wide criticism from religious elements. The case involved in the world about him, Bran- rally schoIem (peace) began to Directory of 1845. a "kohen" and a divorcee. Under Jewish law a "kohen" is not per- deis was totally indifferent to go out of style, like the seasonal mitted to marry a divorcee. The couple, refugees, met in Italy. Be- Jewish traditions and institu- a'arments of the innumerable cause their identification papers were not in order they were un- tions. Slowly, however, the sig- manufacturers. Largely at fault able to marry legally. Instead they resorted to an ancient and nificance of being Jewish in a was the machinery of the plan permissible Jewish practice. The man placed a ring on the woman's complex non-Jewish world of for adjusting grievances be- finger and, in the presence of a minyan, declared her to be his commerce and group needs tween employers and employees. lawful spouse. Later the couple settled in Israel, where they sought began to dawn on him. In 1912 The preferential union shop, to legitimize the marriage in full compliance with Jewish law he met a former associate of however, was effective as a pro and tradition. But no rabbi in Israel would marry them in viola- Theodor Herzl, Jacob- De Haas, tern expedient for maintaining tion of the Biblical edict. Finally they took the matter to court, and somehow became suddenly amity between capital and since, under Israeli law, courts have jurisdiction to determine' and strongly imbued with the labor, and for curbing excesses marital questions. The court was in a quandry. To rule the mar- meaning a n d aspirations of of "bigness" on the part of riage legal would • have meant antagonizing religious elements. Zionism. Brandeis's rise in the either side. Brandeis, here as Besides, it was reluctant to set a precedent. In the end the court sphere of Zionism was as mete- elsewhere, successfully attempt- ruled that the couple wis entitled to documents establishing their oric as his rise in the legal ed to advance the cause of the marriage relationship. As to the question whether they complied world. There is little doubt that individual and the welfare of with Jewish' law in getting married, the court held that the issue he would have become one of human initiative. was not germane. Instead the court ruled that this particular the very highest luminaries in question must remain unsolved until laws are formulated meeting Zionist endeavor had he not had KKK Attacks Baruch such contingencies. a difference of opinion with JACOB SILBERMAN, first Weizmann in 1920. After this As _a 'Zionist Jew' president of Temple Beth El and They Can Have Him schism Brandeis resigned from first president of Pisgah Lodge, GEORGETOWN, S. C. (JTA)-- Last Easter, Martin Bormann Jr., and his sisters, Erika and active leadership, but remained who is listed in the City Direc- Irma, had an audit ce with the Pope. Martin Bormann Jr., Hit- an ardent Zionist throughout Bernard Baruch was attacked as tory of 1846. ler's godson, lived in South Germany. He has adopted the 'Catho- the remainder of his life. "a Zionist Jew" by Thomas L. lic faith and is a student for the priesthood in the seminary of Brandeis's deep interest in Hamilton, Grand Dragon of the Zionism did not affect his at- the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart near Ingoistadt. He is 21. During the war he was enrolled in the best special schools for titude toward Jewish tradi- Ku Klux Klan in South Carolina.. tions. He held himself entirely He spoke before a crowd of Nazi party "elite" youngsters. His sisters too became converts to aloof from custom and ritual, about 1,000 persons gathered 20 Catholicism, but one of them returned to the Protestant fold. A from anthing that would set miles from Mr. Baruch's planta- publishing house in Tangier will shortly publish a series of ex- a group apart, except some- tion home. None of them wore change letters between Bormann and his wife. This information thing like "blood," which was klan robes. is culled from the July issue of the Catholic Digest. The meeting marked renewed already there. At his funeral services in 1941, Dean Acheson Klan activity in South Carolina. Missing Jewels delivered the eulogy, following The Ku Klux Klan leader said S. Wiesenthal has been carrying in "Aufbau" interesting re- which Brandeis's body was that Mr. Baruch is attempting ports about secret Nazi treasures. Only a small part of the gold, jewels and other valuables looted from Jews have been turned cremated. Yet in 1919, if to "regiment" the American peo- over by the allied governments to the Jewish Agency and the Israel Zangwill and others had ple with federal control. He also had their way, Brandeis would spoke against Negroes, stating JDC. Wiesenthal indicates that in some mysterious manner some have been the first President that they are conducting effec- of the treasures which had been assigned to Jewish organiza- tiyA propaganda toward ending of Palestine. tions had disappeared. This is a matter that deserves thorough One of Brandeis's most out- segregation in schools. investigation. >1. standing efforts on behalf of so- cial progress and the improve- British Reported Asking for A Busy Man The other day I asked Louis Segal, the well-known Mapai ment of the position of labor Negev Oil Concessions leader, "How come you are still here? Aren't you joining the gen- occurred in 1910, when he was LONDON (JTA) — British oil made chairman of the arbitra- ADAM HERSCH, a charter eral exodus to the Zionist Congress?" Segal replied: "I am too tion board in the New York gar- companies have approached the member of Temple Beth El, who busy to go to the Congress." This is typical of 'the man. He is the ment 'workers' strike. His con- Israel Government in the hopes is listed in the City Directory of most hard working Zionist leader I know. Recently he celebrated ciliatory attitude toward both of securing concessions for ex- his 25th anniversary of Zionist activities. He more than deserved 1846. all the compliments that were paid him. Though devoted to party labor and capital hq.d been ploration and exploitation of oil discipline, he has preserved his common sense, and what is more, clearly indicated five years be- resources in the Negev and in 36 THE JEWISH NEWS his fairmindedness. He is, indeed exceptional._ He prefers to stick fore, when he told the Boston other parts of Israel. The names to his desk, instead of participating in the Jerusalem Congress Central Labor Union: "Don't of the companies were not stated Friday, August 10, 1951 assume that the interests of in the report, debates. ' ;; ,,;7.7,.,.:, ..,;71‘;6-... :;?-.8G11.ey,,, f4,;;.4. 7. 1.04. t4to•✓ / 4 /.0 On the Record - — By SAMUEL I. BELLMAN, M.A. Wayne University School of Law Without counsel purposes are disappointed, but in the multi- tude of counsellors they are es- tablished. — Proverbs, 15., 22.