The Texas Jewish Herald (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 9, 1926 Page: 1 of 8
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70
mpaL
WISH HERALD
J
A WEEKLY JOURNAL DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE JEWISH PEOPLE
THE OLDEST JEWISH NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE SOUTHWEST
Nineteenth Year
HOUSTON, TEXAS, DECEMBER 9, 1926
#
No. 15
Carnegie Endowment For International London Tobacco
r
EGO
22 r
Baron Purchases
M
2,
Palestine Stock
.52
f Antiquss of the
•y
rnment, has handed in
.-5
■ •
Sir }ljndors
Petrie. famous Eng-
lish areh:
er Jordan and Yarmuk and their af-
Zinovieff and Kamenef f, ‘members
ment and maintenance of a Nurses’
o My People.”
Mr. Baron has contributed $250,-
1
i Electric Corporation.
linens to twenty institutions in Pal
condition was carried out some time |
now fixed at $5,000,000.
most
wa- appointed to the post of rabbi
' 6
w
Ah
leader ot the Roumanian
1 S,mite-
M. 1 hor. Im
States and Central Ca ada sent their
PH
I
1‘
Rabbi-Merfeld to Be
IS :
vember 9th, at which leaders of the
what
abe -oop
[ most women journalists of the
2B1
2
embodied into
art icles.
tormerly director
3
o- -0- -0-
■^3
,9
03
9
‘ ’ pier day.
Greater mircles have happened.
attraction
speaker
of the Jew
-0-
.
1.22
44
self-constituted and si
mi
I trui
to bri
lied to pver
I au
donpette-
b
imd
6a Aa
30228
■
* A
eml
Peace Publishes Unfavorable Report On
Palestine’s Prospects For Jewish Home
Speaker On B’nai
B’rith Day Program
i
hear
good
f start-
t work.
the country by the Evening World
and called out widespread enthusi-
under
inti-
if they will lay as "much stress on
the former as they usually do on the
was
to p
is of the Mar-
are ret urning
1 J
Bl
the
will
the
coun-
The
later
if we
thusiasm
Possibly many more Jews than ob-
served the kindling of the lights at
Chanukah will observe the non-Jew-
ish custom of having the Christmas
tree.
tural eexrcises of great
take place.
This year the principal
2
1
. 58
Jew for the
kuh
10
lifh
(> l
np
S
3
• 13
Lead to National Egotiam and Strengthen
He Fears; Dr. Weizmann to Make Reply
Address.
9
^1
official or-
Roll manian
dea
d"28
stimulating a wider interest in the
Rebuilding of the Jewish Homeland
-0=46- -o-
_LI
Sophie Irene Loeb
E
it served as the openigi "gun” in the
national campaign. Eht midwestern
s deputy ill
( ‛om m issariat .
k
< 2
7
' —
Rabbi Harry Merfeld
Fort Worth
fluents for generating and supplying
electrical energy.
And the more Christmas trees and
the more lights he has, the better I
like it.'
2
ae 99
1 of the
22: .
it
%
to the Hebrew University of Jeru-
salem. He is now the largest indi-
vidual shareholder of the Palestine ■
I el of American Jewish women.
Evening World, will turn over the
entire royalties of her book to the
United Palestine Appeal.
Miss Loeb, who is one of the fore-
The Anti-Defamation League of
the Independent Order B'nai B’rith.
—12----fatut-d --A -nally success-
9od name of
Kr
2
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Fg.i
3833
-- Dinese
Dav id.
I'
4
18
In reply Judge Lewis wrote:
"My Dear Miss Loeb:
"Your letter of November 10th
iniwhichou.s “
elaion to turn
I ' '
!'
6 ■ ■
Eav
ea ■
L
E- -
A
SGa
While I have no regard for Christ-
mas ns such, much good might re-
sult therefrom.
-0- -o- -o-
■
W0
w: ••
3-4
5
"1 ■
■
Ea,
estine other than its own.
mittee’s campaign. One such meet-
Dr. Henry S. Pritchett, Returning From Visit to ' Egypt, Palestine and
Greece, Calls Jewish Efforts in Palestine Unfortunate and Visionary;
Reiterates Complaints of Arab Agitators, Refers to Recent Attacks
Fzf •
Rabbi Sudani Nzan, oldest rabbi in
Funis, died at Goletta at the age of
100. His youngest so nis 67 years
old.
n"
2e
I:
■
I ‛r.
Max, J
i ed bv
legist and scholar. arriv-
will be Rabbi Harry A. Merfeld of
Forth Worth. Rabbi Merfeld, as stat-
ed by the committee, has been a
leader in the B’nai B’rith movement
for the past several years and in un-
usually well qualified i to present in
its proper perspectus the part which
the Independent Order of B’nai
-o- -o-
OUTLINE OF HADASSAH ACTIVITIES ! WORL D
BOTH IN AMERICA AND PALESTINE WIDE
-0-
What then?
-o-
"Illusion of Chosen People”,
on Sunday in Carnegie Hall
“From the many letters that I
have received when the book was
published in the Evening World Syn-
dicate, it is evident that many peo-
. „ pie were not aware of the actual
Se I
The pride and exuberance of joy
that effervesces in the heart of the
non-Jew at this season should not be
frowned on, by any means.
-o- -o- -o-
Under the agreement at least $1, gaged in the Holy Land, in addition
000,000 of th company's nominal I to furnishing adequate supplies
share capital had to be paid in cash "
k
2
i
7 2
99
6245
c
. "8
ed in-Gaza for the. purpose o
bbh
Ee
I
to .make the concession valid. This I
successful in Palestine by reason' of
the character and ability of the col-
onists. These hardy Wurtenburg
peasants with their flourishing col-
onies at Jaffa, Haifa and Jerusalem
Were such h hope a Reality today
the Jewish heart is sufficiently
Ander and respensive and will for-
Tve:
and accomplice for thieves, and
sniveling in mock piety, is dead, too.
Palestine g
The B’nai B’rith Day celebration
will be held next Sunday evening,
December 12th, at 8:15, at the
Temple Beth Israel. Thiskevent is
an annual one, at which Emes cul-
ran- in Port ugl v. Im
to' J udaism.
can not instill a bit of en-
225
L
Sg
sme
Appeal in Baltimore to raise $150,-
0(10 of the $7,500,000 goal for 1927
by Dr. Chaim Weizmann, president
of the World Zionist Organization, ‘
who addressed 1000 persons attend-
ing the banquet at which the drive
was launched. Jacob Epstein presid-
ed at the dinner.
these items succinctly picture the re-
markable range of effort in which
the Hadassah Organization, compos-
33
7
his resignation.
a‛..8
.2
19 to 1923-24; a system of penny
school luncheons, and the establish-
ing was held at Allentown on No-
arousing enthusiasm and mustering
strength for the Wider Scope Com- .
the Department
8 । State Ba nk.
. 1 ambassader
/Ee-
1 «
■
FSio-
The “Jew comedian” of the stage
who jested about fires and failures is
dead! *
The stage “Fagin" acting as fence
31 W . '
Cuza. I
w,h W ci fare .Board,
-o- -0-
1 organization, the cost of its propa-
i ganda, etc., is met from the dues
delegates who heard t e purposes of | paid, by the members.
mt o' the make-up of the are the only European settlements
bservance of Chanu-|that have found roots in the coun-
; try. I he vision of Herzl and the pi-
’ turesque visit of the German Emper-
lor, in 1898, while they gave a tem-
। porary stimulus to colonization, did
not lead to any permanent results.
disheartening.
"I had thought that the Carnegie
Endowment was for international
e - ‘
ilarinteresina
tsemNVene
Ti.
■I
misti r to the nee
• formerly Krassin
" ’ Foreign Trade 1
f tfe (‘ommunists. •
000. The Wider Scope Committee’s
plan for the extension of Hillel ___________... ,............... .. ....
oundatiens amehg the universties-try recently visited Patestme.
of this country was greeted with es- impressions of her visit were
pecial enthusiasm and acclaimed as .....
one nt tlie gielite.; Feuds of model n
Jewish life.
could doubt that this would be an
unfortunate situation for those Jews
who lived in Palestine.
“The segregation of any national
group by itself has seldom failed to
develop a type of personality and
national character that was aggres-
sive, egotistic and without capacity
for co-operation with the rest of the
world. No one can doubt that these
qualities would develop themselves
in a Jewish State, as in any other
isolated State, and one cannot for-
get that’ national egotism was per-
haps the greatest weakness of the
Jewish nation.
“No greater misfortune can come
to a people or to a nation than to
cherish the illusion'that it is a chosen
people and enjoys the favor of the
Almighty beyond all other peoples.
That this tendency would be accen-
tuated by a Jewish occupation of
Palestine seems unquestionable.
“The sharpness of feeling between
Jew and Mohammedan is already
making itself uncomfortably evident
in Jerusalem. Small incidents illus-
trte this situation constantly.”
Dr. Chaim Weizmann, president of
the World Zionist Organization, who
is now in Baltimore in the interests
of the United Palestine Appeal,
when shown a despatch concerning
the report refused to comrhent on it
at present, declaring that he will,
make a reply in a few days after he
has read the full text of the state-
---acla
of ‘what ata
08
‘ . 39
• i.
the Jewish settlement of Palestine in
the unfriendly, even beligerent,
terms which Dr. Pritchett choqses to
employ. I haven’t seen the full re-'
port. I shall not permit myself to
make a full comment upon it until
after careful study, but the excerpts
ff *
C . H
. ' G22
. 33
Will the Christian ministry preach
on the text “Peace on earth, good
will to all mankind”?
+O- -O- -O•
I have no quarrel with the non-
Jew for his observance of Christ-
mas.
Talmud Torahs; anti-trachoma cam-
paigns which have reduced the inci-
dence of trachoma from 40.7" to
1 15.3% in the five year period, 1918-
a Na-
20
-
i '
H
ka ■
2
Ea,lli
1
e
Av.'.
F
0 /
2aAg .
President Alfred M. Cohen and
Executive Secretary Boris D. Bogen,
spoke at the .conference of District
No. 2, at St. Louis on November 7,
at which Emil Mayer assumed the
responsibility for leading these west
and southwestern states to success- l
ful accomplishment in the campaign.
Delegates to the Ohio State Gon-
vention on November 14th had an
opportunity not only to hear about
the work of the Order for college
stdents, but to visit the Hilen
Foundation and learn at first hand
of this new factor in the life of the
Jewish college student. Mr. Sidney
G. Kusworm outlined the plans of
the Wider Scope Committee to ex-
tend Hillen Foundations and other
cultural activities.
-------------:-----0-------
The Public Defender
a series of
33 The centuries of suffering will
3 A not have been in vain. ,
i
h , And ■<>,. while the great majority
83a of Jews neglect the beautiful and
n good of their own—
4 o o o
S ughninn AlahaeAna hamaata
B’rith is taking in Jewish life.
Mr. Harry Dow_^will precede Dr.
Merfeld, and Mr. Morris D. Meyer
a§ nis"pai, "LPi,a: remembered that last
a-at- L-- vear the Temple was fill
Palestine May
being made to restore Palestine as
the Home Land. N '
“My hope is that everybody that
can possibly read it, will do so and
I believe they will catch fhe spirit
of hope that I myself had; and I en-
deavored to give a truthful picture
of the whole problem.
“With every good wish, I am,
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) “SOPHIE IRENE LOEB"
Iwas syndicated by the New York
Jewish communities in
known as the "Lehigh
meBu I will say this:
ting forward successfully _
ne,” he said. "The situation has
yiiconsiderably Improved, sine
; , latter, it would not be long till
"Peace on earth and good will to
all mankind” became a reality.
tury Company, to the United Pales-
tine Appeal, has been a source of
deep gratjfication to me as well as
to all of my colleagues of the United
Palestine Appeal.
"I wish further to, assure you of
my firm belief that your book, which
I have read with the greatest in-
terest, will be exceedingly useful in
spreading the true facts with regard
to the situation in Palestine and in
Garstanir, . director of
Some few Jewish homes, yes, some
very few, observed the custom of
lighting the lights.
-o- -o- -o-
l which we re
Waritri of I! am 11 n rg. w as nam-
: t‛ie (jermai vovirnment as its
astic comment. These articles have
now been brought together in book
form and published by the Century
Company under the title of "Pales-
water Beach Hotel, ( hicago. While One hundred cents of every dollar
this meeting was ostensibly held to roccived hy Hadassah for its work in
xall together the Ben B’rith of Illi the Holy Land goes direct ly to its in-
nois and plan the distiii campaign, titutons in I alestine. 1 he cost of
its effects were more Widely felt and S U ing.these < ontr 1 bution:, asWell
•mas the administrative expenses of the
iof th' oppositional group of the
I Bolshevik party, were appointed to
Five hospitals with 375 beds, each
with a dispensary attached, and each
of them open to all elements of the
population, Arab, Christian, and
Jewish; medical stations in more
than 40 Jewish settlements; 14 In-
fant Welfare stations in the princi-
pal cities of Palestine;,medical aid to
immigrants; medical inspection of
18,000 pupils in public schools and
brought to my attention are
yndicated throughout
if we cannot create a love of
things Jewish in the heart of the
Jew—
At fi meeting of the Immigration
Rostriction I.tein New York City
. । ( Mrs. (atherine Parker (‘liyette, pres-
j ilent. asked for drastic restriction
4 • of immigrat ion.
gg
-
M2 ’
next two months. Of this sum, Illi-j
nois has volunteer d to raise $500,-
000. David Komiss is chairman for , ■
the district,'and his aides ares the cent action. during tie tall Holy'
following state ehairmen: Rabbi „ Hadassah. iS a beloved work in when Dr. Barnaten •
Louis L. Mann, Illinois; Robert Lap- TalestincIt; name is a blessing on I'.mUihd. During hi
pen, Iowa; Aaron proock, Michigan; he 11/5.,of eWs, Arabs and Chris hemy h* rreatly (‛l
Arthur Brin, Minnesota; Irvin Stall-itians i ike It has sived countless ' the ’ otrr ut 1 '
master,' Nebraska. Harry lshko- M‛Sthatenedhy,disrastandhasiwlihwiildomt .
witz, North Dakota; Joseph living-breueht,holp nd hevinK to thou hundred- to i,.,.,.
ston. South Dakota: Ben saltzstcin, anda Its benificent influenee ha next At thecl
Wisconsin, and M N Steinkopr, Cen had a tremnendous influrnce in the adisofthsisiri-
tral Canada* Jame E. Becker and mpoVemen! 01 the hyirioni. and . mionnal reset
M. E. Greenbaum head the Chicago anitan eohditions not only ,l. 1 al-i 1) eryhouy - V •
committee. ' -tin l’", the entir" Noir i"1"" vited.
At meetings which are being held
-o- -o- -0-
Then let's try theneverse!
-o- -o- -0-
Arabs in trade, agriculture and other
economic business pursuits is in
creasing daily.”
Dr. Stephen S. Wise, shown ex-
cerpts of Dr. Pritchett’s article, de-
scribed the adverse comment as "dis-
heartening.” Lacking the complete
text, Dr. Wise withheld extended ex-
pression on the statement, until he
had seen it, "it is difficult to be-
lieve,” Dr. Wise said, “that a person
of scientific equipment should have
made this report. It reads like an ar-
ticle in an incendiary Arab newspa-
per in 1920 or 1921.
. “No intelligent Arab would discuss
Easton. Reading, Chester, Bethle-
hem, Lancaster, and Allentown—
pledged themselves to assist in rais-
ing Pennsylvania's quota of $125,-
:. 02
gai
132
/
lilnl prorredines
"(urierul l ra lite
And if they did so preach, how
would—they—continue—their--efforts
along this line with their interpre-
tation of the death of Christ?
-o- -o- -o-
Aarnn Shein man .
Could the Jews wish for our neigh-
bors any thing greater than a full
comprehension of the utterance?
-o- -o- -0-
Rabbi Louis L. Mami, James H.
Becker, David Kniise, M. E. Green-
baum, and others, and pledged on , • . -
behalf of their con tituent lodges to sands, of members of the organiza- ideliv
raise more than $800,000 within thetion hrine to thoin solf-imnesnd tnek Im......
Cincinnati.-—Response has come
from all parts of the country to the
appeal of Henry Monsky, chairmkh
of the Wider Scope Committee of the
Independent Order B’nai B’rith and
Alfred M. Cohen, president, on be-
half of the $2,000,000 campaign of
the. Order. District and State com-
mittees, it was' reported today, have
now well under way the steps of
preliminary organization which will
assure the support of every lodge
and the co-operation of its members
for the campaign. The campaign will
be conducted through seven districts,
each embracing several states in the
United States and Canada. District
chairmen and state chairmen have
been appointed and campaigns will
be run during the succeeding months
in cities from coast to coast.
The first answer to the appeal
came from District Number Six,
which held a meeting at the Edge-
peace rather than to foment strife
and deepen misunderstanding.”
tine Awake: The Rebirth of
I new posts by the Soviet Govern-
I ment.
. Sludom Treistmann of War-
a hrother of tin late Lodz ral-
ful defender of the
zizzfaua
prena,alt Mto etope 11
K I
je8n-
F -a
the campaign outlined by the na- .. ‘,“v • au PPaEeuuit>
tional chairman, Henry Monsky, Hadassah many of which devote
It gives to them a brighter and
“The Zionist movement as it .ex-
ists today had its rise in a reaction
against the anti-Semitic agitation of
the concluding quarter of the nine-
teenth century. It received a new
stimulus in the enormous develop-
ment of self-determination on the
part of all races which was so accen-
tuated during the Great War.
“Today the effort as carried on in
Palestine has the backing of a strong
organization which has large funds
at its disposal. It has the energetic
support of the English Government,
which exercise the mandate for Pal-
estine.
“Notwithstanding all these forces
which have been brought to its sup-
port the movement seems to the
thoughtful observer a visionary ef-
fort-and one that can scarcely attain
success'.
“The inherent poverty of the
country, its lack of resources, the ab-
sence of an industrial life, operate
to make futile the economic success
of such an effort. The enterprise is
an artificial one, having its chief
justification in the enthusiasm of
well-meaning men who apparently do
not appreciate the difficulties of
their problem nor the interests of the
existing native population.
“There is a phase of the Jewish
re-occupation of Palestine to which
apparently no reference has yet been
made, but which would seem also to
constitute a serious objection to the
proposal, even were it feasible. If
Palestine could be cleared of the
Arabs and populated with Jews ex-
clusively and thus become a pure
Jewish state, no thoughtfat man
j Training School in Jerusalem, the
. only institution of its kind in the
000 to the Keren Hayesod (Pales- Orient; a Roentgen Institute which
tine Founation Fundi and $50,000 is one of the best in the world—
V,
E -
Fg
2o
)
"s.....
a
against tire
wmaweggemmre- : { rg,
' . N
■ .i. cwni 1 y ' or
' ■. 1jr !‛ ri 1)-
1 i i i h »" r
. ' "1 IL. were
1 : rtom in ’
? ivti, u n-
i./1vi h;
3"
" a
g
Ds
t- 6;w,
On Jews at Wailing Wall; Segregation of Jews
Dr. Morgenstern
— ' In ndd ition to the famous Poltava
Will Visit Houston
tion."
“Palestine Awake” gives a graphic
picture of the kaledioseopie life of
the newly arising Jewish Homeland
and has aroused wide interest
throughout tire country. Nathay
Strauss, the eminent philanthropist
and benefactor of Palestine, has
written an introduction to Miss
Loeb’s book.
On behalf of the United Palestine
Appeal, Judge William M. Lewis,
chairman, has sent a letter to Miss
Loeb expressing his gratitude for
her generosity in assigning her roy-
alties to the United Palestine Ap-
peal.
Miss Loeb’s letter to Judge Lewis
follows:
“My Dear Judge Lewis:
“This is to say that my book “Pal-
estine Awake” has just been issued
by the Century Company, and I
have notified the Century Company
that all of the royalties and pro-
ceeds of the book that would come
to me I wish to turn over to the
United Palestine Appeal.
IT um
“Ha-x-dMeqddid
ngfak "Bs1
vjadk A A
A ' ■ 4 A
Jerusalem, Dec. 4. A block of
shares worth $500,000 has been tak
en by Bernhard Baron of London,
70-year-old Jewish philanthropist,
known as England’s "toheaco baron”
in the Palestine Electrical Corpora-
tion. The company was formed to
""UIllllIIMl/lltl/lllllll/uuulllm
Chanukah is here!
-0- -O- rO-
Christmas will soon be here.
-o- -o- -o-
And I know there are some who
will shudder at 'the desecration (?)
of mentioning the two in tho same
breath.
6
Ao
88888288
Its institutions, spread over the land
like the loving embrace of a great
mother, are visited by thousands of
tou.rists from every part of the world
who have marvelled at the efficiency
and humanity of Hadassah'.- work.
Its praises are sung all over the
world.
Hadassah is a word of nrisc in
America. To be courted among its
members is to be included in that
ever growing army of Jewish wman-
hood, who, answering the call' of
Israel in anguish, are giving them- , ,
selves unsparingly, joyously, selfless-F archaeological
ly to the "Healing cf the Daurht -
o- -o- -o-
Is there one among us who does
not hope for “peace on earth and
good will to all mankind”? .
-o- -o- -o- •
Hadassah is exclusively a women’s ' '
back, and the authorized capital is organization. In a brief period it has
now fixed at $5,000,00)0. grown to a paid-up membership of|
The Jaffa Electric Company, Inc., 31,000 Senior members and 7000
a subsidiary company of the Pales- Juniors. In the past five years its
tine Electric Corpor ihon, made a । membership has trebled. The organi I
net profit, for 1925 o! $.'<0,515, ac-zation has 248 chapters in as many g
cording to the report to the league Jewish communities in the United
of nations submitted by the British States, in addition to over 700 sew .
government. A dividend of 6 per ing circles and 170 Junior groups;
cent was paid on ordinary shares of For the year 1926-1927 Hadassah
the company for that period. , I has assumed a budget of $500,000
: — = /for its own needs in addition .to
. | $250,000 for general Palestine needs . ‘
IBNAI BRITH CAMPAIGN IS iumi-mm"N
RAPIDLY GAINING IN STRENGTH -mim" A
brew University Hospital and allied A.
__hospital buildings. Ah
, ‘ lake Mr. shnm position in
' State Bank.
" . ! + + +
Le , . Tremendous impetus was given to
&bma.the opening of the United Palestine
"TTTT
which you have so aptly tarmed “the
greateat experiment of the century.”
“Your generous act of turning
over the royalties to the United PaI-
stine Appeal proves your own idenl- 8
istie interest in the cause and will.
more liberal “slant” on life.
-0- -o- -0-
And on every hand we
preached: “Peace on earth-
will to all mankind.”
• -o- -o- -0-
EMMg ‘ N
Eggg
• \l
14 tg
l
i6oha7
qem
. 50.8.
While in many lands the cross has
t • been the cause of much grief, agony
and pain to the Jew, he continues to
live in hope of a brighter and hap-
carry out the agreement concluded
in 1921 between the British crown
agents for the colonies and Pinhas
Rutenberg, for a con cession for the
utilization of the waters of the riv-
New York, Nov. 29 (J. T. A.)—A
distinctly unfavorable report of the
prospects of establishing- the Jewish
national home in Palestine was ren-
dered by Dr. Henry S. Pritchett to
the Carnegie Endowment for Inter-
natioal Peace made public yesterday
at Columbia University by Dr. Nich-
olas Murray Butler, president of the
Endowment. Dr. Pritchett, who re-
cently completed a survey of Pales-
tine, Egypt and Greece for the En-
dowment, is president of the Car-
negie Foundation for the Advance-
ment of Teaehiug and is a trustee of
the Carnegie Endowment for Inter-
national Peace.
The report which is to appear in
the “International Conciliator,” the
official publication of the Endow-
ment, was released Monday morning
to the metropolitan press by the De-
partment of Public Information of
Columbia University and was widely
puhlished.
“From the standpoint of econom-
ics fl is difficult to see how any
great Jewish population is to live in
Palestine. The Arabs who_now culti-
vate the soil are a backward race,
but they toil endlessly and with all
their toil are able to obtain only a
meagre sustenance,” Dr. Pritchett
said.
“A few German colonies, institu-
ted many years ago, have proved
NS 48753 05583 9175575250747
18 "
,,, ■ ■
o
:: ' 0,■
’ ’ ’• yrai,:
be' l nion of
e i: -1 it tiled I V
rupresemtitive at the I ‘ermanent Fi-
■ , , I nance 1 mmission of the League of
Hie officers and propagandists of , Nations, it was learned today.
--ederemh, men, ef ghish deute all Dr. Julian Morgenstern. principal',' + + + ...
of their time to the direction and de-lof the Hebrew I nion ( ollege o{ cin- Maurice Samuel, the well-known
velopment of Hadassah’s activities, cinnati, Ohio, will hr in Houston on 1 Jewish writer and’ Zionist lecturer,
are volunteers.. They,, and th thou- Tuesday, Docemlu-r 1th. and will has resigned 'his position ‛a‛s propa-
... .......... ... .... vikouiveiiver an address at ‘Temple Bthiandist of" the’ Zionist Organization
tion, bring to their self-imposed task. | Israel at S p.m. The member- ofof Amerimanf the lnite Pales-
zeal, intelligence and devotion, which Beth Israel have a .very warm 1 t - t ine Appeal,
make Hadassah the highest expres-in their lumas for 1 . M --nu, :. ri. , + + +
sion of Jewish womanhood in benefi-I who 'occupied Dr -Hanis en - . 1 lp • • The Thira Innialconvention f
l ay - n1 12o. the lewi-i Wifare n ar will be
a- eltd -a hal- i" !onenltth at the Hly-
lri, -,1 <ii.iu (l‛, it en. Me . Judge Irv-
"! f.'-'il u l,. 1 1 ; 1 . ■ Nw ). "h e*ty, pres-
et Moscow,
the Russian
inted Rusnian
Mr. Eni in km,
1 . । Ir. Bernard Kahn. Furopean di-
M ' regtor or the American Jewish Joint
E Itrbutien Committee. and Miss
EK, - Amelia Greenwald, were elected hon-
edk. erary" memhers c ‛ the first Jewish
2320 Nurss Training School recogni-
m: t i. " । ■ f f ie ■1 aenierimenis Jewish
EV sm ml service
208___________
-o- -O- -O-
Chanukah has a beautiful symbol
and a glorious significance.
-o- -o- -0-
The observance of Chanukah is
respected in the negative rather than
the positive.
-o- -o- -o-
- 1 j Mnlomen I.ovitan. State Treasurer
i of Wi-un-in. was re-elected for the
I : third term by a vote if : 18,000 over
I , hi hearet opponent. lle led the
' ticket at both primary and regular’
Smrhai-nsn " SOPHIE IRENE LOEB DEVOTES BOOK............
chairman, Leonard S. Levin, are । T " m ""M lcil, ■.< (;iry (11 :i Ilcimairiiar
PROFITS TO UNITED PLESTINE DRIVE ■.
tomarry n Jewish girl, Miss Sooseia.
---- • - Dincua changed his mme to Janeu
.......,, is , Sophie Irene Loeb, author of “Pal-
Valley”-— estine Awake” which, in serial form,
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Goldberg, Edgar. The Texas Jewish Herald (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 9, 1926, newspaper, December 9, 1926; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1520819/m1/1/: accessed June 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .