The Jewish Monitor (Fort Worth-Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, August 13, 1920 Page: 4 of 16
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THE JEWISH MONITOR Friday August 13 1920.
Four
0000CKXXX0
AN OVERSTOCK
NEWS FROM DALLAS 1
OTTO ELECTRIC CO.
Sunday September the 12th
ia EREV ROSH HASHONAH.
Send in your New Year's
Greetings so that they can be
published in due time. Price is
$1.00.
THE JEWISH MONITOR.
Mrs. N. Yonack and children are
visiting parents and grandparents
Mr. and Mrs. H. Cweng'e of Denison.
Mrs. R. Pollock and Miss Carolyn
Pollock have gone to Atlantic City for
the remainder of the summer.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Star are in
San Antonio.
Mrs. Steinberg and granddaugh-
ter Sylvia Abrams of St. Louis are
the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
Boas 2500 South Boulevard.
Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Weil have gone
to California.
Mrs. Max Rosenfeld and Mrs. Lewis
Rosenburg and son left Saturday af-
ternoon for Cleveland Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Joseph are
spending the summer in California.
Miss Henrietta Marks is visiting
friends in Milwaukee.
Misses Adele Miller and Rubye
Marks left Sunday afternoon for Chi-
cago and other points in the East.
Mrs.. Gertie Marks 517 Sanger ave-
nue is visiting in Memphis Tenn.
and Vicksburg Miss.
Mrs. Albert Mittenthal and little
son Freeman have returned from a
week's visit to Farmcrsville.
Miss Alice Roos entertained with a
morning bridge at her home on Forest
Avenue Friday.
Miss Blanche Mittenthal gave an al
fresco party at her home 1921 Forest
Avenue Monday evening in honor of
her guest Miss Schon Landman of
Waco.
Miss Marine Gill has returned to
her home in Greenville.
Mrs. I. N. Cerf and daughter Idalia
of Corsicana spent last Thursday
with the Lawrence family on McMil-
lan street.
Miss Sarah Nathan of Chicago who
was the guest of Mrs. Joe Lawrence
and family at 4903 Lindsley street for
several weeks has left for home. Many
of the friends regret in seeing Miss
Nathan leave although we hope she
will visit us again before long.
Mr. Nathan Wilner of Breckenridge
was visiting his relations last week on
McMillan street.
WACO.
Mr. William Marks returned on
Tuesday from Chicago where he spent
several weeks.
Among the graduates of the Waco
High School Summer Class are the
following Jewish students Julius
Berkman and Nathaniel Kaplan.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Wood left
last week for a visit with Mr. and
Mrs. I. Gabert of McAlester Okla.
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Hayman attend-
ed the Steele-Ablon wedding in Dal-
las. Mrs. Hayman will remain in Dal-
las for several days and will then go
to Marshall where she will be present
at the marriage of her brother Mr.
Ben Tobolowsky to Miss Cornelia Co-
hen on August the 15th.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Lowich and sons
spent several days In Dallas the past
week. They will go to Marshall later
for the Tobolowsky-ohen wedding on
the fifteenth.
Mr. Ellie Gilbert of Fort Worth
spent Sunday in Waco.
Mr. and Mrs. B. Novich and daugh-
ter Gertrude have returned from an
extended visit to California Utah and
other points.
Miss Ida Rosenberg has returned
home from a very pleasant visit to
San Antonio and Houston.
A stag banquet was given at the
Raleigh Hotel on Tuesday evening in
honor of Mr. Noah Henry who will
leave shortly for New Orleans his
future home. Place cards held the
following names: Messrs. William
Marks Bernard Sachs Seymour Lip-
pard Abe Rosenberg Jules Tobias
Julian Genecov Harry Berlowitz Phil
Cohen Wnu Saffer Lape Lazarus
Gus Fred Noah Henry N. M. Hurtz
Mitchell Nelson Ivan Davidson and
William Lipshitz. A seven course din-
ner was served the guests. Messrs.
Mitchell Nelson and Bernard Sachs
favored the guests with several mu-
sical selections during the evening.
Mr. Henry was presented with a beau-
tiful diamond studded Shrine pin by
the "boys." In leaving our city Mr.
Henry leaves a host of friends who
will miss him and they wish for them
much success in his ned undertaking.
j
V Phone Lamar 4878
Y 206
OF
ELECTRIC
FIXTURES
We are overstocked on Electrical Fixtures. If
you are going to buy any time in the next six
months NOW IS THE TIME.
"COME IN AND LOOK THEM OVER"
It don't cost nothing but your time and may
save you money. Show rooms open all the time
OTTO ELECTRIC CO.
SO. JENNINGS
00000
GERMANY THE THOROUGHFARE
FOR THE NEW JEWISH
IMMIGRATION.
Immigration and the Jewish Parties
Migration to Germany Work of
Jewish Employment Bureau Hat-
red of the Oppressor The New
Generation and the Old.
By Israel Taubes (Berlin)
(Copyright 1920 by I. J. P. B.)
With Jewish immigration we in Eu
rope have been but little taken up. In instance London where
1920 only 41133 Jews came into the
whole of Germany and of these 21-
683 settled in Berlin. Germny sure-
ly has not lost anything on these few
thousand Jews for they carried on a
foreign trade in leather fish eggs
furs machinery and chemical and
greatly raised the economic and cul-
tural values of Germany abroad. Here
also the Jewish immigratns followed
the same process as in New York
Chicago and London. Not great eco-
nomic successes or resulting good
fortunes but a strong inward impulse
drove them to huddle together to
share their hunger social and physio-
logical. Shared troubles are half troubles.
No philosophies and no theories of our
great learned men not even the va-
rious committees organized in the
Western European countries for the
purpose of diffusing and scattering
the incoming Eastern Jewish popula-
tion so that it may" not arouse so
much opposition will avail. It is an
old category that the Jew must live
among his own.
Besides other economic causes
that there is no real Jewish life in
Germany is perhaps the greatest rea-
son why Germany may never become
a center for Jewish immigration as
92 per
not a single party program was it
stated how the Jewish immigration
may now be accomplished. We have
simply let our masses wander wher-
ever their eyes might lead them.
That is the tragic chapter in the his-
tory of Jewish immigration and the
worst showing for the Jewish par-
ties which get lost in their theories
and do not wish to take account of
every day life. )
Germany is the country to which'
but a small number of Jews went
either before or during the war al-
though they believed that it would
offer them greater range freedom of
movement and a freer life. The pres-j
ent anti-Semitic plague which rages'
so frulously in Germany is trying to'k
pull the wool over the eyes of the J
world and is spreading everywhere f
the report that all Germany is flood-1
ed with millions of Jews who deprive
the Christian population of its live
lihood and even seek to establish
their own Jewish ventert here.
Whoever seriously studies Jewish
immigration and wishes to look into
the Eastern Jewish problem in Ger
many objectively will set that until'
cent of the Jewish immigrants live in
social union in only two sections. In
London the newly arrived Jews bring
over their relatives neighbors and
friends. They live together share
their lot in common laugh and weep
together and suffer in partnership
their hunger.
i But these are not seasonal immi-
grants who work for several months
I a year or two and then return home
to their wives and children. Our im-
' migrants are people who escape from
their homes never again to return to
them because there are the gallows
I and here is life. The1 2497527 Jews
who migrated to America between
.1880 lnd 1914 certainly have no
'great longing for their former homes
jin Poland or Ukrania to taste Pil-
sudski'i or Dcnikin'i rule. It is quite
different however with Germany
f All of Germany has today only about
'eighty or ninety thousand immigrat-
ed Eastern European Jews. The
.Commissioner of Housing in Berlin
pr. Laporte claims that in Berlin it-
self there are bout 50000 unreported
0 refugees. According to this estimate
Nthe number of reported refugees
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DALLAS
ought to be over a million. With
what lies and libels Laporte and with
him the whole anti-Semitic and part
of the Liberal "Israelitish" press dab-
ble is shown by the last noted raid
on Granadierstrasse. Of the 400
Eastern Jews taken to the police
quarters like the most desperate quar
ten herded like beasts and even
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Fox, George. The Jewish Monitor (Fort Worth-Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, August 13, 1920, newspaper, August 13, 1920; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth296773/m1/4/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .