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HOW MUCH
Can money earn
Nowadays
SAFELY f
Your Money Can Earn
7%
Total I in limn i t y from
Market Fluctuations
This investment will bring to
you, four times each year,
necks aggregating a full 7 per
jent annually. Every careful
investor wants to be assured of
the security behind his invest
ment.
These funds are confined to in
vestments in State, County and
Municipal tax liens on improved
Real Estate on a ratio averag
ing less than 3 per cent of the
assessed taxable value.
Tax liens are non-speculative;
the payment mandatory by law.
AIN OUTSTANDING
INVESTMENT FOR SMALL
OR LARGE FUNDS
•
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[14]
NATIONAL AND FOREIGN EVENTS
Nrw York.—Dr. Chaim Weizmann,
former President of World Zionist Organ
ization, and for yearn the acknowledged
leader of the Zionist movement, will visit
the United States in February, 1933. In
DR. ( HAIM WEIZMANN
. . . the acknowledged leader . . .
giving this announcement, the American
Palestine C ampaign made clear that Dr.
Weizmann is not coming to assume
responsibility for the fund-raising of the
Keren llayesod, but purely in the interest
of strengthening Zionist sentiment in tlii»
country and of stimulating among Ameri
can Jews additional interest in, and de
votion to, the upbuilding of the Jewish
National Home in Palestine. Dr. Weiz-
mann's stay will be brief because of en
gagements of a personal and public char
acter that call upon him in Europe.
Moscow.—Charging the editor of the
Odessa Arheiter with Marxian heresy,
the Ernes, Jewish Communist organ, takes
issue with his plea to halt the anti-re
ligious campaign directed against the ob
servance of Rush Hashanah and Yotn
Kippur among the Jewish colonists. The
Odessa publicist contends that the Russian
Revolution established the doctrine that
religion is a private concern and is not
the business of the State. Therefore,
those with religious inclinations who do
not interfere with the administration of
the State should be permitted to follow
their ritual. The Ernes laments this atti
tude, remarking that religion seems very
thoroughly entrenched among the Jewish
colonists in Crimea.
Urbana, III.—Maximilian Harden, the
famous German-Jewish editor and critic,
was included, with four Americans, in
the Hall of Fame compiled annually by
Illinois editors.
Washington, D. (\ — Congratulations
from liberals, lawyers and other friends
from all parts of the country came to
Supreme Court Justice Louis 1). Brandeis
as he marked his 76th birthday without
ceremonies of any kind at his home on
Sunday.
New York, N. Y.—Dr. John H. Finley,
associate editor of the New York Times,
was awarded the third annual medal of
the American Hebrew for the promotion
of better understanding between Jew and
Christian, that magazine has announced.
"Because, as educator and builder of pub
lic opinion, he has continually fostered
straight thinking on inter-group rela
tionship," was part of the reason assigned
for the honor given to hitn.
Berlin.—The action of President von
Hindenburg in continuing in power the
cabinet of Chancellor Franz von Papen,
after he and his colleagues had resigned
in a body, did much to reassure German
Jews on the eve of the opening of the
new Reichstag, scheduled to take place
on December 6th. The increasing
strength of the Nazis through cooperative
alliances with the Centre Party and the
Bavarians, had led Jews to believe that
a Chancellorship for Adolf Hitler was
inevitable. The “presidial’’ cabinet of
Von Papen will rule under emergency
decrees and will have dictatorial power.
Depending solely on Von Hindenburg, it
will be free to pursue its present policy
of national government without refer
ence to the National Socialists and their
program. It is recognized, however, that
Hindenburg may eventually have to yield
to the pressure of the press and other
political parties, the majority of whom
are opposed to Von Papen. Among those
suggested for the Chancellorship in that
event is Gregor Strasser, one of the
chief aides of Adolf Hitler.
RABBI EDWARD N. CALISH
... a feature speaker . . .
New York.—Rabbi Edward N. Calish,
of Richmond, Ya., was one of the feature
speakers at the annual meeting of Ameri
can Jewish Committee held at Temple
Emanu-EI in Ne wYork City. Dr. Cyrus
Adler was re-elected president with other
officers, such as Judge Irving Lehman and
Abram L. Elkus, as vice-president; Sam
uel D. Leidesdorf, treasurer. New mem
bers for the executive committee include
Governor Julius Meier of Oregon, James
N. Rosenberg, Lessing Rosenwald and
B. (\ Vladeck.
A review of the Jewish situation here
and abroad and a discussion of the plan
of community organization proposed by
Judge Horace Stern, of Philadelphia,
were the principal items on the agenda.
A feeling of satisfaction with the decline
ot Nazi influence in Germany was ex
pressed in the report of the committee,
although grave concern was expressed
with regard to anti-Semitic developments
in other European countries. The report
dealt also with discrimination against
Jews in colleges and in employment.
New York, N. Y.—The name of Aaron
Sapiro, noted lawyer and co-operative
organizer, who sued Henry Ford for anti-
Semitism and won his case, has been pro
jected into the complex politico-religious
kashruth controversy in New York City
as a result of efforts being made under
his direction to organize the Master
Kosher Butchers Association of the city.
Phis new group conflicts with the Kash
ruth Association, recently formed by
New York orthodox rabbis under the
sponsorship of prominent laymen. The
Kashruth Association has announced that
after January 1st, only those butcher-
displaying their sign will be recognized
as observing the diety laws.
At a meeting in Brooklyn to further
the purposes of his organization, designed
to federate butchers for economic protec
tion, Mr. Sapiro expressed sympathy with
the effort of rabbis to enforce Kashruth
but asserted that the Kashruth Associa
tion would become a menace to the but
chers by catering to the whims of am
rabbi who protested against a particular
butcher. He suggested that the Kashruth
Association and his group join, so that
both rabbis and butchers would be
equally represented. The Vaad liarah-
bonim issued a statement denouncing
Sapiro a> undermining the Torah.
London.—A new expedition is shortly
to leave for Palestine to dig up the ruin'
of Lachish, the city where, legend ha> it.
18,000 Assyrians died mysteriously after
a prayer of intercession uttered for the
beleaguered Jews by Isaiah. The an
nouncement of the archaeological journey
was made by Sir Henry Wellcome, fellow
of the Royal Society, who expects by his
discoveties to reveal some of the military
secrets of the ancient Israelites.
Paris.—Through special intercession of
the French Foreign Office, some one thou
sand Jews were permitted to remain in
France this year, despite the fact that
they had entered illegally and were sub
ject to deportation, according to a report
of the ^Jewish Immigrant Aid Society,
which also stated that it had aided 1,053
Jews during the same period to sail to
other lands or to return to their own
countries. The dispensation given to the
Jews by the Foreign Office was based on
the realization that they would be ruined
if they left the country at this time, the
Society declared.
Berlin.—Arnold Zweig, famous Ger-
man-Jewish novelist, author of "The
Case of Sergeant Grisha" and “Young
Women of 1914,” and himself a Zionist,
charges that the Zionists of Palestine
were responsible for the murder of J. de
Haan some years ago in Palestine. The
mysterious death of de Haan, who was
a Dutch Agudath Israel member, has
never been cleared up. Zionists charged
at the time that his fanatical anti-Zionism
and his attempts to arouse the Arabs
against them were inimical to Jewish
progress. Zweig’s accusation is contained
in a new novel that he has written but
which is still in manuscript form. In
rtsponse to pleas by Jewish friends that
he delete the passage inasmuch as it
might adversely affect the Jews in Pales
tine, the noted novelist replied that he
was more concerned with moral truth
than national honor.
New York. N. Y.—Talking from
Copenhagen, where he arrived to deliver
a series of lectures to Socialist students,
Leon Trotsky, former Commander-in-
Chief of the Soviet armies, and now an
exile in Turkey, made an appeal for
sympathy on behalf of Russia and made
no mention of the individuals or policies
causing his expulsion from the land
which his genius had helped free from
the Czar. His address was broadcast
over the Columbia System network.
if THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE