Newspaper Page Text
Henry Grady
Hotel
ATLANTA
GEORGIA
550 Room*
550 Rath**
Announcing Lower Rates
With the Same High
Standard of Service
HMl Room* at
. #2.00
1.10 Knout* tit
2.50
12-1 IfooniH at
3.00
Twin Bed Rooms from
. 4.00
Suite* from
. 6.00
I>i*|tlay Room* from .
. 3.50
All rooms have private bath,
two or more windows, circu
lating ice water, ceiling fan,
radio, bed lamps and full
length mirror door.
The Coffee Shop is never
closed, good food, prompt
service at reasonable prices.
I
Convenient Garage service,
with attendant at hotel en-
I trance.
Wake the Friendly Hotel
} our Atlanta Home
1 * ur Dairy Product* Arc of the
lli|che*t Quality
Grade-A Milk Pasteurized
Special Buttermilk
^hipping Cream and Butter
CLOVERDALE DAIRY. Inc.
- .0-252 K.r.ytk St. Ph*nr ¥A. 49*3
** C »rd*n St. S W. Phonr HA. 3919
OPERATED BY PEEK BROS.
1 C ^ »nd L. C. Peek, Sole Owner.
STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL ♦ + +
Jid-Hits from Everywhere + + + by phineas j. biron
- ' —
You may have wondered why Felix
Warburg did not attend the Einstein din
ner and the Nathan Straus testimonial,
and why he has not been seen at any
functions of late. While not gravely ill,
Mr. Warburg is unable to go about much,
to the great distress of his many friends
. . . And because of the warm place
which Warburg occupies in the heart
of the American Jewish community it
seems to us that all of us should make
him feel that we miss his charming and
optimistic smile and that we wish him
a complete and quick recovery . . .
So we suggest that you and you and you
sit down and write him a heartfelt note
of good wishes . . . Don’t expect an
answer. . . . Do it for your own satis
faction. ... It is such human gestures
that make men in the public spotlight
feel that their sacrifihces have not been
in vain. . . . Oh, we almost forgot: Mr.
Warburg's address is 1109 Fifth Avenue,
New York . . .
A few weeks after AI Jolson opened
on his recent radio program (so tells us
W. W.), one of the major executives up
at the National Broadcasting Company
sent to Jolson a memo which read: “My
only suggestion to you is to omit the per
sonal pronoun. Don’t keep talking about
yourself. Cut out all the I's.” To which
Jolson replied: "You memo to hand.
Me no get me salary yet for the last
three weeks. Me hungry. We want me
dough. Kick in. . . . ”
Indianapolis has the smallest Anglo-
Jewish monthly in the world, the Jewish
Post, edited by Leonard Rothschild, an
ambitious columist . . . The strongest
chess club in the world is the llakoak
Chess Division, which boasts such mem
bers as Lasker, Rubinstein and Spiel-
man. . . . Believe it or not, but a Jewish
journalist in the Vienna “Stimme" of
March 9 ends up his survey of Jewish
conditions in Germany and America with
the exclamation: “Es ist eine Lust zu
Lebed." . . . That fellow never heard of
Hitler and Wall Street, we suppose. . . .
That little package of tough sweetness,
I.yda Roberti, who conquered America
on the stage and screen, is reported to
be Jewish, ladies and gentlemen—or,
rather, gentlemen and ladies. . . . Max
Reinhardt is not in Germany, reports
notwithstanding. He is on his way to
New York and Hollywood. . . . Paul Ash.
the jazz conductor, will be appointed
musical director of the World's Fair in
Chicago. . . .
If you know how to read between the
lines of German papers you will note
that Gottfried Feder and Gregor Stras-
ser, two of the Hitlerites' most efficient
anti-Semites, are on the outs with Adolf.
. . . Lecturing has reached its lowest ebb.
We know of one eminent lecturer who
traveled four hundred miles for two
lectures, for his expenses and $15. . . .
That anti-German boycott which some
of our Jewish leaders are planning may
have odd results. . . . For instance,
“Maedchen in Uniform" is being shunned
these days by the Jewish clientele not
withstanding the fact that the film was
bought outright by two Jewish gentle
men of New York and although the sub
ject of the film is an indictment of the
Junker system of education. . . . 1 hat lit
tle girl Renee Carroll, who checks your
hat but in her off-hours is a writer of
books, is the granddaughter of an Or
thodox rabbi. . . .
We’ve been told that Dr. Hahlfeld,
cable editor of the Beringer Lokal An-
zeiger, who is visiting New York, ap
peared at a news service’s Times Build
ing office accompanied by four Nazis
clothed in Hitler uniform. . . . And the
same informant insists that Joseph Goeb-
bles, Hitler's most madly intoxicated ad
jutant, is married to a Jewess—which
might explain his rage. . . . Her maiden
name is said to be Friedlander. . . .
If this is true, will Frau Goehbels be sub
ject to the anti-Jewish boycott scheduled
by Hitler? . . . The silence about Dr.
Arthur J. Krauss, who went on a hunger
strike two months ago in protest against
anti-Semitism in Poland (he would have
to call ten hunger strikes now) is ex
plained when we tell you that he has a
good job now as a member of the faculty
of Long Island University and that h<
eats ham and eggs every morning. . .
Because of the Hitlerites Maurice
Schwartz has canceled the European trip
of “Yoshe Kalb," the papers say. . . . But
we think that Chicago will keep the
Chasaidic spectacle at the Apollo Theatre
too long for any trans-Atlantic adven
tures. . . .
Lou Goldberg, the one-time Paramount
and Warner press agent, is now writing
books under the nom de plume Lewis
Graham. . . . Bruno Lessing, the only
feuilletonist in the American press who
spent more than a year tramping around
in Europe, will soon be back. . . . Misha
Levitski is having much success on his
European tour. . . . Another Hitler item
. . . What a godsend that fellow has
turned out to be for columists (pardon
our cynicism). . . . Well, anyhow, Paul
Abraham’s screening was stopped mid
way when Hitler took charge of Ger
many, and almost all the Jewish directors,
actors, cameramen and press photogra
phers have left Berlin for Budapest. . . .
Walter Winchell was paid seven thou
sand dollars for a week at the Paramount
Theatre in New York, but the theatre
lost a few hundred bucks on him. . . .
But it did rain and snow that week. . . .
Jerry Wald, the former radio columnist
of the Mirror (he's only nineteen), just
finished a novel, "The Great Sale," but
it will appear signed by John Bascom.
... A. H. Fromenson is in Miami, sun
ning himself back to health. . . . Salmon
Levinson, the great peace pact expert,
is the counsel of a newly established
league of Jewish importers, which is not
aiming at boycotting any particular coun
try. It will, however, inaugurate and
maintain a policy of favoring those coun
tries whose official and de facto attitude
tovsard their Jewish population is up to
par. . . . Pierre Van Paassen, who has
been lashed by some Zionists for his re
cent articles, was beaten up by the Hit
lerites while defending some Jewish shop
keeper in Munich. Van Paassen looks
Nordic all right, but has a Jewish heart.
. . . Morris Margulies, the genial secre
tary of the Zionist Organization of
America, is keeping his name out of the
papers, but he is doing more than his bit,
behind the scenes, for the Jewish victims
of the Nazi regime. . . .
Some day will be told the hectic story
of the American Jewish leadership try
ing to stem the Hitlerite wave of anti-
Semitism. . . . And then some of the
leaders and near-leaders will look far
from glorious. . . . For instance, what
would you say if we told you that Wise's
trip to Washington was quite superfluous,
because some Jewish personalities much
closer to the Roosevelt administration
than Dr. Wise had already received as
surances that the State Department would
investigate? . . . And do you know that
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