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L / THE EGENING STAR, WASHINGTON. D. C., FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1933. mwm&u-m arrested several Nationalists and |race by the Hitler government in Gere o & vauniary exle n Sviteriand ta Communists. saspacted of plotiing. to | maRy. et sl seh tmaror e D 18| plunder the shops curing market day.| A commitiee of 25 was appointed i ices,” the JEWS INNEW YORK REQUEST BOYGOTT 10,000 March to City Hall| in Protest Against Al- leged Persecution. circumstan A crowd. stormed the jail and released | mect today to plan a demonstration B Palcating i ehe enly.oblect whiek e o g T o e stim- 3 EXPULSION OF JEWS st His message was read at a dinner in honor of Nathan Straus, jr., lanching| DRESDEN, Germany, March 24 (#). = A ; a_fund-i campaign for the Jew- | _police today discovered 48 hand gren- Hitler Agent in Palatinate |!sh Asency Jor Palestine. et | 246 a0d 8 quantity of fuses, which they | .qrocities’ Protested By Head of Or- 4 * said had been buried by Communists in Rabbis in North Tells Banks Not to s A Release Funds. ion was reached, the Senator Borah, Alfred E. Newton D, Baker were men discussion as to selection of a spesker. DAY FOR FASTING SET. BURIED ARMS FOUND. lly speaking,” Prof. Eifistein sald, “it doer not accord with my ideal | the nearby town of Radeberg. CINCINNATI, March 2¢ (P)—la & that communities bound together by e e "orts o euiiviis | CMICAGO MEETING FLANNED. |y ation protesing sgainst Wt CHICAGO, March 24 (#).—Jews|he termed “Hitlerite atrocities,”- Rabbl attacked as such, it is bound to defend | FePresenting peay Chicago organiza- | Eliezer Silver, president of the Ortho- From Pirst tions in & decided to|dox Rabbis of North America, yester- ——— Page) _|ltself as such. in order that its indl- | tage & mass meeting in Drotest of re- | day set March 27 as a day fof fasting neither its existence nor that of the |tain their material and spiritual in.|POTtS Of mistreatment of others of their ‘and prayer. = - By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, March 24—Ten thou- sand Jews marched to City Hall yes- terday to the mournful chant of “El| Molal Rachmem,” dirge for the dead, to protest alleged persecutions in Germany and to call for a boycott of German goods. The torah, sacred scroll of the Jews, was carried in its silver case, and the dean of the city's cantors chanted. As the orderly protest procession en- tered the New York City Hall Park shortly after noon Mayor John P. O'Brien, who previously had said he would not see the marchers, changed | his mind, reviewed the parade and re- | ceived a delegation. | They presented a resolution calling | upon all New Yorkers to “make com- | mon cause with us in a mighty wave of | protest to isolate the German govern- | ment in its commercial pursuits and to | refuse to buy any goods of German ' Germany, said reports of atrocities and | persecution are “absolutely untrue.” manufacture or origin.” Mass Protest Planned. intolerance is bound to meet with op- position throughout the world.” | He promised to attend a mass pro- | test meeting at Madison Square Garden | LONDON DOCTOR TELLS Monday_night, at which former Gov. Alfred E. Smith and Bishop William T. Manning will be among #he speakers, At the same time Rev. Theodore Ainsworth Greene of New Britain, Conn,, chairman of the Commission on International Relations of the General | 8T8Phic Agency).—Dr. Hertzberg, a Lon- Council of Congregational and Chris- | don doctor who has just returned from Hian Churches, wrote Secretary Hull on | Germany, asserted yesterday that he et Ml oreanization protesting |59 witnessed the Jewish boycott there, against alleged German anti-Semitism. There were 125 policemen on duty, [the smashing of Jewish windows and but the only trouble they were called | obstruction of shops by Nazi pickets. upon to quiet came when some 50 mem- bers of the Ex-Service Men's League, | of shops, he said, and Nazl hooligans described as a radical organization, at- |carried on boycott agitation outside tempted to join the parade over the |them, leaving the Jews perplexed as to objections of parade leaders. They | whose orders were to be obeyed. were dispersed by the police. = Persecution Denied. many has been announced by Eugene J. Deuth, owner and publisher of the | joining in the campaign to boycott | American News, only American news- | Jewish stores, Dr. Hertzberg said, and Betth e e e this boycott recentlym}lxu tl:'m'tne lm‘gl'e uth declared last n: t] - | in than ever, although actual vio- . gram, signed by Gov. vgn Th:e:lu:d lexllf:re‘sgutslde Sewlsh 5[01'25 is diminish- | Lett to right, Chancellor Adolf Hitler, Vice Chancellor Franz von Papen and Provincial Treasurer Werner of Silesia, | ing paper published in Central Eurcpe. . e are not molested and absolutely free Mayor O'Brien replied that “any op- | from _interference,” the cable said. pression meets with the moral indigna- | “Isolated and unorganized excesses tion of the world” and added that “any | against individuals are not of a danger- regime that fosters religious and racial | ous or harmful nature. Complete peace and quiet in town and country.” beards of Jews and burned their hair. He asserted that German newspaper re- Recelpt of a cablegram denying e- | ports were altogether unreliable because —— e e e l Ippm: General view in frdht of the New York City Hall yesterday when “Jewish business and Jewish press OF JEWISH BOYCOTT LONDON, March 24 (Jewish Tele- Authorities requested the reopening Dr. Hertzberg said Nazis tore off the g. Werner von Blomberg, Reichswehr minister. 10,000 Jewish war veterans enlisted Mayor O'Brien's support in their protest against Nazi persecution of Jews in Germany. Lower: Three men who are guiding the destinies of Germany are shown talking together in front of the Berlin State Opera during a recent céremony. —A. P. Photos. Reichsrat, the state council which had to approve legislation before it was in- troduced in the Reichstag, dangered.” He does not have to refer any longer to either body, however, to enact any measures, even involving the national budget, taxation and foreign loans or treaties. BRITAIN OPENS INQUIRY. LONDON, March 24 (#).—The Brit- ish government, like that of the United States, has started inquiries through its 1 office into the reports of atro- cities agains} Jews in Germany. Premier say MacDonald an- nounced this attion was being taken when he was asked, during a discus- sion in Parliament of the German sit- uation, concerning an unconfirmed re- port’ that 1,400 persons were slain in Hamburg. @ London newspapers today attacked the reported violence of the Hitler re- gime in Germany and the censorship of news reports. Meanwhile many Jew- ish traders have started boycotts of German goods, while others hesitated to follow suit, fearing reprisals against Jews in Germany. In the House of Commons discussion | yesterday Josiah Wedgwood, a Labor member, declared “pro-German” Eng- land has been completely converted into “pro-French” England because of the activities of the Nazis under the Hitler government. “May I ask whether the prime min- ister is acquainted with the steps the American Government has taken in or- der to put an end to this state of things and whether he has any con- firmation of a story that 1,400 people have been put to death in Hamburg alone?” asked Wedgwood. Leaders of the more than 300,000 Jews in Great Britain, represented on the Board of Jewish Deputies, will meet in London Sunday to decide whether to urge a boycott or take some other action in behalf of the German Jews. :{;vflle Laski, Jewish lawyer, will pre- e. EINSTEIN ISSUES MESSAGE. NEW YORK, March 24 () .—Albert Einstein, in a message yesterday to the Jewish Agency for Palestine, said “our very sufferings” have brought a “revival of Jewish corporate life, of which the last generation could not have dreamed.” , were “en- by | on Wilhelmstrasse in Berlin.) {late at Hessen has officially tested terests. * * * Whoever understands this | clearly must approve of united action all Jews for a corporate purpose.” SPEECH HAILED IN PARIS. 1 Hitler’s Restraint Pleases Official Gov- | ernment Quarters. PARIS, March 24 (#).—The moderz- tion of Chancellor Adolf Hitler's speech in the German Reichstag yesterday pleased official luvmflg!nqulmn. H A government spok sald, “the | language Herr Hitler used was well re- ceived here. The responsibilities of | power and advice of Wilhelmstrassers | to use restraint were apparemt.” (The German foreign office is located WARSAW LISTS NEW CASES. Official Complaint on Attacks Lodged ‘With German Ministry. ‘WARSAW, March 24 (Jewish Tele- | graphic Agency).—Twenty-five new at- tacks are the subject of an official com- plaint lodged by the Pclish Ambassador | with the German m'nistry of foreign | affairs. Among the cases of brutality cited are those of seven Jews who were taken | from various cafes, carried off to Nazi | locales, maltreated and flung out into the streets almost unconscious. Apart from these, the Polish consu- to the authorities in connectifn with a Nazi attack at Duesburg where organ- ized Nazis, it is charged, beat an aged rabbi, who is a Polish citizen, and ! damaged the synagogue attached to the rabbi’s house. Police Fire on Pillagers. ‘WARSAW, March 24. (#)—Two per- sons were killed and three seriously in- jured yesterday when police fired on pillagers of Jewish shops in the village of Ragsllow. Trouble started when po- FLYING ly and Buildings TMENT necessary—Free Inspection Terminix Co. of Washington 1102 National Press Bldg. Phone National 3703 Don’t be short-changed on long wear WoobDwWARD & LOTHROP Now—We Inaugurate a NEW PRICE LINE— | what shoes cost o Men's Quality Shirts || L st year... , $|.50 | We have taken a group of higher-priced shirts, and reduced them to $1.50. And, because of favorable market conditions now existing, we have augmented this group with fresh purchases of our standard quality shirts from our regular manufacturers. In this new shirt value group—choose from white and plain colored broadcloth, in col- lar-attached style—white broadcloth, in neckband style—and colored figured and striped broadeloth and madras, with two laundered collars to match. ‘THE MEN'S STORE, SECOND FLOOR. Genuine Ermine com- bined with#lack kid makes a smart opera for spring ensembles. Puf your trust, and hard-saved dollars in a Double-Woven olton Wizl o 20 Stop longing for longwear! Get itll And. to boot, revel in the soundest dollars-worth in our lifetime and yours. Why buy a second-grade worsted, when a thoroughbred Bolton (with 2 trousers) costs only $20% THAT COUNTS! @ Of course prices have come down. We lowered our price too . . . but we have done more—much more—we have put so much more beauty, more style and more quality into our shoes that their real value is far above their price. Don’t judge our shoes by last year’s prices . . . com- pare them with values of today and mar- velhow much real guality can be built into beautiful shoes at the low price of $3. JUDGE THESE SHOES BY Fashion favors reptile T”nAY!s QQVALD'E‘S” o go with new Spring e e costumes. Select this one-eyelet tie in geau- ine watersnake. Side-laced tie in the Buccaneer blue kid, also in genuine grey Ermine Snake. High Louis heel. 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