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August 23, 1940 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1940-08-23

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

America "(wish Periodical easter

CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, 01110

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1 940

August 23, 1940

Frank Fitzgerald's Candidacy
For U. S. Senate Gets Strong
Backing in Liberal Circles

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The candidacy of Frank Fitz-
gerald for the nomination for the
United States Senate on the
Democratic ticket has received
the strong support of all liberal
groups throughout the state.
Mr. Fitzgerald is an attorney
who has been associated with
William Henry Gallagher for 16

Six additional courses in dee-
tro-mechanics, sanitary engineer-
ing, motor mechanics, weaving
and dressmaking were opened
in Vilna the first week of Au-
gust. Three hundred persons,
both native and refugee, were
enrolled in these courses.
Three hundred of over 2,200
enrollees in the industrial cours-
es in Lithuania receiver their
diplomas in July, the cable ad-
vises, and of these, a great num-
ber have already secured em-
ployment.

Kaplan Arrives in Jerusalem
from United States

JERUSALEM (Palcor Agency)
—Eliezer Kaplan, treasurer of
the Jewish Agency for Palestine,
has arrived here, less than three
weeks after he had left the Unit-
ed States. Mr. Kaplan, who has
conferred with American leaders,
for several months on economic
problems arising out of the war,
left San Francisco by Clipper on
July 30, and made his return
trip, by way of Hawaii, Ilong
Kong, Siam and India, entirely
by air.

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WHEN TREATMENT
WHY NOT PREVENT stern4

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nities

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H. Esper Wins

Insurance Award

The ORT in France has em-
barked on a broad program of
constructive aid and rehabilita-
tion in the unoccupied territory
of France, according to a cable
received by George Backer, presi-
dent of the American ORT Fed-
eration. Plans to meet the
needs of the thousands of Jews
ish war refugees in unoccupied
France have already ben made,
the cable states. ORT vocation-
al experts are on their way to a
number of large cities where the
greatest number of refugees are
now living.
It is estimated that over 20,-
000 Jews in unoccupied France
will be aided by the ORT pro-
gram of gricultural and indus-
trial training and rehabilitation.

Penn.

an

years. In addition to his law
practice, he is also professor of
law at the University of Detroit.
A Catholic, with strong liberal
leanings, Mr. Fitzgerald is a
Democrat of long standing. He
favors liberal legislation and
stands for the progressive policies
of President Roosevelt.

ORT Plans to Aid 20,000 M.
Jewish War Refugees in
Unoccupied France

Lithuania ORT Legalized. Addi-
tional Training Courses Opened.

c CAW

igsgt fiLter4

EFFICIENT COMFORTABLE •
...VA xi' /ACONSOVC/OUS

Believe it or not—hay fever is nothing
"to be sneezed at." Serious-Complica-
lions can result from severe attacks

and extreme discomfort is always felt.

Keep pollen, dust and irritants out

of the nasal passages this new way.
Firs in—not on the nose. Your friends
wont know you wear it. Filters the air
ou breathe without uncomfortable re-
stricrion.

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4nifi
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IEE '17! BUY 11' AT

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KOFFMAN'S

DRUG STORE

8521 - 12th St.

At Philadelphia

Phone TY. 5-1692

3

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and the Legal Chronicle

EUROPE

(Continued from Page 1)

Palestine
ed Haifa, important
port city, three times.
The Italian radio, in special
broadcasts aimed at the Arabs
in Palestine, alternate hymns of
love and threats of retribution
at the Arab population.
The Italian radio, in special
broadcasts aimed at the Arabs
in Palestine, alternate hymns of
love and threats of retribution
at the Arab population.
The Fascists are wooing the
Arabs with promises of sole-gov-
ernment, and are urging them
to break away from their Eng-
lish-Jewish masters. To date,
however, the Fascist program is
making little headway among
Arabs in the Holy Land.
Other Italian broadcasts are
extolling the virtues of the ex-
iled Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj
Amin al Hussoini, in the hope
of rallying the Arabs behind the
Mufti against the British.

Slovakian Press Launches New
Anti-Semitic Campaign

MORTON H. ESPAR

The Nazi-controlled press of
Slovakia has launched a new
anti-Semetic campaign, demand-
ing that a law be passed re-
quiring all Jewish men be known
as "Israel" and all Jewish wo-
men be "Rebecca." Such a law
is now in effect in Nazi Ger-
many.
The Slovokian Government has
issued a decree forbidding Jews
to employ "Aryan" women un-
der 40 years of age. Slovakia's
"liquidation" of Jewish enterpris-
es has been proceeding at a slow
rate because of a shortage of
"Aryans" qualified to run Jew-
ish industrial and commercial en-
terprises.

that police had to be called to
preserve peace.

GIFTS TO JEWISH CENTER
MOTHERS' CLUB

Westrick Sails for Home

The Jewish Community Center
acknowledges a gift from Clar-
ence L. Ascher to Camp Chelsea,
the Mothers' Club Camp of the
Center. Camp Chelsea, which was
sponsored for the summer of
1939 with funds made available
by the United Jewish Charities,
has been operating at capacity
during the months of July and
August of this year under the
leadership of an advisory com-
mittee of Mothers' Clubs of the
Center, headed by Mrs. Sidney J.
Allen. Mary Caplan is director of
the camp.

LOS ANGELES (WNS) — Dr.
Alois Westrick, ace Nazi trouble
shooter sent here to promote
better business relations with
Germany, sailed for home aboard
the Japanese motorship Nitta Ma-
ru. The Nazi agent was accom-
panied by his wife, their two
sons, and his secretary. Baroness
Irmgard von Wagonheim.

Report Jewish Communities in
Nazi Hands to Send Relief
Committee to U. S.

GENEVA. (WNS)—According
to an unconfirmed report receiv-
ed here, representatives of the
Jewish communities of Berlin,
Vienna and Prague are planning
to send a delegation to Nazi of-
ficials in Berlin for permission
to send a committee to the Unit-
ed States to raise funds for the
relief of these communities. The
report said that the Jewish lead-
ers discussed emigration possi-
bilities.
Representatives of the Jewish
Agency Executive leaders of the
local Zionist movement, and rep-
resentatives of Swiss Jewry join-
ed in tribute to Vladimir Jabot-
insky at a memorial meeting here.

WOMEN'S AUXILIARY OF
JEWISH HOME FOR AGED

The Women's Auxiliary of the
Jewish Home for Aged acknowl-
edges a donation in honor of
her daughter Dolores' confirma-
tion by Mrs. S. Salzman; in
memory of Mrs. Marian Levitt,
by Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wine; in
memory of Mrs. Marian Levitt,
by Mrs. Samuel Schwartz, Mrs.
J. Soberman and Mrs. Alex Le-
vitt.

Morton H. Espar of the Great
West Life Assurance Co. has
been informed that he has won
a trip to the home office in Win-
nipeg, Manitoba. This reward is
given to agents who have a high
sales record.
Refugees Land Safely After Nazi Palestine Rabbis Appeal for Quick

Three Day District AZA
Conclave to Open
Aug. 30

Final plans have been com-
pleted by A. Z. A. for District
No. 6 second camp convention to
be held at Camp Wooster, situat-
ed near Round Lake, III. The
camp will officially open late Fri-
day afternoon, Aug. 30 and will
close Labor Day afternoon, Sept.
2.
Over 300 delegates from eight
states are expected to attend.
Detroit will send representatives
from its 11 chapters.
After registration, Friday eve-
ning services will be held under
the leadership of Rabbi Solomon
Jacobson from Waukegan. Dr.
A. L. Sachar, national director
of the Bnai Brith Hillel Founda-
tions, will speak following the
services on the subject, "A Blue-
print for Tomorrow." Saturday
morning services will be held.
A 10-event sport competitive
program will take place. Medals
will be awarded to members and
chapters winning the events. The
best chapter award of District
No. 6 will also be presented.
Saturday eveni:.g the district
will hold its extemperaneous
speech contest. Philip M. Klutz-
nick, president of District No. 6
Bnai Brith Grand Lodge, will
speak.
Max Chomsky, Detroit AZA di-
rector, will serve on the athletic
staff.
The Shield of David awards for
outstanding leadership and activ-
ity were made known at the In-
ternational Convention held at
Camp Manatoc, 0. Those from
Detroit who received the awards
included Jack Rouman and Sid-
ney Garelick from Bnai David
chapter 314 and Phil Rothschild
from the Highland Park chapter
313. Plans are being made to
present these medals at an open
social function in the near fu-
ture.
This week-end, Michigan chap-
ters are meeting in Benton Har-
bor for the annual Michigan
summer tournament. Eighteen
chapters will compete in sport
events and attend the sessions of
the Michigan AZA conference.

Submarine Chase

NEW YORK (WNS) — Pray-
ers of "Gomel" (thanksgiving)
were offered in the Synagogue of
the national headquarters of the
Hebrew Sheltering and Immi-
grant Aid Society (HIAS) by a
group of 13 refugees brought
from the SS "Ansolm," follow-
ing a perilous journey from Great
Britain.
The steamer, carrying 15 pas-
sengers narrowly escaped torpe-
doing by a Nazi submarine in
mid Atlantic. A British man-of-
war, fortunately, happened to be
nearby and prevented a disaster.
The submarine disappeared. It
was either put out of commis-
sion or was sunk. Among the 13
refugees were Mr. and Mrs.
Chaim Schreiber, both in their
seventies, who, after a brief stay
at the HIAS shelter here, left
for California to join their
nephew.

Nazis Agitate Against Jews In
Unoccupied-France

LONDON (WNS) — Unrest
and wide dissatisfaction with the
policies of the semi-totalitarian
Petain regime in France were be-
lieved to be the chief reasons for
the renewed anti-Jewish agita-
tion on the part of the Nazis in
un-occupied France.
French Fascists, supervised by
imported Nazi agitators, are de-
manding harsher restrictions
against the Jews on the ground
that the Jews are friends of
Great Britain, which is prosecut-
ing its blockade against France.
Anti-Jewish demonstrations are
held regularly at Lyon, Grenoble
and Vichy.

Italian Press Says Italians in
U. S. Suffer at Hands of Jews

Lamenting the "persecution"
of Italians in the United States,
the influential newspaper. Cor-
riere della Sere, charged that
"the psychosis of the fifth col-
umn has conquered even Amer-
ica. It is gross propaganda—the
Jewish element at work."
The anti-Semitic paper Regime
Fascista, complained that the
United States was forcing "all
our brothers to be finger-printed
as if they were delinquents."
"This," the paper said, "is be-
cause the press and radio, rigidly
controlled by the Jewish banks,
IN MEMORIAM
hammer daily the most unlikely
In loving memory of our dear fables into the rather spongy
grandmother, Bella Dinah Zlot- and elementary brains of the
chenko, who passed away 15 Americans."
years ago, Aug. 8, 1925 (18 Nazi Film In Bucharest Leads To
days in Ab).
Anti-Jewish Riots
The showing of a violently an-
Happy were t he years we spent
together,
ti-Semitic Nazi film in Bucharest
Lonely are our hearts today,
movie houses has resulted in
For the one we loved so dearly
I las forever passed away.
scores of outbreaks against Jews
In our hearts your memory lingers.
in the streets of the Rumanian
Sweetly, tender, fond and t rue:
capital, it was reported here.
There is not a day, dear Grand-
mother,
The film purports to show how
That we do not think of you.
Jews use the blood of Gentile
Ever to be sadly missed by children for religious purposes.
your grandsons, Louis J. and Dr. The film repeats every known
A. J. Kapetansky, and grand- Nazi charge against the Jews.
Audiences became so outraged
daughter, Mrs. Clara Leib.

Help to Forestall Catastrophe

With a cry of deep agony and
warning that all of the scores
of religious educational and char-
itable institutions of Palestine
are "faced with imminent col-
lapse," the leaders of the Yishuv,
headed by Chief Rabbi Dr. Isaac
Herzog, have called upon Amer-
ican Jewry to forestall a catas-
trophe by forwarding immediate
and effective aid.
In urgent cable messages to
the Federated Council for Pales-
tine Institutions, recently formed
in America and sponsored by the
Union of Orthodox Rabbis and
by the Central Relief Committee,
the Palestinian leaders point out
that all sources of income for
these institutions have been clos-
ed as a result of the war, and
that even the aid from the United
States has fallen off because of
the disrupted mail connections.
Having thus been deprived of
almost all of their income, these
Yeshivoth, Talmud Torahs, hos-
pitas, homes for the aged, orphan
lunatic asylums, vocational schools
and others will have no alterna-
tive but to close their doors —
with dire results that stagger the
Jewish mind.
Full information about these
Palestinian institutions can be
obtained from the Federated
Council for Palestine Institutions,
38 Park Row, New York City.

The obituary editor of the New
York Herald-Tribune, you'll be
pleased to know. has just com-
pleted his obit on Herr Hitler ...
He—the editor, that is—worked
on it for a full month, and re-
ports are that it is a pippin . . .
Here's hoping there'll be a
chance to publish it soon.

y.

FOR SALE—APARTMENTS

ti

Another

Apartment Sold

Another smart buyer steps
into earnings of better than.
10% plus a future. Rely on
our Facts and Figures.

Spanish Design

Tan bk. beauty. 40 apts 2
to 4 rooms, lobby, painted
walls, carpet halls, tiled
baths with showers. Select
location with a future.
$20,000 rents. Former sale
$165,000 cash. Now only
$75,000 cash and %trade.
Don't miss the boat on this
one.

ki

Must Sell

Semi-fireproof 4 story with
elevator. Painted walls, car-
pet halls, baths with show-
ers, new stoves, new refrig.
$13,000 rents. 31 apts 2 and
3 good sized rooms. Com-
pletely furnished. Positively
sales value in the '20s was
$150,000. Entire price to-
day $45,000. Cash and
trade.

Near Crosstown

Heart of N. Woodward. 7
apts of 5 rooms ea, 7
baths, 1 steam, garages.
Money maker to split up,
housekeeping
and single
furn. rooms. Sold once for
$65,000. On the bargain
table only $17,500, terms
$3,500.

MR. BEDFORD

Homer Warren &

CO.
64 Years Dependable Service

Am...mime
FOR OUT-OF-TOWNERS 8 LOCALS

SPECIAL

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