October 18, 194,

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and the Legal Chronicle

Additional List
Of Patrons for
The Balfour Ball

Al DAVID MEN'S CLUB
_ no Bnai David Men's Club is
preparing for a "gala fun night"
to be held in the social hall of
the synagogue, 14th 'and Elm-
An additional list of patrons
hurst, on Thursday, Oct. 31 (Hal-
for the annual Balfour Ball of
lowe'en).
the Zionist Organization of De-
troit, to be held on Saturday
PRIMROSE BENEVOLENT
night, Nov. 9, at Hotel Statler, is
CLUB
announced as follows:
Primrose Benevolent Club met
Mr. and Mrs. Charles N. Agree,
Oct. 7. Plans for the annual Dr. and Mrs. Raphael Altman,
bridge dance were completed, to Mr. and Mrs. Herman August,
be held at Lachar's, on Cass Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Broder, Mr.
Ave., on Dec. 15.
and Mrs. William J. Brown, Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph S. Burak, Fred
M. Butzel, Dr. and Mrs. J. H.
Chalat, Dr. and Mrs. Daniel
Cohn, Richard Cohn, Mr. and
Mrs. Sol Edelman. Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Ehrlich, Mr. and Mrs.
Nathan Fishman, Mr. and Mrs.
Alexander Freeman, William
Friedman, Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Gold, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Gour-
witz, Mr. and Mrs. Julius Green,
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Jacobs,
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin E. Jaffe,
Dr. and Mrs. H. Kallet, Dr. and
Mrs. Sol O. Kesler, Dr. and Mrs.
Robert Kallman, Mr. and Mrs.
`Ern. H. Kaplan, Mr. an 1 Mrs.
Benjamin Klein, Dr. and Mrs.
Max Kohn, Mr. and Mrs. Julian
H. Krolik, Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin
Kurtzman, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Lichterman, Mr. and Mrs. Abra-
ham Piel, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
Pregerson. Mr. and Mrs. M. H.
Prince, Mr. and Mrs. Meyer
Prussian. Dr. and Mrs. Robert
Rosen, Dr. and Mrs. Theodore
Roth, Dr. and Mrs. Emil Rothman,
Mr. and Mrs. David Safran, Mr.
and Mrs. Hyman Safran, Dr.
Harry Saltzstein, Mr. ani Mrs.
Sol Schayowitz, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Schumer, Mr. and Mrs.
Nathan Simons. Mr. and Mrs.
Harold H. Smilav, Wachler &
Horwitz, Mr. and Mrs. Isidore
Wolf, Mr. and Mrs. Kolman
Shapero, Jay Solovich, Dr. and
RIDING BREECHES
Mrs. Arthur Wittenberg.

$2.95 up

lien's BEN Uniforms

COULD

UNIVERSITY 2-3112
15492 LIVERNOIS

Open Evenings until 9 P. M.

Newcomer
to
Manhattan's
night entertainment is Charlotte
Kraus, formerly of Vienna . .
Warbler Hildegarde discovered
her when she (Charlotte) was
working as a maid in a Florida
hotel and singing as she swept.

SEASON'S GREETINGS

Carmel Hebrew School

11845 LINWOOD near Elmhurst

TO. 8-3503—TO. 5-5462

WE FURNISH FREE TRANSPORTATION
from the following schools:
MacCULLOCH — LONGFELLOW — DOTY —
WINTERHALTER — THIRKELL — GROSMAN
AND BRADY
for Your Children's Convenience

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Detroit Lodge No. 55
Knights of Pythias

Gala Mardi Gras Night

J. N. F. Auxiliary
Marshall Lodge
Succoth Program
Plans Activities
Tuesday Evening Box Collections Start Sunday;

The festival of Succoth will be
celebrated by Detroit Louis Mar-
shall Lodge of Bnai Brith on
Tuesday, Oct. 22, starting 8:30
p. m., at the Jewish Community
Center.
With Mrs. Samuel Schaflander
as narrator, an illustrated dis-
course on the "Development of
Jewish Music" will
introduce a pro-
gram, unique in
its approach and
presentation of
the subject.
Guest artist will
be Mrs. Jack S.
Sauls, mezzo - so-
prano, who will
appear in a series
of specially select-
ed concert num-
bers. Mrs. Sauls
will be accompan-
ied by the well
known pianist, Lil-
lian Robbins.
The
evening's
program will in-
Schaflander elude an address
by Rabbi Joshua S. Sperka on
the subject: "Fasts and. Festi-
vals—Their Spiritual and Cul-
tural Significance in Jewish Life."
The public is invited to attend
without charge.
Announcement is made by the
lodge president of the appoint-
ment- of the following commit-
tees' personnel selected to serve
for the ensuing year: Anti-De-
famation League, Joseph Glazer,
chairman; Alvin B. Levin, Reu-
ben Losh, Abe Mendelson, Max
Blumenthal; membership commit.
tee, Dr. M. M. Silverman, chair-
man, William Bobrin, Dr. Har-
old Maxmen, Samuel Daitch, Saul
Kling, Ben Desenberg, Robert
Overton; conservation committee,
Morton Bechek, chairman, Joseph
Glazer, Jess R. Feiler, Dr. M. M.
Silverman; program committee,
Dr. Albert N. Prussin, chairman,
Max Blumenthal, David C. Mar-
key. David Pacernick. Alvin B.
Levin; athletic committee. Mor-
ton Bechek, chairman, William
Parnos, Ben Day's, Irving Hen-
kekn, Harry Greenblatt; special
functions committee, Max Blu-
menthal and Jess R. Feiler, co-
chairmen, Dr. Charles Stolnr, My-
ron Lane; degree team, David I.
Rosin, chairman. Dr. M. M. Sil-
verman, Alvin B. Levin, Jess R.
Feiler, Nathan Kaplan, Milton
Kushnir; visiting committee, Ben
Stashevsky, c h a i r m a n, Julius
Stross; Detroit Bnai Brith Coun-
cil delegates, Jess R. Feiler, chair-
man, Dr. Albert N. Prussin, M.
Manuel Helfman, Walter Berlew,
Dr. M. M. Silverman. N. H. Ru-
bin; press and peblicity, Saul
Kling, chairman, David Pacernick,
Max Chomsky.

Mid-Western Conference

Program:

20. 1940-8:30 p. m.

Final plans were adopted and
definite dates set for the affairs
and campaigns of the 1940-41
season of the Ladies' Auxiliary
of the Jewish National Fund, at
a luncheon meeting of the board,
held at the home of Mrs, John
Hayman on Pin-
gree Ave. In a
statement made
f ol 1 o wing the
meeting, the
board members
declared that
they had laid
their plans with
the same enthus-
iasm and opti-
mism displayed
in previous years
despite misgiv-
ings held by
some that world
conditions may
retard the work
of the Jewish
Mrs. L. Kay National Fund.
"The work of
Zionism is going ahead with in-
creased vigor and there will be
no cessation or slackening of ac-
tivities in a work that is so nec-
essary and vital to the life of
Jewry — the redemption of our
Homeland and the rebirth of Jew-
ish culture," the statement said.
Mrs. Leon Kay announced that
the traditional drive for placing
and clearing the Blue and White
Jewish National Fund Boxes will
start Chol Hamoed Succoth, Oct.
20, and all people holding boxes
are notified that volunteer work-
ers will call to clear these boxes
sometime in the two weeks fol-
lowing. Box collections have be-
come an important source of rev-
enue for the Jewish National
Fund, and all persons who wish
to contribute through this med-
ium are urged to communicate
with Mrs. Kay at University 5-
4208. The unimportant nennies
dropped in a Jewish National
Fund Box soon become very im-
portant dollars and Zionist work
is carried further.
The membership camnaign is
now in full swing with Mrs.
Harry D. Davis acting as chair-
man of the membership commit-
tee, assisted by Mrs. William
Hordes and Mrs. Harry Schwartz.
Persons who are desirous of af-
filiating with the Auxiliary are
urged to contact Mrs. Davis at
Northlawn 5962 or her assistant
chairmen, Mrs. Hordes and Mrs.
Schwartz.
March 19, 19-11, has been set
as the date for the annual fund-
raising event of the 'ies' Aux-
iliary. Further particulars will be
given in a later issue.

Van Paassen at
Fisher Town Hall

Simchas Beis Hashoeivo of
Yeshivah Beth Yehudah
on Sunday
Pierre Van Paassen, foreign

corresnondent and author of the
best seller, "Days of Our Years,"
will be the Detroit Town Hall
sneaker in the Fisher Theater
SUNDAY EVE., OCT. 20
next Wednesday, Oct. 23, at 11
a. m. His subject will be "The
DETROIT LODGE BLDG.
Erskine £4 John R Sr.
Crisis in Western Civilization."
What Van Paassen wrote about
An EVENING PACKED WITH FUN - THRILLS - EXCITEMENT
Hitler back in 1928. and what
REFRESHMENTS FREE! Eat and drink all you want.
771 was then regarded as unimpor-
tant and "fantastic sensational-
ADMISSION I 5c
ism" has turned out to be more
1 . al I 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 8 1 I 1 1 1 1 2 I 8 8 1111 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 8 1 1 1 I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 191 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I . 1 1 1 Il l 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 9 1 1 I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 Ti - l than true. He was one of the first
foreign correspondent s to inter-
view Mussolini and Hitler and
to see in their rise an ominous
threat to the future freedom and
welfare of mankind. Freed at
last from the shackles of foreign
censorship, Van Paassen brings to
his lecture audience the whole
truth of what he has observed
in roaming the news fronts of
Europe, Africa and Asia.
Born in Holland of strict Cal-
OCTOBER 19-20
vinist parents, he spent his youth
in Canada and soon after the
DETROIT. MICHIGAN
outbreak of the World War, left
a theological school to join the
Canadian Army in France. He
A. ONEG SHABBAT GATHERING—Detroit-Leland Hotel.
was wounded in action and was
Detroit. Mich.—Sat.. October 19. 1940-2:30 p. m.
decorated several titre; for his
Guest Speaker—RABBI SAMUEL WOHL. Pres. League for
bravery. His reportorial experi-
Labor Palestine.
ence began on the Toronto Star
after the Armistice and led him
B. REGISTRATION OF DELEGATES—Detroit-Leland Hotel—
back to France, to Morocco,
Sat., October 19. 1940-7:00 p. m.
Spain, Italy, Syria, Palestine,
C. BANQUET — $1.50 per plate — Detroit-Leland Hotel.—Sat..
Russia, the Balkans and Ger-
October 19. 1940-8:15 p. m.—RABBI SAMUEL WOHL.
many.
Toastmaster. RABBI JACOB J. WEINSTEIN• Guest Speaker.
Balcony tickets are available
D. CONFERENCE SESSIONS — Detroit-Leland Hotel — Sunday,
at Grinnell's, Ra. 1124, for $1.10
including tax.
October 20. 1940-10:00 a. m. Sunday, October 20. 1940-
3:00 p. m.—General Assembly of Delegates.
VOTE FOR
F. DANCE-75c ticket—Detroit-Leland Hotel—Sunday. October

LEAGUE FOR LABOR PALESTINE

March 19 Set as Date for
Annual Luncheon

7. 7 1

Simchas Beis Hashoeivo, the
traditional Succoth festivity, will
be observed by the Hebrew Tal-
mudical Academy Yeshivath Beth
Yehudah, on Sunday, Oct. 20,
at 5:30 p. m. in the Young Israel
Bldg., 2691 Joy Rd. The affair
is given for the students of the
Yeshiva, and representatives of
every class will appear on the
program, which will include com-
munity singing and vocal selec-
tions by Cantor Hyman Schul-
singer of Congregation Beth Te-
filo Emanuel. Special invitations
have been sent out to the parents
in order to give them the op-
portunity of becoming better ac-
quainted with the work and the
snirit of the institution. The pub-
lic is cordially invited to natrici-
pate in the Smchas Beis Ilasho-
eivo, Refreshments will be served.
There will be no admission charge
and no solicitations.
The board of directors of
Yeshivath Beth Yehudah, at its
last meeting, decided to utilize
the occasion of Simchas Beis
Hashoeivo for the organization of
a Parent-Teachers' Association.

,

ZETA ALPHA RHO

Frank Bagdade, newly elected
chancellor of Zeta Alpha Rho
Fraternity, presided over the
meeting held Sept. 25 at Hotel
Detroiter.
Louis Schwartz and Harold To-
bias discussed the Defense Act.
• Zeta Alpha Rho is the only
Theodore I. Fry Jewish acconnting fraternity in
Michigan and is in its 11th year
State Treasurer—Democrat of
existence.

Goodwill Sewing Circle's
Annual Donor Lunch-
eon on Nov. 6

The annual donor luncheon spon-
sored by the Goodwill Sewing
Circle will be held at Lachar's
3153 Cass, Tuesday, Nov. 6, at
12 noon. As in former years, the
proceeds of this affair will be
devoted to worthy charities.
Mrs. Robert Ronnberg is chair-
man in charge of arrangements
and is assisted by Mrs. Joseph
Grossfeld.

N. H. J. C. Tea Next
Monday

Mrs. Irwin I. Cohn of 18541)
Fairfield Ave. will ue hostess to
the chairmen and committees for
the fall fund-raising affair of the
Detroit League of the National
Home for Jewish Children, on
Monday, Oct. 21.
Mrs. Harry Goldberg is presi-
dent of the League. Mrs. Aaron
Silberblatt is general chairman
and her co-chairman is Mrs. Cy
Ross. All proceeds of the annual
theater party which will be held
at the General Motors Auditor•
sum on Wednesday, Oct. 6, go
towards the Home in Denver. The
entertainment committee an-
nounces that a lovely program
has been arranged for the eve-
ning.
A meeting of the League was
held on Wednesday, Oct. 16, at
the Jewish Community Center.
Miss Jeffries of the child guid-
ance department of the Board of
Education was guest speaker, and
her interesting talk was well re-

ceived.

Proposal No. 4 Seeks to
Protect Public's Dental
Needs

Since the days when Paul Re-
vere made a set of false teeth
for George Washington, there has
been such consistent progress in
laws regulating the rract'cl of
dentistry that, today, dentistry
is a truly healing arts profession.
Great as this advancement has
been, certain abuses have re-
mained which recently have
caused 43 states of our nation
to enact laws that make it pos-
sible for the public to enjoy to
a still fuller degree the advan-
tages of an evolving profession.
Still more recently, as such laws
passed both houses of our na-
tional congress and were signed
by President Roosevelt, the Dis-
trict of Columbia has contributed
to a reduction of these abuses.
Now Michigan seeks the same
kind of progressive legislation in
Dental Practice Act No. 122,
which is up for ratification in
Proposal No. 4 on the state
ballot.
The Act which Proposal No. 4
offers for approval was snon-
sored by 95 per cent of the den-
tists in Michigan, was passed by
both houses of our state legis-
lature, without a dissenting vote
in the senate, and signed by Gov-
ernor Dickinson during the reg-
ular session of 1939. The Act has
the approval of the Michigan
State Board of Dental Examiners,
the Dental School of the Uni-
versity of Detroit, and the Michi-
gan State Medical Society. Oppo-
sition to the Act, by Planing it
on the ballot for referendum,
was brought about by one-half of
one per rent of the licensed den-
tists in this state.
The legislation is not for the
purpose of protecting the dental
profession, but rather for the
purpose of protecting the nubile
in Places where the need for
protection is recognized by the
dental profession. The means by
which this benefit will be gained
will be in the imnroved stand-
ards of training, ani rervi-e,
and the manner in which this
service may be presented to the
public.
Specifically the act requires the
licensing of dental specialists
unon presentation of proof that
they have extra training in the
desired snecialty. The hill also
requires the State Board of Den-
tal Examiners to rate dental
schools. according to specified e-

go moments, to determine eli•ri-
hil ■ tv for examination in this

state. By this means "dinloma
mill" dental schools will not be
able to dump their untrained
graduates on the Michigan public.

Reserve Thursday, Nov. 14

for Classical Concert featuring

EMMA LAZAROFF SCHAVER
In Scottish Rite Cathedral of
Masonic Temple

