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September 26, 1941 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish Chronicle and the Legal Chronicle, 1941-09-26

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

September 26, 1941

7

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and the Legal Chronicle

A Happy and Prosperous New Year to the Jewish Community . . .

Mrs. Celia Burnstein and Family Mr. and Mrs. Alvin B. Levin
18045 Roselawn Ave.
and son, Kenneth
Extend their best wishes to their rela•
1953 Taylor Ave.
lives and friends for a Happy and

Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. A. Cohen
and Family
2305 W. Grand Ave.

Extend their best wishes to their rela-
tives and friends for • Happy and
Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Israel Davidson
and Family
Belcrest Hotel

Extend their best wishes to their reia-
thes and friends for a Happy and
Prosperous New Year.

Dr. and Mrs. Michael H. Engelman
and son, William Myron
18043 Roselawn Ave.

Extend their best wishes to their rela-
tives and friends for • Happy and
Prosperous New Year.

Mrs. Jeannette Gallant
2964 Webb Ave.

Extends her best wishes to her rela-
tives and friends for a Happy and
Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Max C. Handler
and Sons
2516 Pingree Ave.

Extend their best wishes to their rela.
tives and friends for • Happy and
Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Kaplan
and Sons
858 Lakepointe Ave.

Extend their best wishes to their rela-
tives and friends for a Ilappy and
Prosperous New Year.

Mr. ad Mrs. Herbert Margolis
and daughter, Alicia
2704 Leslie Ave.

Extend their best wishes to their rela-
tives and friends for a Happy and
Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and –Mrs. Albert Nelson
and Daughter
16252 Parkside Ave.

Extend their best wishes to their rela
tives and friends for a Happy and
Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rott
and Family
17500 Fairfield Ave.

Extend their best wishes to their rela-
tives and friends for a Happy and
Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Sol Schayowitz and
daughters, Florence and Carolyn
2670 Oakman Blvd.

Extend their best wishes to their rela
lives and friends for a Happy and

Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Max Schmier
and Family
3316 Lawrence Ave.

Extend their best wishes to their rela-
tives and friends for a Happy and
Prosperous New Year.

Staff Sergeant and Mrs. Harry
Seligson and daughter, Judith
Headquarters Battery
95th CA (AA)
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Kass and
Camp Davis, N. C.
daughters, Sharon and Barbara
Extend their best wishes to their rela-
2960 Sturtevant Ave.
tives and Wends for • Happy and

Extend their best wishes to their rela-
tives and friends for a Happy and
Prosperous New Year.

Extend their best wishes to their rela•
Oyes and friends for a Happy and
Prosperous New Year

Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Lemberg
and son, Burton J.
225 Merton Rd.

Extend their beat wishes to their rela-
tives and friends for a Happy and
Prosperous New Year.

Velvet Nut Products

Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Smilo
and Sons
2902 Clements Ave.

Extend their best wishes to their rela-
tives and friends for a Happy and
Prosperous New Year.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry H. Wachs
and Family
3314 W. Buena Vista Ave.

Extend their best wishes to their rela
tives and friends for ■ Happy and
Prosperous New Year.

Mrs. Ida Rabinowitz and Family
2090 Hazelwood Ave.

Extend their best wishes to their rela.
and
Lives and friends for a Happy ■
Prosperous New Year.

6335 LYNDON AVE.

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel L. Weller
and Family
16841 Wildemere Ave.

DETROIT TOWEL SUPPLY
CO.

2829 Begley Ave.

LA. 0156

Extend- their best wishes to their relit.
tives and friends for a happy and
Prosperous New Year.

Dr. and Mrs. A. Wittenberg
and Sons
4020 Cortland Ave.

Extend their best wishes to their rela-
tives and friends for a Happy and
Prosperous New Year.

MR. AND MRS. LOUIS MARGOLIS
AND FAMILY

2706 LESLIE -

1'

Extend to All Their Friends

Best Wishes for a Happy and
Prosperous New Year

Women in the News

BY MARTHA NEUMARK

bPEAKING LADY

She may be a grandmother, but
she still has an extraordinary
power to move men by her elo-
quence. Mrs. Archibald Silverman
of Providence, R. I., has been a
familiar figuure on the American
scene for some three decades now.
If there are towns in the United
States where she has not spoken
they are probably not recorded
by Rand-McNally. But she is now
in the midst of new triumphs as
a speaker. Within the past few
weeks she has done what no
other American woman has ever
done in South America: she ad-
dressed in Yiddish a great crowd
of 16,000 people and was cheered
to the skies when she was
through.
Early this spring she visited a
number of South American coun-
tries and was urged to return by
the leaders who were weary of
the aloofness or the coldness of
some of the American men who
had been there. In August Mrs.
Silverman was again in Rio de
Janeiro. The laws of Brazil, how-
ever, do not permit the use of
foreign languages in pulic meet-
ings. She speaks English as per-
haps no other American Jewess
does. Her Yiddish is just as stir-
ring. But although she is learn-
ing Spanish rapidly, it is not
good enough for the platform yet.
The only way in which her com-
panion, Dr. Nahum Goldmann,
could speak in Rio was at a
religious service, addressing a
large audience in Yiddish. But
since the services were Orthodox,
Mrs. Silverman could not par-
ticipate.
But this was more than made
up in the clays that followed
when she had to speak to smaller
groups at the rate of three a
day. Then, on Aug. 10, in beauti-
ful Luna Park in Buenos Aires,
came a memorable occasion. The
Argentinian authorities were per-
suaded to relax their rule. Mrs.
Silverman addressed the audience
of 16,000 in Yiddish. Two weeks
later another exception was made,
and for a half hour she spoke
on one of the principal Brazilian
radio stations—in Yiddish!
How impressed South American
Jewry is with this vibrant ener-
getic, effective Jewish personality
from the United States was illus-
trated in Argentina when a He-
brew class attended by boys and
girls in Flores, ill suburb of
Buenos Aires, was named for
Mrs Silverman. Tokens of her
stimulating presence may now be
found from Panama to Palestine.

FANNIE

HURST'S OWN STORY,

Fannie Hurst, one of America's
great feminists as well as novel-
ists, is gradually beginning to
dictate her autobiography. It
should be one of the most excit-
ing documents since Isadora Dun-
can told her story. Miss Hurst
has, in spite of :laving written
numerous novels and short stories,
nevertheless managed to be an
active figure in the civic scene.
A close friend of Mrs. Eleanor
Roosevelt, she can always be
counted upon to promote sortif
public cause or to interpret an
important Govenmrental policy.
As the woman who Dive a ro-

mantic halo to five-and-ten cent
store girls and who has always
invested her feminine characters
with both dignity and self-
sufficiency, it is not unexpected
that Miss Hurst should now be
advocating that the army should
use women. She thinks they
would make bettetr cooks than the
boys, certainly better chamber-
maids and perhaps even better
truck drivers. In this way, every
man could be released for actual
front-line service, she points out.
Her autobiography
starting
with her birth in Hamilton, 0.,
in the month of October, 1889,
as the only child of wealthy St.
Louis parents—is not unusual in
the early stages. She obtained a
B. A. in 1909 from Washington
University, whose reports indi-
cate that athletics and dramatics
were as much her forte as writ-
ing. Of all things, Miss Hurst
started her career as 'a school-
teacher. But it wasn't long before
she was flooding the publishers
of America. She always encour-
ages other young writers by
pointing out that it was not until
the editor had rejected 35 other
short stories that the Saturday
Eening. Post finally accepted her
first. Readers of her various
novels will recognize her own life
experience in . such occupations as
waitress, salesgirl and even
actress. In those days, too, she
helped in the fight to get the vote
for women. Although she was
married in 1914 to musician
Jacques Danielson, even most of
her friends didn't know about it
until five years later. She be-
lieved in keeping her own iden-
tity. With this skeletal frame-
work, which becomes even more
impressive in the last two dec-
ades, she could provide much to
stimulate and to inform if she
would speak her mind—as she
can.

Wm. McKenzie Ross'
Sons

FLORISTS

QUEEN ST. SOUTH

Phone 355

Chatham, Ont,

Mannion Express Co.

TRUCK LEASING SERVICE

Your Dr;ver or Ours

847 HOWARD ST.

CHerry 7914

or 7185

Silver Star Cafe

GEORGE MONDALEK, Prop.

2482 CLIFFORD

CL. 0915

W. VERNON GLENDENING

OPTOMETRIST

1838 Ferry Park

TR. 2.0473

(Copyright 1941 by Independent Jewish
Press Service, Inc.)

LASALLE TOOL

T. A. BELANGER

GAUGE.

Carpentry and Building

INC.

2054 VINEWOOD AVE.

2830 E. 7-Mile Road

LA. 0554

Twinbrook 2-1525

DR. BRUCE H. DOUGLAS

COMMISSIONER

Detroit Board of Health

JAMES J. McMAHON

REGISTERED ENGINEER AND SURVEYOR

LOT AND BONDED MORTGAGE SURVEYS

ONE DAY SERVICE

11623 EAST JEFFERSON AVENUE

GODIN TOOL 8 DIE CO., INc.

SEITZ CONCRETE BOX CO.

LENOX 7887

Nights

and Sundays: PINGREE 1018

LENOX 2666

Manufacturers of

GARBAGE AND ASH

RECEPTACLES

2210 TWELFTH STREET

1765 20th Street

LA. 1053

qtte

HOME HEATING AND

MILTON D. RUMPEL ZS CO.

EQUIPMENT CO.

Frigidaires, Refrigerators and
Ranges

Photostat Prints

nti A IA I OCAC H

N she:: III

cinci

ptospetous

\\,

c s
'1_3

Valspar Paints and Varnishes
Link Belt Stokers

Artists' Supplies

R. E. Dooley, Pres.

203 STEPHENSON BLDG.

tAapcli

Its Viands0 yen
"(eat

MADISON 1146

16854 HAMILTON AVE.

UN. 1.5670

ROSE chow, Oreates

J

THE.000SE.
1 - 0.t4KOF

FRANKE.L. '0,roso

.....20111101111 •

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