America/I 'elvish Periodical Cotter

CLIFTON AVENUE • CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

3

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The loyal Chronicle

September 18, 1942

Red Cross to Deliver
Parcels to Internees

CATHOLIC THEATRE OF DETROIT PRESENTS Young Israel to Hold
PLAY FOR DETROIT LEAGUE OF N. H.J.C.
Anniversary Nov. 6-15

The Federation of Polish Jews
is indebted to the following con-
cerns who laundered free of
charge several thousand articles
of clothing which left Detroit in
a transport last week: The Reli-
able Linen Co., The American
Laundry, and the General Linen
Sillily Company.
The Clothing Campaign con-
ducted for the past several weeks
will be concluded on September
11. After this date it will not be
possible to accept clothing in-
tended for Polish refugees in
Russia. However, word has been
reuived that standard relief pack-
ages are still being sent to Polish
citizens in the U.S.S.R. A list of
these packages together with
prices covering all charges is
available at the office of the Fed-
eration at 9124 Linwood Avenue.
In cooperation with the Red
Cross orders can be accepted for
standard food parcels, at $2.40
each, for delivery to unidentified
internees in Camp Ferramonte.
These internees who came origi-
nally from the Island of Rhodes
where they were landed after
being shipwrecked, are entitled to
receive mail and packages. The
camp contains approximately 300
refugees, exclusively Jewish. Any-
one having relatives or friends
interned in Camp Ferramonte
may communicate with the office
of this Federation for further in-
formation.
During the High Holidays ap-
peals will be made in the syna-
gogues on behalf of the Federa-
tion for Polish Jews, as announced
by Morris Mohr, chairmna of the
Vaad Ha Kehiloth and Isidore
Sosnick, president of the Bnai
Zion Synagogue. The public is
urged to respond generously to
this appeal.

Mrs. Jack Berger, president of
the Detroit League of the Na-
tional Home for Jewish Children
at Denver, announces that plans

Noted Scientist Will
Address Marshall Lodge

Dr. Robert S. Drews, Dean of
Great Lakes College and director
of its Department of Biology and
Sociology, will address the mem-
bers of Detroit Louis Marshall
Lodge of B'nai B'rith on Tuesday,
Sept. 22, 1942, at 8:30 P. M., at
the Rose Sittig Cohen Memorial
Building, Lawton and Taylor
Avenues. Dr. Drews' subject will
be "The Myth of Racial Super-
iority." The meeting will be a
closed business session for mem-
bers only.
The Lodge Bowling League
held its organization session last
Monday evening and elected Saul
Herman, president; Max Adler,
vice-president; William Pa rnos,
secretary and Irving Gilbert,
treasurer. Bowling sessions will
he held at the Bowl-O-Drone each
Monday evening at 9 P. M. for
the duration of the bowling sea-
son. Lodge members desiring to
he placed on a bowling team
should notify Mr. Herman at
Townsend 6-8689 immediately.

—BUY WAR BONDS—

Holiday Greetings

Belvidere Hotel

VISIT OUR SIIIP "FAVERN

Al ways the l3est in Musical

Entertainment

110 W. SPRUCE

Phone 321

Sauk Ste. Marie, Mich.

w ish all our Jewish Friends

A Happy New Year

•

BARBAS BROS.

CONFECTIONERS

16 CADILLAC SQUARE

RAndolph 3592

MRS. ROBERT DREWS

have been completed for the De-
troit League's annual fall fund-
raising project. On Thursday,
Oct. 8, the Detroit League is
sponsoring a play which will be
presented by the Catholic Theatre
of Detroit in the auditorium of
the Art Institute.
For this event, Paul A. Lilly,
business manager of the Catholic
Theatre has selected a three-act
comedy, "The More the Merrier"
written by Frank Gabrielson and
Irvin Pincus.. When presented on
Broadway, this play was lauded
by the critics as one of the sea-
son's merriest.
Mrs. Irvin Cohn has been ap-
pointed the general chairman
with Mrs. J. J. Karbal, of 2993
Webb ave., ticket chairman, and
Mrs. Edward Schlussel, of Stur-
tevant ave., co-chairman; Mrs.
Moe Leiter, chairman of hospital-
ity committee with Mrs. Maurice
Cohen and Mrs. Sanford Klein,
co-chairmen. Tickets are now
available, and all those desiring
to help this splendid cause, may
obtain tickets by calling Mrs.
Karbal, To. 7-4523 or Mrs. Sch-
lussel, To. 7-6887, or any of the
following members of the Ticket
Committee: Monty Weston, Maur-
ice Cohen, Aaron Silberblatt, Her-
man Osnos, Irving Schwab, M.
Ben Berkman, Moe Prince, Jos-
eph Mellon, Louis Burns, Sol
Brock, Nate Weingarden, David
Ebner, Arthur Miller, and Ed-
ward Krause.
All proceeds from this perform-
ance will be sent to the Home
at Denver which cares for under-

privileged children from all parts
of the country, who have been
exposed to tuberculosis and suf-
fering from other respiratory dis-
eases.
It is a definite contribution to
the war effort to build up a gen-
eration of strong, healthy young
men and women prepared to con-
tribute the best of their capabili-
ties as loyal and worthy American
c itizens.
Conditions of today have re-
vealed to all that it is the re-
sponsibility of those who are in
a more fortunate position to aid
those children who are subject
to illnesses which would incapaci-
tates them for life if measures
were not taken to cure them in
the early stages of their affliction.
Children cared for at the Home
at Denver are constantly under
expert medical supervision. The
Home prepares them to go out
into the world by teaching them
practical trades, thereby equip-
ping these children to live as
healthy and useful citizens. Boys
and girls who desire a profes-
sional career are given this op-
portunity. Those especially tal-
ented in the arts are not neglect-
ed. In addition to these under-
privileged children, at the Home
at Denver has opened its doors
to refugee children who were
sent to our country to escane
the brutalities and horrors of the
war abroad.
Mrs. Jack Berger, president of
the Detroit League, states: "It
is my belief that all those who
support this cause, are making a
definite contribution to the war
effort."
The first regular meeting of
the fall season will be held on
Wednesday, Sept. 23, 1 :15 p.
at the Jewish Community Center.

Young Israel of Detroit, one
of 70 such groups throughout the
country, has been dedicated for
two decades to the ideal of serv-
ice. The organization has de-
veloped thousands of young men
and women who have given of
themselves to the cause of Israel
and America, whenever called
upon. The membership, distrib-
uted in senior, sub-senior, inter-
mediate and junior age groups,
is constantly training itself to
the knowledge and practice of
Judaism. It hopes to utilize the

GREETINGS

FRONI

Webster Hall Hotel

IN THE ART CENTER DISTRICT

•

Luncheons, Dinners, Banquets

and Receptions

•

Gifts to Mt. Sinai
Hospital Association

5050 CASS AVE.

The Mount Sinai Hospital As-
sociation wishes to acknowledge,
with thanks, the following:
A bequest by the lace departed
Sara Miller, who passed away
Feb. 19, 1942.
A donation by the Eva Prenz-
lauer Maternity Aid, in memory
of the late Mrs. Rebecca David
Freedman, and the late Mrs.
Sarah Freedman.
By Mrs. Irving Winkelman, in
honor of Mrs. Fannie Rodin.
In memory of Beloved Father
Theodore Brand by son Arthur.

-

CO. 0100

Greetings to the Boys in the Armed Forces"

KELLY COAL COMPANY

"A YARD NEAR YOU"

12300 Greenfield Road

VErmont 6.3300—Fl. 0380

Littasaa's People's Theater

ALL-OUT FOR SPIRITUAL VICTORY

8210-12th St. near Seward Ave.—Phone TR. 2-0100
Re-opens Sunday Motze Yom Kippur with the Yiddish
Talking Picture

By RABBI M. J. WOHLGELERNTER
Congregation Beth Tefilo Emanuel

religious life, it is with heavy hearts that we turn again
to our Father in Heaven, in prayer for the safety of
our beloved country and the salvation of Israel. Amer-
ica is now at war and the tragedy of world Jewry has
increased manifold. The duties devolving upon each
one of us, both as a Jew and as a citizen of the United
States. are greater than ever before. To meet these
newer obligations, we must submit to a more rigorous
discipline and training.
Jewishnes can no longer be taken lightly. The safe-
guarding of our very existence as a people today de-
mands a greater degree of knowledge and active service.
The exigencies of war bring home to us with telling
force the conviction that, in religious as well as in civic
life, the days of isolation and carefree individualism
are at an end. "All Israelites are responsible for each
other," and only as a unified community may we hope
to meet the challenge of the times.
Religious life sees the individual as a soldier in
the ranks of the "Lord of Hosts". The fulfillment of
Divine commandments may, in that sense, be likened
to military tasks. Ritual exercises such as daily prayer
and benediction, donning of distinctive garments, e. g.
tefIllin and talith, point to that similarity. The evil in-
clination within one's own heart is a constant danger
to spiritual integrity, and the need of combatting it is
akin to warfare. Loyalty to God and Israel must be
placed above every personal interest, in much the same
manner as the defense of flag and country for the
civilian.
It is in this spirit that American Jewry greets the
beginning of the New Year 5703 in the Hebrew Calen-
dar. We must dedicate ourselves to the zealous defense
of our historical treasures through the retraining of our
manpower and gearing it to new needs. No Jew or
Jewess may remain spiritually unemployed; there is
enough work to go around. Both on the actual battle-
field and on the homefront, in the synagogue and the
family circle, in the schools for the young and the adult,
in organizational life and communal institutions—the
call must be sounded for an all-out effort.
May we all be inscribed in the book of the righeous,
immediately, for purposeful life in the spirit of Jewish
tradition!

functions of the anniversary
week for acquainting wider cir-
cles of the local Jewish commu-
nity with the contribution Young
Israel has made to American Jew-
ish life.
The anniversary functions will
begin on Friday evening, Nov.
6, and continue through Sunday
evening, Nov. 15, when a banquet
will be held at the hall of Con-
gregation Shaarey Zedek. The
anniversary dinner will be at-
tended by representatives of all
groups in Detroit Jewry sympa-
thetic to the work of the move-
ment. Further details will be
publicized through the press and
furnished upon request.

"MIRELE EFROS"

By JACOB GORDON—with BERTHA GERSON

ADDED ATTRACTION

AARON LEBEDEFF IN PERSON

Noted Singing Comedian—in his inimitable repertoire

MON.. SEPT. 21-8 P. M. to 11:30
FRI., SAT.. SUN., MON., TUES. £1 WED.. SEPT.
25 to 30—Week Days 7 to 11:30—Sunday 2 to 11:30

Daily Two Shows-- 7 P. M. to I I P. M.
Prices—Adults 55c—Children 15c, including tax

iu

Detroit Town Hall .. Fisher Theater

20 Wednesday Mornings of World Celebrities
Im p e nni e n sg d y ik,
r: 0 a 0c t In
d

*CARMEN AMAYA

e

OCT. 14

Also coming! Alexander P. de Seversky—Eve Curie—Paul
Draper and Larry Adler—His Imperial Highness. Otto of Austria
—Krishnalal Shridharani—Franklin P. Adams—Leland Stowe—
Jan Struther—Walter Duranty—American Ballad Singers—Henry
Scott—Ernest K. Lindley--Margaret Culkin Banning—Father
Hubbard—Pierre Van Paassen—Merryle Stanley Rukeyser-
Julien Bryan—Hallett Abend—Kathryn Turney Garten.

..F; v.4)

11F;11111:1)%111I'S N()%% —691, $ 16 . 541. $ 13 . 15. $ 11 . 0 0. $N.%%

tax Included.

Town Hall Office-220 Hotel Statler: CH. 5617, CH. 6000

Holiday Greetings

Marr General Hospital

MEDICAL — SURGICAL

MATERNITY

3066 TRUMBULL AVE.

AO,

I

TE. 1-5115

iu

