2

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle

IN THE
REALM OF SOCIETY

M A RR I AGES

PROMOTED

MOLNER - LEVIN
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Levin of
Elmhurst Ave. announce the
marriage of their daughter, Mil-
dred, to Monroe Davis Molner,
Sp. 1 ic USNR, son of Mr. and
Mrs. H. J. L. Frank and Mr. Mrs. Sam Molner of Chicago, Ill.,
and Mrs. Lewis Frank and daugh- Saturday, Aug. 12.
ter, Betty, of Colorado Ave., and
LEVINE - SPARER
Mrs. Ida Blum of the Belerest
Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Spiral .
left Monday to spend a few
weeks at the Grand Hotel in of Gladstone Ave. announce the
marriage of their daughter, Ther-
Mackinac.
esa, to Dr. Hyman S. Levine, son
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Fink of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Levine of
of the Lee Plaza returned from Wildemere Ave.
The bride is a graduate of the
a visit in Chicago and Minneap-
Mt. Sinai Hospital Nursing
olis.
School of Chicago and was doing
Mrs. Arthur Miller of Glynn graduate work at Children's Hos-
Court left Tuesday to visit with pital in Detroit. Dr. Levine is a
relatives in St. Ignace.
graduate of the University of
Michigan Medical School, in-
Mrs. Mack Lane and son, Ken- terned at Grace Hospital and
neth, returned to their home on had his specialty training in
Fullerton Ave., having visited in Pediatrics at the Children's Hos-
Charlevoix for three weeks.
pital in Detroit.
Immediately following the wed-
Edmund Saperstone of Wis•
consin Ave. returned from a ding Dr. and Mrs. Levine left
by motor for the west coast
business trip in Chicago.
where they will reside in Oak-
Sidney A. Jacobs of Virginia land, Cal.
Park left for an extended vaca-
KAPLAN - SHEFTEL
tion in California.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Sheftel of
Lt. (jg) Arthur Thorner of Yellowstone Blvd., Forest Hills,
Newport, Va., visited in Detroit New York, announce the mar-
the past week.
riage of their daughter, Renea
Joy, to Dr. Earl G. Kaplan, son
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Dreifus of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Kaplan of
of Birchcrest Ave. returned last Calvert Ave. The wedding took
Sunday from a week in New
place Sunday, Aug. 6, at the
York.
Hotel New Yorker in New York
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Shrader City. The couple will reside at
entertained a group of friends 3205 Tyler Ave.
at a supper party last Sunday
evening at their farm, honoring
Mrs. Adolph Moses of Chicago.

Eudice Shapiro to be
NBC Symphony Soloist
On WWJ Aug. 20

Eudice Shapiro, 1937 Winner
of the Artist Contest Award of
the National Federation of Music
Clubs and who performed here
in 1938 under the auspices of
the Music Study Club of Detroit
will be the soloist with Dr. Frank
Black and the NBC Symphony
Orchestra on Sunday, Aug. 20
at 5 p. m. EWT on the General
Motors Program (WWJ). She
will play the Mozart A Major
Violin Concerto.

There was an old saying in
ancient Palestine: He who re-
fuses to continue a quarrel and
keeps quiet, comes from good
1
J
tuay.

Do not give free rein to your
anger.

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Great Britain and U. S.
Considering Horthy's
Offer to Release Jews

10,000 Jewish Children
from Hungary to be
Admitted by Sweden

STOCKHOLD (WNS) — The
Swedish Government is prepared
to receive 10,000 Jewish chil-
dren from Hungary and to pro-
vide for them until such time
as they can emigrate to other
countries, it was officially an-
nounced here this week by the
Swedish Premier Alvin Hanson.
The Premier said that the re-
moval of the children to Sweden
would be arranged by the Inter-
national Red Cross.
Simultaneously, the 'Swedish
Foreign Office made public this
week the telegrams exchanged be-
tween King Gustave and Ad-
miral Nicholas Horthy concern-
ing the Hungarian Jews. The
exchange telegrams disclose that
Horthy's assurances that every-
thing would be done to ease the
plight of the Jews in Hungary
were given in response to King
Gustave's appeal that he inter-
vene on behalf of the Jews.
Hungarian newspapers reach-
ing here this week disclose that
more than 2,000 residents of the
city of Nagyvarad had been ar-
rested for concealing approxi-
mately $8,000,000 worth of Jew-
ish property. Among the arrest-
ed were several municipal offi-
cials. Similar arrests took place
in Koloszver and Szarszregen. At
Budapest, where many protests
have been reported against the
internment of Jews in ghettos,
the chief of police was given the
discretionary power to relax the
anti-Jewish restrictions.
Reports reaching here from
diplomatic quarters in Turkey
say that Hungary is on the verge
of civil war as a result of Pre-
mier Doeme Sztojay's action in
"relieving" three members of his
Cabinet from their posts. The
three relieved officials were: Bela
Imredi, Minister of Economic
Affairs; Andor Jaross, Minister
of the Interior; and Antal Kun-
der, Minister of Trade and Trans-
port. All three of the Cabinet
members who were "relieved of
their posts" are members of the
Hungarian Rejuvenation party, a
pro-German party that is led by
Imredy. These men were re-
sponsible for the laws confiscat-
ing Jewish property.

He who, doing what he ought,
. . gives pleasure to others,
shall find joy in the other world.
—Udanavarga.

8625 LINWOOD
CALL TYLER 5-1230

11738

DEXTER BLVD.

Between Webb and Tuxedo

QUALITY MEATS — ALWAYS FRESH

Aaron B. Margolis

Kosher Meat & Poultry Market

J. D. C. Rushes Food and Relief to 500 Refugees
Who Escaped Torpedoing in Black Sea

Food and supplies are being refugees,
j. p. cs Dr. e r S s ceEchatas;it chief
e oeiltl
rushed by the Joint Distribution
ef o indicat-
frioeu
titiee
Committee's representative in the ed that Reuben Renck en
Middle
Middle East to the Turkish Black hja.Ds.Cb.eeMn instructed :sot arff
dispatch
Sea port of Igneada where the necessary supplies, is arrange
Turkish motor ship Bulbul today to Igneada where, after mini
disembarked about 500 Jewish tering to the immediate needs of s.
refugees. This action followed the refugees, he u
range for
the submarine shelling seven miles their overland transportation
to
off the Turko-Bulgar border of Palestine via Turkey. This situa-
the Turkish rescue ship Mafkura tion is the more involved because
which was sunk on Monday. Igneada is in a military zone.
About 250 Jewish refugees from
The sinking of the Mafkura
Hungary, Romania and Poland followed closely after the break
lost their lives. The few surviv- of diplomatic relations between
ors, mainly members of the Maf- Turkey and Germany. All of the
kura's crew, were taken aboard refugees had been informed that
the Bulbul, according to word they ran the risk of enemy at-
received today by the J.D.C. tack because it had not been
from its European chairman, Dr. possible to gain safe conduct
Joseph Schwartz.
Three vessels left the Roman- guarantees. The refugees chose
ian escape port of Constanza last: the hazardous trip rather than
week, the third being the Marina, remain in Nazi territory. Th ere
whose 315 refugee passengers has been no word as to whether
LT. SIDNEY RAVINE
reached Istanbul safely. Today
the Marina's complement left additional rescue vessels will be
Lt. Sidney Ravine has been Turkey for Palestine, original permitted to clear from Con-
promoted from Second to First destination of the entire 1,050stanza.
Lieutenant. Lt. and Mrs. Ravine
(the former Sylvia Dorn) are
residing in Hanford, Cal., where
Lt. Ravine is stationed. Joseph
Dorn, of Detroit, their brother,
has been visiting them all sum-
mer.

Mr. and Mrs. Herman Holin-
stat and daughter, Judy, of Rose-
lawn Ave. returned from three
weeks in Charlevoix.

Mrs. Harold M. Barker and
(laughter, Joan, of E. Chicago
are spending 10 (lays with the
former's mother, Mrs. David Op.
penheim of Chicago Blvd.

Friday, August 18
1944

"1 1

WASHINGTON ( W N S) —
Consultations between the gov-
ernments of the United States
and Great Britain on the ques-
tion of implementing the recent
offer of Regent Horthy of Hun-
gary to release certain cate-
gories of Hungarian Jews have
reached a point where definite
and material results may obtain
in the near future, according to
an authoritative source whose
identity cannot be disclosed at
this time.
The informant said that the
consultations followed G r eat
Britain's official notification to
the State Department accepting,
in principle, the offer which
Regent Horthy of Hungary had
recently transmitted to the U.S.
and British governments through
the International Red Cross.
Horthy has offered to release
from Hungary all Jewish chil-
dren under the age of 10, all
adult Jews with immigration
visas to Palestine and Jewish
holders of still valid visas to
other reception countries.

Snap, Crackle, Pop!
idetlyyjr

I

KRIiPIES

"THE GRAINS

ARE GREAT FOODS"

711 411116.-ii ?If

• Kellogg's Rice Krispies equal the
whole ripe grain in nearly all the
protective food elements declared
essential to human nutrition.

•

Christmas Packages for the
Armed Forces Overseas
Must be Ready Soon!

• TIME OF MAILING . . . Christmas cards and parcels must be
mailed between September 15, 1944 and October 15, 1944, the
earlier the better. Christmas cards must be sent in sealed envelopes.
prepaid at the first class rate. Gift parcels should be endorsed
"Christmas Parcel" by the sender.

• SIZE AND WEIGHT . . . Parcels shall not exceed five pounds
in weight, or fifteen inches in length, or thirty-six inches in length
and girth. One individual may send only one package a week to
the same person during this period.

• HOW TO WRAP ... Articles must be carefully packed in boxes

of metal, wood, solid fiberboard, or strong double faced corrugated
fiberboard, tied with strong twine. It is desirable to have fiberboard
boxes securely wrapped in heavy paper. Articles within the box
must be tightly packed. Any sharp points or edges must be
protected.

• HOW TO ADDRESS . . . Addresses must be legible, in type-
writing or ink. The complete address should also be shown on a
piece of paper inside the parcel. Be sure you have the complete
address and also the address and zone number of the sender on
both the inside and outside of package.

The J. L. Hudson Company

4 4

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