A merlealt 9ewish Periodical Carter Friday, CLIFTON AVENUE - CINCINNATI 20, OHIO Page Nine DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle March 9, 1946 Strictly Confidential (Continued from Page 4) at the Carnegie Chum- ni onorated , be• Music Hall the day after Pu- no, was born, married and be- ,amt,g,randfather on Purist Sylvan Joseph, who used to head the ()PA in New York, is pre- - f paring to go into politics . . . He just been published, and a new be General Sessions Judge Jonah will probably be the Democratic hook of American folk tales is J. Goldstein. candidate for the Manhattan bor- just about ready, for the presses WEEKLY GIGGLE: ought presidency . . A new news . . . Ella Winter is readying a Going around the army camps service is it-borning, we hear, book on her recent trip to Rus- with Marshall Field and James sia . . Successor of the late is the story that an American guard at a P, 0.. W. camp heard Warburg as co-fathers . . . How- Alfred E. Smith as head of the one German prisoner complain to and Fast has been keping very executive committee of the Holy his buddy: "Hitler told us we'd busy , . . His edition of the "Se- Name Center, operated by the march from California to New lected Works of Tom Paine" has Catholic Charities, w ill probably York—but he didn't tell us we'd stop to pick peanuts in Georgia on the way." 1,300 TO PALESTINE Over 1,300 refu- LONDON gee Jews—men, women and chil- dren—detained on Mauritius since 1941, will be released and al- lowed to enter Palestine as soon as necessary arrangements can be made. — FOLKS, THE RED CROSS DESERVES YOUR HELP kitaWi I SOW 1dAVIL., .?. 111111111111111. Wit BOB HOPE reports on Bob Hope should know. He saw. For two years he ' as devoted most of "Foxhole Circuit" of USO- his spare time to entertaining C.f.'s on the Alaska, British Isles, Panama, Camp Shows. Hope has made 'em laugh in the captured islands of recently through most North Africa, Sicily, and men relaxing just behind the front audiences were the South Pacific. His service from home. friendly a they appreciate lines. He knows how the Red Cross in action I SAW Red Cross blood plasma bring a man back to life! I watched a miracle. A miracle that could not have happened without you . ; and your Red Cross. In 1944 the Red Cross was asked to provide 5,000,000 pints of blood for the armed forces in addition to the 5,600,000 pints previously obtained. This project requiring 100,000 pints a week was carried on through fixed centers located in 35 major cities and by 60 mobile units attached to the centers which visited nearby towns. I SAW the Red Cross bring news from home to a worried son! Not all the worries arc at home. A soldier in a distant Pacific Station was worrying why a letter to his mother had been returned to him marked "unknown." Was she sick? Alive? What has happened? Through his Red Cross Field Director and National Headquarters came a re- quest to investigate and report. The mother was found to be all right and her address correct. But just after she had moved to her new location about 6 months previously, the mail man "thought he had returned a letter." A small matter perhaps, but terribly important to a dear one so far away. I SAW the Red Cross greet fliers FI I SAW the Red Cross playing mother to homesick, war-weary fighters! There are more than 700 Red Cross Clubs overseas. Some of them are like big hotels. They're headquarters for meals, snacks, tours, dances, games, books, home newspapers. I SAW a Red Cross ship taking food to our men in prison camps! Thousands of our men in enemy hands would be near star- Nation were it not for the food, clothing and medical supplies aent by and through the Red Cross. I SAW the Red Cross handing out kits to the wounded in a hospital! When a man has lost everything but his dirty, blood-stained uniform—these comfort kits are worth their weight in gold. They contain toilet articles, cigarettes, candy. just back from a mission! I saw a Fort come in—with dazed, haggard men crawling out of her. A Red Cross clubmohile Pulled up beside the plane. And the fliers' strained nerves relaxed over American dough- nu ts,American coffee, Amer- ican girls' smiles. GIVE NOW_ GIVE MORE Keep your RED CROSS at his side DETROIT CHAPTER THE AMERICAN RED CROSS CAMPAIGN II EA DQUARTERS , 1214 GRISWOLD STREET—RANDOLPH 6285