•T-I5E JEWISH NEWS Friday, -May .29, 1942 jewish Boys In The War Advertisers- Have Asked Us to Thank You • Sgt. Richard Kramer, son of -Mr. and Mrs. M. • Kramer of 2962 Tuxedo Ave., was inducted in serv- ice three months ago and was promoted to his presentrank. He is stationed at Duncan Field, Texas. His pro- motion was from Chemical War- fare branch of the service to the Air Corps. He holds a Master's degree from Wayne University. (Continued from Page 1) Prior to his induction in service foundations the whole social order. This will not soon he was director of activities in the Jewish Community Center be forgotten. And so the night of our bewilderment yields to the of Minneapolis. While in Detroit dawn of a new hope, that the world finally will compre- he was the organizer of the "Youth Speaks Committee" at hend, beyond possibility of misunderstanding, that free- the Jewish Community Center. dom for none may live where injustice and discrimination He was president of Avukah and or some reside, and that the gravest threat to ordered speaker of the Philmathic De- ciety lies not in the untrammeled functioning of its bating club. For weeks we have requested our readers to patronize the stores who advertise in The Jewish News. Your cooperation has been so complete that many, of our advertisers have told us of the response and asked us to thank you for your patronage. These stores deserve your business becaUse they are among the finest stores in the city. And remember, you help YOUR paper every time you tell an advertiser . . . - "I Saw It In The Jewish News" . omponent groups, btit in discrimination against or in- ustice to any of them. ar Honor Roll eekly Compilation of Ex- ploits of Jews Who Gained Distinction in Service 11. ISTINGUISHED SERVICE Lieutenant Harry Schreiber, of alveston, Tex., today wears the der of the Purple Heart, warded to him in recognition of the courage he displayed during recent Pacific bombing mission. reiber was wounded during that flight. But he is back in ac- ion now. The young lieutenant is a navi- gator, having received his corn- ..ion at March Field, C ornia, last year. Before the ar, he took part in a formation 'slit of 21 bombers to Hawaii. ollowing Pearl Harbor, he was nt to Claud Field, Hawaii, and ence to the Philippines, where e served under MacArthur. Private Alexander Katchtik, ine Corps, 25, of Sacramento, alit., has received the Silver tar decoration from General MacArthur for gallantry in ac- tion in the Philippines. On De- cember 29, 1941, during intense taerial bombardment, two wound- men were placed in a truck to be taken to the hospital. The driver of the truck abandoned his lace when a wave of Japanese r- • • mbers appeared. Private Kat- chuk volunteered to take the heel, and succeeded in getting the two wounded marines to the hospital, in the face of repeated attacks by enemy aircraft. KILLED IN ACTION Julius V. Greenberg, of Brook- ; line, Mass., was killed in action over Norway while flying with the RCAF. Flight Officer Green- berg could not get admittance to .the U. S. Air Cadets because of .strict educational requirements ,then enforced. He enlisted with e Royal Canadian Air Force as his only means of getting into ,. • • • P v t. Charles - Hoptman, son of. Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Hopt- . man of 2 0S2 Taylor Ave., sends his parents interesting news- paper clippings and photographs from Belfast, Ireland, showing how he and other Jewish boys in the service were entertained at the Pass- over Seder in the Belfast Jewish Institute. The second Seder night, Pvt. Hoptman was the guest of the Reverend Pollakoff and family. On the second day of Passover, at the Belfast Syna- gogue services, the Intercession Prayer was chanted and the guests included the Lord Mayor, the Chief Justice and other of- ficials. quick action against the Nazis. Isadore Goldstick, of Spring- field, Mass., died in Australia of malaria. Private Goldstick was a technician in the Army Air Corps. He had been in the serv- ice 18 months. Seaman second class Horace Roy Klonin, of Philadelphia, killed in action aboard the U. S. Destroyer "Sturtevant" when that ship was sunk by the enemy off the Florida coast. He is sur- vived by his mother, Mrs. Anna Klonin of Philadelphia. Eliot I. Sherris, 26, of Buffalo, N. Y., a seaman in the U. S. Navy, died of gunshot wounds after surviving the torpedoing of his ship in the Indian Ocean, late in March. His mother is Mrs. Henrietta Sherris of New York City. William Timmerman, 21, of Brooklyn. N. Y., a second class machinist in the Army Air Corps, Ensign Phillip Kaplan, grad- was killed in action at Pearl Har- uate of the University of Michi- bor on Dec. 7, 1941. gan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ben STEIN'S CLOVER LODGE Kaplan of 2425 Interesting social programs are Fullerton Ave., being planned by Stein's Clover formerly s t a - Lodge, on Grand Traverse Bay, tioned at Grosse Omena, Mich. Ile Air Base, Located in the forests of was married Northern Michigan, 1,600 feet May 5 to Miss above sea level, this popular Frances Berg- lodge has 22 acres of picturesque son, daughter of land and fruit orchards. Mr. and Mrs. Stein's is the only Jewish lodge - Herman Bergson in northern Michigan. It is equip- of 2224 Blaine Ave. Ensign Kap- ped with the most modern equip- lan, who was transferred from ment, such as running hot water, Grosse Ile Air Base, left for Nor- showers, etc. folk, Va., with his wife. Information may be secured by His latest address, just re- writing or calling Stein's Clover ceived, is Air Corps, A.IP.0, 501- Lodge, Omena, Mich., phone 5 C-10, Postmaster, San Francisco, F-12, or the Detroit representa- Calif. tive, TY. 5-7738. First Lieutenant Louis Hudson "JEWISH LEGALISM" Rosenthal, formerly located in Jewish legalism has been de- the Maccabees Bldg., is now sta- fined as the Judaistic system of tioned at Fort 'Benjamin Harri- life prescribed by the five books of Moses and its derivative codes son, Indiana, in the medical corps. of the Talmud and the Schulchan He is the son of Mrs. Sarah Ros- enthal, 2509 Blaine Ave. Aruch. AN OLD CAMP UNDER. NEW MANAGEMENT BEAUTIFUL CAMP IN CHARLEVOIX, MICH. Exclusively for Boys A camp with Grade A rating from the Mich. Dept. of Health. Competent. professional super- vision; nurse and doctor. I./mined dietician, College athletes for coaching in all sports. A Camp that merits your complete confidence. —15 Happy • Canoeing • • Volleyball • Swimming - Football • Ping-pong • Basketball • Arts and Crafts • Baseball • Boxing, Wrestling • Photography • ELshing Archery • Marksmanship • Tennis • Gymnastics • Model Airplanes • Morse Code • First Aid • Semaphores • Scouting • Horsemanship • Golf • Badminton • Track Meets • Campfire Singing • Hayrides • Indian Ceremonial Campfires . • Professional Supervision. Director Phil. Niekerman For Complete Information Mr. and lira. Jack Mann . . . 147• Wyss Cart TO. 8-8382 or TI. 14734 Officers of German Ministry of Economics Press Budapest Authorities to Block Jewish Accounts; Premier Opposes Move LISBON (JTA).—Nazi officers of the German Ministry of Eco- nomics, who now are stationed in Budapest under the economic agareement concluded between Hungary and Germany, are press- ing the Hungarian authorities to confiscate all Jewish funds in the country by blocking Jewish ac- counts, it was reported here this week, following a demand to this effect voiced last week in the Hungariaan parliament by the anti-Semitic Deputy Reiniss. Sanatorium Picnic On Sunday, June 7 The annual picnic of the De- troit Auxiliary of the Los Angeles Sanatorium will take place at Belcedere Park, Utica Road, near Schonherr Road, on Sunday, June 7. Owing to the present conditions and to the high cost of living, the cost of maintenance of pa- tients has increased. The Sana- torium and its ailiated institu- tions, the Ex-Patient Home, the Children's clinic and adult clinic have been obliged to issue a spe- cial appeal for funds. The local auxiliary has sent two patients in the last six weeks, one of them a young man 28 years of age, who was sent last Monday. This patient has been treated in the Maybury Sanatorium and was told that he was sufficiently well to pursue his profession of keep- ing books. He worked for three weeks and collapsed. He was again taken to the Herman Kief- er Hospital, where the doctors, after a thorough study and sev- eral examinations, recommended the Los Angeles Sanatorium. The Wayne County Board of Audi- tors together with Mr. Duncan, director of the Bureau of In- vestigation, provided transporta- tion and guaranteed the return fare. On the waiting list at present and under investigation is a young man 23 years of age. Obviously acting under Nazi in- fluence, Reiniss demanded the is- suance of a law which would provide that all payments to Jews in Hungary be made through blocked accounts exclusively. This, the anti-Semitic deputy said, would help Hungary to solve its "Jewish problem." Premier Nicholas von Kallay, in opposing the demand, declared that "the Jewish problem in Hungary consists of many com- plex questions" which cannot be solved in such a simple way as suggested by the anti-Semitic deputy. "I prefer to treat the Jewish question along broader lines'', he is reported here to have told Parliament during the discussion. The opposition of the Hungar- ian premier to the proposed new anti-Jewish measure is explained by the fact that he fears that the Jewish capial will fall under Ger- man control rather than under the control of Hungary. At pres- ent most of the banks in Hungary are already under control or Ger- man officers to the great dissatis- faction of the Hungarian author- of ities. Uncle: the pretext carrying out the Hungarian-Ger- man economic agreement, the Nazis have sent into Hungary about 800 German officers who are now occupying practically all leading positions in Hungarian financial, industrial and railroad enterprises. These men are really the masters of Hungary, forcing their orders upon Hungarian of- ficials in the various government departments. Solicitors Wanted! Excellent opportunity for women or for boys and girls 15 and older to add to their incomes. Part-time work. Write Box D, care of The Jewish News, 2114 Penob- scot Bldg., or call Randolph 1823. WITH A CARTON OF AT ALL CUNNINGHAM DRUG STORES Mailed to Any Man In Service Carton 200 FOR MEN IN CANADA OR OVERSEAS Chesterf ields Philip Morris Chesterfield, Philip 1.25 No Extra Charge 11110ffiS 75c 85c A Carton—No Extra Charge The bbys in service are calling for cigarettes! Don't disap- point them. Cunningham's will supply the postage and mail- ing free. Cartons of Chesterfields or Philip Morris at the above prices.