r Pg. 64,00w4g4n Rabbi Adler Views 'Painful Job' as Chaplain H' E,;. JE` 55 Jews Deported Following Battle In Eritrea Camp , Writes About Detroiters, Jewish Refugees in -Tokyo Special Wire to Jewish News Rabbi Morris Adler, U. S. Army Chaplain serving in the Tokyo area, on leave from Cong. Shaarey Zedek, has little time to write, but whenever he gets a chance he writes- Pages and. pages of interesting occurrences and about: Detroiters serving in Ja- 18280 San Juan; Larry Shalit, son pan. of Alex Shalit, 2463 Taylor; Max One of his most "painful jobs" Mindlin, •husband • of Mrs. E. is to correct grave markers over Mindlin, 2689 Virginia Park. - Jewish soldiers, he writes. . "Only `One-Man' Post Office -last week I cor- Rabbi Adler has been -sending rected an error under his own military 'address after .a Christian letters. for JewiSh civilians in chaplain had Tokyo to all parts of the world, sent the family, because there is no civilian mail against all reg- service as . yet. "Replies have,. ulation s, a been pouring in, which in turn photograph of I distribute to the addresses. In their son's grave addition their kin have been showing a sending packages." Cross." Following is a list of Detroit- Placed hastily er's whom Rabbi Adler has met over the grave, Capt. Adler the cross was replaced with a in Japan: Pvt. Bert Caplan, son of Mrs. S. R. Star of David. Caplan, 18296 Woodingham. _ Pvt. Avery Clarfelt, son of Mr. S. Hanukah Celebration Clarfelt, 9373 Broadstreet. Harold Feldman, son of Mr. Morris • Chaplain Adler is well sur- Feldman, 1993 Monterey. rounded by local Jewish service- Lt (j. g.) Harold Frank, son of Mr. men, especially after , services. Samuel Frank, 5533 Woodward. Sgt. Aaron Gelfend, 2737 Gladstone. "Last. night in the GHQ auditor- T/3 Irving Gerger, son of Mrs. T. ium in Tokyo we held a Hanukah Gerger, 2084' Virginia Park. Pfc. Herman Ginsberg,husband of celebration. About 600 Jewish Mrs. H. Ginsberg, 4298 Fullerton. T/Sgt, Harry Halpert, son of Mrs. GIs attended. Interestingly Halpert, 2212 Taylor. enough quite a number of Jew- M. Capt. Morton -Helper, of Atkinson ish. civilians came. For three' re: Avenue. Cpl. Nathan son of Mr. and fugee children it 'was the first Mrs. A. Kusnit, Kusnit, 2334 Richton. visit to a "synagogue" and' first Lt. Burton. Marks, brother-in-law of Sidney Cohen. attendance at a • service. Pfc. Max Mindlin, husband of Mrs. E. Mindlin, 2689 Virginia Park. "We had a fine musical pro- T/Sgt. Abraham Peltori, son of Mr. gram in vthich two civilian Jew- and Mrs. M. Pelton, 5974 14th. William Schumer, son of Mr. and ish artists (stateless, to be sure)• Harry Schumer, 18220 Pennington. took part. Dr. Josef Rosenstock, Mrs. Alvin Solomon, _husband of Mrs. Betty Solomon, 2536 Tuxedo. conductor of the Nippon Sym- Cpl. Jack Shapiro, son of Mrs. M. phony, Japan's leading musical Shapiro, 3710. Burlingame. Capt. Robert Morrison, husband of organization, and Willy Frey, Mrs. N. Morrison, 8621 LaSalle. _noted Viennese virtuoso; present= Capt. Bernard Stamel, . of Calvert ed a program of Jewish music." Avenue. Lillian Schwartz, daughter of Mr. Occasional 'Nash' - and Mrs. Max Schwartz, 3236 Webb. Pfc. Daniel Katz, son of Mr. and Rabbi Adler also adds that if L. Katz, 18041 Griggs. be ever writes book "I will Mrs. Pvt. Herbert L. Kollin, win of Mrs. have to .devote a chapter -to _the David Kollin,, 3226 Cortland, • Lt. Samuel Joseph Faurhan, son of devious methods chaplains have Dr. and 'Mrs. D. Fauman, 3200 Bos- • evolved in precuring an Occasion- ton. E. P. Ellias, brother of Dr. al "nash" for the congregation. S. Capt. F. Ellias, 4845 Fullerton. He had a little reunion of De- Ens. Ira Brawer, son- of•Mr. I. Braw- 3290 Hazelwood. troiters recently, among them er, Cyril Feldman, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Schumer, son of the Har- Edward Feldrhan, Park PlaZa Apts., ry Schuiners.,_ 18220. 'Pennington; 8125 Whitmore Road. Herbert M. Rosenthal, 3339 Webb. Lillian Schwartz, daughter of Max Allan Kaplan, 'son of Mrs. S. Kap- 637 Robinwood. Schwartz, 3236 Webb; Samuel. J. lan, Joseph Schulnick, son of Mrs. A. Fauman, sail. of Dr. David Fau- Schulnick, 3760 W. Chicago. Cpl. Herschel L. Harris, son of man, 3200 Boston; Nathan Kus- Mrs. Kate J. Harris, 9360 Genessee. nit, son of A. Kusnit; 2334 Rich- Lt. Morton Kanfer, son of Mr. Henry Kanfer, 3339 Ewald . Circle. ton; Allah Kaplah, son of Mrs.. Martin Kaatz, son of David Kaata, S. Kaplan, 637 RobinwoOd; Mar- 18280 San Juan Drive. tin. Kaatz, son - 'of David Kaatz, Larry Shalit, son. of Alex Shalit, 2463 Taylor. , T Friday, Deceml,er. 28i -, 1945 IVi 1 H N NrY JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Fifty- five Jews were deported from Eritrea last Thursday after a pitched battle in the Latrun de- tention camp in which all the Jewish prisoners participated, it was revealed on Tuesday. The deportees finally were ov- erpowered by heavily armed troops. Meanwhile, a strike called by the remaining detainees went in- to its fourth day with strikers neither eating, shaving nor mov- ing from benches. In some set- tlements wives of families of de- portees gathered in the settlement offices and remained there to protest the government action. The Hebrew newspapers bit- terly attacked the deportations. Davar says the Latrun strikers have the support of the entire Yishuv. Parents of Lost Flier Give $160,000 To JNF; Art Collection Donated JERUSALEM, (Palcor) .— Two of 'the largest individual dona- tions ever made to Keren. Kaye-- meth (Jewish National Fund) Jewish Palestine's land aquiring agency, were reported by ,JNF headquarters here. They include $160,000 from Mr. and Mrs. Woolf of Johannesburg, South Africa, and an invaluable collec- . tion of p'aintings, donated by an Austrian Jewish family. Part of the art collection will be presented by JNF to muse- ums in Tel Aviv -and Jerusalem, and part is to be sold with the proceeds going to JNF. Of the Woolf donation, $80,000 was presented in a check to' th• JNF earmarked for the acquisi- tion of land in, Hanana, Sharon valley, for establishment of dwellings for Jewish ex-service= men and refugees. The remain- der is in form of a ,trust fund. The settlement, to house from 200 to 300 families, will be named Shchunat Arye, in-memory of the late Lt. Leon Arye Reuben, elder son of the donors, who has been missing since March 1945, when his Liberator bomber was re- ported overdue at Undine, Italy. The late lieutenant, who was 27, was living 'in Palestine at the outbreak of the war, when he re- turned to South , Africa to join the air force. His father previous- ly made several outstanding con- tributions to Keren Kayemeth, one of them, a donation of $25,000 for the acquisition of land for a settlement, named for the late President Roosevelt. 1,500 Books in Five Years JERUSALEM (ZOA) — Four hundred- Hebrew books were published in Palestine in the year ended Sept.- 30, 1945, com- pared with 250 the previous year and 20-30 annually in the period preceding 1925. 1,500 books were published by 30 local in the past five years, reports the "Palestine Economic Review." . . - 31 Million Cost Of UPA Functions During Year 5705 Figure Reaches Four Times Sum Spent 4 Years Ago Upbuilding Homeland NEW YORK—Reaching a fig- ure four times the amount spent four years ago for the recon- struction of the Jewish National Home in Palestine, the expendi- tures of the Jewish Agency, Pal- estine Foundation Fund and Jewish National Fund—the agen- cies deriving their American support through the United Pal- estine Appeal—totalled $31,104,- 146 in the fiscal year 5705, end- ing Sept. 30, 1945. Making public a report from the :national,- funds in Palestine, Dr. James: G., Heller, National UPA. .said. that in the fiscal year 5701 - (1940-1941, - $7,- 305,937 has been expended. Largest increases, he pointed out, were in immigration and agri- cultural settlement. Describing in detail the activi- ties included in the programs of the UPA agencies, Dr. Heller said that expenditures of the Jewish Agency and Palestine Foundation Fund had totalled $17,631,339 last year, for such purposes as immigration, agri- cultural settlement, promotion of trade and industry, activities of the labor department, internal security and aid to the armed forces, educational, religious and Cultural affairs. The expendi- tures of the JNF for purchase of land and its amelioration reached $13,472,807 in 5705. Thanks For Your Patronage We Extend New Year's Greetings To Our Friends PrHERE isn't room for one more in this bridge foursome—even for a kibitzer ... all he does is cause trouble for the players. And one appliance too many on an elec- trical circuit may be the cause of that trouble- some blown fuse. Many people are accus- tomed to inadequate wiring. But overloaded circuits are not your only handicap to home happiness if you have inadequate wiring. It may mean improper distribution of out- lets —not having the electric roaster where you want it, because there's no outlet con- venient—or maybe Dad can't plug in his new electric shaver where he wants it. For tomorrow's electrical living, an adequately wired home should accommodate a new frozen-food cabinet, electric range, auto- matic laundry, electric dishwasher and many other electrical appliances that will make living more pleasant and easier. And, of course, if 'your plans for tomorrow in- dude a brand-new home, it's doubly im- portant that your plans and specifications be checked for adequate Wiring. This is one of a series of advertisements prepared in cooperation with the Electrical Association of Detroit in the interest of insuring adequate wir- ing for every home in this area. Be sure your home is properly wired. When you are planning a new home, for wiring recom- mendations, call: THE ELECTRICAL ASSOCIATION OF DETROIT 3903 NOTTINGHAM DETROIT 24, MICHIGAN PHONE: TUXEDO 2-1240 Pauline Brown and Joe Brown Detroit Lighting & Furniture Co. 7651 WEST McNICHOLS ROAD THE DETROIT EDI$ON ,