TOT E

Page Fourteen

Christian Grandfather Brings Son's
Jewish Children to Aunt in U. S.

JEWISH NEWS

Friday, August 2, 1946

Truman Fay- ors JWB Elects Cohen
Spre# ding Visas National Treasurer
YORK—Election of Joseph
For Other Aliensk, H.. NEW
Cohen, New :York civic leader

Classified Ads Get Results!

and retired cotton factor, as treas-

Letter to Byrnes Su.gges. ts urer of .the National Jewish Wel-
Cut in DP Quota to..Let
fare Board to succeed the late Max
Wiltier, has 'been announced by
Deserving Persons In

WASHINGTON, (JTA) ---Presi-
dent Truman in a letter to Secre-
tary of State Byrnes on May 25
suggested that immigration quotas
about 90 per -cent of which were
being filled by displaced persons
in the American zone. in Ger-
many, be spread around so that
aliens throughout t h e world
might have a chance, to emigrate
to the U. S. according to the visa
division of the State Department.
In the letter, President Truman
is reported to have called Byrnes'
attention to the many deserving
aliens waiting at U. S. consulates
throughout the world, and to have
expressed himself in favor of les-
sening the quota numbers which
had been allotted to the Ameri-
can zone in Germany to enable
part of these other aliens to come
to this country.
The State Department spokes-
man poirAed out that many of
these people were themselves
refugees who had escaped from
Germany in earlier years.

-

NEW YORK.—A dramatic, meeting of two orphaned Jewish
girls with American relatives whom they had never seen before
took place on a New York pier on arrival of the S.S. "Marine
Perch", the childden, use Stelzer, 9 (left) , a concentration camp
survivor, and Marinne, 3, were brought • here by their Christian
grandfather, Ernest Stelzer, 79, (right), with the assistance of Na-
tional Refugee Service. When Stelzer's son adopted Judaism and
refused to give up his Jewish wife, the couple were sent to con-
centration camp, where they died. The girls are being greeted by their
aunt, Mrs. H. Wells, and maternal grandmother, Mrs. Jacob Stein.

Chachmey Lublin Thanks
Mt. Clemens Hotels for Aid
In Yeshivah Fund Appeal

A delegation from Yeshivath
Chachmey Lublin recently visited
the Jewish hotels in Mt. Clements.
The Yeshivah thanks proprietors
of the following hotels who co-
operated in appeals for funds:
:framers Olympia hotel, River-
side . hotel, Feldman's Arthusa
hotel, Altman's hotel, Kahn's hotel.
Albany hotel, Willinger's Hotel
New York, Plaza hotel.
Morris Speber of 3225 8turteant
at the Olympia hotel, and Rabbi
Dachowitz of New York, made the

AN INTERESTING
RECIPE FOR THE
JEWISH HOME

Frank L. Weil, JWB president. Mr.
Well also announced the election
of Robert K. Raisler, president of
the Raisler _Corporation, New York,
who served as lieutenant com-
mander in the navy during World
War II, as assistant treasurer, suc-
ceeding Merwin R. Ha,skel, who
has resigned:

Also Furniture Cleaning )

Vaad Hatzala Leaders
Meet in Germany Aug. 5

NEW YORK Rabbi I. Solo-
mon . Rosenberg of Hartford,
Conn., sailed July 26, for the Vaad
Hatzala Rescue Committee, one
of the immigrant certifying agen-
cies under the Truman directive,
to attend a conference being held
in Frankfort, Germany, Monday,
Aug. 5, of all Vaad Hatzala rep-
resentatives in Europe to coordi-
nate its imthigration procedure for
displaced persons who will come
to the U. S. on the Vaad Hatzala
Corporate Affidavit.

“Nature's Gift to Detroit -

WAYNE BATHS

FOOT OF SECOND

Detroit's Only Natural Mineral Baths

. FOR THE TREATMENT OF
RilifETIMATISM • ARTHRITIS • NEURITIS AND SCIATICA

TURKISH AND REDUCING BATHS

appeal at Kramer's. An appeal at
New Glenwood hotel will take place -
in two weeks.

10 BATHS $15

Attendant's Fee 50c Each Bath Not Inc.

RA. 6744

-

$ 122, t 00,000 Qs FOR
THE t NERAL WELFARE"

from the HEINZ HOME INSTITUTE

Something New In Cold
Milchig Soups
We don't have to sell Jewish
families on cold milchig soups for
summer meals. Is there a Jewish
home, for instance, where borscht
is not ehthroned as the favorite
from April to October?
But without threatening the
supremacy of "King Borscht", we
would like to suggest a new cold
soup recipe, easy to prepare and
easier to eat. We present con-
densed cream soups as the basis
for a new summer `mechaya".
Yes, *condensed cream of tomato
and *condensed cream of green pea
are colorful and captivating served
cold with a collop of sour cream,
whipped cream, or egg fluff float-
ing on the surface. Try this:— -
Chilled Cream of Green Pea Soup

Combine-
( 11-oz. can *condensed cream of

green pea soup, undiluted
2 cups milk
3/4 teaspoon dehydrated horse-
radish
teaspoon sugar
Pour into a refrigerator tray and
chill for 10 minutes. Serve cold.
Garnish with Whipped Egg White
Garnish (recipe below).
Whipped Egg White Garnish

Whip until stiff but still moist-

1 egg white.

Add, during whipping—

Dash salt.
Place a spoonful on chilled soup.
Top with a dash of paprika.
Serves 6.

`ade by Heinz — endorsed by the Unto*

if Orthodox Jewish Congregations

of aincrics.

Through the ten years ending with 1945, The Detroit Edison Company paid
taxes totaling more than $122,000,000. Those taxes were collected from us,
under the authority of the Constitution, to "provide for the common defence
and promote the general wt.4fare."
More than $55,000,000 of that amount was paid to LOCAL, units-of government.
s counties, villages and townships right here Pt
That means it went to the cities,
home, in the territory which The Detroit Edison Company serves.
The, tiniest village has Edison taxes in its treasury. The little red schoolhouse
got its share of the $55,000,000. Edison tax payments were a major contribution
to the funds necessary to meet the ever-growing governmental obligations of the
City of Detroit.
In 1945, "Detroit Edison's local taxes passed $6,000,000, for a new high, higher
than our Federal taxes for the first time since 1940.
There is no intent either to boast or to complain about this record of tax payments.
The Detroit Edison Company prizes its position as a private citizen, and with that
position goes the obligation to be a tax payer rather than a tax consumer.
Let it also be made crystal-clear that you, the buyers of Edison power and light,
paid that $122,000,000.
It was a part of your electric bill, but it was not a charge for electricity. It WAS a
part of your cost of government.

T H E

DETROIT

EDISON

COMPANY

11111Innminutm

TY. 5-8400

