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May 04, 1951 - Image 21

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1951-05-04

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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-

Danny

ar

Raskin's

S

LISTENING

THE PICTURE OF the week
is the man sweeping the side-
walk in front of his home ... or
raking the grass . . He is the
symbol of a good citizen . . a
diligently-clean resident and a
proud community-ite• . • There
are many people like him . . .
and there are some who just
don't care . . . The condition of
a sector is reflected in the care
it is given by folks who are
against living in an atmosphere
of filth . . . and whose pride
leans toward a well-groomed
neighborhood.
* * *
THE COLUMN'S Clean - Up
Campaign to promote the
cleanest community in the city.
. . . but a typewriter can't do it
all .. < The cooperation of every
resident and buuinessman in the
area is needed . . If you want
a clean community, do your duty
and show your neighbor that
you mean business!
* *
WATCHING A SMALL boy's
softball game at Central Field,
last week, Sam Katz was a bit
amused to see the team in the
field full of pep and ginger . •
although they apparently were
taking a beating • • When he
was told the team at bat was
leading, 18 to 0, Sam wondered
aloud why the team in the field
wasn't a little bit downhearted.
. . ,. "Downhearted!" exploded
the youthful first baseman, "why
should we be downhearted? We
haven't come to bat yet."
* * *
JEWELRY DEPT. . . •• Alfred
Gottlieb and Sylvia Pevin will be
wed July .15 .. . Attorney Maur-
ice Glaser and Elena Mann are
engaged . . . with wedding plans
set for sometime in July.

*

*

leaving .
and little Hannah
solemnly assured her, "Oh yes I
did. I thanked her very much
for the nice dinner and told-her
it was a lot better than. I
thought it would be."
• .* * *
IN 1929, Leo Polk was working
as a plumber during erection of
a new building when a brick fell
from a six-story high scaffold-
ing and hit his head . , It was
two hours before the doctor
came and sewed the vicious cut
with 14 stitches . . In the
meantime, Leo was losing many
pints of blood . . . The doctor
was amazed, and said that if 100
persons had lost the amount of
blood he had, they would all
have been drained completely
and died! . . But Leo was a
rare phenomenon . . . According
to the doctor, he made up the
blood as he lost it! . . . and the
medic told him he would make
a good professional blood donor.
• • • which he became from 1930
to 1940, giving 140 pints of blood
for sale through the state to
hospitals, before stopping this
practice.
* * *

THEN CAME PEARL HARBOR
. .. On April 8, 1941, Leo volun-
teered his services as a blood
donor . • . and from that date
until April 16, 1951, he had
donated 69 pints between the
Red Cross and hospitals . .. All
told, he has given the most blood
of any one person in the coun-
try . . saving many lives when,
many years ago, he himself
should have been dead from loss
of the blood he today is still
giving.
250 POUND LEO is on the
board of directors of the Ameri-
can Red Cross and was a voting
delegate to the last national
convention of that great organ-
ization . . • He is head of the
Blood Bank for Bnai Brith .
from which, of the 229 pints
that have been collected to date,
25% goes to Korea . . . and the
rest distributed among the in-
dividual lodges for the use of
-their own membership and fam-
ilies . . . 196 pints were collected
at a mobile unit and 33 pints at
the Red Cross base . . . Another
unit will be set up at the JWV
Memorial Bldg. on Davison . . .
May 29 . .. from 5 to 10 p.m.

THE JEWISH

NEWS-2/
Friday, May 4, 1951

The 25th anniversary dinner which she has held for 20 years.

S. D. Irwin to Address of the Ladies of Yeshivath Beth
The ladies have purchased two
Women's Congress
Yehudah will be held at 6:30 homes, on Pingree and Elm-

p.m., May 13, at Cong. Beth
Spencer D. Irwin, associate Shmuel. A double - celebration
editor and foreign affairs col- will be observedthe marking of
umnist of the Cleveland Plain
25 years of achievement made
by the Yeshivah in Jewish re-
ligious education and the per-
sonal success of Mrs. H. Pearl
Rottenberg, president of the
group.
Mrs. Rottenberg, one of the
founders of the organization,
was secretary for five years, be-
fore attaining the presidency,

hurst, and have acquired a lot
on Dexter for further expansion.
They also maintain the Beth
Jacob school for girls.
David J. Cohen is chairman
and Rabbi Joshua S. Sperka is
toastmaster.

COMING SOON!

COLONEL MAYBOHM'S

BIG ANNOUNCEMENT

WHEN' YOU "PIC A COCKTAIL

READY AWED-kg CHILL a
- d SERVE ,



CAROUSEL

4426 N. WOODWARD

DE TR-WI L S A . 42PROOF•

Business As Usual

Announcing the Opening of

SIM YUEN RESTAURANT_

SPENCER D. IRWIN

Dealer, will be the featured
speaker at the fourth annual
amity award luncheon of the
Detroit Women's Division of the
American Jewish Congress, Wed-
nesday, May 16, 12:30 p.m., at
Masonic Temple. Mrs. Harry
Frank, president, will preside.
Elections of officers will take
place.
Mr. Irwin holds decorations
from Czechoslovakia and Ro-
mania and was an intimate
friend of the late Eduard Benes
and Jan Masaryk. He recently
returned from a trip to Israel
and is now completing his third
book on the Jewish state. He is
a member of the speakers' bu-
reau of the United Nations.
Tickets may be obtained from
program chairmen : South, Mrs.
S. Meyers, TY. 6-9657; Northeast,
Mrs. A. Grant, UN. 1-3551; Cen-
tral, Mrs. M. Saidman, TO.
8-9194; Northwest, Mrs. A. Agree,
VE. 6-2620.

Furniture Club to Present
First Spring Dinner-Dance

The Furniture Club of Detroit
will present its first informal
spring dinner dance on Tuesday,
at the Western Golf and Coun-
try Club. Members and their
friends are invited.
Reservations, limited to 100
couples, may be made by call-
ing Morton Newlander, ticket
chairman, UN. 2-2700.

A LITTLE KNOWN and com-
pletely unpublicized act of real
public service by the Jewish
War Veterans rates a salute
from this column. . . . During
those recent tragic days when
two anguished families were
searching for two little children
who had disappeared from a
home in Lansing, the JWV or-
ganized a searching party to
work under the direction of the
State Police .. . On a miserable
and wet Sunday, 300 vets from
1 JWV posts all over the state
in the
converged on Lansing ... and in
Fisher Bldg.
a heavy and cold rain sloshed
If you turn the
through fields, swamps, forests,
Open Daily: 11:30 to 8:30 p.m.
* V *s •n
through thickets and around
Luncheons from $1.00
upside down, you wont
Complete Dinners from $1.60
river beds, searching for some
find a finer wine than
trace of the missing youngsters.
Private Rooms Available for
. . . The discomforts suffered by
Showers -- Luncheons
Sweet 16 Parties
all the men in the searching
Weddings — Receptions
teams, and the actual illnesses
Supper Dances
from exposure which subse-
Cocktail Parties
quently laid low a few of them,
Business Dinners
are of course minor when con-
MILAN WINERIES. DETROIT, MICHIGAN
For Reservations TR 5-5100
trasted with the real tragedy of
the occasion . .. but noteworthy
to us nonetheless . . . Significant Illililliiiilliill11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111linlilirninnlinillin111111111l111111111
too, is this moving demonstra-
FOR FOOD YOU'LL REMEMBER
tion by the Jewish War Veterans
of helpfulness to a fellow human
AS THE BEST YOU'VE EVER HAD
beings in distress . . . a spirit of
James and Lillian Mattas cordially Invite You to
communal responsibility which
carries into action the high g_-
principles of JWV.
* * *
BEST BET Of Weekend . . .
Situated on the St. Clair River
For Young Adults . • . 64th Hol-
Just 11/2 Miles No. of Algonac on M-29
iday Hop ... May 6 ... at Wood-
ward Jewish Center . . . with
SEA FOOD DINNERS OUR SPECIALTY
planned floor show to help make
Steaks- and Chicken To Your Taste
this a cabaret-night affair . •
During the hottest days our guests have a cool ringside
featuring orchestra of Ben
Young.
seat on one of the world's busiest inland waterways . . .
* *
and Great Lakes vessels pass frequently, not more than
HANNAH . LICHTERMAN, a
100 feet from Sid' window tables providing a pleas-
carefully brought up little girl
ant, peaceful atmosphere for the diner.
of five, returned from her first
• LIQUOR
• BEER
• WINE
dinner away from home, at the
home of an aunt, and was ques-
DANCING EVERY SATURDAY FROM 9:30 P.M. to 1 :30 A.M.
To the Music of Witt Wilson and His Orchestra
tioned by her mother, Mrs. Elsie
Lichterman'.. . Asked if she was
For Reservations Phone Algonac 506
polite all the time, Hannah
Our Main Ambition
proudly replied that she was .
To Please You and to Serve You Again
Mrs. Lichtermaii then hoped she
Meet Your Friends
A Picturesque Drive - A Good Place
had. . remembered. to say, some-
thing nice to hei aunt before -7ii1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111141101111111111111P.

Huyler's



SID'S CAFE



y eshivah Ladies to Hold 25th Banquet

Specializing in

Chinese and American Dishes

• EGG ROLLS
• NATIVE DISHES

• FAMILY DINNERS

From

2 to

8 Persons

0 CARRY OUT SERVICE

OPEN: Sunday to Thursday — 11 A.M. to 12 P.M.

Friday and Saturday — 11 A.M. to 2 A.M.

3317 W. Davison

TO.' 8-0233

Near Dexter

Parking Facilities

WHERE TO DINE

NORTHWOOD INN

FAMOUS FOR FINE FOODS
Dancing and Floor Shows Nightly

Open Sundays
Jo. 4-6688

Woodward at 11 1/2 Mile Rd.

BOESKY'S

SID'S

e Entorytaitohme eobtest

at food a ntd

prices. Dancing nightly. We cater to parties and banquets.
15241 E. WARREN at Barham

Open Sunday.
TU. 2-3883

CAFE LOUNGE

SALERNO PIZZERIA

15207 W. 7 MILE — VE. 8-9749

Featuring our famous Pizza Pies, Spaghetti and Rayiola
Also Chicken, Steaks, from $1.50.
Open Sundays 2 p.m. to 3 a.m.
Weekdays 4 p.m. to 3 a.m.

Hund's Downtown

Grand River at Bagley. Phone WO. 3-1022.
Thirty years of Fine Food, Liquors. Lunch-

eons 11:30 to 3 p.m. Dinners 3 to 10. Open Sundays 1 to 10 p.m.

MARIA'S PIZZERIA

Specializing in Pizza Pie and Famous Italian Foods

Parking Facilities . . . Carry Out Service
7113 PURITAN . .
Open 4 p.m. to 3 a.m.
. . UN. 4-9816

BUDDY'S BAR-B-Q

TR. 2-8500

Take Out and Delivery

Ribs 8' Chicken right off the fire.
Service Our Specialty .
Cor. 12th 6 Clairmount
Open 4 p.m. to 4 a.m., Sunday 1 p.m. to 4 a.m.

CARL'S BAR & CHOP HOUSE

Steaks - Chops - Sea Foods - Cocktail Bar
Free Parking
Near Downtown
TErrace
2-8600
3020 GRAND RIVER

HARRY BOESKY'S

12th at Hazelwood

Newly Remodeled, Distinguished
RESTAURANT - DELICATESSEN - BAR

TRinity 2-4375

ROSSINI'S American 6• Italian Food

Home Made Noodles and Ravioli. Luncheons and Dinners - Choice Liquors.
6683 Gratiot, 1 BI. W. of Forest. Open every day except Mon. WA. 2-9829

THE MERCURY FISH AND CHIPS
CARRY-OUT SERVICE A SPECIALTY

HOURS: Tues. thru Thurs. 11-9; Fri. and Sat. 11-1; Sun. 11 to 11
CLOSED MONDAYS

17144 Schaefer

UNiversity 1-4698

ROBIN EtOOD'S serving the finest and most delicious of foods.
Steaks, Chops, Chicken Club Sandwiches. Short Orders. Delicious
UN. 1-9802
Hamburgers. "Served as you like it."
20176 LIVERNOIS AVE. 1 1/2 Blks. So. 8 Mile Rd. Open 24 Hours

MAJORS CAFE

268 Oakwood Blvd. Phone VI. 2-9150

RUSSIAN BEAR

Open 11 a.m. to 2 a.m.

Specializing in Italian and American Food
Open Sundays—We Cater to Private Parties and Banquets

Closed Mondays — Good Food — Liquors — Wine
HENRY'S CONTINENTAL STRING ENSEMBLE
WO. 1-0983
62 E. COLUMBIA

SAVOIA RESTAURANT

Chicken, Steaks, Frog Legs, Dinners, Spaghetti Cr Raviolli
Full Course Dinners $1.25 up
We Cater to Families. and Parties
Open Sun.
15508 Liyernois
UN. 2-9775

a.

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