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September 30, 1960 - Image 30

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1960-09-30

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

30

50—BUSINESS CARDS

50—BUSINESS CARDS

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Friday, September 30, 1960 —

PAINTING and decorating, finest
workmanship, free estimates. Sam
Fishman, UN. 1-3265.

l. SCHWARTZ. All kinds of carpen-
ter work, no job too big or small
BR 3-4826, LI 5-4035.

TILE

GUTTER cleaning and repairs, leaks
repaired on roof, carpenter work,
other repairs done, free estimates
on all work. Brewer's Mainte-
nance Service, VI 3-1514.

DO YOU NEED TILE WORK?
New and Repair Special
U OF t TILE & TERRAZZO CO

FATHER AND SON. Will work rea-
sonable. Use best odorless paint.
Free estimates. Best references.
Mr. Edleman. TR 5-2561.

UN 1-5075

PLASTERING and decorating.
Cement work. TY. 7-5654.

55

FURNITURE repairs and refinishing.
Free estimates. Call UN. 4-3547.

MISCELLANEOUS



MINK STOLES, designers samples.
Luxurious. Latest styles and shades.
Days DI 1-6338, evenings MA 6-2235.

ROOFING

We Stop Any Leak!
5 Year Guarantee

WILL BUY

used clothes for men and chil-
dren. Boys' gym shoes, and nov-
elties, etc.

OLD ROOFS MADE
BETTER THAN NEW

CALL

SAVE 50%

TO 8-9561

Commercial - Industrial
Apartments - Residential

BEST PRICES PAID for men's suits,
top-coats, and shoes. TU 3-1872.

No roof-too large or to small.

For Free Estimates Call

MEMBERSHIP in Tam - 0 - Shanter
Country Club. Cheap. MA 6-2409
evenings.

Salomon
Roof
Spraying
Co.
DI 1-5367

50—BUSINESS CARDS

57—FOR SALE HOUSEHOLD
GOODS AND FURNISHINGS

NICE 4-piece Mahogany bedroom
set, double bed, LI 7-2383.

6 PIECE dining room set, meat slic-
ing machine, juicer, electric deep
fry, sunbeam coffee maker, sand-
wich and waffle grill, electric
clothes dryer and hand mixer.
Single bed. 20162 Hubbell. Sunday
after 1 p.m.

Please Do Not Attend Synagogue

on Yom Kippur . . . . . . IF

you must drive to your place of worship, for you are desecrating this Sabbath

of Sabbaths by doing so.

We learn in the Haftorah (Prophetic
this Holy Day:
"If thy foot rest on the Sabbath from f
ng thy occ
y holy

day;_ and thou shalt call the Sabbat
delight
U SHAL
OR
IT BY REFRAINING FROM THY
UAL
S, from pursuing thy pl as
and from speaking vain word
hen shalt thou find delight in the L—d

Thus, the prophet
assign to this day qualiti
This applies to Yom 'Kip

In spite of what
IT I PROM IBITED T
RIVE
ON THE SABBATH OR
YO
PPUR. This has been reit
d by our
great rabbis both in the
in modern times and is •
ntrovertible.
If you do not live within alking distance of a synag
then STAY AT
HOME AND PRAY. Wheth
ou walk to a syna
or pray at home, may
our Father in Heaven accept y
year of life and happiness.

Rabbi Solomon H. Gruskin, Chairman

50—BUSINESS CARDS

Moginei Hadas Committee

(Committee for Defense of the Faith)

ALL CITY
MOVING Sc STORAGE CO.

1111=11111111011.

VE
8 7660

- 0

-

14948

Meyer:. Rd.



C74•414.



MolmAIis

Complete Moving Service
No Job Too Large — Too Small
Always Open

Dead Sea Receding;
Affects Potash Works

JERUSALEM, (JTA) — The
Dead Sea, which has been
steadily shrinking through the
ages, is now receding visibly,
forcing changes in mechanical
operations for potash extrac-
tion, officials reported.
The potash works company
has been compelled to install
floating pumps and dredges in
place of the fixed equipment
used heretofore. Wooden quays
which were on the shore, now
in many cases are scores of
feet from the receding water's
edge.
Geologists have reported that
in prehistoric times, the Dead
Sea was 160 miles long. It is
about 50 miles long at present.
After the First World War, the
Dead Sea waters were near the
entrance of the Sodom cave.
The shoreline now is about
350 feet away.

Libya Confiscates Israel
Mail Aboard U.S. Plane

LONDON, (JTA)—Israel mail
destined for Nigeria, carried by
an American commercial plane,
was confisdated by Libyan auth-
orities when the plane made a
forced landing at the Tripoli
airport in Libya.

How do you measure up?
on this VOTER'S

CHECK LIST

1. Be sure you're registered.

2. Know the issues.
3. Look at the records of the parties
and candidates.
4. Get active in politics.
5. Talk up the need to register and

vote.

6. Start at the bottom with local

issues and candidates.

'7. Decide for yourself.

8. Mark up a sample ballot in ad-

vance.

9. Allow time to vote. Make a date

with yourself and keep it.

GET READY, by registering.
GET SET by knowing what you're

voting for and why.Then — GO VOTE!

Published as a public service in co.
operation with The Advertising Council

us clearly that to hon
f distinctive a iffer

The Sherry Brothers

By HAROLD U. RIBALOW

(Copyright, 1960, Jewish
Telegraphic Agency, Inc.)

Two years ago, Norm and Larry
Sherry, were obscure ballplayers.
Last year, Larry won immortality
as a great World Series pitcher,
while Norm was just holding on
as a third-string catcher for the
Los Angeles Dodgers. This year
of 1960, luck has held, in a sense,
for Larry, but not for Norm.
In 1960, Norm finally won
recognition as a regular catcher
for his club. He was batting bet-
ter than .280, was one of the
leading hitters on the team and
started regularly against left-
handed pitchers. Then, late in
August, he was hit on his right
wrist by an errant toss made by
Stu Miller of the Giants. And his
season's activity ended then and
there.
Larry, on the other hand, had
a different sort of season. At the
outset, he asked that he be con-
sidered for starting roles. Relief
pitching, which made him his rep-
utation, was nice, he said, but
there was greater glory in being
a starter. His luck in starting
games was indifferent. He re-
turned to the fireman's role. Late
in the season, he hit his top
form and won five in a row in
relief. At one stretch, he account-
ed for seven Los Angeles vic-
tories in 11 games (five wins and
two saves), and got credit for
his own 13th victory. Once again,
Larry was the star of the brother
act, with Norm not only in the
shadows, but out of action.

Russian Jews Need
U.S. Help—Halpern

WASHINGTON, (JTA) —Rep.

Seymour Halpern, New York Re-
publican, urged that the Ameri-
can delegation to the United
Nations use Khrushchev's visit
as an opportunity to press in the
UN Committee on Human Rights
for alleviation of the plight of
Jews in the Soviet Union.
In a letter to Secretary of
State Christian Herter, Rep. Hal-
pern expressed concern over the
fate of 3,000,000 Jews in the
Soviet Union who are denied
rights to religious, educational
and cultural expression.

Mayor of Jerusalem Is Censured
for 'Too Polite' Letter to Hamburg

JERUSALEM, (JTA)—Mayor
Mordechai Ish-Shalom apologized
to the Jerusalem Municipal
Council for his "too polite" let-
ter to the Mayor of Munich,
Germany, which, he said, gave
the impression that he favored
"establishing relations with the
city which served as the incu-
bator of Nazism."
The letter, which was given
last May to two emissaries from
the Munich mayor who sought
to establish cultural relations be-
tween Jerusalem and the West
Gern.an city, included a state-
ment by Mayor Ish-Shalom that
"I appreciate your program to
establish cultural relations with
Jerusalem."
Mayor Ish-Shalom told the
Council that he had informed
the emissaries that "it was im-
possible to consider such rela-
tions." He said they left empty
handed. The municipality oppo-
sition had demanded a vote of
non-confidence in the mayor
after the letter was published.
In Munich, the municipal
council adopted a resolution ex-
pressing regret over the de-
cision of the Jerusalem munici-
pality not to engage in a cultural
exchange program with Munich.

Urge Halt to Sectional
Appeals to South Africa
Jews on Referendum

JOHANNESBURG, (JTA) —
The Board of Deputies of South
African Jews appealed to South
African Jewry to ignore sug-

gestions to them to vote as a
community in the forthcoming
referendum • on establishment of
a Republic of South Africa.
The latest such bid was made
in a statement issued on Rosh
Hashanah by a group calling it-
self the "Jewish Democratic As-
sociation," a tiny extreme leftist
group which has de f ended
Stalin and the Soviet Union and
which has attacked members of
the board and of the South
African Zionist Federation.
The statement of this group,
which was unsigned, appealed
to Jews to vote against the gov-
ernment in the Oct. 5 referen-
dum, calling the government
Nazi and anti-Semitic.

"Jerusalem's decision shows that
the past still overshadows the
relations between Jews and Ger-
mans," the resolution stated.
"We must be patient, however,
wnd. shall try again and again
to show that our offer of friend-
ship is sincere.")

`Submarine Z-1;
Powerful Novel

"Submarine Z-1" is a powerful
novel. It first was written in
Yiddish, then was translated into
Russian and now appears in a
commendable English translation.
Its author, Lon Chanukoff, a
teacher, lecturer, critic and sculp-
tor, was born in Russia where
many of his poems and essays
were published. He came to the
United States in 1914, worked in
shipyards and became thoroughly
acquainted with the submarine-
building industry. He then be-
came a teacher in New York
Yiddish schools.
Max Rosenfeld translated the
novel into English. It was pub-
lished by Citadel Press (222 4th,
N.Y. 3).
The powerful submarine is de-
scribed with skill by Chanukoff.
The crew also is delineated in
detail.
It is a tragic story about a
stubborn lieutenant commander
who, in his zeal for triumph,
acted contrary to good judgment
by driving the submarine to the
depth of the sea. The crew suf-
fered want, nearly all died, in-
cluding the commander, and
three survived to make a final
escape from the watery prison.
One died while the plan for
rescue was being manipulated,
another passed away before
emerging from the sea and the
third was rescued but was un-
*conscious and did not revive to
tell the tale of a battle for life.
Chanukoff is an able writer.
He narrates his story brilliantly
and the translation into English
was done very ably. "Submarine
Z-1" is a novel worthy of the
widest circulation.

Last year, the University of
Michigan Extension Service
offered 692 courses in 63 com-
munities in 52 counties within
the state.

Oil Prospectors Invest
$40 Million in Israel

JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Oil
prospectors in Israel have in-
vested more than 70,000,000
pounds ($39,200,000) in their
drillings for gas and oil in the
last seven years, the Ministry
of Development announced in
its latest evaluations of the
search for fuels here.
Two oilfields have been dis-
covered thus far—first in the
Heletz region, latterly in the
Negbah area, and one impor-
tant natural gas field has been
developed. According to the
Ministry, the result is that Is-
rael is expected to obtain from
domestic fields more than a
fourth of its total annual fuel
requirements. -
Domestic firms have, in re-
cent years, increased their in-
vestments in prospecting acti-
vities, as foreign activities in
this search for gas and oil
have decreased, the Ministry's
figures showed..

Delta Air Lines Marks
First Jet Birthday

ATLANTA, Ga. — Delta Air
Lines celebrated its first year
of scheduled jet service with
the boarding of its 500,000th
jet passenger.
Delta began operation with
the Douglas DC-8 on Sept. 18,
1959, with flights between New
York and Atlanta. It was the
first airline in the world to
fly the DC-8 in scheduled serv-
ice.
Since the inauguration of
service a year ago Delta jets
have flown over 6,200,000 miles
in scheduled service — equal to
14 round trips to the moon.

Sports in Israel

Sport is organized through na-
tional clubs known as Hapoel,
Maccabi, Betar, etc. The largest,
Hapoel, was formed by - the
workers of the country organ-
ized through the General Feder-
ation of Labor; it is affiliated
to the Workers' Sports Interna-
tional Committee (SASI), and
next April will celebrate the
35th anniversary of its founda-
tion at an international rally
which will be the largest of its
kind ever to take place in Israel.
Over 40,000 athletes will par-
ticipate, at least 300 of them
from overseas.

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