Newspaper Page Text
DECEMBER 6, 1946
Fine Women's Apparel
THE RIDGE SHOP
. 141 Bull Street
Ruhr Bros.
212 Broughton St West
Phone 8-7796
Rock Wool Insulation
Metal Weatherstrip
"Paul’s "Tlowers
Next to Lucas Theatre
DIAL 3-4248
* irradiated Vitamin-D ^
Rruietteb
“Dependable for ooor 25 years’*
CALL 8191
Men’s Wear Furnishings
lACOB’S MEN’S SHOP
110 W. Broughton St
Jake Ginsberg
STEWART’S JUVENILE
SHOE STORE
115 East Broughton St
Phone 5555
Better Furniture for Less
MORDECAI
FURNITURE CO.
Broughton at Montgomery Sts.
£uan& (Pnintiruj Co.
EVERY PRINTING
REQUIREMENT
AND ENGRAVING
Call 5242
121 W. York St
ASHER'S
GREAT NAME SHOES
WITH COURTEOUS SERVICE
SAVANNAH
PLANING MILL CO.
LUMBER AND SERVICE
WHEATON AT LIBERTY ST.
Phone 7168
THE JEWISH ALLIANCE
Day Camp
(Continued from page 1)
working on jewelry making, metal
craft, leather craft, and airplane
model building.
The campers will be treated to
a movie on Sunday December first
as part of the Ahuance Junior J£n
tertauunent benes, which is planned
to be neta once a month. The follow- '
ing boys ana girls are now attending
this project:
Larry Homansky, Joel Homan
sky, Juies Jtiom*ns, Lawrence Muv
sovitz, Jerry Kosenthai, fete vie Co¬
hen, Warren btemuerg, Ancnei Sam¬
uels, Anen senwartz, Arnold Tenen¬
baum, neywaid Fxiue, Aoram Kubin,
Neil Markowitz, Norman Doigoff,
Aioert Babin, Walter Rabhan, mic.
haei toiler, Nathan Rabhan, Stanley~
K a r s m a n , Allen Platock, Bonnie
Haysman, Howard Nicholson, Edwin
Feuer, Julian Friedman, Herschel
Kemper, Herbert Goodman, Stewart
Golastem, Simon Goldstein, Philip
Kandel, Bernard Hlrsch, Melvin Hir
sch, Arnold Cohen, Kurt Scheier,
Stanley Greenfield, Also Harold
Black, Deanne Javetz, Dian Udinsky,
Elaine Rubnitz, Davida Tenenbaum,
Barbara Tenenbaum, Shirley Doi¬
goff, Bailee Tenenbaum, sally Levy,
Jacquelin Rabhan, Barbara Rabhan,
Debora Rabhan, Phyllis Passink,
Sandra Rosen, Patsy Nicholson, Har¬
ris Kandel, Martha Kandel, Linda
Homansky, Carol Sherman, Nancy
Passink, Patsy Singer, Brenda Ros¬
enthal, Arlene Bracker, Reva Ann
Black, Beverly Rosenthal, Rebecca
Marcus, Marsha Rosen, Harriet
Rosen, Esther Kronstadt, Naomi
Adler, Jane Mirsky, Sherry Gins¬
berg, Rochelle Ginsberg^ Johanna
Rotkow, Barbara Mirsky, Tanya
Lefko, Joseph Kaminsky, Harold
Solomon. Also Charles Epstein, Gil¬
bert Kullck, Herbie Steiner, Alvin
Steiner, Mathew Lybanon, Aaron
Weiner, Joe Levine, Bobby Hlrsch,
Melvin Center, Harold Javetz, Is
ser Gottlieb, Barron Goodman,
Philip Haysman, Sanford Rosen¬
thal, Steven Schneider, Stanley Fell¬
er, Allen Wexler, Larry Pike, Joe Mar¬
cus, Steven Bernstein, Jack Louza,
Arnold Perelman, Larry Richman,
Solomon Epstein, and Irwin Spritz.
Generators, Starters, Distributors
Also Carburetors
lor a better and more reliable job see
GABE COHN
SINCE 1925
BAY AND MONTGOMERY
PHONE 3-4511 RESIDENCE 2-1502
Open to 2 P. M. Sunday
LBWY JlWILBii
ftHOUGHTON ^7 DRAYTON
Smart Shoppeis Save at
MOPPER’S
2412 Waters Ave. 409 E. Broughton Si
1624 E. 38th St. 3907 Bull St.
J. D. C. and Jewish Agency Will Get
$22,500,000 From Allied Reparations
BY BERL CORALNIK
(Jewish Telegraphic Agency Correspondent)
TEL AVIV, (JTA) — The International Refugee Com¬
mittee will turn over $22,500,000 to Jewish organizations as
compensation for damage suffered by Jewish communities
during the Nazi regime, Eliezer Kaplan, treasurer of the Jew¬
ish Agency, disclosed in a report on the state of the Jewish
- community of Palestine delivered at
’Teen Canteen
Draws Young 'Uns
The Alliance Teen Canteen off¬
icially opened its doors on Saturday
evening November 9, with a profes¬
sor Quiz Show. Although the atten¬
dance on that particular evening was
limited by other activities taking
place in the community, those wno
were present on opening night were
treated to a delightful show put on
by Earaie Friedman, who served as
the Quizmaster. Earnie’s perform¬
ance was so good that he has been
asked to put on another performance
in the near future. On the following
Saturday, the BBG’s sponsored the
Canteen for the evening. The girls
reaUy had a unique idea when they
ran a Backwards Party. All the girls
came dresesed in slacks and other
types of boys wearing aparel, but
dressed backwards. The boys who
attended that evening were-also-wear
ing their clothes “In reverse”. Games
and 1 dancing were all part of the
evening’s fun.
The Canteen is now being run
on a new system whereby each mem¬
ber group of the Alliance Youth
Council sponsors a Canteen program
each Saturday evening. The group in
charge for each Saturday not only
formulates and operates the pro¬
gram, ^ut also cares for the snack
bar, and in this way shares in its
profits. Once a month the Youth
Council will sponsor a special affair.
The opening Council affairs calls
for a full length movie and a post
Thanksgiving Dance.
SAFER
Kosher Market
FRESH MEATS DAILY
Please Call Ua
When in Need
City Market - - 7281
T. J. TURNER
Plumbing and Heating
Company
564 East Liberty St.
Phone 3-2147
CAPITOL
Laundry Cleaners and
402 West Broad Street
Phone 3-5591
Pick-up and Delivery
Service
Seymour Schantz, Owner
• FOR WEE MODERNS" IT’S
120 E. BROUGHTON ST.
BARNETT’S
Children’s Shop
117 ET. .Broughton
dSt. <&. £ickko£^
Insurance Real Estate
140 Whitaker St.
GOTTLIEB’S
BAKERY
1601 Bull St.
KONTER
radio Electric
Co.
2106 Waters Ave. 2-1974
a meeting of the Histadrutii.
.tie revealed that the Joint Dis¬
tribution Oumuiiuee woujlcl receive
bo percent, oi uie sum, wxuie the
Jewirni Agency would get 40 percent.
Tne money comes uom some
$za,U0o,Uuu in Nazi gold and otner
assets wxncn tne Amed Reparations
Commission. a warned tne xntergov
erunj.cnuu Reiugee Comxxuu.ee lor
tne reuex ana renabiiita-uon. of tne
victims of Nazism.
Plan For 100,000 Jews
Kapran xurtner ueciared that the
Agency naa proposed a pum to the
Intergovernmental Refugee Com¬
mittee lor tne absorption of 100,uOO
European jews m Palestine at tne
rate of 10,000 monthly. Tne main¬
tenance and absorption of each
wave of lo,000 immigrants will cost
between $1 J,000,UOO and $14,000,000 he
estimated, adding that the cost of
absorbing 10,000 children would be
somewnat lower - - $8,000,000 to
$10,000,000. He reported that the
Agency has asked for an interna¬
tional loan to cary through the pro¬
ject.
The Agency has spent about
$7,200,000 in the last nine months for
immigration, Kaplan stated, and an
additional $4,400,000 for the improve¬
ment of agriculture in the Jewish
settlements and $1,200,000 on various
housing schemes. His report also dis¬
closed that the Agency has spent
$68,000,000 for all purposes since 1939
and that its income during the same
period was less than expenditures,
resulting in a deficit of nearly
$7,000,000.
Some 80 new agriculture estab¬
lishments have been organized in
Palestine since 1939, Kaplan said,
reporting that the Agency plans, on
the basis of land already owned by
the Jews in Palestine, to establish
6,000 new agriculture units and to
expand 3,000 units already farmed
by Jews. Among the new projects
will be 40 setlements in the Galilee
and Negev areas. In addition, the
Agency has made arangements for
the bringing of water to new settle¬
ments in the Negev by next March.
The Jewish National Fund has ac¬
quired 75,000 acres of land since the
last World Zionist Congress in 1939,
he said. The cost of this land was
$48,000,000
Full employment in Palestine
Turning to Jewish industry,
Kaplan declared that there was full
employment in Palestine with only
about 1,000 persons unemployed. The
full employment record, he said, was
all the more remarkable in light of
the fact that 53,000 new workers en¬
tered the country since 1939. There
are 60,000 persons directly employed
in Jewish industry. Pointing out that
42 percent of all Palestinian Jews are
employed in white collar and pro¬
fessional jobs and that another 27
percent are engaged in factory and
manuel work, he asserted that this
percentage of workers was higher
than that in other Jewish commun¬
ities throughout the world, except
perhaps in the Soviet Union.
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