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THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
SAVE
' THAT WATER!
-oL
s STOP
THAT WORK!
Home Laundry
0 WASHDAY WORK
. . . ALL BY ITSELF
. . WITH GALLONS
LESS HOT WATER
SEE THE 8ENDIX
WASH
RINSE 3 TIMES .
DAMP DRY CLOTHES
CLEAN ITSELF
DRAIN ITSELF
SHUT ITSELF OFF
We'll show you the amazing ma
chine that takea the work <^it
of washday! See uh set the Ban
dit dial—add eome »onp—then
■tap away! Without touching
the Bendiz again it doea the
waah from atart to flnlah! It
washea clothaa amazingly clean,
damp dry* them ready for line
or dryer—and you never put a
hand in water!
Don't miaa the Bendiz Dem
onstration . . . Come in now!
&
APPLIANCE Cr
Capitol
Spotlight
By Beatrice Heiman
ORPHANS HOME MEETING
A meeting of the Executive and
Financial committees of the He
brew Orphans Home will be held
Monday. July 14. 12:30 P. M. at
the Standard Club.
A flurry of Arab activity has
became evident around these
parts.
“Pleasant words are as a hon
eycomb, sweet to the soul, and
health to the bones.” So says
Proverbs, and John. too. And
they are echoed by the Arabs.
No sooner had Abdul Rahman
Azzam Pasha, secretary of the
Arab League, left Washington
after a torrent of words, than he
was followed by the seventeenth
son of King Ibn Saud, 14-year-
old Prince Nawnf al Saud.
Whereas Azzam Pasha unloosed
many words upon Secretary of
State Marshall, the young prince
paid his respects to the Near
Eastern Division, and then hot
footed It to the movies.
Equipment more utilitarian in
character, and marked "Made In
U. S. A.” will soon be on its way
to Yemen, the tiny country at
the southwestern tip of Saudi
Arabia. By an agreement re
cently concluded, the United
States is extending a one-mil
lion dollar credit to Yemen to
buy surplus trucks, agricultural
and road-building equipment,
most of it in Germany. When an
American diplomatic mission vis
ited Sana’a, the capital of Ye
men. last year, they had to trav
el eleven days from neighboring
Aden in light two-and-one-half
trucks, out of respect for the
rugged roads. Within the past
month, the first American piano
to land at Sana'a made the same
trip in two hours.
Of possibly more practical im
portance, Is the compressed time
schedule by air between here and
Palestine. A new direct flight
from New York to Lydda. the
airport serving Jerusalem, takes
35 hours and 5 minutes, with a
look en route at Newfoundland,
Ireland, Geneva. Rome and
Cairo . Air express shipments
for Palestine can now reach there
via "The Bombay Merchant,” a
week-end air express service
from Washington which makes
an intermediate stop at Lydda
en route to Bombay.
Development of other than
than American trade channels
by the Arab governments is also
under way. Reports are current
of the departure of a Yugoslav
trade mission for Arab countries
to establish commercial rela
tions. Egypt is rumored to be
negotiating a barter agreement
with Yougoslavia. and other Eu
ropean countries. According to
reports from the American Em
bassy in Cairo, Egypt wishes to
sell her large surplus of cotton,
and has been seeking arrange
ments to exchange the cotton for
commodities produced by a num
ber of countries. Lumber is one
of the products sought from
Yugoslavia.
As one of the eleven nations
composing the United Nations
Inquiry Committee on Palestine,
Yugoslavia, meanwhile, is seek
ing facts political, climatlcal,
demographic and economic, on-
which to base the forthcoming
rccomjnendations for that long-
sought solution to the Palestine
problem
ScAiUcn
‘DtetliAxtbUf (?».
316 IVY ST., N. E.
WAInut 1630
DISTRIBUTORS OF
STROMBERG - CARLSON
FM and AM Radios
Phonograph Combinations
Television Receivers
Wire Recorders
For your main radio—
there’s nothing finer than a
S HtOMBERG-CARI.SON
ASK YOUR DEALER IN
YOUR COMMUNITY
First Jews in 14 Years
Get Heidelberg Degree
MUNICH (JTA1.—The first two
Jewish students to be graduated
from famed Heidelberg University
in fourteen years received their de
grees this week.
The graduates, who received
doctorates in medicine, are Nathan
Wiener. 28. and Boris Anolik, 30,
both former concentration camp
inmates. Anolik and Wiener had
almost completed their medical
studies in Poland when the war
broke out. They have been enrolled
at Heidelberg for the past year.
Refugees Released
ROME (JTA).—One hundred
Jews who were slated for depor
tation to the Lipari penal isles aft
er their illegal entry into Italy
from Austria were released. Ital
ian authorities agreed to allow
them to proceed to an IRO camp.
The chairman of the camp com
mittee at an installation for dis
placed Jews near Turin was beaten
by British officers when he re
fused to order the inmates of the
camp to cooperate in the officers’
search for deserters who they al-
1 '"erl might be hiding in the camp.
JWV Cooperate With
Agricultural Society
NEW YORK (JTA).—Formula -
tfon of a joint program to facili
tate farm settlement by Jewish
veterans was announced by the
Jewish War Veterans, through
Charles I. Schottland. national
executive director, and the Jew
ish Agricultural Society, acting
through its managing director.!
Dr. Gabriel Davidson.
Under an agreement between
the two organizations they will
aid veterans from the initial pur
chase of agricultural property to
guidance in modern methods of
successful farm operation. Spe
cialists assigned by the Society
will assist veterans in appraising
farm land and will advise on lat- !
est techniques in proper cultiva- j
tion and sanitation. Veterans seek- '
ing preparatory job training for
agricultural careers will be assist
ed by the Society's farm employ
ment department.
Assistance in obtaining govern- !
mental benefits toward the pur-1
chase of farm property will be pro
vided through the veterans service j
program of the Jewish War Vet- i
erans. The organization's 600 posts '
throughout the country have des
ignated service officers who will,
aid veterans in filing for loans and j
other benefits under the GI Bill.
The posts. In addition, will con- j
duct i tensive educational pro- [
grams to acquaint veterans with
current agricultural opportunities.
U. S. Jews Charged
In House
WASHINGTON < JTA) - Ameri-
c> n Jews were accused on the floor
of the House of Representatives
tills week by Rep. Ed. Gosset, Tex- j
as Democrat, of attempting to tear 1
down the country’s Immigration'
barriers and to “control the press j
and radio for selfish ends."
The charge was made in a brief
address scoring the Stratton Bill,;
which Gosset attacked as Jewish-
inspired. He also accused Jr / ish
groups of using non-Jewish groups
and individuals to achieve their
own “obviously selfish purposes.”
Friday, July 11, 1947
DEATHS
FRANK TAFFEL
Th* body of Frank Taffel, 70,
was Rund late Monday on a mud-
bank in the Bull River, near Ty*
bee Island, according to a dispatch
from Savannah. Police said he
had been dead for several hours.
Mrs. Gersh said her father, a
native of Austria, came to Atlanta
about 45 years ago from Montreal.
Canada. His wife died two years
aco.
.'Survivor': are a daughter, Mrs.
T. A Gersh, and three sons, Mose
Louis and Mike Taffel, all of At
lanta.
MILTON KLEIN, SR.
Milton Klein. Sr., 64. died un
expectedly Sunday of a heart at
tack while playing golf on the
James L. Key course.
He was very active in Jewish
affairs in the southeast, and was
a past president of the Fifth Dis
trict B'nai B’rith. He was a mem
ber of The Temple.
Born in Cincinnati, Mr. Klein
had been a resident of Atlanta
since childhood. He was active
many years ago during the Leo
Frank case, and was instrumental
in enlisting aid fo- Frank.
Surviving are his wife; a son,
Milton Klein, Jr., of Atlanta; a
daughter. Mrs. I. R. Newman, of
San Francisco. Cal., and several
grandchildren
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by Greenberg and
Flinn.
MRS. HARRY EHRENREICH
Mrs. Dona Levin Ehrenreich, of
Savannah, died June 25.
Pallbearers were Max Gordon,
Harry Friedman, Morris Levy, Ben
Friedman. Sam Hornstein and
Isaac Levington.
In addition to her husband, Har
ry S. Ehrenreich. she is survived
by her mother. Mrs. Ester Levin,
seven sisters. Miss Ray Levin. Mrs.
Sara Richman. Mrs. Benjamin
Feldman, all of Savannah: Mrs.
Hyman Lichtenstein, Augusta:
Mrs. A C. Bannett. Allendale.
S. C., and Mrs. Barney Slifkin and
Mrs. Rose Zalka, both of Miami,
Fla.; and several nieces and ne
phews.
/"> t *T'
ULcasi
■o- nn../*
Q’sta
Wholesale Distributors
"Good* With a National Reputation“
DRY GOODS—NOTIONS—READY-TO-WEaR
185-187 PRYOR ST., S. W. ATLANTA, GA.
GOLD BROS.
KOSHER DELICATESSEN
431 Ponce de Leon Ave., N. E.
NOW OWNED BY AND OPERATED UNDER PERSONAL
SUPERVISION OF
DAVID J. GOLD
New Owner - New Lower Prices - New Poicy - New Hours
Open 9 A. M. to 7 P. M. Every Day Except Saturday
IN ATLANTA STOCK
for
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
nErc^jpnn
EXTRA HEAVY STEEL
TOOL STANDS
TOOL WALL CABINETS
FOREMAN’S DESKS
WORK BENCHES
IN STANDARD SIZES
2914x6 feetx33?«
for Quick Service, Coll or Write
S. D. POSEY
AUTOMOTIVE Jt INDUSTRIAL
EQUIPMENT
286 Spring St., N. W.
HA. 8722 JA. 7996
British Neglect
Property Transfer
LONDON (JTA).—German au
thorities in the British zone of
Germany have not been instructed
to make certain that property
transfers made during the Nazi
regime shall not be recognized as
legal. Under Secretary of Foreign
Affairs told Commons.
He said that property trans
ferred under duress was covered
I by a British military government
I law prohibiting transactions in
such property without military
government sanction. When one
member pointed out that many
forced sales of property seemed
; legal on their face. Mayhew said
' that consideration was being giv-
j en to this problem. He told anoth
er member that he could not
promise at this time that the even
tual treaty of peace with Germany
would contain a clause covering
such transactions, such as has been
included in the peace treaties with
tha satellite nations.
HERMAN LOEB
Herman Loeb. 51, a leader in the
American Legion, and assistant
purchasing agent for the Selig
Company, died unexpectedly Tues
day of a heart attack at his office.
Funeral services will be con
ducted at 10 a. m. Thursday at the
chapel of Greenberg and Flinn,
with Rabbi Jacob Rothschild of
ficiating. Burial will be in Crest
lawn Cemetery, with military
services in charge of the 40 et 8.
He was a veteran of World War
I, serving in combat with First In
fantry Division in France, and
later with the occupying forces in
Germany. He joined the American
Legion when he returned and was
active in it until the time of his
death. He was a member of Post
No. 1 in Atlanta, and was also a
former Chef-de-Gare of the 40
et 8.
Surviving are his brother. Ru
dolph Loeb. traffic manager for the
Rosenfeld Company, and a niece,
both of Atlanta.
OVER 30 YEARS
SIEGEL'S
KOSHER DELICATESSEN
HAS MEANT GOOD FOOD
TO ATLANTANS
• -(g)—•
HAROLD SIEGEL
1048 N. Highland Ave.
Next to Va.-Hilan P. O.
HE. 6132
WANT ADS
Two male adults urgently
need three or four room apart
ment. No children, drinking or
pets. Proper care of premises.
Established Atlantans. Wa-9116.
weekdays 9:39 to 4 p. m. Sun
day Ve-4087.
PROGRESSIVE
RELIGIOUS LEADER
Age 35, wide experience as
Rabbi, teacher, Baal T’fillah
and youth worker. Interested in
locating in smaller Alabama
congregation. Best references.
Address Box 269, care Southern
Israelite.
REV PHILIP FRIED
rmi are
EXPERT SURGICAl MOHEL
Graduate of
Philadelphia Jewish Hospital
Practiced in Atlantic City,
Miami. Greenville, S. C.
Affiliated with Congregation
Ahavath Achim
Phone VE 2764 (Center)
VE 4414 (Residence)