Newspaper Page Text
SERY/CEAM>
. COURTESY
The Choice Is Yours
of Hamper's . . .
CLERK SERVICE j
SELF SERVICE 7}
Page Two
Friday. October 10. 1?M7
Call
Otkin Today
Oikin will rid you! pi cru
ises of pests—and, by *rien-
tiflc methods, keep them
trer of rat*, roaches, ants,
termite* and other pests.
Our 46 years’ experience
is your assurance of satis
faction. Inspection and es
timate without obligation.
590 Ceurtlomf St., N. (.
Arab Capacity for Warfare
!tO HEAR MRS. KAHN ON DP CAMPS
(Continued From Pace One' j
control, with 80 per cent to 90 j
per cent of all members of the j
Parliament coming from that up- ,
per strata of two per cent which 1
controls the area.”
The memorandum discloses that
in two countries of tlie Middle |
East, Saudi Arabia and Yemen,
j slavery is recognized by law, and
j that in most of the Arab states
| women are bought and sold,
l The memorandum scoffs at the
t/ireat that the Arabs will cancel
I the oil leases held by Anglo-Amcri-
I can interests if the UN takes a
j decision favorable to the Jews. It
| points out withdrawal of the oil
j concessions is altogether unlikely
I since the "concessions benefit di-
j redly monarchs like Ibn Saud and
> the middle classes in other Mid
dle Eastern countries." The docu
ment cites the gains made by the
Palestine Arabs in the fields of
health and welfare services, edu
cation and earning power as a re
sult of the colonization by Jews.
It includes with a review of the
strength of the Jewish defense
force in Palestine, and says that if
there is an armed Arab revolt.
"It can only be because the Arabs
arc equipped and led by some out
side power.”
In a message to President Tru
man. the left-wing Jewish Peo
ples Fraternal Order, which ll/s a
membership of 60.000. called for
a four-power temporary trustee
ship over Palestine, with the U. S.,
Britain, the USSR and France as
trustees. It also called for the
admission to Palestine of as many
Jews as wish to enter the country.
Unity to Key New Orleans Conference
Of Council of Jewish Women Oct. 19-22
WITH THAT DOWN ON THE
FARM FLAVOR
GUARANTEED RIPE HONEY DEW
MELONS -40'
SUGAR
Pumpkins
(About 3 Lbs Each)
”10“
FRESH TABLE DRESSED
TURKEYS
*■ 65 c
FRESH TABLE DRESSED
FRYERS
u 62 c
FANCY GRADE
ROUND STEAK
u 65 c
FANCY
CELERY HEARTS LI 14'
COBBLER
IRISH POTATOES 5 - 16'
MINNESOTA
WILD RICE — 1.49
OCEAN SPRAY
CRANBERRY SAUCE r 25°
PHARR'S
CORN, OKRA & TOMATOES
2 NO 2 CANS 0jJ C
HEINZ SOUPS
CREAM OF TOMATO
3 c * ns 39 c
Buy 3 cons of Heinz Cream of Tomato
and get 1 can free of any of the
‘allowing varieties:
Vegetable soup, cream of chicken,
cream ot pea, cream of mush
room. beef noodle, beef soup,
gumbo creole soup, rhicken soup,
clam chowder, cream of asparagwv
rhicken noodle soup.
VIRGINIA DARE
MEAT SAUCE *■ oi ,omt
CHARMIN
TOILET TISSUE 4 — 35'
CHARMIN
KITCHEN TOWELS -15'
Fournier _
BRANDIED FRUITS ”°‘ '«89 c
Figs, Fruits for Salad, Apricots, Pears
60S p
tree St.
°'tree
,l} Foods"
Kd.
BY MRS. R. C. KORY
Southern Publicity Chairman
LITTLE ROCK. Ark.—Twenty-
three sections from nine Southern
and Southwestern states will unite
in New Orleans Oct. 19-22 for the
Southern Interstate Conference of
the National Council of Jew-ish
Women.
Mrs. Moise Cahn. of New Orl
eans. president, will preside during
the sessions, all scheduled at the
Roosevelt Hotel.
Keynote of the convention will
be "Council—Unity not Unani
mity.”
Mrs. Clarence Berolzheimer of
Chicago Heights. Ill., national vice
president, will give the opening
address. She will also lead a panel
on education.
Mrs. Cahn, also a national vice
president, will report on her ex
perience in Europe this past sum
mer. She will give details of live
opening of the Councils Paris
Home for Girls where she offici
ated while on tne cohtincnt. She
will also discuss the five days she
spent visiting the Displaced Per
sons Camps in Germany.
Mrs. Florian Strassburger. Mont
gomery. a former president of the
Southern Interstate Conference,
will lead a discussion on social
welfare.
Mrs. Isaac Heller and C. Ellis
New at Connecticut
Henican will discuss "Anti-Semi
tism—a Candid Consideration" as
the feature of the convention ban
quet. The two will consider the
subject from within and without.
This conference is held yearly
to further the national council's
program of education for action
and for service.
"No Incident”
Reported on Arab
General Strike
JERUSALEM. fJTAl — Tile
much-heralded Arab general strike
to protest the UNSCOP partition
recommendations passed quietly
with only very minor incidents re
ported, Tlie worst violence was
the stoning of a Jewish bus.
Thousands of Arabs gathered in
mosques throughout the country
where they heard religious and po
litical leaders urge them to fight
to preserve their country. All
Arab shops were closed and most
vehicles operated by Arabs stayed
off tlie streets. The effectiveness
of the strike was aided by the fact
that Friday is tlie Moslem sab
bath.
Early that day, a group of Mos
lem women gathered in the Old
City and elected a delegation to
visit tlie various consuls in the city
and leave protests against the es
tablishment of a Jewish state.
A Jewish Telegraphic Agency
dispatch from Cairo, where dem
onstrations had been banned be
came of the cholera epidemic, re
ported that no incidents had oc
curred. although helmeted police
were posted throughout the city
in readiness for any eventuality.
Tlie first step towards good
Is not to do evil.
—Jean Jacques Rousseau
Rabbi Alex Feinsilver, above,
has been transferred from Athens
to a Hillel Foundation assignment
at the University of Connecticut
| and Trinity College.
His home is now Storrs. Conn.,
where lie has removed with his
wife, herself a native of Connecti-
' cut.
I Pabbi Fcinsilvcr at Athens, di
rected tli t spiritual activities of
1 the local congregation in addition
j to supervising Hillel House and the
j activities of the Hillel Foundation
I at the University of Georgia.
He brought several innovations
j to tile campus and his success with
student drama, radio and song
workshops was especially note
worthy.
TEL AVIV FIRE ENGINE
NEW YORK.—The Tel Aviv
Fire Brigade was to receive a fire
engine from the New York City-
Fire Department on Friday Oct.
10. at the New York City Hall.
ScAi^ex
'DiQl'UfatiMf
316 IVY ST.. N. E.
WAlnut 16.10
DISTRIBUTORS OP
STROMBERG - CARLSON
FM and AM Radios
Phonograph Combinations
Te*evision Receivers
Wire Recorders
For your main radio—
there’s nothing: finer than a
S TROMBERG-CARLSON
ASK YOUR DEALER IN
YOUR COMMUNITY
\ From where I sit... Ay Joe Marsh
Motorists are mighty glad to pa-
Ironize Ed’s Service Station. The
driveway’s always cleanly swept,
the pumps kept nicely painted, and
the office and rest rooms neat and
spotless. And Ed himself is “Serv
ice with a Smile.”
It’s not only Ed’s idea. The com
pany that supplies Ed’s oil and
gasoline insists on certain stan
dards—not just in the upkeep of
the station, but in the courteous
service that Ed render*.
Jr t » ,ik * th * browers ’ Program of
belf-Kegnlation. Through bulletins.
meetings and personal visits, the
brewers encourage retailers of beer
to maintain clean, law-abiding tav
erns. Those that don’t toe the line
are reported to the authorities.
From where I sit, it’p just com
mon business sense to see that the
product which you sell is handled:
by responsible, courteous people
through attractive outlets. It win*
the good will and the gratitude of
the community.
IPff, United States Brewers Foumfu/iV J