Newspaper Page Text
P»p Twelve
IBI gODTHIIN IIIAILITI
Friday, Sept «, 1M3
St. Petersburg Holds Rites
For Center Ground-Breaking
SF Club members turned out In
a goodly number to attend the of
ficial ground breaking ceremonies
at the Jewish Community Center,
on Sunday afternoon, August 25.
Over 200 attended the special
program of ground breaking, re
gardless of the fact that the rains
did not hold off and for a while
interupted the arranged program.
Mrs. Marion B. Ross, president of
the Jewish Community Council,
presented the address of wel
come, which was followed by the
aingtng of our National Athem.
The invocation was offered by
Rabbi David J. Susskind, of
Temple Bethel.
Abe J. Pardoll, Chairman of
the Fund Building Drive, gave a
short address, which was follow
ed by Edward Roggell, Chairman
of the Jewish Community Cen
ter's Building Committee.
Mayor Herman Goldner, Mayor
of St Petersburg, delivered the
main address and was very im
pressive. (The mayor’s mother is
a member of SF Club). Oscar
Kreutz, president of the United
Fund, also presented talks of
welcome and good will.
Breaking of the grotind was the
next order of business as Mrs
Marlon B. Roes, Mayor Herman
Goldner, Oscar Kreutz, Rabbi
Morris Chapman and Rabbi
David J. Susskind all took active
parts in the actual turning of the
earth.
The group then sang “God
Bless America” followed by the
benediction, which was rendered
by Rabbi Morris B. Chapman.
Music fo rthe occasion was furn
ished by Mrs. Lowell Fyvolent.
Presidents of all of the organ
izations associated with the Jew
ish Community Center were in
troduced, with Emanual Ward,
treasurer of SF Club, represent
ing the members of Senior
Friendship Club. Work will ac
tually start next week and it is
hoped to have the building open
ed by the last week in October.
Senior Friendship Club will
hold its weekly meeting at the
Temple Beth 13, until the of
ficial opening of the new Jewish
Community Center.
Senior .3rienddLip lf]i
lewA
By HARRY ROSE
George Perlman of 324 Thirty-
Eighth St South, St. Peterburg,
a member of long standing in the
SF Club, passed away Sunday,
Aug. 25, at the age of 75, follow
ing an extended illness. He was
bom in Russia and has been a
resident of St Petersburg the
past nine years and a member of
SF Club the past five years. He
owned and operated a drug store
in Chicago for 28 years before his
retirement He was a member of
B’nai Israel and the Chicago Re
tail Druggist Association. He is
survived by his wife Hessie, two
sons, Edward and Harvey, both
of Chicago; one brother Louis of
Madison, Wls., and four grand
children. Rabbi Morris S. Chap
man read the funeral services
and the remains were interred in
Royal Palm Cemetery, St. Peters
burg, Fla.
« , ■ - • • ’ ■
Anna and Harry Kaye will
leave for New York on Sept. 10,
for a two or three weeks vaca
tion in New York.
Kasper and Caroline Loewen-
stein are visiting in New York
City where they will remain for
three weeks before returning to
their home in St. Pete.
Manny Ward, treasurer of SF
Club, is getting pats on the back
this week for the splendid job,
he and George Blrkhahn did with
the outdoor loud speaker system,
which was used for the ground
breaking ceremony. Manny has
been doubling for both the Pres
ident and First Vice President of
SF Club, both of whom are out
of the city.
Senior Friendship Club mem
bership continues to hold gather
ings at both Gulf Pbrt and St.
Petersburg Municipal Beaches
and each group reports wonder
ful afternoons of their get-to
gethers. During the month of Oc
tober the indoor season will get
underway and the entire mem
bership will again hold their
meeting get-togethers on each
Monday and Thursday afternoons.
Plans for the Program Committee
are such that they will surpass
the programs as offered all dur
ing the past year. Special events
are planned and a number of new
shows have been arranged and
will go into rehearsals some time
late in October. Ada Marx, mu
sical director, will return to St.
Petersburg late this month to
make her permanent home in the
Sunshine City. William and Ada
Marx are selling their home in
Jackaon Haights, M. T.
Reports along sick row are
brighter and members on the “ill
list” doing much better in their
efforts to throw off entirely the
scourge of illness. Molly and
Harry Bauman rejoicing over
their wonderful climb back to
100% perfect health. Mrs. Charles
Monroe is in a local hospital
undergoing close observation and
study. Gussle Levine became a
hospital patient last week while
medics gave her a close check-up
and tests.
William and Ada Marx will
leave Jackson Heights about the
15th of September for St. Peters
burg, where they will make their
permanent home. Ada Marx will
immediately organize the “Little
Theatre Movement” and a num
ber of sketches and plays will be
readied for immediate produc
tion. Several Broadway Musical
Comedy hits will be boiled down
to one hour productions.
A Serric* oi Your Doctor ol Medicine,
Your Local Medical Society and the
Florida Medical Association.
r v< PROTEINS:
NECESSARY FOODS
Proteim are the principal
building materials of cells. They
determine the way in which the
organa and tissue! of the body
carry out their functions. Pro
tein is a necessary food and a
minimum quantity must be con
sumed regularly if growth and
renewal of body structures are
to be maintained.
The term protein was coined
by Jan Mulder, Dutch chemist,
who in 1839 characterized pro
tein as “unquestionably the
most important of all known
substances in the organic king
dom.” Without protein, Mulder
declared, no life would be pos
sible. So be called it protein
from the Greek word proteios
that means holding first place.
Protein for the human diet is
obtained from both animal and
vegetable sources. Among food
stuffs of animal origin, meats,
fish, eggs, milk and milk prod
ucts are important Vegetable
protein is readily available from
cereal grains such as wheat,
corn, rice, rye and barley, and
the seeds of legumes, peas and
various kinds of beans.
In addition to being used as
building material, protein in
the diet also is used promptly
by the body as a source of en
ergy. The need for protein is
usually increased during the
process of recovery from an
illness, operation or an injury.
At such times, there is need for
building up depleted or dam
aged body tissues, which art
mainly protein in structure.
Your physician is the person
best qualified to advise upon
the amount and type oi protein
Meded in tech rndfriduaTs diet.
ST. PETERSBURG ♦
Temple
Beth-El
ttt Pasadena Ave. South
Ht Petersburg, Fla.
Rabbi David Suskind
SPIRITUAL LEADER
Religious School registration
and class sessions will be held on
Sunday morning, Sept. 8, at Tem
ple Beth-El, 400 Pasadena Ave.
S.
All classes from Kindergarten
to 8th Grade Confirmation will
meet on the one day, Sunday,
from 10 a. m. to 12:15 p. m.
The departmental system now
applies to 4th Grade and above
and the entire student body now
has occasion to meet and worship
together in the Sanctuary regu
larly each Sunday morning be
fore the formal classes begin.
Hebrew School will begin on
Wednesday, Sept. 11. New mod
ern text books for Bar Mitzvah
candidates, special Hebrew lang
uage courses for those students
who qualify and audio lingual
learning techniques will be of
fered. Two experienced Hebrew
teachers have joined the faculty
and the schedule of classes has
been so arranged to accommodate
those students who are in a late
session in Public School. Hebrew
School registration is scheduled
for Sept 9 from 4 to 5:30 p. m.
At the Sabbath Eve Services at
Temple Beth-El on Friday, Sept.
13, 8 p. m. Rabbi David Susskind
will ceremonially install the elect
ed officers for the new year of
the Congregation, Sisterhood,
Brotherhood and Youth Group.
Formal Sabbath Worship will be
accompanied by the Temple Choir
and organist. Rabbi Susskind will
conduct the worship, deliver the
charge and bless the elected
leaders who are to administer the
affairs of the Temple and its
auxiliaries.
Congregation
B’nai Israel
SOI Flfty-Ntnth St, North
St Petersburg, Fla.
Phone S41—1471
Rabbi M. Chapman
SPIRITUAL LEADER
Sat. Sept. 7, the Traditional
Service will be held at a. m.,
in the Teen Chapel. Jeffrey Pin-
cus, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
Pincus, will become a Bar Mitz
vah at Conservative Services be
ginning at 10 a. m. This will mark
the first session of the Youth and
Family Hour for the current year.
All children of the Religious
School will assembled at that
time in order to participate in
the ceremonies. Rabbi Chapman
will conduct the service, assisted
by the Bar Mitzvah.
Sunday, Sept 8— Conservative
Service will begin at 9 a. m. the
first session of the Sunday divis
ion of the Religious School will
begin at 9 a. m.
Monday, Sept. 9, parents of the
Nursery - Kindergarten children
will meet in the teen room at
10:30 a. m.—Men’s Club meeting
at 8 p. m.
Friday, Sept 13, Marcia Hal-
prin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Irving H. Halprin, will become a
Bat Mitzvah at the Family Sab
bath Hour at 8 p. m.
Report Barcelona
Jews Enjoy Full
Religious Freedom
NEW YORK (WUP)—The Jews
of Barcelona, Spain—numbering
approximately 2,000 — enjoy full
religious freedom, according to
the noted Physician Dr. M. I. Sal
omon, who has Just returned from
a trip abroad which included a
visit to the predominantly Cath
olic Spanish city.
During an Interview, Dr. Sal
omon reported that when he and
his wife inquired at the Barce
lona Government Tourist Office
about the Jewish community, its
religious and communal life, the
Spanish officials, very courteous
and cordial in giving them the
information they sought, enthusi
astically directed them to the
Synagogue and Jewish Commun
ity Center.
At the Synagogue—a spacious
two-storied building—the head of
the Jewish community assured
the Salomons that the Jews of
Barcelona enjoy full freedom of
worship, that no one molests
them and that the Government
has taken a correct attitude tow
ards them.
Breakfast A Grade-A Help!
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Add a Hawaiian tone* la row cereal and milk serving—Jut
spoon creahedpineappie and a canned fig onto bowls of whole
wheat lakes. To complete the mens serve battered toast, milk,
and beverage, if desired, for a breakfast that is adequate and
qaiek and easy to prepare. __ . ..
* Mother*—you realize that your children need a good breakfast
for energy and for growth. But do you know that their school
work profits by a good breakfast, too? During the course of the
lows Breakfast Studies on the role of breakfast in the diet
regimen, an adequate breakfast, designated ai a basic breakfast,
was established. The basic breakfast is defined as one which
provides one-fourth the total daily caloric requirement, and one-
fourth the total daily protein allowance. During the experiment
involving achool boys, while the total daily food allowances were
-rigidly controlled and the boys were in school, the teacher in
charge of the group made careful observations and records of
the attitudes and scholastic attainments of the boys. The report
showed that the majority of the boys had a definitely better
attitude and a better scholastic record during the period when
breakfast was included in the daily dietary regimen than when
it was omitted. A basic cereal and milk breakfast pattern—fruit
juice, cereal, milk, bread and butter or margarine, will be a
material asset to your school-age boys and girls in the matter
Of attitude and scholastic attainment. There are many good rea
sons for you to check the breakfast habits of your family—and
September, Better Breakfast Month, is a wise time to do this I
BAKED ON OUR
MADE FRESH
ON SUNDAY
OWN PREMISES
NANCY and CHUCK’S
The Cake Box
6601 Central Avenue
(West Central Shopping Center) 342-8331
SL Petersburg, Florida