The Texas Jewish Post (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 7, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 1, 1947 Page: 4 of 4
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Page Four
Tuesday, July 1, 194’
CHRISTIAN FARMER GIVES LIFE-SAVINGS TO U.J.A.
70 Educators to Pal.
The Voice of U.m.U.A.
I
By REUBEN HILLMAN
VO
Ki
Jewish boy and girl must stick
together. They must work to
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2985
88
FINEGAN’S BEAUTY SHOP
(Kate and Anna)
2-4158
700 Houston
Kara
U. J.A. Agency
(Continued From Page One)
wi
1117 W. Magnolia
Phone 4-6809
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More and More
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I BOUGHT IT AT
CHAS. SCHOTTA CAKE SHOP
2850 W. Berry
Phone 4-2139
MYE
FOR JOUR PROTECTION
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NEW HOME FOR JEWISH GIRLS
2101 RIO GRANDE—AUSTIN, TEXAS
gether. To gain this goal of unity
there must be the guiding hand of
the older Jewish people. We must
have their knowledge of the Jew-
ish ways. We must have their
guidance. This unity of the young
Jewish people starts when they
are small. It starts by their join-
ing a club similar to the Young
Judaea. This gives the background
of working together. When thay
get older, they join the A.Z.A.
or the B.B.G’s. - When the girls
get older yet they get into the
S.A.O., the Junior Council or Jun-
ior Hadassah. My friends, what
do the boys have to look forward
Rabbi £
vill resu
Brn.
•e
Sentence Streicher
Man
stating what price ad you want.
Lets give the boys the encourage-'
ment of putting on an even better
affair than that one.
Lets remember August 10th day,
for it is a great event for YMJA.
J
B’nai B'rith
News
VS
University of Texas... September Semester
Room and Board
Be My Guest Friday Night—Tune In Station
WBAP at 7:30 P. M.
Write Now for Complete Information to
P. O. Box 962, Houston, Texas
COX'S"
Specializing in
WEDDING—BIRTHDAY—PARTY CAKES
Danish and French Pastries
Black Bottom Pie and All Flavors of
Chiffon Pie
Adolph A. Smulian
Representing
\
\
THE EQUITABLE '
Life Assurance Society of the U. S.
use
HELENE CURTIS MILKY SHAMPOO
at Your Favorite Beauty Shop
SOUTHLAND BEAUTY SHOP
Jewish Appeal’s $170,000,000 cam-
paign.
for both the aged and the infirm.
According to Mickey Goldman,
local President, the convention re-
vealed more of a perspective on
B’nai B’rith in its few days of
session than could be gained in a
year of local study. “I strongly
urge that next year men attend
the convention who did not go
this year in order that others
may gain the benefit of this in-
tensive educational course in the
good works of B’nai B’rith.”
town of Ebersberg.
---o---------
Hold Open House
E
Mr. M
Quality i
He is a I
Associati
Mr. M;
Southwes
the Milli
member
Round T
ler Roun
Associati
- ...because “
TH REE FEATH ERS
K, C. & Comnany
Seventh, Throckmoaton & Sixth Sts*
FORT WORTH
99
Al
Erven Rovinsky and Hal Cohen
in this article let us pull up a
chair and talk things over. Let
us have a word or two about our
Y.M.J.A. • in relation to our com-
munity.
Do we all know the problem
today is to keep up Judaism in
every respect. To do this every
2
“This Is Your FBI”
Edgar
been inv
Underwr
ita Falls
8th. Mr
“Men ai
is well 1
tions as
covers i
port. Th
prehensi
.............11111111
FOR DRY HAIR—
FOR BRITTLE HAIR
xgao880%0me48 N
meseyg
m
cess. This year, the YMJA is
throwing one of the largest- tour-
naments ever to be held in Texas.
To do this will take work. It will
take every spare moment the boys
can find to put into making this
tournament a success.. There will
be activities planned from Satur-
day night August 9th to Sunday
night August 10th. Everyone is
invited. The dinner dance, to be
held at the Skyliner, with noted
celebrities appearing, will be $3.00
per person. The boys will be
around to have you subscribe to an
ad to go into the ad book. They
range from five to thirty-five dol-
lars. This ad book is not just
limited to business men. It will
also hold family names. If one of
Dn
of 25c, since the state committee
will now be composed of about
half of its former membership;
also it will meet less frequently,
and in a less formal manner.
Other decisions made at the
convention in Memphis were to
send the 11 orphans from the New
Orleans home toi Cleveland, in
order to close this district home.
District 7 will continue to pay
$1850 per child to provide for their
keep. Every effort will be made
- to place all orphan children from
this district near to home as
possible before sending them t to
Ohio: - - - - ? '
et
i
The Old Age Home in Memphj
will be. maintained, and hospital
wing will be added so as to care
A.agA GRADE A
grM PASTEURIZED
WSf MILK
THE TEXAS JEWISH POST
,pe
FINE WHISKIES
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Rubin, 211
Warner Road, held an open hous
on June 24 to honor Mr. and Mb
Samuel Raden, recently move
here from Chicago. Mr. and Mr
Raden are living at 2527 Hemphil
aasa:
assn2E
383
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88 333
-,
6%IE
M_"g2r.
JACK J. SPITZER
ed and he may be in a position to
return to his duties to which he
dedicated his energies and superior
ability. He will leave his post in
New Orleans the end of June.
Jack J. Spitzer was engaged as
District Field Representative in
1940. In 1942 he became District
Secretary, at which time he reor-
ganized the work and opened a
fulltime Secretary’s office in New
Orleans. Shortly after that date
he entered the U. S. Army and re-
ceived a leave of absence from Dis-
trict 7. At the time of his honor-
able discharge Mr. Spitzer was a
Lieutenant and he returned to
B’nai B’rith in 1946.
During the full year which he
has now served the District in the
capacity of Field Director, he vis-
ited almost every lodge in the Dis-
trict, succeeded in increasing B’nai
B’rith membership considerably
and did a brilliant job in lodge
programming.
Ig
r dw
-- monuu
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JEl
news]
fices
mous
them
kidna
Tel A
The
thems
said t
the ai
longel
under
precip
maine
ducted
Mea
errme
by Br
Cross
asking
kidnap
the ab
ing tl
person
to "pr
ing fr
disastr
which
serve.”
. Thot
system
Nathar
or i he
abduct,
tion oj
suspect
are bei
arreste
The
ed to
a. m.
throug
the. boys doesn’t get a chace to
eeyet,rop a cardio the YMJA
S i care of the Hebrew Institute
towers and concrete reservoirs hav-
ing a total capacity of 247,000 cu-
bic meters were constructed. Iron
gate length of 477,100 ' meters
were laid during the seven year
period, and 11,800' meters of stone
and concrete canals were built, the
and water conduits with an aggre-
report said.
The report revealed the difficul-
ties experienced in connection
with an inadequate water supply
by one Jewish settlement whose
existence parallels the period cov-
ered by the survey. Matzuba, a
Moved by the desperate position Europe’s Jewish survivors find them-
selves in two years after the end of the war, Homer L. Berninger, 48-year-old
farmer from Bloomsburg, Pa., this week contributed his life-savings— $500—
who served’inX0 repkavsnnsttsSntstpnmdcppztnMrinE-rvsser
be able to enjoy the automobile he had been wanting for so many years Mr
Berninger, who is not Jewish, (standing) presents his check to Charles Weiss-
man Chairman of the Wyoming Valley Jewish Committee drive in behalf of
the United Jewish Appeal. I couldn’t live with myself if I didn’t do something
o help these poor people, the Bloomsburg farmer said in contributing his
-ife-gavings tothe nationwide effort to support the reconstruction programs
of the Joint Distribution Committee, United Palestine Appeal and United
Service for New Americans.
\
2-4159
K 1
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—
■
---------0----------
The local men who attended
the recent district convention of
B’nai B’rith. succeeded in calling
the attention of the Lodge to the
duplication and ineffectiveness of
the State committees, and suc-
ceeded in remedying the situation.
The charge per member will now
be but 10c per member, instead
Owing to the severe illness of
both his parents, Jack J. Spitzer
decided to return to his home in
Los Angeles, temporarily severing
his connections with District
Grand Lodge No. 7. On learning of
his difficulties, the Grand Lodge
Executive Committee, by an over-
whelming majority, voted to ex-
tend him a year’s leave of absence,
after which time it is hoped that
his family matters may be adjust-
to ? When a boy gets to be 18
he doesn’t feel like staying in a
club with younger boys. His ideas
of how things should be run
changes. He wants to be in an or-
ganization where he is a vital unit
to the organization. This is where
the Y.M.J.A. makes its entrance.
A group of young men from 18 to
28 got together and organized the
club.
They organized it because they
could see the older boys moving-
farther apart. They knew that if
this club was not organized, it
would not be long until the older
boys were separated. This is why
the Jewish people of Fort Worth
should take an interest in their
boys. If the people have time,
they should come around and visit
the meetings. When affairs come
up, they should encourage the
boys by coming. When an affair
is given, the boys don’t just want
charity given to them by buying
a couple of tickets to a dance and
throwing them away.
When they put their heart and
soul into making an affair a suc-
cess, only you, the older people,
kcan really put that sparkle in the
boys’ eyes by coming to it. Even
if you could only stay five minutes,
the boys would know you were be-
hind them; they would have even
more ambition to do better things.
As you people remember, last
year the YMJA threw a softball
tournament which was a big suc-
NEW YORK (JTA). — More
than 70 American Jewish educa-
tors and communal leaders inter-
ested in Jewish education are leav-
ing this month for Palestine to
attend the first World Conference
on Jewish Education to be held
in Jerusalem from July 29 to Aug.
7 under the auspices of the He-
brew University, it was announced
by the American Friends of the
Hebrew University. Representa-
tives from many European coun-
tries will also attend.
ithbut
An
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As you know, aluminum is friendly to food—•
used for cooking utensils—for wrapping
cheese, yeast, candy, and other foods—to
protect freshness and purity. Only Boswell’s
Milk gives you the sanitary Alcoa Aluminum
Hood. Applied automatically—untouched
by human hands. In the new, handy, com-
pact square bottles—at your store or deliv-
ered to your door.
Dr. Greines New Pres.
Dr. Abe Greines was recently
-made-rwpresident of the Fort
Worth Park Board, succeeding
Mrs. Will F. Lake. ' -
Dr. Greines, who resides~with
his family at 1317 Boulevard, has
been a Park Board member sinse
seven-year-old cooperative settle-
ment in the Galilee hills near the
Syrian border, was faced with an
almost complete absence of water.
Only seven cubic meters a day
were available as a result of three
borings for wells up to 60' meters
in depth. In the summer, the set-
tlers’ water ration consisted of
only two glasses a day. Recently,
under the direction of the Jewish
Agency, a fourth well was under-
taken, and at a depth of sixty-two
meters, water was struck with a
a ‘flow of seventy-five cubic me-
ters per hour, a two hundred and
forty fold increase over the pre-
vious supply.
The United Palestine Appeal
provides the American support for
the Jewish Agency’s program of
developing and expanding ‘Pales-
tine resources as well as for the
rehabilitation and resettlement of
immigrants and is currently rais-
ing its funds through the United
front Premium grain
IS THE’ FINEST BOTTLED
IN 64 YEARS
‛•.,Ai AT/ALLFAVORITE FORT WORTH
h PACKAGE[ANDIDRUGYSTORES
You Hear it Said .
kw 5
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b, APPRECIATE THE
bonte FoR Thru reathces ost”
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MUNICH (JTA).—The Germa
press reports that Phillip Rup
precht, cartoonist for Juliu
Streicher’s anti-Semitic newspape
Stuermer, has been sentenced t
ten years at hard labor by a de ;
nazification court in the Bavaria
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ACCEPTED by GOOD TASTE
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Execute Gestapo
Murderer
PARIS (JTA).—Max Knipping,
Gestapo man who shot Georges
Mandel, former French Minister
of the Interior, while he was being I
transferred from one Nazi prison
to another, was executed this
week. Mandel, the only Jewish
member of the war-time French
cabinet prior to the fall of Paris,
was considered by the Nazis to be
their "Enemy No. 1” in France.
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Beren, Sheldon K. The Texas Jewish Post (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 7, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 1, 1947, newspaper, July 1, 1947; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1523513/m1/4/: accessed May 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .