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By OBSERVER Police Chesterfields Every New York policeman has his shoes polished up to the last degree. You can find one without his shield sooner than without a polish. Their uniforms are always pressed and there is not a set of men in the world who present as smart an appearance as the 19,000 men on Commissioner Mulroo- ney' force. Naturally, on $60 a week, the pay of a New York cop, they can afford to dress better than they used to when they drew $80 a month not so very many years ago. Police Wire-pulling Naturally, with so many on the force, there is a certain amount of inside politics played all the time. One of the choice assign- ments over which the men battle is the tri-weekly job of policing the crowd at the Goldman band concerts in Central Park. And the way they fight each other for the privilege of getting that job is nobody's business. Eatch cncer t-trae~ss close to 7,000 people, half 'of whom get 1seatsd whilder the re mairuler are tale grass or wherever they can find a point of vantage. The police are ther to kee themi oder- on pinch ea ce mntr worl r-an high avrg.All th cp ha t do isaverage to one eof te fnes concerts on earth and then go home. A Wonderful Gift Thee Goldnapn band concert are Yorkers all through the year. The city gives the bandstand and the Guggenheim family, which made a huge fortune in minerals in the Rocky Mountains, pays the musi- cians, the cost running to many thousands of dollars every year. The band plays at Columbia University campus on alternate nights, thereby drawing a totally different crowd. In the course of the year probably a millioil peo- ple hear the band, not to count the many millions more who lis- ten in by radio. Even New York- ers who seem to find it hard to praise anythilig in especial about their city, admit the Goldman band concerts are wonderful. The Goldman band is just' one more thing that links New York up, in its likes and dislikes, with the small town. Hundreds of small places support a town band and the tri-weekly summer scene in Central Park differs only in sizre from the happenings in myriad of smaller places throughout the A New Wrinkle The best shoe polisher in the world has a stand in the shadow of the Metropolitan Opera House, just off Broadway. Like most of them, he is an Italian. He puts four or five different kinds of (Continuedl on Page Five) - --- $f~llmrnrmm mm m An ~Interview With the President of the Greater Miami Jewish Cemetery Association Q. Mr. Williams, will you please tell us of the formation and ob- jects of the Greater Miami Jew- ish Cemetery Association, and how it came to be formed ? A. Some years ago, the Broth- erhood of Chesed Shel Emes and the Sisterhood had been formed for the purpose of taking care of the burial of the dead in accord- ance with good Jewish principles. They acquired the Jewish section of the Woodlawn Park cemetery and for some time proceeded to take care of it. They had a very limited membership and worked independently of any synagogue. The Brotherhood was in the hands of a few individuals who ran the organization to suit them- selves. It seems that the Jews of Greater Miami objected to this method of conducting the affairs of the Chesed Shel Emes and thus a quarrel arose that for a time looked like it would cause the pur- chase of independent cemeteries by each synagogue., This would have been fatal to the Chesed Shel Emes. Without the support of all the synagogues the organi- ZnationCII coP Ott~ he p the pscy" ments on the cemetery and they would have lost it. As a result of numerous conferences between delegates from each of the syna- gogues in Miami, it was deter- mined. that it would be best for the Brotherhood of Chesed Shel Emes to be dissolved and that a new organization be formed. This new organization, of which I have the honor to be president, consists nouncements IAMI JEWISH ORTHODOX CONGREGATION (Orthodox) 1545 S. W. Third Street SAAC M. WAPNER, Rabbi hewual gFri ay evening sSv- aymorning services at 9 ock, with the afternoon serv- at 6:30 o'clock. Rabbi Isaac Wapner is now in charge, hav- returned from his vacation week. NGREGATION BETH DAVID (Conservative) 139 N. W. Third Avenue S. M. MACHTEI, Rabbi services are held daily at 7:30 m., with the afternoon and eve- g services daily at 7 and 7:15. Saturday and Sunday mornings services will begin at 8 o'clock, ththe afternoon service on Sat- dy at 6:30 o'clock. Talmud Torah classes during summer term will be held ev- morning except Saturday dSunday from 9 to 12. MPLE ISRAEL OF MIAMI (Reform) 137 N. E. Nineteenth Street .JACOB H. KAPLAN, Rabbi rvces at Temple~ Israel, 127 E'. 19th street, Friday evening, tiue throughout the summer ei ht o'clock in Kaplan hall will be a religious service with informal presentation of mat- rsof interest and a discussion the members present. Anyone hohas any subject of interest be discussed is invited to pre- nt' the subject to Dr. Jacob H. plan, so that he may be pre- ardto speak on it. A social our will follow each religious service. ONGREGAIOhNdBETII JACOB 311 Washington Avenue Miami Beach L. AXELROD, Rabbi Daily services are held at 8 'clock every morning and at 7 'clock every evening. Friday eve- ig services during the absence f Rabbi Axelrod begin at 7 'clock, and Saturday morning evcsat 8 o'clock under the di- etion of Mr. M. Silverman. The regular Sunday school pro- rmbegins at 10 a. m. and will continued throughout the year. TISHA B'AV IS OBSERVED The fast of Ab commemorating he destruction of the Temple at erusalem was observed by Beth avid, Beth Jacob and Miami ewish Orthodox Congregations st Wednesday night and Thurs- ay. The "Lamentations" were hated and the "Kinos" recited during the services. MOTHER OF MIAMIAN DIES IrWord thas djustt been r c vd iGrassian, formerly of Miami, at blew York city last week. Among those surviving her is a daughter, Mrs. Victor Ezkenazie of Miami. KING MAKES APPOINTMENT Replying in the House of Com- rnons, Dominion Minister Thomas has announced the appointment of Bir Isaac Isanes as governor of Australia by King George. P. Beach Greets Its New Rabbi Rabbi Dr. Kleinfeld to Preach On "New Problems of Jewish Life" Beth El Congregation of West Palm Beach will hear Rabbi Dr. Alexander S. Klemnfeld of New York city at the Friday night and Saturday morning services. On Friday night Rabbi Kleinfeld will preac on "New Problm 0f J native of New York city and is a graduate of the Jewish Theologi- cal Seminary of America and of Columbia University of the class of 1905. He is also a cantor of repute and versed in the tradi- tional synagogal music. Messrs. Jack Sneider, Morris Dubbin and John Wolfe, officers of Beth El Congregation, went to Jacksonville to welcome the rabbi and they arrived in Palm Beach Thursday morning. A reception will be held immediately after the Friday night services so that all may greet the rabbi. G. R. HILTY URGES ADVERTISING OF IIOME PRODUCTS George R. Hilty, advertising di- liecto~r of thle Florida Power Lanrd Light Company and one of the im. portant factors m ~the advocacy of the use of Dade county and Flori- da products for home consump- tion, urged the importance of lo- cal advertising to accomplish the results desired. In a talk before the Dade County Federation of Women's Clubs, Mr. Hilty pointed out that the recent newspaper ad. vertising campaign which called Cemetery Body To Audit Booksi Public Accountant Will Go Over Books of Brother- hood Chesed Shel Emes At a special meeting of the Greater Miami Jewish Cemetery Association held at Beth David Synagogue last Monday night unanimous approval was given for the employment of a certified public accountant to make an audit and thorough investigation of the financial affairs of the Brother_ hood of Chesed Shel Emes since its inception in 1927. The present cemetery associa- tion is the successor to the Chesed Shel Emes and has assumed its assets and liabilities. Several changes have been made as to the fIdfthdinancial record sof te o or- fon ee ydy fr t ptrho et of the general interests of the Miami Jewish public that a com- plete audit be made. This audit and investigation when completed will be published and made avail- able for the information of all those interested. A mass meeting of the general public is scheduled for an early date, at which time a thorough statement of the work of the or- sanizrcioun will -be gfiven-; to all. JEWISH MERCHANTS ACTIVE IN NEW BODY TO BOOST' AVENUE Last Wednesday saw the forma- tion of the Miami Avernue Associ- ation which was organized for the purpose of advancing the inter- ests of the merchants on N. Mi- ami avenue. Prominent in its organization vc t eid~ent; lieDabe, whbe s urer. S. J. Tritt, Leonard Abess, Joe Cohen, Sidney Mayer and I. T. Wasman were elected to the boar dof directors. Messrs. Tritt, Cohen and Fink were chosen on the membership committee. The organization was originally projected some Time ago but noth- ing came of these efforts until several weeks ago when a tempo- rary organization was effected. MEMORIAL SHAFT TO BE UNVEILED A memorial shaft will be un- veiled to the memory of the late Mrs. Elizabeth Barlier at Wood- lawn cemetery on next Sunday, July 26, at 2:30 p. m. Mrs. Bar- ber was a member of Emunah Chapter, O. E. S., at the time of her death. The memorial serv- ices will be conducted by Rabbi S. M. Machtei of Beth David Congregation. JEWS IN MADRID, SPAIN, RECEIVE PRAYER BOOKS For the first time in modern history an order for "Machzorim" (prayer books) for the coming ' high holidays was received from ' the Jewish community of Madrid, ? Spain, by book publishers in-Paris This indicates the reetablish ment of Jewish life in Spain. I attention to home products had for the first year of representa- tives of the Chesed Shel Emes Brotherhood, the Beth David syn- a g g e o mh heth e Ja o b oden a Thgu If Ma B h anth of coe s ande d rctors ofo te new association are, with probably one or two exceptions, not interested selfishly financially in the work of the organization but are working for the common good and benefit of-the people of Greater Miami at large. Our purpose is to take care of the cemetery, to pay (Continued on Page Six) elallllrilumnumn ml nuiinnlm'nI'""" "'"""""I" JEWISH FLORIDIAN BOWLING TOURNEY ATTRACTING MANY Since the announcement of the Jewish Floridian Bowling Tournament a number of en- tries have been received. We jare especially anxious to have the Miami Jewish organiza- ~tions, men and women, enroll. SBecause of the fact that many ~ have discontinued their busi- ~ness meetings during the sum- mer we urge upon them that now is tthe time t a adv n ~ ~enthusiasm and friendly rival- ~ry may be established for the Benefit of all. The contest in ~which organizations as well .as ~individuals will receive trophies wrill be started shortly. Turn to the last page and enroll by ~using the blank for that pur- ~pose. DO IT NOW. :;11111111 ,,11111,1111111 nn1n1111111(n1nu usu111imialu aninnun, been enormously successful. 1"Evr dollar set inDade cou rie trur oee, soaidi r Hily ty. "We must educate ourselves in the knowledge that collective pros- perity is necessary for individual ~1ell bing. Co-oper tio sa a st 11 bring such prosperity about. ' UNEMPLOYMENT" IS SUBJECT OF LECTURE "Unemployment and the Pres- ent Irlues rial Deperession ril b R. Defoe, formerly of New York city, Sunday night, July 26, at' 8 o'clock, at the Workmen's Circle hall, 701 N. W. Fifth avenue. Im- meiael fte the co uIo of mhe *entran open d scusio nw 11 he permitted in which the public is invited to participate. Those in- terested in the present economic problems are urged to attend. KOSHER BUTCHERS TO OBSERVE HALF HOLIDAYS By mutual agreement of the kse butcer -f liami hrey wl of the week excepting Thursday. They will be closed on Saturday all day and reopen Saturday night at sundown. JUDGE jDIES SUDDENLY Joseph P. Newburger, former judge of the Supreme Court of New York, died suddenly last week at Bluff Point. He was prominent in Jewish affairs. mJwis flIst~ ol. IV.--No. XXX. Vliam Florida, Friday, July 24, 1931 Price, 5 Cents __ Page 2THE JEWISH FLORIDIAN e Asia. They have been bred in crease of Id00,0 ive us 145,0000 How the Author of the Pentateuch E"rop fro sport for centre. eha mortancie fthse figures00 M ight Have Solved Depression ";"'! cleaned out our aive gm Te ndthseretanc tdha s a isom oo ported pheasant will increase and tim hnrave bend based on te e- Abstract of Sermon D~elivered at the Eutaw Place Temple of multiply under careful conserva- a lttion thatebe pouatidon thould Baltimore, Md., Saturday, May 9i, by Rev. Dr. William Rosensu tion, so that there will still be k e ton grwigat the rateo whichd ofsprtme to he net nrto it did in the 18SO's and early (Continued from Last Week) the Jubilee Year, the Jubilee Year ofsotmnt ho.1900's, when immigration was un- Morovrmoarcyassuhwiped them out and everybody restricted. Pressure for the low- Morovrmoarcyassuhthus could start life anew from BONUSES .ering of immigration bars comes was denounced by Moses. He knew tesadonoffacilbl- Bethlehem Steel Company, In manyfo hoeitrss no other royalty but the divine gain.W er h coo response to the protests of some Farm production in the United- royalty. With the royalty of man's gra elo akcrido stockholders who thought the men States today is sufficient to feed stadadiatin e adno pa- Wahntnls ekaotwrwho run the business were getting 140,000,000 people. Farmers must tience. It was the royalty of man's et.Fac sest epr too much money for their work, find a foreign market for food stanardzatonmonrch, wichfectly willing to have them wiped has increased salaries and reduced sufficient for 15,000,00 people, brought misfortune in its train for h ecna o nus id theeoe rs~~r fo o out as far as France itselfistepreteofbnsspiotrfre rsuerfm lw centuries. Do you not recall that inrae rdue '~cs h lentv st profitably affected by them. But employes for icesdpou-rcs h lentv st e Moses warned the people against appinin a in ?He el tatthe debts of other nations, to be tion. duce the acreage under cultiva- the king would always surround paid to it, it wishes to see met.l Perhaps the Bethlehem bonuses tion for the staple crops. That is 8( It seems indeed that the Jubilee were too high; I cannot judge tha what the Federal Farm Board sy himself with a large and expen- cran oer that the rahnadi sbudt siv cort hatmigt cushtheidea is able to suggest a remedy I amcrtihwv, pecin adtisbud o siv cort hatmigt cushtheto the governments in the solu- greatest incentive to good work come. people with his imposed taxes. c tion of the all-prevailing problem which any employer can offer to Remember, Israel went to pieces ist iethemRCESOdadol during the First Commonwealth, of depression. his employesist gve mROKT on account of the tyranny of the Before closing, observe one money rewards above their wages Prof. Robert H. Gdado monrch frm oloon owntopoint more--namely, that Moses if they do more than the routine Clark University, who has beenli theen o th sxt cetuy e-knew nothing about high tariff, requirements of their jobs. eprmnigwith and talking for te hrstaner. emcrcywhich only as it becomes radical- Some day the whole wage sys- abu rplig aircraft by I in the true sense of the term was ly modified can improve our tem will be revised and every means of rockets, has taken out the contribution of Moses to the stts okrwl epi rcsl patents on a rocket-propelled air- solution of world development. If Here, then, is a thought receiv- proportion to his output. Then ifpln.Telaeiexctdo today we have democarcy in this ed from the Mosaic Dispensation. he wants to loaf on the job it. will risne frmthe ground liexpc 'any country, our 'form of government The world must begin to build be his loss and not his employer'sJ. other plane, its propellors being was suggested by Moses through anew. A new point of vision needs -- turned by a turbine engine, for the Pilgrim Fathers, who were to be developed. Let us not blame BABCOCK which the gas from a succession students and lovers of the Old God for our present misfortune.i When Dr. Stephen Moulton of rockets will furnish the power. Testament. Moses wanted a gov- New leaders with new vision must Babcock died at the age of 87 a When it gets into the rarified at- ernment of the people, by the peo- be sought. And if such leaders Ifew days ago, there passed on the mosphere the engine will be cut ple and for the people, aind not a are found, they need to be retain- man who, more than any other off and the propulsive force will government for the benefit of the led only as long as they seem to individual, was the father of the be that of rockets themselves. chosen few and their particular have the interest of the whole modern dairy industry. T~he Bab- Prof. Goddard is no idle vision- financial or political preference. world at heart. The moment they cock test for butter fat revolu- ary. Just what he has got in his .Read any of the principles of fail the world in the right kind of tionized dairying and set a new desert laboratory in New Mexico Moses' Law, and you will findsllervice, they should be removed standard to which to breed dairy he ig not telling the world as ye-t, that they breath( the healthier and better leaders put in their cows. but if anyone in this country is democracy required by humanity places. Whatever the world is to Today thge dairy industry, which going to succeed in flying by for its upbuilding. become for better, will depend includes not onily milk, cheese and means of rockets Prof. Goddardf ..upon our obedience and our prac- butter production but the wide Nor did Moaes endorse unhimit- ..will probably be the first. tice of the commandments of God. range of manufacturing industries ed land ownership. Henry George, And whatever it might become for based on the use of casein from who forty years ago wrote a book PIGEONS ,,worse should ever be traced to our skim milk, is one of the greatest on "rogess nd overy, nddisobedience and our violation of in the nation. It has brought the A ble omn pionfe was designated "the single taxer, 503% miles from Salisbury, N. C., i; God's commands. For, let it not impoverished wheat states of the? knew whereof he spoke when he bovrokdbanofuttNotwsitoheorroto to New York City, in 13 hours, 11 proestd aaint te bundessevery misfortune, and particularly) agricultural prosperity. It has minutes and 51 seconds the other and endless possession of proper- th ifrueo u rsn ruh elhunuihn odday. This was not quite a record ty .by people, instead of the own- unvra odtohsisnt ihnteraho vrbd.for the 500mile annual pigeon ership of the land by the govern- uaanloiacus.Adllttasherulofnerace, but it comes very close to it. ment. If, for example, a man agiutrlcleepoesrs A large part of a homing pig- bought property according to the experiments. eon's time in flying long distances, Mosaic Dispensation, he could not however, is taken up in the bird's own it forever, like property is McCORMICK questing, or circling at high alti- owned by the Standard Oil Com- tudes to find landmarks to guide pany and other manufactories in Exactly 100 years a~go, in July, i akt t oelf.Teei these times. At the time of the 1831, a youn Virini fame 1 t oelf.Teei Jubilee, such property went back named Cyrus McCormick made no longer any great mystery about to its original owner for his ow the first public demonstration of how the homing pigeon finds its cultivation and his own support. his horse-drawn reaper. At that wray back to its home nest. The Are' you not aware of the in- time more than four-fifths of the bird has no mysterious sixth sense stitution particularly specified in people of the United States were or homing instinct. It cannot find this week's Scriptural portion des- engaged in farming. To put it in its way home at night or in a ignated the "Release Year"? It another way, it took the labor of dense fog or conditions of low vis- provided that the land had to rest four families on the farm to feed ibility. Like almost all birds, how- every seventh year. Thus there five families, including them- ever, it has telescopic powers of was forestalled the draining of GAME selves. vision beyond anything which hu- the soil's power of productivity. Driving over Austerlitz moun- The direct result of McCor- man beings can easily imagine, ac- Hence such a condition as over- tain, one of the Taconic range mick's invention was to increase cording to Dr. Casey Wood, fam- production of wheat, corn, sugar which separates New York from agricultural production, and re- ous oculist, who has devoted many and what not, never could come Massachusetts, I flushed seven duce the number of farmers. To- years to the study of the eyes of into- existence, as is the case to- pheasants in as many miles. One day fewer than a quarter of our birds. The homing pigeon memo- day, when we are endeavoring to gorgeous, long-tailed cock-pheas. people are farmers. One family on rizes landmarks near its home limit by arbitrary measures the ant rocketted out of the brush the farm needs three other fami- loft, and, as it is given longer and amount of produce which any smack into my windshield and fell lies who produce no food. And longer flight trials, it learns the? government should yield. And to the road with a broken neck. anyone who knows farming will lay of the land at greater dis- whenever, unfortunately, drought He deserved a better fate. agree that evled fewer farmers tances, until it knows the country visited the Holy Land, the The breeding of pheasants is could feed the whole nation. so well that, when liberated with~- drought, by virtue of its detri- being encouraged by the states of McCormick became a million- in 500 miles from home on a clear mental power, rarely brought the Northeast. Some of the state aire, one of the few such in his dlay, It can see some remembered about such conditions as we ex- *authorities supply pheasant eggs time. His descendants still con- landmark in the direction of its perienced in the United States free to those who will hatch them trol the International Harvester home. last year. It might be advantage- under barnyard hens. New York Company. They are industrialists, ous for some of our statesmen to is paying 4-H Club boys and girls and the United States has become Go to the bathing beaches and study the improvement of our ec- $1 each for mature pheasants so an industrial nation, largely be-. you will discover that the Amer- onomic conditions in the light of hatched. They are liberated in the cause of Cyrus McCormick. ican girls knows all about her SIsrael's classic "Release Year." state forest preserve, to be shot ----_constitutional right to bare arms. And let us also note the "Jubi- by hunters in the proper season. POPULATION - lee Year"' o'f which our Scriptural In Virginia and some other The population of the United DELANEY & BEERS section today speaks. It came ev- parts of the South the Native States is not increasing at as rap- Kodak Finishing and Enlarant ery fifty years. Among the many American partridge is sometimes id a rate as formerly. We hawl! Commercial Work and Home Portraits valuable purposes it subserved, called a pheasant. There is no na- about 125,000,000 people now, and 50%/ Off on All Amateur Work was this one--that unless debts tive pheasant. These game birds President Hoover recently said 334 N. E. Second Avenue were settled before the coming of are imports from China and east- that the expectation is for an in. Phone 2-58as THINKING JEWS ALL SUBSCRIBE TO THE JEWISH FLORIDIAN! I 4 THE ~~al SER UD C--------- HE JEWISH 12."BD AN IS LORUID 0 PuaBLanue LO 07 SOUTH MIAMI AVE. 6 C~ J. LOUISJ SHOCHET, Editor P. O. Box 2)8 ami, Florida Po 218 WEST PALM BEACH OFFICE: 414 Elthth street Mrs. M. Schrebalek, Represntative Entered as second class matter, ly4th, 1930, at the Post Office Miami, Florida, under the act March 3, 1879. sUEacICPTION S Months ........... s VOLUME IV.--NUMBER XXX. FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1931 3ALONIKI AND MADRID When the Jews of Spain were spelled, centuries ago, by Ferdi. ndand Isabella, a goodly num- arof them found refuge in reece. The city of Saloniki be- sme one of the most prosperous wish centers. The Sephardic aws of Spain adjusted them- alves to the new conditions and rauly became a great factor Ithe industrial and commercial ordof .the city. At the same me they remained 'tradition-lov- agJews, *whovise- ~Jewish life 3 aloniki went on undisturbed. The pogroms that recently were perpetrated against the Saloniki esby Greek chauvinists came sa thunderbolt. For a hundred nd fifty ~years there had been practically no anti-Jewish inci- ent th~ere. To judge by reports ecived here, the doings of these ntionalists," who burned hun- reds ~of homes in the Jewish quarter and injured numberless ople, unchecked by a lethargic police force, constitute one of the not violent assaults ever com- nitted on modern Jewry any- whre. Premier Venizelos has promised his full support in running the nti-Semitic hooligans to earth 'and punishing them. The Ameri. can Jewish Congress, we ydr- rstand, is looking into the facts ~and will shortly present a memo- randum to the proper authorities. tBut whatever will be done to pun- ish the culprits, the pogroms can- not be undone. Saloniki, the free Jewish city, becomes a pogrom city--and this almost on the very day when the new Spanish Re- publican Government recogmszes the wrong done to the Jews four hundred years ago mn its country. Madrid and Saloniki have changed roles. Perhaps there will be a re- exodus from Greece to Spain. His- tory sometimes arranges such pra ks. King Carol has had to punish little Prince Michael for turning in a false alarm of fire, says a cable, but what's one more false alarm among Balkan royalty ? Maybe William Allen White would like to make some changes at this time in his old slogan for Kansas: "Raise more wheat and less hell." vDOCTOR OiN JOSEPH CAINES. M.D. A SUGAR REVIEW My patient readers may be possibly amazed at some of the ideas here advanced. Let me say at the outset that I very seldom peddle the ideas of others--at least I seldom quote; but much of the thought herein expressed is borrowed from current literature. An authority from Vienna attributes "strikingly favorable re sults" in the treatment of heart disease and stomach ulcers, with: table sugar. If I had these sort of complaints, I'd consult my doctor' as to how to use the sweet. You know, sugar is one of our-staples. The value of sugar "in relieving fatigue and supplying quick en; ergy," also has scientific endorsement. The Vienna authority is be- lieved to be the first to suggest the use of sugar in the treatment of certain, widely prevalent diseases. He (Dr. Rocht) claims to have used sugar in the treatment of stomach and duodenal ulcers, with good success. He noticed increase of appetite, with better food-tol- erance, in an increased supply of mucous, favored by the su~gar. He saw improvement in the habitual constipation in such cases, with notable gain in weight. Too, remarkable increase in nerve- forces, less melancholia, and more happy disposition in the gloomy . victims. The relief was not immediate, but gradual and lasting. He sajrs, "sugar is the most important nutritional element of the heart, in that .it; lowers blood pressure and stimulates the live* and kidneys." Dr. Donald A. Laird, of Colgate University, _contributes to a scientific .symposium on sugar; he states that sugar contributes to restful sleen. This argues, almost, for a chocolate at bedtime, doesn't it ? Dr. Laird also declares it to be valuable in curing "vague feelings of fatigue, so common among physicians' patients." A remedy for "that tired feeling,') so commonly met. In short, if sugar helps relieve mental and physical tire, and favors restful sleep, then it certainly is among our most valued foods. THE JEWISH FLORIDIAN--A MEDIUM OF ANDFO MIAMLMI JEWRY! r I iday, July 24, 1931 Page 3 Salesman--There, madam, that's just what you want. This port- manteau is solid leather--every inch of it solid leather. SShopper--But, my good man, I want a hollow one, to put things in! "Why, yes, my boy, you may have her." - "How's that? Have whom? "My daughter, of course. You want to marry her, don't you?" "No, sir; I just wanted to find out if you would endorse my note for $100 ,, "Certainly not. Why, I hardly know you," Barber--You are very bald, sir. Do you know what is the cause of it ? Feddup--I don't know, but I sus- Spect my hair falling out had some- thing to do with it. A maiden speech--"Ask papa." When a butcher moves he pulls up steaks. It's easy to be patient when you have nothing at stake. When cats fight in the dark they always scratch a match. When I was young and very wise I made a resolution. If I should take on family ties I'd harbor no illusion About how good my children were. I'd know that although heaven- sent It followed not they could not err, And so each child toward mischief bent Should duly get his punishment. One thing for which he'd sure get cffe Was dancing on the overstuffed. If he puts grapenuts in my bed, Straight to the closet he'd be led. And if he tracked in muddy feet Or to the frosting helped himself, He'd find it pleasanter .to eat .His meals upon the mantel-shelf. But now I find I was a crank, (Yeah, that's the dope) For now they follow Johnny's prank With the mituseope. Mother, dear, you mustn't spank (Says the faddist). Don't let John hang on your skirt You'll make the lad an introvert Or a saddist. You should smile and show your dimple When he as "Ma, don't be sim- n e!sas, , It just proves he's growing older When he says things from the shoulder. Though soon you'll need a cush- ioned cell You can figure out how well You've worked to give him self- reliance And done your bit to foster sci- ence. A Wisconsin preacher adver- tises that he will pay $5 to any- one who can sleep through one of his sermons. Before taking him up on that one we would want to know the exact conditions of the contest--whether he would as- sault the aural sense alone or the tactual also. In the old Puritan churches of New England a watchful official patroled the aisles carrying a long rod with a hard knob on the end. When a brother appeared to be dozing as the minister labored on from the 20thly to the 21stly of his sermon, this official reached out and rapped him on the head. We should want to be sure that the Wisconsin challenger will not resort to this brutal expedient. He could talk as loud as he liked. And we might even allow him a scout: wit a so t-en e weapon. When that was applied, we believe we could still say, with $5 in prospect, "Gwan! I'm asleep. You can't wake me.,, Missus--Why do you always ask me to sing when Mr. Smathers comes here? Mister--Well, you see, I don't like that fellow; yet I[ don't feel like telling him outright to go. Proud Father--He's a fine baby -he inherits his looks from me. His Wife--I've been thinking of that myself. Can't you see a lawyer about dismnheriting him? The pill of adversity is never sugar-coated. Half a loaf is better than the average railroad sandwich. No man with a poor memory has any business to become a liar. It sometimes happens that a man who is short of brains is long on tongue. When a woman flies into a pas-i sion it's time for her to have her wmngs clipped. There must be a woman in the moon instead of a man, otherwise it wouldn't change so often. "I'm afraid Mr. Jones will not attend our party,, "Nonsense! His better self will triumph,, "She always does, doesn't she ?" Jinx: Television will soon be here Blinx: Yes, just think what a nuisance it will be to have to shave before you answer the telo- phone. Tourist: This seems to be a very dangerous precipice. It's a won- der they don't put up a warning sign Native: Yes, it is dangerous, but they kept a warning sign up for two years and no one fell over, so it was taken down. "If you go first, dear, you'll wait for me on the other shore, won't you ?" questioned the fond wife. "I suppose so," returned her husband, with a sigh. "I never went anywhere yet without hav- ing to wait for you." The increasing popularity of small hdng Ia ezost h pplyd il when a speaker, as it is reported, "gave a miniature address." A Boston girl says she wil marry the man who pays her father's debts. We would advise interested~ parties to first find out who got the father in debt. The track farmers have their problems, too," but cantaloupes are ours, not theirs. I I 1 1 *' THE JEWISH FLORIDIAN TOO FAST When I was a student in Amherst College, and my father was: preachmng mn Chicago, I used to go home for Chrismtas on the Et-ie Railroad, The trip consumed two nights and a day; but this was the golden age when some kmnd hearted railroads were allowed tot; present free. passes to clergymen and their families. . Now the Erie makes fast time, and there are no passes; but the memory of those old slow trips is pleasant. .My mother od pack,a shoe-box full of sandwiches and hard boiled eggs and bananae, and I1 had a glorious time; never thinking that it was any hardship to travel slowly, but thanking my lucky stars that I was able to giet home at all. On one of the days preceding last Christmas, so I am told, eight: sections of America's swellest trains were required to leave New York i to hurry the youngsters home from school. i It hurried them home for what? So that they could be towicaj running kiss on their parents, shed their day clothes and change into~ evening clothes, and be off on a series of parties. This is the world we live in. This is the tempo of modern life. Any of us old folks who decry it are merely dating ourselves as be-1 longing to a passing generation. : Yet, I personally feel a little sorry for these headlong youngsters~~ ISomehow it seems to me that in travelling so fast they miss an awful~ lot. I remember the Christmas when my father presented me my first: ~watch -a big silver affair that he himself had carried for years. was ten years old, and the gift amazed me. It had never occurred to~ me that I should ever own a watch until I was twenty-one. I remember how my wife and I saved up patiently to buy our: :first car--a second-hand Ford. I remember our first antique,~ which :we loved for months before we could finally acquire it. Aind the jo~f of seeing a savings account grow slowly; and the thrill of building 4i library, one book at a time. Now the kids smash up a dozen watches before they are six; And they start life with cars, and with furniture.; and at twenty theyf have rushed through all the emotional experiences that lasted ai leisurely through forty years. Don't mistake me. I'm a booster for the new generation, Tihey. are healthy, direct and fine. Only sometimes I wonder- I. wonder when, on my way home at night, I pass a big house in which lives one of New York's famous neurologists. It's an expensive house, paid for by nerves. Limousines are always stacked up in front of it, It would seem almost as if the prize of life in America is to own a limousine and park it int front of a nerve specialist's door. Every' one seems to ~be racing to get there. ( *IIIUIIIH;Y~II r *u*rr u~RlrrmlnHnHIIImlafir~rwllHWMII (se*******@eooeooosesotestoooo@@@@+@#@4###++ SO IET .a (P * soooewoooooowoooooatsoso@++++++++++ BAGS AND METALS L. (Pop) G;ERSON Buyer of All Kinds of Scrap )[el We Sell Auito Parts 2141 N. W. SECOND AVE. Phone 2-0821 EAST COAST BAG & MEACO Incorporated I. L. MINTZER :MACHINERY OF ALL K(INDII 435-445 N. W. 8th Street Phone 2-4485 PEPPER- METL C PEPPR MEAL CRP. Scrap Metal and Machinery NJ. W. Cor. 5th Ave. aind 14th St Phone 2-2546 BUILDING SUPPLIESl J. SIMPSON Building Materials Roofing Paper, Asphalt 423 N. W. North River Drive Phone 2-7251 DELICATESSEN ROSED)ALE DELICATESSIEl 170 N. W. 5th Street We Supply Your Every Want PHARMACISTS BRYAN PARK: PHARMACY Chas. Tannenbaum Pharmacist (Reg. Pharmacist for 17 Years) Cor. 22nd Ave. and 8th St. S. W. PIPE AND STEEL :A. & B. PIPE AND METAL CO. 53 N. E. 25th Street Phone 3.1355 YI IADELMAN PIPE &t STEEL CO. S58 N, E. 25th Street ,At F. E. C. R. R. Phone 2-142) TRANSFER FLASH EXPRESS &t STORAGE COMPANY, Inc. 48 N. W. Seventh Street 1Telephone~ 2-4836 Miaml, Fis KING FUNERAL HlOME 29 N. WT. THIRD AVENUE JOSEPH P. McGHAN FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service SPhone 21-1284 1923 8. W.y Eighth S~ltreet Beth David Sisterhood is spon- sornga card party at Hardie's Garden Beach for Thursday after- DR. HOLLOMlAN DENTIST 534 North West Second Ave. W. Carbsr o, Eskb. 1896 Phase M.a h,5-191 "HURRY BACK" TO SELLER 8 Honest, Courteous Service. I N. ~W. 7thr Ave, at 28th Street Mr. and Mrs. NJathan Abramson entertained a party of friends last Sunday aboard the yacht "Doro- thy" on a fishing trip down the keys. As a result of the day's work Frederick Shochet caught a string of forty fish, among them twelve three to four-pound group- ers. Present were Mr. and Mrs. Abramson, Master Alvin Abram- son, Miss Sarah Shochet, Freder- ick Shochet, Ray Shochet, Esther Shochet and Mr. and Mrs. J. Louis Shochet * Rabbi Isaac M. Wapner of the Miami Jewish Orthodox Congre- gation returned to Miami early Tuesday morning after having At a meeting of the Workmen's Circle held at its hall last Tues- SServing Millions of People All Over the United States IMORRIS PLAN COMPANY oF~. NIM ABSOLUTELY FREE I - :ea ____ Friday, July 24 sla THE JEWISH FL~EORIDIAN pa 4 - da iht Mr. Leon Elkin, secre- tary of the cir ist a gaenannfe ou: southeast nrena aititcn ee frmtesukof the Wlorkmen's Crl hc cusses the work lar the Aor n Circle and p~arc us in this sec- beiter Ring Shl i i sc tion of the country. -*- Among those who participated in the musical program presented by the Woman's Club of the Workmen's Circle at its supper last Sunday night were Mr. and Mrs. H. Greenberg, in a number of vocal solos and duets in Yid- dish; Morris Seiderman, irt a number of Yiddish songs, and Mr. A. Dock, in a number of readings and recitations. -*- Miss Jean Goldstein of Louis- ville, Ky., is visiting her brother- in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Leo C. Steinberg, in Miami Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Steinberg and children of Paterson, N. J., brother and sister-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. Max Steinberg, are now making their home in Miami. Miss Te Stemnberg, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Max Steinberg of Mliami, left by auto for Savan- nah, Ga., where she will visit rel- spent four weeks traveling in the dotduring wh ch stimeh ka O h io a en d P th la d 1p h i na n dP a r r l -a -tended event was the bridge party given by the Senior Chapter of Miami Hadassah last Tuesday evening in the patio of the May- field Court apartments at Miami Beach. Mrs. Harry Weinberg as chairman and Mesdames Harry Orlin, Isidor Cohen, Sadye G. Rose, B. Kandel and B. Weinkle were in' charge of arrangements. Refreshments were served and prizes' awarded. Plans for the gala dance being sponsored by the Junior Hadas- sah at Carter's Pier for the night of Thursday, August 6, include a number of novel features for the entertainment of the 'guests in addition to the splendid dance music. Misses Ben Silver, Sarah Kohn, Sylvia Rayvis, Evelyn Ja- mison and Lee Kasanoff comprise the committee in charge. One of the prettiest and most impressive events of the season was thre formal installation of of- fleers for the women's branch of the Workmen's Circle, held at the ArbD~iter Ring hall, 701 14I. W. Plfth avenue, last Sunday eve- ning. In charge of the supper, during which the installation ceremonies were held, was Mrs. Slaviter, who was the toastmistress. A number of the members of the club as well as' of the Workmen's Circle spoke during the evening. A cake donated by Mrs. Friedman was sold and brought the sum of twenty-one dollars and seven cents which was donated to the striking miners of the Pennsyl- vania coal district. Among the officers installed were Mrs. A. Kaplan, financial secretary; Mrs. Henry Seitlin, re- cording secretary; Mrs. Slaviter, corresponding secretary, an$ Mrs. E. Katzis, treasurer. On the ex- e uti boad tge hrM Ri t Kaler and Mrs. Gross were elect- ed. The proceeds of the supper will be used for the Schule fund of the Workmen's Circle. During the evening a number of folk songs were sung by all present and a number of readings in Yid- dish were enjoyed by the guests. noon, July 30, at 2:30 o'clock, when prizes will be given for high scores and refreshments will be served. In charge of arrangements and acting as hostesses for the afternoon are Mesdames J. Eng- ler, J. Silberstein, J. ]Katz, Lewis Brown, E. Winer and Isidor Co- hen. The public is invited to at- tend. -*~ - Spendmng a vacation of a few weeks at Miami Beach are M. and Mrs. Max Kupferstein, well- known communal workers of Mi- ami. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Pallott are receiving congratulations on the arrival of a baby daughter last Tuesday morning. Mother and daughter are resting nicely. The birth of a baby boy to Mr. and Mrs. Dan Rosengarten sev- eral weeks ago at New Haven, Conn., has just been announced. Teerbo handbenh name fore h s M. Rosengarten, well-known Mi- ami merchant and communal worker for many years who died about a year and a half ago. Mrs. J. Gell is recuperating from a tonsilectomy which she underwent last week. The Fortnightly Book Review Club will hold a weiner roast next Tuesd n evening Julym2e, frs t lieu of the usual meeting. On August 11 the club will meet at the home of Mrs. Henry Berg when "Angel Pavement" by J. B. Priestly will be reviewed. -+ atives and friends. While away she expects to spend some time at Tybee Beach. -k- Mrs. Rose Weiss of 226 Collins avenue, Miami Beach, accompan- ied by her mother, Mrs. Hama Sayetta, left Tuesday by motor car for New Yor~k city, where they will visit Mrs. Weiss' daugh- ter, Malvina, a student at Colum- bia University, and her son, Mil- ton Weiss. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Wolfe left for New York by auto last Tuesday morning. They will make their future home there. Mr. Leo Kupferstein arrived home Wednesday morning ,after having spent the summer in pur- suing his studies at the Univer- sity of A-labama. Miss Gladys Abenson was host- ess recently at a bridge party at her home, 1678 S. W. Eleventh street, for the pleasure of Miss Miriam Safer. Miss Safer, who is from Jacksonville, is the guest of Miss Ida Safer at her home, 321 N. W. Fourth avenue. A color scheme of pink and white was accentuated in the appointments and refreshments. The guest of honor was the recipient of a love- ly gift, while the prize for the high score was awarded to Miss D~orothy Dubler. Miss Bernice Schwartz received second prize and consolation went to Miss Lil- lian Eisman. Guests present included Miss Norma Gelberman of Mobile, Ala., Miss Miriam Safer, Miss Ida Sa- fer, Miss Rose Dubler, Miss Lil- lian Eisman, Miss Rose Levine' Miss Ethel Mintzer, Miss Doro- thy Dubler, Miss Jennie Spector, Miss Ida Engler, Miss Charlotte D~avis, Miss Shirley Elkin, Miss Pauline Lasky, Miss Bernice Schwartz, Miss Theda Maurer, Miss Elsie Reisman, Miss Rosalyn Klein, Miss Betty Lasky, Miss Miriam Greenwald and Miss Hel- en Eisman. Samuel Kar~ns, who has been visiting in New York city and other northern points, has re- turned to Miami, having spent several weeks on a combined bus- iness and pleasure trip. Additional Society on Page 5 Philbrick Director of Funer s serving Ccrater Miams City WOod Yard, Inc Fireplace Stove and Kindling WYood 1218 N. W. EIGHTH COURT Phone 2-3252 family finish A completely finish- LGNA RIEO, INA "IN~~ro oe vr os dollr of savings r interesting a Morris Plan Bank" Pioneetrs Of INDUSTRIAL BANKING Vincent Rt. Brice, MWanager ___~j I ~8~"ari~;i~gg~gllg~ ~__ - T) USINESS 5,,) Directory ................................ Savings - Rhmt~art We Deliver Bundles *'-. Satisfaction 21 Nort Wet Nth street 10 N.i J E. First Avenue K heep Up to the Minute! For Correct Tunme Phone 2-3141 DAY OR NIGHT CORRECT TIMIE SERVICE, IncIo pomta TH~ J~WISH FLORIDI~E-A MEDIUI~ OF AND M)R IMUNII~WIYRYI B O W L INGJ BISCAYNB BOWLING ALLEYS 1829 N. E. Second Avenues WE CATER TO LADIES FLORIDA CUT RATE DRUG STORE 176 N. W. FIFTH STREET (Corner Second Avenue) Gillette Bladh pk 39......Jc Rubbing Alcohol, p nt. 29c..~e~ Veldown Sanitar Na kis Fpnck e ..... ,.............10...... c9 value, guaranteed one year .......,..............................59c PHONE 2-9334 For Free Delivery Service McKEERANQ PURNPITRBE CO. "Where Year Dellar Does Its Darty" Pianos, Radfoe, New and Used Furniture 531-539 N. W. Srd Ave. Ph. 8-152 DR. R. F. BOWMAN 1 DENTIST 811 S. W. Seventeenth Avenue~ STelephone 2-5721 Bl80 BOWl Bakery 1559 8. W. Eighth Street 210 Alhambra Circle Coral Gables We specialize in home cooked foods. Our rolls, breads, patty shells, eakes and pies are un- surpassed. Try our special Japanese Fruit Cake. anHe c ter to parties, banquets unmnman nnumaner seuanu........, ~_ I : 3CSOIE YT : BROWN EMPLOYMENT BUREAU 109 SHORELAND ARCADE "On the Ground Ploor" Catering to ~every emnployer and housewife m GreaterL Mi ei a solnef wth ad a low flat rate to applicant. Visit Us an4 Pe~raonally PHONE 2-8149 Jack 11. Millikin L. R. Hierndon RIVer81de Garage 517 8. W. 17th Avenue General Auto Repairing Washing, Polishing, Greasing OPENING SPECIAL Carbon Cleaned and Valves $9 Ground, Ford or Chevrolet -3 All Other Cars $1 per Cylinder "Glad to Do Your Work While You Sleep" DI r. and Mrs. Morton Fagan en- tanda number of the juve- afriends of their daughter, usine, last Wednesday after- mJuTify22" Z;lif honor of her birthday. The little guests ;hrdin the beautiful dining im of the Palatial Kosher Res- rnt and enjoyed a number of msfor their benefit. The table beautifully decorated with cut wers, and a large birthday eake orted in blue, pink and white sthe centerpiece. Six candles the cake were lit by little Sun- neand then the cake was cut Divided between the guests. vrs had been placed at each atas a place mark and were m kept by the youngsters who ;eded. Ice cream, cake and chwere served during the af- ooafter which the guests ened a motion picture show. TeBnai Brith held its weekly scen at the Palatial Kosher sturant last Wednesday and a ief discussion of the local work the Anti-Defamation League isgiven by Mr. Isaac Levin, aimn of the local committee. gars were distributed to the ests by Mr. Fagan as a gift smlittle Sunshine Fagan on her birthday anniversary. Mr.David L. Perlman and s.Martha Bloch of Baltimore, .,are visiting Mrs. Samuel rsnand her daughter, Mrs. nkPerlman, at their Miami ch home. They will remain refor their summer vacation. Mr. Herbert U. Feibelman, ac. Inpanied by Mrs. Feibelman, tby motor Wednesday to at- dthe convention of commercial onys in Toronto, Canada. Af- the close of the convention y will motor to New York eity other points north, visiting' atives and friendis. jThe card party sponsored for be benefit of Temple Israel Sis. irhood last Tuesday afternoon at be home of Mrs. Samuel Merson attracted quite a number of nuests. Assisting in serving were SAnnouncing the Opening of CHALET INN 1440 BISCAYNE BLVD * Within Easy Access of Every Part of Miami and Miami E Beach We Make a Specialty of Cater- Sing to Luncheon Bridges and SSpecial Parties at Very SReasonable Prices II"Make Thisl Your Rendezvous" I). ... ..G F.B R U B (Physician) I APINNOUNCES The R~eestabishmeint of His - Offices at 1822 N. BAYIII 4T DRIVE YOU PAY FORU HIGH CLASS PRIIIINTING WHY NOT GET ITT ..at ,.. *im n Company T'he BB3TTCER K~indl of Printin8 At Reasonable Prices Phone 2-8281 107 8. Miaml Ave. 6db - the Misses Reta Merson and Ger- trude Goldman. In charge of ar- rangements were Mrs. Albin Czech and Mrs. Alex Mendelson. Mrs. David L. Perlman and Mrs* Martha Bloch, house guests of Mrs. Merson, were the special guests of honor. Prize winners were Mrs. Tobias Simon, Mrs. Sadye G. Rose, Mrs. Lewis Brown and Mrs. Barney Weinkle. Acake donated by Mrs. Jacob H. Kaplan was won by Mrs. Isaac Levin. Among the guests present, in addition to the hostesses, commit- tee and prize winners, were Mes- dames Leonard Epstein, S. Drei- sen, I. J. Wasman, Julius Damen- stein, I. L. Rosendorf, S. A. Rei- nach, Walter Bishof, Jacob H. Kaplan, J. William Baros, A. L. Kahn, Si Mendelson, Irving Seigel, A. Wise and Frank Coret. The next card party of the Sis- terhood will be given at the home of Mrs. Joseph Fields at a date to be announced shortly. _4 - Miss Celia Ornstein of Atlanta, Ga., is visiting at the Marrevista Apartments, Miami Beach. Mrs. Joseph Fields is on a bus- iness trip to New York city. Little Donald Marx entertained a number of his juvenile friends in celebration of his fourth birth- day anniversary last Tuesday af. ternoon. The guests gathered at the St. David Apartments, where Donald lives, and then went to the beach. Swimming and various children's games were enjoyed by the guests. Prizes were given to the winners in the different games. On a table decorated for the event was a large birthday cake with four candles. Refresi- ments, including ice cream and cake, were served. Among those present were Rosalee Kotkin, Al- vin Abramson, Marcie Adelman, Martin Dubler, Reta Futterfass, Irvin Futterfass and Marcie Schwartz. -*- J. B. Cappleman and daughter, Dorothy, of Ocala, are visiting his son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Cappelman. Miss Cap. pelman is a senior at the Florida Stat. Con..e for 'wom... The Yeddedem Club held a so- cial gathering at the home- of its president, Mr. Israel Dock, last Wedne~sdayA~vening. Dancing wts enjoyed and during the evening refreshments were served. A wa- termelon party will be held next Sunday, July 26, at Miami Beach and according to the plans an- nounced will be one well worth attending. The next meeting of the club will be held at Kaplan Hall next Wednesday evening, July 20, at 8 o'clock, when impor- tant business matters will be diis- cussed* Spend an Enjoyable Hoar ...at the..* RIVERVI[EW TEA HOUSE~ 25 N. W. North River Drive LUNCHEONS, PRIVATE BRIDGE AND TEA PARTIES MADAME RAMONA SABELLA Serving Tea Phone 2.0798 PI r ---- s. COWN, Manaser~ II/ ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS THE JB iWISH FLORIDIAN---A ]MEDIUM OF AND FOR MIAMI JEWRY! ,July 24, 1981 Pasge ai CHALET INN OPENS ON THE BOULEVARD In announcing the opening of Chalet Inn on beautiful Biscayne boulevard at Fourteenth street, Mrs. C. R. Sherman, the proprie- tress, announces her intention of making this a meeting place for friends. Special efforts will be made and personal attention giv- en to private bridge luncheons and parties. "Make this your' rendez- vous" is the motto of the mal- agement, who wants all Miamians to feel that the Chalet Inn is their own. "PACIFIERS,, ,By means of expensive ma- chines the authorities in New York have found out everything possible about the town's noises except how to abate the~. The new member of the exty council felt very proud of himself and nodded amicably at any pas- serby whom he thought he had seen before. "Excuse me, sir," responded one man to whom he had given a par- ticularly affable bow, "but I think I saw your likeness in the pa- pers." "Er-yes, my photograph has been rather prominent lately," gushed the new member. "I thought I could tell your face again," continued the other. "And, do you know, I've tried that very same medicine for my rheuma- tism and it hasn't cured me. A New York barber has estab- lished a world's record by cutting in one hour the hair of 24 men who looked thereafter like 24 men who had their hair cut in one hour ' E~arl Carrol p wp the~ater in MAlIl STREET L;OOK(S AT BROADWAY (Continued from Page One) polishes on your shoes and makes them look like new. What 1(lit me most was that when I sat down in his chair he tucked in my shoe laces, so they wouldn't get wet, and then slipped in pieces of leather about as big as a half-sole, into the sides of my shoes, letting then stick up to protect the socks from getting stained. It was a touch of the real service one gets in this town. It's a good tip for your local shoe shiner. Boot Trees Nearly every man in New York owns one or more pairs of boot trees those chunks of wood shaped like the foot that go in the shoes when you take them off. They keep the leather from shrinking and make them look like new right up to the day you fire them into the garbage can. Of course, all women every- where keep their~ shoes on lasts when they are not being worn, but New York is probably the only place in this country where the men dse t em. In England mn hs, ev ryodev had t s them or have their shoes look like Charlie Chaplin's. NOVEL SERVICE BEGUN Unique in Miami is the service to be given absolutely free of charge to the public by Correct Time Service, Incorporated. 'When one is uncertain of the correct time and it becomes important to know whether one's watch is cor- rect the easiest way to ascertain the right time is by calling the Correct Time Service, number 2-3141, and without charge, sim- N Y k h idws mak- ing ttdandy foa a smaHlbo w o h house. Due to a misprint, bakers in the East are putting out a line of square pies. The demand was for square peas, Ithat wouldn't roll off the knife ' RADIODYNAMICS That is the word coined by John Hays Hammond, jr., and now ac- cepted by the patent office and Congress, to mean the control of a Ieogy at a distance by means of Hammond began to experiment with radiodynamics wJhen he was a student in Yale in 1909. He in- vented a method of controlling a boat on the surface of the water and a torpedo under the surface by radio impulses, as well as steering an airplane over a long course without a pilot on board. This is something quite differ- ent from transmitting power by radio.~ Only enough power can be transmitted to set a piece of ma- chinery in motion or stop it. The machinery must have its own mn- dependent power plant. The day may come when actual power can be sent through the air, but that is a long way in the future* ply by phoning, one has the exact time. The local service is maintained by Mr. Michelslen, who has been in charge of many of the com- pany's offices throughout the country, and by Mr. Sandercock, a resident of Miami for the past ten years. Similar services are being operated in Dallas, Houston and Fort Worth, Texas; Kansas City, New Orleans, Tulsa, Denver, Atlanta and many other large cities throughout the country, numbering 36 at the present time. This service is being maintained day and night fr te ben ituof urated in Miami last Wednesday and has already received the well. merited commendation of many. MOTOR EXPERTS UNITE Jack R. Millikin, previously as. sociated with the service depart. ment of the Dade Motor Service and an expert in motor repairs, and L. R. Herndon, new car in- spector with the same firm for a long time, have joined in forming the Riverside Garage at 515 S. W. Seventeenth avenue, where re. pairs and other motor service will be given the public at .prices based on present economic condi- tions. One of the special services to be given is night work without additional cost, so that one m 9 not lose the use of his car when needed. Mrs. Lena Simon, prominent in Miami communal circles and the president of the Loyalty Club, re- turned to Miami Wednesday af- ter having. spent some tlime in Norfolk, Va., and Baltimore, Md., visiting relatives and friends* It wasn't the old-time political orator that disappeared; it; was his audience. 8. DREISE~N, Jeweler Successor to L. Dloahy Established in 1924 8 Lorraine Arcade Special for July-Have Your Watch Cleshed for $1.00 THEj JEWISH FLORIDIAN HEnr JE WlISH ~ rrr are performed by the Chevra Ka- synagogue, ale pnao aonl mb F diha. dollutretdinte arsnsago ue he may become a G Q. Ae yu iterste intheme her at large by paying an an- '42] undertaker ? nual due of seven dollars and fif- Bod A. I am glad you asked this t cns and ques ioa. te uar rnt einteh este Q. Is eheresanything else you the family. That is a private mat-wollk hGraeMi ter~ ~ f t fai nd the under- A. Just this. Te rae i taer. fo thure, fmiy canes where ami Jewish Cemetery Association takS~i~fhour, n apoo caeis being conducted in the linter- then the price is agreed upon be- ests of the Jewisho rei. tween them. We insist upon the Greater Miami an do terie undertaker giving proper facili- We welcome ane tquesin rn tie for the performance of the invite the people atn u ies sh rites in accordance with meetings and acquaint themselves tra ition. of course, we ask for a with our work. WehapdpreciaC ethe donation from the undertaker af el'k Ef tes nSdb erd our unway- 62 bthen prie h mlyM ad ae un ering support to them at all dertaker. We will not and have times. We pledge clean business n not countenanced the padding of administration of the affairs of File any bills so that we may get a this association and its cemetery. Yell( donation. It is a free and volun- I may say that we have at a re- Sat tary donation and act of the un- cent meeting decided to engage a 5 n dertaker.certified public accountant who Q. Do the Chevra Kadisha will audit the accounts of the chare fo thir srvics ?Brotherhood of Clhesed Shel Emes chare fr teir ervce t and that this report will be pub- oAun Yes wo haetd heow k lished for the benefit of the pub- S fornotingbuthav ben tus arlic. We have no ax to grind. We fornohin bt aveben hu a want everything clean and hon- t alee toor aan .n Teyd c ar e est, and you may rest assured that forming the rites. In a number of this o bord will d its utos to cases, I should state, in fairness caryones ourn wonnrk nace to the men, that they are con-hoetndpnmanr fronted with the danger of con- I "Do tracting dangerous and infectious "Roug may not be deadly " diseases. The work is hard and so ssF lu l,"u ti ay far has been 1 mited toal '"t o a girl's finish." to do this work continually andl WI to about three women. Had we a large body of men and women T/ff'911/f LI-~ cia/Slb/ who would volunteer to do the WO/C/f4 ex) aee work, we might be able to save deiiu the expense. But when men are , called away from their business at 11"O//fli~i (I/ITS 1 Leav any and all hours of the day it is only fair that they receive some compensation. 1 i"".C;---` ( Q. Are there any charges for ~t r g ~C shrouds ? A. Yes. Under an agreement with the Sisterhood of Chesed etrutAot Shel Emes we pay them twenty- five dollars for every set of ujgy t e uc ss Tfo dsef eyin ntol r funerals. Iam advised that the :4 TH average cost of a set of shroud.3, AUTO LUGGAGE not counting the voluntary sew- ing, is about fourteen dollars a MNFCUESO UOTU set, so I don't think we are being CASES--REPAIRING DONE ON ALI overcharged. Q. You have a very large cem_ ALSO HAND RADI( etery, far too large for the pres- 1225 N. E. Second Avenue ent needs, why don't you surren- der part to save the interest and #*!!*#*#*3:* * *33:~t~~~t upkeep? ?I Page 6 WEST PALM BEACH ACTIVITIES Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lesser are spending the month of July at the home of Mr. Lesser's parents in Rome, Ga. Mr. Lesser is a prominent attorney here and is president of the Palm Beach Lodge of Bnai Brith. *~ Sam A. Goldstein, prominent communal worker, is now in Chi- cago and will stop at Atlanta on his return journey. He is making a combined business and pleasure trip. Fis C0Ilpsan ~9 W. Flagler Street PHONE 2-3862 pper, whole, lb....~~~~~l ow Tail, lb............----J mni M ckerel, 1...... ----........................ It~~~l Free Delivr NJDAY TUESDAY THURSDAY SATURDAY Iwn Among the ys 'ALATIAL YACHIT DORYTHAY Je Furnish Bait and Tackle Free i-COURSE LUNCHI SERVED ON BOARD, 50c e Pier No. 10 9:30 A. I Back Home 5:30 P. M. ll1 Inland W~ater Route No Seasickness ROUND TRIP FACTORY KS, SUIT AND SAMPLE L, KINDS OF LUGGAGE O CASES Phone 2-5614l ,8t8"5383$3$383$3$383$3-?~''4~ T WIN RADIO CO. NOW LOCATED IN THEIR NEW HOME TAMIA1MI HOTEL BUILDING 205 West Flagler Street AUTHORIZED DEALERS FOR R.C.A. and M~ajestic Radios The Jewish Florldian Bowhing TOWHrnment Entry Blank Please enroll me as a contestant in THE JEW- ISH FLORIDIAN BOWLING TOURNAMENT. I desire to play in the individual contest. I desire ofMaito represent the.. ........... ...~.._~~~~~ ...~~~~ ... ~~~~ Name.,.....~........ _~....._~ Telephone............................ B Mail this to P. O. Box 2973 s ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,, .. ,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,, .,,,,,,,, . . ,,, .,,,,,,, ,. L. STFIN -- FIRST, AVE. GAa eneral Auto Reara 1-423 N. W. First ocp y and Fender Work, Md Brake WService. Aut Tp attended. After the business ses- Visiting her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Irving Moss of this eity, is Miss Lillian Dave of Durham, N. C. sion a social hour was spent and refreshments were served by the hostess ' Mrs. Harry A. Lee of Lee's, Inc., returned Tuesday morning after having visited relatives and friends in New York, Pennsyl- vania and Connecticut. AN INTERVIEW (Continued from Page One) The bridge party at the home for it, to provide decent and re- of Mrs. Alexander Gordon for the benefit of Beth Israel Sisterhood was a marked success. A water- melon and ice course were served to the guests. Prizes were given for high scores. Beth Israel Sisterhood enter- tained recently with a beach sup- per at the Boynton casino. In charge of the affair, which was very well attended, were Miss Mollie Oppenheim, chairman, Mrs. O. P. Gruner, Mrs. Harry Hal- pern and Mrs. M. H. Meltz. Mrs. M. L. Pastroff entertain d a group of friends at a luncheon rvo re ntFour th eshomeco - tract bridge were in play. An ice course was served to the guests immediately after the games. At Beth Israel services last Friday night Messrs. Harry Hal- pern and Joe Schupler officiated. A joint meeting of the congre- gation and sisterhood of Beth El was held recently and final ar- rangements for the employment of a rabbi were made. Mrs. Leah Karfunkel was the hostess at a surprise birthday Fn ie e ehrreebn ck hnay ni ht A moonlight swim was enjoyed at the beach, after which a delicious supper and ice course were served. A large number of friends at- tended. Recently the United Jewish Welfare Board of the Palm Beaches has been called upon to provide for .the relief of many needy cases and so far has met all the demands made upon it. Mr. andl Mrs. Irving Moss have as their guests Mr. and Mrs. Max Ruben and children, Elinor, Mil- dred and Hyman, of Durham, N. C. The Rubens are well known here, having lived in this city for a number of years. -k- Beth El Sisterhood semi-month- ly meeting was held at the home of Mrs. John Wolf, 735 Kanuga drive, last week. It was very well spectable care of the dead and for their proper interment. Q. How much is now due on the cemetery ? A. Approximately fifteen thou- sand dollars. Q. WThat are the annual ex- penses ? A. The interest on the mort- gage, upkeep of the land, and, of course, the cost for opening and closing graves. This cost was originally only $15 per grave but it has been advanced to $25 for each grave, under a contract made by the Brotherhood of Ches- ed Shel Emes, which we are bound to respect. ha in s mam t graves do you A. Originally the officers of the Chesed Shel Emes told us we had one thousand and fifty graves, and this is what was fenced in. However, upon examination of the title, we find that we have only one thousand graves, and that we have fenced in fifty graves that belong to the cemetery company, ad n t s ane nHow any graves did the new association take title to ? A. To only seven hundred graves. The remaining three hun- dred graves were retained by the Sisterhood of Chesed Shel Emes for the express purpose of inter- ain tea ngowho can-not afford Q. Who is to pay for these three hundred graves retained by the Sisterhood ? A. Under the terms of the agree- ment between the Sisterhood and the new association, we assumed to pay for all the graves, includ- ing the Sisterhood portion though thee Sitoemood will retain the ti- Q. Will you please explain the procedure in the event of the d athtiof Jew, so far as your as- A. Gladly. The president, vice president or secretary, who con- stitute the cemetery committee are to be notified immediately This committee in turn notifies the Gabbai, or chairman, of the Chevra Kadisha. They then pro- ceed to place a guard, as required by Jewish tradition, over the body. When the time for the fu- neral is set, then the last rites A. We had that in mind, but ohoedn oweC ound Shat the sB oh r terred the dead in every part of the cemetery we realized that it had been made impossible for us to do anything but keep the whole section, even though the cost was high. Q. At the end of a year the Brotherhood of Chesed Shel Emes will have no representation; why? A. Very simply because of the fact that the brotherhood is not now functioning and by the end of a year will have been out of existence. Their original members are now and have been for years members of the different syna- gogues, and may ente ras individ- ual members if they desire with- out affiliation with any syna- gogue. Q. What does membership en- title one to ? A. It entitles one to interment in the event of a death in his family o a dependent under the Q. Who may become members ? A. Any Jew or unmarried Jew- ess over the age of 18, of good mondl chameta r. Ifa nmn r of ""* *l Twmn Radio Co. E. D. MERLIN I T FLORIDIAN I FOR DEMONSTRATION Phone 2-4171 205 W st FIalrSre THE JEWISH FLORIDIAN--A MDU A la ynaogu ad paid o yteI I~ I 111 ---' A I |
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| MILLISECOND | CLASS.METHOD | MESSAGE |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Application State validated or built |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Navigation Object created from URI query string |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.display_item | Retrieving item or group information |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | Retrieving hierarchy information |
| 0 | sobekcm_assistant.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | Found item aggregation on local cache |
| 0 | item_aggregation_builder.get_item_aggregation | Found 'all' item aggregation in cache |
| 0 | system.web.ui.page.page_load (ufdc.page_load) | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor.on_page_load | |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_style_references | Adding style references to HTML |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Reading the text from the file and echoing back to the output stream |
| 39 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |