� :'�- \. THE CANADIAN JEWISH REVIEW Coolly planned to ret* lightly on your figure. UGNE LELONG FOtfNPATIONf AN� we EITS COiSET SHOPPE Reg'd. 5439 PARK AVL CA. S648 FLATTERING MODELS FOR THE MOTHER TO-BE, COMBINING COMFORT AND GRACE. HD.G. KOSHER MEAT MARKET V � s- 9 Fresh Killed Broilers MEAT DELIVERED TO TOUR COUNTRY HOME PACKED IN DRY ICE SPECIALTY: CAMP AND HOTEL SUPPLIES $343 Shcrbrooke W. DE. 8494 � TW Canadian Jewish Review is the only Jewish publication in Canada to �nJ lanjrnaje reaching the Jewish community which ta to claim membership in the Audit Baraaa of Circulations. CLASS IN COOKERY PINEAPPLE FILLED CAKE one-half pound butter two squares melted bitter three-quarters cup sugar chocolate one beaten egg three tablespoons brandy one and one-half cups flour Cream butter and sugar, add egg, then chocolate and brandy, and flour at the last. Place bowl with dough in refrigerator for one-half hour. Take about three-quarters of this mixture, and pat it down in a greased eight-by-twelve-or-thirteen-inch pan; then pour in filling, and roll the rest of the dough in strips, laying them across the top of the rilling. Bake in a medium oven, of about 300 to 325 degrees, for twenty minutes. Filling Mix together: One tin of crushed pineapple with four tablespoons flour; two beaten eggs, and one cup of sugar, and beat well. Mrs. Juliiu E. Weiser, 1132 St. Vicrteur Street West, Montreal. SPINACH PATTIES one pound spinach two eggs matzah meal salt dash of pepper Boil spinach for ten minutes, strain, mash well, beat and add two eggs, matxbh meal to make thick, salt, and pepper. Grease pan well, putting under broiler, When warm drop spinach with, spoon, and pat down into patties. Brown on hteth sides. Mrs. Charles LLbman, 51 Crang Avenue, Toronto. Refugee, Now Canadian, Goes Back To Help Needy Youngsters Mrs. Elsa Margo. has been happy in Canada since she first came here from Germany a few months before the war broke out She has served this country during the war and is proud of the citizenship papers which she has received from Ottawa. Now she will be going back as a Canadian in the service of the Canadian Jewish Congress. She will be attached, like 110 other trained and experienced workers, to the.staff of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee with its European headquarters in Paris. She hopes that her work will be with children and that her nursing experience will be utilised. A native of the Danzig Corridor, I N A D M UNLIMITED ~ ENERGY TO BURN Moke sure your children get at least a quart of milk every day. It quickly restores the energy they burn up at school and play. It gives them the needed elements also which they require to build sound teeth and strong bones. Adults should take at least a pint daily. Elmhurst Dairy Limited DE. 8401 Montreal Acme Fanners Dairy Limited MI. 3541 Toronto The Producers Dairy Limited 2-4281 Ottawa Crescent Creamery Co. Limited 37-101 Winnipeg she had begun to study nursing in a Red Cross Hospital in Berlin. After she married a young lawyer and notary she made her home in Essen on the Ruhr. She recalls the days after the last World War when inflation of the market and the black market brought great suffering to Germany. She was then a voluntary worker with the American Quakers in* Essen, assisted at children's clinics and helped to distribute milk to the undernourished. Hitler was already on the march, but as she recalls it now, it seems strange to her that no one took him seriously and counted on the basic good sense and decency of the German people as a protection against his ambitions. Mrs. Margo remembers a visit fo -% * . ^:~� *.-.-_ ^- . only a few months before war broke out and soon after they entered the Department of National War Services where their knowledge of English, French, German and Dutch proved very useful. One of the treasured possessions which she managed to get out of Germany is an old Scroll of the Law, a handwritten Pentateuch on parchment which the grandfather of Mr. Mergo had had written in his home more than a century ago in accordance with Jewish tradition. The Tol searched their home just before they left but a Christian friend of Mrs. Margo sat on the box holding the Scroll and its silver ornaments and flirted with the agent She diverted his attention from, the ewe and the aacnd Gnat BMtJPs A Tritwt*. By W. �. MAY 16TH, 1921, be stood in a small, dingy room in the Medical Building of the Uaiveraty of Toronto, a self-�ppotnted geeber, untttled, unpaid, b�t gaitained by a conviction that he on the track of a great discovery. instruments to provide funds for stake in Banting's grim race to his living costs. He believed he had the key to the dread riddle of diabetes, a disease that h*A KftfrU^ Tp^dical science His name was Frederick Grant , Canadian Suryusi, and he had told fail office fttfaitare and since the dawn of history. Medical opinion was skeptical, but physiologists *r>H biochemists their efforts and soon the) r was whispered in hospitals and perfect Insulin in time. The rest is history, as is the fact that Sir Frederick Grant Banting died as he had lived�in the service of his country and of humanity. Today, 25 years after his discovery, his work has saved uncounted thousands of lives, and the, story of Toronto has ditoo&rtd it treatment for ttiafrefer". over the conti- Omrf* * diabetics came to vW^^^^^^^^^^^L^^ Sm_^^^^^^^^^k^Bk ^Bi^BS^^M^^B^^B^sV A UVeBvOw O0DBDK BBBBH hope, their v�y tirtss at become a glowing example and an inspiration to all Canadians . . . giving as an assurance of an ever-increasing measure of health and prosperity in the Canada Unlimited of the future. Jewish comm in 1 acts would not be as extreme and as cntel as he had forewarned, But the Nasi poison was at work and by 1935 the Margos were beginning to feel the discomforts of the totalitarian state. Their friends began to look the other way tjhen they met them on the street and hesitated to meet with them socially because they were Jews. Mr. Mar-go's practice fell off under the tightening boycott and rocks were thrown into their home. Only two or three of their closest friends remained loyal and one of them later even helped to smuggle some of their possessions out of the country after they had emigrated. The Margos moved to Berlin where she entered the physiotherapy school and clinic of Dr. Ernest Bergman, now professor at New York University. Patients from all over the world came there, including Hollywood actors and the French ambassador to Berlin. By 1938 persecution in Germany became intensified. The clinic closed and Dr. Bergman emigrated, Mrs. Margo began to look for ways of quitting the country. She studied English at a special school for prospective emigrants where technicians were taught UM terms of their trades in other countries. The ORT gave courses on vocational training and those who hoped to reach Palestine ware taught Hebrew aad the traditions of the Holy Land. Later in the year Mrs. Margo was enabled to go to Bagiand to arrange for her earigraUop. bat her plan from the befiaaiag was to get to Canada, Her taterest in ^M�^H^^S>^B^ ^^^M-A ^^^fc*^^aeV__J t^_ ._. cuuauy was wwwea 07 a utian iliiaietij atawsat sae in Bertia. Iw* atove aD feh fotvftrtvly that tfct Nad to tae borders ef scRsght to get ae far away as pee- sfble aad reft taat tae not toe wife U No part of ^?*V/?V < ^**�Ti5f>* � A BOUQUET OF BLENDED PERFECTION Grotroso Olhrsj OU Corp. .'& "-<* tot- smilk, flave>rias "JUN1 to Csaaea wtth her h