Page Eight
JEWISH WESTERN BULLETIN
Friday, October 12, 1962
(TSVfSHN UNZ AMIIN) By LAZAR
Here and there—Among things doing this coming week in the community are the visit of Ben Lax to Vancouver as B.I. guest speaker at a joint Men's Club-Sisierhood banquet this Wednesday eve. . . The Chug Ivxi meets this Thursday evening at Dr. and Mrs. Leon Komar's home, 4850 Hudson St., RE 1-2803, commencing 8.30 p.m. Everyone who wishes to be a part of a Hebrew speaking circle is cordially invited to turn out for a stimulating time. . . Talk of the town are the color-schemes of the main floor men's and women's rest-rooms (you should excuse the expression) at the New Centre. The women's is a dazzling combination of tangerine and tan while men are basking in the beauty of a sort of mauve-gray combination that is toto good to restrict to such accommodations,
* * *
Life in Ihe glass-encased office wing is beginning to settle a bit down to normal these days in the new building, but office worke':-s one and all have learned what a goldfish feels like. . . You just have to be caught working these days and every little personal scratch or twitch becomes a public manifestation . . . When oh when will draperies descend to
mellow the scene?
* * *
Wilh just a couple of days to
go Bulletin readers are still able to rush to their nearby delicatessen to pick up a couple of tickets for the hilarious Yiddish-Ameri-
CLASSIFIED
PAINTING — DECORATING
—Brush or Spray. Interior and exterior. Paper hanging, furniture, etc. Roxatoned. Free estimate. Call MARVIN VIRSTUK. Phone RE. 3-9256.
can movie, "Catskill Honeymoon." The movie promises to be the talk of the town, so bo sure not to miss it. . . By the way for all of you who have been enquiring about who designed those cute posters appearing in store windows it was none other than Cindy Zimmerman, daugli-ter of Anne and Lou.
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Our sincere apologies: Inadvertently omitted by the Bulletin reporter from the list of notables participating in the N.C.J.W. presentation "Songs of the Shtell" was the name of the very capable and accomplished pianist, Mrs. Muriel Morris.
Postscripi—Seen at a local Synagogue during the High Holydays was a gentleman who was listening to his transistor radio with earphones. Could it be he was tuned in to some other Yiskor service—or was it the World Series?
MRS. MATTHEW WATERMAN MRS. HARRY CRAMER
MRS. MYER GOLDBERG
Pictured here are the three Hadassah ladies who spearheaded the Photo Contest promotion, an exciting feature of this year's Hadassah Bazaar.
handicrafts, entertainment and displays, and all under one roof, October 2?,and 24 at the PNE Showmart "Builiding! ->
Don't miss it. — S. K.
APPOINTED SUn&Z
MONTOEAL—H a r r y Wais-berg, Q.C., of Sudbury, .Ontario, has beenaiamed Junior Judge of York Comity, iilling the vacancy created by the death of the late Samuel Factor. Mr. Waisberg is a member of the Central Region Joint Community Relations Committee, the National Council of Congress and has been an various other cominittees of Cana-
HAPASSAH BAZAAR HMHUflffS
Excitement mounts as news of to mention but a feW, They are
also featuring a "Country Far", a "little bit of everything/' as Elizabeth Zacks tells it, "from doilies to all kinds of fancy handicrafts."
M. S4MCOFF
Sales Help Wanted Male
' GOOD INCOME
■\Ve need a commission salesman to handle oiir leruaranteed electric bulbs, and fluorescent tube and fixtures. Here is a top 20 per cent commission proposition offering you a real chance to establish your own clientele. All samples and sales literature provided. Car necessary. V^'rite or ■wire to-day to Artliur Underwood, Sales Manag-er, Dominion I^igliting Corpoi-ation. P.O. Box 782, Hamilton, Ontario.
Lou Sims
Pork Barber Shop
[Personalized Service with a Smile. '3365 Cambie TR 4-3954Lj
TYPEWRITERS
RENT with option to purchase fi'orn the most modern stock of TTPEWBITEBS in the Citv $7.50 per month — 3 months $18.00
FREE DEIiIVEST Boyal Typewriter Co. Iitd. 1900 West Broadway. BEg-ent 8-7131— Lots of Parking- S'pace
J. B. Newall Monuments
Hebrew InscrlptiouB our Specialty
Established 1909
Personal attention paid to ALL ORDERS
Praser and 35th Ave. PA- 7-1312
Your used and unwanted
M. Simcoff celebrates 75\h birthday
The family of Mr. Marks "Mendel" Simcoff gathered at the Delmar restaurant last Sunday evening to celebrate Mr. Simcoff's 75 birthday. Born in Sevastopol, Mr. Simcoff came to Canada in 1908 and took up residence in Winnipeg, where he worked for the C.N.R. as a sheet metal worker for 55 years.
Upon retirement from the C.N.R. ten years ago, Mr. Simcoff moved to Vancouver, and resides at 1012 Richelieu.
Visiting the offices of The Bulletin this week, Mr. Simcoff said that when he retired from the C.N.R. in 1952 he vowed that he would make a number of worthwhile contributions to Jewish causes when he reached his seventy-fifth birthday.
Fulfilling his oath, Mr. Simcoff this week presented The Bulletin with cheques for $75 each to be forwarded to the following Jewish institutions:
New Jewish Community Centre Building Fund, Vancouver Jewish Home for the Aged, Histadrut, United Jewish Appeal, Vancouver Feretz School and Canadian Jewish Weekly, Toronto. In addition he contri-
articles are for many people ^uted $25 to the IKUF Jewish
cultural organization marking its 25th anniversary.
--— — ————— -^m. V .XA&M&A^ ^^^VK'XX
vitally imporfanf
Your donation of clothing, bedding, furniture, dishes, pots, pans and other kinds of household goods will assist us to help the less fortunate. Simply Call
MU 2-3161 Our truck will pick up every still usable item at your door. May God bless you. St. VINCENT de PAUL SALVAGE BUREAU Catholic Charities Bldg. basement rear 150 Robson St.
latest developments on the Bazaar Front reaches the press Anita Waterman and Vera Cramer have been two very, very busy gals indeed, arranging thi«; most fabulous promotion, and here it is.
A Hadassah Amateur Photo Conlesi. Grand Prize? — a trip to anywhere in America, courtesy Trans Canada Airlines — so that your choice of city is limited to something like any one of twenty fascinating cities on this continent: Miami? New York? Montreal? Washington? What a decision!
The other six (yes, 6) prizes? (all courtesy of Mortifee-Mun-shaw) are listed elsewhere in this issue, and include such wonderful items as a Durst enlarger^ 35mm complete with necessary supplies, both a color movie camera and a black and white movie camera, etc. Please see Hadassah's full page ad for details.
Are you still with us? The judges are a most distinguished group of gentlemen in journalism, photography and l-elated fields. They include: Jack Ham-bleton, president of the Art Director's Club; Al Kipnis, president of Graphic Industries; Himie Ko-shevoy, feature writer for the Vancouver Province; John Gerald, of Mortifee-Munshaw: and Charles Werner, head photographer for the Vancouver Sun.
Their final choices w^ill be based on originality, technical excellence and human appeal. So start clicking. Submit a photo of eny subject, be it the maje.stic serenity of a snow-capped Mt. Seymour slope, your toothless six-year-old, that delightful shot of your playful kitten, or even you, dwarfed by the Eiffel Tower. You may enter as many photos as you wish, and it's only $1.00 for each entry. The contest begins now, and ends at midnight on Nov. 15. Submit your entries to Hadassah Amateur Photo Contest, P.O. Box 3030, The Vancouver Sun.
We wish to add that all monies raised by this project are spent in Canada, for the purchase | of wheat, lumber, salmon and medical supplies.
Mortifee-Munshaw. Trans Canada Airlines and the Vancouver Sun have worked hand in hand with our Anita Waterman and
Brina Brail, of Herzlia, reports that her chapter is busily preparing dishes for the Delicatessen Carousel, among them, sauerkraut. If you can just con- _ . , ^
tain yourself till Bazaar time, d^an Jewish Congress.
imagine this treat with the corned beef sandwiches of the Ben Zvi's. Esther Gray of Ben Zvi. suggests her girls are going from one extreme to the other, from hot soup, a first in the food line this year, to an ice cream booth, just what the children will be looking for.
Donuts and coffee, anyone? Fish and chips? The former are offered by the Menorah chapter, to dunk or take home. Dora Brandes tells us these girls also have a novel: "Holiday Booth," complete with Chanuka Stars, Christmas wreaths and colored poodles, good for any holiday. The fish and chips are served courtesy of the Hadassim chapter, and Sara Sidenberg assures us this, too, is a new addition to the food booths.
Such a variety of foods and
Yours
For The Offering Exclusive Ookridge
(1) 6169 Filemlin—7 on 1— Brand niew contemporary 8 or 5 bdrms. Landscaped. Open Sat. 1-3 & nightly 7-9.
(2) 6636 Asji—The best buy in Oakridge and under $30,000. 3 bedrms. & den VACANT — Absolutely MUST BE SOLD. OPEN SAT 1-3.
(3) 6575 Tisdall. Luxurious 4 or 5 bedrm. mansion. Perfect for entertaining. Will sell $10,000 below replacement cost, VACANT.
Above honnes shown at anytime or Q^il Virginia Friswold FA 1-9269.
KER & KER LTD. 811 W. Pender St. MU 1-3243
Celebrating the happy simcha Vera Cramer to make such a
were Mr. Simcoff's children and grandchildren daughters and sons-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Hymie (Ethel) Barad, Mr. and Mrs. Max (Susie) Dodek and Mr. and Mrs. submit a photo now! Louis (Bella) Bevan, and families; a son, George Simpson, of
wonderful contest possible. It is open to any and all Amateur photographers. So, just for fun, and. plenty of valuable prizes,
And here's more Chapter
Victoria; a daughter and son-in-1 "^^s. Lillian Freiman. the Kap-law, Mr. and Mrs. Henry (Elsie)' tivating Kaptains of the Kitchen Oliver, Victoria: and a son and \ (o^'') ^^ve been preparing such daughter-in-law Mr. and Mrs. I clelectible items as gefilte fish,
This Sunday, Oct. 14
THE HABONIM ZIONIST SOCIETY PRESENTS ...
★ 14 Top Song Hits!
m$mi
now OTP
STARRING JAN BART JULIUS ADLER BAS SHEVA
^ Laugh Pocked
Morris Simcoff of Winnipeg and, cheese blintzes, sweet and sour j families. j meat balls, and cheese knishes, i IL
Yiddish-American Full-length movie, plus selected short "Bar Mitzvah"
HOLLYWOOD THEATRE
(near Lindy's) Two performances
3125 West Broadway commencing ct 7:30 p.m.
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT DOOR OR AT . . .
Safe's Delicatessen, Granville and 41st Avenue Pheasant BelicatesBen, 4030 Canil>ie Street Iiindy's Pellcatessen, 3211 West Broadway Bnbin's Pellcatessen. 974 Gtanville Street Max's Delicatessen, 3150 Oak Street Cambie Flaza Delicatessen. 5556 Cambie Street Swartz's BXeat. 3170 Oak Street Oakridge Drug's, Oak and 4lEt Avenue Triang-le Restaurant. 302 W. Cordova
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