TIM CAN AMAH JEWISH- fftYU.W
T� ?���<� ffnor*i* �torf V.D,
'BTTS be quite frank.
When you read-as you probably did during the part few months-sole than 900*000 people ia Canada rphitts, what was your seeoion? Did you say, 'That's too bad; something shoukl be done about it", and then turn to the oaoac page? Chances are you did.
But if that article had told you that Tommy Jones, the lad who used to mow your lawn after school, had syphilis�how would yon have felt about it? O that the young couple who built that cute house in the next block, had just lost a baby through syphflst. * ..would that have made you stop aadthtak?
Or, if you suddenly discovered that ymf Mar - - .. .No? That couldn't happen? But k c**. And it docs ... to hnadnads of Tommies and Marys cverjr year, right here in Canada. light in your community. You'll
j it I
1944
never read articles like that, of coursci for these are the personal tragedies that people bear in silence.
So, when yon pick up the paper sometime and teed, " . . . there were WHO new VOsMAi PtSlASi cases reported in this province last year . . .", remember I These are not cold figures. They represent 5,000 ;hean-breaking... heart-aching situations.
Yes, VavMtiftl DBfASt is a serious problem. It's a problem for parent*; for taxpayers; for young peopk on the threshold of life; for everyone.
Vfjasjiiii ptSlASl need never strike if we all do our part. If we know the facts. If we use these fscfs to advantage. If we don't shrug our shoulders and say, "This couldn't happen to anyone in my family."
You have a duty to your family and tike
ununity.
LEARN THE FACTS!
��*�
Ann, aged six, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, M. Coh*ft, 6208 Dulou Avenue, Montreal; grandchild of the late Mr. and Mrs. A. Sehnisman, of Odessa, Roasia; and of Mr. and Mrs, B. Cohen, Mapkwood Avenue.
�W. Gor*mMitch�U.
Mrs, R. Grnman and son, Samuel Lawrence, aged one year when the picture was taken, now nineteen months old, 742 Dmvaar Avenue, Montreal; grandson of Mr. and Mrs. R. Coreahlttm, of Leth-bridge, AHa,; and of Mr. and Mrs. A. Truman, 742 Davaar Avenue.
cowrriui 27 YIAIS
A fsgui* to high-tight o&ty cofltutnoi
UGNELELONG
AND
fl.'/t r i
FOUNDATION! COMflETE HANOI Of
Mme. A. Courval
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. . PL. t4MV . . . Pt. 0507 . . . . TA, 00* . CM. 4TIT
^ka^a s^^at^aaiMa^s^aB SkmtBSB^msaa^ssBi^^a^aa
on Bocron numssusTiufi*
Mra. Aaron C. Gddemblatt and children, David, aged four, and EWnor, seven, 745* Querbes Avenue, Mont, real; graitdehil-dren of Mr. and Mra. M. Dei I In, 6417 Bsplanadc Avenue; and of the late Mr. and Mrs. H y m a n Goldenbtatt, of Montreal
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Married 70 Years, Gives Rules For
ing by wife's I
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Art To>Ui. Gallery
Saamel H. Kress, of New York, has given to the United States a targe new eellsetka of rare HaL ian art, including some ef the
and sculpture in America, it was announced at Washington by Da-
vid X. titaal The than National
ef the Na-
with many world-
gift ia the third large itrees donation to the National Gallery and win aagssent the Kress eoUeetiOD of ItnUnn pedntiiifs preeettted to the cattery at the time of its opening:. In
July, W4, the gave one of the
fes ssT Frenen paintings ever senm. Mr. FiaJay
heaaive in the by the four lemdinc lections ia Floreaee, and Berlin.
nocnnie serv
Mam
any
theNa-of Ital-
___compre-
rivaled only eei-London, Paris
snalmssry wHh sair graadehfldren their _
In n large ball of the Society for the AJianrsnsstit of Judaism, at 16 West Bigfcty-elxth Street, where a grandson, Ira Bissnstein, is a rabbi, the eeapie were hen �ored ay their descendants in a round of toasts, spmrhss, prayers, songs, langhter and tears.
Mrs. Eisenstein is now eighty-nine years old, her husband ninety.
rtl
ORY80NOS
of nil was bom in New York,
the Mack movraiBs; which draped the city's bafldia�s the day of Abraham Lteeeia's fumeral . . . the first essetrle Usjhta on Broadway ... the great stinsrd.
As for Mr. IFIamislaia, who eaats from Pulaad ia 1B72. when he was eithtMn years eld, his auad is fiBed not eady wtth sasnv-ories of those early days but with Bkoaories of the history of Judaism. Ia 1889 he retired from shirt
______-^- ^- - �----A.^ *-� * -fc^^ 1�J^
BuA^KDIsVCvD^^DiK wO QsWOBB BAB m^
to tfholfirahine, f**^ ri'K^ that time he has translated many
lissssl ^ssmmVlEmV 4^mfcA RessssslMBSsT ss^sssl'
lished a tsn-volame Jewish etopedia* CuiissUlf he is at work on the traaehrtinti, romparlansi aad
and Jewish provena, says the New York Herald Tribune,
pfiAi Fissiistiiiii. dminc the formal cfrsatnsiiss, paid partieidar tribute to the influence of his grandparents' loaf mfsacrifs upon the psyeholocieaT weO-beinc , of
their Jewisa
and said that si Amer to the ai
congratulatory letter from Senator Robert F. Wagner, for whom Pi i vats Pmlia Levy, a
down to the present and into the future, "la my opinion/* he said, read-
He also gave his evity: "Marry twenty; eat snJohiag, hard playing; no long sitting at or movies except at the afternoon once a weak; to at 9tSO p^n. and up at i: be an optfanmt and tan; above all, be believe in the immortality souL"
In a short meamite n Rabbi BttTnftiti". his _ said: "I give thanks to God that Grandpa and I can spend ear e|4 age together."
An honored truest at the ease-bration was Lei survivor of the ding in 1674. and Mrs. Ida
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^m
�*^s
_;-^-.>-;.
of
tiaeaix
r ^^^�^�^�^��
kept at home.
Only one flaw marked the- ee-caaion for the couple, wm> five at 15 Fort WaakiaeW Avene. Hr,
on a
did
If Us
they eeald hear hia vuk% eh the words of tae smshU: Irvine, the Kving, he aant that, as I de Una day; ~ to the -� ' ^* the tn
ftve, arc tne dren esT Mr. Mrs.M. Vb
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