Friday, Septarakoor 24, 947
THE JEWISH NEWS
Page eighteen
grandchildren
grandchild.
•
Obituaries
LEAH WERBE, 84, of 35.0wen
Ave., died Sept. 20. Dr. A. M.
Hershman officiated at funeral
services at Lewis Bros. Memorial
Chapel. Burial was at Mach-
pelah Cemetery. She is survived
by her daughters, Isabelle, Eva,
Mrs. Said Rothenberg; a son,
Alex; a sister, Adel, and -brothers
David and Raub.
*
•
ABRAHAM •LIBER, 47, of 3289
Monterey, died Sept. 18. Funeral
services were held at Lewis Bros.
Meinorial Chapel with Rabbi
Sperka and Cantor Adler officiat-
ing. Burial was at Bnai David
Cemetery. • He leaves his wife,
Mollie; a daughter, Vivian, and
a brother, Sam, of Toledo.
* * • .
MAURICE H. SOBELL, 59, of
1940 Lincolnshire, died Sept. 19.
Dr. B. Benedict Glazer and Rabbi
Rosenwasser officiated at funeral
services at Lewis Bros. Inter-
ment was •at White Chapel Cenie-
tery. A civil engineer,- Sobell-
was an active worker for the
Fresh Air Camp, a member of
the Probus Club and of the
Masonic Order Shrine. and Con-
sistory. He is survived by his
wife, Frances; sons Henry and
Frank; sisters, Ida and. Mrs.
g.irah May of New York City.
* * *
•
and one great
•
JOSE4PH livIIKOFSICY, 64, 2626
Pasadena, - died Sept. 17. Services
were held at. Kaufman Chapel
with Rabbi • Adler officiating. He ,
leaves his wife, Minnie; one son,
Bernard, of Kent, O. two daugh-
ters, Mrs. Allen Charlip and Mrs.
Hyman Horenstein: one sister,
Mrs. Louis Appel of New York.
Interment was at Machpelah
Cemetery.
« * *
GUS TENENBERG, 65, of 1412
Chase Ave., Chicago, died Sept.
10. He leaves his wife, Fanny;
five sons, Joseph, of Detroit, Ben,
Louis:. Willard -and Lester of
Chicago, and five grandchildren.
Interment was- at Rosemont
Cemetery.
FANNIE SILBER, 70, died
• * *
Sept. • 18. Funeral services were
SOPHIE SCHERR, 71, of 1545 held at the Hebrew Benevolent
Calvert, died Sept. 10. Funeral Society, with interment at He-
services were held at the Hebrew brew Memorial Park. ....Rabbi
Benevolent Society, with inter- Stollman officiated. She is sur-
ment at Beth Tefilah Cemetery. vived by her husband, Myer; her
She is survived by her husband, brother, Abraham Yormofsky, of
Joseph, her sons, Jack, Abraham N. Y., sisters, Mrs. I. Kulinsky,
and Dave, and daughters, Mrs. Miss Ruth Silber, of Detroit, and
Bessie Rochlin and Mrs.. Ruth Mrs. M. Seltzer of Brooklyn,
N. Y.
Wolfson.
-
• • •
BENJAMIN ELKIN, 58,
MRS. SARAH HILLMAN, 69,
died Sept. 20. Funeral services died Sept 10. : Funeral services
were held at the Hebrew Ben-• were held at the Hebrew - Ben-
evolent Society, with interment evolent Society, with interment
at Hebrew Memorial Park. Rab- at Hebrew Memorial Park. Rabbi
bi Robinovitz officiated.. She is Wohlgelernter officiated. He • is
survived by her sons, Charles, survived by his wife Lena; a
Peter, Harry, and Alex; daugh- son, Saul, and daughters, Mrs.
ters, Mrs. Dorothy Schechter, Rose Farber and Mrs. Betty
Mrs. Bessie Dorchen and Mrs. Utchenick.
Anna K o r m a n; twenty-four
(Continued on Page 19)
Jewish Ne-ws Thanks Readers
For Praise on Holiday Issue
The Jewish News is grateful to many of its. readers -who-
have taken the trouble to write us in commendation of the
contents• and make-up of oUr special New Year edition. We
regret that the con-miunications were too .numerous to b _ e_
published. •
We are especially gratified to learn that our readers have
noticed that in our - 76-page - issue there was not a single story-
that required continuation on another page.
. The Jewish News is especially-grateful to Mr. Malcolm W.
Bingay, editorial director of the Detroit- Free. Press for the-
following complimentary note:
• "I have read carefully the splendid 76-page New Year's -
issue of your Jewish News. I find it to' be a magnificent
typographical job.
"It is well balanced in the placement of your art and
the heads do not clash on any page because there is snob a
fine shading of just the right type faces."
CUSTOM BUILT LAMPS
Vases, urns, pitchers, flasks, candle sticks, figurines, statuary
and .other' keepsakes converted into artistic table lamps.
Oil lamps electrified.
LAMP SHADES MADE
LAMPS MODERNIZED,
- AND RECOVERED
REVAIRtt,D & REFINISHED
Old style floor lamps made Custom made and recovered.
Styled to your lamp. Large
into indirect lamps and
stock on display.
torcheres.
PICKUP AND DELIVERY ALL PARTS OF DETROIT
E OF ,LAMPS
16841 Livernois Ave.,
Phone UN. 2-8338
•
Mrs. Williams couldn't be-
lieve that this was the Edison
man, come to replace a burned-
out fuse. Why, she had reported her electrical
trouBle only twenty minutes before.
If Mrs. Williams were to visit Edison's Customer
Service Switchboard, she'd understand better
how such promptness is possible. Here, at the
nerve-center of the Edison system, clerks write
up incoming requests for service, pass them on a
conveyor belt to a control table, where a large
illuminated map of the city stands. . The requests
are sorted geographically, routed on another
belt to a staff of 'dispatchers who are in almost
constant touch with servicemen in the field.
With such a system it's no wonder that most
customers' calls are relayed to a serviceman in
their neighborhood within a matter of minutes.
TrIlE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY
Y2 Block South of Six Mile
Open Wed. & Fri. to 9 Fe M.
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September 26, 1947 - Image 18
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- Publication:
- The Detroit Jewish News, 1947-09-26
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