14

Obituaries

Services for MISS SELMA
RILL RESSLER, 2449 W. Euclid,
who died suddenly Aug. 2, were
held Thursday, Aug. 4, at 11 a.m.
from Temple Beth El. Miss
Ressler was the daughter of the
late Isadore Ressler, well known
Detroit artist, and the late Mrs.
Ressler. She was active in num-
erous charitable campaigns as
well as in Red Cross work. She
is survived by two sisters, Hilde
and Helen, and two brothers,
Herbert and Albert.
* * *
UOLDSCHIvIIDT, 1676
Gladstone, died July 25. Services
were held at Kaufman Chapel
witth Rabbi Paneth officiating.
He leaves one son, Richard; one
daughter, Onny Goldsmith; two
brothers, Morris and Rev. A. M.
Goldsmith of Massachusetts; one
sister, Mrs. Rosa Zukerman of
New York- Interment, Mach-
pelah Cemetery.
* * *
JACOB LEVINE, 84, of 3204
Gladstone, died July 29. Ser-
vices were held at Kaufman
Chapel with Rabbi Leon Fram,
Rabbi Leizer Levine and Cantor
Robert Tulman officiating. He
leaves his wife, Freda; two sons,
Morris and Reuben; one daugh-
ter, Ida; two grandchildren, and
one sister, Mrs. Martha Schul-
man- Interment, Nusach Harie
Cemetery.

*

* *

LIBBE MILSTEIN, 2545 High-
land, died July 30. Services were
held at Kaufman Chapel, with -
Rabbi Hershman officiating. She
leaves two sons, Nathan and
Myron; five daughters, Ruth,
Mrs. George Kolb; Mrs- Harry
Berman, Mrs. Harry S. Cohen
and Mrs. Barney Shuman. Inter-
ment, Beth Tefilo Emanuel
Cemetery.
* * *
IRVING SCHUTZMAN, 57, of
9626 Martindale, died July 31.
Dr. A. M. Hershman officiated
at funeral services at Lewis Bros.
Burial, Clover Hill Memorial
Park. He is survived by his wife,
Bessie; daughters, Mrs. . Samuel
Litt, Mrs. Herbert Targum and
Yetta; a son, Arthur; brothers,
Dr. Benjamin and : = Jack, and
sisters, Sylvia and Faye.
* * *
BEN BERCOWITZ, 60, of 3726
Longfellow, died July 29. Funeral
services were held at Lewis
Bros. with Rabbi H. RosenWasser
officiating. Burial, Clover Hill
Memorial Park. He leaves his
wife, Belle; sisters, Rose Cole of
San Francisco, Pearl Lichtman
and Marie Rabinowitz.
* • *
BENI WALLACH, 86, of 2060
W. Philadelphia, died July 27.
Services were held at Hebrew
Benevolent Society. Interment,
Cemetery of Congregation Beth-
Abraham. Rabbi Joseph Thumin
officiated. He is survived by his
sons, Milton and Maxwell, his
daughter, Mrs. Rose Youdel-
baum, three grandchildren and
one great-grandchild.
* * *
MORRIS BLOOM, 75, of 2667
Elmhurst, died July 27. Funeral
services were held at Hebrew
Benevolent Society with inter-
ment at the Cemetery of Con-
gregation Beth Tefilah. Rabbi
Isaac Lawton officiated. He is
survived by his wife, Lena, his
sons, Joe of California, and Pin-
chos, his daughters, Mrs. Sarah
Woloshin, of New Jersey, Mrs.
Bernice Rosen, 12 grandchildren
and a sister.

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MRS. IDA YAWER, 89, of 3740
Tuxedo, died July 26. Funeral
services were held at Hebrew
Benevolent Society. Rabbi Isaac
Stollman officiated. She is sur-
vived by her sons, Sol and Sam
Strager; daughters, Mrs. Molly
Bohn, Mrs. Yetta Rucker; 18
grandchildren, and 28 great
grandchildren.
* * *
BENJAMIN ARONSON, 69, of
3846 Humphrey, died July 25.
Funeral services were held at
Hebrew Benevolent Society.
Rabbis Wohlgerlernter and
Wasserman officiated. He is sur-
vived by his sons, Louis, Max
and Hymie, and five grandchil-
dren.
* * *
MRS. SARAH DEBORAH
RING, 90, of Jewish Home for
Aged, died July 28. Rabbi Leo
Goldman officiated. Funeral
services were held at Hebrew
Benevolent Society. ‘She is sur-
vived by her sons, Harry and
Julius; her daughter, Mrs. Anne
Katzman, 12 grandchildren, and
.12 great-grandchildren.
* * *
Word has reached Detroit of
the death of MAX SOBEL, 52, of
New York City. He is survived
by his wife, Minnie; sons, Mor-
ton, William and Frank; his
mother, Mrs. Antoinette Sobel;
brothers, James and David of
Detroit and Murray of Los An-
geles, and a sister, Mrs. Morris
Reichner of New York.
* * *
MRS. ROSE SHEREFKIN, 57,
of 3316 Fullerton, died Tuesday.
Services were held at Kaufman
Chapel Tuesday. Burial, Mach-
pelah. Surviving are a son, Da-
vid; three daughters, Anne, Mrs.
Ida Schneider and Mrs. Sara
Levy-

Brevities

Auditions for "YOUNG ADULT
GUILD" SHOWS are being
planned. Young adults, 15 to 22
who feel that they have individ-
ual talent or have a novelty act
suitable for a musical show or a
teen-age cabaret floor show, may
contact Beverly Goldfine, TO.
9-1178 or TO. 6-4885, for further
information and audition ap-
pointments.
* * *
BODZIN FAMILY CLUB will
meet at the home of Mr, and
Mrs. Harry Bodzin of Calvert
Ave. to plan the annual picnic
and election of -officers.
* * *
The next meeting of the
HENRY C OBEN FAMILY
CIRCLE will be held , Aug. 6, at
the home of Mrs. Fannie Cohen,
3039 Carter.
* * *
Pioneer Women branches in
six South American countries
will be visited during the next
three months by DVORAH
ROTHBARD, a member of the
national board of the organiza-
tion. Miss Rothbard will meet
with groups in. Brazil, Uruguay,
Argentina, Chile, Colombia and
Venezuela.
* * *
SPYROS SKOURAS, president
of the 20th Century Fox Film
Corp., who is now on a tour of
Israel, declared in a cabled mes-
sage sent from Tel Aviv to
Henry Morgenthau, Jr., general
chairman of the United Jewish
Appeal, that "America is the
beacon of hope and salvation"
of the Jews who are building the
new State of Israel.

Missing Nazi Victims
May- Get Death Status

GENEVA—(JTA)—Members of
various delegations at the cur-
rent meeting here of the United
Nations Economic and Social
Council expressed hope that the
Council will accept without de-
bate and refer to the General
Assembly the draft proposals for
an international convention de-
claring persons missing as a re-
sult of the war and Nazi per-
secution to be dead.

Eddie Cantor, headline radio
comedian since 1931, will tackle
his first ad lib assignment as
quizmaster of NBC's "Take It
or Leave It" Sunday, Sept. 11.

—

THE JEWISH NEWS

Friday, August 5, 1949

S Sgt. Louis Aaron
Reburial on Sunday

Reburial of Staff Sergeant
Louis Aaron, who died on Leyte
in October, 1943, will take place
Sunday, Aug. 7.
Services will
take place at
Kaufman
Chapel, 9419
Dexter. I n t e r-
ment, Nusach
Ari Cemetery.
Surviving are
a daughter,
Laurel Marcia;
brothers, Sam-
S./Sgt. Aaron uel S., Cy, Zal
and Cecil, and
sisters, Mrs. Samuel Granitz
and Mrs. S. Ginsberg.
S/Sgt. Aaron was prominent
in printers' and Bnai Brith
circles.

Hold Services Sunday
For Sgt: Jack Shultz

Reburial services for Sgt. Jack
E. Schultz, who died July 7,
1944, in France, at the age of
33, will be held at 10 a.m. Sun-
day, Aug. 7, at the Kaufman
Chapel. Rabbi Jacob Regal will
officiate, with military rites
conducted by the Jewish War
Veterans. Reburial will take
place at Mt. Sinai Cemetery.
Sgt. Shultz is survived by his
wife, Mrs. Rebecca Miskin; his
father, Abe Shultz; his mother,
Mrs. Ida Lieberman; brothers,
Arthur and Paul Shultz, and a
sister, Mrs. Nat Benton.

Lt. Raymond Bloch
To Be Reburied Sunday

Reburial services for Lt. Ray-
mond Bloch, who died April 8,
1945, at the age of 24, on Iwo
Shima Island, will be held at 12
noon, this Sunday, Aug. 10, at
Ira Kaufman Chapel. Members
of the JWV Post named in hon-
or of Lt. Bloch will conduct
military rites. Rabbi Joshua
Sperka will officiate. Burial will
be at Machpelah Cemetery.
Lt. Bloch is survived by his
mother, Mrs. Jeanette Bloch; his
daughter, Lynn; a brother, Ir-
win, and a sister, Edith.

In Memoriam

In loving memory of my dear
daughter, Jean Bernstein, who
died July 30, 1943, 27 days in
Tammuz. You are not forgotten,
daughter dear, nor will you ever
be. Only God alone knows how
much I love you and how much
I miss you, my dear daughter.
Sleep on, my dear daughter,
sleep on and take thy rest. Sadly
missed by your forever broken-
hearted
FATHER.

New System Provides
Education for Shut-Ins

Beginning early in September
the Board of Education in co-
operation with the Michigan
Bell. Telephone Company
and the Detroit Chapter cf
the Michigan League for Crip-
pled Children, will inaugurate a
bedside-classroom service for
children who are confined to
their homes for long periods of
time because of illness or physi-
cal impairment.
Through the use of a newly
per f e cted intercommunication
system linking the home and
the school classroom, incapaci-
tated pupils will be able to listen
in on regular classroom discus-
sion, and, at the same time, par-
ticipate freely in that discussion
through the bedside telephone-
classroom hookup.
The Oakman School for Crip-
pled Children, 12920 Wadsworth,
will have three classrooms wired
with speaker-microphones with
"listen-talk" switches so that
the teacher and the class may
talk directly to the homebound
student, and, likewise, the
homebound student may talk
directly with the teacher and
the class.

Try and Stop Me

By BENNETT CERF

OSBORNE, JR., tells about a six-year-old girl
C ECIL
bearded a bank president in his den, and demanded a con-

who

tribution to a fund her school was raising to send poor children
to camp. The banker laid a
dollar bill and a nickel on
the desk and suggested,
"Take your pick."

The little girl picked up the
nickel and &A?, "Mama tells
me I should always take the
smallest piece." Then she picked
up the dollar too, and added
with a grin, "but I wouldn't
want to lose the nickel, so I'll
take this piece of paper to
wrap it up in."
S. * *

If puns disagree witl you, I
advise you to skip the story of
the father who came home and
told his wife and children, "Go and pack up your duds. We're moving'
to Constantinople." The kids set up a terrific caterwauling, and
insisted, "we dowanna live in Constantinople," but the mother silenced
them in short order. "Run along and pack," she ordered. "Daddy
knbws what's Bosphorus."

Copyright, 1949, by Bennett Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate,

People Make News

HENRY MORAN is a candi-
date for a seat in the Common
Council. He is a member of the
Roosevelt Jewish Democratic
Club and a graduate of Temple
University. Born in Russia as
Henry Mohransky, he came to
the United States in 1911 and
after his enlistment, in 1917, was
wounded in action at Argonne
Forest, while serving with Co B,
26th Infantry, the first division
to go overseas. He is married
and lives at 1970 W. Philadel-
phia with his wife, Ida, and
sons, David and Frank.
* * *
JACOB J. "RABINOWITZ, who
has written widely on legal mat-
ters and whose translation of
part of the Code of Maimonides
was published recently by the
Yale University Press, has ac-
cepted an invitation to deliver
several lectures on Hebrew juris-
prudence at the Hebrew Univer-
sity in Jerusalem, it was an-
nounced by Philip G. Whitman,
secretary of American Friends
of the Hebrew University.
* *
Safe in the port of. good hope
is two-year-old Jackie Einheiber,
mascot of the
crew aboard the
SS General
Haan, which
last week
brought 883 DPs
to New Y o r'k
from Germanys
Jackie, born in
a DP camp, was
„,,
aided, along -
with his par-
ents, by HIAS
Jackie
(Hebrew Immi-
grant Aid Society) to come to a
new land and secure home.

. Serge Koussevitsky, interna-
tionally beloved figure of the
,music world, has consented to
serve as consultant in Music to
Brandeis University, it was an-
nounced by Dr. Abram L. Sachar,
president of the Waltham, Mass,
institution. Concurrent with Dr.
Koussevitsky's appointment as
music consultant announcement
was made of the
.ntention of the
a ewly created
U n iversit
to establish
a, school of
music. First step
:n the emergen-
3e of the school
s the depart-
ment of - music
which will open
Kousevitsky in the fall of the
1949-50 academic year with the
counsel of Dr. Koussevitsky. Dr.
Koussevitsky -retired as Conduc-
tor of the Boston Symphony Or-
chestra last spring after an as-
sociation of 24 years.

Let the Jewish News' expand..
ing classified department bring
you business. • Call WO. 5-1155.

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