V

DP Commissioner

Obituaries

MARTIN GOLDSMITH, 66; of George and Roy; and three

3302 Monterey, died Sept. 26.
Funeral services • were held at
Hebrew Benevolent Society with
interment at Machpelah Ceme-
tery. Rabbis Adler, Stollman,
and Bakst officiated. He is sur-
vived by sons, Samuel, Lewis,
and Norman; a daughter, Mrs.
Mary Sage; seven grandchildren,
and two sisters.
* * *
CHARLES SHERMAN, 16
months, of 16141 Linwood, died
Sept. 27. Funeral seryices were
held at the Hebrew Benevolent
Society. He is survived by his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
Sherman; a brother, Robert, and
grandfathers: Max -Myers and
Max Sherman.
* * *
MRS. FANNY BAYER, 67, of
2542 Blaine, died Sept. 27. Bene-
volent Society with interment at
Beth Moses Cemetery. Rabbi
Frankel officiated. She is sur-
vived by her husband, Harry; a
daughter, Mrs. Esther Krbtgle; a
son, Harry, and five grandchil-
dren:--
* * ,*
HARRY ALTMAN, 28, of 1968
Pingree, died Sept. 28. Funeral
services' were held at Hebrew
Benevolent Society. Rabbi Leo
Goldman officiated. He is sur-
vived by his wife, Estelle, and
brother, Mendel.
* * *
RAY ELLA PILDSA, 69, of
2903 Elmhurst, died Oct. 1. She
leaves he'r husband, Wolf; chil-
dren Hannah • and Paul; a
brother, Jack, and sister, Kate
Grossman of Chicago. Rabbi
Leon Fram and Cantor Robert
Tulman officiated at services at
Lewis Bros. Interment, Beth El
Memorial Park.
* * *
SAMUEL EKII;LMAN, 95, of
8720 12th, died Sept. 29. He was
a Detroit resident 37 years. Fu-
neral services were held at Lewis
Bros., with Rabbi A. M. Hersh-
m a n officiatihg. Interment,
Cloverhill Park Cemetery. He is
survived by four daughters, - Mrs.
Mae Day, Mrs. Bertha Loucas,
Mrs. Jean Harris and Mrs. Sally
Gordon; son, Max; brother,
-.Isaac 'Eckelman and 23 grand-
children and nine great-grand-
children.

daughters, Mrs. Hy Rachlin, Mrs.
Sam Bensman and Mrs. George
Curry.
* * *
MRS. PEARL BARNETT, 55, of
3380, Collingwood, died Sept. 27.
-Interment was at Cloverhill
Park Cemetery. Rabbi Fram of-
ficiated at funeral services. She
is survived by one daughter, Mrs.
Sylvia lane Serrins of Van Nuys,
Calif., one grandchild, and a
sister, Mrs. Alice Gran.
* ,. *
REGINA SIEGL, 71; formerly ef
Detroit, died Sept. 29, while vis-
iting in Los Angeles. Services
were held at the Hebrew Burial
Society,- with burial in Oakview
Cemetery. She is survived by
her son, Henry Siegl and daugh-
ter, Mrs. Julia Stocker.

—International News photo

EDWARD M. M. O'CON,
NOR was nominated as a
member of the Displaced Per-
sons Commission.

Peronists Will Punish
Biased Immigration Aids

BUENOS AIRES, (JTA)—Col.
Jose Gonzalez, director of the
Argentine Department of Immi-
gration, has warned members of
his staff that President Juan
Peron is displeased with the fact
that some of them have dis-
played anti-Jewish bias in the
past. Col. Gonzalez threatened
that repetition of such discrimi-
nation in the future would be
punished most severely.
He also declared that any
member of the department in
disagreement with the principle
of racial equality will be re-
moved. At the same time, Col.
Gonzalez ordered the distribu-
tion of 250 visas for displaced
Jews to enter Argentina. The
visas, which will be distributed
through the pro-Peronist Or-
ganizacion Israelita Argentina,
are allotted for the remainder
of this year.
Mme. Evita Peron, the First
Lady, released a New Year's
message to the Jewish people
through O.I.A., extending to the
Argentine Jews her "most Cor-
dial and sincere New Year's
wishes."

Tea Is Served

JA, Collectives Agree on
Absorbing Immigrants

TEL AVIV, (JTA)—A "test
period" for new immigrants who
wish to settle on the land, plus
some concessions, will be at-
tempted in an effort to induce
a largely number of new immi-
grants to join agricultural settle-
ments, it . was annonuced here.
Most of the new arrivals gray-
itate toward the already over-
crowded urban areas and only
a little more than five percent
of the 250,000 new immigrants
have elected to join agricultural
settlements. One of the main
difficulties standing in the way
of new immigrants who wish to
join collective settlements was
that in joining they lost their
"repatriatees' fights," granted to
them by the Jewish Agency.
As a result of an. agreement,
between the Agency, those who
are willing to try living and
working in a collective settle-
ment may do so for one year
without losing any priority rights
for housing and . financial
grants for the establishment
of individual enterprises.
At the same time, the new im-
migrants will enjoy all the
rights of regular members of
Kibbutz settlements during their
test period, including two weeks'
annual leave. They-will not, how-
ever, have voting privileges in
the settlements. If, at the end
of the year, the immigrants want
to leave the settlement, they
will be outfitted with clothes and
given a bed and blankets, but
they will not receive any wages
or any money grant.

.

ANNA ROBINSON, 75, of 2095
Pingree, died • Sept. 30. Services
were held at Lewis Bros. with
Rabbi Harold Rosenthal offici-
ating. Interment: Machpelah
Cemetery. She is survived by
five sons, Samuel, Ted, Reuben;

Israel Sachs,-Philanthropic
Leader, Dies at Age of '75
NEW YORK, (JTA) —Israel
Sachs, a founder of the Federa-
tion'of Jewish Philanthropies of
New York and a director of the
United Jewish Appeal, died in
Ferndale, N.Y., where he was va-
cationing, at the age of 75.
Sachs, leading New York mer-
chant, was active in numerous
charitable, welfare and religious
causes and was cited on several
occasions for his contributions to
curbing interracial bias.

Israel's Prime,Ministet DAVID
BEN-GURION is served tea
prior to his address before the
18th World- Mizrachi Conference
which recently ended in Jeru-
salem. On the serving end is
ISRAEL FRIEDMAN, who for
many years served as personal
secretary to Rabbi Meir Berlin,
late president of the World Miz-
Mrs. Julius Rosenwald Dies
Mrs. Adelaide Rau Rosenwald, rachi Organization. Leon Gell-
widow of Julius Rosenwald, phil- man is shown presiding at the
anthropist and former president session.
and chairman -of the board of
Sears, Roebuck and Co., died at Schlossberg Officially
80 in Los Angeles. She is sur- Received in Israel
vived by a son and two daugh-
ters, including Mrs. Lessing
TEL OVIV, (By Special Cable
Rosenwald, wife of the president to LIIB) — Joseph Schlossberg,
of the American • Council for general chairman of the Israel
Judaism.
Histadrut Campaign in • the
United States, was officially wel-
comed to Israel at a special din-
Israel Censors Soviet
ner in his honor, presided over
Play as 'Un-American' by Joseph Sprinzak, acting presi-
dent of Israel, and attended by
TEL AVIV—(JTA)—The Israel members of the Israeli Cabinet
Censorship Committee has ban- and members of the Knesset.
ned a production here of Kon-
stantine Simonov's play, "The
Dr. Joseph Rufeisen Dies
American Problem," on the
TEL AVIV, (JTA)—Dr. Joseph
grounds that it contains anti- Rufeisen, member of the Zionist
American propaganda. Simonov Actions Committee and a former
is an outstanding Soviet play- member of the Czechoslovak
wright.
Parliament who served as head
(Reu rs reported from Tel of the Zionist Organization in
Aviv t at circles close to the Czechoslovakia for 20 years, died
Censors ip Commission said of a heart attack, aged 63.
that the Commission's action
Hoyle's rule book first was
was taken because it had re-
cently banned an American film published in 1742 as a treatise
which it considered anti-Soviet.) on whist.

Report Arabs Setting
Booby Traps in Negev

JERUSALEM, (JTA) — Reports
from Negev settlements indicate
that Arabs infiltrating Israel
have recently begun to plant
booby traps and land mines in
areas inhabited by Jewish colo-
nists. The Negev settlers have
requested the Army to institute
closer supervision of the Jewish
state's borders and to clear "sus-
picious areas" of explosives.
Representatives of the Red
Mogen Dovid and Health Minis-
ter Moshe Shapira accepted 30
new ambulances for the use of
the organization donated by
Jewish communities in the West-
ern hemisphere, England and
France.
Joseph Schlossberg, chairman
of the Histadrut campaign in the
U.S., arrived here and was greet-
ed by a delegation of the His-
tadrut executive and represen-
tatives of other labor groups in
Israel.
The hope that American Jews
will invest $100,000,000 in Israel
during the next three years was
expressed in Tel Aviv at a press
conference by Robert R. Nathan,
American economic adviser to
the Jewish Agency. He said
,000,000 was being
that, about $40
invested in Israel by such Amer-
ican groups as the AMPAL and
the Palestine Economic Corpora-
tion.

Hebrew U Claims Arabs
Have Violated Truce

JERUSALEM— ( JTA ) —Prof.
8elig'Brodetsky, president of the
Hebrew Uniyersity, declared the
Arabs have violated the Israel-.
Transj ordan armistice agree-
ment concluded on the island of
Rhodes by their refusal to alloW
Jews to use the road leading to-
Mount 'Scopus, where both the
University and Hadassah Hospi-
tal are located.
The Hebrew. UniVersity asked
Dr. Werner Senator, Prof. Bro-
detsky said, to proceed to the
United States to inform Ameri-
can public opinion of the pres-
ent situation, which is "hamper-
ing the University's normal life
and development."

Eliashey Leaves MoscoW;
Satisfied with Relations

18—THE JEWISH NEWS

Friday, October 7, 1949

Don't Let Her Down

A youthful immigrant ar-
at Beit Lid reception
camp near Nathanya. Lonely
and bewildered, she symbol-
izes the 71,000 Jewish immi-
grants forced to live in camps
on the soil of Israel. Immediate
cash for the United Jewish Ap-
peal is the only 'hope she Kas
for a home in her homeland.

rives

New Detergent Aids
Home Carpet Cleaning

On'flocation carpet cleaning
has taken a step forward with
the advent of 'a new detergent
cleaner developed by the Bige-
low-Sanford Carpet Co.
The cleaner is now being used
by Leader Carpet Cleaning Co.
in refurbishing wall-to-wall car- .
pets or others .that cannot be
removed from the home easily.
The detergent contains a mi-
nute amount of water and fluffs
up into extra-dry suds. It will
not shrink the carpet and the
colors are safer than whe,p put
in contact with more watery,
stronger solutions. . The carpet
is left mildew resistant.
Not sold in stores, the new
product is available only to com-
mercial cleaners, including
Leader.

MOSCOW—(JTA)—Dr. Samuel
Eliashev, director of the East
European division of the Israel
Foreign Ministry, left for Prague
en route home to Tel Aviv fol-
George Washington laid the
lowing a two-week visit to the
cornerstone of the White. House
Soviet capital.
Prior: to his departure; Dr. Elia- in October, 1792. -
I.
She's,' expressed satisfaction with
the results of his visit, which
was highlighted by a meeting
Israel Delegates to Urge with
acting Foreign Minister
UN Meeting Guarantees Andrei Gromyko. He said that Lowest Prices for Highest Quality
Soviet-Israel relations have been' Granite and Outstanding Designs
LAKE SUCCESS (JTA)—The established on a basis of sound
DETROIT MONUMENT
Israel delegation indicated that friendship with prospects for
WORKS
it might enter a formal pro- improvement,
2744 W. Davison cor. Lawton
posal requiring a member state
TO. 8-7523
of the UN acting as host to a WJC Asks US Officials
TO. 8-6923
UN conference to give "uncon-
ditional assurances that it will To Prosecute Vandals
admit on equal _terms all repre-
MONUMENTS
NEW YORK—The World Jew-
sentatives and observers entitled
to attend," or failing such as- ish Congress has called upon
surances to have the conference U. S. authorities to bring to
justice those guilty of desecrat-
transferred to another scene.
This indication came in a ing a synagogue in Marktred-
statement by Dr. Abraham witz, Bavaria.
Katznelson of the Israel dele-
gation, before the Social and
WOLF WROTSLAVSKY
Humanitarian Committee dur-
MONUMENTS •
ing a discussion on freedom of
MANUAL URBACH & SO
access for the press. Dr. Katz-
Artistic Memorials at Lowest Prices
A Tribute — Everlasting
7729 TWELFTH ST.
nelson charged that in two re-
cent conferences of UN special-
TY. 8-6117
TY. 6-7192
2975 JOY RD.
ized bodies member states, by
discriminatory action, prevented
Israel from attending. This oc-
curred, he said, in connection
with the Middle Eastern region-
Expanded Facilities.
al conference of the World
OF UNEQUALLED BEAUTY
Health Organization_

Cemetery Memorials

.

In Memoriam

A distinct departure from
the usual conception of a
funeral home, the new ad-

. In memory of our dearly be-
loved wife and mother, Sarah
Bernstein, 'who passed on 13
years ago, Sept. 30, 14 days in
Tishri.

dition
. to our Chapel is op-
pointed and furnished with
exquisite taste, presenting
an atmosphere of dignity
and refinement that is rest-
ful and comforting.

There is no death! An angel form
Walks o'er the earth with silent tread:
He bears our best loved things away '
And then we call them "dead."

He leaves our hearts all desolate—
He plucks our fairest, sweetest flowers;
Transplanted into bliss, they now
Adorn immortal bowers.
Husband, David;
Children, Mildred and Ralph.

"J'AMMINVISPirr

The Ira

KAUFMAN

9419 DEXTER BOULEVARD

Chapel

at

EDISON

TYler 7-4520

