• Obituaries 4.• • DORA FENBERG, 3045 Cort- land, died Sept 27. Services were held at Kaufman Chapel, with Rabbi Rosenwasser and Cantor . Sonenklar officiating. She leaves her husbandi Henry. Interment, . Machpelah Cemetery. * * * ROSE ZACKEM, of Chicago, died Sept. 26. Services were held at Kaufman Chapel, with Rabbi Lehrman and Cantor Tulman of- ficiating. She leaves her mother, , Mrs. Sarah Zackem; three sis- ters, Matilda, Mrs. George Gold- en, Mrs. Ben Granner. Interment, Machpelah Cemetery. * * * PEARL BRASCH ABLITZ, 2670 Gladstone, died. Oct. 3. Services were held at Kaufman Chapel, with Rabbi Gruskin officiating. She leaves her husband, Harry; three sons, Bert, Clarence and Raymond; a daughter, Mrs. Mil- ton Bogrow; a 'brother, Henry Brasch. Interment, Clover Hill Park Cemetery. * * * SOPHIE KNOTT, 2955 Elm- hurst, died Oct. 4. Services were held at Kaufman Chapel, with Rabbi Sperka and Cantor Adler officiating. She leaves her hus- band, Louis; two sons, Ben and Jack; two daughters, Mrs. Shir- ley Lichtenstein and Mrs. Fay Bernstein; two brothers, Sol and David Edelman; and a sis- ter, Mrs. Bertha Sarut. Inter- ment, Bnai David Cemetery. * * * DAVID, SACHS, 15017 Wilde- mere, died Oct. 8. Services were held at Kaufman Chapel, with Rabbi .Wohlgelernter and Cantor Sonenklar ogiciating. He leaves three brothers, Nathan, Ben- jamin and Frank. Interment, Machpelah Cemetery. * * * HARRY HARRIS, 62, of 15345 Evergreen, died Oct. 7. A native Detroiter, he was a veteran of World War I. Rabbi Sidney Akselrad officiated at funeral services at Lewis Bros. Burial, Machpelah Cemetry. He leaves two sisters, Mrs. Max Komer and Mrs. Esther Sussan, and four brothers, Archie, Walter, Ed and Alfred Harris. * * LILLIAN SEGAL, 52, of 16831 Monte Vista, died Oct. 9. Dr. B. Benedict Glazer officiated at funeral services at Lewis Bros. Burial, Beth El Memorial Park. She is survived by her husband, Harry; her mother, Mrs. Anna Fegelman; a daughter, Mrs. Ben Nathanson; sisters, Mrs. • Dan Laven, Mrs. Rose Babkin; and brothers, Louis and Max Fegel- man of Cincinnati and Mitchell of Charleston, W. Va. * * * ADOLPH KASTOR, 80, of 3452 Edison, died Oct. 10. He is sur- vived by two daughters, Mrs. Armin Ferencz of Detroit and Mrs. Helen Gluck of Brooklyn, N.Y. Funeral services were con- ducted at Kaufman Chapel; burial, Oakview Cemetery. * * * MEYER GREENBERG, 65, of Los Angeles, formerly of Detroit, died Sept. 18 in Los Angeles. He is survived by his wife, Anna. * * * LOUIS SAPERSTEIN, 63, of Miami Beach, formerly of De- troit, died Sept. 25. He is sur- vived by his wife, Sophie; three sons, Milton, Albert and Julius, and four grandchildren. * * * NATHAN STEIN, 68, of 2074 Clairmount, died, Oct. 2. Funeral services were held ..at Hebrew Benevolent Society. Rabbi Max Wohlgelernter officiated. He is survived by his wife Sylvia, son Kenneth, daughters, Mrs. Shar- ron, Mrs. Clara Edgar, and 3 grandchildren. * * * LOUIS DIAMOND, 60, of the Seward Hotel, died Oct. 2. Fun- eral services were held at He- brew Benevolent Society of Cong. Mogen Abraham. Rabbi Wohlgelernter officiate d. No known surviving relatives. * * * BARNET TOPCIK, 69, of 1941 Gladstone, died Oct. Funeral services were held at Hebrew Benevolent Society. Rabbi Issac Stollman officiated. He is sur- vived by his wife, Mamie, sons, Dr. Harry, Dr. Aaron, Ben, five grandchildren, and a sister, Mrs. Alta Goldman. MRS. GOLDIE FEALK. of 3380 Monterey, 72, died Oct. 4. Fun- eral services were held at He- brew Benevolent Society with interment at the cemetery of Cong. Beth Shumuel. Rabbi Rabbi Rabinowitz officiated. She is survived by her sons, Ben and Morris; daughters, Mrs. Rose Marcus, Mrs. Beatrice After- good, Rachel, 7 grand children and sister, Mrs, Ida Berman. * * * LENA SITRIN, 30, of 3016 Clairmount, died Oct. 5. She served as secretary to Morris Jacobs, president of the Zionist organization of Detroit and was a leader in the Zionist move- ment. Jacobs eulogized in be- half of the Zionist movement and Rabbi Jacob Segal officiat- ed. Survived by her mother, Sarah; her brothers, Gabriel M. and Leon. * * * MORRIS BRICKNER, 75, of 2205 W. Philadelphia, died Oct. 6. Funeral services were held at the Hebrew Benevolent Society with interment at Turover Aid cemetery Rabbi Stollman offi- ciated. He is survived by his wife, Kate; sons, Max, Daniel Nathan, Sam and Paul; daugh- t e r, Mrs. Ann Burkow; 18 grandchildren; four great- grandchildren, four brothers, and three sisters. * * * MAX FELDMAN, 31, of 201 E. Alexandrine, died Oct. 9. Funeral services were held at Hebrew Benevolent Society. Interment, Bnai David Cemetery. Rabbi Sperka and Cantor Adler offi- ciated. Survived by his wife, Colleen, father, Max, mother, Fannie, and brother, Leon. * * * MRS. FANNIE GOLDBERG, 62, of 2660 Glynn Ct., died Oct. 10. Funeral services were held at Hebrew Benevolent Society. Rabbi Jacob Segal officiated. Survived by her husband, Jacob, daughters, Mrs. Jack Parr and Mrs. Isador Sklar, and -four grandchildren. Monument Unveilings Announcement is made of the unveiling of monuments in mem- ory of Eliezer and Betty Eisen- man, late parents of Mrs. Louis Berry and Bernard Eisenman, at 12 noon Sunday, Oct. 23, at Cloverhill Park Cemetery. Rabbi Morris Adler will officiate. Friends and relatives are in- vited to attend the service. * • * * The family of the late Isadore Shacket announces the unveil- ing of a monument in his mem- ory at 1 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 23, at Mt. Sinai Memorial Park. Rabbi Jacob Segal will officiate. Friends and relatives are invited to attend the service. 22 Gets Agency Office — THE JEWISH NEWS Brevities Friady, October 14, 1949 Solemn Worship, Desecration, Mark Day, of Atonement MOSCOW (JTA) — Orthodox Jews in Moscow observed Yom Kippur with traditional fasting and at religious services con- ducted both in the synagogue and in auxiliary "worship cir- cles" in various parts of the city. The Main Synagogue was packed, with the stream of Day of Atonement worshippers mov- ing in and out of the buff- walled edifice all day long. Israel Minister to • Moscow Mordecai Namir, accompanied by Michael M. Nisselson, presi- members of the Jewish state's dent of the Jewish Occupation- delegation, also attended ser- al Council of New York, na- vices. tional coordinating agency for Jewish economic adjustment agencies throughout the United States and Canada, has an- nounced the election of SAM -- UEL S. GREENBERG of Detroit as a national vice president of the organization. Greenberg, an attorney, is president of the Jewish Vocational Service of Detroit. UJA Group to Study Israel's Financial Needs for Next Year NEW YORK—A group of 12 Jewish communal leaders will leave for Israel Oct. 15 to con- fer with Prime Minister Ben Gurion, Finance Minister Elie- zer Kaplan and other govern- ment leaders on the immigra- tion and financial needs which the Jewish state will face in 1950. The group, .which has been designated as the Survey Com- mission of the United Jewish Appeal, will include. Jewish corn- munal leaders from New York City, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Cincinnati, St. Louis and Peoria. Harry Greenstein, now in Ger- many as Advisor on Jewish Af- fairs to IT: S. High Commissioner John J. McCloy, will join the commission in Paris and travel with it to Israel. The UJA Survey Commission will report on its findings and discussions to the national con- ference of representatives of major cities which will meet in Atlantic City for three days be- ginning Nov. 25, under the aus- pices of the United Jewish Ap- peal, to plan its 1950 campaign for aid to Israel, Europe and to refugees in the United States. Arrangements have been made to conduct voting tegistration at 37 stations throughout the city from 12 noon to 8 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, Oct. 18 and 19. Nazis Attack Synagogue FRANKFURT (JTA)—A Frank- furt synagogue was attacked by three Nazis during services Yom Kippur eve. All windows in the structure were smashed. Two of the Nazis—Theodor Helrich and Werner Mixdorf—were arrested on the scene. Police later cap- tured Rudolph Geis, the third man. A telegram from the mayor of Marktredwitz, where the town's only synagogue was damaged last week by a "denazified" Nazi, reported that the edifice has been repaired by the town. Yom Kippur Services Are Held in Warsaw Color motion pictuers of his adventure-crammed 18-month "Fourth Round-the-World Cruise in the 96-foot Yankee" will be shown by Commander Irving Johnson, world-famous author and yachtsman, to open the WORLD ADVENTURE SERIES program of public illustrated lectures at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 16, at the Detroit Institute of Arts. * * * Immediately prior to his his departure for Israel where he will assume the chairman- ship of the executive of the World Mizrachi movement, Leon Gellman, president of the Miz- rachi Organization of America, will be honored at a farewell banquet to be tendered him by the American Mizrachi move, ment to be held Tuesday evening Oct. 18, at the Hotel Woodstock, New York City. * 5 * M. M. Sumner of Windsor will preside over the discussion on community organization at the opening of the Eighth Plenary Session .of the CANADIAN JEW- -ISH CONGRESS which will be held in the King Edward Hotel in Toronto, Oct. 22-24. * * Detroit Chapter of the Ameri- can Technion Society will meet at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 19, at the Engineering Society of Detroit. Dr. Menachem Sobel will ad- dress the group: Dr. Sobel, chairman of the department of chemical engineering. at the Haifa Technion, is the first American to be announced to the institute's faculty. WARSAW (JTA) — Dr. Israel Barzilai, Israel Minister to Po- land; attended Yom Kippur ser- In July and August, 1864, in vices, accompanied by a num- the Civil war, $100 in bills was ber of officials from the lega- worth only $39 in gold. tion. Special arrangements were made for Jewish prisoners to celebrate the Jewish High Holy days at the Sandomierz prison. I SERVICES FOR ALL CORAL GABLES, Fla. (JTA) —The First Jewish Congregation of this city threw open its doors to all Jewish residents for Yom Kippur services. Religious ser- vices . were . conducted in the Col- iseum, a hall seating 5,000 per- sons. MONUMENTS By Karl C. Berg BETH EL MEMORIAL PARK OFFERS JEWISH FAMILIES THE FINEST BURIAL PLOTS AT MODERATE PRICES ON EXTENDED TERMS Owner One of America's newest and most beautiful ceme- teries, dedicated to the service of Detroit Jews. Wrotslaysky Monument Works Max Distinctive Monu merits Reasonably Priced 3201 JOY ROAD Corner \'Wildemere TYler 6-0196 Beth El Memorial Park 28120 WEST SIX MILE ROAD Between Inkster and Middlebelt For Information Call Mr. Segall at MAdison 8530 Judge Pinanski Dead BOSTON, (JTA)—Judge Pin- anski, 62, a member of the Mass- achusetts Supreme Court for nearly two decades, died here. He was associated with Jewish hospitals, social welfare groups, a synagogue and other com- munal institutions in Boston. Hebrew Author Dies , Off ineJi in Airoit TEL AVIV— (JT.A }Meir Siko, 73, well-known Hebrew author, died herd. He was a brother of Moshe S m i l a n s k i, leader of the Farmers Association. Born in Russia, he came to Palestine in 1912. New Manager Named For Miami Beach Hotel Gordon Jesso has been appoint- ed manager of the Martinique Hotel in Miami Beach, according to Charles Cohen, -resident of the hotel. Jesso came to Miami Beach 20 years ago. He has been associated with Pancoast, Royal Palm, Belmar and Sea Isle hotels. He succeeds Meyer Friedman, who resigned. Neither the Capitol norther federal buildings are covered by insurance. OUR NEW HOME FUNERALS COMPLETE, Under Our Personal Supervision Low as $100, Excluding Cemetery Charges Sy rntoi 0/ Quality, -A Reputation o/ Service UNiversity 1-7700 3800 Puritan at Dexter