18—THE JEWISH NEWS Obituaries EMANUEL HELLER, 66, 480 Randolph, Windsor, died Feb, 13. Services were at Hebrew Benevolent Society, with inter- ment in El Moshe Cemetery. Survived by his wife, Kate; sis- ters, Annie Sosnick, and Yetta Daneman and brother, Sam. * * * ABRAHAM NA TINSK Y, 50 : 2575 Richton, died Feb. 13. Serv- ices were at Hebrew Benevolent Society. Survived by his wife, Helen; mother, Sarah Willis Na- tinsky; sisters, Mary Karp and Mrs. Eva Alpert, and brother, * * * ANNA EDER, 85, 11501 Petos- key, died Feb. 15. Services were at the Hebrew Benevolent So- ciety, with interment in Beth Abraham Cethetery. Survived by her sons, Albert, Ben and Dr. Sam Eder of Cleveland; daugh- ter, Mrs. Zelda Corn; brother, Michael Eder; sisters, Mrs. Git- tel Klein and Mrs. Sam Saltz- man; 12 grandchildren and 14 great grandchildren. * * * ROSE ZAGER, 62, 3026 W, Grand, died Feb. 15. Services were at Hebrew Benevolent So- ciety, with interment in Bnai Jacob Cemetery. Survived by her daughters, Fay Lucie Zager; two brothers, and a sister. * * * •JAKE C. GREENBERG, 59, 149 Davenport, died Feb. 17. Services were, at Hebrew Benevolent So- ciety. Survived by his wife, Nor- ma; and sister, of Rochester, New York. * * * SAMUEL COHEN, 69, 11501 Pe tosky, died Feb. 18. Services were at Hebrew Benevolent So- ciety. He is survived by his wife, Jennie; daughters, Sarah Honig- bloom, Baibara Conn, Rose B. Kaufman, Muriel Conn, and Irene Lieberman, five grandchil- dren and one great grandchild. SAMUEL DAVID SCHULMAN, 42, 1217 W. Euclid, died Feb. 19. Services were at Lewis Bros., with interment in Beth Abra- ham Cemetery. Rabbi Halpern officiated. Survived by his wife, Sylvia; mother, Esther; daugh- ters, Marilyn, Natalie, Joan, Judy and Dianna; son, Elliot; brother, Jacob Shulman; sister, Anne -Weinberg. * * * MRS. CLARA EISENBERG, 67, formerly of 3000 Rochester, a Detroit resident for 40 years, died Sunday in Tucson, Ariz., where she moved two weeks ago. Services were held at Kaufman Chapel Thursday. Burial, Clover Hill. She was a member of Shaarey Zedek, Mizrachi, Sab- bath Observance League, Home for Aged. . Surviving are two sons, Carl and Sol; three daugh- ters, Mesdames Joseph Gendel- man; two brothers, Sam London and Joseph London of Israel. * * * - GEORGE A. BLOOM, 73, of 95 Tennyson, a native Detroiter, died Monday. Funeral services were held Wednesday in Temple Beth El. Surviving are his wife, Cora; son, Howard; daughters, Dorothy Bloom and Mrs. Ruth Fox. In Memoriam In loving memory of our dear mother, Pearl Strohl, who• left us Feb. 2D, 1947. 'Gone but not forgotten." Sadly missed by her Children and Grandchildren. * * * . In loving memory of our be- loved father and grandfather, Sidney Frank, who left this world seventeen years ago, Feb. 14, 1934 (eight days in Adar). Your Children and Grandchildren. * * * * In loving memory of our dear HARRY J. SIMON, 60, 3310 mother, Sonia Sherman, who Monterey, died Feb. 14. Services passed away eight years ago, were at Lewis Bros., with Rabbi Feb. 22, 1943. Our loss is great, our sorrow deep, Stollman officiating. Interment. Our tears continue to pour, Machpelah Cemetery. Survived Your cherished memory like a treas- ure we keep, by his wife, Rose; son, Milton; With the years we miss you more and daughter, Mario n; brother, more. James; and sisters, Mrs. Jack Sadly missed by her daugh- Uhr and Mrs. Rose Brenner. ters, Mrs. James Rachleff, Dor- * * * othy, sons Morrie, Abe and Jack. MORRIS MAX GOCHER, 73, 3041 Gladstone, died Feb. 16. Denver GI Dies in Korea Services were at Lewis Bros., DENVER, (AJP) — A gymnas- with Rabbi Levin officiating. tics star and recipient of the Interment, Workman's Circle American Legion Award for Ci- Cemetery. Survived by his tizenship, 21-year-old Cpl. Yale daughters, Mrs. Anna Michelson Kiefer, lost his life in the Kor- ean War. and Mrs. Ida Kingston. Kiefer, who moved to Denver * * SAMUEL LUKASH, 2092 Ewald recently from Minneapolis Circle, died Feb. 15. Services where in addition to winning were at Kaufman Chapel, with the Legion Award, he served as Rabbi Fram and Cantor Tulman vice president of his senior class, officiating. He leaves his wife, left Sept. 15 to join the First Jennie; and daughter, Mrs. Marine Division?t,. Samuel Gerber. Interment, Beth Rabbi's Eulogy for Duchin El Memorial Park Cemetery. A VALUABLE HEBREW CALENDAR! A NEW EDITION! FREE TO OUR READERS! NEW YORK, (AJP) — "Eddy Duchin never hurt anybody in his life", said Dr. Julius Mark of Temple Emanual at the funeral of the great band leader. Death took the 41-year-old virtuoso whose tintillating piano selections earned themselves an honored- place in the musical world. Eddy was a naval :officer during World War II serving in the operations •and landings at Iwo Jima and later at Norman- dy. He was discharged in 1945 as a Lieutenant Commander. Eddy Duchin was ill with Lukeniia since his discharge but kept on working until the dread disease finally cut him down this week. Anti-Zionist Arab Dies Above is the famous 24-Year Hebrew-English Calendar; the new edition goes to 1952, starting in 1928. Jewish Holidays, 1939 to 1964. By arrangement with one of our advertisers this useful calendar in its new edition is being sent free to readers of this publication. For your copy, write a letter or postcard to:— H. J. Heinz Co., Dept. J2 Pittsburgh 3%, Pg., Friday, February 23, 1951 Kvutzah Offer Memorial To Mrs. Benjamin Stein Democratic Experiment in New York Is Clue to Real World Brotherhood By FRANK SIMONS Often the crossroads of A Memorial meeting for Mrs. America are referred to as New Benjamin Stein, who passed York's famed intersection, away a month ago, will be held Broadway and 42nd street. To Rev. Richard E. Evans, minister of the Presbyterian Labor Tem- ple, the real crossroads is at 14th street -and 2nd Avenue where the Temple is situated and where "the glits of Ameri- can Democracy is rooted." Rev. Evans,. in Detroit early this week on his way to a Broth- erhood Week meeting in Mil- waukee, stopped to chat with a small group of civil rights peo- ple on the work of his Temple, called "the most amazing ex- periment in democracy ever tried." . LATE MRS. B. STEIN at 2:30 p.m., Sunday, in the auditorium of the Rose Sittig Cohen Bldg. Held under the auspices of the Kvutzah Ivrith and its La- dies Auxiliary, it will include appropriate readings from the Psalter, brief talks by Bernard Isaacs and Alex Gershon, a reading by Aaron Taback and the chanting of the Mole. The committee in charge of the program includes Mrs. Jo- seph Geselia, Mrs. M. Rappaport, Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Panush, Norman Ruttenberg, Morris No- bel, J. M. Mathis, Mrs. Julius Ring and Bernard Isaacs. The Labor Temple, started by the Presbyterian clergy in New York 40 years ago, has functioned since it opened as a non - sectarian i n stitution dedicated to an open door policy Which discriminates against no person on the grounds of race, color, reli- gion or nationality. From a small start, the Temple has grown into a democratic com- munity in itself where five re- ligious groups worship and where 11 different demonina- tion hold their activities. The Labor Temple owns its o w n building, a seven - story fulfillment of a promise he made 30 years earlier when he decided on the ministry. He told his foster mother that if he entered the clergy it would be to aid people. Not just Presbyter- ian or whites, but people — whether white or Negro, Cath- olic, Protestant, Jewish or what- haveyou. He even singled out Labor Temple as THE place at which he would enjoy working. The "rebel," as Rev. Evans likes to call himself, has been a crusader for man ever since his boyhood which was spent in the stockyard district of Chicago, where he was born in 1900. When he took his mother down South years back be- cause of her health, the fiery Rev. Evans preached to a Negro congregation, which brought immediate threats from the Ku Klux Klan. His life was threatened in Tampa if he didn't leave town. He invited the note sender to occupy a front pew at the church service and remained in Tampa. One of the first Christians in- terested in aiding the upbuild- ing of Israel, Rev. EVans is an active member of the American Christian Palestine Committee. When Rev. Evans was in- ducted as minister of the Tem- ple in December the sermon was preached by Rabbi Arthur Liely- veld, national director of Hillel Foundations. Brotherhood as practiced at the Presbyterian Labor Temple, at which there strangely is not a Presbyterian congregation, is not only a one week a year job, exclaimed Rev. Evans, "it is a 24 hour-a-day, 52 weeks-a-year responsibility that we all love." structure valued at $1,000,000, and, while it still has a ,mort- gage to pay off, .charges no ren- tal to the groups that use its facilities. Maintenance funds are received from the Presbyterian ministry, but the many and var- ied functions of the Temple are Further Tragedy Added dependent on contributions. The Rev. Dr. Evans came to To Story of Crash Victims Labor Temple last year as the Dr. Maxwell M. Hoffman, who was an intimate friend of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Gotlieb and their daughter, Denise, 22 who perished in a plane crash re-• cently, this week provided The Jewish News with additional Another. rebuke to the dele- We join with you in expressing facts regarding the tragedy. gates from Detroit's organiza- solidarity with people like Reu- Dr. Hoffman informs us that tions to the Jewish Community ter and his fellow Social Demo- Jean Rosenblatt of Auckland, Council for reversing the posi- crats who are striving today to New Zealand, a cousin of Miss Dora Tonkell, of 3210 Chicago tion of the Council's executive build a new Europe and a new Blvd., wrote reavealing that in and for refusing to participate Germany on the same principles addition to the three Gotliebs, in welcoming Berlin's Mayor of personal freedom and the Mrs. Gotlieb's sister and her Reuter was made known this democratic process in which we husband were in the plane fly- week in a statement issued by ourselves believe. the Detroit office of the Jewish "The response of the labor ing from Paris to Rome. They had planned to go to Is- Labor Committee. Last week, the movement in Detroit to Reuter's rael from Rome. There was a Bnai Brith Council asked the appearance helps to demonstrate thunderstorm, lightning, hit the general assembly of the Council our abiding hope for the re- plane in- mid-air and it caught to reconsider its stand. surgence and survival of democ- fire. The entire family burnt to The Jewish Labor Committee, racy in Germany and through- death except Mr. Gotlieb, who in a letter to Dr. Harold A. Bas- out the world." lived for 10 days. ilius, chairman of the Citizens' He died of burns and a frac- Committee to Welcome Mayor tured skull in a Rome hospital. Reuter, signed by Leon A. COU.- Post Office Is Seeking His wife's uncle dropped dead in sens, declares: Neighborhood Quarters Sydney, Australia, when he "The Jewish Labor Committee heard the news. Proposals to furnish suitable A son and a daughter survive extends to you and your Com- quarters for post office purposes mittee our greetings and best the Gotliebs in New Zealand. are solicited and will )e received The Chevra Kadisha is bringing wishes for your meeting which in the office of Post Office In- features Mayor Reuter of Ber- the bodies of the dead to New spector Martin Thompson, 213 lin. Zealand for burial. Federal Building, Detroit 31, "The bitterness which many Michigan up to and including While in Detroit visiting the Hoffmans, the Gotliebs were people still feel t o ward Ger- March 17. guests at a luncheon of the many is understandable. Nazism One of the quarters must be Zionist organization of Detroit brought ruin to much of the located near to the intersection and described their experiences world and destruction to many of Linwood and Clairmount in • New Zealand and in the people—among them six million Streets in Detroit, and contain Zionist cause. of our fellow Jews in Europe. about 17,000 square feet of floor "We know, however, that May- space. or Reuter represents the Social Missourian Named Top Democratic forces in Germany Ford Salesman for 1950 which are devoting their efforts MONUMENTS Breaking sales records for to wiping out the last evidences of Nazism and anti-Semitism. three consecutive months and By Karl C. Berg reaching a new high by selling Owner 109 new Ford cars and trucks Max Wrotslaysky during October, Hyman Gold- Monument Works stein, of St. Louis, has been Distinctive Lowest Prices for Highest Quality named 1950 national champion Monu merits Granite and Outstanding Designs Reasonably Priced Ford salesman. In his peak 3201 JOY ROAD month, the 40 year-old Missouri- DETROIT MONUMENT Corner Wildemere an sold nine different types of TYler 6-0196 WORKS Ford trucks and 47 passenger 2744 W. Davison cor. Lawton cars. Goldstein says he puts special TO. 8-6923 TO. 8-7523 emphasis on full product infor- mation and knowledge of the hauling business. He worked 14 DETROIT'S FINEST FUNERAL HOME hours a day to pile up his championship total. Habib I. Katibah, Syrian-born author and lecturer, who vio= lently opposed the Zionist cause and frequently attacked the Jewish people, died in New York last Friday. Some of his anti- Zionist articles appeared, in The Detroit News. He also appeared TEL AVIV (JTA) — Turkey, on public platforms here attack- Sweden and Finland will get ing Zionists. the bulk of Kaiser-Frazer auto- Researchers are now using mobiles assembled in 1951 at the sonic methods to test wood new assembly plant near Haifa. The arrangements were made without destroying it: These ex- acting methods can permit safer under trade agreements. The construction of _,N. 00d, aircsraft plant is, expected to .-,turn put, .20 fra.mps. l a dders and scalfoldtS. 'cars a flay. – - Jewish Labor Committee Backs Welcome to Berlin Mayor Reuter Cemetery Memorials _LEWIS BROTHERS rfote/eag..0 3800 PURITAN • UNIVERSITY 1-7700 •