50-BUSINESS CARDS

EXPERT wall washing, 1:1sonable prices.
TO. 5-8728.

GUTTERS //c downspouts cleaned and
repaired, no job too small. Day or
evenings. TO. 5-1853.

A-1 PAINTING, decorating, contractor;
interior-exterior. Free estimatees.
Dresser. TO. 8-6047.

ASH and Rubbish Drums

32.50

21 Gallon Galvanized Garbage Can $4.00
Heavy Wire Burning Baskets $2.50
Free Delivery-Matt Dean. Phone KE.
3-4870-KE. 1-1593.

WROUGHT IRON
FURNITURE

MADE TO ORDER
Porch Railings
Stair Rails
Burglar Protection

TE. 4-2374

BErix,R wall washing call James
Russell. One day service. TO. 6-4005.

FOR

526 Belmont.

FURNITURE REPAIRED and refinished.
Free estimates. WE. 3-2110.

A-1 PAINTING, decorating. Reasonable
prices. Free estimates. VI. 2-8997, TO.
5-8271.

CARPENTER-All types of alterations.
Call WE. 3-0815, WE. 4-4826.

.PAINTING - Exterior, Interior, Decorat-
ing, wall washing. W. Williams, 7758
Prairie. TE. 4-0195-TY. 4-0512.

NATHAN BORENSTEIN - Plaster con-
tractor. TY. 7-0441.

PAINTER AND Decorator. Removing
paper, sanding and finishing floors.
TY 8-3898.

CARPENTER-Alterations. No job too
big or too - small. TO. 8-2779.

Built Up Flat
Asphalt Roofing
Gutters
Tin and Canvas Decks
Roof Repairing

All Work Guaranteed

Cadillac
Roofing Co.

2479 W. Davison Ave.

TO. 8-0071

TILE

DO YOU NEED TILE WORK?
New and Repair Special

U OF D TILE & TERRAZZO CO.

DI. 1-0568

UN. 1-5075

WALL \'ASPIING and painting; A-1
work, very reasonable. Immediate
service. TW. 3-8992.

BRICK WORK, all kinds: Porches, chim-
neys, steps. J. Barak, 3770 Edison,
TY. 6-0649.

L. KAHAN, carpenter, cabinet maker,
attics, recreation rooms, kitchen cabinets.
Estimates and advice free. UN. 2-8890.

55-MISCELLANEOUS

R-WAY dining room set, 11/2 years old,
mahogany, 9 pieces. Leaving town,
best offer. WE. 5-8577.

A complete home of furniture

Tables, lamps, bedrooms, living room.
Practically new leather couch qnd
chairs, radio, phonograph combina-
Hon. Television set. Also misc. pieces.
Private-no dealers.

18450 STEEL

JDC Aids Aged Jews

Depart from China

Nine aged Jews, former resi-
dents of Shanghai, China, arriv-
ed at Vevey, Switzerland, by
plane last week, to join the five
others from " China who came
here last May. It brings to 14
the number of elderly Jews who
have left China in the past
three months to find a final
haven in a Swiss old-age home.

14 were brought to Swit-
zerland by the Joint Distribution
Committee in cooperation with
governmental, intergovern-
mental and voluntary agencies.
The five men and four women,
the youngest age 60 and the old-
est 81, who arrived here, lived in
China for the past 25 years.
They come from a variety of
backgrounds, including a clerk,
medical doctor, police officer
and bookkeeper. From the Shel-
ter House in Shanghai, they
were brought to Hong Kong,
then flown by the inter-govern-
mental committee for European
migration to their new home on
the • shores of Lake Geneva.

All

New UN Truce Chief
Hopes to Improve
Palestine Situation

UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.,
(JTA) Maj. Gen. E. L. M. Burns,
newly appointed chief of the
United Nations truce supervisory
organization in Palestine told a
press conference that he felt the
Anglo-Egyptian agreement re-.
garding the Suez Canal would
bring about an improvement in
the atmosphere of the Middle
East and "one would hope that
it would have an effect on the
Palestine situation." He also ex-
pressed the hope that Israel
would return to the Israel-Jor-
dan Armistice Commission-
which Israel has boycotted for
sceveral months.
(Gen. Burns, who succeeds
Maj. Gen. Vagn Bennike, was
expected to arrive in Jerusalem
this week. He revealed that,
with Bennike, he would visit the
capitals of the states involved in
the Palestine armistice agree-
ments.)
The new UN truce chief found
the Israel-Egyptian Mixed Arm-
istice Commission action in wip-
ing the -slate clean of charges
and counter-charges "an en-
c our aging development." "I
hope to keep that slate clean,"
he stated. He has spent his time
here, he said, in interviewing
and seeing the Secretary-Gen-
eral and the delegates from Is-
rael, Lebanon, Egypt, and Syria,
as well as studying documents
on the Israel-Arab • situation
provided him by the United Na-
tions Secretariat.
The last report submitted by
Gen. Bennike as chief of staff of
the UN truce supervision organ-
ization in Palestine to member
governments deals with the
"small war" in Jerusalem be-
tween June 30 and July 2.
At the end of his report, Gen.
Bennike said that he intended
to hold conversations with Jor-
dan and Israel for the discus-
sion of practical measures to
prevent the recurrence of blood-
shed.
Gen. Bennike gave as the rea-
son for his refusal to find either
party guilty of starting the
shooting in Jerusalem "the want
of concrete evidence of advance
preparation for an attack by
either side,"

-

Egypt Charged by Israel
With New Aggression;
TEL AVIV, (JTA)-Egypt was
charged by Israel with new
"grave attacks" after a period of
five weeks of comparative quiet
on the Egyptian-Israeli border.
A military spokesman here
Said that the main water pipe-
line near Niram was blown up
by persons whose tracks led to
Egyptian-held territory in the
Gaza atrip. A large quantity of
explosives was used in the oper-
ation, the spokesman charged.
United Nations observers started
an investigation on the spot.
The second aggressive inci-
dent, the spokesman said, took
place when an Israel patrol was
fired upon from across the
Egyptian border near Rafah.
The patrol returned fire. No cas-
ualties were reported.
The Voice of Israel, govern-
ment radio, reported that Israeli
citizens blew up a main water-
pumping station on the Egyp-
tian side of the Gaza strip, in
retaliation for Egyptian explos-
ion.

Monument Unveilings
and Additional
Obituaries
On Page 14

Polio victims need help NOW!

give

CARD OF

THANKS

The Family of the Late

Naomi Joy Freeman

Acknowledges with grateful appre-
ciation the many kind expressions
of sympathy and the many tributes
extended by relatives and friends
during the family's recent bereave-
ment.

In Memoriam

Obituaries

LOUIS BAKST, 19515 Prevost,
died Aug. 11, in Phoenix, Ariz.
Services at Menorah Funeral
Chapel on Puritan. Survived by a
son, Aaron; four daughters, Mrs.
Rebecca Kass, of Detroit, Mrs.
Esther Kahn, of San Diego,
Calif., Mrs. Diane Zucker and
Mary Bakst, both of Rome, Italy;
two brothers, and nine grand-
children.

*

RUTH

4:

*

(WEINSTEIN) WES-

TON, 2081 W. Euclid, died July
30. Services at Hebrew Memorial
Chapel. Survived by her hus-
band, Samuel; two sons, Martin
and Norman; and two grand-
children.
*
*
ABRAHAM GLASS, 3730 Clem-
ents, died Aug. 3. Services at
Hebrew Memorial Chapel. Sur-
vived by his wife, Rae; two sons,
Harold I. and Joseph Roy; three
sisters and two grandchildren.
* * *
FAY AISEN, 92 Gerald, High-
land Park, died Aug. 5. SerVices
at Hebrew Memorial Chapel.
Survived by two sons, William
and Arthur; three,,, daughters,
Mrs. George Hull, Mrs. Murray
Roth and Mrs. Leonard Kay-
reles; a sister and ten grandchil-
dren.
• C. *
MATES VOSKO, 2641 W. Eu-
clid, died Aug. 10. Services at
Hebrew Memorial Chapel. Sur-
vived by his wife, Fanny; two
sons, Irving and Jack; two
daughters, Mrs. Sanford Rosen-
thal and Mrs. Martin Libson; a
brother, a sister and seven
grandchildren.
* * *
HARRY SHEIN, 19783 San
Juan, died Aug. 11. Services at
Hebrew Memorial Chapel. Sur-
vived by his wife, Ida; two sons,
Henry and Jay; a daughter,
Patricia; father; Isaac Shein,
and two brothers.
* * *
NATHAN MARTIN POLAN-
SKY, 3352 W. Grand, died Aug.
13. Services at Hebrew Memorial
Chapel. Survived by his wife,
Mary; two sons, Murray and
Marvin; a daughter, Mrs. Har-
old Burg; two brothers; a sis-
ter and four grandchildren.
* * *
MENDEL BELY, 11501 Petos-
key, died Aug. 14. Services at
Hebrew Memorial Chapel. Sur-
vived by two sons, Max Bello and
Rubin Bely; two daughters, Mrs.
Morris Nerenberg and Mrs. Abe
Bello; four grandchildren and
two great grandchildren.
*
*
HARRY WEISS, 2909 Webb,
died Aug. 13. Services at Hebrew
Memorial Chapel. Survived by a
son, Nathan; three daughters,
Mrs. Charlotte DeRoven, Mrs.
Morris Kirsch and Sarah; five
grandchildren and four great
grandchildren.
* * *
WILLIAM LEOPOLD LANDS-
MAN, 8615 McQuade, died Aug.
14. Services at Hebrew Memorial
Chapel. Survived by his wife,
Edna; two sons, Ronald and
Howard; a daughter, Sheila;
mother, Mrs. Nettie Landsman;
two brothers and two sisters.
* * *
ARTHUR WISE KAUFMAN,
746 Collingwood, died Aug B.
Services at Ira Kaufman Chapel.
He leaves his wife, Rosalie; son,
Dr. Louis W.; daughter, Mrs.
Robert L. Kann, of Shaker
Heights, 0.; a brother, a sister
and four grandchildren.
* * *
MARY SCHWARTZ, 2702
Glendale, died Aug. 11. Services
at Ira Kaufman Chapel. She
leaves two sons, Harry and Lar-
ry; three daughters, Mrs. Jules
Kraft, Mrs. Abe Slotnick and
Mrs. Joseph Deitch; a brother
and six grandchildren.
* *
JOSEPH BAER, Miami Beach,
Fla., died Aug. 13, in Detroit.
Services at Ira Kaufman Chapel.
He leaves his son, Sidney; three
daughters, Mrs. Maxwell D. Solo-
vich and Mrs. Burton J. Fried-
man, of Detroit and Mrs. Morris
Goldstein, of San Francisco; four
brothers, two sisters, seven
grandchildren and two great
grandchildren.

MAX KELLIVLAN, 13750 Dexter,
died Aug. 12. Services at Ira
Kaufman Chapel. He leaves his
sister, Miss Ida Keliman.
*
ROSE J. MANKOFF, 18491
Lauder, died Aug. 12. Services at
Ira Kaufman Chapel. She leaves
her husband, Albert;. two sons,
Howard and Daniel; her mother,
Mrs. Dora Jacobs; three broth-
ers and three. sistem.

C

*

9810
Lawton, died Aug. 12. Services at
Ira Kaufman Chapel. She leaves
her husband, Emil; and a son,
Harold L., of Long Beach, Calif.
* *
HARRY H. BIERMAN, 13641
Dexter, died Aug. 11. Services at
Ira Kaufman Chapel. He leaves
his wife. Sarah; two sons, Gil- '
bert of Richmond, Calif., and
Edwin, of Detroit; two daugh-
ters, Mrs. Harvey B. Goldberg
and Marcus Sugarman; three
brothers, four sisters and seven
grandchildren.
• * *
PERCY GREENFIELD, 275 E.
Hazelhurst, Ferndale, died Aug.
13. Services at Ira Kaufman
Chapel. He leaves his wife, Vera
Rees, a son, David; two broth-
ers, three sisters and a grand-
child.
•
*
FANNIE POLLOCK, 18546 Sus-
sex, died Aug. 15. Services at
Ira Kaufman Chapel. She leaves
her husband, Samuel; two
brothers, Harry and William
Nedelman; and a sister, Mrs.
Bessie Simon, of Pittsburgh, Pa.
• * C
STANLEY ORLOF F, 20271
Annchester, died Aug. 14. Serv-
ices at Ira Kaufman Chapel. He
leaves his wife, Leah; and a
daughter, Mrs. Marilyn Guss.

JOHANNA :DOIVIBROWER,

*

CHARLES BIEGELMAN, 2251
W. Philadelphia, died Aug. 17.
Services at Menorah Funeral
Chapel, on Puritan. Survived by
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Abra-
ham Biegelman; a brother, Leo;
and a sister? Mrs. Robert Wein-
trob.

In loving memory of (Ars be-
loved son and brother, Pfe, Al
exander Mogill, who was killed
while fighting for his country ox
Aug. 21, 1944.
Sadly missed by his mother,
Gussie; brothers, Leo and George
Mogill; and family and Harry
Rosenthal.
.
In cherished memory of my
beloved husband and our devot-
ed father, Jerry J. Greenblatt,
who passed away on Aug. 11
1953.
Deeply missed, and always re-
membered by his wife, Rose E.:
son, Dr. Norman Greene; and
daughter, Mrs. Norman W. Kauf-
man.

President of Dortmund
Jewish Community Dies

DORTMUND, (JTA)
Sieg-
bert Vollman, head of the Jew-
ish community, died here. He
had ea e the local Jewish.
community since his liberation
in 1945 from a concentration
camp where he had spent the
war years.

Moritz Goldschmidt Dies

COLOGNE, (JTA)-More than
1,000 mourners attended the fu-
neral services here for Moritz
Goldschmidt, president of the
local. Jewish community. Gold-
schmidt's remains were brought
here for interment from Italy,
where he had succumbed to IL
heart attack. He was 57.

Rabbi Gives House Prayer

WASHINGTON, (JTA)-Rabbi
Morris Teller, spiritual leader of
South Side Hebrew Congrega-
tion, Chicago, Ill., offered the
opening prayer for the House off'
Representatives here.

JOSHUA S.
SPERKA

Author of

"ETERNAL
LIFE"

Samuel Victor Dies

Services for Samuel Victor,
who died Aug. 15, were held
Tuesday at Ira Kaufman Chap-
el. Mr. Victor, president and
owner of the Victor Paint Co.,
12817 Dexter, came to Detroit 40
years ago from his native Rus-
sia. He was 38, and lived at 17607
Fairfield.
Among the many organiza-
tions with which he was affil-
iated were Cong. Shaarey Zedek,
Pisgah Lodge, Bnai Brith, Zion-
ist Organization of America,
Paint, Varnish and Lacquer
Assn. and the Wallpaper Whole-
salers Assn.
Surviving are his wife, Jennie;
a son, Harold; three daughters,
Mrs. Samuel Stulberg, Mrs. Mar-
vin Finkel and Mrs. Jack Gold-
berg, a brother and three sisters.

DETROIT JEWISH NEWS-i 9

Friday, August 20, 1954

MONUMENTS

0

C:=4

By Karl C. Berg
owner
Max Wrotslaysky
Monument Works

Distinctive
Monuments
Reasonably Priced
3201 JOY ROAD
Corner Wildemere

TY. 6-0196

RABBI SPERKA

Popular hand-
book on the laws
of MOURNING,
KADDISH, VIZ-
KOR and YAHR-
ZEIT. Now re:
printed in a new
Price
edition.
$2.50.
Available
at all Jeish
w
book stores and

MENORAH CHAPEL

3800 PURITAN

r7

MENORAH

,.7.1 Chapel

We serpg an groups of the

Jewish Community in an at-
mosphere of dignity, 'refine-

ment and reverence..

PURITAN cor. DEXTER

UNiversity 1-7700
C, W. MOORE, Mgr,

BROtlill & RANCH CO.

17125-27 VAN DYKE AVENUE

Opposite main entrance to Mt. OUvet Cemetery

DETROIT 34, MICH. - TW. 2-6200

•

■

,9*Mr:44.44 44m,....wo•

DESIGNERS • MANUFACTURERS

MONUMENTS • GRAVE MARKERS • MAUSOLEUMS

GRANITE • BRONZE • MARBLE

WE ERECT WORK ANY PLACE IN THE UNITED STATES

