50-BUSINESS CARDS

Seek Sister of
Deceased Woman

TILE

DO YOU NEED TILE WORK?
New and Repair Special

OF 13 TILE & TERRAZZO CO.

DL 1-0568

UN. 1-5075

L. KAHAN, carpenter, cabinet maker. at-
tics, reacreation rooms, louver doors,
Estimates and
exceptional material.
advice free. UN. 2-8390.

ASH and Rubbish Drums

52.50

21 Gallon Galvanized Garbage Can $4.00
Heavy Wire Burning Baskets $2.50
Free Delivery-Matt Dean. Phone KE.
3-4870-KE. 1-1593.
•
BRICK, Plaster, Pointing. All repairs.
Chimney, porches, steps. UN. 2-1017,
UN. 2-8948

WALL WASHING and painting, A-1 work
very reasonable. TW. 3-8992. Caftone.

M. L. TAYLOR-Painting and papering,
wall washing, reasonable. TY. 6-1390.

I. SCIIWARTZ & Co All types of car-
penters work. TY 7-7758 or UN. 2-6329.

STORM WINDOWS removed, windows
washed. Awnings put up. KE. 1-1716.

A-I PAINTING, decorating. Reasonable
prices. Free estimates. VL 2-8997,
BR. 3-6271.
--- -
EXPERT painting & wall washing. Ref-
erences. TY. 7-2501.

COLORED painter, expert workmanship.
Free estimates. Clarence Evans. TE.
4-2188.

PAINTING, wall washing, interior,
terior. Free estimates. KE. 1-1716.

ex-

WASH WALLS and ceiling. Good work.
One day service TE. 1-9804.

ACE VAN-STORAGE CO.

Clean, modern equipped vans, 2 men,

Best service, guaranteed, pickups,

piano specialist, local-long distance.

TY. 8-1694

WE DO carpenter work, porches, recre-
ations, additions and utility rooms, kit-
chen. re-model. TO. 7-9755.

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

All Work Guaranteed

Cadillac
Roofing Co.

Bertha Chalof, a resident
of the Pontiac State Hospital,
died June 23, at the hospital.
Services and burial were ar-
ranged by the Hebrew Benev-
olent Society, which is seeking
the whereabouts of Mrs.
Chalof's sister, Mrs. Anna
Rosen, who is believed to be
her only survivor. Mrs. Ros-
en's last known address was
1473 Taylor. Any one knowing
of Mrs. Rosen's present ad-
dress is urged to communicate
with Hebrew Benevolent Soci-
ety, TY. 6-1686.

Nine Israeli Scouts
Arrive in New York
For Tour of Country

NEW YORK-A selected group
of nine Israeli Boy Scouts, in-
cluding Moslem and Catholic,
received greetings of a patrol of
New York scouts on their arrival
here Tuesday aboard the SS Je-
ruselam from Haifa.
Invited to make a tour of scout
camps in the United States and
to participate in the World
Jamboree in Canada next
month, the Israeli visitors were
met by New York scout officials
and Jewish leaders.
At ceremonies on shipboard
the visitors from Israel present-
ed the blue and white flag of
their country to their American
greeters, and the U.S. scouts in
turn gave an American flag to
their foreign guests.
Also welcoming the youths
were Reuven Dafni, acting Con-
sul General of Israel, who greet-
ed them in behalf of his govern-
ment, and Rabbi Irving Miller,
chairman of the American Zion-
ist Council, who bid them wel-
come in behalf of all Zionist
organizations in the U. S.
The AZC is coordinating the
scouts' tour throughout the
country in cooperation with the
Boy Scouts of America whose
guests they will be in various
encampments.

Mrs. Bessie Wetsman,
Prominent Detroiter,
Dies at Age of 92

Mrs. Bessie Wetsman, promi-
nent Detroiter and mother of
three of Detroit's most prominent
Jewish leaders, died at her home,
1666 W. Chicago, last Friday. She
was 92. Funeral services were
held at her late residence Sun-
day m o r n i n g. Rabbis A. M.
Hershman and Morris Adler and
Cantor J. H. Sonenklar offici-
ated.
Born in Russia, she came to
the United States 71 years ago.
She was a Detroit resident for 50
years.
Her husband, the late Joseph
Wetstrnan, who died 18 years ago,
was a prominent
Detroit real es-
tate broker and
a former presi-
dent of Shaarey
Zedek. They
were married 53
years at the
time of his
death.
Mrs. Wetsman
first resided in
Mrs. Wetsman this country at
Oskaloosa, Ia., as a bride, She
had a colorful career, took a
deep interest in Jewish affairs,
was traditionally observant and
was a guide to her family even
when she reached the nineties.
Mrs. Wetsman was associated
with Hadassah, the United He-
brew Schools, the Jewish Hone
for Aged, Congregation Shaarey
Zedek and Mizrachi.
Two of her daughters, Mrs.
Ralph Davidson and Mrs. Morse
Saulson, are former presidents
of Detroit chapter of Hadassah.
Her son, Frank A. Wetsman,
who is a leader in the motion
picture field in Michigan, is a
leader in the Allied Jewish Cam-
paign and other local move-
ments. Mrs. Wetsman, also is
survived by a third daughter,
Mrs. Jacqes Uhr; six grandchil-
dren, two great-grandchildren,
and a brother, Rabbi Walter
Handler, of Oskaloosa, Ia,

New Overseas Bnai Brith Lodges David I, Huhar Dies
New Bnai Brith lodges have At the Age of 63
TO. 8-007?
been established in Rome and in
Brazil, Bnai Brith headquarters
David Isadore Hubar, of 25690
announced.
York, Huntington Woods, a well
known figure_ in Detroit's phil-
anthropic and communal causes
and a practicing attorney for 37
years; died last Friday at the
age of 63. Funeral services were
By NATHAN ZIPRIN
held at Ira Kaufman Chapel on
(Copyright, 1955, Seven Arts Feature Syndicate)
Sunday morning.
Peglerism at Its Lowest
A 1918 University of Michigan
Westbrook Pegler's propensity to quarrel with the dead is an Law School graduate, he was as-
old ailment with the star of the Hearst press. He has defamed sociated with the local Jewish
countless dead in the past, and now he has turned his strange social service agencies and was
avarice on Einstein. How long will it take before he turns on a member of Temple Beth El,
Moses and on Jesus and on the seers and visionaries of all faiths Zionist Organization, Moslem
whose paths did not follow old carvings? The Peglers of the world Shrine, Highland Park F&AM
are never possessed of humility. What they do not understand Lodge, Franklin Hills Country
they would destroy.
Club and Michigan Bar Associ-
Pegler can't bear the idea of the world having heaped
adulation on Einstein in life and in death, an obsession which ation.
He is survived by his wife,
propels him to boasting that he realized he was inviting contempt
by daring to question whether the world really and sincerely Ethel; sons, Alan and Harvey;
mourned the passing of -Einstein. Frightened at this point by the daughter, Cheryl; sister, Mrs. Is-
enormity of his impudence, Pegler goes for hechsher and fortifi- adore Levine, of LaPorte, Ind.
cation to Ben Stolberg's estimate of an ungrateful immigrant. But
Reuven Iceland Dies
calling Einstein an ungrateful immigrant and the author of an
obscure jargon is not enough for this defiler of pen. He hinted
NEW YORK, (JTA)-Funeral
at something more sinister and more contemptible when weeping services were held here June 20
crocodile-like over Ezra Pond, the American poet and anti-Semite for Reuven Iceland, noted Jew-
who escaped treason's penalty only because he was declared ish poet and essayist, who died
legally insane while possessed of sufficient sanity to go on with in Miami Beach at the age of 71.
creative work. It seems to us that one who pretends anguish
Mr. Iceland, who had been a
over a traitor's languishing in forced asylum is lacking ,in the member of the Jewish Day staff
measurements by which to judge greatness or even jargon.
for many years, was the author
Pegler's memory will be forgotten even before the ink dries of a number of books. He was
on the sheets using his dung. Einstein and his jargon will remain born in Radomyszl, Galicia, and
for the ages.
came to the United States in
* *
1903. His body was brought to
Thinking Back
New York for burial,
Dr. Abraham A. Neuman, president of Dropsie College,
Philadelphia, was-I believe-a member of the Isaac Elchanan Refresher Course Seminar
Yeshiva student group which made history close to five decades For U. S. Hebrew Teachers
ago with a strike against the institution, forerunner of what
is now Yeshiva University. When I entered the Yeshiva in 1912
' The fourth annual summer'
the strike was still such a fresh subject of discuision that it seminar, a series of refresher
seemed the daring w
was but of yesterday. The story as I heard it courses and lectures for teachers
was that the students demanded a more dignified approach to in American-Jewish schools, will
the maintenance problem. What the student maintenance fee
be held July 6 to 20 under the
was at the time of the strike can be gleaned from the fact that
joint auspices of the department
my weekly stepend from the Yeshiva in 1912 was all of 50 cents
of education and culture of the
delivered each Friday afternoon in a 50-penny wrapper. The more
advanced students, many of whom are now holding highest posi- Jewish Agency for Palestine and
tions in the rabbinate and institutions of learning, received all of the American Association for
$3 a week. This chapter in the colorful life of New York's Jews Jewish Education, in cooperation
with the National Federation of
merits preservation and gathering into history since the unique
Hebrew Teachers, at Western
area known as the East Side is rapidly yielding to alien change
View Hotel, Ellenville, N.Y.
and the tellers of the story are of the dwindling tribe.

2479 W. Davison Ave.

On the Record

DETROIT JEWISH NEWS-19

Friday, July 1, 1955

Jealousy is the paralysis of

love. - Marquis de Vauvenargues.

Obituaries

REBECCA NEIMARK : 1E401
Sunderland, riled June 21. Serv-
ices at Hebrew Memorial Chapel.
Survived by a son, Sol M. -Lef-
ton; two daughters, Mrs. Ber-
trarld Goldman, of Natick, Mass..
and Faye; and three grandchil-
dren.
* * *
SAM KORMAN, 3791 Fullerton,
died June 21. Services at Hebrew
Memorial Chapel. Survived by
two sons, Saul and David; three
daughters, Mrs. Max Balk, Mrs.
Anna Talcowsky and Mrs. Lena
Goldstein; a brother; two sis-
ters; nine grandchildren, and 13
great-grandchildren.
*
*
*
LESTER BASKIN, 4086 Hum-
phrey, died June 23. Services. at
Hebrew Memorial Chapel. Sur-
vived by his wife, Belle, and a.
son, Martin Findling.
* *
*
FANNIE LUBIN, 18060 Wiscon-
sin, died June 25. Services at He-
brew Memorial Chapel. Survived
by a son, Albert K., a brother;
a sister, and three grandchil-
dren.
* * *
LEWIS WOLFE, 9133 Dawes,
died June 26. Services at Hebrew
Memorial Chapel. Survived by
his wife, Etta; four sons, Irving;
Bernard, Harold and Julius; four
daughters, Mrs. Allan Silvers,
Mrs. Daniel Levy, Mrs. Harold
Sears and Mrs. Leo Neuman; a
brother, four sisters, 19 grand-
children and a great grandchild.
• * *
DAVID M. BLANKE, 19545 Suf-
folk, died June 23, in New York.

Bundestag Rejects
Indemnification Hike

.

BONN, (JTA) - The govern-
ment majority in the Bundestag
rejected a Social Democratic
motion to increase the alloca
tions for indemnification pur-
poses from $38,000,000 to $60,000,-
000. The action was taken at
the second and third readings of
the Federal budget for 1955-56.
The Social Democratic motion
was made by Jeanette Wolf, her-
self a concentration camp vet-
eran, who was congratulated
earlier in the session by the Bun-
destag Speaker on the occasion
of her 67th birthday.
In a bitter speech in which she
named names and cited figures,
she contrasted the large pensions
readily granted Nazi officers
with the miserly payments to
Nazi victims.
Her demands that the indem-
nification program be speeded
up at long last was supported by
other speakers, but when the
motion came to a vote, it was
turned down, with only a half
dozen deputies outside her own
party supporting it.
Minister of Finance H. Schaef-
fer said that the $38,000,000 ap-
propriation was an estimate,"

1956 Economic Aid
For Israel Approved

-
WASHINGTON, ( J T A ) -
Continued economic and tech-
nical assistance for Israel
during the fiscal year 1956
has been approved by the
House Foreign Affairs Com-
mittee in the Mutual Securi-
ty authorization bill. The bill
included no changes in t h e
amounts authorized for the
Middle East in which the sum
allotted for Israel is includ-
ed. The full report on the bill
will be released soon.
T h e Foreign Operations
Administration a n n o u need
authorizations totaling $196,-
000 for Israel to finance bur-
chases of chemicals, chemical
preparations, and ocean
transportation.

Cemetery Memorials

Lowest Prices for Highest Quality
Outstanding Designs

Granite and

DETROIT MONUMENT
WORKS
2744 W. Davison ear. Lawton
TO. 8-6923
TO. 8-7523

Services at Ira Kaufman Chapel.
He leaves his wife, Naomi; a sor.
Gerald; daughter, Nancy; ra.
brother and three sisters.
* •
HARRY MICHAEL M1LOV,
2287 Ford. died June 28. Services
at Menorah Chapel. Survived
by his wife, Eva; two daughters,
Mrs. Dora Malkin, of Los An-
geles, and Mrs. Herman Latov-
sky, of Detroit; two grandchil-
dren and three great grandchil-
dren.
• * *
SAMUEL COHEN, 11842 La
Salle, died June 29. Services
arranged by Menorah Chapel,
with burial in Brooklyn, N.Y.
Survived by three sons, Morris,
Harry and Leonard and four
grandchildren.

Monument
Unveilings

(Unveiling announcements may be In-
serted by mail or by calling The Jewish
News office, VE. 8-9364. Written an-
nouncements must be acccrnpanied by
the name and address of the Person
making the insertion. There is a standard
charge of $2.00 for unveiling notices,
measuring an inch in depth.)

The family of the late Max
Kellman announces the unveil-•
ing of a monument in his mem-
ory at 11:30 a.m.. Sunday, July
10, at Machpelah C e metery,
Rabbi Halpern w ill officiate..
Relatives and friends are asked
to attend.
* * *
The family of the late Abe
Fishman announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in his me-
mory at 1:30 p.m., Sunday, July
3, at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi
Donin and Cantor Adler will of-
ficiate. Relatives and friends are
asked to attend.
C *
The family of the late Merton
'M. Ertz announces the unveiling
of a monument in his memory
at 11 a.m., Sunday, July 10, at
Workman's Circle Cemetery,
Gratiot at 141/2 Mile Rd. Rabbi
Sperka will officiate. Relatives
and friends are asked to attend.,
• * *
The family of the late Joseph
Feldman announces the unveil-i
ing of a monument in his mem-
ory at 2 p.m., Sunday, July 3,
at Turover Cemetery. Rabbi
Gruskin will officiate. Relatives
and friends are asked to attend:
* *
The family of the late Julius
H. Jacobs announces the unveil-
ing of a monument in his mem-
ory at 11 a. m., Sunday, July 3,
at Machpelah Cemetery. Rabbi
Sperka will officiate. Relatives-
and friends are asked to attend.

MONUMENTS

IiIILSACS

MANUAL URBACH & SON

7729 TWELFTH ST.

TY. 6-7192

MENORAH

nye/

• CENTRALLY LOCATED

Only Jewish Chapel in
the Northwest district

• SPACIOUS FACILITIES
Largest Jewish Chapel
in Detroit

PURITAN cor. DEXTE,R

UNiversity 1-7700
C. W. Moore, mgr.

