Newspaper Page Text
Page 13
first annual CONVEN
f tion southeastern
ORTHODOX RABBIS
i Continued From Page 6)
recommend that the officers
utive Committee of the Union
in constant contact with the
stituent organizations in order to
Uit t lie in in their work.
We recommend that only such
l, c engaged as are observant
h Orthodox religious law.”
; lay morning the last Rabbini-
n was held and Rabbi Israel
is fold. of Miami, Fla., was unan-
elected President and Rabbi
n Axehnan, of Charleston, S. C.,
I.xecutive Council of the follow
er Kabl>is was elected:
n Nathan N. Rosen, Savannah, Ga.
Kahhi Benjamin Axelman, Charles-
! ill. > ( •
Kahhi Klijah I). Stampfer, Memphis,
ihhi Israel Weisfeld, Miami, Fla.
Kahhi Xisen Heifetz, Nashville, Tenn.
While the Southern Rabbinical Con
ner of the Orthodox Rabbis was
in session a permanent organization of
in, ii of the Southern Orthodox Con-
Kregatioiis was formed and the follow-
ticers were elected : President,
Weitz, Savannah, Ga.; First Vice-
ddent, F. Hershkowitz, Nashville,
Second Vice-President, L. Wei-
Miami, Fla.; Secretary, William
lo r, Savannah, Ga.; Treasurer,
ml Rosen, Savannah; Assistant Sec-
iries. Max Kupferstein, of Miami,
Harry Stern, Nashville, Tenn.
man of Executive Committee,
v Garfunkel, Savannah, Ga.
After the final session, Mayor Gor-
Saussy greeted the delegates of
'iivention and extended his best
s to the Union of Southern Or-
io«lo\ Congregation and to the South-
n ( (inference of Orthodox Rabbis.
1 hi Tuesday evening the guests were
udered a reception by Mr. and Mrs.
Garfunkel. The guests also in-
led the officers of the Synagogue
h Jacob and the members of the
M'tion Committee and their wives,
officers of the Congregation are:
ilumenthal, President; Max Fos-
ice-President; H. Gable, Record-
ecretary; Marx Wilensky, Treas-
Philip Foster, Financial Secre-
ii'tees: J. Bernstein, A. J. Fein-
Chas. Boblasky, H. S. Wexler,
'■'tker, M. Richman, N. Persky,
Silverstein, Sam Portman, Sam
Hniau. I. Center.
lf d of Education: Chairman, Na-
Bersky; Marx Wilensky, A. Med-
s-a,n Blumenthal, Max Foster, I.
!ir . J. Richman, Albert Blumberg,
•C Ginsberg.
Reception Committee consisted
ini Blumenthal, President, of the
Jacob; L. Weitz, M. Wilensky,
Bortman, Nathan Persky, William
I. Blumberg, Rev. H. Geffen,
Slotin. Fred Rosen, Chas. Gar-
: and H. Horovitz.
testimonial banquet was held
<mlay evening at the Jewish
»>nal Alliance for the visiting
Rabbi Nathan N. Rosen, of
. acob Synagogue, was the toast-
ami in his welcome expressed
mre appreciation and that of the
Rabbis to the women who had
ated. Among those who gave
gs were Sam Blumenthal, Presi-
The Southern Israelite
dent of the B. B. Jacob Synagogue;
W illiam Pinsker, Jewish Educational
Alliance; Nathan Persky, Mifitzi Has-
kalah; Mrs. Sam Hornstein, Senior
Hadassah; Mrs. A. J. Garfunkel, He
brew Women’s Aid; Mrs. Alex Raskin,
Womens Club, and Sam Portman,
President of the Zionist Organization
of Savannah.
Among the Rabbis who spoke were
Rabbi H. Stampfer, Memphis, Tenn.;
Rabbi Heifetz, Nashville, Tenn.; Rabbi
Axelman, Charleston, S. C.; Rabbi
Weisfeld, Miami, Fla., and Rabbi
George Solomon, of Savannah, Ga.
Several vocal selections were rendered
by Rev. H. Geffen, of Savannah.
During the convention, luncheons
were sponsored by the Senior Hadas
sah, Hebrew Women's Aid, Daughters
B. B. Jacob, and the Grandmothers
Club.
Wender received their D.H. degree
from the Robin Adair School of Hy
giene.
Messrs. Sidney Newworth and Harry
Steinberg, of Tampa, Fla., spent a few
weeks in Atlanta recently.
Miss Lavinia Greenblatt has returned
home from college.
SOCIETY
(Continued From Page 8)
Misses Helen Abelson and Mary I.ee
Miss Pauline Sorodie, of Birming
ham, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Dave
Spielherger,
(Continued on Page 14)
It takes a lot
of Comfort
to run up an ELECTRIC BILL
T HE cost of electrical comfort is
so low that no family need
“scrimp” on this item in the budget.
You have to bum a 50-watt lamp
four hours to add one cent to your
bill, while a 25-watt lamp runs eight
hours for a penny.
For one cent you can make
enough toast to feed the whole fam
ily and more—21 minutes of opera
tion for a penny.
An hour with the vacuum cleaner
finds your house thoroughly spruced-
up. And only one cent has been
added to the bill for all that work,
which would take you many, many
hours by hand.
Run your radio from seven to
nine in the evening, and that two-
hour entertainment has only cost you
one penny. And if the elec
tric fan has been running
during that time it has only
added half a cent to the
cost — a fan will run four
hours for a penny.
For one cent you can run a wash
ing machine one hour, a heating pad
four hours, a curling iron ten hours.
And your electric refrigerator can
run steadily for one hour, while you
are freezing a dessert, and add only
one cent to the bill.
Truly it takes a lot of comfort to
run up an electric bill! It is the small
est item in the family budget. It is
the one item in the household budget
whose price is lower today than in
pre-war days — all the rest are far
higher than they were in 1913. On
this Company’s lines alone the 1929
rates represent a saving of over
$600,000 a year to the people for the
same service.
Georgia
POWER f« ZZjj COMPANY
A CITIZEN
WHEREVER WE SERVE