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Centrally located—
nearest to stores, of
fices, theatres, and
railroad stations.
Guest rooms are all
outside with bath,
circulating ice water,
bed-head reading
lamp and Servidor.
Garage facilities.
2500 ROOMS
*3?? up
World’sTallestHotel-46 Stories High
LEONARD HICKS
Managing Director
MORRISON HOTEL
Madison and Clark Streets
CHICAGO
ST. CHARLES
OX THE HO A 111) WALK
At New Jersey Avenue
Atlantic City
A Smart Hotel in
America's Smartest Resort
EUROPEAN OR A>1 Kl<K AN l’LAN
FRENCH AN I) (iKK MAN
CITIflINR
SPECIAL PASSOVER DISHES
JACKSONVILLE
FLORIDA
"^GEORGE
WASHINGTON
F«m«d lor Kotpiulity
... Modem ... Tourist
•nd Commercial . , .
300 Rooms with B«th
.. Rates $2.00 and up
The Wonder Hotel
of the South ... True
Colonial Hospitality
300 Rooms with Bath
.. Rates $3 and up .
MOTEL
MAYFLOWER
rWO Splendid Hotel* now
I under same ownership and
irection. Radio in every room
he Comfort, Service and Cui-
nc delight the most exacting
Vinter Visitors and Business
4en who make these hotels
icir Jacksonville headquarters
ROBERT KLOEPPEL
OWNER
DIRECTOR
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THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
SOUTHERN NOTES
(Continued from page 15)
Atlanta
Rabbi David Marx was recently on
a trip which carried him to Cincinnati to
be principal speaker at the 108th an
niversary of the founding of the B nai
Israel Congregation, and St. Louis, where
he attended a meeting of the Commission
on Jewish Religious Education.
Rabbi Abraham Schusterman, of
Athens, Ga., was guest speaker at the
B’nai B’rith luncheon recently. The
B’nai B’rith Luncheon Club has had
among its guest speakers every Friday,
the former Governor Slaton, of Georgia;
Honorable Garland Watkins, judge of the
Atlanta Juvenile Court, and other promi
nent civic leaders.
The Shearith Israel Sisterhood gave a
benefit at Rich’s Tea Room recently. Mrs.
J. Goldwasser was chairman of tickets,
with Mrs. A. M. Goldstein, Mrs. I. Clein,
and Mrs. B. Kaplan as assistants. The
prize committee were Mrs. H. Sobelson
and Mrs. S. Zimmerman, while Mrs. R.
Mendelson and Mrs. S. Goncher were in
charge of refreshments. Mrs. Spector
was general chairman of the bridge.
Mrs. Max Scheuer, 68, of Cartersville,
Ga., who died recently in St. Petersburg,
Fla., was interred in Atlanta. Rabbi
Shusterman, of Athens, Ga., officiated.
She is survived by her husband, three
sons, Earl, Lee and Adolph Scheuer, of
Cartersville, a brother, Emil Baer, of
Youngstown, Ohio. She was a cousin of
Mrs. David Marx and Mrs. Julia Som-
merfield, of Atlanta.
Reuben M. Cohen, 42, died after a short
illness. He is survived by his wife, one
son, Melvin Cohen; five brothers, Harry,
Berry, Irvin, Jake and Sol Cohen, and
two sisters, Mrs. A. B. Reisman and Mrs.
Frank Rosenhluth, all of Atlanta.
Simon Silverman, 85, passed away re
cently. Surviving are his wife, two sons,
Louis Silverman and Samuel H. Silver-
man, and four daughters, Mrs. Philip
Gotlieb, Mrs. S. D. Shephard, Mrs. J.
Goodman and Mrs. II. Kaplan, all of
Atlanta.
The friends and relatives of Mr. and
Mrs. Simon Michael, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Michael, Colonel and Mrs. Max
Michael of Athens, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs.
Morris Michael of Macon, Ga.; Colonel
and Mrs. M. G. Michael, Mrs. Meyer
Stern of Athens, offer sympathy upon the
death of Mr. Simon Michael.
Mrs. W. B. Weil, of New York City,
passed away recently after a long illness.
She was for many years a director of the
Amelia Relief Society. She is survived
by her husband, two daughters, Mrs.
Armand Wyle, of Atlanta, and Mrs.
P. M. Sneckner, of New York, and a
son, Mr. Edwin A. Weil, of Chicago.
Rabbi Stephen S. Wise officiated at the
rites.
Bert Altmayer, 64, of San Francisco,
Calif., died recently. He is survived by
his widow, Mrs. Hannah Altmayer, a
brother, Mr. Larry Altmayer, of Atlanta,
and a sister, Mrs. Ben Loewenstein, of
Cincinnati.
Abram Woolfson passed away at his
residence. Surviving him is a son, Mr.
Jake Woolfson, brothers, Mr. Phillip
Woolfson, Atlanta; Mr. Sam Woolfson,
Johannesburg, South Africa; a sister, Mrs.
M. Goldberg, of Gastonia, N. C.
Henry Levy, president of B. H. Levy
Brothers and Company, Savannah, Ga.,
one of the leading stores in the south
east, died at his home in Savannah. He
is survived by his widow, Mrs. Leonie
D. Levy; two sons, Sidney Levy and
Morton H. Levy, and one daughter, Mrs.
Herman M. Edel. He is also survived
by two brothers, Julius Levy, Savannah,
and Camille Levy, Wissenbourg, France,
and two sisters, Mrs. Maurice Bloch, of
Cannes, France, and Mrs. Henry Freund,
of Forbach, France.
Aaron Wallace, of Augusta, Ga., died
recently in his eighty-ninth year. He is
survived bv three daughters, Misses
Esther, Clara and Frances Wallace, of
Augusta, and three sons, William and
Philip Wallace, of Augusta, and B. S.
Wallace, of Fort Pierce, Fla. Funeral
services were conducted by Rabbi Joseph
Leiser.
An Evening With Van Paassen
(Continued from Page 16)
eyes, and there was no doubt in my mind
that it was he, the great savant.
“Good afternoon, Herr Professor,” l
greeted him in German. He motioned
for me to sit down by his table. He ap
peared somewhat restless and his eyes
betrayed anxiety.
“I am lost,” he whispered to me. “I
left my hotel three hours ago, walked
about the block and lost my way home.”
He looked at his watch.
“I was to meet my wife at eleven
o’clock and it is three o’clock already.
>»
He looked rather helpless, even pa
thetic. There w’as his wife waiting for
him, worrying perhaps over his pro
longed absence.
“May I show the way to your hotel,
Herr Einstein?” I suggested. “What is
the name of the hotel, anyway?”
"I don’t know . . . that is, I forgot.
9>
“I shall call a gendarme and ask him to
find out the name of your hotel from the
prefecture,” I said, getting up to call a
cop. In Paris a stranger is registered at
the prefecture within 12 hours after his
arrival.
“Oh, no, please don’t call police . . .
that would create a commotion,” pleaded
the scientist.
“But,'’ I protested, “since you forgot the
name of your place it is the only thing
to do to get you home. And you know
the frau must be getting uneasy.”
Finally, Einstein yielded to my en
treaties and I called the gendarme.
“Please call the nearest prefecture and
find out where Professor Albert Einstein
is staying,” I asked the Frenchman.
A few minutes later the gendarme was
running back to our table.
“Professor Einstein is registered at the
Hotel Louvre.”
I could not help laughing. Einstein
has all this time been sitting directly
across from his hotel.
Miniature Portrait of a
(Continued ft
crashed more anthologies than any other
writer’s. As a youth he told these tales
to Sarah Bernhardt who urged him to
put them on paper. . . . Dictates the first
draft of all his stories. So he didn’t really
take her advice. Rewrites with stubby
pencils that leave calluses on his finger
tips. Earns his living not by sweat of
brow but by curvature of spine . . . Es-
Copyrighted 1932 for Ti
Contemporary Writer
om page 12)
caped death several times when attacked
for political reasons. Also in five auto
accidents. Never while driving. When a
highway cop catches him speeding he in
variably asks him how long he has been
in this country. Because he looks like a
greenhorn from Sicily . . Knows most
of the world’s famous people. Who knows
him too . . . Now you do.
e Southern Israelite
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