Newspaper Page Text
Friday, February 10, 1950
Page Two
THE SOUTHERN ISRAELITE
SOUTHERN OBITUARIES
SAMUEL KATZOFF
Samuel Katzoff, 65, well-known
merchant of Wallace, N. C., died
recently while visiting his daugh
ter, Mrs. Leonard Suls, of Balti
more.
Funeral services were conduct
ed at Temple Oheb Shylem in
Goldsboro, S. C., by Rabbi Mau
rice Feuer. Interment was in Wil
low Dale Cemetery.
Mr. Katzo/f, who lived in Man
tling, S. Cy for nineteen years,
was in business in Wilmington
before coming to Wallace in 1942.
NO. 21302
STATE OF GEORGIA
COUNTY OF FULTON
TO THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
SAID COUNTY:
REUBEN ROSE. LEON SOCOL nnd
IRVING K. KALER, hereinafter called
applicants, brink thir. application for
the granting of a charter for a private
corporation, and show to the Court the
following facts:
They desire for themselves, their
associates and successors to be Incor
porated for a period of “Thirty-five (35)
years, with the rights of renewal
thereof, at. provided by law, under the
name and style of
GEORGIA SERVICES, INC.
2.
The principal office and place of
business shall be located in Fulton
County, Georgia, with the privilege of
establishing branch offices and places
of business In such other places as
may be determined.
3,
The applicants' are residents of Ful
ton County, and their Post Office ad
dresses are:
Reuben Roseo-728 Spring St., N\ W..
Atlanta, Georgia.
Leon Socol—1358 N. Highland Ave..
N. E., Atlanta, Georgia.
Irving K. Kaler—483 Boulevard. N.E.,
Atlanta, Georgia.
4.
The purpose and object of said cor
poration Is pecuniary gain and profit
to Its stockholders. The general nature
of the businesses to be transacted, and
the corporate powers desired area:
The operation of laundry, launder
ette nnd dry cleaning establishments,
and allied, auxiliary and subsiduary
activities thereof: also, on Us own be
half. and on behalf of others to ac
quire, purchase, own, hold, operate,
develop, lease, mortgage, pledge, ex
change, sell, transfer or otherwise In
vest. trade or deal. In any manner
permitted by law. In real and personal
property, of every kind and character;
to finance various business enter
prises. Including the tending and bor
rowing of money; to purchase nnd
sell mortgages, securities, deeds, loans
and choses In action, and the purchase
and sale of all types and kinds of
stocks, bonds, debentures and other
securities.
5.
The minimum amount of capital
stock with which said corporation
shall begin business shall be One
Thousand (1.000.00) Dollars, paid In
cash or its equivalent.
«.
The minimum number of common
shares of stock shall be One Thousand
(1,000) shares, each share having a par
value of One (91.00) Dollar, and there
shall be a maximum of One Hundred
Hundred Thousand (100,000) shares of
said stock.
7.
The shares of stock of said corpora
tion may be issued for any considera
tion. whether money, property or ser
vices, and may be issued In exchange
for leases. Including the transfer and
assignment thereof, sales contracts,
plants and equipment, and any other
real or personal property or choses in
action useful or necessary In the
prosecution of the business of said
corporation.
8.
Applicants further request that they
be granted permission to issue frac
tional shares of stock.
0.
Applicants desire that the said cor
poration shall have and enjoy all the
privileges, rights and powers enume
rated tn Chapter 22-18 of the Corpora
tion Act of 1938 of the Code of Geor
gia. and as the same may be hereafter
amended, and all of the powers and
privileges enumerated therein are
made a part hereof to the same extent
as if the same were enumerated herein.
WHEREFORE, applicants pray that
they be incorporated under the name
and style aforesaid, with all the rights
and privileges herein set out. and such
others as are now or may hereafter be
authorized by law, and appplicants
further pray that their application be
granted.
\ IRVING K. KALER
Attorney for Applicants
404-22 Marietta Street Bldg.
ORDER
The foregoing application for the
formation of a corporation to be
known as
GEORGIA SERVICES. INC.
having been presented to the Court,
and it appearing that said application
tv within the purview and intention of
the Statues of the State of Georgia;
and it appearing further that the ap
plicants have conformed with the pro
visions of law relating to the granting
of characters; and it further appearing
by certificate of the Secretary of
State that the name of the proposed
corporation is not the name of any
other existing corporation registered
In the records of said Secretary of
State
IT IS ORDERED AND ADJUDGED
that the said application is hereby
granted, and the corporation is hereby
created under the name of GEORGIA
SERVICE. INC., and said applicants,
their associates, successor* and assigns
are hereby- incorporated as prayed in
•add application, with all the rights,
powers, privileges and Immunities as
prayed in said application and as
authorized by the Law of this State.
This XI day of January-.
WALTER C. HENDRIX
Judge. Superior Court.
Pulton County.
He was a native of Baltimore, a
Mason and a member of Temple
of Israel in Wilmington and B’nai
B’rith in Goldsboro. He was noted
for his civic activities and philan
thropies.
He is survived by three other
daughters; Mrs. Harry Eisenberg
and Mrs. Harry Kramer of Wal
lace and Mrs. Isadore Kramer of
Summerville, S. C.; a brother, Is
adore Katzoff of Baltimore, and
a sister, Mrs. Sam Cavlier of
Baltimore.
BURK UNVEILING
Unveiling ceremonies in mem
ory of Mrs. Ellen Burke will be
conducted at 2:30 p. m. Sunday,
Feb. 12, at Greenwood Cemetery.
Rabbi Harry Epstein and Cantor
Joseph Schwartzman will officiate.
Friends and relatives are invited.
JACOB IIANAN
Jacob Hanan, 82, of Atlanta,
died February 1. Funeral services
were held at the chapel of Henry
M. Blanchard & Son. Rabbi Joseph
Cohen officiated and burial was
held in Greenwood cemetery.
Mr. Hanan died Wednesday at
a private hospital. Although a na
tive of Italy, he had lived in At
lanta since he came to this coun
try in 1914. For many years he
was in the shoe repairing business
here. He was a pioneer member
of the Or Ve-Shalon Congrega
tion.
Surviving are three daughters,
Mrs. Morris Hanan, Mrs. Nace
Amato, both of Atlanta, and Mrs.
Marco Israel, of Los Angeles,
Calif.; a brother, Israel Hanan, of
New York; several nieces and
nephews.
MRS. H. I. DIAMOND
Mrs. Harry I. (Lizzie) Chomsky
Diamond, of Atlanta, died Sunday,
Feb. 5.
Funeral services were held on
Tuesday, Feb. 7. Rabbi Jacob
Rothschild officiated. Burial was
in Crest Lawn Cemetery.
Mrs. Diamond \%as the widow
of Harry I. Diamond, former pres
ident of the Holdfast Rubber
Company, manufacturers of auto
motive and aircraft equipment,
who died three years ago.
Surviving are a son, Eugene L.
Diamond; two sisters. Mrs. H. C.
Rosendorf and Miss Rose May
Chomsky; three brothers, A. S.
Chomsky, G. S. Chomsky and C.
H. Chomsky, and three grand
children, all of Atlanta.
JAKE COHEN
Jake Cohen, 46, manufacturer
of metal parts in Atlanta, died
Jan. 13.
Rabbi Harry Epstein and Can
tor Joseph Schwartzman conduct
ed the funeral Jan. 15 at the
chapel of Blanchard & Son. Bur
ial was in Greenwood Cemetery.
Surviving Mr. Cohen are three
daughters, Miss Marilyn Cohen
and Miss Dorothy Cohen, both of
Atlanta, and Miss Nancy Cohen,
of New York City; a sister. Mrs.
A. B. Reisman of Atlanta and a
brother, Sol Cohen, also of At
lanta.
“South Terrific” Scores Hit;
Reveals Splendid Talent Array
BY ADOLPH ROSENBERG
So specialized has our modern way of life become, with
such super professional entertainers in radio, tv., movies and
concert artists just around the corner for our enjoyment that
we are apt to forget the wealth of
talent for entertainment right in
our own family group.
A wonderful example of such
talent was revealed in the musical
show, “South Terrific”, staged last
week by the Atlanta Section,
Council of Jewish Women as a part
of its bundle party to secure
clothing donated for its Thrift
Shop.
Just as the piles of bundles of
discarded articles rose to ceiling
height at the start of the show, so
afterwards mounted the applause
for the fine performers and the
splendid showmanship of the
sponsors in arranging this talent
feast.
The show, of course, took its
cue from an extremely popular
show currently sweeping interest
on Broadway. Mrs. Arthur White-
hill, in hula skirt, enchanted with
the haunting, nostalgic “Bali Hai."
Edwin Haas, deJongh Franklin,
Gerald Ghertner and George Haas
performed a superb “Dames,”
with a fr^me comically realistic
up to the pair of coconuts. Frank
Lesser, Simon S. Selig Jr., Frank
Myers, Sinclair Jacobs Jr., Arthur
Hey man, Jack Eiseman, George
Goldman, Dan Paradies and Ted
Fisher joined in a ballet number
which was decidedly more hirsute
than femine. So jocose and
hilarious was the reception that
this number was repeated en toto.
Mrs. Donald Kaufman, formerly
a professional dancer, apparently
has lost none of her lissome skill
at terpsichore since she surren
dered the stage for domesticity.
Her dancing knit several numbers
into perfected sequences.
Mrs. Arthur L. Harris and Mrs.
Harry Solomon, as sailors, joined
with Irwin Schwartz and Robert
Gerson for as satirical a turn
about number as we’ve ever wit
nessed. Bob later enchored with
his terrific oral—and explosive—
punctuation act.
Elliot Smolen, Stanley Ebner,
Dr. Marvin Goldstein and Milton
Romm burlesqued in “Meet Me
Round the Corner,” or “Why Girls
Leave Home” while Mrs. A1
Sherer, Mrs. Stanley Ebner. Mrs.
Harry Solomon, Mrs. Sam Lemer
and Miss Barbara Berman pro
vided the “come-hither” lure.
Mrs. Sidney Goldberg, Bernard
Howard and Dan Ehrlich teamed
for three fine brief sketches of
“Married Life,” as he would wish
it, as she would wish it and as it
really is.
“At the County Fair,” the open
ing act, presented a well rehearsed
chorus of “teen-agers and specta
tors” in a riotous Fair number—
complete with horses, merry-go-
round, ferris wheel and other ani
mals. What matter that these were
toys? The choruses here and in the
final “Oh Baby, Shades of 1918,"
a period costume presentation,
performed pleasurably. We must
skjp the names in the interest of
space.
Gem of the entire show was the
versatile Sinclair Jacobs, cos
tumed as a homey master of cere
monies, the rural make-up dis
guising him completely. Only his
voice—and sharp wit struck a
familiar chord. His introduction of
numbers and extemporizing when
the performers took longer to
change costumes than expected
held the show together with sus
tained interest. His forays into
tap-dancing revealed a side of this
communal leader unfamiliar to so
many of his contemporaries.
Mrs. Maurice Pepper was chair
man of the program, coordinating
successfully the assistance of Mrs.
Arthur L. Harris and Mrs. Morris
Hirsch, entertainment; Mrs. Simon
S. Selig Jr., Mrs. Donald Oberdor-
fer, Mrs. Louis Long, hostesses;
Mrs. Hugh Marx, Mrs. Herman
Kulman, bundle stations; Mrs.
Joseph Stone, Mrs. Jack Kirk,
pick-up; Mrs. Albert Selig, Mrs.
J. Kurt Holland, costumes; Mrs.
Armand May, decorations; Mrs.
Kay Pass, wardrobe mistress; Mrs.
Herbert Ringle, Mrs. Louis Regen-
stein Jr., Miss Barbara Berman,
props; Mrs. Jacob Rothschild, Mrs.
Louis Levy, make-up; Mrs. Henry
Geigerman Jr., publicity; Mrs.
Gerald Ghertner, Mrs. Leslie
Jacobs, hula girls; Mrs. Lewis
Hirsch, accompanist for rehear
sals.
Special mention must be made
of the 22 lovely hula girls. They
circulated among the more than
750 guests hawking ducats for
drinks. Their charming smiles and
beguiling midriffs added the is
land touch whose absence in ser
vice satire inspired the quartet act
on “Dames.”
Emory TEPs Get
New Sweetheart
At Feb. 15 Dance
Mu chapter of Tau Epsilon Phi
will celebrate its annual Sweet
heart Dance this year on Feb. 12,
at the Mayfair Club. \
The events of the evening will
be highlighted by the announce
ment of the TEP new Sweetheart,
who will succeed a pert Atlanta
Miss Rachelle Leaf.
Then too, an annual award will
be given to the outstanding TEP
pledge of the year. As the final
feature for the evening, newly
initiated brothers will be formally
pinned in a impressive ceremony.
termites
RATS-ROACHES-MICE
PLY 591
4545 P’tree
And there's noth
ing for shower en-
joyment like a
draft-free, water
tight shower door.
Adds class to your
bathroom, too.
Shower Doors • Tub Enclosures
Convenient Terms Arranged
MIC I*
SHOWia POO* COWFAKT 04 *»(•«*
Contact Your Tile,
Plumbing or Glass
Contractor
cSfunuVL Dorfi. Combanu
OF AMCRICA
*73 React*** St-**!. N L Allant* S, Om.
COMFORT
There’s comfort in know
ing that all will be taken
care of in your hour of
bereavement. Our effic
ient, experienced person
nel will take charge of
all details for you and
will arrange a quiet, dig
nified service in perfect
keeping with your wishes.
Henry M. Blanchard
& Son
Ambulance Service
1270 Spring St., N. W.
HE. 6984-5
{—
C. G. MARTIN. C. P. A.
=
F. W. HESSE. R. P. A.
MARTIN &
HESSE
Public Accountants
S16 Bona Allen Building
Atlanta 3, Georgia
BOOKKEEPING
INCOME TAX
SERVICE CYpreaa 6051
RETURNS