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THE 1ODTHEIN ISRAELITE
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Rev. Taratoot
Dies; Retired
Cantor, Moreh
Rev. Jacob Taratoot, a retired
cantor and teacher at Ahavath
Achim Synagogue, died Saturday,
Sept 21.
Funeral services were held
September 22 at Ahavath Achim
Synagogue, Rabbi Harry H. Ep
stein and Cantor Joseph
Schwartzman officiating. Burial
was in Greenwood Cemetery.
Rev. Taratoot, a native of Rus
sia, had lived in Atlanta since
about 1914 and had been connect
ed with the synagogue about 45
years.
He is survived by his daugh
ters, Mrs. Seymour Cristal of At
lanta, and Mrs. I. Malamud of
Washington, D. C.; sons, Philip,
Samuel, Joseph and Isador Tara
toot and Samuel Glass, all of At
lanta; a brother, Harry Taratoot
of Atlanta, and 23 grandchildren
and 14 great-grandchildren.
Macon Architect
Killed in Wreck
MACON— Meyers Goldenberg,
41, Macon architect, was killed
in an automobile accident near
Jackson, Ga., during the Labor
Day weekend.
The car he was driving to At
lanta lost traction on a rain-slick
ed pavement and plumeted over
a 45-foot embankment, overturn
ing several times and crushing
him to death.
The funeral was conducted
September 3 in Stanetsky’s Mem
orial Chapel, Dorechester, Mass.,
by Rabbi S. Korff. Interment was
45 Boylston Lodge Cemeetry, West
Roxbury, Mass.
Mr. - Goldenberg studied at
Georgia Tech and was graduated
in 1943 and again in 1951 with
different degrees. He was a na
tive of Mattapan, Mass., and a
World War II veteran.
Surviving are his wife and two
daughters, Ruth Ellen and Debra
Susan, of Atlanta, who will soon
make their home in Boston, and
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Julius
Goldenberg.
Mrs. Rose Azrael
Mrs. Rose Dunn Azrael, wife
of Samuel Azrael, music business
man, died September 17 in Bal
timore. She was 50 years old.
She is survived by her hus
band; a son, Jacob Marshall Az
rael; her mother, Mrs. Bessie
Dunn of Dublin, Ga.; two sisters,
Mrs. Leah Landey, of Valdosta,
Ga., and Mrs. Shirley Reisman,
of Atlanta, and a brother, David
Dunn, of Dublin.
The funeral was held Septem
ber 18 at the Sol Levinson fu
neral home in Baltimore, with
burial in Arlington Cemetery.
SYMPATHY
When some one in your
family has died, it’s hard
to think logically and
clearly. But you can de
pend on our truly courte
ous and sympathetic per
sonnel to assist you in all
funeral details. Our long
years of experience result
in complete confidence
for you.
Henry M. Blanchard
& Son
ambulance service
1270 Spring St., N.W.
11. <-4311 Atlanta, Ga.
Friday, Sept, 27, 1965
Max Danneman
Max Danneman, 7#, retired
Atlanta merchant, died Sunday,
Sept. 22. He had for years op
erated a kosher meat market
and delicatessen. In this capacity
he was well known in the Jew
ish community.
A native of Russia, Mr. Danne
man was a member of Shearith
Israel Congregation and Fulton
Masonic Lodge 216.
Funeral services were held
Monday, Sept. 23 at Blanchard’s
chapel with Rabbi Harry H.
Epstein and Cantor Joseph
Schwartzman officiating. Burial
was in Greenwood Cemetery.
Mr. Danneman is survived by
three daughters, Mrs. Jack Kin-
sler of Columbus, Mrs. Joseph
K. Krinsky and Mrs. Ruth Kora-
lek, both of Atlanta, and a bro
ther, Dan Danneman of Atlanta.
A1 Horwitz
A1 Horwitz, 61, of Brooklyn,
N. Y., died Tuesday, September
17.
A native of Atlanta, he had
lived in New York several years
and was retired from the whole
sale-clothing business.
Funeral services were held Sep
tember 18 at Westminster Chapel
In Brooklyn.
Mr. Horwitz is survived by a
son, Marvin Horwitz of Brooklyn,
and four sisters, Mrs. Arthur J.
Shur and Mrs. Jake L. Pries, both
of Atlanta; Mrs. Ike M. Rudder-
man of Gainesville, Fla., and Mrs
Raye Wolfe of Coral Gables, Fla.
Mrs. Isadore Brown
Mrs. Isadore Brown, 84, of
Charleston, S. C., died September
17.
A native of New York, she was
the former Sadie Cohen. She had
lived in Charleston for the past
five years.
Survivors include two daugh
ters, Mrs. Joseph E. Goldlng^knd
Mrs. Ernest Weatherhorn, both of
Charleston; two sons, Sol Brown,
Atlanta, and Leon Brown, Wash
ington,; a sister, Miss Carrie
Cohen, Charleston; a niece, Mrs.
Benedict Goldberg, Augusta; two
grandchildren and four great
grandchildren.
Funeral services were conduct
ed at the graveside in Magnolia
Cemetery, Augusta, by Dr. Nor
man Goldburg.
Mrs. Reuben Blumenfeld
Mrs. Bess Ehrlich Blumenfeld,
54, of Savannah, died September
11.
She was the wife of Reuben
Blumenfeld, and was a resident
of Savannah for 30 years. She
was a member of the Congrega
tion B. B. Jacob, the Sisterhood
of the B. B. Jacob, Georgia Edu
cational Association, the Jewish
Educational Alliance, the Hebrew
Women’s Aide Society and the
Hadassah.
Besides her husband, she is sur
vived by a son, Thomas A. Blum
enfeld, a student at the Univer
sity of Tennessee Medical School;
a daughter, Mrs. William Krapf
of Savannah; her mother, Mrs.
Bennie Ehrlich of Jacksonville;
two brothers, Matthew Ehrlich of
Jacksonville, and two grandchil
dren.
Sipple’s Mortuary is in charge
of arrangements.
Rabbi A. I. Rosenberg conduct
ed the funeral at Sipple’s Chapel
September 12. Interment was in
Bonaventure Cemetery.
Mrs. Evelyn Pearlman
Mrs. Evelyn Ann Pearlman
died September 14 in Houston,
Texas.
The former Evleyn Anne Wen-
grow, she was born and reared
in Atlanta and had lived in
Houston about seven years.
Surviving are her mother, Mrs.
Sylvia Wengrow, now of Chicago,
and her daughters, Marlene Janice
Pearlman and Sylvia Pearlman,
both of Charleston.
The funeral was conducted in
Atlanta September 17 by Rabbi
Harry Epstein. Interment was in
Crest Lawn Memorial Park.
87th Annual Meeting
Jewish Children’s Service Board
Hears of Progress in Area
Dr. William Rottersman, prom
inent Atlanta psychiatrist, gave
the keynote address on “Parent-
Child Relationships in Modern
Living” at the 87th annual meet
ing of the Jewish Children’s Serv
ice, held at the Atlanta Amer
icana Hotel on September 14 and
15.
Attended by board members
and social welfare leaders from
fifteen communities of the five
state area served by the regional
agency—Florida, Georgia - North
Carolina - South Carolina - Vir
ginia, and the District of Colum
bia—the conference gave its at
tention to the needs of local com
munity child welfare programs
and how the resources and serv
ices of the regional agency can
best be directed toward develop
ing and strengthening them.
At a special general discussion
session, Sunday morning, led by
Alfred Garber, vice president,
specific proposals were presented
by representatives of the various
communities. These included
special counselling clinics for
adolescents and parents to con
sider their concerns, anxieties and
problems of relationships, circuit
riding caseworkers for the smal
ler organized and unorganized
Jewish communities, special case
workers attached to major com
munity agencies and offering
services to surrounding commun
ities within a reasonable distance,
and special foster home and group
home demonstration projects for
emotionally disturbed adolescent
children.
The weekend sessions included
a special professional workshop
conducted by Eli Fahn, ACSW
Executive Director of the Jewish
Children’s Service, for executive
directors of Jewish Federations
and Jewish Family and Children’s
Agencies. They considered the
more technical problems of de
veloping local, sub-regional, and
regional programs as well as in
ter-agency cooperation for serv
ices to emotionally disturbed chil
dren, unmarried expectant par
ents, adoption procedures and
community education programs
for a better understanding of
child welfare needs. Participating
were social workers from Wash
ington, Norfolk, Charlotte,
Charleston, Atlanta and Savan
nah, as well as Jacksonville, Tam
pa, West Palm Beach, Hollywood
and Miami.
Dr. Irving H. Goldstein was re
elected for a second term as pres
ident of the 85-member regional
board of the
Jewish Children’s
Service, former
ly known as the
Hebrew Orphans’
§H o m e , with
headquarters in
;. Atlanta since it
was organized in
1876. Also re-
lelected were Al
fred E. Garber,
Cuba and William
Jr., vice presidents,
Abe Goldstein, treasurer, and
Mrs. Louis Regenstein Jr., secre
tary. Joseph F. Haas and Herber*
Ringel were reelected chairman
and vice chairman of the board
respectively, while Armand May
and Albert E Mayer were hon
ored with being chosen as chair
men of the Board emeritus.
Regional vice presidents elect
ed were Mrs. Leon Ackerman of
Miami, Maier Triest of Charles-
OLD BIBLES
■•kwnd In InaftMT. Cdcn, buck
Call ar Writ*
MAVRAY CO.
n> McDmwfk IM, U,
Atlanta IS, «a. tO-Uft
Office: JA. 44652
Morris H. Manheim, Jr.
MONUMENTS
Home: TR. 4-2055
ton, Morris Speizman of Char
lotte, Mrs. Saul Viener of Rich
mond, and Jack Blume of Wash
ington.
A special guest at the confer
ence was Dr. William B. Furie, a
noted Jewish educator from Sal
isbury, who related his experi
ence pertaining to parent-child
relationships in the vary small
Jewisn communities, as gleaned
from the 59,000 miles he traveled
in one year as the executive di
rector of the Circuit Riding Rabbi
projct of th North Carolina As
sociation of Jewish Men.
A special progress report on
the Group Home for emotionally
disturbed adolescent boys to be
established in Miami by the Jew
ish Children’s Service and the
Jewish Family and Children’s
Service of Miami, was given by
Mrs. Burton Goldstein, president
of the Miami agency and board
member of the JCS. The Home
will be for six to eight young
sters who although unable to live
in their own homes, have suf
ficient controls to attend school
and participate in community ac
tivities while being helped
through casework and psychiatric
treatment.
The expanded Educational Loan
program through which the JCS
provides help for Jewish young
sters in the region to attend col
lege and other educational insti-
Canadian Jews Discuss
Teachers Recruitment
For Small Communities
TORONTO, (JTA)—Plans for
recruiting qualified Jewish
teachers for small communities
in this province were discussed
here by a special subcommittee
on Jewish education and a study
group on recruitment, training
and placement of teachers in the
less populated Jewish communi
ties in Ontario. Representatives
of the Jewish educational boards
participated in the meeting. The
subcommittee is headed by Dr.
Joseph Diamond.
Among the ways and means
discussed were: Proper salary
scales fringe benefits, scholar
ships for students in teacher
training schools, and recruitment
of newcomers to the H ebrew
teaching profession from Israel
and other countries. A full re
port on the plans will be sub
mitted at the ninth regional
conference on Jewish education
to be held at Hamilton, Ont., on
November 24.
Texas Woman Wills
$262,000 to Shules
EL PASO, Texas, (JTA)—
Mrs. Rebecca G. Krupp of El
Paso, who died here last
month, has bequeathed a total
of $262,000 to two El Paso
synagogues, it was reported
here. Mrs. Krupp, who was the
widow of the late H. Krupp,
a pioneer in this city’s oil
industry, left $175,000 to Tem
ple Mount Sinai, and $87,000
to Congregation B’nai Zion.
AUGUSTA NEWS
Miss Phyllis Greenfield, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Irving Green
field, recently returned from an
eight weeks’ tour of Israel, Italy,
Switzerland and France. She en
tered the University of Georgia
on September 22.
» • «
Miss Sheila Bogo of Atlanta
spent Rosh Hashonah holidays
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Max Bogo and family in Augusta.
• * •
Edwin Harelick of Atlanta was
In Augusta for Rosh Hashonah,
visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Sol Harelick, and sister, Marian
Harelick.
tutions in the region to attend
college and other educational in
stitutions was reported on by Her
bert Ringel of the Scholarship
Committee. Nine loans have been
approved for students from five
communities to attend nine dif
ferent schools for the year 1963-
1964. The courses of study in
clude graduate training for social
work, nurses training, senior,
junior and freshman studies in
college. Also awarded was a one
year tuition scholarship at Mas
sey College in Atlanta given by
the College to a student recom
mended by the JCS and known
as the Jewish Children’s Service
Scholarship.
All loans and scholarships are
considered by the JCS on rec
ommendations by the local Jew
ish community agency in which
the applicant lives, with the
prime requisite being demonstrat
ed financial need.
New members elected to the
regional board from Atlanta in
clude William Breman, Mrs. Hen
ry Caplan, Mrs. Herbert Cohen,
Mrs. Leon Goldstein, Irvin Kaler,
Dr. Theodore C. Levitas, Ben
Massell Jr., and Erwin Zaban.
Other new members chosen are
Mrs. S. Walter Schine of Wash
ington, Mrs. Ben Steingold of
Norfolk, Irving Fleishman of Fay
etteville, N. C., Lee J. Baker of
Columbia, Mrs. M. B. Ross of St
Petersburg, and Mrs. Stanley
Friedman of Macon.
Want Ads
FOR RENT
3 ROOM FURNISHED APT.
ON BUS LINE, NEAR SHOP
PING. N.E. SECTION.
TR. 2-3688
WANTED TO RENT
GENTLEMAN DESIRES FUR
NISHED ROOM WITH PRI
VATE BATH AND KITCHEN
PRIVILEGES. TR. 5-3838
JOB OPPORTUNITY
COMPANION-SECRET ARY
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MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS. PHI
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SALARY OPEN. WRITE PERTI
NENT INFORMATION AND
REFERENCES TO BOX 118
SOUTHERN ISRAELITE, 390
COURTLAND ST., N.E„ AT
LANTA, GA., 30303
OPPORTUNITY
ATOO Chemical Co. Is now
looking for several young men
to service established terri
tories In Georgia.
Previous selling experience
desirable but not mandatory.
Car and willingness to work
are necessary.
Fringe benefits, drawing ac
count and formal training are
given qualified applicants.
Call Tr. 6-1144 or write P.O.
Box 13552, Atlanta 30324.
For Sale—By Owner
1831 HOMESTEAD AVE., NE
Corner lot. 3 BR, 2 Baths,
LR-DR comb. Living Kit.
with built-ins, large playim,
double garage inside home,
wall-to-wall carpeting thru-
out. Can finance with little
or no cash for person with
good credit Price $25,500.
Harry Berchenko
Office 521-1021
home TR. 2-7151