: Montreal
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Girls wishing to spend their vacation at Camp Welcome, apply Monday evenings at the Central Y.W.H.A., 717 Clark Street, to the Camp Secretary.
MOSES ARON VINEBERG DIES
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The funeral .took pla4*on Monday, fuly 7, from hia residence, 29 Cote Des N'eig&s Road, of Mosea Aron Vineberg, one of the oldest members of the Jewish community in Montreal.
Mr, Vineberg, whose death took place on Saturday, wa8; prominent in business and philanthropic work in Canada for nearly sixty years, was a life governor of three hospitals, and was one of the original movers in many notable Jewish charities,
Dr. H. Abramovitz officiated at the religious ceremony at the residence, the mourners including the two sons of Mr. Vineberg, Abraham M. Vineberg, Herbert A. Vineberg, a daughter, Mrs. Jacob Kellert, other relatives and representatives of charitable institutions with which the deceased was connected, and prominent members of the Jewish community. Interment took place at �he cemetery of the Shaar Hashomayim in Mount Royal Cemetery.
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Moses Aron Vineberg w-as born .Neinstadt, Russia, in 1850, He came :o Canada in 1864, settling first in Lansdowne, Ont., where he opened a -mall retail establishment, He married, :i 1869, Fanny, daughter of Myer i'reedman, who predeceased him some >ears ago. In 1870, he came to Mon-:real and engaged in the retail hat and -;r trade on St. Lawrence Boulevard, fterwards removing to St. Paul Street,
� nd entering the wholesale trade, in �'"'hich he continued until his retirement :i 1914.
During his long business career in anada, Mr. Vineberg was actively
� isociated with charitable, religious and immunity work. He was instrumental
"establishing the thriving town of Hirsch, Manitoba, in 1895, on behalf of ' he late Baron de Hirach; he participated n 1868 in the erection of the congrega-
!Qp of the English, Polish and German lews; and in 18&5, while treasurer of 'hat institution, he was largely responsible for the building of the olo Quarters
n McGill College Avenue. He also -lied the office* of president and trustee. The congregation Shaar Hashomayim
also in part owes its building to his efforts,
He was a life governor of the Montreal General Hospital, the Western Hospital and the Protestant Hospital for the Insane; one of the original subscribers of the Mount Sinai Sanitorium at Ste. Agathe, and a supporter of the Federation of Jewish Philanthropies since its foundation. He was a great traveller, frequently visiting Europe, and visited Palestine two years ago.
Among those present at the funeral were: A. M, Vineberg, Herbert Vineberg, Jacob Kellert, H. Kellert, Maxwell Goldstein, Barney Goldstein, Sam E. Lichtenheim, A. L. Gittleson, J. L, Gittleson, P. Glickman, Michael Hirsch, Lionel Coviensky, Robert Hirsch, Dr. A. B. Illievitz, J. N. Neumann, Harold Neumann, L, Samuelsohn, W. LevikofT, Max Bernfeld, Henry Weinfield, H. Levy, Louis Solomon, A. Z. Cohen, Hillel Greenberg, M. L. Joseph, T. Percy Hirsch, Dr. Moe Scherzer, D. Cumming8, S. Ballon, Ascher Pierce, Richard Pierce, Harry Glickman, I. Stuart, D, Davis, L. Cohen, N. J. Fraid, and many others.
DEATHS
In Ottawa, on July 4, Gertrude, age 13 years and 8 months, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. Freed, 149 Esplanade Avenue, Montreal. Funeral took place Sunday, July 6, at 2.30 p.m., from above address to Shaar Hashomayim Cemetery.
BRILLIANT YOUNG 'CELLIST RETURNS TO MONTREAL
After appearing at a recent Students' Concert at Massey Hall in Toronto, Brahm Sands, boy 'cellist, is returning to Montreal, on July 15, and will l>e heard in concert at the Windsor Hall in
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November in conjunction with his sister, BJuma, who will accompany him. Brahm Sands, a former pupil of Prof. Dubois, has entered upon a five years' course of study with Boris Hambourg, of Toronto, the well-known 'cellist.
MORRIS ROTHENBERG DENIES KEREN HAYESOD INTENDS TO ISSUE CALL FOR FORTY TO FIFTY MILLION DOLLARS
New York (J.T.A.;. � Morns Rothen-berg, chairman of the Board of Directors of the Palestine Foundation Fund (Keren Hayesod,), made the following statement to-day in connection with the reported interview between Dr. Weiz-mann and Mr. L^on Levite, of Warsaw:
"Regarding that part of the alleged interview between Dr. Weizmann and .Mr. Leon Levite, of Warsaw, which refers to a proposed call to be issued by the Keren Hayesod for the collection of a fund of from forts1 to fifty milton dollars within a period of two years, I desire to state that the Keren Hayesod
has not considered the raising of such an amount and the report has no foundation whatever. When it is recalled that during the nine years of war relief collections in this country, under the most critical emergency, with all American Jewry co-operating, the total sum raised was
approximately sixty million dollars, it will at once he seen how absurd would be any proposal to raise from forty to fifty million dollars within two years, whether it be for Palestine or for any other Jewish welfare purpose. Obviously Dr. Weismann was erroneously quoted."
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