York funeral home obituaries – Buddhist funeral traditions.
York Funeral Home Obituaries
- An establishment where the dead are prepared for burial or cremation
- A funeral home, funeral parlor or mortuary, is a business that provides burial and funeral services for the deceased and their families. These services may include a prepared wake and funeral, and the provision of a chapel for the funeral.
- (Funeral Homes) A matchcover category whose advertisement mentions funeral parlors, funeral homes, casket makers, or funeral accouterments.
- a mortuary where those who knew the deceased can come to pay their last respects
funeral home
- The Obituaries were one of the most popular and groundbreaking bands in the Northwest USA from 1986-1990. Fronted by singer/wordsmith Monica Nelson who was known for her powerful stage presence and stunning vocals.
- (obituary) a notice of someone’s death; usually includes a short biography
- A notice of a death, esp. in a newspaper, typically including a brief biography of the deceased person
- An obituary is a death notice which often includes an attempt by an author, publication, or news organization to give an account of the life of someone considered significant who has recently died.
obituaries
- York is a walled city, situated at the confluence of the Rivers Ouse and Foss in North Yorkshire, England. The city has a rich heritage and has provided the backdrop to major political events throughout much of its two millennia of existence.
- A city in northern England, on the Ouse River; pop. 101,000
- York was a federal electoral district in New Brunswick, Canada, that was represented in the Canadian House of Commons from 1867 to 1917.
- The southwestern tip of Hayes Peninsula, on Baffin Bay in Greenland. It served as a base for US explorer Robert E. Peary’s polar expedition. A 100-ton meteorite found here was brought to the US by Peary
- the English royal house (a branch of the Plantagenet line) that reigned from 1461 to 1485; its emblem was a white rose
- A commercial and industrial city in southeastern Pennsylvania; pop. 42,192
york
1983 03 04 Segall Bernard Milwaukee Chronicle
The Milwaukee Jewish Chronicle
3-4-82 14
Bernard Segall
Bernard Segall, whom Rabbi Twerski described in his eulogy as “one of the last of the great patriarchs in Milwaukee,” died February 9 at the age of 87.
Born in Poland, Segall came to the United States as a young man. He established a small-town department store in Coleman, Wis., moving from there to Carrollville (now part of Oak Creek), where he owned a small department store from 1926-33. In 1933 he opened Segall’s Family Clothing Store in South Milwaukee from which he retired just a few years ago.
Segall and his late wife Naomi (nee Simmons) worked side-by-side in the business over the years. They had, what their daughter Simme described, as a 24-hour-a-day marriage and they celebrated 57 years of marriage before Mrs. Segall died.
A life-long member of the Milwaukee Jewish Home, Segall was a resident there at the time of his death. He had also been involved in the Gilead Lodge of B’nai B’rith, the Zionist Organization of America and the Jeremiah Rusk Masonic Lodge, in addition to numerous other Jewish organizations and charities.
Segall was a member of Congregation Beth Jehudah and Beth El Ner Tamid Synagogue.
He is survived by his children, Annabelle (Seymour) Wasser of Whitefish Bay and Simme (Jerome) Frank of Fox Point; his grandchildren, Jim (Midge) Frank of New York, Dr. Bruce (Enid) Frank of St. Louis, Ellen (Dr. Mitchell) Cairo of Los Angeles and Linda Wasser of Minneapolis. He is further survived by his great-grandchildren, Leonard Efraim, Elizabeth Meira and Eve Nechamah Frank of St. Louis, and Adam Robert Frank of New York.
Services were held at Goodman-Bensman Funeral Home. Rabbi Michael Twerski and Cantor Norton Siegel officiated. Interment was at Beth Hamedrosh Hagodel Cemetery.
Memorial contributions to the charity of your choice or to the Milwaukee Jewish Home would be appreciated by the family.
1947 12 05 Gash Hilda nee Glassman Milwaukee Chronicle
The Milwaukee Jewish Chronicle
12-5-47 5
MRS. HILDA GASH
Funeral services for Mrs. Hilda Gash, 47, of 5126 W. Concordia avenue, were held at Goodman and Sons funeral home, 1701 W. Walnut street, Sunday Noember 23. Mrs. Gash died suddenly at her home Friday, November 21.
Born in Indianapolis, Ind., Mrs. Gash was a resident of Milwaukee for 25 years. She was a member of Temple Beth El and its Sisterhood, the Home for Aged Jews, Hadassah, Jewish Convalescent Home, Hebrew Sheltering Home, Ladies’ Auxiliary of the Zionist Organization and Washington Park Lodge.
Survivors are her husband, Morris; two daughters, Shirley and Mrs. Rosalyn Wolfe; one son, Sheldon, all of Milwaukee; and a brother, Karl Glassman of New York City.
Burial was in Spring HIll cemetery.