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  <title>List of Records in Beck Archives Photograph Collection  - PEAK Digital</title>
  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/</link>
  <description>PEAK Digital Repository</description>
  <language>en</language>
  <generator>Fez </generator>
  <docs>http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss</docs>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Abraham Sosne Family</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57300</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Formal portrait of Rachel Sosne (Mrs. Abraham Sosne) and her daughters Gert Sosne Sigman, Anna Sosne Cohan, Lottie Sosne Craig and Sara Sosne Stein. Members of the Sosne family ran the Capitol Wet Wash Laundry on West Colfax Avenue in Denver, Colorado.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 10:22:01</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Elite Studio
										</author>
		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Adolph Kiesler at Cornerstone Ceremony for Beth Israel Home</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57287</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Adolph Kiesler attends a cornerstone ceremony for Beth Israel Home for the Aged at West 16th Avenue and Lowell Boulevard, Denver, Colorado. He stands in a suit and holds his hat in his left arm while shaking hands with a man in a suit and overcoat. Two men in suits, hats and overcoats stand behind Adolph Kiesler. Two men in work clothes stand behind the cornerstone that is attached to a pulley. &quot;Home for the Aged 1940 Erected 5700&quot; is chiseled on the stone. A boy stands, and two boys (one wears a jacket, the others are in shirtsleeves) sit on a brick wall. Adolph Kiesler was born in Romania on October 18, 1880 and died in Denver, Colorado on December 19, 1967. He started the Peerless Alloy Company in Denver, Colorado in 1908. A philanthropist, he was a founder and president of Beth Israel Hospital and Geriatric Center, formerly Beth Israel Home for the Aged and Beth Israel Hospital, and was active in the Allied Jewish Federation.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 16:56:13</pubDate>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Adolph Kiesler in Front of Peerless Smelting Works</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57288</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Exterior view of Peerless Smelting Works at 2022 West Colfax Avenue in Denver, Colorado. Adolph Kiesler, standing in the center, was born in Romania on October 18, 1880 and died in Denver on December 19, 1967. He began as a peddler and junk dealer and started the Peerless Alloy Company in Denver in 1908. His motto was &quot;Money is made to give way.&quot; He was a founder and president of Beth Israel Home for the Aged (later Beth Israel Hospital and Geriatric Center) and was active in the Allied Jewish Federation.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 16:57:59</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Advertisement for the Palm Theatre</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57315</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Advertisement for the Yiddish theater at the Palm Theatre that appeared in the Denver Jewish News. The theater was located at 3116 West Colfax Avenue in Denver, Colorado. The main drama was &quot;The Second Wife&quot; on December 25, 1923. The Jewish Theatre was established by the Jewish Theatrical Company, organized by the Josephson family. The Jewish Theatrical Company operated from 1922 to 1926.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:40:25</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Art Class at the Jewish Consumptives&#039; Relief Society</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57299</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>An art class that is part of the rehabilitation program of the Jewish Consumptives&#039; Relief Society (JCRS) meets for a session. Male patients sit on folding chairs in a half circle around a male model wearing a robe, pajamas, slippers and hat. Max Lazarus, a German-Jewish artist, is pictured second from the left. Twenty-three charcoal drawings hang on the walls. The JCRS was a sanatorium for tuberculosis patients that was founded in 1904 by a group of immigrant Jewish workingmen along with the support of several leading physicians and rabbis in Denver, Colorado. It was located on West Colfax Avenue just outside of Denver. This print does not appear to be on photographic emulsion paper and may be a page from The JCRS Bulletin.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:16:15</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Ben Glass with H. Leivick, Yiddish Poet</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:37769</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Portrait of Ben Glass (at left) and H. Leivick (the pen name of Leyv??ik?? Halpern or Leivick Halper), Yiddish poet. Both men were patients at the Jewish Consumptives&#039; Relief Society (JCRS). Ben Glass was a printer at the JCRS bindery from 1928 to 1978 when it closed. The JCRS was a sanatorium for tuberculosis patients that was founded in 1904 by a group of immigrant Jewish working men along with the support of several leading physicians and rabbis in Denver, Colorado. It was located on West Colfax Avenue just outside of Denver. This is a copy of the original photograph and matting.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-03-26 19:40:49</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Cavarra Studio (Denver, Colo.)
										</author>
		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Bernstein Family at Seven Falls, Colorado</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:37771</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Mrs. Moritz Bernstein, her son and daughter and an unidentified woman ride on burros in front of the waterfalls at Seven Falls, Colorado Springs, Colorado, during a tour. Mrs. Bernstein&#039;s other son stands behind the group and there is a fake moose behind the burro riders. All five of the men and women are wearing hats. Moritz Bernstein had a dry goods store in Walsenberg, Colorado, where the family lived and in other southern Colorado towns.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-03-26 19:43:02</pubDate>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Beth Israel Hospital and Geriatric Center</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57329</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Exterior view of Beth Israel Hospital and Geriatric Center in
						Denver, Colorado. Beth Israel was founded in 1905 and was located on the
						west side of Denver at 16th Avenue and Lowell Boulevard. Pictured are the
						Guldman and Dupler Buildings.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:52:35</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Beth Israel Hospital and Geriatric Center (Denver,
							Colo.)
										</author>
		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Billie Stein and Her Harmony Girls Band</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:38548</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Billie (Lillian) Stein&#039;s All-Girls Orchestra posing with their instruments. Billie Stein is second from the right, holding her trumpet. Billie Stein started her own all-girls band at the age of 14 and traveled throughout the United States performing on her trumpet.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-04-09 15:21:23</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Bookbinding and Print Shop of the Jewish Consumptives&#039; Relief
							Society</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57325</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Interior of the bookbinding and print shop room of the Jewish
						Consumptives&#039; Relief Society (JCRS) . A large group of men and women work on
						various tasks throughout the room. The JCRS was a sanatorium for
						tuberculosis patients founded in 1904 by a group of physicians and rabbis in
						Denver, Colorado. It was located on West Colfax Avenue just outside of
						Denver.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:46:09</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Boys Milking a Tuberculin-Tested Cow</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57327</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Sammy and Irving Israel milk a tuberculin-tested cow. The boys
						were summertime volunteers in the care of the National Home for Jewish
						Children at Denver, which later became part of the National Jewish
						Hospital.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:49:29</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Capitol Wet Wash Laundry</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:37774</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Joseph Sosne, proprietor, stands at the right with two of his employees in front of the laundry located at 2700 West Colfax Avenue in Denver, Colorado.  Buckets of laundry are located to the right and left of the men.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-03-26 19:46:34</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Celia Isaacs with Children, Sadie and Louis</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:37767</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Formal portrait of Celia (Stager) Isaacs posed behind a prop fence with her children Sadie and Louis.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-03-26 19:38:34</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Channah Milstein Wearing a Kerchief</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:37760</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Mrs. Channah Milstein, wears a traditional kerchief or tichel headcovering in a head and shoulders formal portrait.  She was a member of the &quot;Glazierlach&quot; clan of Denver, Colorado&#039;s west side Orthodox Jewish Community. The family had been glaziers in Brest-Litovsk and in Denver the family became known as the &quot;glassies.&quot;  Channah Milstein was known for her personal commitment to charity in Denver&#039;s west-side East European immigrant Jewish community as she urged residents to contribute to her collections of food, clothing, and money for the needy. She and her husband Benjamin, emmigants from Russia, were part of the early settlers in the Jewish agricultural community located in Cotopaxi, Colorado in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains in the early 1880s. The colony failed in 1884. She was the sister-in-law of Shul Baer Milstein.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-03-26 13:31:24</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Cheltenham School 8th Grade Class</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57309</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>The members of the 8th grade class at Cheltenham School sit on the steps of the school located at the corner of Irving Street and West Colfax Avenue in Denver, Colorado. Many of the Jewish children living in the West Colfax neighborhood went to Cheltenham School. The students include Sam Greenwald, Sam Golanty, ? Shachet, ? Stein, Sara Morris, Dora Gardenschwartz, Ida Cohen, Phil Francis, Louis Cook, Susie Sigman, Sarah Karsh, Si Mintz, Rod Goldberg, Ida Cohen, Phil Francis, Rose Levy, Conrad Echstein, Lillian Neulander, Stella Webber, Izzie Greenwald, as well as Principal William Knapp and teacher Miss Weymouth.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:33:11</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Cheltenham School January Class 1921</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57295</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Women and men pose with students of the class of 1921 on the steps of Cheltenham School located at West Colfax Avenue and Irving Street in Denver, Colorado. The boys wear suits with short pants and the girls wear dresses. Many of the students were from Jewish families who lived in the West Colfax neighborhood of Denver. Hyman Friedland (3rd row, 2nd from left); Standing far right - Frieda Radetsky Toltz; Sam Yales (right front of center); Irene Radetsky(2nd row 3rd from left)</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:09:46</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Martin, Alexander
										</author>
		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Cheltenham School June Class 1917</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57328</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Women and one man pose with students of the class of 1917 on the
						steps of Cheltenham School located at West Colfax Avenue and Irving Street
						in Denver, Colorado. The boys wear suits with short pants and the girls wear
						dresses. Many of the students are from Jewish families who lived in the West
						Colfax neighborhood of Denver.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:50:43</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Martin, Alexander
										</author>
		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Children at the Jewish Sheltering Home in Denver</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:37782</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>A group of children, some in robes, sit in front on three adults at the Denver Sheltering Home for Jewish Children. The children were in the care of the home, which later became the National Home for Jewish Children in Denver.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-03-26 19:54:11</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Hollowell, N.C.
										</author>
		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Children at the National Home for Jewish Children in Denver</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57316</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>A group of children in the Nursery at the National Home for Jewish Children at Denver in Denver, Colorado.  The Home later became part of the National Jewish Hospital. From right to left: Joey Carsh, Barbara Blackmer, Joey Barret, Ester Carsh, and Alvin Uikon.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:41:27</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Children in Front of the Jewish Sheltering Home in
							Denver</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57334</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>A group of children gather in front of the original Denver
						Sheltering Home at 19th Street and Julian Street in Denver, Colorado. A man
						and the matron stand on either side of the children. The Sheltering Home
						began as a home for the children of tuberculosis patients who came to the
						sanatoriums in Denver. The Denver Sheltering Home later became the National
						Asthma Center. The original building was destroyed by fire in 1914. The 36
						children living in the home at the time were taken in by neighborhood
						families until a new building could be erected.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:58:05</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Children Perform at the National Home for Jewish Children in
							Denver</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57333</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Sarah Klein (right) and Mildren Seidenberg (left) rehearse for a
						show at the National Home for Jewish Children at Denver, located in Denver,
						Colorado. The play (probably Hansel and Gretal) was presented at East High
						School in Denver and was open to the entire community.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:57:09</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Cook&#039;s Baths Baseball Team</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:37780</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Members of the 1912 Cook&#039;s Baths Baseball Team line up in front of a brick building: Sam Kantrowitz (coach) at center; others from left to right, Al Fishman, Dave Cook, Harry Gibbons, Max Sedalnick, [unidentified player], Sam Kay, Dudi Goldberg, Sam Waitz, Louie Spector, Max Gelfond, Abe Pringle, and Louis Cook. Ten of the team members are wearing uniforms that display the word &quot;Cook&#039;s&quot; on their shirts.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-03-26 19:52:20</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Dance Recital at the National Home for Jewish Children in Denver</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57296</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>A group of unidentified young girls participate in a dance recital at the National Home for Jewish Children at Denver, which later became part of the National Jewish Hospital.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:11:10</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Dr. Charles Spivak at His Desk With Dictaphone</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57289</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Dr. Charles Spivak sits at his desk and speaks into a dictaphone. Dr. Spivak was a founder of the Jewish Consumptives&#039; Relief Society (JCRS). The JCRS was a sanatorium for tuberculosis patients that was founded in 1904 by a group of immigrant Jewish workingmen along with the support of several leading physicians and rabbis in Denver, Colorado. The sanatorium was located on West Colfax Avenue just outside of Denver.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 16:59:34</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Dr. Charles Spivak Seated at His Desk</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:37766</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Dr. Charles D. Spivak sits at his desk at the Jewish Consumptives&#039; Relief Society (JCRS) with a copy of the Denver Jewish News opened in front of him, and a telephone on an extension frame behind him.  Spivak was the first editor of the Denver Jewish News. The JCRS was a sanatorium for tuberculosis patients that was founded in 1904 by a group of immigrant Jewish working men along with the support of several leading physicians, including Dr. Spivak, and rabbis in Denver, Colorado. It was located on West Colfax Avenue just outside of Denver. Dr. Charles Spivak&#039;s early socialist philosophy was in play at the JCRS, which was largely supported from modest donations by the members of the Jewish working class, most of them East European Jewish immigrants. He instructed that fund-raisers should collect money in dimes and quarters so the JCRS could continue as a &quot;people&#039;s institution.&quot;</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-03-26 19:37:35</pubDate>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Dr. Emanuel Friedman</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57301</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Portrait of Dr. Emanuel Friedman, a pediatrician in Denver, Colorado, at his desk. He originally came to Colorado because of tuberculosis. After recovering his health, he opened his office on West Colfax Avenue in the immigrant community and was one of Denver&#039;s first pediatricians. He graduated from Denver&#039;s Gross Medical College in 1904 and also served on the medical staff at National Jewish Hospital and the Jewish Consumptives&#039; Relief Society.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:23:14</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Dr. Isadore Bronfin, Ben Lindsey, Clarence Darrow and Staff
							Members of the Jewish Consumptives&#039; Relief Society</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57331</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Trial lawyer Clarence Darrow stands with Jewish Consumptives&#039;
						Relief Society (JCRS) staff members and with Judge Ben Lindsey of the Denver
						Juvenile Court. Left to right: Dr. Isidore D. Bronfin, Judge Ben Lindsey,
						Dr. Leo Tepley, Clarence Darrow and Dr. Charles Spivak. Clarence Darrow
						defended John Scopes in the Tennessee &quot;Monkey Trial&quot; against prosecutor
						William Jennings Bryant. Dr. Isidore Bronfin was a physician and
						tuberculosis specialist with the JCRS; Leo Tepley was a physician with the
						JCRS, and Dr. Charles Spivak was a physician and a founder of the JCRS.
						Judge Lindsay was a pioneer in the establishment of the American juvenile
						court system. The JCRS was a sanatorium for tuberculosis patients that was
						founded in 1904 by a group of immigrant Jewish workingmen along with the
						support of several leading physicians and rabbis in Denver, Colorado. The
						sanatorium was located on West Colfax Avenue just outside of
						Denver.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:55:10</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Ed Grimes</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57294</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Ed Grimes in a formal portrait taken for the Independent Order of B&#039;nai B&#039;rith Lodge #171 in Denver, Colorado. Ed Grimes was a colonist at Cotopaxi, Colorado and walked to Denver from Cotopaxi in 1883, a distance of about 94 miles. He later served as Congregation Zera Abraham&#039;s first president and was also active in B&#039;nai B&#039;rith Lodge #171.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:07:03</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Etta Miller Robinson</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:37779</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Etta Miller Robinson poses for a formal portrait. She is wearing a flowered full-length dress with lace at the collar and cuffs and a sash waist. Etta Miller Robinson was born in Lithuania and was the eldest daughter of cattle dealer Robert Lazar Miller. Etta Robinson married Hyman Robinson, who ran his family&#039;s dairy business with his brother Morris. Etta died in childbirth in 1900 when the couple&#039;s son Sam was born. Sam Robinson was responsible for the transformation of the Robinson Farm Climax Dairy into the Gold Seal Dairy, which later became Robinson Dairy.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-03-26 19:50:54</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Nast Studio
										</author>
		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Exterior of Hebrew Education Alliance</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57332</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>The Hebrew Educational Alliance&#039;s original building at West
						Colfax and Meade Street. It was founded in 1932 and became the largest
						congregation on Denver&#039;s west side. The Hebrew Educational Alliance was
						created as a result of the &quot;alliance&quot; between the Beth David Hebrew School
						Sisterhood and Brotherhood, and the Denver Hebrew Institute. On October 25,
						1932, Rabbi Manuel Laderman arrived in Denver to serve as the first Rabbi of
						the Hebrew Educational Alliance. The combined synagogue and Hebrew School
						was organized along Orthodox lines. When the Alliance moved into another
						building, the original building became the Golden West Nursing
						Home.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:56:09</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													McNamara, Charles
										</author>
		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Exterior View of Congregation Zera Abraham</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57318</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Congregation Zera Abraham was originally organized as a Chassidic Orthodox Jewish congregation in 1877, making it the oldest congregation on the west side of Denver, Colorado. The building shown here at Julian Street and West Conejos Place was the congregation&#039;s second home. It was purchased in 1938 from the Workmen&#039;s Circle, which originally erected the building as the Labor Lyceum, an educational center. The congregation moved to its third location on Winona Court.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:43:53</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													McNamara, Charles
										</author>
		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Exterior View of Yad Achass (Rumanian Shul)</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57310</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Many small synagogues, or shuls, were built in Denver, Colorado&#039;s west-side with the East European immigrant Jewish community, including Yad Achass, more commonly known as the Rumansche (Romanian) shul. It was orgainized in 1903, and its second home, pictured here, was at the corner of King Street and Conejos Place.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:34:14</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													McNamara, Charles
										</author>
		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Fannie E. Lorber Breaking Ground at the Denver Sheltering Home for Jewish Children</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:37773</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Mrs. Fannie E. Lorber, one of the founders of the Denver Sheltering Home, which opened in 1907, shovels dirt for a groundbreaking of the Lorber Building, with unidentified men and women looking on. The Sheltering Home began as a home for the children of tuberculosis patients who came to the sanatoriums in Denver, Colorado.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-03-26 19:45:16</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Fannie Lorber at Sheltering Home</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57326</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Fannie E. Lorber stands between two unidentified men in front of
						the National Home for Jewish Children. Mrs. Lorber was one of the founders
						of the Denver Sheltering Home, which opened in 1908.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:47:50</pubDate>
	  		  </item>
   				  	      
		  <item>
	  <title>Founders of the Denver Sheltering Home for Jewish Children</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57290</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Promotional notecard from National Jewish Medical and Research Center showing the founders of the Denver Sheltering Home for Jewish Children. From left to right are Jennie Kantrowitz, Mollie Lifshutz, Mary Augenblich, Bessie Willens, Fannie Lorber and Sadie Francis. The Denver Sheltering Home for Jewish Children was founded in 1907 to care for children whose parents were victims of tuberculosis. It later evolved into the National Home for Asthmatic Children and eventually merged with National Jewish Hospital. Spearheaded by Fannie Lorber and Bessie Willens and other immigrant East European Jewish women, the home provided a traditional Jewish environment for the children who passed through its doors, as well as a strong secular education.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:00:45</pubDate>
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	  <title>George Toltz Family</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57291</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Formal portrait of George (Gedalia) and Minnie Toltz and their children Ida, Israel, and Rose. The family became active members of the west-side East European Jewish community. Ida&#039;s married name was Radetsky and Rose&#039;s was Mizel.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:01:55</pubDate>
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	  <title>Geriatric Center at Beth Israel Hospital</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57305</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Exterior view of the Geriatric Center at Beth Israel Hospital in Denver, Colorado. Beth Israel at the corner of Sixteenth Avenue and Lowell Boulevard.  Beth Israel opened in Denver&#039;s west-side community in 1920 as a Jewish old-age home. It added a Jewish-run general hospital in 1923. Sparked by Bella Mintz, it garnered the support of members of Denver&#039;s Jewish community from throughout the city. Philanthropists Leopold Guldman, Isadore Rude, and Adolph Kiesler provided especially generous donations. Eventually its geriatric center evolved into Denver&#039;s Shalom Park, located today in Aurora, Colorado.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:28:49</pubDate>
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	  <title>Hannah Levy as a Young Woman</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:37772</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Hannah Levy sits in an outdoor setting in the early 1930s. Hannah Levy opened the Hosiery Bar with her brother Jack and by 1936 they were running five retail women&#039;s clothing stores called, Fashion Bar stores, in Colorado. Later they opened the chain of Hannah clothing stores. Hannah Levy used her interest in fashion to serve as chief buyer for the enterprise. She also became a leading Colorado philanthropist and helped support numerous community institutions, including the Rose Hospital and the University of Denver.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-03-26 19:44:19</pubDate>
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	  <title>Harry Battock Family</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57314</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Harry and Rose Battock are sit for a formal portrait with four of their children; Ben, Sophie, Joe and Mary. Harry Battock, who came to Denver, Colorado to be treated at the Jewish Consumptives&#039; Relief Society (JCRS), peddled fruit and vegetables from a horse-drawn wagon on Denver&#039;s west side.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:38:18</pubDate>
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	  <title>Hebrew School Class at Yeshiva Etz Chaim</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57286</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Class of students and teacher of the Yeshiva Etz Chaim School chedar class at 2852 West Fourteenth Avenue in Denver, Colorado&#039;s Jewish immigrant enclave. Two adult men stand behind 28 male students. From left to right starting in the first row at the bottom: &quot;1. Unidentified male, 2.Unidentified male, 3.Unidentified male, 4. Kandler, 5. Hershkovitz, 6. Ben Fishman, 7. Max Schreiber, 8. Sam Schwartz (the Baker&#039;s son), 9. Cohen (the Barber&#039;s son), 10. Willie Solomon, 11. Weinstein (Doctor&#039;s son), 12. Abe Ornstein, 13 Singer, 14. Phil Richtel, 15. Fabricant (Auto mechanic&#039;s son), 16. Bronstien (Chuneh), 17. Abe Weiner (Chickie Boomie), 18. Sam Silver, 19. Lou Siegel (Red), 20. Weinstien (Muttle), 21. Bernstein, 22. Sammy Dare, 23. Rudy Boscoe, 24. Barney Siegel, 25. George Rubin, 26. Joe Sobel, 27. Unidentified male, 28. Al Schiff, 29. Mr. Clarr (teacher), 30. Mr. Greenberg (Mayer Luzer).</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 16:54:55</pubDate>
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	  <title>Interior View of the Star Bakery</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57337</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Members of the Boscowitz and Rubin familes stand in the Star
						Bakery store surrounded by loaves of bread. Pictured from left to right are
						Rudy Boscowitz (Boscoe), Elya (Eli) Rubin, Eva Boscowitz Rubin and Sam
						Boscowitz (Boscoe). Located at 2744 West Colfax in Denver, Colorado, the
						Star Bread Company (operating as Star Bakery) was founded by East European
						immigrants Eva and Jacob Boscowitz in 1907. After her husband&#039;s death in
						1909, Eva Boscowitz continued to operate the store, later marrying another
						baker, Elya (Eli) Rubin. The boys changed their names to Rudy Boscoe and Sam
						Boscoe, eventually taking over and operating the business until the
						1970s.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 18:02:17</pubDate>
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	  <title>Irene Stein and Her Artwork</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:32552</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Irene Miller Stein (1894-2000) (Mrs. Azriel Stein), age 94, looks through a piece of her artwork. Stein was the daughter of Anna and Robert Lazar Miller. In 1921 she married Azriel &quot;Azie&quot; Stein, a pharmacist who owned and operated Pencol Drug Store at the corner of Pennsylvania Street and Colfax Avenue. Irene Stein was a regional artist who worked in a variety of media and was still creating works of art in her nineties. She died in 2000 at the age of 106.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2009-11-10 18:02:47</pubDate>
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	  <title>Irving and Arthur Hayutin Seated in a Goat Cart</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:37765</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Irving (age 6) and Arthur (age 3) Hayutin sit together in a small cart drawn by a goat in front of their childhood home on Denver&#039;s west side. Irving wears a cap and Arthur wears a hat and coat. The cart is inscribed with the words, &quot;Denver 1924.&quot; Irving and Arthur, who both became attorneys, were the sons of Morris and Anna Ginsberg Hayutin and the brothers of Peryle Hayutin Beck.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-03-26 19:36:37</pubDate>
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	  <title>Israel and Rebecca Kortz</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57297</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Full-length portrait of Israel Kortz in his suit and bowler hat and Rebecca Kortz in a dress and hat. She holds a parasol. The Kortz family originated in Brest Litovsk, Russia, and arrived in Denver, Colorado around 1885. The Kortz family and their descendants contributed to the development of Denver and its Jewish community.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:12:40</pubDate>
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	  <title>Jacob and Charlotte Gordon and their Daughters</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57330</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Jacob and Charlotte Gordon stand in front of a building. In front
						of them are their daughters, Bess (with a large bow), Baila, and Eleanor. A
						son born later is not shown in the photograph. Jacob, a schohet (a kosher
						slaughterer in the Jewish tradition), Talmudic scholar, and later a mohel
						(one who performs the ritual circumcision), migrated to Denver, Colorado, in
						1914 from Russia to join his uncle, Velvel Heller. By 1917 Jacob Gordon
						saved enough to bring his wife and daughter Bess from Russia and the family
						settled on Denver&#039;s west side. Two more daughters and a son were born in
						Denver. Charlotte Gordon was a founder of the Beth David Sisterhood, which
						was organized for the purpose of building a school for Jewish education on
						Denver&#039;s west side. As treasurer she collected dimes and quarters for the
						school in the neighborhoods on the west side of Denver. The Sisterhood
						merged with the Denver Hebrew Institute and became the Hebrew Educational
						Alliance.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:54:04</pubDate>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Joseph Goldfain Family</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57317</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Studio portrait of East European Jewish immigrants Joseph and Nettie Goldfain and their children shows the family in Denver, Colorado with Joseph holding a Yiddish newspaper printed in America. Pictured from left to right are (first row) Rose, Joseph, and Ephraim Goldfain; (second row) George, Samuel, and Nettie Goldfain.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:42:30</pubDate>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Kobey Family Home in Aspen, Colorado</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:37764</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Exterior of the Kobey family home in Aspen, Colorado.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-03-26 19:35:39</pubDate>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Label Ginsburg Standing in Ginsburg&#039;s Grocery Store</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:37770</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Label Ginsburg stands in front of Ginsburg&#039;s grocery counter wearing a suit and bowler hat. Canned and dry goods are displayed on the shelves as well as a large sign for Hills Brothers Coffee. The store was located at 1401 Grove Street in Denver, Colorado. When a sign painter made a mistake and spelled the Ginsburg surname with a &quot;u&quot; instead of an &quot;e,&quot; Label (Louis) changed the family name to Ginsburg.  Label married Mollie E. Ginsberg and is the father of Dr. Hyman Ginsburg of Frisco, California, Joseph Ginsburg, Accountant - Denver, Rose Ginsburg Greenblatt (Mrs. Isadore Greenblatt), Fay Ginsburg Langer (Mrs. William Langer).</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-03-26 19:42:06</pubDate>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Louis Robinson Family</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57339</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Louis Robinson sits on a chair, flanked by his wife and children.
						Louis Robinson established the first Robinson dairy farm in 1885. He was
						instrumental in developing the Jewish Consumptives&#039; Relief Society (JCRS)
						and donated the land on which the JCRS poultry and dairy farms were
						developed. Robinson Dairy remained a family enterprise for five generations.
						This is a copy of the original photograph.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 18:04:31</pubDate>
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		  <item>
	  <title>Major Operating Room at the Jewish Consumptives&#039; Relief Society</title>
	  <link>http://adr.coalliance.org/codu/fez/view/codu:57313</link>
	  	
	  	 <description>Interior of the major operating room used for collapsed lungs on the campus of the Jewish Consumptives&#039; Relief Society (JCRS). The JCRS was a sanatorium for tuberculosis patients that was founded in 1904 by a group of immigrant Jewish workingmen along with the support of several leading physicians and rabbis in Denver, Colorado. The sanatorium was located on West Colfax Avenue just outside of Denver.</description>
	  	  	  	<pubDate>2010-11-17 17:37:15</pubDate>
	  					<author>
													Mile High Photo Co.
										</author>
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