ith a house full of his wife's German relatives, our favorite uncle Hermann Wolf kept his usual equanimity and continued to be his kind self; however, two constantly rambunctious brothers were a bit much in this now overcrowded household.
Alfred was thus dispatched to the "Pension Grosser" in St. Germain-en-Laye, near Paris, in the company of his two French cousins, another Alfred Moritz and cousin Georges, until the start of classes.
A third Alfred Moritz, son of grandfather Isidor's brother August, had taken advantage of the turn-of-the-Century liberalization in Germany, completed medical studies and opened a practice in Berlin. Like many others, he perished in the Auschwitz Death Camp.