a) C*1 40-EMPLOYMENT z MAN TO WORK IN TILE JEWELRY STOkE, DO YOU NEED TILE WORK? GOOD STEADY JOB. KING'S, 124 MONROE ti •E:40 PRACTICAL Nurse or housekeeper, full charge of small apartment and care of alert elderly convalescent woman with broken hip. Simple kosher meals. Live-in, excellent salary. UN. 1-6362. SECRETARY - Good shorthand and typing. With knowledge of 'office procedures. Grand River-Blvd. dis- trict. Call Mrs. Brown, TY. 8-3200. Friday, June 28, 1957 SALESMAN WANTED Reliable concern, good earnings, bonus plan, will train. Also part- time. BRESLER REAL ESTATE TY. 8-7450 8221 LINWOOD PART-TIME TAILOR wanted. 7310 W. Warren. Call TY 7-3080. WANTED English speaking lady to care for 2 children, 5 and 10, while mother works. Must observe Kashut, will have beautiful room in new ranch type home, no heavy work or cooking, permanent home for right person. Call evenings, Mrs. K estenbaum, Norman dy 8-8282. Fields Employment Couples, Cooks, Maids. Chauffeurs, Janitors, Caretakers, Porters DAY or WEEK TR. 3-7770 UNIVERSAL EMPLOYMENT service, experienced help, days or weeks Call TY. 8-5310. 40 A - 50-BUSINESS CARDS - EMPLOYMENT WANTED MIDDLE-AGED woman will sit with children evenings. WE. 4-4469. VERY RESPONSIBLE baby - sitter, middle-aged woman. WE. 3-6467. EXPERIENCED Receptionist, sales and cashier. TO. 7-5778. RRITJABLE young family man seek- ing full or part-time position. LI. 5-8942. WOMAN wishes dresS making and alterations work. 11842 LaSalle, Apt. 305, TO. 6-5039. BOOKKEEPING, Typing, Teacher, seeks summer employment, state- ments, payrolls, taxes. WE. 3-9248. SINGER, poet, entertainer, no set fee. David Horowitz. TO 5-3652. 45-BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES GROCERY, BEER AND WINE In apt. bldg. Small store, big profits. Doing $4,000 monthly. Rent $47.50 mo., includes heat, lease available. Will sacrifice, owner leaving city, ACT now. S chiff's Market. 2473 Elmhurst. TO 8-3542, TO 6-2624 after 7 p.m. TAXI BUSINESS, in Oak Park. 5 cabs. 2-way radio. Base station. LI 4-2416, LI 1-2416. 50-BUSINESS CARDS All City Moving Company :LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE APPLIANCES - PIANOS ALSO EXPRESSING AGENTS OF U.S. VAN LINES 14948 MEYERS VE. 8-7660 PAINTING, decorating, . free esti- mates, reasonably priced. TO 7-1937 L SCHWARTZ & CO. All types of carpenters work. TY 7-7758 or UN 2-6329. FURNITURE repaired and refinished. Free estimates. WE. 3-2110. LEO KAHAN, carpenter, cabinet maker, attics, recreation rooms, porches, exclusive material. Excel- lent work. Estimates free. Phone UN 2-8890. A-1 PAINTING, decorating. Reason- able prices. Free estimates. VI. 2-1026, BR. 3-6271. LARKINS MOVING and Delivery Service. Any time. Reasonable. 3319 Gladstone. TY 4-4587. Built Up Asphalt Roofing, Shingle Roofing and Siding, Gutters and Tin Decks All Work Guaranteed Cadillac Roofing Co. FHA TERMS AVAILABLE 2479 W. Davison Ave. TO 8-0071 Three Excellent Books for Youth For summer reading, as gifts, to replenish libraries, Macmillan has issued some exceptionally U OF D TILE & TERRAZZO CO. fine new juveniles. UN 1-5075 Highly recommended for young readers is "The Mys- call FOR BETTER wall washing James Russell. One day service. terious Machine," written and TO 6-4005. 526 Belmont. illustrated-both ably and at- PAINTING-Exterior, interior, deco- tractively-by Glen .Dines. The rating, wall washing. W. Williams, hero of the story is Jerry 7758 Prairie. TE. 4-0195. Barnes, an inventor who had REPAIR, brick, cement, plaster, the warning "Top Secret-Keep pointing, chimneys and porches, Out" painted on his laboratory. steps. UN 2-101.7. Together with his friend Vic he DOORBELLS repaired, $4.50; chimes worked at inventions. But when installed, $12.50; free estimates. TR the weird stranger Lankersham 2-3008. EXPERT Painting & Wall Washing. arrived they took him into con- fidence. The stranger began to References. TY 7-2501, build a mysterious machine. CARPENTER, all kinds of altera- Out of it developed the fun tions. Call WE 3-0815. and humor of the story. When COMPLETE decorating service in- terior, exterior commercial ' and the machine was unveiled, it residential, insured, 25 years ex- puffed out balloons with wise perience, workmanship guaranteed. sayings. Bubbles, confetti, ping TY. 5-2293, after 6. pong balls, limericks were the result of the concoction. It General Home. Repairs angered Jerry, until he learned Alterations, additions, garages what a "howling" success this and recreation rooms. machine was-because it pro- Free Estimates duced good cheer and laughter. It is an entertaining book and Work Guaranteed we recommend it. F.H.A. Terms Then there is "Wheels for Licensed Bldr. & Insured Conquest' by Harriet H. Carr, an . interesting adventure story ch develops into a very whi Irving Ron wholesome love story. A trip to LI 5-4761 Pittsburgh, experiences on a LI 5-7051 farm and wholesome human re- PAINTING and Decorating. Free es- lations mark this fine tale. timates. Reasonable price. TO. Another new Macmillan 'T-1937. DOOR-BELLS, CHIMES, repaired product is the new edition of and installed, lamps re-wired, "The Adventures of Don plugs and switches repaired and Quixote" by Miguel de Cer- installed. WE. 4-5138. vantes. It is splendidly EXTERIOR and Interior. Painting trated by Johannes Troyer. and decorating. Spray or brush. Specializing in • paperhanging. Jo- These three books will enrich seph Plinski - Arnold Pemberton. yOur bookshelf and will provide 11376 •ardin. WE. 3-5562. _you with excellent'reading ma- ALL KINDS of Carpenter work. terial. Porch floors, steps, kitchen cabi- New and Repair Special Ron Const. Co. nets-doors. Work myself. UN. 4-1897 55 - MISCELLANEOUS REGULATION Pool Table, newly recovered. New pockets. Including balls and cues, $150. 21911 Ridge- dale, Oak Park. LI. 6-0069. FRENCH POODLES, pure bred sol- ids, black or brown. 8 weeks. LU. 2-4421. 57-FOR SALE-HOUSEHOLD GOODS AND FURNITURE MAHOGANY CABINET portable bar, with glassware. Price reasonable. UN. 1-7007. Ousted Clergyman Is a Missionary Victim NEW YORK (AJP) - Rev. Dr. Richard E. Evans, a staunch Zionist and a friend of Israel, who has directed the Presby- terian Labor Temple on East 14th Stret since 1951, was dealt a severe blow by the Presby- terate of New York when it voted to terminate its relation- ship with the famous institu- tion. Dr. Evans, who has never permitted any Christian mis- sionary activity to take place in the temple, charged that the in- stitution had been "victimized by a parliamentary trick of shabby, dubious character" and that the Presbyterate had "won out on a technicality unworthy of the best traditions of the Presbyterian .Church." The new move will turn the former interdenominational La- bor Temple under Dr. Evan's direction into an out-and-out Christian missionary institution. Ebant Awarded Degree NEW YORK (JTA)-Yeshiva University conferred 160 aca- demic degrees and diplomas and five honorary degrees at its 26th annual commencement ex- ercises. Abba S. Eban, Israeli Ambassador to the United States, and Roy E. Larsen, president of Time, Inc., re- ceived honorary degrees and addressed the graduates. The three others honored by Yeshiva were William Lau- rence, science editor of the New York Times, Dr. Harry Zim- merman of •Montefiore Hospi- tal, and Dr. James E. Allen, N. Y. State Education Com- missioner. European Jewry's Fate Major Concern, Goldmann Tells WJC PARIS, (JTA) - A major problem facing world Jewry today is the fate of an esti- mated 3,500,000 East European Jews, Dr. Nahum Goldmann, president of the World Jewish Congress, told a meeting of the General Assembly of the WJC here. We know that we-cannot ask the regime to become non- Communist just because of the Jews under that regime. But when the Jews' spiritual life is condemned to death, the time has come for Jewry to begin to make its demands on the Soviet Union publicly known," Dr. Goldmann said. The WJC leader asserted that "We want beside the protection of their legal position, respect for Jewish life." Dr. Goldmann expressed the belief that this is the time to seek such action because the Soviet leaders are beginning to realize that they have solved many problems in their country but not the Jew- ish problem. Turning to the situation in North Africa, Dr. Goldmann said the World Jewish Congress must remain outside the dis- pute between the French and the nationalists because the WJC is a world movement which cannot take a position on a local French matter. How- ever, he pointed out, this does not prevent individual affili- ated chapters of the WJC, like the French and Algerian sec- tions, from taking a position. The Congress, he stressed, could only involve itself if Jewish rights were threatened in Al- geria, which is not the case. UN_ Aide Seeks Funds Sev 2 n on efte for Arab Rehabilitation Individuality UNITED NATIONS, DT-A: By JACQUES BACK (JTA) - A shift in thinking away from repatriation and to- wards rehabilitation among the Arab refugees is taking place, according to sources close to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency whose director, Henry R. Labouisse, is in the United States in search of funds to finance a vocational training program to take advantage of this shift. Labouisse, in a press confer- ence, stressed the need to obtain funds for UNRWA rehabilita- tion projects. He said his agency would need at least $15,000,000 for the next twelve months alone to finance vocational and other training projects, and re- vealed that a great many refu- gees are now anxious to take this kind of training. Labouisse's concern with funds for vocational training lent substance to reports that the refugees are beginning at last to accept the fact that most of them will not go back to what is now Israel. 'Man's New Hope,' Foreign Aid Help Religious groups in this coun- try must become aware of the tremendous problems that ex- ist in areas of backwardness and poverty all over the world so they may acquaint them- selves with the overall picture on foreign aid. This is the summation of "Man's New Hope: A Religious Approach to Foreign Aid," writ- ten by Justin Wroe Nixon, pro- fessor emeritus of Christian theeology and ethics at Colgate Rochester Divinity School, in a 112-page pamphlet for the Church Peace Union. In and appendix to the reg- ular chapters, the author has compiled a list of overseas aid expenditures of the American Jewish community during 1955. For the most part, the infor- mation was compiled for the American Jewish Year Book. "Man's New Hope" may be ,obtained for 50 cents from the Church Peace Union, 170 E. 64th St., New York 21, N.Y. Israel to Sell Gift Parcels in U.S., Communist Countries JERUSALEM (JTA) - Plans were completed for the estab- lishment of an Israeli gift par- cel company which will distrib- ute parcels both in the United States and in countries behind the Iron Curtain. The plans call for two categories of parcels: semi-luxury gifts for American recipients and gifts of essential items for Iron Curtain countries. Gift certificates for parcels will be sold in both areas. In the United States, recipi- ents of certificates will be able to choose from Israeli-made arts and crafts, fashion products, re- ligious articles, special foods, and sweets. The list of gift ne- cessities for Iron Curtain recipi- ents includes textiles, clothing, shoes, foodstuffs and appliances. Australian Jews Oppose Emigration of Jews from Israel to Australia SYDNEY, Australia (JTA)- The annual conference of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, the representative body of Australian Jews, "urged the Western Powers to compel Egypt and the other Arab States to accord Israel equal treat- ment in passage through the Suez Canal and the Gulf of Aqaba. The conference also decided to urge the Australian govern- ment to support any action lead- ing toward a peaceful and just settlement of the Middle East conflict. The delegates reiter- ated their opposition to the or- ganized migration of Jews from Israel, pledging that they would not work to help Jews leave Israel to come to Aus- tralia. (An AJP Feature) is interesting to note the parallellism of Matthew Ar- nold's poetry with Ralph Waldo Emerson's prose, as the former chants his spiritual song, with its measured passion, that gath- ers from the stars above and the waters beneath, the inspira- tion that flows from their calm fulfillment of the law of their being, "self-poised-bounded by themselves," and thus serene and strong. Self-dependence is the tenor of their cosmic chant. And self-reliance. To the aristocrat of English letters, from the pride of intel-. lect, and a certain stoic hardi- hood springs self-dependence. But the American philosopher heard in his summons to self- reliance a call to the people; not simply the talismanic word that made him independent of the multitude, but that made also each one of the multitude independent of all the others. Self-reliance is courage. It flows from insight; it leads to power and achievement - to self-dependence. But we cannot have either, unless we have a "self;" unless a man is himself, and not a pale reflection of an- other's opinions, of another's standpoint. There must be self in each and every man; there must be individuality. Indeed, it abides in him. He needs but discover it beneath all the lay- ers and incrustations of conven- tion; he must discover it, and develop for himself his own ele- ments of strength, thus learn- ing to invest his life's capital most honorably and usefully for the good of humanity. It Ben-Zvi in Italy, Stresses Bonds of Friendship NAPLES (JTA) - The firm bonds of friendship between Is- rael and Italy were stressed by President Itzhak Ben-Zvi of Is- rael on his arrival in Naples aboard the SS _Theodor Herzl of the Zim lines, Israel's new- est passenger liner. Ben-Zvi spoke of Israel and Italy as two "ancient nations which. have become young again" and which believe that their destiny lies with the younger generation. Following a visit to Pompei, President Ben-Zvi lunched aboard ship with Israel's Am- basador to Italy, the Chief Rabbi of Rome, representatives of Italian Jewry and the Pre- fect of Naples, representing the Mayor. Sergio Piperno, president of the Union of Jewish Communi- ties in Italy, hailed the Israeli leader as a symbol of the unity of the Jewish people. Elect Liveran to Chair UN-Pension Fund Board UNITED NATIONS (AJP) - Arthur C. Liveran, one of Am- bassador Eban's close aides here at the UN, who serves as an advisor on political and se- curity affairs, has been elected chairman of the UN's Joint Staff Pension Fund Board. The board consists of 27 mem- bers: nine delegates, nine repre- senting the Secretary General and the Specialized Agencies and nine on the Secretariat Staff. This is the first time that an Israeli has been elected to head such a body. Judge Rosenblatt Elected Foundation President NEW YORK (JTA) - Judge Bernard A. Rosenblatt w a s Chili Zionists Convene • elected president of the Founda- tion for the Jewish National SANTIAGO, Chile (JTA) - Fund at its annual meeting. The_ two-day annual conven- The Foundation is the in- tion of the Zionist Federation strumentality through which of Chile concluded with the funds are set up for large-scale adoption of resolutions to give land development projects in maximum aid to Israel. The con- Israel through wills, bequests vention was addressed by Israel and insurance with the Jewish Minister Matitiahu Dori. It elec- National Fund as a beneficiary. ted Miguel Maladaysky, a Gen- The wills and insurance poten- eral Zionist, president; Leo tial raised by the Foundation in Gomberoff, Zionist Laborite, vice - president, and Marcos "A man shall be satisfied with the course of the last three Francos, Mapam member, secre- good by the fruit of his mouth." years since its inception totals $11,000,000. tary. -Pray. 12:6