38 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS — Friday, May 4, 1962 — 40-EMPLOYMENT , - FINANCIAL OPPORTUNITY Large corporation has outstand- ing sales opening for a man aged 25-40. Individual must be local resident with managerial ability, ambition. and show prog- ress for age. Business or sales background helpful. In request- ing personal interview, please submit resume stating personal history, education. and business experience. Write Box 549. The Jewish News. 17100 West Seven Mile Road. Detroit 35. Michigan. HOUSEKEEPER, 35-40. for large home, must know simple cook- ing. No shirts to do. Stay in. Off Sundays. Must have city refer- ences. Family of 3 adults. Start $35 week. CALL EVENINGS ONLY. TE 4-9494 Two experienced real estate sales people. male or female. Please call for appointment. GEM REALTY & MORTGAGE CO. 50-BUSINESS CARDS LARKINS MOVING AND DELIVERY SERVICE Also Office Furniture. Any time. Reasonable. 3319 GLADSTONE TY 44587 ORCHESTRAS, finest music, all oc- casions, International: Carlos Ri- vera. VA 2-9226. I. SCHWARTZ. All kinds of carpenter work, no lob too big or small. BR 3-4826. LI 5-4035. ..0u1E's Re-uphoistering. Repairing Satisfaction guaranteed. Reason able Free estimates. UN 4-3339 VE 5-7453 TILE DO YOU NEED TILE WORK? New and Repair Special U OF D TILE do TERRAZZO CO. UN 1-5075 PHARMACIST 15379 LIVERNOIS AVENUE WANTED FOR UN. 1-4630 40-A-EMPLOYMENT WANTED EXCELLENT day worker has Thurs. free. $7.00 plus bus fare. Call EL 7-0616 for references. TYPIN(; done at my home. Pick-up and delivery. Reasonable. UN 3-5265. WIDOW will baby sit or stay with children while you travel or con- valesce. UN 4-8707. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY TO OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS $5,000 CAPITAL REQUIRED CALI. WO 1-5290 55 - A - WANTED MISC. WANTED from a better home. private party. Clothing for my little girls, size 8-14. In good condition, PARTNER WANTED for Kosher Meat • and reasonable. Also infants business. Call DI 1-2406. wear. Call LO 5-6908. MEN'S FURNISHINGS and Tailor 55-B-APPAREL Shop. Widow must sell. Call KE 7-1880. TURN YOUR OLD suits, topcoats, and shoes into cash. TU 3-1872. ESTABLISHED women's ready to- wear store, selling discount mer- chandise, wonderful opportunity 57-FOR SALE: HOUSEHOLD for man and wife. Doing nice vol- GOODS AND FURNISHINGS ume. with very low overhead. Call Mr M. J., El. 7-0545. MOVING 45 - BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 50 - BUSINESS CARDS - -- REPAIRS, brick. cement, plaster, pointing, chimneys, porches. Steps. UN. 2-1017. FOR BETTER wall washing. call James Russell. One day service . TO 6-4005 526 Belmont. FURNITURE repairs and refinishing. Free estimates. Call UN 4-3547. ALL CARPENTER work. Kitchen cabi- nets, louvre doors, railings, cedar closets, porches. floors, steps. Work myself. 342-1880. DRESSMAKING All Kinds of Alterations Call for Appointments UN 3-8283 17175 ROSELAWN PAINTING, wall washing, 25 years experience. striping, waxing, buff- ing tile floors. TE 4-5864. PAINTING and decorating, finest workmanship, free estimates. Sam Fishman UN 1-3265. HOME REPAIRS (No Job Too Small) • • • • • • • Carpentry Glass Screening Gutters. Plastering Painting Complete Electrical Service (License # 7 1 8) FREE ESTIMATES KE 3-9988 VE 8-2219 ERNIE'S CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR FOR SALE-Amana Freezer, Roper gas stove, refrigerator, Kenmore washer and dryer, furniture. 19580 Stratford near Pembroke. Open Sunday. 87 - PETS FOR SALE STANDARD Poodle Puppies, beauti- ful white show quality. Sired by in- ternational champions. Puttencove Promise, best of show at Westmin- ster. WE 5-1872. Federal Grants Will Go to Jewish Board of Guardians for Research NEW YORK, (JTA) - Re- search grants totaling $606,832 to be spread over a period of seven years have been awarded by the Federal Government to the Henry Ittelson Center for Child Research of the Jewish Board of Guardians, it was an- nounced by Henry L. Heming, president of JBG. The grants will make possible, Heming said, the continuation of research conducted by the Ittel- son Center for the last seven years, and will be used for an inquiry into the roles played by organic factors and family pat- terns in the illness of schizo- phrenic children The grants were made by the National Institute of Mental Health of the United States De- partment of Health, Education and Welfare. Eleven psychia- trists, neurologists and research- ers will work on the project. under Dr. William Goldfarb, di- rector of the Henry Ittelson Cen- ter. Dr. David M. Levy, consul- tant to the U.S. Public Health Service and the New York City Department of Health, will be the project program consultant. . PAINTING • • • CALL KRIGEL Prices As Low As 15 A ROOM and $40 FOR ' EXTERIORS All work done by trained mechanics using the finest Oil Bose Points obtainable. FOR PAINTING THAT LASTS CALL US- DI 1-7252, UN 4-3366 or DI 1-6182 KRIGEL PAINTING & DECORATING 25 Years Experlonce Special rates to Real Estate Companies U. S. Has Trouble Deporting Malaxa, Romanian Nazi OBITUARIES NEW YORK, (JTA)-Fulton Lewis, Jr., nationally syndicated columnist, charged that Nicolae Malaxa, former Romanian liv- ing "in palatial elegance" in this city, has been implicated in the death of 100,000 Romanian Jews during World War II. Declaring that efforts to de- port him to Romania have been unavailing, Lewis stated: "There is no explanation why Malaxa is still here. Nor is there an ex- cuse." According to the columnist, Malaxa, an industrialist in Bu- charest, "financed the infamous Iron Guard of Romania, which massacred, tortured, imprisoned and hanged hundreds of thou- sands of Jews in the early days of 1941." Later, during the war, Lewis alleges, Malaxa "hooked up" with Albert Goering, brother of Mar- shal Goering, Hitler's No. 2 man, and "helped supply Hitler's army with some of the metallur- gical products so badly needed during the war." Lewis asserted that Malaxa came to the United States in 1946 to represent the Communist Romanian govern- ment. and has remained here since. The United States Immigra- tion Service, which has held de- portation hearings against Ma- laxa, "has been stymied in its efforts to send him back to Ro- mania," according to Lewis. King of Sweden Names Blaustein, 2 Others to Haminarskjold Board UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., ■ MRS. MINNIE BARON BER- LAD of Miami Beach, Fla., died April 26. Survived by husband, Isadore; three daughters, Mrs. Al (Anna) Cohen of Chicago, Mrs. Nat (Florence) Goldman of New York and Mrs. Edward (Shirley) Rosenberg of Detroit; six grandchildren and two great grandchildren. a a * BENJAMIN D E A N, 7419 Curtis, died April 24. Survived by his wife, Faye; a son, Har- old; his mother, Mrs. Fannie Dean of Chicago; two brothers and two sisters. ▪ * PEARL KENNEDY, 5549 Manistique, died April 25. Sur- vived by her husband, Thomas; a son, Robert of Santa Monica, Cal.; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Brown, and a brother. * s * ANNA RATCHICK, 11501 Petoskey, died April 26. Sur- vived by a son, Jack Rogers; a daughter, Mrs. William Flem- ion; a brother and two grand- children. * * DAVID LITVIN, 19135 Prev- ost, died April 26. Survived by his wife, Marion; a son, Nor- man; four daughters, Mrs. James (Ruth) Fisher of Tucson, Ariz.; Geraldine of Studio City, Cal., Mrs. Theodore (Maxine) Jackson and Mrs. Ronald (Jean- ette) Holzman of Hairborn, Ohio; two brothers and three grandchildren. • * BESSIE SHER, 18638 Schae- fer, died April 26. Survived by her husband, Max; two daugh- ters, Mrs. Paul (Clara) Shultz and Mrs. Isadore (Esther) Plot- nick; three sisters and six grandchildren. • a • G U S S I E ROTTENBERG, 11501 Petoskey, died April 26. HARRY R. HELMAN, 18980 San Juan, died April 27. .He leaves his wife, May; a son, Leroy; and a sister, Mrs. Peter Hack. * s * ZELDA SIMON, 1460 Farmer, died April 28. She leaves three nephews, Nathan, Alfred and Frederick Simon; two nieces, Mrs. Bernard Linden and Mrs. Jerry Tobias; and a cousin, David Nederlander. * * * JOSEPH STOLLER, 13241 W. Chicago, died April 29. He leaves six sons, Max, Herman, Jack, Irving, Robert and Louis; a daughter, Mrs. Charles Cush- ner; 15 grandchildren and 10 great grandchildren. * s * HEIDI GALANTER, 15 3 4 9 Cherrylawn, died April 30. Sur- vived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Max Galanter, and grand- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Weingarten. ▪ • S MEYER SHERMAN, 2 18 6 1 Beverly, Oak Park, died May 2. Survived by his wife, Ruth; son, Harvey; daughter, Mrs. Herbert (Nancy) Kay; five brothers, a sister, and three grandchildren. * * SAM DWOSKIN, 19936 Tracy, died April 20. He leaves his wife, Ann; a son, David; a daugh- ter, Mrs. Aaron Leash; a brother, a sister and five grandchildren. * * * ROSE ROTH, 767 Ferdinand, died April 29. She leaVes two brothers, Joe and Louis Roth; and a sister, Mrs. Jack Krause. (JTA) - King Gustav IV Adolf of Sweden has named three Americans to the board of trus- In loving memory of our tees of the Dag Hammarskjold darling Joyce Weingarden Mar- Foundation, which has its head- quarters at Stockholm. Survived by a brother-in-law, kle, who left us five years ago today, May 19, 1957. ' The three are Andrew W. Julius Rottenberg. Oh happy hours we once enjoyed and how Cordier, the late Hammar- skjold's executive assistant; Jacob Blaustein, honorary pres- ident of the American Jewish Committee, and Ernest A. Gross. Blaustein, who had served one term as a member of the United States delegation to the United Nations, was a close personal friend of Hammarskjold. Gross was American deputy permanent representative here during the administration of former Presi- dent Harry S. Truman. Dr. Maximilian Bendit Dies in London at 49 LONDON. (JTA)-Dr. Maxi- milian Bendit, an eminent neu- rologist and active supporter of Jewish causes, died here at the age of 49. French President Charles deGaule and former French President Vincent Auriol were among his private patients. Bendit took an active part in various Jewish charities. espe- cially for youth causes. He made frequent trips to Israel where his family. which escaped from Romania, now resides. Born in Czernowitz. Romania, Bendit completed his studies in psychia- try in Paris where he practiced for a number of years. During World War II he was among the first contingent of free French forces who emigrated to England where he was appointed chief resident physician at the French Hospital in London. Richard Fondiller Dies Richard Fondiller, 77, one of the country's outstanding con- sulting actuaries, died in New York Sunday. Born in Minsk, Russia, he came to this country at the age of 2. The face of the late Senator Carter Glass of Virginia. founder of the Federal Reserve System, will appear on the new $50,000 bill. In Memoriam MAX GROSSMAN, 18043 Sweet their memories still; Wisconsin, died April 27. Sur- But Death has left a vived by his wife, Dora; a loneliness, the daughter, Mrs. Irving (Lee) World can never fill. Weiner; and three grandchil- Sadly missed by all, her pa- dren. rents, Sue and Lou Weingard- BENJAMIN KAUFMAN, 18926 Monte Vista, died May 2. Sur- vived by wife, Celia; a son, Dr. , Jack; two daughters, Barbara and Mrs. Harold Saferstein of Levit- town. N.J.; a sister and two grandchildren. • * * WILLIAM ABRAMSON, 23000 Parklawn, Oak Park, died May 2. Survived by wife, Florence; three sons, Marshall and Dr. Lary Abramson and Harvey Al- len; a daughter, Mrs. Edward Robinson; his mother, Mrs. Goldie Abramson; and seven grandchildren. * * * ESSIE GUTENBERG, 19345 Glastonbury. died April 25. She leaves three sons, Abe Guten- berg, Alfred Cohen and Nat Kent: two daughters, Mrs. Sam Goldberg and Mrs. David Sher- man: a brother, two sisters, eight grandchildren and 15 great grandchildren. * x * MORRIS J. LOEB, 18685 Mendota, died April 26. He leaves a son, Kenneth; a daugh- ter. Mrs. Charles Prussian; a brother and six grandchildren. • * * MAX SHARF, 13841 Dexter, died in Miami Beach, April 26. He leaves his wife, Yetta; five sons, Ben, Sigmond, Clarence, Oscar and Donald; a daughter, Mrs. Saul Block; a sister and nine grandchildren. * * * JACOB W. SELLER, 16206 Ward, died April 29. He leaves his wife, Louise; two sons, Mark and Charles; a daughter, Mrs. Simon Singer, a brother, three sisters, his mother, Mrs. Sarah Seller; and four grand- children, en; her sister s, Mrs. Ruben Isaacs (Irene) and Mrs. Harvey Tanner (Raundie); her hus- band, Marshall; and her daugh- ters, Sandra and Frances. * * * In memory of Abraham Gluck, who passed away May 7, 1961. Sadly missed by his beloved wife. Jenny; his brothers and sisters, Herman, Nathan, Mrs. Yetta Polovitz, Mrs. Eva Dash and Mrs. Pearl Allen. In Loving Memory of MERRILL GOODMAN Who passed away May 5, 1960. Sadl 37 missed and always re- membered by his wife, Lea, and sisters. IN MEMORIAM The Hannah Schloss Old Timers mourns the passing of one of its distinguished, members BEN EDER We pay tribute to his memory for his friend- ship, for all the good deeds that marked his active life. Our heart- felt sympathies go to the entire Eder fam- ily. May they be con- soled in their hour of sorrow.