50—BUSINESS CARDS Dr. Meyer Jacobstein, Ex-Congressman, Dies PAINTING, decorating, wall paper removing. Free estimates. Sam Fishman, UN IA265. - ROCHESTER, N. Y., (JTA)— jacobstein, former Dr. Meyer - member • of the U. S. Congress, college professor and publisher of the Rorchester Journal-Amer- ican, died last Thursday at the age of 83. Born in New York, Dr. Jacob- stein spent most of his life in Rochester. He was elected in 1922 to Congress on the Demo- cratic ticket, and was the second Democratic representative from the 38th Congressional District since the Civil War. He was re- elected twice but chose not to 30% off on all carpets and rugs cleaned and shampooed. Also wall washing and furni- ture cleaning. MASTER CARPET CLEANERS KE 8-6969 A-1 PAINTING, paperhanging, wall. washing. Immediate service. Guar. anteed. Reasonable. UN 4-0326. LARKINS MOVING AND DELIVERY SERVICE Also Office Furniture. Any time. Reasonable. 3319 GLADSTONE TY 44587 I. SCHWARTZ. All kinds of carpenter work, no job too big ur small BR 3-4826. LI 5-4035. NORTHLAND MOVING & STORAGE CO. LOCAL Cr LONG DISTANCE Agent For Lyon Van Lines Inc. 342-3151 NEW METHOD — Carpets cleaned; walls washed, by machine. Work guaranteed. Free estimates. KE 5- 8470—KE 8-1778. TILE DO YOU NEED TILE WORK? New and Repair Special U OF D TILE & TERRAZZO CO. UN 1-5075 LOUIE'S Re-upholstering, Repairing. Satisfaction guaranteed. Reasonable. Free estimates. UN 4-3339, VE 5-7453.. PAINTING, decorating, exterior, in- terior, free estimates. Reasonable. LI 7-5639, KE 8-1047. PAINTING and decorating, rooms as low as $25. Exteriors $60. Licensed and insured. 25 years experience. KE 8-2235. MOTHER of ten needs sewing, alter- ations. Call 532-3746. EUROPEAN dressmaker, designing And alterations, in my home or your home. Call after 5 p.m. for appointment. 835-3834. 55—MISCELLANEOUS TURN YOUR old suits - shoes into cash. DI 2-3717. Must sell, Singer automatic Zig Zag sewing machine. Just dial for decorative patterns, button holes, blind hems. Take on payments of S6.60 or will sacrifice at $66.80. Discount for cash. VI 6-7896 ALMOST new Singer console style sewing machine and zig zag. For button holes, blind hems, designs, etc. Will accept only $3.70 per month of $32.96 total cash price. KE 5-0283. COOKING Classes. "The touch of Grandma". Yeast dough, hors D' oeuvres, Gefilte fish, Kreplach, cakes, pastry. Small groups. MA 6- 6893. WANTED from better home. ma- ternity clothes, childrens. LO 5-6908. 57—FOR SALE: HOUSEHOLD GOODS AND FURNISHINGS Dining Room Set, Bedroom set and Porch set. Glassware. Men's clothing and shoes, size 42. Crib. Ladies' dresses. Other Misc. items. All in excellent condition. 20042 ST. MARY'S OPEN SUNDAY 10-4 ONLY One of the world's largest unions, the United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Imple- ment Workers of America, AFL-CIO ,was founded in Michi- gan in 1935. run in 1928. He was assistant professor of economics in the University of North Dakota from 1909 to 1913. In 1913 he joined the faculty of the University' of Rochester as professor of eco- nomics. Dr. Jacobstein was publisher of The Journal American here from 1924 until the newspaper suspended in 1937. He then be- came a research consultant for the Brookings Institute in Wash- ington. In 1944, he was director of a Senate special committee on postwar economic policy and planning. He retired from public life hi 1957, after completing a Barth's Evangelical- one-year study of Rochester em- at the request of Gov- Lectures Emphasize ployment ernor Averell. Harriman. He is survived by his widow, Lena the Christological (Lipsky), two daughters and Holt, Rinehart -and Winston, eight grandchildren. publishers, 383 Madison, New York 17, announce the publica- Countess Converted tion of a series of religious books, which will include sev- to Judaism to Avoid eral of specific Jewish interest. The first in the series is Prof. Count in Future World The story of the conversion to Karl Barth's "Evangelical Theo- logy,' the series of lectures he Judaism of a countess in 19th delivered at Princeton Theolo- century London, England, de- gical Seminary and the Uni- lighted the audience at the Bays- water Synagogue centenary cele- versity of Chicago. His contention in his lectures bration last week. Mrs. Olga Somech Phillips, co- is that • the history of Christ "took place first and foremost author with H. A. Simons of for the benefit of Israel." Barth "The History of the Bayswater emphasized that "it was the his- Synagogue," spoke on "some tory of the covenant of God with curiosities of the synagogue so- Israel which attained its con- cial scene." She referred to summation in that subsequent "that strange, non-Jewish char- history." acter, the Countess of Charle- The eminent theologian main- mont, born in 1834, the only tained that "God's Word, which daughter of an Irish peer, the was fully spoken in the history first Lord Athlumney, and mar- of Christ, when it became flesh ried to another Irish peer, the in him, remains first and fore- third Earl of Charlemont. most his concluding word to "She was converted to Juda- Israel. This ought never to be ism, frequently attending the forgotten! Nevertheless, Israel Bayswater Synagogue when she was sent precisely as God's me- was in London. The reason for diator to the nations; and this conversion given by members remains the meaning of the of the family was that she had covenant made with it." remarked: 'I do not want to Approaching his subject meet my husband in a future Christologically, Prof. Bar t h world." stated that "the fulfillment of Israel's history is not its own continuation." This is easily in- Anti-Jewish Bias terpretable as a missionary's ap- in Russia Condemned proach. at Mapam Convention However, in his reference to TEL AVIV, (JTA)—A lead- Lessing's play in which Jewish, Christian and Mohammedan er of the leftist Mapam de- claims are compared in the nounced current anti-Semitism story of the three brothers and in. Russia and declared that the precious ring bequeather by death sentences for economic offenses were unworthy of a their father, Barth stated: "Each claimed to have re- Socialist regime. Jacob Hazan, a leader of the ceived his father's one and only precious ring, rather than an party, made the denunciation exact copy of it. The warning at the annual convention of the contained in this fable is ob- party. He said that while Ma- vious, even if we do not choose pam was spiritually united with to follow Lessing's opinion that the Socialist world, it did not, perhaps the genuine ring was however, identify itself with any lost and nothing else but imita- specific Socialist country. The speaker told the dele- tions were left in the brothers' hands. The best theology (not to gates that he foresaw a long speak of the only right one) of period for the Mapam of fight- the highest, or even the ex- ing its way alone with no hope clusively true and real, God of an early union with the other would have the following dis- two labor parties. Achdut Avo tinction: it would prove itself— dah and Prime Minister David and in this regard Lessing was Ben-Gurion's Mapai. He called altogether right—by the demon- the proposal of another Mapam stration of the Spirit and of its leader for a three-party unifi- power. However, if it should cation as -"dead before it was hail and proclaim itself as such, born." it would by this very fact betray Series E Savings Bonds that it certainly is not the one cashed during 1962 averaged true theology." Naturally, Barth's Evangelical less than one per cent per words are Christological, but month of the total amount of E his approach will interest stu- Bonds outstanding, the U.S. dents of theology of all faiths. Treasury reported recently. -Eric Maier, Former WJC Official, Dies NEW YORK, (JTA)—Dr. Eric Maier, 71, former official of the World Jewish Congress, died here Monday after a long illness. He served with the World Jew- ish Congress in New York from 1945 to 1948, after several years in Europe, during which he had been employed by the United States Department of Censorship and Department of. War. Maier had arrived in the United States from Austria in 1938, escaping the fate that eventually engulfed many of his family. On his return to Europe as a U. S. official, Maier managed to devote a considerable amount of time and effort to alleviating the plight of the DP's in the vari- ous camps, and acted as a WJC volunteer, providing medicines, clinthing, books, and other ma- terials. Maier also helped many of the survivors to find relatives from whom they had been sepa- rated. P. Handleman Dies -at 88; Was Called 'The Duke' Philip Handleman, secretary of the Handleman Co., which he founded together with his sons 30 years ago, died last Friday evening at his apartment at the Belcrest. Funeral services were held Sunday afternoon at Kaufman Chapel. Surviving him are a daughter, Mrs. Burton J. Wade of Chi- cago; four sons, Joseph and David of Detroit; Paul of Cleve- Wilhelm Filderman, Rumanian Leader, Dies NEW YORK, (JTA)—Dr. Wil- helm Filderman, one of the most prominent leaders of Rumanian Jewry until the advent of the Nazi regime there, died in Paris, aged 79, according to a dispatch received here. Born in Bucharest, and a well- known attorney, he represented Rumanian Jewry during the Ver- sailles Peace Conference that followed World War I. In 1927, he was elected to the Rumanian parliament. He was the author of several books tracing the his- tory of anti-Semitism in his coun- try and attacking that phenom- enon. Considered the most influ- ential leader of Rumanian Jew- ry, he was sent by the pro-Nazi government in Rumania to a con- centration camp in Transnistria. After the war, he came to the United States, where he resided for a short time prior to taking up permanent residence in France. Judge Rubenstein, 1st Jew on Massachusetts Bench, Dies at 84 PHILIP HANDLEMAN land and Moe of Chicago; 10 grandchildren and three great- grandchildren. His wife died in 1956. They were married 51 years. For more than 50 years a resi- dent of Detroit, he took a deep interest during that entire pe- riod in the activities of Temple Beth El, of which he was an active member, as well as in Bnai Brith and in many other local movements.. With his sons he was one of the large contrib- utors to the Allied Jewish Cam- paign and to other Jewish and civic causes. Always a good dresser, an avid reader and a good story teller, he made many friends among all faiths and he became known here as "The Duke." The late Mr. Handleman was born in Warsaw, Poland, April 24, 1875, and his death occurred less than a week before his 88th birthday. He came to this country at the age of 17, settled in Detroit in 1912 and in the interim visited in Europe nu- merous times. He knew seven languages. Judge Philip Rubenstein, the first Jew to serve on the Mas- sachusetts bench, died April 17 at his home in Longwood Towers, Brookline, at the age of 84. He was appointed as a spe- cial justice of the Boston Ju- venile Court when it was estab- lished in 1906. He served there until his retirement in 1956. Judge Rubenstein was instru- mental in founding the Beth Israel Hospital in Boston and served as trustee of Temple Israel. Surviving are his wife, Meyer Fisher, Sports Minna Dreyfus; two sons, John Head at Brandeis, Dies B. and Paul B.; three brothers NEW YORK, (JTA)—Funeral and three sisters. services were held in Brooklyn for Meyer (Mickey) Fisher, 58, Max Nemoff Dies acting director of athletics at Born in Odessa, Russia, and Brandeis University. a Detroit resident for more than The athletic director died of 30 years, Max Nemoff died April a heart attack while visiting rel- atives in Brooklyn where he was 16 in Israel. He was 78. Mr. Nemoff owned and lived born. During 1960 he went to above a harware store at 7515 Israel on a six-month sabbatical Michigan for 25 years. He was at the request of the State De- a member of the Jewish National partment as coach of Israel's Workers Alliance. Surviving are 11960 Olympic basketball team. his wife, Rose; two sons, Dorian "And I hate all this toil that of Israel and Alexander of Oak Park; a sister, Mrs. Fanya Zagor I toil under the sun, for I must of Argentina and a brother, I leave my achievements to my 1 successors."—Ecclesiastes 2 Joseph of California. HAVE A SHARE IN THE NEW BUILDING!! •?;;;;;.:,.. c • • 4 •- "" • Send Your Contribution to : ' .< <000 A•444 • ••••' ""•3"- Contribute To: THE NEW HEBREW MEMORIAL CHAPEL Chesed Shel Emes —1 -vvm "n3 707 Being Built At 26640 Greenfield, Oak Park THE Webresi, enevolerit Society BUILDING FUND 2995 Joy Road, Detroit 6, Michigan TY 6-1686