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The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

July 02, 1965 - Image 30

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1965-07-02

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

40—EMPLOYMENT

CA

1:1

11CIMCCC
,I0 - 1.0 ,/,1,6,,

$300 A MONTH
TO START

Household and
Office Furniture

LICENSED MOVERS
PROFESSIONALS
894-4587

CALL 2-8 P.M.

Mr. Hage

JE 9-0404

PAWN SHOP WORK

CARDS

Youth Groups Are Happy'
LARKINS MOVING CO. Algeria Festival Canceled

Public contact work. Age
45-60. Pleasant working
conditions.

EXPERIENCED teacher for Religious
School. Sundays. Must have good Jew-
ish background. LI 8-9000.

t" A

LOUIE'S Re-upholstering, Repairing.
Satisfaction guaranteed. Reasonable.
Free estimates. VE 5-7453.

I. SCHWARTZ. All kinds of carpenter
work, no job too big or small. BR
3-4326, LI 5-4035.

Young man of high school age.
No experience necessary. Apply
in person only.

TILE

1400 MICHIGAN AVE.

DO YOU NEED TILE WORK?
New and Repair Special

1 Block East of Tiger Stadium

U OF D TILE & TERRAZZO CO.

CAPABLE WOMAN wanted to manage
a uniform shop. Good opportunity for
the right party. LO 3-0090.

FURNITURE SALESMAN
BORAX

NO NIGHT WORK

UN 1-4950

DECORATING, interior, exterior paint-
ing. Small carpenter work. Clean and
quick service. Call Bill Powell. 542-3270.

LAWN SPRINKLER

SERVICE
INSTALLATION and

American Auction House

4849 GRAND RIVER

SALEMEN WANTED. Make up to $1,600
a month. Act now. JE 9-0404.

MAINTENANCE

BOOKKEEPER

With experience and general office
work. Neat appearing with refer-
ences, under age 45. WRITE BOX
718. THE JEWISH NEWS, 17100 W.
7 Mile Road, Detroit, Michigan
48235. Giving full particulars in own
handwriting.

MANAGER, telephone boiler room. $10,-
000 a year. SL 4-8810, BR 3-4515.

MANAGEM ENT
TRAINING

Male. 18-24. High school grad.,
some college preferred but not
necessary, high advancement po-
tential with large national com-
pany based in Detroit area. Excel-
lent starting salary for qualified
man. FOR PERSONAL INTER-
VIEW CALL:

MR. COLE

268-0550

EXPERIENCED: Dresses and small wear
saleswoman. Woodward Avenue-High-
land Park. TO 8-6041.

SECRETARY

For large synagogue. Competent,
all office procedures. T y p i ng,
steno. Salary attractive. Write de-
tailing capabilitites, experience to

BOX 719
The Jewish News
17100 W. 7 Mile Road
Detroit, Mich. 48235

40-A—EMPLOYMENT WANTED

WOMAN wants companion to sick
woman or light housework. TE 4-1646.

45—BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

Professional Sales
Opportunity

THE EQUITABLE LIFE ASSUR-
ANCE SOCIETY OF THE UNITED
STATES, third largest life ins. com-
pany, desires to interview men
whose occupations and income are
limited. Excellent two-year training
program. Monthly salary plus com-
missions. Detroit or suburban area
resident. Married, preferably with
some sales or related background ex-
perience and have intense desire to
be in business for yourself. Call
Dale R. Hockstra.

Weekdays WO 3-8400, Ext. 358
Weekends and Evenings:
OR 6.7581

A YOUNG MAN experienced in truck,

WORK GUARANTEED

527-5044

VIENNA FURRIER takes remodeling,
repairs at a reasonable price.
DI.
1-0462.


55



MISCELLANEOUS

PORCH GLIDER, $15 ... Ladies dresses,
suits, coats, size 16, some new. Plenty
of give-aways. Young man's suit, jacket
size 40-42 long, plants 34-36; worn twice.
UN 1-6668.

55 A

-



MISCELLANEOUS WANTED

TURN YOUR OLD SUITS,
shoes into cash. DI 2-3717.

topcoats,

56—ANTIQUES

You'll see the Bizarre and the
Beautiful, the Quaint and the
Quixotic—evrything from fine
antiques to inexpensive "What-
is-its"--at our second AN-
TIQUES WALK at the Livo-
nia Mall on Thursday, Friday,
Saturday, July 8, 9, 10, from
9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. daily.
No admission charge, com-
pletely air-conditioned, f r e e
parking.

LIVONIA MALL
SHOPPING CENTER

WASHINGTON (JTA) — Secre-
tary of State Dean Rusk and Is-
rael Ambassador Avraham Har-
man signed an American-Israel
convention for avoidance of double
taxation and to encourage inter-
national trade and investment. The
signing ceremony took place at
the Department of State.
According to its terms, the con-
vention will be brought into force
by the exchange of instruments
of ratification. It will be sub-
mitted to the U.S. Senate for ad-
vice and consent.

Two Nazis Sentenced
for Polish Mass Murders

FREIBURG, W. Germany (JTA)
Two former SS officers were sen-
tenced here to prison terms for
participation in multiple murders
of Poles and Jews at Zakopane in
occupied Poland.
Former SS Major Robert Weiss-
man, 57, former Gestapo chief in
Zakopane, was sentenced to seven
years' imprisonment at hard labor
for aiding in the murder of 111
victims. Former SS Lt. Arno Seh-
misch, 59, received a 4Y2-year sen-
tence.

Dr. Bernard Bamberger, spirit-
ual leader of the Baruch family
congregation, Temple Shaaray
Tefila, where funeral services
were held June 23.

Several hundred persons, in-
cluding some of his close friends
attended the short service. Among
the mourners were Sir Patrick
Dean, British ambassador to the
United States; Francis Cardinal
Spellman; Mayor Wagner; Adlai
E. Stevenson; and Sen. Jacob K.
Javits.
James F. Byrnes, former gov-
ernor of South Carolina, Mr. Bar-
uch's native state, also was pres-
ent for the funeral of his good
friend; as was an 82-year-old Aus-
trian, Ernest Stresser, who said
Mr. Baruchc had made it possible
for him to come to the U.S. in
1940.
Mr. Baruch's two surviving
children, Bernard M. Baruch Jr.
and Mrs. Robert Samstag, at-
tended. The remainder of the list
read like a Who's Who.
A group of about 500 persons
crowded outside behind police

Try and Stop Me

60—CARS FOR SALE

1964 OLDS "98" convertible. Air condi-
tioned, all power. Perfect condition.
Private owner. 624-1533.

By BENNETT CERF

I

91—COUNTRY CLUB MEMBERSHIP
FOR SALE

N A CASE in which a burly mountaineer was. accused of
moonshining, the Kentucky judge charged the jury, then
asked if they had any questions before 'considering the evi-
dence. "A couple of us

MEMBERSHIP—Ramblewood Swimming
Club. UN 4-9413.

jurymen, Your Honor,"
spoke up the foreman,

UN Calls Jordan Shots

'Gross Violation' of
Armistice Agreement

(Direct JTA Teletype Wire
to The Jewish News)

JERUSALEM — The Israel-Jor-
dan Mixed Armistice Commission
condemned Jordan Tuesday for
ROOFING and sheet metal business. the May 31 Jerusalem border
Established 43 years. Fully equipped. shooting in which two Israelis
Bargain. Retiring. TO 5-0438.
were killed and four wounded.
The commission called the in-
50 BUSINESS CARDS
cident a "gross violation" of the
A-1 PAINTING, paperhanging, interior, armistice agreement and stressed
wallwashing. Immediate service. Guar-
anteed. Reasonable. UN 4-0326 after that the perpetrators were regu-
5 p.m.
lar Jordanian soldiers on official
duty.
JULIUS ROSS MOVING CO.
The commission called on Jor-
By Hour or Flat Rate
dan to act to "ensure that disi-
Local and Long Distance Packing,
storage, pianos. appliances, house-
plined military personnel are em-
hold furnishings.
ployed along the demarcation
8700 West McNichols Rd.
line."



UN 2 6047

-

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS
30—Friday, July 2, 1965

Rusk, Harman Sign Pact
to Avoid Double Taxation

With Bernard Baruch brought
to rest, the stories about Jewish
moments in his life abound. Na-
than Ziprin, editor of the Seven
Arts Feature Syndicate, tells this
one:
It has often been said that Mr.
Baruch pretended he was deaf to
I ward off bores
(see hearing aid
in picture). But
once a delegation
of Jewish War
Veterans came to
his home to pre-
sent him with its
annual award,
and he told them
a different ver-
Ziprin
sion.
Mr. Baruch confided that he
really was deaf, and that his
handicap had been caused by his
Jewishness. A man had once
called him a dirty Jew. They ar-
gued, and Mr. Baruch, proud of
his boxing prowness, thought he
would settle the matter with his
fists.
His opponent dealt him a heavy
blow, which impaired Mr. Baruch's
hearing for the rest of his life.
He often quipped that there was
compensation in deafness: not
hearing the barking of anti-Sem-
itic dogs.
The wisdom and humor that
"marked all the days of his life"
were noted in a brief eulogy by

MIDDLEBELT
AND WEST SEVEN MILE RD.

body and trailer builders looknig for a
partner to open business. Call eve-
nings. 862-3286.

FOR BETTER wall washing, call James
Russell. One day service. TO 6-4005.
526 Belmont.

NEW YORK (JTA) — National
organizations of Jewish youth in
this country welcomed the news
that the World Youth Festival,
which was scheduled to be held
in Algeria from July 28 to Aug. 7,
will not take place there.
They have been looking askance
at the projected festival, which
was Moscow-backed, because Al-
geria snubbed Israel and refused
to invite any youth delegation
from there to participate in the
festival.
The World Union of Jewish
Students recently issued a state-
m e n t vehemently protesting
"against all political discrimina-
tion and particularly that evi-
denced by Algeria in withhold-
ing an invitation to Israel to par-
ticipate in the festival."
It urged participants to "make
the strongest possible protest and
demonstration against Israel's ar-
bitrary and discriminatory exclu-
sion and against any decisions con-
cerning Israel that might be
taken."
A similar protest has come from
the French Students Union and a
like national organization of Jew-
ish students in Holland.

700 Attend Funeral of Bernard Baruch

Israel's Farm Area
Israel has a total cultivated farm
area of more than a million acres
yf which more than 350,000 acres
Ire under irrigation.

"would like to know if
the defendant boiled the
malt one or two hours,
and how he keeps the
yeast out."

* • •

A manufacturer decided
his son's bar mitzvah party
was going to be the talk of
the town for years to come.
"Have it in the middle of
the African jungle," pro-
posed his Broadway press
agent. "It will be the first
bar mitzvah in history where all the guests had to go on a safari.
to get there."
So the manufacturer flew three hundred guests by jet to
Africa, then hired fifty porters, a hundred elephants, and two
score beaters to lead them into the heart of Africa. On the third
day, the procession came to a halt, and stayed in one place for
two hours before the manufacturer caught up with the head
guide to ask, "What is holding us up ? If this keeps, up, my son
will be too old for the bar mitzvah ceremony."
"Sorry," apologized the head guide. "There seem to be two
bar mitzvahs ahead of us."
*
*
*
First Harvard frosh: "I'm majoring in ancient history."
Second ditto: "So am I."
First again: "Well, we'll have to get together and talk over
Old thnes."
@ 196.5, by Bennett Cent Distributed by King Features Syndicate

BERNARD BARUCH

barriers. The ceremony took about
15 minutes and was private in ac-
cordance with Mr. Baruch's wish-

es.

The body was cremated and
buried privately at Flushing
Cemetery in Queens, with Dr.
Bamberger officiating.

Dr. Bamberger noted that Mr.
Baruch didn't attend services
often, but when he did it was at
Shaaray Tefila. In recent years,
the temple had reserved two seats
in the last row for the 6-foot-3
financier so he would have room
for his long legs.

Leading Brazilian
Horacio Lafer Dies

SAO PAULO (JTA) — Horacio

Lafer, one of South America's out-
standing Jewish leaders, and the
first Brazilian Jew to be a mem-
ber of the Brazilian Congress and
twice a member of the cabinet, died
Tuesday in Paris at age 65. His
body will be returned to Brazil
today.
He served as Brazil's first dele-
gate to the League of Nations in
1929 and was a member of the Na-
tional Assembly in 1933, which
was convened to draw up a new
constitution for Brazil. Mr. Lafer
served as a member of the Brazil-
ian Congress from 1934 to 1963.
From 1946 to 1950, he was a ma-
jority leader in the Brazilian con-
gress. In 1951 he was finance min-
ister and later served as foreign
minister.
In 1952, as governor of the
World Bank, he presided at a con-
ference on the International
Monetary Fund. He presided also
in 1960 at the conference of Latin
American Foreign Ministers in
Costa Rica. He took an active in-
terest in Jewish life and had a
major role in Brazil's industrial
development, particularly in the
paper and newsprint industries.

ti

Colorado State Banks
Can Buy Israel Bonds

DENVER (JTA)—A new Colo-
rado code enacted into law per-
mits state banks to purchase Israel
Bonds up to 5 per cent of their
capital and surplus. Prior to en-
•ctment of the new code, only na-
tional banks could buy Israel
bonds.
(The Union National Bank of
Pittsburgh purchased $500.000 in
Israel bonds last week. A. J. Aber-
man, a leading member of the
Israel Bond Committee, presented
the bonds to the bank following
completion of the sale.)

Shrinks Hemorrhoids
Without Surgery

Stops Itch—Relieves Pain

For the first time science has found
a new healing substance with the as-
tonishing ability to shrink hemor-
rhoids and to relieve pain — without
surgery. In case after case, while
gently relieving pain, actual reduc-
tion (shrinkage) took place. Most
amazing of all — results were so thor-
ough that sufferers made astonishing
statements like "Piles have ceased to
be a problem!" The secret is a new
healing substance (Bio-Dyne®)-- dis-
covery of a world-famous research
institute. This substance is now avail-
able in suppository or ointment form
called Preparation H®. At all drug
I counters.

rl-

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