r 40—EMPLOYMENT 50 TELLER TRAINEES Are you looking for a permanent posi- tion? We have a number of openings due to increased operations of our neighbor- hood branch offices in Northwest De- troit and Suburbs. You must be a high school graduate, minimum age of 21, and have had gen- eral office clerical or teller experience. Apply at our Main Office, Downtown Personnel Dept., 7th Floor. Monday- Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. OR 22401 W. 8 Mile Rd. near Lahser Road- Branch. Friday and Monday, a.m. to 4:00 p.m. AMERICAN SAVINGS 600 WOODWARD AT CONGRESS BABYSITTER needed for Thursday, from 12:30 to 6:00. Call 273-6425. — BUSINESS CARDS JULIUS ROSS MOVING CO. By Hour or Flat Rate UN 2-6047 543-4832 FURNITURE refinished and repaired. Free estimates. UN 4-3547. VIENNA FURRIER. Re-modeling, re- pairs. Reasonable prices. DI 1-0462. TILE and linoleum floors, basement and kitchen, machine scrubbed, waxed and buffed to a beautiful shine. KE 2-1602. PLASTERING service. Fine, expert workmanship. Reasonable prices. Free estimates. Alfred Thomas. UN 3-8929. 55—M!SCELLANEOUS Desks 19.50 Portables 29.50 Royals 39.50 IBM 69.50 Checkwriters 29.50 ALL GUARANTEED—NO JUNK 22741 Woodward 548-6404 56—ANTIQUES ANTIQUE SHOW FEB. 22-25 Roma Hall in Livonia, 27777 School- craft (next to Detroit Race Course), 1-10 p.m. Free parking. Door prizes. INFORMATION 771-2767 BOX 757 The Jewish News 17100 W. 7 Mi. Rd. Detroit, Mich. 48235 GENERAL ELECTRIC refrigerator and stove — refrigerator self-defrosting. Very good condition. 4 years old. LI 8-5416. LEAVING CITY — must sell — 6 rooms good condition furniture including de- luxe Whirlpool washer and dryer, 13 , ft. Frigidaire, 2 T.V. sets. 19371 Win- throp. VE 8-5375. MINYAN-MEN needed for daily Minyan. 342-8126. 60—CARS FOR SALE RECEPTIONIST for photography studio. Mature person. UN 2-0660. SELLING wife's car — 1965 Chevy S. S. Impala. 6000 Miles. Like new. Sunday LI 6-6768. TAILOR EXPERIENCED FOR MENS" CLOTHING STORE BLOCKS CLOTHES 19132 Livernois DI 1-0480 EXPERIENCED pawn broker. Applica- tions strictly confidential. Tremendous future. TY 4-6111. WANTED — Companion for 65 year old lady recovering from illness. TY 5-5590, or 353-2304. STENOGRAPHERS AND TYPISTS For positions in Jewish Agencies. Call Mrs. Vass Jewish Vocational Service WO 1-8570 TO WORK IN PAWN SHOP. YOUNG PERSON After School Okay No Experience Necessary 1400 MICHIGAN WO 2-8698 COMPANION to widow — must drive — free to travel. Live in. 356-6061. 40-A—EMPLOYMENT WANTED BABY SITTER — mature. Days 10 a.m.- 4 p.m. Eves. Tues.and Wed. DI 1-1846. 50—BUSINESS CARDS LARKINS MOVING CO. Household and Office Furniture LICENSED MOVERS PROFESSIONALS 894-4587 A-1 PAINTING, paperhanging, interior wallwashing. UN 4-0326, UN 2-3873 after 6:30. FOR BETTER wall washing, call James Russell. One day service. TO 64005. 526 Belmont. DECORATING, interior, exterior paint- ing. Small carpenter work. Clean and quick service. Call Bill Powell. 542-3270. I. SCHWARTZ. All kinds of carpenter work. We specialize in rec. rooms. BR 3-4826, LI 54035. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 38—Friday, February 18, 1966 German Flower Import Nipped in Bud by Israel JERUSALEM (ZINS) — The Is- raeli Embassy in Bonn recently in- quired from the foreign ministry in Jerusalem as to the reason for the sudden stoppage of shipments of flowers to Western Germany from the kibbutzim of Hashomer Hatzair and Ahdut Avoda. Spokesmen for these kibbutzim asserted that they will continue to send oranges to Germany but "as to flowers, this is out of the ques- tion." The press ironically asked: "Why do the kibbutzim make use of German machines, German cars, and even go out of their way to obtain German marks—why is all this kosher but flowers are `trefe'? Doesn't such an attitude smack to a large extent of socialist hypo- crisy?" Supersol's Accountant Gets 18-Month Sentence TEL AVIV (JTA)-1,toshe Hey- man, former chief accountant for the Supersol Company, operators of a chain of supermarkets in Is- rael, was sentenced by the District Court here Monday to 18 months imprisonment for . his part in a multimillion-pound s w i n d 1 e. He was convicted specifically of falsi- fying the company's books and of conspiring to burn the firm's books. The court permitted him to stay free under bail of 120,000 Israeli pounds ($40,000) until March 27. Heyman told the judges he wanted to retract his admission of larceny but still admits participa- tion in the plot to' set the Supersol offices on fire and to forging lists of stocks. The prosecutor, Eliezer Leibson,, agreed to Heyman's ac- quittal of larceny, and he was con- victed on the other points. Prior to sentencing him, the court. heard Meir de Shalit, direc- tor-general of the Israeli Tourist Ministry, who testified as a char- acter witness on Heyman's behalf De Shalit said that Heyman was of great service to Israel and sub- mitted to the court a letter to this e f f e c t from Abba Eban, now Foreign Minister and for years the Israeli Ambassador to Wash- ington. York will be a dull place." In 1939, he put on the most colossal water show yet seen—the Aquacade at New York's World Fair, earning him the title of the littlest Big Showman in the world. Within five years he produced "Carmen Jones;" purchased the . Ziegfield Theater; ran the "Dia- mond Horseshoe" nightclub, which formed the basis for a movie; and served as a director of the Metro- politan Opera Company. At the services, Israel Ambas- sador Avraham Harman read a telegram from Prime Minister and Mrs. Eshkol in which they said that "The whole country and peo- ple of Israel have lost a good friend." LIQUIDATING ! ! ! GOODS AND FURNISHINGS People with college training — sales or sales management experience. Compensation and bonus. Send resume to: addition to the synagogue of which she was a longtime member. She gave to many other causes, supporting the Jewish Theatrical Guild and helping establish schools and youth centers in Israel. A for- est in Israel bearing her name was planted in her honor. In 1955, she endowed a chair in the theater arts at Brandeis University through the Sophie Tucker Foundation set up to bene- fit various charities. * * * Local and Long Distance Packing, stor- age, pianos, appliances, household furn- ishings. 8829 Northend—Ferndale HOUSEKEEPER wanted to live in. Light housework, simple cooking. Good home 57—FOR SALE: HOUSEHOLD for right person. UN 1-0109. SALES Two Entertainment Greats Are Laid to Rest SOPHIE TUCKER NEW YORK—"I had a feeling," said Rabbi Isidore A. Aaron in a softly light ed chapel, "that Wednesday afternoon there must have been a great deal of excite- ment in heaven—the trumpets must have been blaring." Rabbi Aaron of Mount Sinai Congregation, Brooklyn, was pay- ing tribute to an old friend, the flamboyant Sophie Tucker, who died Feb. •9 at age 79. Nearly 1,000 friends and admirers attended funeral service for the entertainer Sunday, and more than 3,000 others stood outside to watch the personalities in attendance. Miss Tucker was referred to as "a • warm-hearted individual who gave of herself freely to all. Everywhere she went she lit a bright candle in a dark cornier," Rabbi Aaron said. A tireless fund-raiser on behalf of numerous Jewish , causes throughout her star-studded ca- reer of six decades, Miss Tucker was eulogized by a longtime friend, George Jessel. "The - Lord gave Sophie - many blessings that few women have enjoyed," Jessel said. "A full life, a life of being loved and respected, from the tipsters to the tycoons, from the chamberniaid in a small hotel to a Queen of England in Buckingham Palace." In deference to the memory of the "last of the red-hot mammas," striking funeral car drivers re- moved their picket lines from in front of the chapel during the service. Honorary pallbearers rep- resented actors' guilds of all faiths and fellow entertainers. Burial took place in Emanuel Cemetery, Wethersfield, Conn., after a service in Hartford. It was the city she had left 60 years ago as a poor girl seeking fame as an entertainer. Thirty ears fol- lowed the coffin. Rabbi Simon Noveck, spiritual leader of the Emanuel Syna- gogue, told of Miss Tucker's visits each fall just before the High Holy Days to the graves of her parents, Russian Jewish immigrants in whose small res- taurant she worked as a waitress in Hartford. Miss Tucker would not work on any Jewish holi- days. He told of the year she was going on an Australian tour and would not be back in time for this duty. So she came in May, five months early, to pray at the graves of her parents, her brother and sister, near whom Miss Tucker is now buried. Among the mourn- ers was her 'son, Bert Tuck. Miss Tucker, born while her parents were en route to this country, left Hartford as Sophie Kalish. Years after she had be- come a success in vaudeville, night clubs and television, she was still the neighbor girl, helping in local causes—a new building for the Hebrew Home for the Aged, an BILLY ROSE NEW YORK—Final tribute was paid to showman Billy Rose in the theater named for him. His coffin, blanketed by more than 1,200 red roses, rested center stage. Seven hundred -persons braved a driving rain to attend the funeral service Sunday. Rabbi Nathan Perilman of Temple Emanu-El noted -in his remarks that it was "fitting" that the service be held "in a monument of his own mak- ing." "Billy Rose," the rabbi • said, "wore many masks simultaneously, and in each he proved he had the quality of a many-sided genius." Rose died Feb. 9 at age 66 in his Jamaica summer home. Sen. Jacob Javitz told how he had consulted Mr. Rose on many matters, from show business to politics. "You always knew where Billy Rose stood," he said. "The music of his spirit will go on for- ever as part of America _ 's music anthology." Jimmy Cannon, sports column- ist for the New York Journal American, recalled nights on the town with Mr. Rose. They had been "members of the same lodge of the night," he said. "He had to have action—whether it was playing the stock market or running what he called a big saloon. Now he is gone and New Dr. Louis Wender, Psychiatrist, 76 NEW YORK—A pioneering psy- chiatrist in group therapy, Dr. Louis Wender, died Tuesday at age 76. Dr. Wender, chief of psychiatry at Beth Israel Hospital here, established group therapy in 1933 at Hillside Hospital, and his basic monographs on group therapy were widely referred to by other writers on the subject. He was honorary • president and medical director of a consultation service, the League for Mental Health, which he founded as an "alumni group" of former Mental patients. He served in many advisory ca- pacities. A short,- stocky man with bushy white hair, he resembled David Ben-Gurion, former Israel prime minister. Some years ago,' on a visit to Israel, Dr. Wender was cheered by crowds on the streets who thought he was Ben-Gurion. A memorial service_ for Mr. Rose was held hi Jerusalem at the same time the, funeral was taking place in the theater "to commemorate the passing of a friend, and there is no greater name than that and no man deserved it more," Har- man said. Mr. Rose donated most of his prized sculpture collection to Israel not long ago and had contributed financially to the development of arts there. A Billy Rose Art Gar-. den was established at the Israel Museum to house the valuable col- lection. Most of his estate was willed to the Billy Rose Foundation, Inc., a trust devoted to religious, charitable and educational pur- poses. There was no official esti- mate of the value of the estate, but one executor said that Rose had once said it "amounted to upwards of $10,000,000." Some estimates put it at $50,000,000. Sizable amounts will go to two of Rose's four ex-wives, Joyce Mat- thews and Eleanor Holm. Other sizable amounts went to his sisters, Mrs. Miriam Stern and Mrs. Polly Gottlieb. In addition to stocks, R _ ose owned large parcels of real estate. His holdings included the Rose and Ziegfield theaters, a large New York town house with many price- less art works; and residences. Born William Samuel Rosenberg on New York's Lower East Side, Mr. Rose began his career as a stenographer to financier Bernard Baruch and subsequently amassed his fortune through his theatrical ventures and activities in the stock market. Attorney Gives Brandeis Valuable Daumier Lithos WALTHAM, Mass. — A Boston attorney who has amassed and given to Brandeis University the most comprehensive private col- lection of prints by Honore Daumier has presented the uni- versity with another valuable series of lithographs by the French caricaturist. The complete 39-print "Les Gens de Justice" series, which in- cludes two very rare prints that were never published, has been added to the Benjamin A. and Julia M. Trustman Collection of Lithographs by Daumier at Bran- deis. The newly acquired series is now on exhibition in Brandeis' Springold Theater Arts Center through March. A wise man adapts himself to circumstances as water shapes it- self to the vessel that contains it. —Chinese proverb. 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 Prepieration HO. At all drug counters.