PAGE TEN laughs and a few giddy tremors Oh,. pass off without any "after effed" for the timid. It's all good fun art tery Play, at Majestic. so excellently manipulated that :• cannot fail to please. Laughs folk, one another in quick succes-i,,L Owen Davis, a popular American Owen Davis has taken the mystyry playwright, is the author of "The play and set it to jazz, making a t flaunted House," the laughing suc- amusing combination. cess which the Woodward Players will offer next week. "The Haunted (louse" ran one whole season at the As a tribute to his public service :a George M. Cohen theater in New York. It is built for laugh-provoking the cause of arbitration, friends „f purposes only and is really a com- Judge Moses II. Grossman of New bination of mystery and comedy as York complimented him with a birth- only Owen Davis knows how to blend day dinner at the Biltmore Judge Grossman is the founder an .1 them. "The haunted House" is a skilfully directing head of the Arbitration So. "The Haunted House," by M. SPECTOR, FAMOUS WILL BE CHAIRMAN OF Owen Davis, Laughing Mys- CELEBRATION APRIL 12' JEWISH WRITER, DIES Mr. Butzel will preside at the Ile- Journalist in Leningrad and Warsaw, brew University celebration to b on Staff of Jewish Daily News. NEW YORK.—(.I. T. A.)—Morde- l cai Spector, Jewish novelist, died re- . eently at Mt. Sinai Hospital at the age of 67. Mordecai Spector, who was one of [ the founders of the modern Yiddish literature, started his literary career 15 years ago. He was born May 5, 1558, in Uman, government of Kieff, in a Chassidic family. He studied un- til 1678 when he made the acquaint- ance of the then-famous Hebrew poet constructed play that is packed with ciety of America. and critic, Elicsar Znvi ZWeifel, who, learning that Spector wanted to write, encouraged him to write his novels in Yiddish. His first two novels, "A Story Without a Name" and "The I Jewish Peasant," giving expression to ' the pro-Palestine tendencies among Russian Jewry, rapidly gaind a Tenn- i tation for him. Ile was soon called to Leningrad as associate editor of the Yiddisehe Volkshlat. In Leningrad he wrote a number of [ short stories, being one of the first contributors to the then beginning Yiddish literature. Spector later transferred his activities to Wa rsao • where he issued a popular magazine, Roaches, FRED M. BUTZEL Der House Freund. House- In 1891, Spector, together with I. L. held at Kirby Center Sunday evening, ther magazine, April 12, at 8 o'clock. The celebra- , Paretz, formed an tion will be given under the auspices' around which a number of young Yid- of the Detroit district of the Zionist dish writers grouped themselves. been a Organization of America, assisted by . Since then there has hardly other local organizations. Yiddish newspaper published without Ithe collaboration of Mordecai Spector. His novels were very popular among OPEN DAY AND NIGHT the Yiddish reading masses. Three and a half years ago Spector Contracts Solicited for Apartments, Hotels and came to America where he was on the Public Buildings. :staff of the Jewish Daily News, in Kohler, Endow, Mmire^. 1 .'" "1 which his novels were published. Ilk Volume. ifuneral was arranged by the Jewish Guarantee Others Write in 34th W titers' Club in New York. EVERY DETROIT JEW Is Invited to Be Present at the PASSOVER GREETINGS GREAT CELEBRATION OF THE HEBREW UNIVERSITY DETROIT EXTERMINATING SERVICE At Kirby Center, Kirby and Antoine SUNDAY, APRIL 12th, 8 P. M. GLENDALE 5655 Chairmen: FRED M. BUTZEL Speakers: DR. JACOB SONDERLING, DR. SAUL SILBER, RABBI HENRY J. BERKOWITZ, RABBI A. M. HERSHMAN I AN EVENING NEVER TO BE FORGOTTEN COME AND BRING YOUR FRENDS Licensed Exterminator of Rats, Bed Bugs, Fleas, Moths, Carpet Beetles, Mice and All hold Pests with o 1 POISON GAS ADMISSION FREE AMERICAN RABBIS ISSUE YEARBOOK Written 990 STIMSON The Central Conference of Ameri- Chevrolets Must I can Rabbis recently issued the thirty- Abe Max Says Be Ordered Now for June fourth volume of its yearbooks. The latest issue contains the report of the Delivery. H i sessions held last year at Cedar Point, (,7, .; Ohio, as well as the papers presented I Abraham Max, a member of the at that convention. luvafttnmeofisRacfouii,; sales force of the Hamtramck Chev- . fe oa ntuJ A e oRfe,thae sih utm poT rolet Sales, 11426 Jos. Campau ave- nue, in a recent interview stated that , t .; nue, commemorating t he e tenary of Reform Judaism in Amer- so many Chevrolet cars are being ira. There is an introduction by Dr. sold that if customers desire to have Fob ■ Kaufman Kohler, president enuritu. - of the Ilebrew Union College, and ar- ticks by Dr. H. G. Enelow on "The Theoretical Foundation of Reform Judaism;" by Dr. Julian Morgenstern, president of the Hebrew Union Col- lege, on "The Achievements of Re- form Judaism;" by Rabbi Samuel H. !Goldenson, "The Present Status and 1Future Outlook of Reform Judaism." Claude G. Monteliore of England, who was awarded the honorable de- gree of Doctor of Ilebrew Literature, contributes an article on "Prospects I of Liberal Judaism," giving the Eng- lish point of view in the symposium. In the volume are two papers pre- pared by the late Professor David [ Neumark. There is also a paper on "The Place of the Sermon in Jewish Worship," by Rabbi Gerson 13. Levi. Dr. Emanuel Gamoran, educational director of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, is the author of a "Survey of the Religious Schools of Reform Congregations" which is included in the voulme. The volume was edited by Rabbi Isaac E. Marcusou of Macon, Ga. • VBrisia r n ,IixteriN5 to 3Javisi! Coittnutnitt; of petroit its Wishes '..For Vassover 15 e(aster lout Plants and flowers delivered Easter Morning anywhere in the United States and Canada through the Florists' Telegraph Delivery. CUT FLOWERS PLANTS Easter Lilies Polled Roses Hydrangeas Tulips Daffodils Lilies Roses Spring Flowers Snapdragons Carnations and many others — in basket and novelty arrangements. Also Corsages of Orchids, Violets, Sweet Peas., etc. c:`,1