merica faith Periorfical Cotter CLIPTON AUNTIE - CINCINNATI 20, OHIO PIEDETROWEIVISR(ARONICLE PAGE NINE and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE PRESENTING AND HIS SHONS NIGHTLY ACTS 7:30-11:00-1:00 A. M. I ACTS NEVER A COVER CHARGE ; 9-COURSE DE LUXE DINNER SERVED NIGHTLY, S TO 12 Reservation:: Trinity gg J. W. BECKER J. R. GA R DI NER • ONE TERRA! E. Grand Blvd. —Just SPEND Off Woodward AN EVENING AT SAKS YOU'LL ENJOY THE COMFORTING ATMOSPHERE OF RELAXATION THE ENCHANTING SONGS OF MONA FISHER THE ENTRANCING MUSIC OF Don Zullo's Orchestra NEVER A COVER CHARGE CAFE SAKS n, m . x- .r. ble NO id. led Hall 791 for of nil- Bewten Virginia Park and Seward 8231 WOODWARD TR. 2.9191 FULL COURSE DINNERONE DOLLAR I 4111 ■ NIMMII=111•111111111M 41111 ■ Mit SYL•D] OM W.3:03-c1 I aadu 41:1 a a Finest Entertainment Greatest of Comfort Open 11:30 till 2 a. tn. for and, me. nes. able, flees. c art. fur- tive ans. up- shed - lung near for pay 'trod edam ant. ; 'or s rnish- hkat Call 9 P. I dy or r the s alon. Town- wants orida. moot wanly. adiso8 at. genre/ ;on gas lost of j Ea' Car s evert me. Be lest de- yrner 020 a n sad cars that he e eons' care' v field pandas rest• for the ith qiientlf g51 trains 'Inch is ern Di :t so nY'" ,own t h rove' w orth 1 'od e( Ii r. ti e q his Is sluir • • .. ^ Palestine Depicted By March of Time A 25-year-old editor will chal- lenge a famous psychologist's max- im—that life begins at .10—in • debate which promises to be fire- works from start to finish, as the second attraction of the Detroit Town 11811 season at the Fisher Theater, Wednesday morning, Oct. 23, at llo'clock. Walter B. Pitkin, author of "Life Begins at Forty," professor of journalism at Columbia Uni- versity, best-seller author, farmer and psychologist, says not until 40 do we have enough sense to know what it's all about. William Har- lan Hale, associate editor of For- tune magazine, who has also been on the staff of Vanity Fair and the Washington Post, disagrees with Dr. l'itkin. Dr. l'itkin operates 7,500 acres of farm land under advanced sewn- tifific management, is editor of The Farm Journal, writes a daily column for a newspaper syndicate and contributes to many maga- zines and periodicals, advises fed- eral and state governments on so- cial problems and keeps a large MO busy with research into a variety of activities which he feels point the way to more satisfactory and abundant life. He is the au- thor "More Power to You," "New Careers for Youth." "Short His- tory of Human Stupidity" and many others. Mr. Hale is regarded as one of the intellectual leaders of his gen- eration. At 19 he was graduated from Yale and wrote "Challenge to Defeat" addressed to the Youth of the nation and designed to stim - ulate them to seize their genera- tion's heritage, despite the handi- caps of the time, the prevailing conventions and the obvious odds against them. His recent articles in the Atlantic Monthly and other journals have given him nation. wide attention. Tickets for the de- bates are on sale now at Grinnell's, or Monday, Tuesday and Wednes- day at the Fisher Theater. With the Don Cossak Chorus, the first fall music feature at the Masonic Temple, a complete sell- out, and even standing room at a premium Friday night, keen inter- est is centering on the next attrac- IN PERSON DANCING CONTINUOUS 6 P. M. TO 2 A. M. PITKIN-HALE DEBATE AT TOWN HALL OCT 23 American Ballet at Masonic Temple Nov. 1, 2 TONIGHT VINCENT LOPEZ Seventeen Piece Incomparable Orchestra 7 Diversified Vaudevale 7 STAGE AND SCREEN ORIOLE TERRACE J. R. Gardiner and J. W. Beck- er the new bosses of the Oriole Terrace are quick on the trigger • .. their promises are made good with a bang . . . they look like business men . . . good luck to them from us all . . . Friday is the big night • . . and a "bang up" affair 'twill be . . . Vincent Lopez to dance to . . . lovely Maxine Tappen to sing to you while you dance and otherwise . . . going to make it a romantic Oriole . . . the adorables promise to be more "glorified" than ever ... and before we get lost in this maze . . . seven acts of diversified vaudeville go on the bill . . . so its onward ye cafe goers. PENTHOUSE Conies another change in the nite line of Detroit's life ... new and very capable management in the process of being installed . , can't tell you who . . . yet . . . wants to get thoroly organized . . . but its an old friend . . Visit the Penthouse and you'll feel a new "air" about this beau- tiful place . . . already a new show . .. a quickie . . . but okeh . . . Lafayette and Laverne are an ace dance team ... little Bet- ty Stephenson sings sweetly and Eddie Lee who is the only one around these parts who can bit some of those high notes . . . or something . . . sings and kids his way into everyones good graces. POWATAN It had to be held over . , , so you have another week to enjoy a swell show . . . the beautiful blonde Phelps Twins . . . every- one has had trouble getting rid of them .. Chicago . . . New York . . . everywhere stick . .. there is a reason ... peppy Bee Sarche singing popular rythms and the International Trio to amuse you with those ultra songs. PLANTATION Its Detroit's outstanding . . . well . . . one of the most inter- esting of its kind anywhere .. . unique decorative scheme . . . plantation . . genial Earl Wal- ton has the orchestra . . . that smile . . , its contagious . . . what rythm in that harlemaniac revue. TELLIN' YOU Its one of those weeks . . you got to see them all ... you're warned . . . Detroit is on its toes entertainingly . . . hats off to Sam Sofferin . . , to that new guy at the Penthouse ... to Gar- diner and Becker ... smilin' Earl Walton . . . and if you haven't had a dollar dinner at saks you better get one. -- Leading Pictures At Center Theater "MOZARTIANA" DANCE Lion, the American Ballet, which will be presented Nov. 1 and 2 in the Consistory Cathedral. There will be two evening performances and a Saturday nmtinee. The 27 beautiful and talented young dancers have been drawn from 20 different American cities, while the repertory, created by George Balanchine, one of the out- standing choreographers of the world, combines the efforts of the most noted musicians, painters and authors, The music for the ballet will be provided by a 20-piece sym- phony orchestra. EASTERN STAR CAFE FEATURES SHAN AUSTIN Shan Austin and his inimitable sweet music continues its second consecutive season at the East- ern Star Cafe. This talented or- chestra provides velvety rhythms Palestine of today, filled with 350,000 young Jews who are trans- forming it from desert and pesti- lential swamp into a fertile land, forms one of the principal episodes in the new seventh issue of the Starch of Time to first-run thea- ters throughout the country Oct. 18. In Detroit it is seen at the RKO Theater. In explaining the great influx of Jews into Palestine, Starch of Time goes back to the Germany of 1930, when the people still enjoyed a republican form of government under their president, beloved old I'aul von Hindenburg, and Adolf Hitler was an unsuccessful poli- tician whose party rankest only ninth among those of the nation. Few Jews then were frightened by his constantly repeated warning of "Germany for the Germans." Few considered going to Paestine, which England won from the Turks in 1917 and which later was made an English protectorate with the door open to Jewish immigration. Then follows, in the picture, the rapid rise of Hitler, first to the chancellorship, then to the supreme head of the Nazi state. It pictures the burning of books by Jewish authors in the public squares, the terrorizing of Jewish citizens in their homes, stores and cafes. The Palestine sequences show much of the work that has been ac- complished during the past few years. It shows the immigrants from Germany as well as other countries laying out their colontea on land bought by Jewish capital raised in the United States and England, working to build homes and create a new nation. The pic- tures of Palestine today show thriving, cosmopolitan cities, suc- cessful farms and businesses, miles of new roads and beaches where Jews of the whole world enjoy themselves. In picturing the success of the Jews in modern Palestine, March of Time suggests that the day is not far off when the colony will be able to govern itself and Brit- sin's mandate will be relinquished. At that time the world most rec- ognize a new nation of equal privi- leges with any on earth—the Jew- ish nation of the future. 15c Sunshine Laundry FLAT II DRY 511, WATCH The Chronicle REAL ESTATE BARGAINS _40 "A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM" ON SUNDAY AT WILSON THEATER ..eintittil Enyagemint MAX REINHARDT'S JAMES CAGNEY JOE E. BROWN DICK POWELL ANITA LOUISE JEAN MUIR HUGH HERBERT OLIVIA DE HAVILLAND ROSS ALEXANDER VERREE TEASDALE IAN HUNTER MICKEY RC:0ND VICTOR JORY HOBART CAVANAUGI GRANT MITCHELL FRANK M