4wegratalfaitiaraVAL PAi Eikraorrja, PAGE EIGHT By ROBERT STONE 2nd and Final Week SHIRLEY E: TEMPLEM "The Littlest Rebel" with 101111111111111011101111 NEW YEAR'S EVE Larry Vincent Ten-Forty 0011111111111111011111 Gala New Year's Eve Party A. M. Floor Show—Music Makers Complete 8 Course Dinner A great contribution to the his- tory of the war period and of 41 .11F Fir plate America's participation in the World War comes coincidently as Limit Reservation for a comparison to German action today, 17 years after the armistice. Aside from the fact that Mr. Lansing's memoirs, published seven Call New ler Reyervetione yeraa after his death, most form NO COVER CHARGE an almost indispensable part of the literature on the history of the last international conflict, this bowel Cale fa Detroit work is imortant because of the 1511 Woodward CA 2901 late Secretary of State's attitude toward Germany. For Instance, on July 11, 1916, Mr. Lansing pre- pared for his own use • memoran- dum which reads In part: "Ihave come to the conclusion that the German Government is utterly hostile to all nations with democratic institutions.* • • The Year's Eve. remedy seems to me to be plain. It Is that Germany must not be In Harlemtown permitted to win this war or break The Used Welcome to 1936 even, though to prevent it this will be held et "The Cabin in country is forced to take an active the Cottonfielde of Adams part.••• American public opinion Ave." must be prepared for the time, which may come when we will have * ALL-STAR * to cast aside our neutrality and * ALL•NEW become one of the champions of democracy." It is difficult to touch all the EARL WALTON'S important points in these memoirs, . Most Danceable Music but it Is worth noting the hostile attitude expressed toward Soviet ► ** Russia and the Communist lead- ers, Lenin and Trotzky, whom Lansing distrusted. Among the several personalities described by Mr. Lansing is the 550 E. Adams Ch. 0230 late Lord Balfour. In a concluding paragraph to the sketch on Balfour Mr. Lansing wrote: "It is not difficult, if not impos- sible, to put Into words the impres- sions made upon me by Mr. Bal- four. One trait of his character seemed to contradict another. They STARDUST • • •• did not appear to fit into the same •• •• PERSONIFIED mold. There is something elusive about such a personality, some- thing that is subtR' and hidden, something that makes a deep and lasting impression, though to re, duce that impression to exact terms would challenge the talents of one far more expert than I in the power of expression." Among the many interesting references In the book Is the re- peated charge made against Bern- 7~111385 it'd M. Baruch that he capitalized in national crises on the Stock Market. The Baruch incident is thus described by Mr. Lansing: "The Department had been through an inpleasant experience in January 1917, which emphasized the importance of preventing pre- SEASON'S GREETINGS mature knowledge of a policy of To All Our Old & New Friends the government or of intended action by it in dealing with Inter- national affairs. It was publicly charged that certain persons had advance information of President American and Chinese Foods Wilson's note, which, on Dec. 18, 9031 WOODWARD AVE. 1916, was addressed to the war- At Clairmount ring powers, and that the persons 14 Years in the Same Lemtio• obtaining the information had made large sums in speculating on Chowmein or Chop Suey the New York Stock Exchange. Naturally suspicion as to the .. ALL NIGHT DELIVERY .. source of such alleged information SERVICE NEW YEAR'S EVE fell upon the Department of e, Order Early—Prompt Delivery it being presumed that, if the as- sertion were true, some officer or Phone MADISON 0802 employee of the Department had • FRANK LEE, Mgr . 1"leaked." So much publicity was DETROIT'S GAYEST CELEBRATION Chinese T Garden Spend... New * HARLEM REVUE THE CLUB P LANTATION NEW YEARS lumen NOW Nanking Inn TO THE HOST OF THE ... New Year's Eve House Party Serve Your Guests Wm. Boesky's Inimitable and Delicious Tasting Delicatesse•. A Delivery system has been installed Which Permit. Us to Render Immediate Delivery Service Anytime of the Evening or Night. Just Phone TOwnsend 6.9686 ti Folks ... get ready for the gay- est round of New Year's Eve par- ties this little town has had in many a moon ... The Oriole Terrace Christmas present to us was Art Jarret and his orchestra ... Elenore Holm is featured as the singer . and is she lovely . . . if swimming does that ... well girls ... there is a swell pool at Webster Hall to get started in ... The Bentley brothers and Harvey .. , dance trio . . Lee Robbins on gorgeous of figure is featured . . . in a snow ballet number ... our favorite Jane Sal- lee is doing acrobatics again. • • • Penthouse folks are falling in love with Ruth Brent ... ador- able little bundle of femininity ... who ... whether you expect it or not . . . can really sing . . . and the rhythm this kid puts into song . . . swings and sweeps her audi- ences . . . Johnny Howard has a new stunt , , . a March of Time newsreel . . . terrific . . . all his own material . . . but he needed something good to top that Russian baritone burlesque .. , so he got it ... from Hitler ... to Chaplin and Hollywood ... Dead pan Dibert is still clowning around and leading the music . Dea Lange . . . just got back from a visit to Washington ... where they liked her dancing to the tune of six weeks. • • Club Plantation ... in the heart of Harlemtown . . . will give you something to talk about the three Debs ...the Boswells in sepia ... are delightful to listen to ... Billie and Millie ... specialists in "hot" work are producing a new show which will ring out the old year and bring in the new . .. in that gayest way. • • • Those Murals at Saks Cocktail Bar are going to be mighty in- teresting in the wee hours of New fun to sit and speculate with Year's Day ... when its on much the material right at hand ... an innovation for Saks will be a spe- Below are a few extracts from cial floor show ... of proportions Mark Twain's writings which show . . . the sweet strings of Gene how he felt about the Jews: Regis music continue to please ... "The Jew is not a disturber of Blanche Fezzey ... is one of those the Peace in any country." good looking redheads ... who can "That the Jewish home is a sing. • • • home in the truest sense is • fact which no one will dispute." Ten Forty is and always will be "The Jew is not a burden on the Manhattan to us . . . and we the charities of the state nor of are glad Poppa Silk opened it ... the city," Larry Vincent makes it all . . . "A Jewish beggar is not im- well . like it was . .. and the possible; perhaps such a thing food is good Ethel Howe , r t illa ay t e ca x n ist, sab yu t u :e hy e rte l a r ee s f ee ew n ran t and how , .. she sings .. . and looks , .. torchy . . . Gene Mona spectacle." is the torso tosser ... who tosses "His (the Jew's) race is entitled . Coyle McKay was liked at the to be called the most benevolent Book Cadillac and will be even bet- of all the races of men." ter liked here. • • • "The Christian can claim no su- periority over the Jew in the mat- When better hosts are born ... ter of good citizenship." Samuel Sofferin , will be there "Nine-tenths of the hostility to . because that is what he is ... the Jew comes from the average the whole eight Texas Rockets '... Christian's inability to compete schooled by Ruth Laird have caught with the average Jew in business." the spirit ... and Carrel and Gor- "The persecution of the Jew man carry on ... and if you want is not due in any large degree to a drink . . , in the manner inti- mate ... drop in to Powatan. religious prejudice." "On the score of religion • • it (persecution of the Jew) has already come to an end. On the score of race prejudice and trade, I have the idea it will continue." "Jewish persecution is not a NEW YORK.—A gift of $5,000 religious passion, it is a business to the National Council of Jewish passion." Women by Mrs, Rebekah Kohut, "Who gives the Jew the right, dean of Jewish women communal who gives any race the right, to workers, is announced by Mrs. sit still in a free country, and let Marion M. Miller, executive direc- somebody else look after its tor of the Council safety?" The sumgiven the Council is art of • fund presented to Mrs "Get up volunteer regiments composed of Jews solely, and K ohut on her golden jubilee In when the drums beat, fall in and public service celebrated with a go to the front, so as to remove dinner recently in New York. Fur- the reproachment that you have ther contributions to the Kohut few Massenas among you, and Fund which has not yet reached that you feed on a country but the quota of $50,000 set are coming in from all over the country to don't like to fight for it." "The Jews have the best aver- Mrs. Daniel Guggenheim, treas- age brain of any people in the urer of the Fund, with headquar- ters at the Hotel Commodore. world." Mrs. Kohut, who was one of the They (the Jews) are peculiarly and conspicuously the world's in- founders of the Council 42 years ago, and is an honorary vice-presi- tellectual aristocracy." "All things are mortal but the dent, in making her gift to the Jew; all other forces pass, but he organization urged that it inaugu- rate an expansion and membership remains." drive. BOESK Y Delicatessen-Restaurant, Inc. DEXTER AT COLLINGWOOD Mrs. Kohut Gives $5,000 to Council . p COLD ANYWAY "What made your sister so mad?" questioned Jimmie. "Ah, she don't know what she wants," returned Bobbie in dis- gust. "She sent me to the drug store to get some cold cream. I got ice cream because that's the coldest kind they had an' now she's sore about it" given to the charge that there had been a "leak," which was made with great positiveness, that • special committee of the House of Representatives was directed to investigate the matter. Several public hearings were held and the various officials, who had know- ledge of the President's circular note prior to its publication were summoned before the committee and examined. It was asserted that, shortly before the note was sent, I had breakfasted in New York with Bernard M. Baruch, who was said to have made several hundred thousand dollars on the fluctuation in stock prices resulting from the sending of the note. The fact is that I had not been in New York since Election Day, 1916, had never seen Mr. Baruch, and did not meet him until sometime after the hear- ings. It was ouch "cock-and-bull" stories the committee was called on to investigate, Thomas W. Law- son being the principal romancer." It is regrettable that Mr. Lans- ing made no mention of President Wilson's part in the issuing of the Balfour Declaration and In guar- anteeing the pledge for the estab- lishment of a Jewish National Home in Palestine. We looked for a reference to Jewish national as- pirations and were disappointed not to find it. But on the score of the event, that preceded and ce- cormd during the World War, Mr. Lansing memoirs form an ime ALL DETROIT IS DANCING TO .. . AT TEN-FORTY CLUB ART JARRETT Outstanding Features for the Week and an Excellent New Year Selection of Pictures Lansing's Memoirs A Humorist Looks At Anti-Semitism WAR MEMOIRS OF ROFIEHT LANRINO. The Ilobbs-Merrill Co., Indianapolis. 03.50. $ A50 WILLIAM At Center Theater AN ANTHOLOGY OP AIEDIAEVAL IAKI11IRW LIT5:EtTt RE. Yelked by Abra- ham K. 51111entm. Published by the Ateraisted Talmud Tomlin, PhiladelPhia. The celebration of the octocenten- you that any intelligent layman nial of Moses Maimonides this can read this anthology with much profit and delight. year served to remind many of us I, Among the writers represented that a living culture flourished in here are Solomon Ibn Gabirol, the the so-called Dark Ages, and that Jewish philosopher whom Christian the word "medieval," now being theologians knew for centuries as used so freely to connote unen- Avencebrol, and whose "Fons VI- John BOLES •Jack HOLT lightened barbarism, denotes also tae", a Latin translation of a work a definite period of intellectual Gabirol had written in Arabic, they Karen Morley =. progress. To bring home to us this accepted as a philosophical guide; Bill Robinson truth, and to acquaint us with Maimonides, of course; Joseph Ca- • some of the products of the Jewish ro, author of the last of the Rabbi- On the Mayo sages of that period—which he has nic codes; Petachiah of Ratisbon, IN PERSON a famous traveler whose descrip- Rodin's Favorites tions of little-known countries not * MOLASSES 'N only delighted his contemporaries JANUARY but brought accurate knowledge of * PICK & PAT Eg twelfth-century conditions to later generations; Moses de Leon, often * Three X Sisters "M . regarded as the true author of the And Many Other. Ea great Cabbalistic work "Zohar", Sam Jack Kaufman which he himself ascribed to Rabbi Frank Conners Simeon ben Yohai; King Joseph of Khazaria, the last ruler of that medieval Jewish kingdom of prose- lytes; Joseph Albo, who was forced to spend nearly two years in an argumentative defense of his faith Celebrate before an assembly of church dig- nitaries; and many others—some whose names have a familiar ring, Where Nite Lilt Begins others of whom the average Jew has scarcely heard. Detroit's Gayest Spot While of course much of the po- —el:D- etry and prose in Rabbi Millgram's na Clowning F smiler anthology is liturgical and religious in spirit, secular writins too are contained in this volume. Love Heading • Great Show poems by Judah Ilalevi, author of the philosophical defense of Juda- COYLE McKAY11%1LISIC ism known as "The Cusari"; a CLUB... whimsical drinking song by Gabir- ol; ironical poems by Abraham Ibn Ezra, who is credited with the revo- lutionary discovery that the Bibli- RABBI A. E. MILLGRAM cal book of Isaiah had more than Hemet? MI MATTA') one author; Joseph Ha-Cohen's extended to the 18th century, as it descriptions of the first crusade 1040 Wayne St. CIR. 3100 was not until then that the West- and of the expulsion from Spain; Srtggeil Immediate Reserralions ern Renaissance reached the mas- and, to cite only one other, a de- ses of Jewry — Rabbi Millgram tailed description of fifteenth-cen- gives us this anthology of Jewish tury Alexandria by Rabbi Meshul. writings unknown to the layman. lam ben Menahem. Ben Rosen, director of the Phila- Much gratitude is due Rabbi delphia Associated Talmud Torahs, Millgram for bringing together in tells us in his foreword that the a single volume so many excerpts book is intended primarily for col- of fascinating Jewish works un- lege, Y.M.H.A. and similar study known to modern Jewry. groups. But this reviewer can tell It'opyrIght 1935, ft A. F. ) Dancing Until 4 December 27, 1935 STAGE AND SCREEN BEACONS OF THE DARK AGES n RON ICU and THE LEGAL. CHRONICLE AND HIS COLLEGE INN ORCHESTRA smenisiti At the Center Theater, Wood- ward and the Boulevard, the selec- tions for Saturday, Sunday, Mon- day and Tuesday are the "Two Sinners" with Otto Kruger and Martha Sleeper, and "Here Comes Cookie," with George Burns and Gracie Allen. An excellent bill has been ar- ranged for the opening of the new year. On Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, the Center Theater will feature Claudette Colbert in "She Married Her Boss" and Warren William and Claire Dodd in "Don't Bet on Blondes". A color cartoon, "Three Bears," will be an addition- al feature. Free parking and chauffeur serv- ice, excellent selections of pictures, fine service and the best of com- fort are among the features which make the Center Theater stand out. For future program information call Madison 8484. ELEANOR HOLM „Lt., AN ENTIRE NEW REVUE NEVER A COVER CHARGE Gala New Year's Eve Celebration It' IT It ART JARRETT and His Music PLUS 15 Acts FUN — FAVORS — SOUVENIRS $1.50 Per Person, Including Tax $8.00 RAINBOW ROOM $7.00, including Tax. Reservations Trinity 2.0100 and 2.8806 Oriole Terrace Charles Kullmann, to Be the Guest Soloist on Ford Sunday Hour LARRY VINCENT popular clown of night life, now at Ten-Forty Club, which was for- Charles Kullmann, new Metro- merly the Club Manhattan. politan Opera tenor, will be guest soloist with the Ford Symphony Mussolini's Attack on Ethi- Orchestra and Chorus, under the opia Subject of Art In- direction of Victor Kolar, in the stitute Lecture Ford Sunday evening hour, Dec. 29. The program will be heard from 9 to 10 p. M.. E.S.T., over the Why is Mussolini hurling his complete coast-to-coast network of Fascist legions against Emperor the Columbia Broadcasting System. Haile Selassie's fanatical hordes? Mr. Kullmann will sing the And why is England willing to "Flower Song" from Carmen by risk another world war to thwart Bizet; RachmaninofT's "In the him? Dr. Wilfred H. Osgood, the Silence of the Night"; "Lolita" by noted scientist and explorer who Buzzi-Peccia; "Summer Evening", headed the Field Museum expedi- by Palmgren, and "Believe Me if tion 2,000 miles through Ethiopia, All Those Endearing Young will answer those questions Sun- Charms", by Moore. • day, Dec. 29, at 3:30 p. m., when Mr. Kullmann was born in New he speaks and shows his motion Haven, Conn., in 1903. He studied pictures for the World Adventure at Yale with the intention of be- Series at the Detroit Institute coming a doctor of medicine and of Arts on "Exploring Ethiopia earned much of his way through and the Source of the Blue Nile." college by singing in the glee club By caravan Dr. Osgood crossed and elsewhere. rugged mountains, lush jungles The late Harold Huni, formerly and sun baked plateaus. He dis- of the Chicago Opera Company, covered vast and tillable lands, heard him and urged him to seek a career as a singer. When finan- rich natural resources—and alert, cial restrictions prevented his com- barbaric tribesmen. He penetrat- pleting a medical course, Mr. Kull- ed to Lake Tsana, fountainhead mann went to New York and won of the Blue Nile and key to Brit- a scholarship at the Julliard ish control of Egypt. Hundreds School, where he studied for three of semi-savage chieftans enter- years, Later he was awarded a fel- tained him with medieval splen- lowship at the American Conserv. dor. He feasted with them, view- ed their feats of bravery and atory in Fontainebleau, France. Mr. Kullmann was honor soloist watched their ancient rites of on Nov. 7, 1934, in the performance Christian worship. Where he of Verdi's Requiem, conducted in hunted the lion, hippopotamus, Vienna by Arturo Toscanini in baboon and zebra, Ethiopian war- memory of Chancellor Dollfuss. He riors now stalk Italian sentries. was brought to the United States Dr. Osgood will show the obstacles by Edward Johnson, the new gen- that confront the invading Ital- eral manager of the Metropolitan ians and the courage and re- sources of the Ethiopians. Opera. E. GRAND BLVD. JUST OFF WOODWARD YOU'LL HAVE THE BEST TIME NEW YEAR'S EVE A HUGE FLOOR SHOW FUN — FAVORS The Cocktail Bar-Cafe Moderns GENE REGIS' MUSIC • SAKS 8231 Woodward, Near Seward CHINESE T GARDEN The Chinese T Garden announces a gala New Year's Eve party with dancing until 4 a. m. There will be a big floor show and noisemakers. A complete 8 course dinner will be served.There will be no cover charge and the management urges that you make immediate reserv- ations. SONG WRITER'S SCHEDULES So keen is the interest of Irving Berlin in the progress of the new RKO-Radio picture for which he wrote the musical score that he makes almost daily telephone calls from New York to Hollywood. The famous composer will make a trip across the country just to see this film when it is previewed in Holly- wood. He can't wait until it is edited and shipped to New York where he can see it free Song writing inspiration follows no time schedules, Irving Berlin A THOUGHT ON STANDARDS told us. "It may take a week, a Not: "How did he dl.?' month, or sometimes only a day to Out "How did he Rye?" write a gong," he said. "And one Not: 'IOW did he 1. 1 tii - stands as much chance as the Hui: "What did he give? These are the units others of becoming a hit, so far as To measure the worth time in creation angle is con- Of Man a. •man cerned." Berlin says he does not Regardiem of birth. Not: 'What was his station?" believe in sitting back and waiting But: "Had he a heart?" for inspiration. Work, he believes, And: "How did he play his God-given parer- stimulates creative ideas. Neither Wan he ever ready does he follow any rigid office With words or good cheer hours routine for writing. When To bring bark • mile, he is in the throes of actual com- To banisha tear?" Not: "What ma. hie church?. position, he has worked as long as Nor: - Whet was his erred?" Dot: "Had h. befriended thee. realty 24 hours without a break, except In need r. to sip black coffee. Despite the Not: ''What did the sketch in the mental hazards and the technical newerePer Hut - How many were miry •hen he requirements, Berlin's enthusiastic heated *way r• about writing for pictures. He likes Hollywood. And Hollywood, ON THE NAZI FRONT it might be added, likes Irving Mrs. James P. Warburg is one Berlin and his music. of the patronesses for the Olympic hockey and skating trials at Madi- BACKSTAGE son Square Garden on Dec. 30 ... Francis Lederer, Hollywood ma- Proceeds will go to finance the tinee idol, is determined to become American Olympic team . . . The filmland's worst dressed actor ... swastika is boldly displayed by He hasn't bought a new suit in one of the leading toy stores on three years, never wears neckties New York's Fifth Avenue . . . and carries a fountain pen in his Knut Hamsun, Norwegian writer hip pocket ... Al Jolson has made an dwinner of the Nobel Prize in more money out of his talents than literature in 1920, has turned any other actor in the country ... Nazi ... America's self-styled Hit- His total earnings are estimated ler, Healey, is living in a ritzy at $15,000,000 . . . Irving Berlin New York hotel under the name is the telephone company's best of McGillicudy while waiting customer in California . . . Ile word that he has been appointed makes at least two transcontinental an assistant to Premier Goering calla • day . . . The world's first of Germany .. When the Nazi Jewish marionette theatre has been fans attending the Anglo-German established in Latvia, but it is be- soccer match in London went back ing moved to Palestine next year to Germany they took with them . . . The late David Belasco had thousands of pounds of butter ... a man keep a day and night vigil Butter is almost unobtainable in at the mausoleum of one of the Naziland .. . famous producer's daughters for many years . . . Aline McMahon, Among the flock of Huey Long film star, who in private life is biographies announced is one by the wife of Clarence Stein, the Herman Deutsch, New Orleans architect who designed the old newspaper man, whose work on the Temple Emanu-El has gone to Kingfish will be published by Al- Japan to add to her collection of Bernardino Molinar guiahed conductor of the Augua- teum Orchestra, in Rome, arrives in Detroit Dec. 30, to be guest leader with the Detroit Symphony during the month of January. He will give five programs in Detroit and one in Ann Arbor, directing the subscription concerts of Jan- uary 2, 9 and 23 and two of the Saturday evening popular priced events on Jan. 11 and 25. He appears with the Detroit Orches- tra in the University town on Jan. 24. At the opening concert of the new year, the celebrated Russian colortura soprana, Maria Kuren- ko, will be presented as soloist. The eminent artist will be heard in the Cradle Song from Rim- sky-Korsakoff's "Sadko" and the Bolero from Verdi's "The Sicil- ian Vespers." EASTERN STAR CAFE All is in readiness for the' gala New Year's Eve party which will be held at the Eastern Star Cafe, Grand River at the Boulevard. The management has engaged a gorgeous revue of 25 celebrities. There will be tons of favors, thou- sands of noisemakers, a million laughs and a whirl of amusements. Choice liquors will be served and dancing will be continuous all night. There are still a few tables available. On New Year's day a special dinner will be served for 95c and a children's dinner will be served for 65c. Floyd Snyder and his popular band will furnish the music. ----- WRESTLING AT ARENA GARDEN The old year will be properly rung out at the Arena Gardens by the staging of a popular priced mat entertainment including five bouts, the New Year's party being staged next Monday evening. On this occasion Promoter Adam Weissmuller will trot out two of his foremost light heavies, Charles "Midget" Fischer, the former champion, and George Dusette, Yankee strong boy, for his main event. Here's the lineup for the other bouts on the quintuplet program: Stanley Buresh, the Australian kangaroo man, vs. "Lefty" Pacer, New York, 2 in 3 falls; Jim Par- ker, St. Louis, vs. Bill Kid, popu- lar Cincinnati blonde matman; Johnny Cacek, Milwaukee, vs. Cleve Kaufman, New York and Walter Sirois, Serie, vs. Walter Logan, Kansas City, one fall. Creek Anti•Semites Seek Jewish Votes SALONIKA I WNS)—In antici- pation of the forthcoming parlia- mentary election., emissaries of former Premier Eleutherios Veni- zelos, whose party is responsible for most of the anti-Semitism in Greece, have approached Jewish leaders here to win their support. The Venizelists are understood to have agreed to end their anti-Se- mitic agitation if the Jews support them. The Jewiah community here, however, has no confidence in the Venizelists and is under- stood to have rejected the offer. Meanwhile the government has announced that Sephardic Jews will no longer be recognised as Spanish citizens and will there- fore be eligible for military serv- Tri. 2.9191 EXCELLENT FACILITIES FOR LARGE PARTIES .■ 11•1111111•11•111111111=11111=1111M. EASTERN STAR CAFE * New Year's Eve Celebration A to- • GLORIOUS SPREE OF FUN and MIDNIGHT FROM., with • Gorgeous Revue of 26 Celebrities DtNCING--ALL NIGHT--Continuous till Dawn Tone of Tutors — A 111tIrl of Amueentent* Gala New Year Celebration Molinari to Be Guest Leader of Symphony in January at New Oriole Terrace Joseph Becker, genial host of the New Oriole Terrace, is planning a gala New Year's Eve celebration. Among the out-of-town friends of Mr. Becker, the following have ar- ranged parties at the Oriole: Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Spiro, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Spiro, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Deutsch, Mr. and Mrs. Rothbauth, Sol and Dick Bergman, Sam Lus- tig, Phil Selznick, all of Cleveland, and many others. Mr. Becker prom- ises his many Jewish friends his personal attention for this gala celebration. DIVERSIFIED VAUDEVILLE 95c New Year's Day Dinner.. Children'. 11.3e Euclid 2000 " \ (I I 1 P f \:\N V • 7r- GREAT REVUE L IlL.b‘i)*•0111 gottet sou " 6515 GRAND RIVER AT GRAND BLVD. 117L0D] qaudEvi 4r/am :111 I a•iu II AT/_1 a RAT. SI N. MON, TIE& Dee. TI • 15 - 3• • 3I Finest Entertainment Greatest of Comfort Open 11130 till 2 a. ra. OTTO KRUGER MARTHA SLEEPER In `Two Sinners' N VZIW A0 ALSO GRACIE ALLEN :61 . 1:::i :1 iis yi RING IN - • THE NEW YEAR TUESDAY NIGHT — NEW YEAR'S EVE AT DETROIT'S MOST BEAUTIFUL SUPPER CLUB JOHNNY HOWARD Acclaimed the Moot Entertaining at C. of the Year Ruth Brent Sammy Dibert Lovely Itiottun Singer And Ills Muds * * * GUEST STARS * * * YOU'LL TALK ABOUT IT FOR FIFTY WEEKS( ENTIIOUSE III sellout curronn ITU ATOP THE PARK ME. HOTEL WISHING YOU ALL A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR! Littman's Peoples T TRIle m ,a 2 t 3. 0 8 r , TWELFTH idFl FErL ayH and SEWARD Evenings, January 3 . 5 A Sensational with Mt Musical Revile 'JA I S 5 augmented cast including several Now stars in singing and dancing that will thrill you. NEW LOW PRICES PREVAIL — 4C and 55c Special New Year's Eve Show Midnight Tuesday, Dec. 31 Special sketch•., music, dances and varied entertainment Price. for this show only-35e en CI 12:7141