A llletia lewisk Periodical Carter

CLIFTON AVENUE •

cznantorn

20, OHIO

and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE

Revelry by Night

MOLLY PICON FILM AT THE WILSON

A Passover Announcement .. .

POWATAN

Ray Prince and Clark, those
three rogues of song are back at
the Powatan for a demand en-
gagement. Their m at e r i a l is
sprightly and they go into action
around the piano as though they
were having as much fun as the
customers. Charles and Barbara
are a pair of eccentric tap and
musical comedy dancers. Ruth
Denning, N. B. C.'s singing ten-
elation warbles current popular
numbers and Art Mooney's tend
plays for dancing.

BY

William Boesky

•

We will be open during the entire week
of Passover and will regular
Pesach meal.. We will feature dishes
which are so popular during the holiday.

On Sunday night and every night
you'll always find your friends here

%Valiant Boesky

Delicatessen - Restaurant

10350 LilEXTER BLVD., cor. Collingwood

Nazism ? • • •

?

What is it doing to Germany--to the World•-to You?

Be Sure to See the Detroit Premiere of

'Blood on the Moon'

Presented by

The Young Men's Jewish Association

CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL — March 30 and 31

8:16 P. M.
Do not fail to attend this stirring, gripping and sensational
drama—See the tragedy and fallacies of Germany today. We
advise early reservations as tickets are limited.

COME EARLY FOR CHOICE SEATS

Singing Star

FREE PARKING • •r CURB SERVICE

Frl. Sat. Sun.. March 20-27-211

JAMES CAGNEY
In

Midsummer

Night's Dream'

Mon. - Tars.. Wed. - Thurs.
March 29, 30, 3I and April I

VICTOR MeLAGLEN
In

"The Informer"

PLUS
CHARLES LAUGHTON
In

PLUS
DIONNE QUINTUPLETS
In

"REUNION "

REMBRAND1

AIR. CONDITIONED • • MIRROPNONIC SOUND
PEN it A.m. mt. 1130 A.M.

Masonic

T

Tickets

Grinnell

J

2.7100

with ORPHEUS CLUB

•

■-■

March 30

J ames

Audi torium

Bros.

s000so:0000lgadO

C•

Proudly Presents

Those 3
Rogues
of
Song

RUTH DENNING, who
sprang to fame as a singing
star over the NBC networks.
is warbling nightly at the
Powatan Club.

BRAND NEW'
GRAND NEW
SIM
$1! f , LOOR
#m4/4.,

iDDIE

WILL CLEAR J. N. F.
BOXES THIS WEEK

',. (1-P7 BRATMA
MUSIC

FLORENCE 5T110

lk

Mooney's

Band

/it-Charles
and Barbara

Eccentric Dancer.

*lath Denning NBC Star

DINNER TONIGHT

Homo Broiled Young Call.
fornia Squab, Barleduc Jelly

LES ARQUETTE

aid HIS Orchestra

at

DOWNTOWN

--BAR

and

RESTAURANT

2035 Park Ave., at Elizabeth

2d'
rd
rs.
of

Now . DANCING

NIGHTLY AND
SATURDAY MATINEE
CHICO REYES

AND Ills 0101IENTILA

Or

in
!or
of
to

lit

rd

ld-

in

110

ity

BETTY THOMPSON

Pang Styll•t

LUNCHES 3Se
DINNERS 90e
EXCELLENT FOOD

I

CHOICE LIQUORS

Special p i 10 I
Sunday

Dinner

Under New Management

Tel. CL 1313

The Center Theater, located on Will Have Main Role in Gerkl'a
"Yegor Bulitchev"
Woodward near the Boulevard, of-
fers the following screen bill for
One of the most vital and charm-
the coming week:
On Friday, Saturday and Sun- ing personalities on the Yiddish
day, March 26 , 27 and 28, "A and English stage, Jacob Ben-Ami
Midsummer Night's Dream" will will appear in person with his
be shown with Dick Powell, James Chicago company of 25 players on
Cagney, Oliva Dellavilland and Sunday, March 28, in the Scottish
Mickey Rooney. The Dionne Quin- Rites Cathedral, Masonic Temple,
tuplets and Jean liersholt will ap- in "Yegor Bulitchev," the last play
pear in "Reunion" on the same written by the renowned' Russian
author, Maxim Gorki. There will
program.
In answer to the public's re-, be only two performances, one a
quest, the Center Theater will pre- matinee and the other an evening
sent once more the academy award one.
According to Mr. Ben-Ami, the
picture, "The Informer," with
Victor McLaglen, as well as play is one of the world's outstand-
ing
compositions and ran for sev-
"Rembrandt" with Charles Laugh-
ten on Monday, Tuesday, Wednes- eral months in New York and
day and Thursday, March 29, 30, Chicago as well as in foreign coun-
t r i;fsr .
31 and April 1.
S. Ben-Ami, a sincere person
"A Midsummer Night's Dream,"
the story of Shakespeare's immor- with a deep sense of Jewish na-
tal play 01s brought to the screen tionalism, is even more delightful
in all its fantastic beauty, its glor- off the stage than on.
An opportunity will be given the
ious spirit and its grandeur. Rol-
licking, raucous comedy mingles general public to hear this famed
with stirring romance and it will artist when he will be interviewed
touch the down-to-earth human as by Russell McLaughlin at '7 p. rn.
Saturday over Station WWJ. Mr.
only Shakespeare could do it.
Ben-Ami has also consented to
present
a skit during the broad-
Program for James Melton's
cast.

Clever character dances are the

"The Spider," thrilling and
novel mystery melodrama, which
has been playing to capacity aud-
iences since its opening at the
People's Theater, 8212 12th ,St.,
Friday evening, March 19, is en-
tering on its second big week.
Monday and Tuesday evenings will
be dark but the popular produc-
tion will open again on Wednes-
day evening, March 31, to run
through Sunday, April 4.
The four-act vaudeville which
serves as an introduction to the
current attraction, is meeting with
warm approval f r o m packed
houses. Outstanding among the
headliners, is Samuel Chagy, Rus-
sian song and dance artist, assisted
by Jean Kritzer and Lilies Ship-
ley; Madge Maitland, whose songs
and monologues are great favor-
ites with Detroit audiences, Wil-
liam J. Williams, Alma LaPointe
and Grace Roberts, musical artist.
Audiences at the People's The-
ater are particularly interested in
the magical feats of Jay Michael,
leading man, who has been able
to master many secrets of the
occult science for his role as Chat-
rand the Great. With the tutelage
of Walter Domzalski, prominent
attorney and President of the De-
troit Magicians S o c i e t y, Mr.
Michael has made great progress
in magic in an incredibly short
space of time. Under the direction
of Verner Haldene, "The Spider"
is proving one of the most popular
presentations as yet offered by the
Detroit Federal Theater.

WILSON

Week's Attractions JACOB BEN - AMI
at Center Theater TO PLAY SUNDAY

"The Spider" Enters Its 2nd offering of Brynes and Swanson,
featured dance team at Webster
Week at the Federal
Hall Grill.
Theater
Bee Sarche's swing-low blues

Arranged by Benedict •Idmans
GO Sword of F
Frederle Field Bullard
Orphene Clab
In the Silence of Night....Rachmantooff
Carnemill
1.0., with me
Chart.
Bridge
LOVO Went a-riding
Harold Dart at the piano for Mr. Melton.

Dr. Higgins, Boston Psy-
chologist, to Speak at
Art Institute Sunday

CONTINUOUS FROM 1 P M

Popular

NO 11,1

The wor4I-ivide laugh hit

MOLLY

PICON

In her sensational all-talking
Yiddish musical fi:ln

Yiddlewhiitsh
Fiddle

COMPLETE ENGLISH

DIALOGUE TITLES

Masonic Temple

Scottish Rite Cathedral

TEmple 24100 2nd k Temple
IMPORTANT YIDDISH
THEATER EVENT

JACOB

BEN RMI

Is there really such a thing as
a ghost? Do the dead speak through
mediums? How do mediums tell
our fortunes when they do not
know who we are? Ilow did the '
corpse of a New Hampshire manu-
facturer come to sit up and talk to
his widow?
Dr. Howard Higgins, Boston
psychologist and educator, will
answer these questions when he
speaks on "Can the Dead Com-
municate with the Living?" at
3:30 and 8:30 at the Detroit In-
stitute of Arts on Sunday, March
28, Dr. Higgins, who investigated
psychic phenomena and also stud-
ied magic as a part of his graduate
work, will present a complete se-
ance, demonstrating the most spec-
tacular features of leading medi-
ums. Ile will show slate and spirit
writing, reading of sealed mes-
sages, spirit forces and spirit
vision, materialization of a spirit
while the medium is securely bound.
Special music and screen pictures
will be a part of the lecture.
Open forums will follow each
lecture, with Dr. Higgins answer-
ing questions from the audience.

IN PERSON

style and vivid personality draw
Melton will be soloist with the
enthusiastic reception for her vo- Orpheus Club of Detroit, and
cal numbers as soloist with Les Charles Frederic Morse will direct
Arquette's rhythmic dance band.
the concert.
PLANTATION
Aboard the "Rhythm Excur-
sion", sepia musical revue at Club
Plantation, the crew of star en-
MICHIGAN—Bing Crosby, Bob
tertainers offer c o m e d y, hot
rhythm and elaborate production "Bazooka" Burns, Martha Raye
and
Shirley Ross in the singing
dances. Desoree Alexander, sou-
brette, sings and dances with Joe musical-comedy "Waikiki Wed-
Johnson, who also conducts as ding" is the big Easter week at-
traction now at the Michigan
master of ceremonies.
Others are Strangeman, come- Theater. On the Michigan stage are
dian; Marcia Marquez , Spanish presented the "Easter Frolics" in-
awing-singer; Catherine Ragland, cluding among others Ben Yost's
prima donna; Ted Lewis, Detroit "Singing Yoemen," Paul Gerrits,
Crooner and the Drinkards, eccen- Dick and Edith Barstow, the
tric dancers. Earl Walton's Har- Libonati Trio, and the Three So-
the famous English Yiddish
lem orchestra provide!' the music. phisticated Ladies.
Roger Pryor Establishes His Din•
star with his Chicago company
ing Quarters at, Boesky's
MADISON—Charles Boyer and
of 25 players for
Jean Arthur in the widely-herald-
Roger Pryor, the famous star of
2 Performances Only
Back at Club Ten-Forty
ed romantic hit, "History is Made
at Night,' is now showing at the stage and screen, who appeared in
Madison Theater with Leo Car- I Detroit this week at the Fox The-
ater, reveals the interesting fact
rill* and Colin Clive.
that most stage and screen cele-
MATINEE and EVENING
UNITED ARTISTS—Jeanette
MacDonald and Nelson Eddy in
In
Sigmund Romberg's world-Famous
Maxim Gorki's last play
"Maytime," is now at the United
Artists Theater.

Downtown Theaters

Likes Kosher Food

Easter Sunday
March 28

"YEGOR
BULITCHEV"

FOX—The tenderest romance of
our time lives gloriously again on
the screen in "Seventh Heaven,"
which recreates with new heart-
throbs the immortal love story of
the Parisian lovers, Diane and
Chico. Simone Simon, emerging as
the screen's newest and greatest
star; and James Stewart, surpass-
ing anything he has ever done be-
fore, enact the stancrossed lovers
in the newest screen version of
"Seventh Heaven" at the Fox The-
ater. The Fox Theater's gala Eas-
ter week stage show includes such
sterling variety entertainers as the
Stanley Twins, eters of numerous
"Scandals" and "Vanities" musi-
cal revues.

Nathan Strauss Executives
to Participate in Allied
Jewish Campaign

The Nathan Strauss Executives
met at Lacher's, as the guests of
Rabbi Harold Rosenthal and Saul
Hxs tea:-de
Lewis.
T organization mapped out a
The
Coincidental with the week of
A4.11UCI1Iirgo
Passover, the festival commumo- P rogram of aid for the Jewish
rating the exodus of the children community and began by donating
d. the Moos Chitim, matzo
of Israel from Egypt, more than fund.
SiehVG SOrCIIMISS
3,000 years ago, a canvass will
A team composed of Nathan
in
Jew-
begin
begin
Monday,
March
29
in
1,1104011541ALEY
the Strauss Executives will partici- I
ish communities through
rsefflomnsfs
Cam-
nation for the clearance of 200,- pate in the Allied Jewish Cam-;
00 blue-white boxes in homes and paign. The president, Joe Schnei.
der, will appoint the committee.
offices,
it
was
announced
by
Leon
WrACitlyirOrk.04
Nathan Strauss Executives will
Kay, chairman of the Jewish Na-
tional Fund Council of Detroit. Participate
articipate in the parade along
Second
Ave. from Kirby Ave. to
The blue-white boxes, distribut-
ed under the auspices of the Jew- Cuss Technical High School. !
Bands
ish National Fund, the American and about 1,000 automo-
branch of the world-wide organize- biles will participate. The public
tiara, Karen Kayemeth Le Israel, is invited to this mammoth rally
serve as repositories for small and at Cass Technical High School.
larger contributions by Jews to the At the meeting Monday, March
Palestine Land Fund. The fund 2 22, the Nathan Strauss Execu-
has as its purpose the acquisition tives indorsed the entire State and
County Democratic ticket unani-
and reclamation of the soil of mously and will do all in its power
Holy Land as the Jews' inalien- to help elect the entire ticket.
able property which is being placed
at the disposal of refugees and
immigrants who go to Palestine to Contributions to the Jewish
become tillers of the mil.
Children's Home
Detroit Jewry will join in the
drive as national blue-white box
The
Jewish
Children's Home of
clearance week begins through the
canvass of homes where blue-white Detroit wishes to acknowledge with
boxes have been functioning dur- thanks the receipt of donations
ing the past year. Other homes from the following:
Mrs. Henry Mendelsohn and
will be visited by a volunteer
corps, the members of which will family, 2984 Grand Ave., in mem-
suggest the installation of a blue- ory of Mrs. Louis Duscoff.
Mrs. Fannie Davidson, 1970
white box which is the distinguish-
ing mark of hundreds of thousands Chicago Blvd., in memory of Lois
Rattner
.
Alec Templeton's Recital
of Zionist homes in all parts of
Mrs. J. W. Allen, 2305 W. Bos-
the world.
Orchestra Hall April 4
ton Blvd.
S. Friedleng, 2687 Sturtevant.
William Grosberg, 8600 Grand
Alec Templeton, brilliant young Plan J. W. E W. 0. Lunch-
River
Ave.
English pianist who has been blind
eon April 14
Irvin S. Yarrows, 3209 Webb
since his childhood, believes that
Ave.
Benny Goodman has the best dance
Mrs. Joseph Weisberg, chair-
Sisterhood Temple Beth El.
band in America and that Ambrose man of the luncheon and bridge
Rainbow for Girls, in memory of
has the best dance band in Eng- to be given at the Kern's Audito-
land. Jack Hylton's band he com- rium on Wednesday, April 14, at Mrs. Pauline Jackson.
Mrs. Sidney Stone, Ambassador
pares to Fred Waring's as an ace
12:30 p. m., will be hostess at her Hotel, Los Angeles, Calif., in mem-
show band.
home at a special board meeting ory of hire. L. Duscoff.
Templeton, who will appear in of the North Woodward Branch
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Abrahams.
recital here in Orchestra, Hall at of the Jewish Women's European 1160
Burlingame, in memory of
3:30 p. m., Sunday, April 4, leans Welfare Organization, to make Mrs.
L. Duscoff.
heavily toward Bach, Beethoven, final arrangements for this event.
Mrs. William Lanaky, 3209 Elm-
Mozart and Brehm among the There will be a kosher luncheon hurst Ave.
classicists. He especially likes the served and prizes at each card
Elaine, Geraldine and Melvin
modern French school as exempli- table.
Davidson, 2445 Boston Blvd.
fied in the works of Ravel and
For reservations call Garfield
Jeanette Kabaker, 2499 Edison,
Debussy. Rachmaninoff is his mu- 2843-W. Reservations are limited. in memory of Mrs. S. Goldman.
eical idol. Of him Templeton says,
The organization acknowledges
"He is not only the greatest com- with thanks the contribution in
poser and pianist of the modern memory of the iate Mrs. Bessie
Washington is s till talking
about the amazing feat of Charlie
day, but one of the greatest musi- Marko from her family.
cians of all time."
Wrzanski, Jr., former Labor De-
The April 4 recital will take It is true that two well-known partment Solicitor, in speaking
place as the result of popular de- Jews are among the heaviest for 45 minutes without briefs or
mend, following Templeton's an- stockholders of one of the na- notes before the Supreme Court as
usual success as soloist with the tion's biggest banks, which re- counsel for the government In the
Detroit Symphony Orchestra early cently made a substantial loan to National Labor Relations Act
Case.
in February in Orchestra Hall.' German firm?

AL !MASCO.—
JOAN 1161.1...'

Art

STAGE AN D SCREEN

SAKS CAFE
AI Belasco shows patrons of
Saks Cafe, where he is directing
the new floor show, how he can
"go to town" on anything from
a fiddle and a flute to impersona-
tions. As a master of ceremonies,
he also introduces Nichols and
Ha!ey, dancers, who have been
appearing all winter at the smart-
est late spots in Chicago. Joan
Leigh is a lovely red-head who
sings original rhythm arrange-
ments of song hits. Dance music
Molly Picon in "Yiddle with His Fiddle"
is by Eddie Bratton's orchestra,
Molly Picon'e all Yiddish musi- lywoodian lustre and acumen, with featured vocal numbers by
cal comedy film, "Yiddle With His were employed to furnish the in- Florence Strong.
Fiddle," which has garnered un- terior scenes of the picture. As
told wreaths of glory in Warsaw, far as the outdoor scenes were
TEN-FORTY
London, Paris and New York, will concerned, the cast journeyed to
Joaquin Garay, Mexican sing-
open at the Wilson Theater Sun- a picturesque little hamlet by the ing star of screen and stage, re-
day afternoon. The Yiddish pic- name of Kazmierz. Abe Ellen- turns tonight to the Club Ten.
ture with English titles was pro- stein supplied the lilting score, in- Forty for a two-week engagement.
Recital on Tuesday
duced in Poland during the piq- cluding several song hits which
Garay, who sang the "Merry.
uant comedienne's recent tour of are sung by Miss Picon.
Go-Round" song with Gladys
The
following program is an-
While "Yiddle With His Fid- Swarthout in "Champagne Waltz"
the continent, which included per-
for the recital by James
sonal appearances in England, dle," is exhibited at the Wilson blot also been featured in other nounced
Melton
on Tuesday evening, March
Theater, Molly Picon, the darling major films. Bette Thompson,
Scotland, Ireland and France.
30,
at
the
Masonic Temple:
comedienne,
is
touring
the
distant
Molly, the favorite of the East
*Boss t
petite lyricist, production numbers
Side and the West Side, spent six cities of South Africa. A cos- by Maybelle Van's Odorables and la) Brothers, Sing On....Edyard (Wog
(b)
chitty...
Kentucky Mountain Ballad
weeks in Warsaw, Poland, to com- mopolitan artist, Molly is desired Natalie and Howard complete the
Arranged by Donald F. Meng
plete "Yiddle With His Fiddle," a the world over. And hardly a floor shows, with Bill Lankin's
(1 hoax Club
picture said by one and all to more glorious and reputable trans- piano .numbers scheduled between Ombra mal fit f rom "Xerres")..Handel
Clmara
be the outstanding European cription of her talent can be ask- dance music by Max Fidler's or- Mornello
Charninade
Sombrero
Massenet
Ouvre tee yens bleus
triumph of the past decade. In ed for than her initial all-Yiddish chestra.
damn Mrlioa
Warsaw, sets, modernistic and musical film hit, "Yiddle With His
GROUP II
Orlando dl Lamo
elaborate, constructed with a Hal- Fiddle."
la) Villanela
WEBSTER HALL

OUR COZY COCKTAIL ROOM WILL ALSO BE OPEN
AND WILL SERVE SPECIAL PASSOVER DRINKS

'A

PA( E NINETEEN

PIEDErRonjonsitemoricui

March 26, 1937

JOAQUIN GARAY, Mexican
singing Bar, is featured at Club
Ten-Forty.

Children's Seder Held at the
Bnai David

The pupils and parents of the
Baal David Religious School saw
an impressive children's seder last
Sunday. About 180 children were
seated at tables in the banquet
hall of the synagogue when sev-
eral girls at each table lit the
candles before the Seder began.
Abe Cohen, a member of the
Junior Congregation, made Kid-
dush. Rabbi Joshua Sperka con-
ducted the Seder but the questions
as well as the answers were mostly
given by pupils of the school.
Leonard Cohen and Louis Gold
asked the four questions. The
rabbi gave an all-inclusive an-
swer, but Joseph Gorelick, Shirley
Zack and Arlene Slobin answered
the questions of Matzo, Motor and
Pesach respectively.
The Ilagadah, llalayl. and Se-
der songs, the opening of the door
for Elijah and the traditional Four
Kossds were part of this celebra-
tion. •
Many parents and officrrs of
the school witnessed these cere-
monies of this educational experi-
ment of Beal David Religious
School.

DOWNTOWN THEATER —
Having broken all house records
for the theater, "Ecstasy," the
moch-discussed, controversial pic-
ture of young love, continues at
the Downtown Theater, opposite
the Tuller Hotel, for a third week.
In the first nine days more than
75,000 persons enjoyed the picture.
Popular prices prevail for the en-
gagement here, which runs con-
tinuous daily from 11 a. m. to 11
p. m.

CINEMA—"A Greater Prom-
ise," the New Soviet film at the
Cinema Theater, 58 East Colum-
bia, just off Woodward Ave., is
being held over for another week.
It is a warm, humorous, absorb-
ing story about an immigrant Jew-
ish family which comes to Biro-Bid-
jan from a foreign country to be-
gin life anew. The picture shows
how ideas and habits contracted
from their previous existence af-
fects these immigrants. It depicts
oppressed, poverty-stricken people
from other lands finding work and
happiness in Southern Russia.
Many of the Soviet Union's leading
actors are in the cast of the pic-
ture which the New York Times
termed, "spiced with • fund of
humorous incidents and both in-
structive and arousing."

ADAMS—"Trouble in Morocco"
Rival newspaper correspondents,
played by Jack Holt and Mae
Clark, on the trail of up-to-the-
minute news, travel to Morocco to
substantiate a rumor that guns are
Australia's First Anti-Semitic being smuggled to Arab tribesmen.
"Time Out for Romance," with
Paper Appears
SIDNEY, Australia,'— (WNS1 Claire Trevor and Michael Whalen,
is
the second feature.
—Jew-baiting, long in a moribund
condition in Australia, was given
Wrestling
at Arena Gardens
an unexpected fillip with the ap-
Monday Evening
pearance of the National Socialist,
the country's first anti-Semitic
Orville Brown, the Kansas far-
and Fascist publication. With the mer wrestler, George Zaharlas,
swastika emblazoned on the front heavyweight bad boy, Lem Stock-
nage and the usual Nazi anti- lin, hillbilly grappler and his pet
Jewish propaganda dominating ita racoon, Oscar, and "The Blimp",
contents, the paper is published 625 pounds mat prodigy, all will
by A. R. Mills, ■ former lawyer, appear on next Monday's wrestling
who Balms to be • friend of Sir card at the Arena Gardens.
Oswald Mosley. Mills would not
Brown who has wrestled title
discuss reports that his paper is bouts against Jim London and
Mosley
but
being financed by
Dazes O'Mahoney in Detroit, meets
claimed that the first issue had Hans Schnable, the German mat
sold out. Is is being curculated in rogue, in the 2 in 3 falls final.
all book stores in important cities. Zaharias, sometimes called the
In announcing his program, Mills Peuble fireman, is to meet Benny
welcomes "any person of British Reuben, young Jewish athlete from
rate, regardless of religion or New York, in the semi-finals. Both
creed," to join him. at one shill- of these bouts are two In three
falls.
ing • month.

IN YIDDISH

-

at the

Masonic Temple

(Scottish Rite Cathedral)

Mat. Prices-50c - 75c - $1
Eve. — 50c - 75c•$ - $1,50

For reservations call Trinity
2.9396—The day of the Per-
formance call TEMPLE 2.7100

Tune in on WWJ Saturday
evening, March 27, at 7
p. m. for a special radio
program by Jacob Ben
Ami.

ROGER PRYOR

brities have a decided fondness for
kosher style food. And Roger, him-
self, is no exception.
It is almost a year now since
he last visited Detroit—during
Passover week, to be exact. Apd
the first Seder night found him
with a party of friends enjoying
some traditional pesach dishes at
William Boesky's Delicatessen-
Restaurant, Dexter and Coiling-
wood. So well did he enjoy the
food that he came again and
again. Upon his arrival in De-
troit this week he immediately es-
tablished his dining quartets at
this famous rendezvous where be-
tween mouthfuls of delicious food
he "kibitzed" with 'Bill" Boesky,
the genial host. According to Bill,
Roger's only regret was that his
itinerary brought him here one
week before Pesach—one week too
early.

DISCOVERS DRUG TO CURE

BONE AILMENTS

PITTSBURGH (WNS) — Dis-
covery of allantotn, a drug obtained
from the secretion of zurgical
maggots, as a successful treat-
ment for bone diseases, gangrene,
suppurating wounds and affected
burns was announced at the an-
nual meeting of the American
Chemical Society by Dr. Frederick
R. Greenbaum of Philadelphia.

Sephardic Jews in London are
preparing to raise a $500,000 fund
to establish a Sephardic rabbini-
cal seminary in Palestine.

Get Aboard the "RHYTHM EXCURSION*

"Joe Johnson

■ ••

eTrtreariat.aintire,jrrrire
earnithr•.
•tree

neve/

NORIA OF 10 DANCE'S

GREAT ACTS!

