A merica Par ish periodical Carter

937

Blumenau Appointed
Week's Attractions
at Center Theater General Agent Here
For Crown Life Co.
The Center Theater, Woodward

mad.
fight.

3101

CH

should

scn-

ty by

Chris-

• Catering to Luncheons,
Bridge Parties, etc.

BOESKY'S

ON 12th STREET

12th & Hazelwood

WILSON

MADISON AT BRUSH

Starts TONIGHT 3 Days Only

19.
w.

in

FAIN, 15,.$1,00.$1.50.11 00 ( ri.t s
MATS. 60,75r41.00-$1.50 ( TAN

ON STAGE—IN PERSON

Maurice Schwartz

and His Yiddish Theater Co.

In two areal eurrwooes direct
from blI months on Itroadany

Tonight, Sat. Mat., Sat. Eve,

see
6
he

ist

`The Water Carrier'

A Folk Satire with Musk,

Sun. Mat. and Sun, Eve.

"BORDERLINE"?

A Stormy New Drama

0 ,

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00.

LES ARQUETTE

and HIS Orchestra

33
ns,

end
Its.
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00

13
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ea.
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15,-
at
100
tri.

O.

PAGE NINE

and THE LEGAL CHRONICLE

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CINCINNATI 20, OHIO

PIE)LTRONIEWISITOIRONICLE

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April 9, 1937

inner.
Sent

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CLIFTON

"Paths of Glory" Opens
April 16 at Federal
Theater

The Detroit Federal Theater
has chosen for its next attraction,
opening Friday evening, April 16,
at the People's Theater, 8212 12th
St., "Paths of Glory," Sidney
Howard's adaptation of Humph-
rey_ Cobb's powerful novel. Pro-
duced for the first time in De-
troit, it will be under the direc-
tion of Verner Haldane.
The play is presented in re-
sponse to the wish of Mrs. Bailie
Flanagan, national director of
the Federal Theater, that each of
the units of the the theater pro-
duce a peace play in April, the
month which, 20 years ago, wit-
nessed the entrance of the United
States into the World War.
This gripping drama is not a
rescord of the horrors of war but
a picture of the ruthless working
out of war-time logic. It is an
indictment of war so direct as
to exclude the possibility of any
confusion.

and the Boulevard, announces the
Of interest to the community
following attractive program for
is the announcement that A. J.
this week:
Blumenau has been appointed
Friday, Saturday and Sunday,
general agent in this area for the
April 9, 10 and 11: Joe E. Brown,
Crown Life Insurance Co. of
in "Polo Joe;" and "Born to
Toronto, Canada. The company
Dance," with Eleanor Powell,
was organized in 1900 and is one
James Stewart, Virginia Bruce,
Francis Langford and Buddy Eb-
sen.
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
and Thursday, April 12 to 15:
"One in a Million," featuring
Sonja Ilenie, Adolph Menjou, Don
Ameche, Jean llersholt and "The
Ritz Brothers;" and "Stoaway,"
with Shirley Temple, Robert
Young and Alice Faye in the title
roles.
The daughter of a Swiss hotel-
keeper, lovely Sonja Ilenie who is
featured in "One in a Million," is I
being secretly trained by her
father, Jean lIersholt, to capture
the Olympic figure-skating cham- ,
pionship, 'a title which he had won
and then lost, years before, on a i,
false charge of professionalism.
Bonja attracts the interest of
Don Ameche, young American re-1
porter investigating a neighborhood
mystery, for he sees in her unusual
material for a human-interest story
for his paper. He despatches his
frozen-faced photographer, Ned
Sparks, to follow the suspicious
A. J. BLUMENAU
Montague Love in an attempt to
solve his mystery assignment.
of the leading life insurance com-
Sonja also interests, profession- panies in Canada.
ally, the fumbling but glib-tongued
Mr. Blumenau brings to his
manager of a vaudeville troupe,
new post a wealth of experience
Adolph Menjou, stranded penniless gained as a special representative
in Hersholt'e hostelry. In the group
of the Aetna Life Insurance Co.,
are Arline Judge, Dixie Dunbar,
with which firm he was associat-
Leah Ray, the Ritz Brothers, 12
ed since 1924. Ile is recognized
beautiful girls of the band, and
in insurance circles as one of the
Borrah Minevitch and his gang.
foremost "life" men in the coun-
try and has been for years one
of the leading producers for
Aetna. Having made an exhaus-
tive study of life insurance in all
its phases, Mr. Blumenau's pol-
The George L, Nadel' and Com- icy has always been not merely to
pany, a prominent investment load a prospect up with insurance
firm, announces t h at Manuel but rather to study each individ-
Rosenthal has become associated ual case and provide the maxi-
mum of protection for the least
with the sales
money. His sincerity and consci-
force of t h e
entiousness have acquired for him
firm.
a large personal following.
Mr. Rosenthal
Recognizing these fine qualities
comes to the
in Mr. Blumenau as those reflect-
Nadel' organiza-
ing
the policies of their own com-
tion after 10
pany, the Crown Life Co. was
years of service
happy
to appoint him general
with the Detroit
agent. He is now installed in
Fixtu re Com-
new offices at 1669 National Bank
pany.
Bldg. and is rapidly getting plans
The Nadell
under way to build his own or-
Investment
ganization.
House is now
"A. J.," as he is affectionately
engaged in sell-
known by his friends and clients,
ing the issue of
has resided in Detroit for 22 years
the Atlas Malt-
and is well known in the commu-
ing Company, a
new corporation Manuel Rosenthal nity. His untiring efforts in ev-
of Bay City, which is building a ery worthy communal endeavor
gigantic malting plant, said to be has often won him praise from
the communal leaders. lie is a
the largest in the world.
Mr. Rosenthal will devote his past master of Perfection Lodge
F.
& A. 1M., and at the present
entire attention to the offering of
time is serving as treasurer of
this stock to his many friends.
the lodge. Before entering the
insurance field Mr. Blumenau was
Snappy Trio at Powatan prominent in the mercantile field
and at one time was secretary and
arbitrator of the linen supplies in-
dustry which office he creditably
filled for a period of two years.

Rosenthal Joins
Nadell & Company

ANTI-NAZI FILM
AT THE DOWNTOWN

The No. 2 Bulletin in the Old
Gold Contest has now been mailed
to all who are entered in the con-
test. This Bulletin contains pic-
tures for the 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th,
9th and 10th weeks of the con-
test.
Unless your entry in the con-
test was made within the last
few days, you should have receiv-
ed your copy of Bulletin No. 2.
If it has not reached you, send a
postcard at once to: Old Gold
Contest, P. 0. Box No. 9, Varick
Street Station, New York, N. Y.,
and a second copy will be mailed
you immediately.
All further puzzles to complete
the contest will be mailed to con-
testants, as promptly as issued.
The third mailing of Puzzle Bul-
letins is due to reach contestants
Monday, April 12.
There is still time to enter
this most exciting contest in his-
tory and go after that $100,000
first prize. If you have not yet
entered, send us a post card at
once. Promptly we will mail you,
postpaid, all puzzle pictures ir
sued to date, up to and includ-
ing the 10th week's series, togeth-
er with complete rules, entry
blanks and answer forms, and ev-
erything needed to bring you
right up to date in the contest.
Your name and address will
be immediately put on our mail-
ing list and you will receive all
further puzzles to the end of the
16-week contest as issued. Ad-
dress: Old Gold Contest, P. 0. Box
No. 9, Varick St. Sta., New York,
N. Y.

FREE PARKING • • GUTS SERVICE

`Born to Dance'

Program on April 18

Club

Meek Pepper

Cornea. C

Maybelle

Bette Thompson

Lyric Tome
Lowey Damara

Adorable'

NEVER A
Max Fldler's Mask11111 Loath
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RE
RESERVATIONS TErrate 2-8385
14LISTOCRAT Of DITROIr NIGHT CLUBS

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,

Downtown Theaters

MICHIGAN — Joan Blondell
Fernand Gravet, French matins
idol in his American debut, Edwar
Everett Horton and Kenny Bake
in "The King and the Chorus Girl'
is now at the Michigan Theater
The stage show presents in perso
Louise Massey and her Westerner
of radio fame; the Roxyettes, i t
precision dancing beauties; and th
Wiere Brothers.

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,
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;

The Seven Arts Institute will
present its Children's Theater in
its first professional appearance,
in the variety program scheduled
for Sunday, April 18, from 3 to
UNITED ARTISTS—Jean Ha
5 p. m., at the Central High
low and Robert Taylor in "Person a
School Auditorium.
Property," gay and romantic pic
A two piano team of distin-
turization of a popular Broadwa
guished ability will open the pro-
stage success, is now at the Unite I
gram with a series of classical
Artists Theater. In co-starrin
and popular solos and duets. Next
Jean Harlow and Robert Taylo
will be featured "The Maid of
M-G-M is credited with a smar
Orleans," in authentic settings
stroke of business romantically an
and costumes. This stirring play
otherwise, teaming two of its grey
based on the story of Joan of Arc,
est box-office attractions in the i
will be produced for the first
initial co-starring venture.
time in Detroit with a complete
STATE—Jean Arthur, Cheri e
musical score as background. Fol-
Boyer and Leo Carrillo in "Hi
lowing an interlude of vocal mus-
tory Is Made At Night," is no
ic by the talented Donald Eater-
at the State Theater, on the pr
nik, will be a series of six dra-
POWATAN
gram also is "We're on the Jury,
matic readings in costume and
The Five Casino Girls, go starring those two funsters, Vi
settings, co-ordinated to theme
music, and supplemented by start- through their numbers thrice for Moore and Helen Broderick.
ling effects on the Seven Arta nightly at Sammy Sofferin's club.
FOX—James Dunn and Sall Y
interior broadcasting set. One Raye, Prince and Clark, those
of the outstanding features of the three rogues of song, continue Eilers, co-stars of the memorab l e
program is "The Children's on their merry way with Ruth "Bad Girl," are enjoying a happ
Hour," in which the stage Is trans- Denning, Rudy Vallee's singer, screen re-union in "We Have O n 1r
formed into a radio broadcasting warbling popular songs. Art Momenta," the sparkling come d Y
studio, and the audience is treat- Mooney's band plays for dancing drama of shipboard adventure, no .
ed to a complete 30 minute broad- with Bill Henderson's Glee Club at the Fox Theater. Dave Appolo
cast on the exclusive Seven Arts band scheduled to go Into their justly fames as a "maker if
stars," brings a grand parade if
Interior Broadcasting Unit. In- numbers on April 14.
Dance Festival at Art Insti- eluded on this broadcast is the
new discoveries to the Fox stage n
•
MAYFIELD
his "Star Parade of 1937."
hilarious
play,
"The
Mad
Tea
tute April 10
Charles and Grace Herbert,
Party," adapted from Alice In
DOWNTOWN THEATER
one of the smartest singing teams
Wonderland.
The "Dance Festival"' will take
As a finale for a thoroughly to drop in on Detroit audiences in "Ecstasy," the picture which h IS
place in the auditorium of the enjoyable afternoon, the audience many a day, headline the Mayfield established la record for attendan :e
Detroit Institute of Arts, Satur-
show. This act is similar to the at the Downtown Theater for t he
participates in a song-fest.
day evening, April 10, under the
The cast for "Maid of Orleans" song team of Van and Schenck past four weeks, has been he Id
auspices of the newly-formed
follows: Sybil Rosengarten, Sel- which thrilled audiences years over for a fifth and final we !lc
Michigan Dance Council. The
ma Ghinasin, Sybil Goldfard, ago. There's just a dash of so- starting Friday. Critics have pr
program will offer a cross-section
Sally Ann Newman, Lillian Lisa, phistication added to their num- claimed this picture throughout t
of Detroit's dance activity along
Lynn Morrison, Dale Berger, bers. Natalie and Howard, com- country as a symphony in m oo'
the more serious lines, including
Eveleen Budnitzky, Arlene Hal- edy and apache dancers with Jack describing the actions of a you r
ballet, toe, neo-classic and mod- perin, Leona Shlain, Sylvia Sevin. Russell as master of ceremonies girl though married, yet havi r
ern forms.
Tickets for the presentation and two other acts complete the fallen in love with another vi
The formation of the Michigan
may be obtained at Grinnell's. offering with two shows nightly. whom she kept a rendezvous.
Dance Council is an event of Lane's Drug (Linwood at Bur- Karl Spaeth's band plays for the
major important in the dance lingame) or by phoning Town- dancing.
ADAMS—"Racketeers in Exit
field in Detrcit and Michigan. The send 8-7291.
shows a racketeering evangel i
aim of the council is to include in
who harkens back to his childh
HOLLYWOOD HEARS
its membership all dance groups
Darryl F. Zanuck, big chief at on a visit to his home town to
Robert Riskin, Columbia director
in Michigan for the purpose of and scenario writer will soon be director, to direct one of that stu- cape G-men, preaches passiona te
promoting dance activity and in- on his way to Europe for a threi Gregory Ratoff, actor, writer , against crime, and is carried aw l
creasing the general interest In months' vacation ... Riskin, win- 20th Century-Fox, has singled out by his own eloquence—so much
the dance.
ner of the Academy award for his dies mast valuable story buy! of he decides to mend his ways. "Le
screen writing, is currently re- the year, "Lancer Spy.' The story Get Married," with Ralph Bella
two-fold congratulations. deals with spies in the World War . Ida Lupino and Walter Connolly,
Ganapol School Announces ceiving
is the second feature.
Ile is credited with the reen In that great conflict, Rato
Spring Series of 10
adaptation of "Lost Horizon," in served as an officer in the Rua -
CINEMA—One of the example*
-
which Sam Jaffe has an important elan Army. Sol Wurtzel and Sam
Concerts
supporting role, and his first effort uel G. Engel will produce the film . of European movie-making embrac-
ing
the best in photography, is
David Levy has been signed to
The Ganapol School of Musical as a full-fledged director. Jane's
Art announces a spring series of acting, incidentally, is being highly co-author the script for an tin- "Janosik." now showing at the
Cinema
Theater, 68 East Columbia,
10 concerts at the MacGregor Au- praised by critics and audiences titled film for Condor Pictures.
ditorium and several at the school, alike everywhere . . . II t on David Silverstein is writing the just off Woodward Ave. This is the
Putnam and Cass Ayes. The first Berle's work on the radio is the screen play for "Flight from picturization of the life of the
and Harry Segal Czecholovakian patriot of the eight
R
of the series will be a piano recital talk and toast of Hollywood. He Glory" for RICO
by Ruth Caster Dayer of the staff is here to make • motion picture is doing the same for RKO'a "The eenth century who first led his
people spinal oppression.
Muddled
Deal."
for RKO.
on May 10.

III/

*

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-

OF ADVENTURES
IN BERLIN'S GAY
SOCIAL WHIRL
HONEYCOMB
with INTRIGUE
and
SPYINGI

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PlIVI

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Of
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1, 1 1.11011 via& Ott
t IsOii e v on GO t.s trigUel•

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AT LAST
THE INSIDE STORY

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Downtowns

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DINNER 10
5110w
AT 8.00 -

In

OP L

PLANTATION

Seven Arts Institute Variety

SHIRLEY TEMPLE

- 550 I, A9APA- -

Joe Johnson in his sepia revue,
"Swing Holiday," has a large cast
bf "singers, dancers and 10 girli
in lively ensemble dances to as-
sist him, as Mr. Swing defeats
Mr. Gloom. Desoree Alexander
is his singing and dancing part-
ner. Strangeman, disarming come-
dian, leads the girls in a military
march. Catherine Ragland is a
sweet singer, Marcia Marquez
swings Spanish style, while Ted
Lewis is a Detroit crooner and the
Drinkards have fast shuffle and ELAINE MANZI is featured i
tap steps.
fast dances at Cafe Saks.
•

MACK PEPPER is the comedian
emcee now appearing ■ at Club
Ten-Forty.

PLUS

JOE E. BROWN

AIR. CONDITIONED • • NIIRROPHONIC SOUND

'Marilyn Maynard. brunette blues
singer, and Jean Gary, red-headed
tapper of hot rhythm. Both girls
conic from Cleveland. Nita and
Bernille, dancers of comedy and
adagio specialties, will start Mon-
day night. Dance music by Ed-
die Bretton's orchestra, featuring
Florence Strong as soloist.
•

The romantic waltz mood that
is seen this spring in songs, fash-
ions and theaters is captured b y
Mahon and Ricker, featured ball-
room dancers at Webster Hall
Grill, where they also present
stylized routines of more mod-
ern character. Dance rhythms in
current hits for the Websterites
are supplied by Las Arquette's
orchestra, with Bee Sarche's per-
sonality songs as added attrac-
tions.
•
TEN-FORTY
Mack Pepper, energetic new di-
rector of fun at Club Ten-Forty,
sprinkles his entertainment with
peppery jokes, all-around clown-
ing, and is also a gifted singer
and dancer. Bette Thompson, the
pretty little blues singer who was
there two weeks ago, is back with
a fresh supply of songs. Maybelle
Van's peppy Adorables, Billy
Lankin's piano playing and dance
music by Max Fidler's orchestra
round the program.
•

'One in a Million'

PLUS

,
`Polo Joe' "STOWAWAY'

SAKS

WEBSTER HALL

SONJA HENIE
DON AMECHE
n

In

New acts at Saks Cafe include

1

31 1;,,Prt:1 1 ,1‘ f 1.C.T: -.

FA, • Rat. • Ron., April 940.11

ELEANOR POWELL

b

Publicity man Louis Popkin has
submitted a plan to British of-
ficials for a King George VI schol-
arship fund, the money for which
would be raised by a series of
balls to be held simultaneously in
the United States, Canada and
Bobby Morris of New York,
who'll a non-Aryan despite his the British possessions in North ,
and South America on May 12
monicker, is the world's only male
the day of the King's coronation .
striptease artist.

Appears at Wilson Theater in
"The Water Carrier" and
"Borderline"

Revelry by Night

AT CLUB TEN-FORTY

Notice to Partici-1
pants in the Old Gold
$200,000 Contest

RAYE, PRINCE AND CLARK,
purveyors of snappy 11011P, also
prove they can hoof ■ bit in their
offering at the Powatan.

Nelson Eddy Here
Thursday Evening

Maurice Schwartz
Presents Two Plays

Based specifically on the Nazi
Nelson Eddy, eminent baritone,
persecution of the German Jew,
will appear in concert here on
'B order lin e," which Maurice
evening, April 16, at
Isobel Lillian Steele's 'I Was Thursday
Schwartz and his - Yiddish Art
the Masonic Auditorium. He was
Theater will present at the Wil-
Captive
in
Germany'
originally
to
be
here
in
February,
a
son Theater, is as terribly vivid
Is Coming
as the news stories of the bloody
civil war in Spain, or the horror
of families being rent assunder In
Sam Carver, manager of the
today's Germany. Written and
Downtown Theater, has issued in-
acted in Yiddish, "Borderline" is
vitations to a group of Jewish,
not a secular play. It is a play for
Catholic and Masonic leaders to
all races and creeds. In a word,
attend a preview of the stirring
a play of universal appeal and
film, "1 Was a Captice of Nazi
interest.
Germany," Isobel Lillian Steele's
With the materials used to con-
own story, at 11:30 p. on Mon-
struct and tell it, the author, Al-
day, April 12. This picture will
bert G a nt zert , employing the
come to the Downtown Theater
Chekovian manner, tells his highly
within a week or 10 days.
explosive story of the German Jew
Isobel Steele crossed the Amer-
restrainedly, simply and intellec-
ican continent from California, her
home, to the New York docks;
tually, which, aside from the Maur-
sped across the "frantic Atlantic"
ice,,,Schwartz repertoire, is a rare
to Germany to become a virtuoso
event in the Yiddish theater.
on her favorite musical instrument,
"Borderline" will be presented
the violin. Then Berlin, where her
Sunday matinee and evening at
paternal grandfather was once
the Wilson Theater.
editor of "Klatterdatch," a great
It is fortunate, perhaps, that
weekly of culture and distinction.
affairs of honor are settled in this
Here were teachers of every mu-
country in the traditional manner
steal instrument known to civilise-
or dramatic critics would find them-
tion. Here was Europe's foremost
selves at the end of a sword's
culture. This was the fatherland of
point after the fashion of their
Mozart, Schubert, Beethoven, Hay- I
European contemporaries. Criticise
NELSON EDDY
dn, Wagner, the birthplaces of
an author or an actor too sharply
Goethe, Shiller, Kant, Luther and'
on the continent and quite often a
but the recital was postponed on
challenge to a duel is hurled at
a legion of other philosophers, stu-
account of illness.
dents and thinkers.
the bitter critic. This happened to
Bright star in the musical Joseph Prager, Polish poet and
One coldish autumn day, with
the crackling fire in the open firmament, Nelson Eddy's life is journalist and, strangely enough
hearth playing a weird obligato to an American success story of the The Water Carrier" musical
the difficult passages of a Paganini most heart-warming kind. Born spectacle, was the result.
concerto, Miss Steele's nimble fin- in Providence, brought up in New
Maurice Schwartz, who is cur-
gers suddenly froze to the finger- England, trained in Philadelphia, rently presenting the play with
the baritone was successively re- the Yiddish Art Players, held the
board of her precious violin.
With a woman's unfailing In-' porter, copy-reader, and advertis- script for six months before turn-
tuition, she had sensed, rather; ing writer before he got his ing to its adaptation for Amer-
than heard, the terrible goose-step chance at singing career — a ican audiences.
of the dread Black Shirts.
The job of adapting the "Water
i career which has needed remark-
Through the walls of her apart- ably few years to carry him to Carrier" consumed five weeks, and
ment came the hoarse voice of the the heights. Today this tall 61014 the rehearsals another five weeks,
official Nazi, bold and command- young man has a dazzling record and thus the comedy finally came
of achievement. Sold-out concert to Broadway and now to the Wil-
il-
ing:
You are under arrest for tours, cinema headliner, radio son
son Theater in Detroit for five per-
espionage," announced the official. idol, operatic success, fclstival and formances only commencing Fri-
It was the beginning of Miss o r a t o r i o favorite, conductor
day evening, April 9, to Sunday
Steele's months of terror, waiting choice—all combine to seal his evening, April 11, with two mati-
for a formal judicial trial which title to fame.
I nee performances on Saturday and
This season Mr. Eddy is more Sunday.
never took place.
All these incidents and many popular than ever. His third pic-
more are realistically pictured in ture is "Maytime" in which he
AT CAFE SAKS
"I Was a Captive of Nazi Ger- co-stars with Jeannette MacDon-
many," making this attraction one ald.
of the most talked-of pictures ever
produced.

Special

New Jewish Funeral Home
Opened by Sam Werney

Of interest to the Jewish com-
munity is the creation of a new
Jewish funeral home which will
provide an atmosphere of dignity
and tenderness. Centrally located
at 613 Clairmount et Second, it
will be identified as the Werney
Jewish Funeral Home and is un-
der the management of Sam B.
Werney, son of A. J. Werney, who
for the last 16 years was con-
nected with the Detroit Free
Burial Association.
Mr. Werney is a graduate of
the Worsham College of Embalm-
ing in Chicago and after his grad-
uation gained practical experience
assisting his father at the Chesed
Shel Emes. Recognizing the need
in this community for a Jewish
funeral home of distinction and
believing his service to be of a
high standard he decided to enter
business for himself. No money
was spared in obtaining the finest
mortuary facilities possible and in
connection with the reposing par-
lors are the chapel and offices.
Everything has been arranged
with special emphasis on refine-
ment and good taste. Ultra mod-
ern in every manner, at the same
time adhering to all the precepts
of Jewish and scientific law, this
new establishment will look after
every possible detail tactfully,
helpfully and guidingly, with a
minimum of anxiety to family and
friends. Mr. Werney also empha-
sizes that the simplest funeral will
be conducted with the same con-
sideration as the largest. Service
is available at any time of the
day or night by calling Madison
2525.

STAGE AND SCREEN

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CEREMONIES RETURNS BY DEMAND/

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MGM has rewarded Luisei "The Great Ziegkele Her pen
Rainer (wife of Clifford Odets) formance in the iallst *tam ISSI
for her marvelous work on the only won the award el the Am-
demy of Motion Picture Arts and
silver screen with a new long term
Sciences for 1936, but the award
contract. She became famous at of the poll conducted by New York
this studio, winning the two high.: drama critics or the best performs-
est award. possible for an actress sore of an actreaz Jering the peat
to gain in one year. The Vienese year, Since then, she has appoint!
actress made her first appearance I with Paul Muni In The Good
in "Escapade." The second was in 'Earth."

