6
DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE
A Fearless, Uncensored Discussion of
;Tr ige JAN. 14
"The Nazi Threat to Civilization"
only Betrolt Appearance of the Famous Foreign Correspondent
EDGAR ANSEL MOWRER
Expelled from Germany heritage he wrote "Germany Puts the Clock Deck"
Tickets at World Ad-
venture Series Office at
Institute. Open
every
afternoon but Mondays.
Temple 2-7676.
Reserved
Seats
75c -$1
DETROIT INSTITUTE
OF ARTS
• Littman's People's Theater •
8210 TWELFTH ST.
TRINITY 2.0100
UNITED STAR
* OPERETTA
CO. *
Presents for the First Time in Detroit
"GUILTY OR NOT"
By II. IIOFFENBERG
N. Itemonnn
Friday Eve., Jan. 12, Sunday Matinee and Evening, Jan. 14
On Tuesday Eve., Jan. 16, "AVREMEHLE DER CHAZEN"
will be staged.
M. Schllobberg
Jan.
"Guilty Or Not"
Talented Pianist
Now at Littman's Symphony Soloist
Thursday, Jan. 18
"Guilty or Not," a play by
H. Hoffenberg, is the production
at Littman's People's Theater,
12th and Seward, for this Fri-
day evening and for Sunday
matinee and evening.
On Tuesday evening, "Avre-
mehle Der Chazen" will be
staged,
A testimonial performance will
be given in honor of Hyman
Prisant and Sarah Filler on Jan.
23, when "The Fifth Command-
ment" will be staged.
Adele Marcus, one of the most
talented of the younger American
pianists, will make her debut
appearance as soloist with the
Detroit Symphony Orchestra at
$2,500 Down
12 apts 3 room furn. Wood-
ward-Edmund district. For-
mer sales value $65,000. Rent
$4,400. Owner poor health
must sell. Entire price only
$16,500.
Lillian Carmen, of the Earl
Carroll musicals and last year's
Ziegfeld Follies, tops the new
show at Chink McNamara's Club
Royale, singing the songs of the
hit parade in the style that has
$5,000 Down
ADELE MARCUS
club R OVA LE
PINGREE 1666-7
—
FOR SUNDAY DINNER
Choice Steer Tenderloin Steak with
Mushrooms
2 25
Frog Legs (double order)
2.50
Frog Legs (single order)
2.00
Frog and Chicken
2.00
Frog and Cricken
2.25
Frog and T-Bone or Tenderloin
2.50
Spaghetti Royale Special with Meat Balls
1.50
Half Broiled Spring Chicken
1.75
Fresh Caught Lake Erie White Fish
1.75
Fresh Caught Lake Superior Trout
1.75
NO COVER OR MINIMUM (except Saturdays)
ALL STAR FLOOR SHOWS
11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111121111U
OPENS TONIGHT
M
g
Terry
&
Walker
i
- 0 6 .
Novelty Dance Routines
TED LEARY
Singing Master of
Ceremonies
H. R. Knickerbocker
To Address Fisher
Town Hall Wednesday
H. R. Knickerbocker, war cor-
respondent for International News
Service, who recently returned
1 from the war zone, will speak be-
fore the Detroit Town Hall in the
Fisher Theater next Wednesday,
Ruth Craven 1
g
Sammy Sofferin's
1
Powatan 1-
124 Davenport TE. 2-8385
ci111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111!11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 ■ 1111a;
S36COND IT E E K
Awarded First Prize by N. Y. Film
Critics (or Best Foreign Film of Year.
LILLIAN CARMEN
at the Club Royale
Singing
made her Broadway's number
one singing star, and that kept
her at the International Casino
for 16 weeks.
Paul Winchell, with a dummy
reputed to be far superior even
to the great McCarthy, comes
fresh from a seven-week record
at N. Y.'s strand with a novelty
impression act faintly reminiscent
of Dean Murphy. Acrobatic con-
trol routines are the specialty
of Dolly Arden. Billie Burns and
Dennis White do some lively mu-
sical comedy dance characteriza-
tions.
Danny Demetry provides music
for shows and supper dancing,
and Preston Lambert and Chet
Eve•hardt fill in during the lulls.
MAIM PAGNOLS Atitnifttent Epic et she Soil
The Powatan Program
HARVEST
1ZilIK4
INDUNE10 1
At Wots h
)IANT.— Toers
Terry and Walker, a young
dance team with a bagful of
novelty routines, head the new
Columbia
Major Eliot Will Address
Town Hall at Cass
Theater Jan. 19
Major George Fielding Eliot,
America's foremost ranking mili-
tary expert, writer and lecturer,
will discuss the problems of na-
tional defense in his lecture,
"The Ramparts We Watch," next
Friday morning, Jan. 19, at 11
o'clock, in the Cass Theater.
Major Eliot served with the
Anzacs at the Dardanelles and
on the Western Front, later join-
ing the A. E. F., while after the
World War he was an officer in
the Military Intelligence Reserve,
U. S. Army. Military strategy
has been his life study and today
he is military expert of Life, the
Columbia Broadcasting System,
the New York Tribune and Look.
A film is being made of his cur-
rent sensational best seller, "The
Ramparts We Watch."
the season's ninth subscription
concert Thursday night, Jan. 18,
in Masonic Auditorium.
Born in Kansas City, Miss
Marcus showed exceptional talent
as a child and young girl. She
won a Julliard scholarship, study-
ing piano with Josef Lhevinne
and composition with Rubin
Goldmark. Later she won the
Naumberg prize which entitled
her to a New York debut. This
was hailed by critics as the
"most auspicious of the season."
Then followed Europe where
Miss Marcus coached with Artur
Schnabel and where she played
extensively in the larger cities
of Germany. These engagements
included an appearance as solo-
ist with the Berlin Philharmonic.
On her return to America she
was engaged as soloist with the
San Francisco and Los Angeles
Symphony Orchestras under Issay
Dobrowen and Arthur Rodzinski.
A coast-to-coast concert tour
followed, together with several
New York Town Hall recitals. In
another field, radio broadcasting,
Miss Marcus has established her-
self as a top-flight performer,
playing under the conductorship
of such leaders as Wallenstein,
Ganz and Smallens.
Although the young artist ad-
mits she has a few superstitions,
one that she has successfsully
avoided is the much-debated nu-
meral 13. Being the 13th child in
her family and born on a Friday
has given Miss Marcus sufficient
reason to ignore this particular
superstition.
As a child of eight, piano play-
ing was not Miss Marcus' only
interest, for her inclinations were
to become a dancer. But her
parents who were of the ortho-
dox school, strongly protested
when it came to the choice of a
career. Her debut as a pianist
was made at the age of 13 at
the Gamut Club Auditorium, in
Los Angeles.
UNITED ARTISTS — "The
Shop Around the Corner" and
"Pride of the Blue Grass" are
the two features. The first film,
a Lubitsch - directed comedy,
marks the third teaming of Mar-
garet Sullavan and James Stew-
art, Hollywood's busiest male
lead, in a whimsical tale of two
people who sought romance the
mail order route.
RUTH CRAVEN
Singing at Sammy Sofferin's
Club Powatan
show opening at Sammy Sofferin's
Club Powatan tonight.
Ted Leary, singing master of
ceremonies, offers comedy relief.
Ex - "Hollywood Hotel" radio
star Ruth Craven sings torch
tunes in swing arrangements.
Lew Fidler and his popular
Californians continue on the
bandstand.
Fine solid bk steel frame
like new. 14 apts 4 rooms
furn. Includes solid bk single
21 rooms 3 baths. Owner re-
fused $100,000 in the twen-
ties. Entire price only $25,-
000. Bet John R and Brush.
Now white tenants, colored
pay better.
$10,000 Down
31 apts 4 and 5 rooms full
tiled baths. Large well built
property on Seward Ave.
Valued in the twenties $175,-
000. Rent $15,000. Try offer
$65,000.
MR. BEDFORD
Homer Warren & Co.
fill
Years Dependable Service
BLAINE NR. 14TH
20-apartment building, recondi-
tioned in 1939.
70 ft.
stoves, individual
lot. New
refrigeration,
new boiler, floors sanded. 100%
occupied. Gross income over
$9,300. Should not over
$4,000.
Institutional owner will consider
offer of $33,000, with $5,500 down
and balance on easy payments
including only
5%
interest.
HOLDEN &
DEAUME, Iiie.
2150 BUHL BLDG.
RA. 6464
Downtown Theaters
FOX — "Destry Rides Again"
and "Music in My Heart" are
the two features. The Marlene
Dietrich-Una Merkel brawl, with
lanky James Stewart mediating
with a bucket of water, is the
highlight of a western adventure
warn which marks La Dietrich's
return to the screen under the
aegis of Universal.
H. R. KNICKERBOCKER
Jan. 17, at 11 a. m. "At the
Ringside of History" will be his
subject.
The famed reporter, winner of
the 1930 Pulitzer Prize for his
series on the Red trade menace,
and twice named in Mott's "100
Best News Stories," come direct
from a roving assignment to
cover Europe's battle and politi-
cal fronts, He became thoroughly
acquainted with the Western Front
through residence within a Magi-
not Line fortress, where he was
made an honorary member of the
125 French Infantry,
An uncanny predicter of world
events, Knickerbocker prophesied
months ago the tragic events of
B. U. D. CLUB
today.
The B. U. D. Club met at the
Tickets are on sale at Grin-
home of Helen Salk, 2972 Ful- nell's Music Store, Ra. 1124, for
lerton, and elected officers as $1.10 and $1.65 including tax.
follows: President, Helen Salk;
secretary, Ada Honikman; treas-
MONDAY NIGHT CLUB
urer, re-elected. Sally August;
The
Monday Night Club will
entertainment, Ilene Reitzin and hold its
monthly social at the
Rhoda Cowen; membership, Har- home of Mrs. C. Smith, 3756
riet Woratt; publicity, Gladys Clements Ave., Saturday, Jan, 13.
Levenson. There will be a closed Clum members invite all friends
business meeting Jan. 13, at the of the organizzation to attend
home of Ilene Reitzen, 2275 the affair, which will be held in
Tuxedo.
the afternoon and evening.
INVESTORS
taking advantage of today's
liquidation prices are defin-
itely faced with a fortune.
You will be convinced if you
consult our Facts and Fig-
ures.
$4,500 Down
23—Te•dlmonlall performance for HYMAN PHISANT and SARAH
FILLER, staging "THE Firm CO3131ANDMENT"
GRATIOT AT 8-MILE ROAD
— presents
FOR SALE—APARTMENTS
30 apts furn. Second-Forest
section. Former sales value
$150,000. Former mtg $90,-
000. Rent $12,000. Close out
$45,000.
Club Royale
PRICES—EVES: 50c, 75c, $1: MATINEE: 50c, 75c.
N
January 12 194(
MICHIGAN—"The Great Vic-
tor Herbert" and "Flying Deuces"
are the current features. The
singing voices of Allan Jones and
Mary Martin, making her movie
bow, are generously utilized in
a musical tied to the life of the
great American composer, enacted
here by Walter Connolly.
Relatives Sought Here
Hugo Fischer, now in Brussels,
is looking for Max L. Kahn.
David Weyland of Wilno, Lith-
uania, is looking for relatives in
Detroit.
Any person knowing these peo-
ple, plese call the Council of
Jewish Women, Columbia 0450,
89 Mack Ave.
MIAMI BEACH. FLORIDA
100 Rooms
Each unth Private Bath
All Facing the Ocean
Completely Equipped Solarium
AMERICAll and EUROPEAn PLAII
Chewy Lows
Early Reservations
Suggested
Louts Adler Management
Sumner Sedson
Noel Adler • Shoo, So.seps. N
PRIZE WINNING FILM
"HARVEST" HAS DETROIT
PREMIERE AT CINEMA
The celebrated French fil
"Harvest" which has just bet it
awarded the New York Fil
Critics' circle award as the "be
foreign film of 1939," becan e,
something of a "cause celebr , '
with the New York censors wi'.-
ning an overwhelming victor y
when New York Board of Re'
gents reversed the censors' ban,
passing it without a single cur.
It is now playing its second wee k
at the Cinema Theater. The film
stars Orane Demazis, Fernand-4
and Gabriel Gabrio and was di-
rected and produced by Marcel
Pagnol.