The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 12, 1935, Page TWO, Image 3

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    SUNDAY, MAY 12, 1935.
WS70
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
Daily Nebraskan
u:ion A, Lincoln, Nebraska.
OFFICIAL STUDENT PUBLICATION
UNIVKRITV Of NEBRASKA
This paper ! rprsntd (or o irl advertising by th
MtrttKi prasa .sociation.
V m .rq. T nil I
lM UrIaiBt) ItM sa-
sentimental, It la right that w should pause to
make a sincere offering; of appreciation to Mothor,
Like all other events, Mothers Day has become
commercialised to the point that it becomes sicken
ing-. But this hard shell of commercialism must
be put aside and the true meaning- of the day
realized.
And so, a toast to and a prayer for Mother.
EDITORIAL STAFF
kimelne Bible ... Edltor-ln-Chltf
Jack Flachar Associate Editor
MANAGING EDITORS
Irwin Ryan Virginia Sal Itch
NEWS EDITORS
Frad Nlcklas Arnold La vim
Sancha Kll bourn Qaorge Fipal
Marylu Pataraan Woman's Editor
Dorthaa Fulton Soclaty Editor
Loraina Campbell Faatura Editor
BUSINESS STAFF
Richard Schmidt Bualnaaa Managar
ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS
Truman Oberndorf Bob Shallanbaro Robart FunK
Democracy
Entarad aa oond -class mattar M tha poatoffleu m 1 Mnrkfid.
1 Innnln. NfthFMkA. unriir aa nf aannraaa. March S. 187v. I
and at special rats of poataua provided for m sect ton I "-pHE pee-pul-1-1 have had a new came with which
1101. act of October s. 1917. authorizad January SO. a.l I . . . . . .... .
congress. As yet it hasn't been named definitely,
but it probably will be something- like "Go off half
cocked and write a letter to your Congressman."
While actual figures are not available it is safe
to hazard a guess that postal rcceplts have been
stepped up and Western Union and Postal Tele
graph have been coining money as a result of this
craze.
The World Court issue provided the first occa
sion for propagandists to whisper or shout In the
ears of thepee-pul that they should write and
wire their congressmen, frowning on passage of the
measure. It turned out to be a most effective wpy
of defeating the proposal. The trouble la that many
of the letter writers and telegram senders did not
even know what they were screaming about
Now that the Patman bonus bill is scheduled to
go to the President, that worthy personage Is the
unhappy recipient of thousands of telegrams and
letters, all urging him to sign the measure.
It would be interesting to know how many of
the senders know Just exactly what they are urging.
Propagandists have told them that the bonus is a
good thing. Certain newspapers are even going so
far aa to print specimen telegrams. So without fur
ther consideration the pee-pul demand that the
bonus bill be signed.
All this is justified, of course, by bringing forth
the old democratic principle that congressmen rep
resent the pee-pul and that the will of the pee-pul
shall be law. But in order to make that principle
safe, the constituents must be intelligently informed.
Otherwise these demands on Congress and on the
President are a mockery of democracy.
Another Angle On
Freedom of the Press.
OtEEDOM of speech and freedom of the press, es-
pecially during the turbulent times thru which
the country has been passing the last five years,
have been rattled around by editors, both metropoli
tan and college, until it has become almost a time
worn subject But while some were merely viewing
with alarm and others were fighting suspected gov'
ernmental Invasion of that freedom, there have been
a few editors In the nation who have tsken a new
angle on the problem. That view was given expres
sion recently by Grove Patterson, editor of the To
ledo Blade and president of the American Society
of Newspaper Editors.
The greatest danger to freedom of the press,
he feels, comes not from threatened governmental
suppression, but from within the press itself,
"Frankly, I am less disturbed about freedom of the
press In the United States than I am about the dis
position of too many newspaper editors not to do
anything with the freedom that Is theirs," Patterson
stated.
"We suffer from editorial inactivity and mental
indolence. The press does not lack courage, but In
too many quarters courage has trrown rusty with
disuse."
Such a statement coming from the president of
the A. S. N. E. should be a good indication that
such condition actually does exist in this coun
try. A casual survey of the nation's press by even
the most journalistically uninformed will reveal the
same conclusion. The only time that the majority
of the editors manage to get up on their ears about
anything- is when their own freedom seems to be
threatened.
Tet there is a definite need for a militant press
In the United States. The journalistic school of
thought which dictates that the newspaper should
comment passively on events of the day is out of
place. There are conditions which need correction
and as long as those conditions exist, it is the duty
of the newspaper to fight vigorously toward the ell'
mlnatlon of those evils. The press should not re
flect, it should lead.
T OOKING into the future Mr. Patterson predicts
some of the conditions that are to come to pass
In this country which will require the leadership of
live newspaper editors. First, he sees a political
realignment along- liberal and conservative lines.
One faction will favor continued strict adherence to
their constitution. The other will advocate domina
tion of the government
When and if these things come to pass, and
present trends seem to at least partially bear out
Mr. Patterson, the newspaper will be called upon
for a more intelligent leadership than has been
shown for some tin" .
Leadership in the construction of a sound eco
nomic policy is also lharged to the newspaper. "It Is
the high duty of newspapers to counsel steadiness,
economy, and common sense. It is the duty of news
papers to call for leadership among men experienced
in life men who have put aside student lamps and
green eyeshades to face facts," be states.
Creation of a new public opinion in relation to
crime is the next obligation placed upon newspaper
editors. Abuses within the system of law and jus
tice are obvious. A glance at any front page reveals
bow poorly our machinery of justice is functioning.
But hee again the newspapers have been content
to ride with the current and neglect to carry on a
fight for repairs to the worn out contraption.
There still remains, however, another point
which Mr. Patterson neglected to point out and that
point is as important as the others to which he al
luded. That is the establishment of a better Interna
tional understanding.
Most of the agitation along this line, tragically
enough, has come from the college press. In most
cases, it has been neglected by the metropolitan
newspapers. This, however is not peculiar when one
takes into consideration the indifference accorded
the other problems which Mr. Patterson declares
are facing the nation.
' I 'HESE then are problems which students In
schools of journalism must carefully weigh and
consider. Nor should they be neglected by other stu
dent. Sane and active leadership indubitably is
required.
' To nave that leadership the newspapers must
once again become militant And as long as it is a
fighting: press, there will be but small danger to
freedom of speech and the press. But freedom of
the press, like an arm which is kept in a sling and
unused, will atrophy. That arm, in order that it be
kept healthy, requires exercise. So it is with the
newspapers. Otherwise, editors will some day see
their dearest right slip away from them.
'PAGING THE
SMART COED
To
Mother.
TJDAY is the da.y specifically set aside and dedi
cated to that grand person Mother. On the
campus and all over the nation special affairs are
being- held in honor of that person.
It is entirely fitting that such an occasion
should be observed. Without becoming- mawkishly
Browsing
Among Th
Books
gEING Pulitzer-prized has come to be almost
aouDuui nonor, wnai witn Sinclair Lewis' re
fusing the award, the committee's undignified tilt
with Walter Winchell, and last year's choice of
Caroline Miller's pretty dreadful "Lamb In His
Bosom." Nevertheless, when 24 year old Missouri an
Josephine Johnson was told she had won this year's
thousand dollar prize, she said, "I am the most
thrilled woman In America." She knows it means
that Simon and Shuster, publishers of Crossword
Puzzle Books and flash-in-the-pan first novels, will
sell thousands of copies of her "Now in November.
and that her peems and short stories will be fought
for by magazine editors.
But what about the worthiness of her 231-paged
"Now in November?" And who will be pleased by
the award? T. S. Matthews will not be pleased, we
may be sure. Last year, Matthews, a dependable
and not too serious critic, wrote that Miss Johnson
had bitten off too big a bite of a "pretty sour apple,
and her attempts to swallow while maintaining a
classic composure are one too many for the read
ers."
The humanists should like "Now in November,"
on the whole. Reviewers have compared it to the
work of Edith Wharton and Willa Cather. There
has been talk of its "subtly cadenced prose," its
"aching fragility," its "memorable quality," and it
has been called a "stark and beautiful idyll, preg
Eant with tragedy," whatever that would be.
The proletarian school should like it. too, for
Josephine Johnson has openly allied herself to their
propagandist cause. She contributes frequently to
the semi-radical little magazines, and she is an edi
tor of the Anvil, which purports to be the mouth
piece lor workers' fiction. Moreover, under its
'subtly cadenced prose" "Now in November" is i
surprisingly purposeful example cf proletarian writ
ing, if the reader wants it to be.
The judges, then, would seem to have satisfied
almost everybody In their choice. Miss Johnson,
Messrs. Simon and Schuster, patrons of restraint
and order in writing, book-reviewing club women,
rabid proletarian propagandists, all are happy; and
one guesses that the Pulitzer prize committee is
hsppy, too. for "Now In November" cannot be de
cried as unpatriotic or unAmerican, as was Mrs.
.buck s uooa uinn, - wnicn tney honored some
years ago. All the poetry, drought, madness, debt
thwarted love, disaster, and description of the Hald
marne'a farm In "Now In November" are strictly
American.
VELL, who should have won the Pulitzer Prize?
tag "Now in November" a sour apple, to say: "The
book really deserves the Pulitzer Prize, but will not
get it, is Robert CantweU's "The Land of Plenty."
"The Land of Plenty," a story of a strike in a
western lumber mill, was too avowedly the work of
a professional proletarian writer to be given any fat
Pulitzer Prizes of one-thousand dollars, for all its
innumerable excellences. In speaking of CantweU's
novel, Henry Seidel Canby droned from the recesses
or his Saturday Review office that "once the mod
ern novelist takes up the class struggle, one eye or
the other goes blind." The New York Times ad
mitted that Cantwell had done a splendid job of
what he set out to do, but that newspaper was a
little sad about his "service to the Marxists." It was
only proletarian colleagues like novelist John Dos
Passos who wrote of the "deadly devastating accu
racy" of "The Land of Plenty."
It is interesting' that in the New Outlook, Rob
ert Cantwell last year briefly reviewed Miss John
son's prize novel. Her prose is often beautiful, he
said, but he spoke of the unhappy characters of her
novel as being less real than the miserable rural
landscape against which they move.
Now we will sit back into the upholstering and
twiddle our thumbs until next year's Pulitzer prize
novel is announced. What will It be? We are be
coming: a little weary of first novles by women, for
all their "freshness" and "acbisj? frnHiitv,"
HEALTH SERVICE HAS
14Z CASES IS APRIL
University Doctor$ Fill
330 Prescriptions
During Month,
During the month of April, 1.M9
stiKjecta were cared for by the uni
rersity health department, accord
Icj to tit report issued last week.
Of this number 609 treatments
were for men. and 439 for women.
At the college of agriculture doc
tors gave ninety-two treatments.
Swimming examinations were
given to twenty-three, civil service
examinations to seventeen, and
eighty-nine employees were exani
ined. Students spent seventy-three
hospital days in th infirmary.
University doctors filled 330 pre
scriptions during the month.
Harriet Zink Writes
75-Page Publication
Miss Harriet R. Zink of Lin
coin, graduate student in the de
partment of English, is the author
of a seventy-five page publication
on "Emrn'i Use of the Bible."
This work by Miss Zink has been
Issued as part of the university
"Studies In Language, Literature
and Criticism."
Although the rustle of taf4ita is
Deing heard everywhere, the ren
alssance of cotton is in the bud
ready to burst Into bloom, the
minute old Sol fives it half
chance.
The cotton Miss has come Into
her own this season, with natural
dominating: white brinrine with it
a nost or vivid, darinr compllmen
tary colors, on the peasant order,
Gayly it will give a lot of brilliance
and life to cotton fabrics, which
curiously enough are as smart in
evening clothes as they are in
beach costumes.
Suggestive of brown skins, blaz
ing suns and interesting settings
is me pronounced trend for rustic
weaves, natural and bold colorings
ana native designs.
seersuckers in novel weaves,
tweed linens, sheer seersuckers
cotton lace and plaids formed by
sheer crossbars on close textured
grounds make the summer fabric
story a diverse and exciting tale.
since picture frocks are sneak
ing into the evening picture, it is
a foregone conclusion that organ
dies will be imports nt but they
must De mrierent from the organ
dies of last season. Exquisite ones
interwoven with metal threads are
prophesied, as well as those with
small or large checks and stripes.
Cotton accessories will want
their own little niche in everyone's
wardrobe this summer. Sailor
pique hats and a noticeable flurry
or orr-tne-face bonnets will adorn
many a lassies head. Linen gloves,
shoes and purses to complete the
ever-good linen suit will be smart.
Linen suits will lead the sports
parade again this season but dusty
pasteis and earthy, rusty color
ings will spice up the many white
ana natural shades we ve been see
ing. The cotton sports coat is
more important than last season.
Some of the smartest are being
maae in yarn-dye cottons in vivid
sport shades, deep pastels and soft
tweedy colorings.
Sheers will be promoted for in
formal and formal wear. The new
dimities, voiles and dotted Swisses
are very sophisticated, going in
for dark town colorings, or the
deep bright sports shades. Swiss
es are now shown with the dot on
checked or plaid grounds. Checks
in a range of brown, red, green,
navy, and lighter blue, are being
featured also.
But seriously, checks or dots,
sheer or rustic, let's be comfort
able, smart and happy in cotton
the summer through.
Fashionably yours,
ELEANOR ANN.
Unite for Student Union.
UNIVERSITY HOST
TO 150 EXTENSION
MEET DELEGATES
(Continued from Page 1.)
the University of California.
Among the visitors from distant
places will be Director Etta R.
Washburn of the University of
Hawaii.
Women attending the convention
will be guests at a tea in Morrill
hall Weonesday afternoon, at
which Mrs. A. A. Reed will pre
side. On Thursday afternoon Mrs.
E. A. Burnett will act as hostess
at a luncheon in Carrie Belle Ray
mond hall.
Mr. Debatin will preside at t h e
Thursday afternoon session, and
Mr. Farrell and Mr. Richardson
will conduct a symposium on the
topic: "Aims and Policies of Uni
versity Extension in Relation to a
National Program of Adult Educa
tion." Following the round table,
delegates will be guests of Gover
nor and Mrs. R. L. Cochran at a
reception in the governor's suite in
the capital building.
J. W. Crabtree. secretary emer
itus of the Nr.tional Education as
sociation and a former Nebraskan,
will be a guest of honor at the
Thursday evening banquet, as will
uov. K. U. Cochran, and Chancel
lor E. A. Burnett. Dr. Crabtree
was given an honorary LL. D. de
gree by the University of Nebraska
last February.
A conference on supervised cor
respondence study and a business
meeting will occupy most of Fri
day morning. At noon the associa
tion will celebrate its twentieth
birthday at en anniversary lunch
eon. W. H. Lighty of the Univer
sity of Wisconsin will speak.
Registration for the convention
and general sessions is to be held
at the Lincoln hotel.
WITIE STUDENTS TO
GIVE . VOCAL RECITAL
Eight Present Annual Music
Event on Temple Stage
Monday.
AFFAIR OPEN TO PUBLIC
Eight vocal students from the
class of Parvln Witte will present
a recital Monday May 13, at 8:13
o'clock in the Temple theater. The
program is an annual event spon
sored by Mr. Witte to give his stu
dents experience before an audi
ence.
Frederick Wilson will offer se
lections "Of Thee I'm Thinking
Margarite," by Meyer-Helmund,
and "Mattinatl" by Tostl. Ruth
Talhelm will sing "Persian Dawn,"
by Cowles, while Donald Boehm
will present "Blue Are Her Eyes,"
by Winter Watts, and "Dreams,"
by Chasins.
"Nocturne," by Curran, and
"Dream (Manon)," by Thomas will
be presented by Harold spencer,
"Where E'er You Walk," by Han
del, and "The Bitterness of Love,"
by Dunn will be sung by Paschal
Stone.
Harley Hubbard will offer 'Hear
Me Ye Winds and waves," ny
Handel, "Mein Gluek," by Walter
Kramer, "My Lady Walks In Love
liness," by Charles, and "Vision
Fugitive (Herodiate)," by Masse
net.
Anna Browkema Jones will pre
sent "To the Children," by Raclv
maninoff, "The Sleigh," by Kounta,
"My Lover Comes on the Skee,"
by Clogh-Leighter, and 'Cera Una
Volta un Principe," by Gomes.
Paschal Stone, and Harley Hub
bard will present "Solenne in
Quest 'ora' from from 'La Forza
Del Destino' "Verdi, by Dsrt.
Genevieve Wilson, and Robert
Burdick will accompany the vocalists.
Unite for Student Union.
Unite for Student Union.
1 1 STUDENTS OBTAIN
TEACHING POSITIONS
Fourteen students and former
students of the university have re
ceived teaching positions during
tne week, it nas been announced
by the department of educational
service. Bernice Carpenter, Vil
lisca, la., goes to Randolph, la.;
Inez Dovel, Auburn, to Goehner;
Jane Edwards, Lincoln, to Hoi-
drege; Florence Gebhard. Wausau,
Wis., to Marathon, Wis.; Donald
Hare. Brock, to Brainard; R. M.
Hartman, Mullen, to be superin
tendent at Belgrade: Lois Holsteen,
Nelson, to Keystone; Louise Hos
sack, Sutherland, to Bayard; Har
old W. Jensen. Winside, to Una-
dilla; Helen Lutz, Papillion. to
Nelson; Lloyd Schelby, Rising City,
to crookston; Louise Skrable, Ra
venna, to Johnson; Melba Smith
Lexington, to Franklin; and Mar
vin Trautwein, Winside, to John
son.
Unite for Student Union.
Magazine Reprints
Talk by Prof. Void
An address by Prof. Lawrence
Void of the college of law on
Progress and Prospects in the Ad
ministration of Justice," which was
delivered at the eleventh annual
convention of the American inter
professional institute, has been re
printed in the current issue of the
Institute quarterly.
Hertzier Speaks at Doane.
Dr. J. O. Hertrler chairman of
the department of sociology, spoke
at Doane college Thursday eve
ning. May 9. to students and fac
ulty of the social sciences. He dis
cussed "American Ancestor Wor
shippers. ,
BOARD CHOOSES
125 BIO SISTERS
FOR NEXT TERM
(Continued on Page 3.)
tricia Vetter, Bernice Kauffman
and Georgia Gould.
Junior women chosen are: Jean-
nette Baker, Dorothy Bentz, Lu
cille Berger, Fern Bloom, Barbara
Burt, Gayle Caley, Evelyn Caress,
Evelyn Capron, Virginia cnain,
Dorothy Chapelow, Eleanor Clizbe,
Dorcas Crawford, Jean Doty, Ardis
Graybiel, Genevieve Dowing, Vir
ginia Griswold, Margaret Harris,
Eileen Honnald, Frances Kalin,
Caroline Kile, Jane Keefer, Fran
ces Lincoln, Leona McBride, Dor
thea Noble. Betty Paine, Marylu
Petersen, Margaret Phillippe, Jean
Spencer, Frances Reed, Alice Ter
rill, Carol Schmidt Selma Schnit
ter, Virginia Veith, Vera Wekesser,
June Waggener, Wary White, Dor
othea Fulton and Marjorie Calder.
Select Sophomores.
Sophomore women are: Kathryn
Adams, Genevieve Agnew, Jane
Bell, Eloise Benjamin. Hazel Brad
street, Gretchen Budd, Catherine
Cahill, Betty Cherny, Carolyn
Davis, June Day, Maxine Durand,
Elizabeth Edison, Dorothy Eller,
Elinor Farrell, Jean Gist Char
lotte Boldsmith, Frances Hansen,
Jane Holland. Irene Houston, Mil
drew Holland, Regina Hunkins,
Barbara Jeary, Dorothy Larson,
Nancy Lee, Georgeanna Lehr,
Joyce Lebendorfer, Louise R. Ma
gee, Betty Mallan, Vida Mae
Markham, Doris Mills, Margaret
M o r a n, Martha Ann Morrow,
Rosalie Motl, Helen Missek, Aline
Millikin, Winifred Nelson, Helen
Nolte, Theodora Nye, Marian
Paine, Jane Pennington, Alta Per
kins, Alice Redwood, Lorraine
Schuek, Doris Van Bergen, Alice
Weller, Kathryn Winquist Helen
Woodward, Henrietta York, Marie
Kotouc, Muriel Kranse, Katherine
Kilbancb, Mary Ann Rosencrans.
Pansy Mooney and Mary Jean
Birk.
Girls chosen from ag college
are: Agnes Novacek, Irene Ruz-
cika, Eleanor Chase. Viola John
son, Hannah Srb, Marion Morgan,
Iva Miller, Pauline Walters, Mar
jorie Frances, Frances Schmidt,
Truma McClellan, Alice Soukup,
Ruth Rice, Donna Hiatt Helen
Halloway, Ruth Henderson, Elea
nor McFadden, Genevieve Bennett
and Ramona Hilton.
R. 0. T. 0. REGIMENT
TO PARADE IN HONOR
OF LEOI0N OFFICER
(Continued from Page 1.)
Frank N. Belgrano, Jr., of San
Francisco, national commander of
the American Legion, on May
rvmmnrler Relorano will be aC'
companied to Lincoln by state and
district legion officers.
A special public convocation, the
oniv address mat uie nnuuum
commander will give to any uni
versity, will be held at the coli
seum t 4:45 n. m. Each year
according to legion officials, the
national commander speaks at one
colleee or university. Last year
the address was given at the Uni
versity of Southern California.
Prior to the convocation a spe
cial military review will be held
bv the university R. O. T. C. at
4 p. m., after which the entire body
of men will march into the coli
seum to be seated in a special sec
tion.
Mr. Belgrano was born in San
Francisco. Calif., on May 18. 1895.
He entered the service on August
8, 1917, in the 144th field artillery,
batterv "A." After a year as pri
vate, corporal and sergeant he was
sent to camp zacnary layior,
Louisville, Ken., was commissioned
a second lieutenant and attached
to batterv "F." 33rd field artillery,
11th division. He was honorably
discharged in December, 1918.
He is vice president of the Bank
of America National Trust and
Savincs association, president of
the Pacific National Fire Insur
ance company, and vice president
of the Occidental L,ue insurance
company.
Invitations are being sent to all
the American Legion posts in the
state inviting their members to at
tend the events of the day.
Unite for Student Union.
Progressive Platform.
(Continued from Page 1.)
campus, this year set up a new
rally committee, which gave the
campus the best rally program in
its history.
5. The Progressive party, in us
administration of Corn Cobs, men s
pep group, points with pride to the
restoration of that organization's
prestige, and to the place as an
actively functioning campus so
ciety which it now holds as a re
sult of this year's administration.
Prfogressive party members ask
but two questions of student lead
ers: "Will you work unselfishly for
the Interest of the student body?"
and "Are you qualified for this
honor?" On the basis of fulfilling
these requirements, we have nomi
nated our candidates, and we
pledge ourselves to continued
espousal of the cause of clean and
progressive student government,
free from the taint of politics.
Unite for Student Union.
UNIVERSITY BAPTISTS
T
0 INSTALL OFFICERS
Parents to Be Guests at
Ceremonies Sunday
Evening.
At a candlelight Installation
service Sunday at 6:30, four mem
bers of the university group of tha
First Baptist church 14th and K
sts. will be installed as officers.
Miss Grace Spacht, Baptist Stu
dent secretary, will act as the in-aniline-
officer, eivlng the charge of
the new president, Lorene Adelsick,
Hastings, Clarence oummera, Lin
coln, vice president; Edith Young
nolumbus. secretary; and Willard
Jeffrey, Stromsburg, treasurer; Re
tiring officers are: Claire Rhodes,
Vincent Broady, Dorothy Thomp
son, and Jennie Neill.
Parents of tne students win ne
special guests, and Mrs. a. l.
Raines, will review the book "God
and My Garden," by Margaret
Sangster.
A social hour will follow tha
meeting, with the tables decorated
with spring flowers. Claire Rhodes,
retiring president, cordially invites
all interested to attend .
The university class meets each
Sunday from 12 to 12:50 p. m. Rev.
W. D. Bancroft will speak this
Sunday on the Apostle Nathaniel.
Unite for Student Union.
Charles Sternberg Visits
Two Days at University
Charles Sternberg of Hays, Kas.,
visited two days in the university
museum last week, after bringing
a shipment of fossils. Both Mr.
Sternberg's father and grandfather
have been famous collectors, whose
finds are in museums over much of
the world. Charles H. Sternberg,
the grandfather, became well
known for his collection of rep
tilian material in Canada,
Unite for Student Union.
Itaysor Writes Article
For Study in Philology
Dr. T. M. Raysor, chairman of
the department of English at the
university, has recently written an
article on the "Aesthetic Signify
lcance of Shakespeare s Handling
of Time" for the University of
Nortn Carolina studies in phil
ology. ARNDT SPEAKS AT HASTINGS.
K. M. Arndt of the department
of economics addressed the Hast
ings c ha Tiber of commerce in its
annual meeting Tuesday eveniner.
May 7. He spoke concerning the
government finance nd inflation.
Rytex Feather
Stationery
$1.50
50 Double Sheets
60 Envelopes
Both Envelop and Paper Prlnlad
Envelopes Lined with
Delicate Colom
With Writing Fluid to Match
Uie Color oi the Printing
NEW CONTRACT
BRIDGE RULES
All the Latest
International Rules
.50c
Spring PaitT Innovations
Taola Appointment
Dainty and Colorful Favors
Party Venn Vtiny Clever
Cut-Out Deugns
George Bros.
Printers Station r
Green Toga Platform.
(Continued from Page 1.)
up the proper executive machinery
to bring such result about.
II. Cooperate with the Student
Union Drive and set up the proper
machinery to make a Student Un
ion Building an actuality.
III. End strict adherence to the
polis system so efficiently wor
shipped by the ill named Progres
sive party which has reduced merit
to the point where sincere student
interest In activities is only a
memory.
Orfield to Write Article
On One House Legislature
Lester B. Orfield, associate pro
fessor of law at the university, has
been invited by the editor of the
Pennsylvania Bar association quar
terly to write an article describing
the Nebraska unicameral legislature.
TRAVEL
This Summer
and - - -
WORK
YOUR
WAY
Midland Travel Club Tours of
fers college men and women an
opportunity to see The Great
Southwest at prices and terms
that will fit a student's budget;
and you may work for part of
your expenses.
Mail the coupon complete your
education from original sources
GO PLACES.
Not Since MTCT is a cooper,
ative project, each inquirer it
respectfully requested to en
close 10c to help cover cost of
mailing folders and booklets.
Midland Travel Club Tours,
503 Avenue D.
Dodge City, Kansas.
Gentlemen:
Without obligating myself, I wish
to receive literature on your tours
in
( ) Th Ozark regions
( ) New and Old Mexico
I enclose 10c for postage.
NAME
ADDRESS
Z7
give Yocr i160
the ladiance
of
the twenf
in
20 minu
with
fib' - w
y
'
, A A
Strawberry Cream Math
rt&ai&T $3.00 far for $1.00
. this week only . .
with amy $1S0 Qulnlan purchase
Smooth on this utiny pink Mask rt th dote of
difficult, tiring day rhesi behold your face,
c revelation of radiant frethnecs I Wearied looks
are banished lines vsmthed skm-tone ligM
nod and tho nataral glow of youth retforsxf,
making you fH for any important ngagntont.
Be sure to wear a Mask of StrtTwborry Cream
once or twice weekly to loop your stm youtnfuf.
13.00, 1540 and $10.00 'pre.
Mitt Quinlm's
Strawberry
Cream Mask
was the first
rejuvenating
treatment
created.
MADAM SARRACH, Kathleen Mary Quinlan's Beauty Stylist,
will be In our Toilet Goods Department ali this week to tell
you all about this marvelous rejuvenating treatment.
t r - i
fefil feu.