The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 28, 1936, Page TWO, Image 2

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    TUESDAY. APRIL 2fl. 1936.
TWO
TIIE DAILY NEBIUSKAN
Daily Nebraskan
Station A. Unceln, Nebraska,
1933 Member 1936)
ftssocialod Collegiate Press
This pup)1 represented tor atnvtfi dvrtleli by tM
' Nebraska Pri Xoelttor.
Entered ucsna-ciau matter at tht pooffc in
and at epeciel rata cl poetaae provided tor In i ttctt"
1104. act of Octobar S, 1l7. authorwad January CO. 192a,
THIRTY-FOURTH VIA
Publlthf-d Tuetd.y, Wednesday, Tburediy,
Sunday mornlnoa durtno tha acadamMi ymr.
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
il.M a yaar Slnola Copy t cents tVOOi a
S2.S0 a yaar mailed semester manaa)
Undar dlractlon ot tbe Student Publication Board,
Editorial Office Unlveralty Hall 4.
Business Oftica Unlvaralty Hall A.
Telephones Dayi B681 Nlohtl B68SA BSSSS (Journal).
Official atudant publication ot tha Unlvaralty of Nabraika
In Lincoln, Nebraska.
IRWIN RYAN EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
TRUMAN OBERNDORF BUSINESS MANAGER
EDITORIAL STAFF
MANAGING EMTORS
Ceoroa Plpal Arnold Lsvli
" NEWS EDITORS
JohnrtPn Snipes Dore.Jiy stents
Jana Walcott Eleanor CI libs Den Wagner
Society Editor , ...Woulaa Mages
BUSINESS STAFF
ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS
Bob Funk Bob Shellenbero Bob Weifhama
Circulation Manager ..................--taniey aatcnaai
CONTEMPORARY
COMMENT
Learning
To Lire
The averspe person thinks 1hst the univer
sity's paramount purpose is to teach students
how to make a. hotter living. Consequently
mmy come here with th exclusive idea of
seeking 'knowledge to that end, failing to real
ize 1 hiit a higher purpose of the university is
to toich individuals how to live better.
There are so many things in this world
which are enjoyable. Mixed up with the
splotches in life's picture is a lot of fine color.
And the reason a lot of us don't see anything
hut the smudges is that we have eome to think
that activity is worthless unless it is required
or is materially productive in an immediate
sense,
Many of us were urged to think in these
terms very early, learned to play marbles for
keeps -when kids, and never got out of the
tendency to avoid that activity which does not
yield something which can be taken home in
the pocket.
Learning how to relax take pleasure in
superficially unproductive activity is one of
the important lessons of more pleasant living.
One does not have to resolve to be a loafer,
in the highly prejudicial sense of the word,
to learn to relax.. There is an art to good idling,
the kind which gives your sensibilities a
chance to exercise themselves, affords the set
ting for the cultivation of an appreciation for
beauty and the tendency to look for the in
spirational rather than the sordid things in
the panorama of society.
The means to pleasant living these days
cannot be completely divorced from the dollar
mark. But the student who abandons or ignores
the sources of benefit in the idler's art for
nothing but the search to make a better living
does himself an injustice. And what he gets
out of the university eannot properly be
termed a high education. From the Daily
Texan.
The Exam.
Problem.,
Speaking with a candor and humility that
i refreshing, a professor in the University
stated last Friday to his classes that he had
been "trying for thirty-five years to find a
solution to the problem of examinations."
And no answer had been found, it was in
dicated. It i very probable that no answer ever will
Dean of Women to Review
Year's Activities at Last
Meeting.
Concluding the meetings of the
charm school hobby group for
this year, Mihs Amanda Heppner.
dean of women of the university,
will speak before members of the
group at their meeting to be held
this evening at 7 o'clock in Ellen
Smith hall. All university gills,
as well as others interested in at
tending the meeting are invited
to be present, according to Jean
Doty, program chairman of the
organization.
The subject which Miss Heppner
will discuss will be in the form of
a summary of the most outstand
ing points of the year's meetings
and will include a short review of
the various characteristics which
have been brought out in the gath
erings as being necessary to the
development of charm.
"We are anxious that members
of the hobby group, as well as
any others who might wish to be
present, make plans to attend the
meeting this evening, in order that
charm school meetings for the
year may be closed with success.
A summary of most of the helpful
hints which have been given at the
year's meetings will undoubted
prove valuable to those who at
tend charm Bchool this evening,"
Miss Doty stated.
The group, which is sponsored
as one of the projects of the Coed
Counselors, will probably make a
tour of the state capitol at a. latter
date, according to Miss Doty, but
the meeting this evening will form
Jly close the organization's gath
erings for this school year.
"i
I COLLEGE I
f WORLD I
trm m m mum.m:m m mm
A blotter is omethlng you look
tor while the Ink dries.
be found until
to experiment
examinations is
A frown is said to have no cash
value; but it may keep pests at
arm's length.
I cannot open a new book of
mine without pain.
"1 draw the line at kissing,"
Said she in accents fine;
But he was a football hero.
And so he crossed the line.
The Purdue Exponent has the
following "gripe" to register with
which we agree.
We columnists may dig and toil
Until our fingers are sore.
But some poor fish will surely
say
I've heard that one before!
"College men are being molly
coddled entirely too much," the
dean of men at the University of
Wisconsin told 100 other deans at
a conference recently. He asserted
there are too much counseling, too
many intelligence tests, and execu
tive committees.
I had a wooden whistle
And it wooden whistle
So now I got a tin whistle
And now I tin whistle. Illini.
Two items eome to us:
Says one: Almost all the
seniors who finish Brown uni
versity this June will not be
faced with unemployment, ac
cording to statisticians at that
fortunate university.
Says the other: In a tough,
shambling federal relief camp
pitched on the outskirts of the
village of Savage, Minn., live
40 broken, wandering men listed
officially as "transients.' One
was graduated from Harvard,
another from Princeton; some
held degrees from Tulane, Tufts,
Wisconsin, Missouri, Bates and
Haverford. Some of them once
headed businesses orrarl 'd high
In their professions.
The camp cook is a bacteriolo
gist, graduated from Missouri
and one of the potato peelers is
a graduate of the Art Students'
league of New York.
II Duce says Italians seed room
for expansion. Maybe be could
buy a little plot of ground some
where with the money be is using
to arm and train soldiers for bis
African expedition,
Mr. referring to the fabled
toas of a silver dollar across the
Potomac by George Washington,
I says:
r. "It is obviously a myth, because:
there is an effort by the faculty
with various other methods for
testing the knowledge and thinking capacity
of mudenta.
If it is agreed that the present syslcin of
obstructing the work of higher
education, then there should be a definite
eagerness on the pnrt of educators to revise
that system.
At the University of Chicago that revision
is being attempted. An experimental program
of comprehensive examinations is being tried.
Those who formulated and are carrying out
the "Chicago Plan" are apparently of the
opinion that higher education should not be
interfered with by frequent, unnecessary and
distracting quizzes. In each course there is one
examination winch is given at the end of the
semester and that examination is a compre
hensive one, that is, it covers the entire subject
which has been under consideration by the
student and professor.
Students are not coached with the aim of
passing regular two-week or monthly tests. All
examinations are prepared by a Hoard of Ex
aminers. The function of examining is not that
of the professor.
The teacher is not the judge, or the accuser
and the student is not the petitioner for grace.
At Chicago, the faculty administration is hop
ing to work out an arrangement in which stu
dent and instructor are co-partners in the ad
venture of learning, with the professor enjoy
ing a respect that is the result of his superior
knowledge and insight.
The "Chicago Plan" of comprehensive ex
aminations is frankly an experiment.
It seems to be functioning exceedingly well.
At least at that institution there is some
practical endeavor to determine how the pres
ent examination evils may be overcome. From
the Daily Calif ornian.
Primitive Ethiopia Checkmates
Italian I 'ictories.
Emperor Haile Selassie is ready for peace
at almost any price. At any moment Italian
forces will occupy Addis Ababa and the war
for all practical purposes will be over, with
the Ethiopians in full subjugation. Such are
the optimistic reports from the llalian front.
But while Mussolini states that he has
Ethiopia in the palm of his hand, he must
realize that, far from complele victory, his
troops are in one of the critical stages of the
war. Marshal Badoglio may continue his dash
ing campaigns and Addis Ababa may be con
quered shortly with little trouble, but the vic
tory will be only a little more than psycho
logical. Ethiopia, after all, is a backward country,
and therefore control of its capital means little
from a military standpoint. It is not the cen
ter of government, commerce, communication
or finance, for these are in a primitive state.
Thus the capture of the capital would not par
alyze the country as would, for inslance, the
capture of Paris paralyze France, There would
still remain the menace of native troops con
ducting guerrilla raids against the invaders.
These forces will have to be mopped up one by
one. necessitating a long and arduous cam
paign. Meanwhile, the heavy rains are only six
weeks away. When the rains come, the roads
pointing south to the capital will become un
passable mire, for time is too short to permit
construction of hard surfaced roads which can
be used in any season. The supplies of food
and ammunition will be cut off, and if there
are any considerable number of troops ma
rooned in the interior their posh ion -will in
deed be critical. Further conquest would be
entirely out of the question.
If Mussolini persists in his intent to sub
jugate the kincdom of Haile Selassie, his dif
ficulties may well be just beginning. Caplure
of the capital can be little more 1han a prelude
to the enormously difficult and expensive
piecemeal conquest. It is extremely doubtful
that Italy's precarious internal economy can
much longer si and the strain. Hence we can
expect further art erupts on the part of Musso
lini to make peace on terms which will not
make him lose face at home. Minnesota Daily.
1. George was about 10 at the
time.
2. There wei-e no silver dollars.
3. George was very thrifty by
nature.
4. Besides, the river's much too
wide."
The man evidently doesnt think
George chucked the buck.
Tt . .. ... T". . f
Paul this week. The women will
foot the bills, pay the checks,
come and get 'em. and the men
hope, take them back alive. There
is only pne bad point, so they say
the women will still have to
check in for the night at 10 o'clock.
Those men who are not already
dated up for the Leap Week or
Men's Suffrage week call in when
you will are powdering their
nones and waiting.
Stanford university regulations
keep the nearest bar five miles
away from the student beer drink
ers. And at Wisconsin they have a
bar in the basement of the Union.
I need not fear the future if 1
do the best that I know and strive
to learn the best that there is to
know.
Success, social, economic and
spiritual is directly proportional to
one's attainment of the Christ-like
life.
The most satisf ying way to use
strength is to help the weak.
I get Just awards for all my
acts whether they are good or
toad.
Spring note of faint hope for
Greek letter men:
"College boys go social too soon,"
he said. "Girls and parties ought
to take a back seat while a boy
gets ready to do something impor
tant. Tou cant mix gals with a
career; one of them is bound to
uffer."
Hew Deil
Tlzrbct Chop
HAIRCUT
1WM O Street
TAKE HID IRIP 10
STUDY TOPOGRAPHY
150 Students Go 110 Miles
On Annual Excursion to
Platte Valley.
One hundred and fifty students,
constituting the first division of
economic geography 72, took their
annual field trip of 110 miles Sat
urday, April 23. For those stu
dents who were unable to go on
the trip April 23 there is to be an
other conducted trip May 7. Four
special Union Pacific buses were
chartered.
There was a study made of the
dissected drift hills east of Lincoln,
the alluviaVflood plains and ter
races along the creeks and river
vslliea, the deeply intrenched
Weeping Water valley, the river
phenomena and the bedrock expo
sures which could be seen to good
advantage. After leaving Weep
ing Water the trip was directed
northward to Louisville, Here the
students saw the Manly loess plain
and the divide between the Weep
ing Water and Platte river drain
age system. At Louisville the
party was conducted through the
Ash Grove Cement factory and
the quarries. The students stu
died the various processes involved
in cement manufacture. Due to
rain the trip to the pottery factory
was eliminated.
From Louisville the trip was
north across Platte valley bottom
to Spring-field, then west over the
glacial drift and the loess mantled
hills to Gretna and south to the
fisheries located along the banks
of the Platte river. At the state
fisheries there is a small aquarium
and several natural springs.
The return trip was made via
Ashland and Waver ly to Lincoln.
During the last part of the trip the
extensive terraces along Salt creek
were noted and the varying phases
of land utilization in respect to soil
were observed.
Student Pulse
A recent issue of Cosmopolitan
carried an article on psychological
cricticisms of the methods of rais
ing those much publicized babes,
the wonders of the past decade,
the Dionne quintuplets. Psychology
critics of much renown denounced
the uniform method of the up
bringing of the infants on the
ground that beneath the almost
iiPTitir.al nhvsical characteristics
of the five were five distinct dif
ferent personalities that should be
separated and placed in separate
homes to follow their natural
trend of development.
I am not a psycnoiogisi or
even an exceptionally bright col
lege junior, but good common
horse sense would tell me as it
should tell you that if it would
curb the natural personalities
of anyone so identical as the
quins to put them under a uni
form pattern of living, it would
be impossible for the university
officials to expect six thousand
students to conform to a com
mon set of rules. We must have
rules of course, just as the
United States government must
set up laws for the better wel
fare of its people. But should
these rules be based on a theme
so staunch, so puritanical that
they will be followed to the let
ter by a small minority of the
students. The faculty could
glory in new strength and power
that it has never before enjoyed
if it would only give the stu
dents the opportunity to give
vent to the nalural hilarity and
emotional responses that is their
birthright, and still be within
the laws of the institution.
Students are cathered at the
University of Nebraska from all
over the United States. They come
from families of every circum
stance; financial, spiritual and
moral. A large majority of the
young folks from these families
hnvp alwavs done more or less as
they please, at least most of them
have accumulated namus mat ai-thnur-h
accented bv societv as a
whole, are outside the bounds of
some restriction set down by the
university.
It it a natural tendency tor
the young plowing mind, when
thwarted in its natural tenden
cies to turn to the extreme to
satisfy its want. Every now
and then one of them is caught
and punished, quite often by ex
pulsion. But this is really an
injustice to the student, and a
distinct failure if the purpose
has been to use him as an ex
ample to frighten s few more
into line.
Although the faculty is the di
rect factor in this type of govern
ing, and the body that receives a
larg.e part of the student criticism
for it. I believe that the indirect
underlying voice is the adminis
tration of the city of Lincoln, and
the narrow minded parents of a
very small part of the students.
These different groups bring
pressure to bear upon the admin
istration that for political reasons
and reasons of self preservation
can not be ignored. It is these
groupB that are responsible for
the petitions that are being circu
lated to prevent any liquor by the
drink legislation at the nert ses
sion of the legislature. In the city
of Lincoln a bill advocating liquor
by the drink is inevitably a failure.
fiew Bus Service
Elkhorn Valley Stages
Daily to
Fremont-Oakland-West roirrt
Norfolk: and Points Worth
EXCURSION RATES
Over the Weekend
beginning Friday and ending
Sunday ftJighta
Sunn lwe CLV
NEEEASX-VN HOTEL
230 No. 11th St.
Phone B3BB8
REIMIARDT DELIVERS SPEECH
AT RECREATIONAL MEETING
The problem of the tremendous wastage in personality
disintegration through loss of self respect resulting from whole
sale unemployment in our country must lie met Ivy an adequate
leisure time program on nn intelligent and constructive basis,
explained James M. Reinhardt, instructor in sociology at the
University in an address on "Leis-
ure and Personality" before the re
creational planning conference In
the house of representatives cham
ber Monday morning.
The conference, which la spon
sored by educational and child wel
fare organisations of the state,
is assembled for a three day meet
ing for the purpose of recognising
and discussing the need for a new
approach to the problem of leisure
time planning.
"We must recognise a new def
inition of leisure," Professor Rein
and when it fails to pass, the so
called protectors of young man
and womanhood will ait back and
reminisce upon the number of
young souls that they have saved
from perdition.
Their minds can see only a
brass rail around a long bar with
students staggering to and fro
with glasses partially filled with
amber poison. What they don't
see is the well equipped and lux
urious barrom of 1936. These
establishments that are maintained
in almost all large cities are under
governmental supervision are
places where father meet son,
partakes of luxury provided by
law in an atmosphere free from
the stigma of the old speakeasies
and roadside taverns, and go their
way in full confidence and trust
in each other.
Regardless of the general
pinion of our elders, there are
a great many drinkers on the
campus, male and female. The
legislature ruled that liquor
might be tad by the bottle, buj
provided no place for the con
sumption. University control of
fraternity and boarding bouses
gives the student desiring to
drink only the alternatives of a
parked car or one of the bouses
maintained on the campus or
within the city by the vultures
that are always ready to take
advantage of the condition of
depraved students.
There are several houses of this
sort in Lincoln where a man or a
couple can go and stay as long as
they wish. Rooms are provided,
private if desired, in which . the
student may eat, sleep, ennk ana
be merry far from the eyes of the
university spies. Campus social
headquarters; drug stores, restaur
ants, beer taverns and soda foun
tains are infested by stooges to
entice the young folks looking for
a good time to these speakeasies
where they can 3o just as they
please in perfect seclusion.
At a recent meeting the
housemothers were berated for
allowing afternoon dancing in
the fraternity and sorority
houses, tf this be the will of the
parents of students, they should
realize that such regulations im
poses on these warm spring
afternoons will be driving the
students to road houses, hotels,
and blanket parties in the coun
try. Conditions such as we have
have brought on the famous Ne
braska Sunday afternoon picnics
in activity that should give dot
ing parents fruit for worry.
It is my contention that the
average student is law abiding,
and willing to do his share to up
hold the law and traditions, and
conform to any rules if given a
break. But the young man of
twenty or twenty-one will natur
ally resent a ruling that he feels
is unnecessarily confining. Give
him an opportunity to do a few of
the things that are his right as a
citizen, and he will not turn to
the extreme form of entertainment.
That from necessity accelerates
his tempo of living and turns him
out at the end of four years a
perfect example of what the uni-
versitv doesn't want. It is tie?
genera view that if given an inch, i
the student will take a mile. I
dont think so. GIVE HIM A
BREAK. B. K.
THAT IMD1AK1 PEACEH
YES,
Pipe is oje of the
favorites im vouc
collection!, 'swt it,
OF
DADDY?.
AND
1 GUESS THE
tJO IMDEEQ SCH PA. iZ CO
FRAGRANT, COOL, AND
SOOTHING, IT MAKES ANY
1 PIPE A PIPE OF PEACE
DAY OF PEACE-
PIPES IS wst;
EH, JUD&E?
ay.
mm. m. 1. 1 ii . Oj.
ifi)
!
1 -
fm M pWuW f hrm
W I I fnn brrl to
hardt stated, "a definition which
makes it possible for the unem
ployed, aged, and children to find
outlets In keeping with standards
of respectability and human
worth."
The general subject of discus
sion at the conference Monday
morning waa "Philosophy and In
terpretation of Leisure." Miss
Mabel Lee, head of physical educa
tion for women at the university,
will speak before the conference
today.
Paging Jhe
Smart Qoed
The common cold is rampant in
even the best colleges today. The
Spring crop of them was sown
during a hard winter and has
bloomed in this changeable, rainy,
cold weather. Finals are coming;
and they're no help. Into the bar
gain this is the season when the
young man's fancy lightly turns,
when Spring formals are upon us
and when the end-of-the-year so
rority, fraternity and collepe fes
tivities are bursting nightly.
The feverish co-ed leaves off
studying the irregular verbs of
the logical French language and
ceases the destructive blowing
up of oversize boxes of tissues
only to prepare for her dates.
She is in a bad way. With an
outsize nose, watering eyes and
a chapped, rough skin she feels
that there is little that can be
done. And she is quite wrong.
To begin with, there is no need
for a chapped skin. At the first
sign of a cold, apply yourself to
your pasteurized cream. Colds are
drying: tut pasteurized cream will
restore the natural oils to the
skin and keep it supple and
smooth. Pat it on generously over
the face and throat and when re
moving, leave on a thin film to
protect the complexion from all
outside irritants. Follow with town
and country film if you have a
naturally dry skin and with town
and country lotion if you have a
naturally oily skin. The pasteur
ized cream will take care of the
extra-usual dryness caused by the
cold, and the town and country
film and lotion will cool and
soothe. It is a delightfully smooth.
lasting foundation that will hold j
make-up for hours despite the i
most devastating "code Jd oe
head."
As for your eyes pet your
self some eye drops and use reg
ularly before going out. They
wilt keep your eyes clear and
bright and should be used not
only when you have a cold but
at all times. You take a bath
every day and cleanse your face
and hands miny times daily.
How often do you give your
eyes a bath? Believe me, the
regular use ot eye drops is a
habit that should be cultivated
not only for the sake of beauty
but also for the sake of your
eyes.
Now you are readv for vouj
make-up. Put in on carefully, milk
ing sure that you use your water
proof Persian mascara sr" a
whisper of iridescent eyrKhadow
to produce that effecl of bewitch
ing mystery. Chines" rea roupe
and lipstick of course, and cold
or no cold, you will look your
best for this date by Helena
Ruben stein.
"Your Drug Store"
If it's drugs you need when
your doctor calls. Phone B106S
for quick servic
The Owl Pharmacy
14S NO. 14th & P at.
Fra Delivery 61068
THE CALUMET
IT SEEMS THAT
IS ABOUT THE ONLY
DECENT -MEMENTO
30TH REDSKIN
AMD WHITE MELD
OUO LONG,USELES3
THE CALUMFT
AN INVIOLATE
BLOODV INDIASI
Svmbol or
PEACE
7
TO
SMOKE 20 PIPEFULS UNDER NO-RISK OFFER!
20 fnifraat pipatub of Print Albert. If ym dost find it tea aneUsw
aet, tastiest pis tobaco vm ewer aaaoknd. nture tnc pocket tia with the
eaat a tha tahacoa ia it te ue at key tiaat arirbia e eaanth troai tbie data, aaj
riH rafaiai full purcfaaae price, plus post-.
IWi WL i. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPACT
klKlBEAlDEIli
STUDENTS TODAY ON
MQWUGION'
Religious Week Speaker
Appears at Joint
Convocation.
Students of bo " the city and aj;
campuses will meet in a joint con
vocation this afternoon at 4 o'clock
in ag hall, in order to hear Pr.
Henry Nelson Wieman. professor
of the philolophy of religion at the
University of Chicago, speak on
the general subject of "Religion
Adequate for These Times."
The convocation, sponsored on
the university campus by the Re
ligious Welfare Council, is being
held as another program in ob
servance of Religious Emphasis
Week, and takes the place of ves
per services on both campuses for
this week.
Dr. Wieman will conclude his
series of Religious Week programs
at the university on Wednesday,
April 29, when he makes closing
addresses befoie faculty members
at a noon luncheon at the Grand
Hotel and before students and
other interested persons at the
University Episcopal church.
As a supplement to his first ad
dress before faculty members yes
terday norm. Pr. Wieman will
speak on the subject of "God and
the Work of Man" at a luncheon to
be held at 12 o'clock today. The
topic of the young people's discus
sion meeting to take place this eve
ning at the University Episcopal
church at 7:15 o'clock will be in
continuance of the discussion be
gun last evening and will deal with
the theme. "Prayer and Faith."
The committee in charge of the
meetings scheduled for Dr. Wie
man includes: Miss Grace Spaeht,
chairman: Pr. C. II. Patterson, Pr.
S. M. Corey, Miss Leuvicy Hill,
Rev. R K. Heniv. Miss Mildred
Greene, Mr. C. P. Hayes. Miss
Theople Wolle. Howard Wright,
and Rev. G. T. Savery.
Several hundred carefully
chosen postal cards of the scenic
and historic points cf interest in
Paris are now on display in the
Romance language department.
University hall. In addition there
are several French publications.
The public is invited to see the
display.
Recent visitors n the chemis
try department included Dr.
Donald Loder. who received his
M. A. deg-ee in 1927; Dr. R. E.
Etzelmiller, who received his
Ph. D. degree in 1930 and Dr.
Henry J. Wayne, who was grant
ed his master's degree here in
1925.
It looks like it's the cowgirls out
west who are the toughies, not the
cowboys.
Anyway, in the University of
Utah investigators tried to find
out how much theoretic etiquette
i say that fasti the freshmen girls
and boys knew. The males out
classed the female.
They a!J agreed, however, that
the gum chewing and love making
in public whs not in cood taste and
that if one insisted on it. one
should first s.-ek out a heavy
clocnp of sagebrush.
SPRING COATS
HAVE THEM
CLEANED NOW
Save 10",, Cash & Carry
frlODERN
CLEANERS
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ti inr
v.
'tT-r v:,c-jj
GKE-WQEO DESCRIPTION CF
PEIKCE ALECRT: "COr'TCHTING"
Ttie minute ynn light up P. A.
you know you've met as cool nd
mellow and fragrant a tobacco as
j'ou 'U ever want- No other tobacco
is like iL Prince Albert charms
i
away your cares brightens the
long hours of study. t in ' 'crimp cut.'" That makes
cooler smoking, keeps jiijies tweeter. P. A. does not
bite the tongue. 1 1 'f a national favorite. Head our open
invitation to all college men to try P. A. without risk-
1
Winetea-SaJeea. Kertb Carslme
"A
TrlE NATIONAL
JOT SMOKE