The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 26, 1937, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    I KIDAY. FKHItnAISV 26. 19.37.
FOUR
FEBRUARY SCHOONER
- FEATURES WORK OF
THREE NEBRASKANS
(Continued from Pago 1.)
nuthors, outstanding stories, and
the purpose of the magazine.
"A New Kngland Childhood," by
Miss Jeanette Carpenter, is a re
membrance of the authors child
hood in New England. Miss Car
penter recalls the entertainments,
the nature of the people, the work,
and other details connected with
her life at that time. The author
heads the English department of
Hastings college.
In addition t,o the.e articles by
Nebraska writers, book reviews
are presented by Loren Eiseley,
G" Lincoln's Fashion (.Virr .As?xfcJ
1 Tfnka&SEiDsnA 3
IMf Sl I
)J j 1 Smooth and $nug as you ?V
q J I swing a golf club or !
swing to dance music 'j
f A i I We believe that Hosette is
vf 1 y
:k f the finest knee-length stock-
: 'n9 ,naf nas been put on
'. the market. A strong sheer
v chiffon with a luxurious smart
s '
' v Vnr look, it is dress-up enough ,
f- sports. In these smart colors; j
X
jj HALO SMILES SUNSAN . CARNIVAL j
x'jh- RHYTHM MARIBOU FLASH M
Enter The
Cartwright Design
Contest
Tf you're i"r. ri sixteen to t v. t -Ml y- iulit yenrs . ynij
t; t a swoll clijui'-f of viiMiinir M;irtli;i (inle's .! it st .
Just Jraw the ijir little frock vouM like In !iac
ami eiiter it.
fin In (Jiild K.'impn-, u'ii-l' ui t Hill i h t'i H'l.ii: t H M
jmhI mi entry liljiirk. It's r..i'if;iMe fun . . . Try i: . . .
Ym tuav !. 1 1n- Im k v
Contest Judges
Mis firarp Mr.rtrm Unm a Finnnmiiie
Department . . . University of Nebraska
Miss Gladjs Lux . . . President of Lincoln
Artist's Guild
Miss Rose Shonka Home Economics
weparcmeni . , . iincom
Weldon Kees, Robert Carlson, and
Norris Gettey. The articles of the
magazine are not. limited to Ne
braska writers, however.
BAPTISTS TOJEAR ADAMS
Leading a discussion on the
Child Labor amendment, Johu
Adams, member of the unicameral
legislature from Omaha, will ap
pear before the evening session of
the Baptist student groups Sun
day evening at 7 o'clock in the
church young peoples' parlors.
The meeting, which will begin
at 5 o'clock, will include a re
creational period, buffet supper,
and vesper hour prior to Senator
Adams' talk.
ia,
for evening, indispensable for
sports. In these smart colors
To Art School
You May Go!
How'd you like to go to the l raphagen School
of Fashion Design in New York City . . . and
take n course there from recognized designers of
women s clothes
. 1
A Cruising You
May Go!
r. )i.jv J ymi like- tn I'tl-.f ;i rriiixe ii'
Southern V .'iters . . . In Imsk 1:1 tlie
suu of inspirm"- t l'mlnimi-nHi Meijiii r
r.'i he.'i 11 ports . . . on mie 01' (lie Ainev-ji-nu
Kx porters f int. si- liners?
fugn acnooi
Teclinicolor Picture
Depicts Evolution of
Present Day Ixigpnj;
The complete story of the mod
ern logging industry, following a
tree from the time it Is cut down
in a virgin forest, thru a sawmill,
and converted into lumber for
building, is told as incidental back
ground to "God's County and the
Woman," Warner Bios, technicol
or picture which will show at the
Stuart next week.
George Brent and Beverly Rob
erts head the cast. William Ketgh
ley is the director.
ENGINEERS APPOINT
DEPARTMENT HEADS
FOR MAY ACTIVITIES
i Continued from Page l.t
events, will be awarded this year
to the society doing the most work
in promoting Engineers Week. A
new office of contest manager has
been created to work out the de
tails of awarding this trophy.
Others who will act as chairman
of their respective societies in ar
ranging for the week will be:
At: ttnvtnerinr lrr lvtrnn
Arrhttortiirnl KnKlnprrltiff.Knhrrt Mnlllnff
( honilcnl Knulnrrrlnic Bill Rtlohardt
I'lvll KmJnNrlnjj MorrU Anderson
:lrrlrlonl f ntlnrrrlnt. . . Karl 0"tmilirf
Mwhnnlcnl ICnlnrln. .Wilbur Krhnlti
STATE ART SOCIETY
OPENS 47TH EXHIBIT
IN MORRILL SUNDAY
'Continued from Pago 1.)
leading impressionist; Dubois by
"Portrait of Captain Billy;" and
John Singleton Copley whose por
trait of Sir Georee Cookp, painted
in 17P2. will be displayed.
According to custom the exhibi
tion will include the naintin2s of
a group of Nobraska artists, eight
of whom are members of the uni
versity faculty. The 17 Nebraskan
artists are Gladys Dana, Helen
Wilson, Charlotte Kizer, Zanna
Anderson. Louise Mundy. Gladys
Lux. Elizabeth Dolan. Marvin Rob
inson. Morris Gordon. Linus Burr
Smith, Kady Faulkner. Robert
Pugslev. Mrs. A. R. Edmiston,
Mrs. Dean R. Leland. Dwight
Kirsch. Raymond H. Williams and
Wm. L. Yourkin.
By special arrangement with
the university, students will be
admitted free of charsre to the
exhibition and to all of the Sunday
afternoon gallery lectures except
the one on March 7th when George
Biddle. prominent mural painter
and art lecturer, will address the
members of the association.
Your Cornhusker negatives are
saved by Townsend Studio to use
foi Easter and Mother's Day re
membrances. The most intimate
of all gifts. No extra charge if
new sittings are desired. You are
entitled to our best at Corn
husker prices.
Fiace your order
studio'226 So. 11
Place your order immediately.
th. Adv.
Keitkotter. 1;u" Market
QUALITY MEATS
AT LOW PRICES
Makers of Pin Sausage
anrf larbcutd Meat
10 So. 11th
ri i i
MARGIE DEE HEADS FEA
TURE LIST OF WEEKS'
PROM BAND.
(Continued from Page 1.)
musical history as the original
"man on the flying trapeze."
Along with the many features
of Anson Weeks and his orchestra
is the presentation of the 1937
Prom girl. June Waggener, Helen
Fox, Addrlenne Griffith and June
Butler are the candidates for elec
tion nt the coliseum March 6.
Members of the presentation com
mittee of the Junior-Senior prom
report that this year's presenta
tion will surpass all previous ones
in sophistication and swankiness.
Flynn Questions Federal Bor
rowing; Asks Reform of Cor
porate Control
(Continued from Page 1.)
tion without intermittent govern
ment transfusions."
Will Never Be Paid.
We have become so accustomed
to passing on the national debt
from generation to generation
after making our own contribution
to it, that we think nothing of It.
We financed the war with bor
rowed money, we hastened the ar
tificial prosperity of the 20's by
exploiting our credit, and now we
are borrowing our way out of a
depression, the economist declared.
But some day wc are going to
have to reckon with this debt "not
to pay it. because no one will ever
pay that debt, but to face the eco
nomic consequences, which will be
the disruption of the entire indus
trial economic system."
The routine has been the same
in Italv and Germany as we have
experienced here, but they are
still closer to the bankruptcy' point.
Thev are draining their inhani
tants to the utmost degree and
the breaking point seems near at
hand. Flynn predicted. England is
in much the same position, hut her
existence seems much more estab
lished due to a comparatively
sound economic system. Our Anglo-Saxon
ancester has likewise in
curred a sizable debt, but by
means of a lucrative income tax.
she is managing: to stay above
water.
Relief Spending Saved.
Every financial transaction we
make today tends to concentrate
the wealth in the hands of the
rich, the former journalist ex
plained. We dole out funds to the
poor in the form of relief, who in
turn are forced to spend it imme
diately. As the money proceeds
thru the industrial process, it
changes from "relief dollar" to the
"spending dollar" and eventually
to the ' saved dollar" in the hands
of a monied producer. It is the
province of the government to tax
this 'saved dollar" to its fullest
extent, and return as much of it
to the administrative coffer, as it
can demand.
At this point, the bespectacled
lecturer, raised his sights and
opened a withering attack on cor
: porative exploitation under the ex
, isting economic setup. It is not
: the monopolistic forms of corpo
rations, that political leaders have I
long been fighting, with which '.ve
should be most directly concerned,
but with the underhanded type of
corporation that has been such a
blotch on our industrial system.
An Economic Institution.
A corporation is an economic !
and not a legal institution. Flynn)
explained, and vet the only con-1
sideration extended in their direc'
tion comes from lawyers who are ,
chiefly concerned with finding
a way to escape existing regula
tions, or who desire passage of
laws, perhaps intended to fulfill
a commendable purpose, but sadly
without economic basis.
The speaker cited specific in
stances of monstrous abuse of this
inadequacy of corporation control,
and urged immediate steps to rem
edy the existing evils. State legis
lation can never effectively con
trol corporations and it is up to
the federal government to remedy
this situation which is now de
stroying our entire industrial set
up. The corporation "must be pre
served as an economic utility, but
must be destroyed as an economic
machine gain," the guest speaker
charged.
We must make our democratic
system work for we surely have
no desire to resort to such dicta
torial forms as we see employed
by our neighbors abroad. But in
order to make our democratic sys
tem work, we must make our eco
nomic system work and before
that can be true we must make it
work as effectively for the masses
"as it vorks for a select few to
day," Klynn charged. And as a
departing word he urged that we
"must find a wholesome prosper-)
1 ity which we have not experienced
for the last 25 vears.
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