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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (March 18, 1928)
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN PRESIDENTIAL 1 POSSIBILITIES (Continued from Page 2) .tfairs. No Secretary had ever franker in dealing with the riUan press; none had ever made re earnest effort to keep the J,Sn informed "within the inescap- For A TEACHERS AGENCY with Professional Ideals See The n vis School Service 138 RoSm 38 (Up.Uir, able limitations" of strnio-hrfnrwnrd diplomacy. The Treaties for the Limitation of Naval Armament, the Four-Power Treaty in the Pacific, the Dawes Plan and a wise course of dealing with Latin America, are probably the outstanding achievements of Mi as Secretary of State. . The Change of 20 Year So Mr. Hughes at 65 is again an attorney, appearing at frequent in tervals before the Supreme Court of the United States. It is a far cry SPRING Should Mean a New Suit and Topcoat from NEBRASKAN TAILORS CLEANERS B-6013 235 No. 14 from the thorough-going Progressive of 1907 to the highest-paid corpora tion lawyer in "the United States of 1927. Mr. Hughes is no longer thought of as Progressive, or even Liberal. ; With respect to the issues that will figure in the election of 1928, his position is somewhat uncertain. In the series of political speeches he made in 1924, supporting the candi dacy of Mr. Coolidge, Mr. Hughes adverted most often to the problem of foreign affairs. He is opposed to American membership in the League of Nations. He is committed to a policy of "helpful co-operation" with Today at Rector's MONDAY, MARCH 19 Peanut Butter Tostette Pie Any Sc Drink 25c Also S Other Specials A TRIPLE PROGRAM ONE OF THE SEASON'S GREATEST ON THE STAGE America's Foremost Indian Artists Clifford Wayne & Co, A Trio of Versatile Entertainers Featurinf CARLISLE WAYNE Indian Boy Concert Violinist See the Parade of the Giants BILLY M. TOMMY Smith-Colton A Company of Eight Versatile Funsters in "A GOLF FANTASY" See the Screamingly Funny Horse The Famous Colored Fast Steppers "Three Browns" Featuring the Fattest Charleston Dancer in World BEAVER and MELODY MONARCHS CHENOWETH at the WURLITZER MARION DAVIS THE PATSY A Metro-Goldwya Picture When Marion Davies remembered it was leap year, all bets were off in the great heart-throb handicap. You'll laugh your head off at the way she gets her man. with Marie Dressier Lawrence Gray A KING VIDOR Production p WW Vwtf. ACTUAL MOTION PICTURES OF THE DARING ACHIEVEMENTS THAT HAVE THRILLED THE WORLD MILES WITH LINDBERGH SEE Lindy's hop to Paris Cheering millions in 17 foreign countries His retorn trip to America His receptions in every state in the union 4 0,01)0 miles in the air without mishap the wonder plane. The Spirit of St. Louis SHOWS AT I. 3. 5. 7, 9 Next Week "LADIES NIGHT IN A TURKISH BATH- MAT. EVE. ....35c ..50c Europe. He is a strong. believer in a protective tariff. He is a firm supporter of economy in government. On the issue of pro hibition his position is not altogether definite. He is ordinarily considered dry, and he is, of course, committed to "law enforcement." It would not, however, be sound to assume vsiat be cause of his religious background and high moral standards Mr. Hughes believes in the kind of legislation rep resented in the Eighteenth Amend ment and the Volstead Act. From a political standpoint he is probably the same kind of dry as Presitent Cool ioge. E. T. MEREDITH trict Federal Eeserve Bank; chair man National Committee on Boys and Girls Club work; chairman agricul tural service, United States Chamber of Commerce; president Associated Advertising Clubs of the World; president and founder of v Jefferson Highway Association; member of the British Labor Mission; member of Board of Excess Profit Advisors; member commission on training camp activities of Navy Department; mem ber of executive committee of The two greatest laugh-stealers of the age are coming to town. They'll get your gig gles when you see them turned out for love-making in an underworld of thrills. They've got a corner on all the fun. Beginning Tomorrow FOR ONE WEEK STARTING AT 1. 3, 7 and 9 REGULAR ORPHEUM PRICES Love! Comedy! Thrill ! Romance! Spectacle! Dm Sri. v 1 7 ill feAraiiallH A RECORD 16 Weeks in New York at $2.20 8 Weeks in Chicago at $1.65 6 Weeks in Detroit at $1.65 4 Weeks in Philadelphia at $1.65 More than you ever expected from the screen. It has convuls ing LAUGHTER-heart-rending THRILLS-Floods of TEARS-a tremendous battle scene-an IN SPIRING finish-and best of all, a consistent and winderfully characterized, brilliantly enac ted Love Story full cf YOUTH and FIRE. n WALLACE BEERY and RAYMOND HATTON in PARTNERS IN CRIME A Paramount Picture "We're a couple of ruthless killers. We kill time! But we've never rob bed anybody of anything, except worry. When we pick pockets all we take away is monotony, and trive you in exchange some hearty laughs. NEWS TOPICS COMEDY MAT. 25c EVE. 35c QjjLLTO VOW Next Week: Win. Boyd in "DRESS PARADE" League to Enforce Peace; Secretary of Agriculture in President Wilson's Cabinet; Sovereign Grand Inspector General in Iowa, Scottish Rite Ma sons; candidate for Governor of Iowa, and for the United States Sen ate. It is not strange that a Demo crat should be defeated for Governor or Senator in Republican Iowa. Promoter of Understanding As Secretary of Agriculture he won the admiration of the natural scientists employed in that great de partment by his instant grasp of their important work, and his friendliness and approachability. No secretary of agriculture ever attempted in so great a degree to bring to business men throughout the Nation under standing and sympathy toward agri culture. He has carried on this cam paign of enlightenment ever sir.ce, in the endeavor to break down the prejudices of the financial and manu facturing interests of the East against the clamorous agricultural interests of the West. He appeared before the agricultural committee of the United States Senate with a defi nite plan for stabilizing agricultural prices, believing- that the greatest curse to that industry is and has been the uncertainty of markets. Mr. Meredith employs union labor in the mechanical departments of hi? great plant. He has never had a strike or any labor trouble. He al ways stood for a fair wage and a reasonable length of day. In few organizations wholly owned by one man can you find such loyal co-operation by the employees. There is the feeling of responsibility akin to partial ownership. Mr. Meredith would have none other than a dry candidate nominated on the Democrat ticket in 1928. And that candidate must have an under standing of farming conditions and insist upon a plan for putting agri culture on an equal footing with the other protected interests. Who Was the 13th Juror?? A murder had been committed. A man had been sentenced. Twelve men believed him ruilty. But the Thir teenth knew he was innocent! For the thirteenth juror WAS the guilty man. Who he was and what he did is revealed in Uau crealest emotional book picture o the year! "The Man Without a Face" CHAPTER SEVEN THE SMITH FAMILY in "SMITH'S CUSTOMERS" Mat. 15c FflX NEWS Shows 1-3-5-7-9 Eve. 25c HOW COLONIAL NOW Next Week Tim McCoy in "WYOMING" PLAYHOUSE FRIDAY, APRIL 6 Margaret Anglin Jacob Ben-Ami Rollo Peters Georgette Cohan ONE NIGHT ONLY TF75SE PLAYERS Frances Starr Wm. Faversham Helen Gahagan Charles Coburn Cecilia Lof tus Tyrone Power Georges Renavent Antony Holies IN SARDOU'S MASTERPIECE (nrni r A r"V THIRD ANNUAL ALL-STAR REVIVAL DIRECTION GEORGE C. TYLER. STAGED BY CAMPBELL GULL AN Mail Orders When Accompanied by Remittance Filled in Enact Order Prices 4.40, S3.30, $2.75, S2.20. $1.10. ale Monday, April Z Totno i" i vw All Week Ev'nrs at S:30 p. m. A Sat. (Sixty-fourth Successful Week) We Present By Special Permission of Mr. Walker Whiteside HIS GREATEST SUCCESS "THE HINDU" Aa Oriental Mystery Play By CORDEN KEAN "THE HINDU" is founded in part on hut what's the difference anyway. While the "long arm cf coincidence" has been stretched a bit to make a theatre holiday, anyone at all familiar with the workinjrs of Scotland Yard (and nobody in) or who possesses a clear knowledge of India (and nobody does) will undemtsnd the plausibility of many of the stranKe incident, of the pisy maybe. We do not wish you to take the play with sombre serious ness for it is merely an en'ivenfd myutery of the Far East. Please keep your imagination at work, and UEXIEVE, but afterward don't teU, as to dlwulrr the endlnt: of the play would lessen the enjoyment of tl e who attend lair in th' week. w t4-nk lo. NOTE: Mr. Whiteside la atill presentin "The HINDU" aa part oJ hie present repertoire. Torwxrow Evenfnf Auspices ZETA TAU ALPHA Tuesday Evening Auspices AXIS CLUB Evenlnis M... BOc, V Popular Prices Matinees Zfc, boc NEXT WEEK "IT'S A BOY" Another of Those Deliahtful "Family Tlays" GEORGE W. NORRIS blurts out everything he thinks, scorns patronage, taunts the ma chine, and even campaigns against his own party and flourishes polit ically all the while? Since 1902 he has been re-elected repeatedly to the House of Repre sentatives and then to the Senate, often hardly lifting a finger. Now his progressive Republican associates have asked him to be their candidate1 for the Republican presidential nom ination. Norris received this propo sal in his typical way. "All right," he said. "But I'm not fooling myself. I know I haven't got a chance. The Republican party never will nominate me." He Began With a Hoe Labels do not always accurately describe the contents of a package but it is no misrepresentation to tag Norris as a friend of the common people. Norris is a dry, but he is more in terested in other issues just now. , "I'm a prohibitionist," he said. "I voted for the amendment. I believe in honest and fair enforcement. But the law is not being enforced. There never has been a fair, square and honest effort by the executive de partment to enforce it, I'm not a crank. Prohibition isn't the only thing. There are many other ques tions of vastly more importance. "Assuming that a president would enforce the law, I would rather sup port a wet who believed in progres sive ideas such as control of monopo lies and trusts, water power develop ment, and correct methods of rail road valuation, and I would support such a man in preference to a dry on the other side. I am opposed to modification until we have had a fair opportunity to try out the law, and we never have had that" Studies Power Problems Norris probably has given more time than any other public man to the study of water-power problems Electric power, he believes, is tbe vital force of modern civilization. He thinks proper control of it in the in terest of the consuming public is the most important issue before the country. This issue is embodied at the mo ment in the Muscle Shoals (Ala., project and the proposed Boulder Dam on the Colorado River. In both cases, Norris is concerned lest great i water-power resources, the property of the people, be given away to pri vate power interests. Norris wants the Government to develop and sell electric power instead of turning the projects over to private operation. Norris has stood generally with the insurgent Republican group. He has favored fhe McNary-Haugen equalization fee plan for farm relief, he proposed the amendment several years ago which for a time opened " income tax returns to public inspec tion, he fought to seat Brookhart and Nye in the Senate and fought equally hard against Newberry, Smith of Il linois, and Vare. Unlike most speakers, Norris seems more belligerent in print than on the floor of the Senate. He speaks in a quiet, patient, conversa tional tone. He puts his force into his words rather than into Thespian gestures. His insurgent friends have one complaint against him as a practical politician. They think he does not fight hard enough. Having deep re spect for his own convictions, he has equal respect for the convictions of others. They are too important to him to be maltreated, even when he does not agree with them. He will attempt to change a man's op inion by argument He will not try to do it by abuse or the tactics of the cloak room. This broad streak of tolerance baf fles the regulars in dealing with Nor ris. They know how to handle an insurgent bully. But Norris keeps saying. "Maybe I'm wrong and you may be right, but I intend to vote my convictions." How can you go after a man like; that with both fists? Typewriters For Rent All standard makes special rate to stu dents for long term. Used machines portable typewriters monthly payments. Nebraska Typewriter Co. 1232 O St. B-2157 Registrar Has Information (Continued from Page 1) course. The great increase in attend ance in recent years has made it necessary to add new departments and to increase the number of courses in other departments already represented. Special provision for a superior in structional staff has also been re quired by the influx of students dur ing the summer months. The quality of instruction is thus equal to that of the regular semesters. Educators and professors from all parts of the country, together with those of the permanent facu!ty who remain, will be here this summer. For many years the summer ses sion offered but six weeks of work. It was then increased to eight weeks and in 1920 it was changed to ex tend over a period of twelve weeks. The session was divided into two terms at that time, each term con stituting six weeks of work. The schedule and courses are so planned now that students can enter either term. Nearly all departments in the second term offer beginning work. Likewise the instruction is os arranged that work begun in the first term can be continued in the sec ond, giving students the opportunity to attend both terms consecutively. Before You Buy Clothes See these Amazing Values You will save money and get the utmost satis faction if you wear M.B0RN 4 COMPANY Made to Measure Clothes High quality fabrics Exclusive styles Choice patterns Large assortment Low price No middleman's profit Satisfaction Guaranteed by Co. 52 years in business New Spring Samples are now ready for your inspection C. H. Chamberlin Authorized Dealer 1535 N. 32nd. M-1158 Open Evening 7 to 9:30 We Call upon you by request. Spanish Think Americans Expeditious j (Continued from Page 1) school," Professor Alexis stated. : "There the students completely con trol the affairs of the university, the faculty giving their commands and orders in such a low voice that the students need recognize them only when they wish to. Should the fac ulty attempt regulations which the students do not approve of the stu- ' dents go on a strike, and refuse to go to school until the faculty remove the undesired regulations. I Two farces were given in Spanish I by students, and the 'program was concluded with a Spanish song sung by Mary Giangrosso. LUNCHEONETTES AT THE OWL DRUG 14 and P Sts. DIAMONDS April Is the Diamond Month OUR SELECTION IS COMPLETE We carry anappr blue-white atones and the verr latest mounting. We will extend credit. Fenton B. Fleming Jeweler 1143 "O" St. I will b" there nr'.ttx wnf 14 piece "Billy Coat Orchestra.'' Barney Google announces his big Billy Goat-Nanny Goat DANCE Wed. Night & LINDELL OKMNX we're 20,0G0,CQD strong Checking Free with Membership Card Dah-a-a-a- . "HoriefeaJher" 75c per Couple I