The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 10, 1937, Page TWO, Image 2

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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1937.
TWO
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
KIHTORIAI. STAFF
Editor George Plpsl
Munsglnfl Editor. .. Don Wgnr. Ed Murray
News Edltors-Wlllurd Burnry. Helen Pasce, Jn
WAlcott. Howard Kplan. Morrli Llop.
. h tH0r B,rtMr R"W,,,er- .... Ed S.eeve.
l&VXi::::r .7v:::;::.:.virB.n,. n.r.o
ONTHIS.SSUE Murray
Detk Editor Pitcoa
iNigni tomr
Under direction of the Student Publication Board.
Editorial Office University Hall .
ST.?' BmU N.BMY BSb.
Telephon
fn6 Member TT
Fissociafed CoUoeiate Pre
Distributors of
C6llc6ialGDi5c?st
Nebraska Goes 'Commercial;
Funds Spent for Instruction
Show Proportional Decline
. ft-AWt ro o-a 1
civ .rri.nt was devoted to commercial activities,
uch as the hog cholera scrum plant, which fur
nishes serum to Nebraska farmers at cost; the cafe
teria at the agricultural collepe; and the women s
dormitories, where the receipts are ued as revolv
ing funds to pay operating expenses.
Quite a proportion to spend on outside activities,
isn't it Especially is this true when we see that
the proportion is growing, simply necause the uni
versity has not had enough money for instructional
purposes. In 1934-33. 63.5-, of the expenditures
were for instructional purposes; in 1933-34, 65;
in 1932-33, 66.7.
These activities are essential as services to the
people of the state; they should not be discontin
An Open Letter to
President Roosevelt.
To King Franklin I
Roosevelt, D. C.
Dear Chief:
I have been unable to reach you by mail lately,
until the boys down at Yale let us in on the fact
that the name of Washington has been changed to
Roosevelt. What I have to report, Chief, is pretty
urgent
We had a student forum yesterday on your plan
to knife the Supreme Court, and some of the nasty
things they didn't say about you! There is a very
prominent attorney here who needs to be liquidated.
This Mr. C. Petrus Peterson doesn't like you at all.
Mr. Peterson told us that our governmental
systems, like the university, in which centrifugal
and centripetal forces hold a constant balance,
vacillate between rule by dictators and rule by
the masses. He said that packing the court got rid
of one of those checks and balances, upsetting the
equilibrium, which was liberty.
I was puzzled for awhile. Chief, because one
of the many law students that were there told me
that when we got out of balance, like Mr. Peter
son said we would, everybody would disregard
property rights and the masses would rule. Not
tinly that, Chief, but this student backed his state
ment by showing how you were trying to help all
the communists and farmers and workingmen.
I was about to lose faith in you until Mr. Pet
erson straightened me out. He made it plain that
the masses weren't in danger of getting control of
the government because you have a messianic com
plex. Frankly, Chief, I've been worri?d about your
messianic complex lately. To make a full confes
sion. I've been studying up to do a little dictating
myself, because you can't last forever. And here's
what's been bothering me. I've always been taught
that America could beat those foreign countries all
hollow in making anything from Fords to domestic
champagne. But if this fellow I've been reading
is any authority on dictatorships at all, those boys
in Europe are putting your technique in the shade.
Chief, what you need to organize is a joint seminar
with Comrades Stalin, Hitler and Mussolini, and
pick up a few pointers on dictating. No stuff,
Chief, you re pretty poor.
For instance, to make a real dictatorship, you
have to have an economic philosophy like the Rus
siars. It has to be simple, so any moron can under
stand it; people like trite little maxims for ration
Criterion
Of Excellence.
Washington Daily.
Murray Morgan, Editor.
What makes a university great?
If asked this question many a j
college stulent will reply "the fac- j
ulty and the teaching methods." j
cite the fact that Oxford does not j
employ the American system, de-
cry "billiard ball education," and
let it go at that.
If asked to write .VJ0 words on
the faculty of any American uni- ,
versity except his own, or on the
benefits of the Oxford method, or i
on Chicago's "new plan," the stu- j
dent would fail.
Dpspite the possible denials of ,
idealists, universities in America j
gain their reputations primarily i
through athletics. No? Who was ,
president of Notre Dame during l
the Knute Rockne regime?
Those who shirk from the idea j
that a championship football team
means a good university, have an- j
other answer. They say that the :
criterion of excellence lies in the
campus. I
The prophets of the campus j
school point with pride to Gothic
structures which soar toward the
fkies, massive concrete and steel
affair with specious buttresses,
''"iiis. they say. makes a university.
The belief of other thousands is
that the schools of America should
be bigger to be better. Those who
suffer from numberatosis. glory in
the 20 and 30 thousands of Cali
fornia and Columbia.
Still another school declares that
It is not football, nor buildings,
nor number of students but instead
the fame of the alumni which de
termines excellence. To this school.
Harvard, which waves (somewhat
TIUKTY.SIXTH YEAR
BUSINESS STAFF
Business Manager Bob Shellenberg
Aaalstant Managtrt Bob Wadhami, Web Mills,
Frank Johnson.
Circulation Manager Stanley Michael
$1.50 a year
2.b0 mailed
Entered at aecond-claaa matter at the poatofflce In
Lincoln. Nebraika. under act of congreat. March 3. 1879,
and at apecial rate of postage provided for In aectjon
1103. act of October S. 117. authorlred January 80. 1922.
B33337jOurn.
0.
P u b 1 1 1 h t d every
Tuesday, Wedneaday,
Thursday, Friday and
Sunday morning of
the academic year by
studenta of the Unl.
versity of Nebraska,
under the supervision
of the Board of Publication.
remains that of instructing students, and snouia
not be neglected to make commercial clearing
houses out of our seminars, and factories out of our
laboratories. Yet a cut In appropriations hits the
classroom first, and such an emphasis on non
educational phases is bound to result.
If the state wishes the university to continue
these special services which now represent over 40
percent of our expenditures, we raise no objection.
But we do object when these services approach the
main function of a university by their proportion.
We ask that this institution either receive a fair
amount for ins-tructional purposes, or drop the
appellation of "an institution of higher learning."
alizing purposes. But your New Deal? The other
day Stanley High wrote about his conception of
your aims, and did it raise a rumpus! If anything
brought out the "abysmal ignorance" (borrowed
from another era! that we mass men have about
your future plans, that did. If you would settle
down instead of experimenting around so much,
maybe we could get this dictatorship organized.
If you don't have an economic dogma, like
the Russians, you have to try to be economically
self-sufficient, like the Germans and Italians. I
first suspected skullduggery when you made that
trade treaty with Canada. And we're still getting
all the butter we need. Chief, if there's any place
where you haven't been loyal to home products,
it's at Washington. Imagine sending a commission
way over to Sweden to investigate their coopera
tives. I'm beginning to believe Mr. Hearst with
his "Buy American" knows a lot more about dic
tatorships than you do.
Another thing, you have to pick out someone
that we mass men can hate real hard, and then
periodically purge them. The Germans and Ital
ians proceed along racial lines, and the Russians
liquidate the kulaks. Up to now, the "economic
royalists" have been taking the biggest beating
over here, but confidentially. Chief, that gag would
be a lot more effective if you didn't have your
picture taken for the newspapers on Mr. Astor's
yacht.
Mr. Salvador De Madaiiaga, who wrii.es about
dictators for the New York Times, says that "Dic
tators are no longer kings, princes, generals; a
workman, a schoolmaster rules." You can't help it
if your origin is against you, but it certainly would
have helped to have been a house painter or a
journalist.
Finally, you have to have a carefully organized
party system under an iron discipline. Chief, I
know plenty of fellows who are working at the
union warehouse here in Lincoln that don't have
The Cause at heart. In Russia, they have only
three per cent of the total population of the coun
try in the communist party. Sometimes, Chief, I
think you don't discriminate enough in matters of
party membership.
Your whole record as a dictator has been
pretty spotty. If there's one thing that should be
impressed upon you, it's this: when you get a
chance at power, seize it. You certainly didn't
do that back in the dark days of the early thirties,
and your chances aren't half as good now.
I'm hoping for a change. Chief, but I can tell
you frankly that my patience won't hold out much
longer. Sometimes I wish that the Kingfish hadn't
met with such violent opposition.
discreetly in view of its 8 percent
republican rating) the Roosevelt
banner, rates tops.
There are a few left, however,
who really do believe that a faculty
and teaching methods mark the
great university. To these de
votees of the Oxford and Chicago
methods, the little colleges such as
Reed rate high.
The members of this school fur
ther brieve thst the wisecracks of
the imperturbable George L. Kit
tredge of Harvard, who once tum
bled off the lecture platform and
rose calmly to announce "this is
the first time I ever descended to
the level of my audience," are as
worthy if publicity as the repartee
of Lar.., Kelly.
But then, they're idealists.
"No OoTk
Winding Wanted . .
The Daily Texan
Ed Hodge, Editor
One all-important cog in the
University athletic machine that
has long been far too much neg
lected appears, at last, to be get
ting some attention. That cog is
the athlete, the athlete as a stu
dent seeking a way of life, not
the athlete as a publicity organ
for the University.
And it is Dana X. Bible, brought
to the campus by the Regents to
point to just such things, who is
turning the focusing dial in that
direction.
Participation in athletics should
have an educational value, Bible
told the Ex-Students' Association
executive council here last week.
And they approved of the plan he
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LOS AHOSLSS PORTLAND - SSATTLI
ued. But the fundamental principle of a university
proposed, a plan calling for the
useful employment of players in
jobs that would require work "60
minutes of each hour." Bible's
contention is that the men who
play football, basketball, and other
sports, should be given honest
jobs instead of clock-winding as
signments and checks slipped un
der the pillow. He is looking to
the future of the graduates of this
University. When they finish
school, will they be men morally
as well as physically?
Too often in the frenzy of bang
ing bands and cheering crowds the
purpose of coming to college is
forgotten. Any sincere man with
football ability does not come to
the University to play football. He
comes, first, to find an education,
then to play football. Should he
be paid for his ability to make
the team? The modern trend of
intercollegiate athletics demands
that he be paid if the institution
wishes to remain athletically on
the same level with other tnptitu
tions. The Regents last month had
to decide whether the University
would cempete or whether it
would reject the custom like Co
lumbia did a few years back. They
hired the best set of coaches.
Paying a man to make touch
downs for Texas is one thing. Pay
ing a man for work he does, when
he knows that the reason he has
the job is that he can make touch
downs, is another thing.
D. X. can see this difference. It
L VI
E
CONVOCATION TODAY
Nine Students to Perform
At Twenty-First Music
Assembly.
Advanced students of the school
of music will present the twenty
first musical convocation this
afternoon with a recital of piano,
vocal and violin music at 4 o'clock
in the Temple theater.
Opening the convocation with a
number by Chopin, Alice Terril, a
student of Miss Dreamer, will play
"Scherzo in B flat minor" on the
piano. "Carmena" by Wilson, will
be presented hy Sylvia Wolf, voice
student of Miss Upton. Edith
Burkett, who is studying violin
under Mrs. Larimer, will offer
Rehfeld's "Spanish Dance."
With a violin obligato played by
Eunice Bingham, Jean Spencer
will sing for the convocation audi
ence "The Nile," a composition
written by Leroux. Miss Spencer
is a student of Mrs. Van Kirk.
Two selections by Debussy "Sara
bande" and "Prelude" will be per
formed on the piano by Margaret
Jane Pyle, piano pupil of Miss
Klinker.
Hazel Gertrude K i n s c e 1 1 a ' s
"Daisies" will be one of the two
numbers that Constance Baker,
who is studying under Mrs. Diers
will sing. The other selection will
be an old French air arranged by
A. L., "Come Sweet Morning."
"Etude, Op. 25, No. 10" will be
the selection that Houghton Furr,
student of Mr. Harrison will
present.
Hermit Hansen will sing three
selections "Love Went A-Riding"
by Bridge. "I Heard a Lady Sigh"
by Church, and "Absence" by
Easthope-Martin. Mr. Hansen is a
voice pupil of Mrs. Gutzmer.
IX THE
INFIRMARY
Admitted Tuesday:
Verna Reynoldson, St. Ed
wards. Dale Wolvin, Utica.
Released:
Fred Shirey, Latrobe, Pa.
Ruth M. Green, St. Francis,
Kas.
is one of the many components
of a healthy athletic program, and
if he has been successful with this
kind of program for 25 years, he
can be successful again.
When the ex-students' executive
council approved of D. X.'s plan,
they approved the best idea that
has been submitted here for mak
ing the foremost educational insti
tution in the south, the University
of Texas, the ethical, successful
center of Southwest conference
sport.
Education A la
Dr. Conant.
Oregon State Daily Barometer
Hal Higgs, Editor.
Filling courses with masses of
information to be memorized for
examination meets opposition from
Dr. James B. Conant, president of
Harvard university. Yet he advo
vates old fashioned education with
plenty of stiff courses, grades and
examinations as the most effective
means known to select college
graduates to be leaders of the
future.
Dr. Conant has placed himself
in a seemingly ambiguous posi
tion. To the average college stu
dent a stiff course with lots of
examinations means plenty of
facts, cold and unappealing. As
signed readings are packed with
an array of almanac material. For
many students, even in our own
college, the class hour is devoted
to a sonorous recital by the pro
fessor of stuff to be found in any
good encyclopedia.
The type of stiff course Har
vard s president is talking about
must be of an entirely different
nature. Certainly Dr. Conant would
not be so careless as to contradict
himself in the same speech. Is it
possible to make a course stiff
without requiring parrot work by
students?
Professors find that the easiest
way to kep students busy is to en
tangle them in a maze of facts.
Students, prone to protest, spend
hours at "busy" work in an at
tempt to get facts catalogued for
the exam. Mar.y students and,
certainly, some professors have
overlooked the possibility that
understanding and creativeness
may be the stiff elements in a
course.
Says Dr. Conant, "The apprecia
tion of the interplay of forces lead
ing to the development of our pres
ent governmental machinery is
surely of more educational value
than an exact knowledge of legis
lative and administrative details."
Here the emphasis is placed on un
derstanding, a greater and more
permanent asset than a carload of
facts.
College advertises itself as de
veloping the ability to think intel
ligently. The "pouring in" of
nicely arranged facts is a far cry
from de'elopraent of thought proc
esses. Stiff courses having as
their aim the development of un
derstanding and creative ability
would better equip students to fit
into the present day world.
"We are all products of a sys
tem which knows not the classics
and the liberal arts, and there is
every indication that the system
is growing wnrse instead of bet
ter. Every day brings us news of
some educational inventions de
signed to deprive the student of
the last vestiges of his tools and
to send him for his education help
less against the environment it
self." The dirge of President Rob
ert Maynard Hutchins of the Uni
versity of Chicago.
A figure finder at Northwestern
university has discovered that
rain corbon dioxide and. water, as
it strikes the limestone buildings
on the campus will dissolve the;
structures in 72,000 years. j
Your inquiring reporter had
some difficulty getting answers to
the question: "Have you ever
taken a course which was, to you,
practically a waste of time?"
Many students felt that such can
dor might have some slight ef
fect on professors who still re
main to be impressed. At any rate
these answers obtained may give
some clue as to what not to take
if you had it all to do over again.
Charles Tanton, Bizad junior:
"Psychology. The course is too
general. It spreads itself out over
so much territory that it is value
less at any point. It attempts to
cover a lifetime of psychological
research in a single term. Like a
mouse eating chee'se, what he
doesn't eat, he crawls through;
this subject crawls through prac
tically every field yet doesnt
pause in any one long enougn to
give the student any practical val
ue.
Ray Herschner, Arts and Sciences
junior:
"Fnp-lish. It- was a course that I
had to take although my interest
didn't lie along that particular line.
It took valuable time away from
subjects in which I was really in
terested.
Lewis Pral, Arts and Sciences
freshman:
"Freshman lecture. Anything
which I might learn by chance
from the course will not in any
wav annlv to the tyne of work
which I pian to take up."
Mary Ellen Leweiien, mzaa iresn
man: "Historv. It's merelv a repetition
of things you already know. By
the time you've finished high
school vou've had all the funda
mentals of history that you will
ever need. Also, why tresnman
lecture? That subject takes so
very much time and you get so
very little out of it. You gain no
complete knowledge aooui any one
thin? all vou acauire is a miscel
laneous hodge-podge of assorted
facts."
Orville Hutchinson, Bizad senior:
"Trie-onometrv. It doesn t relate
in any way to the field which 1
plan to enter, l naa to wne me
stuff and reallv feel that I got
nothing out of it. The "cosign of
a tangent" has no bearing what
soever on my work in business."
Jerry Wallace, Teachers college
sophomore:
"Freshman lecture. There was
nothing to it. You write for hours
and hours on a paper, and what
good does it do you ? In most cases,
the lectures are merely repetitions
of something you already know, or
an advance into something which
vou will take in the future."
Delvan Becker, Bizad sophomore:
"Required Economics. I can see
no significant value in the course
which should give it a place
among the compulsory subjects.
For a required course it does not
bring out any information that
should make it an essential to the
following courses."
Ted Weltcn, Arts and Sciences
freshman:
"Freshman lecture. The stu-,
dents who take it do no work.
Everyone that I know of. myself
included, merely copies excerpts
from a few references, throwing
them together, and handing the
mess in. Before the paper has
been returned to you, you've for
gotten all about the subject.
Jean Willis. Bizad sophomore:
"French Phonetics. MO negm :
with, I hate French, and I took I
the subject just to get the credit.
I didn't care a bit about the tech-
nical side of French, I was not ;
interested in the subject because
it was too far removed from th j
field in which I plan to work." !
Dick West, Arts and Sciences j
junior: i
"Freshman lecture. The lectures
covered subjects which were too
technical. The lecturers usually I
knew too much about the field 1
which he was covering, and conse
quently raised his language to a
technical level far above the un
derstanding of his listeners. The
course took time which could have
been profitably spent in work,
study, or better yet. in taking a
useful course."
Annabelle Emlein, Bizad fresh
man: "History. You just learn a lot
of details which are unnecessary,
which you'll never use, and which
you forget by the time the first
examination is given."
Harold Huestis, Graduate Stu
dent: "Education 31. The course, a
history of education, had no prac
tical application. A reasonable
familiarity with the subject mat
ter could be gained in a week, and
to draw it out over the period of
a semester is just a waste of time.
All of the material contained in
the course is covered time and
again by other subjects.
Ruby Schwarting, Bizad fresh
man: "Gym. It may be good for you,
but it should not be required. You
never really do anything in the
course."
Last 2 Days: GRACE MOORE-CARY
meanip? Finn
J mm a wesiianii IhMatrtmMtmmm t Iff i
STARTING FRIDAY 11
r i to t p. m. X vi RGm0 "Solas U
( 20C H Wt j ii. -
11 NIGHTS JJ e"thTTNESS
Lower Floor 2Sc H I"! .up
Balcony 20c II " ,1
FEATURE
SPRINGTOPICTUESDAY
Misses KeinHoltz, Albin,
Peterson Take Part
In Program.
As a tribute to spring the pro
gram at yesterday afternoon's Ves
pers at Ellen Smith hall was de
voted entirely to enreriHmni'-in.
suggestive of this coming season.
Mary Elizabeth Keinholtz sang
"A Pastoral by Veraveisa and "The
Little Shepherd," bv Walts. Repre
senting the drama department
were Vera May Peterson and Flora
Albin.
Depicting the Negro's version of
the first spring, "Creation," by
James Waldon Johnson, Negro
poet, also includes the story of the
creation of the universe and man.
Miss Peterson read this poem and
Sarah Teasdale's "Wisdom."
How a man dreamed of his first
real love while attending an opera
with his betrothed was described
by Miss Albin, who read "Aux
Italieans."
Assisting with the program was
the Vesper choir under tha direc
tion of Maxine Federle. Bernice
Nellemann was accompanist. Eva
Jane Sinclair presided at the meet
ing. WOMEN TO NAME
COED COUNSELOR
OFFICERS TODAY
(Continued from Page 1.)
which time she has headed com
mittees for the Coed Counselor
dinner and carnival.
Following is the election ballot:
BALLOT.
President.
Jean Marvin
Mary Priscilla Stewart.
Senior Board Members.
Affiliated.
(Two to be elected)
Frances Scudder
Martha Leefers
Katherine Kilbuck
Kay Risser
Unaffiliated.
(Two to be elected)
Helen Ann Howie
Bernice Velte
Eunice Schwedhelm
Mary Jane Birk
Junior Board Members.
Affiliated.
(Two to be elected)
Virginia Fleetwood.
Lois Cooper
Harriet Cummer
Pat Jenserv
Unaffiliated.
(Two to be elected)
Virginia Nolte
Arlene Williams
Betty Beeson
Sophomore Board Members.
Affiliated.
(One to be elected)
Jean Meents
Fern Steuteville
Unaffiliated.
(One to be elected)
Joy Pestal
Faith Medlar
PORTIA B0YNT0N
SUBMITS WINNING
SONG FOR REVIEW
(Continued from Page 1.)
in the review, Shellenberg an
nounced. The western setting of "Bar
Nothing Ranch" provides oppor
tunity to use the talents of Melvin
Beerman, student rope twirler of
professional skill, who will appear
in the show.
Principals of the cast have al
ready been announced and re
hearsals are under way, Joe Iver
son, director of the show, an
nounced. About five more minor
roles are vacant, but are expected
to be filled soon.
Kermit Hansen plays the chief
comedy role, that of Mrs. Van
Fleet, a gay divorcee who comes
to the ranch to recuperate from
a nervous strain caused by her
recent divorce. Judge Van Fleet,
as played by Thurston Phelps, also
in need of a rest after the divorce,
comes to the same ranch.
Strong, Boehm in Leads.
Bill Strong is he ingenue of
"Bar Nothing Ranch," playing the
role of Lynn McAllister, the girl
owner-operator of the ranch. Don
Boehm takes the male lead as
Spud, the ranch foreman. Both
Strong and Boehm held the leads
in last year's Kosmet Klub show,
"Southern Exposure."
Villain of the show is Waldemar
Mueller in the role of Beit Mc
Allister, who poses as Lynn's half
brother in order to claim title to
half the ranch Irvin Kuklin, as
Lil, and Bill Pugsley, as Eddie,
are a professional dance team
visiting the ranch at the time ot
the action.
Freshmen at the University of
Michigan have been granted the
permission to live in fraternity
houses during the second semester.
GRANT "When You're In Love"
YW VESPERS
NEBRASKA TO MEET
WEST VIRGINIANS IN
VERBAL DUEL TODAY
(Continued from Page l.j
town is Arkansas City, Kansas.
Kreuger, from Wallace, Nebraska,
participated in the Topeka legisla,.'
ture in 1935, where he was elected
head of the independent party. .
The West Virginia represent.!
tives will have their choice of the
question. If they choose the mlii
Imum wage maximum hours
question, Nebraska will uphold the
negative. If, on the other hand,
they choose the question of con
sumer's cooperatives, Nebrask4
will debate the affirmative,
science and will pursue the study
of law. '
Both Kreuger and Curtis of
Nebraska are also experienced
arguers. Allho Curtis was a new
man to the squad at the beginning
of the season, he has had con
siderable experience in high school
debating and has participated in
more than a score of contests for
Nebraska this year. His home
EY
TO COMMENCE TODAY
State Meet Begins With 48
Prep Teams Entered in ;
Three Flights.
At one o'clock this afternoon on
the coliseum maples, the 27th an
nual NHSAA basketball tourna
ment will get underway with 4.s
teams taking part in the A, B and
C classes. Creighton Prep of
Omaha is defending champion in
the A class, but dopesters do not
pick the metropolitan quintet to
repeat.
On the varsity court at one this
afternoon, Coach Cornie Collins'
South high Packers tangle with
York in the championship flight.
At 9:30 this evening and on the
same floor, Mentor Merritt Rob
son's Jackson high team, runner
up last year to the junior Blue
jays, clash with Kearney.
To accommodate the large num
ber of entries, the varsity, fresh
man, and stage courts will be
used in staging games thruout the
tourney. Finals to be held this
Saturday, will be staged only on
the varsity court.
Pipe Smokers!
Please Don't
Believe
all Smoking Tobacco
bites the Tongue
Edgeworth Guarantees that Process
Aging Prevents Tongue Bite
TONGUE BITE is the bane of
pipe smokers. We guarantee'
that Edpeworth will not bite the
tongue.
The use of the finest Burley to
baccos will not prevent tongue bite.
It's the processing that does it. As
every tobacco expert knows, pipe
tobacco can, be rushed through the
plant and save big sums of money.
It is pipe tobacco, but it is not
EdRCworth.
Our method is Process-Aging
a process as vital as the aging of old
wines. There are twelve required
6teos, each under laboratory control.
It takes 4 to 7 times as long as might
seem necessary. But in no other way
can we guarantee that Edgeworth
will not bite the tongue.
We ask you to try it under our
money-back guarantee. If Edge
worth bites your tongue, return it
and get your money back. You.
can't lose.
NOTE: There are three kindi of
Edgeworth for you to choose from:
1 Edgrworth P.rady-Rubbed
cool, i,nz-burning tobacco pro
fpnrd by suaaoDfd smokers.
2 Edcpworth Plug Slice fur the
nmoki;r who likes to crumble the
tohacro in his hands until it's ju-t
right fur birn.
3 Edirfworth Jr. the same to
barco al' Proeess-Apid, but cut
for a milder, more free-burning
Ftnnke.
ricp accept 50 Cold Plated Collar Pin
for nn!y 0f whn you Lay E'ltfewnrtti.
Mcrc'y Rrnd inside white wrapj'cr from
any tin of Edprworth with your name and
ad'Ire and 10f to Laru & Bro. Co.,
le;it. ln. Richmond. Va.
EDGEV0RTH"'
EDGEVQRTH-
w': . Ar.nmlXi in mnwmi
PS-