The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 28, 1937, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
THE DAILY NEB1USKAN. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1937
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
THIKTY-SEYEMII YEAR
LDITORIAI. STAFF ItlSI.M-SS SI AM
Editor Kd Murray Bu-lnr Mutineer . Ili.h IIlIImiiii
Associate Editor Don Wagner Assistant Mnniuirs Frank Johnson, Arthur Hill
Managing Editors Willard Bornry, Hrlrn Canco rirrulatlon Manager Slsnley Mlrharl
News Editors ... Morris I.lpi,
Howard Kaplan, Rarhara Rnsewater, Ed Steeves, ZZZrZZII!IirrrZ3IirZ3I!II!ZZI3ZZri!IlIirtr!ZrrZir
Harold Niemann, Marjorle Churchill.
Sl'BSCRIPTION RATE
U.N THIS ISSl E XI. AO a yrur SMiirIp ropy 91.(10 ft ai-nirstrr
lrsk Editor Hurnry $'.'..80 mailed fi cents SI. 50 srmeMcr
Mght Editor Rnsewater mailed
L'nder direction of thr student rnhllrntlon Mourd.
Editorial Of flee I nlvrrslty Hall 4.
BllMnrss Office I 'nlvrrslty Hall 4-A.
TelephnnrDay: BB891; Mght: HUSK. BS83S Uournall
r.nlcred as second-clans matter at the pn,lofflee In
t.fneoln, Nebraska, tinder act of congre,, Murrh it. IH1I.
and at opeeinl rate of poHtage provided for In ai-rtlon
1103. act uf tlitohcr 3. 1017, authorized January 20, IMS.
Plisocidcd CbUe&fc Prta
Distributors f
Cbfle6ideDi6esr
tuhlfhrd everv Turs
day, Wednesday,
Thursday, rrldny and
Sunday morning ot
the academic year by
indent of the I'nl
yerlly of Nebraska,
under the supervision
of the Hoard of I'uu-Mratlnna.
RieacstNTsD won national aovintisin bt
National Advertising Service, Inc
Collrfe Publishers Ittfresrntativt
420 Madiion Avi. New York. N. Y.
CHICAdO BOSTON BAN FNANCIICO
Lea ANOELia Portland sa.ttli
Photography Climhs lo Height
Of Supremacy Among Sciences
We Want More Bawl
In Football.
Football ! the Team ! Kali. 'Rah, Kali ! IVit'f
.Tones! Iluzzah, lluzzah. Huzzah ! Cheers in
the halls, rallies, maybe the skipping uf n class
or two. Sanyo collece has begun at last.
The Nebraskan looks with grave concern
upon the state of hidebound bookishness into
which the nienibers of this educational institu
tion have fallen. We utterly deplore the men
tal condition, bordering on depravity, which
Allowed the students of this heretofore respec
table university to let the first day of ihe week
of the Minnesota game be spent in orderly at
tendance at classes.
We know it's only Tuesday, leaving- vir
tually a whole week in which to make the
old halls ring with that glorious braying signifying-
college spirit. Ah, college spirit, col
lege spirit, college spirit ! . But what national
magazine, or what news reel, or what movie
short would recognize the student of these
last few weeks as the glamorous Betty Coed
or Joe College? Nebraska is flat on its back
from an epidemic of college-going. Oh, col
legitis, balm and diversion of youth, where
are you?
It's true, we have our estra-enrricular ne
tivities pretty well under way. The social life
has been hampered by polio, but is only path
crinrr force for a colossal country club fair of
parties, and thinps. and mich. And the vast
and impressive machinery of the recruitinp
station of the United States army, the R. 0.
T. C, is functioninp in fine shape. But ye
pods! and all stronger exclamations that the
publication board will stand for this is an
educational institution and this is football
season.
Where's your spunk? Where's your
fight? Think if we could beat Minnesota
next Saturday how the name of our univer
sity, our "community of scholars," would be
blared over the airlanes, screamed in the
headlines, mouthed in the beer joints back
some, deified by the chamber of commerce
4own town. How do we expect to get out
bawling ability whipped into shape by next
Saturday if we don't get organized?
Of course the Innocents. Corn Cobs, Tas
.;els, and various rally committees of the same
have been burning up the haunts of old V hall
a class buildinp sometimes thought to be less
respectable looking than the coliseum or sta
dium organizing rallies, parades, down town
demonstrations, special eheerinp practices. But
this does not mean that the individuals who
will be depended upon to provide the screech
ing and droninu for these affairs are cettlnp
themselves in the proper frame of mind for
real co-operation.
Yell in the halls! Yell on the campus!
Let's hear a BEAT MINNESOTA that will
shatter the clouds peal out every time one of
those heroes in a scarlet and white sweater is
seen on the mall. Everyone knows that the
players are all but oblivious to this fine fidel
ity, raucous loyalty, larynx injuring support.
But what's the difference? AVhose football
team is this?
And how do you expect to perform your
part in the great commercial enterprise of
football is you don't practice a little? The
fans, yes, the fans the dear public, the peo
ple. The fans want a spectacle on Saturday
afternoon. The university's public, the kind
patroL of our "community of scholars"
have every right to expect the youth of the
crop, the hope of the future, to raise a great
hue and cry to the almighty god, Racket.
And the fans have every right to demand,
having purchased Mr. Selleck's $8 ducat, a
certain amount of hysteria in the stadium,
hysteria which numerous despicable cynics
have accused of covering a multitude of sins.
And the alumni ah, the alumni, ulorificd
fans, sterling citizens graduated from this in
stitution in '02, and '01, and '67, ai. l 'lo,
alumni, alumni, alumni, rah, r rah, and !od
bless thein. How would our institution pet
along without the alumni, the life blood of the
school? How would our educational mill pet
along without the alumni support of football?
Do you realize that the alumni of this institu
tion virtually built the stadium and coliseum
with their contributions? Well, they helped.
Alumni Secretary Kay Ramsay boasts that
his charges, the irrads, never solicited for any
contributions, other than those for the stadia. n
and coliseum, until the time of the Union
bnildine. And how could this institution ad
vance the boundaries of science, inculcate fai
lure into the liven of our youth, educate the
men and women of the state as we said, the
hope of the future without this support from
Ihe alumni, without the coliseum, the stadium,
and the furnishiups for the Union building?
Well, the fans and alumni hosannas as
above- wouldn't be satisfied to see a throng
of students troop into the stadium of a Satur
day afternoon to sec two great football teams
demonstrate the best in American sport if
those students didn't make a hell of a holler.
So get goin' gang. Oil up your pipes. It's
your team. You're every bit as important as
the players. College spirit ! And let's not pet
completely bogged down in the mire of intelli
gence before Saturdav cither.
A Fair Proportion of i
Students Attend Church.
At First rivmnuth CnFretratlonal rl.un h r.n Univer- ,
fity Sunday Mr. MrCV.nnoll !i. u.-reri in sermon the !
nuestii.n raiser! in the Diiilv Nebraskan- "Do Students I
Attend Chinch?" j
Excerpts from Mr. McCouiiell's sermon i
follow: j
The Daily Nebraskan asks the fpiestion.i
"Do students attend church and answers i
it in a fashion by giving figures oi'l'erod by the j
fraternities. The figures submitted indicate!
lhat '217 out of ti.'tS students in the organiza-j
t ions listed attend church. The Inquiring lie-j
porter makes no great claim to accuracy. Fur-
thermore the number of students in the organi
zations is only a little over 10 percent of the
student body. The proportion of church at
tending students might be materially changed
by a study of the much larger number outside
the organizations named.
But inadequate or inaccurate as 1he fig
ures submitted may be, they indicate that one
third of the organization students attend
church. It probably averages up above ihe
general population habits. One-third of the
membership of protcstant churches is the aver
age Sunday attendance in America on any one
Sunday.
The reasons given for students not at
tending church are "sleep is preferred,"
"funny papers and other reading," "ser
mons are dry," "ministers fail to make ser
mons interesting and attractive!" Curious
ideal! "Rev. Mr. Blank offers the most in
teresting and attractive sermons for the en
tertainment of students. Better than the
funny papers!" A surgeon or physician
might also advertise his ministry of physical
healing: "Come to Dr. So and Sc. His serv
ice is most interesting and entertaining. You
will die laughing." The analogy is not wholly
accurate but the idea is there.
Ministers are inadequate, sermons often
are dull church services smut times lack in
beauty and fail to minister to the soul's needs.
But often none ot' i,.s- things is true and the
student who stays away fails to know it. He
rationalizes lower motives, sometimes excusing
himself by accusing the church. He is not
alone in use of that l !'-nse mechanism.
As many students .attend church as ever in
all probability. As many students as others
in proportion to numbers attend church in all
probability. Large numbers of them come to
worship, to find strength and courage ior life,
to share in service in the oldest institution
existing today and the only one wholly dedi
cated to unselfish i.bals. to the saving of man
and society, to proclaiming the way of life ad
vocated by the greatest Teacher of the ages.
Students attend classes, but how many
would do so if they could graduate without
it? Many students stay away from the opera,
the concert, the best plays, fail to read the
best literature, are strangers to the Bible,
Shakespeare, and Milton. Dry and uninter
esting? Surely, to some mind?!
The church will in the long run survive
even John Erskine. ;.s a moral counsellor and
guide for students or non-students. The church
must seek always to enlist, to minister to, and
to commission students. The church must
'remedy h r faults and wtaknesses. Students
can help. This is not sm-li an easy world to
understand or thai with. I.ii'c has its spiritual
meanings and values, or it is a madhouse of
unauthorized and u.u-ontroiiid forces. Students
need help. The church filters it to those who
attend. The church cannot require attendance,
cannot and should not compete on the levels
of the movie, the funny paper, or other enter
tainment; cannot without serious peril enter
any high pressure publicity appeals. The
church must not betray the spirit of the Master
by trying to attain noble cuds by ignoble or
cheap means. The church at its best says:
Come, follow me! "Except the Lord build the
house they labor in vain lhat build it: Except
the Eoi-il keep the city, the watchman waketh
but in vain!"
By Bruce Alexander.
Photography, having for years
occupied a position of importance
among the great industries, now
advances to the enviable status of
an indispensable tool in the pur
suit of the sciences. From its first
meaner beginnings in the shadowy
images imprisoned upon Dsguer
rc's silver plates, the process ha.
progressed through Its succesive
sta ges of development until it stands
today upon equal footing with the
manner both inexpensive and in
teresting, has hastened its develop
clder sciences of mathematics,
physics and chemistry from which
it derives its being.
First a Curiosity.
First a curiosity, then a toy,
becoming the hobby of millions,
photography has been improved in
precision, in dependability, and in
efficiency until it has become an
outstanding agent in the modern
activities of research, representa
tion, and record.
The evolution of photography, so
far as its industrial and scientific
aspects are concerned, has, for the
most part, taken place in the last
two decades. There Is no doubt
that its universal adoption by
young and old, as a means of re
cording scenes and events in a
manner both inexpensive and in
teresting has hastened its develop
ment into the tremendous indus
trial system It now comprises. Its
adaption by editors and advertisers
to the manifold purposes of news
print and periodical, as the su
preme attractor of attention, the
powerful proponent of the new
idea, has furthered the same end.
But other qualities, those of facil
ity, precision, and versatility, have
endeared the process to the hearts
of scientists, and introduced it to
its most important and enduring
work.
Records Events.
Ample evidence of photography's
growing indispensability is the
trend of events in science. More
and more, it is removed from the
realm of amusement, of pastime,
and set to work in the serious
business of gaining and interpret
ing information of the universe in
which we live. On June 8. 1937,
the finest pictures ever taken of
the sun's corona were made at
Arequippa, Peru, by an amateur
astronomer, Fernando de Roniana.
With the blazing orb completely
obscured by .the moon, he obtained
actual color pictures of those great
tongues of flame which shoot hun
dreds of miles into space from the
sun's surface. Having borrowed
certain costly articles of equipment
from Harvard university astron
omers, he repaid their trust a thou
sand times by the excellence of his
research. In our own country, at
Mount Wilson Observatory, a new
photographic lens captures the
light from nebulae only one thirty
thousandths part as bright as the
faint-eat visible stars. From an
eight foot mirror, the star's light is
reflected Into the camera, forming
an image only two twenty-fifths of
an inch long. Camera mountings
have been devised of such superb
precision that the camera may be
maintained in perfect focus, de
spite the sidereal movement of its
object, for periods of exposure as
long as sixty hours.
Aerial Map of U. S.
Most dramatic of photographic
projects, and the crowning achieve
ment of aerial mapping, is the
present ambitious attempt to map
the entire Continental United
States from the air. At an esti
mated cost of S3S.OOO,000.00,
planes will fly at an altitude of
14,400 feet, photographic roads,
streams, fields, and mountains, re
ducing all to a predetermined
scale. Of supreme importance to
the national defense in event of
war, the survey will also furnish
Invaluable information in flood
control, in the prevention of eros
ion, and in the consrrvatio of nat
ural resources. At the present mo
ment, high flying planes are carry
ing huge tcnlcns cameras over
carefully charted paths, snapping
as much as six hundred square
miles in one picture, at an average
cost per picture of $6.35. Mobile
dark-rooms and flashlight "bombs"
are other innovations that help the
task toward completion.
"Shoots" Boulder Dam.
A sidelight of practical interest
in this connection is the application
of the principal idea to the "con
tour mapping" of Lake Meade, the
huge body of water impounded by
Boulder dam. In contour mapping,
all points having the same eleva
tion are connected by imaginary
"contour" lines. To outline the
lake after each successive twenty
foot rise, by ordinary surveying
methods, would offer insurmount
able difficulties, particularly so in
the precipitous tcrrane in which
the lake is situated. Instead, by
the aerial procedure, one picture is
taken after each rise, and the
margin of the lake furnishes an ac-1
curate contour. As the lake now j
approaches its ultimate depth of;
07.") feet, an impressive number of
conl ours are superposed, one over
another, lending accurate informa
tion of the lake's capacity and ex
tent. Here, by the simple appli
cation of a simple process, man
effects a substantial saving in
money, together with increased ef
ficiency and elimination of waste:
truly a scientific achievement of
real worth.
9lV JIlSL
Darrell Bauder, Glenville.
Carol Clark, Rock Island, III.
Released Saturday.
Jon Pruden, Lincoln.
William Rarlck, Auburn.
William Johnson, Alliance.
Released Friday.
Lorraine Beckmann, Burr.
and the Magna Carta, while those
who found an ancestor among the
followers of William the Con
queror, 25 generations ago, must
distinguish, if they ran, their rela
tive from a possible 8,388.608
predecessors in that generation.
What about the future? It is
Dr. Hertzler's conviction that
ancestor worship, frail as it may
tie, will not only continue, but wiil
become stronger, because the con
ditions now croniping human
nature will persist and the social
and economic trends which have
brought about this phenomenon
will become more acute as time
goes on.
SIJi
BULLETIN
Corn Cobs.
Corn Cobs, actives and pledges,
will meet at 8 o'clock today for a
general meeting in room 107B of
Social Sciences building.
TASSELS.
Members of Tassels will con
vene tonight at 7 o'clock in room
101 of Social Sciences building.
Rally Committee.
All members of the Rally Com
mittee will meet this afternoon
promptly at 4:30 o'clock in the
Daily Nebraskan office to outline
rally plans for the Nebraska
Minnesota game.
Poultry Club.
Members of the agricultural col
lege Poultry Club will meet to
morrow night in room 205. poultry
husbandry hall, at 7 o'clock for a
short business meeting.
ficiently so that he was able to
drive the car, we went and noti
fied the sheriff."
Each thought himself very calm
and unemotional. Each thought the
other chicken hearted and af
frighted. Well, what would you have
done?
SEASON ATHLETIC
BOOKS GO ON SALE
IN COLISEUM AT 8
(Continued from Page 1.)
the Wednesday noon drawing, and
upon presentation of the receipt
given them when they paid their
money, will be handed their ath
letic books. The representative of
the students wishing to sit to
gether will call for all the tickets
of his group and receive their ath
letic books.
Salei Continue.
The ticket sales, however, are
not over with the drawings Wed
nesday. Students who do not get
in with their money before Wd
nesday noon may buy their tickets
at the activities office Thursday or
later. They will, however, have
to take what stadium seats are
left after the drawings.
The athletic book will admit the
holder to the student reserved sec
tion for football gam8, as well as
to all basketball, baseball, dual
intercollegiate track, swimming,
and wrestling meets during the
year.
s i r l. r..li:l.
i bureau uncrs 10 rum i sr..
Broadcast Best Choral
Compositions.
A national broadcast and a
chance' to have their compositions
published and recorded are offered
an a prize to potential composers
by the WPA Federal Music
Project
Five manuscripts of unaccom
panied choral works for mixed
chorus will be selected from nation-wide
entrants and will be re
corded by the Columbia Phono
graph Co. after a premier broad
east over WABC and the Colum
bia Broadcasting System. Carl
Fischer, Inc., is to publish those
of the winning compositions which
arc suitable.
Terms of the contest, open to
any amateur composer, follow:
j A. 11 compositions must be for
; mixed chorus, without accompani
( ment, having a performance time
of from two to four minutes. The
text must be in English, and no
composition shall have been pre
viously performed. All work must
be submitted in manuscript form
before Nov. 15 to the Choral Con
test Committee. Federal Music
Project, 2o4 West 54th street, New
York Citv.
Two University Students Label
Each Cther ' Chicken-Heart-
ed' When They Find Suicide
Victim.
(Continued from Page 1.)
ple'i convention In Fremont next
week. A told to a Dally Nebras
kan reporter, here li what they
found and here is how they re
' acted to the dlicovery.
Version No. 1.
John'i story: "Leaving Dorla In
the car, I went over to Investigate
;tn cabins and found them locked.
Ai I started to hunt for aomeone
who could open them for me, I
noticed a tall ladder leaning
'against a branch of a tree, with a
man apparently standing on one
of the middle rungs. Thinking he
might possibly be the cmeUker, I
walked over toward him and was
about to ask If he had the keys to
the cabin when I noticed his feet
weren't on the ladder.
"Alt:-o it startled me a little to
find a man hanging there, I didn't
get excited, but calmly walked
over to the car and told Doris
there was a man hanging by hia
neck in a tree over there. She
took a quick look, gasped, got very
white, and for a moment 1 thought
she was going to pass out on me.
After a while she pulled hcrs'lf
together and we notified the sher
iff." Version No. 2.
Doiis' story: "I stayed In the car
and read a magazine while John
went to look over the grounds and
the cabins. He was gone for quite
a long while. When he came back
he was pale as a ghost, his teeth
were chattering snd he was shak
ing all over. 'Why. John, what's
the matter?' I asked. He swal
lowed a couple of times and finally
choked out: 'There's a man over
there.' I looked in the direction
he nodded and saw that some man
had evidently committed suicide. I
don't remember that I got particu
larly nervous or excited. Finally
I when John collected his wits suf-
NEW MUSIC DIRECTOR
WIL RELIEVE QUICK
.OF ACTIVE TEACHING
(Continued from Page l.i
standing ability that he was chosen
as a clinical conductor at the Min
neapolis meeting of the North Cen
tral Music conference this spring.
These are some of the many things
which recommended him to How
ard Kirkpatrick, director of the
school of music.
Responsible In part for Mr.
Lentz's knowledge Is the great
amount of studying he has done
under well known teachers. In
cluded in this is graduate work at
the outstanding Jullllard school of
music In New York, where he
worked under Edgar Schenkeman.
He also studied with Vladimir
Bakaelnlkoff, formerly of the Mos
cow theatre of art, anC prominent
New York artists
BARBS ORGANIZE
INDIVIDUAL CLUBS
WITHIN COUNCIL
I Continued from Page 1
ceive representation on the council.
Although all the organizations
were to have been formed by last
night, he Indicated that anyone
who does not have his club formed
as yet may still be able to com
plete his organization and partici
pate In the intramural program
and later council activities.
Reuben Dennine. athletic chair
man for the council, reported on
the progress of the formation of
the intramurals league and Robert
Simmons, member of the Barb
council, reported on final plans for
the Varsity party in the Coliseum
Saturday night.
The council decided by a unani
mous vote to continue to hold Its
meetings on Monday evenings the
same as last year,
Avenge American Neglects ,
His Future to Spend Time
in Worship .of Ancestors,
Says Dr. Hertzler.
(Continued from Page 1 )
thing." And we must remembei
that the economic and social
orders are undergoing change and
the tomorrows are becoming in
creasingly more uncertain. Like
wise, the population elements that
once provided the pioneers now
turn to their past. The future has
lost much of its glow; the past
alone is secure."
Maturity Reached.
Dr. Hertzler will have you rea
lize that we. as a people, are no
longer in a youth stage; we have
definitely reached our maturity.
We are confronted with new life
situations and experiences. Tho
grown up. the average American
has not yet discovered the duties
of his maturity. In fact, he hasn't
even prepared himself to meet
them. The hundreds of snooty so
cieties which have come into ex
istence through the passing of an
historical event or Ihe renown of
peoples who have lived genera
tions ago arc indicative of our
dependence upon the past.
Of course it's fooliah to place
so much emphasis on the import
ance of these organizations, par
ticularly when some of the more
petty ones are analyzed and their
requirements for membership
known. And if the whole develop
ment is an unfortunate one. Dr.
Hertzler would blame the indi
vidual himself, who man, though
he is. faces life's problems in the
faltering manner of the boy.
There are certain factors in the
progression of this civilization
which have been responsible for
me pronounced growth of these so
eieties. Pr. Hertzler discusses them
in his article entitled "American
Ancestor worsmpers" which was
recently published In the South At
lantic Quarterly. He says:
Life Becomes Routinized.
"Preceding the late 60's the new
frontier always offered new types
of conquest as well ns a relief
from the undesirable sosciul, eco
nomic, and political conditions
present in the more crowded sec
tions In the esst. But by the time
of the 90's the frontier had all but
disappeared, while a concentration
of wealth became noticeable. A
farm for every man was a thing
of the past; easy fortunes were
rapidly diminishing. American life
was becoming routinized. The most
striking effect of these events w,as
that they produced a skepticism
about the present and a pessimist
about the future.
In addition to these factors, tho
great hordes of Immigrants who
'tame to U1I4 country during this
transition period threw the older
stocks with their declining birth-
late into a panic. They made more j
acute class distinction anil they di- j
luted the older American pioneer j
culture. While in the earlier stages 1
the immigrants caused the older!
stocks to adhere more rigidly to ;
their standard of living, in later 1
years it has led them to turn more i
and more to their past. Now, the
good Daughter of the American
Revolution feels that she can do
Americanization work among these
peoples, secure in the knowledge
that she has an unimpeachable
uniqueness arid abiding distinction
based on the antiquity of her an
cestry in this country.
Educational Prestige Diffused.
"Another trend tending to throw
the older middle class stocks upon
their past is the increasing number
of people taking advantage of the
universities and colleges. The pres.
tige that once was attached to the
higher education has become so
widely diffused that it has lost its
distinctive value. And as much as
some people hate to believe it,
these newer educated people have
become the intellectual equals of
the older educated stocks. Thus,
the educational situation has ac
tually forced the older stocks to
seek social security and individual
aloofness in their past."'
Dr. Hertzler is merely saying
that we are actually living in a
world made up of a vast number
of nobodies one in which it is
increasingly difficult to become
somebody. Human beings will not
willingly be unrecognized. They
will always struggle for identity
and social position; hence, the j
increasing interest in these so-
called distinctive soeiel?vs. And
the humorous side of it all is that
the only claim to distinction that
many of these ancient worthies
have is that they were caught,
often against their will, in some
event that luckily turned out to
have some historical significance.
And of course, they reproduced
car.sistently and abundantly.
Form Exclusive Societies.
In his study of this interesting
sociological development, Dr.
Hertzler found that this growing
passion for distinguished aneestty
has resulted in the formation of
societies of super exelusiveness,
including such suggestive organi
zations as The Order of Colonial
Lords of Manors in America, open
to only descendents of one who
enjoyed feudal rights in the colo
nies prior to July 4, 1776; and,
as another example, the Imperial
Order of the Yellow Rose, which
organization admits only thoe ot
royal descent. With the exception
of the Pilgrim Soriety, all ot the
well-known ancient ancestor so
cieties were organized after the
late eighties.
While not attempting to punc
ture onyone's robust pride in be
longing to one of these societies,
the Nebraska educator is, never
theless willing to risk life and
limb in declaring that ancestor
worship at its best rests upon a
very slender thread. For example,
If we allow three generations to
a century a most modest esti
mate in the light of the repro
ductive performance of earlier
generations we find that these
worshipful contemporaries glean
their fame from one or two among
an appalling number.
How Many Ancestors?
Anyone now forty years of age
would have a possible 18 adult
ancestors at the time of the
American Revolution; M2 at the
time of the Msvflower voyage;
524.288 at the time of King John
" LAUGH RIOT
OF THE YEAR!
1 ffirj
KING OF GAMBLERS
CLAIR TREVOR
AKIM TAMIROFF
L.-ii-t Times Today Tuesday
JEDSKINSJIN THE WsRPsTHI
RltrE
It! V.V,
111 ftrfto
1
FlOc LIBERTY 15cj
plus "PUBLIC WEDDING"
WEDNESDAY Sept. 29
JOE LOUIS-TOMMY FARR
RINGSIDE FIGHT FILMS
plus "G" Man Thrills Galore
"THE 13TH MAN"
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with
ALFALFA
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Walter nrrnnan
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Mat. 1M
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The Mightiest sea picture of them
an: uy me 777 "TT"
nrrwlueer j' i
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and direc tor
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and "Lent
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ft
I FRANCES DEE
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EXTRA!
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CiAnr C.nrlonn
American l.rglnn Taket
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