The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 12, 1938, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE TWO
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN. WEDNESDAY. JAMTAKY 12, 193ft
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
LWTOIU.Vl. STAFF
Mltot Ed Marti)
Annulate Mllnr Iun Maimer
Managing Krlltor ...Helen Pasrna
Nri kdlliirt . Morrla Lllm,
Howard Kaplan, Barbara Rosewtter, td titecvc,
Marjttrlt ChurrhlU, Joa ZeNey,
O.N IH1S ISSl'B
Pe.U Editor. ...
Night Editor
Coder direction nt the Htndenl PnhllcalhHi Hoard,
fcdtturiai offlr I nlvrr.lt Hall 4.
Business I it fire I nivertlt) Hall 4-A.
Telephone ls HUM. Mthti rVMSS. BSSSS (Journal).
1937 Member 1938
Associated Golle&ide Press
Distributor of
GoUe6iate DL$est
Necessary Versus
Criminal Negligence
Students in the Inquiring Reporter col
umn today report that the advisory system at
Nebraska creaks and groans, effecting little
more than an enormous waste of time. Not
only do students complain of total lack of sat
isfaction in the choice of subjects, but in some
cases the routine requirements for graduation
tire not even met. There is something wrong
with the system.
The Nebraskan, reflecting campus opinion,
has published stories and editorials unfavor
able to the system for almost a decade. It is
reported that at various faculty sessions acrid
criticism is leveled at the setup for advising
students at the time of registration. Still fur
ther evidence is found in the results of the
faculty senate committee, which studied the
lower division plan for freshmen last spring.
The principle product of months of committee
meetings was the recommendation of betler
machinery for advising and orienting first
year students.
In view of this evidence against the
present method of advising students, one
may be inclined to question the integrity of
the professors acting in the capacity of ad
visors, since every student has an advisor.
The fault does not rest with the advisors,
however. Professors carrying their usual
load of work during registration week sim
ply do not have time to give the personal di
rection required for the successful drafting
of a schedule.
A professor with a hundred students to
oversee during registration could do nothing
else. The professor yesterday who had to
give a master's exam, supervise and instruct
a laboratory of 16, and take care of regis
tering students was probably too busy to be
very effective in any of these three places.
But professors not only lack the neces
sary time to be good advisors. They lack the
necessary understanding of the students whom
they are supposed to direct. If an advisor be
comes acquainted with the personal aims and
needs of one of his students during four years
at university, it is the exception rather than
the rule. The usual advisor-student relation
ship of clawing at the completed recislralion
form, asking a few questions about require
ments, and stamping the original and copies
of the form is not conducive 1o valuable
advice.
There is negligence, then, on the part of
the advisors. But it is necessary, not criminal,
Early Romance
Belter Showing
(From the Wichita Oasette.)
College students, in the opinion
of Pr. Lambertu HekhMs, dean
of liberal arts and ex-officio dean
of men at the University of
Wichita, should resist the urge to
marry until they have finished
their educations.
Taking issue with statements of
Prof. George A. Works, University
of Chicago dean of students, in
a press dispatch that college pro
grams must be reorganized, per
mitting students to marry before
they are 25 years old and forestal
ling disastrous biological and psy
chological problems. Dean Hek
tiuit said:
"Such biological anil social pres
sure as Professor Works df fries."
Dr. Hekhuia pointed out, "is the
name as that faced by rtudenu of
every generation who seelc higher
education. While continence may
be difficult to endure, it is like
wise character-building."
Improve Scholarships.
Trofessor Works set forth as his
opinion that opening more colleges
and undergraduate schools to mar
riPd students, and reorganization
of rollege crricuia to permit
awarding a bachelor of arts de
gree at the end of two years col
lege work would free students for
arly marriage, solve these prob
lems and improve scholarships.
The University of Chicago dean
pointed to a "15-year gap between
the biological and social age for
marriage, necessitated by our
present educational system" as
having disturbing oonscquenoes
and being responsible for the fact
that the death rate among single
men it twice that of married men.
"The present educational system
fcakea it Impossible for a man to
Miry before 25," Dr. Works aatd.
AItbo he nay compete his aca
tanlc education at 23 or 25, be
stust spend a year or two estab
lishing himself in hit work before
he can assume the responsibility
of a wife and family. Students
seeking higher drgrtes must post
pone marriage until 30 or ater."
Problem! Will Increase.
Tbene problems, the Chicago
man predicted, will Increase ma-
TIIIKTY-SEV ENT1I YEAR
Llop
..Churchill
11 MO jear
13. SO mailed
ttiblliiried Terj Tora
ds. Medassdnl,
rhnnday. rrldny and
Sunday morning nt
the arndemlr vear lj
atndenta of the linl
rerlt nf Nebraska,
nnder the annervl.lon
nf the Board ol I'ub
Ifcatlon. Versus
in Books
terially during the coming decade,
j when an increasingly h'h per
' centage of the general population
will attend college and be forced
to postpone marrying.
Dr. Hekhuia said be believed
marriage among college students
: should occur only to relieve "ex
treme emotional strain" which
j may le hampering their scholastic
I activities.
j Even then," be added, "the ad
: ditional family and economic prob
! lems set up by marriage may
prove too great a burden for the
young student and he may fail in
hit studies or be forced out of
school by economic pressure."
The head of the Wichita univer
sity's liberal arts department and
adviser to the student council
agreed with his Chicago colleague
that only a small 7errentage of
college students are married.
Not Necessarily Better.
"Those few University of Wichita
students I know to be married are
not necessarily better students
than single men and women, as Ir.
Works holds," declared Dean Hek
hu s. "We have both married and
unmarried students whose scholas
tic standards are of the highest."
Dr. Hekhuis said he is familiar
with efforts of the University of
Chicago director to shorten the
liberal arts course from four to
two years, but added that he does
not believe such a move should
be based entirely upon a purported
net'd for early marriage.
Gadgets Galore:
Gongs, Rfd Lights,
Though! finders
Here are the latest things In
the way of tnventiona, products ef
professors and colleges.
At Oregon university, the pro
fessor of public speaking h.i been
using a novel system for telling
his atudente when the time Is up
for a speech. The new system
com isti of a red atop light which
comet on when time is up for the
speaker. Acco-fling to the profes
sor, the Improvement of this sys
tem over the old gong type Is that
it will no longer be accessary
HL'SINESS STAFF
Pa. men Manager Bob Wadhams
Assistant Manager frank Johnson, Arthur Hill
Clrrnlatloe Manager Stanley Michael
SIBSCKIITION RATE
Kindt cnpi
t cents
1.00 aememet
SI. SO eemeslci
mailed
Entered aft aecfind-flaas matter at the pnsioftlc In
Lincoln. Nfhraskn, nndei art ot connrfss, March s. IH1B.
and at snrelal rate nt postage prtivlded tnr In srrttna
DOS. act ol October S, ml), aathorlird Janunrj to, lUtt.
aarntsaririD ron national AoviariaiNa ar
National Advertising Service, Inc
Ctlltft Fmblisktn kttrttentttirt
420 MADiaON Ave. New York. N. Y.
CMIC0 . BoBTON . SAN riUKCIKO
Lea ANasLia Portland aiATtki
negligence. The only way the professors could
remedy this situation would be by reorganiz
ing their work on the tutorial basis. There
would need to be about one-fifth as many pro
fessors as students. There are considerably
fewer students per professor at present.
Where the criminal negligence in the
situation exists is in the students. The ad
visors are advisors all semester. They may
be consulted every week in the semester and
not just during registration week. Most of
the advisory difficulties could be ironed out
before the registration rush, providing the
students had sufficient interest in well or
ganized schedules and intelligent college
courses to get the matter attended to before
the deadline week. Then registration week
would be, as it is anyway, a matter of rou
tine. Another Solution
Student indifference may be at the bottom
of the unfortunate, situation arising out of pro
fessors being overworked during registration
week. But since human nature is what it is.
all that can be done in the matter of education
is to dicker with Ihe machinery. To set up
new advisory machinery, such as an oricnta
lion or educational guidance bureau, at the
university, however, requires men and money.
Perhaps there is a way in which both eonld
be obtained. The idea of a nominal fine on
every flunk hour during a semester is a new
one at Nebraska. But some rlan could be
worked out whereby such a flunk fine might
provide necessary funds for a better advisory
system, and also eliminate some undesirables
from our badly crowded university.
The blatantly democratic theory of edu
cation for everybody has run riot. There is
no doubt that there are students in the uni
versity who do not belong here. There are
also others who are wasting their own time
and a good deal of the state's money in the
university, because they are not interested
in what the university has to offer, but find
it a pleasant haven in which to spend five or
six years.
A flunk fee of $3 at Nebraska would un
doubtedly yield $12.0V or fri.'i.Oiio. Such a
fine yields $12.0imi at Oklahoma, whose enrol
ment is about 5.000. Nebraska's is over ti.Ono.
Twelve thousand would be no noirlitril'de
start toward an educational Guidance bureau.
It could be supplemented, if found valuable,
from the university coffers. The fine would
undoubtedly eliminate some students. And it
would prick others to more productive effort.
It mk'ht even send sonic to their advisers be
fore registration week.
to wake other students when a
speaker finishes.
Students coming in late to the
physics classes at St. Thomas col
lege will be greeted with a loud
gfmg. An electric eye has been
installed so the late comers cannot
slip in undetected. There is no
getting around it. Each one must
cross the licht beam an.' when he
does, the signal is sounded.
A thought detector, which re
cords and classifies the dilfercnt
states of mind, has been set up
at the University of Iowa. The
detector indicates that the hiph'-st
mental quality, "abstract thought,"
operates in an electrical field defi
nitely unlike the field of other ac
tivities of the brain. This highest
function works in an electrical
calm as apparently unruffled as
the states of fleep or of "mental
blankness."
A new machine which grades
12 test papers a minute was tried
out successfully at the University
of Texas recently. It it can be
made generally applicable, the ma
chine may revolutionize the pres
ent system of grading examina-
j tions, Texas officials state,
i A "t ime telescope." which makes
j possible remarkable motion pic
j ture photography of many motions
j formerly imperceptible, hat been
j invented at Rutgers university.
With the new machine such pro
I cesses at the erosion of a road.
I or the gradual disintegration of a
bridge may be seen easily. The
invention, a product of five years
of research, will make possible a
better study of growing plants.
A professor at the University of
Iowa has Just finished an "emotion
meter," which claims will measure
the capacity of one's mood for love
by the perspiration in the palm of
the hand. According to the pro
fessor, the machine it of little use
to the ordinary laymen, at It takes
a trained psychologist to Interpret
the romantic side of tne readings.
This little machine measures al
most e'cry other type of emotional
reaction as ar.ger, fear, Joy, and
that produced by lying. Most Ue
detectors used today are dependent
on the changet In the blood pres
sure but. in the opinion of the pro
fessor, the hand perspiration Is
much more reliable as experiments
have proven the sweat glands be
come more active when one begins
to tell 'falsehoods.' ,
l tint t um sMt' na
Q NEWS
PARADE
r
sJ Marjorie Churchill
I ! v."- ..'' .... . -.-J
tin's ! "- '-l
AKENT OU BITING
OFF QUITE A BIT,
MR. MUSSOLINI?
You're a pretty busy man these
days, Mr. Mussolini. And a bad
one, too, the little English nd
French boys and girls are being
told sort of a Fublic Enemy No.
One.
While there must always be n
bogey man upon whom the blame
for every grievance may be placed,
the fact' still remains, II Duce, that
you have been busy-bodying
around quite a bit, putting your
lingers in a lot of other people's
fires.
Tlic Caso Against II Duce
ETHIOPIA.
The starting point in your al
leged life of crime, Mr. Mussolini,
seems to have been back in the
days when you helped yourself to
some 3.r)0,000 square miles of your
neighbor's property down in Af
rica. Yes, we remember that Brit
ain and France have taken upon
themselves other lr.rge slices of
the Dark Continent, but that's off
the record and is irrelevant to the
case at hand.
SPAIN.
Large numbers of soldiers are
still in Spain, helping the insur
gents to beat back government
forces. We understand that vou
are only helping to further 'the
cause of right government, that
you have no designs on valuable
resources in return for your help,
and that it is only the slowness of
the committee on adjustment that
prevents your callmc the soldiers
Lome, but theu the soldiers re
main, and a large section of the
forces which held Tcrucl for a long
time were your men.
JAPAN.
Tou are reported to have toll
the Brussels Conference that you
would spprc no resources to aid
.lap.ni in her war with China. You
have been accused of forming the
wrong kind of associations, when
you joined the tri-power council
with Hitler and Hirohito
THE BALKANS.
Now exactly what do vou have
in mind in the Balkans. Mr. Mus
solini ? Editorials soon after Mr.
Vargas' coup d'etat flung out
rather ominous predictions of a
spread of fascism into Czechoslo
vakia thru your agents and Mr.
Hitler's. So far that hasn't come
about.
The Balkans ever the "powder
lifg" of Europe are beginning a
new intense struggle over the bal
ance of power. Important issues
are coming up in your conference
with Austria and Hungary. Ruma
nia seems to be coming over to
your party. That would rather
break up the little entente, Ruma
nia, Czechoslovakia and Jugosla
via. Then, with Rumania out of the
way, Hungary might join up with
Czechoslovakia in a friendly alli
ance with France and Great Eiit
ain. But then again Hungary is
still remembering the territory
which she lost to form Czechoslo
vakia. It's rathf-r a vicious circle,
i.-n't it? However, as head if a
large and very interested neighbor
nation, it behooves you, of course,
to step in and guide the proceed
ings so that everything will shape
out all right. Your Rome-Berlin
axis muv-t be used as a "biJse for
piace" which will "lead smaller
nations in a common fmr.t "
THE NEAR EAST.
There arc s&me rather bad stor
ies gouig around about your pro
ceedings in the Near East, Tales
tine is the scene (,f Mcdy revolts
Arabs shooting Jews and British
troops shooting Arvbs. The whole
trouble, they say, bus come about
thru the short uac propaganda
which you have bet n distributing
among the Arabs -even furnishing
the thousan.is of radio acts to re
ceive the propaganda,
Frcr.f j fori e hve only recently
put down insum-ftion in North
Africa. Now they are faced with
Arab uprisings in Syria and Leba
non. Tue treaty giving Syria com
pute autonomy sli)j-d' thru the
French parliament in 3 :"G. says a
French writer. Now France must
face the issue of granting the au
tonomy. But if she does, there are
the cil lines from Irak, which
cross Syria to go to the port of
Tripoli. Should jou be the mnn-of-the-hour
to take over guidance of
the bewildered newly independent
Syria, you coulu make things
pretty tough for France in petting
her oil across Syria, couldn't you?
At least that t what they're saying
in France.
They're are a lot of different ra
cial groups in the Near East who
can b- aroused against ear-h other.
And that is anolhtr of the charges
that your Italian agents are
spreading the message to Asvr-lan-Chaldean
populations ,f the
higher Djezirih: "Since France
threatens to abandon you to the
mercy of the people of Damascus,
be informed that Italy is there to
protect vou."
WHAT'S THE ANSWER.?
All these f eem like quite a lot of
protecting, evt-n for the King of
Italy and Emperor of Ethiopia.
Slow mo'inir as they have been,
France and Eritain will not always
sit idly by, letting control over
their choice colonies slip thru their
hands. Sooner or later they're
going to call for a showing of
hands. Or perhaps that's what
you want.
flMEL PESTER'S
A truly atBular band, at a popular pMc
at Llncxin'a Moat popular Ballroom!
COM I NO. Friday. Jan. 21, direct from Col
Iroe Inn Chicapa. FRANKIE MA&TEPtfc.
Continuous Sua frarvlca. 1 miH wast.
EE
OFFICIALBULLETIN.
Red Guidon Association.
There will be a meeting of the
Red GiiiiUm association Vednes
tiny evening; at 7:30 p. m. in room
205 of Nebraska hull. Mnjor Wood
will be the speaker.
Corn Cobs.
All members of Corn Cobs, both
actives and pledges, will attend a
short business meeting tonight at
7:1s o'clock in room 107-B of so
ckil sciences. A treasurer's report
will be made. Attendance at bas
ketball games will also be dis
cussed. Student Council.
' The Student Council will meet
today at 5 o'clock in room 106 of
University hall for the regular
meeting. Flection will be held to
fill vacant positions.
Former Nebraska Chancellor
Former Nebraska Chancellor
Honored by Brown Univer
sity in Spite of Old Bimetal
Feud
(Continued from Page 1.)
Hall" was made by the board of
regents at their meeting Oct. 22,
1927, when they approved the ar
chitect's plans and authorized
him to advertise for bids. It was
to be in honor of former Chancel
lor E. Benjamin Andrews, who en
tered upon the functions of that
office Aug. 1, 1900, and continued
as executive officers of the univer
sity until compelled by ill health
to retire Dee. 31, 1908.
Brown university has special
reason to remember the clear
headed, independent Dr. Andrews.
He had long been a believer in and
an exponent of bi-metallism. Altho
far from being a radical on the
subject, the then president had
seen fit to express some of his
opinions in public addresses and
in articles.
Therefore, in 1897, a comittee
of the trustees requested him to
make "not a renunciation of these
views, but to have a forbearance
to promulgate them out of regard
to the interests of the university."
Dr. Andrews took the stand that
he could not meet the understood
wishes of the corporation "with
out surrendering that reasonable
liberty of utteranre. . .in the ab
sence of which the most ample en
dowment for an educational insti
tution would have but little worth."
Some Discord Arose.
He immediately resigned. The
trustees had not expected nor de
sired this turn of affairs, and
wrote an explanatory letter to
their militant chief declaring that
"it was not in our minds to pre
scribe the path you should tread or
to testrain your freedom of opin
ion or reasonable liberty of utter
ance." They asked President Andrews
to withdraw his resignation, which
he did. He piloted Brown univer
sity until 1S93. when he resigned to
become superintendent of the Chi
cago public schools. There are
still those who believe he left
Brown more to facilitate the be
queathing of much-needed endow
ments than for any particular de
sire to head the Chicago school
system. Dowagers with money to
give were inclined to look wit!:
jaundiced eye upon advocates of
bi-metallism.
Dr. Andrew's stay at Nebraska
was a period of marked growth.
Under his nine year leadership the
student enrolln-.er.t advanced from
2.2.06 to 3.611. There were but 5fi
members with any professional
ranking whatever on the faculty
when he err: veil in 1900. Nine
years later the faculty had been in
creased to 390.
Appropriations for his last bi
er.nium were 1, 330.067 or nearly
three times that of the first, $175 -OoO.
Nevertheless, when the board
of regerts once added a thousand
dollars to his salary, he begged
that "so long as the university is
compelled to the rigid economy il
now exercises" that he "continue
to be paid at the pre.vnt rate."
Contributed to Publications,
During his active chancellorship,
Dr. Andrews continued his steady
literary production, contributing
many books in the fields of history
and economics beside numerous
articles and sermons. He also
found time for various public ac
tivities. For a long time while he was
chancellor he maintained a course
in practical ethics to which stu
dents are said to have come n
throngs. As a biographer writes
in the "Alumnus," "Here he dis
played a remar kable skill in expo
sition and virility in discussion,
that wonderful blending of high
ideals, horsc-wonse, humor and racy
anecdote which had earlier estab
lished his eminence as a teacher."
His early life too as not with
out color. Eom in Hinsdale, N. H.,
Jan. 10, JM4. he spent hit early
life under the expert thologira!
tutelage of two Baptist preacher,
one on each side of the family tree
Enlisted in Artillery.
He began ti prepare for college
at the Connecticut Literary Insti
tute, but his studies were inter
rupted by the onslaught of th
Civil war. He enlisted as a private
in ine nrst t nnoecticut heavy ar
tillery, and at the end of two years
had risen to the rank of second
ljeutcrmijt.
In l'il he was wounded In the
siege of I'etcrsburgh and lost his
left eye. Mustered out, he re
sumed his studies and was gradu
ated from Brown university tn
170. He filled several pastorates,
until, in 175, he was called to be
president of Denison university, a
Baptist school, at Granville, O. He
was there four years.
After resigning from the chan
cellorship at Nebraska In 190H, Dr.
Andrews and his wife took a vaca
tion trip around the world. He
died the next year In Florida, where
he had gone because of hit health.
He is buried on the campus at
Deniaon university.
Famous Cwlrg Band
TONIGHT
ADMISSION 2So
by . $
merriii .
Fngfumi 1 If
' r . k
k : A IlJ
1 1
If, at the end of your first and
subsequent day of registration,
you weren't tired, disgusted, and
almost ready to go back home,
don't read any further. If, after
being pushed and shoved, told
"Take this-Don't take it," This
professor is keen He's lousy
He's not," "Here's a swell course
It's terrible," rushed through the
madhouse that is registration, you
have never wondered if you really
belonged here, it would be a waste
of your time for you to continue
to read.
But if you have been dissatisfied
with your registration, the courses
into which you were stuck, or the
activities into which you fell, you'd
better stop a moment and think
about it. Is there a remedy which
if properly applied will do away
with round mental pegs in square
class holes; misfits preparing
themselves for professions in
which they will never fit; students,
good ones, wasting their time pre
paring for a vocation for which
they are not equipped?
Would it help to have a group
of advisors, old enough to have
some wisdom, young enough to
understand the problems of the
student, with time enough to spend
to be able to talk things over with
their charges? They could give
new students a perspective of col
lege life, of courses, instructors,
social life and activities and at the
same time be able to help the older
students as well.
Arts and Sciences junior:
"We're in too much of a hurry,
here, to get anything done realiy
well. The main trouble is that the
instructors are forced to take care
of registration besides their other
duties. They're expected to teach,
to have the laboratory courses, and
take care of everything else which
they ordinarily have to do; then,
on top of that, they have to handle
registration.
They're in such a hurry, they
have so many to advise, that they
just assign students to classes
without really helninor them. So
all you have is a bunch of students !
taking courses which they don't
like, and sooner or later flunking
out. 6 1
'The Idea of a regular group of
advisors with no other functions
is a good one. Give them an office,
pick men who are not so old that
they've forgotten how they felt
when they were in college. Then
the students would have some one
to go to for advice. The freshmen
aren t the only ones who have
problems. And the way things are j
now, whom can you go and really I
taiK lo
"I guess what I'm looking for
is a shoulder to cry on. somebody
who understands what a mess
things can ret into. There inst !
isn't anyone like that now."
Bizad junior:
" A for t'jrt vt,M Vau T . l
. ,i ai a nor, 1 it-ei I
just as disgusted with registration '
as I did when I was a freshman. '
It's the same old stuff-advisors !
wno don t advise. I suppose its rot
their fault, but why do I have to
nave an advisor if he can't or
won't help me? j
"The special advisor idea Is a
good one, if they could re.illv ad- ,
vise. Only, why not. instead of just I
getting a down slip, get a request 1
to drop in and see one of the ad- !
visors? That way, instead of let-1
tir.g things go till the end of the :
semester when it s too late to do I
anything a bruit it, the student !
could talk to somebody who'd un- !
acrstann, and who could help him."
Arts and Sciences junior:
"I just found out the other 1hv
that the slightly dumb gentleman j
who has been my a ivi.w.r wiuld
have fixed it so that I'd have been i
lacking just six hours of a re- !
quiremcnt at the end of next vear. !
"The present advisor svstern is !
terrible. Us in Ificient, and a i
waste of time both f,,r the stu- '
dent and for the professor. No, it's !
worse than a was'.e of time for the
student, for he trusts b. i.iv,., '
and
him
believes that he is helping ;
uui about naif the time, the
siuoem gets a real jolt when he
wakes up and finds that b lack-,
some requirements to graduate."
Bind sophomore:
"Kight now, our advisors are
DO YOU LIKE
ONIONS ON YOUR
HAMBURGERS?
. . it makes no differ
ence whtther you do or
not . . . you're ture to
"ke ....
CLATJDETTE
COLBERT
In the year's twetltt
comedy
"TOVARICH"
(Pronounced "Tot.vsr.rlch)
"d tt meant a million
oollirt worth of fun for
you!!
Stirts
SAT.
""' JOT SllliH! I
HI '"K I) ft tit. , I
good enough they can take care
of things easy e'lou.ili, if uu.y jU: t
have the time. Instead of ehaii '.
ing things around, just fix it so
that the present advisors are given
more time to handle students.
"You can't tell ma that any
body flunks a course unless ile
just doesn't have the ambition t0
do it. No course is useless, it ji.st
depends on how the student looks
at it. If men and women of col
lege age haven't yet learned to
handle their time, will they ever?"
LAST TIME TODAY
"Fireman's Luck"
'Waikikl Wedding"
STARTS THURSDAY
Buck Jones
In I
"LAW FOR TOMBSTONE'1
Plus
Beverly Roberts
In
'EXPENSIVE HUSBANDS"
LIBERTY
altttlt
Sea This -.AEJLI
1 U 1 . A - i
Bin PrPTf.lm Tfirlay! I
HEX BEACH'S 2tt
Most Thrilling Adven. ' till 0 n! m
ture ot the rsorth!
"The
Barrier"
with
Leo Carrillo
lit No.
'SH H-H THE
CCTOPUS"
lltich Mrrhert
Allen .lenMn
form nc.
Thoe Acron Are Iimim-!
WHEELER and WOOLSEY
eHICH FLYERS"
f I'M HAPPY!
'V. . U'ttu nnl " VA
fg . ,,j die
T U. --L- in ... PH i i-
"THE THIN MAN"
Wll I I am x?j"rf
POWELL
MYRNA
L x
I CIV ACT A
" i I
'AFTER THE &j
4 and "
tuiu inu"
nun ninn
, I
nir nu, -i -
He hrinc romance
THE GAY 6iT
DESPERADO.,
V.
id, itiptno ,1r t-
10c
T,ll S
i
iHurry!!
Onl" ? r--s L"'t see.
EBB TIDE
FRANCCS FAF.VER
RAY MILLASD
Starts FRIDAY!
AWEIGH
eS. V. 1
ANCHORS '
I; lTinlhl "y .
.""'i STTWrlB
ft
A- ri
LAST TIMES TODAY
2 BIG SHOWS 2
VU Hlf r MM. IMI.I.
(iii i ii a , cvw. m.u.
! , In
-Beloved . .Esc.-t;e by
Vagabond'' j rvght"
WA!illlYV
T
A Mlfwf ftjilfMiuia e'l "U
H
U
R
S
D
A
Y
pi., p"na niniui.
lauiilikl
James Donn
Patricia Ellis
la
"VENUS MAKES
TROUBLE"
CHARLES
STARRETT
la
"OUTLAWS of
the PRAIRIE"
;10c
A'i
Don't V,ss It!
Latt Ep'srre
FRANK EUCK
N
I
T
S
"JUNGLE
MENACE '
Also First Episode
4
' U
l N
I
T
-1 - '.i i
mm.
w
LIBEOTY fcAYi: OnAr.D 1H0-
-
Adrratnre... rr
Slfbtt... s
Susuejue .
SOLOMON'
ttpeic MAIDWICr-l ANNA III