The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 18, 1938, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
T11E DAILY NEBRASKAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1938
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THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
THIRTY-SEVEMH YEAK
EDITORIAL STAFF
falter tt Murae
Aiim-lata editor at ...Dun Werner
Mnnml.it Editor Helea Peeeo
New, Mltiire Miirrli LIPP,
Howard Kaplan, Barbara RoKweter, ICd Sleeves,
Marjorla Churchill, Joa relief,
O.N lilltt IHBLB
BUSINESS STAFF
Boatncia Marnier Bob Wadhame
Aulitant Manaerrs franJi Johnson, Arthur HUI
Clrealatkra Manasr Stanlrj Mlohaal
Night Editor
Deik Editor
.Kaplan
.Sleeves
luder directum of th Hlndenl Publication Hoard,
Mltnnal Office University Hall 4,
Huiiwm OHIce Inlvrrilt) Hall 4-.
Telephone Ua U11H1. Mghti a71Wv. UssitS (Journal).
SUBSCRIPTION RATE
11.60 year HI nil, cop a 1. 00 a ermtatw
IJ.M mailed cent, ll.ou eemeetet
mailed
entered a, eecond-claee matter at th poitaffloa Is
Lincoln, Mrbratka, undn act ol eungreea, March a. Ilia,
and at aprrlal rate ol poetaaa prorldrd foi In tret loo
I10II, act el October I, Mil, aatborlird January 10, 111,
J937 Mtmbft 1938
Plsjocicifed GottG6ate Press
Distributor of
CDlle6iflleDi6esl
rublUhrd seen lure
day, Wednesday
IhdrMlaj, r rider and
Hunan rmirnlnia ol
the academic near h
elud.nle nl the tnl
eeralle ol Nrbreeke,
under the eunervlnhto
ol the Hoard ol Pub
Ileal tola.
National Advertising Service, Inc
Cillif feMiiaers Httnttmlttltt
4SO Madison Ave. NlWYoaK. N.Y.
chicoo ReeroN . bam ratNaieco
ketANaiLBt roaiLAKo iiArru
9nqiwJnq
Merrill Vi s T
mm
'"i a i in '
On. ihsL Avl
To the Pub Board;
Gi'ntlenini, you nre meeting tomorrow to
rhoosc a new stnt'f to suffer, sin, nnd shine with
the Daily Xehnisknn for another semester.
Since this is the lust letter 1 ahull ever write
you, lunr with me, I'd like to make some sug
gestions. There is something you should consider
besides staff positions. It is in your power to
initiate, a change in policy on the Nebraskan,
which would have a most vital and important
influence on this campus.
But first 1 must tell you a story. I made
it up so it's probably not very good. Any
way, my story concerns a mythical group of
athletes, say about 200 of them. These ath
letes are all potential football players, but, as
yet, they know nothing about the sport. They
are victims, or benefactors, of newspaper pub
licity. These 200 athletes, all fine physical
specimens, have heard a lot about football and
they want to learn to play it.
Consequently, they find themselves at a
university in the fall. They all turn out for
the first football practice, get their suits, and
betake themselves to the stadium greensward
with the school's coaches. The coaches make
a few speeches, introducing themselves around,
and then assign limbering up exercises for the
first day.
The next day the football enthusiasts
go again to the stadium and go thru some
drills that are not too exciting. The boys
begin thinking that football isn't what it's
cracked up to be. On the third day one of
the boys brings a jack knife with him and
smuggles it into his football suit. When the
coaches start their instructions, he nudge
a companion and shows him the jack knife.
"Know how to play mumbledepeg?"
asks the culprit.
"Sure, let's play."
Two others join the little game and these
four don't pay much attention to football that
afternoon. The next day there are three groups
of mumbledepeg at the stadium. The brighter
boys Coach Jones calls them the better boys
all bring their knives after a few days, and
mumbledepeg becomes the important activity
of many of the men who could have become
the best football players.
These mumbledepeg players really came
1o learn how to play football, but, well they
already knew how to play mumbledepeg and
football was a little complicated, and the cam
pus daily was lots more interested in mumble
depeg as something with more originality and
sparkle, than football. Consequently, the best
potential football players never became very
good football players. Their attention was
distracted by mumbledepeg. In later years at
this school mumbledepeg became so popular
that a mumbledepeg mansion was built at the
corner of 14th and R for them to relax in.
I suppose you publication board moguls
think this is rather a strange story. Athletes
coming to school to learn to play football and
spending all their time playing mumbledepeg.
But here's what the story means.
Football in the story represents academ
ic studies at Nebraska. Mumbledepeg rep
resents extra-curricular activities. Students
really come here to study, or the bright ones
do, but learning to study, settling down in
other words, is a bit tedious so they imme
diately begin fiddling away their time at
the mumbledepeg of activities.
Activities at N. U. are preventing some
of the best young minds in the state from
getting an education, meaning by education
that understanding, refinement, tolerance,
and appreciation of value to be had from
associating with good minds and good books.
It is the best minds that go into activities.
The activity ruts are so deep here and the
. empty via of dubious honor in Innocents
- and Mortar Board so often stressed as the
proverbial pot of gold that students with
.good minds, but as yet little discernment,
are drawn into the maelstrom.
Participation in one activity might serve
as relaxation instead of a distraction. But
there is no such thing as moderation among
the more competent students. If they go into
activities they have to try to get enough of
them to make Innocents or Mortar Board, and
this is fatal. The good minds and the good
books are neglected for activity haunts, out
lines of courses, and cramming. The result is
often, as has been the case of the Nebraskan
this semester, ineligibility.
The emphasis on activities as a part of
education is largely misplaced. Activities of
fer, not education, but the opportunity to ap
ply what is already acquired. Nor do activi
ties develop personality because it is the stu
dents with fine personalities, for the most part,
who engage in activities. Any necessary eon
tact with people, so highly lauded by pro
ponents of activity careers, might better be had
with some intelligent conversation over a coke
or in a fraternity or rooming house.
The notion of activities as an opportu
nity for practicing the business manage
ment of people, and the carrying of respon
sibility is false because college is not life ; it
is a preparation for it. It is the one opportu
nity for standing apart in life as a spectator
and getting a bit of perspective on the bustle.
Why, then, has the harmful tradition of
extra-curricular activities grown up at Ne
braska? The spurious honor attaching to Inno
cents and Mortar Board is a partial answer.
If the sororities and fraternities were to use
Thi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi as talking points
instead of the activity honoraries, it would
help.
The real explanation of the emphasis on
activities is in the Daily Nebraskan. The Ne
braskan is the dean of student activities. It
not only acts as a stepping stone to the hon
oraries for a few people, but it helps to make
every person who is tapped or masked on Ivy
day.
In fact, the great share of activities on the
campus are nothing more tangible than pub
licity in the Daily. And often the Nebraskan
is little more than publicity for these ethereal
activities. The Nebraskan must take the lion's
share of responsibility for the mumbledepeg at
tne university.
You, gentlemen of the pub board, can
remedy this. The Daily Nebraskan needs a
wire service. Either an AP or a UP wire
would make an almost incalculable differ
ence on this campus. 1 the Daily staff had
wire news to serve up for the campus every
day, it would not have to run columns on
Student Council meetings where nothing
went on; it would not have to rewrite an ag
campus party story five times during one
week for the odd hundred persons who will
attend. It would not have to give a string
to Kosmet Klub; and so thru the whole
gamut of activities much less significant
than those mentioned. Activities would have
to be activities. There would be fewer of
them, and perhaps even a few significant
ones.
You will answer that a colleire dailv
should print campus news. The answer now
is that the real news of the campus is never
unearthed. Features and news stories are
missed every day. We pseudo journalists be
come so engrossed in activities ourselves that
we cannot see anything else. Wc dish up per
functory tripe because the emphasis is wrong.
AVe are so deep in the activity ruts that we
cannot see out.
Furthermore, if the Daily had a wire serv
ice it could become more than an activity it
self and a waste of time for those engaged in
it. Newspapermen in the state have told me
that activity writing for the Daily Nebraskan
is the worst possible experience that a journal
ist could have. "We learn false news values.
We pad. The writing is sloppy. The proof
reading is so bad that n corrigendum should
be published for each edition. But we make
Innocents and Mortar Board ourselves and
make others Innocents and Mortar Boards.
Instead of being a laboratory for jour
nalists, the Nebraskan is a joke. It is not
written by seniors in the School of Journal
ism, but by freshmen and sophomore and
junior activity workers. It prints bad news
badly. A wire service would bring a serious
tone to the Daily, to the campus, and to the
School of Journalism.
Why don't you talk it over today at the
nueting of the board, gentlemen?
Signed,
The Departing, Disillusioned
EDITOR.
Finals are all right in
their place, but no far we
haven't succeeded in find
in" that pluce.
This, In substance, seems to be
the campus opinion on the subject
of semester examinations. Long
the practice at Nebraska, they are
In fairly general use thruout the
colleges and universities of the
country. The recent trend, how
ever, seems to be away from the
semester examination and toward
the comprehensive examination
given at the time a certain courae
has been completed and the Indi
vidual la prepared for It.
How do you stand on the sub
ject of finals? What is good about
them or wrong with them? Have
you any suggestions which would
change them?
CHICAGO SOLOISTS
PRESENT DEBUSSY
OPERA TOMORROW
(Continued from Fage 1.)
tire opera takes only an hour and
a quarter.
Maria Matyas, who sings the
role of Ua in the presentation has
been with the Chicago Opera com
pany before in many performances,
Including that of "Lakme" with
Lily pons She also appeared with
th Metropolitan opera in New
York last spring where she will re
turn again this year. Her other
triumphs have been the role of
"Jack" in "Jack and the Bean
stalk," Carmen in ths opera "Car
men," and Hansel in "Hansel and
Gretcl." The last role she played
musical world she is known as "the
most famous boy in opera."
Mary Garden's Protege.
Robert Long has appeared with
the same company in the leading
tenor roles of "Faust," "Martha,"
"La Travlata," and "Rlgoletto."
His extraordinary talent and bril
liant vole so attracted the atten
tion of Mary Garden that she
awarded him a scholarship in her
opera repertoire classes. In addi
tion to opera work Mr. Long has
been heard in concert work and
regularly over the radio.
Raymond Koch is a well known
opera soloist, and has sung the
leading roles of many of the fa
mous works. He is a master of the
oratorio style and is famous for
his Interpretations of Elijah in
over 400 times and thruout the Mendelssohn's "Elijah." He has
been proclaimed by some critics to
d ine master of the role.
Members of the Beatrice Wom
an's club last week enloycd an Il
lustrated lecture by Dwight
Kirsch, chairman of the depart
ment of fine arts.
"The Mercuration and Arslna
tlon of Beniothieone" is the title
of an article by Dr. A. W. Weit
kamp and Dr. Cliff Hamilton of
the chemistry faculty. The article
was published in the recent issue
of the Journal of the American
Chemical Society. Dr. Weitkamp
Is now research chemist for the
Standard Oil company of Indiana.
He received his Ph. D. degree from
Nebraska in August, 1937,
Arts and Solences Junior:
They're Just a pain in the neck
to me. They put too much empha
sis on that one grade it counts
too much. You can't tell me that
anyone can come in and in three
hours adequately express the
knowledge that he's gotten in a
whole semester.
"Too many profs seem to go
into exams with the Idea of seeing
how many of their students they
can flunk. In that short a time,
only the main points of a course
can be touched on, yet a prof usu
ally drags in some minor point
you've never heard of.
Id say cut them out let each
prof give his own testa and make
up his grades on a basis of class
room work, attendance, and the
grades in these smaller tets."
Engineering college sophomore;
"The examination idea is all
right. You must have some kind
of tests to see if the students are
getting the courae. What I don't
like is all of them being given
practically at once. It's impossible
to have all the main points about
all your courses in your head at
once, and that's Just what we're
supposed to do right now. If the
exams were given, but were spread
out over a much longer period, it
would help a lot."
Arts and Sclenoes freshman:
"I don't know anything about
them, except that they have me
scared. My sorority mother has
told me some about them, and I
wish that's aU I'd hear about
them."
Blid Sophomore:
"Theyre unfair. I don't like them
because so many of the teachers
count them so much on final
grades. If you want to, in some
courses, you could stay away from
class for a semester, cram for a
few nights, and get a good grade
in tne final and pass the course
Maybe someone else goes to class
every day, studies, and just be
cause he makes a poor showing
in tne final, he gets a low grade.
"I'd say take them away. Let
the teachers handle their own
grading problem in their own
way. After a semester they know
what you can do. I've had profs
who said that they could tell
within five points what a person
would get in his final just by the
other work he's been doing all
semester. Let them, then."
Arts and Sciences Junior:
"You can't tell me that a per
son can do his best work when
he's all hopped up for a final. The
grades you get depend too much
on how you're feeling and on what
kind of a start you get on the
test. If you're feeling O. K., and
get started all right, yen can really
crack it; but if you're all nervous
and excited, you can really mess
it up.
The whole idea seems to be
putting a fellow up to bat with two
strikes already on him. It s not so
encouraging to know that you can
ruin a whole semester's work by
a slip on the final exam.
Id like it a lot better if each
teacher would give a little test
every week or two and make up
ms grades from a scries of grades
which would show what a student
could do over a period of time,
Instead of in three hours."
Blzad freshman:
"I've heard so much about these
finals that I'm getting plenty wor
ried. It doesn't seem fair that a
student can either get a grade for
himself or lose one In the three
hours that he's taking a final."
Arts and Sciences sophomore:
"I favor a comprehensive ex
amination system, but not the
jumbled up scheme we use here.
A fellow may be called upon to
take an exam in Spanish in the
morning, one In psychology on the
same afternoon; English the fol
lowing morning, and economics
that afternoon. How can anyone
keep his facts straight In a situ
ation like that? I'd like to see
some of the profs try It.
"We should adopt a plan similar
to that in use in Chicago. When
students have completed a speci
fied amount of work, and feel that
they are prepared, they come and
take an exam over the course."
Arts and Solenoes sophomore:
"I can't see where the present
examination system is so bad. It's
used pretty generally all over, and
thit should prove that it'a woitu
something. There just dotan't
seem to be any practical substi
tute for it.
"Anyway, If you've gona to a
class for a whole semester, studied,
and taken part in class discussion,
an exam shouldn't give you a lot
of trouble, if you Just take the
time to review properly."
By Elwood Randol,
Whether or not Goodman has
gone highhat or whether the ex
ponents of the classlco! type have
at last seen the light will be con
clusively decided tonight on the
Camel Caravan when the Coolidge
String Quartet will do Mozart's G
Major Quintet with Benny doing
the clarinet part. The staggering
announcement that Goodman will
do Mozart follows closely upon the
swing master's concert In the staid
Carnegie Hall Sunday. Also on
the program will be Jimmy
Schnowola" Durante who has
been finally lured forth. Durante
will be heard from Hollywood on
Pres Oakle's half of the double
feature program which begins at
8:30 tonight over KFAB.
Roy Harris has written a new
composition called "A Song for
Occupations." The Westminster
choir school of Princeton, will
festure the work this afternoon
at 2:00 over the Columbia and
KFOR. John Flnley Williamson
will direct the oholr and Harris
will speak briefly before hs
mutle Is played.
Let's Pretend, dramatized by
children for children, will move
from its regular Saturday spot to
Tuesday and Thursday afternoon
at 5 over KFAB.
Eddie O. Robinson, star of the
seriul Big Town, will be heard
from the big town tonight. The
script for the next two shows will
be written so that actors in New
York can take the supporting parts
in the show.
Alias Jimmy Valentine,
starring Bert Lytell, famous
actor of stage and screen, Is the
name of a new serial taking the
air over the NBC-Blue tonight
at 8:30 over KOIL. Lytell Is
supported by a good cast In a
tense drama that has as its
theme the struggle of a former
penitentiary inmate to redeem
his name and honor.
James C. Douglass was ap
pointed today to the newly created
post of program director of the
Central States Broadcasting Sys'
tern effective Immediately. Doug
las is 29 years old, married and
the father of one son three years
old. He is a graduate of the Hast
ings college conservatory of music
and the University of Nebraska.
He was assistant manager and
program director of WAAW. As
CSBS program director, Douglas
will work directly under Don
Searle, general manager, and will
have charge of a'l production on
all three stations. Heretofore, each
station has had its own program
director. Searle also announced
the resignation of Bob Cunning
ham, program director of KOIL
for the past two years, to take
effect Jan. 14. Cunningham has
not announced his future plans.
Jeanette MacDonaid, lyric SO'
prano and hostess on Vick's Open
House, was voted the most popular
female star in the recent radio poll
conducted by newspapers thruout
tne country . . . Harry Johnson
KFAB sports reporter, was ap
pointed by the National geml-pro
baseball congress as director of
radio relations for the 48 state
tournaments preceding the na
tlonal finals at Wichita In August
. . . Incidentally Johnson is back
on the air with pre-baseball sea.
son stuff. He may be heard on
Monday, Wednesday and Friday at
3:30 over K.r Ats , . . Freddy Mar
tin picked up a battered valve
trombone used In the famous Gr
man bands two decades ago Just
to show how "you push the first
valve down" when the craze was
for music to go round and around
He liked the Instrument so well
he is still using tt . . . Every time
the Lone Ranger knocks down an
enemy during the episodes heard
three times a week over MBS and
KFOR, a real live man hits the
floor. The professional "fall guy
is Ernest Wlnstanley who got his
start when he accidentally full dur
ing rehearsal. Since then Ernie's
150 pound body has dropped to the
floor more than a thousand times
DEAR DEL CASINO: "For
the last two years my esse has
been studied by many authorities
in the medical world. After a
long Illness, which I had two
years ago, I auddenly acquired
tne ability to capture radio pro
grams with nothing more me
chanlcal than my own ears. Due
to some predominance of salt In
my body there Is an electro
chemical bails which makes
radio waves passing thru my
Body actually have sound.
rainy weather, especially, or
when I'm lying on bed springs
which act as a ground, I get
things very clearly. So far I have
never been able to get short
wave programs. The continual
noise sometimes just about
drives me orazy and I often go
up In airplanes where the noiie
of the plane makes m forget
the buzzing In my ear. But what
I wanted to ell you, Mr. Casino,
wss that your voles comes Into
my ear very clear and fine.
Where I travel, the Columbia
station KMOX Is nice and pow
erful and of all voices I receive
it's yours and Gabriel Heatter's
that's the most pleasing. Keep
up the good work. Sincerely."
E. M., Moberly, Mo.
ariw - t - ' ( 1 1 lit liH
NEWS
PARADE
hr
Marjorh Churchill
P'.. -aV V, 'r"' U75 IN
THKKK LL RE
A HOT TIME ..."
France comes to the end of the
third day of its political crisis,
with no ministry as yet and lead
ers of the Innumerable parties la
boring to bring about some sort
of reconciliation. Camille Chau
temps, premier since June 22, re
signed last week, precipitating the
crisis and political confusion which
has ensued since that time. He
returns now to bring some order
out of the chaos, to create a cab
inet agreeable to all factions
mammoth undertaking.
What It's All About.
For ths past year France's po
litical situation has been in a
turmoil, Fragments of the peo
ple's frontformed to combat
fssclsm remain, though disten
tion within the group makes
agreement along any policy al
most impossible.
To begin at the beginning:
Leon Blum, first people's front
premier, Is ousted in the spring
of 1937, The Chautemps regime
them comes into power, With
the resignation of Chautemps,
Flnanoier Diplomat Gerge Bon
net, radical socialist leader, is
appointed by President Albert
Lebrun to create a new cabinet.
Bonnet finds himself faced with
the opposition of the socialist
faction, the dominant party.
Communists, likewise, are defi
nitely antagonistic because of
hit demand for decreased gov
ernment expenditures.
Blum, socialist leader, takes
a try and fares no' better. He
abandons his effort to form a
ministry which would reach be
yound the popular front.
Now Chautemps is back. By one
of the quirks of political fate, the
dapper Frenchman (whose name
means "Hot Time ) returns to
the position of a leader to a be
wildered people. He was denounced
a few years ago as public enemy
way-up-on-tne-iist. lie is later ele
vated to the position of prime im
portance. And now, In his desper
ation, the French king brings him
back as a political Moses to do his
out-of-the-wllderness act with the
myriads of different factions and
political beliefs.
SEARCHING OUT
POSSIBLE SKELETONS
IN THE CLOSET
Investigation of the qualifica
tions of Stanley Reed are becun
by a senate Judiciary subcommit
tee. Indications are that a thoro
Investigation will be made. The
senate evidently has blcomc wary
IN THK IMTRMAHY
Lester Trabert.
Roscoe Hlnes, Ruskln.
Raymond Potter, Alma.
Dismissed.
Claude Tetherow, Wood Lake,
(Note: A typographical error
was committed last week
among the Infirmary dismissal
when the name Barry Ginsbery
appeared In place of Harry
Ginsberg.)
following the Blnck episode, nM,j
sre determined that there shall be
no slip this time. Approval of most
democratic senntor.s nnd Home re
publicans is voiced, however, mid
there seems tto he no question that
the appointment will be confirmed,
READY ALU . . , ?
Russia casts caution to the
winds and nnounccs her new fimi
stand toward the fascist nutions.
All payments due to Ilullrm firms'
are suspended. Ktissmn planes are
sent to the aid of China "nt least
100 Russian planes and more than
100 soviet pilots ond meehrinics
operating from the Nimchnngu air
base, about 400 miles southwest 0f '
Shanghai."
Reports from Moscow carry the .
story of a heavy program of iiaval
construction being planned to com
pete with the fleets of Japan, Cier
many and Italy. Russia defends
her action with the declaration f
that Italy has defaulted in debts t
owed to Russiiin firms and thiit
the three fascist nations either'
have never consented to limitation
of armaments or have made
"scraps of pupr" agreements
which they have never Intended to
keep. At any rate the two factions
are from all appearances "getting
set," with ammunition In readiness
and with China as the most likely
place to play off thoir differences,
.Hurry.
AND uu
will"
I Start HtM.iY! I
IIRROL p JOANI
mmmmmE
COMING THURSDAY!
BEIRUT ns n 5Hininc
. SHEU SING a31
HER WAY INTO JT
YOUR HEART f
! 'V
'4
TONITE
IS
Extra
on th
Stage!
7-l:20
Matter
Singtra
singing
Roaalla'
Dean J. E. LeRosslgnol of the
college of business administration
will apeak on "Revolutionary Die
lectlcs" at the graduate scholar
ship dinner meeting Jan. 25 at 8:15
p. m. at the University club. Dr.
Ray W. Frantz of the English de
partment Is in charge of arrangements.
Dr. David Fellman of the po
litical science faculty haa the lead
ing article In the January issue of
the Minnesota Law Review. His
subject is "The Allen'a Right to
Work."
Vi ZANE J BOMBSHELL
grey's i TH;,:S
In I w
"Thunder
Trail"
with
Chas. aicWori)
Oilbsrt Roland
Msrshs Hunt
ACTION1
1 LIUE11TY
Plus Hit No. 8
What unsaen
fare keep
.merles from
conquering
gangland f
EC
'MISSINQ
, WITNESSES'
STUDENT
NIGHT
Your registration
card and
30C
will admit you
to see
-STUART,
Hurry! h'ndt FrUar!
CLAUDETTE
COLBERT
TOVARICH'
with CHARLES BOYER
KXTRA!
Charlie McCarthy
aV Edgar Bergen
March of Time
Band Act News
With (f? lilt alt
111 ssssa sa
1 1 ,
Melvyn DOUGLAS
Helen WESTLEY 7
Stuart ERWINJ
A coiuuiia r&iusi y
H
Aflrr
n :Xn
asa a waUantJ inealra warn
End "KINQ SOLOMON'S
WED. MINES"
The Year'l Miraclm
4 u lieu,'
Starts
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ECLiV-rait-
ham intua nsu but sura
it ititii nou iisut
hut limn ikimj mi
25c
tii
:3
UARITYaow
Main mi llnlrony
I. If KM
Kim llll Ala
u Y ANOTHEf
V VICTORY
AX
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IhlUiliLi
DON TERRY
MARY RUSSELL
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sv NssLi rlmn un I hi, rarlt-
TH RRT! ONI.T I MORE DAYS
,Rir. TflWN r.lDl
wlta
Claire Trevor
heart na the raetn pro-
ram nil inn with
.". (1. KOIIIMsiiN
Hit no. i i
Wheeler I
ana
Woolae7
moil
CLIERS"
1M4 Oim
OHPHKI M
1
A
Marine
200
illl D.
I aeoni
Starts
Thursday! I
E-
On Our
STAGE! I
8 Headline Aets of
VAUDEVILLE
"SENSATIONS Of 1938" '
WaiJ AND LAl'OHS GALOSH
NO. 2
Hr runil4 up th aan( hlcu
'..lr the famril Mm l.lia . .
I. .11 , hrl.k al llir hanita ll
llll mn tana ( lnuh pupil. A
UvH), exciting rnmrriy-ilrtima !
In
"WHERE THERE'S
A WILL"
Kith
WILL HAY
LILLI PALMER
a
Grandpa Snazzy
Says ... Ho la
THE
LOVER . . ,
PERFECT
of Van Buren .
BOB BURNS
with
MARTHA RAYE
"MOUNTAIN
MUSIC"
plu 2nd FF.ATIRE
Public enemy to public hero I
iMAN OF THE PEOPLE
JOSEPH CALL El A
1 FLORENCE RICE '
MAT.
10c
SIM
EVE.
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