THE DAILY NEBRASKA! ' . . 1 " 1 F : BOOKS ON TEACHING THE DAILY IBRASKAH Chaa. II. Epperson Editor-in-Chief George E. Grimes.... Managing tauor Era L Miller Associate Editor John Cejnar Associate Editor o'clock. All university women are in Tlted A short business meeting will follow the address. M. L. Poteet Business Manager Roy Harney ...Asst. Business Manager , REPORTORIAL STAFF Ivan O. Beede Edgar D. Klddoo Jean Burroughs Jospeh Pekar vi.ionno TTnii'iid John Wenstrand Jack Fraser Marguerite Kauffman Offices: News, Basement, University Hall. Business, Basement, Admin lstration Building. Telephones: News, L-8658. Buoiness, B-2597. Published dally, except Saturday and Sunday, during the college year. Subscription, per semester U-00 Entered at the postoffice at Lincoln, . - - II mm4a Nebraska, as secona-ciass nuu manci, under the act of Congress of March 3, 1879. OUR. NEW COACH All who have made the acquaintance of Dr. Stewart join in his praise. He brings to Nebraska the proper com bination to add further glory to our record on the field of battle. A re markable knowledge of the game counted with the highest ideals of clean athletics, will do much for the future Nebraska. But the task he faces is not an easy one. Nebraska has not met de feat In football since 1912. As was suggested at the banquet last night. It is easier to bring up a team that is behind, than to please a student body that has not seen a defeat In three years. We fac a hard sched ule next year. Notr Dame, the Ore gon Aggies, and Iowa not to men tion our respected opponents of the Valley, Kansas and Ames are enough to make any coach lie awake nights. Furthermore, It cannot be denied that the coach, will not have the galaxy of stars that have graced Ne braska Field during the past three years. But if spirit means anything. Dr. Stewart will be dealing in untold wealth. Nebraskans from border to border are ready to do bis bidding. They are anxious to add every unit of their strength and Influence to make Nebraska second to none. The team's Interest will be theirs. For Nebraska, We Will. THE SINGLE TAX The Single Tax is progressing nice ly. By the middle of next week if such does not seem unwise from an early Interview with the regents--the petitions so long promised will be circulated. The opposition to the movement comes from the inherent nature of things, not from any par ticular persons. Very few people per sonally object to its adoption. But for the present the matter must again take a second place. The high school people are our guests for the week, and The Nebraskan will give much of Us space to their affairs. But do not forget the importance of the Single Tax, aid remember the climax is due next week. UNIVERSITY NOTICES Chemistry Examination Students who bare a condition In chemistry A or D may take a special examination Saturday, March 11. at 10 o'clock In the chemistry lecture room. Benton Dales. Win the party who took my Grays Electrical Design from Mechanics Arts bunding, return same? IL B. Whitfield. . 214-107 Math. Club Meeting In B 211 The Math, club will meet tomorrow evening at 7:30 o'clock in the lecture room of the Physics building (B 211) instead of the Temple. Note the chanee of place. Mr. Glsh desires more adequate facilities for blowing soap bubbles than the Temple ar fords. Barbour Will Speak to Engineers Prof. E. H. Barbour will give an Illustrated lecture on 'The Park and Park Systems" with particular refer ence to Lincoln, at the Lincoln Js.ngi neers club meeting Friday night at 8 o'clock in M. E. 206. Snapshots Wanted for Cornhusker If tou have any appropriate snap shots for the 1916 Cornhusker, tele phone Carl Harnsberger, B 1821, and he will come after them. Senior Invitations Orders for senior Invitations will be taken next week. The committee that thas this In charge has arranged to haTe samples on display and will be prepared to complete a canvass of the class at that time. Tegner Teener meets Saturday, March 11, at the state farm. Agricultural hall ma Take state farm car tearing Eleventh and P streets at 7:55 or 8:10 o'clock. Kearney Club Kearney club meets In the Y. W. C. A. room Friday. March 10. Note the change from Saturday to Friday. HIGH SCHOOL PLAYERS TO GET NEBRASKAN Free Subscriptions Go to Best Players in Each Oivisicn The Daily Nebraskan will be sent free for the rest of the school year to the thirty-five or forty best high rchool players in the state basketball tournament, which stairs today. The tournament committee will select the ten or twelve best players in each di vision, and The Nebraskan will be mailed to their homes. The names of these players, who will comprise the honor roll for the 1916 tourney, will be published next week in The Nebraskan. "The idea of sending the college paper to the high school men is a splendid one, and should result in great good fo the university." Dr. Stewart, the new coach, said yester day afternoon. "It will help the men to become acquainted with their home state university, so that when they are thinking about going away to school, they will be drawn to Ne braska, because they will feel thev know this school." Guy Reed, manager of athletics. likes the plan of the staff as well as Dr. Stewart, and for the same reason. The Nebraskan will also give away to the bi;h school people, 100 ropits of the school r?per each day of ornament It is hoped that the high hool fols will feel that the univer sity is Interested in them, and war-is thm to f-el the warmth of the wel come the Nebraskan extends to alL Business Woman's Club Meeting Prof. O. P. Martin will address the Business Woman's club In University ban 102 tomorrow evening at S PATRIOTISM ' A nation is made great, not by its fruitful acres, but by the men who cultivate them; not by its great for ests, but by the men who use them; not by its mines, but by tie men who work In them; not by its railways, but by the men who build and run them. America was a great land when Co lumbus discover ad It; Americans have made of it a great nation. In 1776 our' fathers bad a vision of a new nation "conceived In liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equaf."' Without an army they fought the greatest ex istlng world empires that they might realize this vision. A third of a cen tury later, without a navy, they fought the greatest . navy in the world that they might win for their nation the freedom of the seas. Half a century later they fough through an unparalleled civil war that they might establish for all time on this continent the Inalienable right of life. liberty and the pursuit of happiness. A third of a century later they fought to emancipate an oppressed neigh bor, and victory won, gave back Cuba to the Cubans, sent an army of school masters to educate for liberty the Filipinos, asked no war indemnity from their vanquished enemy, but paid him liberally for his property. Meanwhile they offered land freely to any farmer who would live upon and cultivate it, opened to foreign immi grants on equal terms the door of in dustrial opportunity, shared with them political equality, and provided by universial taxation for universal education. The cynic who can see in this his tory only a theme for his egotistical satire is no true American, whatever his parentage, whatever his birth place. He who looks with pride upon this history which his fathers have written by their heroic deeds, who accepts with gratitude the inheritance which they have bequeathed to him, and who highly resolves to preserve this inheritance unimpaired and to pass it on to his descendants en larged and enriched, is a true Ameri can, be his birthplace or his parent age what it may be. Lyman Abbott. CHRISTIAN SCHOLARS, CHINA'S GREAT NEED (Continued from page 1) seizure of Cochin-China, the seizure of Port Arthur by the Russians, Wei Hal Wei by the English, and other foreign aggressions. The result was the Boxer uprising. After that China changed her atti tude and commenced ber new era. In this work of rejuvenation the mission aries have had a prominent part, Dr. Verity said. China came to see that! her ancient civilization could not' sustain her. She felt that she needed J a new educational system, and she t took the missionary schools as a pat tern form which to build one. The eastern nation is now determined to have a modern civilization. The wonderful progress of her an cient rival, Japan, has astounded 1 China, said the speaker. Now 20,000 of ber young men go to Japan to learn the secret of the mikado's na tion's power. The Chinese revolution is the united effort of her people to gain something that will save their country. China's great needs in Dr. Verity's opinion, are men and women of great scholarship who are leading the Christ life. Christian doctors and nurses, and a more serious under standing by America and the rest of the world. German Lunch and Cafe, R. C. Schelder. manager. 1121 P ctreeL The Mogul Barber Shop, S. L. Chap lin, proprietor, 127 North Twelfth- Meal tickets, for $L50. 127 North Twelfth. Newbert Cafe. G. E. Spear, B. Sc. M. D.. Univer sity of Nebraska, '03; physician and surgeon. 1417 O SL B-302L Printing that' better, at Boyd'. 12S North 12th. After dinner dances at Mccormick's Cafe. Open till 1 p. m. 129 South Twelfth street. eootri Orchestra. CaU. B-ISX. So many university students bo come teachers that some books ' on teaching on the vocational shelf will probably be of interest. One vol ume of a series of books on voca tions is given up to education, and contains among many others the fol lowing articles: Benson, "Personality of the Teach er." Brown, "The Successful Teacher." Child, "The Schoolma'am." Richardson, "Kindergarten." Wilson, "Personal Factor tln Edu cation." The following books also will be placed on the shelf: Benson, "The Schoolmaster." Boykin & King, "Tangible Rewards of Teaching." Brown, ."Government by Influence" Gilchrist, "Mary Lyon." Palmer, "Alice Freeman Palmer." Palmer, "The Teacher." Phelps, "Teaching in School and College." Winship, "Great American Educators." CHOOSE a friend like you would yo' smokin' to bacco. Don't have one that ain't worth keepin always an' that you won't grow to ma AT - liKe oerter ev ry day. aZ0t n 2C BRING YOUR HIGH SCHOOL FRIENDS TO THE College Book Store Facing Campus To bey tissir POST CARDS, CAKOY, FEXXMTS, isd otlir tfciags "The Den" in Basement The University School of Music - RELIABLE INSTRUCTION IN ALL BRANCHES OF Musis Dramatic Art Assfhe!i3 Dancing ASK FOR INFORMATION WILLARD KIMBALL, Director Opposite Campus 1 1 th & R Sts. THE rail S33 North 12th Ct Telephones B2311 and B3SSS Gleaners, Pressers, Dyers For th "Work and Serrlce taat Pleaaea." Call B2J1L The Beat Equipped Dry Cleaning; Plant la th West One day serrlc If eeded. Reasonable prices, good work, prom at errloe. Repair to men's garment carefully made. CO-OP BOOK ST00E 318 Ho. llih. Student Supplies A. II. Fedea Than L 4318