-SUMMER NEBRASKAN rulillxlu'il TiiPMiliiv, Tlmrsilny unci Smiir ilny !' vtu-h li.v Hit I nlvrrsity of Ciiti-ivii hh H"-'iul duns mutter at tin' l.i.nu.lfitj in l.liwolii. Nehritckii, mull'. .VI ti 'iiiiri-n. M.ircli It. lfI. OK Kit I A I. INIVKKSITV VI Hl.H ATION I mlrr (lie olirotllun uf tlir Muclrnt 1'ub llrtUlone Hoard. MibwriiMion rutr. ftOc for (lie mmmrr. Siufflp ropy. MAN A(i KMKNTi Jtok AocWm Muninrw V ilbur l'rirr.on Kdi(or Ward Kjuidel AMM'lMte hilllor i;r rOKTtltS olti Turrtr Laura Rooney Klhrl Herman Vi 'entry Tonkuiun tltuirlir lrnn C. F. Uomniun OKHCK HOIKS: Muwicrr and Kditor 3 to 4 Itaily Muilout Aitivllli Office. HnNenient, Went t.nii AdmiuiMtratian Huiltlin. TREAT 'EM WHITE The highest compliment any man could ever receive was paid to War don Billie" Fentcn of the Nebraska state penitentiary when Fred Brown, Omaha bandit who had led police of ficers a merry chase for nearly a month, said that Nebraska's prison custodian would not have been Jiarmed had the bandit and jailer come face to face. "For", sari Drown, "he treated me white when 1 was in the penitentiary and I would not have shot him". To have that said about one by a man hunted by hundreds , of other men is certainly a compliment and a high one. Brown was fighting for his life and it was merely a matter of good fortune that he did not seri ously mangle or kill a number of the hunting party. He was caught un awares. But at any time had War den Fenton approached. Brown would not have fought. He regarded Foli um too highly lor Fenton "treated him square". There is a lesson in ihat statement of Brown's by which every man ma profit. Warden -Fenton would prob ably have saved his life had he met the bandit just because he had done what was "white". Few are the men who can boast of such a record. There Is probably not a man in the Nebraska state prison who would not endorse Brown. And a prison is no easy matter to go "while". It is not hard to overlap the line when one is dealing with hardened criminals such as inhabit the penitentiary. All me'n should consider the statement of Brown and think how much "treat-1 ing the other man white" is really worth in the end. HIGH SCHOOL PUBLICATIONS Completion of each school year finds more and more high schools at tempting to publish a school paper of some kind. AJmost every high school now has a paper which is pub lished by the students of the school at regular intervals. This growth of interest in publications has called for instructors who have some knowl edge of the fundamentals of journal ism. High school teachers, as a rule, have little foundation for teaching journalism. Few, if any have bad any course in it. Until more experi enced instructors are secured the rating cf high school publications will not be great. Instructors of Journal ism should seek a more thorough knowledge of their subject than they generally possess. iaiiH Ruth went on his barnstorm ing career because he thought he could get away with it. He was su pended and fined by Judge Landis. Ho get back in baseball expecting a wonderful ovation and he got it. But then he failed to connect with the ball. His cheers turned to jeers and Kuth lost his temper. He assaulted an umpire and started after a fan in the bleachers. He was suspended third time for "crabbing". hen men reach the "hall of fame" in that way and fall- in as disgraceful a way as that, the drop is much worse than Just gradually pass- ing out A man who cannot hold his followers is a poor man at best. He may reach a stage of overwhelming apparent success but he fails be cause of the very high momentum of the thing. Better it were that he had struck a reasonable level and kept it than go high above it only to fall farther below and to get mad because cne loses out by one's own actions is worse still. No man,, is regarded highly who cannot stand a defeat. There is a lesson In Ruth's downfall for all. PAUL GRUMMANN WRITES ' OF TRIP TO CARNEGIE BABE RUTH AND FAME But last year Babe Rulh was the most talked of man In America, at least in baseball. Now be is reeard vl rarely and with no complimentary comment Three times this year Ruth has been suspended. All thr' times were the results of too much STUDENT OSTRICHES Recently a college professor an nounced to the world that college students, almost without exception, swallowed every statement he saw fit to make concerning . his subject. There is a lementable lack of ques tioning attitude, he averred, that is necessary before a student can tap the wellsprings of learning. How often have we noticed the same thing in the class rooms of In diana. An instructor or professor will make a prodigious statement concerning something touching his subject, of which his auditors never heard before. Every one hastily writes it down in the ever-present notebook as gospel, although outslue of class someone would be sure to ask for more information. We have seen a learned professor demonstrate Mr. H. R. Grummann, son of Paul H. Grummann, director of the school of fine arts, writes from Wilkins burg, Ba., concerning his trip of the "Carnesie". He states that after spending a few months in the West Indies making obseratlons from . St. rin niiis to Barbadoes, he returned to the U, S. A. and hopes it won't be necessary for him to leave it again. Mr. Grummann is at present in the research department of the Westing house Electric and Manufacturing Company, East Pittsburg. Pa. '99, Broken Bow. progressive; Robert G. Simmons, '15, Scottsblutf, republi- LOST Fountain pen, all but tap, between campus and 410 No. Uth Emma Mishek, phone B 1166. 10 PER CENT INCREASE IN CHEMISTRY STUDENTS DANCING SCHOOL Learn to Dance for $5.00 at the Franrmathes School of Dancing at the Garden Academy, 1018 n St. Call or phone B-60S4. Fifty -five students are registered in freshman chemistry and 42 in organic chemistry. This represents about a 10 per cent increase over last summer. LOUISVILLE FIELD TRIP IN GEOGRAPHY The Louisville trip will be made Saturday, June 24. The trip Is made via auto truck. The party will leave Nebraska Hall at 7:30 A. M. Studies will be made of the Salt Creek valley, the Platte valley and industries. Places to be visited are the sand dredges, Indian cave, state fish hatch eries at South Bend, stone quarries and the pottery plant at Louisville. Vistors are welcome and arrange ments may be made for transporta tion by signing the bulletin in Nebras ka Hall or consulting Miss Anderson before Friday noon. UNIVERSITY ALUMNI IN POLITICAL RACE (Continued from page 1) Shike, '11, University Place, republi can; third district P. F. O'Gara, '06, Hartington, democrat; fourth district Lloyd Crocker, '06, Beatrice, repub- PLAY TENNIS! KEEP IN PHYSICAL TRIM to Spalding Equipment Assures you of the Highest Quality Pos. sible. Tennis Rackets, Balls, Nets, Shoes, Etc. SnMl for Oar Not rwtslona A- G. SPALDING & BROS. 211 So. State St, Chicago, III. the snelline of a word ner Chancer I "",u- t,4la a'smci cnanes W. Deal. Anglo-Saxon and Teutonic, and even show how it was spelled about 5.000 B. C. in the Indo-European. He probably was right, but did anyone ask where scholars derived their In formation? Not a one. Perhaps we are being trained to be intelligent animals, instead of think ers. A trained horse can ao Ms worK just as efficiently without knowing why, but something more will have to be expected, from Americans if we don't want to be a group of trained horses performing at the command of a few whipholders. Students say instructors dislike questions. Un doubtedly they do resent foolish queries, but if a college is a boy on one end of a leg and an instructor, on the other, how can the Instructor do his best if the fellow opposite be comes the proverbial "bump on the log". All that would result under such circumstances, and about all that many modern classes are, is a dry m:u!cgue ground out by a pro fessor. Mos instructors would probably welcome a little original thought in jected into their recitations, we be lieve. Maybe they would not. as stu dents maintain. Indiana Daily Student 200 NEWSPAPERS NOW GET THE NEBRASKAN Nearly two hundred of the leading editors of Nebraska are now regularly receiving the copies of The Summer Nebraskan. The university is takin; this means of informing the people of the state about what its leading edu cational institution is doing. SODA'S SUNDAES' SERVICE I L L E R S ' PRESCRIPTION HASMAC7 p; A Cleaning Service That Satisfies IT'LL PAY YOU TO TRY IT. BE NEATI Phone B2301 CITY CLEANING and DYE WORKS Return Postage Paid 1605 '0" H. RATMER, Pres. W. 0. CARLSON, Mgr. ffppoooooooooooocoocooooocoooooooooooooooooooooooococ NOW IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY to have TOWNSEND make your PHOTOGRAPHS STUDIO 226 So. 11th St. "PRESERVE THE PRESENT FOR THE FUTURE" Our Special 75c Evening: Meal is Most Satisfactory "The Place Different" PEKIN CAFE 1130 "0" Served at All Hours Look for the Pekin Sign Upstairs