THE DHL Y NEBBA8KAH The Dally Nebraskan rroperty of THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Lincoln J. C. BEARD KUltor-ln-Chlef Managing Editor... OrvllU Chatt FlrBt ABBOclate Editor am Second Associate Editor.... Ethel Arnold REPOIITORTAL STAFF Richard V. Koupal Marguerite Kauff man J. U Olffen O. 1. Craven Charles M. Frey l,eetMiYlan C E Paul T. W. McMillan Everett J. Althouse 5"" le",ner 10 W. McDonald Ruth Sheldon Camllle Leyda H. P. riara R Uodda Harry I. Oayer tr Zook Wayne Townsend ifl" TVoberf elder Ellie M. Noll Phil Warner SPECIAL FEATURES &g:::::::::iq&rsS!l Athletlo Edltorv - Beede Business Manager Russell F. Clark Asst. Business Manager.... U. S. Harkson Subscription price $2.00 per year, payable In advance. Single copies, 6 cents each. Entered at the postofflce at Lincoln. Nebraska, as second-class mall matter, under the Act of Congress of March S, 1879. - TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 1915 THE FORUM Army and Navy Journal of February 13, 1915 "We are told that every youth should go to school to fit himself to cast an intelligent vote, and that school attendance should be made com pulsory. Nations that believe in com pulsory military training simply ex tend this principle to military educa tion. They say if book learning is necessary to make a boy a good citi zen, then education In the means of defending the nation, and thus defend ing himself and his dear ones, is equally necessary to make a good citi zen. The compulsory character of school education does not detract from its quality of essentialness, nor should the compulsory character of military training be considered as affecting it as a measure of great national utility.'' SAM M. PARKER, 1st Lieut, of Infantry, Commandant. Limitations of the Military Expert The following is clipped from an address by Charles E. Jefferson: Although somewhat snobbish, he has his virtues. He is not a barbarian or a charlatan. He is a patriot and a gentleman. He has not consciously entered into a conspiracy against hu manity. His misfortune is that his ideal is . pagan. His education has given his mind a bias which makes him a dangerous counsellor. He is a specialist, and, like many another specialist, he is expensive and has a knack of suggesting elaborate and ' costly methods of treatment He is prone to diagnose along the line of his specialty. Ho can see what he is looking for whether it is there or not. Prolonged application to a narrow set of phenomena has destroyed his per spective. He is apt to see everything through the bore of a gun. Brooding over battles has turned the whole earth Into a battlefield. Looking for enemies he has found them on every side. Dreaming of possibilities, he has reached the astounding conclusion that every conceivable contingency must be provided for.. So long as he deals with matters within the scope of his knowledge, he is a man to be re lied on. The moment he attempts to deal with questions of national policy he is to be feared. Of all the serv ants of the government he is the last to be entrusted with the responsibili ties of statesmanship. He is peculiar ly unfit to say how a nation's money shall be spent National finances are In a muddle wherever he has his way. Because he is an expert in the firing of shells, it does not follow that he knows how many shells the people are able to buy. A knowledge of the force of explosive flta no man to deal with the tangled threads of international business. JSalling a battleship is one thing, and sailing the Ship of State is another. He evidently knows nothing of the value of money, or of the dan ger of turning the screws of taxation until the people rise in revolt. He has never once in any land during the last thirty years suggested retrench ment. His one cry Is ever, "More! More! More!" Office of Associate Professor of Po litical Science, 1(13 Law Building. February 25, 1915. Probably the most bitterly bated man in the world today is the Kaiser of Germany, whose preparedness for war and over-confidence in that pre paredness has plunged the world into the most terrible struggle in its his tory. Before this war broke out Eng land and Germany had been for years engaged in a struggle to uotdo each other in the building of armaments. Assuming that the writer of the arti cle in the Forum in Wednesday's Ne braskan is right, and that war would not have been brought on if England had not followed Viscount Haldane's policy of ceasing for a time in this struggle to outstrip each other, this struggle would have gone on until one of the countries was exhausted and then, perhaps, this war would have come anyway. At most, Haldane's policy can only be said to have hastened the conflict. The Kaiser's preparedness and con fidence in that preparedness, and not Haldane's unpreparedness, is the thing that the world should look at and learn its lesson from. Long after Haldane has been forgotten, long after the world ceases to care which side is victorious, in the years to come when England and Germany are firm ly united in a new civilization based on Christianity and Reason, the Kaiser and his war policy will be re membered with bitterness and horror. We have "Kaiser Williams" here. They are blind to the real facts. They hold up Haldane to us as a terrible example. They would have us follow the example of Germany and carry out a program of preparation for war that can only lead to, or be curbed by, exhaustion in the end. And all against an imaginary foe! In Germany, Eng land had a real foe, warily watching and waiting to spring the moment England was caught napping. We have no such foe, and it is only the flighty imagination of such "American Kaisers" as the wone who wrote that article for the Forum that can predict such a foe. We grant that there is a great lesson to be learned from the present war, but is it to be learned from Haldane's unpreparedness or the Kaiser's over-preparedness? "AN AMERICAN HALDANE." LOST Ring of Keys. Finder please return to Paul Babson or Nebraskan office and receive reward. FOR SALE Second hand Harper's Latin Dictionary. Practically good as new. Call U. 103. 25-3t $1,500 College students all over the U. S. are going to the PANAMA-CALIFOR NIA EXPOSITION this summer, HOW? Selling our newly published THREE YEAR UNIVERSITY LAW COURSE complete in a small-sized, VEST POCKET volume, 6x3 inches, Every business man wants one, and he wants his wife and each child to have one. It sells itself! It's high grade university work. SALARY or COMMISSION paid to all college MEN or WOMEN. Territory reserved. Send $1 and get the "AMERICAN STANDARD LAW" volume and make your territory reservations at ONCE. After you get your volume, EXAMINE it thoroughly; if you are not ABSO LUTELY satisfied. SEND the volume back and we will mail your $1 back to you. TOGETHER with postage. You can make $1,500. jO this SUMMER do ing UNIVERSITY work. AMERICAN STANDARD LAW Branch Ten Omaha, Nebraska FORMER, CAPTAINS RUN AT TRACK MEET Nebraska Track Captains of Past , Three Years Run For Kansas City Club "Louie" Anderson, '12, captain of cross-country, and track, David Reavis, 14, track captain, and "Stony" Und strum, '13, track captain of the Uni versity of Nebraska represented the Kansas City Athletic Club in a tourna ment at Kansas City, Saturday, Febru ary 28. The meet offered an opportunity for old Nebraska men to appear, Lewis Anderson took second place in the thousand yard race. Lindstrum was one of the four who tied for second place in the pole vault. Abel Mlviat placed first in the 1,000 yards In which Anderson ran a close second. Mr. Kivlat held the world's record in the 15,000 meter race in 1912, until Jackson, the English long dis tance man, brought it down to 3:56 at the 1912 Stockholm Olympics. March Extension Bulletins Are Out Two new Extension bulletins have been issued this month, Directory of Nebraska Dairy Breeders and Dealers, by J. H. Frandsen, and bulletin on Spraying Fruit in Nebraska, by J. Ralph Cooper. To Aid Farmers and Blacksmiths A new policy has been inaugurated in the forge room of the agricultural engineering department at the Uni versity Farm whereby farmers and blacksmiths of Nebraska will be aided with any information about new equipment and new devices that they may desire. The shop will be fitted with modern hammers, shears, J punches, welders, and other new lines j of tools. An oxy-acetylene welder has . just been installed. With this, steel j plates can be cut, delicate pieces of wrought welding can .be done, and j cast-iron breaks can be repaired and j made as good as new. The instructor in the shops is a blacksmith of years of experience and is able to teach methods as well as apply them. Printing and engraving at Boyd's, 125 No. 12th. CALENDAR March Friday, March 5 Phi Delta Theta Lincoln Alpha Sigma Phi Banquet. Palladian Banquet Saturday, March 6 Junior Prom. Union Banquet Phi Delta Theta Banquet. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Banquet. Friday, March 12 Senior Party. Delta Zeta Banquet Phi Kappa PsI Lincoln. - Saturday, March 13 Delta Zeta Lincoln. Delta Gamma Banquet. Phi Kappa Psl Banquet Matinee Mixer for H. S. Visitors. Friday, March 19 Junior Play. Alpha Xi Delta Lincoln. Saturday, March 20 University Night. Delta Gamma Rosewllde. Kappa Kappa Gamma Lincoln. . Kappa Kappa Theta Banquet Alpha Xi Delta Banquet. Friday, March 26 Iron Sphynx Lincoln. Killed January Grasshopper Crop While breeding some new varieties of strawberries at the Nebraska Ex periment Station this winter, the ex perimenters have had the novel an noyance of fighting a January crop of grasshoppers. The strawberry plants had been removed to the greenhouse from the beds outside, after the par ents had deposited their eggs in the ground in the fall. As the result of the artificial heat, the eggs developed Into young grasshoppers that prom ised considerable nuisance. Before the youngsters got their wings they were killed by a spray of tobacco ex tract. Ants are now a pest, the best remedy being sticky paper. Knew What He Wanted to Give Billie, who had been having trouble with bis older cousin Ralph, came into the house, so the Ladies' Home Jour nal tells us. his mother, knowing nothing of the trouble said: 'Billie,- what would you like to give your cousin Ralph for Christmas?" "I know what I'd like to give him," said Billie savagely, "but I ain't big enough." He Wat 8he In a college for women, where the faculty consisted chiefly of the gentler sex, a meeting of the academic council was in progress. Here and there a lone man sat surrounded by learned HUNDREDS OP LINCOLN PEOPLE have paid 1.35 for The Rosary. It is a clean, fascinat ing story of ideal, unconquerable, triumphant Love. On sale Monday 50c 1212 "O" st. THE BOOK SnOP You will be happy when you have a Houston pen. Lend me your Pen a mo ment, please? Say! That's a dandy pen, where did you get it ? COLLEGE BOOK STORE PACING THE CAMPUS. Some Pens! University School ofMusic Established 1894 Opposite the University Camput Eleventh and R la traction given in all branches- of music. Students maj caroll at any time. Beginners accepted. Prices reasonable WILLARD KIMBALL, Director Don't Waste Time thinking about your programs. Come down and talk it over. We don't claim a monopoly of the "nifty printing," but we do take pride in our work. Let ns try to solve your problems In the print ing line. Graves Printery ladlos. An amendment had JuBt Wm proposed. ' "Where is the person who offers thig amendment?" Inquired the president "Who is she?" Whereupon Mr. Skeets, the popular young professor of a favorite subject, rose and replied, deprecatlngly, "i am she." New York Evening Tost Why People "Shrivel Up" Dr. J. II. Coursault and hla four-year-old daughter, Ruth, were walking through. the cemetery on their way from Sunday school when the follow ing conversation took place: "Father, when people die, they shrivel up, don't they?" "Yes. Do you know why they shrivel up?" "Surely. When people die, their souls go out of their bodies. Then there Is nothing to hold their Bides out, so they Just shrivel up." Mls sourian Magazine. 1212 "O'' St. TOE K Specializing m UnivezsUy'Pzinfing m m B I 4 ! LS-ZU57 44Hui pi , ICJ