Nebraska and Her Public Schools HEN ths National Congress of Mothers offered me the privilege of working for its Interests In Nebraska I was glad, remember Ing some pleasant acquaintances made In that state ten years ago. Nebraska has changed In ten years. It B Dot so lonesome as It used to be. You Can't look out of a car window quite so Often and see nothing between earth and sky, or at most just a team and wagon crawling over the sands, making you won der where It came from aryd where It could posslMy be going. '"Trees have grown In Nebraska. Blessed be J. Sterling Morton! Houses have grown, cattle and hogs have been fruitful and multiplied and replenished the pocketbooks, so that the mortgages, which formerly made so much campaign captgtJliave given place to new Issues. There are tall sons and. daughters of the morning who have wrestled successfully with tho big windswhich slill have the right-of-way on these wide prairies. Plenty to eat, and good enough to wear, and work that has been worth while, has kept alive the "good as you are" spirit of the old cowboy days, and the ubllity to. have a rollicking good time without a conscious loss of dignity. To be suro a few haven't got rested yet from the hard times, but tho prevailing air of cheerfulness and sat isfaction almost persuaded me to become a native. Honesty Is a virtue taken for grsntcd. Judging from the number of hotel rooms that couldn't be locked. There Is a small handful of men In the penitentiary, but I was solemnly assured that most of these were arrested In transit. Tho men are moro courteous and kind than In some places I could name. I know, because I was foolish enough to carry two rather large size pieces of baggage in my hands. They were not as heavy as they looked, being mostly vanity, but there was always some man about good enough to carry them for me, to say nothing of the eagerness with which they gave up their seats In tho street cars, or the good reports I heard from the legislature regarding tho bills In which women were Interested, or tho attitude of the Btate university toward women. In a certain city of another state a leading official answered my question as to whether the club women had ever undertaken any municipal reforms, by say ing, "The women cf know enough to mind their own business." In Nebraska I have been told more than once by men in power, "The woman's club can have anything It wants." The women have more brains to the acre and more clubs to the town than Is usual, even hi these days of club reign, and they are well abreast with national club policies and politics. The prevalence of "kenslngtons" puzzled mo not a little at first, till I learned that It was a new way of spelling afternoon tea, a form of social life which dies hard among the women. The Mothers' Congress alms to bring about closer and more helpful relations be tween the homo and the schools, and so on reaching a town I headed straight for the school house. The "little red school house" of our daddies has grown to noble propor tions in these days and there Is nothing to Indicate that it has stopped growing. Whatever criticism may be made of our public school system it Is not a fixed and rigid, nor dead, nor yet a dying Institu tion, but very much alive and plastlo enough to adjust Itself to the changes in our social and in dustrial life. I was Informed everywhere I went that Ne braska has the smallest per cent of Illiteracy of any state In the union, and I surely didn't find anytiody who was unable to read and write, except the babies, and they take to learlng like ducks to wator. It Is fairly startling to one wio nas been out of school work ten or fifteen years to see the ease and understanding with which the little ones ' get to reading in that way which seems so much more, like play than work. I couldn't he'.p draw ing a comparison with ' the dreary struggle of mastering the old New Kngland primer. There are a gratifying number of first-class kindergartens In Nebraska and their influence has reached well on Into the primary work. The sehoots are mostly unrter tne manage ment of energetic, red-blooded young men who haven't forgotten how a boy feels. The state superintendent has a few gray hairs, but they evidently Indicate wisdom und not age. The university ranks high In brains as well as foot ball and pays as much at tention to life os to books, managing to keep In close touch with all the educational work of the state, giving and getting in good measure. The normal schools, too, ure up-to-date In Ideas and methods. As elsewhere there Is a big feminine ma jority among teachers nnd pupils. Thero are women who have been teaching twenty and even thirty yenrs, und calmly tell you so, probably enjoying the involuntary ex clamation, "You don't look it." No woman ever lived to grow old who didn't appreciate that kind of 11 compliment. Such brisk, trim, motherly-wlso women they are. It Is a fresh wonder every time I enter a school room how the cure of children develops a wemnn. The trouble at homo is that the house cares nre often so exacting they fairly drive tho children out of sight and out of mind. I see these women In the primary rooms putting wraps nnd rubbers on tho llttlo ones, wiping away tears, sharing Joys, settling difficulties, watching over health and personal habits, und so on up through the grades, encouraging and stimulating the dull pupils, directing and cheering tho bright ones, thinking out special methods for special cases, teaching ethics, not out of a book, but by constant practice, and all with infinite patience and kindness. i I I 1 Mt-- ' ..'A i ;i"5;l?' Si CARRIE I,. GROUT. No wonder they are often deadly tired, when wo reflect that mothers nre some times distracted to Ill-temper with threo or four, while the teacher seldom has less than thirty or forty and often more. It Is not surprising that such a teacher rules young men with ease. They worship tho Madonna In her. After visiting schools for several years. In several states, the feeling deepens that with nil our loyalty to our free Hchools wo do not yet half realize the value of this crucible Into which our children are poured, that the elements which make for char acter may be fusd In them in the right proportions to fit them for the world's uses. The book work may sometimes get monotonous, but the children never do, and It Is most interesting to wutch the change which takes place In the children from the beginning to the end of school life. Entering as different as the racial elements of the world cm make them, with widely varying environments, "mother's little darling," rubbing up against the child who Is nobody's darling, we find here the nearest approach to equality outside the Declaration of Independence. It Is a true democracy of Ideals, and day by day, little by little, the plastic natures are wrought upon by these Ideals till In the high school we get a fair average of excellence. The standards fixed by common coiftent on the play grounds, the wear and tear of con stant association, tho habits of regularity, punctuality, attention, self-control and re gard for the common welfare obtained, not through fear of punishment, but by sug gestion and tho cultivation of a genuine Interest In the work In hand, go quite as for as the knowledge of the lis or X toward making good, useful, happy Amer lean cltliens. Good as our schools are, they will bo vastly better when wo prop erly nrpreclato their valuo to our clvlllsa tlon, and this will come about only by keeping better Informed about their work. Some day the millionaires will give to ths common schools ns they aro now giving to the universities, realizing that If wo aro to have a worthy superstructure we must first have a fine and strong foundation. . 1 have seen quite a bit of social settle ment work In different sections of tho coun try, but have seen nothing to ci mpard with the efficiency of what Is doing In the Cans and l'ai ille schools of ('mala, and tho llayward school of Lincoln, year in and year out, not only for the children themselves, but for tho ticlghhnrhoi d, and this could be multlplltd Indt finitely by lhi addition of gymnasiums, baths, mur.ual training and domestic silence, us lha teachers will tell you. Too many chl'ilren, especially boys, escape from the reboots fur lack of an equipment suited to tbrlr needs, which tho homo cannot fun Ish, either, and so the lads grudutn from th streets Into the reformatories and prb-oiis. Hut the community In such a caso does not escape from tho expense or responsibility. I have often asked the chlMien how many liked to go to school. It Is always unanimously "Yes" In the first, s coiid and third grades; from the fourth to the sev enth there nro apt to be doubters, and It Is from these grades that truancy Is mot common. In the High scho d the turvlval of the flttcpt show again In the plc.uure taken In the work. In tho old times, when there wero only a few occupations for aiobidy to choose from, only a few studies were I. ceiled. Now when tin re Is such a vailety of In dustries a wider preparation b demanded, and It must tome from the scln ol, for ths home lias less and less to offer In the way of Industrial training. Now, the elertlVO studies, tho sciences, business com sea, manual training, drawing and even musto arc no longer fad-for a day but necessi ties. The children of the primary grade, who made a doll's house that 1 s:tw, deigning and painting the wall paper, making the wooden bedsteads, tables and chair.-', wear ing the matting and rugs for tho Moors and the llttlo towels, hemming the sheets and spreads and pll'.ow slips, mod l!n; of clay the dishes, were laying a ko d nnd wldo foundation for future usefulniss. The school which prepared for patron's day an exhibit of olls!'.od wo ids, i e 'ds of grains and grasses, botanical si c: Incus, Insects, funuus growths and even cpilto a respectable display of stuffed birds and small animals, all obtained In the vicinity, had made an acquaintance of their emlrm ment, which would afford a lasting pleas ure nnd profit. The Indian village, In a bank of sand, with wigwams, canoes, bows und nrrows, blankets nnd moccasins, gave a vlvldnnss to tho reading of "I I'lawathi" Impounds without It. Tho Illustrative drawing In connection with the English work wns a plcusing coulrust to tho old-tlmo "compost tlons." In a few cases I found cooking and sew (Continued on rugo Thirteen.) Occupation of Ping-Yang by the Japanese, March 1 rinoHMMpsiriv' i ft- ' - .v - - JAPANESE! INFANTRY BREAKFASTINO OPPOSITE PINO-YANQ. Copyright, 1304. bv Collier's Weeklv. I iTTTSR n t f ' 1 1 1 r w,ra mnrla Kv T T. 11 I Dunn, Collier's special photog A I ranher with the JarwineaA xrmv In Cores, after the pontoon bridge over the Tal Tong river had been completed and the Infantry began to puss over It Into the city. The Japanese made ring Yang one of their principal military bases in Corea and pushed on toward the Yalu from there. Mr. Dunn was about to Start with this advance when he wrote from Ping Yang, March 6, as follows: "Ex pecting to leave tonight for the north, so pictures for a few days will be delayed, as they have to come back here (Ping Yang) by messenger on foot, then travel to Seoul on foot, a distance of 250 miles or more. Half the messengers leaving us are turned buck by the soldiers, or rather put to work to carry their luggage. It almost drives one to distraction to figure how to get stuff out from here. Money transac tions are worse than anything. The Co rean money Is now taken exclusively, even at a higher value than the Japanese yen; every day there Is a change In value; and money worth $000 one day Is worth In an other city the next day only $0 some times less. My expenses are very high. I have to have four horses In order to get ,' ji ''Tr?lit--f'-'r n ,,,- ' ' ' ff " - .... V n ' ..A I ; '-itlr'sW-V - ' ' it ' r - ,1 v' ' S1 t FIEI-D ARTILLERY WAITINO TO CTROSS THE II RIDGE OVER THE TAI TONQ KlVKlt. Copyright, lttl, by Colliers Weekly. about two saddle and two pack one saddle horse for my Interpreter and two coolies to see to the horses. Tho feed for the horses costs a lot, as everything Is at war prices. One bar of soap yesterday cost GO cents gold. Traveling ahead as I do In order to get good pictures, nnd of scenes not to be made by other photographers for several weeks yet, is very trying. All the roads aro completely blocked and there is no place to sleep. We travel over frozen rice Melds and Ice-covered mountains, sleeping anywhere we may happen to be, nearly freezing every night, but I am getting th stuff ahead of others and am willing to keep pushing on. Tho Japatieso army does not know what to think of my pushing ahead with them without any crcduntials; but I understand there aro many press men In Toklo doing no work and unable to get uway. I am going to keep ahead and get results of tho first land fighting." Ths first detachment of American and European newspaper correspondents to be officially allowed to enter Ping Yang was landed there April 15, six weeks after Collier's photographs of ths Japanese occupation were made.