THE DAILY NEBRA S KAN Select your distinctive Christmas EEfiKSECV ONLY THREE OF SIX CUE WIZARDS REMAIN CE-9APIN BROS. 127 So- "A St gifts at the Victor V. Krause Art Shop, 1331 N street. BOXING AND WRESTLING LESSONS 20-for $3.00 City Y. M. C. A. lOWCrS ALL THE TIME Hi 1 rJV) ft- n r- 1 n) A GOOD WATCH IS CHEAP You pay from $25.00 to $73.00 for an overcoat tliat may wear three seat on s. Why he'sitate about paying as ouch tor a watch which will wear a life time? Your inspection solicited. TUCKER-SHE AN Manufacturing Jewelers and Opticians Eleven Twenty-Three O Street Get your Lunches at the City Y. M. C. A., Cafeteria Plan 13TH ANO P Quick Service Orpheum Cafe Speolal Attention to University Students SPECIAL PHOTOS FOE XMAS BLAZEK PHOTO STUDIO 1306 O St. Upstairs GILLEN 'S JOHNSTON and APOLLO CHOCOLATES Always fresh at the TERMINAL DRUG STORE II w ill rni YOU to consult SW- tir i it nAU us about your Y'.jy eyes. My advice 1 s unprejudiced and costs you nothing. W. H. MARTIN, O. D. Optometrist EYESIGHT SPECIALIST 1234 O St. Opposite Miller & Paine's CLEANING SERVICE You ncoil not luive an ex tensive Wardrobe with our prompt serviee at hand. Phone ns any day if want garments' cleaned pressed by evening. W do it and do it right. yon and can LINCOLN CLEANING! & DYE WORKS 326 S. 11th Lincoln, Neb. LEO SOUKUP, Mgr. Copies of OLD PHOTOS FREDERICK MACDONALD 1309 O Street, Room 4 Phone L4022 II Li Xmas Neckwear Thousands of beautiful ties in pretty holiday boxes. Regular 50c shape and qual ity. Splendid values at 4.w in Ope at All Times JT W&i ' wl? f Y t" WO- d Ell 1 HOPPE, BILLIARD CHAMPION OF WORLD Six mimes of cueists ;iro pointed to in Hie billiard hall of fame, 'Willie Hoppo, Oeore Sutton, (ieorpe Slos soii. Juke Schaeffer, Maurice Vignaus and Frank Ives. Of the six but three are living, Ives, Yignaux and Schaefcr having passed on. Slosson, nn old man. is no longer in the running. Re cently Iloppe put Sutton in the same class and today the world's balkline champion at all distances stands in a class by himself, without a single balkline player being nble to give him n good battle. Sutton has been n great player and is the only one who ever defeated Iloppe for the' 18.1 crown. Sutton is still a skillful billlardist, but Iloppe has Improved so stendily that the veteran looked like a novice in their recent meet. Holds World's Titles. Iloppe holds both the 18.1 and 18.2 world's titles. The 1S.1 game Is en tirely too difficult for even the cham pion, and lias been discarded. Iloppe took the 1S.1 crown from Yignaux in Paris when the Frenchman was f8 and Iloppe 40 years his junior. Sutton wrested this title from Iloppe, but the latter regained it ut the expense of Oru Morningstar. From almost infancy Willie's life has been devoted to billiards. lie was able to beat his father ut pocket bil liards before he was six years old. When he was ten he averaged 13 at This year's new 2 :05 pacers number 22. St. Louis is estimated to have 50,000 ten-pin enthusiasts. Cornell university has a new rifle rnnge with 12 targets. English racetracks may try the pari mutuel system of betting. Jersey City, N. J., has turned Reser voir park Into an athletic field. Many professional athletes think they are amateurs when they get their pay checks. Pennsylvania has enacted a law giv ing protection to the bear. The bag limit is one bear per year. Susquehanna's recent defeat of Buck nell was Its first gridiron victory over that Institution In 21 years. Jimmy Isamlnger, baseball writer, has been appointed sporting editor of the Philadelphia North American. Syracuse Is to have a new racetrack costing $75,480. which will be the scene of future Grand circuit and other races. Dick Iloblltzel, first baseman of the chnmplou Red Sox, Is assisting In the coaching of the Colby College football eleven. SPORTING WORLD 14.2 balkline. Tim when he beat Yignaux it was natural to say, "I told you so." Compared to Ives. Iloppe has often been compared to Frank Ives. Ives was a meteor in the billiard zenith that flashed into view 20 years ago, but he had nothing In common with Iloppe. Before he be came a great cueist Ives had tried liis hands at many things, while Iloppe has been at the green cloth game his entire life. Previous to becoming a billiardist Ives had been a jockey, bi cycle rider, racetrack bookmaker, roll er skater, in fact a jack-of-all-trades. Ives was a wonderful shotmaker, one of the most spectacular in the history of the game, but he never reached the proficiency of Iloppe in handling the cue. Iloppe's billiards are the same to him as religion. Although he -probably knew Sutton could not give him a hard battle in the St. Louis match, Uoppe trained faithfully for the con test, starting the middle of August. First he played alone on a set sched ule of each day and In the last two weeks of his training took on "Chick" Wright, a well-known San Francisco cueist, to polish off his preparatory work. While he loves to golf, Hoppe refuses to play the game for fear it would spoil his touch with the cue, ns it is more rigorous exercise. " 'Freddy' Welch is champion be cause he boxes with his head," says an expert. Never heard of him butting anybody. University of Utah. Salt Lake City, may next season book gridiron contests with University of California, Nebras ka and other big elevens. ' Rumor has it at Salt Lake that Cliff RIankenship, deposed manager of the Salt Lake Rees, has purchased enough stock In the club to gain control. August Herrmann has been chairman of the nntlonnl baseball commission since the American and National leagues formed their peace agreement In 1903. George Washington university will hold Its annual Indoor track meet In Convention hall, Washington, D. C, March 2. 1017. Allan Sothoron. Portland Pacific Const league hurler, who won 13 straight games last season, has been drafted by the Cardinals for next year. A new trap-shooting club hns been formed at Mlnakl, Ont., with 30 mem bers, and plans have been mapped out for a two days' registered shoot to 1917. Annie Oakley, the famous shot, was fifty years of age in August, and on her birthday she broke 93 out of 100 targets. Carpentier Famous in War. Georges Carpentier, the . famous French pugilist, who Is an airman at tached to the army, has been proposed for the Military medal. Carix-ntier al ready has been decorated with the War cross. Get the money and supplies to the risoners by paying your pledge At Student Activities or Daily Nebraskan Office When ycu Ivy a shoe you have it f.i'.cd arid ycu id c it because it looks vvcIS ai.d f eeb comfortable. But a careful selec tion of ycur corset i; much more important. You must .feci com fortablc end your corset must fcrm a fashicnabls smooth base for your gown. , Hack Lace Front Lace aic designed with in fini;c care for every type cf figure, and nat' urally the best of fa brics, boning and other materials h used in their design, for they are high class corsets. But a Redfern is not an indulgence. It is a healthful safeguard. You will find it all you expect the best corset to be comfortable, fash' ionable ard serviceable. From Three Dollars Up For Sale by Miller & Paine INC. 0nd 13th Streets Europe T ONCE 3 il m Jin. LET A NEBRASKAN WANT D do It for you. Find you employment hlr your help for you find that lost artlcls p"t you In touch with a trade on that motor cycle. Old Book, eta See T. A. Williams, basement Adm. Bids;. 12 words 10o. 'jo for aaoh additional word. S Insertion 25c ill'1 : 1 Mlli' : sTZS IN CLUS the outside shirt and undcrdrewcrs are one gamicnt. Tliis means that the sh'rt can't work out of the trousers, that there nic no thirt taih to bunch in scat, that the drawers "st.-.y put," to say nothing of the comfort and economy of saving a g u-mcnt. OLUS is coat cut, opens all the way down c'.oied crotch, closed bade See illustration. For go!;, tennis and field wear, wc recommend the special attached collar OLUS witTi regular or short sleeves. I'.xtn sizes for very tall or stout men. All shirt fabrics, h smart desif-ns, inducing silks $1X0 to $10.00. CIX'S one-pioce PAJAMAS lor loonclm, tming ind comfortable ilrrti. Mn.!c on t!ic mme primri'-le u OLUS Sblm coat cii, clot' d back, cloud crouh. f.o ct--Luj3 lo tikhtoa or coma loose. Sl.iJ to (3.50. Ask your dealer for OLUS. Dooltlet on request. IE !!' I "i !:' Pi 'I II 1!:' Ill 'I! i l l Fill mm " '!!ll'!!!!!,;!'l PKILLIPS-JONES 1193 Broadway, Load Wmm iilMj . a.. done msMsHskiaaksk. iiair" is ftMsiiiiMsasii irr"isi - - that blessed pipe with good old "Tux" and knock the daylights out of care and woe and trouble and all the rest of that tribe. The Perfect Tobacco for Pipe and Cigarette "Tux" is made of the finest selected Burley full of gimp and go and get-there liveliness. But it's a smooth, mellow, fragrant smoke the "Tuxedo Process," which is often imitated but never equalled, takes away all the bite and parch and Jtaves- it mild, sweet and cool. Try or. j tin of "Tux" you'll find it will comfort, refresh and satisfy you as no other tobacco can. YOU CAN BUY TUXEDO EVERYWHERE Convenient, giniine wrapped, J tnoisturc-proot pouch . . , Famout jrr-en tin with gold 1 f lettering, curved to tit pocket 1 UC In Tin IumiJorj, 40c end 80c I t UumiJtri, 50c end 90c -;;E AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY ' w.yr-.jt.Lti-" . M m 'I'M I il I till' il! COMPANY, Riders New York forr FrhraleWomet Up " 'Wok) 3 V r r i,