THE DAILY NEBR ASKAN TRACKSTERS TO START WORKING Indoor Cinders Are in Shape for Workouts to Begin After Vacation. SCHULTE HAS HARD ' TASK BEFORE HIM Upon the opening of school follow ing Christmas vacation, the Husker track men will start training in ear nest for the indoor season. This year the Husker team will be in a position to train in spite of the severe cold. The indoor track will be in rood shape by the first of the year, and stand is the room under the east heated. The Husker prospects as thevup from t),e numeral winners to take Hein, the Husker midget sprinter, has been working in the sprint events all fall, and will show some class when the 1925 season begins. In the hurdle events, the Husker prospects are fair. Ed Weir, foot ball captain, is a hurdler of the championship type. Though a big man, he has lots of speed and the usual "Schulte" hurdle form. Numeral Man Compete. Beerklo is also a letter winner in the hurdle events who will be back this year. Besides, there is Daily, Mandnry, and Reese, last season numeral winners who will give any one a good race. 'Red" Layton, the Husker Olympic star, will be missed in the short races this year. "Red" ran the sprints and hurdle with equal skill. His biggest races for Nebraska were in the quar ter-mile and the mile relay. There should be some good material coming look from the distance are only fair, and Coach H. F. Schulte has a hard task in filling the gaps left by gradu ation last spring. The Huskers will be weak in the field events this year, and in the half-mile and two-mile running events. '"Sed" Hartman, winner of the shot-put at the Drake and Kansas relays on several occasions, will be missed when the scores of the meets begin to come in. He was also a con sistent winner in the discus and jave lin events. Need Jumper. Howard Turner's absence in the high jump means a hard place to fill, while the broad-jumpers will have trouble making leaps equal to the record set by Hatch. Hatch was also a sprint man of ability. In the SSO-yard run, there arc no letter-men returning who might be able to fill the place of Gardner, former captain, or of Higgins, also a letter-man in this event It is prob able however, that Lewis, harrier captain, will be run in this event in stead of in the mile. Two-milers are also scarce. Slem mons of the medical college has com pleted his three years of competition, ar.d no man of quality has yet appear ed to fill his shoes. Strong in Sprints. In the sprints, the Huskers are strong as usual. - Captain Crites can run any event from the 440-yard dash on down the list, with winning form. Besides that, he is capable of ( running both of the hurdle races Curtis won the 440-yard dash at the Missouri Valley indoor meet last Feb- ruary. Locke, winner of the Missouri Val-! ley sprint championship, will be back with perhaps more speed than ever, j the place of Whippcrman and Lay ton, on the relay teams this year. In the milo run are Ross, and Lewis, cross-country men and track letter-men, who won consistently last season. Besides there are some new cross-country men of ability. Law- son Hays, and McCartney, are all prospective nulers. In the two-mile, Zimmerman and Cohen will be out to win. Johnson and Scarchette are harriers of ability who will try the two-mile run in the spring. Cleatoa Is Back. Gleason, who broke tho Varsity record in the pole-vault last spring, will be among the best in the Valley this season. Davis, also a letter-man in this event, will be back. Rhodes has a large field of activi ties in track and the pole-vault is one of them. "Choppy" is also a high jumper, and broad jumper of ability. In the weight events, there will be material from the football players to select from. Krimmelmeyer has been working in the weight events this fall, while Pospisil can throw the discus over ISO feet consistently. Molxen is another prospect in this branch of the sport. Meyers is a man of ability in the weights. Coach "Indian" Schulte has an enviable track record at Nebraska. During six years of coaching at the Husker school, he has won the Mis souri alley outdoor cnampionsnip for the past four years, and has placed second with his team in the saus - - Christmas Stockings The Christmas stocking the world wide symbol of Christ mas Gift Givirg. Christmas Stockings the gift that will be welcomed by every feminine heart, Such a gift may be as ex quisitely dainty or as practical as the taste of one who gives or of the one who receives may dictate. Gift Hosiery of all hosiery mu't be dependable, which is sufficient incentive for choos ing from Rudge &. Guenzel's wida variety of dependable stocks. Never before have they shown such a large variety of beautiful silk Hosiery as is now on display. The wide variety, the beautiful qualities, the di versified colorings will be of special interest to those who wish to give hosiery. A few of their interesting items are: Pointex Heel Silk Stock ing Sheer chiffon with silk tops and feet. The knitting is a work of art, pair $5 McCallum Chiffon Hosiery Gun Metal with a black Bilk heel splicing. This gives a strik ing effect to the hose and is very smart in appearance, pair $3.95 Silk Hosiery Sheer as a spider's web de scribes this Hose. These can be had in black or gun metal Tith very fine Paris Clocking, pair (330 "Onyx" Sheer Chiffon Lace Clocked and Lace In serts for afternoon and evening in these attractive stockings at pair $2.95 to $&,50 All Hosiery will be attrac tively boxed without extra charge. How About A Black Onyx Charm for his WsJdemere chaia with his Fraternity Crest on it? Good looking and quite the thing. $2.50 to $15.00 y i i i w i University Jeweler Eat. 1871 117-119 So. 12 The College Press THE ACTIVITY HOUND. We are told by some that unless one engages in some activity on the campus other than the pursuit of learning, one loses at least half of the joy of attending college. And to prove that time sper.t managing the glee club or being chai man of the refreshment committee of the junior prom is not wasted, statistic are forthcoming which show that Peter McDuf fus, who was graduated , in 1913 and who held those positions, is better off, financially, than Don Smith of the same class who did noth ing but go to school. The fallacy of the proof is that Peter McDuffus owes his success not to the training he received managing the glee club, but to his own ability, which made him manager of the club and made him succeed outsido also. The second condition does not depend upon the first, worthies. Now it so happens hat one goes in for activities for one of two or three reasons. One is a poser, per haps, and would be in the public eye. Well, one attaches one's self to the staff of the Booster's Club, or joins indoor meets since they were first started. In his policy of "Athletics for Everyone" Schulte has developed many men of good ability in every event, and some stars along with his all-around good teams. As usual he is pessimestic as to the 1925 track prospects. the Lowell Lit Or one is forced to go cut for some job by one's fratern ity. The prestige of the old chapter must be kept up, you kno. Or one really believes the hocum that being in activities in college helps prepare one for the stern battle of life. One or the other of these engaging ideals is the whip that keeps the ac tivity man with nose to the grind stone long after the first glow of be ing in activities wears off, and In his heart he is sick of the business which robs him of time to get the best out of his carefree college days. Ohio State Lantern. Mechanical Engineering, '17, and former Professor J. E. Rasmussen. Agree on Removal Of Kickoff Point ANN ARBOR, Mich., Dec. 18. Rnninvnl of the kickoff point from midfteld to the forty-yard line has been agreed upon by members ot tne Kauffman Revisits Nebraska University Vincent E. Kauffman, Mechanical Engineering, '19, called at the office of Dean O. J. Ferguson of the Col lecre of Ensrineerinir Thursday. He is now connected with the Baker Ice Machine Company of Fort Worth, Texas. Coworkers of Mr. Kauffman from Nebraska are McKinley T. Clark, Mi Ihe finest materials, expert de signing and careful workmanship make every Stetson a masterpiece. STETSON HATS Styled for young men To our Host of University Friends: A Merry Christmas and the Happiest New Year you've ever known! FARQUHAR'S WANT ADS LOST A Parker fountain pen Mon day, December 15, in S. S. 102, S. S. corridor, on R St. between 12th and 13th, or on 13th between Q and R. Reward. Call B3477. LOST Three small padlock keys on a small ring. Return to Nebras- kan Office and receive reward ...ii machos' association, Field- IVWfMW ing H. Vost, Michigan athletic di rector and chairman of the commit tee said hore today. The committee is to report in Now York Decomber 29. At the meeting of the coaches' association Yost said he was opposed to any limitation of the number of forward passes a team cn make during a game. A new ruling removing the prlvi. lege oi rumiiiiK wun a recovered fumble and instead giving the ball to the team on the spot where it was rccovereu, was suggested Yost. by CHRISTMAS CANDIES LINCOLN, NEB. C. E. BUCHHOLZ, Mgr. 1 J L 11 Merry Christmas Greet Him With Gifts From the Christmas Store THE SAFE THING to do is to buy a Man's Gift from a Man's Store. It's very logical, isn't it, that a Store which caters so successfully to his preferences the other 364 days of each year should be the most practical place to select Christmas Gifts? We've not only planned extensively, but have borne in mind a range of prices that will lend to your each individ ual requirement Need we suggest shopping early while the stocks in this store are most comprehensive. Tenth and O Street SPEIERS Lincoln, Nebraska Pmhlukeii the imternt uf Elec trical Development by m Institute that will he helped by what' ever helps tie Industry. Good news for all lovers of graphic pie Graphic pie enough to satisfy the hunger of a life-time : no end of graphic mountains to scale and toboggan down. Tliat's what the man who loves to analyze graphs and statistical symbols can look forward to when be comes with the electrical industry. Economicstudy is oneof many branches in this broad field. If you have thought of electricity as limited to engineers, this other side of the picture will interest you. The commercial organization with its problems of distributing, selling, adver tising; the manufacturing end with its opportunity for trained technical men ; the legal and accounting branches all this and more totals electrical industry. It may pay you to keep this in mind against graduation. Vestertt Electric Com patty Sim 1S69 maim mnd diitnhuten if cltctrktl equipment Nwmhf It n