T II E DAILY NEBRA S E A H BEARG DRIVES VARSITY HARD Rough Edge Are Still Appr- ent on Football Squad) Something Lacking. WORK LONG AND HARD Utilizing to the utmost the little time, left. Coach E. E .Berg is driv. ing hia Varsity football team hard In an effort to put It into shape for the Illinois game Saturday. With the time growing shorter and shorter comes the realization to on lookers that the Husker team Is not In anv shape to defeat Illinois. Something was lacking at the start of the nractice yesterday afternoon The workout was long and string ent for the first and second string men. The edges seem to be rounding off little by little under Coach Bearg's energetic direction, but the tm! status of the team is hard to forecast That is a point which will not be known until after the game this week. Yesterday's practice lasted until fter six o'clock, with the freshmen using Illinois plays during the last hour of work. Practice on the 01 tensive was on the program for the early part of the afternoon, and all energy and drive of the regular line up was concentrated against the sec ond team. "Choppy" Rhodes remains the main show in the backfield, with Frank Dailey coming in for second honors. Rhodes broke away more than once, and looks good at this stage of the game. He has develop ed a hitting power which seems greater than that of last year. Add to this his weight and no little amount of Bpeed and you have one of the mainstays of the Hker back- field. Frank Dailey also looks good. He la a. back who has been working hard, but did not receive a regular berth until after the freshman game. Dailey is lighter than Rhodes, but possesses a push very similar to the Ansley player. Coach Bearg's first string lineup baa chaneed little since he first start ed to pick one, and it looks as if the lineup which will start at Urbana Saturday will be something like this Ends, Joe Weir and Shaner. Tackles, Stiner and Ed Weir. Guards, Raish and Scholz. Center, Hutchinson. Quarterback. Brown. Halfbacks, Dailey and A. Man dery. Fullback, Rhodes There is little doubt but that Ste phens will also get into the game at quarter. Brown can be used at either mutter or half, but it would be hard tJ dispense with either Dailey or Avard Mandery. Rnracue was playine second string end yesterday, with Lawson as his running mate on the other wing. Shaner has been moved to the first string, paired with Joe Weir. The freshmen, using Mini plays, made steady progress through the Varsity line at first, but were stop ped during the latter part of the practice. Wyatt broke away on a line play and scored on the regulars, running through three tacklers from the twenty yard line. After that the yearlings had little luck. Coach Bearg continued the drill on plays after six o'clock. The first string ran signals while the seconds lined uo on the defense against the freshmen. On the second team were Stiner Developing Into Capable Mate for Weir Pi i 111 WASHINGTON LOOKS GOOD Seven Coaches Busy Pointing Seattle Team for Game With Husker. Jimmy Lewis Captains Cross Country Team "Lonnie" Stiner Stiner and Ed Weir were both in the line up at the tackle positions yesterday when the freshmen pulled Illinois plays against the Varsity. Both were out of the regular fresh man game Saturday on account of minor inpuries, but are now patch ed up and are going as strong as ever. Stiner comes from Lombard College Illinois, and it looks as if he has the material for a capable mate for Ed Weir. Sprague and Lawson at ends, Molien and Roy Mandery at Tackles, Krimel- meyer and Pospisil at guards, and Joe Wostoupal at center. The backs were Wickman, Locke, Presnell, and Oehlrich. Of the second string Molzen and Joe Wostoupal seem to be the best hets for reserve linemen. Molzen shows an aggressiveness at tackle, and Wostoupal shines at defensive, roving center. Oehlrich is a reserve fullback, but can hardly be expected to fill Rhodes' shoes, and Locke appears to nave lost his drive. As a passer, though Locke is about as good as there is on the field. Yesterday's practice indicated that more hard work will be in line for the Buskers today. The team leaves Thursday at 4:40 p. m. PACIFIC ELEVEN STRONG SEATTLE, Wash., Sept 29. Sev en coaches, five of them graduates of the University of Washington, are directing the destinies of the Hus kies here, and pointing for the only intersectional battle on the Washing ton schedule, that with the Nebraska Cornhuskers, October 17 at Lincoln This game is regarded as one of the great intersectional games of the season. It brings together two of the leading teams in the Pacific Coast and the Missouri Valley conferences, and should be an index to the strength of the far western teams as compared with the middlewestern. Enoch Bagshaw, a graduate of the University in 1907, is head coach of the Huskies. Bagshaw1 flayed five years of football with his alma mater. As coach of the high school at Ever ett, Wash., he turned out two inter sectional high school championship football teams, one year beating Scott High of Toledo and the other, Long Beach, Cal. Bagshaw came to the Husky school in 1921. From the Missouri Valley came the head line coach, Dorsett Graves, for merly with the University of Mis souri. He is pictured as 'one of the most comical and good-natured coaches I have ever seen," by Roscoe Torrance, assistant graduate mana ger of Washington. Wayne Sutton, freshman coach, was graduated in 1913. He has been with the Huskies for three years. Under Gilmore Dobie, now of Cor nell, Sutton developed into an all Coast end. Dobie considered Sutton one of the best ends in the country at that time. Sutton coaches the Varsity ends during preliminary practice before the freshman report. Ray Eckman of the class of 1922, Walter Dailey, class of 1923, and Abe Wilson, class of 1925, all former Varsity men, are learning the coach ing game by assisting on the Varsity and freshmen squads. C. S. Edmundson, a member of the American Olympic team in 1909, is trainer of the Huskies. He has been with the University of Washington since 1918. "Hec" is a good trainer. He has turned out such national starn as Gus Pope, inter-collegiate discus champion, and James Char teris, holder of the national inter collegiate half-mile championship. A V, .. -TV -I ''. j r"'i : 7 Jimmie Lewi Captain James Lewis of the 1925 harriers. Lewis is a" two letter man in cross country and was credited with the fastest time made in the Missouri Valley last season when he led the field at the Kansas-Nebraska dual meet Lewis is also a two let terman in track, and won the Mis souri Valley indoor Jialf-mile last spring. HARRIERS IN FIHAL. TRIALS THURSDAY Strong Competition, Epcted In Final Tryouti for Croaa Country Team. Final tryouts for the Varsity cross country team will be held Thursday afternoon at 4 o'clock, mere ar nroRDecta for good time being made, according to Coach Henry F. Schulte. Frank Hays was the Iirst man to cross the tape in the run last Friday, completing the course in 28 minutes, 28.5 seconds. The first six men finished under thirty minutes but the course is esti mated to be slightly less than five miles. Lawson and Zimmerman came in fnr a tie for second place, and firaham. a freshman, finished fourth. Lewis, who is captain of the harriers thin season, came in for an easy fifth place while Rcller placed sixth. Coach Schulte would not permit Jack Rosa and Ellis McCartney to run because of foot injuries, but both will be in the final tryouts Friday. Searles, handicapped by illness, could finish no better than seventh Friday but is expected by Coach Schulte to be among the leaders Thursday. Several other men made a good showing last week. Among them are Dexter, Rogers, Arnot, Randall and Kelly. WANT ADS TYPING DONE Call B3592. RIFLB TEAM NEEDS PLACE TO PRACTICE Large Number of Veterans WUh To Try Outj but Gallery Location Not Yet Definite. LOST Fountain Pen. F. C. Wil liams engraved. Return to Nebras kan office. LOST Gamma Phi Beta pin Call F 2989. WANTED Responsible student to nrcranize and manage selling crew at football games. New proposition, fHfc pller. unlimited profits. Write at once for details. Jay Farrell, 1222 N. State St., Chicago, 111. LOST Gamma Phi Beta pin, be tween U Hall and Administration. Name on back, Willie Rogers. Re ward. Call B3627. FRrh NICE ROOMS for Uni girls; also breakfast and six o'clock dinner at 511 No. 16th St. Two blocks from the campus. If you're going to Illinois you batter end me your clothe today or tomorrow o to he them ready. Soap Special Pure Cattile 3 bars for 25c Floating Castile Larger 22 oa bar 27c, 4 for $1 Meier Drug Co. Always The Best 123(1 O St. We Deliver HUSKERS TO SLEEP IN CARS Nebraska rifle team prespects which at the beginning of school ap peared to be the best for several years, are taking a downward slump as a' result of the closing of the gal lery in Nebraska Hall, recently con demned. A suitable location for the gallery has not yet been found. The stadium is under consideration but it is feared that it "will be too cold in the winter time. The greatest number of veterans ever trying out for places on the University team are on Captain Eggers' list of candidates this year. Several of the men made expert rifle men trade at the Fort Snelling sum mer camp. Currier, Hrasels and Fredrichs fired at Camp Perry na tional competitions. The other veterans are all good shots, and with the new rifles recent ly added to the gallery, indications are that high team scores will be made, provided a gallery is located in time for ample practice. "Pullman Hotel" Will House Team In Columbia Hotels Have No Room Left. COLUMBIA, MO., SEPT. 29. Owing to the fact that the Ki wanis clubs will hold a convention here at the same time that tha Ne braska football men arrive for their came with Missouri, Director C. L. Brewer has made arrangements with the Wabash Railroad to have a "Pull man hotel" for the Cornhuskers. Diners wffll be attached to the Pullman cars and the Nebraska men will sleep and eat in their cars dur ing their stay in Columbia. Wisconsin Instructor Visits Here. B. S. Spieth, M. E. '16, assistant professor of steam and gas engineer ing at the Universsity of Wisconsin, called at the, office of Dean 0. J. Ferguson last week. He is taking a year's leave of absence from his duties to engage in mechanical en gineering practice. There's A Scarf For Every If i Costume Si N The scarf s F J There's a scarf for sports, Li for tailleur. for warmth, i for evening, i) delicate, or. h bundly. 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