Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 19, 1914)
m j.iT. jaitfr-ynEwtrwue-rafai "L. ' Ji." -.!-.' gjffjIWWiJBtPPtel M -.if i-,,,,,! q. . w i ' I m ii n i if H '" in I ii 'IKtfcwwiwWM ipi II twr m ., ii in, i ""S " THE DAILY NEBRASKAN ummmmmmmmHvmim m ntm It n COLLEGE Atheletic FOOTBALL SCHEDULE 18 NOW ALMOST COMPLETE Manager Hamilton Has But One Open Date for 1914 8eason. Man ikm V O Mnmllton has nlmoBt completed t ho hchedulo for tho 1914 lootball nqii.l Only one dato Ih open and tli i probabl) will bo ft homo gnmo with Washington or nomo other Hinaller school Three big games will be played on Mc(ok. Missouri. Ok l.iliotna and the Kansas Aggies Tho loam will vlHlt tho Ichnboda at To peka. tlr CornhiiHkers at Lincoln and will lnade tho Drake camp at Dob MolncH The season will opon with the William Jewell team at Lawrence. Here are the datea arranged by M inaKi-r Hamilton Oitolxr 4 William Jewell at Law- i cm i ()( tuber 10 oM'ii October 17. Drnkv ut Dob Moines October 24 Aggies at Lawronce Ottnhor 'M. Oklahoma at Lawrence November 7. Washburn at Topoka November 14. NebraHka at Lincoln. November 21 Missouri at Lawrence luih Kansan DRAKE-NEBRASKA HOLD INDOOR MEET BY WIRE First Event of Novel Meet Will Be Contested Every Man In School Eligible to Compote. n Intel collegiate moot in which tci) man In s hool mnj compote is fii novel idea evolved by Coach (Jrlf lltli wliuli has taken form in the hIi ipc of an indoor meet with No bi.iska University One event will bo ht Id i at li da during the next two weckh 'I he utoidd for each event will be ex handed daily by telegraph I'odav the firm event of the meet, the high jump will bo held Any man in the Umvtratt) will bo ellglblo to (oniH'te In order to onter it Ih only ue(esnar that he appear at tho gym n hhim at 4 p m today. The contest "ill bo held on the dirt lloor and tho liir will bi at II i .st placed at a height it which any min (nn clear it (!rad- Miss Charlotte Whedon Student of Louis Challf of New York Aimouiu i"i lnsata in the New Social DaiKt't. Maxixe Tango Ono-Stop lleHitatlon Waltzes, beginning Sat urday 3 .!0 p m at Whltton Car liHle (SyninaBlum Kor Information call Phono 111287 PANTS! DoYouNoedaNsw Pair ? ? ? Come in here and match up that good coat and vest. Prices ranging from 95c to $4.45. A special offering at $2.45 KLINES Opan Evenings 1132 0 St. SPORTS Editor. ually the bar will bo raised until tho laBt man 1b olimlnatod. Tho marks of tho thirty boat Jumpers will bo aver aged and that average will conatituto Drako'8 record in tho high Jump At the Hamo time a similar content will bo going on at Nebraska. To night Coach Griffith will wiro the Drake mark to Coach Guy Reed of Nobraaka and he will in turn wire back Nebraaka'a mark in tho same event Tho winnorf the first event will bo announced In tomorrow'a Del phic. Tomorrow at 4 p. m. tho shot put will bo conducted in the Bamo way and various other track and field events will be included for tho noxt two weoks Tho toam winning the moHt ovonta will win the meet. Coach Griffith Originates Idea. Tho idoa of a moot in which all the men of the University may have a part has boon evolved by Coach John L Griffith of Drake in an attempt to answer the criticism often made, that college athlotlcs served only to de velop the few experts to tho detriment of those most In need of development In the proposed plan every man in school will lx able to enter his fa vorite events There 1b hardly a man In school who will not be able to place among tho thirty best men in any one event There are absolutely no restrictions as to entrance Indicates Average Strength. The records secured from the meet wll stand as a fail Indication of the notmal average athletic ability for tho men of the institution Comparison of the recotds made bv the two schools, Nebraska and Drake, will be of considerable interest, while there is n possibility foi much competitive en thusiasm to be aroused for the meet Drake Delphi NEBRASKA HERE THURSDAY. Varsity Seeks Revenge for Double De feat at CornhuBker Camp. Hard practice Is the program for the VarBlty squad in preparation for the game with Nebraska on the Drake floor Thursday The team arrived home from Ne braska Sunday morning somewhat the worse for tho two-game series They made an unexpected showing, how ever, particularly in the first game, which they lost 33 to 110 The score was 12 and 11? at the end of the first half, but Nebraska forged ahead In the, second session The second game was lost 31 to 10, but the team was dis turbed somewhat by a shift from the usual playing order Drake Delphic CORNHU8KERS LEAD THE VALLEY BASKETBALL TEAMS Has Won Two Games and Lost None Kansas Ranks Second. Including tho games playod Friday and Saturday, tho basketball situation In tho Missouri Valloy Conference is: Teams Won LoBt Pet. Nobraska 2 0 1000 Kansas 9 1 .900 Missouri 4 4 .500 Amos 4 0 .333 Kansas Aggies. ... 2 4 .333 Washington .... 1 f .166 Drake 0 4 .000 This table takes into account the following games: Nebraska whipped Drake Friday and Saturday, which wore tho first Conference clashes for tho Cornhuskers, Kansas has beaten Washington four times, the Tlgors twice, and tho Aggieb three times, Missouri took three games from Ames and one from Washington; tho Kan Baa Aggies defeated Ames once and tho Jayhawkera once; Ames licked Drake twlco, the Aggies once and the Tlgors once; Washington came out ahead of tho Tigers on one occasion, 1 tory Missourian. OMAHA X-UNI TEAM QOE8 DOWN TO DEFEAT Another Scalp Added to Nebraska's List Starting Off the Final Tour Right. Nobraska defeated tho X Uni team of Omaha by a score of 40 to 19, Tues day ovonlng. at Omaha. Tho game was played at the Y. M. C. A and was fairly easily won As will bo seen by the scoreboard, most of tho game was played by subs The score In detail is as follows FreoTh'wB Coals F'ls Mis'd M'do Haskell, rf . 2 2 0 0 Hanzlik. rf . 5 2 0 0 Thelsen. If . . 1 1 4 5 Hugg, If 1 3 0 0 Myer. c .... 0 0 0 0 Flnloy, c . . 5 1 p 0 Hawkins, rg . . . 2 2 0 0 Rutherford, lg . . 1 2 0 0 Howard, lg . . . 1 1 0 0 Totals .18 14 The X-Uni team made 3 goals on Tholsen 1 goal on Mers 1 goal on Flnley 1 goal op Hawkins 2 goals on Howard H goals pluB 3 free throws A WAY OUT OF IT '1 don't know what I am ever go Jng to do with that boy of mine He s careless and absplutely recklesB of consequences, and doesn't seem to care for anyone " "Good' You can make a taxlcab drlvei out of him " JOHN I. NOLAN. One of the Progressive congressmen from California Is John I. Nolan of San Francisco, In which city he was born rorty years ago. He Is an Iron molder by trade. JIM - if ilL r wttkf' ;'' Mesa HmaUHHIy few! ????????????????? WHO WHAT WHERE HANDY DIRECTORY OF THOSE WHO ALWAYS HAVE SOME- THINI YOU NEED Bank Carry Your Bank Account VVltH Urn CITY INATIOINAL 0INK CORNER ELEVENTH AND O 8T8. Coal J. M. CLARK, '10. Flnrkt FtawrtAII the Tim. CHAPIN BROS. I lUIUli 137 South Thlrtonth. Telephone B2334 notomle r Printing Nia Location 4i N. ilth Street Watch This Column Grow! JOHN F COINROV, Harvard Graduate Who Appears atthe Orpheum This Week, has Only Complete Set of Medals Granted for Saving Lives In the U. S. Medal Given Mr. Conroy by Carnegie Fund Lincoln this week is the temporary home of a man who claims the dis tinguished honor of possessing the only complete set of medals granted publicly in the United States for sav ing lives Tho man is John F. Conroy, Bos ton's noted swimming instructor, who with hl$ models and dilng girls, ono of whom is his sister, and the other a well known actress in water scenes and horsemanship moving pictures, is appearing in a spectacular aquatic act at the Orpheum. Mr. Conroy possesses four medals and has a record for having saved 137 lives from watery graves. He has one of the five medals in ex istence granted by Congress for life- VCew Lindell Ball oozm JUNIOR HOP February 28 th, 1914 $1.25 See Us First. Let Us Sm Tob First. B329I Consult with FREDK. MACDONALD Concerning KI-AHHI.IOIItS. V1KWS 4l AMATEUR KIAIHIIINO. 31H Drownull Illk. Phone MODS GRAVES saving, and also has ono granted by the Carnegie hero fund commission, another by tho United States Volun teer Life Saving Corps and another by the MassachiiBottB Stato Humane So cioty. The Carnegie medal was granted Mr. Conroy upon application of resi dents of Manche8tor-by-the-Soa, Mass., after he had savod tho Ufo of Walton 8cull, son of James P. Scully, Pitts burgh millionaire, under most sensa tional clrcumatancoB during a gale. Mr. Conroy was for ton years phys ical director of municipal gymnasiuma and public schools in Boston. Ho also was Instructor in heavy gymnastics at Harvard and holds an A. B. degree from that institution. y 1 V tat y