VARSITY LINEUP CHANGED AGAIN Condition of Locke and Mie- lenz Still Bad But Both May Get Into Game. RHODES AND MYERS ARE SHIFTED TO BACKFIELD More changes in the Varsity line up were made at practice Thursday night, when Rhodes, end, was shift ed to left halfback and Myers, who has been playing end recently, was again placed at fullback. A. Mandery was at right half and Bloodgood was at quarter. Oeden and Hubka worked at guards. J. Weir and Swearingen later took these positions. Captain Ed Weir and Molzen were at tackles Kase later was given a tryout in Mol- sen's place. Collins, who was on the Varsity squad last year, was put in at end to take the place of Rhodes. The mov ing of Rhodes to halfback was neces sitated by the injury of Locke and Mielenz, first and second string half backs. Robertson and R. Mandery alternated at right end. Hutchinson was at center. The numerous changes in the line up made it impossible to determine the lineup that will start the game with Illinois Saturday. There is hardly a position where there are not a number of men of about equal ability in a close contest. Working at a defense against a passing game was the program for the evening. The freshmen were called in to demonstrate Illinois pass- With Coach Frank, who scouted the Illinois game, as the passer, the Freshmen hurled passes to all parts of the field. The Varsity had fair luck in breaking them up. Drilling on the passing game offensive and defensive has constituted a large part of the work for the past week Locke and Mielenx were in suit Thursday but their injuries were still bothering them. Neither got into any active practice. According to Train er "Doc" McLean, they will be able to start the game Saturday if called upon. Mielenz was more seriously injured than Locke. One light practice Friday evening is all that is left. This practice must be light for no chances can be taken on having more men added to the list of the injured 6n the day before the game. Cross-Country Men Will Compete for Positions Thirty or more athletes will gath er today at the start of the 220-yard straight-away of the Memorial Stad ium track, waiting for the starter's gun. For the past four weeks they have been training for this test: to see who will represent their univer sity in the cross-country runs this fall. They will race over the five mile course today, from the Stadium and back into the Stadium almost a half-hour of battle with each other for the first places and the right to represent Nebraska. They will come staggering in to the finish, exhaust ed. In a similar fashion they will represent their University in the four or five conference meets of the sea son, fighting as the football team fights, for victory. OKLAHOMA MEETS KANSAS SATURDAY Jayhawks Open Season With Fairly Green Team ; Nine Letter Men Back. WANT ADS WANTED Assistant barber from 4 to 6:30 daily except Saturday. Call at Rayners Barber Shop, 119 No. 12th. LOST Leather billfold containing money, DeMolay card, and rail road pass. Reward. Call B3844. LOST Waterman Fountain Pen. Reward $5.00. Call L8909. LOST Heavy, plain, dull gold band bracelet Reward. Call B4953. LOST Dunn Fountain L9680. Pen. Call LOST 1923 Senior pin. Call L9465 LOST Kappa Sigma pin er call B2193. Find- LAWRENCE, Kans., Oct 2. Kansas will take the field against the Oklahoma A. and M. football aggre gation, October 4, with a green squad. Only nine letter men are back on the squad of forty-two, and of this forty-two only twelve have ever participated in a Valley game. Captain Harold Burt, fullback, is perhaps the outstanding man of the team. He made a name for himself last year as one of the hardest hit ting backs in the Valley. Eldon Haley, guard, is the only other two year man cn the squad. The other letter men are Kene Hart, Alex Hod- i a m n 1 1 ft . 'iL 1 ges, naUDacKs; iteginaia enmn ana Wiliam Mullins, tackles; Ted Sanborn and William Anderson, ends; and Ed ward Halpin, guard. 'We may have a green team, but it will not be a poor one," said Coach "Potsy" Clark, when asked about the ream's prospects. "We are handicap ped by lack of experience but what material we have is mighty good." Clark has been drilling his men behind closed gates this last week and is expected to spring some new plays on the Oklahoma invaders Sat urday. The men who are showing up best for berths on the eleven are: Ends Sanborn, Anderson and Testerman; tackles Reginald Smith, Mullins, Hardy, guards Halpin, Snyder, Ha ley; center Davidson, Russell, Smith; halfbacks Zuber, Joe Ander son, Hart, Lindley; fullback Burt, Coulter; quarterback Walters, Wellman. WRESTLING PRACTICE STARTED THIS WEEK Work-outs Planned for Mon day, Wednesday and Fri day of Each Week. Wrestling practice started this week and will continue until after the wrestling season. Work-outs were held Monday and Wednesday of this week, and will continue on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday of each week hereafter. According to Dr. R. G. Clapp, professor of physical education and coach of the wrestling team, men may work out any day of the week, The work so far has been light, said Dr. Clapp, and will increase daily. Men who intend to try out for the sport are urged to get into prac tices as soon as possible. Men can be used in all weight classes, from 115 pounds to 175 pounds. Unless they are out for football, all candidates for the teams are expcted to attend practices regularly. "Chuck" Brown, Tackle, Coming With Illinois NEBRASKAN College Press Freshman Squad Will Take It Easy Tonight The Freshman Football squad was again put through an intensive drill in passing, blocking, and charging Thursday evening. The squad was then divided into three teams, each one running signals. The plays were very similar to the ones that niinois is expected to use against the Varsity next Saturday. The yearlings were sent to the Stadium for a short scrim mage with the Varsity, the second string men also getting a chance at the Cornhusker subs. No scrimmage is planned for the Freshmen tonight. Commercial Club Will Elect Officers Soon New officers of the University Commercial Club will be elected at a meeting to be held in Social Science 305 at 11 o'clock next Tuesday morn ing, according to an announcement made yesterday by Bennett S. Mar tin, present president of the club. Committees will also be appointed and plans made for the initiation of new members. 1 "Chuck" Brown, veteran tackle on the University of Illinois team, is shown above. Brown is known as one of the most reliable tackles in the middle west With plenty of weight and enough speed for his position, Brown has ru ined the hopes of many teams. Hall, the other tackle on the team, is also a veteran, and little success is predicted for the team that tries to plunge off tackle. UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA Mystic Keys, honorary sophomore society, held formal pledging Mon day for thirty-four second-year men. Initiation of new members will be held immediatey and election of offi cers will take place at the same meet ing. Mystic Keys was tounaea in 1908. UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI More than twenty-eight students tried out for dramatic positions at a meeting of the Missouri Workshop, dramatic organization at M. U. The tryout consisted of a pantomine showing one person in three differ ent emotions, and a reading or cut ting from a play. College Football Teams All Over Country to Play This Week-end When the sun sets next Saturday nearly every football team in Ameri can collegiate circles will have been in action. At the head of the list of games scheduled for this Saturday is the Nebraska-Illinois game, in which last years Big Ten champions will meet last year's Valley cham pions. It is the second consecutive meeting of the two teams and will be watched closely by followers of the gridiron sport throughout the United States. Two other Valley teams, Missouri and Ames, will meet Big Ten teams this week, the Bengals playing at Chicago University and Ames taking on the Wisconsin eleven. Of the re maining Valley teams, Drake Univer sity will play Utah at Salt Lake City, Kansas will meet Oklahoma A. and M. at Lawrence, Kansas State plays Emporia, Oklahoma will be seen in action against Edmond Normal, Washington will play Drury at St Louis, and Grinnell will play Cornell (la.) on their home field. In the Big Ten, Purdue and Ohio State will furnish the only confer ence tilt, while the rest of the teams will all have formidable opponents. Notre Dame will open the season against Lombard, a team which held them to a 14-to-0 score last year, and from all indications has a strong team again this season. A number of eastern grid teams will be seen in action Saturday, but none in that section will rival in im portance the Illini-Husker game. The big three schools have been wary in meeting Virginia, Yale playing North Carolina in the famous Bowl, and Princeton playing Amherst Colgate, Nebraska's eastern oppon ent this year, will open their schedule with a home game against Alfred Uni versity, a school famous for its Arts College, but of little importance in past years in reckoning eastern cham pionships. Other games of interest this week are: Auburn vs. Clemson; Califor nia vs. St Mary; Centre vs. Valpara iso; Columbia vs. St Lawrence; Geor gia Tech vs. Virginia Military Insti tute, Pensylvania vs. Franklin and Marshall; Penn State vs. North Caro lina State, Pitt vs. Lafayette; Navy vs. Williams and Mary, Army vs. St. Louis, Washington vs. Willamette. Illinois will bring to Nebraska one of the most formidable backfields ever developed at that institution, al though reports from the Illinois camp state that Mcllwain, plunging half, and Dancier, half, will be unable to play because of injuries and illness. Grange has been used in punting and passing formations this week prepara tory to the Nebraska trip. THAT GREAT HEREAFTER. Every once in a not-very-long while some magazine or other betters the public mind with an account of the relative earning power of college graduates and people who started thAir business careers from child hood. The Open Road is the latest It not only shows that college men earn more material reward in life beyond college, but it goes to the unusual labor of charting the earn inw nowpr of men who have been "prominent" in college life, ath letes, presidents, scholars, editors, etc. The editorial staff of the Dart mouth resents this. The Open Road has the downright nerve to tell us what salary we will achieve in a cer tain period of years, and they prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that edi tors of college publications do not make very great progress. Our resentment is not based on be ing told that we cannot do as well as class presidents or athletes or such. The real cause of our froth is beine told the exact amount Yes, sir, we will undoubtedly make just so much in dollars and cents. If we are going to fail, the magazines of the nation might at least have felt us a pleasant, surprise and not doomed us to an existence of precluded lack of success. Our friend, the Open Road, tries to sooth our hurt feelings with the reminder, "Better to have been big in college than never to have been big at all." We, however, have not much faith in that We do hope that our old pals who do make big successes will still remember us. Perhaps we will be able to borrow from them. The Dartmouth. THAT MISSING LINK. Science is now believed to be clos ing in on the long sought "missing link." It is reported that a whole tribe of these mysterious creatures, half man and half ape, are inhabit ing the small islands in the vicinity of Sumatre. The Dutch government has organized a scientific expedition to visit the region. If one of thse wierd individuals can be captured we would have the solution of many of the controversial theories of evolution, such as wheth er or not the "missing link" wears grey flannel trousers. It would be rather nice for the "link," too. Think of all the publicity he would get. And after the scientists and the re- norters were through with him, he could go to San Francisco and easily get a Job on one of her monarchial dailies covering California football games. The Daily Callfornian. Informal Party for Faculty Is Tonight An annual informal faculty party will be given by Chancellor and Mrs Averv at Ellen Smith Hall tonight. The party is given for all members of the teaching and administrative staffs, extension, library, and relig ious workers and their wives or hus bands. It will begin at 8 oclock. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN According to the rough estimate of campus officials, the average stu dents education at Michigan costs him between $750 and $1,000 per year. Education lor the medical stu dent comes the highest, while the expenses for the students in the Arts and Sciences College seem to ap proach the minimum estimate. Spare Time Money Christmai Greeting Cards offer an un- uaual opportunity to earn $36.00 to (60.00 weakly axtra. Weekly payment. Sample free. Selling experience unneeea ary. Get detail:. Write today. Dept. 820. John A. Hertel Co., 118 W. Wash ington, Chicago. Hotel De Hamburger 5 c Buy 'em by the sack 1141 Q St. T. 1 after every meal Cleanses tnoath aad teeth ana aids digestion. Relieves that over eaten feeling ajd acta tnoath. Its 1-a-s-t-I-n-n flavor satieties the craving tor sweets. Wrtgleys Is donate valae In Ine Benefit pleasure it provides. StalmJ in it Parity Package. (iiiiuHiuiiniiuiiiimiilittiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiuiliiiiiimimiiraMU.iiiii4tiiHiiiiiuiiiiiuiii , C? Ill I aaaVTT at m. m m ms sm a us a i na L J ROOTERS! Keep Your Throat in "Hollering Good Shape" THE GAME! Use RECTOR'S Antiseptic Throat Pastilles rriLy H-joa S.W.C0R.I3OAN0 RSTS LINCOLN. NEB. Lindell Party House FRIDAY NIGHT Original Rag-A-Jazz all-star eight-piece orchestra SATURDAY NIGHT THE NEBRASKANS Avoid the Rush- , Lots of Parties Friday and Saturday. Big football game. Big crowd. Have that week end suit or suits pressed and put in shape right now and hang it up in your room. All worries are then over Varsity Cleaners ROY WYTHERS 316 No. 12th SL !!!lllli!llil!II!III!IIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIII!lllll!!IIII!llllS!lII!l!!II!!!I!l!lIll I iCa JLi j l JIV Jl ly. Facing The Campus College Book ore EoHo Lon Prop