THE DAILY NEBRASKAN HUSKERS WIN INDOOR MEET Fire Record Broken at Kan s City Meet) Nebraska Get Five First. POINTS IN LAST EVENT GIVE HUSKERS VICTORY KANSAS CITY, Mo., March 9. fSnpHal The Dailv Nebras- kan.) Nebraska won the Mis souri Valley Indoor track meet here tonight when, tied with Kansas at 30 points, Wirsig tied for second In the pole vault and cinched the meet for the Huskers. Cornhusker men who won first place are as follows : Locke, 50-yard dash. Weir, 60-yard low hurdles; 50-yard high hurdles. Lewis, half-mile run. Nebraska beat Kansas in the mile relay, taking first place. Teams finished as follows : Nebraska 32. Kansasi 30. Missouri 24. Kansas Aggies 14. Grinnell 8. Oklahoma 8. Washington 3. Drake 2. Ames 0. A last-minute member of the Ne brasks squad at the indoor meet at Kansas Citv was Edward Beckord Honker half-miler, who was ill with the criDDe early in the week. oniric recovery brought him into the fold, and strengthened the Nebras ka representation at the indoor meet Beckord is one of Schulte's best mid' die-distance runners, and his loss on account of sickness would have been greatly felt by the team. 400 SEE OPEN GRID WORKOUT Stadium Gates Are Thrown Open for First Time Since Bearg Took Charge: BROWN AND STEPHENS MAKE LONG PLUNGES Four hundred spectators viewed the first open football scrimmage on the practice field at the Btadium yes terday afternoon from 8 to 6, when two varsity teams under the direction of Coach Bearg clashed. Over thirty players got into the fray during the afternoon. The scrimmage was not a regula tion game and first one team and then the other was given the ball to advance down the field. The Red team was given the ball first and after some plunges by Oehl rich, Brown and Stephens, Oehlrich went over the line. The Red back field was working especially well, with Brown and Stephens making some nice open-field runs. Near the end of the fracas, Brown ran ,30 yards around end, but the Reds were penalized fifteen yards on the next play for holding. Brown made them back with a twenty-yard run and Presnell went through the line for a touchdown. The White team was on the de fense most of the afternoon. Hutch inson at center was the mainstay of the blonde jerseys. He broke through time after time to throw the Red backs for a loss. Voris played a good game in the White backfield as did Armour. The lineups for the game: Reds Fob. Whites Dover le J. Weir Fischer It Casay Roller lg Rck 7uver C Hutchinson J. Kuska rg Grow Randels rt Dunker Lawson re Peaker Stephens qb Shostak Brown lh Armour Presnell rh Wickman Oehlrich fb Voris Red substitutes: Bass, Simmons, H. Kuska, Wilson. White substitutes: Raesch, Gross, Mclntyre, Douglas. BASEBALL I1E1I ARB COIIIM IHTO FORD Workout Will Be Held at Rock Island Field Park If in Condition. Baseball practice was held Satur day afternoon, when the men, after warming up, had another session of hitting. Most of the men are rapid ly rounding into form and the prac tice was improved. If the ground at Rock Island Park is in condition, practice will be held there. . The pitching staff is made up of two pitchers from last year, Lang and Rhodes, although Rhodes will not be out until after the California track meet, and Edwards, Ash, Hig gins, Raun, and Doehlmer, who pitched for the freshmen last year. Behind the plate, Coach Kline has Hubka and Lang of last year, Jar dine, of last Tear's freshman team, and Ed Hughes, Dick Poole and Al Raun who showed up well in this position in interfraternity basebalL ' The infield is not ! strong, for the short-stop and thrd baseman art not back. First and second buses are filled by Vols and aJnda, captain of the team last year. -An-drsason, Eevis, ' Thompson, Gibbs, Dresher and Schrum are all trying cot for infield positions. In th out field are C.V..s, Eckstrom and Pac ken, all regulars of last year. Track is about the only Univer sity sport that is engaged in all year round in some form or other. The fall season sees the cross-coun try runners jogging for miles on the road to Belmont over which the dual cross-country runs are held during football games, the runners return ing to the stadium between halves. Then there is a lull of only a few weeks between the close of cross country running and the first official call for indoor track. ' Even during that time the more eager tracksters are working out on the indoor cinder path under the stadium, building up endurance power for the more stren uous season of competition in later winter and spring. With the increasing amount of in terest in track and field athletics, and the better facilities being pro- K. D. RELAYS WILL BE HELD APRIL 18 vided all over the country for Indoor track, the indoor track season with its great meets like the Illinois re lays, K. C. A. C. meet, Valley meet and others, is becoming almost as important as the outdoor season. In fact, some of the best running ever seen in America was done on indoor tracks this winter in the races in which the Finnish runners, Nurmi and Ritola, competed with America's middle-disatnce runners, Hahn and Ray. Back again to track as an all-year-round sport, the indoor season is be ginning to assume an importance of its own, instead of, as hitherto, a mere means of preparation for the outdoor season in spring. And this means that just as much work and preparation in being put into the win ter indoor track sport, as into the outdoor season. Will Be First Major Outdoor Track Carnival of Season in Middle-West. LAWRENCE, Kans., March 21. The last of the big indoor meets for middle-western track athletes has been held, and the eyes of the cinder fans, as well as those of the athletes and coaches, are turned toward the third annual University of Kansas relays to be held here on April 18. This will be the first major outdoor track carnival in the Middle-West this season, and will give coaches their first real line on the abilities of their men for the outdoor season. Advance word from coaches in sures an entry list at the Kansas re lays of more than a thousand ath letes and among them practically all of the middle western Olympic-team stars who still remain in collegiate competition. When the outdoor season is well in swing, it continues with unabated interest until the very last days of school when the great conference and intersectional meets are held. Even that does not close the track season, for after the college meets are over the various amateur athlet ic clubs of the country like the Bos ton, and the Illinois Clubs have meets in which not only the stars of the current college year compete but also the stars of college days gone by. Joie Ray, Bill Hahn, and numerous others are examples of college track men who keep up active participation in the sport after graduation. RIFLE TBAUS FIRE IH CLOSING IIEBT Reaulla of Matches to Be Known When Record from Other School Arrive. The Nebraska rifle teams complet ed the final targets of the season in indoor intercollegiate rifle match shooting yesterday. The men's rifle team was shoot ing against St. John's College, An napolis, Md., North Dakota Aggies; Rhode Island State College; Agri cultural College of Utah and New York University. The women's team spent a busy week In contesting dual matches with the University of Syracuse, Univer sity of Kansas, and the University of Maine. They also forfeited a match to the University of Arisona. The results of the matches will be deter mined as soon as the reports from the other schools are received. The ten highest scores on the men's rifle squad, determined by the aver aged shooting from the prone, sit ting, kneeling, and standing positions, are as follows: Lammli, W. T 374 Roberts, D. P - 371 Shafer, H 370 Treadwell, P. E 368 Currier, R. M 360 Platts, E. L 356 McLellan, M. L 352 Kossek, B. F. 347 Dover, W. D 344 Russell, R. F. 339 Total 3581 In the match with Syracuse, the highest scores on the women's team, shot from the prone position, ar i follows: McCarthy, 97 Abbott, D I Cox, E - I Lawless, J - Foster, C 83 Total - 472 Airainst the University of Kansas, the women' ten highest scores, shot from the prone position, are as follows: McCarthy, M - 7 Abbott, D Cox, E 4 Foster G 3 Kidwell, K 3 Zimmerman 91 Jensen, K 88 Sbinely, E. 79 Hermanek, M - 78 Total 901 The scores in the match against Maine, shot from the prone and sit ting positions, are as follows: Foster, G 189 Abbott, D - 189 Cox, E 189 Lawless, J 188 Kidwell, K 185 Total .820 The free medical clinic of the Uni versity of Wisconsin treated more than 6,000 students last year. FRIDAY THE THIRTEENTH SNEAKS BACK FOR A RETURN ENGAGEMENT Your old fountain pen made a big blotch on your paper on Friday the thirteenth. It blot ted again almost every day since and tearing that date out of the calendar will not remedy the situation! Avoid this annoyance by taking your pen to Latsch Brothers at 1118 O street and let them make the proper adjustments on your pen. Do this right away for tomorrow it will blot again! Don't forget! Adv. eirvice and atisfaction rjp HE Daily Nebraskan is always striving to give service and satisfaction, to both the reader and the advertiser. The Murray Mat Service has been purchased by this publication in order to fulfill a long felt need of the adver tisers that is to furnish them with mats and cuts which will typify that which the college student expects to see in a college publication. This service will also benefit the readers, in that it will illustrate in a much better way the merchandise which the reader is desirous of buying. For the advertisers we have also created a copywriting department which will write copy to fit the needs of the advertisers and will also suggest type, borders and layouts. This is a service which very few college publications furnish. 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IN THE LIGHT OF REASON, AND IN AMERICA, AND IN 1925 SOMETHING FOR NOTHING IS A MYTH, LIKE A PRETTY GIRL WHO DOESN'T KNOW IT, OR A FLASK TO CARRY TEAI YOU GET EXACTLY WHAT YOU PAY FOR NO MORE. AND IF YOU TRY TO BUY CLOTHES FOR LESS THAN FAR QUHAR PRICES, YOU'LL GET LESS THAN FARQUHAR QUAL ITY! PAY ENOUGH FOR YOUR NEW SUIT AND TOPCOAT TO GET GOOD FABRICS DEPENDABLE TAILORING GOOD STYLE AND LASTING SATISFACTION. YOU'LL FIND SUCH CLOTHES HERE NOW AT $30, $35, $40, AND $45 AND THEY'RE CLOTHES AND VALUES YOU CAN DEPEND ON AS NEBRASKA MEN HAVE DEPENDED ON FARQUHAR CLOTHES FOR TWENTY YEARS! COME! FAR( NEBPASKAS UHARS COLLEGE CLOTHIERS