THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Will . Run Telegraphic M eet VALLEY SQUADS WILL COMPETE Hunker Freshmen Will Try for Honor in Second Contest Against District Yearling Teams. Kansas Aggies Will Compete With Huskcrs in Track Meet DEFEATED BY DRAKE 79 to 52 Is Score of Wire Meet of Ust Week; Show Weak ness in Century, High Jump and Javelin. The second freshman telegraphic meet of the season will be run off today. The Hunker frosh will com pete against the yearling squads of the Valley. The Nebraska freshmen were defeated last week by the Drake freshmen in wire meet, 79 to 62. In the Drake meet, the Huskers were blanked in the century, 220 and quarter but showed strength in the distance runa. The freshmen are also weak in the high jump and jave lin but on the rest of the field events, split even with the Bulldogs. The calibre of the competition which the yearlings will face today is very high and results can only be conjectured at. Davenport is a Husker ace in the dashes who may tally some points. Wyatt was high point man in the Drake meet, taking firsts in the two lowest dashes and the high and low hurdles. Searles and Stiner tied for second place honors, each taking two firsts. The men, who will compose the squad for this afternoon's meet were chosen from tryouts held for the Drake meet. The relay teams were made up according to the results of the dashes in the Drake meet The time of the events and the men who are entered In them are as follows: 100-yard, 4:10 Presnell, Beck with, Davenport, Wyatt Fisher. Mile, 4.20 Keller, Roberts, Moore, Searles, Johnson, Oehlerking, Reller. 220-yard, 4:30 Davenport, Pres nell, Glasgow, Hendricks. 120 hish Vim-HlpR, 4:40 Voris, Leffter, Blium, Wyatt Sprague. 440-yard, 4:55 Davenport Glas gow, Cronk, King, Mousel, Wilson, Pate. Dexter. SL0 low hurdles, 5:05 Voris Lef fter, Wyatt, Petersen, Sprague. 880-yard, 5 :20 Randalls, Roberts, Johnson, Hunter, Kelley, Fetter man, Dexter, Freaderich, Mousel. Half-mile relay, 5:40 Presnell, Pate, Chambers and Blium. MUe relay, 6:00 Johnson, Fetter man, Hoffman and Davenport Discus, 4:30 Durish, Stiner, Raisch. .Tallin, 4 :30 Stevens, Surley, Stiner. Shot put 4:30 Stiner, Durish, Lewis, Raisch, Presnell. Pole vault, 5:30 Watke, Town send, Chambers. High Jump, 5:30 Hulsker, Blum, Mills, Stevens. PREPARE FOR DDAL L1EET WITH AGGIES Place Stress on Distance and Field Events in Monday Practice. The Husker trackmen spent a busy afternoon yesterday working cut in the various events in prepara tion for the dual track meet to be held at Manhattan against the Kan sas Aggies next Saturday. Special stress was placed on the distance and field events in which Nebraska was weuk in the recent dual meet with Grinnell. The lat ter part of the afternoon was spent on the hurdles. Ed Weir, whose leg injuries received at the Drake relays have forced him temporarily from the hurdles, was on the track for a light workout yesterday. He will probably be able to take part in the meet Saturday. Varsity work on the track will be light today as the freshmen will be striving for records and first place in the annual Missouri Valley telegra phic meet which will be held this afternoon. I 'Y ' v, II ;V i- - P i t XX fT KENNETH KNOUSE Kenneth Knouse is the Aggio captain this year. Liks the Husk er captain, he is a quarter miler. He is also a member of the Aggie mile relay team which is expected to show up well at the triangular meet Saturday. Knouse was de feated by Rooncy of Kansas in the Kansas-Kansas Ag dual meet re cently in the 440, but is doped to be a strong contender at the triangular. AUGUSTUS BA Augustus Balzcr i another Ag gie star. He holds the Missouri Valley record for the indoor two mile run and is rated as one of the best distance men in the Val ley. His time at the Kansas-Kansas Ag dual meet for the distance was 9:45.2. At the Grinnell-Ne-braska meet, the winning time was better than ten minutes. JOHN GARTNER John Gartner is one of the Ag gie field event stars. His spocial ty is the discus heave although he can also put the shot creditably. He made a winning mark of 125 feet 5 3-4 inches for the discus when his team mates met the Ag gies a short time ago. Point Totals of Saturday's High School Track Meet GROUP THREE Grand Island 38 Omaha Central 30 Lincoln 16 Kearney 14 Omaha Tech 12 VI Norfolk 11 Hastings 9 Alliance 5 Fremont 5 McCook 3H Columbus 3 Beatrice 2 Broken Bow 2 Creighton Prep 1 Fairbury, North Platte, Omaha North, Omaha South and York failed to score. GROUP TWO . Cambridge 36 Gothenburg 22 Tecumseh 21 Wilber 17 Ord 13 Havelock 9 Crete 8' Geneva 6'a David City 6 Fullerton 6 Aurora 5 Blair 1 Callaway 1 Ashland, Auburn, Friend, Lex ington, Neligh, Seward, Sutton, Tekamah and University Place failed to score. GROUP ONE Fairfield 17Vs O'Neill 14 Mi Tilden 14 Dodge 13 DeWitt 11 Indianola H Baker Rural 10 Ansley 9 Pawnee City 9 Nelson 6 Swanton '. 6 Arlington 5 DuBois 5 Tlainview 5 Clay Center 3 Dawson 3 Oakland 3 Indianola 2 Edgar 1 Glenvil 1 Mil ford 1 Pilger 1 Redfern 1 Tobius 1 Bradshaw, Clatonia, Crab Or chard, Elmcreek, Exeter, Harvard, Henderson, Randolph, Stapleton, and Tamora failed to score. BASEBALL SQUAD HITS WEAK SPOTS Attempt to Strengthen Hitting and Base-running, Lax Points at Ames. The Husker baseball squad held a slugfest against the freshmen team in an attempt to strengthen their hit ting and base-running stride which appeared rather lax in the games with Ames last week. A heavy schedule lies just ahead of the baseball squad in the last two weeks of the season. The Sooners will journey to Lincoln next Friday and Saturday, May 15 and 16, to cross bats with the Huskers. They will be followed by the Kansas Ag gies on the following Monday and Tuesday, May 19 and 20, who will at tempt to avenge their double defeat of a few weeks ago. The Huskers will complete the present schedule by journeying to Ames to make amends for the fifteen inning defeat suffered at the home grounds last Monday. The Senior Prom of the University of Minnesota will be held in the capitol building; this year. It is planned to bank the capitol halls with flowers, in a fashion similar to the way in which it is done when a governor is inaugurated. South Dakota State College cele brates a Hobo Day. Both men and women turn hoboes for the occasion, the men "by sapping their life blood to gi-ow beards," and the women by t- vii,i? the bobbinz shears a week's Say-off. An oM fa -.ioned "spelling bee" is : r.:t on by the English depart- t si C i r Agricultural College. Five Qualify For Varsity Golf Squad Five men qualified for the Varsity golf squad yesterday afternoon, E. E. Bearg, who is acting golf coach, has announced. Twenty-seven holes were played in the tryouts ar.j the squad was picked from the best scores turned in for the afternoon. Six men will composa the squad and four men will be chosen from this number to make up the team for matches. The men who qualified are Joe Brown, Harold Palmer, Fred Vette, Don Miller, and George Ready." The men will play 54 holes this week at the Country Club to deter mine who compose the team for the first match and the order in which they will play. The first meet is scheduled with Drake at Des Moines Friday. A dual meet has also been arranged with the University of Kan sas the following week here. '-i The senior council at Syracuse Uni-vei-sity denied the petition to admit thti debute manager to the council on the ground that further addition to the present body of twenty would make the body unwieldy and inefficient Tom Poor, Olympic star, will also be on deck Saturday afternoon. Poor is without doubt the class of the Val ley when it comes to hopping over the bar. His team-mate Graham is a close second in the event, their records being only an inch apart. Gleason, Wirsig, and Rhodes will face competition also. They will have to clear the rod at better than twelve feet, probably, in order to beat the entries from the two Kan sas squads. All three of the Hus kers have done this however. Wir sig went 12 feet 7 3-4 inches after the meet with Grinnell. Rooney and Engel of Kansas are star entries in the quarter. Scher rich and Dailey are doped to beat them, however, and Captain Crites of the Huskers runs 8 consistently pretty 440 which ought to be in the money. Track fans always watch for the relays and the mile class Saturday ought not to disappoint anyone. All three teams entered are pace-makers and their limes are very close as judged by Drake, and Kansas Relays. One of the big races of the year will be between Locke and Fisher GET A Memory Book AT of Kansas, at the triangular meet Saturday. Fisher is one of the best sprinters in the Valley, running the century in ten seconds consistently. Hein of Nebraska and the Hawaiian flash from Kansas Wongwai are also expected to put up a real battle in the dashes. Graham, Kansas captain, will run Ed Weir a real Tace in the barriers at the meet also. Not only does the Kansan hurdle but he can high jump 6 feet 4 inches and broad jump lot iL Guards oi New Arrow Collar Today over twenty-three feet He will fur nish Beerkle and Dailey some compe tition In the lows, also, if dope works out. Kimport is one of the Aggie stars who will appear at the meet He Is a star miler and half milcr. Watson of Kansas Is another sterling entry in these runs and Ross, Lewis and Houdcrscheldt will find keen compe tition waiting for them In these events. Bearg Gives Basket Men Stiff Drill Coach E. E. Bearg put his squad of spring basketball candidates through a stiff drill in fundamentals yesterday evening. Floorwork on the offensive and continued practice on the short pass featured the evening workout. More men are urged to turout regularly for spring practice. Dur ing spring practice much time can be spent on important fundamentals and points of the game which cannot be taken ud when the regular season rolls around. Equipment can be "se cured at the Armory. j The practices are held from 4 to ( 6 o'clock on Tuesday and Thursday; afternoons and from 7 to 9 o'clock' on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, evenings. Will Meet Oklahoma In Two-Game Series The Hunker pastimers will face tho University of Oklahoma team this week end In a two-game serlos. The Sooners are leading the Valley and the games are expected to be cf high calibre. The Saturday morning game will be called at 10 o'clock as the triangular track meet with Kan sas and Kansas Ag will be held in the afternoon. Both games will be played at Rock Island park. Student tiekcta are good for admission to the games as well as the track meet. Denver University has lot con tract for a half million dollar stad ium to be ready for partial use thin fall. The military band of South Dakota State College gave its twenty-third annual concert last month. Freshman women at the Univer sity of Hawaii are not permitted to speak to men on the campus during ( hool hours. This rule does not p. ply to professors. WANT ADS MEN and WOMEN distribution relig. ious and educational publicntions. Guarantee Salary. L-8605. LOST Large mannish ring, blue flat stone It fancy gold mounting, valued as an heirloom. Reward. Call Jo Ann Westgate. F-8118. EMPLOYMENT Largest organisa tion of its kind will have openings, In scviral states, for college men. L-5004, Tuesday. TEACHERS wanted for all lines of teaching work. The Stewart School Service, 138 No. 12 street Room 383, Peterson block. 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NEW SWEATERS AND SPORT HOSE FOR WEAR WITH KNICKERS THE SUDDEN POPULARITY OF KNICKERS HAS CREATED A BIG DEMAND FOR SMART SWEAT ERS AND SPORT HOSE BOTH IN SETS AND INDIVIDUAL PAT TERNS. WE HAVE THEM BOTH! BEAUTIFUL FAIR ISLE PAT TERNSPLAIDS, CHECKS, FAN CY MIXTURES IN ALL SHADES TO MATCH ANY COLOR KNICK ERS. A LOT OF NEW THINGS WILL BE IN TOMORROW, BY EXPRESS. BETTER GET IN NOW. SWEATERS $5 TO $10 HOSE $2 TO $7 KNICKERS -$7.50 TO $10 The radio station at the Univer sity of Minnesota has entered com petition with other stations for the number of messages relayed in a period of a month. LATSCH BROTHERS 1118 O St. FOR A GRADUATION GIFT BnaDMBMB Hotel D' Hamburger 5c Buy 'em by the sack 1141 Q St. LONG S and FOUNTAIN LUNCH g Special Dinners, Fountain Service COLLEGE BOOK STORE aavttff MftMtff If Ittff Iff fffllf Mf f f MM ? ttflf faflf Ifff Ifff Iff If tffffff f Mf III Mf f "Mil .M 'f tl f 1 1 M ?M1 HfMMF t Wt?tl??9ff f t?ItF If f????Mf i