THE DAILY NEBRASKAN RECORMiDMBER hi; SET FOR MEET Eighty-seven Schools Enter Twenty-fifth Annual Track Contests DIVIDED IN THREE GROUPS A record list of entries has already been received by the athletic office for the twenty-fifth annual track and field meet of the Nebraska High School Athletic association which is to be held here Friday and Saturday. More schools are expected to enter before the meet. A total of eighty seven schools has been entered against last year's record-breaking list of eighty-one. Teams will prob ably start to arrive here Thursday although most of the men will get here Friday morning. The increase in entries is due to the entrance of a larger number of schools in the small-school class; the number of schools in the second and third class has fallen off slightly but . there are several schools in these classes which are still expected to send in their entrance. Group I has fifty-two entries this year, compared to forty-one last year. Group II fell off from twenty-one to nineteen and Group III fell from nineteen entries to sixteen. The grouping of vthe schools is according to enrollment, as follows: Group I consists of schools whose enrollment is less than 150, Group II consists of schools whose enrollment is between 150 and 300 and Group III consists of schools with an enrollment of over 300 students. Preliminaries Held Friday The preliminaries in the field events and dashes will be held begin ning at two o'clock Friday and the finals will be held Saturday after noon. An admission .of twenty-five cents will be charged for the prelim inaries and fifty cents for the finals. The high schools will be guests of the University athletic association at the Drake-Nebraska meet Saturday morning. A list of entries to date follows: CrauD III Schools with an enrollment of S01 and up. Beatrice Lincoln Columbus North Platte Fairbury Norfolk Falls City Omaha Central Fremont Omaha North Grand Island Scottsbluff Hastings University Place Kearney Omaha Tech Group II Schools with an enrollment of 151 to inclusive. Ashland Humboldt Auburn Minden Aurora McCook Central City Nelifth Crete O'Neill Cambridge Seward Callaway Schuyler , David City Teeumkeh Gothenburg Wymore Havelock G?oup I Schools with an enrollment of 1 to Inclusive. Anseimo Litchfield Arlinrton Nelson Bit Springs North Loup Benedict , Oakland Bradshaw Orleans Clay Center Peru Prep College View Pilger Comstock Pawnee City Dawson Palisade DeWitt St. Edward DuBois Stanton Danbury Sterling Eagle Syracuse Edgar Swanton Exeter Tobias Fainield Table Rock Friend Tilden Goehner Tekamah Guido Rock Trenton Harvard Walton Herman Wsuneta Hershey Wilber Hartington Winnebago Hildreth Walthill Leigh Wakefield IN THE VALLEY . . By . . JACK ELLIOTT A peculiar incident happened at Manhattan last Saturday when the Aggie school was participating in a number of athletic events. Just about as many Missouri Valley teams were present on the Kansas State athletic fields as there would be at a meeting of the Valley schools. Ne braska, Kansas University, and the Kansas Aggies met in a triangular track meet, Iowa State met the Spring U the Season of the year when a man buys everything New from his underwear to his overcoat from his hat to his shoes. And speaking of Shoes, we're showing everything New thrt is shown under the Sun, sad they're not Style Fads, they're Style Facts. Our Style Experts at the Factory go over the whole Style Story and separate the fiction from the facts, pick out the New Lasts and Leathers in all the New Shapes and Shades, ia all the New Designs and Pattern and present all the Mew Style Facto u And the Regal Price One TYttt, : n.oo for all Leathers in all Jjtyics, U xv recognized fturn Coast to Coast as a New Standard of Value ia Shoes. ILLEGAL' SMOES On Display tr llr. "Cash" SSrykw I'M Delia TKata House Haggles in a double header baseball game, Drake met the Aggies in a Missouri Valley golf math, and Grin nell played the Aggies racquet men in a Valley tennis match. If Mis souri, Washington, and the two Okla homa schools had been present it would have been a real meeting of all the Valley schools. The Kansas University baseball nine succeeded in winning a long drawn out game from the Mizzou Tigers at Lawrence last Saturday, taking the r-onrt of Missouri 14 to 9. The Jayhawkers collected 18 hits off the three Tiger hurlers. Seven errors by the Missouri nine helped the Kansas with their victory. The Stillwater Aggies won a pair of games from the Oklahoma Sooners last week in the Missouri Valley base ball race. To date Oklahoma has won six and lost three, and Kansas has won six and lost four. The Sooners meet the Jayhawkers this week to decided who takes the lead in the race for the1 title. Rev. Alva Martin, former North western star, and Captain Ray Con ger of the Iowa State team will run an 880-yard -exhibition race at Ames Saturday. The special half-mile race will be the feature of the Veishes, Iowa State's exposition. The Martin Conger dual will be the last appear ance of the Cyclene track captain before a home crowd. CHANGE MADE IN WRESTLING MEET First and Second Team Idea Dropped; Only One Dual Will be Held Thursday Afternoon Coach Kellogg of the wrestling de partment announced yesterday a change in the wrestling schedule printed in Tuesday's Nebraskan. In stead of having two dual meets on Wednesday and Thursday, only one meet will be held. This will be run off at four o'clock Thursday in the Coliseum. The first and second team idea was also abandoned as it was found impossible to make fair choices. Ex-Captain Brannigan and Captain-Elect Luff have each chosen ten men from among the wrestling classes and Coach Kellogg announced the following pairings: Brannigan team: Luff team: Kish Ecklund Thomas Hurren Brown Karrer Thornberg Svoboda Bishop Luff Simic Toman McBride Davis Sulso Reimers Bennet Lnndy kelson Buchannan Pennoyer Mallette I F W A TO INSERT A WANT AO The Daily JUST CALL B6891 BUSINESS OFFICE BRING YOUR AD TO THE OFFICES IN THE BASEMENT OF "U HALL" There will be no weighing in as men of equal weight were paired. The bouts will be of seven minutes duration. To determine the winning team the following point system will be used; 3 points for decision, 5 points for a fall, and 5 points for forfeit or failure to show up. Coach Kellogg urges all contest ants to be at hand promptly at 4 o'clock Thursday, especially those who will be eligible for varsity com petition next year. ' The meet should prove interesting to all who are interested in wrestling, for the outcome of the meet will un doubtedly be an influencing factor in lining up varsity material for next year. It will also be a chance for budding mat artists to pit their prowness against the letter men. NET SQUAD AIMS FOR VALLEY MEET Bears Send Players Through Long Preparatory Work-Outs; Will Play Wesleyan Thursday Coach Bearg has been sending his racqueteers through strenuous work outs every day on the indoor courts in preparation for the annual Mis souri Valhy tennis meet which will be held here the 20 and 21 of May. The Husker net squad was to have played matches with Missouri and Washington but no dates could be agreed upon. The Wesleyan team has been substituted and matches have been scheduled for May 12 and 16. The Methodist squad defeated the Husker net men in an early season practice match. The University Place school has a great player in Mahood, former state champion. The Cornhusker racquet wielders are steadily improving under the tutorage of Bearg and should be in good condition for the Valley meet. The Valley meet will bring to Lin coln numerous well-known ' tennis stars. Among them will be Cogges hall pf Grinnell who in 1925 was the second ranking junior player in the United States. Struble, another star from the Pioneer school, will be one of the veterans. The Oklahoma Ag gies have a great player in Barnes, southpaw racquet wielder, who re cently defeated Heacock, Husker No. 1 player, without little effort. Fred Royer, last year's Valley singles champion and finalist in 1925, will be here under the Oklahoma colors. Charles Sigloff, the St. Louis bright light will again perform for the Bears. A senior girl at Simpson College earned her way through college by peeling potatoes at the dormitories. The faculty of Valparaiso Univer sity has outlawed all secret and Greek letter organizations. Y O U N IN Nebraskari AND ASK FOR THE OR GOLD WIND HAMPERS WORK OF TRACKMEN Chill Blast Cause Postponement of Events in Freshmen Telegraphic n!et Until Later in Week Old man weather turned a cold wind loose on the stadium track again Monday and Tuesday to put another crimp in the Cornhusker training for tlie annual valley meet to be held here Friday and Saturday, May 20 and 21. It also prevented the freshmen from starting running for the freshmen telegraphic. Coach Henry F. Schulte will start putting his freshmen through their paces in time trials for telegraphic marks as soon as the weather is good. The freshmen have all week to make their marks for the meet, the results to be wired in to Washington Univer sity, St. Louis, Saturday evening. Nebraska freshmen too'i second last year and this year's squad is conceded to be stronger and better-balanced than last year's team. Point Toward Valley Meet Apparently unconcerned over the narrow defeat at Manhattan last Saturday, Coach Schulte is concen trating his attention on the valley meet now twe weeks off. He is not forgetting the Saturday morning dual meet with Drake however. The Cornhuskers should outscore Drake but a fast, closely contested meet is expected before the f inal relay. The meet will be held Saturday morning so as not to interfere with the state1 high school meet to be held Friday and Saturday afternoons. This will be the first chance Husker fans will have to see this year's vars ity team in action and the only time with the exception of the annual val ley classic. Work was carried on indoors again Tuesday afternoon. Chadderdon and Johnson breezed through a mile and a half in easy manner. Camp bell led Wyatt and Hoffman to the tape in a 660 in 1:28.8. Janulewicz was bothered by a fallen arch Tues day. Freshmen were taking it easy both days in preparation for their tele graphic races as soon as the weather breaks. If the1 weather doesn't turn by Thursday Coach Schulte will prob ably have to go ahead and begin to run the yearlings despite the handicap of cold and wind. ...LA 'EKSKINE ... in mm PI KAPPA PHIS DEFEAT DU'S Delta Upsilon Uses Three Pitchers In Effort to Win Came The Pi Kappa Phi nine took the Delta Upsilon hBsohnll fsm to a 19-to-3 defeat in three frigid innings played Monday afternoon. The D Us used three pitchers, Melski, Jorgen sen and Kase who presented their op ponents with a bevy of twelve hits. Warren Strand, hurling for tha Pi Kaps, was found for only three bing les and these were distributed equally between the three chapters. The gameT ended at the end of the third when Kase, the last D U pitcher, sprained his ankle sliding into first. Pi Kappa Phl V. Schmidt, e .. Hutchins, rf .... Adams, lb Sloan, 8b Maaeke, bb .. . Domeier, 2b F. Schmidt, c .. Pumphrey, If .. Strand, p 2 2 0 S 2 2 1 8 1 8 2 1 8 2 1 8 2 2 8 2 1 8 11 8 2 8 24 19 12 Delta UPBilon Anderson, cf ..... - 0 Freas, 2 b Kelly. 2b HJ..V I ... e II unLUUji.i, .n, . .............. ..... Fitssimmons, If 1 Jorgensen, 2b, p Colwell, rf . 1 Karnes, lb - 1 Kane, c, J J Melski. ss. . - 1 10 8 8 Summary: Two base hits, Hutchins, Ad ams, Maaske, Strand. Home Runs, Dom eier, Strand; Bases c.l balls, off Strand 8, off Melski S; Struck out, f rand 6, Jorgen sen 2, Kase 8. Umpire Kiffin. SIG ALPHS WIN CAME Kappa Rho Sigma Loses Baseball Bout by 4-to-l Score The Sigma Alpha Epsilon baseball nine defeated the Kappa Rho Sigma aggregation by a 4-to-l count Thurs day afternoon. They collected six hits from Holmes, Kappa Rho Sigma hurler, and turned these into four Appointments for Permanent Waves Should Be Made Now Giffen Beaute Shoppe B-3273 1340 M. SIX' SON B L fi G A N C B it JUNE DAYS . . . Youth steps on the gas. 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