THE DAILY NEBRASKAN NEBRASKA GROSS-COUNTRY TAKE THIRD IN VALLEY MEN roach Schulte's Well-Balanced Team Places Behind Oklahoma And Kansas in Conference Run at Manhattan After Breaking Even in Dual Meet Schedule JOHNSON, CHADDERDON, SPRAGUE WERE VETERANS Huskers Have Nine Men of Varsity Caliber Eliminating Worry Over Regulars Being in Shape; Drake and Missouri Beaten by Whitewash Route This Fall Six Nebraska cross-country men were awarded letters at the close of tne ivti season aiuer me nusKers Had broken Iven in their dual meet schedule and won third place in the annual Missouri mucj ui-vuuiiuji iuu ai wanimuan, jvan Mnvpmber 19. ' Captain Glen Johnson headed the list of harriers, winding uo the season by placing seventh at Manhattan in the Valley meet The other letter-men were Norris Chadderdon, Emerie rummings, Carroll Griffen, Clarence Kibble, and Robert Opening the season with three letter-men from last sea Coach Henry F. Schulte developed the best all around team Nebraska has had, a team with a wealth of strong reserve material, me mice ietier-men, jonnson, unadaerdon, and Sprague won their places on the team in the first trials and wpre never in danger ox ucmg uispiacea. . .. i -a j.v. I Tt from tne Dejrinninis x uia BETAS DEFEAT LAM GHI TEAM Inter-Fraternity Water Polo Championship Goes to Winners 16-1 Captain season, ioaca uuiw from week to week which men would be in best sliape to cover the five miles. Cummings was regularly on the team until the Kansas Aggie dual meet at Manhattan in which both Johnson and Cummings col lapsed under the intense heat after outrunning themselves in the early part of the race. Schulte Had Extras Coach Schulte had nine men work ing who were varsity caliber mate rial Any of them could have run regularly on the 1926 team. Be sides the six letter-men, Batie, Etherton, and Janulewicx all took part in varsity meets. Which men would make the team was in doubt from one meet to another. The Huskers opened the season with a crushing defeat of Missouri on the Tigers' home course October 7. Captain Johnson, Chadderdon, Sprague, Cummings, and Griffen loped through the course easily to finish in a tie for first. Batie, the sixth member of the team, lost his shoe several times and even then was sble to finish ahead of the first Miss ourian. Heat Bothers Huskers Finding the heat too much for them, the Huskers went down to de feat in their dual meet with Kansas Aggies at Manhattan October 22. Johnson, Cummings, and Chadder- i j r m .1 eon set a uerce Pce iron, xt race The Huskers repeated their ; "" , . r complete white-washing or a year running unaer a Dialing imnsww uu. inst rrk finishing air men ahead of the first Bulldog. k .... .,. .,7 : We- r r j' f j : ': . i -, - i J. -o T I w VI i: ; . .. w .''. w; l Glen Johnson fell while running before they reach ed the finish. Kibble, who had dis placed Batie on the team, and Grif fen, finished to the fore of the Ne braska runners. Johnson and Cummings were kept out of the Drake meet here the foh lowing week by Coach Schulte in an attempt to insure their recovery !from the strain of the Manhattan finish but Johnson and Cummings 17 you have $5 or less to spend on "TV His Christmas This is the place to come, you'll find something he needs; something in per fect taste. Gloves, mufflers, hose, neckwear, handkerchiefs, dippers, belts, shirts, hats. All Can Be Had for $5 Or Less Elling er s Janulewicx Takes First Janulewicz, who had failed to make the team in the trials was per- 'mitted to run, not counting in the meet, and finished first. Chadder don led those counting with Sprague second. Griffen and Batie, sopho more runners who had been fighting for supremacy all season, finished in a tie for third place with Kibble and Etherton placing fifth and sixth re spectively. Kansas University 'nosed out a win between halves of the Husker-Jay-hawk game by the narrowest pf mar gins. They defeated the Huskers by a single point, 27 to 28. "Poco" Frazier, diminutive Jayhawk, won hands down but Chadderdon was an easy second. Sauraman nosed out Captain Johnson for third. Oklahoma Wins Valley This completed the Husker season except for the Valley run at Man hattan in which the Huskers finished i third. The conference meet was won by Oklahoma whose men fin ished second, third, fourth, fifth, and I sixth. Captain Johnson, finishing seventh, was the first Husker across the line. Frazier again turned in a victory covering the five mile Kaggie course in 24 minutes 44 seconds. Keith of Oklahoma and Niblack of Oklahoma, followed well ahead of the remain der of the runners, but at a respec table distance behind Frazier. I Coath Schulte had a well-trained team in the field every meet They were a heady group of runners, fin ishing far above early season expec tations. With nine men of varsity 'caliber, Coach Schulte did not need 'to worry about some of the first string being ill, a fear that has kept jhim awake many nights in seasons , past. I The Huskers climaxed the season by running ahead c" yl but Okla- WALDO WINS SWIM FINAL Beta Theta Pi is inter-fraternity water polo champion of the Univer sity as the result of its 16-1 .win over Lambda Chi Alpha in the finals held Wednesday night at the Y. M. C. A. pool. Gregg Waldo won the finals of the forty-yard dash with a mark of :21.2. The Beta-Lambda Chi game was a closer contest than the score would indicate. Every field goal scored was made only after a stiff fight, the Lambda Chi Alpha guards, Wilson, Davis and King, keeping up a strong defense at all times. The Lambda Chi forwards did not threaten the Beta goal as often as they have that of former opponents, but were un comfortably close a number of times. Beta Forwards Were Effective Chaloupka played an aggressive offensive game for Beta Theta Pi, and was well supported by Hall and Smith. These three forwards worked together in close formation, and de serve equal credit for the Beta field goals of which two were made' by Hall and one by Smith. Erb tallied Lambda CKi's lone point on a foul, and along with Carlberg carried on the main part of the Lambda Chi Alpha offense. Waldo, in winning the final heat of the forty-yard event, approached his own record of twenty-one seconds flat for the Y pool. Frank Mockler was close behind Waldo, and Joe Spangler came in third. Mockler took the first heat in 23 :2 and Waldo won the second in 21:4. Youngsters Race Another feature of the meet was an exhibition twenty-yard race by Billy Weil, nine, and Clark Faulk ner, eight years old. These two em bryo champions crossed the mark almost together, but Billy Weil was given the decision with a time of six teen seconds flat Summary of water polo finals: Beta Theta P Lambda Chi Alpha Hall Egan Chaloupka Kelly Abbott Smith rf If cf rg lg gg Carlberg ngen Erb Wilson Davis King Substitutions: Lambda Chi Alpha; Woodman for Erb, Erion for Wood man, Erb for Erion. Beta Theta Pi; Peterson for Kelly. Goals: Field goals; Hall 2, Smith 1. Free throws; Erb 1, Chaloupka 1. You Are Always NEXT AT STURM SHOP Frunks & Franks 116 So. 13th. homa and Kansas in the Valley meet, beating out Kansas Aggies who had defeated them earlier in the season in a dual meet Besides, Johnson, Griffen, Kibble, and Sprague fin ished in the first twenty in the Val ley meet. Griffen was fourteenth, Kibble, eighteenth, and Sprague, nineteenth. Presnell Hits The Line , $A s-";" fr-ws i 1 -y.MKK-h'-? H 1 i xs i v" ' C ' SsW 4" Glenn Presnell, thundering Scarlet halfback hitting the Syracuse line for a Rain in the Oranffe-Husker clash on Memorial Stadium field, l'resnell's drives throuuh the Orange forward wall were partially responsible for the 21 to 0 set back the Beargmen administered the eastern eleven. The Syracuse-Nebraska clash was the first inter-sectional clash on the Husker schedule and the Scarlet squad wasted no time in putting the important east-west conflict on the win column. In the action picture the Cornhusker forward wa II has just cleared a hole for the Husker ground gaining ace to go through. Seventeen more shopping days until Xmas. Buy your favorite instru ment this year. Altstadt Instrument Company 1210 "O" j8mt ( 7X shallldo Sy, Vrn with WPJ that f M. mix iM B3367 VARSITY CLEANERS AND UtESS STICKERS POSTED FOR HUSKER GAMES Slogans Greeted Visiting Teams on Arrival in City; Prepared By Innocents Society As symbols of Cornhusker spirit and hospitality welcome "stickers" were issued by the Innocents before each football game. Each sticker was printed with a slogan befitting the coming game, and they were dis tributed for pasting on automobiles, windows, in classrooms, and any where else where they could do their little bit toward developing pep. The slogans were picked by the Innocents, and have been chosen for effective expression of the feeling Nebraska has always shown to visit ing teams. They typify the Corn husker sportsmanship which makes all Cornhuskers want victory, but fair victory, with all the respect and fellowship which Nebraska holds for other schools. The printing of the stickers was paid for by the athletic board. Incoming teams have not had to wait to go out on the streets to be welcomed by these little expressions of Nebraska enthusiasm. Immedi ately upon the arrival of visiting football men, the stickers have been pasted up in their hotel rooms, on their cars or railway coaches, and in their dressing rooms in the Sta dium. These are the slogans used on this year '8 stickers: "Hi Ames!" "(Break that Jinx) Beat Mizzou," "Greetings Grinnell," "Hello Dads We're Greeting Syra cuse," "Beat Pitt," "Welcome Jay- hawks Grads," "N come." Y U R Wei- H5l?(BfB&aIbIl(B and the smoothest writer you have ever used! Sure I YouU pay $5 for the Junior or Lady size, or $7forthe Big Over size but you've GOT something;! You've got a NON-BREAKABLE. That saves money. And you've got PRfiSSURELESS TOUCH. That saves tiring your self out writing themes and tak ing notes. We'vo thrown these new Duofolds from the roof of a sky scraper, from an aeroplane 3,000 feet aloft, and from the rim of tbo Grand Canyon, and not one has broken. Yet it's 28 $ tighter than when made with rubber t And it write immediately, and keeps on writ ing, with merely the pressure of its own lightweight you simply guide it It clears the track for THINKING. And it's a satisfaction, too, to "pull a good one" when you write or lend. That's another thing: 14K Gold pen points with iridium tips (choice of six styles) to suit your hand exactly but so tempered that your smoothest-talking, roughest friend oouldnt distort it out of shape for you. Hale and hearty colors Lacquer-Red, Mandarin Yellow (new), Lapis Lazuli Blue, Green Jade and flashing Black and Gold ail black-tipped. 35 years of experience, 47 im provement J, 33 psa patents all have been incorporated in this Master Pen. See what it does for you. Tn rum rn oourun, lansvnUtWsV Im im I Willi' " 1 1; '' 2! Wsnah iia nVa V::o fold Jr. V LaoyDnrtMd' "Geo, S. Parkcr-DUOFOLD" One caution: See where ttis pea points ? Do a little detective work. Look for thkt imprint oa the barrel of etch pen. Theie for your protection, the deal er's and our own. Congratulations to Our New Captain. May You Carry on the Spirit Your Team Has Intrusted in You. "G. E. SWANSON, CAPT. 21." SMART WEAR FOR WOAEN 1222-1224-O STREET r ff CI Thirteen Wonderful Coats at One Price 2 Black Ponys. Sizes 16 and 18 2 Tan Ponys. Sizes 16 and 18 2 Natural Opossums. Sizes 18 and 36 1 Tan Caracul. Size 18 1 Grey Caracul. Size 38 1 Black Sealine. Marmink trim. Size 18 4 Black Sealines. Squirrel trim. Sizes 18 to 42 Muskrat Coats Eighteen Beautiful Coats of Silver and Golden Muskrats. 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