The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 23, 1930, ANNUAL DAD'S DAY EDITION, Page FOUR, Image 4

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    PQtJR 1 III, mil.. -i HH K .
Bible Drills Huskers
VARSITY BREAKS
UP PASS ATTACK
Drfriup Apprur Mront-r 'lliun til
SruMni: iilr KximtImI lo
(.miiii in Sutiinlat
matiiis. houi.k.. MM.n i in. u silk list
MurroH Hark i:iinl for I irl Nrinpt in NTiniinupr
Ll Nielli l Young. hrriiiipT and IVmImii
Hiukfiild; I
in
Court) I. X. I'.ll'li mi i two - 1 1 1 1 I I limns lust lli'.'iil i
he Kent lii Tin nlniki r tliroiiwli a 1 ill tr im-1 fn til llnin
for their tilt villi the Montana stair Moluata iitnrila . FKt.li
man Rriiiilrrs used Montana pl.i against Imtli nf I In- nrsii
Rgrrtjntion.
Til" VJtr.sity luid IIHili' iiti'.s mi liloi'kilig ' III n1iIii.HI
passe than they have had all
oo. Montana State ba.t uned a
paulnr attack to gmxi effert in
paat yeara, and an oriling to re
port from that arctlon this year la
no exception. Nrbra.-ka fana iin
doubtedlv Will era a Rreat dral of
th aerial ranie in the tilt Satur
day,
Three Regular on Bench.
Chna Mathl. Bob Manlev and
Claud Rnwiey win nm he wted in
la. DAkxal ft a rtta 1 II Ikraa fa
inn none l ganir. ,ll iiurr ic
till nurelnc injurirs received In
ID itnii f.iair Knnic ihi wren.
The flrat team uwvl In the acrlm
mag last night waa compewted of
IT' Vn.. L'..mn.. n . I
MaTrow. S u-Uh K cenr-
. a l- ' ,..j.!
- n
Rbea and Broadxtone, tackb-a: and
Hokuf and Pmc ka, ends. The sec
ond team to tnko the field was
made up of Paul. Brown, Nelson
and Penney barks; McPheraon.
center; Campbell and J net ire.
guardi; Kroger and Hulbert.
tackle and Bokenktoger and Dur
kee. ends. Stansiherry and Perry
alternated in the backfleld.
Froth Score Once.
The freshman team wa com
posed of Q. Mlnick. Blasak, La
Bounty, and Traylor, backs; with
Moainian, center; Marmon and
Justice, guards; Bcntley and
BlackMtone. tackles: and Lunney
and Cole. ends.
The varsity showed real scoring
power in the practice last night,
scoring two touchdowns in the
comparatively short time that the
scrimmage lasted. A single fresh
man touchdown was made when
Mlnick Intercepted a varsity pass
and ran sixty yards for the
counter. That was the only time
Uie varsity goal was threatent-d.
Staab, Nesmith Promoted.
Carlyle Staab, Ansley. and Nor
rls Nesmith. Wajmeta, were ad'
yanced to the varsity - squad I from
ine ounnins iaai diiu. oinnu in
a backfield man, a fast, clever
open-field runner Nwmtth. an j
cuu. ... ... . .t.i u.-r"! i
attaCK.
WnpL. Irfrilliinil win iik ci-iii .o.i.
to scout the Pittsburgh-Notre
Dame game at Pittsburgh Satur
day. Bill Day will watch the
Kansas U.-Iowa State game at
Lawrence on the same day. Both
Pittsburgh and Kansas will be Ne
braska opponents in the two weeks
following the Montana State game.
MEET BEARS FRIDAY
Washington Team Presents
Formidable Threat to
Southerners.
STILLWATER, OkI.--( Special I
With 55 points on their side of
the book and a zero marked for
the opposition, Washington uni
versity Green Bears present a
formidable threat to the Oklahoma
Aggies in their game Friday night
on Lewis field here.
Washington kept its record clear
in an easy 14 to 0 win over West
minister college lat Saturday at
St. Louis. Previously, the Bears
had defeated Illinois college, 44 to
0 and tied William Jewell, 0 to 0.
A great set of hard running
backs and a stonewall defense that
Aggie coaches expect to be as
stubborn as any they have faced,
will be presented by the Bears Fri
day night.
Led by Sausele, all-Missouri Val
ley back last year, Washington
had everything so much its own
way that it was forced to show lit
tle, and Roy W. Kenny, Aggie line
coach, who scouted the game, was
able to catch only fleeting
glimpses of the offensive the Ag
gies expect to encounter this week.
In Hornsby, a fine punter and a
fierce line-plunger, and Miller,
light and scrappy halfback, the
Bears boast two ball carriers
whom the Ag-gies must watch con
stantly, since either is likely to get j
away "for long gains.
In 1926, last time the two teams ;
met, Washington won 6 to 0. j
WAUSAU, Wis. (IP)--After I
a summer tour of Europe, George j
K. A. Shields, 75, has returned to ;
commence his 60th year of teach- i
The highest temperature during
the -Lt summer season was re- j
corded in Death valley, eastern
California, where the thermometer 1
registered 130 degrees one day. J
CLASSIFIED WANT ADS.
THE HAUCK STCDIO. 1216 O Streel.
B2991. Distinctive photographs.
SLEEPING ROOM-One lanje room
for 4 men. Cheap if taken this week.
Also single. Close In. 1117 (j. B1T53
AFTER ALL it's a I'ownseai
photograph that you want.
HELP W ANT E D-OpixTrl unity " f o- "a
young man or wjman open to !he
right person. . Cosmetic (unpHiiy
mailt ainhittnus person to sell rouse.
G""i commission. E isy money. Sep
Bueinefs Manager, Daily Neurajkan.
n I inir Diii inu
l'e Oirrlirml
(.ridiimi
llllllll.
roli Srori Onrr.
K. U. GRIDDERS LOOK
TO IOWA STATE TILT
Harrl
flal U
i
... -. .
I HarCJISS GlVlPQ MCn
' Drills in Prcoaralion
I '
-. e.,-J., C -,nr,
rOr OdUJlOay UdmC.
LAWRKNCK. Kas. -I'niveraity
of Kanaaa player who aaw moat
xenue In the K-ARgie same laat
" P'
prwIlM, vrrnle the real of the
squad engaged the freshmen In
stiff practice .as a start for a
week of intensive training for the
Ames game here next Saturday.
A chalk-talk review of the K-Aggie
game by Coach Hargiss showed up
weaknesses of the team and was
the basis of instruction on how
better to meet the situations.
Coach Hargiss recognizes
th. 1
power of the Iowa Cyclones, and J
is drilling bis men with view to
meeting the Iowa play. In spite of
snow flurries, he is' giving the
Jayhawkers stiff workouts. I
Bauach On Bench. I
JiVn BaUM'h. who sustained a
slightly wrenched knee in the j
Manhattan game, was not .suited
up .Monday and may be out of ;
practice the greater part of the
week, but it is expected he will be
in trim by the end of the week. !
Other backs came through with I
only minor bruises and sore ,
muscles. j
From Ames comes word that !
Paul Trauger, backfield man who
it uni nnriu infill nu i
has been ill. is again in the lineup.
much to the relief of the Iowa
I State fans. The Cyclones are con-
I linilino- kafli'u hphhMiia anH , r,r
njze & v, s 'one f the M
games on their schedule.
CVini'h Monl U'nrliman ie tinAr.
ujn M tf) ms u jt
might not he decided until a few
,niirl hcfirn fho rnnldcl r"f,o..
Hargiss usually selects his Jay-
hawk warriors the clay before the
Bame.
Colorado Girl IT eds
Hindu Leader; Will
Make Home in India
DENVER, Colo. Miss Irene
Hall, twenty, coed of the Univer
sity of Colorado at Boulder, be
came the bride of Gopal Singh
Khalsa, one of the three repre
sentatives of the Indian National
congress In this country, Tuesduy
night.
Khalsa has been identified with
Mahatmn Ghandi and his follow
ers, who compose the congreijs
which Khalsa represents in this
country. He met Miss Hall while
giving lectures at the university a
year ago.
After a honeymoon trip through
Europe, the couple will go to In
dia, where Khalsa hopes to open a
chain of newspapers, provided the
British .ban on native press is re
moved. Mr. Khalsa has done consider
able writing, and while in this
country published the Hindustani,
a newspaper, in San Francisco.
Seventy percent of the English
speaking people of the world live
on the North American continent,
and 60 percent of them in the
United States.
leii i0 f
I COUNT their qualiti.
THE moit popular ready-to-
at cereals served in the
dining - rooms of American
colleges, eating clubs and
fraternities are made by
Kellogg in Battle Creek. They
include Kellogg's Corn Flakes,
PEP Bran Flakes, Rice Kritp
ies. Wheat Kruitblns and Kel
logg's Shredded V'hole Wheat
Biscuit. Also Kaffee Hag Cof
fee the coffee that lets you
sleep.
ALL BRAN
ftrnrliwarincr
I J ANLi li. hand with the lli u-
i..n ..f tiJ .looking . a
lonM.Jriatlon of r lirw liratllii;
plant. iN.n't Unoiue linl a
thin la li.-l :liiC ! U a iu(mmuI
jlu hae lln lair ilaiiiM-U rnl'.y
tlirll diiairllra III th liralliiK
plant It i ninety annlhri kind (
smoke with a dlllrrenl fault
r'or M-vmat vr. Coinhuekrt
I football tram wrl bottirml by
'the anioke hun uxinl from the
emokralatk it thr old hratllik
plnnl Huge cloud il It would
awoop down linil thr glldllon,
blotting the player anil lieM from
thr Vlrw nl H-lalii
I'layera writ rliokrd anil blinuod.
women acreamrd ami little liable
were thrown fioin the top of th'
stadium. And the womt thing
about all thrae amoke sirecn
the ability to come at am h Inop-
iMiitune lime. It wa alway
afe liet thnt a smoke rlnuil would
rr
haien along if the
ami either tram
fiMit Jine.
yrOKKMKN aie now hold at
work tearing down this abom
inable amoketai k as the old heat
ing plant hat gone to the same
place a the eecond stoiy of L'ni
ersity hall, wherever that may lie.
Sectators at games this year
may be reasonably miic nl seeing
all the game. With the passing ol
1 lhf Mn,"'r Mack the ratnpti
! has loat annllier iRnilniurU u-hirh
will linger long In the memories
1 of Cornlm-iker. Kvery time any
i body thinks of the duin thing he
j w ill probably start i ussing.
I If the smoke belcher had not
gone the way of all good smoke
stacks It would have been neces-
; snry to issue "smoke checks" in
the place of rain checks and refund
money if people missed over three
fourths of the game.
NIKBRASKA'S football team is
Just as good as the men com
posing that team think they are.
If the squad could become infused
with the spirit of "unbeatablcnehs"
't would be a long, hard afternoon
for any team facing Nebraska. The
thing which seems to be troubling ,
the coaching staff at the present
time is the belief of the men that
they are only a mediocre team.
Any team that takes the field
with a belief that it is not so good
and the other team has a good
chance of walloping it is liable to
; take a licking. But I be team that :
, thinks it Is unbeatable and refuses '
i to be licked will make I he going i
j tough for any opponent.
The Huskei line functioned like
a million dollars against the Iowa.1
team. The backfield performed j
smoothly and showed a lot of ;
promise. The only thing that was ;
, , . ,
MOW, if any team has a strong
line, a dependable backfield and
a good defense, both against passes
and runs, it Is a tough combination
to beat.
Nebraska has all of these things, j
True, the pass defense did slip a j
little against. Ames and the play j
strains! Oklahoma was not u-hnt It 1
should have been,
Let s forgot the past and look
towards the future. We have Pitts-
i burgh. Kansas. Missouri, Mon-
I tana and Kansas Aggies all left on 1
( the schedule and the team has only I
I met with one defeat in three starts, i
All this was accomplished with a
j comparatively green team. !
( It takes time to develop football i
teams as any student of football '
will tell you. Starting- with a team i
which did not quite show the prom
ise of past Husker teams. Coach
Bible has developed a team which i
has tremendous possibilities.
Bible is waiting for the team to
"explode" and when this occurs,
look out!
QTHER Cornhusker teams and
coaches are already planning
their campaigns.
Coach Charley Black and his
basket tossers are all set for a big
season and have a chance to bring
a Big Six championship homo with
them. Morrie Kisher, Steve Ho
kuf. Don Maclay and others will I
be back to help the cause along.
Coach Schulte has Ms. track
men running around in circles un-
TYPEWRITERS
See lis for thf Royal portable tyi'
wrlnr, the Meal machine for tln
sluiient All makes o mai-hine.s
for rent. All makes of u.ed ma
chines eapy pigments.
.Nebraska Typewriter Co.
Call B-215" 1232 O St.
COUNT their qualities. Each an all-
round man. Leaders in campus life.
Keen and alert in the classroom.
Each With a thoroughly engaging
' personality. Each a dynamo of
energy.
There, after all, is the secret. It
takes health to hold the pace. But
one of the most insidious foes of
health is constipation.
Here' the easy, effective answer
Kellogg's AL.L-BKAN. Guaranteed
to bring prompt and permanent re
liefeven in recurring cases. Two
tablespoonfuls a day will keep you
regular. Delicious with milk or
cream fruits or honey added. Ask
that it be served at your fraternity
house or campus restaurant.
All-Bran
for Tilt
lima ! Tim n
t'.irlt form thin
tfrnunitril Croup
AM KM. la - Amn rills ( lout
toiirg now D.v m wpiu.
nil inn ! ihrir own throtifh whith
tbav tan take pait In liilraniiiral
lliirllra anil many othrr w livitba
(nun uhlih thry havr pievlmialy
I !! barinl U- ane thry tteie not
mrmlirie ol a lollrite oriaMia-
tloll
'I lie Town I in la rutuiul. reiently
.IIN.CTII ir'iTriniiu.vi I f iv
limn Ki'l- have eletled JUxinr
Itraul .ie.i.lrnt and Knuly fonk.
mi act iriaf y-irraaiirrr
Una oiBnintinn wilt fiom a
inn Inia lor many aitlvilira fur 274
Anna Kirl Seven hmulred gul
live in ilmmitoiira and moie than
hi in aiiiiiiiie.
ili'i the l ailiuin evrry day and
thry should be In t-hape for big
NrHon i
Thr year ln t a total failiu yet!
GAMMA PHIS WIN IN
Defeat Alpha Chi Omega
4-3; Henna Bcckman.
Alice Bulfett Star.
( lamina Phi Beta defeated Al
pha Chi Omega by a score of 4-3
In the second round of the wom
en's intramural speedhall tourna
ment last night at S o'clock.
The gnme wbs not very fast, and
' although
matched.
the teams were well
the contest did take on
the aspects of a nip and tuck bat
tle. The only outstanding combina
tion on either of the two teams
was that of Herma Bcckman and
Alice Buffet t. Gamma Phi Betas. (
who led a passing attack which
netted their team two scores to
win Uie game.
The second round of the eliml-
nation tournament continue tbls j -
j week, and the semi-finals and fi
nais win dc piayea in iwo weens,
if the schedule is run as it la
planned
Three hundred and seventy-eight
students at the New Jersey col
lege for women who worked dur
ing the past summer earned a
total of $44,S."iO. The average
length of employment was eight
and a half weeks.
ff n It iUf Hi!
t urffln uro& f:
I w f) M ata rcrrjAX yi ' ' " J I
With Montana State
HUSKERS CAST EYES
Five Veterans Back lor Win
ter Carr.paign; Will Play
On West Coast.
,
i pRSJ
PRACTICE SOON 1
i m
ajy Cliff P. landahl .
wh ,h, fm,lb., ,elrt(n .ullt
luilf over. University i f Nebiaka
ludciit are now tasting thru
eye toward the poaaibllillea of the
1H.10-31 banket ball term, prospect
of which look blight at this time
Although the first practice pr
nod will not take plaie yet for a i
couple of week. I'narh Charley
Black Is already beginning to j
lather in hia old Vhatgea in order
"to look them over."
When the roll l called at the
opening practice at least fi let- ,
trrmen a well a a anrinklint of i
good reserve ar expected to re
. . . i . i a L.
soono. ah are rnmiiro in in-.
university at present and will be
eligible to play at least a far as
scholastic irquiremrni gc
The five veterans c-mnpoae a i
lean. In Ita entirety. They are
loii Maclay. Auhuin. center: Mr
! lis Usher. Lincoln, and Seldmi
Pavev. Lincoln, forwards; Cliff
Jensen, Omaha, and Steve Hokuf.
i Crete, guards.
The featute of the forthcoming
season will be a jaunt to me i-h-cific
coast, where the Scailel and
Cream eager will battle with the
I'niveraity of Washington tb.scis
In a three dav series. These game.4 ,
will lake place during the Christ
maa holidays.
(,)()1 ROADS MKN
ARK KNI KR I AIMJ)
m iowa colu:(;i
OMKS. Ia.--Ninety-six men, in
terested In good roads, represent
ing twenty-four countries, were
guests of Iowa State college,
Ames business men and the state
highway commission at a luncheon
in Memorial Union building on the
11 . . . U . - T. . .in..
join vniiiiiiB in-ir m .--unjr iiirm.
The delegation was made up of
men wno aiienoen ine inierna-
. tional Good Roads congress in
Washington, D. C. about two j
ween ago and who are now on a
tour of the United States previous I
to returning home. A total of
about 200 persons attended the i
luncheon. Pean Anson Marslon, '
&ID)So
The Daily Neb rash an extends to you its kind
. est regards and invites you to the Dad's , Day
celebration, November 1st.
That's the day of the Pittsburgh - Nebraska
game, which promises to be a cracher-jach uf
fair. Bring Mother and the children, and visit
your son or daughter.
AND
While you are here subscribe to the Nebrashan.
Your boy or girl reads it daily, you may be sure,
so why not you parents?
READ
about what is going on at the university and
what part your children have in university life.
By Mail:
3.00 Year. '
1.75 Semester.
of the iik in""' divuu.n.
for Ire.idrnt It M llufhr. !
com J the uitii
Kefoi leaving for I Mniea.
from hr thry t III K" ,M
umbia. M. the clrlale
vuitei
Hit Atliktit: MiuiiIc.lt
li.'iM;! Cumfurt!
rmi:&i- ;iA
' J .!J:..k.-.;i'
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Athletic Shoulders
Can Be Fitted in
a Learbury
Koulliall. It.i-krlli.ill. Imm'ImII. sw iiiiiniii:
.ttiI oilier sports lcloi slmulilrrs lli.it
onlinan riot lie simply cannot fit villi
util prpssi allrrulimi-.
()nl in
"allilelir
In meet
fii'nloiii
l.-ailiiir
slintilde-r'
Mat
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in ImkIv iiKiM'mrnl ,
i at
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a now nnpliH.-i- on
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Tin new fall Lmrlnin suits an tierr in
inlereelinn nfw pallr-nix . . . Oxford
SiNcrlone Mack. (.Ion Ian.-. Sa illc
lilnes ii ml slnnnini:
e
4
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and nrow
i t
a round
in
$35
SmSimcn &SmS
FORMERLY ARMSTRONGS
4
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Address:
DAILY NEBRASKA
Station A,
Lincoln. Nebr.
iin iKiiiw ocinnr ?i
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lh huh ay
Airtra
lolllllliuloll ll"' '
Rural tea. hen " Haiti
Mltnn of from l l
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find the
designed
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