The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 12, 1939, Page SEVEN, Image 12

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    FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1939
DAILY NEBTUSKAN
SEVEN
all teams enter second round
Prep
Central, Prep
come through
to easy wins
Lincoln, West Point,
Fremont, Madison,
Schuyler among victors
Omaha Central and Creighton
Trcp, co-favorites for the state
high school baseball champion
ships, got off to great starts yes
terday as the Centralites beat
Valparaiso 10-0, and the flashy
Prepsters poured it on Raymond,
22-0.
Both games went but five in
nings, because of a rule that con
tests would be called after four
and a half or five innings provided
one team is ten runs ahead.
Angelo Ossino, Central's hurling
ace, worked but two innings, al
lowing only one hit. Ray Henning
scn was on the mound for Prep,
leaving Skip Palrang's two best
pitchers, Billy Wachtler and
George Dunn, ready for duty.
Sheffert settles down.
West Point beat Omaha South,
5-1, as Titcher El Wagner got
two of the Pointers' six hits. Lin
coln High beat Gretna, 5-2. as
Mark Sheffert. Red and Black
pitcher, settled down alter a bad
first inning. He gave up five hits,
as Ralph Scheef, Gretna's whole
show, was giving the winners six
bingles.
Fremont scored four in the first
and three in the second inning to
ret off on a good start to an 8-1
victory over Teachers' High of
Lincoln. Schuyler tallied three
runs in the last half of the sixth
to edge out Weeping Water. 7-6,
while Millard broke a 4-all dead
lock in their half of the sixth to
beat Burehard 8-4. Wahoo turned
back Hallam, 10-2, while Liberty
lost to Frank Smagacz's Arling
ton team, 6-2.
Curtis goes down.
Omaha Tech scored 13 runs in
the first three innings to wallop
Curtis, 13-1. The Tochsters had
three homers, one each by Loomis,
Wiles and Stones, and weie aided
by 13 Curtis errors. J. and F.
Sczepaniak, pitching for the
See CENTRAL page 8.
iaie tracts meet be
goons
"May
Lincoln favored
ion class rocordl
certaon on (fecims
Red and Black set to dethrone Scottsbluff team;
Bayard, 1939 class B. winners, gone; Winnebago
with Louis St. Cyr, picked for class B title
SAE moves
toward l-M
championship
Sig Alphs need one
more Softball victory to
clinch intramural cup
Sigma Alpha Epsilon league 2
winners, eliminated Phi Gamma
Delta from the iramural soft
ball championships, winning 8-3,
and incidentally puting an end to
wnoi nopes tne Fiji's had for the
Lincoln Iliirh school reifrns as favorite to cop Class A crown tn: Th phi
....... . , , , i , . . -.i. i- . ; r-"""
as the J'.'.i'J tracK and nem nicei opens wan preliminaries um wague 4. The Sig Alphs need to
afternoon at the stadium, in every event but the mile, 880 ami win but one of the remaining
M) relay. ar" 1"?: ,
Cy York's Hod and Black brigade won the state penta- - 'e rl in the Xnci
tathlon team title, and has won four major meets, the latest ae- and two in the fourth, nut an end
eoniplishment beinr a smashing victory m the Hastings mvita- to the Phi Gam's hopes. Osborn
1 . . - I rnA T.. ........ . 1 . . .
tional last Saturday. "7" ""
were bateries.
Sig Eps stay in race.
League 5 winners. Sirma Phi
t.psiion kept in the running for
softball and all-round honors bv
walloping the ATO's, League 3
winners, 11-3.
In the playoff for League 1 hon
ors, Phi Kappa Psi put on an eight
run splurge in the fifth to win
from Farm House, 11-9. It was a
close game for the first four in
nings, the score going into the
fifth being 3-all, after which Farm
House got six and the Thi Psi's
eight.
Gateley's, winner of Barb
League 2, came through in the
playoff against the Brown Derbies.
champs of League 3, 6-2 behind
Jim Knight's pitching. .
Second round of girls'
tennis finishes tonight
The second round of the girla
intramural tennis tournament
must be played off by tonight.
The games can be played on any
court but the scores must be re
ported to the W. A. A. office.
Scottsbluff, who won the Class A
crown last year, along with Ord
and Omaha Tech ny give the
Lincoln team a race for the title.
Bayard out.
Neligh, with Les Reiss and Gene
Grace, may come thru in Class B.
Bayard won not only Class B, but
also all class honors last year, will
not be in the meet. Other strong
B teams are South Sioux City,
Nelson and Gothenburg.
Winnebago, led by the redoubt
able Louis Ct. Cyr, may take Walt
hill's Class C title. In Class D, won
by Oconto last yenr, Lebanon,
Carleton and Ohiowa should f'ght
it out
A new record is certain in the
discus, what with a platter 13
4 r-
Mm
r
1 7S HELP!
S.O.S.
The Riot Is Onf
This if National Arrow Week...
and our decks are packed to
the gunnels with the complete
line of new Arrow master
pieces Arrow shirts in new
Spring patterns . . . new collar
styles . . . Arrow ties that
sparkle . . . Arrow handker
chiefs that sizzle . . . non
'creeping Arrow shorts . .
and Arrow's famous sports
wear . . . the best-looking
collection of men's -wear this
side of paradise.
Come in today and look over
the marvels Arrowhas
wrought and take home a
year's supply of ARROWS.
ounces lighter than that used last
year now beinjr tossed. The man
who will probably set the record
will be big Howard Debus, Lin
coln's amazing prep pentathlon
winner, and all around athletic
star. Debus has done 160 feet in
practice, his best cpmpetitive
mark being 109 odd feet.
Debus favored.
Debus, who has hit over 180 feet
in the javelin, may take that event
too. unless Omaha Central s Leo
Sampson beats him out In the
shot, Leonard McDonald, Omaha
Central, Charley Hoffman of Lm
coin, St Cyr and Debus look like
contenders for top honors.
Best pole vaulting marks In the
state have been turned in by De
bus and St Cyr, who tied for first
at Hastings last Saturday, and
who both did 12 feet in pentathlon
competition.
The 120 yard high hurdles will
furnish one of the meet's best
duels, what with Lexington's Clyde
Taylor and Waterloo s Ralph King,
Aliho the boys ae in different
classes, Taylor in A and King in
D, they will be fighting it out for
the gold medal which goes to each
individual champion, regardless of
his class. King has bettered the
state mark of :15.2 twice this year
while Taylor has equaled it.
200 lows' mark threatened.
Flovd Newton's 200 yard low
hurdles record of :23.2 is in dan
cer from Jack Van Decar of
Scottsbluff and Merlin Stack-
hou3e. Oshkosh. Van Decar did
22.9 with a wind at his back, but
a week later lost to Stackhouse in
23 seconds even.
Harold McAlfeity, Gothenburg
junior who tied for the gold medal
in the hich jump last year, has ex-
ceeuea me siaie rccoru or -:,
twice this year. Lyle Rook, Ogal-
lala, who tied with him for the
rieclal, is back, an is Lexington's
Taylor, who won class A honors
last year.
Retzlaff has :21.7
Pierce Retzlaff may push the
220 record of 21.8. He has a mark
of :21.7, and his battle with Nc
light's Ress in class B should fea
ture the sprints. Reiss has done
:9.9. Lloyd Horner of Clay Center
is another man to watch, he hav
ing done 9.9 in the century, and
22-4 in the broad lump. Bin Ar-
not of Humboldt and John Lord
of Valentine are two of the state's
other fine sprinters.
La.it year's 440 record, set by
Bob McArthur of South Sioux City
See LINCOLN page 8.
No droop No wilt,
No fray !
The collar on the Ar
row DART shirt wont
wilt though you wear ft
from dawn to midnight
(yet it has not a drop of
starch) . . . and it wont
fray or blister though
you have it laundered
dozens and dozens of
times. $2.25.
L
QtiJlOlV-
m 1 , ... - ii m.L' vC . i m
1 V, ' .
Welcome to . .
ARROW'S OPEN HOUSE
Tear down to
your Arrow
dealer this noon
if you want to get the pick of
this season's crop of Arrow
beauties. Be the first on the
campus to wear what everyone
else will be wearing six months
hence. New patterns, new colors,
in Arrow shirts, ties, underwear,
handkerchiefs, and sportswear.
Huge assortments of crisp fresh
Arrow merchandise just waiting
to be ensnared... get yours now.
DAVI
SCHOOL SERVICE
"A Good Triwhrr AHWTM
1911 193t
If it hasn't an Arrow label,
it isn't Arrow,
7?fx 1
Come In and See V
43 Htmrt Ralldlng
II'IHIIU
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