FRIDAY, SEPT. 20, 1940 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Sooners— (continued from page four) Mathews, two husky juniors who should play a lot of halfback for Oklahoma during the next two years. Jacobs, the 185-pound Creek Indian, with the benefit of experience from last year's campaign should develop into one of the best backs in the conference this fall. Mathews, who weighs only 162 pounds, can be counted upon to thrill the Sooner fans with his broken field running. Johnny Martin, 185-pound senior letterman, will replace the departed JACK JACOBS CLIFF SPEEGLER Bob Seymour at fullback. Rounding out the starting backfield probably will be Gus Kitchens, 177-pound corner. Marvin Whited, 190-pound halfback, is the only other experienced ball carrier, but Stidham has eight husky sophomores who'll be trying to edge their way into the first string lineup. Bill Jennings, a 180-pounder who played halfback in his first two years at Oklahoma, will be shifted to end this season. Lyle Smith, 195 pounds, and Louis Sharpe, 205 pounds, last year's substitute wingmen, should be ready for varsity competition this fall. Two junior lettermen, Roger Eason, 210 pounds, and Howard Teeter, 225 pounds, are slated to start at tackle. Six sophomores, none of whom weigh less than 195 pounds, will make the Sooner line all the tougher as soon as they have acquired needed experience. Taking the place of Stevenson and Manley at guards will be Harold Lahar, 214-pound senior letterman, and Ralph Harris, 235-pound junior letter-winner. Other veteran guards include Olin Keith and Chad Vallance. Clifton Speeagle. 180-pound regular center on last year's team, will handle the pivot post again this season. He will be assisted by Novel Wood, a senior letterman, and Clare Morford, a promising sophomore. A final reason for selecting the Sooners to finish in second place behind Nebraska is the kindness of the schedule-makers. Oklahoma has the advantage of playing host in Norman to the only conference teams likely to beat them—Nebraska and Missouri. Stidham's warriors will also tangle with Kansas State at Norman DRVILLE MATHEWS RALPH HARRIS but will meet Kansas and Iowa State on foreign fields. The Sooner nonconference schedule lists four battles which should provide the foundation on which Stidham will build his title hopes for next year. OKLAHOMA'S 1940 SCHEDULE October 5-Oklahoma Aggies at Norman October 12—Texas at Dallas. October 19—Kansas State at Norman Norman. October 26—Iowa State at Ames. November 2—Nebraska at Norman. November 9—Kansas at Lawrence. November 16—Missouri at Norman. November 23—Temple at Norman. November 30—Santa Clara at San Francisco. Sports Card- (continued from page four) familiar in Tiger stripes. They should because they helped Mizzou win the Big Six championship last year. Bob Orf, one-half of the colorful twin end combination, tutors the wingmen, while M. Wetzel pays special attention to tackles, guards, and centers, and Clay Cooper works with the backs. All are completing work on degrees this year in addition to performing their coaching chores. CORSAGES Yearling Cagers To Meet New Coach The purpose of the meeting will be to give the new Jayhawk freshman coach, Gordon Gray, a chance to meet freshman candidates. Gray will be introduced to the men by Dr. F. C. Allen, varsity basketball coach. All men interested in being members of the freshman basketball squad this year are invited to attend a meeting Monday night at 7 o'clock on 'the second floor of Robinson gymnasium. SIDELINE QUARTERBACKS at the practice sessions of the Jayhawks yesterday afternoon were startled when they heard sounds closely resembling the chant of the tobacco auctioneer floating out of the midst of a cluster of varsity players gathered around the water can. Investigation revealed the crooner to be Ed Hall, 188 pound Sublette, Kan., fullback. Nazis Score---- Nazi informants said that despite bad weather, German planes continued night raids on London and on harbors and industrial works in the east and west coasts of England, in Southern England and in the Midlands. (continued from page one) fore it can bite. It will pay dearly for every action." It was said that there had been no reports of British raids on Germany or German-occupied territory Game's over the fall VARSITY-TOWNS are in town. We don't know what play the quarterback would have called, but we do know the play these new Varsity-Town arrivals are getting. They've got All-America style . . . from the campuses . . . from Hollywood . . . from Fifth Avenue . . . stellar performers from every style-starting spot. New details in pockets, lapels and coat lengths . . . new pattern performance that is dazzling. All of which, should be a signal that you've got a "goal to go" . . . and that's to our store to see Fall '40 Varsity-Towns- Learn To Dance "presumably because the British are unable to cope with the gales raging in many areas." Private Lessons in Ballroom Dancing MARION RICE DANCE STUDIO 927 1/2 Mass. A United Press correspondent visited the Bethel hospital at Bielefeld yesterday in a conducted party of foreign newspaper men. He said that Nazis put the death toll there at eight feeble-minded children and two nurses. A bomb from a single plane, the guides told the correspondent, went through the roof of the hospital into a room where the eight children lay ill. FREDA A DURHAM UNIVERSITY of Georgia Graduate WAS NEARELY EATEN EALIVE BY ATYGER AS HE LAY ALONE AND EXHAUSTED IN THE WILDS OF BURN SUDDENLY THAT MAN-EATING TIGER FELL WHIS EXCITING NEW BOOK 'AROUND THE WORLD ON A BICYCLE' - BUT WAIT SOON THEREAFTER, THIS DARING YOUNG CYCLIST WAS BARELY SAVED FROM DROWNING WHEN HIS BAMBOO RAPTIC CAPSIZED IN A SWIFT, SWOLLEN JUNGLE STREAM IN A WILD ANIMIST. TRIBAL COUNTRY. "MY CAMERA, FILMS AND ALL OTHER EQUIPMENT WERE RUNED. HYROTE THE PARKER PEN COMPANY, 'BUT MY MOST VALUABLE ASSET WAS UNHARMED.' THIS WAS HUNDREDS OF PAGES OR NOTES ON MY ARAVENTURES WRITTER WITHIN PARKER PERMANENT **quink** that I BOUGHT IN ATHENS GA. WHEN I STARTED OUT. "AS SOON AS I REACHED A NATIVE HUT AND DRIED THE WATER-SOAKED PAGES. FOUND THAT CONDITION PERFECT—NOT A SMEAR ON A SINGLE PAGE. MY PARKER PEN HAD NEVER FAILLED ME, AND NOW PARKER PERMANENT Quink IN A CRISIS THAT I DIDN'T THINK ANY INK COULD STAND-CAME THROUGH 100%." Parker Quink DOES WHAT NO OTHER INK CAN DO! IT DRIES 31% QUICKER THAN AVERAGE ON PAPER YET DOES NOT DRY IN YOUR PEN. IT CLEANS YOUR PEN AS IT WRITES. A PARKER OR ANY OTHER PEN- DIGESTS AND DISSOUSS DEPOSITS LEFT BY PEN-CLOUGING INGS. TWO KINDS -PERMANENT AND WASHABLE- BOTH IN BRILLIANT COLORS- NEVER WATERY AND NEVER GUMMY. GET PARKER FROM ANY WALL WORK LAMINATE OR HOMEWASH. WILL WORK LIKE A CHARMS. *Ursula D. Sohl, Ph.D.* Believe It or Not! Robert J. Ripley