THE MICHIGAN DAILY . . ,.. . .. ..,; ., ,i. .X p ; . .Y $ . ," ." . ,, , .O w'.. e r p / ,. rs LIGHT DRILL 1FOR BASKETBALL MEN Expect All Players to Be in Best of Shape for Contest Saturday Evening MATHER EXPECTS STRENUOUS STRUGGLE WITH WISCONSIN Only a light workout was given the Varsity basketball squad last night by Coach Mather. The tapering off process for the first Conference game with Wisconsin Saturday night was begun by the coach so that his men would be in excellent condition for what will probably prove one of the most difficult games of the season. Only an Hour's Drill An hour's drill in signal work, team play, perfection of plays, and basket shooting was the most that Mathr would permit his players last night. With the exception of "Duke" Dunne, who appeared at practice for the first time Monday night, Billy Fallon re- ported all his men in condition to last the whole game, and the trainer expects the football captain to get in- to his last year's form in a short time. Coach Maiher would announce no probable line-up, but his choice will probably lie between Miller, Whit- lock, and Captain Karpus for for- wards, Weiss at center, and Williams, Rea, and Wilson for guards. Piper and Rouse may get into the game at guards, Reason and Dunne at center, and Peare at forward. Tonight's workout will be even lighter than that of yesterday. Glass Backstops Put In For the past week the glass back- stops have been up in the gymnasium and the players have found no diffi- culty in adjusting themselves to the new arrangement. Michigan is the last school in the Conference to erect the transparent backboards which give the people on the end- seats a better view of the game. According to Coach Mather, Wis- consin comes to Ann Arbor doped as one of the strongest contenders for the Conference basketball champion- ship, despite their one point defeat by Northwestern. "Watch Wisconsin" is the motto of the Big Ten coaches, and with Meanwell back as the Badger mentor, the Madison institution will send out a strong quintet. Employ- ing the short pass and the bounce pass, the Badger five outplayed North- western, but the player's inability to ring the ball lost them the contest. Coach Mather is expecting a difficult game Saturday, one which Michigan will find it hard to win. Have you got yours? The new mod- ified English Brogue-they're cut down 20 per cent too at the Readjust- ment Sale-Davis Toggery Shoppe 119 S. Main St.-Adv. What's that? Cheney Cravats-20 per cent off too! Davis Toggery Shoppe, 119 S. Main St.-Adv. Classes in shorthand, typewriting; bookkeeping and penmanship will be organized at the School of Shorthand. 711 N. University Ave., on Tuesday, January 11.-Adv. FRESH BASKETBALL Beginning at 7:15 o'clock to- night, there will be freshman basketball practice at the same hour every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday night. FRATERNITY FIVES TO MEET TUESDAY Fraternity basketball will make its first appearance Tuesday evening when 16 teams will engage each other on the floor at Waterman gymnasium. Characteristic of this year's athletic attitude, a large number of houses are represented in the league. The schedule for Tuesday evening is as follows: 8:45 o'clock-Zeta Beta Tau vs. Theta Chi; Delta Sigma Delta vs. Chi Psi; Phi Sigma Delta vs. Delta Sigma Phi; Phi Gam- ma Delta vs. Delta Tau Delta; 9:15 o'clock-Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Sin- fonia; Phi Delta Theta vs. Phi Up- silon; Phylon vs. Theta Delta Chi; Phi Kappa Psi vs. Alpha Delta Phi. THREE CUSHION TOURNAMENT WILL GET UNDER WAY MONDAY Play in the second annual three cushion billiard tournament will be started at 4 o'clock next Monday aft- ernoon in the Union billiard room. B. C. Robbins, '23, winner of last year's tournament, will defend his title in the present series which will be conducted on the round robin plan. Al Taylor will be in charge of all matches played during the tourney and has been coaching the entrants for some time. An entry fee of $2 is being charged. The School of Shorthand begins new term on Tuesday, January 11. 711 N. University Ave.-Adv. -- ARE YOU INTERESTED in the WELFARE OF YOUNG MEN Play is as necessary as work. Any game which is interesting enough to afford real Re-crea- tion is a beneficial game, pro- vided it is played amid clean, decent surroundings. Most young men prefer games like billiards for their leisure hours. If you are interested in the welfare of young men, you are invited to visit our billiard parlors as often as you wish. You will find that this is a place of clean sport, where gambling, profanity and other undesirable elements are abso- lutely TABOO. HUSTON BROS. Pocket and Carom Billiards. Cigars and Candies. Soft Drinks and Light Lunches. Cigarettes and Pipes. "We Try to Treat You Right" No. 4 will journey to East Lansing to meet the Aggies, if negotiations now under way are successfully completed. The _ CHU ElE II flsquad will invade foreign territory U again the following week, playing the Michigan College of Mines at Hough- GAMES WITH WISCONSIN AND ton on Jan. 27 and at Calumet, Jan. 28. COLLEGE OF MINES ON LIST Northwestern to Play M. A. C. will play a return date here Games with Wisconsin and the on Feb. 4 or 5 after which the team Michigan College of Mines feature the will be given a rest until Feb. 17 when 1921 hockey schedule as announced it will open a ,three day trip with ,a' yesterday by Manager Fletcher. These game with Northwestern at Evanston. teams are probably the strongest of On Feb. 18 and 19, Wisconsin will be the middle western schools that have the opponent on her home ice. These taken up the winter sport, 'having two games promise to be the battles played the game for several years, royal of the season. they have now established it on a firm Notre Dame is endeavoring to ar- foundation in their respective insti- range at least two games with the tutions. Varsity, and if suitable dates can be Other matches will be played here agreed upon the Catholics will no beginning Wednesday, Jan. 12, when doubt be encountered before the season the Waterstons of Detroit, a team that ends. Assumption College of Windsor fell before the Wolverines last season has also requested a place on the on two occasions, will be the attrac- Maize and Blue schedule and will be. tion. On Jan. 14 and 15 the University given two games if such a step is at of Wisconsin comes here, the first all possible. The Canadians brought Conference school to meet Michigan a strong team to Ann Arbor last wint- on the ice. The following Friday and er displaying just about as fast a Saturday, Jan. 21 and 22, the Varsity brand of hockey as was seen in the Coliseum during the season. It is probable that several of the fastest in- dependent teams in the Detroit-Wind- (Continued on Page Eight) ONLY THREE MEN QUALIFY IN BASKET SHOOTING CONTEST Only three men qualified out of a fair sized number of tryouts Thurs- day afternoon in the foul-shooting contest which the Intramural office is conducting in Waterman gymnasium. It is expected that the number of men qualifying will be greatly in- creased this evening when the con- test closes. Officials from the Intra- mural department will be at the gym- nasium to judge the tryouts from 1 to 3 o'clock Friday afternoon and from 7 to 8 o'clock in the evening. The three men who qualified Thursday aft- ernoon are: J. .Jerome, 42; G. E. Stone, 34; H. E. Storz, 31. The num- bers represent the number of bas- kets caged in 50 chances. F. S. Fletch- er shot 17 out of 25 attempts and will complete the 50 trys this afternoon. Feature it boys. $4.00 cloth hats at $2.95-Readjustment Sale-Davis Tog- gery Shoppe, 119 S. Main St.-Adv. ME You tell 'em, State Street, They all take LIBERTY. GIVE k I FRIDAY ADULTS 30c SATURDAY 1W1u e r ICHILDREN 10c 4.-. g*MAY4Mx"44ILE_ 44,M.. 4 #-',h -4 44 -4-4,4' 444*444-4-4 ' 44 " . .44 !44",,4 -0.4,43f 4' 4 4,4'4 44 * 4 h,#G3 EYESOF TI IFART ADAPTED FROM fUDES YDNABR9 D-IECTED $V SCENAx44 4 r- PAUL POW EL L CLARA,'ENN~nV After Years of Darkness- LAURA, a blind girl, lived in squalid quarters in Dunn's Court. The shady characters in whose care she had been placed when a baby, in trying to be knd to her, had drawn rosy pictures of her home and surroundings. Imagine her grief and shock, when her sight was restored, and she saw with her eyes instead of with her heart! But all came right in the end in this heart- gripping drama of a young girl's "faith, "TH E EYES OF TH E HEART," " in which MARY MILES MINTER, "the Sunbeam of the Screen," has made the greatest success of her remarkable areer. NOTICE Advance Sale of Reserved Seats for "The Rainbow Revue" Starts Saturday Morning at Ten O'Cloca. Two Performances Nightly at 7 and 9. Matinee at 3. NIGHT--LOWER FLOOR 50c; BALCONY 40c MATINEE 30c-NO RESERVATIONS LIBERTY OR GIVE ME DEATH! so SAID PATRICK HENRY IN THOSE DAYS so SAD - sO SAID YOUNG EZEKIEL AS HE CAME AFTER THIS AD- NO GREATER OR MORE PROPE R NAME COULD BE ATTACHED TO SUCH A LITTLE UNASSUMING STREET AND BETTER YET FOR LIBERTY WHEN A "YOUNG MEN'S TAILOR CAME INTO EXISTENCE SELLING HAND - TAILORED CLOTHES - $90.00 VALUES AT $45 & $50 I ;I $50 VALUES AS LOW AS $24.98 1111UIII11111111111l11 11 11t11111 111il1111lllllllllil111111111111111111 11 1111111 Here's the Winner - the kind of bargains you've been looking for, - a READJUSTMENT SALE - not the Old-Fashioned "Clean-Out-the Old-Stuff" Sale, but a flat 20% off on everything° in the Davis Toggery Shoppe. And say, there are hundreds of new Brogues that haven't been un- packed for two weeks yet.' And Cravats, and all the other things you need right now. And I'm here to say the prices are the kind that will pull the iron men right out of your pockets and put the goods on your back. PATTERNS One Thousand Strong TWEEDS AND HOMESPUNS imported, like the "RED COATS" of old THEN LIKE GOOD LITTLE "ZEK" YOU'LL SAY- GIVE ME LIBERTY - SUSPEND TRAFFIC ON ALL CROSS STREETS FOR I'M AFTER MY NEW SUIT AT F'Libertv T1ILEO[ DAVIS .c Toggery Shoppe 119 SOUTH MAIN STREET - rieet YOUNG MEN'S HABERDASHERY MQTION PICTURE FEATURE IN ADDITION E t~ *3 ~1 I. 1._ l .a. r " - - A- ---- ._1_ 1 1 . . f1 Ao '- a" r n_ n t '