TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1928 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PACE SEVEN 7-, 7 PA:E SEVEN VARSITY RELAY TEAMBRAVES IGNORE HORNSBY OFFER J NTEC(By Associated Press) .YJa. 16 -Rogers i THE TIP-OFF (- ', ;r v( s [ tirn, Chicago, And fae nNdfd To Comnpete * With laize And Blue l ,IiIOAN WON IN 1924 For the first time since 1924, Michi-S gan will send a team to participate in the invitation two mile Universi- ty Relay which is one of the features of the handicap games which are held annually under the auspices of the Illinois Athletic club, according to an auncuncement made by Coach Farrell. This year the games will be held on Feb. 10 in Chicago. A two mile relay team! was entered in t is meet by Coach Farrell in 1924, anr.d the Wolverinesnwon the Colonel 'William 1H. Beckman trophy by de- feating Iowa State college of Ames and Ohio State. The Michigan team was composed of Bowman, Freyberg, Hattendor , and Reinke. Three Big Teams Invited Invitations have been sent to three other Big Ten schools, Illinois, North- west'rn, and Chicago, in addition to l1ichigan, but it is not certain at the prosent time which will accept thy, offer. Notre Dame has also been ask- ed to enter a team in this event. Although Michigan has never made a regular practice of going outside the circles of the Big Ten in track competition, Coach Farrell looks up- on the invitational relay as an ex- cellent opportunity to test the strength of the Wolverine runners before the first regular indoor meet, which is the indoor Conference cham- pionships that will be held about the middle of March at Iowa City. The I. A. C. games will give the Maize and Blue trackmen a total of four indoor meets, including the In- door Conference championship event and the dual meet with Cornell at Ithaca and the meet here with Har- vard. iIornsby, newly acquired second base-iI man of the Boston Braves, is not for i sale, President Emil E. Fuchs of the Boston club, declared here last night, putting to rest reports that the fa- mous player might eventually turn up with the Chicago Cubs. Even Hazen Cuyler and other stars of the Cubs would not be tempting in any exchange for Hornsby, President Fuchs said. And as far as money is concerned, no amount would be con- sidered. "We secured Hornsby to play for us and not to auction off for fancy prices," Fuchs asserted. "Hornsby is satisfied and so are the Braves. Hornsby is a great ball player and, with his services, the prospects of the Braves are the brightest in years. "As for the reports that the Cubs are after Hornsby, I have not been approached, but even though offers were made I would promptly turn them down without a second thought. He's now a Brave and we won't turn him loose." The sensational trade by which Hornsby went to the Braves in ex- change for two ordinary players, Catcher Francis Hogan and Outfield- er Jimmy Welsh, developed many re- ports than another big deal was in the making, but President Fuchs was emphatic in his assertion that Horns- by was with the Braves to stay. ' t 1 f IX (Continued From Page Six) ears ago played another great game. t is doubtful if there is a faster reaking player in the Big Ten than Beckner and to this fact may be at- ributed at least a half dozen Hoosier points. Danny Rose had his hands ull in trailing Beckner-as indeed would almost anyone. I The fact that Beckner will be lost to Indiana by graduation at the end of the present semester is one of the big reasoins why Indiana is not rated as high in titular considerations as she otherwise would be. Captain Correll of the Hoosiers though not taking a prominent part in the scoring, is an underlying rea- son for Indiana success. He is a clever floor man and passer of no little consequence. Those who had heard the ad- vance stories of McCracken, the visitors' center, were a little dis- appointed because he did not score so heavily. Nevertheless he made eight points and played a rather good floor game. On the tip-off no particular superiority could be conceded him as Chap- man more than took care of him- self.I In 'speaking of Chapman, one mustI passing game that was the 1 ,t 3 he has ever shown. say that the sopflpnore cent'r is getting better with every game. Ile looked like a veteran and was able toa sink his shot in the emergency. He took care of the tip-off well and in! the closing minutes of play gaine(d possession of the ball for Michigan without fail. Comment on the work of iar- rigan and Oosterbaan under the basket is superfluous--it looked like last year! Oo-terbaan whit high point scorer. Harrigan with only one basket to his credit nevertheless was a star in thie combination-he dropped the role I of spectacular and fitted into team play wonderfully, playing u I~ V~E wECTIG STAR fse_ . e na" !(N"\ CI(T'lY. Iowa,.,Jami16 (>'m i- f;r Iinself by IM rson \. Nelsn. i Versity f ~4i'wa honmrr t11 0').i har ' Is mi4 would ave placen 1him secoind i the 1924 nt eraon Nelson, Win was captain of the 1P27 H lOwkeye WOtball team, Will ceoncen- irate on Ile event from M.rch toI Ju lly wXit h tIM' hope that he will B on of tief o n a ha n i throwers at Anserdan next sunn e In compettionr , his best record is r ,1 feet, 9 inches, made last spring, and standing as the 'n iversity of fowa record. A throw of 170 feet is his finest practice mark, according t, Nelson. Wi h a ,heave of 174 feet 1.0 inches , Fred Toot ell, now a coach, won the Stympic title four years ago. RcNIsd 1 a i i f i TICE TYPING-Theses a specialty. Rea- sonable rates. M. V. Hartsuff. 1)1RFSSMAKING-Experienced; can Dial 9387. 77-180 furnish references. Estimate given - -- on work desired. Phone 3655. TYPEWRITER RIBBONS-Our rapid SUn., Tues., Thurs. turnover insures a fresh stock. You -- . secure the best quality at a noder- NOTICE-We deliver between the ate price. O. D. Morrill, 17 Nickels hours of 9:10 and 11:30 p m. Prompt Arcade. Delivery. Barbecue Inn. Phone 4481. 20 100 TYPING THESIS, ;126 Packard. Y)al 7391. 85, 8G, 87 NtTiI Two used portable. type--- - - -- writers for sale. One and two years TYPEWRITING and Mimeographing old r ptectively. Reasonable prices. promptly and neatly done by ex- Call 34'9_ E. H1. Munn. i perienced operators at moderate Tues., Thurs., Sat. rates. College work a specialty for nearly twenty years. O. P1. Nlorrill, NO'CTI(-it will pay you to call 3489 17 Nickels Arcade. b fore buying or renting a type- writer. H17.T. Munn, 203 So. Thayer. TYPEWRITERS-All makes, sold, Tues., Thurs., Sat.I rented, exchanged. cleaned, re- paired. Our machines and work NOTICE--Be sure and visit this most guaranteed to give best satisfaction. modern and efficient Hat Cleaning O. D. Morrill, 17 Nickels Arcade. and Shoe Shining Parlor. Michigan Theatre Bldg. 539 E. Liberty. FOUNTAIN PEN SERVICE Tues., Thurs., Sat. WE have three skilled penmakers COLUM Xs, t L A S Sl"F E CLOSES CLPS AT 3 P.M ADVERTISING AT 3 PJA Ernie McCoy demonstrated that he !lace went to M\att 1lecrati. h 11 has completely recovered from anyi slumps he has been in working well I all around except for a mental lapseI in the last hectic minutes of the strife, when he tossed the ball in the gen- Aral.direction of the hoop from mid- floor. If this error had been costly, Mac would likely never have recov- ered-but it wasn't so all's well. While individuals were starring, they were starring in a smoth- working combination; they were contributing immeasurably to team play-and that was the _ most significant part of thti game. threw the 16 pound implemeni 163( feet and 9 5-8 inchs. Another Amer- ican won sixth place with a throwI three feet less than Nelsois best competitive mark. PORT A BIE TYPEWRITERS Corona, Underwood, Relniiigi on, Royal. 11"e have al makes. Some in colored duco finisltes. 0. D. M RORRILL 17 Nickels Arcade. Phone 6615. ii I TYPEiWRITER SERICE COMPLETE typewriter service, new and used machines of all makes. Rentals by the week, month or semester; repairing of all makes by skilled workmen; all kinds of typ- ing, prompt service. High class rib- bons and carbons. Rider's Pen Shop. back of our retail counter to serve you on correct fitting, adjustments and repairing of all makes. You will not find equal service any- where else. Our prices are no more than you would pay elsewhere. Manufacturers of the famous Rider "Masterpen." Rider's Pen Shop. FOR SALE LAST WEEK of special oriental rug sale. Oriental brassware;, Indian prints, etc. Must be closed out re- gardless of cost. Real opportunity to buy. Mr. Jamgotch's importations tit reduced prices. Third floor, Mack & Co 87, 88, 89, 90, 91 1hij I lill L 1 FOR SALE TWO J-HOP TICKETS Inquire Box 23, Michigan Daily FORMAL WEAR Demands Correctness . P ' FOR SALE-J-Hop ticket. Apply Box 22, Michigan Daily. 86, 87,, 88 FOR RENT FOR RENT-Furnished Apt. 1215 Hill St. First floor front, four rooms, sun parlor and bath. Phone 3567. 87, 88, 89 FOR RENT-Modern furnished apart- ment or rooms for two girls, second semester. 621 Forest. Phone 5607, near campus. 87, 88, 89 TWO furnished rooms including one fairly large room, near Campus, by faculty man. Address; Box 23, Mich- igan Daily. 87, 88 FOR RENT-Newly decorated front suite. Light and warm. Shower bath. 803 .South State.- Phone 6110.. 86, 87, 88, 89 FOR RENT-Comfortable suite and single room. Phone 8194. 89, 90, 91 SUITE-Single and double room, one block from Campus. Phone 5009. 1303 Wilmot. 86, 87 LARGE beautiful suite, also double room, in comfortable home. Con- venient location. 208 N. Division. 86, 87, 88 FOR RENT-214 Packard St. 2 pleasant double rooms; near -cam- pus; $3.00. Phone 9152. 86, 87, 88 FOR RENT-Furnished house, 6 rooms, good condition, facing cam- pus. For second semester. 421 Church. Phone 5561. 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92 FOR RENT-A pleasant single room. Dial 8194. 86, 87, 88 FOR RENT-Single room, warm, pri- vate home. 1.30.4 Herman Ct., be- tween Forest and Olivia, near Wells. Telephone 21619. 85, 86, 87 FOR RENT-Completely furnished five-room house; hieatedl; one block. from Campus. Very reasonable. Phone 6642. 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89 ROOMS at $3.25 per week at FLETCHER HALL Ann Arbor's only Men's Dormitory. Under new Management. Especially adapted for Student's con- venience. New, Fire-proof Building, Steam heat, Shower Baths, Iotand cold water in each room. Lounging and Smoking Room 915 Sybil St., near Ferry Field. Dial 4770. WANTED . WANTED CHEF Write, giving full information and references. Box 21. 85, 86, 87 SIT is a decided pleasure to experience the feel- ing of being correctly dressed on every ocea- sion. launde ease c Smart tailoring is the first requisite yet rng is of vital import. Comfort and an only be obtained with shirts and col- lars which are spotlessly clean and faultlessly ironed. The painstaking methods which are so characteristic of Varsity Service insure the superior of laundry w ork. I LOST Phone 21 , ' + 0 ty : ^' f f 4 ... r s . q t. !f , , J, b " tl 1 q it ," 1 - s 7 1 1 87, 88, 89,, 90 LOST-Blue lavelier setting, Friday night, between Michigan Union and Arcade Theatre. Dial 21494. 87 LOST-An Elgin watch was lost in -the locker room of Waterman gym, Saturday. Reward for its return to Champe, 556 So. State or Phone 4017. 87, 88, 89 LOST-A reward is offered for the return of the Elgin watch which was lost Saturday in Waterman gym. Call Champe, Phone 4017, or 556 So. State St. Illlllll li 1111 IiHi1111111 ilillilllll li ii Subscribe For ', N :J C LI I® 0 u m