THE MICHIGAN DAILY igan Varsity Nine ins mBadgers, 1I V .r wo FE MARKED BY EFRGIAE RUNS le, Diffley Drive Circuit ws for Wolves, Butler Sprains Ankle. (Spr rioIl o The Daily) [SCN, Wisconsin-Wiscon- pes of retaining its Big Ten onship were virtually shat- oday as Michigan won a ting game, 10-6. Braendle ffley polled out home runs invaders, while Smilgoff, right fielder also clouted it blow. Butler, Wolverine elder was carried from the d in the seventh inning sprained ankle. Michigan Northwestern Golf eam to Meet Wolverines Today TOLAN TO ENTER LAST HOME RACE iNET'TEAM' ITS MEIT lql[9C9TSl Michigan Must Take Match Evanston to Remain in Conference Race. at ko, die, kins, )n, 1 y, c r, rf Is, 2 it s al, p eke, ton, ABB 3b 5 2 f .....5 3 cf ..4.. 1 2 b .. . .2 1 p....4 b 4... ! 0 rf .. 1 1 p . 2 0 .38 10 Wisconsin R 2 3 1 0 0 1 H 1 2 3 0 3 2 2 0. 0 0 0 13 0 3 0. 0 13 6, 1 0 4 0 0 0 27 A E 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 21 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 13 21 , cf . Adel, ss . . gff, rf . cier, 3b . der, lb, 'ld, c .. 'eld, p e , 2b .. AB R H OA E .. .523 2 0 0 5, 0 0 0 0 0 4 2 2 3 0 0 ..5 1 3 3 0 0 ... 1 2 6 1 0 .. 5 0 0 5 1 0 4 0 2 2 5 0 .,.. 3 0 I S 2 3 ~~ 3 ..t.3 o 1327e1e3 hits-Sommerfield, Eddie Tolan, Who will be running his last sprints on the home track this afternoon when the Wolverines meet the Minnesota thinclads to open the Conference dual meet season. He willeruntin both the 100 and the 220 events. 'M' BLANKET AWARDS Varsity 'M' blankets were awarded to the following men atn the Cap Night ceremonies last night: J. Perry Austin . . . .cross country track William Benz ........ wrestling William V. Compton....baseball Francis M. Cornwell .... football Thomas Courtis .........hockey Joseph Downing.....basketball Leo Draveling......... football Theron Donahue...... wrestling Leonard Friedman ......fencing Robert Gordon .. ..... .. fencing Edward Hammer.......tennis Richard Livingston ........ golf John Noyes ...............track John Pottle .............. track J. R. Royston ..............golf Harrison Simrall......football (Continued on Page 7) In an attempt to gain their first Western Conference victory of the season, the 'Michigan tennis team will invade Evanston today to do battle with the powerful aggrega- t i o n representing Northwestern University, in what promises to be one of the crucial meets of the year for the Wolverines. Northwestern Team Strong. Northwestern has e n g a g e d in .three meets to date, being returned victorious over Indiana and Purdue, and dropping a meet to the strong Chicago team. Chicago, however, holds the Big Ten championship, and a loss to that team is no dis- grace. Should the Wolverines drop today's meet to the Wildcats they would be practically out of the conference race, as they lost a hard fought 5-4 decision last Mon- day to Onio State at Columbus. On the other hand, if the Maize and Blue team crashes through to a victory today it stands an excell- ent chance of going through the rest of the season withat least an even eha.,ace of finishing high up in the standings. Four dual meets remain after the Wildcats clash, Indiana, Chicago, Illinois, and Min- 'nesota Leing on the Wolverine's schedule. Seven Men Make Trip. Coach John Johnstone took a squad of seven men with him to Chicago yesterday when the team left for the meet. The entire regu- lar team, with the exception of Sherman, made the trip. He was kept at home because of an infec- tion to his foot that prohibits him from taking apart in the proceed- (Corntinuea on, Eage 7) REGULARS NAMED BY SOCCER COACH' All-Campus Sport Sees Foreign- ers Dominate Selections. Coach Johnstone announced his! first team from the soccer playersl yesterday afternoon. Few players on the regular team hail from America and none from Michigan.. Inter-squad games are scheduled to begin Saturday, May 16. Soccer is an Intramural sport and little. outside competition is available. Aruiyo, fram Brazil, has got the jump on the, other candidates for1 goal position. C. E. Dee, from In-I diana, Z. Lucassian, from Persia, and Trelles are the best fullbacks on the squad.1 A. Terrazas, from Bolivia, is one{ of the outstanding backs on the team. E. Groth, Ting, from China, and B. S. Sidhu, from India, are the ranking forwards. Other players who have been- selected on the first squad are: Valverde, from Bolivia: Gamarra, from Peru; J. Guardia, from Pan- ama; P. Garzon, from Colombia; I ios, from Bolivia; and W. Ouspen- sky. the ef 1 titI ue 12 f SUNDAY, MAY 10 Place your order now: avoid disappointment Michigan Flower Growers, Inc. 1021 Maiden Lane Phone 2-1715 Det......200 000 000 1 Brown and Spencer; Schang and Hayworth. Bost. ....300 500 000 Clev. ....301 000 000 8 4 AMERICAN LEAGUE R H Wash. ... 200 000 000 0 2 9 E YESTERDAY'S RESULTS American League. Detroit 3, Washington 2, (10 innings). Boston 8, Clevland 4. New York-Chicago, rain. Philadelphia-St. Louis, rain. National League Brkln. 4, Philadelphia 3. St. Louis-Pi t t s b u r g h, wet grounds. Baseball Stomas With but three games played in both leagues yesterday afternoon, the Detroit Tigers managed to find time betwen showers to nose out the Washington Senators in a tight ten-inning game by a score of 3-2. Each team scored two runs in the first inning and then seemed able only to scatter their hits over the remaining innings in such a way Arriving in Ann Arbor at about 10 o'clock yesterday morning, North- western's Varsity golfers proceeded Go breeze around the new Univer- sity course in close to par figures in preparation for their miatch today. wih Coach Trueblood's mashie- weilders. Capt. Ollie Rogers and Fred Da- maske, the two veterans ftfm the team which last year defeated the Wolverines, led the visitors' attack on "old man Par." At the same time the Wildcats were tuning up for the crucial fray today as Capt. Royston and his team confined their pre-game ef- forts to the hitting of practice shots, with special emphasis being placed on the shorter strokes. At a late hour last night, Coach (Continued on Page 7) TIGERS NOSE OUT M I f IWASHiNGTON, 3-2 111UlW Detroit Keeps in Fourth PaceI by Ten-Inning Victory. NATIONAL LEAGUE 000 031 000 4 .... 000 002 001 3 4 9 FOR THE WEEK-END ENJOY A PLEASANT EVENINGON THE WATER Saunder's Canoe Livery ON THE HURON RIVER OPEN TILL 12:00 P. M. I , I , . I; . Record-Breaking Values on Mstinctive New Fraternity Jewelry BURR PATTERSON'S Spring Sale 20 % to 50 % Discount 603 Church Street 3 9 Whitehi I. 13 9 0 that there was no more scoring 11, until Akers, substitute shortstop for the Tigers, broke up the game with 1 a timely triple with a man on sec- 2 ond. Detroit now holds fourth position 1 with a margin of a game and a half 0 over the Senators. base Diffley. e runs-Braendle, Diffley, hits--Pankey, Kracht "FLAVOR is SEALED -IN -Braendle, Hudson, TYPEWRITER REPAIRING All makes of machines. a ek out by Sommerfield 1 2; Compton 1. , on balls-Sommerfield 1 2; ComptonL ed balls-Diffley. by pitcher-Scheinder; 4' 5; Our equipmen t and per- s a n ne are .considered,. among the best in the State. The result of twenty years' careful building. 0. D. MORRILL and:- food-val.Iues are regained "nJfe semi -seaed oven, of =mY by, ire-Schuler and Naprestek. 314 South State St. Phone 6615 / ELECTROCHEF electric range AI .:V / )k "LARRY" GOULJ "This is Healthful Coking!" (SECOND IN COMMAND ON THE BYRD EXPEDITION) /r Tonight Hill Auditorium - 8:30 P.M. +Yk j . W4 '; , . ', I Q1 Wi t' ag" A study of one thousand families using the ELECTROCHEF electric range showed a cooking cost of less than one cent a meal a person r f _ " ry; °y f "The oven of my Electrochef electric range has no vent - it is semi-sealed. All the nourishing food "With Byrd to the Bottom of the-World" ILLUSTRATED IY MOTION PICTURES AND STEREOPTICON SLIDES "The best lecture on any Polar expedition, I have ever heard."-Prof. Wi. H. Hobbs Material Never Before Presened in Ann Arbor / values are retained, as in a pressure cooker, instead of being lost in steam. Meats and vegetables cook .to melting, tenderness in their. own juices, with their deli- cious natural flavors seled-in. Electric cooking requires very little water-half-a-cup is ample for vegetables. Electric cooking is healthful. I am so delighted with my Electrochef electric range that I wouldn't dream of going back to cooking with burning fuels""" i x GET TICKETS NOW: Y V TILTVA'%lLY i V" f £ . TT W V - V WI^ err-Y- w . .- - GENERAL ADMISSION, $1.00 CASH PRICE $105 INSTALLED including all necessary wiring. $10 down, $6 a month, small carrying j - - - - k, W- -q9tIP - - - i H1ll111. 1 1 FAl 1 IF WIA I4E'%I %I A1L1J'gt OT74ZVAIVT!QVA 'TrQa'Ivi n t E