THE MICHIGAN DAILY. i Area dia.,e ctive and home-like student restaurant appeared in Ann Arbor opened this year name "The Arcadia." It is on the same d two doors west. 'eciate this large, airy and light dining tely new and fresh. The management ay with the atmosphere of the ordinary The idea has been to make it a home- :he students. t has not changed, the distinctive excell- rcadia will be upheld. There are plants hina is white and glossy, the silverware s, and the four piece orchestra will lend n this new restaurant. And last and not the meals will be raised. This is natur- is larger and more up-to-date and the be, for board $3.75 and $4.50 a week; be sold for $5.75, $7.50 and $8.00. SARCADIA Er - MRS. M. E. MORROW -16 EAST LIBERTY ST. FACULTY MEN ARE STRANDEDABROA Several Professors and their Parties Are Overtaken by War While Touring Europe MAJORITY OF TRAVELLERS REACH AMERICA SAFELY Several Students Encounter Stirring Adventures in Warring Countries Practically all the Michigan stu- dents and professors who were in Europe at the outbreak of war, have been heard from. Prof. Fred N. Scott has cabled that he and his family were to return Sep- tember 23 on the "Nordam," which had been delayed in port for several days. When the war started Prof. Scott was in the interior of Germany, from where he escaped to the Hague with difficulty. Prof. and Mrs. William H. Butts were in Spain at the beginning of hostilities. They were left penniless until a Spanish friend relieved their distress on the day before their ship left the port at Barcelona. Among those who escaped almost unscathed were Prof. and Mrs. Arthur G. Hall who were travelling in Great Britain. They left England in state- rooms which they had engaged several weeks before. Prof. William D. Henderson and family, and a daughter of Dean John 0. Reed were in Paris where news of the war broke upon them unexpected- ly. They were obliged to stand up most of the way to London and to endure steerage quarters on the voy- age home. Friends of Prof. Albert A. Stanley have received word that he sailed from England September 20, expect- ing to arrive at Ann Arbor about the time of university opening. When Austria declared war, Prof. John O. Reed was in Vienna with his family. He went to Jena where he had intended to join Prof. Henderson's party. He expected to remain at Jena, rather than risk a hazardous voyage to America. Dr. and Mrs. Reuben Peterson at the latter end of July were at Frei- burg, Germany, where a group of specialists were studying the twi- light sleep. Dr. and Mrs. Peterson had just returned from an automobilei trip near Liege when the news of war reached Freiburg. After a thril-1 ling escape from Germany to London, they secured steerage passage to the United States, and on September 5 arrived at Ann Arbor. A party of thirteen, including Prof.1 James P. Bird and twelve women had variegated luck in escaping the wara countries. The party had gone as fari as Berne by the last of July. Here the unexpected news of war prevented their starting for Belgium and Ger-< many, and made them hasten to Paris. The party with difficulty reached Bou- logne where the English troops were just landing. In England the party's railroad trip from London to Glasgow was hindered for some time by the passing of some 200,000 Russian troops through the island. The thirteen sail- ed August 26, in a ship accompanied by an English cruiser, and on a north- ern route endangered by ice-bergs. The greatest danger came in the St. Lawrence River where the ship was rammed, and saved only by all night work with the pumps. Prof. Rene Talamon and bride were affected more seriously. They were on their wedding trip in Paris when the great war broke, and he enlisted in the French army. Prof. Talamon was appointed drill-master at a re- cruiting station whither his wife was able to accompany him. Near the first of September he was ordered nearer the front and his wife returned to her sister's home in Paris. It is believed that he is now at the front of the bat- ale line. Among Michigan students in Europe were H. BeachCarpenter, '14, Morris Milligan, '14, Carlton Jenks, '15, West- cott Smith, '15E, Howard M. Warner, '16, Lawrence G. Puchta, '17, W. S. Davidson, '15, Bruce D. Bromley, '14, John T. Naylon, '15E. These were all subjected t trouble in leaving Europe, and some were forced to submit to the horrors of a steerage passage to Amer- ica. PLANS FOR UNION OPERA TO INCLUDE SIX-DAY TOUR Management Hopes to Stage Produc- tion in Coming Season at Hill Auditorium Michigan Union Opera plans have gone forward during the summer va- cation until General Chairman Ken- neth Baxter, '15E, was able to an- nounce yesterday that a six day trip would be made during spring vacation, beginning with a presentation of the show in Kalamazoo on Monday, April 12, Grand Rapids on Tuesday, Chicago on Wednesday, South Bend on Thurs- day, Toledo on Friday, and Ddtroit on Saturday night. Permission to take such a trip has been obtained from the Senate Council and definite arrange- ments have been practically completed in all of the cities. March 24, 25, 26, and 27 have been chosen as the dates for the Ann Arbor performances. The management is endeavoring to make satisfactory ar- rangements for staging the opera in Hill auditorium. If this can be done the Wednesday and Thursday night shows will be omitted. The 1915 production will be the sev- enth annual Union Opera, each of which has been more successful than the preceding one. The entire Opera .personnel, management and caste, is made up of members of the Union. General Chairman Baxter will meet with all those who are writing the mu- sic Wednesday afternoon at 5:00 o'clock at the Union. EN6INEERS BREAK RECO RDAT CMP Enrollment of Ninety-Five Students Exceeds All Former Years; Foresters Attend This Year CAMP IS VISITED BY MANY FACULTY MEN AND FRIENDS Only One Accident Marks Otherwise Perfect Year; Many Changes Inaugurated A record attendance marked the for- tieth annual engineering camp held at Douglas Lake this summer. There were 95 students at the camp. This is a gain of 58 per cent over the at- tendance of last year. The largest camp previous to the one held this summer was in 1907 when 74 students attended. Though the camp is primarily for civil engineers, all of the departments of engineering were represented at Camp Bogardus this summer. For the first time in the history of the camp, forestry students attended. This is probably due to the fact that the Unit- ed States government is now requiring of its foresters a knowledge of survey- ing. "We have had a most successful summer at the Bogardus camp," said Prof. Clarence T. Johnson, director of the camp, yesterday. "A splendid spirit of industry and good feeling was present in all the work. The general scholastic standing was higher than ever before and the weather was ideal all summer. "An electric light plant and a new system of water supply were the ad- ded improvements this year. Also, we began replacing the canvas tents with steel dwellings. "The camp has now been establish- ed entirely on a cooperative basis. Provisions are bought in large quanti- ties and students pay board exactly at cost. Every one connected with the camp is a Michigan student." Among the faculty members who vis- ited Camp Bogardus this summer are: Prof. Filibert Roth, Dean Karl E, Guthe, Prof. Henry E. Riggs, Prof. W. C. Hoad. One serious accident occurred dur- ing the summer. Paul Weinlander, '15E, broke his leg in a ball game. The limb is still in a cast. Weinlander will return to college when it has heal- ed. An innovation at the camp this sum- mer was the establishment of a vis- itor's day. August 15 was set aside for the entertainment of friends and relatives of the students, and gradu- ates of the University. About 150 were present. Track and field events were participated in, and a baseball game was played. k, I O CONDUCTS ~MERATTACKS and Faculty Are Vanquished God SUCCUMB PUBLICATIONS CHANGE OFFICES The Daily, Gargoyle, iichiganensian and Directory Centralize in One Office The.student publications start this year with newly equipped quarters in the Ann Arbor Press building, on May- nard street, formerly occupied by the University Music House. The' offices of The Michigan Daily, the Gargoyle, Michiganensian and Students' Direct- ory will all be centralized in this one location. Workmen are now at work thor- oughly renovating the place, installing counters and private offices, and will have the quarters ready for occupan- cy in the next few days. The base- ment will be used as a lounging room and reportorial headquarters for the Daily men. among students, culty, and recent e fact that "Dan his vacation dur- ap-I Prof. W. A. Frayer, of the history tin- department, maried Bertha Vanwalen- ton, burg, a graduate of Leland Stanford >rk,' University, at Riverside, Cal., during ter, September. Prof. Frayer is now at nd. Cornell University, studying for the with degree of Doctor of Philosophy. go- Earl V. Moore, '12, head of the organ ger department of the University School t in of Music, married Blanche W. Ander- om- son, '12, at Muskegon, August 26. 50 Harold P. Scott, '13, instructor in the ken rhetoric department, married Jennie 13 Morris, '15, at Columbus, Ohio, July 18. Pa- Albert B. Parfett, '16, married Mad- this eline McVoy, '14, on June 22. Mr. Par- t In fett is a member 'of the Sigma Chi fra- Ian- ternity, and Miss McVoy is a member Jni- . of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. lace Leo E. Baribeau, '14D, married Hel- ;ard en Boyke in Ann Arbor June 20. The Frank A.Wright, '14L, married Kath- . on erine Breitmeyer, of Detroit, at that as city, in June. gan Clarence E. Lehr, '14L, married Mrs. Lorena Genter in Ann Arbor June 13. rap- Werner S. Allison, '12, married Jos- In ephine Morrison, '12, at Iron River, n a Mich., September 4. In Elmer P. Grierson, '14L, married eted Phyllis Murray of Manchester, Ohio, ever at that city on June 18. ap- Walter P. Staebler, '13, former busi- St. ness manager of the Gargoyle, mar asa- ried Mildred B. Guilford of Friendship, and New York, on September 9. John H. Payne, '12L, who was busi- ness manager of The Wolverine for the summer of 1912, married Lura EAR Masterson of Chicago on June 20. Glen E. Mapes, '14, married Lois A. the Bassett of the School of Music in Ann .g Arbor, September 16. Ong, Prentis Douglas, coach of the fresh- de- man football squad, married Curry Nu- nics gent, of Lexington, Ky., on September ulty 23. . r. George Moe, of the athletic associa- 1 of tion staff, married Genevieve Roche, me- of Ann Arbor, on June 20. en- During the summer the engagement R~. of Gerald H. Hagar, '14, of Berkeley, to Cal., to Carrie H. Kendall, '14, of Al- gmnna, Mich. was announced. i CALLAG HAN COMPANY Established 1864 BUY, SELL EXCHANGE F STUDENTS LAWV BOOKS The Latest Editions of All Required Books Dictionaries, Quiz-Books, Form Books, Miscellany q CALLACHAN COMPANY OPPOSITE LAW BUILDING 340 5. STATE NEXT TO CORNER