[ALt THE MICHIGAN DAILY. xtenisi U News L C0 Ileges Theatre Market Specials .. SIX CONFERENCE COLLEOLS151FAVO TILE PR()FEASSION AL BALI lULIN( 1:OW SEE S 1E:RT'AIN TO BE RE CA LLb) SOON (fficiallsonfidently Expectei d to 4vs tigAte careii 1ly All Pnthas Champaign, Ili., Nov. 5.---Returns from six f the conference universitioe show a total vote of more than 10 to 1 against the present ruling regarding sunimer baseball. With Iowa and Chi- cago yet to be heard from, and Purdue refusing to report, there seems little likelihood that the advisory ballot will be anything but an overwhelming vic- tory for professionaism mn the Big Nine. The greatest victory for sammer sports was reported at Illinois, where the vote was practically 21 to 1. The least decisive ballot was recorded at Wisconsin, where the ratio was a lit- tie less than 10 to 1. However unfa- vorable the reports from Chicago and Iowa may be--and there is no reason for believing that they will be unfa- vorable-the status of the issue can be changed very little. Offaichls Will Investigate In the face of this definite expres- sion of student opinion, conference officials may at least be expected to investigate carefully every phase of the situation before allowing the pres- ent eligibility clause t* remain in the rules. STEEL MEN MAKE 10G RAIL ORDERS' Cgre te Denand by American Rail- 1-oad sCausing Increase in Do- jmestic Business E1N I1l)ERS STILL LARGE New Ycrk. Nov 5.-One of the rea- oas why crtain steel ma nuiacturers have stoped making steel Specialties fir Eurcpean consumption is tile in- 'r Sri.g deuand for rails now being .. y 1Lx America Thrailrsads. usI tl an as caused many steel con- errs to turn their efforts toward the Spiying c local orders. . :ust not be thought, however. that Euope is using less steel than h'r'tofore. The wants there are just as r .at as they have always been. C ne steel man said recently that if he h, d the capacity he could :manufac- tore 3J00;00 tons of steel bars for ex- rortation within the next month. Ship Famine Possible After the War NORTHERN SERBIA CLEARANC; NOT A RETREAT OF AN ARMY Procession Made Up of Carriages, Carts Loaded With Ammni- tion and People London, Nov. 5-A story of the Ser- bian tragedy, received from Nish by way of Milan, from the pen of Luciano Magrini, an Italian war correspondent, is printed by the Evening News. The writer characterized the clearance o.f northern Serbia as "the retreat of a people, not an army." In his account of the retreat the-cor- respondent describes the unendinc' procession on a road leading to th south of, gun carriages, carts lad& with war material, conveyances of al. sorts bearing women, children, ol& men, the sick and the wounded, with at intervals flocks of sheep and drove.s of pigs and of soldiers walking'side by side with peasants. At Topola, King Peter, ill and weak, was waiting to retire with the rear-guard of his troops. Metropolitan OpernStars AssenAbl ig Metropolitan opera stars have been assembling for the past month in prep- aration for the first performance of he season the latter part of the nionth. Several new or unusual operas will be given during the winter. The new Spanish opera of Enrique Granada, "Goyesca," will be the feature per- formance of the year. Impressario Gatti Cazazza has arranged that the noted Spanish soprano, Lucrezia Bori, take the leading role. Gaetano Bava- nogli will direct for the first time in this country. Bizet's "Les Pecheurs de Perles" will be given for the first time under adequate staging and direction. A new German opera by Hermann Goetz will be presented late in the season, with Arthur Bodanzky conducting. Bo- danzky is another new find of the en- terprising impressario. Already he is busy with his cast for this new opera, "The Taming of the Shrew," which promises to be a notable addition to the company's repertoire of German operas, which at present are rather few in number. PADEREWSKI RECEIVD LITTLE APPRECIATION OF RAVE POLISH APPA ills Plea for his Countrymen's Rights Criticized for Lacking Passion to Move People MA KES LONG SPEECH BEFOR1E (JONC1lIRT, IN AUIIBLE TO MANY ARTIST'S WORK IN THE QUIET PASSAGES REACHES USUAL PERFECTION Ignace Jan Paderewski, the Polish master pianist, received little applaust in Uew York recently when he gave the first of a series of concerts in Carnegie hall, the proceeds of which are to be used for the benefit of Polish war sufferers, and his efforts to make his English-speaking auditors under- stand the desperate straits of his fel- low countrymen fell rather fiat. He preceded his concert by a much criticized plea for his country's rights. Critics say that it lacked the passion necessary to move an audience. At any rate, Mr. Paderewski received lit- tle applause for his effort. There was considerable unfavorable commotion, in the galleries, where it was no doubt impossible to catch even a word of the hour-long appeal. Acknowledged Superior in Lyric Work There was also the usual amount of criticism upon the customary intro- duction of crashing chords preliminary to the first number. The program of Chopin selections consisted of the Ab Ballade, the Bb Sonata 'and the G ma- jor nocturne. Many critics lament his banging in the fortissimo passages of these exquisite numbers, but all ac- knowledge his incomparable superior- ity in the lyric pasages as to the purity of tone and the masterful reading of the delicate rubato and pianissimo pas- sages. His "reckless mishandling of the instrument" may perhaps be for- given in view of his unquestionable perfection in the "quiet passages." Paderewski appears in Ann Arbor for the fourth of the Choral Union pre- festival concerts on January 20, 1916. 'I Scd[, ree fr7!' _.- .'ln Trh 4;;.tt S - ig c . 1 ar i ¢fin ' elodri I3 v l ner ' "°er ..,i l .'!Ser itoe ' ? mu no ',i ' tI . __, _, k~ i~'ce~oi .e y CerLadr w F I0 n in PPSP E ('lliESAETlIYI ;I or oi UInersi.,y Snor s as a New ork, NOv. 5.--Shipping men a e now considering the possibility of --- a ship famine after the close of the present war. It has been estimated uthatup to October 15, 1,500,000 tons [f shipping have been destroyed, most- ly by German submarines. Added to this. Creat Britain is constructing only I 50 per cent as many merchant vessels a(as in normal times. These facts poit to a serious situation at the close of 3ser alyr is I hos tilities. te ste eru' f Ati'Sy stenui "'~< TLSO IA IN IS1A1iIFTdA For Pres- ent Rule Illinois .............32 Minnesota ..........171 Ohio State..........31 Wisconsin ..........78 Indiana............14 *Total...........326 *Returns from Iowa not Opposed 669 1,832 414 775 200 3,890 received. Northwestern practically unanimous. Ballot at Chicago tomorrow. AUTOMOB ILE[STDENT ATTACK HOL Companies have Spent Nuch Tnie and Money Trying to Find Answer to Question GIVEN: A certain amount of gaso- line in the tank of an automobile. DATA: All the different ways in wiich the energy represented by the gasoline may be used up, as, for in- stance, the energy that goes to turning the wheels, the heat energy that is lost in the exhaust and water-cooling process, and the energy that -is used up in overcoming friction. REQUIRED: The exact amounts of energy that go to each of the forego- ing uses and losses. ANSWER: Is being worked out at present in the automobile laboiatory of the University of Michigan. Prof. W. T. Fishleigh, of the engi- neering college, assisted hy four stu- dents who are enrolled in M. E. 33, are working on the experiment that is hoped to give the answer to the above question. The students are: W. J. Case, '16E; J. G. Milliken, '16E; W C. Thompson, '16E, and P. L. Ulrich, '16 E. Though stated like and seemingly as simple as a problem in geometry, the question is one that has never been answered, although numerous automo- bile companies have expended time and money on it. The answer may only be obtained through experimental results, and because of the complica- tions and difficulties in the set-up of the experiment, no one has attempted its complete answer. New Haven, Con., Nov. 5.-The More than 1,650 double stars have largest impromptu football parade been discovered by Prof. W. J. Hussey, which has been held for m any yewrs director of the university observatory at Yale started at 6:30 last evening. and of the observatory ci the La Plata' The parade was led by the cheer lead- univcrsity, Argentine Republic. A ers and the Second Reghuent band. It double star is a system in which two is estimated that over 2,50 men were suns revole in similar orbits about marching in line when the parade was a center oi' gravity which is between' at its height. them. (3f these, 1,333 were first sight- At 6:45 the band assetribled on the cA from Lick observatory, while the campus and moved down in front of remainder were discovered at La Connecticut hall. Then, led by the Plata. five cheer leaders and the seniors, it Professor Hussey and Prof. R. G. crossed the campus. After singing, Aitken, of Lick observatory, are mak- "Good Night, Harvard," and " lull ing a systematic examination of every Dog," at Berkeley Oval, the cOhumn star to the ninth magnitude--that is, marched to the gymnasium 12 abreast. of all stars visible with a telescope Captain Wilson and Coach linhey having a lens one inch in diameter, were cheered, after which L. 1H. Bi e- to determine what enes are double. low, '08, made a short speech, the gist lntil about 10 years age, the two men of which was that Yale would rise worked together at the Lick Observa- like the Phoenix fron her asies, and tory, where the work could be carried triumph over Princeton and Harvard. on quickly and accurately, due to the Later, Captain Wilson spoke, after large number of clear nights. which the crowd dispersed. Their observation extends from the --North Pole to 20 degrees south of the A Sceming Defeat Firie. io Vitory eQuator. La Plata university has the Berkeley, Cal., Nov. 5.-The Varsity best equipped observatory in the and the Freshman teams made a clean southern hemisphere. i cas u ry Situationi Looks Promising Washington, Nov. 5.-The treasury situation, compared with former months, has been much stronger dur- ig October, and the outlook now is toward continued improvement. On November 1 the tyeasury balance was $122,300,000. Large OuItput from Superior Mines Calumet, Mich., Nov. 5.-The copper output of the mines in the Lake Su- perior region for October was 24,900,- 000 pounds. Cramp Concern Tries to Get Money Washington, Nov. 5.-The Depart- ment of Justice has filed a brief in the Supreme court against Cramp & Sons, shipbuilders, of Philadelphia. The Cramp concern is trying to recover $483,757 from the United States gov- ernment, which amount they say is still due them for the manufacture of the battleship Massachusetts. Large Totals for Corporate Financing New York, Nov. 5. - Corporate financing in this country for the month of October amounted to $210,- 000,000. This is the largest amount for any month this year with the ex- ception of February. The large sun, is due in part to the establishment ofx several new corporations. London Has Anti-Treating Order London, Nov. 5.-The anti-treating order went into effect in London on the 11th of last month. "Don'ts," which are really commands, have been plentifully posted about the city. Here they are: Don't order any intoxicating drinks for another. Don't pay for drinks for a friend. Don't lend or advance money to buy, drinks. Don't consume any drink which somebody else has ordered or paid for. These "don'ts" apply to licensed premises and clubs, highways, open spaces, railway stations adjoining or near to licensed places in which the liquor was sold or supplied, However, the sale of 'whisky, brandy and rum, reduced to between 25 and 35 degrees under proof, and of gin re- duced to between 35 and 45 degrees, is permitted, The advisability of clos- ing all night clubs is being considered by Scotland yard, sweep Saturday, when the former downed St. Mary's Phoenix eleven by a 10-9 score, and the yearlings walked over Nevada Varsity to thie tune of 39-7. After being outplayed throughout the game, the Bluae and Cold Nwarrijrs canie back with a vicious attacn in the last few minutes of play and Lura- ed almost certain defeat into victory. The men from the Sagebrusi state -put up a hard, game fight, but they were completely ouklassed1 by the California freshmen. F1rv'ard pass- ing prove d an efiicient ground ga r for the yearlings, and two of the fi touchdowns were made by that method. Experiments Unider' A tcal Condom The work in the auto loboracory is being carried on under acal roadI conditions, since the results are to be put to practical are when the design of a car is considered by an automo- bile engineer. In order to raeet road conditions, the moors that are mo be exporinented on, a hudsoi 6-4, a Franklin six, a Reo four and a F urd, are encased in a hood and ap'on that are furnished with the motor.j Large Ng Telescope t o Go South To help in this work, the large new telescope, now being made for the university observatory will be thken to the southern hemoisphere as soon as it is completed. The two lenses, each of which is 24 iches in diameter, were ordered from a French firm. four years ago. After two years, a dupli- cate order was placed with a German concer<, but the lenses have not yet been brought to this country. They are to be ground by A. Clark & Sonis, Cabridge, Mass. Attached to the large telescopc will be a sialier one, known as a guiding telescope, for use in locating heavenly bodis before attempting to focup the mean blnsi umnent. A wind blast of a certain velocity is forced into the hood by a fan blower.I In order to determine the velocity re-r quired it was necessary to obtain the velocihv of the wind rushing through the hood of a car on the road when it was propelled at variors speeds. Prof. J. P. Allen's car, a I-hud son, was bor- rowed and run at different rates while a velocity meter, attached to the en- gine, recorded the velocity of the wind. Extraordinary Preparations in the for Saturday insure our guests of the usual prompt service and incomparable cooking. Noon and Evening Meals will consist of Brazed Lamb and Veal Cutlets at 50c Roast Chicken 75c Roast Duck$1.00 though customers who prefer may be served a la carte, Open from 8:00 a. m. to 9:00 p. m. (Second Floor Annex) v I ooo4r I - I I 1 1. - Em , loommommummumli I r _ . - - --- --_ _ _ _____ ___ ___ ___ ___ ____ ___ ___ ___ ____ ___ ___ ___ ___ ____ ___ ___ ___ __r i Suits CleanedA___PressedOvercoatsleaned__ANDPressed-75C Trousers CleanedANPressed-35c Suits Pressed-25c ov~e ~ats Pressed-25c Trousers Pressed-lOc HEPA1IKANG AND -ALTEKING L. E. O'CNESOR & CO., TAILORS 619 EAST WILLIAM STREET II j