six Tilt ,MICI-I:IGAN I}AILY SIX' t'fhll ICHI AN ''AIe _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _- We Can Make a Dress Suit which will look as if molded on you. It will be the perfection of fit and fashion, embody- ing elegance and good taste. Whether you. respond to a toast, or lead in a German, other men will admire your suit and some may ask,"Who is your Tailor?" But allow us time enough to put into your, suit those refinements which are the Hall- marks of our work. DRESS SUITS KA If L SHIRTS TO FOR HIRE .LORDER m f7.- II Can You Take Pictures? This may seem an unimportant question, but it is not. Photography plays such an important part in every walk of life nowadays, that no college man can afford to go into the world without it. Whitney Theatre Jan14 F R I D A Y' '1I 11 Cone in and talk it over wth me. L Y N The Kodak Store of Ann Arbor DON Direct from Blackstone Theatre, Chicago KLAW & ERLANGER and GEORGE TYLER 719 N. University .v.. . '1 PRESENT The Distinguished Actor COMPULSION STIRS ENGLISHINTERESTI Matinees *AweeO Wednesday fA f ~ eko and Sat. U~II U Jan. I10th DETROIT MAY IRWIN in "33 Washington Square" Gec. £4rliss t 604 E. Liberty SWAIN. 713 E. Univ. Ave. Malcolm Block Has on Sale in sizes from a Post Card to 8x io, the finest Collection of Views ever taken of Ann Arbor and the Picture- sque Huron Valley. Hand-colored Prints and enlargements made to order. Drop in and see his work. -! 1- That's What They All Say Take your Shoe Repairing to VAN if you want them repaired right. THE NEW SHOP - 1114 S, University Ave1 . , . _ . YCT HOCOI ES , TRI BEY, 218 S. Main St. VAN DOREN, 703 Packard St. CALKINS, 324 S. State St. STUDENT SUPPLY STORE, i i S. Univ. Italians Want To Rule lMon tenegro Mountain Kingdom, Attacked on All Sides by Austrian Forces, in Great Danger Rome, Jan. 10.-The Italian press is urging that the government assume the control and defense of Montenegro. Montenegro, they urge, is dynasti- cally united with Italy through the Italian queen, who is the daughter of King Nicholas. In the second place, they point out, that as Montenegro is now situated she is threatened by the Austrians with the loss of Mount Lowzen, which in Austrian hands would make Cattaro impregnable and the defeat of the Aus- trian navy on the Adriatic impossible. Austria is determined on the con- quest of this strategic fortress, they say, and Montenegro is fighting them unaided--a pass to which she is hard- ly equal. Reports have reached here toray of a violent bombardment of Mount Lowzen by the Austrian heet off Cattaro, coincident with energetic attacks by the Austrian army along the Montenegrin frontier. There are now in Italy 58,000 Aus- trian prisoners, beside 62,000 which have been transferred from Serb.a. Saginaw Club to Be Organized A meeting will be held at the Mich- igan Union Wednesday evening, Jan- uary 12, at 7:30 o'clock, for the pur- pose of organizing a Saginaw Club. The object of the club will be to boost the university, and also to help the students from that city to become bet- ter acquainted with each other. All Saginaw students in the university are urged to attend. Students in University Hospital William C. Skinner, '19M, Willard Girwin, '16E, and J. F. Runner, '17M, are confined to the university hos- pital withnan acutehdisease of the ear, the result of la grippe. Engineer Society Elects Rakestraw Linn M. Rakestraw, '16E, has been elected a junior member of the So- ciety of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers at a meeting of that or- ganization held recently in New York. Folders, Announcements, etc. Try The Ann Arbor Press. (*) HUNGER BRINGS GREEK REVOLT Lack of Food Causes Trouble in Grecian Islands of Samos Paris, Jan. 10.-An insurrection in the Grecian islands of Samos due to lack of foodstuffs led to the filing of an urgent protest of the Greek gov- ernment against the arrests of the German, Austrian, Turkish and Bul- garian consuls at Mitymelia by the al- lied powers and continued prepara- tions for the attack that is believed to be impending on Saloniki are report- ed in dispatches received from Athens and Saloniki today. Send Creek Cruiser According to an Athens dispatch, the Greek cruiser Hilh and the de- stroyer Leos with a strong contin- gent of troops have been sent to Samos. to deal with conditions there. It is generally believed that the feel- ing is such that martial law will soon be declared in Athens itself. A dispatch from Toulon tells of the interning of the central powers' con- suls arrested at Saloniki on board the French auxiliary cruiser Savoie, formerly in the New York-Havre serv- ice. ''AllANT ELECTION MAKE PR EDITIONS UNCERTAIN (Continued from Page Four) ,rally of sound proportions. Tht. steel trade shows remarkable activ- ity, and this is more due to home trade and an accumulation of domes- tic orders than to war contracts. The leading mills are well employed and in scme cases their entire output is sold for six months ahead. Railroads have been larger buyers; building contracts are being placed with more freedom and our domestic shipyards are also liberal consumers of steel. Finally, a further improvement in the sterling exchange situation has taken place. being the result. of the return of securities, gold imports and the placing of large foreign credits. As a whole, therefore, the outlook is decidedly encouraging, but it is recognized that present prosperity may be of a somewhat transient char- acter. Therefore more or less prud- ence will have to be injected into ex- cessive financial operations extending into the future. General Election on Forced Service lan 3IaY lie Reslt o Agitation liHARE 'Sl'IT N 0OVERNMET London, Jan. 10.-The interest of all England is centered on the situation arising from the intr duction of the compulsory military service bill. While it is admitted in most quart- ers that a general election would re- sult in securing the support of the country for the measure, the govern- ment is evidently desirous of avoiding such an eventuality if it is in any way possible. Certain papers, how- ever, noticeably the Daily Mail and the Daily Telegraph give it as their opinion that with the open opposition of the Labor Congress to the bill the election is inevitable. The Manchester Guardian, the strong conservative organ, expresses regret that the first introduction of a compulsion plan should result in the disintegration of the coalition cabinet. However unsteady the union of part- ies has been, it said, under the stress of certain untoward events, it has tended to the concentration of country on one object from the out- break of the war to the present time. "The break-up," says its statement, "is announced by the massive ma- jority against the government bill at the great labor conference yesterday and is signalized by the prompt resig- nation of three labor ministers. Of the three parties forming the coali- tion, one has just withdrawn. Of the other two parties forming the coali- tion, one has just withdrawn. Of the other two parties one distin- guished member has withdrawn while a material proportion of the rank and file will go with him. "The government has at a stroke become a party government. Al- though the party is due in politics and adefinite and regular opposition emerges at the same moment. Such are the.deeply regrettable consequenc- es of which many of us have con- sistently warned the government since the conscription agitation began." DECLARES GREEK RULERS MAD ITnezelos SAys Only Hope Rests on Strengthening of Anglo-French Forces at Saloniki Rome, Jan. 10.--An Athens dispatch forwards the following portion of a speech of ex-Premier Venizelos of Greece which it says he delivered in reply to the congratulations of a deputation of merchants who waited on him on his name day. "I wish that the rulers of Greece were sufciently sensible to realize the importance of her present situa- tion and rezulate the country's policy according to the circumstances of her geographical position. Instead they are a-parently determined to reduce Greece to a mere Mediterranean -tate' They do not understand the place clearly assigned to Greece because of her geographical position. Our inter- ests as well as those of the Anglo- French are diametrically opposed to those of the Austro-Germans, yet the government continues blind to the Bulgarian peril. We can only hope that we can be spared evils unfor- unately inevitable. "Our hope lies in the presence of the Anglo-French at Saloniki and the strengthening of their position there.'' Four Killed in Springfield Collision Springfield, Ohio, Jan. 10. --Four persons were killed and eleven others injured when a Big Four switch en- gine struck a street car at a grade crosisng here tonight. Ask Ushers to Report All Choral Union ushers are asked to report for the Palmer lecture, Wednesday. January 1.2, at 7:30 p. m. In future all cars stop at Goodyear's Drug Store. tf Call Lyndon for.a good fiashlight. eod-tues A RC A D.E Showsat 3:oo, 6:30, 8:oo g :-o Tuesday, Jan. i -Lenore Ulrich in "The Better Woman." Equitable 'Wed. Jan. 12-Mle. Diane and Charles 'rowbridge in "The Siren's Song." World. Thursday, Jan. 1-'-"nmmy of Stork's Nest," Mary Miles Minter. A Metro, return date:.' "P AGANINI" The New Comedy Success By the Author of "Marie-Odile" and "Kismet" ADDITIONAL THEATER NEWS The story of "Paganini," the new play in which George Arliss is com- ing with fresh triumphs from Chicago to the Whitney Theatre on Friday, January 14, deals with a romantic phase of the great violinist's career. It treats of the infatuation conceived for Paganini by Charlotte Watson. daughter of a wealthy London mer- chant, at whose house the eccentric maestro was a guest in 1830. Char- lotte's fiance, a young English army officer, upbraids her for permitting Paganini to display a fatherly inter- est in her, and enlists the aid of his aunt and uncle, Sir Richard and Lady Strangford, in an effort to hastenthe departure of Pagani. The tale of Charlotte loveis carried to her Brt- on of the old school. He upbraids her to a degree that sends her post- haste after Paganini, whenathelatter is at Dover en route for France. At the Ship Inn in Dover, where the sec- ond act is laid, Charlotte openly de- clares her love for Paganini and her firm resolve never to return home to London. Paganini was a man much older than Charlotte, and had, be- sides, embarrassments standing in the way of a union with her. How he deals with the situation to the ulti- mate good of the innocent Charlotte is said to lead to a dramatic climax affording Mr. Arliss opportunities surpassing even those of "Disraeli." CO-AtlPTROLLER'S REPORT LAUDS FEI)ERAL RESERVE (Continued from Page Four) excess reserves of $891,000,000 on No- vember 10, 1915. "Banking power," the surplus, capi- tal, circulation, deposits, etc.. of all reporting banks, national and other- wise, amounted in June, 1915, to $25,- 397,100,000, and increase in a year of $1,057,090,000. Rankin Home Burglarized Burglars broke into the home of Prof. Thomas E Rankin, 605 Os- wego street, Sunday afternoon about, 4:03 o'clock, taking a quantity of money and silverware. Entrance was .gained by prying open a window in the. library.-4 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Just right for two students; $4,000 takes established business clearing over $200 per month. If you mean business, write Michigan Daily, Box XX. -nov27tfi FINE WATCH ANDO JEWELRY REPAIRING Rings Michigan Pins Fobs HALL ER JEWELRY CO. State Street Jewelers "The AVE R N " Spoons Pendants Novelties lockets SAIANE, MICHIGAN And Complete Chicago Cast in A Fine $2.00 a Day House located on Electric Line and nine miles fromn Ann Arbor. We serve special dinners to small Banquets, Clubs and Parties. Phone 63 Regular 50c-Meals-Special $1.00 CA R L SCHLEDEH, Prop. Factory Hat Store 118 E. Huron St. Orders by Mail Received Now Seat Sale Wednesday Prices 50c to $2.0 Parisian Ivory Leather Goods Silverware Gold Pocket Knives Chains Pencils M A JESTIlC"^INEE 3 aP.M. 10c and 18c TI NIGST,7:30 and 9 15c-2$e-20c IF YOU DON'T WAN T TO LAUGH-STAY A% AY : "Ws company of Tsileswho"*pre- tThe L1Va ier sent a skit filed with comedy, girls and music. Sherman, Just One DeForest "A -ircus ' Laugh After BILL ROBINSON HALLEN & HUNTER CAPLANE & WELLS Colored Comedian "JUST FOR FUN" Roomerang 'Uhrowers{ i Thursday - - " THE FOUR HUSBANDS " ASQUITH PRAISES BRITISH RETREAT FROM GALLIPOLI' (Continued from Page One) manding officer anti men of both serv- ices-may well be proud." Retirement Helps Turks The complete abandonment of the Dardanelles campaign has been ad- mitted. It is estimated more than 200,- 000 Turkish troops are available for' use in the other theaters of war. These comprise the strongest corps of the4 Turkish army, already trained by a year of the hard fighting on Gallipoli. They will be thrown, it is believed here, either into the proposed Egyp- tian campaign or to Mesopotamia to drive out the British force so pre-' cariously situated near Kut-el-amara. The destination of the military and naval forces likewise relieved for the Allies is being suppressed by the1 censor,. Shoes repaired while you wait. 0,- G. Andres, 222 S. State. tues-eod ENGLISh ARMIES IN MESO- POTAMIA REPORTED LOST (Continued from Page One) along' the Tigris. Critics Admit Danger. Military critics here do not con- ceal their fear that the entire British force is still in Kut-el-Amara, as a re- treat southward by part of it would drive them into open battle with the Turks, who are believed to be in at least three-fold superiority. A Turk- ish war office statement issued tonight reports that the Turks already have penetrated through the British main position at Kut-el-Amara and fore- shadow the early capture of the fort- ress. Fischer Party at Michigan Union Friday evening, January 14. Dancing from 9 to 2 o'clock. For tickets call 2370 or 236. jan11-12-13 The Ann ArJ' r Press-Press build. ing, Maynard s!i eet. Phone No. 1. (*) r :