THE WEATHER ANN ARBOR-_ AND-0 (A)L])hl a :; Q- a., , . " w h kr :;pro . JA JL. Z~~~ ...-mE-J nA UNITED PRESS W DAY AND NIGHT SERVI TilE ONLY MORNING PAPE ANN ARBOR . VOL. XXVIL No. 36. HITS FOR LTE ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1916. PRICE FIVE .. GOVERNOlI OHSN (HXI' ('()MMITTEEAN 1FOl' T AGAINST OWE",2 . k.IT 1 J WISON'S [.AD NO 31- Unofficial ('oaiit of 5,S8i5 Oni ci 5 6( PrecIncts in State Glycs Presi- dent 46546 S San Francisco, Nov. 1ll. -aiforni " political pot ethed nd boiledr to- night following a hot statennt i "e; by Governor Hiram Johnson. in which he excoriated his enemies nd blamed the defeat of Charles r Hohes to national Republican Committeman Crocker, former State Committee Chairman Keesling and General Har- rison Gray Otis, of Los Angeles. So aroused was poltic4 California that it forgot even to wtch the un- official count of presidenia hlol believing the 11 precincts stl u- counted could not affect President Wil- son's plurality. United Press tabulations tonight of# 5,855 precincts out of 5,866 in the state gave Wilson 465,486 and Hughes _ . 'lCHfiLkING / Id inlll A uditoriijni , a4 Y I TO SIN G r. l Cv(1hurch£ll King, president .y t. r ln Co e, wi speak at 7:30 PEACE IMPOSSIBLE NOWSAYSGENERAL General Von Buelow Says War May Continue for Indefinite Period T A L K S T O CORRESPONDENTS By Carl W. Ackerman (United Press Staff Correspondent) German Army Headquarters on the Somme, via Berlin and "Wireless to Sayville, Nov. 11.-As long as the al- lies maintain their present conditions, peace is out of the question, and if they expect to force peace by a de- cisive blow along the Somme, that ex- pectation is an impossibility. So declared General von Buelow, commander-in-chief of the German forces along the particular front where interest now centers in the great war. He spoke to foreign correspondents at his headquarters today. "The English and French face an impossibility along the Somme," he de- clared, "if they expect to break through. Every soldier, every officer, every general on the German side knows that the enemy cannot do so. It is technically and physically im- possible. The battle will continue two months, two years, 200 years until the English and French get so much iron pounded into their heads that they can't carry them." London Says Columbian Torpedoed London, Nov. 11.-The American steamer Columbian was torpedoed. A Lloyd's dispatch tonight said that she sank. The dispatch apparently was confirmed in later messages from Ber- lin which said the crew, half of whom are Americans, ,'had landed on the Spanish coast together with the crews of the Norwegian steamer Fordal and Bulto, and the British steamer Sea- tonia, which also were torpedoed. The combined crews number 163 men. The Lloyd's dispatch reporting the sinking of the Columbian, an American-Hawai- ian line freighter bound from Boston to Brest, was the first news of the ship since she wirelessed on Tuesday saying two submarines held her up and that one of them shelled her. No GLEE CLUB GIVES FIRST CGNCERT DECEMBER 15 Musical Organization to Appear Three Days Before Leaving on Pa- cific Coast Trip The Glee club will make its only appearance in Ann Arbor this semester on Dec. 15, three days before it leaves for the Pacific coast. At this time an entire new program, with the ex- ception of two pieces which will be re- peated from last year by special re- quest, will be offered. According to Manager Nichols, this concert promises to be a musical treat. It will be the only chance to hear the two campus musical stars, Chase B. Sikes, '17, and H. B. Davis, '17, in a duet from an Italian opera, as Davis leaves in February to join the Min- neapolis Symphony orchestra. In addition to this, the famous ukelele club, the ragtime quartet, and various instrumental selections will make this concert one of the biggest musical entertainments -appearing on the campus this year. GIOLOGY LECTURER TO DISCUSS WATER SUPPLY Frank Leverett, of Geology Depart- ment, Will Report on Conditions in Ann Arbor Frank Leverett, lecturer on glacial geology in the University, will deliver the sixth address before the social service class of the Congregational church at 12 o'clock today. He Will discuss the subject, "Water Supply and Its Relation to the City's Growth," with especial reference to the condi- tion of the water supply in Ann Arbor. Mr. Leverett has been for a number of years a member of the U. S. geological survey, and is an authority on all manner of water supply questions, both surface streams and from under- grounl sources. Mr. Leverett will present reasons-for and against the proposed plan of get- ting the water supply of the city from the Steere farm a short distance out- side of the city. At present the greater portion of the city's water supply is WHIRLWIND OFFENSE OF CORNELL BACKS, ABLY LED BY SHIYERICK TIIREE POINT ABILITY OF ITII It' QUTERBACK, AIDED PLUNGING OF MUELLE R ANI) SPEED, NOSE AT TACK OF BOT H TEAMS PR OVES SUPERIOR TO DEFEN Maulbetseh and Zeiger Make Principle Gains for Michigan, With Wieii and Relhor Leadling IDefensive Men; Aerial Route Big Factor By hAL FITZGERALD Ithaca, N. Y., Nov. 11.-It was far and away the best game of the s son if you hail from Cornell. If yo b don't, it wasn't. The big Red team triumphed over the Maize and Blue here this aft noon 23 to 20. Their victory was largely due to the superb kicking Fritz Shiverick. The gentleman with the trained and educated toe dr kicked three field goals during the course of the afternoon's festivit and his punting was instrumental in checking the Wolverines at otl times. For a time it looked as though Michigan was going to pull throt on the long end of the score, as they headed the home hopes by t rather assuring total of 20 to 6, but the Ithacans rallied and tied t count by scoring two touchdowns and then this Shiyerick fellow dropp over another one of his field goals and all bets were settled on this bas 462,233, a plurality of 3,613 for the c ,t in 9ILI- auditorium un- president. Governor Johnson's fiery A statement was issued in reply to an editorial in General Otis' Los Angeles deraton of ChurV es. "Citizens of Times blaming the "treachery of the a w Ciilizaticn" wIl be the subject Johnson machine" for Hughes' defeat. ( s Joison, wh just emerged fronm, hent in educa- the campain ae i y triumphant s in his candidacy for lted States senate, asserted that pOtis h im-j 'r nce work self, Crocker. Keesli' 'f heir as- ie is an em- sociates 'have the prolr dast ion oI .. e : , national pol- having made a presidet of the United citS. States, and Woor , Wlson me to rer of note, Dr. them a debt ,tbat he c[ gre re- books and has pay." He a. ta'-i c:Pr to maga- when Hughes 'td Aliforna, not t v- only issued aC 1bi j imatu at cul- Mr. Hughes "would ha "e nothing to a ( ranged f:r do with Progre es in California" but _l . a i arvis, but created a reactionay atmospbe 'c ,' T,:m isa AdaGrace about the 1aniote1 William H.. ,' Crocker refed tonigt to reply to 1o ,S 'c e h direc- the governor' attack. 1,1011 Cis "s:; t)t 1 1 crt ,. gan y Bisunarck, N. 1, Not'. Ii.-North h)a- kota is safely Democratic with 14 pre- cincts missing. Wilson's lead tonight was 963 votes. Albnqu&'ime, N w Mc Nov. 11,-ih only 25 w&ly scattered precincts in the state still to report, President Wilson's plurality over Hughes in New Mexico tonight stood at 1,174 votes. Coneord, N. Il, Nov. i, New Hlamp shire has cast her four electoral voles for Woodrow Wilson. The president carried the once rock-ribbed Republi- can state by the narrow margin of 6.4 dotes. The final result was in doubt unitil tonight, when Secretary of State Beam announced the complete figures. Errors, misrepresentations, charges, and counter-c!arges featured the swing of New Hmpshiro from the Re- S" C fe n.of a Ger- is' a