THE DAILY NEHUASKAN PS jjg. TODAY THE GUM A GALLOP of FUN SWIFTEST COMEOV and the DROLLEST CHARACTERS ever staged SPARKLING WIT AND HUMOR BRILLIANT songs - music skillfulTdances GIRL and GOWN REVUE LAVISHLY SUPERBLY MOUNTED COSTUMED Prices: Matinee, Main Floor 50c, 75; Balcony 25c. Night, 25c, 50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.50 (Continued on Pane One.) LATE LUCINDA LOOMIS REALIZED LIFE'S AM BITION AT AGE OF 74 UPON GETTING MASTER'S DEGREE MOV Tl KS. WK1. Sw na man llrar no man Kl n man." "'w"''!'" MARGUERITE CLARK la thr IHIntrl Paramount rirtnl "GIRL S" A .iilmdid plrturtatlon f the fama play by Clyde Fith. "MilNNV. SCHOOL SCANDAL" i fH'i- Jri;;K' Swond Coml "THE I-ION HI NT" rtTHF. NEWS. PATHS REVIEW -TOPICS OF THE DAY" K1ALTO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Jran I. Sohafer, Conductor 8ho larl at 1, S. 5, 7, 9 P. M. ""fWaWBaBWBWBWBi III ' j MON. TrES. WED. Von will like thin plrtnre tmnmdniiKly and yon will praifte It to yonr frirndft. VIVIAN rM ARTTN in flhe Paramount Picture. "THE THIRD KISS" Brim full of Mtirrlna- ttecne., A marine mrprW and deliriously human HAROLD LLOYD FINSTERS in "He LeadH, Other Follow" LYRIC NEWS WEEKLY MIRIAM FROSH'S ORCHESTRA Shows Start at 1, S. 5, 7. 9 P. M. hardly moving At the end of hiicIi a strenuous half day's work she would arise and remark. i have had such a pleasant time this morning. Imvo enjoyed this so much.' Mlsa Looiuis prepared a thesis for the master's clt-m-ee of ili, Procedure tlu Chatelei. t lie ciiminul court m Paris In ITS!. The city government of Paris had demanded an Investiga tion and trials were held when hun dreds appeared. Miss Loom la worked 'owly utnd most persevei Inclv. weighing all the evidence with cir cumspect care. Then circumstances intervened which made it necessary lor her to lay the thesis on 'he shelf. Later she was persuaded lo re 'urn to finish the task she had so admirably begun. She worked un remittingly until they had to beg her to be easier with herself. Record at 74 I "Then." said the professor in the I conference as he leaned hack in his Ifh'lll' nn.l tllil l.l'rt ulllmnl f 1.1, .. mi. i 1111 i n u fiiuiillll Ul Ilia RU' dience listened with tears in their ) eye s at the courageous record of one ! I of their own, "Then when the ex amination day arrived she came to it like a trreat lady from one of the learned salons of the brilliant France of old. She was a duchess, pertect mistress of herself and she passed an admirable examination. She was then about seventy four years of age." "She was an inspiration,' contin ued the profVssor," in the way she thought of others. She did not teach fc money bit? flip hs.c! a peivor.r.l interest in every boy and girl. Think of her paying her way to her seventy-fifth year and studying all this time." A friend who knew her very well through all the years Miss Loomis spent in Nebraska tells that she be gan work at the university back in '86 when she carried courses in sucn subjects as would enable her to be a better teacher. She was in her Eixties when she received the degree of A. B. at the university. Such an end had been her ambition since childhood. All her life she clung to her ideal lor learning and kept up her effort until it was realized. This effort was the more commendable on her part for the sacrifices it entailed. When she was in her early forties she had business reverses and found it necessary to start again without anything and not only sustain her self but care for others. 'Ever since I can remember," says her friend, "she showed respect and even reverence for learning. This was a dominant trait in her and was second only to her love for her church. To her it seemed that a scholar could do no wrong. She took the greatest pride in her thesis. The keenest pleasure of her late years was her work digging into the facts about the French revolution. This study was her joy." From the Lin coln Star. LYR I C MON. TCES. WED. THE GIRL IN THE MOON Vaudeville' Mont Pretentious Singing Offering 0 eta via Handworth & Co. in the Comedy Playlet "TWICE A WEEK" BURNS & WILSON in Comedy and Singing Oddity "THE IN TRAIN ED Nl'RSE" COLLINS & DUNBAR in Songs and Dances CHARLIE MURRAY AND FINSTERS in "I'p In Alf's Place" ANNE LUTHER The "Great C.nmble" LIBERTY NEWS WEEKLY" BRADER AND THE ORCHESTRA S SHOWS DAILY I:SO. 7:00, 9:06 Announcement is made that the Prudential committee of Yale Uni versity has elected Professor Albert Feuillerat, of the University of Rennes, France, visiting professor ai Yale for the coming year. It was also announced that a gift of $25,000 has been received from Mrs. John C. Fennell of Kansas City, to establish a fund in memory of her son Charles B. FenneU, a Sheffield graduate in the class of 1911. Other gifts reported include a bird collec tion from Dr. George Hawley and Samuel Hawley of Bridgeport. To obtain a new aid for the Yale song -Bright College Years." which is now sung f The Watch on the Rhine," the class of 1899, through Murray Dodge, its secretary, has offered $l,o(0 as a prire. The pru dential comnlttee of the corporation received the notice and selection of a tone is to test with the alumni ad visory board. Better understanding and care of lenses would undoubtedly increase their effectiveness. The British Jour nal of Photography points out thai so caled "optical" glass is varied greatly in its qualities to adapt it for me many kinds of lenses, and while some glass is as hard and impermeable as other kinds are soft enough to be that used for windows and table easily scratched or even dented, ana may be quickly dimmed by injury to their exquisite surface. Some of the early anastigmats were very soft and easily corroded because other glass was not available. Some glasses are so susceptible to damp that a single drop of water left on the surface a few hours will leave a permanent mark and a film of moisture wil give rise to general corrision, showing prismatic colors in mild cases and a permanent yellow stain in severe ones. Even the nakeds of the lens may not be able to restore the glass to its original accuracy. Prevention is the only safeguard, and tight fitting caps should protect the glass when not in use. KATHLEEN NORRIS'S GREATEST BOOK On September 27th Doubleday, Page & Co- will bring out "Sisters." a novel by Kathleen Norris. The California which Mrs. Norris knows so well furnishes the setting, the unfolding lives of two of the most appealing girls in recent fiction, the theme. In tracing the doubts, the impulses, the dreams, the heartaches, the development of these two sharp ly contrasted characters, Mrs. Norris has, according to one of those best acquainted with her work, reached those depths of Insight and under standing which make for real great ness. This critic has said: -It is without doubt Mrs. Norris's greatest book." If Men Who Read up on Clothes Take to Society Brand as a Squirrel to Nuts 11" i i i I Who was it spread the gospel that "Knowledge is power?" He said a bookfull of facts. Knowledge is power, and your daily newspaper is a sort of power plant out of which you draw knowl edge of lots of things clothes, for instance. The more knowledge you gather about clothes the better qualified you are to buy prudently and economically. We believe that if all men carefully studied the clothes question instead of buying haphazard on price alone, as many do, it would be impossi ble to supply the demand for 0rirtg Iranli Glints FOR YOUNG MEN AND MEN WHO STAY YOUNG This store made an exhaustive study of clothes and the knowledge gained decided us in favor of handling Society Hrand.. The proof of their superiority was so pronounced by careful comparison that we were even surprised. You, too, might get a glad surprise by comparing the clothes we have ready to show you with what you've been wearing. One of your spare hours spent here might prove profitable to you. We'll be glad to offer you the proof at any time. You can be judge and jury, and if you don't find evidence that we can dress you better and save you good dollars, we don't expect your trade. We feature Shire Superior Clothes at $30, $35, $40, and $45 We've a lot of saucy-styled stiff and soft Hats, a smart showing of Ties, spunky Shirts, and other things men are particular about, priced to meet your approval. A.DlC fcsrirta Irani Clailjr M ayer Bros. Co. ELI SHIRE, President LINCOLN NEBRASKA 1 , STUDENTS DO YOU REALIZE that there are about five thousand students in the University and that only eight hundred are subscribers of the Nebraskan? Which are you.