THE DAILY NIBJtASKAN THEATRES ORPHEUM edniond Hayes & co. "Tht Fin Meyer" KRAMER & MORTON DELEON AND DAVIES H1LD THOt AS LOU HALL " EMlL ALLENlBERG WARD, BELL AND WARD OVER" AND OVER Mai, Dally :15 lBfe, c Night 8:16 15c, 25c, 35c, 50c, 75c LYRIC MON., TUE.,VeD., Sept. 88, 29, 30 DFEY A HENDERSON ,AH &Wftf for Abroad" 'bAwtoN, talbot & bray , The Singing Comedians PHOTO PLAY8 "THE 'BELOVED ADVENTURER" tJd. HI 'AVi Affair of Honsr" "LOVE'S MAGNET" "TWINS AND TROUBLE" "HEARST-SEL1G NEWS" Three Shows Dally, S, 7, 9 Mat., all seats 10c. Night, 15c m AO N E T WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY 4- - "'The "Lost Paradise" With H. B. Warner In this great drama ot Capital and Labor Admission 10c Shows i:5, 3:00, 6:30, 8:00, 9:15 Dnl Students! Gome 'and feet acquainted "with us in our remodeled store. Incidentally le iis how you the newest in patterns for Suits or Over coats. Raincoats. ... $ 5.00 and up Ovtrcoats. , . .$12.50 and up Suit ....... .$15.00 and tip Flodeen & B MARLEY COLLAR C2I7ETT PEABOOY CCXTROYJJX UaiTrky Jeweler mhJ C. A. TUCKER S. S. SHEAN optician UJB-O St. YsdWFrss rethouwer SOME FAMOUS SIEGES iHvesTES roWwa that LONtfj HELD OUT AGAINST FOE. That of retest Deration Was at Richmond,, Which the Confeder ates Defended for Feur Years Gibraltar's Great Exptort The defence of Liege by 30,000 Bel glanB againBt three German arm) corps numbering JfcB.OOO will go dowt to history ha one ot the most brilliant feats of Tarms In the annals or War, e&ys London Tit-Bits. The Franco-Prussian war of 1870-71 was remarkable for Its Bleges. Baialnt held out at Metz against the Germans for nearly two monthB, and finally our rendered with 6,000 officers and 173; Wfr men. Tor this ho had to submit to court-martial, and was sentenced to 30 years imprisonment Afterward came the siege of Paris, Which lasted six months. Thousands of shells were rained on the city every day by the Germans, and no fewer than 40,000 of the inhabitants succumbed to disease aid hunger. That lengthy sieges are Quite possi ble even in these days ot huge guns is illustrated hv Ctrnkri Pasha's gallant defense of Adrlanople last year for 158 days." Them there was the compara tively recent great elege of Fort at? thur in the Russo-Japanese, war la 1104-05, which finally capltul'Aed after being blockaded by Admiral t"ogo tor 210 duvs. ThA name of General Stoes- sel will rank with those of the great soldiers of "modern times. KuBHian military history there has never been a siege like that of Plevna in 1877, when Os mah Pasha defied the Russians for 144 days, and Anally surrendered on De cember 10, with 30,000 men and 100 guns, owing" to provisions and am munition running short. In the same year Kars, long the bulwark of the Ottoman empire in Ala, "waB stormed by the Russians after a siege of five tnbnths. Twenty-two years earlier the for tress had been brilliantly defended for eight months against the Russians by "the Turks under General Williams, who had but 15,000 men against 50,000. Even these "'sieges, however, are somewhat insignificant when com nnred with some others. The long est siege occurred in the American Civil war, when the Confederates ae 'fended the town Vf Richmond for 1,485 days, or just over four years. Sebastopol, in the Crimean war. held out for 11 months, while General Gor don defended Khartum against the Sudanese for 300 days. The sieges of Ladysmlth, Kimberley and Mafeklng, In the South African war, lasted 120, 123 and 2S4 days, respectively. there Is probably, "however, no Biege which Britishers like to read about so much as that carried out by France and Spain in their endeavors to carry the Rock of Gibraltar, 1779-83. Alto gether the Biege lasted nearly four years, "ad, as the world knows, re sulted in a complete triumph of Brit ish anas In s1to of the fact that the nemy numbered 30,000 to 40,000 men while the defenders could onl7 mustei 7.000. Monster Aqueduct. The aqueduct conducting the waters of the Owens vlver to Los Angeles Is said to be the largest in the wprld. It is designed to deliver a minimum or 258,000,000 gallons of water daily into the 'San Fernando reservoir, 21 'miles northwest of the city. No pumping plant is required, as the source of sup 4v is everal hundred' feet above the city. The water will furnish a .great amount of power 70,000 horsepower is anticipated :for electric lighting and other parposes. The total coat' of the waterworks will he $25,000,000, and the Installation of the power -giant will he approximately $5,000,000 saore. European Hhrveet. The Awsnsaa tonrtete were esjaal in raise to a gee harvest aad this yea there will he a loss to Europe. If the war coBtinwM into the season seai ymr Wa lews fli he seriee, from a fcutfjpwiii fefart ef Tiew. it ie estlsoat ed that the tourists spend a thossand deHW-aee la their kwr. - OLD LONDON JOURNAL GAZETTE 18 MOST VENERABLE RITISH NEWSPAPER. Publication Has for Two Hundred ana Fifty Years Officially Chronicled the History ef the Island Empire. Modern newspaper enterprise hai lomewhat dwarfed the importance of the London Gazette, "Britain's oldest newspaper, which for 250 years bat officially chronicled the history of th country. Today It is practically onlj used for Buch announcements as the king's birthday honors ltet and legal notices. Time was, however, when the Gazette was the only medium through which the public could learn any for eign news or any public announcement which royalty hd statesmen had to make. Nowadays such announcements, while being sent to the London Ga zette, aVe simultaneously communi cated o the more Important newspa pers. But even today tho London Ga Eette is controlled by the government, and a particularly watchful oye 1b kept on the advertisements in its pages, which are regulated by law. These advertisements are mostly of an official or legal character, of which it 1b nec essary to keep a record, and earn for the nation about $60,000 a year. No great manufacturer could obtain a puff In its pages, even though he were will ing to pay $50,000 a line for it. Alto gether, the Gazette yields the country a profit of about $100,000 a year, al though practically the only people Who buy it are government officials and lawyers. One of the Jnost curious facts regard ing the London Gazette is that white it is Britain's oldest newspaper, it "is also one of the youngest, in the sense that It was not until 1008 that it was regis tered at the general post office for transmission by inland post as a newspaper. Previously it had been re garded as a government publication only, and was dispatched "'O. H. M. S." in this way escaping postal charges altogether. But apparently the government 'saw a way to reap a few extra halfpence by having it regis tered. The Gazette varies in size very con siderably. Sometimes it consists mere ly of one page, and sometimes of be tween four and five hundred, but the price always remains the name, viz, one shilling. There was one memor able week in 1847, which was known as the "Railway Year," when so many parliamentary notices had to be pud llshed that the "Gazette for the week totaled nbout three thousand pages. One of the most Interesting numbers of the Gazette ever published was the Diamond Jubilee number, the whole paper being devoted to n official rec ord of that historic Celebration. As an illustration of the importance of the Gazette In the old days, it might be mentioned that as recently as the Crimean war the Gazette was the first to publish that important item of news, the victory of Alma. At one time the London newspapers had to wait for the publication of the Gazette in order to secure sueh news ot "public importance as the list of casualties, which the war office in those dys sent direct to Fleet ti treet It Is the proud boast of Hirers. Harrison, who for more than one hun dred and thirty years published the London Gazette, that although "kings and cabinet ministers contributed to its pages daring the time they pah liehed the paper, and 'althosgh thou sands of 'employees wtsre engaged on the work of prodscteg the Garotte, Be offcial secrets sent to tifl for pahli cation have ever leaked out The Gazette is irohably the only pa per which returns the original copy to It? authors along with the proof. Thie Is done in the case of communlcatlOM from sovereigns n'd cahinet-alateters. Activities ef Wsme. T 4 AUImM thai WOB6S ttClHOfcl frtudontn complete their coarse snach jfeker taan wen. ' Tto -avwnurA MmlaEg of wossen era- T,inT In tbe clothla trade in Eag- jtead is Vl2 per Wostea anosg up www emmm in New York hare started a rasde asaiast high rests. Just in, by express- Some of the most suits we have ever a price $15 Rich, distinctive Tartan Check woolens in stylish perfect-fitting models with patch pockets and soft roll lapels. As measured by ordinary standards they are actually $20 and $22.50 values. Only & fexo in ihis shipment See ibem today! He is not to be called a true lover of wisdom who loves it for the sake of gain. And it may be said that the true philosopher loves every part of wis dom, and wisdom every part of the philosopher, inasmuch as she draws all to herself, and allows no one of his thoughts to wander to other things. Dante. No Smoking on Campus. A motion providing for a strict en forcement of the rule prohibiting smoking of any kind on, the steps of X s x N ANtlETTElKELlERMAN in "Neptune's Diughter At THJ-DOLSYER Tday MtlRe, 3s30 EvSn, :30 TWO POINT Corner 1Wi Gas -and Electric BtilMing. W. . BRYANT, Pres. beautiful young men's seen anywhere at such and approaches to University build ings, and cigarette smoking on the campus, as well as a rigid enforce ment of all disciplinary rules, was the most Important action of the Student Council In tCs first meeting of the year last nighi. The Council further provided for punishment in cases of violation of lho rule by fixing the penalty, of a public reprimand for the first offense and suspension from the University for three days for the second offense. Dally Kansan. TO CONSIDER First Commercial branches will be of great service to yon, ho matter what career yon have mark ed en t for yourself. Second Yoprjboet opportro ity to get these commercial hr&nches will he to spead some of yor spare tinte in ourchooL (Honrp can be amnged to sit yoorTJnL schedfile.) . O Streets. GERTRUDE BEERS, Vice-Prs.