SUMMER SESSION KANSAN July Selling at the Innes Store is not affected in the least by the hot weather. We appreciate the fact that only real bargains will induce the people to come to the store these hot days and we offer a great many exceptional valves for Saturday, but can make mention of only a few. Silks We continue our Grand Silk Sale while the goods last at prices not o be found elsewhere. AT 55c every yard of figured Fourlands and 16 in. Tab Silks up to the $1.25 values, at yard... 55c AT 69c the Chiffon Taffetas and Tub Silks for all purposes, 36 in. wide, these Tab Silks are the correct thin for men's Shirts, up to the $1.50 values, at a yard...69c Other lines at greatly reduced prices will be sold as low as 50c, 37½c, 30c, 25c, and 19c a yard. KIMONA SILKS, a lot of Chee- ney Bros., well known styles in floral and Oriental designs, 75c values a yard. . . . . . . . . . . 50c Ladies' Waists ONE LOT white Lingerie waistie with all over embroidery fronts, trimmed with lace and embroidery, all good styles and worth up to $1.25. See them in the north window, choice each...89c White Goods 36 inch White P. K. wide welt, 35c value at a yard . . . 35c 36 inch White P. K. wide and narrow welts, 50c volume, a yard . . . . . The above lines are all new, this season's goods and at these prices will create some lively selling which will make Friday and Saturday banner days in this section. Onyx Hosiery for women and for men, a special number of this famous brand known as the Warrior, featured in our hosiery department. Each pair having every wearing point protected, extra splicings just where they are needed at the top, heel, and toe. Don't pay 50c for hose but give these a trial at only a pair...25c ONE LOT children's ribbed hose in black, small sizes only, at pair... .5e Onwes, Bulline & Hackman Mrs. Schwinley's popular boarding club at 1345 Kentucky will remain open for the three weeks' session-- Adv. 2t. Waiter wanted at once. Co-Op Club. 1345 Kentucky Street. Bell 455—Adv. Semi-Annual Clearance Sale Every Man's Suit Every Young Man's Suit will be sold regardless of former values. Come quick and make your selections J. HOUSE & SON 729 Mass. St. DOCTOR GIVEN DOSE OF OWN MEDICINE Head of Physical Culture Department Rescued as per Instructions. "Help, help, I'm drowning," yelled Doctor Naismith in the pool in the gym yesterday. A friend on the edge of the pool plunged in to the rescue. For just such an emergency the doctor had been telling this friend to act. "Swim to the man in danger," said he, "throw one arm under his chin and raise his head above the water. Hold his head in the vise in the bend of your arm. If he struggles, tighten your hold about him so that he can not move his head." The pupil understood and followed instructions only too well. In response to the "help, help" of the sinking "doe" he plunged into the pool and raised his head above the water. As per instructions he held the head of the drowning man tightly in the bend of his strong right arm. He was carrying out his directions beautifully except that his hold around the doctor's neck was about an inch too far down. He was squeezing his "Adam's apple" and the doctor struggled to be freed. The pupil, however, had not forgotten his instructor's injunction, "If he struggles, tighten your hold upon him so that he cannot move his head." He did as he had been told. Doctor Naisimh struggled in vain, and his friend only held him tighter about the neck. If Adam's apple were fruit, there would have been cider. At any rate, there was a decided compression of the trachea. Thanks to his rescuer, Doctor Naismith was taken from the pool with a very sore throat. As a result he is hardly able to speak above a whisper today. Next time he gives a lecture on how to rescue a drowning person, he will be careful to explain that the man in danger should be caught just below the chin, and not, please get this, an inch or two below the chin. YUM, YUM, POPOVERS And Soda Biscuits and Muffins Made and Baked by Domestic Science Girls In spite of the hot weather, the ovens in the basement of Fraser hall are going, and the girls in Miss Newell's domestic science class are learning how to make and to bake bread. Today they made soda biscuits, beaten biscuits, pop-overs, and muffins. 737 Mass. Expert SHAMPOOING and HAIR DRESSING; MANICURING and MASSAGEING, either electric or hand. Earlier in the term the girls learned to can fruit and vegetables. They canned cherries, peaches, berries, corn and beans. The vegetables are canned by the long process, because of the resistant bacteria. This process requires cooking for forty-five minutes on three successive days. There is a row of jars on display in the laboratory that would provide a dandy good spread for anyone lucky enough to get hold of them. McCurdy The Grocer, 1021 Mass. Everything to Eat. Apointments made. Bell 932. Art needlework a Specialty. ARTS AND CRAFTS BEAUTY PARLOR 737. Mass. Ladies and Misses DR. BOLTON STILL TRUE TO ARIZONA Think of 50 Below in Some Places and Roasting Ears in November. Dr. T. L. Bolton who was so enthusiastic over the possibilities of Arizona when he was here last summer still thinks it one of the finest places in the United States. "The pleasantest day I could wish to spend," said Dr. Broll, "would be a day on the desert in Arizona during the winter season which lasts from December until May. Then there's a charm about the desert that one cannot feel elsewhere, while its beauty at night is unsurpassed. "But contrary to the belief of many persons," said Dr. Bolton, "Arizona isn't all desert and always hot. In the mountains in the northern part of the state the temperature is frequently fifty degree below zero. For agricultural pursuits Arizona offers great possibilities. The wheat crop averaged three million acres, but fewer of the every kind are raised. The Arizona oranges are the best produced anywhere. "Just think," added Dr. Bolton, "of having roasted eggs for your Thanksgiving dinner. That is when the roasting ear season begins and it is at its height during December." After the three weeks session Dr. Bolton will leave for Massachusetts where he will visit in the Berkshire hills with old friends. From there he will go to spend a few days at his cottage on the Maine coast, returning in September to his work in the University of Montana. STUDENTS VOLUNTEER University Men and Women Doing Mission Work in Foreign Fields The University Student Volunteer band has had two meetings in Myers hall during the Summer Session. The first meeting was addressed by Miss Edith Russell and the second, held Sunday, by M. W. Wimmer. Miss Edith Russell, 11, has spent the past year in the Indianapolis Mission Training School previous to taking up work in the Chinese and Japanese districts of San Francisco. Miss Russell will start in a new work, this of obtaining condition of the yellow woman in America. M. W. Wimmer a member of the band, is doing summer work in the University. He has been working in Freetown, Africa, in an industrial school. Two years ago the Volunteer Band of the University of Kansas had twenty members enrolled; last year and up to the present time nine volunteers are recorded; present are four K. U. student-workers from foreign field and twenty of these have gone within the last two years. The Kansas University men who are working in foreign fields keep in close touch with their home volunteer band. Recently Mr. Fay Livengood, cass '09, who has been teaching English in Euphrates College at Hampoo, Turkey, sent word that he has lately taken charge of physical training and music in addition to the work in English. The quadrennial convention of the local student volunteer bands of America will be held this year in Kansas City, Missouri, in December. Four years ago it was held in Rochester, New York. Prof. H. P. Cady, professor of chemistry, who has been ill with appendicitis, will be able to return to his classes next week. Babb to Shawnee, Okla. George Babb, student instructor in the Gym, has gone to Shawnee, Okla., to teach swimming in a large park there. He expects to return in time to enter the University next fall. Prof. C. Edward Hubach will spend his vacation with his brothers fishing in the streams of northern Michigan. Ben White, shortstop on the Varsity of 1912, visited Wednesday at the Pi Upson house. Another Chance to Save 250 pair of our regular $4, $4.50, and $5 oxfords, tan or black, choice You better buy 2 pair. $2.50 Many of your friends are saving from $5 to $8.5s on their summer suits. The $25 and $27.50 grades are $17 The $15 grades are $11 Dozens of other saving opportunities Clean Up Sale Johnson & Carl AWNINGS Baker & Lockwood Phone 251 and our salesman will call to submit swatches and prices. Agents for Baker & Lockwood Any size, style or quantity All Text Books and Supplies For The Three Weeks Session. Rowlands College Book Store Half Way Down on Adams Hill. 1