SUMMER SESSION KANSAN JULY Clearance Sale 9c a yard for choice of 25 pieces of 30 inch 12%c Printed Batiste. Wash Goods and Silks 15c a yard for choice of 38 pieces yarn dyed woven tissues, all good styles, 25c values. 19c a yard for fancy Ratines and plain colored Piques, 25c grade. 13c a yard for 15c and 17c woven Crepes and stripe Seeruckers. 22c a yard for Windsor Flisse in plain. Bulgarian and Kimono patterns. 19c a yard for Wm. Anderson Imported Ginghams. 22c a yard for 29c and 35c 40 inch Voiles. Plain or figured. 29c a yard for 39c fancy stripe Wash Silks, all shades. 25c a yard for 39c and 50c half silk wash fabrics 49c a yard for 34 inch half silk brocaded wash fabrics. 52c a yard for Cheney Brothers' 75c Kimono Silks. 69c a yard for 36 inch all silk Tub Silks. 423 75c a yard for Cheney Bros.' 85c and $1.00 all silk Shower Pooled Fouls. WEAVER'S Summer Rates on Typewriters SALE OR RENT F. J. CARTER 150 Fountain Pens to Select From. I. P. Ring Covers and Fillers. F. J. CARTER Phone 1051 1025 Mass. The WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000. Surplus $100,000 Cor. Mass. and Quincy Sts. Issues its own Letters of Credit and Travellers Checks. The only way to carry your money in safety. Banking of all kinds solicited. W. A. GUNTHER W. A. GUNTHER Staple and Fancy GROCERIES Most Complete Line in the City. 721 Mass. St. Both Phones 226 McCurdy The Grocer, 1021 Mass. Everything to Eat. Taxicab, Hack or Livery PHONES 1 4 8 BAGGAGE HANDLED Eldridge House Barn E. MOAK, Prop. Demand AUG. J. PIERSON Brands of Cigars Robert Hudson Black Seal Pierson's Hand Made Manufactured at 902 Mass. Street Read the Summer Session Kansan Read the Summer Session Kansan STUDENTS SHOE SHOP R. O. BURGERT, Prop. Headquarters for Shoe Dressing and Shoe Laces. STUDENTS SHOE SHOP 1107 Mass. St. Ladies and Misses Expert SHAMPOOING and HAIR DRESSING; MANICURING and MASSAGEING, either electric or hand. Appointments made. Bell 932. Art needlework a Specialty. ARTS AND CRAFTS BEAUTY PARLOR 737 Mass. For Summer Tan MARLBOROOL COLD CREAM Softens, Whitens, and Belaches. Sold in 25e Jars at MCOLLCOSH DURO STORE GERMANY'S ARMAMENT THE CHAPEL ADDRESS Read the Summer Session Kansan Read the Summer Session Kansan Dr. Schoenfeld, of George Washington University, the Speaker Prof. Hermann Schoenfeld, professor of Germanics and Continental history at George Washington University, and who is at present teaching German to the students of the Summer Session will talk at chapel Friday morning on the "German Armament and its Meaning." Dr. Schoenfeld has been decorated by Turkey, Persia, and Venezuela. He has held the post of Ottoman consul-general at Washington since 1899, and in 1903, served as United States consul at Riga, Russia, and delegate of the United States Bureau of Education for the investigation of higher education in Russian, Austrian, and Prussian Poland. He is the author of several important books on German history and literature and has edited a series of translations of Teutonic classics. Secretary Brown Buys Pulmotor for Use in Emergencies UNIVERSITY GETS A LIFE-SAVING MACHINE "Conqueror of Death." That might be the name of a small machine in the office of Fraser hall, but it isn't. The wonderful machine is a pulmotor. Its work is forcing the lungs to action in case of drowning, poisoning, strikes by lightning, and attempted suicide. Apparently lifeless bodies begin to breath when the pulmotor sets to work, so that if the slightest trace of blood circulation is in the heart, recusciation in seven cases out of ten occurs. Dr. James Naismith, director of physical education, secured the apparatus for general use at the University. The cost was $150, and the machine in its wooden case weighs 50 pounds. Small tanks of oxygen that operate for 40 minutes are used to work the comparatively simple apparatus. The oxygen passes into a peculiar billows and draws an air suction which serves as a motor, alternately filling the lungs by pressure and emptying them by suction. The respiratory rhythm of the apparatus automatically adapts itself to the lungs in every case. When the lungs are large the rhythm will be Air-tight connection between the palmotor tubes and the respiratory organs is made with a face mask that covers the nose that straps behind the head. "If a pulmotor had been in service here in past years several lives would have been saved," declared secretary E. E. Brown. "Potter's lake, lightning, and live wires have brought death to students who could have been saved through a $150 pulmotor," he said. slow, and with smaller lungs the rhythm will be necessarily faster. Although the pulmotor here is the only one between Kansas City and Denver, many of the cities of the world maintain life saving stations where pulmotors can be rushed to the scene in motor cars immediately upon notice. Mines, fire departments, chemical works, ships, and bathing resorts are providing machines for emergency use. In Kansas City, the street railway company and the fire department have pulmotors that are used at least twice a month. There have been few failures. TEXTILE CLASS DOES WASHING AND IRONING How to Use City Water and Get the Clothes Clean "It is necessary to boil and break every drop of the city water before using it," declared Miss Nowell, "in order to prevent iron rust and to keep the clothes from becoming yellow." The textile class under Miss Nowell's direction, is washing and ironing this week. The members have laundered table linen, bed linen, personal linen, as well as colored and woolen garments. The principles of chemistry are applied in the removal of stains and discolorations. If an acid is used for this purpose, a neutralizing agent must be applied to counteract its effect upon the fibres of the material. Javelle water is used as a bleach for the clothes. It is placed in the boiling water in the proportion of four tablespoonfuls to a gallon of water. If used to remove discolorations it is applied directly to the stained portion. After the water has been treated in this way the soap lathers much more freely and at the same time requires a much smaller amount for the washing. Sal soda is used for "breaking" the water. "Ironing does not require as much technical skill as washing," said Miss Nowell, "for ironing depends upon the ability of the individual than upon the application of principles." Fame If you want to get a double hitch on a laurel wreath—write things worth reading, or do things worth writing. follows this formula and goes one better—it's worth talking about. Go where good fellows get together and you will hear of the delightful flavor, the tempting fragrance, the satisfying smoothness of Velvet. Ligatt Myers Tobacco Co. White Parasols for White Dresses price on 50 White Parasols, embroidered in mercerized floss or with eyellet embroidery bands. White maple sticks, white tassels. Usually sold at $1.50 and $1.75. You can buy them on the first floor this week at An Eastern Maker, who makes only the best, made us a low each 98c Stylish Summer Dresses For street wear. Linen, Ratine, and other wash materials that tailor well. Tissues, lawns and novelty voiles, $3.50 to $12.50 Porch Dresses at $1.25 to $3.75 "Be a Tailor - Made Man" Let us make you a suit for $16 to $25 and give you an extra pair of pants FREE Union Woolen Mills 742 Mass. St. C. F. Heere. Mgr. Office Hours 9 to 11 a. m., 2 to 5 p. m. Phones: Bell 939 Home, 257 Consultation Free Examination and Treatment by Appointment Dr. Bert R. White OSTEOPATH Graduate of the AMERICAN SCHOOL OF OSTEOPAUHY KIRKSVILLE, MO. Office, 745 Mass. St. Lawrence, Kans. Doubled his salary in one year Sounds like a "gold brick" story, but it isn't. It is a frequent experience of young people who complete a course in Lawrence Business College. Shorthand and typewriting is a fine stepping stone for a young man, and those who can take dictation readily, secure excellent positions as private secretaries, to the heads of large corporations. Our school is in session all summer. You are invited to call and investigate our work and methods. LAWRENCE BUSINESS COLLEGE LAWRENCE, KANSAS Send the Daily Kansan Home