UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Arrow Shirt Sale Starts Tomorrow Morning $1.00 Monarch Shirts ... 80c $1.50 Arrow Shirts ... $1.20 $2.00 Arrow Shirts ... $1.50 $2.50 Arrow Shirts ... $1.75 Soft Cuffs Starched Cuffs Johnson & Carl THE YOUNG MEN'S STORE Football players are slow turning in equipment, something like 100 suits still out. Manager Hamilton will take steps at once to have material returned. A great many students left school before the holidays without returning football equipment, which was called for immediately after the close of the inter-class series. This material should be returned once and re-received by the Students in order to becoming careless in their obligations to the Athletic Association. Equipment is checked out freely to those wishing to take part in intercollege or intramural sports with the understanding and agreement that it will be returned when called for or paid at full prices. This carelessness on the part of students greatly inconveniences and is quite expensive to the management, an assessment that are kept on hand to check in this material. Material will be received this week at the store room in the Gymnasium the following hours: 10:00 to 12:00 12:00 to 13:30 1:30 to 5:30 o'clock in the afternoon. There are also a number of men, who have had track material who are not practicing regularly. This material should be returned so that this material may be used by those who wish to practice. It is a rule of the association that persons who do not have track material cannot check out any material or receive any of the honors of the Association.—Adv. PROFESSOR MILLIIS WILL LECTURE IN KANSAS CITY Prof. H. A. Millis, head of the economics department, will take an active part in the lecture course to be held in the university building. The Board of Public Welfare of that city. Professor Millis will speak each Wednesday and Saturday evening during the course, lecturing on economics. The course will begin Tuesday evening with a study course in anthropology, ethnology and evolution by Miss Eva M. Marquis, a member of the Welfare Board. MINE "RESCUE" THRILL Government Experts Drill Marvinites in Imaginary Expeditions With cumbersome breathing ap paratus strapped to their shoulders the K. U. mining engineers on their hands and knees crawled through the mud, wading in water, courageously penetrating the most deadly of imaginary fumes and dauntlessly accomplishing the most thrilling of imagination rescues. The Mines Bureau of Mines is responsible for construction in rescue work and first aid to the injured in mines which representatives of the United States Bureau of Mines are giving the Marvinites this week—the first course of its ever to be offered at the University. The Bureau of Mines demonstration car arrived in Lawrence yesterday evening and will remain here until the first of next week, during demonstrations for the classes. The car will however, also be open to the general public, the plan being to give several public demonstrations in mine rescue training to the Union Pacific tracks a short east of the station. At 11:30 this morning J. J. Rutledge, who is in charge of the mining district which covers Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and parts of Texas, gave a lecture on safety appliances and their use in mines. As Mr. Rutledge spoke, moving pictures were thrown on the screen showing rescue parties making practical use of the contravenses he explained. Mr. Rutledge will give a similar lecture tomorrow morning. Distilled Water Said to be the only pure water. Orde a bottle from McNish. Phones 198.. Adv. Distilled Water Send the Daily Kansan home. K. U. INVITES MERCHANTS Will Leave Stores in February to Attend Short Course at State University. Announcement of the program for the annual short course for Kansas merchants at the state university, February 7 to 11, inclusive, was received this morning by the editor of the. This program is arranged by the director of the University Extension Division and given in the rooms of the University buildings, which are designed for the retailers of Kansas and the growing attendance and interest has led Director F. R. Hamilton to predict an attendance of 1914 being 266 and in 1915, 325. The speakers, topics and methods of conducting the work have been arranged according to the needs of the Kansas retailers expressed in suggestions they have made and questions they have asked in the past three years. The best features previously used have been retained and the program so arranged that three general lectures on mercantile subjects will be given every day. Additional articles are scheduled in salesmanship, advertising, accounting, show card writing and textile judging. Round table lectures will be held for grocers, clothiers, hardware and furniture dealers, department and general merchandise store owners and clerks, druggists and nurses in shoes. Round tables will also be held for those selling auto supplies. Most important among the many speakers for the week are: Charles D. Heller, advertising manager for Marshall Field and Co., and Paul N. Neystrom, who met with such approval at the course last year. HASN'T PICKED SQUAD Take a look at the old magazine counter at Carroll's; fine reading for a nickel.-Adv. Coach Hamilton is Unable to Choose Five to Play Twenty per cent off on all pennants and pillow tops at Carroll's. **-**Adv. Ames The solution of a big basketball problem will be seen Friday night when the Jayhawker basketball squad appears on the floor for the first game of the season with Ames. For three weeks Coach Hamilton has been trying to pick a squab but as the time for the third game was approaching it was able to choose his five. Anyone of fifteen men has a good chance to appear in the opening game. Each day a different squad would be picked as the "regulars" and another bunch as the "scurs." And quite often the scrubs proved to be better than the regulars. The squad will not lack knowledge and ability up to their usual form under strain and excitement will be the main cause of worry. The vacations of fifteen basket-tossers were cut short because of the need of practice. Regular work started Wednesday. At least an hour's scrimmage was required before the run-in, or for the men, as well as basket shooting and dribbling practice. Each position on the team has a number of applicants. At forward, six men have been showing up good all season. Kowder and Gibbons have been doing good work but of late. Pattinson and Kennedy have shown some speed. Miller and Gibson are also going good at the front part of the team. "Slats" Cole, a veteran, has a good hold on the center job. Pausch and Lytle may also get a hand at center. Hamilton has a larger squad of guards to pick from than forwards. Wilson, Heath, Uhrlaub, Nelson, Appel, Hoffman and Rebell are all candidate to win the seven are likely to start the Ames game and in case the score is favorable all of them may get a chance to play. Wilson has seen showing up well since football season when Nielsen has been doing good work all season. Ames has a strong team and the two games this week will be hard ones for the Jayhawkers. But the hard games Friday and Saturday will be good games to get the men in shape two battles at Lincoln next week. Students! STUDENTS: Order a bottle of aerated water from McNish and keep yourself in the best of trim. Phones 198—Adv. It's time to stock up on some Cake Box or Benson & Hedges famous tobacco at Carroll's.—Adv. Roy Napp spent the two-weeks' vacation at his home in White City. Roy says that he spent his time in the doing of various things, principal among which were the unloading of a car of frozen sand, the invoicing of the stock of a lumber at White City, and the amusing of his sister's baby. Plain Tales from the Hill Speaking of vacation time, students living along Ohio street say that it was a familiar sight to see Prof. C. H. Ashton standing in the street before his house with the radiator of his automobile raised, and intently studying from time to time the contents of a book. Slightly modernizing the word "Highway" in The Road Highway' it might read in the professor's case "It is better to be a good auto-mechanic than a bad poet or an incompetent professor." Abe Hay, sophomore College, who hails from Perry, Kansas loves to hunt rabbits. When Abe went out to his farm for the vacation he was soon out with his gun in search of his favorite game. Abe said that he was not out long before he had scared up nearly a hundred rabbits all in one room by hunting them in a hurried back to the country store where he purchased shells amounting to $2.50. It was to be a big day's haul for the University sophomore. Not at all; on returning to the farm Abe was unable to locate a solitary cotton-tail. Out at Minneapolis, Kansas, rabbits are more scarce than settlers, even more scarce than University students. Ernest Stateler, who comes from this short-grass country, says that he does not secure his track training of 10:41 am every morning and has spent home for the Christmas dinner he spent much of the time visiting the Minnesota and home folks. This was the track captain's first visit to the farm since last Christmas. During the summers for the past five years he went in his entire life with threshing crews in the central part of the state. ALPHA TAU HELPS SANTA Walter Wewsonborn, freshman College, spent his vacation period working in a mail car between Kansas City and El Paso. He Tilles, junior medic, had a similar job. The Registrar's office was giving out Christmas gifts again today to the late students who failed to secure one of the little student guide books. Russia and Bulgaria have nothing on the K. U. department of paleontology when it comes to the naming of fossils. During the past week Professor wenhofe has received at the University of New York the purchases purchased from the Ward Natural Science Establishment at Rochester, New York. The following names are eligible to compete: Eucalyptocrinus Crassus, Phacidiella Orestes, and Rhynchotreta Cuneata Americana. Prof, F. C. Dockery of the department of psychology read a paper entitled "The Effects of Distraction upon Discrimination of Sounds" before the American Psychology Association in Chicago during the holidays. Twenty per cent clean-up on all smokers' supplies at Carroll's.—Adv. Twenty per cent on all Spalding woolen jerseys at Carroll's.-Adv. L. S. Beughly What information is the average job listing for you? How do you want to give you concerning his company? (2013) SHUBERT TONIGHT. The Biggest Hit in 25 Years The Biggest Hit in 25 Years ONE YEAR IN NEW YORK, SIX MONTHS IN CHICAGO. ON THE ORIGINAL CHICAGO CAST AND PRODUCTION. TRIAL Nightly, 25c to $2.00, Sat. Mat., 25c to $1.00, Mon., Mat. Best Price, $1.00 to $1.99, Tues. & Wed. PROTSCH The College Tailor A Good Place to Eat Johnson & Tuttle Anderson's Old Stand 715 MASSACHUSETTS STREET CITIZENS STATE BANK We are handling all University accounts, and we solicit your business, deposits guaranteed. 707 Massachusetts St. BOWERSOCK THEATRE Wednesday, January 5 SELWYN & COMPANY present THE LAUGH FESTIVAL TWIN BEDS By SALISBURY FIELD and MARGARET MAYO Direct from the Record-Making Run of 52 Weeks in New York Same Cast and Production — Curtain 8:15 Prices 50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.50 Tickets now on sale at Theater Box Office. Call Bell 10. GET READY, MISTER MANHATTAN SHIRT SALE BEGINS THURSDAY, JANUARY 6th See announcement of prices in tomorrow evening's paper Exclusive Agents for Manhattan Shirts Exclusive Agents for Manhattan Shirts Seniors! If we make your picture it will be ready for the Annual Con Squires