Page 7 -Classified Ads- C three days 75c one day 50c yords ems. Fifth. Phone orders are accepted on the understanding that the bill will paid promptly. Ads must be called in noon or Wednesday or Saturday for the delivery, or brought to the University Daily msn Business office. Flint Hall. five days $1.00 BUSINESS SERVICES *PIST—Experienced in theses, term papers, reports. Fast and accurate, student rates. Mrs. Betty Veqist, 1935 baker Ave. Phone VI 3-2001. tf PERIENCED TYPIST. Fast, accurate device for theses, reports and term pars. Regular rates. Mrs. Barlow. 835 michigan. Phone VI 3-7654. ff IVE GIFTS—Nightingale Canary Singles, Parakeets, all colors from sunny exas—complete stocks of cages and lands, fresh foods and toys. Complete gifts or dogs be given by someone else. Fish Turtles, Chameleons, Hamsters, etc. Everything in the Field. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 N. phone VI3-2921. ff **WERAM** %—All kinds of 6-paks, ice lain. Chained ice in water-repetent paper bags. Plarnic party supplies. Plant, 6th and Vermont. Phone V. If 0350 PING. Experienced. Fast and accue- rable. We serve dinein, ice cream, Burbars, cheese, TVS. FESSMAKING- Formals, alterations. dengowns. Ola Smith. $91\%$ Mai. PERIENCED TYPIST wants thesis bk or papers over 3,000 words. Stann- rate rates. Close to campus. Call Nance- hild. VI 3-5364. 5-13 FOR RENT PERIENCEIED TYPIST will do all kinds typing in my home. Reasonable rates. Robert McEdowney, 634 Greever errace. VI3-8568. tf - IST—experienced. all kinds of typh- nosis. 147 Tenn. VI 3–9, 5–9 Shaver, 147 Tenn. VI 3–9, 5–9 BOMS for rent for summer and fall. blocks from campus. To graduate wom- students and working girls. Cooking d laundry privileges. Also entire 3rd or Private bath. New stove and re- gisterer and sink. VI-31-597. 1224 Hall 5-9 o-room furnished apt. private bath of age grade disposal; within walking minute of medical center; $50 per month. No children please. Available e. I. Mrs. J. S. Snyder. We 1-6226. w. 3. W.勃. Kansas City 11. Mo. vo bedroom house. furnished. $100 per room. Phone VI-3-5662. Bedroom Apartment available for summer. Good possibility for 3 or 4 students share if desired. Furnished. Call VI 3-5 after 3 p.m. free room 2nd floor nicely furnished entertainment. Built-ins, modern, available to a couple or 2 boys. Adultly carry. Cabin 3:00 p.m. VI3-5909, ississippi. hority house at Colorado University, Boulder, Colo., for 1956 summer session approximately June 15 through August. Held half hourly in living room, dining room, kitchen, etc. Only utility furnished is sher. Dishes and furniture furnished; cens not furnished. For further des- interested persons contact Incorpora, Inc., 1224 Pennsilla, Boulder, Colorado. Minimum amount of $350.00 for session. 5-9 HELP WANTED summer employment if you have a card want to earn $1,000 during the summer. We also offer scholarships to those who qualify. For personal interview call Ogren at Eldridge Hotel Tuesday from 8,11 till 1 or 5 till 7. 5-8 DUNG TEACHER for coming year, durel rural school on main highway Lawrence Executive salary, upper level of George McGillie 4. for appointment. We need 5 to 10 college men who want to make big money this summer. Two graduate students arrange a program for $20 per month bringing the school year. If you have a r and are willing to work, we want you to train your students so they can go out so they really can go when cool is out. This job offers terrific partitions for time work in school news站, telephone R. Brennett, 651 Sckess ST, Hopeka, Ranssa. Telephone 275 or 47812. OLLEGE GIRL to help with child care at household chores during summer. Call 817-320-3469 at time of meet Mrs. Nathalie Stark. 4500 Rose Price, Kansas City, Missouri. 5-10 FOUND pen kit by Malott Hau Tuesday evening. CGI VT1-8505. Diane Sandburg. ner have by identifying and ving for this ad. 5-7 ND. The following items have been ed in at the Daily Kansan Business Center, 100 West 32nd Street, other gloves, 1 compass, 1 maroon and ever pen, 1 copy "Spoken German." TRANSPORTATION TICKETS to anywhere by airplane, steamship, and escorted tours. Ask us about Sky-Coach and family day rates. Call Miss Rose Glesman at the First Aviation Center for information for itineraries and reservations. 8th & Mass. Phone VI3-1025. tlf AIRLINE reservations and tickets, touris- ture (coach) and first class, or family ship accommodations. Hotel and resort reservations. See your experience, full- time travel agency. Teton Mtn Travel Ship Service. Travel House, 1236 Mass Phone VI 7-1211. Wanted: Riders to New York City or further information call V1 327-377-5-7 TWO riders wanted to Baltimore, Washington and Philadelphia. Am leaving June 1, 1956. If interested contact George Klein, 317 Lindley Hall. Geology Department, between 3 and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. 5-11 Man's淋车 Auto-Wind watch. New: $110, will surrender. Calf $8167 - 8167, $110, will surrender. Calf $8167 - 8167, FOR SALE 1940 Chevrolet—radio, heater and steering knob, $75, or trade for photo and ham equipment, or gun, or what have you. Jim Mueller, 1600 R. I., V-3-2913. 5-7 Nearly new Brookdale redwood home on corner lot. Three bedrooms and ceramic tiled bath, attached garage. VI 3-3988. 5-7 FOR SALE BY OWNER: 1955 Mercury convertible. Low mileage. Power windows and brakes. Radio and heater. White sidewall tires. Extra nice. Phone VI3-2832, after 5 p.m. or on Saturday. 5-10 GRADUATING couple wishes to sell 1954 27 ft. Rollowhouse house trailer, $2400 including air-conditioner. Phone VI-3- 7484. 5-11 LOST Blue-gray and silver Parker "51" pen. Black-letter Call Calau Sanders-White. 5-94. 3-8055 Dictzen Slide Rule on campus near Malott hall, with plastic ruler inside. Reward. Phone VI 5-3944. Ask for Dick Mierley. 5-7 Mather Will Speak To UVO Tonight Varsity Football Coach Chuck Mather will speak on KU football and show a movie, "Football U.S.A." tonight at the University Veterans Organization meeting, which is to be held at 7:30 in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. Coach Mather will comment on the film and answer questions about the coming football season. The meeting tonight is the last of the semester, and final plans will be made for remaining spring social activities. Lowell Heinz, Lawrence freshman, president of the UVO, urges all veterans, members or not, to attend the meet.3g. St. Louis Alumni Give Grant Award of the first St. Louis Alumni Scholarship at the University has been made to Joanne Novak, a graduating senior from Webster Groves, Mo. Miss Novak will receive $500. The scholarship is renewable for four years and a total value of $2,000. New Zealand's kiwi bird is flightless, tailless, and sprouts whiskers in front of its eyes. It is the only bird with nostrils at the tip of its bill. For its size, the kiwi lays the largest egg known. GRANADA The home management group displayed the use of money, time, attitudes, abilities, and knowledge in managing a home. The housing class used scale models to show the exterior construction involved in housing. Models of homes which were borrowed from the School of Architecture were also on exhibit. Exhibits in the foods area explained the principles of good nutrition. The clothing department showed a number of materials draped on models. The home decoration exhibit included floral arrangements and articles from Spooner Thayer Museum that would be useful "extra" items in the home. 300 Attend High School Day Touring the campus, viewing exhibits, and attending programs kept nearly 300 girls busy as they attended the annual High School Day of the home economics department May 5. Refreshments made by the foods classes were served during the morning in the dining room of the some economics department in the assement of Fraser Hall. Opening talks were given by Miss Mary Peg Hardman, Assistant Dean of Women; Miss Edna Hill, chairman of the department of home economics; Marilyn Ahlstrom, president of the Iota Chapter of Omicron Nu, and Barbara Butler, president of the Home Economics Club. Both high school and KU girls participated in a panel and a fashion show "Rhapsody in Spring." Exhibits were shown in the various home economics departments in Fraser Hall. Structural Engineering Meeting Draws 170 University Daily Kansan Theodore R. Higgins, director of engineering and research at the American Institute of Steel Construction; Edward R. Estes Jr., research engineer of the American Institute of Steel Construction; Dr. Lynn S. Beedle, assistant director of the Fritz Engineering Laboratory at the University of Lehigh, Bethlehem, Pa., and Dr. William J. Hall, research assistant professor of civil engineering at the University of Illinois wereuest speakers. Approximately 170 engineers and University students attended the Structural Engineering Conference held April 3 in the Student Union. 2 Medical Seniors Receive Medal, Prize Two medical seniors won $100 and the Haden Medal for a two-year experiment testing the ability of human blood to protect mice from X-irradiation. The awards were presented May 4 to Donald Woodson and Thomas McGuire, both of Kansas City, Mo. The two donated their own blood for the experiment. Monday, May 7, 1956. Awards Given In Art Show Now On Display In Union Car Blair, Atchison junior, was awarded first place in the annual Delta Phi Delta art show that opened Sunday in the Student Union. Blair's work is a painting called "After the Rain." James McMullan, Long Beach) N.Y. sophomore, was awarded second place for his wood sculpture called "Dispair." Joan Marsh, Chanute junior, won third place with a portrait called "Phoebe." Honorable mentions went to Tal Streeter, Manhattan senior, for a sculpture piece called "The Brave Bull"; Curtis Miller, Orchard sophomore, for a painting called "Misty Harbor"; Virginia Jennings, Independence, Mo. sophomore, for a painting called "City at Night." Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, made the awards. This is the first year that judges rejected work they felt not worthy enough to be in the show. Over two-thirds of the work submitted was refused. Any person on the hill was Correspondents' WorkToBeJudged Prizes for home town correspondents' stringbooks will be awarded at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Pine Room of the Student Union. First prize is $35, second is $20, third is $10, and fourth and fifth $5 each. The correspondents are appointed by the chairman of Statewide Activities to send news and feature items about the University to their home town papers. Stories that appear in the paper are clipped and kept in a stringbook. The judging is based on quality more than quantity. Kay Wright, Columbus sophomore is chairman of the correspondents. Class To Visit K.C. Nursery Schools Mrs. Nell Ish, instructor of home economics, will accompany the group. Members of the Child Development II class will go to Kansas City, Mo. Tuesday to visit nursery schools for the deaf and the retarded, and cooperative, private, and settlement schools. The 72 Ionic columns of the U.S. Treasury building form one of the capital's classic sights. Each column measures 36 feet, nine inches in height, 12 feet, 63 inches in circumference, and weighs 35 tons. All were cut from single blocks of granite. YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. VI 3-2966 Miss Lawrence Scholarship Pageant An Official Preliminary Contest for Miss America Hoch Auditorium, May 18th, 7:30 p.m. TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM THE FOLLOWING MERCHANTS; Beacon Appliance The Carousel Shop Carter's Stationery Douglas County State Bank Dine-A-Mite First National Bank Lawrence National Bank Limerick Finance Pendry Furniture J. C. Penney Co. Raney Drug Store Rexall Drug No. 2 Round Corner Drug Fred Sutton & Co. eligible to participate in the show but members of the drawing and painting faculty could not be awarded prizes. The show will run through May. 9. Those who had work rejected from the show may pick it up in 320 strong Hall. NOW • 7:15—9:00 JOSEPH COTTEN "KILLER IS LOOSE" Wednesday For An Extended Engagement HIS STRANGE GENIUS FED ON LOVE! HERBERT J.YATES presents Magic Fire YVONNE DE CARLO • CARLOS THOMPSON RITA GAM • VALENTINA CORTESE TRUCOLOR BY COMPUTER MACHINES A WILLIAM DIETER PRODUCTION and ALAN BADEL as Richard Wagner A REPUBLIC PRODUCTION NOW Thru WED. DOUBLE FEATURE "TREASURE OF PANCHO VILLA" —Co-Feature— TERRY MOORE "POSTMARK FOR DANGER" Thursday For An Extended Engagement DESPERATE ADVENTURE! The incredible true story of the "Canoe Commands"I JOSE TREVOR FERRER·HOWARD COCKLESHELL Reader's Digest The outstanding Reader's Digest story! HEROES Those Top-Secret Guys! Color by TECHNICOLOR CINEMASCOPE A COLUMBIA PICTURE A WARWICK PRODUCTION