Page 6 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 15, 1956. Electric Women Slate Workshop A workshop for "electrical women" will be conducted Friday and Saturday at the University by the Greater Kansas City chapter of the Electrical Women's Round Table Workshop, Inc. "Electrical women" includes teachers, county farm and home demonstration agents, home economists and others connected with the use of electricity and electrical appliances in the home. Miss Julia Springer, home economist for Kansas Power and Light Co., Lawrence, is workshop chairman. Sessions include a Friday night banquet in the Student Union, with Miss Julia Kiene of Mansfield, Ohio, an independent home economics consultant for Westinghouse, as featured speaker. Saturday's morning program will feature Neil J. Thompson of the Topela Kansas Power and Light, and Elmer Smith of the Kansas City, Mo., Power and Light, who will talk on lighting and farm uses of electricity. In the afternoon a home economist panel will include Miss Edna Hill, professor of home economics, Miss Mae Baird, state home demonstration leader, Manhattan; Miss Betty Olson of Monsanto Chemicals, St. Louis, and Mrs. Jessie Cartright of the Norge Corporation, Chicago. Civil Service Vacancies Listed There is a need for chemists, mathematicians, metallurgists, physicists, and electronic scientists in the Washington, D.C., area, the United States Civil Service Commission has announced. Vacancies are in various Federal agencies and pay salaries ranging from $4,345 to $11,-610 a year. Further information and application forms may be obtained from Norman Denton, N.S. Civil Service Representative, the Lawrence post office. Barr, Klein To Attend Instructors Meeting Harold G. Barr, dean of the School of Religion, and Ernest Klein, instructor in the School of Religion, will attend the National Association of Biblical Instructors, Midwest Section meeting in Chicago Friday and Saturday. Dr. Barr, president of the association, will give the president's address. About 150 persons are expected to attend. THE JAYHAWK GROCERY "nearest the students" STUDY SNACKS has - Potato Chips - Vienna Sausages - Milk - Soft Drink - Soft Drinks PARTY PACKAGES - Paper Plates & Cups * Hot Dogs * Lunch Meat * Bread DRUGS & SCHOOL SUPPLIES Dr. Hoebel will lecture to the law students March 20 on "The Social Meaning of Legal Concepts," and at a public lecture in Strong Auditorium on "The Law of Primitive Peoples" in the afternoon. On March 21 he will meet with sociology faculty members graduate students and undergraduate majors in a colloquium-seminar. His topic is not yet selected but will probably deal with current trends in anthropology. - Razor Blades Razor Blades Soap & Shampoo Paper & Pencils Cigarettes Jayhawk Grocery 1342 Ohio Dr. E. Adamson Hoebel, former dean of the University of Utah and now head of the department of anthropology at the University of Minnesota, will deliver three public lectures to law and sociology students at the University next month The lectures are sponsored by the School of Law and the department of sociology and anthropology. Sociology, Law Talks Set Correction All three meetings will be open to the public. Dr. Hoebel and Dean Frederick J. Moreau of the Law School became good friends while studying at the University of Wisconsin. Dr. Hoebel is an authority on law and its relation to anthropology, and has written four books including an elementary sociology text. His latest book, "The Law of Primitive Man," was published in 1954 by the Harvard University Press. The target date for opening the five-mile bridge being built across the Straits of Mackinac is Nov. 1, 1957. Jim Steerman, Emporia sophomore, chairman of solicitations committee, was omitted from the list of Campus Chest drive officers in yesterday's Daily Kansan. Also James M. Miller, general publicity chairman, is from Kansas City, not Fort Scott. - Seasonal expenses - Car or home repairs Life insurance on all HFC loans without extra cost to you. - Shopping expenses - $20 to $1000 - Doctor bills No endorsers needed. Easy-to-meet requirements. Up to 24 months to repay. Phone or stop in today for fast, one-day friendly service! HOUSEHOLD FINANCE Corporation of Lawrence Kansas 831 1/2 Massachusetts Ave., over Litwins PHONE: Vlking 3-7545 Loans made to residents of nearby towns Inside Acme... Case No.1 . . . by Myhow Clozarclened THE REAPPEARING BUTTONS With sadistic glee, I tore off buttons with frivolous abandon. And then another thought skipped through my calculating mind. To prevent any spies from snatching these priceless buttons, I stomped on them until the mother of pearl was reduced to splintered old maid. I thought I had them this time. Several times in the past I'd sent shirts to Acme that I was sure had buttons missing. But every time they came back . . . flatteringly bright . . . impeccably pressed . . . and carefully wrapped in soil-defying cellophane . . . all the buttons were there! Yet, out of adversity oft comes victory. I searched through my motley selection of shirts and chose one I had worn three times (lucky for indigent students like me, Acme-finished shirts keep a morning-fresh look for days). Now I'm used to regular laundries. When I send clothes out with buttons missing, I expect to get them back the same way. But Oh, how I was fooled. The two-day wait for my shirt was eternity. And then it arrived! Furiously, I tore open the protective cellophane wrapper, scattered cardboard all over the floor and there it was. Weeping, I put on my Acme-launered shirt. Its happy whiteness . . . store-new body . . . didn't matter now. I even noticed a small rip had been mended so well it was hardly perceptible. Every button was replaced. In fact they were exactly like the ones I had so carefully destroyed (except these were brand new). Maybe you can outfox. Acme. Why don't you send them all your shirts today. Even if you can't beat them, you'll get the best shirt finish in town! 10% Off on Cash & Carry ACME 1111 Mass. BAGHELOR LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Dial VI 3-5155 Food Institute Set For Feb. 23-24 E. A. McFarland, manager of the bureau of institutes, University Extension, will be co-ordinator of the fourth annual Kansas Food Institute Feb. 23-24 in Hutchinson. Matthew Bernatsky, director of the Denver University's School of Hotel and Restaurant Management, will speak. The Kansas Restaurant Association, the Kansas Hotel Association, and the University Extension are sponsoring the institute. Not Worth A . . . CHADRON, Neb.—(U.P.) The local Chamber of Commerce has decided to let its members decide what the organization is worth to them. The board of directors told members, each could "rate himself" and the organization and pay his 1956 dues based on the ratings. Try Kansan Want Ads. Get Results. The greatest annual precipitation on record in North Dakota was 38 inches at Milnor in 1944. Special Purchase Reg. $4.95 DOLL SLEEVE BOY SHIRTS printed or plain colors 835 Mass. VI 3-4833 Blended with BLACK! with the paid before 1 days tuesday ally K you all our al 079 fg gog gu IVE C Pax- xas sands, ufts hamamel the Pe hop, 1