ducky Rose willrist-ast."g. KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS 9:45 n of 11111 union arch. Phone KU 376 Classified Advertising Rates ven- p.m. mont sper p.m. services day. llen done will delta nuel no.9 fthree Five days days 75c $1.00 c Additional words -1c 2c 34 name course name a receipt with the understanding that the will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in with the acceptance of payment (or cept Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Jour- nals must be sent to 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. FOR RENT KRUW HALL, 1215 Oread, has a few nothing to say. Call 1158 and ask for Yvonne Schenck. 1-20 TO YOUNG MAN: Large single room. No smoking or drinking. Available immediately. First house south of campus. 1616 Indiana. 1-14 BOARDERS WANTED: Room for 4 men, 3 meals a day, 7 days a week. Nu Sigma a fraternity fraternity. Reasonable price. Convenient location. Call 366 or 1241 Louisiana. ROOM AND BOARD for male student. Call 253JJ. 1-18 VACANCIES FOR MEN STUDENTS at end of semester. Single beds. See at 1631 Illinois or call 26743 between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Mrs. Laughlin. 1-20 **IRLRS:** Several openings at mid-term. **place:** Louisiana, 1-14 Place: 32828, 1245 Louisiana. 1-14 BUSINESS SERVICES EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do neat and accurate work for you Ph 29331-1-18 1-18 GET YOUR TYPING done ectly and touch Ruby Channel, 123-00 mph. Ph. 123-00 123-00 123-00 YOUNG MOTHER WOULD to care for reasonable price good care. Ph. 3836R. 1-18 JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our staff is dedicated to fins, and feathers. Guests Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf CABINET-MAKER and FRESHISHER: Antique pieces, Bar-tail finish on table tops. High class work guaranteed. E. E. Higginbottom, Res. and Shop, 623 Ala. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do all kinds of typing at home. Standard rates. Accurate and fast service. Come to 1616 Vt., or phone 2373R. Joan Manion. ftx EVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the mix-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. 76 FOR SALE CAR FOR QUICK SALE: 1951 Styline Deluxe Chevy, 4-door, 37,000 actual miles. Completely equipped. Excellent condition. $1,000. Ph. 2472M. 1-19 HAM RADIO RECEIVER RM4-8E. Con- troll, Dept. of GEOlogy, room 317. Lindley. CONN ALTO SAXOPHONE in tip-ip shape. Overhauled (including re-padding) last year. To see it, call FRED Miller at 348 after 5 p.m. 1-19 1953 PONTACT convertible. Must sell: 4,500 miles. Royal Masters, white tires, safety tubes, radio, heater, spdlight. Barnes, Ph. 11 week-days. 11th & KY. 1-18 BATTERIES-guaranteed unconditionally for six months. $5.00 and old battery. Battery Stores Associated, 512 E. 9th. Home-owned. Phone 943. 1-18 "MONITER" apartment-sized washing months, in goods. 1-10. Ph. 3838K MISCELLANEOUS HAVE ROOM FOR YOUR pre-school child. balanced meals, regular rest period, large play area. Approved. References available. Call 2473M. 1-20 WANTED: apartment or rooms, preferably in basement, for two law and college students. Write box 46, Daily Kansan, or call KU 376. 1-19 For Extra Cash, sell those items with a Kansan Classified. NOW 2:30-7-9 GEORGE COLE "MR. POTT'S GOES TO MOSCOW" Page 7 NOW .•. OPEN 6:45 Adm. 20c-50c "FORT VENGEANCE" "MURDER WITHOUT TEARS" LOST AND FOUND PLASTIC-RIM GLASSES in brown case. Lost before Christmas, somewhere on campus. Reward. Wendell Sullivan. 1645 Tenn. Phone 684. I-14 SHEAFFER FOUNTAIN PEN, black and white. Schulte, 1646 Tenn. Phone 1414V, 1-20 GRAY GABARDINE overcock at Student Davison at 3051. Finder see: Davidson at 3051. 1-15 BLACK PARKER "S1" pencil in vicinity Bob Meeker at 868. Reward. 1-19 Bob Meeker at 868. Reward. 1-19 TRANSPORTATION ASK US about airplane rates, sky coach, family days, round trip reductions, all expense tours and steamship trips. For bus- man at the First National Bank for infor- mation or itineraries and reservations 8th and Mass. sts. Phone 30. tf Gls Help Austrians In Avalanche Areas Vienna, Austria — (U.P.)—U.S. helicopters prepared today to rush doctors and relief supplies to isolated villages in the Alps where most residents did already had claimed 200 victims and cut off surface transportation. A U.S. spokesman said the helicopters will start relief ferry trips to the Austrian village of Blons as soon as the weather permits. The village is buried under tons of snow. Sixty of its 385 residents are officially listed as missing. Washington—(U.P.)—Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy called a closed session of his permanent investigating subcommittee today to launch an investigation into alleged graft in Alaska government mines, housing and other federal programs. McCarthy Begins Alaskan Probe Earthquake Rocks California Bakersfield, Calif. —(U.P.)—A heavy, rolling earthquake rocked almost the entire length of California yesterday but no injuries or damage were reported. The quake was centered in Kern county where sixteen persons died in a 1952 series of disastrous quakes. The earthquake lasted 15 minutes and had a Richter magnitude of 6.25 on a scale of 10. The 322 islands in Britain's Fiji Colony spread over almost 100,000 square miles of the southwest Pacific. University Daily Kansan Thursday. Jan. 14. 1954 South Is Better Paid As Plants Move In "The South no longer offers a guarantee of lower costs than the North," said John O. Tomb, an associate of McKinsey and Company. Chicago—(U.P.)Northern industrialists in the future may think twice before they move their plants to the South in the hope of making more money, in the opinion of a management consultant. Mr. Tomb recently made a survey of the South as an area where plants could relocate. He said the results surprised him and that some results could be applied to relocating generally. "There are economic forces at work which seem to be narrowing the cost differentials between the South and North." he said. "We found that popular notions about southern differentials were just not true," he said. For instance, he found that in some localities the cost differentials between the North and South were much higher and in some cases had disappeared. He cited the fact that "a lot of market-orientated companies" have been opening up branch plants to meet demand, they have raised the price structure." Also, it is difficult to make up the expenses of transferring a company from one section of the country to another. Some advantages manufacturers had received were due, not to a change in location, but to better management, he said. "Wage rates in the South no longer are as depressed as they were." he added. His survey showed that average hourly earnings of production workers in manufacturing industries in Birmingham, Ala., and Memphis, Tenn., during March, 1952 exceeded the pay levels of Manchester, N.H. Portland, Me., and Lancaster and York, Penn. Pay in Birmingham and Memphis was $1.51 and $1.44 per hour compared with $1.41, $1.34, $1.43, and $1.37 for the northern cities, he said. "On top of that," he continued, "there are some companies that find in the move south and find lower ground to move, moving away, from their markets." "So they find operating costs profits offset by increased transportation costs and difficulty in servicing customers. --- Indians to Honor Their Constitution Students from India, one of the largest group of KU foreign students, celebrate the court's temporary Sanction on the constitution of the Republic of India. There will be a public meeting at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the Jayhawk Room of the Student Union. The program will include movies from India and an exhibition of Indian arts. --- Nurses-to-Be Have Farewell' Dinner More than 25 girls attended the annual farewell dinner given by the Pre-Nursing club last night in honor of the junior class members of the organization. The juniors have finished their work on the campus, and next semester they will go to Kansas City to complete their training. After the dinner a short program was given by the juniors. This consisted of stories and poems which told the under-classmen what to expect when they get to Kansas City. Mary Dougherty, college sophomore, acted as mistress of ceremonies and gave the farewell address. Trip's Obiect Is OT Work Miss Nancie Greenman, associate professor of design, will leave today for Iowa City, Iowa, where she will supervise University students who are taking occupational therapy training at Children's hospital and the Iowa State Tuberculosis hospital. North Carolina, bounded by four states and the Atlantic Ocean, has a 1.296 mile border—along Virginia 322.5 miles, Tennessee 255 miles, Georgia 68.5 miles, South Carolina 325 miles, and the Atlantic Ocean, also 325 miles. JAMES ROBERTSON JUSTICE • GORDON JACKSON A MICHAEL BALCON PRODUCTION · FILMED AT EALING STUDIOS A UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL RELEASE TECHNICOLOR LATE NEWS SPECIAL "GUN TO GUN" TOMORROW "GUN TO GUN" MATINEE (FRIDAY) 2:30 P.M. EVENING 7:00-9:00 FEAT. 7:35-9:35 . COLOR CARTOON 'A YANK In The R.A.F.' Ty. Power - Betty Grable Features At 7:20-9:20 ENDS TONITE Parents Argue As Baby Dies Chicago died (U.P.) A nine-day-old baby died early today, only hours before a court test on whether his young parents could refuse to allow a life-giving blood transfusion on religious grounds. "It was God's will," said 20-year-old Thomas Grzyb, the baby's father. "I would not have the child come back to life if it was against God's will." "We want more children," he said at his home early today, as his wife sobbed hysterically. "But if such a thing happens again and the child dies that will be God's way, too. I will not interfere with God's will." A doctor who stood by helplessly while the child weakened and died said "I almost got down on my knees and begged" the parents to give in. Miller to Discuss Art Grzyb and his 18-year-old wife, Barbara, are Jehova's Witnesses. The sect believes blood transfusions violate a Biblical prohibition on taking blood as food. Dwight C. Miller, instructor in art history, will be the semester's 12th speaker on the Sociology on the Air series over KLWN. He will be heard Sunday at 3:05 on a program entitled "I Know What I Like—A Study in Art." The program is sponsored by the Department of Sociology and Anthropology. Florence E. Allen, member of the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, is the highest ranking woman jurist in the United States. STARTS TODAY