CLASSIFIED Phone KU 376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid by the recipient at 3 p.m. during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daly Kansan Business office. Journals must be submitted 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates One Three Three Three Five Five fives 50c 75c $1.00 50c 75c $1.00 3c 2c $3.00 25 words or less ... Additional words BUSINESS SERVICE JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet shop, and we can also give one-stop pet shop has everything for fur, fins, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf WELCOME STUDENTS and public to the College Inn Cafe, under new management We specialize in home-cooked food, cake, bread & desserts. Call 800-754-2631 Open 6:30 a.m. to midnight. 11-14 PHOTOGRAPHED CHRISTMAS CARDS. This game lets me take and take your family in live action at your home. They can also avoid late rush. Call Steve Carter 971-423-8650. EXPERIENCED TYPIST will do all kinds of typing at home. Standard rates. Accurate and fast service. Come to 1616 Vermont, or phone 2373R. CABINET - MAKER AND Refinishers Antique pieces, Bar-top finish on table tops. High class work guaranteed. E. E. Higginbottom. Res. and Shop, 623 Ala. BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. tl STUDYING late tonight? Retresh your self with fountain beverages and sand-wiches for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360.1109 Mass tf TRANSPORTATION Page 7 TOM MUAUPIN TRAVEL SERVICE. Make your Thanksgiving and Christmas airline reservations to be sure you have confirmations. Ask for lower prices on encore, and Family Travel. Fly Kansas City to New York for only $38.50 plus tax. Fly Kansas City to Los Angeles for only $59.00 plus tax. Make your trip to Las Vegas this summer. TOM MUAUPIN TRAVEL SERVICE. 1015 Mass. Phone 3661. (Successors to Downs Travel Service). 11-3 ASK US about airplane rates, sky coach, family days, round trip reductions, hours, meals for business or pleasure call trip Miss Rose Glesman at the First National Bank for information or linaries and reservations. 8th and Mass. sts. Phon: ff 39 LOST AND FOUND REWARD TO FINDER OF ox blood-colored wallet. Papers within valid. Call Kenneth Baker, 2351R for identification. 10.95 LOST AT THE LIBRARY, Monday night, Oct. 19: Gold ring with ruby setting. Reward. Call room 509, North College hall. Phone 4280. 10-25 PAIR OF MEN'S CLEAR FRAMED CLASSES, lost at football game Saturday on east side of stadium. Please return to Kansan Business Office. Weward-10 29 GAMMA PHI BETA and DELTA UPSILON LINS lost in or around Robinson baseball evening. Oct. 26. Call Ringer during day, or 3061 after 5 p.m. 11-3 LOST SATURDAY between Stadium and Union: Brown wool cardigan sweater Finder please call Pat Cusic, Phone 900 10-30 MISCELLANEOUS FOR ALTERATIONS call Mrs. Gorrill 3441-L3. Also want to buy a baby bib KOREAN VETERANS: There will be a meeting at 5 p.m. Nov. 19, 2013 in the K-vets. Plan to object officers and make plans for future parties, intramural teams, etc. Bring an iPad, tablet computer or other proof of eligibility required for admission. BE THERE! 11-4 Kansan classifieds bring results. 'Dust or Destiny Planned Tonight The film, "Dust or Destiny," depicting some of the laws of God and His plans and purposes of familiar living things, will be shown publicly at 7:30 p.m. today in 426 Lindley. The picture was shown last night in the William Allen White School of Journalism auditorium. Showings are sponsored by the KU Christian fellowship. In a dramatic presentation of the miracles of nature, the film reveals "the wonders of the human heart and eye, as well as the ear, which can hear the roar of a cannon or the touch of a cat's paw in a soft rug." To prove the existence of a mighty universal plan and the unmistakable evidence of God, it also describes the homing instincts of the pigeon, the flight of the bat, guided by it's own radar, and the spawning habits of the grunion, a fish that lays its eggs on dry land. Last night was the first time the film has been shown on the campus. It has enjoyed wide distribution in both educational and industrial fields, and has been used by Air Force chaplains as part of a character guidance program. Quill Club Names Contest Winners Quill club last night chose the winners of the fall creative writing contest. In the prose division, members chose "Drought Year," a short story by Dorothy Shade, education senior. "In the Snow," a story by Norma Fenn, college junior, was second choice. The book was edited by Sherry Ann Wilson, education junior, for her story, "You Can't Go to Heaven." In the poetry division, first prize went to Sharon Theis, college freshman, for her poem "Rain Music". Second prize winner was "Birthday Reflections", by Margaret Thompson, education senior, and third prize went to Virginia Holman, college freshman, for her poem "Dead." Prizes are first place $5, second place $3, and third place $2. All winning selections will be published in the fall issue of Trend magazine. 2 Times OK'd for ID Swaps ID cards may be transferred at the information booth from 2-5 p.m. Fridays, and 9-11 a.m. Saturdays, according to Joe Woods, pharmacy senior and chairman of the athletic committee on student identification card transfers. FOR SALE SWEET CIDER for sale. Lawrence Cider and Vinegar Co. 810 Pa. Phl. 31-25 LAST TIMES TONIGHT STARS AND STRIRES CLUTTON WCEB FOREVER FEATURES: 7:24 — 9:05 FRI.-SAT.-SUN. Two Big Features Thursday, Oct. 29, 1953 He said the figures are only rough estimates since economists are only now beginning to collect the data on corn production which would be used to fix actual allotments if the program goes into effect. Secretary of Agriculture Ezra T. Benson yesterday ruled out marketing quotas—the tightest kind of crop control—on corn next year. But he said supplies are big enough so that acreage allotments in the commercial corn-producing areas "probably will be proclaimed." FEATURE: 8:54 ONLY Box Office Open 6:30 Show Starts 7:00 COME AS YOU ARE RELAX IN YOUR OWN CAR ALWAYS A COLOR CARTOON Phone 260 He is delaying his decision until more is known about the effect of drought on the supply and demand outlook. Farm law requires allotments every year in the commercial corn belt unless ruled out by national emergency, and sets Feb. 1 as the deadline for the proclamation Except for 1950, the emergency clause has been invoked to avoid corn allotments every year since World War II. Marketing quotas never have been in effect on corn. Washington—(U.P.)—Up to 1½ million midwestern farmers, including those in Kansas, may have to cut back their corn crops by about 20 per cent under federal acreage allotments next year, an Agriculture Department spokesman said today. In 1950, commercial corn belt producers were allotted more than 46 million acres to plant to the key livestock feed grain. That was about a 19.7 per cent cut from their acreage in 1949. Corn Cutback Faces Midwestern Farmers Kansan classifieds bring results. U.S. Forests Get Ike OK Washington — (UP — President Eisenhower promised today that his administration never will permit American natural resources to be used for the advantage of one group over another. Speaking informally to the opening of the National Forest congress, the President said the primary economic aim of his administration is to create "a balanced economy and prosperity." He said too many Americans are "blind, indifferent or ignorant" to the efforts of the government to conserve natural resources. Mindful of the "fact that men in forestry must "deal in decades," the President said that looking a century ahead, Americans should strive to maintain a country in which individual freedom and liberty will be preserved lest "we have to degenerate into some kind of controlled economy, some kind or regimentation." Read the Want-Ad page daily. Use it whenever you need cash. Chancellor to Talk At President's Coffee The first "presidents' coffee," for presidents of all organizations on the hill, will be held Saturday, Oct. 31 from 10 to 11 a.m. in the Kansas room of the Student Union. Chancellor Murphy will be the guest speaker. This series of coffees will give the presidents of all organizations an opportunity to discuss common problems and to co-ordinate their activities. For extra cash, sell those items with a Kansan classified ad.