Kansan Classified Ads Page 1 Call KU 376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the understaff call is called in during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kannamath office. Journals may not Interfere at 3 p.m. the day before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days Five days .50c 75c $1.00 .1c 1c $1.00 25 words or less Additional words BUSINESS SERVICE LET ME DO YOUR typing. Prompt service, neat and accurate work. Phone 1957M. Mrs. Sargent, 14E, Sunnyside. 4-4 STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 309, 1109 Mass. **tf** BEVERAGES, ice cold, all kinds, by the six-pack or case. Crushed ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 615 Vt. tf EXPERIENCED tspan will neat and drive work at regular rates. Phone 2721W. Mrs. Betty Vequisit, 1935 Barker BVP. 4-3 TYPING: Prompt, reasonable, accurate service, dictation if desired. Phone 2373J, Hazel Stein, or bring to 1088 Vt. 4-30 TYPING WANTED. Prompt, accurate service. Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 3157R. Mrs. Livingston. tf MISCELLANEOUS JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are huge. Our pet shop has everything for fun, fir, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. ti BIOO and TV service. Same day service on all makes. Most compliant for club and arena. Bowman station and TV, 826 in Vermont. Phone 138 for prompt service. FOR SALE CONCOC SERVICE-B. F. Goodrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication service plumbing, automatic transmission Buchet Concoc Service, 19th and Massachusetts. FORD 'S1 fuor sedan, heater; excellent condition. Call Samt, 1705, 812 A- 4-2 1939 CHEV. Very good condition. Also 22 Remington Sportmaster. Call 3-338-6200. GOLF CLUBS—set of four MacGregor woods, about three seasons old, good condition. Inquire 2903, Jim Mears. tf 1948 FORD convertible. New top, radio, heat and overdrive. Good. white side-wire tires. Reasonable price. Richard Meyers. 414 W.14th. Phone 2984R. 4-2 1938 DODGE SEDAN. Good condition Call Settle at 3236 after 6 p.m. 3-31 TRANSPORTATION ARDE WANTED to Chicago, for spring vacation. Can leave Friday afternoon. Phone 3021. Mare Williams. 3-31 RIDERS between here and Oklahoma City, leaving Friday evening. Call Ralph 3206M, after 5. 4-2 RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Wilchita every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Call Jim Sellers, 31013 evenings. MTW-tt ONE OR TWO eastern students looking for ride to New York-New Jersey area for spring vacation. Willing to share passes and driving. Don Landauer, Ph 412-506-8700. ASK US about airplane rates, sky coach, family days, round trip reductions, all expense tours and steamship lines. For business or pleasure trip can MHG, Glossen Airlines, Bank for information or itineraries and reservations. 8th and Mst, sts. Phone 30. tf HELP WANTED RIDE FROM Kansas City. Arrive at 10:00 or before, leave at 5:00, Monday to Friday. Phone KU 256 or K.C. Ye6442 Waldo Renich. WANTED BOYS INTERESTED in making $45-$75 during Easter vacation. Easy interesting Radio Audience Survey. Need a car. Especially needed are boys who can work in courthouse, library, Murrayville, ElDorado, Wellington, Norton, Goodland, Garden City, Kinsley, Lodge and Giffen room. information see call 26434J after 6:30 p.m. 3-30 SECRETARY: Typing shorthand, and some bookkeeping knowledge necessary. Service clerk-steno I position. University office, start immediately. Beginning salary $150 per month; 44-hour week. Phone KU 298. 4-3 FOR RENT FIVE-ROOM, unfurnished apartment. One-half block from campus. $85 per month. bills paid. Available April 5. Shown by appointment only. Phone 3305. PLEASANT southeast room for men First floor, quiet, nicely furnished. 935 Missouri St. 4-3 LOST RONSON lighter with Kappa Psi fraternity crest on it in Browsing room of Union Sunday between 3 and 3.30. Reward. Contact Box 22, Kansas. 4-2 A LITTLE CAT with a loud voice, named Kit-cat. Grey, about 9 months old, female. Phone after 6:00, 3887M. 4-2 Flick Picks Bv JERRY KNUDSON BREAKING THE SOUND BARRIER (Varsity) Opening tonight at the Varsity for a two-day repeat, this British production dramatizing one of the great events of our life-time—breaking the sound barrier—moves definitely through the difficult theme of human emotions versus the scientific method. Ralph Richardson leads an able east including Nigel Patrick and Ann Todd. Stunning photography and sound recording project you into the sweeping awe of modern aviation. Fascinating. Borrowed Painting Returned to Owners The Rubens painting, "Atalanta and Meleager," that has been exhibited in the Union building, was returned to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York yesterday. The painting is valued at $85,000. Frank Burge, Union building director, estimated that 16,000 persons viewed the paintings while they were on display. Other paintings loaned to the Union for the opening were returned to the Nelson Gallery of Art in Kansas City. The paintings were on display for a month. Koreans Demand Red Removal Seoul —(U,P)— The government of South Korea announced today it will refuse to accept any peace settlement that fails to provide complete withdrawal of Chinese troops from Korea and disarmament of North Korean Communists. Those two demands were among five which a government spokesman said were South Korea's "minimum basis for peace." Besides withdrawal of the Chinese to Manchuria and disarmament of the North Korean Reds, South Korea said it would insist that: The United Nations agree to prevent any third power from helping the North Korean Communists. An official representative of South Korea participate fully in any international conference on Korea. No plan would be considered as having any legal effect if it conflicts with the administrative sovereignty or territorial integrity of the Republic of Korea. In Washington, meanwhile, Korean ambassador Chang Yang branded an offer by Chinese Communist Premier Chou En-Lai to resume peace negotiations as "another Communist trick." Library to Get Gill Engravings Art Meeting Draws 1,000 Attendance A collection of engravings by Eric Gill, English illustrator and book designer, will be added to the library through the Harriett Miles Odell memorial gift fund, Robert Vosper, director of libraries, said today. Vosper described the collection, published in 1929 as a rare addition to KU's arts collection. The fund was established by the late Dr. F. B. Odell of Topeka in honor of his wife who died in 1946. Both were KU graduates in the 1890's. Mrs. F. J. Rost, a daughter, 3155 Shadow Lane, Topeka, subsequently made additions to the fund permitting the most recent purchase. More than 1,000 students from junior and senior high schools attended the annual High School Art conference Friday and Saturday. Demonstrations of various art techniques were given in the School of Fine Arts studio. More than 300 persons attended the Friday evening party in the Student Union at which the Indian Club of Haskell institute furnished the entertainment. University Daily Kansan Tuesday, March 31, 1953 'Grandma England Buried at Windsor Windsor, England—(U.P.)—Queen Mary was buried today beside her husband, King George V, while Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Windsor wept openly at the coffin. The 85-year-old queen who died Tuesday was buried in simple family ceremonies in St. George's chapel within the walls of Windsor castle, seat of Britain's rulers from the time of William the Conqueror. Las Vegas —(U.P.)— The 24th atomic device exploded inside the U.S. was set off by government scientists at 7:00 a.m. today, jarring the Nevada desert floor and casting a brilliant flash seen for hundreds of miles in all directions. The detonation left only two such towers standing for future tests in the present series. Scientists gave no hint as to the nature of the device which appeared to affect an area within the range of 15 to 20 kilos, or an explosive violence equal to that of 15,000 to 20,000 tons of exploding TNT. Remnants of Europe's dwindling royalty—many related by blood to the House of Windsor—gathered for the second time in little more than a year to mourn the passing of a royal Briton. In the same 15th century chapel Queen Mary's son, King George VI, was buried in the The atomic blast was the third of the current spring test series at the Nevada A-bomb proving ground, 63 miles northwest of here. 24th Atomic Bomb Exploded A shattering flash of light turned the early morning darkness into day for a brief moment as scientists set off another experimental nuclear device, presumably atop a 300-foot steel tower in barren Yucca Flat. No troops participated in today's test, either as a force engaged in atomic maneuver or as military observers. Stevenson Arrives in Malaya Singapore —(U,P)— Adlai Stevenson, U.S. Democratic party leader, arrived here today from Manila for an overnight stop before proceeding to Indo-China. Mr. Stevenson said the United States is extremely interested in Malaya's fight against Communism. He returns here April 13 for a seven-day visit. Kansas committed only two fouls in a 1923 basketball tilt with Nebraska. private family vault in February 1952. Crushed by the death of his mother, the Duke of Windsor gave way to emotion built up under the obviously increasing strain since he rushed to her deathbed from the United States. Tears streamed down his face, glinting in the sun's rays, as he stood by the coffin of his mother—a favored son despite his abdication and marriage to an American divorcee. His grief affected his usually stolid brother, the Duke of Gloucester, who reached out a hand to touch him and then wept himself. Queen Elizabeth II wept too as she left her seat among the royal ladies in the choir stalls to sprinkle earth on the coffin of the old lady she used to call "Groundma England." "Ashes to ashes, dust to dust," the Archbishop of Canterbury intoned. And the coffin, covered with Queen Mary's personal standard, slowly sank beneath the floor of the chapel to the royal vaults below. As the simple family funeral service ended, Queen Elizabeth II paused at the door and looked back. As the ship service ended Queen Elizabeth II paraded the door and looked back. Everybody stopped. Slowly and with infinite grace the queen swept low in a curtsy toward the spot where the coffin had rested. The other royal ladies turned and curtsied. The kings and princes and dukes turned and bowed. Just then the brilliant sunshine of the morning faded behind heavy clouds, and it became dark in the old chapel where hang the banners of the Knights of the Garter whose ranks now include only two women —Queen Mother Elizabeth and Queen Juliana of the Netherlands. There was an empty space where of Queen May had been NOW SHOWS 2:30-7-9 MICKEY ROONEY "ALL ASHORE" News - Cartoon - Comedy DON'T MISS "BREAKING THE SOUND BARRIER" TONITE Again Wednesday Box Office Opens 6:45 Shows at 7:00-9:00 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER FOR 'BEST SOUND RECORDING' "BREAKING THE SOUND BARRIER" Starring Ralph Richardson - Ann Todd A Soaring Movie About Supersonic Aviation! ADMISSION 14c-65c • NOW IN 6TH WEEK AT KANSAS CITY