Kansan Classified Ads Page 7 Call KU 376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid on time. Payments must be made during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University of Minnesota Journal office. Journal bldg, not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days Five days 25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00 additional words ... 1c 2c 3c TYPING: Experienced in theses, term papers, stencil cutting and miscellaneous. Prompt and accurate service. Call Mrs. Lewis at 3363W, 2121 Owens Lane. 3-4 BUSINESS SERVICE EXPERIENCED typist will do neat and accurate work at regular rates. Phone 2721W. Mrs. Betty Vequist, 1935 Barker ave. 3-6 STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360, 1199 Mass. **tf** BEVERAGES, ice cold all kinds by the Crushed Ice and picnic supplies. For parties or picnics see American Service Company, 616 Vt. tf MISCELLANEOUS TYPING WANTED. Prompt, accurate service. Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 31517. Mrs. Livingston. tf JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your 'Jayhawk' pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are everything for fur, food and comfort, everything for fur, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. t WANTED By mature woman: part time morning and typing office work. 2-27 RADIO and TV service. Service a day service on all makes. Most completed by Bowman in this area. Bowman Radio and TV, 826 Vermont. Phone 133 for prompt service. CONCOC SERVICE - B. F. Goodrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication service plus repair automatic transmission Boehringer Conoco Service, Ibm and Massachusetts. SAVE MONEY and give your child the best care. Balanced diet, regular exercise. Can furnish "best" references from people you probably know. Call 2473M. 2-26 FOR SALE RADIO - PHONOGRAPH and washing machine, good condition; cheap. Harold Fox, 2231 Learnard. Phone 1815W, after 5 p.m. 16mm MOVIE CAMERA. Bell and Howell magazine, 1.9 lens; practice new Opera. Camera, Sinnam 2.8 lens, new Epson 2.8 lens, new Conn make. Call 4200 Marilyn Miller. HALLICRAFTERS s-40A communications receiver, excellent condition, complete antenna kit. Must sell, will sell cheap. Call Prather 2505M. 3-3 TRUMPET. Buescher professional model. You make an offer. Phone 31753. 2-25 FOR RENT HELP WANTED STUDENT MACHINIST: experienced, Involved in Applied Machines 104, Marvin 108, Gairn 3-28 DESIRABLE two room furnished apart- ments; 54s. Ph, 1958 after 6 p.m. 3-3 TRANSPORTATION ASK U.S. ABOUT, airplane rates, ski coach, family days, round trip resorts, ski resorts, ski tours in American Express land tours. Cunary and Matson Steamship lines. Call Gieseman at the National Bank of Florida and resumes 8th and Mass. streets. Phone 30. 10 Students Initiated Into Radio Players Ten candidates were initiated into Radio Players recently in the home of Mrs. Ruby Motta, sponsor of the group. They are Eileen Foley, journalism senior; Gene Bennett, engineering junior; Mary Kinnane, graduate student; Glenwood Yancey, college sophomore; Susan Montgomery, college freshman; Robert Reynolds, special student in the college; Paul Cecil, engineering freshman; Terry Strong, engineering sophomore; Patricia Fox, college junior, and Geofrey Weston, special graduate student. Jerry Knudson, journalism junior, and president, gave a welcome speech. So Hungry He Ate Clothes Wellington, New Zealand—U,P) Two women who went swimming in a nearby river had to go home in their swim suits when a hungry horse ate the underwear, a blouse, a brassiere and the top on the a seer-sucker dress they left on the bank University Daily Kansan Waring's Career Shows Success Fred Waring, who will appear in Hoch auditorium March 7 with the "Pennsylvanians", has for 35 years scored successes in one entertainment medium after another. Mr. Waring started the original pennsylvanians as an instrumental quartet in 1916. They became known as a name band in 1921 and, expanded to a dozen or more, were playing in Broadway musical hits by 1927. AWS Quiz Winners To Be Served Coffee The Pennsylvaniaians became a glee club and orchestra in 1933, when they made their radio debut. Since that time, Fred Waring and his musical groups have never left the air. This Easter, the Pennsylvania will celebrate their fourth year of television. Their current CB-TV show sponsored by General Electric is the nation's most popular musical program according to current polls. In the last 10 years, Mr. Waring has actively aided music education in America. To foster better choral singing he has organized the Fred Waring Music workshop, which last year toured across the nation and was attended by some 1,500 choral directors. He personally supervises the workshop, visits many school music departments, lends his arrangements and special recordings to music educators, and through his publishing house makes his musical arrangements the common property of all who wish to use them. Women who passed the Associated Women Students quiz for candidacy in the AWS senate will be served coffee at 4 p.m. today in the Women's lounge, by the senior members of this year's Senate. The quiz was to select women qualified to run for AWS offices. It was based upon a knowledge of AWS and upon facts about leadership stressed in the recent AWS Leadership workshop lectures. The AWS election will be held March 4. Thursday, Feb. 26, 1953 Chicago —(U)P.)— Adai L E. Stevenson, who lost the presidency to Dwight B. Eisenhower last November, set out early today for a "long and weary" trip around the world. Mr. Stevenson, who is to report to President Eisenhower upon his return, made it plain that his five-month tour will "not be a vacation." "When I'm through," he said laughingly, "I think I'd like to take another trip around the world." Mr. Stevenson, who was to speak tonight at a Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner at Los Angeles, said he is looking forward to his journey in the Far East because "some of the most difficult problems we must face are there, and some of the men there are going to be making history in the years to come." Included in his itinerary will be a visit to the battlefields of Korea. Mr. Stevenson said he will meet with government officials and will take a special interest in the training of South Korean troops, a subject which played a large part in the late campaign. At Los Angeles, Mr. Stevenson will confer with Democratic party leaders from 11 western states as well as speak at the $100-a-plate dinner. He was scheduled to arrive there at 8:35 a.m. FST (10:35 am. CST). He will fly to San Francisco tomorrow. Stevenson Takes Off OnGlobe-HoppingTour GRANADA Phone 946 Soon: "JEOPARDY" The former Illinois governor will also visit Formosa, headquarters of the Nationalist Chinese government of Chiang Kai-shek. He said he is also particularly interested in his visits to Indonesia, "one of the first so-called revolutionary governments set up since the war" and India. He pointed out that he has never had a chance to travel in many of these countries before and added that "now is the logical time to do it-between jobs." Ike Tackles States Rights Mr. Eisenhower promised during his campaign last fall that, if elected, he would give early attention to such subjects as overlapping taxes and federal intervention in areas that some state governments contend should be left in their hands. Washington — (U.P.) President Eisenhower tackled a problem today that has plagued other presidents and other administrations for many years—a proper division of powers and functions between state and federal governments. To carry out his campaign promise, the President called a 10 a.m. (EST) conference at the White House today of state governors, congressional leaders and key administration figures to talk over the problem. Last year, a House ways and means subcommittee reported after a study of duplicating taxes that it is "very probable that no two states would completely agree as to what would be a proper allocation of taxes between the federal governments and state and local governments." One popular proposal which presumably was up for consideration today is that the states yield to the federal government the exclusive right to levy income taxes, and that the federal government get out of the excise-sales tax field. LAWRENCE'S DISTINCTIVE THEATRE Patee ENDS TONITE "Bloodhounds of Broadway" PHONE 321 STARTS TOMORROW! SCREEN'S MOST STUPENDOUS SPECTACLE!