--- Kansan Classified Ads Page 7 Call KU 376 Phone KU 376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be sent and paid during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univer- sity business office. Journal bldg., not later than 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 BUSINESS SERVICE STUDYING with late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches--for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 360, 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. 616 Vt. tl EXPERIENCED Typist. Term papers experiences, theses and miscellaneous. Mrs E. J. Roscoe, 838 Louisiana, Apartment 4, upstairs. Phone 27753. ti TYPING WANTED. Prompt, accurate service Pick-up and delivery service after 6 p.m. and before 8 a.m. Phone 3157R. Mrs. Livingston. tf RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area thus assuring fast service service on Radio and Television. Phone 138. 829 Vermont. Free pickup and delivery. tf TYFING SERVICE. Experienced theses Miss Hall 606 West 6th, Phone 1344 W. 506 West 6th, Phone 1344 W. JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jawhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Vonn. Phone 418. tf REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales- men, buyers William J. Van Almén, 3110R. CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking. 609 Vt. Open from 6 am. until midnight. tt MISCELLANEOUS CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, mats, home-made pies and cakes. Free parking space for customers. RADIO and TV service. Daily day service on all makes. Most complete stock in this area. Bowman Radio and TV SB Vermont. Phone if prompt for service DRESSMAKING, formals, alterations, by an experienced European dressmaker. See Themis Zannetou. 1633 Vermont (downstairs apartment.) Phone 147M-16 CONCOO SERVICE—B. F. Goodrich tires and batteries, complete lubrication service plus expert automatic transmission concoo Service, Df. & Massachusetts, Df. Air-Conditioned Open from 6 a.m. midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt. tf TYPIST: Experienced in theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work, immediate attention. Mrs. Glinka, 1911 Tenn. Phone 1368M. tf 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Winichi every Friday afternoon and returning Sunday evening. Call Jim Sellers, 310J evenings. MTW-uf TRANSPORTATION ASK US ABOUT, airplane rates, sky coach, family days, round trip reduc- ences, train schedules, American Express land tours, Cunard and Matson Steamship lines. Call Miss M. informations and reservations. 8th af Mass. streets. Phone 301. AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steampair and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether on a special itineraries. Phone Makes calls Odafey . 3661. Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass. HELP WANTED CLEKR-TYPIST II—must be careful, accurate typist, ready to learn electric typewriters, and experienced mimeograph operator. Age, under 40. University of Kansas Press, Journalism Building. 12-tf FULL-TIME secretary. Must be experienced in general office work. Shortland necessary. Call or see Russell L. Wiley, Director of University Band, KU 385.1-12 MALE STUDENT. 2 to 3 hours daily in premons; delivery and bindery work; traveling and helpful. See Mr. rither University Press, Office, journalism building. EXPERIENCED typist will do neat and routine job rates. PLEASE READ: 7212W. Mrs. Betty Vequist. 1-19 FEMALE STUDENT Mimeograph operator, 3 to 4 hours daily, afternoons. High-speed electric machine. Previous experience required. Ability to type desirable. See Mr. Ryther, 117 Journalism building. 1-12 Tuesday, Jan. 6, 1953 University Daily Kansan FULL - TIME Addressograph - Graphite type operator. Previous experience essential. See Mr. Ryth, 117 Journalism building. 1-12 Elks to Give $19,000 For Scholarships The Elks National foundation trustees have announced that 40 scholarships, totaling $19,000, will be awarded at the 1953 Grand Lodge session at St. Louis in July. Any high school senior or undergraduate in a recognized college, residing within the jurisdiction of the order, may make application. The first award is $900, and the two boys and two girls judged most worthy will receive $250 awards from the Kansas Elks association. One boy and one girl will be entered for an Elks National foundation award. Interested students should contact officials of the nearest Elks Lodge, or Wymne W. Ester of Gorham, Kan., for further information. Shows 7-9: Feat. 7:45-9:50 Adults 65c - Children 14c PATERPHONE 321 STARTS FRIDAY Lorette Young Jeff Chandler "Because of You" Rosenbergs—First Family Spy Ring Washington — (U.P) — Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, the convicted atomic bomb spies sentenced to die this month, are entitled to an unenviable "first" in the history of U.S. treason cases. They also could be the first convicted traitors in U.S. history to die by order of a federal civil court. One other person is eligible for a death sentence—Tomoya Kawakita, convicted of treason in California for his brutal treatment of U.S. prisoners of war in Japan. They are the first husband and wife team to be convicted and condemned to death for helping enemies of this country. All other persons convicted in civil court of espionage, treason, and sedition since Revolutionary days have escaped the death penalty. The few executions that have occurred were ordered by military tribunals. After Pennsylvania's "Whisky Rebellion" by opponents of direct taxation in 1789, there were some treason convictions but those involved were granted pardons. Benedict Arnold, Revolutionary War traitor, fled to Britain and was never caught. In any event, he would have been tried by court martial. An historic treason case was that of Aaron Burr, charged with plotting to set up an independent government in the southwest after Thomas Jefferson defeated him for the presidency. Burr was acquitted after a six-month trial in 1807. John Brown of Harper's Ferry fame was hanged for treason against Virginia, not for a federal crime. Charged with fomenting a slave uprising and leading an attack on the state arsenal, he was hanged in 1859 None of the treason cases prosecuted after World War I resulted in conviction. After the Civil War, Confederate President Jefferson Davis and some of his associates were arrested on treason charges but received presi- Of the score or so stemming directly from World War II, there were nine convictions that stuck. Max Stephan of Detroit, convicted of treason for aiding a Nazi officer who had escaped from a Canadian prison camp, got a death sentence. The late President Roosevelt commuted Stephan's sentence to life imprisonment. 3 Professors Visit N.Y. Aircraft Plant Three professors from the School of Engineering and Architecture were guests at the Bell Aircraft corporation in Buffalo, N.Y., plant in the Christmas vacation. In the past, Mr. Verrey said, only 85 per cent of the students have claimed their refunds. In order to increase the percentage of students taking advantage of the refunds, he has started a new system whereby students who have left the University may claim their refunds. the professors were Ammon Andes, chairman of the department of aeronautical engineering; E. J. McBride, chairman of the department of mechanical engineering, and Donald Wilson, chairman of the department of electrical engineering. The professors obtained first hand information on the manner of work done by engineering graduates with Bell. They also made a tour of the company's facilities and talked with staff members. Bookstore Refunds Available Now ENDS TONITE "HERE COMES THE MARINES" "JET JOB" Any student who is no longer at the University and has valid patronage refund slips, may mail them to the bookstore and he will receive his refund by check. Students may now obtain Student Union bookstore patronage refunds for period 12, Ray Verrey, bookstore manager. said today. Period 12 includes all slips given out between Jan. 1 to Dec. 31, 1952. dential pardons. Patronage refunds will be payable at 15 per cent of cash sales and will be paid upon presentation of receipts. --- ENDS TONITE VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD ALEC GUINNESS who delighted you in "Kind Hearts and Coronets" WED. - THURS. Shows 7:00 - 9:00 Several World War II civil cases involved persons who broadcast over the enemy radio, notably "Axis Sally" (Mildred Elizabeth Gillars) and "Tokyo Rose" (Mrs. Iva Toguri D'Aquino). The six Nazi saboteurs who landed on the Atlantic Coast from a submarine in 1942 were executed for espionage after conviction in a military court. Five were Germans and one a naturalized citizen. Lavender Hill Mob" A J. Arthur Rank Organization Presentation A Universal-International Release Plus: 'A Laugh a Day' Cartoon "Madeline" --- Bureau Seeks Flood Funds Washington—(U.P.)—The Bureau of Reclamation today sent Congress a proposed $3,870,835,000 construction program which the agency hopes to undertake in 17 western states during the 1953-1959 fiscal years. Included in the projects were the following: The Kanaska division on tributaries of the Republican river in Kansas and Nebraska to provide 8,500 acres of irrigated land at a cost of $28,756,000. The lower Niobrora division in the Niobrora river in Kansas andaska to the acres of irrigation and 2,260 kilowatts of power at a cost of $115,282,000. The upper Republican division on the Republican river in Colorado, Kansas and Nebraska aimed at an eventual 8,800 acres or irrigation at a cost of $5,696,000. Blue division on the Blue river in Nebraska and Kansas to provide 15,000 acres of irrigated land at a cost of $16,177,000. Lansing, Mich. — (U.P.)—Michigan's "Little Hoover" committee recommended scuttling the state Naval board, pointing out that Michigan has no Naval forces and owns no ships. No Navy for Naval Board NOW! ENDS WEDNESDAY IT'S LUSCIOUS! IT'S LAVISH! MILLION DOLLAR MERMAID TECHNOLOGY EARL WILLIAMS • Walter MATURE WILLIAM FRUGEAN • David BRAM Man 2:50 Features: 2:47-7:17-9:29 Latest Movietone News STARTS THURSDAY DANGER IN EVERY DARKENED CORNER! GRANADA Phone 946 COMING SOON! "Stars and Stripes Forever" 'Pony Soldier' - 'The Clown' Pharmacy Meet Set for Jan. 20 The program will combine reviews of the newest developments in drugs and the promotion and business management of prescription departments. A Pharmacy institute will be held at the University Jan. 18-20 with sponsorship by the Kansas Pharmaceutical association and KU. The faculty includes Clara Miller, secretary of the Kansas Pharmaceutical association, Topeka; Dean J. Allen Reese, Dr. J. H Burckhalter, Dr. Duane G. Wenzel, Dr. Ray E. Hopponen and Dr. Charles Peterson of the Pharmacy school; and Dr. W. Clarke Wescoe, dean of the School of Medicine. All sessions will be in the Union. Henry Changes to Texas Salem, Mass. —(U,P)— Henry and Rosella Kellyhouse Klink won a probate court decree yesterday giving their permission to change their "odd-sounding and unusual name" to Texas and Mary O'Rourke. STARTS FRIDAY For An Extended Engagement. THE CASE FOR THE DOUBLE BED EVERYONE'S CHUCKLING ABOUT This Guy- This Girl- "The Four Posters" COLUMBIA PICTURES presents REX LILLI Harrison·Palmer in STANLEY KRAMER'S Production THE FOUR POSTER Adm. 14c - 65c