Friday, May 16, 1952 University Daily Kaiser PAGE 3 Monday, May 12, 1952 University Daily Kansan Page 7 图 SELL IT! BUY IT RENT IT TRADE IT HIRE IT thru the WANT ADS Call KU 376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered in advance, and during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the university office. Journalism bigr, not later than 3:48 p.m. the day before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates One day 500 Three Five days days 75c $1.00 2c 3c day 25 words or less ... 50c Additional words ... 1c BUSINESS SERVICE SERVED: Typing, theses, term papers reports, etc., by experienced typist Prompt, accurate service. Phone 3157R mornings and evenings. 19 TYPING; Theses, term papers, letters, easily by experienced typist. Prompt. accurate work. Mrs. Schear, 124 Michigan. Phone 2847R. 12 TYPING SERVICE. Experienced theses, Mrs. Hailer, Mrs. Harper, 506 West 6th. Phone 1343W. 9:48 a.m. TYPING: Experience in tresses, term papers, miscellaneous typing and stenil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1952W. 1915 Tenn. tf RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Large stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equipment in this area thus sourcing fine parts for our customers by Television, Phone 128. $26 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. ti TYPING: Theses, application letters, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work. Prompt service. Mrs. Shields, 1209 Ohio. Phone 1601. tf EXAMINED TYPIST: Term papers, no books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. sousse, $88 La Apt. 4, upstairs. Ph. 2715 REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales. Almecn, 31008 buyers. William J. V. Vaillancourt, 31008 TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. JAYHAWKENKS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are special, and their shop has everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone (15). tr CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 689 Vt. Open from 6am until midnight. tf FOR SALE CRYSTAL CAFFE serves enchice steaks sandwiches, mints, home-made plus cakes and space for 8 a.m. to conditioned. Open 6 a.m. to midnight. Crystal Cafe, 609 Vt. N AS NEW Woolf Brothers white bucket, size 38, and Palm Beach stole. Pried for quick sale. Site. 19 TENNIS BALLS: $1.65 a can of three Tennis restrings $2.75 a plain nylon BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:00 P.M. SHOW STARTS AT DUSK TWO SHOWS NITELY Gulfill Sporting Goods. 1711 Minnesota. Kansas City, Kansas. 12 NICE MALE Cocker pup, black and white, 6 mo old. A.K.C. registration; she used a pet for someone. She at 34s Mississippi. Mrs. E. E. Alexander. phone 1133M. TRANSPORTATION DRIVING EAST? A Baker cood would like to ride with you. About May 24 vicinity of Washington, D.C. Write Box 83, Baldwin, Kansas. 14 ASK US ABOUT airplane rates, sky coach, family days, round trip reductions, American Express land tours. Cunard and Matson Steamship lines. Call Miss Glesman at the national Bank for Mass. streets. Phone 30. tf AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel and deliver itineraries. Phone Mrs. Lois Odafer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass. MISCELLANEOUS ARE YOU PLANNING A PARTY? We have a large dinner-dance room. We will reserve for a group up to 100 people. Call 3243J or 1732 Baldwin. 14 WANTED FULL-TIME BOOKKEEPER, permanent position. Apply at Student Union Book Store, room 24, Frank Strong. 12 FOR RENT SUMMER ROOMS for boys. One-ball block from Union building. Sleeping porch in the east. $12 per month. Mrs. Earl Dobson, 1222 Miss Ph. 455. 421 SNGLUE ROOM vscant now. Also rooms 1218 Mississippi. Photo 12 14 or 33. Professors Attending Philosophy Meeting Three University philosophy teachers are attending the 50th annual meeting of the western division of the American Philosophical association in Ann Arbor, Mich. They are Miss Anna McCracken, correspondence study instructor; Dr. Edward Robinson, associate professor; Dr. Robert Stieffeld, assistant professor. The late Dean Olin Templin of KU was one of the leaders in organizing the association. Two Recitals Postponed An organ recital scheduled to have been given by Jack McCoy, graduate student, Sunday, and a senior recital by Blanche Pearson, fine arts senior pianist, originally scheduled for today, have been postponed until further notice, the School of Fine Arts announced. VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD NOW THRU WED. Robert Cummings Barbara Hale "THE FIRST TIME" News - Bugs Bunny NOW THRU TUES. Doris Day "I'LL SEE YOU IN MY DREAMS" -and- Rod Cameron "FORT OSAGE" Uncle Sam Has No Birthday As Origin Remains a Mystery Washington—(U.P.)—Uncle Sam is a man without a birthday. He has been around for nearly 140 years but historians admit the exact date of his initial appearance is still a mystery. Just about everything else of the tall, bewhiskered gentleman's history is now on display at the Library of Congress. Included in the exhibit are five prize-winning paintings which depict modern concepts of Uncle Sam and early representations of other symbols of the United States. Uncle Sam was first heard of during the war of 1812. Legend says he was named after a government supply inspector, a Samuel Wilson who was called "Uncle Sam" by his workmen. The nickname was switched from Wilson to the government when the workers, noting the letters U.S. marked on the supplies, began referring to the goods as "Uncle Sam's beef" and "Uncle Sam's flour." They had Wilson in mind and not the government for which the letters stood. Use of the term spread until it come to personify not only the government but the people and nation as well. Sam was not always beedecked in his now familiar attire of stars and stripes, nor has he always sported whiskers. In most of the early representations he was pictured as clean-shaven and wearing top hat and tails (colonial style). Sometimes he appeared in the guise of a well-to-do southern planter. The red-striped pants and the star-spangled vest became the indispassible part of his wardrobe during Andrew Jackson's administration. He and Abraham Lincoln grew beards about the same time. Actually, a character known as Brother Jonathan preceded Uncle Sam as symbol of America. The name, probably signifying him as the younger brother of John Bull, was more appropriate in colonial times. Another emblem of the United States, the eagle, had a more specific beginning, though a less auspicious one. That bird's first official appearance was on the seal of the United States, right where the founding fathers STARTS TOMORROW BRIAN DONLEVY CLAIRE TREVOR starring A REPUBLIC PICTURE Shows 7 and 9 p.m. - ENDS TONITE - Latest World News "OLIVER TWIST" - WATCH FOR - "Man In The White Suit" placed it. It got there only after some vehement opposition by Benjamin Franklin. He did not go for the story which said the eagle was a symbol of strength. Instead Franklin called it a bird of "bad moral character" that does not "get its living honestly" and is "a rank coward." Franklin held out for the turkey. The eagle, he argued, is found everywhere. The turkey, a peaceful bird, is a native of America. Poaia Girl Wins Scholarship from Kansas BPW Clubs Joan Marie Sherar, Paola, won an $800 scholarship granted by the Kansas Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs, Inc. Miss Sherar was chosen from a group of applicants who live in towns where the BPW has clubs. This is the first time the organization has granted this sort of scholarship. Medical technology is the subject Miss Sherar intends to study. Artist's Works to Be Shown The works of Hiroshige, famous Japanese artist, will be shown at the Museum of Art this month and through commencement, Dr. Maxon, director of the museum, said today. The paintings are from the museum collection and have not been shown recently. University Gets 3 Trust Funds Three memorial trust funds amounting to $16,392.55 have been received by the University Endowment association from the estate of Mrs. Louise O. Wiedemann of Lawrence. A business fund will be administered by the dean of the School o Business. A paleontology fund is to be used for the purposes as the heads of the departments of geology and zoology jointly direct. A fine arts fund will be used for the departments of piano and composition as directed by the dean o. the School of Fine Arts. Dr. Smith Returns From Columbus Trip He read a paper based on excavations carried on by the museum for the past two years at an Indian village in Ft. Randall reservoir. Dr. Smith will return for a third session at the Indian village this summer to continue excavations with a group of students. YOUR EYES Dr. Carlyle S. Smith, assistant curator of Anthropology, has recently returned from the annual meeting of the Society of American Archeology at Columbus, Chio. should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. Phone 425 1025 Mass. starring MARIE POWERS with Leo Coleman and Introducing MARIE POWERS A Valid and Powerful Drama! THE IMAGINATIVE SETTING IS AUTHENTIC --- THE PERFORMANCES ABOUND IN DYNAMIC BEAUTY! STARTS THURSDAY For 3 Days Only NOW! Showing M-G-M presents The. Unequalled Spectacle, The Three Love Stories in One, and the Splendid Performances ... are making "Quo Vadis" the Most-Discussed Motion Picture in Entertainment History! Life and Look magazines describe it as "THE MOST COLOSSAL MOVIE EVER MADE!" Children 50c Anytime Policy This Attraction Only Matinee at 2:00 - Open 1:45 Matinee Admission Price $75c Eye. Shows 6:30-9:22-Open 6:15 Evening Admission Price $1.00. Children. 50c. Anytime Starring Robert Taylor — Deborah Kerr NOTE Passes Not Good On This Road Show Attraction