Page 7 Classified Advertising Terms: Cash, Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be called in on Friday (or before except Saturday) or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business office, Journey 43, Kansan Campus, 2:35 p.m. the day before publication. Phone K.U.376 Classified Advertising Rates Three Five days days 75c $1.00 2c 3c 25 words or less ... 50c Additional words ... 1c AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange tour and international travel whether tour on or off the airport. Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Travel Service, 1015 Mass. TRANSPORTATION Ask us about family rates, ski coach, and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Talent and Winter cruises. Book a show now for our summer summer. Call Miss Gleesner at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30- ROOMS FOR BOYS, one single room, and bath, 1414 Term. Phone 3060W. 27 1414 Term. Phone 3060W. 27 FOR RENT FURNISHED APT. for rent at 1213 Ohio. Second floor, next to bath; new kitchen and decorator in kitchen. Child aslcted. $50 per month, utilities paid. Phone 2157M. GRADUATE STUDENT wants young nearest campus. Call 25158 evening. 25 BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING; Experienced in reports term papers, theses, notes and stencil cutting. Prompt attention given. Phone 1952W. Mrs. Robert Lewis, 1915 Tenn. 28 TYPIST: References; prompt, accurate service and late model Royal typewriter. Convenient to KU Bring to 1724 Indiana or call Mrs. Blesner. 3011r T FOR CLEAN and courteous service also plenty of fresh reading material come to Jack and Shorty at Shorty's Barber Shop, 733 N. 75h. 75c hair trim. 3-6 TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses, prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. XPERIENCED TYPIST: Term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports, and miscellaneous. Mrs. J. Rocose, 833 Lau Apt. 4.提交 Ph. 2715J. CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch, dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. **tt** STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches--for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1198 Mass. RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ment available for efficient service. Bowman Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. CRYSTAL CAFE serves choice steaks, sandwiches, mals, home-made pies and conditioned parking space for customers. a-conditioned meal a.m. 8:45 to midnight. Crystal Café 609 vt. JAYHAWKERS; Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our staff is trained to provide fur, fur, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Comm. Phone 418. tf BUELE PLASTIC bilfoil containing identification, driver's license, and $16.00. If you owe the money, but return papers, Patty Edwards, 420 West 11th, 26 phone 860. LOST University Daily Kansan WANTED WANTED: Typing to do at home. Please contact the office of 3. Lawrence, Kansas, or phone 745126. HELP WANTED BOY TO BUS bushes 12:30 to 1:30 for BUS and for extra parties. Phoos KU 437. MISCELLANEOUS REAL ESTATE listings wanted. Sales- ers buyers. William J. Van Almen, 3110R. William Shakespeare was a german writer. Walter E. Vest of Huntington, W. Ya. Shakespeare Was Biologist Bv UNITED PRESS Dr. Vest, whose vocation is medicine and whose avocation is English literature, made his exposition at the International Gerontological Society's second congress on the problems of ailing. He said the immortal bard understood full well both the physiological and pathological characteristics of senescene and he quoted abundantly from the master's works to prove his point. The most nearly perfect of Shakespeare's biological descriptions he said, is the depicting of the "Seven Ages of Man" in "As You Like It." In 28 lines the melancholy and philosophic character, Jaques, pictures the entire life span from cradle to grave. Dr. Vest said. He quoted the sixth and seventh ages as "the most pertinent to ger- ontology." The sixth age shifts Into the lean and slipper'd pantaloon. With spectacles on nose and pouch on side. His youthful hose, well saved, a world too wide. For his shrunk shank; and his big manly voice. Turning again toward childish treble. nines And whistles in his sound. Last scene of all. That ends this strange eventful history. In his second childishness and mere oblivion. Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything. Memphis — (U.P.) — Grady Cox, television repairman, answered a call from a man who got a picture on his set but no sound. Cox found the customer looking at the picture while listening to the sound over the telephone from a neighbor's set. Solves TV Problem Uniquely Tulip trees of the Great Smoky mountains have been known to attain a height of 200 feet. Announcing... ICE CREAM - SUNDAES - MALTS - SHAKES the reopening of the QUARTS - PINTS Drive-in The week's schedule of programs to be heard on KFKU, university radio station, found at 1250 on the radio dial. 1835 Mass. Dairy Queen Radio Schedule Jayhawk Junior classroom ... 2:00 and the Matel! The Merryman and the Matel! Broadway Rhapsody 2:45 Old friends in music from show Mondav Great Symphonies ... 7:00 Sibellus' sixth symphony. Tuesday Jayhawk Junior classroom ...2:30 Art by Radio: "Paper Batik" taught by Maud Ellsom, associate profes- KU Cavalcade of Hits ... 7:00 top tunes of the week on Mt. Tread Memo Pad ... 7:25 A collection of cultural events in the Kansas City, Lawrence, and Topeka area. Wednesday Jayhawk Junior classroom 2:30 Prairie footprints: "Missions to the Solar System" KU in the News 2:45 *Saturday morning, the University news of the week.* Concert Hall 7:00 Featuring James Mellon and Jascha Lehigh Thursday Jayhawk Junior classroom ...2:30 Adventures in Music Land:"Grand Opera Gets a Face Lifting"—the life and music of Wagner Brainbusters 7:00 Brainbuster, professor of sociology (master of ceremonies); Emil L. Telel, associate professor of journalism; W. H. Sheoamaker, professor of Romance languages William A. Conoby. instructor of English and L. C. Wood- dean, dean of men. Jayhawk Junior classroom ... 2:30 Storybook Train: "In the First Times," told by the Old Conductor storyteller, Robert Calderwood, as- **Walter H. McLain Jr.** Fridav Museum of Art ... 2:45 Organ Receipt: Jerald Hamilton at the Museum of Art Texan Replaces Trees He Wasted Chamber Music ... 7:00 Beethoven's Kreutzer sonata. Palestine, Tex.—(U.P)—An Anderson County pioneer who can remember when pine trees six feet in diameter were common in this area plans to plant a forest of his own to make up for the loss of timber he helped to waste many years ago. William Travis Todd, a 70-year-old farmer, already has set out 40,000 pine seedlings on his 2,000 acres of sandy soil, and he plans to start sowing seeds he gathered by hand. The convert to reforestation said the days of trees more than a hundred feet high won't come back unless men restore what they have wasted. Before he dies, Todd said, he is determined to do his part. He will keep only a small patch of land clear for farming, Todd said. All the rest he hopes to cover with pines. Monday, Feb. 25, 1952 Shows 2:30-7-9 Comfort Convenience JAYHAWKER NEW Park Place CUSHIONED CHAIRS VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD NOW thru TUES. Open 6:45 p.m. Gig Young "HUNT THE MAN DOWN" -and- Roy Rogers "IN OLD AMARILLO" Adlai Stevenson Would Fit As Presidential Nominee Washington—(U.P.)—Gov. Adlai Ewing Stevenson of Illinois would just about fit the Democratic presidential nominee pattern if President Truman decided to retire. $ \textcircled{4} $ Governor Stevenson is in the last year of a four-year term. He is 52 and a veteran of World War I. In general terms, Mr. Stevenson is all out for Mr. Truman's foreign policy, lags a bit behind him on some domestic questions. Mr. Stevenson is not a state's rights man, but he is suspicious of big central government responsibility and power to the states than would Mr. Truman. Here are some positions Mr. Stevenson has taken on public questions: Medical insurance: Does not endorse government-sponsored health insurance, but he says making good medical care available to all is one of the great pending social problems. Believes the solution lies in some compromise between private initiative and government initiative. Foreign policy: "We want no more Munichs. As much as we hate war, we have drawn the sword in unprecedented defense of peace, security and democracy without justice is tyranny and that justice without force is impotent." Civil rights; Twice failed to persuade the legislature to enact a fair employment practices bill. He holds that practice usually is better than a law. Taxes and spending: As governor he increased welfare and education spending and sought to economize elsewhere. He increased gasoline and truck taxes. He vetoded numerous so-called pork-barrel bills and cut expenditures by the state veterans commission. In response Engineers Go To School In A Massachusetts Cellar Medford, Mass.—(U.P.)—A school for railroad engineers, possibly the only one of its kind in the world, in the cellar of a Medford home. The schoolmaster is 72-year-old Charles H. Evans who learned his profession during 40 years with the Boston & Maine before retiring in 1945. His one-room basement classroom is equipped with a library of 300 books and pamphlets, a complete line of railroad equipment supplied by manufacturers, and two blackboards. UNION CAB PHONE 2800 65 Soon . . 2 Really Big Ones! Clark Gable Broderick Crawford "LONE STAR" "The Belle of New York" to American Legion protests, Stevenson that the state Legion protested that veterans must not regard government aid as a "gravy train." YOUR EYES Mr. Stevenson has not undertake a pre-convention campaign. He would not oppose Mr. Truman for the presidential nomination. Wage-price controls: He is regarded as in general agreement with administration policy. However, he said in 1950 I don't like governorship fees. I don't like interference with free markets, free men free enterprise." should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. LAST TIMES TODAY Please take our word and don't miss this truly wonderful picture . . Arthur Kennedy nominated for BEST ACTOR for his portrayal in . . . "Bright Victory" ARTHUR KENNEDY PEGGY DOW JOHN HUDSON Evening Features at 7:22 - 9:21 p.m. STARTS TOMORROW Matinee 2:00 p.m. Show starts 2:30 p.m.