montana mountain cooler Classified Advertising Phone K.U.376 Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days 25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00 Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c Flve days FOR SALE Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted understanding that the bill will be paid pro- grammed during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Uni- versity office for service. Journal bldg., not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication date. 25 FOOT 1947 trailer house in good condition, semi-permanently located, ready for immediate occupancy. See afternoons at 929 Conn. 21 1937 PLYMOUTH coupe, radio, heater. 1938 PLYMOUTH coupe, transportation 1940 Bill Hewitt, 144 Temp. 1951 CHEVROLET. 2-door green Fleetline model. Excellent condition. Must sell car. Make an offer. Call 3441J after 4 p.m. 21 A. S.F.C.—Wouldn't you like to receive a t-shirt for Christmas? Why not give you shirt you would like to receive? Reveals lands Books Stores, 1401 Ohio and 1237 Oread. RONSON LIGHTERS—The perfect gift for all smokers. We still have a large stock to choose from. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio and 1237 Dearborn WE STILL HAVE attractive gifts for all Sportsmen. 1401 Ohio and 1237 Ordew. 20 Boines. YELLOW SCRATCH pads. We still have plenty at 20e a pad. Rowlands Book Stores, 140l Ohio, and 1237 Eread. 20e MONOGRAMMED napkins and matches make the gift more personal. We will give 24 hour service. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio street and 1237 Oread. KANSAS Sweat Shirts, sizes from 4 to 44. Tee shirts from 1 to 44. Also cardigan jackets. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio and 1237 Oread. 20 CHRISTMAS CARDS- It's not too late to have your cards personalized. One day service. Rowlands Book Stores, 1401 Ohio street and 1237 Eard. 20 BOOK-EASE IS THE collapsible book holder. Use it on a desk, in bed, anywhere. Put the pages from the in place. Now, only 98c at the University Union Book Store. 21 FINE ART REPRODUCTIONS! We now have a wide selection of reproductions of famous paintings in full color. Student Union Book Store. 21 GIFT IDEAS FOR CHRISTMAS! Give a magazine subscription for the ideal Christmas Gift. We take subscriptions and magazines. Student Union Book Store. CHEMISTRY MAJORS! We now have in stock three work study aids he has toward better grades. "How to Solve Problems in General Chemistry" by Babor. "How to Solve Problems in Qualitative Analysis" by Babor, and "How to Solve Problems in Intensive Literacy" by Arenson. See them at your Student Union Book Store. 2) TRANSPORTATION SEVERAL RIDERS go toward Utah. leaving Dec. 21, via route 30. See Jack Patton, 1825 Ls., or phone 3-271-L4, between 5 and 6 p.m. 21 AIRLINE TICKETS, prompt confirmation of airline, steamship and hotel reservations. Experienced personnel to arrange national and international travel whether on behalf of a friend or Phone Mrs. Lois Odaffer, 3661, Downs Service, 1015 Mass. tf Ask us about family rates, sky coach and round trip reductions. All expense tours. Fall and winter cruises. Book passage no. 1825-300. Call Miss Glesseman at First National Bank for information and reservations. Eighth and Mass. Phone 30- FOR RENT Page 7 SMALL HOUSE: living-bedroom, modern kitchen and bath. Furnished, suitable for young children. Couple, very comfortable. $45 cover. Write the Daily Kansan, DREED 12.5. RENTAL TYPEWRITERS. Both new and used, portables for $1.00 per week or $3.50 per week. Perfect to better, neat papers. Come in and try one at the Student Union Book Store. ROOMS FOR 3 men. No other roomers. Come or phone 3389, Gilkerson's Cafe 7 a.m. to 2:15 p.m. or 17834 at 942 Miss. 2:30 p.m. to 12 midnight. 21 BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING: Themes, term papers, theses, prompt, accurate service. Call Mrs. Stanley, 1859J, or bring to 917 Rhode Island. TYING of all kinds done promptly and carried out by Christmas rates. Cs. Mrs. Merritt, KU 296. 21 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: term papers, note books, theses, medical and biological reports and miscellaneous. Mrs. Mason, Apt. 4, upstairs. Ph. 2775J after 4 p.m. TYPING: Theses, legal papers, term papers, miscellaneous. Accurate work, prompt attention. 10 years these typing experience. Mrs. Shields, 1290 Ohio. Pt. 161 RADIO AND TV repair service on all makes. Largest stock of finest quality parts. We have the finest test equip-ments and are sure assuring fast, efficient services. Boundary Radio and Television. Phone 138. 826 Vermont Free pickup and delivery. CRYSTAL CAFE serves breakfast, lunch dinner, sandwiches, chili, homemade pastries. Free parking 609 Vt. Open from 6 a.m. until midnight. tf STUDYING late tonight? Refresh yourself with fountain beverages and sand-wiches—for pickup. Alamo Cafe. Phone 3604, 1109 Mass. tt TYPING: Experience in theses term-papers, miscellaneous typing, and sten-cil cutting. Mrs. Robert Lewis, phone 1852W, 1915 Tennessee. JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet store, but you buy one, one-stop pet shop that is interesting for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and PetShop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tf GRYSTAL CHAEL serves choice steaks, sandwiches, malts, home-made pies and air-conditioned. Open from 6 a.m. to midnight. Crystal Chael, 690 Tt. BLUE PARKER 21 with silver cap. Sun- phone: 234-780-5670. Phone: 215-589- 5670. Sam Sebesta, 1234 Oreda. LOST WILL THE PERSON who took by mistake, my overcoat and scarf from the check room in the Student Union, Fri. March 18, 2014, please call MARIE DELmonico-1879. 1-3-52 LOST! Grey top coat at Dine-A-Mite Saturday night. I have wrong coat and want to trade for mine! Earl Merriman. Phone 84. 20 WILL WHOEVER found my bilfold please return it? The money is desperate and at least mail back bilfold and papers. H. Lorena Barlow, 1644 University Drive HELP WANTED WANTED: Part time receptionist. Hours working. Box 2 Day Karsan office. 1-3-52 MISCELLANEOUS ALLY=If you won't listen to me play you'll use your box and you'll understand. Fred. FREE GIFT WRAPPING on all gifts purchased from us. We will also be glad to wrap for mailing. Rowlands Book Stores. 20 February Graduates To Hold Christmas Party Tonight Senior class committee chairmen will be hosts this evening at a Christmas party for seniors who will graduate in February. The party will begin at 7:30 p.m. at the Delta Upsilon fraternity house. Seniors are asked to bring a gift, costing not more than 25 cents, to be put in the grab bag. The University of Michigan was the first state university. Matinee 2:30-Eve.7 and 9 Movietone News HELD OVER Thru Thursday Starts Friday "THE TAREAT" Wednesday, Dec. 19. 1951 Japanese-Built Railroads Help UN Cause In Korea University Daily Kansan Washington, D. C.-On the railroad that went to war in Korea, foxholes are the whistle stops and the fighting front is a freight yard, the National Geographic society reports Japanese military engineers, in the years before World War II, built one of the Far East's finest rail networks in Korea. In many ways it was better than Japan's own narrow-gauge system. Track and equipment in Korea are standard gauge, built to match the Manchurian railways. In the dark days of the Pusan foothold, an entire division was picked up and moved by train, 100 miles in less than 24 hours, to meet a Communist spearhead. Many another time rail transportation has spelled the difference between success and failure of United Nations operations. Railways have been used tactically to an extent not seen since the American Civil war. They have also carried 95 per cent of the U. N. supply load in some areas. Several dozen new diesel-electric locomotives have been shipped to Korea recently, the U. S. Army Transportation corps has disclosed. Unheralded in dispatches, they will be weapons as crucial as the grazing trainloads of tanks, guns, supplies, and troops hauled north thru the battered Korean countryside. Prior to the opening of hostilities in 1950 there were about 3,500 miles of standard-gauge lines and some 400 miles of narrow-gauge branches throughout Korea. But the Iron Curtain across the 38th parallel had already chopped the system in two. In South Korea, an area about the size of the state of Indiana, there were 2,730 miles of track, requiring 239 tunnels and 1,724 bridges. In the short span of 17 months, many parts of this network have Union Adds New Concessions Truck A new truck has been received by the department of concessions, L. E. Woolley, director of the Union, said The truck will be used to handle activities of the department at football games and other athletic events in the stadium. It will also be used to service coin-operated vending machines the department has on the campus. Food and refreshments from the catering service will be delivered by the truck. A snack troop service may be added later, to serve groups of students at intramural events, baseball games and the like, Mr. Woolley said. The department of concessions was organized the past spring. Kevin Remick is the manager. NOW Thru Tomorrow VIRGIL THOMSON COMPOSER AND CRITIC SAYS IN THE NEW YORK HALDR TIBUWE THE NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE "A historical document . . a first class execution of the decade. This is what Verdi's 'Rigoloetto' looks like when performed by the best contemporary artists." Shows 7:00 & 9:00 p.m. Tito GOBBI IN RIGOLETTO Features at: 7:15-9:15 p.m. Doors Open 6:45 p.m. Continuous Shows Sat-Sun. been wrecked and rebuilt several times. Eattered rolling stock has been patched up by one part repair facilities and two parts ingenuity. The small Korean steam locomotives often did their jobs with bullet holes in their boilers plugged with wooden pegs. Members of the U. S. Third Transportation Military Railway service, who have supervised U.N. rail operations since the early days of the war, often hold the throttle in one hand and a gun in the other. Trains have been pushed through guerrilla-held country with sand-bagged gondola cars mounted with machine guns on the front and rear. Locomotives and ammunition-loaded cars have been snatched from beneath the noses of the Communists as the enemy advanced on burning yards and roundhouses. Head of track has stayed close behind the front lines. Today the main line ends at the demolished Han river bridge just above Munsan, advanced base of U. N, peace negotiators. Here, on top of the hottest spot in the world, newswise, a 10-car train is parked as the press headquarters for news correspondents covering the war and the current truce talks at Panmunjom. IFPC To Give Honors Cup Fraternity pledge classes have a new incentive to make good grades. The Inter-Fraternity Pledge council gave rules Monday concerning the awarding of a large scholarship trophy recently purchased. The pledge class with the highest scholarship average for this fall semester will be awarded a plaque which it may keep, and the trophy for temporary possession. The cup will be awarded each semester to the winning house. All house pledge class grades are to be turned in to the IFPC soon after finals. Burglar Welcomes Police Fort Worth, Texas— (U.P.)—Even the police were welcomed by this burglar. He was trapped for seven hours in a ventilator shaft of a cafe when he tried to escape before officers arrived. LAST TIMES TONITE LAST TIMES TONIGHT 7:00 - 9:00 Ray Milland Gene Tierney "CLOSE TO MY HEART" TONITE-THURSDAY Open 6:45 Show Starts 7:00 Nancy Coleman Margaret Lindsey Philip Reed "HER SISTER'S SECRET" —And— Brenda Joyce Donald Woods "STEPCHILD" —ADM.— 14c - 45c County Groups To Publicize KU In High Schools The various county clubs in the organization may purchase the Jayhawker yearbook to send to high schools for $1.50. The rest of the money is contributed by the University and Statewide Activities fund. County chairman of the Statewide organization completed arrangements for the sending of the Jayhawker yearbook, distribution and maintenance of bulletin boards, and the showing of publicity movies to high schools throughout the state in meetings held Monday in the Union Bulletin boards, depicting life at the University, will be distributed by the county clubs and will follow an established route throughout the state in reaching the various high schools. The boards will remain at each high school about two weeks. The county clubs will also show the movies, "Beyond The Towers, and "Your University." Immorality Shakes Faith, Murphy Says Young America's faith is being shaken by the "sad, disgusting spectacle" of immorality in government, Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy told the Wichita Rotary club Monday. "We could teach American history eight hours a day," he said. "and we could put an American flag in every schoolroom in the country. But I am telling you that all that education can be set aside by one act of immorality such as we see in the highest forms of government today." FREE MOVIES From Your Hometown Merchants Get your tickets from These Firms Adelane's Lawrence National Bank Pickens City Service Logan Moore Lumber Norman Edmonds Grocery Beamans Radio-TV Rhodes Heating & Roofing Andrews Skelly Service Knapps Log Cabin Market Rankin Drug Store Gravitts Goodyear Guntert Plumbing-Wiring Union Cab 2-800 Lawrence Sanitary Dairy Turner Produce Rapid Transit Norris Bros. Wiley's Market FREE SHOW For Shoppers Thurs.-Fri. Dec. 20-21 At Your Comfort! Convenience! JAYHAWKER NEW YORK CUSTOMER CHAIRS