TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1s50 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Daily Kansan Classified Ads Phone K.U.376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be received and processed during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univereer Library in person. Journalism bldg, not later than 3:45 p.m. the day before publication on 345 p.m. Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days Five days 25 words or less ... 50c 75c $1.00 Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c MISCELLANEOUS JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet their needs are our business. Our one-stop service includes fun, fir, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Phone 418. tt Ciropractor and Physio-neurapst Phone 1531 1023] Mass. DR. C. R. ALBRIGHT SEE THE Daintest gift line in town- Expressive, Exquisite and Exclusive Broadway. Where's Grant's Pet & Gift Shop, 1218 Conn. Open till 7 p.m. weekdays. t f BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING: Theses, notebooks, term papers, prompt, accurate service. Phone Hazel Stanley, 1859J or bring to 917 Rhode Island. 1-17 TYPING: Thesis term papers, reports, etc. Prompt service. Mrs. Wilde, 1128 Tenn. entrance, 2nd floor, Apt. 4. Phone 3028M. tf WANT RIDE to Philadelphia and back during Christmas holidays. Will share all expenses and assist driving. Arnold Kottwitz. Phone 3872M. 1220 La. TYPING! themes, notebooks, letters, prompt, prompt Mrs. Hirn 13443, Wow W, 6th 1944, Wow W, 6th ENGINEERS! World's only drawing ink fountain pen. The Pelican Graphos is here. Imported from German Draws. Available in both paint and filling. At the Student Union Book Store. FOR CHRISTMAS this year give KU. record albums. A gift all former KU. record albums. $48 at your breakable records. Only $4.90 for your Student Union Book Store. 20 LOST DIAMOND AND platinum ring. Three medium diamonds and six small on set.-Lost on campus, on Mississippi, or Louisiana. Reward. Call 3437. Six Scott. LOST SATURDAY morning in women's lounge of the Union building 9-30. man's white gold watch (Gruen) with expansion band with small medal on it. Reward. Joan Salisbury. Please call 3534. 19 CAR KEY in leather holder. W. W. Smith Carrier. Please call Vincent Hoover, 1428M. BILLFOLD—Lost last Saturday night probably near Chest's Drive-In or Lilac Lane. Finder please keep cash and return credentials for additional reward money. Bob Reshwig, 1213 Ohio, 2019; or during vacation, 507 S. Milwaukee, Wichita. PAIR OF GLASSES. Gold frames. They were in an orange case marked on the inside with the name Fred Noll. Please phone 1857M. 20 GLASSES in red case between library and Union. Reward. Rita Spickker. 365 TRANSPORTATION WANTED: Wed to Omaha. Leave after 4 p.m. Wed, Frank Liscen, phone 1922. 19 WANTED: a ride to Minneapolis, Minn. Museum vacation. Gina Keith Palmquist, 1879. DRIVING TO Dallas, Texas, leaving noon Dec. 23. Can take 3 passengers. Call Mrs. McGregor, 890. 19 DRIVING TO Indianapolis, Ind. over Christmas. Room for 4 riders. For information call Kansas City, Westport 7471 or phone and phone no. Kansas City, office 52. DRIVING TO California for vacation, new car, can take 3. Call 1699J. 19 WANTED RIDERS to New York and Boston. Will leave Wed, noon. Late model car. Call Richard Longarini, 2167, preferably between 2 and 5 p.m. FLY and take advantage of reduced fares, easy connections, good accommodations. Call Miss Gieseman at First National Bank for details and information. Phone 30. FOR RENT DOUBLE sleeping rooms for boys, two blocks from campus. $12.50 per person. One apartment, private bath, private entrance. $35.00. Phone 2099. 5 ROOMS FOR BOYS. Double and single. Plenty of hot water and heat. Bath with shower. Rooms newly decorated. 1414 Tennessee, phone 3060W. 20 ATTRACTIVE unfurnished 5 room bedroom, nice furniture, large living- room, utility room, private entrance, automatic occupancy, immediate occupancy Gill Agency. LOOKING FOR warm, attractive 1st-floor room close to K.U. and bus? Twin beds intersprings well furnished, new kitchen, dining, or breakfast available. Call 14743. FOUND BILLFOLD found Sunday at 9th and Mass. Loser may call 3402M and identify. I will not be in town Dec. 20-22 Jimmy Otsuka. WANTED WANT TO rent a house for 10 or more instructors. Call Aaron Feldstein, 86. FURNISHED apartment after Jan. 2 Private bath preferred. Call 2650R 8 FOR SALE SWEET CIDER and apples for sale. Pineapple and Vinegar Co. 80- Perpetual Phone 335. Firm Selects KU Economist Dr. Domenico Gagliardo, professor of labor economics, has been named one of 12 university consultants for the third annual Industrial Relations forum in Akron, Ohio, June 12-22, 1951. The forum sponsor, the Goodyeau Tire and Rubber company, is bringing a teacher of professorial rank from each of the 12 colleges and universities that are now teaching subjects relating to the field of industrial relations. During the conference of the university, representatives will make an intensive survey of Goodyear's industrial relations techniques through conferences with executives, round table discussions and plant inspections. Guy Says He Needs A Trip, But Can't Get Away Now Jackson, Mich. — (U.P.)— Charles Fredericks, a spinner in a textile mill, was amused to receive a travel folder advertising European vacations with the slogan: "Everybody needs a holiday." "I'm afraid I can't make it," Fred ericks exclaimed. Then he returned to his cell in Jackson state prison to read the rest of his mail. Mason, Tex. —(U,P).— This little south Texas town is loaded with expert deer hunters. A check of local cold storage lockers reveals approximately 1,300 deer have been stored. Last year 1,450 deer were stored by the end of the hunting season. Texans Bring Home Venison Can Men Wrap Packages? No? Then Read And Learn Washington—(U.P.)—When it comes to wrapping a passel of pretties around Christmas time, I'm about as awkward as a man trying to kick field goals in a telephone booth. At the Hecht company store, found a man who knows a man who invented a bow-tier. The gimbal box about the size of a big jewel box and turns into this frivolous bows you ever saw. All you have to take the finished box, jab a pin through it, and fasten it onto your package. Hardest things to wrap, it seems, are bottles and wastepaper baskets. Best way to put a pretty cover on a bottle is to buy some tin or lead wine. You have to do is wind it around, then the bottle will be the whole business unwinnable. The wastepaper basket is a little more complicated. If you do things logically, you start at the bottom and put the tissue up to the insides and then cover the whole business with a big bow. Why anybody would be silly enough to (1) give a wastepaper basket for a present in the first place or (2) want to wrap it up fancy leaves something to the imagination. Everybody, it seems, thinks he knows just how to wrap an ordinary square box. But few realize how the appearance of the package is improved simply by making sure the paper ends just at the edge of the box—where you don't notice it. You can get real personal if you follow a suggestion offered by the Hallmark greeting card folks. So I did a little research. Come Christmas eve, my next of kin should note an improvement over past performances. After folding back the edge, rubber cement is the handiest and quickest way to fasten the paper. Then go over the penciled lines with a thin layer of rubber cement. You can use common yarn to follow the outline. Maybe you have trouble with round boxes, but they are no trouble at all—if you know how. Just trace an outline of the box on gift paper and then scissor-cut, making it a quarter of an inch bigger than the outline. Place on top of the package and fold over the edges. Take any fancy package. After you get it bundled so that a ribbon forms a diamond on the top or front, you can draw a monogram-style outline of the initials of the person to whom you send the present. To make the paper snug against the sides, press it down tight-like while you put on sticker tape. Bus Driver Named Corrigan? Memphis—(U.P.)—An irate passenger shook a bus driver out of his early morning reverie when she informed him that he was on the wrong route. Senior Wins Slosson Award The Edwin Emery Slosson scholarship in science has been awarded to John M. McKinley, engineering senior, for the current school year. The scholarship of $300 is awarded annually to a student of outstanding accomplishment and promise in some field of science. McKinley is majoring in engineering physics and wants to take graduate work in experimental physics. He is a Summerfield scholar. McKinley is president of Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity, and of Scabbard and Blade. He is also a member of Sachem, senior men's honor society; Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity; and Sigma Pi Sigma, honorary physics fraternity. Out Of Gas Milwaukee (U,R)—Dn Crull didn't get to work on time because his car ran out of gas. His work? He's a filling station owner. PIN COLOR "Oops, I should'a warned him about that Flying Red Horse gettaway." *PATRICIA MEDINA* WALKER SILAERT, DORGLAS DUMMELLE Feature Times 1. 47-3:43-5:39-7:37-9:33 - ALSO - Comedy-Cartoon Latest News To Each of you From the Lawrence Optical Co. year. We will be here again in '51 to care for your eyes another year -plus Late News Events Daffy Duck "HIS BITTER HALF" Read the Daily Kansan Daily VARSITY THE THEATRE OF THE WORLD Phone 132 For Sho Time ends tonite "DOWN MISSOURI WAY" —and "I'm From Arkansas" WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY —co-feature- Gordon Julie MacRae London "RETURN OF THE FRONTIERSMAN" (in technicolor) —plus— Joe McDoakes "So You Want To Be On The Radio"