MONDAY, SEPT. 26, 1949 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 telephone company will be called in having the computer 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Business office. Journals not later than 48 p.m. the day before publication date. atures wind need to The larger included rear Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days Five days 25 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c Additional words ... 1c 2c 3c FOR SALE 1941 HUDSON coupe. R. h. new rings, pistons, bearings. Metallic paint job. Latest mileage leak is 20-21 miles. Under dealer book price. Call 2565R. 30 DITZGEN drawing instruments, board T-discoct, etc. $20; K. & E. LLL. Duplex Dietzen slide rule $12. In good shape. Phone 3529 or see at 1145 Ind. 28 WILCOX-GAY Recordio disc rrecorder Excellent condition. Retails at $150 but will sacrifice for $90. Phone 2582 after 5:00 p.m. 28 '37 BUICK Special Tudor. Fair condition. See at 1339% Haskell after 6. 27 DIAMOND engagement ring and wedding band. Small size. Band never worn. I25 1941 NASH 4-door Sedan. Radio, heater and overdrive. Clear inside and out. $835 1940 4-DOOR Dodge $650. Terms available. 427 Indiana. Ph. 1858 after 5:30. 27 RADIO and Record player combinations reduced $30.001 B. F. Goodrich, 929 Mass. St. Reg. $79.95 models now $49.88, pay $5.00 down, $5.00 monthly. 28 9.95 PUTS a new B. F. Goodrich tire for four wheels of federal tax. B. F. Goodrich tires 299 Mags. FOR SALE: "Late" 1925 Packard. The "monster" is in for men of distinction - no women need inquire. Rebuilt engine, new generator, good interior, body and interior; all this for $2 per pound. Phone 3574. See at 1639 Mass. FOR SALE: Registered German Shepard dogs, 8 months old or older, cover of the "Shepard Dog Review" June issue. L. M. Nelson, 545 E. 19th Street, Lawrence, Kansas. KS. 63075 IMMEDIATE SALE: 1941 Chev. convertible. Very good condition, radio, heater, white sidewheel tires. Will sell reasonable Pb. 2212W or see at 1108 Conn. 27 100 MILES per gallon '49 James lightweight motorcycle. Excellent condition. $150.00. See it to believe it. 1247 Mass. After $5.00. 3296M. 27 2 DRAWING sets: 1 German 18-pc. set, cost new $90.00—sell for $75.00 cost used $43.00—nose used one semester—sell for $70.00. Call 2282R. Ask for Ray or see at 709 Miss. 25 1935 OLDs, 6, 2-door sedan; 1939 Olds equipment excellent condition 22 Moss. Mass. Phi. 2865M. IF YOU ARE unable to find an apartment, look over our attractively furnished home. The price furnished is See at 424驾山 or call 1350 after 7 p.m. 27 BUSINESS SERVICE SPECIAL BOOK orders from our store will assure you of the fastest, easiest way to get your book charge, and you still get a rebate! 30 Student Union Book Store. I WILL do washings and iron for students and families. Phone 930. 27 TYPING: Thesis, term papers, reports, 1029 Yl. Ph., 1168R. WOROUGH on the auto check, easy on G.I. check at Hadl Bros. Motor Co. or a tire shop. If you accidentally use fender repair, auto painting, used cars, 317 E. 17th, Phone 785 or 1821R. ELECTRIC portable sewing machine. Practically new. Super doble-bug motor scooter equipped with Briggs & Stratton wheels. Excellent condition, 1831 New Hamp. PICTURE OF WEEK: Chosen each week from our photo finishing. Receives $3 in credit. Hank Brown's Camera Shop. 846 Mass. RADIO SERVICE: Newest G.E. test equipment enables us to give faster, more accurate service on all A.M. and S.A.M. machines than on the lowest prices. Free pickup and delivery. Ph. 138. Bowman Radio and Electric. New location. 826 Vermont. 11-2 FURNITURE upholstered and repaired. Dingman's Furniture and Upholstering. 180 Manor Square. KNICKERS. Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your "Jayhawk" pet shop. We have everything in the pet field. Their needs are our business. Our one-stop pet shop has everything for fur their pets. Give them PET and gift店 t 128 Comp. St., Ph. 143. MISS DOUGHERTY will be at 1203 Oread. Apt. 9, ready to help you through the first hard steps in your mathematics course. Ph. 2278W. 27 TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel. 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. tf TRANSPORTATION COMMUTERS: We need several riders to come Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Leave K.C. 7:00 a.m. Leave Lawrence in City. Jackson 5819. Expenses. Call Kauai Gt. Jackson 5819. WANTED: Two riders to and from Topeka. Leave Topeka no daily and Lawrence at 5:00. Phone 35927 Topeka. **28** WANT RIDERS: Mission, Kansas. Classes 9, a-m, 4-p, daily except on Friday and Saturday. Call Dean, HE-2483. **26** RIDERS wanted to Garnett. Leave each Friday 3:30, arrive in Lawrence each Monday 10:00. Call Lavonne Raymond, 1504 after 7 d.m. 26 RIDERS WANTED. Commuting daily via Boston, Call Chicago Day, K.C. Ch. 60800, 27 and Cali. Call Chicago Day, K.C. Ch. 60800, 27 LOST ONE PAIR of plastic rim glasses lost between Student Union and Lindley Hall Thursday. Needed badly. Reward. Call 2817J if found. $$ REWARD for gold and gray Parker lost in lost or near Robinson Gym. Cm. 230 SMALL, brown piksink pigur at "The Stables." Finder keep money. Please return other contents in purse. Leave at Daily Kansen office or send to Virgin 301-769-2478. ONE PAIR of horn rimed glasses between the intramural field and the Pi Kappa Alpha house, 1499 Denn. If four glasses in a Kappa Alpha house, Phone 291. Welcome to Kappa Alpha house. Phone 291. Welcome to Kappa Alpha house. GREEN and black Parker pen, probably CALL 1124J after 4. FOR RENT THIRD FLOOR double room for 2 boys $16 mo. 1134 Miss. Phone T173 or 31065 LARGE DOUBLE room. Gas furnace Twin beds. Close to bath. Quiet for study NICELY furnished single room for boy phone or phone bus line See at 707 Ter phone or phone 2034R. ONE DOUBLE room; 1 room shared. Also nett for 2 boys; 2 blocks from campus ROOM for one or two boys down stair bedroom 1355 New Hamp Phone 1964 HAVE GARAGE Apt. to share with business or office call or 2373W after $.00. ROOMERS—have vacancy for one boy Nice room with access to lounge or study room. Private entrance. Near bus line See at 1818 Ill. 26 EAT ALL you can eat. Family style dinner served daily, 5 to 7 p.m. 756, 1745 MISCELLANEOUS SPECIAL STUDENT rates on Time and Life magazine subscriptions. We take subscriptions on all magazines. P.S. You get a rebate too! Student Union Book 30 RENT A typewriter to start the new semester with higher grades! Only $3.50 a month for new and used portable standard machines... Student Union Book 29 FREE! Come in now and get your free KU. book covers. Sturdy and attractive! At your Student Union Book Store. 29 Bring your friends to the library. Bring your friend on out for lots of fun! Open Sunday. Orchestra Sat. night. 27 HORSEBACKK RICK: elementary classes on Mon, Wed. at 2.3, and 4 o'clock; Tues. and Thurs. at 2 and 3 o'clock. Advanced courses on Thursday still enroll for credit. Phone 1842 for information. Motts Stables. 27 HORSEBACK riding (equitation). Phone 1842 for Formation. Mail Stuart Sheets. SUSCRIBE to the Kansas City Star. Call 17. 801 Mass. 10-7 EXPERT SLIP cover, drapery, and dec- cryption. 140 East 14th Street, Miami, Mlpa 1549 East 15th Phone 416248, ifR WANTED WANTED TO BUY: Drafting set suitable for high school use. Call Darnell Electric. One half of the 2000 new students entering K. U. this fall will live in private homes. Three of every ten joined a social fraternity or sorority, a survey made by a Daily Kansan reporter revealed. Ten per cent of the new students joined sororities while 20 per cent joined fraternities. Dormitories and residence halls for women will account for 11 per cent. Men's dormitories will hold 5 per cent of the total while men's scholarship halls will house 2 per cent of the new students. Half Of The New Students Live In Private Homes Last year the ratio of new students who joined Greek organizations was over two students for every ten. The decline in the number of new students coupled with the fact that approximately 600 vacancies exist in Greek organizations each year raised the ratio of the number of those who joined. Americans Win Hemline War Parisian Dressmaker Admits New York—(U,P)—Mme. Elsa Schiaparelli has conceded that American men had won the battle for the helmline. She's cutting her skirts two inches shorter than the "going" American length and she hasn't a doubt in the world that American women will buy them. "We appeal to the men first," said the chic Parisian dressmaker with a lift of her blue-shadowed eyebrows. "The women come after." His Dad And Grandad Did It; Son Can Make Million, Too New York, Sept. 26—(U.P.)—George I. Stanford, handsome 30-year-old ex-fighter pilot, set out today to earn $1,000,000 before he's 40 and preserve a family tradition. He expected at least 25,000 American housewives and factory girls to help him. Stanford revealed that both his father and grandfather — starting from scratch—each earned $1,000,000 before their 40th birthdays. "I'm next," he said. "But ever, though it's going to be tough, I'm not worried. I've got the answer." Stanford has a scheme to sell imported French perfumes on a door-to-door basis, the first time such a venture has ever been attempted. The plan, he said, would enable the average American woman to enjoy the world's most sought after perfumes for as little as $3 an ounce, in contrast to the $20 to $50 an ounce charged in leading stores. "I'm now hiring housewives and factory girls to sell the perfume in their spare time," he said. "I pay them one-third of their earnings. I will also give any salesgirl who sells $2,500 worth of perfume a two-week trip to Paris aboard the Isle De France." Stanford said he's tested the plan in the area of Southport, Conn., his home town. Stanford, a Yale man, had another brain child that gave him a start on his million. He manufactured a bath salt advertised to put its users to sleep. "But it didn't always work," he said, "and it didn't sell as well as expected." Stanford said he discovered the source of his perfume while celebrating his liberation from a German prison camp in Paris, at the end of World War II. He claimed it is tops in quality. "I knew there was nothing American woman wanted more than a bottle of French perfume," he said. "I'm convinced that if I can bring it to them at prices they can afford, I can make a million before I am 40." New Restriction On Veterans Veterans who drift from course to course or from institution to institution will meet an obstacle due to a law effective Sept. 12. Dr. E. R. Elbel, director of the Veterans bureau, said, "The law is directed to aid a veteran in an occupational objective, but not for a veteran to take several vocations and have the V. A. pay for his avocations. The Veterans administration law states that "All certificates of eligibility and entitlement issued on or after Sept. 12, 1949, will show the name of the course and the name of the approved educational or training institution." "It is also directed against individuals who jump from institution to institution; although, a veteran not successful in one institution may still be accepted by the V. A. There must be a substantial reason for the change." Miss Patricia Laurencelle, acting advisor of the occupational therapy department at the University, completed an intensive four-week advanced training course in occupational therapy this summer at the University of Southern California. Laurencelle Takes OT Course On Treatment of Polio Victims "Due to recent developments," said Miss Laurencelle, "occupational therapy is being recognized in the treatment of polio." This is the first allocation of funds to occupational therapists for use in advancing its restorative value in treating infantile paralysis, she added. The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis selected 12 women for educational and clinical work in occupational therapy. The group was selected to speed the training of other therapists throughout the nation to work with polio victims. Commercially speaking, the Douglas fir is more valuable than any other tree. Howard To Memorial Post Jack Howard, business junior was elected president of the Student Memorial committee recently. The committee will assist in raising funds for the campanile, carillon, and the memorial drive. Other officers elected were: Naucee L. Bell, education junior, vice president; Patricia Foncannon, college junior, secretary. At present the committee is sponsoring the Spike Jones "Music Decription" concert Tuesday, Oct. 4. The committee will be to the World War II memorial fund. Hospital Releases Two Richard Kimbell, engineering sophomore, was released from Watkins hospital after fracturing both bones of the forearm in a motorcycle accident Sept. 18. Carroll Noland, engineering junior, was sent to his home in Kansas City, Kan. for a week of convalescence after recovering from pneumonia. REUSCH WATCH REPAIR 708 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Phone 903 —Try Us For The Best— Watch - Jewelry Repair Engraving YOUR EYESIGHT IS PRICELESS Proper lighting protects good eyesight. Your lowcost, dependable electric service puts better lighting within the reach of everyone. STUDY LAMPS AT LOWEST PRICES THE Kansas Power & Light Co. The Ohio State... LANTERN Published by the Ohio State University School of Journalism VOL. LXVIII, No. 148 COLUMBUS, OHIO Blockade Of Berli Ends A Price Five Cents Pantry Cafeteria, Inc. Columbus, Ohio One of the favorite off-campus gathering spots at the Ohio State University is the Pantry Cafeteria, Inc. At the Pantry, as in college shops everywhere, ice-cold Coca-Cola is always on hand to complete the enjoyment of a betweenclasses pause or an afternoon date. As an important part of student life—Coke belongs. Ask for it either way... both trade-marks mean the same thing. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY LAWRENCE COCA-COLA BOTTling COMPANY $ \textcircled{c} $ 1949, The Coca-Cola Company