UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Prof. Dr. Order iv. of if ad- of as nce, s. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1949 Classified Ads Phone K.U.376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered in during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (e.g., Saturday) or brought to the University business office. Journalism bldg, not later than 4:35 p.m. the day before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates Classified Advertising Rates One Day Five Days 25 words or less ...35c 65c 90c Additional words ...1c 2c 3c 2 DRAWING SETS $10.00 each; slide rule and case $15.00. See Betty Seay at chemical engineering office, Lindley Hall. 21 49 STUDEBAKER, three months old, overdrive heater, etc. Very liberal reduction. Phone Sjonger, W98L or KU. 409. 23 MATCHing dish and chair. Dark blue and tailored to fit your curves. Price $35. See at 2135 Rhode Island building. German 18-c set, cost new $9.00—sell for $7.50. Never used. 1 post 14-pc. set, cost $34.00. used one semester—sell for $20.00. Chair 228R. Ask for Ray or see at 700 Hill. 20 other drawing accessories in instruments plus other drawing accessories. Practically new. Call 17773 or see in room 3 B.C.L. 8925 OLDS. 6. 2-door sedan; 1939 Olds. 18295 Mass. Phi. 28665M. 18305 Mass. Phi. 28665M. TRANSPORTATION CAR POOL or riders wanted Kansas City 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday. K.C. phone: Clifton 8873. JRTS FROM K.C. Kan., to Lawrence 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. five days a week. R. L. Ward-Med. Phone FA 6809, 725 Vollrue 21 RIDERS WANTED: Commuting Kansas City to Lawrence Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, Arrive at University 9:00 a.m. Call Bill Bell, We. 9829, Kansas City. RIDERS-LEAVE TOpeka 7 a.m. Arrive back 1 p.m. Five days a week. Bill Chapman, 6461 Topeka 21 CAR POOL or riders wanted Topeka to Lawrence, Mrs. Brent 21 Botomia Drive, 17 St. Johns Street Hall. RIDERS RIDERS from K.C. to Lawrence v. 40. 8 o'clock class six days. Contact Noland, FA. 2945. 23 TRANSPORTATION for two or exchange driving from Kansas City Plaza district. Call LOGan 2953. John Murley 28. DRIVING from Topeka Man. Wed. Phone Ph. 2953 or go in truck with Office office. FOR RENT ROOM FOR 1 or 2 male students with other in large newly decorated room. 1129 Vermont. Phone 2880J. 21 ROOM for two boys at 1116 La. Nicely furnished, newly decorated with single beds. 2 blocks from campus. Phone 2321M 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 WANTED OPPORTUNITY for man or woman with car, full or part time work. Promotion in 6 months if can qualify. Contact box 1. Kansan. 21 KITCHEN CRAFT Co. has opening for man with car for part time sales job in local territory. Ideal set up for man needs extra tools, storage and earnings around $200 per month. Sales made thru appointments. Address Box 117 Merriam, Kans WANT to rent garage close to AOPI house. Call 781. Natalie Bolton. WANTED: a fan. Gene Petersen. Phone 569. 20 BUSINESS SERVICE BUSINESS SERVICE TYPING-CALL Hazel Stanley, 2855M for prompt experienced service. 820 Mass. 23 LOST MISSING FROM rush-week. Zelan trench coat. Call 3410. Reward. GREEN and black Parker pen, probation in or near hospital Auditorium. Rebound after. BLACK 3-fold ladies bilbillfold Sat. evening between JAYHAWK jayhawk and Watkins Hall Reward. Call Norma Hawkins, 900. 22 PLEASE—will student who four course game return a game return at Kansas office or call Call 84, leave name Keepsake. Reward. 22 MISCELLANEOUS HORSEBACK riding (equitation). Enroll now for Phys. Ed. credit. Phone 1842 for information. Motts Stables. GO TO THE KANSAS City Star. Call 17, 801 Mass. EAT-ALL YOU can eat. Family style dinner served daily to 5 t. p.m. 75c. 1745 Ohio. Phone 1675j. EXPERT SLIP cover, drapery, and decorating service. Materials for sale. Jean Murphy. 1154 East 15th. Phone 4185h. WILL THE person from your cell in V.A. office Sept. 15 please call me. David A. Harner 1127 Ohio. Phone 730, and I will return It. In deciphering secret messages, the assumption of probable clew words is often necessary. Two Bandits Take $7.592 Worth In K.C. Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 19—(U.P.) Two daring bandits early today entered the hotel room of Miss Ada Bozeman Pereria here, waited for her to come to her room and then robbed her of property valued at nearly $7,500 and took $92 in cash. Miss Pereria, the owner of a Reno, Nev., hotel, told detectives she was confronted by one of the men when she attempted to unlock her hotel room. She was bound and gagged then she screamed and attempted to flee. The man took a wrist watch from her value dat $2,000 and two diamond rings valued at $2,500 and $2,800. Several other items were taken from the room, she said. State Teacher Exams Open To thousands of school children grinding out the first of many weeks of study and tests, the Kansas department of civil service offered today a bit of consolation. Teachers have to take examinations, too! The teachers in this case are those seeking positions at the boys and girls industrial schools, the state orphans home, the industrial reformatory, and other state institutions. The examination is a part of the civil service procedure for filling the positions. Classes being examined include elementary teacher, secondary teacher, vocational teacher, school principal, and educational director. Starting salaries for the classes range from $173 to $324. Using the boys industrial school as an example, Charles S. Manley, acting director of civil service, described the opportunities for teachers in state employment. "Teachers and school administrators who want to specialize in work with exceptional children will find at the boys school the opportunity they have been looking for." Mr. Manley said. "Few schools outside the state service offer comparable facilities for the study and practice of institutional teaching." Several appointments will be made this fall, with others during the remainder of the school year and at the start of the 1950-51 term next fall. Applications for the examinations will be accepted only until Oct. 8, according to Mr. Manley. Application forms may be obtained by writing the Kansas department of civil service, 801 Harrison, Topeka. Whooping Cranes Included In Gift To KU Museum These birds pass through Kansas on spring and fall migrations. Dr. Baker urged hunters not to shoot at any large white birds with dark wing stripes. The whooping cranes are so rare that naturalism is often given for museum specimens, hoping to save the species from extinction. Dr. Rollin H. Baker of the University staff estimated that fewer than 50 of the large, white whooping cranes are alive today. They winter in two game refuges on the Gulf coast and nest in the northern prairie provinces of Canada. Two mounted "whooping cranes," now among the rarest of North American birds, are among a zoological and archeological collection given the University Museum of Natural History by H. H. Eicholtz of Abilene. Because of the bird's rarity, the two specimens given by Eicholtz are prized by the University museum. George Young, taxidermist, is remounting the two specimens in a form suitable for permanent preservation. Dr. Baker believes additional specimens may lie unrecognized in personal collections, since the whooping crane was once a popular game bird, and hopes the owners will make the specimens available for scientific use and preservation. The museum has one whooping crane on exhibit in its natural setting on the second floor of Dyche hall. It was mounted 10 years ago by Klaus Abegg of Lawrence. Most of the items were collected by the donor's father, the late W. H. Eicholtz, who settled in Abilene in 1870. The whooping cranes, largest of all cranes, were shot prior to 1890. Mt McKinley May Become Cosmic Ray Research Site The Eicholtz collection given the museum includes 53 birds and four mammals. There are the horns of a bison shot in 1870 on the first hill west of the Abilene city limits. Other items are Indian bows, arrows Eicholtz obtained from Indians who came to trade in Abilene during the 1870's. Jessup Praises US Press Providence, R. I., Sept. 20—(U.P.) U.S. Ambassador-at-large Philip C. Jessup today praised the American press for doing an "admirable job" of reporting on the United Nations. "But the public must discriminate between reports and the entire facts in arriving at its opinion," Jessup told Brown university students at the opening convoitation of the university's 186th academic year. To the sport and the glory of scaling the high peaks, modern science has added a new purpose—the establishment of sites for cosmic ray research. A survey headed by Bradford Washburn, Boston scientist, is now under way to check the feasibility of such a permanent station on Alaska's Mt. McKinley, the highest point of North America. The mountain has another special advantage for cosmic study, its relative proximity to the North Magnetic Pole, which makes it a front seat for observing the relationship between cosmic rays and magnetic influence. But both height and location add to the dangers and difficulties of Various ground stations, too, have been established for such research on tall mountains in the United States and abroad. Mt. McKinley, however, with a maximum reach in its South peak of 20,257 feet, would offer the world's highest fixed vantage point to date. Rising in Mt. McKinley National Park, north of Anchorage, it has a secondary North peak that is more than 19,000 feet up. Since cosmic rays are best observed in rarefied altitudes, studies of the bombardment of the earth by this mysterious force are often made from aircraft and balloons, notes the National Geographic society. The society, in fact, is currently cooperating in upper-air investigations of cosmic ray secrets over a Canadian outpost settlement on Hudson bay. Approximately 5,000,000 people die of tuberculosis throughout the world every year, according to the World Health organization. making use of the mountain. A perpetual blanket of snow and ice covers two thirds of it. Raging storms, deep crevasses, and snow slides are formidable adversaries. Summer temperatures go to more than 20 degrees below zero (Fahrenheit) and winter drops have been recorded lower than minus 100. In 1947 a scientific party, in addition to taking various observations and geological collections, set up a temporary cosmic ray station at some 18,000 feet. 1,607,400 In Armed Forces Washington, Sept. 29 — (U.P.) The armed forces had a combined numerical strength of 1,607,400 persons on Aug. 31, a decrease of 9,900 from July 31, the Defense department announced today. Army strength was 655,500; navy 444,200, air force 422,000, and marine corps 85,700. Judge Halts Ban On Radio 'Gifts' New York, Sept. 20 — (U.P.)—Federal Judge Simon H. Riffind said he would sign an injunction today temporarily halting the Federal Communications commission's ban on "give away" shows after Oct. 1 until a three-judge court can rule on a permanent injunction. Riftkind said he had decided to grant the request of three major networks to permit them to continue present shows until suits challenging the constitutionality of the F.C.C.'s order are decided. He ordered the hearing for a permanent injunction to be held not later than Oct. 31. Nearly 100 Join Activities Sponsored By Geologists Call K.U. 251 With Your News. In the interest of members of the Kansas Geological society, nearly 100 persons joined in the activities sponsored by the State Geological survey and the department of geology at the University Sept. 18. A non-profit corporation, the Kansas Geological society is composed of nearly 250 professional oil geologists most of whom are from the Wichita area. President of the organization is Don Payne, geologist with Sinclair Prairie Oil company of Wichita. California is the leading producer of lettuce in the United States. --will make you look your best this fall Expert Watch REPAIR Electronically Timed Guaranteed Satisfacton 1 week or less service. WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Dry Cleaning and Pressing It won't be long now before you smell the sharp odor of burning leaves in the hazy autumn air. It's a great outdoor season coming up—and you'll want to have clothes that are freshly cleaned and pressed to make you always look your best no matter whether you're in the stands at a football game, or just strolling down the "Main Stem." Now's the time to arrange it—Phone for cleaning and pressing that is always reliable—always moderate—always prompt. NEW YORK CLEANERS Reservations FLY to Denver September 17 Jayhawkers vs. Colorado Buffalos Kansas City Denver $36.46 one way $69.29 round trip (tax inc.) Exclusive agents for Pan American Airways System CITY TICKET OFFICE The First National Bank of Lawrence Travel Agency 8th & Mass. Sts. Miss Rose Gieseman, Mgr. Tel. 30 ( )