TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1949 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN The University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising Phone KU 376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid in full at the end of the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University's business office. Journalism员ld, not late for 45 p.m. the day before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days Five days 25 words or less ...35c 65c 90c Additional words ...1c 2c 3c FOR RENT TWO PRIVATE rooms and study room for rent, $15.00. Inner-sleep beds. 600 West 33rd. Phone 2829J. 19 ONE ROOM for rent, double or single. 17 Main Avenue. 5 DIMENSION ROOM for undergraduate girls for next semester. $20 month. Mrs. Wilson. 1229 Ohio, Phone 3248W. 5 TWO DOUBLE rooms $15 each person. 3 rooms shared. 2 blocks from campus. Call 3331 before seven. 5 SLEEPING ROOM two girls. Some rooms. Mrs. Fred G. 841 Louisiana. Phone 7999. Mrs. Fred G. 51. Snart. 3 SINGLE ROOM or half of double room for male student. 1536 Tenn. Ph. 2281R. SPACIOUS, LIGHT, double or single rooms with generous closet and storage space. For four graduate women students. Breakfast if desired. Call 1007R. PLACE FOR two men students, laundry and cooking privileges if desired, 103rd hall. SHARP ROOM at the 801 Club for boys Single bed, bungalow. Phone 1426M. 20 SPRING SEEMESTER vacancy for two boys. Double room. Share kitchen with laundry and walking distance on bus lines, and walking distance to town and K.U. 637 Ind. Phone 1782. 19 MISCRLLANEOUS CONTACT US for all airline information. City ticket office, First National Bank of Lawrence. Miss Rose Gieseman, Mgr. 8th and Mass. Phone 30. 19 JAYHAWKERS: Give yourself a pleasant surprise and visit your Jayhawk pet shop. We have the best pets we are our business. Our one-stop pet shop has everything for fur, fin, and feathers. Grant's Pet and Gift Shop. 1218 Conn. St. Ph. 418. 19 FOR SALE 1941 DODGE 4-door sedan. Excellent condition, good tires, low mileage. Bargain. Must sell immediately. See at 2233 Louisiana, or call 28521. 1946 -27foot Royacht house trailer. Good condition. Room 10x10 attached to trailer. %-ton York air air conditioner. Trailer ready to move. Connected to electricity, water, sewer. Located 4 blocks south of K.U. 1828 Louisiana, Ph. 17001 DKEITZEN Commander drawing set_2 &KE rules, board and T-square GUNS SIMMON'S COUCH two months old. Must sell. Open into bed. Blue. New $85. Will sell for $45. Also four $85. Kitchen. WILL SELL FOR $253. B28231. 19 ENROLLOING IN "Spanish I" All required text (grammar and four readers) and helpful Spanish recordings "Living Spanish Course" complete with conversational manual and word dictionary. $18. 1929 CHEVROLET, good motor, good tires, heater, will supply cheap transportation, must sell immediately. Call 2474 3 FURNITURE for living room, bedroom, and kitchen. Also set up the living room of the famous authors. 30-D Sunsyme. 3155R . 3 ONE FORMAL, one dress, two suits, size 9. Attractive styles, excellent condition. $5 each, phone 3112M after a p.m. 19. MOUTON COAT: Flared back, three-quarter length, size 14. Purchased last January. Fur in excellent condition. 8110 indiana after a p.m. 19. COCKER PUPPIES, blond, AKC register, 7 weeks old. 609 Drive D, Sunflower. SUNGERLAND DRUGS, 16" and 12" toms, snare, lacquer finish bass, sock pedal, cymbals, and traps. Will sell cheap. Phone 8117, Akc store. 18 MICROSCOPE KING METallizer, three ring eyepieces; camera lucida; mechanical stage; and other attachments. Mahogany case. For information call 2955J. FINE mobile home: complete with Butane cooking, oil heating, and refrigeration kits. Use trailer for excellent housing at low cost during your stay at K.U. Inspect it at 1700 Kentucky. 1. $5.00 FOR your old battery on a new guaranteed B. F. Goodrich battery. Delivery and installation free. B. F. Goodrich电池 (PH) 21-122. AUTO WRECKING AND JUNK CO. BUSINESS SERVICE 712 E. 9th Phone 954 MAGNETIC RECORDING machine, type-texers, adding and cleaning clams, chars, filing clams, tees, and tables sold or rented t Peterson's 70% Mass. Caramel, 70% Milk. notebooks TYPING: Term papers, notebooks. themes, thesis. By experienced typist. Prompt response, reasonable rates. Phone 1-800-792-6345 19th Oct. WATCHES, expertly repaired at Balfours, 411 West 14th. Timed by electronics. Snappy service; very reasonable tt TYPING DONE quickly and accurately. Thesis papers, etc. Call 1727M. 19 TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel. 418 or bring to 1218 Comm. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 19 FOUND PARKER 51 pen. Owner may have after payment and of payment this is 1558R8. LOST BILLFOLD, brown. Lost near Jayhawk theater. Finder may keep money. Please call 3060W. Ask for George Langsjoen. BLACK SHAFFERFER p. B.A.P. engraved on gold band. Finder please c= a= ARMY OFFICERS' overcourt in Union lounge Friday. Call John Rynker in 817-429-6500. WILL THE person who took by mistake my green jacket (Army Air Force type) on Thursday from a class in Frank Strong Annex E. Call Rivil, 86. 19 PAIR OF GLASSES in black case stamped Muller Optical Service. Dean Coins printed on cleansing tissue inside. Please call 345JJ. 19 call 28253. Pearl "g1", maroon with silver top, very fine point. Possibly lost in vicinity of Robinson Wenger. Finder please call Norman Wenger. Phone 565. **19** KEY RING with 2 house keys, 2 auto keys, and 1948 Kansas license. Identify please contact W. D. Geeding. Phone 2538. **19** ELGIN DELUXE wristwatch. Graduation gift from parents. If found please call 1128W. **19** PAIR OF brown rimmed glasses in red alligator zipper case. Reward. Call Maigre garage. **19** KOWN ZIPPER bilfoil with identification card and activity book. Keep money but please return the rest. Phone Patricia McGovney. 880. **18** LACK AND SILVER Parker "g1" between Robinson and Union. Wednesday at 10am. 25301M. **18** pay by ear, read music, previous experience in a swing band. Phone 92 at, or call Harvey, or meet Tuesday night. Jan. 18 on steps of library at 8:10 p.m. FULL DAY child care. Consider monthly contracts only. Phone 8195. 19 for woman graduate student near hill for woman graduate student 534W between 5 and 6 p.m. 18 TRANSPORTATION WOULD LIKE to commute next semester from South Kansas City. Classes 9 to 3 Monday through Friday. K. W. Bottenberg 2234R, or H8565. 19 The cities of Jacksonville, Tampa, and Miami, Fla., are leading ports of foreign trade. WANTED 1st, 2nd and 3rd sax man. I piano player able to arrange. 2nd trumpet man, 1st trombone. I drummer with own bass drum. We meet in a following requirements: ability to For COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE See TRAYLOR & CALVIN INSURANCE 1026 Mass. She's wearing our pin... Dame Nature and International Harvester have been "going steady" for a long time Just as undergraduates wear pins to indicate their membership in various college organizations, so do employees of International Harvester wear service pins to denote the number of years they have been with the Company. And just as students bestow their pins on favored young ladies, so have Harvester men, in effect, given their pins to Mother Nature. Because for more than 100 years, the business which is now called International Harvester has been basically one of building an ever-increasing variety of machines to help in the production and conservation of food and raw materials, in the transportation of such articles, and in construction and power projects which change the face and harness the forces of nature. But proud as we may be of the machines we produce,we think an equally important contribution to the social good has been our development of methods for soil conservation. So we think we are very much in the role of Mother Nature's steady companion. Little was known about soil conservation when most colleges and universities were founded, or when the business which is today the International Harvester Company had its start in 1831. But today we all appreciate the need to guard our soil against the ravages of wind and water . . . and are learning how to do it. The importance of soil conservation is indicated by the fact that soil scientists estimate that the productivity of 10,000 farms of 100 acres each is seriously impaired each year by lack of proper soil conservation methods. And that more than 700 million tons of surface soil are carried each year by the Mississippi River alone, into the Gulf of Mexico. It is a source of great satisfaction to International Harvester that it has been able through the years to make a substantial contribution to the progress of soil conservation. We have done this by building the machinery which makes modern conservation methods possible, and by cooperating with local and national governmental agencies engaged in this important work. The basic soil conservation work on most farms can be handled by International Harvester's regular line of farm machines, powered by Farmall tractors. Through continuing research, International Harvester will continue to seek better and better ways to gonserve our soil. To continue to be a steady companion to Mother Nature. INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER