MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22. 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE ELEVEN Daily Kansan Classified Ads Phone KU 376 Terms. Cash. Phone orders are accepted under understanding that the bill will be paid promptly and should be received during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the Univertex office, Journalism bldg., not later than the 45 p.m. day before publication date. Classified Advertising Rates One Three Five day days days 25 words or less...35c 65c 90c additional words ...1c 2c 3c FOR SALE 1947 4-DOOR Fleetmaster Chev. 12,000 actual miles. Radio, heater, seat covers, undershelf柜. Private owner, reasonable insurance. 100 W, 8 wth or phone 1840-7535 MUST SELL. 1934 CHVELOWT Deluxe Sedan, heater, good tires, motor just overheated. See at www.chavew.com. 140 STUDEBAKER Champion. 2 door excellent condition. Call Bob Elbe, 238 FORDOR DE SOTO. 35. Good transport. Gives the money. Must sell cheap. 1196 Ohn A KNEE-HOLE desk with 4 drawers Good condition. Call Clair Gillin. 2470R FOR SALE wire recorders Brand new, 5000 and 20 Coffin Hank Black, phone 23244 3600 ARGUS A2 camera, good condition, new Eugene Searl, 1317 Tenn. 30tn, phone 3346 SUN LAMP Special: Get a Florida sun-tan while you study. GE Sunilamts to fit standard sockets now. Only $8.50. B. Goodrich. 929 Mass. per cent below similar used machines at the same rate Jack Campbell. Phone 1-877-553-1127 or 1-877-553-1128 TIRED OF WALKING: Come to the Putt Putt shop at 311 East 9th. I have a new motorcopters for sale there. It's cheap and safe transportation. 2% BUSINESS SERVICE AMMUNITION. Fishing Tackle. Guns and padlocks. Rutter's Shop, 1014 Mass MATHENATICS. Need help? Miss the town most of the Thanksgiving holidays, strengthen points you're weak on. Phone for appointment 304-89M. Maine 22 USED CARS bought and sold 6 blocks 2003-2005 3005 Midwest Motors, 709 North Second. BILL'S ROAD service and delivery serv- ice include a curved car that flattes, start your car, anywhere in or out, within fifteen miles of Lawrence. Will provide a free car care up to say size. Phone Lawrence 252-873-4500. USED CARS bought and sold. 6 blocks. CARERS demand. Phone 3005 Mid- West Motorway 708 New Second TYPING: REASONABLE rate. Prompt service. Phone 1168R, 1192 Vermont. ONE ONE is best - Balfour's for watch on Monday 14th. rfmf TYPING ONE Prompt service, rescu- able rate, accurate time, 1209 Ohio, or Phone 1601. rfmf WHEN ALL PETS including dogs, birds, fish, cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots, squirrels, rats, mice, etc., go shopping with the go to Grant's Pet Shop. 1218 Conn St. Phone 418. Everywhere the pet field—the needs are our busi- ness. 12-21 TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 12-23 EBERHART and Son, tailors. Fittest samples made to measure, suits, topcoats, and overcoats. Alterations, repalring and leather work. 831 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. 19 LOST WILL THE person who took the wrong windbreaker with red and black lining from ballroom cafeteria Nov. 17, call 3251W. I have your jacket. 30 BILFLOLD: Red leather. Duck's Tavern BILFLOLD: grocery money Joe Redd. 4243W. PAIR OF brown horn-rimmed glasses on campus Monday. If found, please notify Duval. Home number 888. Reward. 22 Will Duncan, you must have a strong-Ellynw Human Neurology book from Union lower cafeteria Tuesday noon, please return it to Kansan Urgently need! Grace Horst. 29 MELANIA, your book we hadn't finished reading it. We read the Daily Kansan you know we need it! (we refer to the new Webster dictionary which disappeared from the building. It had "University of Kansas Press" stamped all over the fly leaf. 22 MAN'S WRIST watch left in Room 310 Fraser Hall at 11:00 a.m. Thursday morning. Your office for forward, Eanna Cobb, 2734 haw. FOR RENT ONE ROSE for three men students, and one NORA for another man student, 1340 M.H. Ph., 1747 A.H. Ph., 21 SLEEPING ROOM, 2 singles. Ideal room, 3 blocks from campus. 793RK. Cipro 29 LARGE, quiet, comfortable downstairs room for men. Single, modern, close to KU. and town. 1305 Vermont. 22 NICE SINGLE room for boy at 825 Illinois. If interested please call 2938R. No smoking or drinking. FURNISHED ROOM for man student. 1340 N.H. Phone 1374R. 22 3 OR 4 HIDERS to Wichita. Leaving 4 or 5 on Monday. Returning Sunday 21: evening. Cal Aibel, 190643 TRANSPORTATION WANTED: Passengers to Great Bend, Kansas for Thanksgiving, Leave Tuesday, 4:00. Return Sunday night. Phone 2831W. Earle E. Brehmer. Earle E. Brehmer. RIDE WANTED for two to Wichita or vicinity Wednesday evening, Nov. 24th after six. Will share expenses. Call Bob Cull, 1961M. LIKE RIDE to Columbia, Missouri on 24th for Thanksgiving holiday. Will share expenses. Leave name at Kansan office, box 4, or 304 Fraser. 22 RIDERS WANTED to share expenses. Leaving early Tuesday afternoon for Thanksgiving celebration. Going route to Indiana University. Springfield Ohio. Phone 1333R. WOULD LIKE two riders to Dodge City Nov 26th, 2017 Phone 2107 and ask for White WOULD LIKE a ride to Enid, Okla, or La. Nov. 23. Call Ros Waken, phone 3658. MOTHER AND 7-week old child would like ride, Monday or Tuesday to Stockton, call Leonard Brokaw, phone 22884, 22 WANTED. Two students want ride to Great Bend, Kansas over Thanksgiving. Share expenses, phone 2984R, 1132 Temp URGENTLY NEEDED ride. To share expenses and driving to Philadelphia or eastern city and return. Will leave to car after December 17. Call Bob Teel 284. WANTED: Ride to Russell, Kans. Tuesday afternoon, Nov. 23. Would like to share expenses. Call Jack Campbell Phone 730. 22 COMMERCIAL PILOT飞降 4 place Return Thanksgiving. Take passengers away. Evaluate oral route or 150 mile route. Jackson Hotel or Yellowstone. 390s, Kansas City. MISCELLANEOUS ONLY ONE is best - Balfour's for watch repair. 411 West 14th. ff AGAIN THIS year, by popular demand, a college SKI PARTY is being formed—this is for the fellows and gals who would like to snow skiing from the very best, and enjoy it in the snow. For the finest New Year's your wonders-spent—all meals, transportation (our own special car on the Colorado Eagle), skis, boots, poles, 4 hours of lessons every day, pass on all lifts, Roaring Fork lodge, Fork lake, gasbord dormers, square dance, moonlight skating party, steak dinner at the Red Onion cake, New Year's at the Silver Lake, Aspen Intercelli-collegiate Ski Meet having a social, presented. Contact any one of these agents for further information. Fig Newton, 2039; Don Schanke, 565. 22 KU Students See Comet Four students at the University have been getting up at 5 in the morning to observe a new comet. Claude Harwood, College junior, Don Monger, sophomore, and Deber Robb and Russell Magg, freshmen, saw the astronomical body twice. They first read about it in the Lawrence Daily Journal-World and decided to try to find it. Only two attempts have been successful because of the cloudy weather. When they first saw the comet it had a tail about 4 or 5 degrees long. It was found moving southwest and is now low in the south. Monger fears that they will be unable to see the body again because it was dropping and there have been several days of bad weather. He said that astronomy had been his hobby for the past six years and that he plans to major in that field. He stated that the comet had been named and numbered 1948 I. He explained that comets are named after the year in which they are found and are given a letter to designate the order in which they are seen. Tyler, Tex., Nov. 19—(UP)—The Texas Rose bowl football game will be played here either Dec. 4 or Dec. 11 instead of Thanksgiving day, it was announced today. Texas Bowl Feelers Out Duluth, Minn., Junior college and Hutchinson, Kan., Junior college have been sent bids to meet Tyler Junior college, the host team. Duluth and Hutchinson, each has an ear tuned to the Little Rose bowl game in California and if either receives a bid to play there, the other will accepted the Texas bid, it was reported. The Tyler game was started last year when Compton, Calif., Junior college beat Tyler 20 to 19. The Tyler Rose bowl seats 16,000. Official Bulletin Inter-Dorm, 5 today, Miss Habein's house. Nov. 22,1948 Mathematical colloquium of department of mathematics, 5 today, 203 Frank Strong, Dr. Mina Rees, Washington, D.C., "The Work of the Mathematics Branch of the Office of Naval Research." Delta Sigma Phi, 7:30 tonight, English room, Union. Archery club initiation and supper Wednesday, Dec. 1. New members pay initiation fee at Miss Stapleton's office before that date. Mr. LaPoe of Armstrong Cork company will be on the campus Monday, Nov. 29, to interview June graduates in industrial management interested in sales engineering activity or industrial engineering work. Those interested sign by tomorrow with Mrs. Strong, 214 Frank Strong Flora Should See Almanac Washington—(UP)—It's a rare thing around the big cities. But get out where the pigs squeal, the cows moo, the coyotes howl, the crickets crick and the pump handle squeaks and you'll find folks still looking at the "Old Farmer's Almanac" to find out what's comin' next. The latest edition just came out. The 15th consecutive one. Word comes down the line that the little yellow-bound booklet (which now sells for two-bits) hasn't changed any more than the moon and stars from which the forecast come. Most interesting review of last winter's weather was the account of the green rain which fell on Dayton, Ohio, March 28. All this happened the day after three moons were seen in Boston—"the real moon with a 'dog moon' on either side." There are the usual features, including the weather, astronomy planting, fish and game, tides, and so on. The blurb on the 1949 copy advertises an enlarged recipe section, many of the new scientific developments on the farm, cartoons by Francis W. Dahl and a story about track star Gil Dodds, the trottin' parson, "who runs for the Lord." This winter, the almanac says, it won't be as drippy or as cold as last year. However, it'll last a little longer into March when we can expect rain, sleet and snow. The Almanac was started by Robert B. Thomas, publisher and philosopher. Perhaps he was thinking of the 1948 election forecasts when he wrote in 1802: Fan mail is nothing new, either. Many years ago, Mr. Thomas's fine journal was published a letter from one F. C. Cawthrop of Nashua, N.H. which read: "Read newspapers, but consider, before you believe; for common report is often a great liar." "I have read the 'Old Farmer's Almanac' these many years and I wish the damn fool that changed the reading of the moon's column had died before he done it." Design Institute Offers $250 Prize Students in architecture are eligible to compete for prizes totaling $250 by designing an elementary school and kindergarten in which special attention is given to the use of clay tile. October and November are the months for a fall application of nitrogen fertilizer on bearing apple trees The national contest is sponsored by the Beaulux-Arts Institute of Design in co-operation with the Tile Council of America. First prize is $100, second $75, third $50, and fourth $25. The competition closes Monday, Dec. 20, and judging will begin Tuesday, Jan. 4, 1949. Students from universities and colleges in the United States, Canada, and Cuba may submit entries. Progress In Polio Research Points Eventually To Vaccine New York—(UP)—A polio expert reported today that evidence from research projects is pointing more and more toward the day when a vaccine against infantile paralysis in human beings will be developed. Weaver said that in years gone by it was "generally agreed that infantile paralysis is a mysterious disease that did not behave in accordance with fundamental laws governing all other contagious and infectious diseases." The gains in polio research were made known by Dr. Harry M. Weaver, director of research of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. "The results of National Foundation-supported studies have largely exploded this concept," he said. "It has been shown that monkeys can be effectively and safely vaccinated against the experimental disease, and that poliomyelitis antibodies do develop and function like other bacterial and viral anti-bodies." Once medical science finds an overall vaccine that will be effected against the types of polio in monkeys then it should help with the development of a human vaccine. Dr. Weaver said that medical science has learned that "clinical polyomyelitis is not a single disease, but rather a family of diseases." "This," he said, "has led to an effort to develop methods for determining exactly how many different viruses cause the human disease and what percentage of human cases is caused by each virus." Dr. Weaver also recalled the progress made in determining that destruction of nerve cells and consequent crippling is not associated with every human case of infantile paralysis. In fact, Dr. Weaver said, it is now recognized that for every diagnosed case of the disease there may be from five to 100 additional individuals who harbor the virus without recognizable symptoms. Sporting Instinct Bests Lonely Mate Police fqund Burkhart dressed in a red cap, plaid shirt, breeches and boots and carrying a rifle thru city streets. Denver—(UP)—When Claude W. Burkhart felt the call of the wild it cost him a fine in police court. Burkham told them he was sitting up waiting for his wife when the lure of the hunt swept over him. Driver Travels 1 Block; Smashes 12 Parked Cars Denver—(UP)—Paul J. McCarthy, 44, was picked up by police after his car had struck 12 parked cars in one block. McCarthy was charged with driving under the influence of liquor, careless and reckless driving, leaving the scene of an accident and destroying city property. bring your EXPOSED FILM to us for prompt, expert PHOTO FINISHING We now OFFER SEVEN HOUR SERVICE. In at 10—Out at 5 L. LOKE SMITH CO. "On the Corner" at 9th and Mass. Phone 725 A Pleasing Likeness A Natural Pose These Are The Qualities That Make People Like Our Photographs Make Your Appointments Early 721 Massachusetts Phone 41 1