MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8.1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Daily Kansan Classified Ads Phone KU 376 Classified Advertising Rates Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered at your request during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journals can be sent for 4 p.m. the day before publication date. One Three Five day days five 25 words or less ... 35c 65c 90c additional words ... 1c 2c 3c A GOOD 36 Ford four door. See Ray- nard's 540. at 545 Tempur- mats. 12 x 9 inches. 12 x 9 in. 12 x 9 in. FOR SALE TWO TICKETS to K.U. K-State football game. Call 1328 between 12 and 4. 1935 CHEVROLET sedan. Engine completely overhaulated, all new parts from Chevrolet. Good valves. Good body. $25.40. Bob Burwell. 1017 North Hampshire, phone 2556. PORTABLE TYPEWRITER, Corona, good condition, priced right, Call 3145 and visit us at www.corona.com ORDER YOUR Christmas cards now for complete selection and delivery. Call 617-248-3035 or visit www.orderyourchristmas.com 991 1943 FORD convertible, new, with all features. See at Board and Moore; H.W. 5b/6b. MUST SACRIFICE 1939 Chrysler Imperial sedan. New paint job jobs, bat cage, lift doors, and side mirrors be seen at Conoco店, 1901 Mass. 11 ATTRACTIVE furnished cottage. 5 rooms and bath. One is the cleanest. One is the street scene. Six minu- tions by bus downtown. Possession. pts by bus downtown. Possession 90. See owner at 718 Locust. 11 ALL LEATHER golf bag. Professional type, condition like new. Cost $55 sell for $20. Real bargain. Call at 914 New Hampshire. NEW SPORT jacket. Call 1763R. 8 BLACK PLYMOUTH coupe, excellent condition. $495. Also, refrigerator in good condition. See at 1818 Indiana after FIVE CIGARETTE machines in operation at good locations. Insures large, steep acreage. Investment and little work. For Information, jack Campbell, phone 730. 9 AMMUNITION. F tackle Tackle. Guns and masks. Made made made made made made made Rutter's Shop, 1016 Mass. rfnf FOR RENT 8 x 10 AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHS Bird-sight your of your campus. Just the thing your photo album. Hurry down the hall to Rowland's or Keeler's bookstore. $ LOVELY BASEMENT room in new home to two boys. Furnace piped into room; good ventilation, asphalt tile flooring, secure private toilet, secure kitchen with cars living nearby so transportation might be arranged. $3.50 a week per boy. Phone 2151M. WANTED ROOM SINGLE for girls. Conveniently at University of 1215 Oread. Call 27888. R LOST GLASSES LOST Friday, October 22, between Snow and Watson library. Pink plastic刷s. Brown leather case. Call 3487M. Reward. 9 WISH TO contact person driving to New contact through Daily Kansen office. 9 AR OF blue plastic rimmed glasses *week*. Call 3045. Reward. d MU ALPHA pin with initials G.T.C. on the back. Reward.card 2278M. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA sorority pln. Strong. Phone Edith Elam, 12623. 9 Phone Edith Elam, 12623. 9 FRIDAY EVENING. a Parker lifetime fountain pen. it is black with fine white horizontal stripes. Reward. Finder return to Kansan office or call 2620M. c BLACK SHAEFFER lifetime fountain please please please leave at Kansan 8 Reward. 8 I WOULD appreciate the return of my grey raincoat which was taken from the Tues day noon. Name and address include Charles Quaint, 725 ALESH bona. pham 241J1. BUSINESS SERVICE *LAIN BROWN* leather billiard contain- ment, $21.99. Finder keep money, $21 N. Hamp; 7 DOES YOUR pen need repairing? Excellent service on my make or model. Bring your pens and pencils to Student, Union Book Store. 12 STUDENTS LAUNDRY wanted. Also student from 2149R, 1205 Rhodes Island, Ms. Mas Efremov. TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Tel. 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. Ask for Miss Helen. 12-21 WHEN ALL PETS including dogs, birds, stats, cats, pigeons, skunks, parrots, birds, mice, rats, mice, etc., go shopping outfit they go to Grant's Pet Shop, 1218 Conn. St. L. Phone 418. Everywhere the pet field—their needs are our business. 12-21 . BERHART and Son. tailors. Finest mats made to measure suits, topcoats, leather work, repairing and leather work. 831½ Mass. **19** . TERTING SUITS, coats, and dresses. Specialty. Handmade red button holder. Work guaranteed. 842 Harden. 1295 TRANSPORTATION RIDES AVAILABLE to and from Kansas and Missouri. In the day, Contact Gerald Renner, Oralhall, day. MISCELLANEOUS OUR BAND plays "Bop" and sweet music for your dancing and dining pleasure. The boys in the band invite you to the Skivele Dinner Club. $ Clave Is President Of Spanish Club Robert Clave, College senior, was elected president of the Spanish club recently. Other officers elected were: Ellen Patterson, vice-president; Bautista Murillo, assistant vice-president; Philip Smith, secretary; Rodrigo Solera, assistant secretary; Rita Swearingen, assistant; Juan Aguerri, refreshments chairman. Official Bulletin Senor Domingo Ricart, assistant professor of Spanish gave a summary of the historical importance of Spain. Call K.U. 251 With Your News. Nov. 8, 1948 Archery club, 5 today, Fraser theater. Moving pictures. All interested. Y. M.C.A., Christian faith and heritage commission, 5 today, upstairs classroom, Myers hall. Entomology club, 4 today, 301 Snow. Miss Mary Larson of zoology department to speak on trip through Europe. I. S.A. council, house representatives, and I.S.A. members, 5 p.m. tomorrow, room 16 Fraser. Mathematical collocium of mathematics department, 5 today, 203 Frank Strong. Dr. I. N. Herstein to speak on "The Radical of a Ring." Two vacancies now exist in A.S.C. due to resignation of George Lowe, District IV, and Hugh Johnson, District III. S. A.M., 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Frank Strong auditorium. O. M. Coffman, industrial engineer, Owen - Corning Fiberglas corporation of Kansas City, speaker. Physical Therapy club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Waltkins hospital. Miss Slide rule course, both sections, 7 p.m. tomorrow, 110 Marvin. Sara Patterson, speaker. Following cases will be heard in student court, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow; Orin L. Strobel, Horace V. Edmonds, Melin Murfoin, William O. Richardson, Dean C. Banker, Andrew A. Zahner, Robert S. Clark, Maurice L. Wells, Richard H. Colburn, B. W. Barker. Y. M.C.A. cabinet, 5 p.m. tomorrow. Fencing club, 7.30 p.m. tomorrow, 101 Robinson gym. Pledges of Alpha Kappa Psi, 4 p.m. tomorrow, 210 Frank Strong. Pledge examination. United World Federalists. 4 p.m. tomorrow, Pine room, Union building. Dr. W. W. Adams, president of Central Baptist seminar, will speak on "The Church and World Government." Jay Janes, 5 p.m. Wednesday, Kansas room, Union. Bring money for K-State tickets. All-Association meeting for Y.M.-Y.W.C.A., 4 p.m. Wednesday, English room, Union. Snow Zoology club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 206 Snow. Informal initiation. Movie on evolution. I.S.A. council, 5 p.m. tomorrow, 16 Fraser. W. Y.C.A. party for freshman women, 7 p.m. tomorrow, Henley house. Mortar Board, 9 p.m. Wednesday, Kappa Kappa Gamma house. A. W.S. senate will not meet this week. Music Aids Mental Cases Milwaukee-(UP)-The Milwaukee county civil service commission has announced it will hire a music therapist to help in the treatment of mental patients at county institutions. Experiments at the county mental hospitals have shown that music aids patients to readjust themselves. Read the Daily Kansan daily. They said,"You can't do it!" But Du Pont scientists developed a synthetic rubber with superior properties "Synthetic rubber is an impossibility at any price!" declared a noted European scientist a number of years ago. And most people were inclined to agree because for more than a century chemists had been unable to duplicate natural rubber. Du Pont scientists knew that all rubber had bad qualities as well as good. "Why struggle to duplicate its faults?" they asked. "Why not find a new chemical compound with all the good qualities of rubber, but none of the bad?" They took as their starting point a discovery by Dr. J. A. Nieuwland of Notre Dame in connection with the polymerization of acetylene. By modifying this process, they made monovinyl acetylene. Adding hydrogen chloride, they made a new chemical compound called chloroprene—a thin, clear liquid at low temperatures. Like isoprene, it polymerized to form a rubber-like substance. But the new material, now known as neoprene, required no sulfur for vulcanization and was superior to rubber under many service conditions. Today neoprene production is measured in millions of pounds a year, even though it is priced higher than natural rubber. Hardly an industry is not now using it, for such good reasons as these: neoprene products resist deterioration by oils and greases. They stand up under exposure to direct sunlight. Their aging and flame-retardting properties also are superior to those of rubber. Three types of Du Pont research Modern research involves time, money, manpower. To develop neoprene, for example, took six years of laboratory study, a research and development expenditure of millions of dollars, plus the work of skilled researchchemists, physicists,engineers, and other scientists. At Du Pont, research is continuous. Some of it is designed to develop new products or processes; some to improve existing products or processes; and the balance is fundamental research to uncover basic facts without regard to immediate commercial use. Each of ten manufacturing departments has its own research staff and is operated much like a separate company. In addition, the Chemical and Engineering Departments, which are not engaged in manufacturing operations, conduct research in the interests of the Company as a whole. What you want to know about Du Pont and the College Graduate "The Du Pont Company and the College Graduate"—newly revised, fully illustrated—describes opportunities for men and women in research, production, sales and many other fields. Explains how individual ability is recognized and rewarded under the group system of operation. For your free copy, address: 2521 Nemours Building, Wilmington 98, Del. A typical Du Pont research team The new research man has frequent contact with experienced supervisors. Here M. Hayek, Ph.D., Indiana 47, discusses data obtained in an experiment with F. B. Downing, left, a member of research supervision, and M. B. Sturgis, a research group head. Neopron, used in wire, cable and hose jackets, resists abrasion, oil, heat, and sunlight. Neoprene gloves and protective clothing resist deterioration by chemicals, greases and oils Milling and compounding neoprene in the rubber experimental laboratory. may include physicists, chemists chemical and mechanical engineers each of whom brings specialized training to bear on a specific phase of the subject. The man who joins one of these teams finds himself associated with some of the ablest minds in the profession and receives the opportunity and friendly support needed to make fullest use of his capabilities. BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING ... THROUGH CHEMISTRY More facts about Du Pont—Listen to "Cavalcade of America" Monday Night, NBC Coast to Coast