TUESDAY, APRIL 7, 1942 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE SEVEN nral- Won't dnes- nt of ent to of her one's Mrs. a box as are inter- that is s the e ar- light milad uce. A glives. f the nurest d of- sci- cally ex- tis bis ang to bittles. oubt- so the with to be blue o the rating Then white s un- prob- proce pro- Draft Board to Aid University Students University students who desire assistance in filling out their selective service questionnaires for the third selective service registration, which are being mailed this week by the Douglas county draft board, should confer with Laurence Woodruff, assistant registrar, at the registrar's office, it was announced today. At the same time, the local draft board has announced that it will maintain an advisory board at the community building each weekday, between the hours of ten and twelve in the morning, two and four in the afternoons, and seven and eight o'clock in the evenings. This service will be available for University men who have registered. The University selective service committee consists of Dr. R. Q, Brewster, chairman; Dr. Forrest C. Allen; V. P. Hessler; C. W. Asling, and Laurence Woudruff. Farming With Horse Cheaper Los Angeles, Cal. — (UP) — Farming can be done more cheaply with horses than with tractors, according to the Kellogg Institute of Animal Husbandry. The institute points out that the working life of a horse is longer than that of a tractor, a horse lives off the land and needs no spare parts, and provides fertilizer. CHARLEY'S AUNT--accomplished performance of the evening. Spencer Bayles, as Brassett the butler, gives promise of developing into another Eric Blore. (continued from page one) new vigor by William Kelly. It's hard to decide whether Kelly was giving a dynamic interpretation of a nottoo-unusual fellow or was merely "hamming." In either case, he was competent and could be depended upon to put over a scene with a minimum of ear-strain for the audience. Give him 20 years and he may turn out to be a second-rate Clark Gable. Dean Ostrum, erstwhile journalist, seems to have taken up acting, or a semblance of it, to garner new laurels. In the difficult role of Stephen Spettigue, uncle and guardian of the two young ladies, and ardent wooer of the pseudo-Charley's aunt, Ostrum was a decided scene-stealer. He puffed, raved, and pursued through three acts to force Lord Babberley to share honors with him for a number of laughs. Real Aunt Is Tops As Donna Lucea O'Alvadorez, the real honest-to-gosh aunt, Edith Ann Fleming gave the smoothest and most Robert Hutchinson, portraying Charles Wykeham, the lad who started all the trouble by having an aunt, was properly indecisive and colorless. Colonel Sir Francis Chesney who gets aunt and money in the end, was jauntily, if somewhat jerkly, handled by Ray Helgesen. Betty Rowton did as much as can be expected at Kitty Verdun, Spettigue's ward, and Gloria Goff, as the same gentleman's niece, did a little more. Now a wrigling eel, now a swaying, nodding daftodil, Goff was always in motion with an accent on animation. Dee Ellen Naylor did nothing with a role with which nothing could be done. Fool-Proof Play The play itself is about as foolproof for hearty laughs as a play could be. A perennial favorite since it was first produced in 1892, "Charley's Aunt" is concerned with marrying everyone in the cast to someone else in the cast, with the exceptions of Brassett, the butler, and Stephen Spettigue, frustrated lover of Donna Lucia D'Alvadorez, alias Lord Fancourt Babberley. The play opens with Jack Chesney and Charles Wykeham writing notes to their dearly-beloved Kitty Verdun and Amy Spettigne, inviting them up to their rooms at St. Olde's College in Oxford for lunch. Wykeham's millionaire aunt from Brazil is expected to be present, and when she doesn't appear and the girls won't stay in the men's rooms without a chaperon, Lord Fancourt Babberley, rehearsing for a student play is pressed into service. Throughout the rest of the play, Babberley protestingly pretends to be the aunt, courted by Colonel Chesney and Stephen Spettige for her money, and "she" being tenderly affectionate to the girls. The real aunt appears, the right people get with the right people, and everything ends happily. All Ends Happily Credit should be given the production staff: Allen Crafton, Robert Calderwood, Don Dixon, James Barton, and Jessica Crafton; electrician, Bob Russell; stage, Dick Rice, Roger Whitworth, Harlan Cope; ushers: Barbara Barber; prompter: Alice Hoad; and properties: Jeanne Moyer. Don Dixon did some remarkable scenery-designing, and Robert Calderwood, director, did his usual best. ART STUDENTS---- (continued from page six) and psychological effect upon a person. Green is cold, restful, peaceful; blue is refined and peaceful; yellow is cheerful, light, dainty; and red is vivid and forceful. In apparent size yellow provides the largest effect. Preferences in color are blue in men and red for women and red holds the highest relative attention value for individual colors. Hence, red is used on stop lights with green, third in the attention value scale, occupying the less important position on the "go" light. WANT ADS 675-116 FOR RENT: Two-room cottage ad- joining campus, cemented basement, furnace, oak floors, bath, garage. 1515 W. Campus Rd. Phone 1411-W. Owner lives at 1645 Mass. LOST: Pair of rimless glasses in a dark blue case. Phone 234. New-ell Jenkins. 674-116 LOST: Boys high school ring in First Aid Room, basement of Wattkins Hospital. Letters W. H. S. Return to hospital office. 673-115 Ankles Away—"The Fleet's In" at the Jayhawker Wednesday, 4 Days. One Belle, All's Well—Dorothy Lamour, forsaking her trusty sorang for the role, stars in the gay new Paramount comedy musical, "The Fleet's In," due Wednesday at the Jayhawker theatre. Giving her excellent support are co-stars William Holden and Eddie Bracken. Jimmy Dorsey and his orchestra are featured. CASH PRIZES FOR YOUR SNAPSHOTS At the end of each month, we select from Kodak work brought to us for finishing, outstanding snapshots and reward their owners with cash prizes as follows: First prize, $5; 2nd prize, $3, and 3rd prize, $2. Every print we handle is automatically entered in the monthly selection and the winners are announced in this paper shortly after the first of each month. We are the sale judges and our decisions are final. D'AMBRA PHOTO SERVICE THE WINNERS 1st Prize, $5—W. H. Schoewe, 1002 Tenn. 2nd Prize, $3—H. Penfield Jones, 2240 Vt. 3rd Prize, $2—H. X. Dolen, 1908 Ohio 644 Mass. Phone 034 KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Vicker's Gift Shop 1011 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. for Hummel Prints CARTER'S STATIONERY 1025 Mass. (Opposite Granada Theater) Eaton's Stationery Phone 1051 ROBERTS Jewelry and Gifts for Heisey Crystal 833 Mass. SWOPE SPRING SUITS and DRESSES 943 Mass. New Fiction and Non-Fiction Complete Modern Library Dictionaries Children's Books Rental Library Greeting Cards THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 Marion Rice Dance Studio Private Lessons in Ballroom Dancing 9271/4 Mass. St. Latest Used Phonograph Records — Reasonable JOHNNY'S GRILL 1017½ Mass. Phone 961 TENNIS RACKETS RESTRUNG Bicycles Repaired Lock and Key Service RUTTER'S SHOP 914 Mass. Phone 319 Money Loaned on Valuables Unredeemed Guns, Clothing for Sale WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Phone 675 K. U. 66 TAXI Hunsinger's 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 BURGERT'S Shoe Service 1113 Mass. St. Phone 141 KEELER'S BOOK STORE Phone 33 939 Mass. Webster Collegiate Dictionaries £3.50 Glasses Fitted Eyes Examined Broken Lenses Duplicated NOLL OPTICAL CO. 839½ Mass. Over Royal Shoe Store Res. Ph. 761 Office Phone 979 "It Pays To Look Well" HOTEL ELDRIDGE BARBER SHOP ROCK CHALK 12th & Oread Meals Sandwiches Fountain Service Under Student Management STENOGRAPHIC BUREAU Typing Mimeographing Journalism Building HIXON'S 721 Mass. HEADQUARTERS FOR Cameras & Supplies. Moving Picture Cameras — Projectors For Sale or Rent Expert KODAK FINISHING Expert KODAK FINISHING