SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1937 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN X PAGE THREE X Magazine Has Anniversary (3) 4d Articles of 25 Year Growth in October Number The October 1927 issue of the Kansan Graduate Magazine carries a special section celebrating 25 years of the alpent magnificent now published in America the Graduate Magazine ranks shortest in point of nature. To Prof. Olm Templein, 86, professor of philosophy at the time goes the credit for launching the Graduate Magazine. Pref. R, R. O'Derry, 95, of the department of English, was the first editor. In this number his article, *A Summary of the First Edition* appears. "Developing the Magazine by Trial and Perfection," Prof. L. N. Flieth, 75°, now chairman of the department of Journalism. He was the first executive secretary of the magazine. Mes Mignes Thompson guided the Graduate Magazine Drought a most trying period—the World war time. She recorded the war activities of the alumn. This was no easy task as she were thinking in terms of war. The article in this month's issue concerning the foundation of the Kantian movement, a declaration of determination of the people despite the discouragement and lack of fund for its construction. Former Student Weds Newspaperman in Paris The marriage of Bath Constance Ingalls, A. B., 32, of Atchison, to Russell Barrows of Huntington Lak, took place Saturday, Oct. 1, at 1 a.m. in Paris, France. In second service proceeded the religious service preceded the religious ceremony, which took place at Holy Trinity Emblematic parish in Paris. The birds and greens are spending the honeymoon by a Astier Tyler roll on home made massage table, and at Lake Lizardo, Switzerland. They will be at home in Paris after Mes. Burmes during her career in the University, was a number of Kampong Cham members of the Jay Danes, president of the women's pan-Hellenic coalition and member of the Council on Human Rights. Mr. Barron was graduated from the University of Michigan in 1920. He is Paris correspondent for the Decennial World War II Conference of the Fifth Othello Teeth fraternity, England, Wales Report Decreasing Birth Rate London, Oct. 8- England is still suffering from a dear of births. The actual number of births in England and Wales last year was in excess of one million, but the population was only half its present magnitude, according to statistics just issued by the Registrar-General for the year 1925. The rate of 178 births per thousand in the lowest years of the war, except during the years of the war. This reduction in births is compensated only to a small extent by the low general rate of 14.2 per cent of live births and the mortality rate of 70 per thousand. The Botany Club held its annual picnic and initiation Wednesday evening at Walnut grove, "Five new members were taken into the club." Botany Club Holds Picnic for Five New Member The personnel of the club is made up of students who have completed a course in nursing, surgery, and who are enrolled in additional hours. The initiation has evening were required to construct one plant from five and give it a fitting root. Send the Daily Kansan home. RENT-A-FORD CO. 916 Mass. Phone 653 Appreciate Your Business Corona Typewriters Sale or Rent F. I. Carter 1025 Mass. Phone 1051 DR. H. H. LEWIS Optometrist Practice limited to examination of Dyes without dilating, and Fitting of Glasses. 801 Mass. St. Phone 912 (Over Bound Corner Drug Store) Doctor Moore to Attend Paleontologist Meeting Dr. Raymond C. Moore, state geologist and professor of paleontology, will participate in a southwestern panel at Fort Worth, Texas, Oct. 28 held in Fort Worth, Texas, Oct. 28. Fort Worth Geological Society, the Fort Worth Section of the Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, and Texas Christian University. The plans for the meeting, as outlived call for two days of field work and an evening session. Doctor Moore and B. R. Prummer will be joined by the Pennsylvania formations of North Texas. The Southwestern Paleontological meeting is being held in Fort Worth on May 8th. The members of the new society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists for paleontological field work are expected to attend meetings which have been held in the last few years in the Southwest. Kansas Economists Here Next Week-end for Annual Meeting Faculty of School of Business to Give Dinner Honoring Instructors The annual meeting of Kansas economics and business school instructors will be held at the University on the afternoon and evening of Oct. 14 and on the morning of Oct. 15. The program on the first day will begin Papers will be presented on accounting courses and curricula by Assistant Professor Leslie T. Tuppy, of the University School of Business, for a lecture by R. M. Green, professor of agricultural economics, of the Kansas State Agricultural College. In the evening at 5:30 a complimentary dinner will be given to visiting instructors from the faculty of the School of Business. On the morning of Oct. 15, beginning at 9:30, the program will consist of a discussion of the extent to which the School's curriculum is treated in the various courses relating to finance, production, marketing and personnel. Jean A. B., Adama, of the School of Business, University of Texas at Austin, will present for this session the conference. The first conference of this character was held at the University in the spring of 1926. At that time it was decided that it would be well to hold the confrence thereafter in the fall and was held at the Kansas State Agricultural College in October, 1926. According to the present program our eyes straighten without the use of eyelid tape. We fit We fit and recommend only six qualifying tests. Dr. F. A. 737 Mass. Newcomb Lawrence, Kan Sandwiches Chili Home Made Pies Hot Pork Sandwiches Short Orders GEORGE'S LUNCH the conference will meet one year at the University and the next at the Agricultural College. Savings have a way of disappearing when least expected. But Old Age Endowment insurance can be expedited upon to bring you a monthly check when you reach the point where you want to spend the days with your feet in the air and your head in a good book. Solid Comfort in your old age Invitations to attend the meeting this fall have been extended to all teachers of economics, business and administration, all students at all four-year colleges and junior colleges in the state, as well as the instructors in these subjects at the junior college institutions. The twenty representatives of other institutions are expected. Prof. J, W. Twente's class in business administration of schools visited Orland high school for the purpose of interviewing students and evaluating the school program. They suggested a number of changes to increase the efficiency of the program. Want Ads Prof. George M. Beal of the School of Engineering and Architecture, is to be awarded a diploma from the Fontainebleau School of Fine Arts, Fontainebleau, France, according to a letter from the executives of that institution. Ordinarily the Fontainebleau school does not grant diplomas except for three months work, but in the two summer he completed enough work to make him eligible to the lists of those receiving diplomas. The professor Benal was advised of the granting of the di diploma after he wore from officials of the school. Beal to Receive Diploma From French Art School Class Visita Oread High LOST—“Lo Positivo” Wednesday on return to Kansan office FOR RENT - Room 1 man, new modern Dick at 75, afternoons LOST--Alpha Sigma I Library and Primer graved on back. Red red. gold with seven diamant H, M, H, on back of k H, Marboson, 1101 M hward. Be of the a big trim Provident Mutua Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia Press and发行 Olin K. Fearing Telephone 1614 Albert H. Fearing Telephone 1674 Black Special Agents In ac at 40 WANTED--Boy room mate. New room. Breakfast and dinner if desired. 1501 R. I. Phone 2541 20 Free I LOST- Alpha Camma, Delta pin. Finder please call Rolloe Ewing, 1861. Reward. "77 LOST—On campus, a Kappa key between Ad and Fraser. Finder call Mary Chemy, phone 2399. SOMETHING NEW — "Stay Pot" eliminates need of bait, keeps sooth in trays up, invisible and soft to wear. The new wanted. Box 81, Lawrence, Kansas. FOR RENT—Nicely furnished apartment. Also fine darning, repairing, alterations, cleaning and pressing. 1321 Vermont. LOST—Pair black horn rim spectacles. Finder please return to Kannan business office. FOR RENT: Furnished rooms for girls at 1231 Louisiana. Formerly Waukaita House. Board if desired. Phone 1879. MARCELLING, finger waving, water waving; 50 first 4 days of week; Friday and Saturday. Shannon- pology, 105. Kentucky, phone 2775. FOR RENT - two room apartment, $25. Double room, nicely furnished, $15. House bills paid. Call at 1017 New Hampshire. FRESH APPLE cider for sale. 810 Parkn. Phone 335. 45 LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. Ex DR. FLORENCE BARROWS One Dollar Is all that it takes to have that suit Cleaned and Pressed. Send it along with your laundry bundle and keep looking your best all the time Lawrence Steam Laundry 10th & New Hampshire Phone: 383 We clean everything you wear but your shoes THE MAGAZINE SECTION OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN for October 9, 1927 Huck Finn's Successor Three Students Journey Down Mississippi Huck Finn's modern prototypes have been found in the persons of Leonardo Gregory, A. B. 27, B. Winegar Crawl, A. B. 25, and James Crow, A. B. 27. Like the hero of Mark Townwalt, Huck Finn searches for adventure—and they are finding it, too, if letters from them are any indication Two of their associates, however, spurned the luxury of a launch and turned back to the methods of Marquette and Joliet. These two, Earl Bellman, gr27; and his brother, Galen, started down the Father of Waters in a canoe. They paddled and fed safely down the Missouri and entered the Mississippi. Not far from there, he ventured the entire store of food was lost. Bellman then went to Mea, Ark, where he is a member of the faculty of Commonwealth College. The adventuresome Dows started out early in August in the Skool, as they christened the 30-foot steel speed launch which they purchased for the trip. Paul Porter, c28, and Noel Gist, gr '27, left Lawrence with the team to attend the Festes Y. M. C. A. conference and Gist to teach in the Manual Training High School of Kansas City, Mo. Although the boat was built for speed and is equipped with a 60 horse-power motor, the crew is making no effort to hurry. The Skool is outfitted with built-in lockers, one compartment of which is a library filled with books appropriate for a leisurely outing. Other compartments feature text, cooking equipment, a fishing outfit, a rifle, fold glasses, a typewriter and a camera. With the "Mississipply" channel marked out for navigation, sandbars have caused no trouble. Leonard Gregory reports. Wakes of big stormers are another story. Above Cape Storm, the Shallm met a large stormer full speed. It hit some of the waves, but emerged safely. At Thebes, the next day, another steamer was met in a narrow channel. "We were between him and a rock bluff," writes Gregory, "and when we were alongside, bearing toward shore, we noticed his waves breaking on a rooftop. We knew he might take the worst of his wake. The waves hit the bluff and bounced back, piling up on all sides irregularly. "The Skool did a nose dive into a monster that rolled over the top of my head and back into the boat. As soon as I got enough water out of my eyes to discover that we were still afloat, and bigger wave was on me. The bow was out of sight. The Skool lurched sidewise under the impact of a roller hitting broadside. "This was getting a little too much for enjoyable sport. The second time we came to the surface, we had time only to blink once before seeing a third wave starting in front of me. I saw an ocean plunge and I felt sure that the next land we touched would be the bottom of the river. But the Skool came up again, with less buoyancy, it is true, and with the motor still running, the water was not as strong. The water was just I drew was instead my gift." Johnize Says ... "Thank the Lord for the law of supply and demand. We don't even have to enforce it." "The delicate lines of a Ford are more beautiful than the lines of a Cadillac." "The farmer is leaving the farm and going to the city—at the rate of one million in the last seven years—but they're not going fast enough." "Everytime we take the car out of the garage, it is costing us the same as if we took three dollars out of our pocket and dropped it into a machine." "If you want to get a test of women's clothing, look at anything at least ten years old—anything." "Savages run to jewelry mostly, and as we get civilized, we'll go along more and more without it. Now we can't even get engaged without it." "French farmers are ingogeneous for using cows instead of horses." "As soon as we find perpetual motion, we will have heaven—and have no more need for power." "I trust that I will not be accused of bad pedagogy, because I do not say, 'Now, Charlie, what does the book say about so and so.' That means that I am in school; still it even a waste of time when me." Kansas of the Yesteryear Continued from Page 1 Column 3 roof was a veritable garden of gay flowers. The seed for this queer garden had been carved out. The young man's inquiry for his college mate was satisfactorily answered. He was building a house on another quarter only two miles away. The road? There wasn't any, "Just ride two miles to the west. You can't get there." It's the only house to the west in ten miles." So the weary and uncertain tenderfoot mounted his horse and rode on. After some time he fairly stumbled on to two men, each pulling alternately the handle of a curious long saw, the like of which he had never seen in all his Bottonian day dresses, faces, and even regular bricks of stone fell into a pile ready for use in the construction of the house. The Bostonian waited a few moments unnoticed, then said rather timidly, "I am seek- The boys and girls of those days were brown faced, too, tending the sheep, shearing the corn, digging out prairie dogs, or hunting pollywogs in the rain-filled buffalo wallows. A resounding clap on his shoulder nearly staggered the young man and "So you don't know me!" came with the same welcoming laugh that had won to him his spindle, spilling college chum, made the Bostonian at home in Kansas. Such was the life of Kansas of the yester-year. We Are All Animals Still PAGE THREE It is not necessary to visit a zoo in order to see the various varieties of animals. They can be found along the highways and byways of human life. Who of you has not heard your neighbor say "You know Mrs. So and So is as slay as a fox. I tell you, she's a snake in the grass. This is not a fox. Surely, this neighbor must have been a cat. And we hear, "Well, I don't like her. She's as big as a hippopotamus but she won't diet. And look at her hair, it's just like a shepherd cut it off from the husband of hers looks like a starved pup." From the reviewers' stand at any bathing beach, oh, the resemblance between those who would acquire a coat of tan, and the seals which lazily sleep on the sand. Speaking of monkeys—We have them both in actions and books. One is almost tempted to say, "Darwin's right," when he sees the popcorn eating, street car driving dandans, who look very much like monkeys as they end and clip their food, and bibble incassably. So, as you飞 flair along like a butterfly, sip your tea on a n bee sips honey, and at last stumble over a brick "like a cow" you have animals we have known. much like some animals we have known. Just for fun, let's pretend it was a deer! Newcomer's Idea of America Piare Dail, a Hindu from North India, has been in Lawrence but a few weeks, and he finds it very different even from Berkeley, where he were enrolling before he came to North India. He is from North India have been accepted here and he is a junior in the School of Business. He is sent here by the state in which he lives and will later attend school in England. According to Piare Dail customs, manners and ideas of Indian society are quite outside of Kanartha, India, are very strange. The educational system over there, as he says, is quite different from that here in America. The semester system does not exist in Purjub University and all the courses taught there are written examinations of the English system. Shot Guns are unknown and look puzzling to him. "One cannot find the ability of a student in ten minutes," he said frowning. "Teachers are not the examiners," he pointed out, "and the examination board will examine Examining Board under strict supervision." Of other things Mr. Dial is skeptical. He is unable to understand the frittitude of girls in this country. "Ditocres are surprise," he says. "In India the bond of marriage is very rigid and the system of conducting marriages is quite different. In selecting a bride her status in society is always kept in view." Piare Dall蔡哲命 a spirit of youth and friendly relationship, he made an protocol of the fact that he was locomotive and had a great meet and know people. He spoke proudly of his native customs and particularly of his native dress. He mentioned the dress because he seems to dislike the American clothes. A directing knife makes a frog croak—just once.