--- SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1927 X PAGE THREE 7 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Magazine Has Anniversary o Articles of 25 Year Growth n October Number 1 The October 1927 issue of the Kansas Graduate Magazine carries a special section celebrating 25 years of its publication. The alumni magazines now published in America the Graduate Magazine ranks thirdth in point of interest. To Prof. Olu Templa, 96, prof excellence of philosophy at the time goes the credit for launching the Graduate Magazine. Prof. R, R. O'Larry, 93, of the department of English, was the first editor. In this number his article, *A History of the First Edition*, annegaro. "Developing the Magazine by Trial at Proof," he wrote with Prof. B. Fisk, 21st, new chair of the department of journalism. He was the first executive secretary of the magazine. Mix Aries Thompson guided the Graduates Magazine through a most trying period—the World war time. She recorded the war activities of the time. This was no easy task, as people were thinking in terms of war. The articles in this month's issue, concerning the founding of the Kansai University, detail determination of the people deputy commissioners and that detect the initial attempts. Former Student Weds Newspaperman in Paris The marriage of Rath Constance Ingola, A. B., 23, of Atticon, to Russell Burress of Huntington, Ind., took place Saturday, Oct. 1, at 11 a.m. in Paris, France. In record minutes, the French lace, a cloth marmor service, was presented by a ceremony, which took place at Holy Trinity Episcopal cathedral in Paris. The birds and gardens are spending some honeycomb in the Australian Tartar vineyard, at Lake Lennoah, Switzerland, they will be at home in Paris after Mrs. Burmese during her career in the University, was a member of Kankan College and a member of the Jay Founder, president of the women's parochial council and minister of education. Mr. Barries was graduated from the University of Michigan in 1920. He is Portia correspondent for the Dept. of Defense and Pill Delta Thats friendship, England, Wales Report Decreasing Birth Rate (Source: Statistics Bureau) London, Ontario is still a suffering from a dearth of babies. The actual number of births in England and Wales last year was as small as in the year 1860 when the population reached its maximum magnitude, according to statistics just issued by the Registrar-General for the year 1928. The rate of 175 births per thousand is the lowest since 1920, except during the years of the war. This reduction in birds is compensated only to a small extent by the gene sequenced density rate of 11.7 per million birds and the mortality rate of 70 per thousand. Botany Club Holds Picnic for Five New Members The personnel of the club is made up of students who have completed their studies and are ready to work any, and who are enrolled in additional hours. The initiates last evening were required to construct a plant from five and give it a fitting name. The Botany Club held its annual plenic and initiation Wednesday evening at Walnut grove. Five new members were taken into the club. 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 Practices limited to examination of Dresses without dilating, and Fitting of Clothes. 801 Mass, St. Phone 912 (Over Round Corner Drug Store) Doctor Moore to Attend Paleontologist Meeting Dr. Raymond C. Moore, state geologist and professor of paleontology, will participate in a northeastern pier expedition to the area where fossils held in Fort Worth, Texas, Oct. 28 and 20, under the管理局 of the Fort Worth Section of the Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, and Texas Christian University. The plans for the meeting, as outlined call for two days of field work and an evening session, Doctor Moore will visit which will be made to the Pennsylvania formations of North Texas. The Southern Western Paleontological meeting in being held this week will include a special request of the members of the new society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists for paleontological field work. There are four 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 Instructors The annual meeting of Kansas economies 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 meeting on the first day will begin at 1:30. Papers will be presented on accounting courses and curricula by Assistant Professor Leslie T. Tump, of the University School of Business, and Assistant Professor Larry Culb算 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 business cycles should be managed to finance, production, marketing and personnel. *Bean A. B. Adams*, of the School of Business, University of Chicago, will present for this session of 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 conference thereafter in the fall, and the student college was held at the Kansas State Agricultural College in October, 1926 According to the present program Cross eyes straight- corn without the use of mastoidectomy. We fit and recommend only 1 rest position. Newcomb Lawrence, Kan. Sandwiches Chili Home Made Pies Hot Pork Sandwiches Short Orders GEORGE'S LUNCH Savings have a way of disappearing when least expected. But Old Age Endowment insurance can be depended 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 Provident Mutua Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia Furnace 1801 K. Fearing Telephone 1634 Albert H. Fearing Telephone 1674 Black Special Agenta the conference will meet one year at the University and the next at the Agricultural College. Invitations to attend the meeting this fall have been extended to all teachers of economics, business management, foreignyear colleges and junior colleges in the state, as well as the instructors in these subjects at the junior college of Kannau City. About fifteen or more of other institutions are expected. Prof. George M. Reil 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 list compiled by the executive of that institution. use to Receive Diploma From French Art School LOST—Alpha Phi Alpha pin, White gold with seven diamonds. Initialis- tion M. H. on back of p... B... C... M. H. Hartson, 1101 **l**. ward. Prof. J. W. Twente's class in business administration of schools visited Great high school for the purpose of teaching and evaluating the school program. They suggested a number of changes to increase the efficiency of the schools. Ordinarily the Fontainebleau school does not grant diplomas except for three months work, but in the two years after graduation the summer he completed enough work to make him eligible to the lists of those receiving diplomas. Professor Bent was advised of the granting of thediploma during his last week from officials of the school. Want Ads Class Visits Oread High LOST—"La Positive" Wednesday on return to Kanan office We ca Our La FOR RENT - Room 1 man, new modern Dick at 75, afternoons Free B LOST - Alpha Sigma Library and Friuser granted on back. Rew vd. Be on the J a big trim In ad at 40 LOST—Alpha Gamma Delta pin. Finder please call Relene Ewing. 1601, Reward. 27 WANTED-Hoy room mate. Nice room. Breakfast and dinner if desired. 1501 R. I. Phone 2541 20 SOMETHING NEW "Stay Put" eliminates needs of hea, keeps娃 in trays, invails in invisible clothes wanted. 书 81, Lawrence, Kansas. LOST—On campus, a Kappa key beween Ad and Fraser. Finder call Mary Chemy, phone 2399. FRESH APPLE cider for sale. 810 Pown. Phone 335. 45 FOR RENT--Nicely furnished apartment. Also fine darning, repairing, alternations, cleaning and pressing. 1321 Vermont. MARCELLING, finger waving, water waving; 50e first 4 days of week; 7s Friday and Saturday. Shamoon- phone 2775. year 1915 Kentucky, phone 2775. LOST—Pair black horn rim spe- tacles. Finder please return to Kansan business office. FOR RENT: Furnished rooms for girl at 1231 Loubiana, Formerly Waukantia House. Board if desired. Phone 1875. FOR RENT - 2-room apartment, $25. Double room, nicely furnished, $15. House bills paid. Call at 1017 New Hampshire. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Gloss Exclusively 1025 Mars, --all the time DE. FLORENC BARBROWS Outpatient Physician, Calls answered, Drew Barber's Drug, Phone 2387 Is all that it takes to have that suit Cleaned and Pressed. Send it along with your laundry bundle and keep looking your best One Dollar Lawrence Steam Laundry 10th & New Hampshire Phone: 383 We clean everything you wear but your shoes What Is Good Drycleaning? How should your dress THE KANSAN MAGAZINE SECTION OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Volume XXV . Lawrence, Kansas. Sunday. October 9. 1927 Two Writers Are One Man Laminar 2.5 M The serial printing of the biography of Woodrow Wilson in some of the publications commonly seen on the tables in our homes, by John S. Ray Shankman Barker, into the public notice. Ray Stannard Baker is a successful writer and a clear-sighted man of affair. However, he has a pseudonym under which much of his work has appeared. This pen-name is David Grayson. Baker as Baker is a scholar, but as Grayson, he is a poet and a dreamer. AUDITORIUM ENTRANCE Ray Stanford Baker, Wilson Biographer, and David Geyon, Nature Lover and Dreamer, Are Same Person; Both Personalities Have High Ideals As a youth, he had visions, vague and buoyant, and he sought means of giving expression to them. In the city he found the problems and contacts that made himself, Ray Baker, the publicist, known as a student of industrial and political problems. His work as press representative to the Paris Peace Conference brought him into special prominence. Then followed his book *The Forgotten War*, Woodrow Wilson some time ago turned over all of the former president's state papers and letters to Baker and authorized him to write the life story of Wilson. Thus, Ray Baker is known as a recorder of history, and the most obvious Baker. Baker lives in Amherst, Mass., but he is a world ranger; he knows a great many people and is on terms of intimacy with many famous persons. Returning to the life of Baker as a young man in Chicago, we find him writing stories. He loved to invent characters drawn from his wide circle of acquaintances and place them in unusual situations and then see what would become of them. He sent some of these stories to various magazines and one day he received a call from the editor of "McClure's" magazine, who asked him to be the editor of the magazine and keep writing all the time. He was sent around the world and he wrote "fact stories" on big subjects. This was Ray Stanton. On those same Chicago streets when Baker was meeting the world and its ways, the imaginative turn of his mind was working and he was finding ways to be able to treat that the David Gawker later, While Baker was on his big travels, David Grayson came into being. Baker began to tie of the feverish hurry of New York and of globe-trotting; he needed rest. His life ceased to satisfy him. He had a sense of being too tired. He could spend much time with nature study; he made long trampies over the hills and fields and countrysides. He kept many notebooks in which he recorded ideas, impressions, verbal pictures and adventures. At this time he also became interested in gardening and fruit growing. "One can think in a garden," wrote the nature-lover. Then he began to shape these notes into stories and the writing gave him a sense of release and joy. Here was the true David Grayson. In 1966, Baker with William Allen White and several other accomplished writers started the American Magazine. When they needed more copy, Baker, after some hesitation, sent in his nature observations and adventures revised. These articles were entirely different from what Baker had been contributing to periodicals and he was doubtful as to the outcome. He also didn't know that the secret remained his own for ten years. In a world which was tiring of sensational writing, David Grayson's articles on the simple things of nature received a warm welcome. Finally, when impostors of the name, David Grayson, appeared, the actual facts as to who Grayson really was were made known. Grayson's writings appeal to human beings because he sounds a note of humanity, of simplicity, of faith in mankind. He emphasizes an optimistic philosophic of living. "Ihappiness," Grayson wrote, "is nearly a rebound from hard work." Grayson believes that happiness is not to be found in palaces but rather it is to be found lurking in cornfields and factories and over littered desks. Number 25 This is a sketch in brief form of the double character, Ray Stannard Baker and David Grayson. In either role, however, the man who plays the teacher is the Baker is the thinker, the scholar, the dealer of political warms, the practical expositor of worldly affairs. But Baker as Grayson is the sage, the philosopher, the dreamer, the common human being who enjoys living a useful life. Kansas of the Yesteryear There Were Roaming Buffalo and Many Brown-faced Children in the State During the Early Years of the University; Telephones Only an Image When Kansas was still a husky young state, her western arceau was largely given over to cattle and sheep. The ranchmen were neighbors though their homes were twelve or even twenty miles apart, and twelve or twenty miles apart, not what twelve or twenty miles are today. Even at so early a date in Kansas history, the University of Kansas was in evidence and Mount Oread had sent out several groups of young people who had been proud to wear the cap and gown. But in the west the buffalo had not wholly deserted the prairies, the drowsing of the past year in the morning, and a few deer would sometimes run gracefully each of the rumbling, intruding, slow-moving farm wagon which was the ranchman's only mode of transportation other than his own two feet or the saddle horse. The ranchman, himself, booted and spurred, usually rode a chosen steel, lite and swift, and "cattle trailed" into the grassland also "cattle-trained," but harassed and broken from the wild herds driven up from Texas. The telephone had been heard of but had not come into common use. The automobile and the air craft had not entered the vision of practical man in even his most visionary The ranches were not large in acreage of owned land, but government land was open on every side. A ranchman needed to own only a few squares out of the range. With an outlet to the, as well, unhomesteaded government quarters, he could range to indefinite distances with little exposure except the wage of the border rancher, and he would have to month and "keep." To the herder of cattle he furnished a horse, to the boy with the sheep a dog only, though coyotes and gray wolves were plentiful and ravaged the borders of the land where they are not alert to the protection of his charge. In those days, a man was a man though he were groomed in the dajin jumper and overalla. Harvard graduates and Yale men became men whose hair was held with their hands beside men of sterm oil molds. A Harvard man once sought a college classmate. He had ridden an entire morning over a seemingly endless road. At the first house he rented, a beautiful room on the usual one room of early Kansas, and was built of native lime stone. Its windows, tiny square affairs, were open to the sunlight and fresh air. Its home-made doors and windows were unlatched by any one who brought entrance. Its low dirt Continued on Page 3 Column 2