UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ANNOUNCEMENTS Any students desiring appointment to the Naval Academy at Annapolis should see Captain F. E. Jones at Fowler Shops. The orchestra recital announced for Tuesday evening in Fraser Hall will be postponed until Thursday evening. The Plymouth Guild will give a social at the Congregational Church March 20, at eight o'clock. All Congregational students invited. The School of Education will give give a reception for visiting superintendents from 4:30 to 4:45 Friday in the Greek room. Students of the School of Education will be assessed ten cents each. WANT ADS LOST-Gold pen with monogram M engraved on face of it. Return to Kansan office or call K. U. 25 Bell. Ambrosia ice at Wiedemann's- Adv. New Vaudeville Theatre The Big Show The Best Music The Best Pictures The Best Vaudeville TONIGHT BOYLEN! BROS. European Juggling and Hoop-Rolling Novelty STANLEY AND RICE Comedy Singing and Talking Special Scenery Warner's Feature in 3 Parts THE BROKEN BARRIER A Powerful Story 10c Matinee Daily, 2:30 10c Two Shows Each Night 7:45-9:00 10c and 20c Senior Play PROFESSIONAL CARDS REPEATED FOR BENEFIT OF LAWRENCE CHARITIES MARCH 18 Prices 50c and 25c. PROFESSIONAL CARDS W. C. M'COONELL, Physician and Honorary Doctor of Medicine Honor 9342. Residence, 1346 Team. St. Ball 1023. Home 9363. J. F. BROCK, Optometrist and Specialist Office 802 Mass Shrub, Ball phone 605-794-1330. G. A. HAMMAN M. D. D. Eye, ear, and Satisfaction Guaranteed. Dick Building. HARRY REDING. M. D. Eye, ear nose mouth. Phone 813, home 812. Phone, fax 813, home 812. DR. H. W. HAYNE, Oculist, Lawrence, Kansas. J. W. ©'BRYON. Dentist, Over Wilson's Drug Store. Belfast Phone 807. R. J. BECHTEI M. D. L. D. O. B33 Mass- schuesselt Street. Both phones, office and room. G. W. JONBS, A. M. M. D. Díazes of 1856 M.D., Ph.D., Haskell, Residence, 1936, M.P.H., Rockefeller University. Bldg. Residence 1300 Teen. Phones 211. DR. H. R. Office once squires Studio. Both phones. DR. BURT R. WHITE Osposath. Phones. Blvd Home 327. Faxes. 748. Mass 652. W. D. Percorns, Engineer, Webbismaker and Jeweler, Mannonia and Jewelry. Bail Phone Number: (312) 678-4500. Phase Kenseth Plumbing Co. lot, grade 4 and Maida lamps. 877-620-3150 CLASSIFIED Plumbers Patron reasonable, work the best. Let us have you. **Bob & Dou** or **Bob & Dou** assigned. 450 W. 23rd St. Ladies Tailors MR. BELLISON, Dressmaker and Lodge tailoring. Brought guests a spectacle, 100% silky cotton. 50% polyester. Kyngman Searling School. Leslie's 'Independent' School. 864-932-7000. Email: M. O. McMullen 580 www.mcmlen.com; Power: M. O. McMullen 580 www.mcmlen.com Queen City Colleges, System and sewing Queen City College, System and sewing O. M. Mark Browne, $454 KY, Hel Hawthorne, CA class DY95898 haircutting, hairstyling and hair care dryers, shampooing, hair caredecs. "Marc sahui" tag, hairstyling. Rev. copywriting. talking about Dreaming shop. 937 Main St. Barber Shops Go where they all go J. G. HOUK 918 Mose. Student's Cg-up Club. $8.50 to $3.00 1840 KY. Geo. H. Mason Seward. K. U. OFFERS SUMMER COURSE FOR MEDICS University Hospital at Rose dale Will Give Free Week of Sanitary Work Physicians who desire to brush up on their technique, get acquainted with the newest discoveries in medical science, and meet the best men of their profession in the state will attend the fourth annual summer school for physicians and health officers from across the state. June 8-14. The course will be offered free of charge to licensed Kansas physicians. Mornings of the session will be devoted to clinics, held in the Bell Memorial hospital which adjoins the college building. Instruction will be given by the attending staff of the hospital and by teachers in the School of Medicine. The afternoons will be given to lectures and laboratory work, mostly of a public nature. The course will combine public sanitation and regular medical subjects and is the first one of its kind ever offered. Some of the most noted sanitarians in the country are employed on the school, and the high personnel of the permanent hospital staff insures an excellent course. Immediately after the summer school, a regular postgraduate course will be offered by the faculty of the School of Medicine of the University of Kansas. These hospitals will be utilized by the faculty in giving this first regular postgradurate training. Bell Memorial Hospital, Rosedale; St. Margaret's Hospital and Bethany Hospitals, Kansas City, Kansas; the General City Hospital and Mercy Hospital, Kansas City, Mo. SUMMER BIOLOGY IS POPULAR Kansas City, Washburn, and K. U Send Delegations on Trip to Washington The popularity of the summer work in biology at Puget Sound is growing, according to Prof. W. J. Harper, author of the zoology department. "About fifteen were in the party that went to the station at Friday Harbor, Washington, last summer and we expect a large increase in the number this year," said Professor Baumgartner today. "There are several high school teachers from different parts of the state who have written that they would go this year. Washburn college will send a party and there will be a party from Kansas City as usual. "We will be offered better accommodations this year than we had last year as the town at the station is rebuilding the electric light plant that burned year before last and there will be a new fresh water plant erected by the time the party arrives." All students who wish to make the trip should see Professor Baum-gartner about expenses and other incidentals of the trip. While in Lawrence this week do not fail to attend the big sale Visiting High School Students Pennants Griggs 827 Mass St. Mail orders filled FINE MILLINERY MRS. MYERS STUBBY'S BUILDING A NEAR ROIT AT ALTA VISTA Students Fight in Assembly Hall and Things Get Warm—Only a Psychology Experiment SPRING SUITINGS You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up your money too, on graduation from high school. You will get ready and you'll secure a good position. Free Employment Bureau at your service. Meet us in your area and best Business Collage. No vacations. Alta Vista, Kan., Mar. 13. The high school was thrown into an uproar of excitement and confusion yesterday morning when two senior boys, Clarence Dierking and Harry Morgan had a fight in chapel. The boys were sitting in the back of the room and were noticed to be bawled to be rewarded. Bowden reprimanded them and asked them to leave their personal troubles out of school. However a few minutes later more hot words were heard and Morgan, losing control of himself jumped to his feet and called Dierking a "liar". Dierking at once lunged at him and Morgan struck him with a stick. He was entrendent and several nearby boys after a brief resistance managed to had separated the combatants and set them outside. FRANK KOCH TAILOR 727 Mass. Consternation reigned supreme in the school room; many girls sobbed, while one of the lady teachers broke down and wept. The boys were stupidified although most of them wanted to hush it up as quickly as possible both for the sake of the boys that were in it and for the school's sake. BUSINESS COLLEGE Lawrence, Kansas The secret of the whole affair leaked out this morning when Dierking and Morgan walked into the assembly room with their arms around each other and grinning at the school. Superintendent Bowden then explained that the fight was only one biological experiment by the senior class and two members of the faculty on the remainder of the school. The experiment was to see a three-fold purpose. First to see how a crowd would act in case of trouble or fire; second, to see how the students saw it. The English classes today wrote the story of the fight and no two were exactly alike in the details. The student who wrote "Oma Dame Gossip" would travel. Many of the stories in circulation by night were ridiculous. The entire school had the grouch yesterday. The boys are both well liked, point winners on the track team, an dall felt that this outbreak meant they would be expelled. Their boy friends extended sympathy and pleaded with them to let it drop on the field. But when the question might be, the students all admitted that they were badly "sold" but today has indeed been like sunshine after rain and everyone is wearing a relieved look. COUNCIL SAYS KANSAN EDITOR IS NOW OUSTED (Continued from page 1.) should be stopped. Hansen said that the students had no more business electing the editor of the Kansan than the people of Lawrence would have electing the editor of one of the down town papers. Malcolm wanted to know why the Kansan says it is the "official student paper." Another member volunteered the information that it has been declared "official" by the University Council just as one of the city papers is made the "official city paper." Evans stated that he would support the motion since nothing better had been offered. Holloway said that the passage of the motion would check the entire matter up to the Board of Administration. KANSAS 'CORNO' MAY SHORTEN PIE CRUSTS "It has been stated that we can get 2000 students in school to support this motion," Coggins stated. "Over in the Engineering School I doubt if anyone could get twenty-five names. I think we ought to vote as the fellows who elected us believe on the matter." Before the Daily Kansas matter came up for discussion a motion to throw open the doors of the Council and make further meetings public, was carried. Madden introduced the motion which was seconded by HqT at 10:45 a.m. He present at the Union and heard the discussion from that time on. Another motion, asking the Board to provide bulletin boards on the various approaches to Mount Oread was passed unanimously. Carson introduced the resolution, Madden seconded. "Corno" is the name the students in the chemistry department of the University of Kansas have applied to the new food compounds of corn oil that Dean L. E. Sayre and his assistants have prepared to take the place of lard and the cottonseed oil shortening mixtures. "Corno" is made from the oil of the maize grain, which is an important by product in corn products and other products. Until the discovery of its food value by experts at the University it practically was wasted. Professor Sayre has a bakery in St. Louis experimenting with corn oil as a shortener, and expects to make arrangements with Lawrence bakers to test out "corn." The corn is compounded so that sugar must to make a digestible shortening, that is at the same time palatable. Corn Oil Product Discovered By K. U. Chemists Tried Out in Bakeries "Lard is hard for many persons to digest," said Professor Sayre, "and a palatable substitute which is at the same time cheap, has long been sought. Cottonseed and palm oil products are used more and more every year, and I have no doubt but that our experiments here will lead to the manufacture of a similar product made from the oil of corn. The motion passed when voted on on Wednesday and ended in his resignation to the Council. The Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority has announced April 24 as the date of its annual spring party. The Acacia fraternity pledged Lee Trese of Centerville Tuesday evening. "If we find that corn oil and suet will fuse to form a digestible cooking grease, the value of the corn as a mill product will be increased. It will not be milled for the oil alone, however, although improved processes of manufacture may result in an increased yield of oil. Kid glove cleaner, the best ever, at Barber's Drug Store -- Adv. “At present we are using a corn oil cooking compound in my home. We find the shortening qualities of the best blend better and the indigestibility less.” "If a variety of corn could be evolved richer in oil than the ordinary kinds, the corn oil industry would of course receive a popular. At present, however, it is only a by-product, though a profitable one." Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. We make frames. Squires Studio. Adv. Reception sticks, all colors, at Wiedemann's.-Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. But Five Dollars Contributed Since Last Report of Committee— Will Be Clock Collections on the junior memorial fund are coming in slowly. But five dollars have been collected since the last report. The amount in the treasury at this time is close to $115. Harold Mattoon, chairman of the memorial committee, said that the collections so far had been much better among the women than among the men students. Two girls were invited to the museum from all of the girls to whom they were assigned with the exception of two or three in each case. The junior memorial will probably be a clock. To get the kind desired the class must raise $400 before next year. Prof. Putnam Back on Hill Prof. George E. Putnam, who has been ill at his home for the past two days, was able to resume his work in the department of economics this morning. Don't leave your group pictures lay around. Have them framed at Squires Studio—Adv. Green gauge ice at Wiedemann's Adv. Send the Daily Kansan home. FACULTY MEMBERS WRITE K. U. Men Contribute Chapters to Book By Former Dean Four faculty members of the University of Kansas have contributed chapters to a pedagogical book, "The Modern High School," edited by Dr. Charles Hughes Johnson, formerly Dean of the K. U. School of Education. Each contributor was chosen, as Doctor Johnson says, "because he is an acknowledged expert in his own field." Foster to Act as Judge The Rev. Stanton Olinger, principal of Westminster Hall, has a chapter on "The School's Co-operative Agencies." Homer Josselyn, associate professor of School Administration, contributed two chapters, one on "The High School as a Business Enterprise," and another on the High School to the Elementary School." Dr. James Naismith, professor of physical education, tells "High School Athletics and Gymnastics as an Expression of the Corporate Life of the School." Prof. Merle in the department of journalism has a chapter on "High School Journalism." Butter cups to be good must be fresh—our's are. Wiedemann's.— Adv. Registrar Geo. O. Foster will go to Topeka Thursday night to act as a judge in a debate between Washburnia and the University of Ottawa. MILLINERY Misses Ware & Charlton A nice display of Patterns on and after Thursday, March 19 833 Mass. St. MILLINERY OPENING Thursday and Friday at Miss Wolters Thirty Graduates from K. U. will tell the stories of their lives. These stories are appearing in the University Daily Kansan. Phone or mail your subscription to the University Daily Kansan Lawrence, Kansas