UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ANNOUNCEMENTS The Hash House League Commission will meet tonight at 7:30 in the Student Union. Any team desiring new players should be represented. First rehearsal of the Hawk club will be held Thursday night, April 23, in Room 110, Fraser, at seven o'clock sharp. WANT ADS LOST-Last - Thursday at Varsity knife. Call 2628 Bell. LOST-Y - Y, M. C. A. K book, contain- ual data. Vanderbilt. Finder. 2414 Bail. 137-3* LOST—A Chi Omega pin, finden please return to Helen Crane, 1137 Indiana. WANTED - To rent next year, a room for 12 men. Call Bell 2647. 139-3 FOR RENT-Modern twelve room, house, very desirable for club or fraternity. Bell 1823. 138-6 Want a bathing cap? Large ass- sess and fresh goods at Walmart. Drug Store 138-5 If you want something exclusive in stationery. call at Wilson's Drug Store—Adv. 138-5 Our caramel nut ice cream is different from others. Try it. Wiedemann's.-Adv. Remember the Candies at Wilson's Drug Store are kept in a large refrigerate case. Always fresh and the best makes.-Adv. 138-5 Baseball goods and tennis balls at Wilson's Drug Store.-Adv. 138-5 McCOLLLOCH'S Drug Store. 847 Mass. Street THE REXALL STORE. WARWICK Front 3% In, Back 14% In Warranted Linen Barker Collars only at PECKHAMS You Can Earn a Good Living and lay up Some money too on graduating from business college. Enroll at once get ready and you'll secure a good position. Free Employment at your service. Best for the best and best Business College. No vacations. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Sam S. Shubert MAT. WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY Passing Show of 1913 Return Next Week, "Peg o' My Heart" WATKINS NATIONAL BANK Capital $100,000 Surplus and profits $100,000 The Student Depository R. E. Protsch TAILOR Bert Wadham THE COLLEGE BARBER On 14th Street A. G. ALRICH Printing Binding, Copper, Stainless Printing, Bubber, Stamping, Engraving, Steel Die Embossing, Seals, Badges. 744 Mass. Pittsburgh, Kans., April 23—Proe. E. M. Wollank, of the school of languages at the Pittsburgh Normal, who may be the richest school teacher in the United States, will stay in the school room and work in spite of his wealth. Professor Wollank and his son will soon get a $25,000-000 estate in Berlin, according to advises just received by the professor. The estate is that if a great incumbent whose will预估 that it go to the male descentors of the Wollank line comes certain time. The time has expired and the professor and his son, who is a banker at Lehli, La., are the only heirs. WORTH 12 MILLIONS WILL TEACH SCHOOL Prof. Wollank of Pittsburg Normal Will Not Leave Classroom to Spend Fortune The possession of at least twelve and a half million dollars will not mean the retirement of the professor, he asserts. He intends in the school to soon until age retires. He couldn't be happy elsewhere, he says. "I couldn't say that I will not be glad to get it but it won't make any difference in my manner of living. I suppose that I'll have some things I haven't had before but I've always had all a reasonable man could ask. And I want to work as long as I live." Professor Wollank has been at the Normal five years. He is a widower. Read your own KANSAN that dandelion colored Kansan extras—5c buy them in the Kansan office Medic Building Additional instruction and information for fish farmers of Kansas is available in the latest bulletin on fish culture just issued by Prof. L. L. Lyche, state fish and game warden, and curator of birds, fishes and mammals at the University of Kansas. Professor Dyche believes it possible for every farmer in Kansas to cultivate natural ponds on his farm, as he would chickens or hogs, with a little care and attention to improving natural conditions. WOULD HELP FARMERS KANSAS TOWNS MAY RAISE CROP OF FISH MAKE THEIR OWN ICE The bulletin on Pond Fish Culture, in Kansas, which is the latest one published, contains information regarding the habits and environments of the varieties of fish that commonly live in the pond. The pond fish that are especially adapted to domesticity and scientific culture. The fish treated in this bulletin are all native to Kansas, and are of the varieties which experimentation at the state hatcheries at Pike County that most readily respond to artificial care and treatment. They are: large-mouthed black bass, crappie, sunfish, bullhead, German carp, goldfish and minnow; these are commonly used principally as food for the other varieties of carnivorous fish. The vegetation which makes the best pasture for Kansas fish is also determined, and devices for securing a good growth of aquatic vegetation in ponds are presented. Natural enemies that prey on fish, their eggs and young, are fully utilized and methods for their termination set forth. The most important of these are turtles, snakes, bullfrogs, kiffenshires, ospreys, herons, ducks, mudhens, grebes, gulls, terns, muskrats, minks, gophers, crayfish. There also are special articles on various other subjects connected with fish culture and the stocking of private ponds. CARRY SCHOOL TO PEOPLF Prof. L. L. Dyche of K. U. State Game Warden, Issues Bulletin on Pond Culture Pittsburgh State Normal Professors Organize Classes in Nearby Cities Pittsburgh, Kans., April 23—Personal extension work is being organized throughout this section of the state by members of the faculty of the Pittsburgh Normal. Members of the faculty go to cities in this section and conduct classes once every two weeks. In one city there is a class twelve teachers taking the work offered by the Normal. And a large number of teachers come to the Normal on Saturdays for classes. In addition to this class work that has been organized, lecture courses have been arranged and faculty members are furnishing the numbers. Copies of The Yellow Kansan are for sale, five cents each. Get Extra Copies Student Plays Student Dances Student Mixers PAY When they are advertised in the Daily Kansan. 3,000 Students Faculty and Alumni read it every day. League of Kansas Municipalities Will Try to Get Enabling Law From Legislature City ownership of ice plants by towns will be possible if the legislature acts favorably on the proposed recommendation of the league of Kansas Municipalities which meets at the University of Kansas next fall. C. H. Talbot, head of the municipal reference bureau, and secretary of the league of Kansas Municipalities, and the needs of the league in the April number of the National Municipal League Magazine. Attorney General Dawson has ruled that no Kansas city may operate ice plants unless the legislature passes an enabling Threat of last summer when many places suffered severely from lack of ice. Ice manufactured by the city in connection with the water or gas supply to the consumer much less than ice shipped in or privately manufactured. K. U. STUDENTS GET JOBS AS SCHOOL INSTRUCTORS Prof. W. H. Johnson this morning announced the appointment of the following high school teachers: Charles I. Smith, "14, superintendent; Charles E. Smith, "14, superintendent on Onaqa; Patti Sankee, "11, teacher of Latin at Pittsburg; E. C. Bechold, "14, principal of high school at Hoisington. The committee on appointments has been busy filling the requests for teachers and this is only a partial list of those appointed. STUDENTS WORK TO PAY WAY AT STATE SCHOOL Pittsburg, Kan., April 23—Actual trade work now is being done in the machine and blacksmith shops and the foundry at the Pittsburg Normal. And many students study to help their expenses by repair work. One student, who had no money, brought in enough jobs to pay his expenses. ENGINEERS TO GO INTO CAMP AT CLOSE OF YEAR The mining and civil engineers will go into summer camp as soon as possible after the final examinations. The plans are to make a typical survey of the Robinson Estate, giving special attention to drainage. K. U. Calendar Thursday. 7:00 Amer. Soc. Mech. Eng., (1607 Tenn.) 7:30 Civil Engineering Society, (Marvin.) 8:15 Graduating Piano Recital Miss Morin, (Chapel.) Friday. 11:00 Assembly. 4:00 Economics 'Lecture. Mr. J. W. Cable of Kansas State Utilities Commission. "What Should Be Done with the Local Public Utility?" (Snow Lecture Room.) Saturday 1:30 Outdoor Interclass meet (Mc- Cook.) 8:15 Spanish Play, (Robinson Gymnasium.) 4:00 Haskell Institute Gospel Team. (Myers Hall.) Sunday May 1—Nebraska-Kansas dual track meet, McCook. May 2—Eleventh Annual Interscholastic track meet, McCook. May 1-2—Seventh Interscholastic tennis tournament, McCook. May 6-7—Baseball, Missouri at Lawrence. May 8-10—A. C.-K. U. dual track meet at Manhattan. May 14-15-Baseball, Missouri at Columbia. May 16—M. U.-K. U. dual track meet at Columbia. May 21-22-Baseball, Ames at Ames, Iowa. May 23-Advanced invitation H. S. meet at Lawrence. May 27-28-Baseball, K. S. A. C. at Manhattan. May 29-Baseball, St. Marys at St. Marys. May 30-Missouri Valley track meet at St Louis. June6-Western Conference track meet at Chicago. *Future Events* April 1—M. U.-K. U. debate (Fra.) May 1—M.“Pinafore” University campus. May 1—Interscholastic High School Debating League. May 5-7—Merchants’ Week. May 11-14—Kansas Newspaper Week State and National Newspaper Conference. New Parasols for Summer Price $1.00 to $25.00 The new Parasols are wonderfully clever. The shapes are all new—Tango, Palm Beach, Minaret and Arcadia. Materials are linen, pongee, messaline, chiffon and moire. Weaver's K. U. FINDS OUT HOW CHILD'S MIND WORKS Experiments on Rats, Chickencs, Children and Adults Reveal Mental Processes How we learn a task, how children learn to think, and how animals learn "tricks," is the subject of a comparative study of psychological processes in the laboratories of the University of Kansas under the direction of Prof. F. C. Dockery, of the department of psychology. The purpose of the study is to get data on how tasks are learned in order to throw new light on the relative qualities of animal and child human mental processes. Incidentally, new ideas may be developed upon the control of the processes of thought, habits and tasks. Chicken, monkeys, rats and cats are used to uphold the reputation of the four-footed kingdom, and several children of University professors are used as subjects by advanced students in the department of psychology. Students in the department also act as subjects. The mental task performed is a simple one, and consists of finding the way out of a ladder if it is placed in an inner room, and the pathway to the food among numerous blind alleys and cul-de-sac is left to the rats to determine. Chickens also are taught to find the floor of the labyrinth. Human subjects trace out with a pencil on a chart of the labyrinth, the path to the inner room. Send the Daily Kansan home. An Expanding Vocation that merits the investigation of the high school student who is attracted towards science is that of Chemical Engineering The demand for experts in this line is as keen as the desire of manufacturers for better processes and for the utilization of by-products. The pecuniary rewards include both large salaries and liberal percentages of the saving which the chemist brings about. The course in the University is complete, and after the necessary practical experience and work in research, leads to the degree of chemical engineer. Address Vocation Editor UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas