Page Two Penn State ,oll4an Published weekly during tho Collego year by students of tho Pennsylvania State College In tho Interests of tho Students, Faculty, Alumni and Friends 01 tho College. SI. W Dalrymplo IS ASSOCIATE EDITORS cf. w. Sullivan .10 Cartoonist, R. B. Hanschen .18 MI Col li ode H Dose 'l9 I=l A. D MacKinnon '2O D. C BloisdeU '2O EIMMI .1. AI. IVashburn S. AI. Lowry '18... ASSISTANT BUSINTZS LLASIACERS R. B. Paxson 'lO The Collegian Invites all communications on any subject of college Intortst. Letters must bear signatures of Writer. Subscription prlco $1.60 after November Ist Entered at tho Postoffice, State College, Pa, as second elms matter. OMee. Nittony Printing and Publishing Co. Building. 011100 hours, 4.20 to G2O every afternoon except Saturday. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1018 News Editor for This Issue WANTED-A GOOD DEFINITION The original purpose of the "Get Together Campaign" was to foster and revive "college spirit," or more strictly speaking, "Penn State spirit " The object of the "Stick-Together Campaign" which is now being carried on is to keep up that spirit. These two statements are indisputable. But so far, the terms "college spirit," or "Penn State spirit," are more or less abstract, etherial, phrases that sound well but go no further _ Of course, Penn State men believe that there is a vast diffffrence between "college spirit" and "Penn State spirit" and it is only fitting and proper that there should be. But where does that difference lie, and just what is "Penn State spirit 0 " That is a big question and one that should be solved if the "Stick-Together Campaign" is to have any lasting benefit Without a true knowledge of the purpose of the campaign, it becomes just a meaningless form of amusement and hilarity It is readily apparent that the definition of "Penn State spirit" must come from the student body or from some member of it, and with this end in view, the "Stick-Together" committee is opening a contest for the best definition of "Penn State spirit" Full details of this contest appear elsewhere in this paper and they should be carefully noted by all Penn State students A tempting prize has been offered for the best definition submitted, and it is also hoped that such a defi nition will be composed that will serve as a slogan for Penn State in years to come. So get busy, and even though all can not win the prize, you cannot fail to derive a great amount of benefit from the ' :77 -- (s7, — iit as may get a .igger an. .ette7 comprehen on of the intangible something t h at makes Penn State what it really is— Penn State spirit! A COMPLETED WORK The COLLEGIAN has reached its annual "moving-up" time. This issue marks the end of the road for those who have controlled its interests for the benefit of their fellow students during the past year. In passing over the reins to a new Collegian Publishing Board this week, we do so in full confidence that the work of serving the students for the coming year will be left in the hands of competent leaders. In retiring, the present board feels that a great duty has at least in one way' been accomplished—the serving of a paper every week, when at the beginning of the year our hopes for such an achievement were indeed at a very low ebb A semi-monthly publication for this year was predicted at the close of the college last spring, but with a greater percentage of students backing us than had been doing so for several years, we have been able to continue regular publication, al though not on such elaborate lines as we would have desired. We have endeavored in every way to conduct the COLLEGIAN along the best of journalistic lines, serving the college, the students and the alumni to the best of our ability; and if we have succeeded in the least in accomplishing this aim, we are satisfied in the belief that our efforts have been well worth while. We More thoroughly enjoyed our intimate connections with students, faculty members and business men of the town, and take this opportunity to extend our due appre ciation for the assistance that they have given us in the past. Our relations have been most agreenblEt, and we trust that you will extend the same courtesies to our successors who, by their friendly relations and unselfish assistance, have played no small part in carrying your paper through the year. "MOVING-UP DAY" There should be plenty of opportunity before the close of college for working in the "Moving-Up Day" idea urged by the COLLEGIAN a year ago. Conditions are vastly different at this time, and such that the proposition could easily be worked out. Briefly, the plan called for the "moving up" of each class by appropriate ceremonies. The Freshmen bury their green "clinks," the Sophomores shed their coats and occupy the front campus; the Juniors doff their hats and assume the role of Seniors; the Seniors could have their class day events, and so on. It is nothing more or less than advancing some events of the last day of college a week or so when plenty of time can be provided for appropriate ceremonies, and when all classes are able to get into it instead of the annual Freshman monopoly of the "burial of the green dink." The "Stick-Together" committee could take charge this,year and give "Moving Up Day" a start, and we feel sure that it could then be made an annual event. AS A SUGGESTION- "Ntimerals" in writing to the editor about the matter of class insignia for the women students comes pretty close to a solution but does not offer it. The girls apparently want numerals for those of their number who have won places on their athletic teams. They are sure to meet opposition when they ask for the same kind of numerals that aro awarded the men for inter-class honors. The girls have an athletic association all'their own, we are told.. Now, what's the matter with that association providing its own numerals, something entirely different from those worn by the men, and moreover, laying down rigid and approved conditions whereby every winner of such numerals shall be forced to do some good, hard work in order to attain the honor of wearing them? It has taken years and years to perfect the inter-class numeral regulations at Penn State. Let the girls establish their right to a share by expanding their efforts, and their reward will doubtless come in time. Contrary to the opinion of many, investigation has shown that the college will in no way become involved through arbitration in the movie question as proposed by the Senior class. The girls could make a tidy little sum for the Red Cross or their Y. W. C. A. by advertising their basketball games, standing room for a dime. It is done elsewhere, • not here? Senior Associate Editor A. R. Lelnbach 'l9 Woman's Editor CI S. Wykott .2.0 II B. Coon W. E. Segel EEE=2I GEE= ...Business Manager Advertlelng Manager A. R. LEINBACH FARM TRAINING COURSE PLANS ASSUMING SHAPE Pi °tensor 11. C Parkinson returned last Saturday from Philadelphia N, hero Ito spent the gieatet part of the week in the Intel eats of tho movement to train high fichoul laudenta for farm mot* It has been definitely decided that a large numbet of young men ranging In ago from sixteen to Monty -ono years will be brought here rot a short course of Maroc:lon In farm stork immediately upon the• clone of thin semestet thmo xlll be gisen a courso of four or dye days of intensive training for those college men who aro to be lenders of the young men mho comp here nom serious high schools through out the state. Tho latter will upend about ten flays here preparing for the murk a bleb they mill Mlle up on the farm The drier for the enlistment of high school students for this mork will be taken up during the week of March eighteenth The high school principals mill enlist the students and n physician mill examine them to determine whether or not they two physicall} able to stand the Mot k mhich mlli be required of them on the farms to cc Molt they mill be sent hen the} Imo completed their course of training here N USER ILS REVISED FOR THE TWO YEAR STUDENTS , The Student Council at Its meeting last week gave pet mission to the Two- Year Agriculture students to revise theit athletic numerals, In that the "2Nr" be dropped, and that In the future they award the ordlnaly numerals that Indlutte the clans In this way the nu merals of the second tear clans at thin time would be "10-18" whore before It was "1G 2Yr 18" TllO change man sought by the 2-Year representative because or the toot that tFo "217 r" in the nuimrals made them spread out too much eve: the front of a sweater, and made them too conspicuous /louever, a request that the also of the numerals MII=I .MORE PAINTINGS FOR COLLECTION Tuo more paintings hate been re celled b) the Penn Slate Art Depart ment, ono by John Willard Ilaught of Dunmore. being valued at five hundred dollars, and tho other 1,1 Jordan of Philadelphia, appraised at seventy-five dollars Conti!tuitions from Mrs Fern Cop pedge, .1 13 Crossman. and 0. B Jud son of Philadelphia, and NV C Baum of Sellersville, me also In transit. Each of the abote-uamed artists mere exhib itors in the ono hundred and fourth Annual Art Exhibition in Philadelphia. Professor Zorn Klein, an Instructor in Gelman, left last nook for Washington, where he v 111 be employed In the Con cut Bureau Busing his absence, his claw,. .111 be taken care of by S. 0 Knauss, who but recently returned Born Cot nell University, where ho had been on a. lease of absence, , FACULTI MAN HONORED Professor Rasmussen of the Depart Pak-y4lustiezie,Pi-km-been ad by State Food Administrator Heinz to assist him as tho head of a newly organized doom tment of the state divis ion of Federal Food Administrative Ser. Nice Mr Rasmussen will spend a largo part of his time each meek at this work FOREST L. sTRUBLE Plumbing and Heating Both Phones SHOES x Come in and Look them Over Prices $4 to $7.50 t . You can save a dollir or two. 4. Odd Trousers to match your suit at reasonable prices. M. HUR.WITZ Harvey Brothers Baked Goods & Ice Cream "Quality and Service" Our Motto 320 E. College Ave. 11111111111C3111111111111011111111111100111111111101111111111111311111111111101 Drugs that are RIGHT! As a matter of fact, you have to have high grade , drugs to get high grade remedial value,. We carry the beat of drugs and we sell the beat of drugs, and nothing less than the best. So if you want drugs that are right, please insist on buying them here, whether simple drug needs, or the simple or complex prescription. Ray D. Gilliland DRUGGIST PENN STATE 'COLLEGIAN Letter Box. NUMERALS FOR GIRLS Stato Colloro, Pa., March 8, 1918 Editor, the COLLEGIAN Dear Sir —I have recently learned that the women students of Penn State are desirous of securing straight inter-class numerals for the various members of their athletic teams. I believe that this idea should be discouraged, especially at tide time, when it some to be a very sudden demand placed upon a few solid facts, it very limited geld of athletic endeavor . The wearing of class numerals at Penn State should stand for something—and in recent >ears the winning of numerals hits been made harder for the men. It is felt that when a man ulna his numer als these days that ho certainly has done some good hard nork to earn them, Now here la the girl proposition, as I see it: Figuratively. they have just started out on organized inter-class athletics They hose held a uallting contest, and the Freshman class unwisely awarded their class numerals to the winner, dis regarding the Inter-class athletic rul ings %Odell make no such provision This action sheuid most 'certainly he cancelled by the - Numeral Committee. Now the girls are playing an Inter-class basketball league schedule Wino work!) and doubtless will aunt numentle for a acme or more of contestants when that la completed If the girls hod been playing regularly scheduled games for several learn past, and had the sport well established along with a number of others that girls can get into, then the numeral numition from their sumdpoint mould doubtless be z easonable But lust now it looks like a spontaneous combustion coming from great enthusiasm In getting start ed in athletic spefu3 The girls IA ill my that othet college and universities award numerals to women No doubt, but their sports have been established for 3 ea. s In those big colleges (the small ones don't count In a matter of this kind) and ate on a much broader scale than mere walking and basketball The gills hoe ate to be encouraged In every any in all lines of sports, and I for one etch they had more of it Track and field meets, tennis, field hockey and outdoor winter sports should be added to the women's Inter class sports events, and then when they are regularly organised and made Into annual contests, the girls could be given consideration In the matter of class numeral awards, and not before. I kninv that there are many others mho have the name opinion In addition to “Numerals" Why Not Get Teaching Positions NOW! Last season employers of the Depart ment of Education, Western Reference 61 Bond losoclation, for 2467 teachers In a period of twenty-four working days early in the year. hOW IS THE TIME to enroll without cost. Address them 742 Searritt Bldg. Kansas City Mo. A. DEAL 1 ---Sadtary-r-kuubing , stogy,,., Hot Water Vapg„L_lnd Vacuum Heatiiii State - College, Pennsylvanli"--1 Uncle Sam's Boys' use the Gillette? LET a man spend just one week in the Service—then give him free choice of all the makes of razors there are. He'll reach for the Gillette first, and hold' on to it—every time. There's nothing like seeing the Gillette idea work out in the experience of thou sands of men—under extreme conditions. • Here is the No Stropping, No Honing prin t could find in his shaving—heat; cold, sunburn, ciple--tested and approved by millions of men wind-chap, water scarce or bad—but has been in the world 4 peace. met by the Gillette thousands of times in its The world goes to war. Millions of men spring , nearly four years of war service : - to arms=_and the one razor that survives the The fighting man lives in his pack—every test of war conditions on a world-wide scale is inch of space and ounce of weight taken up. The Gillette tucks away in the corner, or in the No Stropping, No Honing Gillette. his pocket—compact, complete, no strops or There isn't a regiment in the field today un- \ hones to clutter up the kit—Blades always der any of the Allied Flags but numbers more sharp, always ready—simple, strong, stands the users of Ciliates than of all other razors put wear and tear—weighs next to nothing—and together. There isn't a condition that a man No Stropping, No Honing. GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR COMPANY BOSTON, MASS., U. S. A. 00.72 , 7212 SAMS Rates COMPANY OP esssos, LTV. 74 Sr. ALSXINOEO 227., 21041101 AL 200 00 ( 01 ' 4 ..` i7.7.14:731., R at0M710.14.11, 01221 Yes Burnt RAnAs Bocters A 2102,12 A 0 Aftoro2.llB 27 DM Mx 122.110.06, Num Fusses G 3 Tampa, Prriceouse, Miens Agricultural Notes Professor G C. Given of the depart ment. of Experimental Agricultural Chemistry, who le on leave of absence is doing research work for the Atlas Powder Company Recently ho made a hurried trip to England on huffiness relating to the work which that com pany Is doing for the government. L Jesseman Is assisting A P. Mason Milk the sera) ing and pruning demonshatlons which aro being con ducted throughout the state by the De partment of Horticultural Extension J R Bechtel has been granted a leave of absence to old the 'county agents In the work of organizing the war garden movement In this state. . •. Immediately upon - the close of the present semester several Instructors of the Horticultural Department will leave to take up the Instruction of the farm ers of the state In th better awe of the moducts of their surd.ns and orchards The use of common storage houses will be urged By the use oft these Mtge amounts of fruit which are now going to nest° may be saved EXTES,SION SCIIOOI. CLOSES The closing exec class and banquet of the 011 City Enginering L'stension School were held on the evening of Month Bth Professor David A Ander son, of the Deportment of Education, gn e the !officinal address during which he spoke on Vocational, Continuation and Enginering Extension types of In dustrial education Certificates were awarded to over GO andante who had completed their course Among these was a class of poling ladles who took a course In dm(ting nith rely satisfac tory iesults E. E. BAIN CE FIUDAY The annual Eleettical Engineering Suelob Ounce wlll be held on Friday atoning In the Odd Fellows' Hall from eight to twelve A new departure In being made thin yea', In that tho Soph omore,' and Ftenlimnn ate permitted to attend Bring Your Suits to W. E. SMITH Pressing,Cleaning, Repairing Neatly Done Satisfaction Guaranteed HARDWARE aad STOVES J. S - MITII & SON , Hardware Store • e e 'f • - Vsoonn TONI QUIIIINO ‘ k FIGLI 10, MILAN, in.nt, Mining Notes Instructo ' rx In the School of Mines me giving a merles of lectures to the R. 0 T. C men on mining and related subjects, Dr 13 S Home, Professor of Geology and Mineralogy, had as Ills topic 'Tim Relition of Geology and Topography to the Strategy In the Pres ent European War." Doan W. R. Crane Is speaking on the subject "The Use of Trenches and Tunnels In Prmentday Wairate" Mr W. R. Chedsey, of the Mining Deportment. Still 01,0011 0 0 Explosives and the Use of Sub teilanean Explosive Mines" and it Is being arranged for H B Northrup, of the .Metallurgy Department,qo speak on 'The The Influence of Metallurgical Science In Modern Artillery and the Lessening of Wear in Largo Guns Mt A. P. Hones., Instruct - Or In Min errilogy, has an article In the current Issue of the Amniican lout nal of Sci ence entitled" Tho Etching Figures of the Mem:mono) Alternating Typo of Cmstald" and ahoy,s pecullar relations and contrasts of the internal sh uctuie of certain Isomorphous cdrbonato min- I orals The article Is well Illustrated Is photomicrographs. LECTURES TO SENIOR GIRLS Mins Emma Smedloy,,Mrector School Luncheons In Phllitidelphln. epok , to the Senior girls In Home Economlc last Thursday. To Penn State Students We Still Have Our - Popular • $ll.OO Cordovan's to sell at $9.90 We want you to feel free to. look them over. Come in and look over-'our store since our Shoe and Clothing Depart ments are united. "FROMM'S _ Economy Store D 130 E. College Avenue STATE CENTRE ELECTRIC COMPANY Headquarters for Everything Electric Store Closes 6 p. m, Frazier Street Safety Razor Have You Seen the New Gillettes pecially Designed for the Fighting Man? T HESE models were designed by members of the Gillette Orgnnization who have seen service with the Colors and know what the soldier Is up against. Hundreds of oillemzumd men are buying them—the U. S. Ser. fee Set in metal case, and the new Khaki covered sets for Uncle.Sam'a soldiers and officers. The Gillette is the one razor for the icon who is do ing things—the one razor with - world-wide use and ' reputation. When a man wants new Blades lie can get them at any Post Exchange or Y. H. C. A. Hut—here in America or Overseas. Our Paris Office curries stocks—is constantly hop plying the American Expeditionmy Forces. Gillette Safety Razors and Blades on sale everywhere In France, England, Italy and the Eastern battle fronts. Why do so' many of Wednesday, March 13, 1918 RECONSTRUCTION WORK , IN, FRANCE DESCRIBED The Illustrated lecture on "Recon struction Work in France," given by Mn Morrie O Leeds Saturday night In the Old Chapel PM most Interesting and enlightening Mt. Leeds; a member of the firm of Leeds and Northrup,. of Flilladelphin, makers of electrical M tn uments, scent over to France with a Red emus party for the purpose of finding out what the.Amerlcan Friends could do for the horaleas people of Fiance by reconstruction work. On arriving In France, Mr. Lead. ommuniCated with the English Friends, who were °heady In the Said. Hie Wet- - urn dealt upon the work that these English Friends are doing and which the American Friends can do At The SANITARY FOUNTAIN, Green Ice Cream Green Mints ' For Saint Patrick's Day ORANGE ICE -I _ Strawberry Vanilla Chocolate ICE 'CREAN! Home Made Candies Every Day Gregory Bros. Candymakers CANDYLAND STORES Bellefonte State College