Penn State collegian. (State College, Pa.) 1911-1940, January 15, 1920, Image 4

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    .113
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lit. ai.i'on t. /u:u\ r. i:. *it.
IN STATE GRADUATE
RECEIVES PROMOTION
flint Penn Stile Maduntes nru mnk
• their iMixincu toll In the indua
»l and ittuc itlon il \.otld In again
ifonceil b\ the fact that another
nn State man has raised himself to
ilghu n»l».h la his lUM of the “big
mu” Mi Alton II /.orb>. 12 12.
11,
followlmr liH p.ulu ttlon, Inimeil
elj entuod ilu> net \ lux uf the Weit
:lioUHi> I'k‘ctiic nml Mnntif.icltirlnK
tnjiuo, uml for tin- pint -men vmra
s been utt!\il\ LontuctMl wllli that
iccrn Am -i n null of Ills untiling ef
ts nml ul>lltt\ he li.is bLi.ll tnomoted
tlio j»o , 'ltlon of In ml of the Mi'ichati-
Ini; nml Sii|>iil\ si*tloti- of llio I*ub
[t> Dpjj ii tnimit of ill. WtulnKliotim!
tctrlc ami M nmf n >ui Im, Compiuv,
111 olllci n it 1 lit. l’litwlmri Ii Pa
Mr Zoil>> will I* illroi tl> In clnrKe*
all literatim 1 nml i<Jk rlJilup busl-
mi, nml wIU hue iteiii’i »t direction
tho mi-ii-h mdl-dtiK plm** of the tom
,ny Ho is s<ui.iir> of the Nitlonul
uicutlvo Coiiiu.ll of the Kin Kappa
li fraioinity.
AGRICULTURAL NOTES
Piofc*'Oi T.mill i.i ..f th* Anlm.il
Husband) v l). i> ii tin in nuntly at
oiukil i mu tii k ‘>f tin Live-Stock
Jornmltuo of lli>- i: i-dun St »trs E\pn
iltlon in Niu \**il* Cu., whom plans
vote 1 lid f»i th holding of tho next
Ivi-stock nlnm Th* t* utailt<• date It
ho third \u-< Ic in when
he hiiKixt show of Its )vln*l will he
tele! Aiilmils imtu ill the louitnry
ust of Ohio mil ei-li m Cimula will
>ucntei«d I’K < *<lK * l itclv bought
wo Gullowav su-oni which until tho
linu of the show will he uavd At iiic
.olkgo foi iliss woilt
A Itui.il Life smut of reufuson,
Hauls and S’ute C*ill. m“ townblr’w In
tentro County ‘s In 'n, nuulo by tho
Department of F.u-it Sociology. Tho
vorK Is ti'uki the d'tcctlfori of Tro-
OHSor It Cl lh- '-4* i. who Ls ."-oiltlrc
n conjunction with the lnwrcrmnn
tVorld m« m Tin* object of tho
mrvey Is to hn*siignte tho community
ictlvlties and coi il'tlons of firm ton
mtry and ijcaci ii sociological conill*
dons of t null community ouch us
this Tit* lenult* of these investiga
tions, whiih jhutdd ho completed by
March, me foi the ptti|io«i* of comparl
ion with < auditions In n*wc.i and more
recently sutttnl loglnmi. Those sur
veys ate holme conducted by twenty
i tales
Owing to tho cron demand for
•alnod men by dally rnaauficturlng
yncirna, moio slioi t-rouisu studont9
nn In formoi Dears ire talcing work
long these linos, twenty-four out of
bout IHS hit lug registered in this
W 13 Coombf. Unit crsity of Muo
aourl 'IC. tiii been chosen Assistant
Professoi of Dilr\ Mmm ictnrc Pro*
fuMHoi Coombs his been In < roamery
work nt tho Url\<t*dt> of Mlchlßin,
lenvlmr that Institution to tiko charßO
of tho ilop irtnunt of dalr> manufac
ture at tiio .Viw .furscw Aki Iculturat
Colloro. at Kutkora Ho returned lator
to Michigan to tako entire clmrgo of
th» dulr> manufacture. and comes hero
from that pi too. aflat Imln,; had n
year In commercial work. Professor
Coombs has hail wide «%ju’ilei.co In all
phases of dalrv mnnnf u-turltiß work,
am! should make a vtluablo addition
_ to the Dop n tmonl
"*■* "sf P Grimes, A mlct-int Piofessor of
Animal Hushamht. Lpout I'r l lay, De
cember twi iu% -i p th. la Stmbury at*
tondlnc a mectltii; of the Northumber
land Count;. Sv ha-Hi nailers Associa
tion
?
We have |
CAKES 1
I
again and will have as x
long ns sugar is uvailablo. $
!
COME AND SEE |
HARVEY’S BAKERY 1
•5*
220 fast College avenue. •£
The : Pennsylvania : State : College
j;i>nja' jjkli: sparks, jmld., JjJj. d, president
Established ar*l maintained by tho Joint action of tho Unltod Stats* Government and tho Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania
FIVE alt GAT SCHOOLS—Agriculture, Engineering, Liberal Arts, Mining, and Natural Sclonco, offering
f|T thirty-eight courses of four yours each—Also couraoa In Homo Economics, Industrial Art, and Phyal-
cal Education TUITION’ FEED to both aoxoa. Incidental charges moderate.
First nomciitci is-nlns middle of September, second somostor tho first of February; Summer Session for
Touchers about tho third Monday in Juno of oach year. For cataloguo, bulletins, announcements, ota,
at,<lrL ‘ liS TUB REGISTRAR, State Colloge. Pennsylvania
Alumni Notes |l
x yl
Uc-\ hl- .Mc-adc- *ll who bus boon In
Onn> II Unlv*-Mlty und recently ro
■, Iv■ d lit i dc-gic-c of Ph U ftoin that
Institution, la now tti the Maryland
Mat-- Collage. College Park, Maryland,
it I'rofcsaoi of Aiilmul Husbandry,
Fied 12 McEntlre ’ll U now with the
llrm of Buy und Zlmnietman, Inc, In
Phil idc-tplilu, acting In the* capacity of
(power und rate engined Hlu address
lls eoub N Woodstock hticot, Phlludel
-1 phla
Walter Coopcy 'l2 Is with the Roess
ler A Hns-tlaehor Chemical Co, St.
Albuna, Went Virginia, In the cnpucity
of e iglnecr Mr. Coopcy is married
i und hus u daughter, Helen BUzaboth
Coopey
N'Ji-1 H Biuw n ’l2 Is with tho Pacific
Ous A Electric Co., In Phoenix, Ari
zona, oporallng tho gas plant Ills
nddrofiu Is enro of Thomas Building,
Phoenix, Arizona
W liter E Graham *l4 after discharge
fioin tho service, Is now associated with
tho Splsci Manufacturing Corporation,
nl South Plalnsfield, X J„ whvro ho is
metallurgist In charge of heat treat
ment Ills mailing address is Truell
Court, Plainfield, X. J.
W. S Barnhart *l4 has resigned his
position as head of tho Department of
Animal Husbandry und Dairy Industry
at Alfred University, Alfred, X. Y, to
take up county agont work In Mercer
County, X J His address is County
Court Uousc. Trenton, X. J
Tho latest ropoit from Aithur S
"Dubty" Rhoads 'l4 shows that ho
holds the position of assistant In For
istry Pathology with tho olllco of In
vestigation In Forest Pathology, U. 9
Bureau of Plant Industry, 114 San
jnnu- btroot, bun rranctsco. 110 re
* < Ivuit Ms M S dogree ut Penn State
In 'itllfi und Ph D ul the Xuw* York
State Coltcgo of Forestry, at Syrucuso
Unlvui-dty, In 1917
O II Dodoll ’IS ls located ul Wash
ington. D C. In tho Bureau of Animal
Indiistiy. Jn connection with Sheep
liuMbvndry. having charge of sheep ex
tension work In this country 110 Is
n-siocluiod with Mr F R Marshall,
and finds the wmk vary Interesting.
Aftm a thite-yeai Ulp around the
woild. Dun E Welty ’IC U again In
the old USA. und cun be nddressod
ut C.n-.-nsbuig Pa. until fuithcr no
tice
Itavmond 13 Stollui ‘IS teports him
self well single and back on tho Job
in the Sales Dnpaitmont of tho Lehigh
Puitluml Cement Company at Allen
town. l*a
I Ml°b Rebecca J Guthrie 'lO Is teach
ing In thu Clovlu High School, In Xuw
Mexico
John K. Robinson *l6 wrltos from
Chut lesion. W. Va, that thoro aro a
number of Statu mon thoro who are
tiilfikliiir of organizing a State Club
Some of thu mon aro Kenney 'IC, Spuco
11. Irwin 'l3, Cunningham 'Ol, Glea
son 'IC, and Professor Kaufman, Chcm-
Litry Mr Robinson’s address Ls 10 Ar
lington Court. Charleston, W Va
On leaving the Naval Servleo, Clar
ence K Taylor TC has returned to his
old position In tho Xow York Xavy
Yard us Inspector of Eloctrlcai Mater
ial His homo addross Is 64 Clifton
Ptnco, Brooklyn, X Y.
After leaving tho service, Carl B.
Jacobs *l7 became associated with
Swift & Co, Chicago, In the chemical
laboratory of tho Department of Fats
Fraternity Printing
Quality Material
Clever Typography
Master Printers
The Nittany Printing
AND
Publishing Company
17ENUS
YPENCHS "'iJw watld
Inml Oils Mr Jacob’s home address is 1 11 i •' -
l°w~:,r, ~ w„o u THRIFT AS A COLLEGE
Sri.!;’s c ,rxin!''s STUDENT’S problem
Clu\eland net tußOlher and organise UIWWUU ° inwiliiLlU
HU address U Room 111S0, The News' 1 ■
I Cleveland, Ohio,
O. G. Vi’obui ’l? la now Extension
Reptowntntlvo of the York County.
Farm Uunuu located. In York, Pa.
Mltm Cecil** 1 Unities 'IS Is now em
plowed In tin* I’ulmeitoti Hospital, ul
Fnlnurluii, l*n.. us Dlctllkm
Elmer Held 'lB writes tlmt lie la now
employed with the United States rood
Rexcurch Laboratory. 183 d Chestnut
Street Philadelphia, as Jiniloi Chemist
Miss Cecil® M Dixon 'lB writes that
slit l is with the Homo Sortlco Section
of the American He<l Cross In Phila
delphia llci address is 117 South 10th
Street. Philadelphia.
r. El Bennett 'l? tells us that since
Ills dlachargo from the service he has
beon connected with tho*Blalr Count}
Farm Bureau as aupenlsor of school
and homo gardening work. OlTlco ad
dress 303 Commercial Building, Altoona,
Pa.
J R Bechtel 'l3, assistant profcssoi
of vegetable gardening, has resigned
Ills position with the College to take
up productive work In vegetable gar
dening near Wllkcsßorre Professor
Bechtel was granted a leave of nbsenco
several months ago to study vegetable
production In region, and received un
attractive offer of a partnership In u
tlrst-cluss market-gardening business
While with the College, Professor Bech
tel did such commendable work as to
make Ills absence koonl> felt
ANNUAL SIRLOIN CLUB
BANQUET PROVES SUCCESS
The annual banquet of the Sirloin
Club, held lust Tuesday night at the
University Club, proved to bo qulto
us great a. success as the committee
had hoped for rully threo-fourths of
the total membership of the club availed
themselves of the opportunity to heat
numerous excellent talks by membors
of the Department of Animal Husband
i}, both faculty and undergraduates
S M Free *3O acted as toastmastet.
Introducing the speakers, among whomi
were Dr. Armsb}, of the Dopaitmcnt of
Animal Nutrition, Dean Watts, Profos
nur Tomhuvc, of the Animal Hus
bandry Department, pr I. D. Wilson,
; Assistant Profcssoi of Animal Hus
bandry, B H Wilson '2O and several
others.
At the recent elections of officers
of the Club for the next two somosters,
C M Watts '2l was chosen president,
C. F Wuesthoff '2l, vice-president;
P L Coates ’2l, secretary, und L. F
Rolhrock '2l, treasurer The new offic
ers will assume their duties at tho noxt
; meeting of tho club All Indications
point to a prosperous future for tho
club under the now regime
SENIOR AO. bTUBENTS
ENTERTAINED AT SMOKER
That tho fraternity men bf this col
lege ate Interested In tho non-frater
nity men and that they fully ondorsc
tho Penn Stato Union Woo dourly evi
denced by tho smoker and general get
together mooting which was held at
the Alpha Zota fraternity houso last
Wednesday evening Tho Sonlor Ag
ilcultural students, whether of any or
no affiliations fraternally vvero tho
guests and a pleasant evening was ex
perienced by all attending, the various
members of tho class and of tho sev
eral schools becoming closer united In
that great bond of friendship which
Ponn Stato 4s desirous of having for
her entire student body.
' PfiNN-STATE GOLLB3IAN
Th 0 win dutnuuded Utut every Annul
can saw money und students in edu
.cadonal institutions were not excepted
The Liberty Bond and War Savings
Campaign showed that even the col
lege student who Is Half-supporting
could set uslde a small margin for
imnomlc. conditions are demanding a
continuance of war economics, ami uni
venal swings und safe Investment on
'mi the part of all our people Shall
the college studont have a pan In this
afterwar program? At tlrst thought
ono would say that it Is Inexpedient for
the college, student to set asldo part
of hhi current money for savings but
a closer examination of tho student's
own best Interests, rogarded from the
fundamental relation to the national
long-time point of view*, and of his
economic crisis through which wo aro
new going has lead thoughtful advis
ers of tho Treasury Dopartmont’o,Sav
ings Division to urge that tho present
opportunity for rogular saving and In
vestment In government securities be
put beforo the college studnts of‘the
country, as was tho need for war-sav
ings.
Tho Troasury Department In offering
the 2Gc Thrift Stamp, $0 War Savings
Stamp und the $lOO and $lOOO Treas
ury Suvlngx Ceitlflcatos, ns a means
of popular saving. It is also urging
, tho continued purchase of Liberty
Bonds now held by banks as a means
of reducing tho expanded credit which
lx partly responsible for constantly In
creasing prices.
College students arc urged to partic
ipate In Government Savings primarily
because, tho country noeds a rapid In*
cieuse (n Its savings fund and because
the practice of regular saving carries
piMMomU economic benefits so funda
mental and lasting that college students
as futuro loaders will wish to share
In this movement.
Many a colloge studont has earned
and saved money before going to collcgo
and during his four years or more of
academic and professional training has
got entirely out of his habits of thrift
and bo starts his business or profes
sional carocr heavily handicapped by
tho weight of unthrifty standards taken
on during collogo llfo. Tho college stu
dent who practices thrift gets a self
discipline that like faith will movie
mountains.
The Treasury Department proposes
tho following program*
That studonts, as a matter of national
service as woll as porsonal advantage,
work during term time when oppor-
uimnii!iummomiiimiiiDiiiaimunitiumiiitaauuiiuiiniuiuuimaumuiUiiniiumKuit]iiiiuimiiniiiiiiiiuumiuiiiiiuntiumiiiiani
SPORTING GOODS
Basket Ball Uniforms.
Wrestling Trunks
Gymnasium Outfits
Ankle and Knee Caps
THE MUSIC ROOM j
5’
i
i
s
iamwiuiuminwni
Typerwriters for Rent
A wonderful story of the Canadian Northwest
Every Saturday We Have a Special
WATCH OUR WINDOW
L. K. METZGER.
tunlty affords, and during part at least
of vacations.
Tliut iivery college student should
savo a minimum of u dollar u week
during his entire college course
That these savings should bu found
ed as a nucleus fo: the stui l-ln-llfe
fund fm use aftoi gruduatloti.
That tluse tunings be Invested safely
In govei nmont savlnus securities.
That the student on tccelvlng uu al
lowance from homu set aside, us a llrst
charge on this allowance, his weekly
savings.
That the student who Is winking hb
way through college and paying his
own expenses in \vholu or In piut,
should set aside regulurly* u sum tor
savings even It It be so little os SGc
a week, the cost of a U S. Thrift
Stump
The students phm their personal ex
penditures with u personal budgol now
leeognlzed as tho'moßt prutlcal Instru
ment foi promoting wls c expenditure
In government, In business and In per
sonal finance.
That students discuss in debating
clubs, fraternity clubs, and other or
ganizations, tho relation of poraonal
thrift to business efficiency and succojb
In life,, and tho relation of individual
savings to the country’s capital fund,
and to present economic problems
That student organizations should
ns a national after-war service organizo
a public discussion of tho economic
problems related to thrift, savings and
investment, seeking particularly a
statement of their practical beurlng on
the reconstruction problem nnd of tho
Personal 1 responsibility which tho col
lege student has during collego and
afterwards, for personal thrift and for
Its promotion In tho community, to tho
ond that colleges and all hlghor Instl
tutllons which aro in tho work and save
Progrtyn for thy bigger and bolter
America.
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS
I STUDENT FURNITURE I
J
a Specialty at |
GENTZEL’S |
| 200-202 E. College Ave. |
READ
The River’s End
By James Oliver Ctirwood
The House of the Black Ring
By Professor Pattee
JOIN OUR LIBRARY
111 Allen Street
NEW FEATURE' ADDED
JO PLAYWRITING COURSE
It has been announced by tho Do
pat uncut of English that, beginning
vi Ith next semester, a somowhat dif
ferent policy will bo followed In the
play writing course This course, which
will be modeled to somo degree after
similar courses now offered at tho Unt
\et allies of North Dakota and North
Caiullun, will he given under tho di
rection of Mr. Arthur C Clovtingh. who
dli octod the mcent successful Thespian
production, "Step Thief”
The first offoits will consist of dtn
mutlzhig short stories Into one-act
plays When the student lutft learned
tho fundamentals of play-making, at
tention will bo focused on original dm-
WraQLEYS
Other benefits: to teeth,
breath, appetite, nerves.
That’s a good deal to
Set for 5 cents!
Sea!e<3 Tiaftt— Kept Riaht
■«* M 'SSEBis&StfSi. 'lt
n IUBHIIf I
—The Rawer lasts-
, Thursday, Ja'&uSEy 15, 1920
nw it will bo the plan whenever pos*
slble to since ecenca from college life,
and to porttuy tho life and diatoms of
the early Pennsybnnla aeltloro. In a
wotd. to write purely local pla}s.
These plays will then bo ataged under
the direction of the department but
coached by the author of tho play.
This should prove esixjclully helpful to
the student who is contemplating tho
teaching profession, for ho wrlll’luurn
nut only the technique of writing, but
some of the principles of staging.
All end*. many students ha\o slsnl
iled tholi Intention of tnklns this now
course, unil Jt Js essential that nil who
me Intelested In tho work see Mr.
CloctlnKli at once, ns the number In the
class will bo limited and preference will
be accorded to those who register
curb
EYS
Jfter a hearty
tea!, you’d
>cid that
taffy feeling
you chew
a stick of
k« V? »A» Vs» ’JC ?*■» *-*.• *-A?
Sale