Two Penn State Collegian Published tr.l-woekly during the College year by students of the Pennsyl 1 vsttila Strue College. in the interest of the Students, Faculty. Alumni and: lends of the College. EDITORIAL STAFF A. O. Pratt G. 11. 2-ysle. Jr., J V.\ sV.over '22 ASSOCIATE EDITORS \V. It. Auman ‘-3 D. R. Mehl ‘23 \V..:i:.-»r« Kdlior ant Uotn-n's Editor ... G. \V. i:. -y.-r Zi It. B. Colvin "21 J. F. Mullins BUSINESS STAFF ‘A . K. Perry. Jr. "22. 11. R. Werkheiscr ’22. E. S. Yocum ‘22. ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS H. T. Axford "2- '•he Collegian invites all communications on any subject of college interest L'lier* u*v.r signatures of writers. Subscription price: $2.50, if paid before October 15, 1921. After October 15. 1321. $2.75 Entered at the Postolflce. State College. Pa., as second class matter. Office: Nlttany Printing and Publishing Co. Building. omce Hours: 5:00 to 5:45 every afternoon except Saturday. Member of Intercollegiate Newspuper Association News Editor This Issue.. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1921 STUDENTS AND DISARMAMENT There is a mighty, potential power for good among the students of the universities and colleges oi the United States that has seldom, if ever, been put to use. It is the power of united student opinion and action in grave questions confronting the nation or even the world. The time is at hand when this power can and should be used. The hour has come when the potentialities of united student sentiment should be tested to the utmost. The occasion which calls for co-oper ative action on the part of every student body in America is the rapidly approaching disarmament conference in Washington. If one should study conditions in Europe and Latin America he would realize the influence that the student element bears on politi cal and other phases of national existence. If one should study re cent history in China, he would see that not so very long ago the Cel estial Empire virtually preserved its independence from a neighboring country largely through a nation-wide movement instituted by stuu ents acting as one body. What is possible in other quarters of tne globe is possible in America. The coming disarmament conference at Washington persents a wonderful opportunity for student sentiment in this country to ex press itself effectively. The notable gathering of diplomats from the foremost powers bids fair to develop into a mere trades rights con ference or an occasion for airing of international disputes that can not be settled at the time or an attempt on the part of some or all o. t;’.e countries represented to “grab” what they can for as little they can give as possible. This much is certain: if the conference ends without the taking of definite steps toward the limitation or reduc tion of armaments, its efforts will be nil, or probably, will be dis astrous for the future of the world war. And if the delegates do not realize that the world is war weary and that it really desires the pre vention of future wars as far as possible, and that the ideal of per manent peace can never be partially or wholly attained without conces sions from many of the nations represented, then no definite steps in die desired direction are possible. One of the most effective means for letting the conference know the will of the people on the question of disarmament is through the voice of the student population of this country and of the world. Other bodies and organizations and many individuals will send pleas to the conference for definite action, but no group should be heedcu to a greater degree than the student group. Its motives would be fret from political issues. The student of today is the breadwinner, the tax payer, and the business leader of the future. The student of today is the soldier, the political, and the diplomat of the coming decades. Let the student of America speak as one, and let them be heard anu heeded by the disarmament conference. The movement is not one of pacificism in the sense of “peace at any price.” There is nothing in it that demands concessions whic>. will destroy the honor of any nation. If world peace is to be a reality and not a dream in the future, many of the standards of today must be changed but not to ultimate disadvantage of any country. The fu ture of the world is uncertain and can be fathomed only “as through a glass, darkly," but every possible means should be taken to prevent another cataclysm as stupendous and as costly and as destructive of liie and property as the one from which the world has recently emerg ed. There arc many problems to solve: racial, economic, social and others, but it is to be sincerely hoped that the end of war may at last be reached, and the way to this end will be made plainer and easier i. the mass of humanity, including the rising generation of students es pecially, arises and definitely and forcefully expresses itself. Penn State has instituted a movement in favor of making the disarmament conference feel that the students of this country are in favor of armament limitation or reduction. Other colleges and uni versities are rapidly falling in line. The method of presenting the students' case to the gathering in Washington has not yet been decid ed upon, but doubtless the most feasible plan possible will be employ ed. But, whatever the means, the essential thing is that the student body of every college and university shall take an active part in the movement, so that from the many institutions shall come the one common petition to the conference asking it to take every possible step toward the elimination of racial and national hatreds, and the preven tion of future world calamities. The movement has the support of Penn State students. At a re cent mass meeting, the virtually unanimous sentiment of those pres ent was in favor of disarmament and it was on the basis of the re sults of this meeting that Penn State initiated what is expected to be a nation wide student movement for disarmament. Further opportunity will be given to crystallize this sentiment. Penn State should grasp this opportunity to the fullest extent. INTERCOLLEGIATE GLEE CLUB MEETING TOMORROW A meeting of the Intercollegiate Glee Cluh Corporation will lake place at the Harvard Club* in Xew York City on Saturday evening for the purpose of selecting a test piece for the annual intercollegiate contest which will be A. E. Post ’23 E. D.Schive’23 Miss Doris Browning *23 Miss Sarah E. Croll REPORTERS E. E. Helm '24 E. M. Jameson ’24 H. B. Prinsky *24 N. O. Watterson ’24 Business Manager .Advertising Manager ...Circulation Manager C. D. Herbert ’23 \V. G. Davis ’23 - A. E. Post held on the fourth of March. Penn State will he represented at the gath ering by .1. Ix*yden ’24, a member of the Advisory Council. V. M. Noll ’22, manager of the Glee Club, and C. M. Deuds ’22. president of the club. The last two named individuals will repre sent Professor Robinson, who will be unable to attend because of the con cert at Elizabethtown, Pa. BULLETIN Friday, October 28 7:fni j». m.—Mandolin Club Rehearsal. Auditorium. :(iu p. m.—Chess Club. 314 Main. Assistant Editor Senior Associate :00 p. m.—Returns from Penn State- Georgia Tech Game, Xew Beaver. :00 p. m.—Cross Country Trials. :00 p. m.—Y. M. C. A. Entertainment. Kalvl, Harpist, Auditorium. C. B. Tilton *24 11 a. in.—Menorah Society, 14 L. A. P.oth Chapels—‘•Gallia’’ by College Chorus, Auditorium. NOTICE TO JUNIORS All Juniors who have failed to appear at the appointed hour for Iji Vie photographs or who have not received notice of an ap pointment, are urged to comm unicate with Business Manager Axford as soon ns possible. Those not listed in the Junior Class, but who are rated as Juniors and who wish to have their pictures In the I«n Vie are nlso asked to see a member of the Business Staff for appointment cards. AG CHEMS WILL MAKE ANNUAL EASTERN TRIP Big Industrial Concerns Listed On Itinery—Twenty-Three Students Going Twenty-three students in the agri cultural chemistry course will leave the college November sixth on their annual eastern inspection trip. The men will meet in Philadelphia on Nov ember seventh and will visit a number of important industrial concerns which have a direct bearing on the ag chom. cmir.se. The itiner.v of the* trip calls for an inspection of the John T. la*wis Company’s plant, the Fran Min Sugar Refinery, the Baugh and Sons Com pany fertilizer works, the Dungan Hood Company leather goods plant, the Scott Payer Company, at Chester, the P. 15. Sharplcss Comixiny's factory at Con .•nrdvillo. the Wilson Martin Company at Philadelphia, the Colonial Ice-Cream Company, the Frlehofer Baking Com pany. tlie Supplee-Wills Jones Milk Company, the Joseph Campbell Com pany in Camden, Xew Jersey, J. Envon son and Sons Company, manufacturers of soaps at Camden, the Jefferson Med ical College, and the University of Pennsylvania’s chemical laboratories, the H. K. Mulford Company in Glen olden and the Samuel P. Sadtlor and Sons, consulting and analytical chem ists. Following the inspection .of these plants the men will lie present one hun dred per cent strong at the Navy game on Franklin Field Saturday afternoon. The students will return on November fourteenth. PROF. HALL AT PETERSBURG Mr. W. H. Hall, Professor of Farm Simp, is Penn State’s special represen tative at the Community program at Petersburg. The director of the com munity school is Mr. Fred Hosier, a graduate of Penn State in 1920. ARMORY Saturday, October 29, 8:00 to 12:00 “Four New York Stores” Qeneral Offices: Broadway, Cor. agth Street Wallach Bros. HMT .CHAFFMBR * KAJUC Our Stores are Your Stores Thouund, of young men In and out of college heve made the Wallach •tores what they are today. The fine clothes, hats and habetdashery we sell are the kind you 1! • to buy; the style and quality of our goods are the sort Tor which you shown a decided preference. And our prices make these things doubly interesting—due to the pre site of our business which permits us to take a tiny profit on many ss.l.s. against a big profit on a few. “Satisfaction or Money Back” THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN The Love Letters of A Shorthorn My Pansy girrul, Kid, you got the put it ocross stuff lokuted deep in your innerds. There ain’L no telNn how worked up I was with my fingers a’n emoshens when I undid that packige which looked like a side of bnkon from the Wlgglesville Amalgematod Butcherin Cor|>eradheii an on ctoser examinashcu proved to he a collekshen of the plcsent fcotsh ers of Pensy Briggs. Mrs. Mitzler swore a sorta female aware that me an Useless woodent be aloud to use no thumlax in appendln any ohstrukshens to the wail in the form of pitchers of our sw.eethart or other fellows sweefhnrtff. But Use less ain't takin c an f for nothin—its cause his paw knows he ain’t kwall fied fer nothin higher. I dlskard this hunk of Infermashen to you mainly fer you to see why Useless gets brillyent kredit fer nailin the bewtiful lllustra shens of Pansy Briggs to the rafters of the wall with twenty penny spikes. It ain’t no wonder that Uselesses grandpaw got discouraged an dropped over ded Jest in the prime of his life the day before his eighty ninth berth day, when he had in mind wat an im praktikcl kontrapshen his grandson was gone to make out of hisself. Useless has bout as much sense of deroetshen jus Sim Rudders who keeps the general store at Muntford Croaain. In the ferst place, Sim is generally out of everything, in the second place, when Mag Pearsley had compeny fer supper an was in a hurry an ast him dkl he have anything In the shape of bananas, he khew darn well that she dident want no kukumbers. In the therd place an thats where the joke comes in at. old Sim shuffled his cud of tabaka to his other jaw an remarks Innereently, "Mag. the only things we got Jest now in the shape of bananas Is a fresh box of Weolin stogies.’’ But we’re gettin away from the point of djskusshon which was twenty penny nails an which was bein druve into the anteek plastorln with all the viger in Uselesses left hand an the heel of my Army boots. By akshel experiment these nails has been found capabel of supjKirtin not only a pitcher of such a havy girrul ns you. but also one sem- Third Annual OLD MAIN DANCE GRIFF’S SEVEN PIECE ORCHESTRA Be 3ure to get yours as the tickets are limited. Admission $ 1.50 per couple, tax included. Customs are off for the Frosh. Thursduy, an gettin colder Henry Grimm TAILOR 206 E. College Ave. The Varsity Pool Room Pool and 'Billiards Cigars, Cigarettes and Candy H. G. MORRELL, PROP. Coarse, we don’t hang a short up in frunt of your eyes fer you to take offence at. We’re konsiderln your dellkate make-up, Pansy, Its hard on a girruls blushln mekanism to have to look at a fellow wat has disrobed his shert. Wutever we do is fer your l-ortekshen. An speakin of semester sherts. Pansy lin sorry you ain’t trained In college teknikey terms. The only thing that is worse than a semester shert is a below. No. I dotit ineon below a sem ester shert but a below. The only pep ul that sees the distinkshen clearly is fellows that is handlknpod with both bclows and sherts. •Semester sherts has to be reel dark brown in coler befort they me aloud to enter into kompetisshen with other sherts. Another rulJn is that there only aloud to be worn daily until the college thinks they've bin worn long enuff which is genrally sometime In the beginning of the new year. Youd be suprized how straitforward the fel lows get to walkln bout Crissmus, cause a. semester shert worn long enuff stiffens your pride unkonshewdy. Fellows got them trained akurately. too. Fellow -nekst door in us jest sings out fer his shert to retreat an fer the rest of his ekwipmenl to march on at a gal lup an do you know that shert will link into a corner an lean up genst the wall till he wants it agon. Much as I’d like to—but I cam be lettin you into all the inner sekrits of our college life at once. s-> with a few approprlet remarks to the wether your darlin Jasper will Mow nut the light an laps into the arms of Mnre feus by rollin into bed an kickin I’se lese over to the outside ego. So after all 1 wont say nothin bout the wether fer its to cold to go out an sec wat its like. Yours all over ©!¥tfm @A\f® A Trial Is All We Ask A. B. DIETRICH Penn State, 1920 BALFOUR BLUE BOOK 1922 The Standard Reference for Fraternity Jewelry will be mailed on application. L. G. BALFOUR GO. Factory, Attleboro, Mass. Pittsburg Office, 299 Uunion Arcade Badges Jewelry Stationery Green leather poeketbook with S. P. E. seal, containing sum of money Reward if returned to Diemer House. Sheep Lined Coats Crawford Shoes slo—sls.so—slB $9.50 and $ll Crawford Dancing Pumps Dull Kid and Patent Leather $8.50 THE QUALITY SHOP Opposite Front Campus No exchange charged on checks DEAN E.S. MOORE MEETS WITH MINING CONGRESS Dean 15. S. Mnorc, head of the School f Mines, has just returned from a ‘onferoiice .if flic American Mining Congress in Chicago where he took •■art I*: discussions on mining and met •dlurgloal education and the relation ‘etwcoii labor and the mining in dustry. Tills conference was of great importation to mining men in that it Included representatives of the min ing industry from all parts of the country. The sessions were very largely taken up with the discussion of ••ommerrial factors and the relations that exist at tin* present time between labor and capital. At this meeting Senator Nicholson of Colorado propos 'd that a Federal Department of Min ■'S 4 with the Secretary in the Presid ent’s Cabinet lie established. An un usually fine exhibit of mining mach inery and equipment of ail kinds was on display in the Coliseum where many of the meetings were conducted. Dean Moore was requested by the President of the Mining and Metall | urgicnl Society of America to meet | with their committee on mining and ■ metallurgical education at the Harvard Club in New York City on the twenty , eighth of October for the purpose of discussing ;* report on the curricula , for mining schools. We eat Chriss Kunzler’s Red ! Rose Meat Products, the best j obtainable. Have you given j it a trial. If not, do so to sat- j isfy your taste. Lancaster. j Hallowe’en Decorations The Athletic Store ♦X~XX 4 **fr*H**X‘*X**X~X‘ , X 4, X~X'*X~X~W~X~X**X~X~X**X~X~X~X**X“H~X**i There style. as you try on a SOCIETY BRAND Suit or Overcoat. You know it, after you have worn it awhile. Their good style is “built in” by hand-tailoring of the finest all wool fabrics. Van Heusen Collars 50c. ■*X**W**8 m W*' Friday, October 28, 1921 STEItX IU-T.ES FOB PRESUMES AT CONXEmei T COLLEGE Thu following rules (or freshnun, "'ere promulgate.! rereml.v be the per classmen at the Connecticut collecl for women. Tuesday and Wednesday. \ vear white stocking on tin* loft leg an ,j * hlaek stocking on the right leg. Thursday. Friday am! Satunb,.. wear hair drawn lightly hark front ears; drawn la a pig on t„,, ot h with a green bow. Forhhhlen [„ roll stockings be| ow km*»'s until .January first. HEAL BANANA TREE AT rm.LEUE HEARS FRUix There is a real banana tree bearing a uleely growing hunch or fruit t 0 be seen in the conservatory to the loft 0 , the Ik,tatty liuihlhtg. It is , ho ce ‘ of attraction these .lavs as the tr „ hivtrs only nin e In a half-dozen year. SPECIAL :; FRIDAY & SATURDAY Turkish Caramels j 30"> : Chocolate Ice Cream :: 40c Q1, 20c Pi., 10c 1-2 Pt. i! CANDYLAND j DANIEL K. CHASE SIGMA PI HOUSE Phone 125 i On Co-op Corner IS a difference in You see it as soon
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