< Tuesday, May .16, 1922 COUNTY COMING HERE FOR CONFERENCE President Thomas , and Prominent "Y" Officials Will Address Rural District Lads As the culmination of this ycnr'o ac tivities in-the moo ement for the duvet -, opment Of teal Radom among boyn in 'rural districts, the Pica Annual Older Boys Conference of Centel County will meet at State College lor three -beginning on May twenty-sixth. Delo gates, ranging from sixteen to thenty yenta in. age, - will leincsent every com munity In the countyimmestlng and unusual pogrom hue bout plan ' lied for the confelence President Thomas,ptoreasor W. V. Dennis, Asso ciate Profeaaur of Rural Sociology of I Penn State, and prominent or, M. C A • officials from Now lock and Pennsyl l- vanta will be among the speAkers at the meetings the'close of winter, the Y. AI. CVA. - of Penn - State has sent teams on week-end trips thioughout the district — With - the - putpose of lining up Centte County to establish a better undmatand t • dug- of .rural communities -About , fifty students of the college hate model - paled In the movement The matte Idea is novel, differing ftom any total edu cation that has 'prevlouttly , been at - tempted In' that lit pulite. la not to '• develop men as leadets of boys, but rather to train boys In the essentials of e, rural leadership._ The project Is offer ed as a eolatiae of the mai problem One of the intelested Oahe!, who will be pt.enrat thetionfmence Is 'William W.W00d5,..14, belle, known as - Dill" Woods, Ulm wan president of the Y ; hi C. A. at the thee hews a student •- • here. While in college he auttted .113 left tackle fin Penn State, being cap , Lain of the nineteen-fifteen lootball team After graduation he sas ass., t• toted with the Agticultural Ettension -Department of - .Penn State At the i present time 13111' . Woods is coaching Gettysburg's football team LAN4AgrEn. CO. CLUB TO 1 - . ELECT OFFICIALS FOIL rEAII. '4 A. special meeting of the Lancastet o-County Club will be held In Room 314 .4 , 01 d Main this'mening for the purpose of electing officers for the coming year • -"The following have been nominated tar i the various offices President, C. B. Klreiter '23, H. P Rutter '2.1, and H. • / L. Bordner '23, for Vico-President, F • H. Longenecker ' . 23, P. D , Andrews 'for Secretary, D 12 Helm, '24, r (Anne . 2.5;13: AL Zook '25, for Treason. 5 er, G. S Erb '25, W L. Hess '24, C. II tOberdort '25; for Corresponding Score ,' 5 tarp ond'Prese Agent, J R. Bossier '25 (PENN'STATE 'WAS FIRST TO TEACH. FLOUR DILLLINIi The 1 1111 ,, college course for training 11101kr grillag_engineers to be .nablinh i.i-ed In America Isse organized at - the lPennsylvanin State College a number y' of yeirs ago, anti today is the only one + - fof its kind in the eastern part of the The course was established I through the aid of millers of Pommy/. 'lonia and mill machinery men and 'builders, who contributed about d 12,000 worth of equipment, more than half of • the machinery necessary to train men 'to manage flour milling plants The limited number of graduates from this • Penn State course have always been 'in demand both In trade and In govern ' I moot service schools established In recent years in two western agriculture col leges have followed tho lend established Jot the Pennsylvania State College en a tglneering ochool. Adequate state ap propriations have caused these schools - to develop much faster than the one at Penn State. Milling has been recog rained as n basis Industry, ranking per -. haps second only to agriculture In the Z t Importance of food products and their •1 I preparation for consumption , PENN'S 'NEW , STADIUM IS NOV( UNDER CONSTRUCTION The Old Franklin Field stands which i have witnessed many mighty battles are " to be no Moro. The erection of a now stadium tentalling the latest to Italian II i , architecture and design will replace the ~ f old weathered, was: andtwarped boards ,i of the past. About thirty brick arches 1 will be used as an arcade surrounding .: i the field. Alt available -spacs beneath the new , I etande - in to be used for athletics and physical education. In addition to two = , enormous team rooms with lockers, ), chewers and drying rooms there will be e l situated, at the gymnaelum side of the , north and south stands, an indoor track, ' 4 l equash , and /soccor courts, and a crow room. AkAtiAp WRIGLEYS Newest Cosalion-- with ra c znaint *re> Sew, jacket —11 4 a. Nwohn-in wet ~.? 7 , 4l. l 4=tizra sowth• GMAT s(t snwd PROMINENT FARMERS TO GATHER AT PENN STATE (Met one huddled imminent latmem M. tile Mute nill be at We college May tmenty-fifth end t, 011 t) -sixth to Inves tigate the needs of tile college In agri annum' temarch Thcy me coming at than ban expense at the toquent or the Sun, Chambet of Curritnetce After viewing the present situation end needs et the novena departments, they will considet mmnii of enabling the college to secute The Initial meeting mill be held on Thursday, May twenty-fifth, at els o'clock in the Presby torian Church Dinner ulli be setyed to the visitors, aftet %thick the situation of the college with respect to leseinch will be pre sented by President Thomas and Dean Watts, Friday, May tuenty-aisth, will be detotod to an inspection of the dif ferent dopartmetim of the School of Au lculture The meeting In the outgi myth of the conform.° on Agriculture at the then of the Inauguration or Pt euldent Thomas I int fall, At hen it was voted that such - u committte he appointed to visit the college and make recommen dations 101 the extenclon of Agt lcul tut al ittmeat ch Thole is one comection to be noted In the Hittitelass Soccer schedule as printed In the last issue of the COL LEGIAN The game between the Freshmen and the &Mots, scheduled for May nineteenth has been changed to Thutcao, May eighteenth because the Freshmen base regular Physical Education on Thurxdto In the games played Tuesday and Wednesday, the Junlois defeated the V; eshmen and tied ulth the Sophomines after two extol periods -•- In spite of the app trent pool shoot ing of the Ft eshman team It is expect- ed that a good [cam will filially be pto duced flora the ueulth of material from which to pick F W Glum, has been chosen captain. Otto GI upp is the Freshman coach, and H Warner to the Sophomore coach. The tohnstown Club held Its annual election of officers on Tuesday coon- Ing - hhen the following students were named to serve for the coming year. President, W R Auman, '23; vice mesldent, 0 R Strlttmatter, '23, sec tetary-tteasurer, E 21 Leonard, T 3, club reporter, C S Simmons, '2l. DIFFERENT SOILS BEING TESTED BY PENN STATE The spring seeding of the experimen tal plots for soils research at Snowshoe In Centre County, at Springfield in Bradtmd County, find In Washington County has been conducted under the supervision of S. W. F White and his assistant Mr Holtman - of the Agron omy Department's research staff. The plots are composed of from four to six acres each and are subdivided into tenth acre sections. Four 'experiments Misch feeding and cropping are being conducted on each field, twelve of the tenth acre - plots being used for each experiment The college has been cropping the field at Snowshoe for six years, at Ettadfold county and Washington coun ty for four years each The Impel L ance of these experiments lies In the fact that they will make possible a de termination of the requirements of the several soils throughout the state The DeKnlb sell is under observation at Snowshoe, the`Volusia, at Springfield, and the West Mot eland Series at Washington County, the plots on the college forms ate operated on the Hagerstown Series It is planned to acquire similar plots in °thin counties to make tests on the most prevalent soil series in the state As soon as money can be obtained for research the Chester mules, the Beck series, and the Penn series will be observed. T h HOUSANDS of smokers verdict to you— t Of all the other tobaccos NATURE has produced—none can approach the finest varieties of pure Turkish for cigarettes— . None has the delicious FLAVOR of the finest Turkish— None gives the ENJOYMENT of the finest Turkish— None will SATISFY you as will the finest Turkish— U RQD IKIWANLS CLUB ENDORSES 1 ., STATE UNIVERSITY PLAN Well-Known Club at York Passes Resolution Favoring Dr. Thomas's Plans That Pt. Went J. M. Thomas's plan for making Penn State the State Uni veraity Is heartily endorsed by the lead ing organizations of the State and In constantly Ending favor In larger and larger quarto., wax demonstrated at a latent meeting-of the Elwin. Club of 1011 t, Pennsylvania, When that body panned the following resolution. WHEREAS, We believe that the.pub- Ile school vet= of Pennsylvania is not complete without a State University as its apex, and WHEREAS, eta believe that Pennsyl vania Is financially able and morally bound in its obsenunee of the federal land and grant act to maintain such d Unismsity, and WHEREAS,: evety_state..south and stoic of Pena:qt.:lth maintains a State linlvetalty for the inattuction of its )outh uithout paying tuition, and WH.LREAS, set belie. State College has shown itself aoithy of greater sup port and northy of a chance to expand and become still further useful to the Mate both In agriculture and Industry, that efme ho It RESOLVED, that the members of the Kiwanis Club of York, heartily endorse the plan of President-Thomas to change Pennsyhanfa State College to the Penn syhania State University in the be lief that the expansion will more than repay , the state /n-its.value as an edu cational, institution "Ind as the proper place for gloater research work both In agticulture and In industry; further be It RESOLVDD, that a copy of this res olution he sent to the President of tho State College and a copy,be sent to the /hcaldent of-the' local Alumni-Club of the college and that this action,be,pub lished In the daily papers YORK R.MAXIS CLUB (Signed) Lee Relneberg, Secretary. BRONZE STATUE FOIL WOMEN OF INTERCOLLEGIATE GAMES To the college which scores the larg est number of points In the I C. A. A. A. games at the Harvard Stadium on May twenty-sixth and twenty-seventh Is to be axarded a bronze reproduction ofa Burgh.° gladiator California won the title last - year and will have much opposition In defending the tro phy on the last week-end of title month. STUDENTS AT DARTMOUTH - SIGN UP FOR SUMMER CAMP College men from Dartmouth and our rounding districts will . be encamped at Camp Devon, M ass, during the month of August A four weeks course of in tensit e military training is being offer ed by the War' Deparunent which eludes trariegOrtealon, quarters, /mord, and clothe.. Unusual Position FOR Educational; Work Opportunity to travel or to be-: room permanently located with a' well known educational Malta. tlon. Definite salary for die sum mer, drawing account on; business, railroad refunded. Position will pay ! right per, son $4OO to $BOO ;during va— tcation. Write, giving full .details to Sales Monger, National Home 001,001 c a it,. ' Association. care Nn. moat Clty• unease, Noir York - • :ye proved•it—and now give the None bubthe highest I•grade and personally se lected Turkish tobaccos THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAA A. IL BANQUET DRAWS MANYPROMINENT MEN Possibilities for Agricultural De velopment Shown By Hon. Fred Rasmussen An event of considerable significance to Animal Husbandry students, and to the future Interest of livestock produc tion In the Keystone State, was the annual Sirloin Club banquet held in the University Club Wednesday, May third The newly organized Pennml vania Hereford Breeders' Association joined with the students In making the affair extremely successful. Many beef cattle feeders from over the state who were at the college to study the re cently completed steer feeding experi ments, were nice in attendance K C Bailey of the senior class In troduced a number of speakers promi nent in the agricultural work Presi dent John AL Thomas spoke of his im prensimothof,a_year at Penn State and gave.promise of great things fm the college In the immediate future, pmts fag the Animal Husbandry Department for Its succeesfol research and instruc tional work Mr. R FL Miller, repro eenting the American Hereford Breed ers', Association told of the eastward movement of- beef cattle production. secretary of ..Agriculture, Honorable Fred,Rasmussen, ably covered the nob lest of the ,possiblllties of agricultural development in, Pennsylvania, pointing ,out that what have appeared to be dis - - couraging economic conditions. have really, resulted in the rapid recognition of.farm and,livestock problems by law makers and consumers C H. Bedell, eastern, editor ,of the National Stock man and, Farmer and a tonne? Penn :ged the ,undergradu age activities and thus lemselves as servants vealth and leaders In State student, u etas to enter con: better prepare of the Common. their re/menace communities -Professor W. H Thomhavo told what the•ono hundred and ,ninety-two grad uates In Animal Husbandry In ,the poet ton yearn, are doing, and Showed that sixty-one per cent of Chem are, engaged In Work In Pennsylvania With the ex ception of a very few,, all are follow ing 'Mistook or allied.work Dean to Watta L expressed confidence in ithe future livestock business and pre sented- ten medals to Freshmen and ural students for pro n..' judging contest. Two Year Agelea! ficleney, In the an mnr, Nsmr, of Nikola Tesla will always be associated with the invention and earlier development., of the induction motor. In fact, at one time this type of apparatus was known almost exclusively as the "Testa" motor. Teak devised this motor hsdc near the be ginnings of the electrical business, when prac tically everything was built by "cut and try" methods, and none of the accurate unalyticalproc eases of later day shad btatn developed. It maybe said broadly that Teals 'knew two fundamental facts—first, that if a magnet were moved across a sheet of conducting metal, it would tend to drag this metal along; and,—second, that the effects of such a moving magnet could be pro duced by suitably disposed polyphase currents acting on a stationary magnetic structure. Peihaps other, at that time, also knew these -two,facts, but if as, apparently they knew them only as two isolated facts. Testa considered them in combination and the Jesuit was the Teals motor, or what is now known broadly as the "induction motor." These two facts, in combination, represent a fundamental concep tion, and all of the many millions of horsepower of,induction motors in use today throughout the world, are based upon these two fundamentals. Naturally, Westinghouse, havmg,fought single handed to advance the alternating current system, was supremely interested in the new type of , motor. What if the new motor did require The Love Letters of A Shorthorn (Conylight 1922 by H C Frt, Jr) Woltin for the rent 'to come dew Dem Pans), Ito herd as the dooce to strife any thing to you any more cause I'm tide up all my spate time thinkin of you Maybe theres aersc things I could be dole but If I'd tell you bout thorn then you wood think I sus hurtle your feel ins on purpose thery time I look at the front ytud In front of college an the front yard in bak of it puts me in remembrance of hot, big an bentiful Lou ate Not be cause the dandyline.blossoms make me think of the frolics skamperin round otter your fare complesshen One of the templashens In life that Pans) has to restrain herself [tom Is min to count them in front of aoneeyed lookln glass when you ought to be e pectin rad ishes fot Sumlat. inektust. Things Is happenln In the natcherel erre, of the. nays Useless is jest lecoverin hlsself (tom a tell, hul shock —ho dldent shave last month an no , body noticed It The only way Useless can make, an Impresshen on people for tinder welme Is to sing lords them, him havin ale forced In the days of his yuth to sing falsetto at all the funerels that patronized the Safe At Last Semetery In Pajama, Pa Maybe I shouldent be feelln so low dons tallith bout soneterys all the time but a. fellow has a right to peer Into the tutchm on NOrta guess out slat his deminashen Is liable to be Mere . ," likely somebody 'II ketch me some day nalkin barefoot over the sands of time like the poet says. Or like Misses Leish Winters who nas uncommon fond of poetery used to say bout her next to yungest one, Excelsior. That boy wood make foot marks any wear espeshelly If he got his hands Into some plUm P.- T serses oo knon, Pansy old blossom, maybe it woo good Mimess fo, your pay, not Rid the premises of all BED BUGS and destroy the eggs. CENOL STAINLESS ODORLESS Death to Bugs For Salo By GILLILAND & MILLER Nikola Tesla Westin Iboffin you come up here to school an lon to make coupla other dud ent of pies muse from now on the Fresh man Milt aloud towear bloomers, Ni panto nevei was eons enyent to anybody except for nhootin But Pansy, old lllak, If I ram to tell you I 5, is dlanlbutin my time to on- Otte. ghrul with rubarb colored hare no a broken nose you wood rock bal. tehemlnently on maybe nark some ger ant UlllB off the oat not Only be cam, little one, toil Mason hots wicked It Is foi a fellow like me Insin o bet If the haul platers nasent foelin so Inclement that dat an lost the game. then this here tale Itoodent of bad a eomncin end but only a tale end Cause me l lost I had to toluntoor to take Miss Tinket to her church soshibel,lYlNs Tinker must of Jest bin blos.omln Into', matchuritt bout the time Methusalet N 1,14 nnin iound In rompers Not lu that I %%PM to say anything un handy bout the auluilei seks Miss Inker couldent help bein bout up In Baum& Glory, Pa An she had a light plesent look toned the outside of lien face jest like a semetery In blossom Chats holt I got onto toll.in at the fel loin in front of me lie said his name as Ctistnen Zat so, I sans sans I. an ,antin to make hint feel at home I sans Yout name ',win puts me In remembrance of a tam e down home They had a ellstnen cooly Senshen Sunday n hen the Bishop come round Kind of got to be a habit of this here famly to reel", there time US crlstnens Then Mies Tinker bust forth at me Why Mister Tubbs, she says It Mat Tubbs, lie Stubbs I sans. Why Mister Tubbs I'm surprized a che, sayin such terribul things she says at me jest like that Unlit awful hard to work up a blush, as If there ever was a famly havln a cristnen ev ery year She must of bin one of these here ugenlks. But jest the pme I'm nillln to bet WESTCLOX 'Et UNKIE is a big, handsome clock with a large powerful movement, a clock that will give re markable satisfaction in the matter of service, both from a timekeeping standpoint, and from the standpoint of durability.' • -rHa cRAIEITIREE CO. Jewelers State College, Penna polyphase circuits, while all existing -1 —ins were single phase? What if it dal • lower frequency than any emsting Cl/1.1“, I • ti circuits? These were merely details of t Li. tame universal alternating system The important thing was to obtain an ideally simple type of alternating current motor, which Tesla's inven tionoffered. Teslafurnished the fundament-a idea. He and his associates, working for I\ll . West inghouse, proved that thoroughly operative induction motors could be built, provided suitable frequencies and phases were available. What matter if they did not produce an operative commercial system at the time? What matter if it needed the powerful analytical engineers of later date to bring the system to a truly pi ac ticable stage—men with intimate coustrucin e know ledge of magnetic circuits—men on intimate terms with reactive coefficients and other magnetic attributes totally unknown to Tesl.r and hi; co workers? In time the motor was made com mercial, and it has been a tremendous factor in revolutionizing the electrical industry. -Probably no one electrical device has hail more high-power analytical and mathematical ability expended upon it than the induction motor. The practical result has been one of the simplest and most effective types of power machinery in use today. Thus Tesla's fundamental ideas mid Westinghouse's foresight have led to an enormous advance in the world's development. house Li 7 ., „ ,' - 7 ,e,.....),, that :11140 Tlnlon nn Mold° Iterrna tVoi td eat nth. troll So Mont uorry Lakin tel out flohln exot urea n 110, Alnt )on glad . 1 hotted, PM)* old blonnom, mu bolo a, litnytm an not 0-feared of home-made calico or notlan , ' Write quick, Im mallin I=l Dean It L Sacheti, Head of the School of tinglnect log, is attending the annual conter cone of the Aniel lean Mo tu 'Malta In Philadelphia At the close of title conference. Dean Sackett mill go to New York mile.° he mill attend a conference on elmmleal engineering education mark POSTED IN ATHLETIC STONE The Inlet-unit lonely chart lies been pouted In the nlndrnt at the Co-op The units ullt play off theft matches, post the tesults, and continue to their next tonna, CE:SSUS TAKEN OE CARS AT 1% ASIIINOTON UNIT A census oas ikeentb taken of the coin chleb atk parked daily shout the campus of Washington University It keems to prose concluslielk that Wash ington Is not a itch man's school, rot Folds stem by far the most numerous numbering sisty-three, n fib 'Miens and Chemolets a poor second anti third On ly one Pierce-Artmv and hie Cadillac, real coveted the more skpcnshe maims EAMES IZE OUR ADVERTISERS PARK R. HOMAN General Contractor Building Supplies ~`=~ Z; ~ t ~~'zr)!I""'lt'~ s~ - /A tv , 14,, 41, .1