Page Two .STAFF j: u L. il. il-'-lr. k. • ■‘•ivi: staff i.-YANT it; SINCSS AIANACSKUS !,. .%!. ArofiMj lAjvi.s. -■> \V. J.. i J. 11. I.uu. -o :i)j ;uvi:«s cGi’ijiiiink-ations on any sublet of college in s of thy writers. Tii.- JVj.;j S ir- ‘ ,0, if paid before October 15, IU‘J2. After October 15, F.nt-r*d a*. Hit- Iv.-'o'.T: State O'llw. I’ti., as .»eeoml class matter and Publishing Co. Building. .Mrniht-r ui havrrn lnlcrraliryiali? .\cu>|iujmt A*Miriatl»ll News Editor this Issuc- FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1922 BROADCASTING PENN STATE MUSIC A new feature has been added to the New York invasion this year in that music by the Penn State band and the varsity quartet is to be broadcasted to all radio stations east of the Mississippi. This is a mark of distinction that is well merited 1 y these two organizations. For many years, the band has been considered one of the best .in collegiate circles and as such has been well received wherever it has been sent. Under the direction of Bandmaster Thompson, it has gain ed steadily in popularity until now it is considered a necessary part of every large student or alumni program. For the past few years, it has been sent to football contests played on foreign fields where it has been heard and applauded by many thousands more. Next Fri day night, the millions living in the eastern part of the country will “listen in” and many an old grad will feel the thrill of listening again to the strains of that music which has become so dear to his heart. Likewise, the varsity quartet is favored with a growing reputa tion. Trips to the Pacific Coast and the Panama Canal Zone have given it an opportunity to sing before multitudes. Their numbers on Friday night will be a pleasing variation. Due to the fact that trans portation difficulties arc less when few' take passage, it has been cus tomary for the quartet to feature at most of the alumni conventions while the band has been reserved for those large occasions which merit a representation of the band. Both organizations have won their way into the hearts of thousands of people and it pleases the Penn State student body that their band has been granted this good fortune. To the alumni who have arrang ed this broadcasting, the college owes its thanks, and the students are of the opinion that they will be amply repaid ior their efforts by the excellent program that will be sent through the air.. CiO TO IT, TEAM! New York will witness a mighty conflict Saturday afternoon when the Syracuse and Penn State elevens meet for a friendly tussle. From reports that have come from the Pitt-Syracuse game last Saturday, the Orange representation displayed a team that deserves careful consid eration by all other teams in the cast. But Penn State students have confidence in their team. This game is one of four hard contests that form the latter half of* the season’s calendar for the Nittany institution and is the initial game where the full strength of the Blue and White machine must.be used. As a defeat in cither one of these four contests will take away an appreciable amount of strength to claim for the mythical champion ship, it is important that the team come through with a victory. Every Penn State student has faith in the ability and spirit of his team. He is sure that his team is of championship calibre and that it will fight with the same old spirit of loyalty that has characterized the work of the elevens turned out at Penn State. Team! we are backing you to the limit. Go to it for the glory of Penn State. THE CO-ED VAUDEVILLE The entertainment that is to be given for the Endowment Fund by the Co-eds tonight should be largely attended if the student and faculty bodies are acquainted with the purpose and features of the vaudeville. All of these deserve patronage. Since the beginning oi the campaign, the girls have taken an ac tive interest in the raising of the fund and all classes can now boast of 100 percent participation, a mark that was not reached by any of the men s classes. Parties, teas, and other feminine social affairs have been held, the proceeds of which have been turned over to their Alma Mater. The entertainment tonight is the first they have staged this winter and, like other Co-ed undertakings, will be used to swell the Emergency Building Fund. This in itself calls for Penn State patron age, . . . . But in addition, the girl students arc presenting an attractive program, composed oi six good numbers of College talent has been used throughout and is oi such a quality t make an excellent selling point for each ticket. The team has gone to meet its first strong opponent of the 1922 season without a rousing mass meeting. It is feared a mistake has been made in allowing this to happen. ' Penn State spirit runs highest at an athletic mass meeting and the attitude of the student body can generally be measured by the number of these meetings held. An argument might be advanced that the team needs all the practice possible and that a meeting would in trude upon the plans of Coach Bczdek. Why not have the meeting later in the evening alter the srimmage is over? The presence of the team would not be required for longer than one-half an hour and this could easily be arranged after the night’s practice for the team. It is granted that a certain amount of inconvenience is thus placed upon the team and the coaches, but the advantages that attend a mass meeting far outweigh it. Fewer mass meetings have been held this year than ever before and consequently the spirit of the student body is not as intense. It would indeed be a misfortune if this should ef fect the showing of the team on foreign fields. Cheering has also suffered. This should not be. 1 It is true that the scnd-oFF last night served as a substitute for the mass meeting to a certain degree, but it could not take the place of a spirited Penn State mass meeting. e *>.•• y*.-ar by students of the Penntiyl • J •s; of Stud-nts. i':»**ulty. Alumni, ami Friends of; .Managing Edi:<>i Managing ...Miss S. IC. CYnll, BusitieSS .MallUgeJ Advertising Manager .-Orcuintiuu Manager •. H. ,S. .’ilurri.i, W.J. Wsinl.Jr..-^ - 5 i*. w. c;oi(!. . A. W. Potiv R. 15. Colvin A MISTAKE Professor Crockett Writes From Paris In a certain famous sea sow:, tho! author and title of which both escape my memory, an old tar is pictured ns wrapping himself in ids robe of sclf-j • omplaceney. and pitying the land luli-i bers who must content themsevles with the dead calm ami <iuiet of the earth.. I never «pdto appreciated the old tar’s! pity, till wo landed twelve days ago at I-** Havre. That morning we had reached European waters; but our joy at sighting Northern France was tem pered by the fact that the rolling of the; Lafayette had ceased. We became painfully conscious of our sea legs—[ which we did or did not shed, if l anti not mixing metaphor, for a week ori mere. Ftir days the Moors of our rooms { 1 would rise to meet us, while we never! felt safe in ascending nr descending a stairway, without holding to the han-j inters. This all seems like ancient his- 1 tory to us now. but ’tls far moro enjoy* j able In the retrospect than it was ini the reality. ? As the result of this unlooked for ex perience we have been forced to take our sight-seeing lightly. To be sure.) we have kept pretty close to our sched ule. but we huve been content, perforce, not to ellmb cathedral towers, and to see things in the large. So few were the passengers of all classes on the Lafayette, that after landing operations were begun, we had mir passports examined, and were on the dock, and througn the French cus toms almost before, we realized it. But not quite soon enough to catch the special train to Paris, as I had to for ward our trunks to Rome. At our lei sure we took u cab to the station, and the mUI-afternoon train to Rouen. 1 bad twice before been over the route Horn Le Havre to Rouen, but _EdilM-in-Ci»i«t Assistant Editor C. J>. Tilton, \V. W. Stall! ’34 each time by night, and I had therefore no idea of the beauty of the valley of the lower Seim*. For eighty kilometers that afternoon Franco smiled us her welcome In cverehanging landscape of valley and hill, of trim-kept gardens and long stretches of farm-land hardly, a mile not mado picturesque with long avenues ot Hobbema trees. For the geography of our early days, imagine a huge fan spread out with ribs of uneven length, all converging tin Paris. At the ends of the ribs to Rouen. Amiens. Lion, and Reims. To those live cities we went in turn, prov ing to our satisfaction, at least, that all roads lend to Paris as well as to Home. Rouen I had not visited since 1907. but I found it little changed, except for a mammoth new railroad station now In process of erection. It is pre-eminently the city of Jeanne d’Arc, for it was there that she was imprisoned and tried •mil so ruthlessly done to her death* Everywhere one goes, he Is reminded In some way of the fair maid of Or leans. A certain street named after her bothered us for a while, as It seemed determined to go In four directions at once. That fact did not strike us as sadly as it might have done under the circumstances, for we still were wear ing our sea legs; but were were none the less relieved when we found that our street was really two streets which formed a V near our hotel, the Rue Jeunnc d’Arc and the Boulevard Jeanne d’Arc. To Rouen we had gone for the glass of the middle age quite as much as for the Cathedral and the Church of St. Ouen; for Rouen probably contains more churches with good tnedieva. glass than any other city In France, while France contains the finest glass In the world. We were disappointed in getting Into St. Vincent, but found some of the glass In St. Patrice good, though not to be compared with the four really fine windows of the Cathedral. In St. Owen, which externally is a gem. though Its two front towers might well have been larger, there Is but one win dow worthy of mention, a small rose In the apex, directly back of the choir. It is In purple nnff white glnss. < afcU evidently dates from the lost century Of all the glnss wo have seen, and os I write, wo have now seen most of the host glass in Europe, this little rose would best admit of being copied by a modern maker of glass. I wish It might inspire a hundred artists in A merica. Rouen Cathedral is theoretically im possible. combining as it docs, features of all periods of ecclesiastical architec ture. Its nave is impressive, but it must be put into a second category of French Catherdrnls, after those of Amiens and Laon and Bourges and Constance and above all, of Chartres. But in the south tower of its facado— tho so-called Butter Tower—it possesses a tower that is almost unique in its attractiveness. There are other towers of other cathedrals as great, as perfect in their construction, but none more pleasing. Of course after leaving Rouen we made a side trip to Bonsecours taking the first mountain railway of our tour. New Styles New Fabrics New Values In Overcoats You will find in the Quality Shop styles an extraordinary combination of Fabric and Tailoring. They are new values, and they mean something to the man who buys his clothes carefully. Let us show you this super value line. Prices $25, $3O, $35 Sheep Lined All Wool Crawford Coats Scarfs Shoes $10.50 and $14.50 $1.50 to $3.50 $9.00 Tuxedo Suits Tuxedo Vests $6 Special $37.50 Tuxedo Shirts $3 THE QUALITY SHOP : Opposite Front Campus. THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN to see the pilgrimage church of Notre Dame de Bunseeours and the beautiful memorial to Jeanne d'Are with its pa thetic statue of the .Maid of Uoinremy. anti to get a view of the Valley of the Seine for miles in either direction. Amiens claimed us only for her Cath edral —hut how overmastering that sole attraction! Since the ruin of the ca thedral of Reims, the facade of the Amiens Cathedral may well he regarded as the greatest in all France. It makes one catch ones breath, as do the height of the nave with its warm iKvqiiiablo color ami the boldness in the col >rs oi the glass of the three lovely ro.se win dows. ‘i he organ was silent the day of our visit, hut on a former occasion 1 had heard It peal forth great harmonies of sound. Our going to Lion was all along of an adventure I had had on the jMveh of Amiens Cathedral a year ago. We knew of Laon as a very essential .step in the development of cathedral arch!- i teclure, hut we had never really known j anything about Us real greatness tmd the uniqueness of its ntti'actkin and its ’ setting, and we might have passed it 1 by. hut for my fortuitous adventure ‘ of the year before. So to ’ bum we went, vlsitod though it he by only a few; but with what a wealth of memories have we left It behind! 1 fain would put it on the Grand Tour. Imagine a level plain stretching for many miles in every direction save on the east, where, a half dozen miles away rise hills that become almost mountains. In the centre of your plain rises very abruptly the large and irregularly shaped hill of between five and six hundred feet In height, on which is built the city of Laon, though the city has lw-ng since overllowed the city walls on several sides, like water from an over full caldron. The site, as one can believe, has been one of Importance for two thousand years, ami was a stronghold of the Rcni. in the days of Julius Caesar. It has featured in other wars: It was occupied by iho Germans in the Franco-J’russlan War and again for four years in the recent World War. though It suffered but little material damage In either campaign. On my asking the length of the city walls, we were told that they extended for s.x miles. We contented ourselves with two walks, the longer of which did not extend a mile ami a half, and. i r the most pari, just below the ram parts. And what sightly strolls they were—battlements on one side, a precip itously sloping hill pa the other, and in the distance long stretches of the fa.r land of France. Our hotel was built on the ancient city wall; and from our win dow at mght we Ltuked out on that pari of the city that had overllowed the hill, all illumined in its electric lights, as it Iran of giant Fmirth-of-July fireworks that continued hour after hbur. it made on our memories an ineffacable picture. And the cathedral: 'tis a miracle in stone; for, great as it is. it was built and finished within the space of two years. There was no funicular railway to carry up the stone and other mater ial from the plain below, when the ca thedral was built in the twelfth cen tury. such as carried us that hot after noon in August; hut faithful oxen had been employed; ami the memory of those oxen has been fittingly preserved In statues of them that adorn the south ern of the two western towers; and from their high perch, they look down benignly on the visitor, as he strains his neck and eyes to look up at them two hundred feet from the pavement. The effect of the facade and of the four towers is very pleasing. Imposing. I had no idea that one could flftid so much pleasure as ours in looking at square Gothic towers. On its interior the cathedral was a revelation. Clean, well and lovingly preserved, restored, though with few or no evidences of restoration, harmonious in its Norman type save for a few Ren aissance features that did not present themselves obtrusively, to me It Is ■ unique in the picture that it has left. In its nave, of the cathedrals that. I have seen, it is most like Peterborough, but far more impressive than Peterbor ough. For in. addition to Peterborough's 1 almost perfect proportions, one finds In Laon loftiness and spaciousness, and glass that again fairly makes one catch one’s breath. Next to the glass of (Continued on last page) PENN STATE TO HE SCENE OF FRUIT JUDGING CONTEST The Inter-Collegiate Fruit Judging league will hold its annual apple judg ing contest at State College on Satur day, December ninth. The teams enter ing the contest will arrive on the morn ing of the eighth, and will visit the in teresting points about tho college dur ing that day. It is hoped that all the members, Ohio, West Virginia, Mary land, Delaware. New Jersey, and Penn sylvania State Colleges of Agriculture will be represented by teams. Church Notices Presbyterian Sunday School 9:30 a. m. Morning Worship 10:45 :i. m. Junior Christian Endeavor 3:oi> p. m. Intermediate and .-icnlor Christian Endeavor 0:30 p. in. Evening Worship 7:30 p. tn. Prayer Meeting Wednesday 7:30 p. m. St. Andrews Episcopal Twentieth Trinity. Holy Communion 7:45 a. in. Sunday school 9:30 a. m. Morning Prayer and Sermon 10:45 a. m. Evening service 7:30 p. m. A cord ial welcome to all. St. John’s Evangelical Sunday School 9:30 a. tn. Preach ing 10:45 a. m. Public Worship 7:30 p. m. At tliis service the pastor will discuss the recent Church Merger. Prayer'Service Wednesday 7:45 p. in. A cordial welcome to everyone. Si, Paul’s Methodist Episcopal Sunday School 9:30 a. m. Morning Worship 10:45 a. m. Subject "The Religion of an Educated Man, —How Expressed." Intermediate and Senior Kpworth longue 6:30 p. m. Evening Worship 7:30 p. tn. Wednesday even ing Prayer service. Friday evening ilie student social will he held in charge n’ Mr. and Mrs. .1. W. Fitzpatrick. University liuptist Meeting every Sunday in Room 100 Horticulture Building. Bible school at .i:4f> a. m. Divine Worship at 11:00 a. m. Ever} body welcome. Our Lady of Victory Chapel Sunday Mass 10:15 a. tn. Saturday Jon tension at 7:00 p. ni. Week day .Mass at 7:00 p. tn. Mcnornh Society .Members ol* the Intercollegiate Menu .ah Association which lias for Its pur pose the advancement of Jewish cul ture and ideals. .Meeimg ecery Sun- day at ll:uo a. m. in room 35 Liberal’ Arts Building. Everybody welcome. Memhersip is open to all. Christian Science .Meeting every Sunday evening at 6: 30, in Room 100 Horticulture Build- ing. All are welcome. Campus Gossip For the benefit of our readers we inter viewed Hnratius McNutt and herewith present his secret of success. Mr. McNutt is a holder of one of the PePnn State scholarship medals and an authority on students. "I have never Dunked a course and here is the secret,” he confided. "It has always been my policy to laugh heartily at all professorial Jokes”. We have strained our necks for the Did you know this about Osteopathy ? That as a profusion it is only twenty-four years old. has nearly seven thousand practitioners, sup ports eight active schools, the largest of which has over seven hundred stu dents. That Osteopathic Physicians un dergo a scientific course of training which comprises nine months study in each of four’ consecutive calendar years. That this course is the same as is taught in the best medical schools except that otcopathy Is substituted for drugs, and the course in Applied Anatomy is more extensive. That Osteopaths have the highest regard for both major and minor surgery, but they consider surgery the "Court of List Appeal.” That Osteopaths practice obstetrics, use antiseptics, give antidotes in case of poisoning and use anesthetics in surgery. That Osteopathy does not protend lo be a "cure all”. That there is no magic or mystery about the treat ments or the results. It is simply uppllcd common sense. That it is not massage (Osteo paths do not "rub") but it is a sci entific adjustment of deranged body tissues. That it is never rough, never dras tic, never complicated. The treatments are seldom lengthy and almost al ways accomplish good. That it is especially safe an bene* . ficinl for Infants ami the aged. Its results are simple and lasting. That Osteopaths do general prac tice, treating both acute and chronic diseases with remarkable suuces. That careful instruction as to di etetic and hygienic care is given by Osteopathic Physicians in addition to their regular adjustlve treatment. That if you want to know more nbout Osteopathy you had better ask an Osteopath as there are many people who through ignorance or be cause they ‘‘have an ax to grind” will misrepresent it to you. That Osteopathy owes its success to those who have tried it fairly and then told their friend of its benefits' That its success does not depend on the failure of other methods. Its mission Is to fight disease —not other systems of healing. That the man who is "down” on Osteopathy is not "up” on it. That "Osteopathy stands for tho truth wherever -it Is scientifically proven.” Is there anything further you would like to know about the form of diagnosis and sytem of practice known as Osteopathy? If so, the local Osteopathic Phy sician is able to give you authori ter on any subject relating to Oste tative information and reading mnt opathy that may interest you. DR. R. L. CAPERS Office above Varsity Store Phone 74-M Office Hours: Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, 10-5 last week watching that aeroplane that has been Dying over our village. Therefore we feel in perfect trim to view all the skyscrapers In Gotham. I: is the little things that count. Going to sleep in class cuts down looping at night. It also cuts down the grade. Some people go to bed to sleep. Others go to college. We know a prof who called bis class, the pullman section. It was made up entirely of sleepers. We’re Curious to Know Why other students never have ns much work as we do. Why we always get the wrong prof. The Penn State-Symeuse score. Who rings the Old Main bell at night. Where to get a square meal. If all hoarding house and restaurant patrons were placed end to end they would reach. The mistcry of the missing tooth brush has been solved. The previous statement that a sen ior was guilty Is false. It was only a We wore seriously considering go ing to the Navy game next Friday. Direct to You By the time you read tills we will be sauntering on Broadway. For the benefit of our readers we are' going to cover the Penn Slato-Syraeuse Next Tuesday you will be given all [lie high fights on the game in this col- if Bezdek smiles we will tell you. = Flavor I Lasts i A irMiiTWf fni r- —rn tmu«- i'wiß {WHITTINGTON DRESS SUIT CO.. Social Function Clothes Question Solved. ANY STYLE • ALL OCCASIONS Complete Renting Outfitters (Head to Foot) Largest Stock between Chicago and New York. ANY SIZE ALL ACCESSORIES C. D. HERBERT, Bell 199 “When a Feller M needs a Friend” Did you ever start to re- fwyfVfed view your lecture notes for the “mid-years” and find ? P^jj you couldn’t read half of 0 them? Then is the time you will wish you had written \Y/r - them on a '-f Remington Portable A few minutes spent in typing after each lecture hour will do the trick. And don’t overlook the time this machine will save in typing your themes, theses, papers, and all your writing. Friday, October 27,19 a •Hit! exact moment at whlch-i" throws oil- his headgear win be rect^ \\ e*re going to he iiresent when th» band gives its radio eoiirert tonight im we'll give you inside dope „„ lha ”“ Uon’t forget to tarn yonr radio 10U meters tonigiit at eight o'clock. * However, after reading the pron,. of the girls' vaudeville, we thlnktw ■State t.'ollege wal be good enough b. lIS. lw lf "'lt roll will see us at Hie show in seal 10. ltotv G. Mai n In return for a pass, we will agm 10 give the sia.w some free publicity fa tills column. w putuuk hush inauouhated HY HUTGKHS UN OKHCLASSNBS Students Of tin,* t \vii lower classes w Rutgers College instituted a novel serin hisi week in the form of sl picture ru? Thf dates for this rush were from Moo. duy, October sixteenth to Friday, 0c tQ ] in*r twentieth. Any successful picture of either class taken on the camp* between eight a. m. ami four p. nt submitted to the judges. The first gwd pieture that was handed in each day counted as a point for that class. "PhoJopliys y’QuAfii* Cktoqa. ~Rq. * N TITAN Y Note:—The Xittuny Theatre open Tuesday. Friday and Saturday FRIDAY— WESLEY KAKItY In ••Haps to ItlchiV BULL MONTANA COMEDY SATURDAY— The Greatest Fur North Picture Made “XANOOK OF THE NORTH* NEWS WEEKLY— Snub Pol lard Comedy PASTIME FRIDAY and SATURDAY— RirilAltll HAHTiII.KMESS in “The Hum! Huy” BUSTEK KEATON in “The Electric House” Adults 30c, Children lot*, and Tax MONDAY sind TUESDAY— CIIAHI.ES hay in n new version of “The Tailor Made Man” JIMMY AUllltEY In **Tlie Messenger” Adults 30c, Children 15c, and Tax NITTANV TUESDAY— RICHARD TAI.MADGE in “Tin* Unknown” LLOYD HAMILTON COMEDY COMING JOHNNY HINES in “Sure Fire Flint” UONEI. HAHUYMOHE In “The Face in lite Fog” I). W. Griffiths’ Masterpiece “The Orphiins of Hie Storm”
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers