Tuesday, "November 28,'1922 ;FMSH)GRIDMENEND SUCCESSFUL SEASON and One Field Goal. Give Nittany Freshmen a ■ cTotaLof Seventy-Six Points ■Winning five of six scheduled games, the freshman gridiron squad completed a most sucessful yearling football sea son, more.than a week ago, with tho de feat of the Syracuse frosh 16 to 14 Tho . schedule just completed was undoubt edly one of the most difficult arranged in tho past seasons, compilslng teams '' from schools with the.highest football standings' Two now-opponents, West - 'Virginia and Syracuse wero included on this year’s'-cord In addition to tho four whoworo met last season. _ >, Total of Seventy-Sis Points During the season the Nittany fresh men scored elevon touchdowns and one field goal against eight touchdowns and a.fleld goal by their opponents, making together with the extra tries for goal a total of seventy-six points for the Blue and |White 'team and ..fifty-eight for .their opponents. .The,freshmen grid season opened on the.; seventh 'of October, against .Bellefonte Apademy on. Old Beaver. _The_.gtj.mo was.played in.a drizzling ‘rain and against a team completely ( the Dion Cubs in weight and experience. A forward pass by Bolle ' fonts,‘intercepted and .recovered by ,-Oroy of.Penn'State put tho ball on tho Bellefonte fifteen .yard line .from which ‘Johnston made the only touchdown of . tho game leaving the score 6-0 The fallowing .Saturday, Kiski was met on their home • field, where the -freshmen, .completely.demoralized by a lack of team work, fell victim to their opponppts, who scored four touchdowns and .a field goal, .while holding the Nittany .frosh .scoreless. .The Penn representatives, modo a.flying ‘^syirt.against. Kiski.but were unable to ■maintain.their offensive work, allowing ,the gome, to end 31-0 in their opponents fqvor The third game of the,season, played against Dartmouth at Hanover, New Hampshire, resulted In a victory for 'the Centre County yearlings The Nit 'tany BQuad,_completely rebuilt after th« Kiski defeat showed such on improve ment in team work and fighting spirit that they" had the upper hand through out the entire game During tho last part-of-tho-fourth quarter, the_Greon team, by, meanß.of_a_aerlps_of_short for ward passes, succeeded in scoring their .only touchdown Tho final score .was 18 to 7 .Largest Score Against West Virginia The largest score of the season was .piode by the frosh.team the .following i.weok against the'CWest Virginia,eleven yrhen they- .made three touchdowns and three extra points after tho touch downs while holding the Mountaineoro to ,tho,en,d of the,game At ( po time did ‘ the visiting team proye . .dangerous to tho Penn State yearlings - thoir f scoring splays across' rduring the-first -•— t *. , V •j-The ' University of Pittsburgh first team was the next to .before •fhe attack 'of the Nittany freshmen •^The Jxickfleld - men showed a pH other-games and ipielr offensive playing was the strong est type shown during the entire sea ,fon A* weakening of the Blue .and efVhite defense in tho 'last quarter al lowed the Panther Cubs to score their lona ..tally,tleaving,the scorO'2o-6. The‘final game of tho schedule with -Syracuse resulted in a victory for tho frosh, 16 to 14 A touchback caused by’ a forward pass from back of the jffoal, 1 Ine t by~ tho Orange freshmen,gave tly> first scoring points tor the Nittany-1 lies early In the contest. The Syracuse Cfpeh being much heavier than the Blue White aggregation held them for .-top' touchdowns In tho first half and by pa Increased attack and a thirty yard Pftss wero able to push two scores peroaa in the lost half JfBN'P. STATE GRADS DO WELD , - WITH A. T. AND S. P..p.ATT.TV | AY ■ Mr. John H. Linn of tho Atchison, {Qepeka and Santa Fe Railway System jsppnt Friday morning ofjast* week, look toe over the Mechanical and-Railway sfocbanicol equipment He spoke to £9e Senior Mechanical Engineering ,stu flfpts on. tho work of the ,technical graduate on their railroad. ’Lost-year fs.}F. Fields and J E Benfer graduates Railway Mechanical Engineering, with The Atchison, Topeka & San- JpjFe Railway and the company is well leased with the Penn State men Mr. reviewed tho agreement which was noyr in effect and it gives the technical gyfdu&tes more opporunity, thap form- to reach # deslrable positions in service. »|OW TO HAVE IT DONE” 1 ' IB AIM OF OREGON CO-ERjB senior women of the University ytj Oregon are having a Senior Date flftek- The women do all of tho invlt (qg, pay all of the bills and guarantee gtfood tlmo to the lucky men. The wo- Bqn say .they are going to show the fqqn “how to have it done". Tho week jof; merriment includes dances, after Upon and evening; welner roasts; woffle fejes; tea parties; mill race dates; and Rbpary dates. The only admission to *tjl. of these forms of Sfplor standing and a date Fill your orders at the j CRYSTALCAFE 1 -;- “ ’ * FARMERS WEEK* WILL BE HELD DURING HOLIDAYS -The regular JVlnter Farmers’ Week of tho Pennsylvania State College, which has been suspended for a few years, is being resumed this year. The' crowd ed condition of the village and college buildings makes it necessary to hold meetings of this kind during vacations. The dates this year for the seventeenth annual Farmers* Week occur in tho first week of tho Christmas vacation, Decombei eighteenth to twenty-first In clusive ■ Tho program Inoludes work in prac tically all of ,the, departments on Ag Hill und some in Homo Economics. Vis itors , may call at tho various depart mental offices for information which cannot be obtained through tho lectures Special features include'a ploy given by the students of State College High School, a Dairy Breeders' Field Day in recognition of tho pure bred dairy stock presented to the college by tho dairy breeders of the state, speakers of national repute and a reception In the Armory. , > COUNTY CLUBS ARRANGE ; FOR CHRISTMAS DANCES Penn State .Aided Materially by Get-togethers of Students (During Recess Unusual-activity Is being shown this year by .the various -county clubs of Penn State, not the least of these ac tivities being the -many dances which will bo held In different parts of the state over tho Christmas recess The Lancaster County Club wilt hold its dance on December twenty-seventh at the Hotel Brunswick,* Lancaster. The dance will bo informal At its meeting lost Thursday evening, the Delaware County Club decided to stage a dance at the Club at.Lansdowne, Pa., on. December thirtieth. The .admission ' fee will be two dollars, including tax. The Dela ware .Club deserves mention for Its fine complement of,members, and Its many activities. The club numbers sixty-four students, a fine 'showing for a small county. ■The Wayne County Club will have its annual affair at Honesdale on De cember .Further .details have not been arranged The clubs representing Chester, Brad ford and Schuylkill counties trill put on dances In their respective counties, but have not arranged all details, While other clubs not mentioned have com mittees hard at work getting ready for their annual hop. These get-togethers over the vacation period fill *a real need for the students temporarily away from school, In bring ing them together and -talking up Penn Stato. generally _ _ ~ AT STATE HORT. MEETING Dr. S W Fletcher, head-of the Hor ticultural Department of this college will address tho Now Jersey State Hor; tlcultural Society at -Atlantic City on December sixth His topic will bo) Quality in'Nursery Stock On Decemf her fourteonth he will speak before the Indiana State Horticultural Society at Purdue University ,at Lafayette His subject Is the Direct Marketing of Fruit! “FOLKS, MEET DAD” ,If he’a wealthy ,and prominent, and you stand In awe of Mm,' call him "Father." If he sits In his shirt sleoves and suspenders at boll games and pic nics, call him “PoiJ." If he tills the land or teaches Sunday-school, coll him "Pa." If he wheels' the baby carriage and carries bundles meekly, call him "Papa" with the accent on.the first syl lable. If, howovor, he_makes_a pal of you when you’re ;gpod,--and vis .too -wise .to let you puli the wool over his loving oyes when you’re not; if, moreover, ,yqu’re (jure no ..other fellow you know has .quite.so fine, a. father, you may.coll him “Dad"—but not otherwise —Buzz Saw, Kansas City. OFFERS AID TO ' YOUNG - ' AUTHORS An author to be worthy of the cogno men "budding" nowadays must run riot with his similes The'Brown “Dally Herald" offers the following possibil ities: (1) I'Her lips quivered like a light automobile " (2) He edged nearer, un til he was almost as close as tho air In the subway." (3) "But her mind, like her face, was made up." (4) Her hair clung to her pallid face as seaweed to a clam." Henry.-Grimm The Town’s BEST TAILOR 206 E. College Ave. Prof. Crockett T-ells of France "It seemed almost like gottlng home", I wrote, as I closed my last letter which brought this story of our Great Advcn- ture and ua to our Paris hotol, nay, It was home for the next six days The Hotel du Palais Royal Is a modest ho tel of the second class as tho French class their hotels, and possesses, to our minds, as fine a location as can bo found In Paris. On a side street neai the end of tho Avenue de’l Opera, until not far from tho entrance to the Patnce of tho Louvre, it yields one ready access to some of tho more desirable quarters! of tho French capital, while it is almost os quiet as if set In tho hcait of an an cient wood Our room wub ns quiet as one could desire , Wo did some of the conventional things in Paris wo went a number of times to thc-collectlons in the Louvre, which houses tho largest collection of art In tho world, we drove through the Place de la Concorde, over the Bridge of Alexander the Third and between the Grand Palais and the Petit Palais up tho Champs Elysees to the great Arc de Triumph, through the Avenue of the Grand Armee to the Bols. and other where besides, we climbed the Arc do Triumph, and had much of Paris spread out at our feet; wo walked in the grounds of the Louvre, and we had the vlew.fiom the porch of the Palace of the Trocaders, we visited Napoleon’s Tomb, and saw that most remarkable painting of the Great War—tho Panthe on de la Guerre; we visited the Panthe on and tho churches of tho Madeline and St. Etienne du Mont and St- Ger* vais.Jn which latter building fell the bomb from the seventy-mile gun that terrible Good Friday In 1917, killing over seventy people But a3ldo from the art In the Louvre, perhaps we found our-keenest pleasure In visits to tho Cathedral of Notre Dame and the Sainto Chapello. and in listening to the ser- ' vice In the Russian Church on Sunday ; morning. * ! Notre Dame made tho fifth church In our Cathedral Pilgrimage; and because of the buildings wo had Just visited, was of more interest to both of us than it had ever been before Its Interior Is one that grows on the visitor, though I do not think that Its nave Is to be compared with those of half a dozen other French cathedrals In their com pelling impressiveness: but it possesses In Its rose windows one of the greatest charm We found great delight, too. In some of tho sights of the Treasury, •of Notre Dame We were shown the robes worn,at the coronation of Napo leon the Flrst.by 'that monarch and the then .pope,'and-garments worn at the wedding of Francis tho Second and the 111-fated Mary*'Stewart And we mar velled, as we had done'before, at the great ifacado of the and Its wonderful sculptures ;pnd gargoyles But _in buildings raised ,by human hands in Paris wo were to find our greatest pleasure In the Interior of an other church, .only .two blocks away from Notre Dame, the Salnte Chnpelle. as It is called and a comparatively small church In-the court, yard of the-Palais do .Justice, built by ,St Louis as "the court church The (building Is really two churches In one—a lower church for the servants of, the court and pal ace. and the upper church for royalty and its oourtters, One. enters through tho lower church* .It Is rather dark, but one should .tarry, long enough to 'ac cußtom.oup'ft. eye&-tothe dim fight .and tb .remark -whatr ; though' highly Secoratcd room' Then one climbs a dark winding stairway, almost feeling his way up, till ho sud denly comes out into a flood of light. "Tis the most glorious Interior In France, and to my mind is surpassed by tho Interior of only a few other buildings in -the world —St Pnuls- Wdthout-the-Wolls at Rome and tho Cathedral of Chartres On three sides there are long lancet windows in .pairs, filling all the walls save for the narrow* spaces required by tho stone butresses of the sides and apse And these -windows are all of excellent medieval gloss, not so beauti ful. to be sure, os much of -the other glass wo have seen, but In their total effect overmastering In their charm, while tbo-rose window above the great doorway at the'western front is the friendliest of all tfio groat rosea we have seen, so much nearer is It to the be holder, than those of the great cathed rals. In some unaccountable way we both missed seeing this church during our first visit to Paris; but I bad seen it a number of times since, and this Get your order.in for POULTRY Today ' J. J. MEYERS South Ahen Street The Laundry of i Service and Accommodation Collection and delivery every day Penn State Laundry 320 West:Beayer Ave. " Phone ;124 THE .EENN .SXAIE.COLLEGIAN year, it made of’things seen, the very acme of our visit to the French capital ' But^of things heard, the climax came in the service in the Russian Greek Church on the first Sunday of Septem ber I had attended in other summers services there, and had always come away feeling that I had had the musi cal treat of my life* Perhaps a little of this feeling was due to the fact that I had never been able to learn whence came the music But at the last service : I attended last summer, some of th< members of my party had huppened to go to the right on entering the church. [ and so had been nble to see the mem | bers of the choir as thoj sang. So to tho right wo turned, on this particular Sunday, I do not l think we did well In !so doing. Rather, I should say, ono , should always turn to tho left on enter ing this church and nover try to fathom the mystery as to 'Whence comesj the music, and I shall -therefore not tell where the choir is stationed Tho Russian Church In Paris is not Inrgc perhaps It accomodates some four or five hundred worshippers, who almost all stand through the service of an hour and a half The chairs or other seats are occupied, for the most part, by visitors The walls arc almost cov ered with many pictures In mosaic of saints. A large picture of Jesus walking on the Sea attracted our attention after the service ' But it Is the service itself that is real : ly tho sole attraction —and a wonderful service it is beautiful, reverent, wor shipful, I had almost called It magical In the effcct.it produces on us of other faiths, and democratic in that every member of the congregation joins In tho worship, though audible part Is taken only by the priests and the choir. The principal part of the prayers and of the Scripture readings Is taken by a priest—l think he must be a bishop or a patriarch, so dignified Is he—with the richest bass voice that I have ever heard in a man. The music is by the entire choir, without solos or part singing and unaccompanled-by any instrument. Much of the singing is in a minor key. and tho strains are haunting, haunt ing From beglnnlng,to end the service Is a perfected whole,' the deep toned responses of the bishop alternating with such melodies os I have never heard elsewhere. Z cannot but'think that tho American and the English churches have yet very much to learn from the Russian church t There are certain places In Europe , that one should only see for the first , time when the moon Is full or nearly so; . Arnolds, for Instance, and Ravello, and ’ Venice and .Athens. .Athens I have • never yet seen; -but next April Mrs , Crockett and I shall,test out my theory, . as we see the Acropolis and the Parthe i non in the light of the full moon For i tunatoly for üb, the full of the moon and , our going to Chartres fell together on . the fifth of September. We had ar , ranged for this months and months : ago And it was the sanest provision we had made for our trip thus far So to Chartres we went late one Tues day afternoon Of course we caught sight of the majeßtlc.plle known as the Cathedral as we entered the town and were driven to our hotel. Then after a Jolly good dlnner,at tho Hotel du Grand MonarQUe and when the moon was a little way up the sky, we sallied forth for our first Impressions We walked around the Cathedral In awe, pausing longest-near the western towers Up. up soared ,the towers, and still up, as no other towers I have ever seen, save those-of-the Cathedrals of Bourges and of Antwerp .But neither of .those "so beautiful as those of Chartres—perhaps tho mewt beautiful In Europe The very mem ory of them, as ‘I write, almost makes mo catch my breath. It is impossible to write of the Cath edral of Chartres wlthort Indulging In comparisons and superlatives All things considered. I have long thought of St Paul's-Without-the-Walls at Rome as possessing the - most lovely Interior of any basllica'in Europo. of the St Chapelle in Paris ns containing the most lovely interior in Franco; of Westminster Abbey as being not only the greatest of all English Churches, but also the most interesting building In tho world. But when one comes to tho Cathedral of Chartres, I am inclined V to think that architecturally he has reached the greatest building that I • know of, on earth For Chartres la i great for five reasons; great in the . beauty of its northern and In'the peefee- ‘ tion and simplicity of Its southern tow- . era, great In the varied loveliness and • delicacy of its choir screen with Its • forty-two groups of statuary and thedr . Gothic canopies of lace frozen into • stone; great in the vistas that one gets, * r here and there, of columns and columns, 1 —and such vistas one does not get Jn 2 all great cathedrals, great,' especially, i In the effect an appeal of'the nave— . an appeal and effect to vie with that of , all great cathedrals, and greicti over > masteringly gicat, In her stained glass My education in stained glass began i only last summer and with my first visit to Chartres' I had enjoyed cathed ral architecture before, but I had'nover seen Chartres or dreamed how lovely was the stained, glass of the Middle Ages Elsewhere we have seen much good and much fine glass, and more of It In Bourges than anywhere else, but now'here so effcctiveb placed ns In Chartres , Especially beautiful aio fout single windows in tho south aisle unci the roses of the two transepts with tho lancets beneath, though tho latter arc not nearly so good as tho roses; and abo\o all, the rose In the western front and the three long windows beneath it. They all seem mado of jewels and after a pattern that must have been devised In Parndise I know of nothing so beautiful made by human hands If you would have'specifications and figures, look them up In a Baedeker or other guide book. If vou would have ap preciative description go to Henry Ad nms' "Mount St. Michel and Chartres", which is great literature as well as tho most interpretive work on architecture of which I know .But both time and paper are grow ing short. Of Orleans which does not count and of Tours which does, I must saj nothing I can only add that In Bourges, where we closed the second part of our Cathedral Pilgrimage and tho fourth part of our tour, we found a stupendous pile, that appealed very strongly to us If I may allow mjsolf Just one more superlative of Bourges, it is this- I found there tho finest vistas that I have seen when looking at ca thedral columns, yes,'and the greatest sense of spaciousness that I have,ever felt In any church —St. Peters not ex cepted, nor yet St Pauls-WJthout-thc- Walls WHJLIAM DAY CROCKETT Hotel do I‘Europe, Avignon, France, September 13,1822 1 SCIENTISTS WILL HOLD DINNER AT UNIV. CLUB The members of the Pennsylvania State Colleges branch of the American Association for the Advancement of Science are planning for their annual dinner meeting at the University Club on the evening of December twelfth Tho members of the Centre County Medical Association are invited to the meeting After the dinner, Dr W. A. Orton, of 'Washington, D <5, wit! lec ture on the newer knowledge of the re lation of plant food to special diets v KOVEL PLAN USED TO INTEREST ILLINOIS ALUMNI Pink stationery and blue envelopes have been used successfully as a means of Interesting the alumni of the Univer sity of Illinois In' the Alumni Associa tion The former students of the Uni versity had not been joining the Alumni Association ver> readily, so tho busi ness manage; conceived the Idea that something novel. In tho form of station ery, might bring results ’ He tried the combination of pink stationery with blue onvolopcs, and within one ‘week, had received answers from over one thousand graduates. Anger Improves Nothing Exccept The Arch In n Cat's Buck. If«p.t any time you got angry count 10, and if very angry 100 This is one method which miy keep >ou from do ing something you may be sorry for later > on Do you know grouchy disposi tions are mostly caused by strained vision, and nothing burns up one's vi tality like linger. Let me fit you with glasses which will cause, a smile instead of a frown I practice Optometry, the Drugless ‘Science of Fitting Glasses Your optemetrlst, Dr. Eva B Roan, will advise >ou honestly Consult her today. Prices moderate Varsity f Billiard Parlor | Stop in and enjoy ? your favorite games. ? The cleanest Bil- y Hard Parlor in Cen- t tral Penna. % H. G. MORRELL, Prop. | j| Under Post Office | BranIOSS ‘’M THE arrival of the John Word representativ is an event which has been followdwith interest by many generations of eollej men, for the John Word reputation for supplying younger men with footwear meeting their most exacting demand has been es tablish! these many years The John Ward representativ displays in the Nittany Inn .Dec. 2d and 4th mer£s -Shoes Srojes in Nnrfbrkjrgoklya.Newark Phila Address for Mall Orders ittDoui saeet-NnvYotkCity REHABS BEGIN WORK ON “BRIGHT BITS OF 1923” Musical Comedy Will Be Fourth ' Presentation of Club-Men Active in Other Lines The unnual musical pioductiou of the j Rehabilitation Club will bo staged on | Apt 11 tvventy-sKth 'und tnentj-seventh under the title of "Bright Bits of 1923 " The show will be a combined musical comedy and minstrel show as in for mer years and with the professional coaching of E C Mayer, who aided In the production of the club's previous successes, should have all of the pep and punch of its predecessors. The pio tecds will be donated by the ox-set vice men to the Building Funo "Bright Bits" will mark the fouith annual affair that has been put on by the "tehabs" Last >car's production, "The Jollies of 1922", plajed to a crowd ed house and was one of the most suc cessful amateur plays of the year The receipts were sot aside us the basis of a scholarship fund for the future child ren of the "rohabs" The club will probably disband In about three years for by that time all of the o\-servlco men will have graduated and, accord ingly, It is planned to have several scholarships established while the club is still an active organization in the col lege"" ' i The Rehabilitation Out. is composed ■ of sixty-five disabled \ eterans of the | World War who are being sent through college by the govci nment The or ganization they have formed is one of of the strongest and most active on tho Penn State campus Headquarters have been established at 232 West Beaver Avenue where a number of tho mem bers room and board About one-half of the men are married and many of them have children Their wives have formed a Ladies Auxiliary and through the sewing circle, social and literary meetings that they hold, have been a great aid in the success of the club Despite physical handicaps received in tho war, the "rehabs" have taken an active part in college affairs Last spring tho baseball team won the Intor unit championship and an effort will bo made to repeat this achievement In basketball by entering a team in tho the inter-unit tournament this winter In another line of college activity the veterans have won Important positions on the staff of the Penn State Parmer George G Gault, '23, has been chosen BROWN BROS. ORCHESTRA An organization"—"-*' which can carry out' efficiently and at moderate cost every detail of your musical requirements. 1524 Chestnut St. Philadelphia, Pa. Everything for that Thanksgiving Dinner HOY & NEIDIGH UNION Army & Navy Stores 980 Pennsylvania Ave. TYRONE, PENNA. “Army” “Navy” “Sport” “Hiking” “Skating” “Hunting” and “Working” Togs and Shoes. Military Equipments Camping Supplies Outing Specialties Genuine Government Goods. LOW PRICES GOOD SERVICE BEST VALUES THAT’S US Visit the UNION ARMY & NAVY STORES TYRQNE, PENNA. Page Three as editor-in-chief; D L> Crum, '24, business, manager and H A Hartllag, as circulation manager On November olerenth, the third annual banquet of the club nos held In the University Club The affair was attended by over one hundred "rehabs” and their wives, “Prew” Thomas, Dr Sjiurks and sev eral representatives ofl» the Veterans Bureau, Washington, D C MILITARY DEPT. MAKES CHANGE IN TEXT BOOKS Mujoi M D Welty was In Westmore land County all lust week spo iking In the Interests of the Emetgency Building Fund Camp lign Captain G L. Feblgor li is been In dialgc of the Mililurj De partment during his absence. u It Is to be noted thit an important change has been made in text books for cadets at Penn State this jo.u Frosh should put chase at the Co-op or Metz goi n the Moss and Lang H. O T C mnnu ti which will bo good fot their Wo jeai sof mllltarj experience This book la one of the of its kind Colonel Moss has written between thirty-five and fotly texts of this natme and his cnllaboinloi, Mijot I-ang, has had much oxpeiienco in clmtgc of militaij affairs at Lehigh Unlveisltj COST OF A> EDUCATION COMFUTFI) 111 U. OF TORONTO Male students at the University of Toronto find that It 1 centres from seven bundled and fifty to one thousand dol lars f'Ji one j ear's education The tu ition fees iun up as high as three hun-’ dml and eightj-llvo dollars. These es tim ites tefci onlj to non-fraternity men. us it has been ascertained that over two bundled dollars more are no cossnrj everj je.tr, fot "Frat” men For women students. It has been found that a sum of seven hundred and fifty dollars is nocessarj, with an additional outlaj of one hundred dollars for soror itj women MOW Beating Old Man Webster Noah Webster became famous when he wrote 70,000 words Ingersoll carries in its magazine 15 double length leads with a writing mileage of 540,000 words. IfYequites a'new lead only once for every 36,000 written words and is so simply con structed rh.it it always works. Will *not clog at the point. The GlFT—shown here— Is of Rolled Gold $3.00. In W Rolled Silver $1 00. Igl See rhis and ocher models IB nr your stationery or cooper- l| ativc score. I IngersolUlcillnoint Co .Inc. /, Wm H. Inecrsoll, frit. 1 J 461 fourth A\e .New York City j