Page Four Mason To Take Thespian Manuscripts and Music All manuscripts and music that are being so kit ten for the Thespians must be handed in be leia the end of this ueek to D 0 Mason .it the Fiends Of ice in Ohl Main. Lion Gridders Subdue Lebanon Valley, 27-0 (Contmued from first page) charges scoreless and on sonny seen sions outplaying them. Wolff, Roepkr and Lesko Ices° instsumental m scor. ing the second touchdown. Shat off tackle gains by Roepke, 10-laud aerial gain from Roepke to Lesko and the cc reverse plays by the captain and Mlle Wolff placed the ball on the 20 yard line. Here Wolff agasn recessed through left tackle and mg-sagged the distance to the goal line. The score reached 14 when Roepke kicked the extra point. Slamp's Knee Fails Less than a minute before the fluid period ended, one of the most dramat is incidents of the game occurred With the ball on his team's 38-yard line, Captain Roepke faked a left end run and tossed a 25-yard pass tc Stamp, substitute for Delp who was jogging along uncosei ed. Rainer who was in a good position to whirl his way aver the goal line, advanced a feu yields when suddenly his sissy ed knee grue may and he fell face uounwaid limp and helpless with Ins logs intertwined Al Wilson was sent to right end as Slamp was carried from the field The last period, in winch the Nit tarry combination tallied truce, piov ed to be the most e•citing. Central ing the amial tactics, Lung,ren who was insetted in favor of Wolff, threes a short pass to Wilson who dropped it after sonic juggling Undaunted by that failure, Cs housed a longee pass to Dangeifield who snared the oval and ran ten yards foe the thud Lion score Dangeifield's e‘tra nom' try failed to count Wheeler Intercepts Pass An esehange of punts followed Dangerfield's early tally On the are and exchange Lungien returned the ball forty yards. lie gained four more through left tackle after which Penn State was penalized five yards for off.sides. Wheeler, lanky Leha rein Valley left tackle interceptee Lungren's nest short forward pas: and ran to his own thirty-yard line before he was finally downed by Lun gren, Dangerfield and others From this point, the Mylin-coached team made a desperate attempt to blaze a trail through the green and over the goal line. And they almost sue ceeded. A series of unprofitable line smash es by Gelbert failed to advance the ball, but a long pass from Gelbert to Albright placed the pigskin on the seven-yard line. And the Lion toot ers moved uneasily as Gelbert cainer the ball to within one inch of the god , line on too SUCCCSSIN e short end runs Here the Penn State line, presiousle weak and, unbalanced, shooed its true north and strength by holding Lebu non Valley on downs The crond roared and applauded as Gelbert making a last de,perute crash off centre, rebounded distinctly from tin solid wall of beef. Lungren kicked out of the immediate danger. Lungren's Thrilling Run Gelber I tired too unsuccessfu . passes after he had advanced Cr': kick eight yards Line thrusts also proved futile against the defense of the Penn State line which was final ly showing its real power and Be, deb's bruisers received the oval on down.. Dang,erfield circled left end for 18 yards On the second play he heaved a long pass to Langton who side-stepped, dodged,. straightarmed winded, and tawny reversed Ins way nerc.s the goal line after a 40-3 ard run that seas one of the most flied.ac slat witnessed on New Bearer field for the past three years. Danger extra point kick brought the Penn State total to :27, the final score of the game. Prom the sideline Coach Bezdel, made a careful suitey of his team throughout the entuc game Out standing among the defects of the el cc en which Saturday, was clad in ma mon and white to mold confliCtion with the Lebanon Valley blue and white, time the lack of oigamvation and the apparent iesthunt on the part of the Ngtany linesmen Time and again, the Annsille backs plunged through Ulde gaps in the Ladt wall LAUNDRY FOR STUDENTS MRS. DANIEL STOVER 732 East College FOR CHOCOLATE PRETZELS TRY GREGORY'S CANDYLAND I It was not until the last period when the risitors corned the ball to within a scant few inches of the goal line that the Penn State defense braced and offered stonewall resistance. Failure to heel, moving in the face of opposing beef nas another conspic uous mistake. This fault, however, impioled as the game progressed un til a wide-awake, fighting bunch of griddeis were effecting a final score alien the genie ended Erratic tack- I.ng, apparent early in the game, also %unshed during the nailing moments of the fracas. Don Greenshields, burly tackle, performed capably, tackling always fiercely but surely. Roepke, with his short off-tackle gains, Wolff, with his elever reNetoe strategy, and Lungren and Dangerfield with their squirming, Mhnllng tactics, were among the backfield entries who prov ed to be the cream of the offense. Gelbert, the speediest guilman in the game, etas easily the visiting lum inary, whose specialty mils teturning kicks for long and thiilling gains. More thin one hundred of Lebanon Valley's yards gained mere registered in this manner by the speedy Blue and White halfback. Gelbert's long spiral kicks mere the feature of the Nall* team's aerial strategy. The line-up Penn State (27/ Lebanon Valley (0) Oslo Loft End Bonilla° Gretnehlelds Left Tinkle Nereid 11,n/frosts loft Cured 'Mood Mahon, CI one. Heath Kicker Rieht Coned Elboeti Po:merlon Els.ht Tackle ft heeler f aeko Might End Pleln Ptneura quarterback Nit/moor Wank./ Left Ilnifinuk Albright , contain) Moll[ Raid halfback flelbert (C. 31 I llama( • Pullbarls Sa t ucleo Toad/Jost n. —Smoke, Woll7 Lyman, Dan. gertleld Souk from lonehdoust Itoonke 2 Dangsrllthl Sobel/lotion. —1 baron Valles. Bondi./ for Abraham , J 'Mood for A Wood. !famine/. for 1. ((aril Penn Suite-511mo for Dein M loan for Slaron Marlin for Ricker, Lunkren for ffoll7 Use/Tr/ore for bleAntl rene M tile for I:re/until/dile Ithlanas for llama, Parann for Mahone> Balmer for Currs Harrington for unpin Dangerfleld for Plnourn Referet.—Ml(.lll. Rothe., Dead Linesman—FAA.. Urn . UntOre. Crane Dartmouth (load Linesman Hillee. Lebanon Valles Time of period.. 15 mum. Dads' Day Begins With Mass Meeting Friday (Continued from first page) disband The football game ,itli Gettysbutg %sill be the attiaction for the afternoon Tea For Mothers While the fathers are let at the game, the girls will entertain the mothers of both men and women :tu dents at a tea in the Woman's Budd ing, front four until floe-thirty o'clock. ' Smoker In Armor) In keeping uith formes years the Penn State Club will sponsor a Dad's Day smokes in the Armory, Saturday earning Here a vaned program of speeches by parents, faculty members and student leaders, sport exhibitions, and selections by the Glee Club or the Penn State Players will be provided for the parental entertainment. Fos the parents not raring to at tend the smoker, a number of frater nities will proaide diaersion in the form of dances and other social func tions Parents Next Saturday To into est the parents of the mem bers of the Freshman class in the cvent and to furnish information re grading the faille's union, a cal* of the Parents Bulletin, published by the Associat , on of Parents, has been mail ed to each family having a son or daughter in the class of 1931. This pamphlet has also been mailed to members of the Association. D M Cresswell, of the publicity department, emphasves the duty of cs cry loyal Penn State student to is rite home immediately, inviting both parents to come here for this neck end. 1\ AN rED—Plum or finished laundry mg Prices reasonable Satisfaction guaranteed. Call 10:5-1V, 1.32 Mc- Allister Street. Sty ALBERT DEAL & SON Heating AND Plumbing 117 Frazier Street "YOU CAN GET IT AT METZGER'S" Camel, Chesterfield, and Lucky Strike Cigarettes a packs for 25c Fencing Foils and Masks Sweat Shirts $1.50 and $2.50 Basketball---Track---Soccer---Football Shoes • Repaint Golf Balls 3 for $l.OO, 4 for $l.OO and 5 for $l.OO Rewashed Krofliters 45c L. K. METZGER 111 Allen• St. 00000000000 C <000400000000000000000000900000000000000000000 Players Engage Stock Show for Next Week (Continued from first page) cogs Mr. Kennedy also coached the play. Among the cast playing here will be Ernest Hanes and Charles Al lais, owner of the company Mr. Al lais is uell known for his acting op posite Mrs. Fisk in her performance "Ghosts" which was on the road for some time. Last year Planes and Allais, both eminent in the dramatic world, as sembeld a group of professional play ers and prepared "Servant in the House" This group is making a tour of the country, playing particularly for college audiences. Modern Play The play itself is a modern moral ity composition and according to A. C. Cloettngh, coach of the Players, is quito worth nhile Tickets ;sill be on sale at Whitey Musser's a week in advance. "Tho Enemy" by Channing Pollock udl bo the first play staged by the Players this year it tons decided at an executive board meeting Thursday af ternoon The date set is December tho second. Tryouts so ill be conducted sonic time next week. Cambridge U. Debating Team To Appear Here (Continued from first page) indofinttely and to tulicule his oppon eats in any manner desired. In their debatelth Penn State the Eititish tall conform mote to Anton., can customs in regard to time but will present their non type of argument Bentley, Noll Occupy Ag School Vacancies (Continued from first page) achusetts, 55 inning first in horses, sheep, and SU ine, and second in beet cattle. Hereford steers, exhibited by the College at this same fair is on three first prizes and one second premium Doctor Noll succeeds C L Goodling, mho nas farm superintendent for sev enteen years, leaving hero May first ' to become director of the National Palm School at Doylestonn. Doctor Noll was reared on a Perry county Lim. Graduated from Penn State in 1906 he non his master of science de gree from Cornell University in 1911 and his Ph D degree from the same institution in 1023 As an experimental agronomist at Penn State, he developed Pennsyl to change oat growing in the state on= 94, the famous wheat which has prosed so productive that over 'thirty per cent of the acreage devoted to shoat growing in the state is nos planted to this variety. He also has developed too ',lunettes of oats, Key stone and Patterson, which promise to change oat grooving in the state Doctor Noll along with the duties of farm superintendent, will continue in charge of the experimental cork in agronomy. ROOM FOR RENT—Desnable room fat tent, double or single directly Tho People's National Bank on thud floor. Inquire of Mos 'Mollie Gregg. ltp FOR SALD—One first class over stuffed tapestry daNenport; one ma stuffed tapestry dasenport, one ma hogany spinet desk. Cal 139-3 orl apply 323 S. Barnard. ltp IN STATE COLLEGE The Fenway Tea Room Confections THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Industrial Laboratory Conducts Cloth Tests (Continued from first page) the thread count? What does a chem ical e‘am,nntion show? How does it look undei the microscope' Is the co'or fast and does it have 'cleana bility," Ths new laboratory under the di reftior of Dr. E. D Ries and in charge of Professor Mack, is espected to mako available to the salesman and buyer alike information that will give answeis to all these questions that in these days of new textile develop ments are becoming all-important The textile testing laboratory here has already offered its services to the superintendents, stewards and pur , chasing agents of thirty-two State owned institutions, and most of them have taken advantage of the oppor tunity to have simples of their im mense purchase tested here It is , expected that this service by the col lege ssill save thousands of dollars annually for state institutions. The plan was worked out in cooperation with Clement W. Hunt, deputy sem tary of the State Department of Wel fare at Harrsburg Professor Mock, remembered as the lecturer on textiles who exhibited an entnely synthetic bridal costume dur ing the institute of Chemistry here last summer, is national chairman of the textile section of the American Home Economics Association. As the first step in college cooperation with the Pennsylvania Association of Dyers and Cleaners sho goes to Washington next month for an eight steels' course in the National Association Institute of Dyeing and Cleaning. There she will prepare for special instruction of chemistry and home economics stu dents in textile problems. Largest Class In Past Four Years Enrolls In School Of Agriculture Enrolling the largest number of freshmen in years, the School of Ag riculture has the largest attendance it four years, Dr It L Watts, dean of the Agricultural School, stated to day. E‘clusive of graduate students there ate 648 registered. Last Sear 616 different students were enrolled as undergraduates din ing both semesters In 1925-26 there were 612 and the inevmus year the total reached 626 From 1919 to 1923 the enrollment was hell above 800 cash year and the largest group in the history of the school was register ed in 1914-16 when 1015 received in sti action in agiiwlture at Penn State While the Increase this semester is not unusually large, Dean Watts sees it it a trend toward a greater interest agriculture With calming condi tions constantly improving and fine positions awaiting the graduates each y cat it is expected that within a few }ears the enrollment will Tread the high-water mark of pre-war days. t STRAP WATCHES For Ladies and Gents, at HANN & O'NEAL'S Opposite Front Campus Society of Engineering Picks Sackett as Head Dean It. L. Sackett, of the School of Engineering, has been elected presi dent of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education. The organization is composed large ly of collegiate teachers of engineering throughout the United States. A le cent service to the society by Dean Sackett was his editing of a hand book for high school boys to aid them tho selection of an engineming course best suited to their preparation and alplity. The handbook was pub lished by the society An active branch of the society is located here. Outstanding investigations sponsor ed by the Carnegie Foundation have been conducted by the society with the I.iet, to making a careful survey of engineering education throughout the United States and Canada. Dean Sackett mas chairman of a commit tee of this isork. Cox Finishes First in Crosscountry Tryouts (Contmued from first page) Five more men passed the fini.,h post with good time credited to them They were Kovahek, IlelfTrich, 'Bach man, Bass and Mome. C=ll=ll2l Detueiler taking the pole, the fresh men harriers stetted their Saturday cross country race as though headed lot a fire. As the group progressed around the quaiteNmile track it thin ned out leaving Detweilei, the for mer State College high ace, leading and Rockers dogging his heels. Upon ',appearance of the team leaders the respective graduates of State College high school mid West hochester high school were running shoulder to shoulder, and so they crossed the finish line. Schoolboy Champion When he ran Los West Rochester High school, Reckeis garnered honor for his locality by grasping the New York State mile championship He has been wmking out regulai , ly pith Bill Cop, a formes school-mate, and when sunning the short course pith the varsity, manages to maintain a place up anion; the first finishers. JACK FROST :!: Insurance and Bonds of All Kinds 4-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:÷x÷:-:-:-:-.:-:-:-:-:•:-:-:-:. .1. ..?. * Gernerd The Tailor .. :: 138 Allen Street * ::: Sports Wear .:. Clothing .:. Cleaning Pressing Repairing Freshmen Tracksters Hold Fall Competition (Continued from first page) Fresh any dust will fill the jumping pits while new lines will decorate the cinders. Cullman Wants Competition Speaking o 1 the coming event and probability of yearlings signing up foe then one meet of the year, Nate Caitincll stated "We scant all flesh inns echo aic inteiested in tiack and who have the least bit of ability to compete next Friday In no other may can we uncover the peen as well as thd experienced material nom hid den in the class of 101." Among those who will enter the' spiked-shoe engagement will be Full ellen of dash and hurdle fame; Mus sel., a Javelinist; Shawley, a discuss huller; Detweiler, Rekers, Nichols, Moore, Messinger, Harvey, Flennigen Ainte and Robmson in the distance inns, and Herr the weight flinger Shockert, a hurdler lions Central high school of Pluladelphla, m also entered. Dark Horses Many unknown plebe track athletes are expected to tepoit for the pro ceedings Friday afternoon judging from advance reports. Men taking tiack 'oak for physical education have shorn more than passing m teiest and a plentitude of aspirants is expected to engage in the respect ive frays. Eversharp Pencils The Over Size Barrel Fountain Pens Repaired THE ATHLETIC STORE Service THAT IS AN INVITATION Prompt, courteous, helpful service carries its own best invitation to "come again" The First National Bank DAVID F. KAPP, Cashier Tuesday, Septemlier 27, 1927 Rotarians Hold State Convention Next Week (Continued from first page) cause it will give students an excel: lent opportunity to make valuable contacts with notable professional Ind industrial bends." Visiting delegates will reach Statii College on Friday, October seventh, and register at the Armory. On Fri day night the visitors will' attend a student mass meeting in the Auditor mum. Follo.ing the mass electing a mammoth Rottman smoker v be held, while on Saturday morning the progiam as nuanged will include a tour of the campus and College build ings A distinctly Rottman luncheon will be held Satutday noon, allot which the assemblage will repair to New Benner field to witness the annual Sootball encounter between the Nit tuny eleven and Bucknell's guilders. BE PREPARED That I, the watchword of the modern scout. and preparedness for the emergencies of life coals for eyes that observe attlettlY nod sec clearly, snake sure that you ore not handl. rapped by defective skim, Early attention to defective ”esight will mean better vision In life E.res are precious and priceless. Have them examined • • DR EVA R ROAN o,lometrirt On Co-op Corner