Rage E9J_Il 0000.000000.000000000000000 Our Store-Wide Clearance Will Close Saturday, Jan. 21 COME IN AND SEE US M. FROMM I Notices 1 1 1 Flatermt) testllng 1111111.1 gel meet at the Sigma. CM house tonight at seven o'clock. Thing one dollar entrance fee. Coach Conover Selects Temporary Frosh Team (Continued from first page) Mansell as score-defenders. Itlevers and Mazes ate speeds anal lull keep the preunt foiwaids hard-pulsed to hold then places as regulais. Of the eight ph*eis remaining v ho are not among the lust ten Idastbutn and Penitypaeker lull substitute at tenter, Saltzman, Furey and IVilliams at guard, and mi., Love and Ruth mut at forward Larry declares that he will have a ditlatilt job in melt mg out regal., with both an abun dance of good material. Schedule Completed Tee gam., one with St Fiancm vollege yearlings at horns and the sophomme-fic,hman class soap com plete the schedule. I.F.C. President Names Committee Appointees (Continued from first page) week at houses to be announced lat. At this time their mill he a general diseus,on of the problems I elated to the different fiatefluty aliens These informal talks are expected to be one of the main features of the confer ence and it is urged that house offi cial, having any 'noble!. biaig Omni to any membei of the committee in orde. that they in I) be brought into the discussion at the luncheon: A smoke! to Much all fiatetnity men are invited, a nuts, muting in the Auditomm and a formal ban quet ',lunch well pipbtbly be hunt at the Unit el cut Club, ale othee et eat s Included on the these-day plogiam. Fil iio WY ol6/O[ N SAER'S s ei°B:pll s b s .r;A • tInAWIEVSON LENORE ULRIC Talented Actress, writes: "With women in practically all the professions smoking, I have observed those in my own calling and have found their favorite cigarette is the Lucky Strike. I always choose it for my occasional smoke because it af fords the greatest relaxation and pleasure." 2„,,_ "It's toasted" Lion Cagers To Meet Unbeaten Juniata Five (Continued from first page) ten points, but inns unable to equal sensational shooting of the Penn stain, Jou Si.haaf, nhu sued fifteen of his team's twenty-Oleo points. Lou 11s pla i his best game this sea son, sinking thiee field goals and con sistently outjumping Captain Connell Delp, Von Nelda Score After tin minutes dining ,luch neithet team could find the basket, Captain Gene Connell put the Quak er Lay quintet in the lead with a long ,hot Stout undeoult Mamas and Reil ly evened the count with fouls, but Jon Sthaars two fouls and field goal form the side lines again advanced Penr , ., stole A shout while later Connell pawed the ball out of a scrim mage andel the backet to Schaaf who added tine points to the Penn column making the saute 8-2 with eight min ute,, of the half gone When play was resumed Schaaf took up the seining getting three fouls and a neat long shot so that Penn led 11 to 8 when Delp came into the fray at fomaid The Nittany athlete al most immediately tallied the first field goal of the eNemng for the Blue and White passes For a period follo,- mg, nothei quintet could score until, to the later minutes of the half, Cap tain Whitey Von Neida dribbled dour: the door to cut in and make a perfect 'shut so that the seine stood 14 to 7 m Penn's fat on when the half ended. Lions Itoll3, Delp opened the final session by heaving in a shot front =dant. Low, got a foul, and then Delp sent into action again He first got a shot under the basket, a foul and follomed op tutu a long shot from near the center of the coot t to cut the Penn lead to a nation, one-point margin Coach McNichol sent Lukasmitz in to guard Delp and ma ed Schaaf up to a foe maid berth in place of Hartnett This Space Reserved for : SCHLOW? 1 A Quality Shop Lamy then tallied ta o points with a long shot. Lukasa itn followed with another long toss and Pent held a 19 to 11 !anima ugh the foul pet iod half Over Lou Reilly's pan• of field goals put the Lions back in the running, but Schaaf =leased the Penn lead to fhe points again with a clean shot Loom the side court When Delp seined a foul, Schaaf retaliated by dribbling down tho floor and sinking anothei tgo•pointer. With a minute to play, Reilly cut Penn's margin damn to too points by a long shot, but the Red and Blue quintet's freezing tactics baffled the further attempts of the I , llll.any pass ers to score and the game ended with the score 23 to 21 in fitter of the Quaker City comtmen. Extension Instructors Of Agriculture School Hold Conference Here Stuff mganuation proved the em jar topic for discussion at the Ag Es tension conference held there last cinch for Penn State's traveling teachers of the Am /culture department Agents from sixty-five of the sixty-seven counties of Pennsylvania score in at tendance Among the speakers at the meetings Ribero incinhors of the agricultural research staff of the College presented the program of their departments were Dean Watts of the School of .Ig [culture and Di. W 0. Thompson, ,fooner piesident of Ohio State uni ersity. COLLEGE BAND RECORDS WILL GO ON SALE SOON The band and orchestra base en tered into a nest field of endeawn, ramely, that of making phonograph teem db Within the nest too omits the teproductuins Intl he placed on sato at the (Music Room. The "Nit tarty Lion" and "Vwtory," ate the Penn State songs and the others ate two popular selections • r ilic largest selling quality pencil .I_in theworld Superlative in quality, the world-famous Ir US PENCILS give best service and longest'ween Main ends. peed.. $l.OO Rubbercads.perdo. 1.20 • OA Co., 215 Filth Ave.,N.Y. • kelsofUlaQUETlnntead ols in 12 colors—sl 00 per dor. The Cream of the Tobacco Crop "I love the Tobacco business. There is a fascination about it that grips you. The fine texture and beauty of a Leaf of Tobacco appeals to the Tobacco buyer as a great Painting does to the artist. I buy Tobacco for LUCKY STRIKE Cigarettes. I buy 'The Cream of the Crop.' Under instructions only Af / the best and mildest goes into LUCKY ! . 0 9= / STRIKE. Itis my job to see that this is so." No Throat Irritation-No Cough. THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Seniors Win Mat Title By Outpointing Juniors (Coat:sued from first page) Chem, eth, wrestling in the light eight division, put the upper-class in the scoring sun again, when he dis patched Kennedy for mm fall in little more than three minutes. After the 115-pound v,ctory for Eiseman, Packard stepped nut on the mat with Steele, junior middle-weight grappler, and moved himself master of the ough-and-tumble game by securing a tall in two minutes, fifty seconds. Ifollobaugh Injured Parana, \sinner default over liol lobaugh in the preliminm les when the latter sprained his knee, added•up the only points on the sophomore finalist retold and defeated his junior oppon ent, Shaelhoushi, by a' fall The heavy-weight dwrsion, marked by a noticeable inferiority throughout the meet, proved the deciding factor of the da2.'s score, when Rog Mahoney took a win him the juniors by out wrestling the husky "Tiny" Creamer in an extra period. , C 1.4 "Inner Helmlt 11 2 1-11; SiltAu (in.,. lan. 7-11 Tina, 1.48 I I ' d Al. 1 .;::• ' .‘trIrt:1„„ Thu, 41-18 111-11, I.lra 'mm ljunlar) Fall 10-19 160.11, I'nnknrd (senior) Fall, 2-50 175-11, Var., /.o,llalmurc) I all. V-10 1.1111111 Illahna, Isemorl Tun, I, bran.. Sulfur., 10. Fumurs, 11. 6uphoulores. b. IrEFlznlca, u MeKirachan Is Winner Of Oratorial Contest (Continued from hist page) "Aliwuolini, Ty rant of Benefactor." The contest is an -annual event, open to sophomores only, held for the pun post) of stimulating antmest in pub ic speaking About sray tiled out this year, all but six of whom 'acne elinvnated nn meltminaiy Judges wino John It Blacken, pto fes,oi of Landscape Gardening, Rcv. ALBERT DEAL& SON Heating AD Plumbing 117 Frazier Street TALKS to STUDENTS AbOht GOD and LIFE 14 •C. G uiLLET comment by on author llhhe great ndac to me has Men Hz scorching otel, racial sision It must hate been a splendid and Inspiring challenge to your tonna men and 'tome, and u ill carry them far 1 halide, Into A serener consideration of the mearung• unportunltset and Action of life .. '197 pp. feel' for sole it Athletic stun) Donald W. Cat ruthors, student pastor of tho Presbytenan church, and Rob cut L Sackett, dean of the School of Enoneerlng. Charles W. Stoddart, dean of the ISehool of Liberal Arts, acted "as plesaltng officer. Thespians Seek Darcy As Supervisor of Play (Continued from first pogo) have !nought the man fame and success for many years. It contains his innate notes on dance steps which are kept in his own style which is un decipherable to tho uninitiated but w ith Mhich he figures out new dances and steps Lot each show he coaches nom it came the dances for "The 'Maiden Voyage," the Wayburn suc cess of 1926, and many other pro deepens both amateur and profes sional. Igany of the numbers per formed by the Thespian's dancing chin uses of the last four years are newly identical with those of Broad way successes Dr. H. M. Battenhouse Writes Bible Text-book (Continued from first page) periods, the cattle wolk covering the period from 1500 B. C to 100 A D. Completion of the stork by Profes sor Battenhouse came as the result of three }ears of special research in the 'field of Biblical Literature. Pro fessor Battenhouse's lust stork, "Cen tury Readings In The Bible," was pub ' fished en 1924 end lie has already be gun x ork on his third book under con tiact with The Century Company. GILLILAND'S Cod Liver Tonic for Coughs and Colds • A valuable tonic for building up the sys tem following a run down condition $1.25 a Bottle Ray D. Gilliland Druggist Buyer of Tobacco at Owensboro. Ky. lEEE Hoehn. Hetzel Begins Lengthy Speaking Tour (Continued from first rage) twenty-sixth he is to address mem bers of the University Club of Har risburg, an influential group in the Capital City. After meeting with the State as sociation of College Presidents in Har risburg on the twenty-seventh the Penn State executive will address the annual mid-winter meeting of the Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers' Association and renew an invitation for that group to hold its summer out ing at State College in June. Collegian To Compete For Editorial Prizes (Continued from first page) ztimulate interest in college and um ‘orsity publications and to elevate the quality of their editorials If success ful, ,t'will be made an annual event', with additional prizes lutes for other journalistic features. Monthlies, quar terlies, literacy magazines, or comic sheets are not ancluded in the compe tition. 4. Fire Insurance EUGENE H. LEDERER •J: Industrial Engineering Department Student Desks and Chairs, Student Tables BRIDGE LAMPS $1.25 CHIFFONIERS $12.50 TYPEWRITER TABLES - - $4.00 to $8.50 CHAIRS $3.50 DESKS $lO.OO to $40.00 STUDENT TABLES $5.00 COSTUMERS $2.00 to $3.00 GATE-LEG TABLES • - - - $4.50 to $9 DRAWING BOARDS • - $1.25 to $3.00 SWINGS $5.00 to $lO.OO PICTURE MOULDING • 3c to 20c per foot MAGAZINE RACK $1.75 BOOK SHELVES - - - $4.00 to $7.50 CEDAR CHESTS - - - $3.00 to $25.00 ROOM 106, UNIT B r4MmilANWEiliaTmmiwrim Tuesday; January, 17, 1928 CLASSIFIED LOST—Slide rule in leather case. In ituds I. H. W. Reward. Wilber man, 207 East Nittany. ltp STUDENT washing done at reason able prices, dependable work and quick scram Call 1153-W. 1-17-St EXPERT mending and plain sewing of any kind except dressmaking. Will also take care of chaldsen dur ing afternoon or evening. Min May Lose, Apt. 5, Snyder Garage. 1-17-4tp LOST—Latly's.plam gold wrist watch with extension band, between Old Main and College avenue Monday afternoon Return to 600 West College avenue. Renard. 2tp FOR RENT—Garage space for two cars Apply at 428 West College avenue. 2tp SPRING NECKWEAR 4L MONTGOMERY'S :-:+x-x-:-:-:•+i-:-:-:•1-:.-4-:-:-:-:-:-:
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers