Pao Four iT H AV : Ck T II . . • , Matinees at . . . 1:30 and 3:00 Evenings at . . . 6:30 and 8:30 A complete show as late as 9:10 LAST TIMES TODAY BAXTf R LOY in "BROADWAY BILL" With Walter Cotnolly, Helen Vinson She fell in love with a "rolling stone"—who wants to gather "moss"? "'The Pi csi IVEMIESD A Y dent Vanishes' re- Edward mains the most ARNOLD violent, exciting _ _ _ fearful film other season. For • Arthur a truly thrilling and intelligent eve ningßYßON of rough-rid , + ing action, We give it our unqualified recommendation!" —Liberty Mayazirte Paul KELLY "THE PRESIDENT VANISHES" • Andy Walter Winchell DEVINE• • America's Ace Newscaster re- • ports : 'The Pr esi dent Van- BEECHERJanet fishes' ... if you ask me ...should MUM= on asbestos . . . so Charley full of dynamite GRAPENVIN is it." THURSDAY Ted Fin Rito & Orchestra A W. n r B os Ihot e Evenings at , . . 6:30 and 8:30 Matinee Saturday at . . . 2:15 Children's Matinee Saturday at 1:30 TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY "In conception, in production,. in portrayal and direction, it ranks with tho most memorable creations." —Region Crewe, N. Y. American. THURSDAY "The President ,Vanishes" Edward Arnold, Arthur , Byron, Andy Devine, Janet Beecher eAT)!clitst t r.,,, ,„:,:il, ,op :,,-..) , O r Pll ,r, COLONIAL like this at nv 115W.NITTANYAVE. Silififfinestathßesidence ,_.i . :Czl• tVere's ilinin9l42Xer , SO t *a i "" room • Hetzel, "All-American," Merrill High '9B Believe it or not, the handsome, virile gentleman at the left of the dude in the derby (at the reader's right) is none other than President RALPH D. HETZEL, member of the 1898 Merrill (Wis.) high school football team. In after-school life probably the most notable class that ever was graduated from M. D. S., these team mates hive spread their activities over so wide an area that they cover most of America. The picture was discovered recently in Wisconsin Rapids, Wis. It was printed in the Capitol Times and in the Merrill Daily Herald. Players To Give 4th Show on January 25 (Continued front page ono) Manning '36 will play a major char acter part in the role of Breitstein. Mitzi Jane Kennedy and Jackie Lee have been cast as the aristocratic Mrs. Simon's children by an earlier marriage. Other members of the cast will be announced as they are select ed by the director. The play is a tense and dramatic character study of a prominent, self made criminal lawyer in whose New York offices the action takes place. The cast represents clients, members of the office force, family, friends, and others who drop in in the course of business transactions. Sheep Expert To Talk Giving two talks, "Sheep Breeding in England," and "Special Opportuni ties, for the Sheep Breeder," Profes sor William L. Henning, of the animal husbandry department, will be chief speaker.on the program of the New England Sheep and Wool Growers' Association meeting in Worcester, Mass., Wednesday, January 9. CAMPUS BULLETIN TODAY International Relations Club will hold a business meeting in Room 418 Old Main, at 7:30 o'clock. Fraternity Councilors will meet at the Phi Epsilon Pi fraternity at 8 o'clock with Dr. Marsh W. White act ing as chairman. Edward Harkins and John Doty will discuss fraternity property and insurance. Phi Epsilon Kappa, honorary phys ical education fraternity, will meet in Room 417, Old Main, at 7:30 o'- clock. Members of the American Society of Civil Engineers will meet in Room 107, Main Engineering, at 7:30 o'- clock. A program of movies has been planned. Student Tribunal will meet in Room 318, Old Main, at 7:30 o'clock. TOMORROW No women's orchestra practice THURSDAY The Penn State Thespians will meet in • Room 909, Old Main, at 7:30 a'- clock for the election of new members and a business meeting. MISCELLANEOUS Registrations are now open for the intramural basketball tournament, which will get underway next week. Friday will be the last day to sign up at Miss Keller's office. Invitations "to the Beaux Arts . Ball, scheduled for Friday night in the Ar mory, can be purchased from mem bers of Scarab fraternity or at the architectural library on the third floor of Main Engineering building. Mid-year graduates must• sign up for caps and' gowns at the Student Union desk, Old Main, before 6 o'clock Thursday. A deposit of five dollars must be made. CLASSIFIED SPECIAL DANClNG—lndividual and group. Instruction at reasonable prices. Call Ellen Mitchell, 708 E. College .avenue. Phone 468-J. 81-et-np-OW FOR SALE—Table Model Radio. Price $9.00. Call Bill Heckman at 971-R at 6 p. m. any evening. . 61-IMoWBH LOST—Brown Swagger Coat—Re moved fiorn 3rd floor S. L. A. Sat urday, Jan. 5,'11 o'clock. Call Joseph Sternberg at 196. , 58.1tpdCW TYPING WANTED—If you, want neat and dependable typing done quickly and cheaply call "Al" Haiges at T.N.E. phone 324. 59-2tcompACEl LOST—Honorary key and log-log slide rule on Campus. Reward. Call 231-Id. 60-ItpdCF Tweedy Cites World's Need for Saintly Men Pointing out the need in our world today for spiritually-minded men and women, Dr. Henry H. Tweedy, of the Yale Divinity School, New Haven, Conn., spoke for the tenth consecu tive year to the chapel audience Sun day morning. "While we commonly consider a saint as being the opposite of a man of the world, this idea is wrong," Dr. Tweedy declared. "The two can eas ; ily be combined into one person," he continued, "and it is such people who should lead the world." "Anyone for whom people are thankful, men and women who are seeking life's supreme values, those who have taken a deep-rooted place in our hearts, and all really sincere people are saints," Dr. Tweedy ex plained. "And so far as we know, there has been nothing in this uni verse that is finer than the saints i Mil v,.....,3.,. ..zAwain:fk ‘ . 4 i 1w.50 . 14. ' wai.ki..... . ..,.......,,,):: ~ ~,: - 0 1935. Licarr & arm Tomdco Col THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN `Colle:ryian' Candidates Will Meet Tomorrow Freshman "-candidates for: the' °clitoral staff only of the Cot,- LEGIAN will meet in Room 417, Old Main tomorrow night at 7 o'clock, Philip W. Fair jr. '35, assistant managing editor, who is in charge of the meetings, announced. Busi ness candidates will be called at a later date. At the first meeting; Fair will outline the work in which the can didates will' be instructed at the following.sessions. Policies of the paper and the methods of covering the news sources of the College will also be discussed. which have crowned our evolutionary process." "To achieve a perfect world," Dr Tweedy concluded, "we can do no bet ter than to follow the example of Je sus who wax.both the saint of saints and the supreme man of the world." aille . so so:0y . THEY'RE MILDER --and:Mearikm say ; . THEY TASTE BETTER 1 Beta Sigma Rho Wins Debate Cup Majority of Debaters Believe Subsidization Present Here But Cannot Prove It. Beta Sigma Rho's 1-to-14 defeat of Phi Delta Theta in the finals of the Intramural discussion contest prior to Christmas vacation seemed to show that a majority of the contestants representing the eight competing fraternities believe that Penn State is subsidzing athletics at the present time but that they have a great deal of trouble proving it. Among thirty speakers engaging in the ten debates of the contest, six teen of them took the affirmitive side Of the question and fourteen the nega tive side. However, among the twelve speakers in the four teams winning discussions only four of them main tained that subsidization is present while eight of them held the adminis trative viewpoint. • • ' In the final ,contest four of the speakers, two on each team, took the negative side 'of the question and the other . two the affirmitive side. The Beta Sig team—Arthur E.. Pollock ' '37, Lester M. Benjamin !37.'1c and Sey mour Wattenburg '37toofirst, sec ond, and fourth places, in that order; while the Phi Delts—Richard g. Mof fitt '35, Vance o.•Packard . '36, and E. Townsend Swam '37—were awarded the other places by Judge Harold F. Graves, of the department of English composition. In addition to a silver cup, the Beta Sigma Rho's will hold the Delta Sigma Rho cup for one year. The Delta Upsilon and Phi Epsilon Pi fraternities, each with one leg, arc the only other houses which have won this cup previously: Both awards )vill be made at the international debate with the University of Hawaii in February. School of Agriculture Opens Short Courses Open to anyone in the state with an average grammar school educa tion, the short course in agriculture opened here yesterday, while the 'dairy manufacture short course will open Monday. The agriculture courses will close February 28, while the three two-week dairy courses will end February 16. included among the subjects to be covered in the agricultural short courses, according to Dean Ralph L. Watts, of the School of Agriculture, are animal diseases, economic prob lems of the farmer, farm forestry, farm machinery, farm management, feeding and slaughtering, fruit grow ing. and fruit and vegetable insect control, livestock breeding, selection and management, • plant diseases, poultry management, rural life and soil management and fertility. 'Testing dairy products and ;the manufacture of butter and cheese will be the subject of the first dairy short course from January 1 to 19. The second course, January 21 to Febru ary 2, will be devoted to ice cream making. Market milk and milk con trol will be studied in the third course, February 4 to February 16.. George Smith's Barber and Beauty Shoppe Beauty. Craft in all its Branches Pioneer Shoppe--Est: 1920 I'hone 451-J 107 Allen St THE TEXAS LUNCH' We serve the best and most delicious meals in town . We guarantee all the food we serve to be freshly cooked . . . Strictly fresh oysters in shell cooked in any style . . . Give us a trial. OUR WHOLESOME BREAD APPROVED BY THE • American Medical Association • MORNING-• STAR • BREAD • Wholesome Baking Products • "Good to the Last Crumb" DELIVERED FRESH DAILY TO YOUR HOME OR FRATERNITY Laid Sde I do believi 11l t one Tuesday, Jantiary'B, 1935 Group Plans Appraisal Of C. A. Finance Drive Meeting for the purpose of making a thorough investigation into the re cent P. S. C. A. finance Canvass drive, a committee of seven will appiaise its results Thursday in the Hugh Beaver room at 7 o'clock. Next year's drive will be guided by the recommen dations of this committee. Paterson Hosiery Shop Old Main Art Shop Bldg. FLANNEL ROBES 20% Reduction Scarfs Handbags Negligees Blouses Sweaters At Reduced Prices First Quality Hosiery 69 cents and up