Page Four 4 Professors Write Articles for Journal Roux members of the facility of the school of agriculture hare had articles published In a recent issue of Agri eullarni Engineering. the journal of the American Society of Agriculture Engineers. Prof. John 12. Haswell, of the de partment of agricultural extension, wrote "The First American Drain age Engineer." Prof. Arthur W. Clyde, also of the department of agricultural engineer ing, discussed "Vertical Hitching of Farm Implements." Prof. John E. Nicholas, of the de partment of agricultural engineering, and Prof. Ernest W. Calienbach, of the department of poultry husbandry reported on an experiment on "Tem perature Distribution as a Function of Electric Broader Performance." IttrINAIITY • Wa s ri B s iiie flintiest:4 Evenings' xt. . 6:30 and 8:30 :Last complete show at . 9:10 Matinee Saturday at . . . 1:30 TODAY ONLY 1 CLAUDETTE COLBERT in . `7'he Bride Comes Home' - with Fred Mac Murray and Robert Young I SATURDAY ONLY "COLLEGIATE" with Joe Penner Jack Oakie Ned Sparks Betty Grable and Frances Langford MORRIS Department Stoer East College Ave. Institutional Farmer's Week Comes to Close The tenth annual Institutional Farmers' Week, under the auspices of the School of Agriculture and State Department .of Public Welfare, was held here January 7th to sth. Bruce Dunlap 'l2, director of the Institute, is manager of the State Welfare De partment. The Institutional Farmers' Week is especially, designed to help superin tendents, managers, and operators of the charitable, penal, and educational institutions of Pennsylvania. College Given Engine The department of mechanical en gineering has received on loan from the Army Air corps a Wright aero nautical engine, sectionalized to show the details of construction. The en gine was lent to the department by the Texas Air field. It will be in stalled on a special stand in• the me chanical engineering laboratory. College Receives Gift A complete. file of the patent speci fications issued by the Patent office in Washington was given the College Library by the Free Library of Phila delphia recently. ApproXimately orie half of the set is bound. They consti tute over 1,000 volumes and weigh in shipment six tons. I3lumer ConvalOcing Dr. Donald R. Blamer, of the de partment of petroleum and natural gas, is convalescnig at the home of his parents in St. Paul, Minn., after hav ing undergone an appendectomy at a hospital there. Dr. Blamer was sud denly stricken with appendicitis on New Year's daY, while vacationing with his parents. January Clearan c e Sale Now On! Convention Reports Are Given at Service Fou•' college students gave ad dresses at the Grace Lutheran Church last night, the fourth night of the State College Week of Prayer serv ices. The subject of their addresses covered the convention of the Student. Volunteer Movement held at Indian apolis, Indiana, December 28 to Jan uary 1. Margtiret Wentzel '37, reported on addresses by Doctor Kagawa and Doctor Cuemrgo, speakers at the con vention. Dr. Kagawa,• a Japanese 'educator, told about the differences between Christianity and Buddhism. Dr. Camargo said that the world is now in a state of revolution, the question is whether it will be made in the spirit of Christ or anti-Christ. • Charles Salt '36, spoke on the "Seminar Groups." His. group dis cussed "The Christian Fellowship in the World Tomorrow," in regard to cultural, economic, and political and racial orders. Reva Lincoln '37, discussed "My Impressions of Indianapolis." Miss Lincoln said . she was most impressed by the spirit of co-operation which predominated. John Cartmell '36, also spoke on 'My Impressions of Indianapolis." He was impressed by the faith of the whole convention, the intellectual level, and the views of students from the Far East on Christianity. He said it made him feel "the need of the world of something." Where September Got Ito Name September got its name from Sepli• mus, the Latin word meaning seventh; September 'was the' seventh papal) of the Roman year, which began in March. Contango Day Coutango day Is a day upon which premium or interest is paid by a buyer to a seller in order to be permitted to defer payment of the debt. Fingering the Buttons In spite or this zipper age, the av erage man Mil toilsand mibuttons more than ti,:i00,000 buttons in an ordinary lifetime. Steeplechasing in America Steeplechasing In America began in Canada, where. English officers, wail , tercd at Montreal and Turman, gave Meetings. ~...:.CLAsswwv.:, IiALLRObN , DANCING 'INSTRU C ' TlONlndividual ''social dancing instruction. •Fm^• appointment•-teall 77J-J or *e Mry: Hwirahan, Fye Aptsl, 200 .Wet. College , 411:?EMB1. FOR RENT—Single room in private home across from Campus. Very reasonable. Morris's Store or , Phone 989. 130-1 t pd EIIE I WANTED WANTED Fraternity laundry. Sheets and cmes furnished; six cents per pound. Phone 1507-J. TYPING SERVICE—At low cost intelligent personal attention. Phone Mrs. Stunesifer, 195- W, or Call at 300 S. Atherton. 129-1 t pd. GD LOST—Woman's yellow gold Walt- ham wrist watch initials, E. D. G. on back. Please return to 134 E. Col lege avenue. Reward. 12743 t pd GD LOST—Wrist-watch in Eno Hall, on Jan. 7. * Finder please return to 137 S. Atherton or phone Paul Hogg, 485-R. Reward. 128-1 t pd. GD BOARD s.l and $5 a week at the Zerby Glob, located at 234 Allen. Phone O. 11.0..3t pd .GD Capital pOO,OOO Surplus and Undivided Profits $275,000 The First National Bank of State College State College, Pa. John T. ;McCormick, President David F. Kapp. Cashier THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN Society To Hear Talk On Ceramic Problems Dr. F. O. Onderegg, consulting en gineer on building materials, will ad dress a meeting of the local student branch of the 'American Ceramics So ciety, using `;Some Ceramic Problems in the Building Industry" as hi; sub ject. The session will be held in Room 119 of the Mineral Industries build ing at 8' o'clock, Monday evening, January 13. Dr. Anderegg was graduated from Oberlin College in 1910. In 1912 he received his, masters' degree from Harvard University, where he' ob tained his doctorate three years later. `Collegian' Issues Call For Staff Candidates Freshman - candidates for the edi torial staff of the COLLEGIAN will meet for 'the.first time in the Cog.- LEMAN office, Room 405, Old -Main Monday night at 7 o'clock. John E. Miller, assistant managing editor of the paper, will be in charge of the candidates. The nature of 'the work which will occupy the freshmen for the remaind er of the year will be outlined by Mill er at this first meeting. The method of covering news, sources, COLLEGIAN style and policy, and .Similar topics will likewise 'be discussed. Campus Bulletin C. C. Hogg, of the National Pe troleum corporation, will address the Mining society, on "Development of Secondary 'Recovery Methods" in Room 315 Mineral Industries building at 7:30 o'clock. • TOMORROW Penn State Club will hold a meet ing at 8:15 o'clock in the Old Main Sandwich Shop. Members and. those desiring to join the Club are urged to attend.. Refreshments will be served. SUNDAY Reports of the Student Volunteer convention in - Indianapolis during the Christmas vacation will be given by the delegates who attended at a meet ing in the Hugh Beaver Room at 3 o'clock. The meeting is ,open to all who wish to ,attend. MISCELLANEOUS Orders for, invitations for mid semester graduation exercises will be taken at the Student-Union office any time until Wednesday, January -161 All, those interested in amateur photography.ghould leave their name at .the StUdenkUrtion office. • Sign un,at, the Student •Union office for the amateur . .Pool . and Billiard Tournament. ;: . 'Student Artist Course application blanks must be.handed in at the A.A. office on January IE, The office is open ! from 8 0.5. . • ENIM!M . Consuls are, really a group or elllll. merelal agents, who represent the in. terests of the Malted States in every Important trading eenter In lire world. The klei % _ DEN RESTAURANT . . GOOD FOOD OUR SPECIALTY HEAL TICKET'S AT SUBSTANTIAL REDUCTION Glennland Bldg. Phone lil ObS are the ;thing We don't furnish the job, we do provide the photograph for application use—and reasonable, too—from your LaVie nega tives. TheN N TATE J.. HOTO HO P 212 East College Avenue State College Outstanding Reduction On Things You Need Grapplers Meet For Interclass Honor Tomorrow Final Bouts Will Climax 3 Days of Hectic Preliminaries. Close Decision Marks 155-Pound Encounter By TOWNSEND SWALM After three clays of groaning, grunting, twisting, heaving, pulling, and, in a few cases, wrestling, the an nual Interclass wrestling meet has developed to a place where some kind of order is apparent in the scheme of things. With but two weights, 126 and 145, not yet cleaned up' for the finals to morrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, the four class wrestling teams are as fol lows: • Seniors: Wolfson 118, Reed 126, Light 135, Waite 145, Galloway 155, Sloppier 165, Rauek 175, and Enrich, heavy. .Juniors: Wattenburg 118, Preston 121, Halpern 135, Douglas or Haines 145, Calvin 155, ICruppa 165, Eis man 175, and O'Dowd, heavy. Sophomores: Campbell 118, Steig molar or Brooks 126, Reynolds '135, Zazzi 145, Blum 155, Robert Eshbach 165, Shaffer 175, and Murphy, heavy. Freshmen: Craighead 118, Gates 126, Goeken 115, Krybill or Herr 145, Worthington 155, , Bauchman 165, Meyer 175, and Hanley, heavy. Space does not permit mentioning all of the many hard-fought matches which took place in order to narrow the field down to the chosen few men tioned above. In the freshman bat tles one match in particular stands out. Worthington and Ritenour bat tled in one of the closest decisions handed down in the meets to date, when Worthington was awarded the decision on a twenty-two second ad vantage in the extra period. Rite nour had previously won an advan tage of .twenty-eight seconds in the regular match, but as a thirty-second advantage - is required, the extra per iod was necessitated.. It's all in how the cards fall. One 'of ' the 'neculiaritiei of inter class wrestling match finals which' causes theth 'to be so interesting is that two 'bouts Are scheduled for fl nalistsin each weight, frequently re-' - • SLEIGHING Make. Arrangements for a Party Now . . CAMPUS SADDLE • SCHOOL In• Rear of Theatre Phone 9655 suiting in . unexpected upsets. When two top-notch wrestlers happen to be pitted ,together, by accident of Die draw, and are forced to, wear them selves down in the first match, an un known outsider, who had little catty in defeating his opponent, may be able to catch his more experienced opponent off guard and smack on the winning hold. In scanning the draw sheet for to morrow's fracas, these men stand out: 118-lb. class, Wolfson; 126-lb. class, Save • • . . Our Mid-Winter Clearance offers you an opportunity to save on nationally • advertised lines of merchandise. • - Mid -Winter CLEARANCE -. 50c Faultless Shirts or -Shorts . 39c $2 Ariow Shirts, fancy. patterns . $1.69 . 50c Monito'Hose •.. .. :1. $6.50 Stetson Hats . . . • • :$4.95., $22.50 Topcoats . .. . $17:.95 - $8.75 Florsheim Shoes • $7:65 • - • . F ROM - M. / S 114 E. College Ave. • : Back of a Medal FIRE was raging through a Virginia village at midnigt; A telephone workman sped there from his . home ...found the central ollimin danger. Relieving the girl operator, he handled all calls... sum moned help from nearby towns ... 'til buildings on both sides collapsed and the telephone building caught tire. Quickly he disconnected the small switchboard ... moved it to safety ...improvised a telephone station in a field., In 20 minutes hC roostablished communication. Next morning, the rescued .switchboard was insollcd' in new quarters ... telephone service was resumed as usual. That telephone man received the Vail Medal ... one of several awarded each year to Bell System, employees for outstanding public service. Devotion 'duty . . day !by Now On! Friday, January 10, 1936 Brooks IF he Aefeates , Ste . lust aicrf' 155-lb. class, Capt. Light should de fend his laurels successfully,; .145-lb. class, Zaizl or Waite; 1554 b. class, Calvin; 165-lb. eless, anybody's match;, Eshbach, Kruppa, Happier H even Bachman may slip in as a coalition 'candidate; 175-lb. class, Shaffer over. Eisman for fraternal reasons, and be cause we might as, well pick someone; unlimited; the old ,questioncam any one who can't get'their handS around a battering rain hold on for long?
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers