Page Four General Admission to j Muhlenberg Game on Sale at A. A. Office General admission tickets for the l Muhlenberg football game to be held | Saturday went on sale yesterday at the Athletic Association office on the first floor of Old Main. Tickets for this game will cost $1.14 and will be the last to be sold for unreserved seats. The tickjets for all other football games will be for reserved seats, according to Har old R. Gilbert, assistant to the Grad uate Manager of Athletics. Villanova Sale Thursday General admission tickets for the Villanova game scheduled for October 10 will be placed on gale Thursday and will continue until the day of the game. The price will be $2.28. From October 8 to the 15th, admis sion for the Lehigh encounter may be purchased for $1.50. .From October 15 to October 22, tickets for the Cor nell game will be on sale for $3.30. The price of all football game tickets includes the tax. Poultry Association Holds Meeting Here •The sixteenth annual poultry short course and semi-annual meeting of the Pennsylvania State Poultry As sociation will be held October 26 to 30 here. The program has been de veloped primarily to meet the needs of the person who is seeking funda mental knowledge of poultry farm ing. The College poultry plant is used primarily for research work. Howev er, in addition to furnishing facili ties for research, the poultry plant also must provide physical equipment and stock for instructional work. A large proportion of one afternoon will he devoted to a detailed study of the College poultry plant and the inves tigations in progress. There will be no. registration fee for this course. A nominal charge will be made to cover *the expense of the banquet which will be held Thursday, October *29, at 7:00 o’clock. Registra tion .will beheld in Room 106, Horti culture building. Campus Bulletin J Chess Club will meet in 318 Old Main at 7:30 o’clock. Sophomore women candidates for. Collegian editorial staff will meet in 312 Old Main at 6:30 o’clock. Swimming for women will be possi ble in Glennland pool every Thursday, at 4 o’clock upon presentation of ad-, mission tickets. TOMORROW All interested in the Penn State Camera Club should attend its first meeting of its second year in 318 Old Main at 7:30 o’clock. Candidates for both the lacrosse' team and its managership should re-! port to Recreation hall at 4 o’clock. ' Junior and senior women’s hockey practice will be held on Holmes field at 4 o’clock. Practice for all classes will be held on Thursday. Freshman Commission will meet in Hugh Reaver room at 7 o’clock Sophomore seminar, composed of last year’s freshman commission and forum* will meet in Hugh Beaver room at 8 o’clock. THURSDAY • : Penn State Mining Society will hold a smoker ir. 318 Mineral Industries at 8 o'clock. MISCELLANEOUS Engineering library in 110 Main Engineering will be open Sundays from 2 until 10 o’clock. Tickets for the Players show, “Per sonal Appearance.” arc now on safe at the Student Union desk. Second assistant managers for the gym team should report to Coach Glasscr immediately. Classified Advertising BALLROOM DANCING INSTRUC TION—IndividuaI social dancing instruction. For appointment, call 3218 or see Mary Hanrahan, Fye apartments, 200 West College avenue. WANTED—Fraternity washings and ironings; also student laundry. Will call for and deliver. Dial 25D2. Boals burg. Ask for Mrs. Jordan. 17-2 t pd DW FOR RENT Attractive suite in highly desirable residential section, available for two graduate students or upper classmen..Dial 2133. 18-lt pd GD MAN WANTED—for room for bal ance of semester at 232 S. Patter son. Call 3164. WANTED —Co-ed to work for board or room. Call at 227 Hillcrest Ave., or dial 8266. 20-lt pd GD WANTED—Students who are inter ested in string bass instruction. Di al 3170 or ask for Jay. Call at 404 South Burrowes. 21-lt pd GD LOST—Tie-clip, spring-type, flat • small double face, gold-frcnt silver on back. Please return to Student Un ion office* 16-lt pd GD INTRAMURAL HIGHLIGHTS By FRANCIS SZYMCZAK Pairings have been drawn for the I All-College Golf Tournament which (will swing into action this week. I Three flights of i sixteen players each •will compete in their first matches during the week. After the prelimin ary rounds of playing the officials will attempt to schedule two matches a week in order to finish the tourna ment before the cold weather sets in. The first or championship flight has the most probable candidates for the varsity golf team, although there are several good prospects in the low er flights. This year’s tournament has attracted a record field. The Intramural Hoard again calls attention to the filing of entries for the fail sports. Golf putting, cross country, horseshoe pitching, and football entries should be in Miss Kel ler’s office by the end of the week. Charles Watts has been appointed intramural football manager, while Jack Fair will supervise the putting tournament. Dave Ludwig will have charge of the cross-country contest. The winner of the Bezdek trophy will in all probability be announced shortly before Alumni Day. Dr. Hill Will Complete Foxglove Experiment : Six thousand foxgloves will be in full bloom next June as a part of ex periments being conducted by Dr. John B. Hill, of the department of botany. Fully a quarter of an acre, of the botanical garden will be cov ered with these flowers. Dr. Hill is interested in the euge nics of plants, and foxgloves are his present interest. New color combina tions and hybrids will be closely watched and checked with existing ones. These flowers require intensive cultivation and care. The foxgloves were seeded last year in the green house and then planted in the garden. Wahl Granted Leave Herbert A. Wahl, instructor of bot any, on leave of absence for a year, j visited members of the department [last Mr. Wahl is spend- I ing this year at Cornell where he is 'preparing to take his doctor’s degree m science. • j4': v ' : v" y v : 'y > ...for tobacco Dr. Beach Continues Successful Combat of Tobacco Crop Blight For the past eight years, Dr. Wal ter S. Beach, of the department of botany, has been leading a successful fight against a plant disease which strikes at tobacco plants principally m Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. A grant of $lO,OOO was made sev eral years ago by the legislature to carry on the work done here and that done by the Bureau of Plant Indus try, Harrisburg. , The 'disease is technically known as liflcfernon tobaccum. It belongs to that kind of bacteria which resembles a rod in shape. For a long time the blighted areas on tobacco leaves were thought to be only rust spots, but later tests show that in most cases these reddish-brown spots are the re sult of the activities of this bacteria. It is the belief of Dr. Beach that 'this disease has always- attacked tobacco plants more or less and the recent cropping up is the result of extra ordinary conditions favoring Its spread. Rainy weather aids the bac teria to develop and distribute itself. To prevent the spread of the dis ease all machinery, buildings, land persons’ clothing which have been in contact with infected plants must be Hetzel Names Three Members To Faculty Three new appointments to the fac ulty wove announced today by Presi dent Ralph D. Hetzel with authoriza : tion from the Board of Trustees. Andrew H. Melville was named as sistant professor of economics in arts and science extension, Kinsley R. Smith becomes assistant professor of industrial psychology in the Pitts burgh area and E. P. McNamara, who has been a graduate assistant, was appointed supervisor of ceramics extension in mineral industries. Special Grilled Steak Sandwiches AT SPIDER’S All-American Rathskeller cut right to 5; THE PENN STATE COLLEGIAN cai*efully sterilized. All equipment such as cloth covers and pieces of wood used in starting the plants must also undergo a thorough cleaning. The field used should be picked so that it does not get the drain from any other infected plot or from a tobacco warehouse. The ground is sprayed with Bordo which kills the bacteria in the soil. The tobacco leaves cannot be sprayed for that will affect the taste. Disease free plants put in ideal conditions will mature showing little effect of any attack. Another system used is a four-year crop rotation in which three other, plants besides tobacco are grown. Dr. Beach, has found that the niost difficult part of administrating these methods of control is that of convinc ing the growers that machinery, clothes, and .‘other equipment' can carry the bacteria from field to field. Crossley Is Awarded Merit for Flood Aid Gilbert L. Crossley, of the elec trical engineering department, ,was presented with a public service cer tificate by the American Radio Re lay League in consideration of the aid he rendered to the flood-stricken areas last spring. The certificate is given to the indi vidual amateur operator in recogni tion of meritorious work in effecting Communication, constituting a contri bution to tlie; service record of the individual. COAL™ ICE WE ALSO SUPPLY FIREWOOD ICE COMPANY There’s, a right way to carve a chicken or slice a ham. And there’s a right way to cut tobacco. When the tobacco in your cigarette is cut the way it is in Chesterfield... right width and right length •.. it burns even and smooth ... it smokes better. Co-Edits Fraternities have been having open bidding to’ all women students who have been in College for a semester or longer. The list of pledges is as follows: Alpha Chi Omega: Marion R. Weaver *37, Doris L. Jones *39, and Mary Jane Sample ’39. Chi Omega: Dorothy Jane Boette ’37 and Dorothy F. Stafford ’37. Theta Phi Alpha: Mary Alice Zar ger, graduate student. The Alpha' Chi Omegas gave a party for their little sisters Satur day afternoon. - • The little sisters of the Chi Omegas will be entertained at a party at the house Tuesday night. Prof. Bentley Chosen Professor Franklin .L. Bentley, head of tlie department of animal husbandry, is the newly elected vice president of the North .Atlantic Branch of the American Society of Animal Production. The election took place at the semi-annual meeting at the Eastern States Exposition in Springfield, Mass.'' LaVie Calls Candidates Walter L.-Peterson, editor of La Vic,' announces that there will be a meetingof the senior board on Tues day, at 4 o’clock. At that time .the theme for the coming year book will be selected. The junior board will meet on Wednesday at 4 o’clock.' Dial 842 Molasses , Paste , Clippers Were Symbolic of Sophomore Dynasty The 1936 edition of a Penn State' freshman has custom regulations that appear “sissified” to those undergone in “the good old days.” The fresh men of the class of 1914 were faced with the direct statement of