Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 134, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 September 1926 — Page 17

SEPT. 10, 1926

IKIUYWORK IS EXPLAINED TO PURDUESUIDENTS 'Freshmen Week’ Inaugurated to Acquaint Frosh With School. Bu Times fivecial LAFAYETTE, Ind., Sept. 10.— More than freshmen assembled at Purdue University Thursday for the beginning of freshmen week, or an orientation period for newcomers on the campus. Another hundred or two are expected before classes start. Formal registration opens Monday and class work begins Wednesday, Sept. 15, with all sections in full swing by Thursday morning. The freshmen week is anew idea at Purdue, but one which is being adopted generally by larger universities. It has been developed to bridge the gap between high school ano college and to help out the number of “casuals" in the ranks of the new etudents on the campus. Elliott Presides President E. C. Elliott presided at the opening session and introduced the various deans and heads of departments who in turn described the workings of the instituTours about the campus have

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OVER. 3,000 FAMILIES WILL MOVE INTO OTHER LIVING . QUARTERS IN THE NEXT 30 T DAYS. >. , f During September of last year over 3,000 families moved into new dwellings; an equally or larger number will move this September. September is the BIG moving season. Because— • People having-children going to school are moving where they can live near a school. People who, have been living in summer cottages are moving into dwellings for the winter. Thousands of families are seeking new places, getting settled for the winter. You’ll never have a better time than now to stop the revenue leak of your vacant property. A desirable tenant will rent your vacant property this immth “IF” you go about it in the right way. / OVER 200,000 CHANCES DAILY OF RENTING YOUR VACANT PROPERTY—6 DAYS FOR AS LOW AS $1.32. Renters no longer walk up and down the streets looking for rent signs. They look up and down the rental columns in the want ads. In The Times you have over 200,000 chances daily of securing a tenant—that’s the number of people who read The Times every day. Out of such a large number of readers hundreds will be renting property this month. Tell them about your place—you’ll rent it—and at a lower cost, for want ads cost less in The Times.

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been arranged and everything will be done to acquaint the first-year students with the institution during the time until classes start. The freshmen will interview different members of the faculty who will advise with them about the courses they should take, after going over the work they have covered in high school. In addition, the mathematics, English and chemistry departments will spend the first three weeks In an intensive review of high school work, and thus help the students become adjusted to the new order of things. Programs Planned “Many of the young men and women who go to college are away from home for the first time, and because of the more intensive work find it hard to become adjusted to the new conditions,” said F. Dean McCluskey. in charge of the week’s program. “Asa result, in every institution there are a number who become homesick or aren’t able to take hold of their work as they really have the ability to do. We have planned the program to be of real help to the students in meeting" this situation.” SCOUT CONFAB TUESDAY More than seventy-five local scoutmasters are expected to attend the two-day conference which opens Saturday at the Boy Scout reservation near FT. Harrison. Camp will be under the direction of F. O. Belzer. scout executive. Fellowship, instruction and amusement will feature the program. Nine out of every ten automobile sales involve a used car.

DEMPSEY REARING WILL BE RESUMED DN MONDAY Judge Grants Continuance After Heated Verbal Battle. Participants in the hearing for an injunction in Superior Court Four to restrain Jack Dempsey, world’s champion heavyweight boxer, from meeting Gene Tunney at Philadelphia on Sept. 2 mar3ked time today preparing for the case to reopen Monday when Judge Clinton H. Givan instructed ’’all witnesses" to be in court. The case adjourned abruptly Thursday when the court sustained a motion of Earl Cox, co-counsel for Dempsey, for a continuance. When Garth Mclsn, Cox's assistant, made a motion for at least a week's continuance, Arthur Arnold and George A. Farabaugh of South Bend, Ind., attorneys for the Chicago Coliseum Club and Andrew C. Welsberg, South Bend hotel owner plaintiffs. strenously objected. Farabaugh declared that since the DempseyTunney bout is Sept. 23. a dicision, no matter how favarable to the plaintiff’s cause, a week from now wduid

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be of no avail. He Insisted upon an early ruling. Melson replied that plaintiff attorneys ought at least agree to a continuance “out of common decency.” Farabaugh, taking offense at the “common decency” Interference, aroused the ire of Cox, wfco reddened and rose to his feet shouting. “Do you mean to say you havjen’t been treated decent?” Givan, to prevent a “knockout,” declared a ten-minute recess for attorneys to “cool off.” Depositions Imperative Cox declared that various conversations brought out by the plaintiff’s witnesses made imperative depcsi-. tions from Demiey and Floyd Fitzsimmons, fight promoter. Cox refused to say whether he would ask that Dempsey come here. Dempsey is in Atlantic City training for his comity; match with Tunney. The defense lost a point Thursday when Givan overruled a motion to strike from the complaint the copy of the alleged contract between Dempsey and B. E. Clements, club president, to fight Harry Wills, Negro challenger. The oldest known manuscript gt the Bible is at the Vatican in Rome.

CLOSING OUT SALE

Don’t Let Anything Keep You Away From This Sale

_____ 1 4 ' TVT A T jjiipy' |f Used and Exchanged ? INew GRANDS JjL phonographs and Baby Grands JBt { ED $ ' 2 s 9 ON ] Rather than dispose of these fine instruments to 168111 r prv f ¥ TH/101 A dealers, we are going to give the music-loving ?§S|h|Sß|B&? vAJLivJIVIdIA public first chance at them. It’s a shame to see <£OQ such beautiful brand new instruments as IjJ IpZo these sacrificed, but necessity compels it. 11 IFf/IIF I:] Your choice of several well known makes. 8r Iff 13 VIRGINOLA T— —1 SILVERTONE i LIBERAL TERMS l s2l J A H ■ Yon need very little rank to buy one of tbee piano*. We can arrange mo*t ryi f (J* 1 AX7 I. W any kind of ternui you would want. | CHIIS 2LS LOW 3.S P 1 I £T W CCK J — -Ji y No Reasonable Offer Refused During This Sale /, 1 . .'Used, Rebuilt and Repossessed mm PIANOS and gJ9n__ LPLAYERSU Rosewood case. A fine piano for nodern design; 88-note. * Wgm, child taking lessons. A _ rM _ ni lii >*9 i wfl '195 Players fWk | \ SSL ail Upright piano. An instrument you I |P* • a well-known make J) 1 _ _ If would find h.rd to duplicte .rdi-l J **,• EiJi'Xtl ViT‘ rlayers j • Tgg UTijU >99 PlaV ©l* S ROYAL I. **“ Upright piano—mahogany case. A fTWi n j; 1 If A dependable make piano. pi ano that will give years and years /and actiM. 86 ’ **" n * Here’s your chance. Opportunity comes to every * fW i If *' fl $ one once. One glance at these new players and you’ll $ | g gfg s§§'§ fftM jj * have to admit you have . A A 1 never seen their equal xft M I * ItfewT Just from th’e’fac- lISL SMITH & BARNES CORNISH /'ll I ~3CK'i but while stock lasts, *,■ Jr 9 W condition. TERMS I thl bar ** ln your choice at— fIHH As Low ass L__ fe^== _ ==a s ll9 Per WU | Manufacturers Outlet Opposite PIANO STORE- Opposite Post office North Pennsylvania Post office

SHOWS RECORD OF DEMOCRATS EQUALSG .0 ,P. Watson Action Scored by Stump at Party Rally Here. As many months of business prosperity have been recorded under Democratic adminismitions than when Republicans ruled, Evans Woollen, Democratic short term senatorial nominee, declared at a Democratic rally Thursday night at the Clay pool. Albert Stump, long-term senatorial nominee scored the failure of Senator James E. Watson to aid the farmers during his long years in public office and placed the blame for argriculture depression on hight tariff and high taxes. During thp twenty four years of Republican Administrations 55 per

Must Vacate By September 20th Which Means That Our Entire Stock Must Go Before Then The Manufacturers Outlet is to close its doors—one room is to be occupied by another business. We must sell everything at once. Reductions ars very drastic on .fine stock of new and used instruments to be sacrificed. '

cent of the months have been months of business prosperity and 45 per cent months of depression while the records for the sixteen years of Democratic administration show 55 per cent of prosperous months and 45 per cent of months of depression, Wbollen said satistics drafted by Colonel Leonard P. Ayres, nationally famous statistician revealed. Senator Watson’s unpsual relations with "regular” party leaders were emphasized by Stump. Urges Tariff Revision “Some Republican Senators, such as SenatoY Borah, Senator La Follette and Senator Norris, have proposed and championed measures which failed to rteecive the support of their party in the Senate," Stump said. ‘But never, 1 prior to his recent break with President Cooiidge, have the people been accorded the opportunity of hearing the voice of Senator Watson raised in protest against the action of a Republican majority.” The real remedy for farm depression is “to revise the tariff with special reference to the things the farmer buys,’’ Stump said. A single factory in Pascagoula, Miss., makes 4,500,000 paper bags dally J ,

PARK BOARD MAY PASS TOE BOCK Seeks to Put N. Meridian in Board of Works’ Hands. The puzzling problem of forcing N. Meridian St. property owners to consent to resurfacing and widening of N. MeriGian St. from Fall Creek to Thirty-Eighth St., may be passed along from the park board to the board of works, it appeared today. The park board decided Thursday to attempt to have the thoroughfare changed from boulevard to a street, thereby giving the board of works jurisdiction. After spending several thousand dollars for new wooden blocks a few weeks ago, park board members saw the blocks float pierrily away in recent storms. # Mayor Duvall added strength to the report that he plans to route Kessler Bivd. along Fall Creek to Ft. Benjamin Harrison, when he requested the park board to beautify the banks of Fall £reek between Thirty-Eighth St. and Keystone Ave.

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OLD LANDMARK PASSES Historic Broad Ripple Building to Be Replaced. The oldest .landmark in Broad Ripple, on the northeast corner of Bellefontaine ahd Sixty-Third Sits-, is domed to be razed and replaced with a modern structure. The frame building which has been used as a restaurant and street car station was purchased Thursday from the Union Traction Company by the Bellefontaine Realty Company at a reported consideration of $26,000. It is planned to erect a brick and concrete business building. Work will start within a few days. MISSION PLEAS MADE Home and foreign missionaries were to make their pleas today at the national convention of Negro Baptists, beinp held in Tomlinson Hal. St. Louis, Mo.; Denver, Colo., and Pittsburgh, Pa., have entered bids for the 1927 convention. Selection will be announced Monday. About 400 kinds of flowers are used in perfume manufacture. Half the Government reclamation area is planted in alfalfa.

OPEN Every Evening Until We Sell Out