Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 99, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 September 1930 — Page 5

EEPT. 3, 1930.

CITY SCHOOLS !T0 OPEN FALL ! TERM MONDAY Half-Day Classes Will Be Held First Week; 1,500 Increase Likely. Preparations for enrolling approximately 60,000 elementary and high school pupils for the fall term starting next Monday, were being made by Superintendent Paul C. Stetson and a corps of aids today. Elementary school pupils will report 8 15 Monday morning. Halfday classes will be held the first week. Hours for high school pupils to report will be announced by principals. Enrollment, this year is expected to show a 1.500 increase over the 45,000 elementary and 13.000 high school pupils enrolled last year, Stetson said. Schools in Good Shape Added to the normal population Increase, he said, will be many pupils, now out of school on working permits, back to their classes because of the business depression. Finishing touches are being placed on the six high schools and eighty-seven elementary buildings by more than 300 custodians. Buildings all are in good condition for tne opening. Stetson said. No new buildings will be ready for use when school opens. New School 81. Nineteenth and Brookside parkway, with twelve rooms, will be ready for use the second semester. Addition to Be Ready Work is under way on two additions to School 69, at 1902 West Morris street, which will add eight rooms. One wing will be ready about Oct. 15 and the other Jan. 1. A two-room addition at School 85, at 350 South Arlington, will be the only new addition available for use Monday. Portable buildings have been placed at Forty-ninth and Boulevard place, at School 87, Twentyfourth and Paris avenue and at School 91, Forty-sixth and Keystone. BALANCED PROGRAM AT PARK BOYS’ SCHOOL Each Student Is Required to Take Part in Athletics. A balanced program of work and play will get under way at the Park school for boys, 3520 West Riverside drive, Sept. 17, the opening day. Each student is required to participate in some form of athletics. For this purpose the school has one of the best equipped gymnasiums in the middle west. - Parents of students have contributed funds for erection of the new classroom building for students of high school standing now under construction and to be completed in October. The school prepares boys between the ages 9 and 19 years for college entrance. Upper classmen will be offered German as an additional language this year. FACULTY CHANGED AT TERRE HAUTE SCHOOL Normal Is Getting Ready to Open on Sept. 7. F.v Times Special TERRE HAUTE. Ind., Sept. 3 Three changes in* the Indiana State Teachers college here for the school year opening Sept. 27, are announced. Miss Louise Gillum, home economics department head, who has accepted a position in the University of California, will be succeeded by Miss Anna Marbold. J. Roy Goodlad, University of Wisconsin, will take the place of David A. Glascock, physical education professor, who will study at Columbia university on leave of absence and Miss Florence Mirick, dietitian, who also will study, will be succeeded by Miss Olivia Meier. BALL FRESHMEN WILL' REGISTER SEPT. 8-9 Upper Classmen Will Enter School Tuesday, Wednesday. P.’j Times Special MUNCIE. Ind., Sept. 'J.-Fresh-man orientation period at Ball State Teacners’ college will be held Sept. 8 and 9, under direction of Professor Robert C. Scarf of the education department. Upper classmen will register .Tuesday afternoon and classes will begin work Wednesday. Dr. Ralph Noyer, dean, will preside at special convocation for freshmen Monday morning when President I# A. Pittenger will speak. A double Y mixer, in the'Ball gymnasium Tuesday night will start college social activities. DENTISTRY SCHOOL OPENING ARRANGED y Sixty Freshme®-- Are Expected to Enroll at I. U. Sept. 22. Sixty freshmen are expected to enroll at the Indiana university school of dentistry. 635 'North Pennsylvania street, Sept. 22. Classes will start Sept. 23. Br. Clarence May of the Indiana university faculty, Bloomington, will succeed Sherman Davis, professor of chemistry’, at the opening of school. Dean F. R. Henshaw has announced. REGISTRATION DATE SET Indiana School of Medicine Classes to Enroll Sept. 12. Fall registration at the Indiana university school of medicine will begin Sept. 12 and classes will start Sept. 16, the school registrar announced today. Enrollment of 325 students is expected. No major faculty or course changes are announced.

WE RECOMMEND 0 Paul H. Krauss Laundry 7*r|' a * Riley 4591

Playground Champions

'is s .._m - -

The Spades park team won the city playground baseball championship by defeating the KansasMeridian nine in the finals <at Willard park. Members of the Spades team are shown above: Front, row (left to right) Jim Carson, first baseman; Roy King, second baseman; New Garten, left fielder; Russell O’Brien, right fielder, and Ralph Smith, catcher. Back Row—Phil Liehr., pitcher; Richard Hoffbuer, third baseman; Ralph Lytle, shortstop; James

FRESHMAN WEEK TO START AT I. U.

MANY COURSES ARE AVAILABLE I. U. Extension Division to Teach 100 Subjects. Extension courses in about 100 cultural, scientific and business subjects will be available to Indianapolis residents at thq opening of the Indiana university extension division Sept. 25, it was announced today. Classes will be opened to any one able to do the work required, and university credits will be given school graduates. Registration will be held Sept. 22 and 24, with classes starting a day later in the afternoon and evening. Fifty-seven instructors will have charge of the classes. Twelve teachers for the university will conduct a noncredit course in great men of history. Classes and instructors follow: Freshman English. Samuel Yellen, Samuel F. Davidson, James H. Pitman and John C. Kennedy; public speaking, Professor Edgar G. Frarier ami Donald Bowen: short-story writing, Mary B. Orvis; Shakespeare, Professor Henry T. Stephenson; primitive literature, Professor Stith Thompson and Professor Chauncey E. Sanders; the American novel. Professor Laurens J. Mills; continental literature. Professor W. E. Jenkins, and children's literature, Miss Edna Johnson. ' PURDUE STARTS ITS 57TH YEAR Special Test Sept. 7 to Open Enrollment. Eil Times Special LAFAYETTE, Ind. Sept. 3.—Special tests for matriculants will mark the opening of an orientation period and the fifty-seventh year at Purdue university, Sept. 6. Students enrolling for the first time will report for orentation on that date and other students will register Monday, Sept. 8. A committee of students and faculty members, headed by Dean M. L. Fisher, has arranged a program designed to acquaint newcomers with various departments of the university. l INSTITUTE TO OPEN Herron Art Classes Will Begin on Sept. 10. Advance registrations indicate a normal attendance at the John Herron Art Institute this year, according to the school's officials. Registration for full-time students will start Friday and end Tuesday, Sept. 9. Students attending parti time will register Sept.. 9 to 13- Classes will begin Sept. 10. Addition of Forest Stark of Mukwonago, Wis., to the faculty as professor of anatomy and modeling is announced.

Stoles, center fielder, and Paul Stanley, manager. The Kansas nine is pictured, below. They are: Front Row (left to right)— Dick McNelly, first baseman; Ralph Weiss, right fielder; John Wyss, catcher; Lew Davis, second baseman, and Joe Dicken, center fielder. Back Row—Merle Brant, shortstop; Nathan, Regenstraf. third baseman; Bob Greenburg, left fielder; Joe Mack, pitcher, and Francis Cullivan, instructor.

Program Is Designed for Mn Students as Well as Women. Bu Times Special , BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Sept. 3. The orientation program for students entering Indiana university this fall is designed for men students as well as women. Heretofore freshman week was only for women students. Freshman week, which is given over to the orientation program, will begin Sept. 10 and end Sept. 18. This week has been divided into two parts. The first part, an optional period, will end Thursday, Sept. 11, and the period from Sept. 12 to 18 is required. 4 Picnic to Be Held 4 The first part will consist of payment of fees, appointments for library instruction and physical examinations, and a picnic to be given Wednesday, Sept. 10, by the Association of Women Students, the Young Women's Christian Association and the Women’s Athletic Association. The required part of the program will include a tour of the campus, mass meetings, a reception for new students and their parents, physical examinations, library instruction, registration and enrollment in classes, library appointments, payment of fees, required psychology and English tests, and the submitting of tentative courses of study to faculty members. All Students to Register On Monday, Sept. 15, all students of the university will register, Tuesday they will enroll in classes, and regular classroom work will begin Wednesday, Sept. 17. Max Sappenfleld, newiy appointed assistant to the deans of men, will assume his new duties Sept. 10 and will work with the freshman men. Fraternity a,nd sorority rush also will be held during freshman week. REGISTRATION VARIES Most Parochial Schools to Begin Work Monday. Practically all parochial schools will start work Monday, although definite decision as to the opening date is left with heads of the various parishes. Ca+nedral high school will hold regif .ration Thursday. Sept, 4, and star, classes Monday, Sept. 8. St. Agnes academy students registered at 9 a. m. today and will retirn for opening of classes Monday.

‘GO EAST’ ADVICE TO ART STUDENTS

Studio Instructor. Points to Rich Opportunities - * for Experience.* The sage who pointed toward the setting sun as the empire for youth's conquest had his words flung into his teeth when Elmer E. Taflinger opened his art studio at 46 North Pennsylvania street. To his students Taflinger has I urged, nc>i the golden west, but the east, richer in opportunity for an art scholar than the west ever was for a young pioneer, he believes. Asa result a colony of his students this winter will study in New York City, and two others are in Europe. Formerly connected with the Circle Art Academy, Taflinger last year began nis own classes in

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

COUNTY PUPILS PREPARING TO RESUMESTUDY Expect 11,000 Enrollment in 41 Buildings for Fall Semester. The swimmin’ hole, kites and morning chores will be relegated into the realms of forgotten things as 11.000 children assemble in fortyone Marion county schools, outside of Indianapolis. Sept. 8, when the fall term of school begins. ✓ Almost half a million dollars have been spent during the summer in a general expansion program affecting nearly every school. Fred 7 T. Gladden, county school superintendent. announced. Entirely modern educational facilities have been provided in Perry township with completion of anew $260,000 school, located two miles north of Southport. Add New Equipment New equipment costing almost $50,000. has been installed in the whole county system. Construction of anew building at Bridgeport will delay opening of school there almost three weeks. Gladden said, due To delay encountered in construction work during the summer. Additions have been constructed at Flackville and Garden City schools. Perry township's new school will be' dedicated at ceremonies Oct. 1. attended by some of the state's most prominent educators, Gladden said. Expect 800 Increase The total enrollment in grade and high schools in the fall term is expected to eclipse last year’s number by almost 800, according to Gladden. The grade school enrollment will be about 11,000, and the high school 2,000. Uniform system of grading has been adopted, replacing last year’s system of different grade ratings in each township. Grade cards will be issued every six weeks. Children under 6 years of age on Dec. 1 will not be permitted to enter grade schools this year, Gladden said.

GYM UNION TO RESUME WORK Freshman Entrance Tests Set for Sept. 26. i Advance . enrollment of freshmen in the Normal College of North America Gymnastic Union, 415 East Michigan street, indicates it will exceed any fall opening dining the sixty-four years of the school's existence. It V/ill be far greater than last when fifty-five new students entered, according to President Emil Rath. Tlie school, devoted to the teaching of physical education, will hold entrance examinations, Sept. 26, Rath said, and in that manner admit only freshmen of high standing. There will be no changes in the personnel of the teaching staff this year, according to Rath, who said that in addition to his duties as president, he again will act as dean of the depratment of practice and theory of physical education. Dr. C. B. Sputh again will be dean of the department of science, and W. L. Richardson, dean of the department of education. On the Monday following the examinations for freshmen the college will open for all students and they will be assigned to the dormitory located at 1240 Broadway. FRANKLIN WILL OPENSEPT, 19 Ninety-Seventh School Year to Start. Bv Times Spesial FRANKLIN, Ind., Sept. 3.—Franklin colllege will start its ninety-sev-enth school year Friday, Sept. 19, President Homer P. Rainey has announced. Friday, Saturday and Sunday will will be devoted to orientation of new students. Registration will be held Monday and Tueday, Sept. 22 and 23, and classes will begin Wednesday, Sept. 24. A completely rebuilt chapel will be ready for the opening of college. Four new faculty members are announced, including Dr. John Cady of the University of Pennsylvania, who succeeds Dr. C. E. Van Sickle, history department head; Dr. Victor Solberg, succeeding Professor R. P. Currier, English department; Dr. H. G. Hendricks, formerly of the University of Illinois, succeeding Dr. Albert Helbing, of economics, and Professor Roy Tillotson, Miami university, who succeeds Professor Lysle Butler, director of physical education.

drawing and painting and will renew his work with students after Sept. 15. Advance applications, many of them from Minnesota, Ohio and Wisconsin, indicate not only the breadth of his fame as a tutor, but that again he will be forced to turn away almost as many students as he accepts. Last year the group comprised seventy-four pupils, from 16 to 43, some experienced, some novices with the pencil and brush. His students received three scholarships from the Art Students’ League of New York in national competitions. ■ Taflinger’s method is a- return to the old renaissance system of the master studying with his pupils. The classes are conducted nights and alternate Sundays, and in them he instructs only in fundamentals of his art. ' i

RETAIL DEPARTMENT STORE—Massachusetts Avenue ai Alabama Street Store Hours: 9A.M. to 5:30 P. M. Daily Saturdays 9A.M.t09 P. M. LI ncoln 8531 p|BiSchool^Dre:sses ■Bfel v illf Pli5 C l Linene> Si's &SEK'S School Hats Silk Dresses ' 98* ® jg&L Smart Dresses, 98c and SI .95 State Fancy prints and broadcloth. Long and short sleeves. Bloomer style. F weicitT; s BBBBk Boys’ Smart Wash Suits, 98c striped blouse and plain pants. Belted style. Extra quality. Sices • Park—day 'tr Mght. Chinchilla Coats, $3.98 No time limit and no If \ \ All-wool, regulation style; navy blue with brass buttons. Sizes 2to charge. Visit our / j \\ ars ' berets to match coat 83c Store while in toufn . , J j \ \ —Sears. Roebuck—Second Floor

LITTLE NEEDS for School Days School Bags 49c to $1.39 Many of them in portfolio style with extra pocket. Well lined' Leather bound. Strap and grip handle styles. True Point Pencil Sharpeners Regular $1 type. Fastens to desk # or table..' Uv” Outboard A Outfits L L IC Large pencil case with snap fastener. Contains 6 pencils and 4 colored crayons, pen holder, ruler and eraser. 6-Inch World *7A„ Globes ...... lif C Mounted on strong wire frames. Double Set Crayola— 16 colors, complete ... 14c v. Good Pencils— *1 a Dozen iUC Metal-Edge Rulers 0^ 6 Tablets for 29c Large size pencil tablets of good quality. Large Yellow p Tablets JC Penmanship r a Tablets lUC i Composition P Books wC sxß Scratch Pads, i n_ 3 for AUC

Style and Lasting Quality in School Shoes

sooo Girls’ extra fine patent straps, genuine Goodyear welt, onestrap style. With cut-outs, center buckle fastener.\ Sizes 114 to 2. SO9B " Clever oxfords foe young girls. Patent leather, black or brown calf leather. Sizes 24 to 8.

School Suits! Coat, Vest and 0 HBHi OE Two Pairs Knickers me Jj 1 Here are fine, all-wool suits that any B M J L/Ovl boy will be proud to wear. Snappy • r ' JL styles; new fall patterns; attractive Jnb tlr \ colors. Sizes 6 to 14. OKI tTrs \\ • School Suits! m Two Pairs Long Pants F if S New Fall Styles * JkT| 1§ // /$ , _ Here are fine, all-wool suits that any w ■ ■ W f M \ boy would be glad to wear. All-wool, H H j M ..especially selected for school and dress H H (zr wear. New fall patterns, lasting col- waßja ajllhs ae&Smm ors—the finest suits we could produce -LWiy ~ at this low price. Sizes 7 to 14,

98c Boys’ Shirts Fine, fast-colored broadcloth Smartly tailored; neat patterns. Sizes 12to 14.

98c Boys’ Blouses Regular style of high grade broadcloth in a good assortment. of patterns. Fast colors. Sizes 6 toris years.

Higgins’ Official Playground Ball ■HI 38c with tough horsehide cover. Other baseballs, tennis balls, indoor balls and footballs at very low prices.

Save Money at Sears~Roebuch—Better Shoes for Less!

s2°<? High grade oxfords for growing girls; Brotfh. black or patent leather. Sizes 114 to 2. sQoo Sizes 84 to 11 at $1.75 Very smart patent leather straps for girls. One-inch heels. High quality. Sizes 24 to 8.

$1 98 Sweaters Choice of fancy knit cricket style or Shaker ribbed knit. All wool. Plain colors with contrasting trim. 5 P rs - $ 1 Boys’ 39c Hose Here's a great value! Mothers like these sturdy socks. Fancy sports hose in a good assortment of patterns.

" larger Sizes Lunch Kits $1 00 An ideal lunch box for school children or w’orkmen who carry lunch. Strongly made of metal, black enameled, each with Thermos bottle in lid held by wire frame.

SOSO “Korry-Krome” sole shoes straps, oxfords or hi-shoes. Goodyear welt soles. Sizes 84 to 11. $2.50 Sizes 5 to 8 at $2.00 SO9B Here’s quality artQ style at a low price. Hi-cut shoes; black or brown calf, wide toes; sizes 1 to 54.

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64c Shirts and Shorts This low price includes both garments. Fancy broadcloth shorts, swiss ribbed shirts, suit complete. 49c Boys’ Gaps New’, snappy, fall styles, wool fabrics, neat patterns, eight-quarter tops, all sizes. —Sears, Roebuck—First. Floor.

“ley Hot” School fj=| Lunch Kits E© $1 69 a These metal lunch | boxes are ideal for I carrying school f lunches. Finished in enamel. Each box is equipped with a half pint “Icy Hot" thermos bottle for liquids, hot or cold

SO9B Boys' black or brown calfskin oxfords. Wide, comfortable toes. Smartly styled. Sizes 1 to 54. $075 Boys’ smart hi-shoes, black or brown calf; made for real service. Sizes 10 to 134. —Sear*, Boeboek —Fir** Floor.