Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 274, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 March 1926 — Page 7

MARCH 18,192 G

SPRING BRINGS MANY EATABLES Florida Green Beans, Limes on Stands. With the advent of spring weather the curb stands at the city market today blossomed forth with large offerings of fruit and vegetables. Florida green beans at 40 and 45 cents a pound and limes at 50 cents a dozen were seen for the first time today on the stands in the markethouse. Several recessions were chalked up, but strawberries were higher at GO to 80 cents a box. Large bunches of asparagus sold at 25 and 90 cents. Mangoes dropped to 5 and 15 cents each and artichokes fell to 15 and 25 cents"each. Other prices included: pineapples, .10 to 45 cents each; brussels sprouts, 25 cents a box; fresh lima beans, 90 cents a pound; tangerines, 35 to 50 cents a dozen; California tomatoes, 30 cents a pound; white Texas potatoes, two pounds for 25 cents; leaf lettuce, 15 and 20 cents a pound; head lettuce, 10 to 20 cents each: French endive, 50 cents a pound; curley endive, 20 cents a head, and peas, 25 to 30 cents a pound. Eggs were lower at 32 to 35 cents

Nerves If you have overstepped the limit and your nerves are unstrung:, have terrible nervous spells and in mind and body are on the verse of nervous exhaustion, a single dope < f WHEELER’S NEIiVE VITALIXER will brinp rest, sleep and reonporation. Those who are subject to nervousness will marvel at its wonderful “ffeot and the many remarkable recoveries reported. Sample Rot tie Tree. Send 10 cents to .1, W. Rrant Cq*. Dent. 50. Albion. Mich., for a large tr>al bottle. You can got the rremlar size ini most any drug store at >l.lO. Don't fail to try it FREE.—Advertisement.

PERFORMER, HEALTH AND VITALITY GONE, REGAINS OLD PEP; FEELS YOUNG AGAIN Daniel Donahue, Indianapolis, Ind., All His Life an Athlete, Pays Remarkable Tribute to Todd’s Tonic —Has Message for All.

“By profession I was a performer in the circus and theatres. I wag with all t lie big and little shows and played in almost every city that had a theater. I have traveled east, west, north and south, as wtell as in Canada and Mexico. I have lived a strenuous, exciting life, and until a few 5-ears back I always had exceedingly good health, but I began to lose my health in 1920. I began to have trouble with my kidne5 T s, liver and stomach. I could not do as I used to. I w-as troubled with insomnia, loss of appetite and constipation. My system was all shot to pieces. I was very nervous, had no pep, and could hardl5 r walk two squares without getting exhausted. I lost sixteen pounds in weight. My friends would sa5 r . ‘Dan, old timer, what's the matter; going to pass j

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a dozen; butter was 58 cents a pound, and chickens ranged from 42 to 60 cents a pound. In the tish department salmon sold at 35 cents a pound; white fish, 35 cents a pound; mullets, 15 cents a pound, and channel eat fish, 40 cents a pound. Many stands had boxed Jonathans and Grimes Golden apples at three pounds for 25 cents and one farmer on the curb had baskets at six pounds for 25 cents. The difference was in quality. South American Honey dew melons were unchanged at 75 and 85 cents each and rhubarb was still 25 cents a pound.

out?' I got advice and recipes. Nothing did me any good. A friend advised me to take Todd’s Tonic, and said that if it didn't do any good he would pay for it. Well, I got a bottle and it helped me. I then got four more and used them, and today I am almost as >-oung and as good in every way as I was twenty years ago. I posed for the John Herron School of Art, the Shortridge High School, Technical High School, Manual and Broad Ripple High Schools and the Chicago School of Art for six weeks, up until December 21, 1924, so you know I made a come back, thanks to Todd’s Tonic.” —DANIEL DONAHUE, 210 N. Holmes Ave„ Indianapolis, Ind. Todd’s Tonic, with its winelike flavor, is pleasant to take. For sale at all

Bishops Unduly Alarmed Over Children Educator Says There Can Be Religion in Homes of Non-Church Folk.

This is the fourth of five articles by an expert answering the Question : "Are boys and girls worse than they used to be r" •" By Ernest W. Butterfield, LL. I). State Commissioner of Education, " New Hampshire Not long ago, a roomful of bishops declared: “We see in our land tens of millions of men and women who acknowledge no connection with religion and, as a result of this, a large proportion of our children are growing up without religious influence or religious training of any sort.” A great university president read this report and added his oracular words: "The accuracy of this statement by the bishops cannot be doubted.” But you and I do doubt it, for we know more of American homes than do bishops and universits- presidents. If this statement means anything, it means that bishops believe homes where parents are not church members there can be no religion. We know our homes and our neighbors’ homes better. We are told that Benjamin Franklin and. Abraham Lincoln were not church members, but we have ample evidence that their children dally experienced religion. We know that in countless homes, without church membership or Sunday School affiliation, the child is taught by precept, example and experience to walk uprightly-, “to visit the widow and fatherless in their affliction and to keep himself unspotted from the world-/’ If this statement means anything, It means that the bishops believe there can be no religious influence in a school without theology. We know that children who for hours each day work side by side with teachers who are persons of deep personal faith, sanctified lives and ennobling ideals, that such children can not be said to be growing up without religious influence of any kind. These earnest men accept the strange belief that instruction in dogma, intellectual assent to creeds, memorization of catechisms, knowledge of the facts of the Bible, that these mental feats will result in gracious living. Yet all history is opposed. There Is no faith that has not numbered men and women who have given mental assent to every dogma and who have not lived at the same time intolerant and intolerable lives. Character No church ordinance produces character, for character depends upon inheritance and 'is shaped in daily environment. There are three ways in which the public school pro-

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duces character. The first and most important is by the insistence that the teachers themselves live as they would teach their pupils to live. Everywhere the selection and retention of teachers depends upon character, education, training and experience, and the greatest of these is character. The second insistence is upon orderly, progressive, vital school work. Industry and honesty and sobriety cannot be effectively taught as extraneous lessons, but are habits which are gained in schools where the full school day’s work is done by the teacher and pupils working together. The third insistence is a minimum amount of formal instruction in timmoral and social virtues, with the aim that the daily -practice may be fixed as intellectual ideals.

Alert Teachers Most schools now have definite outlines for character development through inculcation of moral virtues. More than this alert teachers daily through school incidents and school instruction teach moral lessons. They teach humanity in history, reverence in astronomy and, by the school organization itself, kindness, courtesy and good manners. In Washington the other day a 7-s'ear-old girl first saw the White House and the flag floating over It. She whispered to her aunt, “Oh, I feel as I do in church.” Then she dropped the protecting hand, saluted the flag, as in school, and gave her pledge of allegiance. In a hushed voice, as she looked beyond the Washington Monument, she sang the first lines of America’s school hymn, "O beautiful for spacious skies.” It was effective. Two hurried Congressmen took off their hats and stood, for they knew that through the public school the religion of patriotism had come to this little girl. BOOTLEG SETS Denmark radio fans are protesting against the high annual license fee imposed upon them by the Government. Asa result, there as approximately 150,000 bootleg sets being operated in that country. A bootleg set is one operated without a license

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PHI DELTS TO BANQUET Fraternity Will Oberve Founders Day Friday Night. The State Founders day banquet of the Phi Delta Theta at the Columia Club Friday night will mark the initial speech in Indianapolis of Oswald Ryan of Anderson, a candidate for the short term senatorial nomination. His opponent, Senator Arthur R. Robinson, also a member, will also appear. Others on the program include Judge Will M. Sparks of Rushville and Solon J. Carter of Indianapolis. Claris Adams, a senatorial candidate for the long term nomination, will be toastmaster. Reports will be made by the president of active chapters at Indiana, Wabash, Butler. Franklin, Hanover, Purdue and De Pauw. Committee in charge includes Fred R. Witherspoon, chairman; Mark D. Griffin, Karl TANARUS, Nessler, James L. Murray and Clarence, F. Merrell.

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LIEUTENANT IS HANGED Pays Penalty for Killing Sweetheart Last April. Bu United Prc* MANILA, P. 1., March 18.—Lieut. John S. Thompson, West Point graduate of 1923, and beau brummel of the Army colony, was hanged at 5:24 a. m., today in an abandoned

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barnlike structure back of the quartermaster supply house at Ft. McKinley. Thompson, son of the Rev. Milton Thompson of Astoria, N. Y., shot and killed 16-year-old Audrey Burleigh, stepdaughter of an army captain and favorite of the army social set, last April, because she would not marry him.

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