Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 277, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 March 1926 — Page 5

MARCH 22,192 G

LINE SAYS HELL IS CONDITION OF pLIFE HERE, THEN Universalist Pastor Has Powerful Sermon on Big Theme. “We have been looking In the wrong place for heaven and hell,” the Rev. Fred A. Line said Sunday at the Central Universalist Church while preaching on “To Heaven or tc Hell—Which?” “We have Regarded death,” the Rev. Line said,' “as the only gateway to the one or the other. A man dies and we say that he has gone to heaven or to hell. “Do we speak advisedly? Does death bring about any change in soul conditions? Is God over there more than here? Does He withdraw himself from certaift realms and certain lives, allowing certain of Jlis children to shift for themselves in hopelessness and despair while He has his abiding place in certain realms and especially favor certain of his children? “Or does He dwell in all worlds and watch over and care for His children one and all with the same love? “What is hell? Where is hell? It is not a place walled in, reserved exclusively as an everlasting habitation for the unrepentant and the damned; a place here the unquenchable fires of divine wrath burn forrer and forever; a place in which God’s failures are covered up, as it were. It is a condition of life, existent here and now as well as there and then. “You don’t have to die to go to hell. Go into the factory where women and children are compelled to work long hours amid shameful conditions of criminal and you will be in hell. Visit the slums of a large city, where human souls cry out to you from an atmosphere and an environment of filth and squalor and wretchedness and degradation, and you will find yourself in hell. “Enter a department store where girls receiving ten or twelve dollars a weqk are not allowed to sit down during nine or ten hours of a long day, and you will be in the midst of hell conditions. “Go into legislative halls, where

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This is the lialf-million-dollar mansion built by the late WUHam Ft. Nelson, founder of the Kansas City Star. It must be destroyed under the terms of the will left by tlic last member of the Nelson family, Mrs. Laura Nelson Kirkwood, who died recently. She directed tliat her husband, Irwin Kirkwood, have the use of the house as long as he lives, but that it be destroyed when he dies, as she does jnot want strangers ever to occupy the place.

graft and bribery and political rottenness are In evidence, and you will be able to smell the brimstone. “Sojourn, if you will, in a home where love abides not, and, if you have vision, you will soon learn that the torments of hell are common to the experience of its inmates. Look within your own heart in those moments when passions of anger and greed and lust and selfishness control your life, and you will behold the fruits of hell in blossom. What Is Heaven? “What is heaven? Where is heaven? William Alger says: ‘The kingdom of heaven, that better dispensation which Christ came to establish, is the humility of contrite hearts, the innocence of little children, the purity of undefiled consciences, the fruit of good works, the truth of universal laws, the love of God and the conscious experience of an indestructible blessed being.’ Heaven in its fundamentals is the same here and in the hereafter, yesterday today and forever —righteousness, peace and joy In the holy spirit. “The conditions that make for heaven and hell are to be found in every heart. Take a soul that is saturated with the rottenness of depravity into the core of heaven, and It is in the heart of hell still. Take a soul that is compacted of divine realities to the very bottom of hell, and heaven is with it there,” the Rev. Mr. Line said. | URGES MASTER’S SriRIT The Rev. Wicks Says Make Church a Religious Center. "Let the Christian church be filled with the spirit of Its Master and nothing will destroy it,” said the Rev. Frank S. C. Wicks in a sermon at All Souls Unitarian Church Sunday morning. “Make the church a religious center, a place where the spiritually hungry are fed, where men in their weakness find strength, and you have a church that needs no external prop,” said the Rev. Mr. Wicks. Make the church strong within, and it will withstand every threat, he said.

TOUTED HOUSE HAS SKELETON ! Boy Scout Finds Bones of Pioneer. lIV I'nifrd Pr<-*x PORTLAND. Ore., March 22. ; Mute evidence that at least one | Oregon pioneer “died with his boo.ts | or” ha3 bees uncovered here with the discovery of a human skeleton crouched in a shack near the McKenzie River Highway. A Winchester rifle of the type used in 1870 was grasped in the bony hands. The bolt was drawn as though he had ejected a shell just before being shot down by an enemy. In the ancient stable, nearby, was found the skeleton of ar horse, evidently the mount of the man. It, too, died in action, for the iron bit was between its teeth. The rope, tying it to the manger, was still in place, indicating that the animal had starved to death. The discovery was made by William Harder, 12, Boy Scout, who became curious about the old buildings while on a camping trip on the McKenzie River. He reported his find to J. Neilson Barry of the Trail Seekers. Barry is conducting an investigation. He reports that settlers of that district thought the place haunted, which explains why the skeleton remained undiscovered for many years. MINSTREL SHOW TUESDAY NIGHT Lodge Entertainment to Be at Tomlinson Hall. Third minstrel show of the Help, Aid and Assist Club of North Park Lodge No. 646, F. and A. be given Tuesday night at Tomlinson Hall. William F. Swope is showmanager and W. J. Condrey director. End Men will be Mike Loucks,' Carl Wilson, Wayne Swope, H. A. Campbell, Wallace Pennsinger, George O’Connor and S. J. Williams. The ballad singers are Earl Davis, J. Raymond Trout, Clay Gullion, Carlos Jones, Jess Monn and E. E. Hindman. Moon, Davis and Gullion are members of a special trio. Dancers are Rusoel Fehr and Earl. Blackwell. CORETHROAT Gargle with warm Balt water —then apply over throat— WICKS | ▼ Vapo Rub 1 Opt If Million Jarm U..J Yearly

SLOGAN PRIZES TO BE AWARDED Youths to Write ‘Boosters’ For C. M. T. C. Cash prizes totaling S4O will be awarded youths submitting the best slogans for the citizens military training camp at Ft. Benjamin Harrison, July 15 to Aug. 111. it was an-

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STATE LUMBER RELIEF SEEN IN CONGRESS BILL Forestry Head Points Out Large Freight Bill for Wood. WASHINGTON, March 22.—Painting the Indiana lumber situation In dark colors, Col. W. fi. Greely, head of the U. S. Forestry Service, has endorsed the bill Introduced by Senator Fees and Representative Fitzgerald, of Ohio, providing a forestry experiment station in the Ohio valley. Greeley pointed out that Indiana, in common with her neighboring state, has stripped off almost all her commerclally-valuable timber, and that the state's freight bill for lumber from outside Is about $10,000,000 a year. Ohio's is $18,000,000 and Illinois’ Is $32,000,000, he said. None of these states now produce more than a fraction of the lumber they use, he said, woodworking industries have greatly fallen off, and the states arc handicapped in every way by the shortage. The three states mentioned, together with Missouri and lowa, still have about 40,000,000 acres of timbeF, he said, out of the 470,000,000 acres in the U. S. The forestry station would encourage growth of timber and the replanting of denuded areas. Greeley pointed out that replanting would redeem hundreds of thousands of acres in such sections as Southern Indiana, where the stripping off of

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the trees was followed by washing away of surface soil, making large areas worthless. The bills appropriate $50,000 tp establish tho station. A site at Miami University, at Oxford, Ohio, Just across the Indiana line, Is favored by the Ohio men, but the Secretary of Agriculture is empowered to select the site. . TO ADDRESS WORKERS Boston Woman Will Speak Before Hospital Social Group. Miss Kate McMahon will address members of the Indiana district of Hospital Social Workers, and their guests at u luncheon at the SplnkArms Friday, March 25, It was announced by Miss Grace Ferguson, chairman, today. Dr. Charles P. Emerson, dean of the Indiana' University School of Medicine; will talk on some aspects of social work related to the hospital patients. Miss McMahon is education secretary of the American Association of Hospital Social Workers, and Is being sent from headquarters in Boston, Mass., to study work In Indianapolis. Luncheon reservations may be made with Miss Ferguson at the Indiana University social service department offices, James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for Children, or with Miss Johanna Holmes, social service department city hospital.

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