Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 309, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 April 1927 — Page 3
APRIL 4, 1927
CONSCIOUSNESS OP GOD MUST BE * IN HEARTS OF ALL Heaven Is Conditioned Upon Service, Says < Pastor. “Heaven is conditioned upon service, the living of a life in harmony with the purposes, promises and ideals of divine love,” the Rev. Fred A. Line of the Central Universalist Church said Sunday while preaching on “Heaven Found.” "First, there must bo in our hearts the consciousness of. God,” the Rev. Line said. “We must recognize man’s relation to God as a child of live, a manifestation of his life in the present world. “It behooves us to recognize the importance of the present moment in its relation to the evolution of the ages. We need to realize more fully that the present is a part of eternity, that the present moment is the moment eternal in the evolution of life. Where Is Heaven? Heaven is found only by the patient struggling soul, by the one who labors in the vineyard. Heaven is realization. Heaven is life fulfillment. The poet dreams. Communing with the great source of power, he expresses the deepest sentiment of the heart and as he realizes the fulfillment of his dream he is privileged to bask in Heaven’s sunshine, m “The painter has a vision. In mind Plie pictures things as they should be, and in response to the heart’s better impulses he portrays to men his ideal of larger life, liven as he paints his song is merged with that •of the heavenly choir. “The author, recognizing the world's need, with deepest devotion to truth, proclaims message calculated to awaken response in the
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Local Youth Takes Flapper Role
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James 1.. Daggett
Playing a leading feminine role, James L. Raggett, 4904 Washington Blvd., University of Pennsylvania freshmen, will appear 'in “Hoot Mon,” the production of the Mask and Wig Club on tour this spring. Daggett takes the part of the flapper daughter of an American millionaire. Daggett attended Technical High School here, was business manager and feature writer on the school paper and took a prominent part in dramatics. He is a member of Phi Gamma Delta. hearts of men. As his work bears fruit in the better conditions and more beneficient institutions of a new civilization his heart is filled with joy. “The prophet hears the call of God as it sounds fopth from the soul’s hidden depths. He heeds the call in rendering the service of love. With the dawning of the new day of higher righteousness 'he is given a share in the peace of heaven. The man who works with his hands and helps to produce something worth
while in the world’s life is making a heaven for himself. “Here and every pluce where love manifests itself in service and life is heaven to be found. The home where a mother sends forth her love that peace may abound and happiness prevail is heaven’s resting place. The great soul, sending forth from his life streams of divine influence, making the roses to blossom in tfie desert and t lie flowers of love to spring up in the waste places, giving beauty and meaning , and power to the lives of men—Surely such a soul is finding heaven. “Door to Heaven" “Achievement is , the door to heaven. Divine energy never rests. There is joy only in fulfillment. Fulfillment goes hand in hand with service. The great men of all times have lived their liyes amid the beauty and the harmony of heavenly spheres. We say a man lias' gone to heaven simply because has died. The statement is false. If a man has gone to heaven, it is because he has lived, because he has been true to the soul’s best light, has cheered and helped and blessed men, has sown peace and joy and righteousness, and so is privileged to reap day by day tlie harvest of love, A man who so lives does not have to die to get into heaven. Already he is experimenting its joys. “Life is indeed a coming into hannony, and the music of the spheres will yet prove to include all activity—physical, mental, spiritual. The man who is learning to live is finding heaven. If you are not finding heaven there is something wrong. You are not living the heavenly life. Begin so to live today, and heaven will be your heritage tomorrow,” the Rev. Line said. Rheumatism Recipe While serving with the American Army in France I was given a prescription for Rheumatism and Neuritis that has produced most gratifying results in thousands of cases. The prescription cost me nothing, so I ask nothing for it, but will send it free to any one who writes me. Ex-Sergeant Paul Case, Room 256. Grace Bldg., Brockton, Mass.—Advertisement.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TRIES
The Times Sworn Statement MADE UNDER THE POSTAL LAW. Statement ot the Ownership, Management. Circulation etc., required by the Act of Congress of August 24, 1912. of The Indianapolis Times, published daily, except Sunday, at Indianapolis, Indiana, for April, 1, 1927, State of Indiana, County of Marlon, ss: Before me, a notarv public in and for the State and county aforesaid, personally appeared Wm A. Mayborn, who having been duty awuru according to law, deposes and says that he is the Business Manager of The Indianapolis Times, and that tlie following Is. to the hg-st of his knowledge and belief, a true stalemeut of the Ownership. Management and Circulation of the aforesaid publication for the date shown in the above caption, required by the Aet of August 24, 1912, embodied iu Section 442, Postal Laws and Regulations, printed on the reverse of this form, to-wlt: 1. That the names ami addresses of the publisher, editor, managing editor and business manager are: PUBLISHER Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos. 214-220 West Maryland Street. Indianapolis, lnd. EDITOR Boyd Gurley 20 Maple Court, Indianapolis, lnd. MANAGING EDITOR Volney B. Fowler 3813 Kenwood Ave., Indianapolis, lnd. BUSINESS MANAGER William A Mayborn 3251 Park Avenue, Indianapolis, lnd. 2. That the known owners are: The E. W. Scripps Cos.. Hamilton, Ohio; G. B. Parker, ■Cleveland. Ohio: the Roy W. Howard Cos., Wilmington, Delaware; Thomas L. Sidlo, Cleveland, Ohio; the Robert P. Scripps Cos., Hamilton, Ohio: the . Managers Finance Cos.. Cincinnati. Ohio; W. W. Hawkins. New York City: tie- Third Investment Cos.. Cincinnati, Ohio; the Fifth Investment Cos., Wilmington, Delaware; Hazel P. Hostetler, Cleveland, Ohio. 3. That the known bondholders, mortgagees and other security holders holding one per cent (t'.l) or more of the total of bonds, mortgages, or other securities: Wabush Realty and Loan Cos., Terre Haute, Indiana. 4. That the two paragraphs next above, giving the names ot the w tiers, stockholders nnd security holders, if any, contain not only the .st of stockholders and security holders as they appear upon the books ot lie company, but also in cases where the stockholder or security holder ppears upon the books of the company as trustee or in any other fiduciary elation the name of the person or corporation for whom snob trustee is icting, is givSn; also that the said two paragraphs contain statements unbracing affiant's full knowledge and belief as to the circumstances and onditions under which stockholders and security holders who do not appear upou the books of the company as trustee, hold stock and securities n a capacity other than that of a bona fide owner: and this affiant has no reason to believe that any other person, association or corporation has any interest direct or indirect in the said stock, bonds or other securities than as so stated by him. ft That the average number of copies of each Issue of this publication sold or distributed, through the mails or otherwise, to paid subscribers during the six months preceding the date shown above is 62,845 WM. A. MAYBORN, Business Manager. Sworn to and subscribed before mo this Ist day of April, 1927. tSEALI W. B. NICEWANGER, Notary Public. My commission expires Jan. 29. 1928.
ENTER INDUSTRIAL SHOW Forty Exhibitors Promised for North Side Event Week of April 18. Forty firms and manufacturers have engaged booths for the North Indianapolis Industrial Exposition at the Riverside dance palace the week
of April 18. This will be the second display of its kind held under the auspices of North Indianapolis business men. Several entrants in the “Miss North Indianapolis” popularity contest have been received, U. R. Lee, 110r> W. Thirty-Fourth St., exposition chairman, announced.
MARCH WARM AND WET REPORT Temperature Was Nearly 5 Degrees Above Normal. March weather in Indianapolis was “warmer and wetter” than is customary for the month of the lion and the lamb, the monthly weather summary issued by the United States XVeather Bureau reveals. The average temperature for March was 44.0 degraes, or 4.9 degrees warmer than normally. The highest temperature of the month was 72 on the 16th and the lowest 20 on the 2nd. Rainfal lamounted to 6.32 inches as compared with a normal 4.1. This excess of 2.31 inches is accountable to the heavy rains of the 19th and 20th when 2.27 inches fell within 24 hours. This deluge was responsible for the White river reaching a flood crest of 19.1 feet on the 22nd. As MAKEMOREMONEY 4k Healty, vigorous men land life’s best prizes. Buoyant step, bright eyes, | Clear and exuberant vitality denote a system free from impurities. Constipation poisons the whole system, slows the step, saps energy, destroys confidence and cuts down the earning power. Rid your system of constipation and its poisons. Dr. Edwards' oliv Tablets remove them gently, tone up the system, clear the eyes and complexion and bring back normal vigor. A compound of vegetable ingredients, prescribed to patients for 20 years in place of calomel. They act easily and quickly on bowels and liver. Take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets and ! keep tit for the daily grind. Thousands | of happy men and women use them ! regularly as an aid to success in their I everyday tasks. Know them by their | olive color, 15c, 30c, 00c.—Advertisement.
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the month came to an end this had dropped to 6.7 feet. March was unusual in that only traces of snow fell on four days while the month is usually a fairly white one. The sun was shining 44 per cent of the possible hours while 48 per cent is normal. The prevailing direction of the wind south at an average velocity of 13.1 miles per hour. The total wind movement was 9,722 miles.
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LOCAL MAN TO PRISON Hu Times Svecial ORKKNCASTLK, lnd., April 4. Leland Stewart of Indianapolis, former superintendent of tho county poor farm, was in Stato prison at Michigan City today, commencing a term of one to five years for embezzlement. His attorneys dismissed an appeal to tho State Supreme Court and Stewart was taken to prison Saturday.
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