Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 274, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 March 1934 — Page 6
PAGE 6
SCIENCE CHURCH LECTURE GIVEN BY CALIFORNIAN Mary Baker Eddy Doctrine Seen as Cure for World’s Ills. Peter V. Ross, San Francisco, member of the lectureship board of the hirst Church of Christ, Scientist, spoke last night in Cadle tabernacle. His topic was “Christian Science: Its Assurance to a Troubled World.” Mr. Ross said in part: “In recent years the Englishspeaking race, indeed western civilization, has been stirred to its depths by Mary Baker Eddy in her discovery' and presentation of Christian Science. To countless thousands this Science has become their avowed religion and has cast their lives into a larger and finer mold. “As men and nations accept the teachings of Christian Science, the human mind begins to part with its limitations. Then individuals begin to recognize the universe more nearly as it is and to envisage the health, abundance, and opportunity which are the legitimate birthright of man. Thereby does mankind get glimpses of that ultimate perfection which characterizes reality; for it would be a bold man who would argue that God’s creation falls short of perfection. “Biology believes that man began a low, simple form of life, in an inconceivably remote past, and throughout the ages has been toiling upward toward a perfection attainable, if at all, in a future still dim and distant. Theology teaches that man began perfect, only thereafter to fall through disobedience; and that now his chief concern is to recapture that perfection. “Christian Science insists that spiritual man, true selfhood, was never less than perfect, never less than eternal life expressed; and and that perfection is man's real status now. Scientifically speaking, therefore, man is not working toward perfection; rather is he working from perfection. “For perfection is not static, no more than are life and mind, which undeniably are in constant and perpetual operation Jesus sums this up emphatically when he declares, ‘My Father worketh hitherto, and I ■work.’ A state of rest or completion, without further work or continued capacity for unfoldment or higher heights to climb, w'ould be intolerable.”
CHURCH MEN'S GROUP WILL MEET FRIDAY Annual Gathering of Christian Organization Scheduled. The annual men’s meeting of the Christian churches of Indianapolis and vicinity will be held at the Central Christian church Friday night opening with a reception at 6, followeo by a dinner at 6:30. Among those men who will he featured in the discussion which will follow the repast will be p. A. Wood, Hilton U. Brown, James H. Tilsley, E. D. Lowe, G I. Hoover, H. O. Pritchard and Virgil P. Brock.
Indianapolis Tomorrow
Kiwanis Club, luncheon, Columbia Club. Lions Club, luncheon, Washington. Apartment Owners’ Association, luncheon, Washington. Twelfth District Legion, luncheon, Board of Trade. Purdue Alumni Association, luncheon, Severin. Mutual Insurance Association, luncheon, Columbia Club. Home Builders, dinner, Washington. League for Hard of Hearing, 7:30 p. m., Stokes building. Pedestrian Struck by Taxi Mrs. Ethel McMichael, 49, of 931 North Illinois street, suffered a leg injury at Delaware and St. C!a r streets last night during the blinding rain when she was knocked down by a taxicab. The driver said that he was unable to see her because of rain. Thieves Take School Clock Stationery and a clock valued at S2O were stolen during the night from school 6 by thieves who entered the school by climbing a fire escape and breaking a window on an upper floor. “NOT CONSTIPATED FOR SEVEN WEEKS" Writes Mrs. Johnson After Using Kellogg’s All-Bran Sufferers from constipation will be interested in this unsolicited letter: “Your All-Bran surely relieves constipation. I am so glad over the good it has done me that I feel I must write and tell you of it. “For lunch I take a banana, a large one. Six tablespoons of AllBran in a sauce dish, and dip banana at each bite until all is consumed. I haven’t been constipated now for seven weeks.”—Mrs. Louise Johnson, 1433 Forest Street, Denver, Colorado. Constipation often causes headaches. loss of appetite and energy’, sleeplessness. This condition is usually due to lack of “bulk” to exercise the intestines, and vitamin B to further promote regular habits. Kellogg's All-Bran has both, as well as iron for the blood. The “bulk” in All-Bran is much like that in leafy vegetables. Within the body, it forms a soft mass. Gently, it clears out the wastes. Try All-Bran in place of patent medicines often harmful. Two tablespoonfuls daily will overcome most types of constipation. Chronic cases, with each meal. If not relieved tnis way, see your doctor. Use as a cereal, or in cooking. Recipes on the red-and-green package. Sold by all grocers. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek.
ACID-KNOX INSTANT RELIEF From INBIOESTION jm GASTRITIS jA K M SOt H STOMACH QldKi STEED ON SALE AT ALL HAAG GROG STOKES
CHILDREN ENJOY MOVIES, MOTHERS SHOP
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“Stop for us when you finish your marketing.” This was the parting message of children Saturday morning, when they left their mothers to attend the supervised children’s movie at the Uptown theater. Mrs. A. W. Fessler, 5227 Washington boulevard, left her laughter Doris, right, and Adeline Kadel, 5131 Washington boulevard, left. The movie, shown under the supervision of an organization of local clubwomen, was one of a series of ten planned for children. Mrs. Howard Robinson, of the Elizabethan club of All Souls’ Unitarian church, is in charge of books of tickets for the series of moving pictures. Only movies suitable for children will be shown. Three hundred children attended the first show at the Ritz theater Friday afternoon. A much larger crowd attended the Saturday movie. Tickets are interchangeable, and can be used for any of the ten performances.
Leland C. Morgan Files for County Prosecutor
Young G. 0. P. Organization Chairman Announces Program Points. Leland C. Morgan, county chairman of the Young Republican Organization of Marion county, today filed his candidacy for the Republican nomination for Marion county prosecutor. Mr. Morgan is a member of the Masonic order, Sigma Delta Kappa legal fraternity, West Park Christian church and the Indianapolis Bar Association. He is 29, married and lives at 4914 East Tenth street. Mr. Morgan has said in a statement: “I am filing notice of my candidacy for prosecutor of Marion county because I believe that there is a rare opportunity for a fighting young man in that job. In recent years, this position has become nothing but an appendix to the police force. It is the solemn duty of a prosecutor to prosecute and not to be a rubber stamp for the police or a cash register for political favors. “Points of my program are: “1. The Indiana statutes give the prosecutor almost unlimited authority to initiate and push through his own investigations. This power has fallen into utter disuse. “2. When an erring youth steps outside society for the first time and steals a few dollars, the prosecutor treats him with the utmost severity. The boy receives ten years in prison and another John Dil-linr-jr is in the making. r th*r hand, men in high places have caused losses of millions of dollars representing the painfully accumulated savings of , -Oirt.. me prosecutor has made not one move to place the facts concerning these losses before the public. If these bankers have violated the law they should be prosecuted. If they have not they should be vindicated, but the people have every right to knov' down to the smallest detail what happened to their money. “3. Many ugly rumors have been 1 abroad for a year concerning the handling of liquor in Indiana. Perstent reports of payoffs, stock- : jobbery and ‘inside’ deals have reached the ears of every citizen of i this state. Persons close to Indi--1 ana’s chief executive suddenly have shown an unusual interest in the business side of beer. If elected I pledge myself to lay all of the facts regarding liquor control before the people. “4. I guarantee that if I am elected every indictment for which I ask will represent an honest belief on my part that an actual crime has been committed. I shall never prostitute the sacred power cf the grand jury to unworthy purposes."
\ I'M SMOKING MORE- J M !§H|MjP and ENJOYING IT MORE. WM mf¥w : MY "NERVES" AREN’T v ANY MORE. i
H. A. BARNHART, EDITORJS DEAD Rochester Publisher and Former Representative Succumbs. By United Press ROCHESTER, Ind., March 27. Henry A. Barnhart, 75, former publisher of the Rochester News-Sen-tinel and for twelve years a representative in congress from the old Thirteenth district, died at his home late yesterday rollowing a long illness. Death was caused by heart disease and complications. Mr. Barnhart was born at Twelve Mile and educated in country schools and at Amboy academy. He taught school several years and purchased the Rocnester Sentinel in 1895, after serving a year as county surveyor. He was owner and editor of the Sentinel and the News-Sentinel for nearly forty years. A son, Hugh Barnhart, is present editor and publisher of the News-Sentinel, while another son, Dean, published the Goshen Democrat before its merger with the Goshen News-Times last year. Mr. Barnhart was a founder and director for many years of the United States Bank and Trust Company, an organizer of the Rochester telephone system and president and general manager from 1895 until his death. He also served as president of the National Independent Telephone Association and was a former president of the Indiana Democratic Eidtorial Association and the Northern Indiana NonPartisan Editorial Association. He was elected to congress in 1908 and served continuously for six terms. In recent years, he had devoted a major portion of his time to his Springbrook farm, where he raised thoroughbred Guernsey cattle. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p. m. tomorrow at the First I Baptist church.
In Constant Misery with si? Psoriasis. Healed by Cuticura. “Psoriasis first appeared on my hands, then on my face and scalp. It was similar to measles in appearance, and spread rapidly into red patches the size of a dime. I was ashamed to be seen. I was in constant misery with the itching and burning sensation and I suffered from loss of sleep. “Treatments failed to relieve this condition and it lasted seven weeks before I resorted to Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I received immediate relief and after using three boxes of Cuticura Ointment with Cuticura Soap I was healed.” (Signed) Willie Whalen, 319 Emmett St, Burlington, lowa, July 27,1933. Soap 2Sc. Ointment 25 and 50c. Talcum 25c. Sold everywhere. lilULvUin One sample each free. Address: “Cuticura Laboratories. M Dept. D Malden. Mass.”
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
—Let’s Go Fishing—
IT'S NO SIN TO USE WORMS IF FLIESWON'T DO Many Times Fish Won’t Take Feathers, So Why Go Empty Handed? BY GEORGE DENNY (Pinch Hitting for Lefty Lee) It seems to us that there is a lot of unfortunate hooey in this fishing business The fly fisherman has his nost a little higher in the air than the man who casts plugs or spinners and the caster in turn is a trifle condescending toward the angler who fishes with worms or minnows. I've heard men say that if they couldn’t get ’em with a dry fly, they rather would not fish. I'm a fly .fisherman myself, and I’m sold on the idea that there’s no sport quite like it. But there are many times that fish just won’t take the feathers. So, why should I return empty-handed when a juicy worm fished deep will provide action? The best trout fisherman that I know' has a cottage on the Pere Marquette river near Baldwin, Mich. He knows every inch of the water for miles upstream and down. He doesn’t try for the little eight or nine-inch ones, bu for the old daddys. If the particular trout that he is casting for will not rise to his dry fly offerings, he will tie on a wet fly or nymph. After the artificials have had their chance he is not a bit too proud to try a grasshopper, minnow or red worm. As often as not he will liberate the fish after the net has closed over it. He never keeps more than he can use that day. With this old sportsman the thrill is not in the heavy creel of small, unwary trout. It’s the matching of wits with the wise old cannibal browns, the bottom feeders, that he lives for. These trout seldom rise to a fly. Should the angler deprive himself of his only chance to do battle with a real antagonist because he is a “dry fly man” only? Isn’t it the same with our bass fishing in Indiana? Just once last season did I happen to be on hand when the bronzebacks w'ere gorging ,on a hatch of large flies. For twenty minutes my caddis imitation fished dry was deadly, but when the hatch was over I had to go down after them with the old reliable spinner and bucktail. Every plug caster remembers the day when the bass ignored all his lures except the one particularly battle scarred old bait that he had almost thrown away a dozen times. Or maybe his entire assortment netted him nothing while the cane pole fisherman on the opposite bank using crickets for bait pulled in several dandies. No, it’s not how much you spent for your tackle or what lure you prefer, but the skill that you show with the tools that you have. It’s the care and patiehce and love of the sport. And if you keep an undersized fish I hope your sportsmen friends w'ill tell you what you should be told. SENATE TO HEAR COX Commerce Committee Testimony to Be Given by Airport Head. The senate commerce committee will hear testimony this morning from Charles E. Cox, Indianapolis' Municipal airport superintendent and Indiana Aircraft Trades Association president, who will discuss a proposed bill on governmental loans ■%o independent aircraft operators, private pilots and flying schools.
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.MARCH 27, 1934
