Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 280, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 April 1934 — Page 2
PAGE 2
SCIENCE CHURCH HEAD LECTURES AT TABERNACLE William Duncan Kilpatrick Talks on God's Law of Freedom. William Duncan Kilpatrick. Detroit, a member of the Mother church. First Church of Christ. Scientist, lectured on “Christian Science: God s Law of Freedom and Dominion'’ at Cadle Tabernacle last night. “As the reflection of divine ideas through man constitutes spiritual existence,” said Mr Kilpatrick, “without any taint of matter or materiality, sin. sickness or death, so the expression of carnal thoughts in individual consciousness or thinking constitutes our material concept of existence—this world of matter and this man of flesh. "This carnal mind, so called, in its attempted counterfeit of the spiritual, contains all the elements of evil, and these elements of thought admitted to individual consciousness result in individual material existence. Because of the supposed existence of the carnal mind in your and my thinking—or the absence of the divine—we are conscious of matter. The material world is simply the carnal mind expressed in individual consciousness, and therefore must be a counterfeit world. You and I, for instance, think in terms of the carnal mind; this carnal thinking in turfl is objectified as matter. Thus j matter has no more substance than thought, because matter is thought. “The material does not exist outside your and my thinking. It exists in and because of our thinking,” Mr. Kilpatrick said. “On page 67 of ‘retrospection and Introspection,’ Mrs. Eddy furnishes us with this most illuminating explanation, where she says, ’Sin [that is, the carnal mindj existed as a false claim before the human concept of sin was formed.’ Now what is the human concept of sin, or the carnal mind? Why, matter or material existence. ‘Hence,’ she says, ‘one s j concept of error [or the carnal] is j not the whole of error,’ explaining,! of course, that the carnal exists 1 outside human consciousness and becomes a part of one’s conscious existence only to the extent that it is admitted to individual thinking. “The five physical senses are mental objectifications of the carnal mind,” said Mr. Kilpatrick, “therefore, we are not conscious of matter because we see, feel, taste, smell, or hear matter. We are conscious of matter because seeing, feeling, tasting, smelling, and hearing are creations of thought. We do not see with our eyes or hear with our ears, even from a material point of view. We see, feel, taste, smell and hear with our thinking. “An unconscious man, for instance, is possessed of all his material faculties, and yet he can not see, feel, taste, smell or hear a thing. He doesn’t even know that he has a material body, and he an’t begin to see, feel, taste, smell, r hear again until he begins to think again. And further than that, someone else may do our seeing, feeling, tasting, smelling, and hearing for us; that is, we may be made to see, feel, taste, smell and hear what someone else thinks.”
/fITTk At TOMORROW! lUY i^MBES $10.95 a | EASY TERMS It's time to get baby out of doors in a smooth, fashionable carnage. The model on sale is very similar to the one pictured. You can be certain of its durability, its flexibility and its lasting quality. This roomy carriage provides untold comfort for baby and at this special sale no mother can afford to be without one for her baby! Sold on Easy Terms! No Interest!
ROCK GARDEN CONSTRUCTION UNDER WAY
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Indianapolis park board is co-operating with the Allied Florists of Indianapolis, Inc., and the Indianapolis Council of Federated Garden Clubs in creating the rock gardens and florist displays that will be seen in the 1934 Home Show opening Friday at the Manufacturers building of the state fairground. This year's garden section, consisting of the pit section of the Manufacturers building, will contain some of the most beautiful gardens that have been created in this section of the country, according to E. E. Temperly, president of the Allied Florists of Indianapolis and chairman of the garden exhibits. The picture shows, left to right, C. F. Kostenbader and Andy Miller, city employes, at work on a pool at the fairground.
HIGH COURT DENIES HUTESON'S APPEAL City Promoter Must Serve Seven-Year Term. With all avenues of appeal closed. James F. Huteson, convicted in federal court here of using the mail to defraud in real estate sales, must serve a seven years’ sentence and pay a fine of $4,000. The United States supreme court yesterday denied Huteson's petition for a review of his case. He was convicted here three years ago, together with two associates, William M. Dozier and Mel J. O'Keefe, officers of the Indiana Estates Company. M ■ NUTT SPEAKS TONIGHT AT POM POM DINNER Home Show Directors Will Play Host to Exhibitors. Governor Paul V. McNutt will be the principal speaker at the annual pompom dinner given by the Home Show board of directors tonight at the Manufacturers’ building at the state fairground. Exhibitors, committee members and all participants in the show will be guests. g Lawrence v. Sheridan landscape architect for the show, will be master of ceremonies. Other speakers will be Walter M. Evans, board president: Fred L. Palmer, building committee chairman: J. F. Cantw r ell, show director, and Frank Woolling, who has served as “chef de gare” annually. Filling Station Looted Tires and tubes valued at S2OO were stolen early today by thieves from the Standard Oil Company’s filling station, Kentucky avenue and Morris street. Entrance was gained through a rear door.
CHURCH TO GIVE PLAY ‘St. Claudia’ Will Be Presented by Dramatic Club. The Dramatic Club of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church will present “St. Claudia,” a three-act religious play, at the social program at the Y. M. C. A. at 7:45 Wednesday. The musical program will be presented by the Tabernacle orchestra.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
SPECULATORS SAID DELAYING HOUSING PLAN Realtors Hindering Federal Slum Projects, Say Officials. By United Prettt WASHINGTON. April 3.—Efforts of speculators to profit at the expense of the government and legal technicalities have seriously hindered the federal low-cost housing and slum clearance plans, officials revealed today. Although considerable sums have been allocated to this work, actual construction is just getting under way on the first of the projects. Upon unnamed “real estate speculators,” officials .of the Federal Emergency Housing Corporation placed the major blame for the delay in starting low-cost housing. About one thousand projects have been submitted to the corporation, all of them involving land costs so high that cheap rentals would be impossible even with the most economical building methods. “These projects unmistakably represent schemes to make money at the expense of the government,” said one official. Elks Spring Frolic Set Annual spring frolic of the Elks and their guests will be held Saturday night, April 14. in the Oriental room of the Antlers. Music will be furnished by Jack Tilson and his “Breeze Blowers” band. A special show will be presented.
GLITTERING EASTER PAGEANTRY REACHES PRE-DEPRESSION LEVEL
The skies smiled with sudden spring warmth, the mercury obligingly climbed . . . and all the welcome, glittering pageantry of pre-depression years was strikingly in evidence again when the camera recorded this spectacular Easter Sunday scene on
New York’s world-famous Fifth avenue. From a vantage point opposite great St. Patrick's Cathedral (at right), you look down on a section of the nearrecord Easter parade that overflowed wide sidewalks into the street and made busses and other vehicles fight for right of way.
APRIL 3, 1934
RUUSEVELT TO CONTINUE TRIP ANOTHER WEEK President Reported Happy Over National Trend; Sons to Visit. /?!/ United fVr* MIAMI. April 3.—President Roosevelt aboard the yacht Nourmahal headed toward far southern seas today, having decided to extend his sea-going vacation until next week. He was represented as happy over the national situation and sure that no pressing matter in Washington demanded his immediate return to the capital. He was to have returned Friday, but now will not return until the latter part of next week. “All well and happy,” the Nourmahal wirelessed last night after heading for new fishing grounds south of the Bahamas. Today, the presidential yacht was nearing Elbow Key light off the Cal Sal banks far down in the Bahamas group. Mr. Roosevelt's trip, as now charted, will break a recent record for absence from the capital of a president during a session of congress. A visit from his two eldest sons, James and Elliott, was on today's schedule. They are flying from here by naval plane and probably will return tonight. Elliott came here last night by plane from the west on a business trip. James has been visiting in the south. There are 200 distinct bones ia the human body.
