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■IENTIST ASKS PtELIGIOUS TRUTH Bvs Christ Has Paved Way Bor Correct Understanding. ■ Honesty and truth in religious belief *s the keynote of an address by Virgil O. Strlckler, C. S. B. a'member of the board of lectureship of the First Church of Christ, Scientist, of Boston, at the Murat theater yesterday. H appeared under auspices of the Christian Science churches of the city-; Mr. Strlckler smashed directly at what he termed "erroneous religious beliefs,” and told of the reasons for his religious convictions. CHRIST HAS PROVED HIMSFXF. He said Christianity has proved it self and that the time has come when ail should atiow the truth of Christ. In pirt, he said: “True religion consists of spiritual truth, and not of erroneous beliefs: hence it follows that one's religion Is limited to the amount of spiritual truth he knows, and that erroneous religious beliefs are only so many delusions that servo no other purpose than to ob struct spiritual growth. "Tile trouble with most of us has been thac we have believed erroneously with er-* knowing it. m "in my own case it was not until Christian Science came to me and taught me the difference between spiritual truth end erroneous human belief that T learned how to dissect my own beliefs. “No one could be more certain of the TUESDAY SPECIALS In times not long past values equal to these were considered extraordinary when offered in only one and two-hour sales. Every department is represented and the extremely low prices quoted here hold throughput the entire day Tuesday. Owing to the unusual values, we can not take phone, mail or C. O. D. orders on the following: Girls 9 Up to $4.75 Dresses, $2.95 A miscellaneous collection of two-piece tub dresses, in combinations of white Lonsdale and striped galatea, plaid voiles and semi-middy dresses of chambray. Sizes 6 to 14 years. Pettis junior dept., second floor. Up to $16.75 Sleeveless Jackets and Waistcoats, $5.00 Ten odd sleeveless jersey jackets and broadcloth waistcoats for wear with sports, golf or riding costume. Jackets are in heather jersey, wajstcoats in golf red or green. —Pettis ready-to-wear, second floor. Baronet Satin Skirts, $15.95 New spring model in gathered waist styles with large ocean pearl slide buckle, strap pockets, button-trimmed back and open lap back, in ivory, strawberry, flesh, ciel and Nubian. Sizes 56 to 32 bands. —Pettis skirts, second floor. $3.50 French Gloves, $1.98 Women's genuine French kid gloves with full PK sewn seamsf in white w ith contrast or self-stitching. —Pettis gloves, street floor, aisle four. Children’s 48c Combs, 19c Fancy mounted push ctrinbs'for children. —Petris jewelry, Btret floor, aisle four. 69c Metal Dcrine Powder Boxes, 29c Many different styles. —Pettis jewelry, street floor, aisle four. Men s 15c Handkerchiefs, 11c Neatly hemstitched handkerchiefs of good quality. ■ —Pettis handkerchiefs, street floor, aisle two. 15c Embroidery Edges, 11c _ s?wis embroidery edges in well-made patterns, very desirable for trimming children s dresses and underwear. - Pettis trimmings, street -floor, aisle two. $1.49 Double Flap Purses, 98c Double flap purses of genuine leather of different grains. Made strap back style and silk lined. —Pettis leather goods, street floor, aisle three. Face Powders, 33c 50c Armand's Bouquet Face Powder, 33<\ 60c L’Ame Face Powder, 33<t 75c Cour Azur Face Powder, 33<*. 50c Elcaya Face Powder, 33c. —Pettis toilet goods, street floor, front. 10c Notions, 5c -10 c Snap Fasteners, card. s<*. 10c Belting, white only, yard. 5c 10c Hooks and Eyes, card, sc. $2.00 Stamped Pillowcases, $1.49 Pair Best quality 42-inch Tubing, used and stamped in new patterns. —Pettis art shop, fifth floor. 50c Douglas Fairbanks ’ Books,l9c Various titles. —Pettis hooks, street floor, airle four. Re-Grouping Women’s Custom PVlade Suits Suits Heretofore Priced (d* |H| as High as $lB9 . . . . Suits of Tricotines and Poiret Twills. Among the Types: The “Norfolk and Mannish Type” sport effect suits. The* “Long,” Straight Line Belted Jackets. The “ Boler” and Pont Coat Suits. The “Severely” Plain Tailored Suits. Sizes for women of 36 to 44. Sizes for misses of 14 to 20 years. —Pettis Suits —Second floor. IWTUS Dm GOODS CO 'the rvi EIW VOP K STORE El ST. >Q,S3~~ correctness of his religious beliefs than I was of mine at that time. TELLS OF HIS EABIA BELIEFS. ‘‘l had been believing honestly anrt sincerely many things that I found could not possibly be true. ~ “Many scales began to fail from my eyes, and I then commenced to learn and experience for the fl*st time the real significance of the Vvnrds used by .Tesus in the eighth chapter of John, xvben he said, ‘Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.’ •‘Christian Science aims to destroy er roneous religious beliefs by substituting a knowledge of truth in place thereof, and to destroy out of the human mind all evil qualities by planting good qual ities in their stead. "It wages relentless warfare against all wrong mental qualities. It seeks to substitute love In place of hate, un selfishness in place of selfishness, hon esty in place of dishonesty and truth in place of error. “It lays tremendous emphasis upon the necessity for ‘bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ' (II Cor. 10:5), as the Bible commands. "It shows that the cause of all disease and sin is mental, and not physical, and that both sickness and sin are destroyed by the evangelization of the human men tality with truth and love.” 3-Eyed Pig Marvel of New York Town BATAVIA, X. V., April It*.—A pig with three eyes and two snouts was born on a farm here. The pig can squeal out of both mouths at the same time. CITY LEADS IN NEW BUILDINGS Pittsburg Nearest to Indian apolis in Federal List. Indianapolis ranks high among cities similar in size in building activities, ac cording to the government report for the first quarter of the present year. The total valuation of buildings erected here during the quarter was $J,523.250, w hile in Pittsburg. Pa , build ing In the same period reached an amount of only $3,423,608. Indianapolis is placed fax ahead of Kansas City, Mo., Buffalo, N. Y., Louis ville, Ky., and Columbus, O. According to present indications valuations of April promise to exceed those of previous months of this year. Local Doctor Joins Marine Staff Here Lieut. John A. Marsh, medical corps. United States navy, has been transferred as medical examiner for the marine corps recruiting station at 157 North Illinois street, it was announced today. Lieut. Marsh is an Indianapolis man and was a practicing physician here be fore the war. * He served one year with the navy at Great Lakes, 111., and has been aboard ship for the last two years. His home is at 530 North Drexel are nue. Pettis Dav Goods Cos W MM VOm.OTO 20c and 25c Wall Paper, 15c Allover leaf designs, cloth effects, tapestries and two tone stripes. —Pettis wall paper, third floor. Women’s $8.50 and $9 Oxfords, $6.45 Black and brown kid oxfords with leather Louis or baby Louis heels and welt soles. A fitting oxford for street wear. , , - —Pettis shoes, street floor, east aisle. $6.50 and $7.50 Plaids and Checks, $5.50 Smart, large plaids in our most desirable patterns. Widths 56 inches. Pettis wool goods, street floor, west aisle. Boys’ $1.19, $1.25 and $1.59 Hats, 89c New shapes and patterns for spring Pettis boys’ clothing, third floor. 50c Stationery, 33c Pettis linen writing paper In various tints. Package —of 108 sheets. . , , —Pettis stationery, street* flodr, aisle four. Women 's $1.75 Merode Union Suits, $1.19 Light weight combed cotton union suits in loose or tight knee; also envelope styles. —Pettis kuit underwear, street floor, aisle five Women’s Lisle Hose, 39c Lisle hose, reinforced at heel and toe. Seconds of a well known make; if firsts, would retail for Ssc. Black and some colors. —Pettis hosiery, street floor, aisle five Men’s 29c Cotton Socks, 19c t'otton socks with reinforced heel and toe; in navy, gray and brown. Fettia hoeierv, street floor. aUtc five. 85c Plain Colored Organdy, 69c Every desirable shade in 40-inch width Pettis wash goods, street floor, west alalc. $1.25 Drapery Poplin, 98c Yard wide, beautiful finish poplin, in rose, blue, green, muf~erry and gold. —Pettis draperies, third floor. Men's $5.00 to $6.95 Trousers, $4.25 Men’s and young men? trousers In light and dark patterns in stripes and plain. Pettis men’s elothlng, third floor. Royal Electric Cleaner Cleans by air alone. Terms of $5 down, the balance in easy terms. Free home trial. —Pettis basement. INDIANA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, APRIL 19, 1920 NEBRASKA PICKS CHOICE TOMORROW Pershing Favorite Son Candi date Against Two Others LINCOLN, Neb., April 19.—Campaign - ing for the capture of Nebraska's pri maries closed today. Nebraska voters tomorrow will do cide between Wood, Johnson or Pershing as republican nominees for president. Pershing is a favorite son candidate. The contest between .William J. Bryan “ECONOMY’* lliree hundred cups of Delicious Orange Pekoe Tea Infused from one pound This result may be obtained wHhout sacrificing the * goodness of & single cup Try a Packet For Sale and test our claims Everywhere $12.95'V/hite Satin Petticoats, $ 7.98 Petticoats of heavy white satin with double panel or plain, elastic waist and deep flounce. I‘ettin petticoats, second floor. Children 's $6.95 and $7.95 Sweaters, $5.69 Slipover, Tuxedo and ripple tail models for spring. Sizes 2 4 to 2S. - Pettis sweaters, second floor. $2.25 Crex Rugs, $1.45 Crex rugs, size 30x60 inches, in green and brown only. Limit two to a customer. Pen is rugs, third floor. Revere Pattern Silverware Discontinued line with 25-year guarantee. $5.00 set of six de-sert spoons, |3.39; $4.50 set of six bouillon spoons. 9iI.DK; $1.50 cold meat forks,, each. 91.10. $2.25 berry spoons, each, $1.50; 98c butter knives, each, 59Ci 9Sc sugar shells, each. 5Dc —Pettis silverware, street floor, front. 7 1 2 c Crystal White Soap, 10 for 65c Excellent laundry soap —Pet .is basement. $2.48 Suit Cases, $1.79 Woven matting cases bound with fiber and metal. 21 inches long. —Pettis basement. 98c Bamboo Baskets, 49c Japanese bamboo baskets for fruit or flowers. -—Pettis basement. 10c Paint and Varnish Cleaner, 6c National Cleanup brand —rettis basement. $5.50 Electric Toaster Stoves, $3.98 Red-top toaster stove for use on table. —Pettis basement. 24c Caps and Saucers, 15c Pair White porcelain, first quality. x —Pettis basement. 49c Glass Pitchers, 33c Half gallon size with ice lip —Pettis basement. • Polo Coats, $20.00 A limited numher of coats of standard quality polo cloth.in jaunty, full cut styles. With leather belts or straight line yoke model with self material belt. Sizes 16 and IS and 36 to 44. , Pettis coats, second floor. Girls’ Up to $29 Dresses, $15.00 A collection of smart frocks developed in Georgette crepe, crepe do chine, chiffon, in surplice or semi-blouse bodices in combination with gathered or pleated ruf fled skirts. Colors are pink, light blue, maize, Nile, white and flesh. Sixes 8 to 16 years. - —Pcitls junior dept., second floor. ROYAL Electric Cleaners A* Our recommendation of this wonder l ful electric cleaner is based upon the number of highly pleased customers An § we have made in our tive years of ISSL HOVAL selling. A demonstration will convince the I \ most skeptical of the-value and super \ I J ioritv of the ROYAL— \ \M I* Cletins by Air Alone \ Ip I $5 Down Free Balance Home M \ Easy Terms Trial | Home of the Crystal Washer | * 1 —Pettis Easement. THE APRIL METROPOLITAN contains another Booth Tarkington Seventeen story, “That Human Being, Leonard Wood,” and eight good short GpPZg* stories. Price Atft - Pettis books, street floor, aisle four.' add Senator Gilbert Hitchcock for the democratic leadership of the state has developed into a warm affair. Bryan is a candidate for delegate-at large to tho national convention and Hitchcock Is a candidate for the state's democratic presidential preferential vote. Death Calls Eldest Daughter of Hughes GLENS FALLS, N. Y., April 19. Helen Hughes, 28, eldest daughter of Charles Evans Hughes, died yesterday, after an illness of several months with Influenza and pneumonia. _ ■ New Equipment to Relieve Our Car Shortage \ ft A RAILROAD is worth to you what it can give you in trans portation service. Our system, like all the railroads <?f the country, is short of rolling stock, ana this problem is yours as well as ours. The cost of railroad inability to handle traffic falls directly on business men, and indirectly on the public at large. A considerable element in the maintenance of the present high prices is the lack of cars for prompt and adequate movement of foodstuffs, raw materials, builders’ supplies and manufactured articles. We have arranged to acquire new equipment which will cost $48,318,300. Thi* will include: 196 locomotives 105 all-steel passenger coaches 4000 all-steel box cars 80 all-steel baggage cars 4000 coal cars 30 milk cars 994 stock cars 12 all-steel combination cars 250 refrigerator cars 15 multiple unit electric passenger cars 11 mail cars 12 all-steel dining cars * ) We are rebuilding 1000 coal cars now out of service, at a cost of approximately $2,000,000, adding that number of 55-ton all-steel coal cars to our equipment. It is hoped to have a large part of this new rolling stock in service next fall. WE would like to buy more equipment. We need it and your business next fall will require it, if handled accord ing to the standard of our service before the war. But with the money market as it is at present, and with expenditures of $50,000,000 more contemplated for improvements and extension of facilities which also will have to be financed by borrowing, we are not in position now to order more than the equipment we have contracted for. RAILROADS today are the bottle-neck of the industrial world. Once they were developed beyond the demands on them. NoW industry is being retarded because they cannot meet the demands. The bottle-neck must be widened or the pressure on it reduced. It is unthinkable that industrial expansion should be checked at a time when intensive production is so urgently needed. Therefore railroad facilities must be improved and increased to be adequate to industry’s ever-growing demands. This is your phase of the problem. We submit for the serious thought of those most directly con cerned, the business men of the nation, the subject of aid to railroad development by investment in railroad securities. Our lines are doing, and will do, their best to serve you. But we, as all the railroads, need the co-operation of the public. THE NEW YORK CENTRAL„LINES Bit FOUR _ - LAKE ERIE &WESTERNg-jMICHIGAN CENTRAL, . BOSTON & ALB ANY OHIO CENTRAL - PITTSBURGH &lAIC ERIE IsTEW.YDRK CENTRAL^AND-SUBSIDIARY^LINES FLETCHER AVENUE MAN GAINS 3 POUNDS IN TWELVE DAYS; HE GIVES CREDIT TO PEPGEH Perhaps nobody lores a fat man, but It is a settled bit of philosophy that the too slender man or woman is rarely happy In that condition. A gain in flesh is the hallmark of re loritiio health and the high sign • a better disposition, and to bring about the gain naturally and wholesomely the stomach must function at ils best. No benefit is derived from food which is not thoroughly digested.* The ease of Ernest Craig. 3fit- Fletcher avenue, Indianapolis, serves as a good ex ample of what Pepgen is doing right here in this city. Mr. Craig, who Is cm ployed at the Rockwood Manufacturing Company, INOI English avenue, says: "I think Pepgen rs the greatest tonic in the world. My stomach became dis ordered through eating cold dinners, as 1 am compelled to carry my dinner to work. My muscles became weakened through lack of exercise, as my work re Millions of Tiny Germs N Cause Your Catarrh Real Relief Comc3 Only by Cleansing Blood of These. Germs. Catarrh conies from a disease germ that finds lodgment in the blood, and makes itself manifest by spreading its attack of poisonous ir citation to the delicate linings of the nose, throat and air passages. These become stopped up by the inflamma tion of the mucous membranes, mak ing it difficult for you to breathe, and you are constantly hawking and spitting in an effort to clear the clogged-up nostrils and get relief. You must realize that your blood is loaded down with catarrh germs, and these cerms must be removed from your blood before you can ex pect real, rational relief fawn the> quires, me to be in a sitting position all day. “When I started home at night I would make up my mind that I would eat a good warm supper, but when t got home 1 couldn't do it because I didn't have any appetite. , “Then I started taking Pepgen. and that hit the spot. It gave me a good ap petite and made me feel stronger. I took Pepgen fojr twelve days and l was three pounds heavier than the day I started to take it. “I am glad to recommend Pepgen and I believe that men who. like myself, are compelled to carry their dinners and eat cold noonday lunches will find the medi cine to be of great benefit. It is even better than I have told.” Pepgen is sold by the Henry ,1. Huder drug stores, corner Washington and Pennsylvania Sts., Michigati and Illinois Sts., and by all other leading druggists everywhere.—Advertisement. disease. And of course, you know that you can not reach these grems in your blood with sprays and douches. Experience has proven that S. S. S. is the best remedy for* Catarrh, be cause it i3 a fine old blood remedy that tends to free the blood of all disease germs. S. S. S. will cleanse your blood of the cause of Catarrh, and give you \-eal relief. It has been in constant use for more than fifty years, and is sold by all druggists. Buy a bottle today and lose ho fur ther time in getting on the right treatment. Valuable literature or special ad vice regarding your own case will be furnished free of charge. Address Chief Medical Adviser, 161 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. —Advertise- ment. Begin to Purity | Your Winter-Blood Grandmother's Old-Faahioned Sul phur and Molasses Did It. But Not So Well As This Sulpherb Tablet—Sugar Coated. Through the winter the blood accu mulates poisons, because you do not per spire enough, because you do not live in the open air, and because you eat more meat, mush and other rich foods. Every spring we feel sluggish, constipated, liver and kidney ills beset us. colds and chronic coughs, pimples, oolls and car buncles. all evidences of Impure, thick, sluggish blood. Sulpherb Tablets (not sulphur tablets' are composed of extracts of roots and herbs, combined with sulphur and cream of tartar—nnd no better physic, blood tonic and blood cleanser has ever been developed. Every spring thousands who already know their value taie them to purify the system of Winter Poisons. Now is the time to begin, so you woD't be attacked by serious ailments when Spring and Summer come. Sold by all druggists, 60c per sealed tube, with full directions.—Advertisement. - LLI V Ll.-1 !5 Would You Gain a Pound A Week for Three Months? Then begin taking regularly three grain hypo-nuclane tablets, which are made from a health-germ of ordinary yeast and combined with hypophosphltes and an absorptive phosphorus. Physicians and chemists assert that this tablet is very largely used for In creasing the weight and improving the nervous system because of Its aid io di gestion. asslmlliation and absorption. The food elements which go to make blood and solid tissue is retained when this treatment is regularly used for aev months. Most apothecary shops supply them In sealed packages.—Advertise ment. 1 1 lI’X CUT THS OUT—IT'S WORTH MBhkY Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c and mall it to Foley & Cos, 2835 Sheffield Ave„ Chicago, 111., writing your name and address clearly. You will receiTo in return a trial package containing Fo ley’s Honey and Tar, for coughs, colae and croup; Foley Kidney Pills for pain in sides and back: rheumatism, back ache, kidney and bladder ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly cleansing cathartic, for constipation, biliousness, headache, and sluggish bowels. Sold everywhere,—&d- Textlwmeat, 3