Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 22, Number 119, Decatur, Adams County, 17 May 1924 — Page 3

E Church Announcements ■ » ■ ■■ ■ ■ M ■ * " " ■■■■■■ I

Z IOX reformed church < r. R. Elliker, Pastor 9 15 ant. Sunday school. 10 30 am. Morning worship. 7:30 Baccalaureate Service at M. E. church. ' Welcome. . • — ZION EV. LUTHERAN CHURCH The fourth Sunday after Easter. Gospel: John 16. 515. Epistle: James 1. I® 2 ’’ German Holy Communion service at I®. * Confessional service at 9:30. English Holy Communion service next Sunday. ■This is My blood of the new testa meat.” Mark 14. 24. — ♦ — - ■” FIRST UNITED BRETHREN Ben J. F. Dotson, pastor The services of the church tomorrow will be held in the nigh school auditorium. There will be Sunday' school at 9:15. followed with divine worship and sermon at 10:20. There will be no services nt night, hut the congregation will Join the ( other churches in the baccalaureate services at the M. E. Church. —• FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Sunday School at 9:90. Morning worship. 10:45. The district superintendent, the Rev. W. W. Martin, D D.. will preach. Junior league, 2:30. Epworth League. 6:15. A thirty minute service. Installations of officers. Baccalaureate service nt 7:30.1 Sermon by the Rev. Mr. Whitesell of the Baptist church. First quarterly conference Monday evening at 7:30. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 7:30. -• BAPTIST CHURCH 9 30. Bible scvhool. Fine spirit and a hearty welcome. 10:30. Morning worship. Sermon hy the pastor. “Finding the Will of God.’’ « 30. Young People s services. There will be no evening service- on arrant of the baccalaureate services at the Methodist Church for the Decants high school. Ni-xt Sunday the pulpit v.ill be filled by Rev. J. R. Shaffer. D. D.. Super intendent of Men. nt the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. Brother Shaffer is a splendid personality, and a great 1 precchur. The pastor will be conditctii!-: evangelistic serviccv for 12 dtiv i at Fait but y. 111. F. D. WHITESELL. pasto- ♦— 1 PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH S -rvices for Sunday. May 18th. 9 30 a. m.. Sunday School. 10:3# a. m.. Morning worship. Childrens Service. also Sermon by Pastor. “The Call of God to the Church." 2:3# p. m. Junior Christian Endeavor. «:<H> p. m. Senior Christian Endeav or. Notice that this meeting la onhalf hour earlier on account of . I'arcslaureata services. 7:3# p. m Bnecnlnurente services nt j M. 11. church. Wednesday. 7:3# p. m. Prayer meetIng The third annual D- V. 11. S will open -ometlme during the first port , of unt nnd will enntinne for tw-nc aitt i- aching days. A kinderaarden dr ' psitnient will lw> added thia yaar All hoys and girls between the ages of «lt and fourteen are eligible to attend. FIRST EVANGELICAL CHUItCH Ralph W. laxine. Minister 8:15 Sunday school L. L. Bnum gunner, sit pt. Hi:lS—The morning Worship per lad. There will bo no evening services heianae of the Baccaluttn- ne aervIces being hold at the First Mathodl*t church. Mid-Week service Wislncrd.iy at CHURCH OF god Sunday School. B:3# a tn. J-’h" Hi lento, rapt. Divine worship nnd dlacourse. subject: "Our responsibility." Young Peoples meeting 7:## p tn. •Miss Mildred Ault, lender. General service and sermon. 7:46. Wednesday evening Prtyer and F *r»t«e. 7:30. Lewis Reynolds, leader. Our services are growing bettor with • s-wid attendance on last Wctlne»d.iy

even ng, ami a fine spiritual uplift to ho church, us many witnessed for )• us and tin- sw.it songs of Zion were sung. At th-- list Sunday evening service one precious soul was glorious.y saved, who had been spared through five hard battles in France. Everybody welcome, bring your friends With you. I). M. LYONS, Pastor CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Crystal Theatre) Unified Service at 10 p. m. No ev ning service. The congregation will join in the union service | to be held in the M-thodist Epi (opal i hurch. You need the church; the church needs yon. Come! • rO—ST. MARY’S CHURCH First Mass 7:00 High Mass !,:15 Doctrine 2:00 Prayer Hour and Benediction .. 2:30 COOHIIfiejINOER DOCTOR'S CURE President Ordered To Keep To His Rooms Until Cold Clears Up (United Press Service) Washington. May 17 —(Special to | Dally Democrat) —President Coolidge today was ordered by Brigadier j General Charles E. Sawyer, white li< use phya'cian. to keep to hit rooms until the cold he has con'racted clears up. Sawyer wax very uncommunicative after his visit, refusing to say whether Mr. Coolidge has any fever. "All I can city is that the President

is indisposed with a cold and it it deemed advisable that he nman in his room end keep quite until he can return to his duties without liability." he said. Secretary Sh-mp. who visited the president.’ minimized h * Indisposition saying Mr. Coolidge had no fever and there was noth ins for the country to worry about. lie explained the prezidint’s trouble ns a cold hl the bronchial tube* TRAMP SOCHI I SIG SUCCESS Plesant Mills. May 17.-The Tramp social given by the Epworth langue Friday evening at the Jones School house, northeast of town, wh.i a, great success. At dusk the vagrants from many climes began to roller t. one by one, around the open fire that biased cheerfully. Representatives of the hardened hoist, wiley crook, gypsy, •ndlun hackwood* family. Katienlam | mer and many others were in the . council. Lively rnme* made up the evening 1 program. but when all were tired, refreshment* of winnie*. bun* and marsbmellow* were served from a rfiystertous larder.. Then campfire v.orle*. r*< iiatlons ami Jokes took potI mxwlon of ‘he "t" 1 #t 8 1 hour they all departed. Ihirinx the evening the ryp*y "red” and many pilms to the satisfaction of the reclp l« nt*. Another iwrisl I* ph»nn»*u for In near future, at wbl. h time will be held the annual Epworth league election „f officers for the coming year.« Order Your (’ream We haw wu**** l our contract with local Grocer* for Whipping Cream anti * offee ( ream. Any one wishing anv cream or milk can gel Mme by tailing I’bone :W2 giving name and addretw nnd It wiH tlrikrred on (he following deliveries: Flnrt. 3 A. M.. Second, at R A. M. Broadacres Dairy w

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, SATURDAY. MAY 17.1924

Middle-west ('hurch 11 (’heirs In Competition 1 I (United Press Service) | C.l imbus. May 17—Church choirs, , : numbering thousands of voices, from [the states or Ohio, Indiana, Illinois | and Michigan, art preparing for the! Sacred Music Week at Winona Lake, i Ind., to he held Aug It! to 21. For the first time, church choirs wfl) I I- brought into competition for prizes i after the manner of nn Eisteddfod, j Church singers will be divided in-! I to choirs of 50 voices and over, choirs between 25‘and 50 choirs between 10 and 25 voices. There will Im mixed quartets, soprano, basso solo, Gospel Solos ami in nildltlon a special cla v; for Sunday School orchestras. Prize# aggregating >I.OOO will be awarded. All the choirs will contest, both wi h accompaniment and unaccompanied. Various standard selection i will form the contestant’s numbers for the quartet and solo singers. '1 he adjudication will lie under the direction of Dan Proter of Chicago. The concluding features of the we- k will be a rendition of one of the standard oratorios, in which the prize winning chorus will participate and : ( nationally known singers, including ! MMe. Schumann-Heink, will sing ' the Solo parts. Sacred Music We--k: t is an institution conceived and fostered by Homer R< dehoaver, and if the event comer, np to expectations, it will he made ', nnd annual affair. Ford Sales For May Break Previous Records ) Detroit, Michigan. May 17.—Ford sales have passed the three quartermillion mark it was announced today. Car and truck deliveries alone show , an Increase < f 102,158 over last year. . The month of May has opened with a r bigger demand for Ford products than nny month sb far this year. The Ford Motor Company announced today tha--1 the retail sales in the United Stale: . during th- first ten days of May averl aged 5.355 daily, exceeding the last . 1 ten days’ period of the record breakling sales months of April and indicat-

EATS RESTAURANT Menu forSundav Dinner Chicken Noodle Soup Fried Chicken New Potatoes New Peas Head Lettuce Cottage Cheese •• ** Strawlierries with Cream Cake Parker House Rolls Coffee, Tea or Milk Phone 28 Price 50c

Do Your Earnings “TAKE WINGS” ? • If you want to make your dollars come home to roost, put them in our Savings Department. Start saving and have your earnings work for you at 4% interest. Like the early bird—the early starter is the one who wins out in Savings. We welcome your account. The Peoples loan & Trust Co. Bank of Service

Ing the continued upward trend at market. Figures Just compiled show 1 a total of 757,023 Ford unites retailed 1 to customers from January first to and Including May 10, or which Ford cars and trucks delivered alone show a gain of 102,15 S over the same period a year ago. With the increase already attained tills month and with the present outlook for business the company anticipates a new high sales figure in May. Town Os Brookville Is Old Settlement Brookville, Ind., May 17—One himdrtd and twenty years ago the first white settlers came to the site of what Is now Brookville, Indiana, one of the older settlements in the state, located rixty-five miles southeast of Indianapolis. The early pioneers who were made up of the sturdiest manhood of the cast, followed the course of the Ohio River on their westward journey. Rome left the course of the Ohio and traveled up the Big Miami near Cin Cincinnati. Twenty-five mfles up the stream they came to two forks of equal size which outlined a beautiful valley, the site of the present town of Droodville. The charming story of the founding

MOVED We have made a change in the location of our studio. formerly occupying the rooms over the ( allow & Kohne Drug store. We ate NOW located in the Old Moser Stand Corner Second and Jefferson Streets Edwards Studio

and development of Brookville, of the many men who became prominent as governors, senators, authors and scientists and of their Influence upon the intellectual develop.ii.nl id’ Indi ana as a state, n.i i d I by the late John Shirk in a paper published in the proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science. Scores of prominent men and women are referred to as residents of Brookville. Os these a few include, General Lew Wallace, author of Ben Hur; James B. Eads, of Mississippi River Jetties fame; Maurice Thomp-

y?- j p-~-J jigBlWS. i I 400 ROOMS gj.;* 1S toftrihrr with many other comfort tvuturvM a( most r**UNonubl«* rutr«. — 100 Rooms at $2.50 per Day 100 Rooms at SI.OO per Da ■ 100 Rooms at $.1.50 per 50 Rooms at $4.00 per Day 50 Rooms at $4.50 per Day There is but osu- prici- to everybody. Ratt n are pouted in each room. Food Service the Very Best Club Breakfast . . $ .75 Special Luncheon . .75 Table d’Hote Dinners 1.50 Coffee Shop and Tea Roo n— Finest in the city i I Conveniently located in the heart of I Indianapolis, on WASIIINGWN ST. I ; (National (rail) at Kentucky Ave. HOTEL LINCOLN 3 1.. MEYER, Manager INDIANAPOLIS

it"’. - K « >1 : — — BBBh, <MI J I |H|| , j bi I I XTy ' kt • v ‘ Jr-3 « mmbm arat wwtwmkb*bww. m'i— The MAYTAG Washing Machine Washing capacity 50 pounds of family clothes per hour. This machine has more points of real merit than any machine on the market. Ask us for a demonstration. YAGER BROTHERS FURNITURFd STORE !

I son, author of Alice of Ohl Vincennes; o ! Louisa Chitwood, poetess; John Otis' I Adams and T. C. Steele, leading artists of the state; ami John Herron, j who gave Indianapolis, the John Herron Art Institute. (j

Be Sure To Try The SE R VI C E Where you see the sign (W) HI-TEST GAS OPALINE Motor Oils The HI-WAY Filling Station 11. L. KERN & CO. North Second Street

■) —— — —o Lt LU (JERBER Teacher of Piano Phone 52 8H N. 3rd > ®