Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 205, Decatur, Adams County, 29 August 1925 — Page 3
Church Announcements
jg i ■ Church o’ Go “ ...hnol—9:3o “ ~b Sund V ln r 10’0 :iin . Failure’’ James 1 :!G YoUßg hln P ;l 7:45 pm. Subject: ’’"“Think Yc of Christ " Matt: T‘ our UH revival will begin about C ic of September We have ho ,hf 7a Liy ‘ We will make Jnoun-ementH later. F E. A. Ha'!’ P ag,or- — o- ““ Presbyterian Church p N Covort, Pastor Sunday. AugustJOth~j 0 Sunday School. o o' Morning worship: -Sermon hv Pustor. Subject, “fiodH Minority w « Tie Dey.l’n Majority To i» “• rl,rl9tlan End “ avor pm Evening: worship sendee. MW Doris Erwin la the speaker of L eveniW- Mint* Erwin has had exXive experienc in settlement work among the foreign elements in our dties . She has an interesting and instructive message for us. You need the uplift and encouragemmt of religious services tomorrow. An automobile won’t run long without oil. Your soul needs the oil of worship to keep-it functioning properly. _ Zion Ev. Lutheran Church The Bible The Norm of Faith and Practice. The 12th Sunday after Trinity. Gospel: Mark, 7. 31-37. Foislle: 2 Cor 3. 4-11. English service at 10:30: Gorman setvice at 9:30. Bible class will begin September 9 The fall term of the day-school hegins. Sept. 8. -He hath done all things well." Mark 7:37. 0 First Evangelical Church Ralph W. Loose, pastor. Sunday school at 9:15. L. I> Baumgartner, Supt. The worship hour follows immedi-
ately at 10:15. Th? morning service is concluded at about eleven o’clock, thus making it possible for all to remain for ami have the privilege of the service of worship, it is the duty of all Christians especially not to neglect the it do so at the peril of the salvation of church of worship. Those who neglect their souls. A characteristic of backsliders is that every one knows they have fallen except themselves We appreciate the habit of the many who worship each Sabbath; ' the custom could be more universal. The E. L. ('■ E. meets at 6:45. Subject: "What is the Gospei ’ Why preach it?". The union Sunday service^ are over. We are glad for the support the Church gave these services. lJ>t us now rally universally to the evening services in our local churches; thus honor God and hedp to build up His Kingdom. No Christian normally can do this and stay at home when his Church is worshipping or putting forth a Gospel service. The evening service begins at 7:30. The pastor will preach. The mid-week service at 7:30. o First United Brethren Church Benjamin F Dotson, pastor. Sunday school —9:15. Divine worship—lo:3o. Christian Endeavor —6:30. Evening worship—7:3o. Tomorrow is the closing Sunday in the conference year Conference meets at Winona Tuesday afternoon 2 o’clock Tomorrow will be the farewell sermons of the pastor. All who can are invited to attend these closing services. The new pastor will be in his pulpit undoubtedly, Sunday September 13th. Let everyone plan to bring all pledges for the past year in full tomorrow so as to be able to meet ad claims of the local church in full The published list of all contributors to the local church will go to press shortly. Get yours in so as to get credit. — ————o Zion Reformed Church A. R. Fledderjobann, Pastor. Members and friends of this church "ill take note of the following announcements: Sunday school at 9:15. There will be no church services as the congregation is Invited to attend the Mission Festival at the Magley Reformed church where the pastor of this church is to speak. The morning service will begin at 10:30 o’clock. The Sunday school will be dismissed about twenty minutes sooner so that a| l may have an opportunity to atend the morning service at Magley. be Rev. A. L. Scherry of Orrville, ■ will also speak in the morning. The afternoon servlice will begin at
2:3<f and three addresses will be glVJ’tl. Evening s.-rvl« e »t 7:30 with Dr J M. harms of our Theological Seminary giving the address He is a great speaker and -you should not fad t<* hear his inspiring message. ■ ■ - —— o ■— ■■ St. Marya Church First Mass —7:00 High Mass 9.15. Benediction Immediately after High Mass. Prayer Hour Friday evening -7:30. 0 First Methodist Episcopal Church Somerville Light D. D, Pastor The services of this church will all be held in the usual order Sunday, August 30th The pastor will occupy the- pulpit morning and evening. Morning topic: “Celestial Salamanders.’’ Evening topic: “The Fact of Jesus.” Friends of the church nnd Strang ers in this city will be welcomed to these services for preaching. Sunday school service 9:30 a, m Come and help boost for Rally Day just ahead. Epworth League meeting, 6:30 pin. Let us all try to make the fine body of young people in this church feel that we are with them in tlfeir efforts to make the Kingdom go. o Christian Church Harry W. Thompson, pastor Unified service beginning at 9:30 n.m. Evening service at 7:30 p.m A cordial invitation is extended to all those who have no regular place of worship. You are welcome to attend any or all of the services of this church. o
Piano Pupils Os Miss Jackson To Cive Recital JWisR Kathryn Jackson will present e number of her junior piano punils in recitaJ at the Kirkland high school building Friday evening, September at 7:15 o'clock. A second recital of her senior piano pupils will bo given on Wednesday evening, September 9, the program to be announc cd at a later date. The public is cordially invited to attend both recitals. Admission free. The junior program is as follows. Solo: The Spray ... Mills Mildred Henschen Duet: B<*ssie and Ethel Wilson Francis Schlickman. Ruth Yake Solo: ('irc/ing Round Bohm Virgene Houck Solo: Dollies Lullaby Sartoris John Heller Duet: By Moonlight .Scherwenka Gladys Spade. Ireta Shoaf S<flo: Happy Adventure -Chopin Velma Worthman Soo: Rippling Waves W’lson Lucile Smith Duet: Approach of Autumn Bach Vera and Verl Heller Solo: Drifting Verdi Radel Andrews Trio: May Days Blake Esther Reppert, Edna & Seltna Peters S<lo: Rowing Song PaYker Virgil Henschen Duet: Day Dream of Youth Wagner Edna and Ida Borne Solo: Western SchotHische Grieg Anna Carper Du't: School Days .... Clay Walter Hilderbrand, Milton Dettinger Solo: Fairies of the Forest Ryder Wava Sherry Duet: Snow Drops Lansing Ruth Irene Sherry, Marie Hilderbrand Soio: Whisj»ering of the Pine Durant Molvena Newhard Duet: Grand March Hobst Rachel Yager, Francos Liby S<fo: Memories of Love Tosti Mildred Martin Solo: Over the Waves Smith Paula Kirchner Duet: No Surrender Shuman Vera and Verl Heller Solo: In the Boat Mozart Magdalene Borne Duet: Tripping over the Green Heller Mary and Milton Dettinger Solo: A Shepherds Tale Johnson Francis Abbott Duet: At Full Tilt Heins Edna Peters, Esther Reppert Solo: When the Roses Bloom Lesson Martha Conrad Trio: The Brigade Beethoven Ruth Sherry. Marie and Walter Hilderbrand Solo: Cheerfulness Rathbun Margaret Arnold 0 Notice To Teachers The teachers institute will be held in conjunction with the Decatur Chautauqua and we are anxious that each one attend every session. In the notice sent out it was stated that sessions would be held each afternoon and evening. This is corect excepting on Monday when the first session will be at 8:00 o'clock in the evening. Please be present at that time. This notice is given with the hope that you will not be inconvenienced by coming for an afternoon session on Monday as there will be none. Clifton Striker, county supt. o — KIRKLAN—CeciI Everman is another crank victim. Ford backfired and broke his arm.
DECATUB DVLY SATURDAY. AUQUST ?9.
> Battleship Now Dance Hall "
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The (J. S. S. Illinois has fallen upon evil days. The famous battleship, the pride of the Navy twenty years japo, will be rented for dances at $225 a night in New York City.
Farmer Stricken In Field M.IJ FcLVOfite Stories ‘ 1 Bq mum s. cobb Marton, Iml.. Aug. 29 —Stricken with a heart attack while working in a The Prompt Response field. William laiwhorn, til, a farmer. Os all the stories relating to our died on the way to a hospital. colored troopers in their services overo ■ Heas, I think the one 1 like best has GREENSBURG- William Finley is 10 do with a brawny black lufantrythe meanest man in town, his friends ,nan ’ who - on hls wa * "P to the froDt . ~ . for Ins first taste of actual combat. say. On a visit to Calgary, C anada. , „„ , . , ~, . . . , , , fortified himself on a full quart of he ntai.ed back iflmncli of beer labels. |lolent Frpn( . h w | ne BLUFFTON- The town is waking As a result, be reached the forward up to the fact that it has a neighbor position In a somewhat elevated and Pennville li-.-s announced plans for a ’•lightly groggy state. - He had been big street fair. Sept. 16-19 warned in advance that he was going Into an exceedingly busy and danger.Mf( HKiAN <II Y Miss Louise oug se ,. tor p ut g 0 happened at the King says slim area t a bit becoming, moment of his arrival the immediate She broke her arm trying to board a vicinity was strangely quiet. He street car. glanced about him in a foggy but dlsNASHVLLLE—Brown county resi- •’Planted way. and then, addressing ...... ids fellow occupants of the trench dints air raising funds to save Tyrils , .. ~ generally, spoke as follows: Clark, formerly of Jackson county, ~W ha, g d# war? _ tha - 8 whut j Ind., f;om the electric chair in Arkan- wall f ß t o know! White folks suttlnly sas for murder. is niouty deceivin’. Yere dey promHARTFORT) CITS’ —Mrs. Melvin ises me a war. So dey rides me‘crost Pefprson leaving her mo’n a million miles of ocean an’ dey f iectrii iron connected* Neighbors marches me th’ough mo’n a thousand called the fire department, when the nlud - an ' •» wlle de ? keeps on fellin’ me at w'en I gits up tropmg board burned. Jen , dpy . n be g wgr walt)n , fQr m(f Itl SIIVILLE Work has been start- An - j. er( , ,| s gn , ( ,py a f n 't no war! ed on the new $75.0011 vocational and j )at n | n - t no w(l y f 0 aet an y o f physical training high school here. j OU folks Is got ary war jest fetch RICHMOND Gasoline dropped two it on ’un' leave it to me. Dat’s all — mon- cent- in Richmond and adjoin- jest leave It in my hands!" ing towns this week, making a total -A veteran of several months expel.’rop of four cents in the last two rience In the trenches Informed him that his desires should shortly be I wee * ts - _ gratified, inasmuch as the hostile poBRAZlL—Andrew Kibbe a tarmer, were on |y about two hundred living within seven miles of here, made )ar(ls awa y, an( | the enemy was both his first trip to Brazil in two years active and alert. W ediu sday. “Dollar Day" was the Hearing this, the green band leaped big attras-tion. upon the parapet and, standing there <T l k ’T“N Th» eoii'i'v Prosecutor revealed In the moonlight, like a great has issued a warrant for the arrest atat “® s ' lo '’ k “ , .» , broad fist in the direction or the toes |of M.S. Anna Dauglntts and Bert |ineß> and ln a volce whlch mlght have Keyes, ot Jasonville. White mule | lt , pn h Pard Half a mile away he cried |wa?j found in the home of each by ou f. the sheriff. « "Come on, you Helnle Germans, an’ BRAZIL George Stinesberger gimme war! Gimme all de war you's claims the tallest stalk of corn in the got! Gimme exploserives! Gimme State. A careful measurment shows K its shells! Gimme scrapernel . Gimli. is 15 feet 3 inches in Height. ra * bung shells! Most In ’special I ~ „ „, , „ „ asts you fur bung shells’” MARION Coiin.;- Clerk Sam (on- At this particular moment a German nelly, serving his second term is get- minnenwerfer, two feet long and nine 1 ting things all set for his successor, inches in diameter and filled with poHe's discarding the old judgement tential ill health, went whirring in its dockets and consolidating the rec- wabbly, uncertain flight just over his lords of the past ten years into one head, and with a crash like the crack of doom struck not fifty yards behind . , him, tearing a hole in the earth big Anderson- Oliver Fenmngton and pnough for (he foundatlonß of „ William Parke, 1,. are charged with Bn) oke bouse. The belligerent warrior trying to get even with James Apostal, wag slapped flat and Instantly covered Confectioner. Police say the boys hurl- in a half-inch coating of powdered ed rotten eggs into the store. The grit and gravel and dust. coustomers scampered. There he lay, stunned, until the last TIPTON-C. M King transfer man, reverberation had died away and the , , , . ... „ tortured earth had ceased from its no longer boast he can move anythmg , |Uivprlngs Then „ low|y and cau . front a small safe to a batt.e ship. t iously, he sat up. First he felt hlmHe was hurt when he got caught in se ff a n OVPr t 0 raa i{e sure he was Inti block and tackle, while moving the tact; then he stole a respectful glance strong safe box of Dr. John V. (•utter, rearward to where the huge, newNEWCASTLE—Joseph Hunter, 48. formed crater behind him still was climbed up a tree to get a squirrel, and smoking and fuming and throwing off touched a high tension wire carrying and ‘ h ™ h « c “ Bt * .. . 4 . cautious look In the direction from 33.000 volts. He was thrown to the wW( , h thp devllgh vlgKor h#d ground and will recover but is suffer- n|ld fl na n y) j n a s tlll. small, curiously ing from the fall. altered voice, he said: o “Well, suzz, (ley’s one thing yon's got to say fur dem Germans—dey suts $ S—WANT ADS EARN s—s -$ tinly does give you service!" —o (Copyright by the Control Pre«« Aooociatftm.j BUY SEASON TICKETS MICHIGAN ClTY—Bathing has been prohibited along the east coast I of lake Michigan, by the coast guard crew. A heavy sea and strong underA Wil I HJI kB 8 Ik? jwk tow bas made swimming unsafe V4lVlilf BRAZIL—Frank G. Senter, SuperiniSnilllllllllllli W tendent of the R. D. Eaglesfield company, is a prince of a fellow according t° employes. Senter provided all the -homegrown watermelons they could August 31 to September 5 eat.
t' ' . Dodge Brothers COMMERCIAL CAR ■■ With the following improvements in the Panel Commercial Car, Dodge Brothere have gone beyond current practice both in point of smart appearance and greater comfort for the driver: A closed cab is now provided, steel throughout, with a full-length and extra wide steel door. The windows, operating in noiseless runways, are raised and lowered as in z passenger cars. The seat is deeply cushioned and equipped with a spring back, hinged to fold forward, assuring exceptional riding comfort. The tire carrier is under the rear, freeing the full area of the side panels for display advertising. z Attractive and practical in design, this J sturdy car offers the additional advantage of complete, year-round protection horn rain and cold. THOMAS J. DURKIN GARAGE DISTRIBUTOR Court House Decatur, Indiana lUSIMIIW‘ w W la la ’ I™ In I -l-r-i-i--H4-++4-i-+4-++-»-+ * - z I ’’ I It costs you seven dollars out offerer:/ ten to live ;; ECONOMIC experts tell us that it costs the ;; : > average family about 70 per cent of its total : ■ ■ ■ income to buy food, clothing, household utiii- ;: ■ • ties and all the multitude of little things that j ■ keep a family comfortable and happy. :: | <j Seven dollars out of every ten—and that «• :: doesn’t include rent, luxuries or entertain- :: ; ■ ment. • • :: Think what a job it is to spend this large :: ; • proportion of your income wisely and well. ;; ' Il To get the biggest and best possible value :; from every one of those seven dollars! :; 4» 1 ' The clever woman gets to the advertise- ■■ !: ments of her daily paper for help. There she :: ■; finds a directory of buying and selling. She : ; ;: learns about the offerings of merchants and :: ■ • manufacturers. She compares values. She ■ ■ weighs quality and price. She takes this :: ■ • opportunity of judging and selecting almost • • :: everything she needs to feed, clothe, amuse, :: ■ ■ instruct and generally bring up her family. ■ • ! I Do you read the advertisements? You will ;■ find them willing and able to serve you in :: the daily business of purchase. :: «» ' • II f ’» M • • ;■ Advertisements are guardians of your ■■ :: pocketbook—read them carefully in ;; The Decatur Daily Democrat.
