Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 23, Number 246, Decatur, Adams County, 17 October 1925 — Page 6
§ Church Announcements :■ JIIIBIIS ; : 8 S SH3TFB3-K1333-;
Zion Reformed Church A. R. Fled<lerjohann, Pastor We will have our annual Mission Festival on Sunday and we should have record crowds and good offerings. a’l the services will be seasoned with special musical selections. Sunday school will begin at 9:15. All lessons should he prepared. Morning service at 10:30 w’ith Rev. J. F. Tapy of Fort Wayne giving thefestive sermon. Afternoon service will begin at 2:30 with two addresses by the Revs. C. W. H. Sauerwein of Berne and C. Hauser of Magley. Evening services at 7:30 with Rev J. F. Tapy preaching. We extend a cordial welcome to all. We expect to have with us Mn. and Mrs. Henry Weidler of Detroit who will favor us with several musical numbers. The C. E. meetings will be dropped for this Sunday. All of our young people should be in the evening services as well as all the rest. The choir will meet for rehearsal at 7 o’clock tonight. ■ -o First Baptist Church 9:30 —Sunday School. 10:30 a.m. —Preaching service. Sermon by Rev. F. D. Whitesell, former pastor. 6:00 p.m—B. Y. P. U. Rev. Whitesell always has a message and we are glad to welcome him back to our city. Come and hear him. Strangers and visitors always welcome. — o — Church of the United Brethren In Christ. Cecil R. Smith, Pastor. Bible School at 9:15. We are glad for the increase in our attendance. We have room for more and have organized several new classes. Our school will soon have all classes according to the International Standard. Morning Worship at 10:30. Sermon by the pastor. Our people are urged to attend this service of worship. It will be helpful to you, pastor and church. Christian Endeavor at 6 p. m. Roscoe Crider, leader. Have you been to this meeting lately. Some mighty fine meetings. Come. Evening Services at 7 o’clock. Note the change in time. | Song service and sermon. We want to make these meetings a worthwhile service. Your
THE CORT SUNDAY—MONDAY “KENTUCKY PRIDE” A Win. Fox attraction with Gertrude Astor—Henry B. Walthall. A romance of kings and queens of the turf. A host of the world's fastest race horses. •I'l IE MOVIES.” a good comedy. 15c» 35c TONIGHT—“THF MYSTERIOUS STRANGER” featuring Richard Talmadge. 10c 20c 25c The ADAMS Theater SUNDAY—MONDAY « * Stop, Look, Laugh! Susan was a slave Q to thrills with a W kick. And when ii»e u t«»Y /I ZIDaMIFI world to get them, I 1 \ She GOT them ~ and J en some ' She was \ L s gjM/ a girl who had a wx,iA°’iscQut weakness for getting into trouble. 15c, 35c .Tonight—Rin-Tin-Tin in “Find Your Man” 10c—20c 25c
attendance will help. To all who are not attending elsewhere we want you to know we would i be pleased to have you come and worI ship with us. You will find a heart and friendly welcome. Your pastor will appreciate it if you will advise him of uny who may be sick. Lets all do our best for a bigger aud • better church. o — Church of God. E. A. Ball. Pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Preaching, 10:30 a. m. Services in charge of Reynolds. Young ePole's meeting, 6:45 p. m. Preaching, 7:30 p. m. The pastor will preach. Subject: "Three Great Events in Human History, Sinai, Calvary and Pentecost." o Zion Ev. Lutheran Church The Bible The Norm of Faith and Practice. The 19th Sunday after Trinity Gospel: Matt. 9. 1-8. Epistle: John 4. 22-28. English service. 10:30; German, 9:30. Catechism: The Fifth Chief Part "Son, be of good cheer; thy sins be forgiven thee.” Matt. 9, 2. — —oChristian Church Harry W. Thompson, Pastor. Unified service beginning at’ 9:30 a. m. Communion and sermon at 10:30 a. m. Evening service at 7 p. m. The evening sermon will be the seventh of a series on the Second Advent. The mid-week devotional service will be held at the home of Mr. Wm. Teeter on Sixth street at 7 p. m„ on next Wedensday evening. Next Sunday we will celebrate the first anniversary of the dedication of our new house of worship. The occasion will be observed as a home-com-ing and rally day. We expect to have a large number of our former members present. Don’t let anything interfere with making this day successful in every way. o — Presbyterian Church. B. N. Covert. Pastor. Services for Sunday, Oct. 18th. 9:30 a. m.—Sunday School. Children’s Department begins at 9 o’clock
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1925.
We had a splendid attendance at Rally Day. Exercises last Sunday, j 10:30 a. m. — Morning Worship. "Protecting the Children," is the sermon subject. This day has been set apart as "Family Religion Day" by our church. 6:00 p. m. — Christian Endeavor. Notice that the hour of meeting is one-half hour earlier. 7:00 P- m—Evening worship service. The pastor will conduct the
first of a series of "Art Night SerI vices." Tomorrow night the sermon will he on "Ba.-rabas or Christ." The sermon will be illustrated by the great picture "Ecce Homo." done In colors. The auditorium will be darkened and a spotlight thrown on the canvass. Wednesday evening. Oct. 21st —MidWeek Service. Thursday evening, Oct. 22nd — Teachers and Workers Conference
Back Os A Boon Name Rarely in manufacturing history has a name entrenched itself so firmly in the confidence of the entire world as the name Dodge Brothers. Everywhere and to everyone this name means but one thing: a product built honestly of the best available materials and sold at a just price. Behind this product, this price and this enviable reputation lie certain impressive and fundamental facts. So important is a knowledge of these facts to the motor car buyer that Dodge Brothers, Inc., have determined to publish them, from time to time, until every newspaper reader in America may be presumed to have read them:
Dodge Brothers, during the past eleven years, have built and sold more than one million four hundred thousand motor cars—and more than 90% of these cars are still in service. This record requires no comment It stands impressively alone, in motor car history. It has never been Dodge Brothers policy to build yearly models. When an improvement, that is really an improvement, is discovered, it is made at once. Their slogan, “Constantly Improved But No Yearly Models” is familiar the world over. Dodge Brothers build one chassis and only one. This policy materially lowers manufacturing cost It also enables Dodge Brothers engineers to concentrate their entire time and thought on the betterment of this one type. Dodge Brothers have never had an “off year” or an “off car.” This is because they have never used the public as a testing ground for “new models” or lowered the quality of their product in the slightest degree. Every change has been an improvement on the original design. Dodge Brothers pioneered in building the first all-steel open car and the first all-steel closed car. These epochal develdp-
The time has passed when transient novelties can lead a thoughtful buyer to overlook the great essentials of motor car worth. A few of these essentials, outlined above, go far to explain why Dodge Brothers name is accepted, the world over, as the hall mark of dollar-for-dollar value. D□□BE B ROTH ERS,IN C. DETROIT
• will meet in the Library. i Sunday. Oct. 25.—Harvest Home . Service in the morning The men ■ will have charge of the evening service. Mr. O. E. Loesch, of Bluffton, will be the speaker. The public, especially the unchurched is cordially Invited to our services. o First Evangelical Church Ralph W. Loose, Minister 9:ls—Sunday School.
10:15—Worship hour. In the absence of the pastor the Rev. Wm. G. ■ 1 Kensinger, returned missionary from | Africa will preach at both the morn- - ing and evening services. Hia sub-' ject in the morning will be "Black is; Black " At 7:00 he will preach on The Missionary Consciousness in CongolAtid." The public is cordially invited to hear these strong missionary addressed At the evening ser\i<e a special offering will be taken
ments have saved Dodge Brothers owners many millions of dollars by materially prolonging motor car life and by effecting marked economies in manufacture. This construction has also reduced incalculably the danger from accident and fire. . Dodge Brothers sell directly through their dealers to the purchaser. There are no sectional distributing agencies to increase the cost of distribution and the cost of the car. Dodge Brothers have never given so-called “free service.” The car is sold at a fair and honest price. Nothing is added to this original purchase price to pay for service that the owner may never need. Dodge Brothers Dealers were pioneers in unanimously adopting the flat rate service system. By this system, the owner knows in advance what any service job will cost There are no unpleasant surprises in his bills The sturdiness and long life of Dodge Brothers Motor Car is reflected in its resale value. Comparatively few Dodge Brothers Motor Cars are advertised in the resale columns of the newspapers. The values they bring testify unanswerably to their goodness—and the public’s belief in their goodness.
for Rev Kensinger. The League of Christian Iwlll meet at 6:15 with Berben , Fuhrman as leader. The aubje„? I "What is Expected of a ChristJ* I Citiien?" “ The Community Training Brh . , meets at 7:15 on Monday ev en( „ On Wednesday evening at 7 is ** mid week prayer meeting service the entire membership WIB u or
