Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 24, Number 275, Decatur, Adams County, 20 November 1926 — Page 5

Church Announcements

Zion Evangelical Lutheran Went Mtmroe and Eleventh ■ Paul W. Schultz, Pastor Hn rncin services —9:80 A. M. ■eiiK'Mi service —10:30 A. M. School —9:30 A. M. vt meeting of voting members English services. Thanksgiving ■jhv Services will be conducted Thurs- ■ morning at 10 o’clock in th.’ ■ Fimli h language. We hope to have ■ full' bouse in these services. IB o — Church of God Bsunday School 9:30 A. M. ■>• ,i hing 10:30 A. M. ■ Mining Service in charge of Miss ■ Nellie Hawkins. ■ Young Peoples meeting at 6:30 P. M. fl Evening Sermon 7:30 P. M. Subjet ■ ••Spiritual Leadership.’’ E. A. f’rll ■ Pastor —l Zion Reformed Church fl Corner Third and Jackson Streets | A. R. Fledderjohann. Pastor JI The establishing l of a definite ■ church going program was very much ■ emphasized during the meetings the ■ past two weeks. It is hoped that ■ 1h .,5,. who have hoard Dr. Halley will I make a resolve to establish a regn- ■ larity. The challenge comes to us to ■ renew our covenant with God. This ■ means the faithful as well as the I faithless. There are, reaches and ■ depths of consecration that even the ■ best have not explored. God is ever ■ vailing men and women out of the ■ shallows into the great deep of life. ■ love and labor. Let us attend the ■ chinch services tomorrow. 3 Sunday school at 9:15 with the ■ adults studying the golden text: ■ "Choose you this day whom ye will ■ serve.” ■ Morning worship services at 10:30 ■ o’clock. A cordial invitation is ex- ■ tended. Junior and Senior C. E. societies ■ will meet at 6:15. Juniors will again I meet in the basement. I After a series of other programs ■ and services our regular evening I services will be resumed. This ser- ■ vice begins at 7 o'clock and a welI come is extended to all. | o— • Baptist Bulletin J The churches resume their regular ■ services tomorrow atfer the inspiring I meetings together with Dr. Halley. Our morning servica_of Bible study ■ and worship begins proptly at 9:30 I with the worship hour at 10:30. Many I are staying for the entire service. NegI !e ■ not the worship period. Subjec I of the morning message, “Sacrifice of 1 Praise." B. Y. P. U. meets at six o'I ci i,. Maltha Moser leader, in the I evening of praise and evangeliziq tin I men will lead in the singing. Subjec' I . message. "Jesus drawing all men ?? .aid h t wo;’.d. Has he done it? If so how? If not why not? Mid Week p ayer service Wednesday 7:30. Tin will be a Thanksgiving service. Afte ■ the absence of two meetings come alin to the prayer meeting. O. E. Miller, Pastor. o ST. MARY’S CHURCH. First Mass f. s:Of Low Mass t 7:30 High Mass 9:45 Christian Doctrine 2:0( H ly Hour and Benediction .... 2:30 Christian Church. Harry W. Thompson, Pastor. Dr. Bert Mangold, superintendent Bible school. Bible school opens at 9:30 a. nt. Communion and sermon at 10:30 a tn. Junior Christian Endeavor at 2:30 p. m. . Evening service begins at 7 p. m. \ou are cordially invited to attend ti'.e services of this church. Come. — o—- ■ The First Methodist Episcopal Church Somerville Light, Pastor. The services of this church will open with Sunday School at 9:30 A. The Morning Worship Hour and Preaching Service at 10-45, A. M. The Pastor . will occupy the pulpit. Sermon Topic: ” i’iie Theology Os Money." No special ' tiering will be taken but it is hoped that the membership will be present with the regular offering. The two budgets of the church need special at-

’he Cort SU.Ni) A Y AN I) MONI) A Y Matinee Sunday 2 P. M.

tent lon Just now. The Senior Epworth League services at »t. I’. M. The Ltvlh s of tho Woman’s Home Missionary Society will join tho pastor In tho Evening Service at 7, o'clock. Mrs. Daisy Bulkey Taylor, National Field Secretary of the society will speak. Mrs. Taylu: is an unusually brilliant speaker. Those who fail to hear her messn. ■ tomorrow night will turn away from an unusual opportunity. Break away from the Old Beaten Path of listless Indi - ference and find your way to the House of Worship tomorrow night. The Mid-Week Prayer Meeting net: l Wednesday night Other announc ■ inents will be made tomorrow in the services. First Evangelical Church Ralph W. Looife. Minister The Bible school meets at 9:15, followed by the worship service for all at 10:15. The E. L. C. E. meeth at 6:15 and following this at 7 o’clock will be the evening preaching service. Tho Communvty tuning school meets Monday at 7:15. The Young People’s Missionary Circle meets on Tuesday evening with Mrs. Iva Teeple on North Ninth street. | The prayer meeting meets at the I church on Wednesday evening. 7:15. i The public is cordially invited to worship with us. United Brethren Church Cecil R. Smith, Minister | Church school at 9:15. A prayerful, interesting discussion in all departments. Your attendance and help Isfst Sunday was fine. Let us • make this Sunday after Rally one . that will prove that Rally Day was ' a real success. Morning Worship at 10:30 Thanks ' giving sermon by the pastor. Christian Endeavor at 6:15. I Evening worship at 7 o’clock. The pastor will speak at this service with the thought of Thanksgiving in,

‘mind. Recognition diplomas ahd certificates will be given out in the Beginners’, Primary and Junior departments tomorrow. These have been delayed on account of the printers. Your pastor will assist in an evangeli. tic meeting at Craigville beginning Monday evening. Sunday, November 28. is the second anniversary of the new church. Are you planning to be with us that day. Dr. J. A. Groves will be the speaker. We welcome to all services. — o—— Presbyterian Church B. N. Covert, Pastor Wo .-ire hack to our full schedule of | orvioes after our recess during the! tlaaoy meetings. We <.,v- confident: everyone will rally to the worship program of tomorrow. 9:30 A. M. Sunday school: Asst.l Supt. David Campbell will be in charge. A fine lesson tomorrow. Work thoroughly, graded and good teachers in rliarge. 10:30 A. M. Morning Worship service: Annual Praise Service of the W. H. ami F. M. Society. ThiS organization will be in charge of the program. Miss Lillian Beaber of Persia will give ani address. 6:30. P. M. Christian Endeavor So-, ciety. 7:30 P. M. Annual Harvest Service! Special music by choir, songs by congregation illustrated by beautiful stereoptiean views followed by an iinpr< ■ sive “Cross service". Serthon by I’as-. tor. Thanksgiving to Gbd. Wednesday Evening: Sunday school toachers and workers meeting addressed by Rev R. .1. McLaundress. Thursday Morning 6:30 A. M. Annual Union Thanksgiving Service Evangelical Church Sermon by the’ Pastor of the church. —— o-, — CARD OF THANKS I wish to express my sincere thanks to the Rev. F. F. Fledderjujiann for. his comforting words, the beautiful' service rendered by the choir, also to| all relatives, neighbors and friend C for the beautiful flowers and all kind-1 ness shown during the death’of my • dear husband Otto F. Reppert. May God bless you all. Mrs. Susie Reppert. 1

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, NOVEMBEB 20, 1920.

CLUB CALENDER Saturday Kings Herald—Marjorie Johnson, 2 o'clock. Sunday Thank-offering and praise service of Presbyterian Missionary Society — Presbyterian church, 10:30 a. m. W. H. M. S. Thank-offering service —Methodist Church at 7:00. Monday Research Club —Mrs. Dhn Sprang. Woman's Club—Library, 7:45 p. m. Tuesday Musical Program—U. B. Church, 8 p. m. Tuesday Five Hundred Club—Mrs. Herman Glllig, 7:30 p. m. Young Woman’s Missionary Circle of E. V. Church—Mrs. Fred Teeple. . 7:30 p. m. Wednesday i Annual Thanksgiving, dinner of Py , thian Needle Club—Pythian Home. ! The members of the Pythian Needle Club and their families will hold their ■ annual Thanksgiving dinner at th : , Pythian Home on Third street, Thurs1 1 day. November 25. Each member of J the club is asked to bring a chicken and two other articles of food. > The Young Woman’s Missionary Circle of the Evangelical church will meet Tuesday evening with Mrs. Fred Teeple at 7:30 o’clock. ThQ attendance of very member is urged. The Music Department of the Wt ■ 1 man's Club will have charge of the ! program at the regular meeting of the ‘ club Monday night at the Library ; Hall. The following program will be ; presented: Tiio, "Golden Leaves" Tschalkowsky I Mesdames Kathryn Tyndall, Jestfiie Bell and Miss Dessolee Chester. ' Piano Solo, “Impromptus,” Schubert ’ Mrs. Bernice Noble. '•Solo. “Will O’ The Wisp" . ...Spross

"Moen Mother” Stalter ‘ “My Love Come on the Skee” ’ Quartette, “Ashes of Roses" 1 ttast’tter G. Cole “Song of the Seasons” C. B. Hanley ’ Tyndall. Chester, Bell Mis. Hazel EngI eler. Solo “In Autumn" Curran “Snow Flakes” Cowan “Villanelle" Dell-Aq ia Mrs. Kathryn Tyndall. • Trio, . “The Snow" Edward Elgar I “The Reapers" L. Chapison Tyndall, Chester, Engeler. [ Piano Solo J “Autnmn-Opus 35 No. 2" Chaminade : Mrs. Kathryn Kern. i Trio. "The Dance of the Pine Trees" R. R. Forman, Tyndall, Chester, Beil. Accompanist, Mrs. Carrie Haubold. The Ladies Aid Society of the Christian church will hold a Christmas bazaar at the Lichtle Meat Market December 16. 17 and 18. A pastry sale will be held in connection with the bazaar on Saturday, December 18. The liberal patronage of the public is (solicited. The ladies also announce a plate supper to be served in the church dining room December 11. Mrs. Ben Shifts, of east of the city, was a shopper heje this afternoon. Miss Helen Beard is spending the week-end in North Manchester with [Mr. and Mrs. Don Redding and family. former residents of this city Miss Kathryn Martin spent the afternoon in Fort Wayne with friends. The Mary and Martha S. S., class ■of the M. E. church will entertain [ their husbands at six o’clock with a I pot-luck supper at the church Tuesday evening, November 23. Bring one article of food and sandwiches for !two. A program has been arranged i and a good time is anticipated. A par- ! cel post sale will also be held at the 'same time. Each member bring two p:i(kages that will sell for ten cents j each. Miss Marcia. Ohler entertained the IV S. P. C. Thursday evening. A

GTIJF DDIMPC rTrMDTrDC ,,! ' ir National Super 'Attraction, featuring CI lElnilEJVj BEN LYONS, LOIS MORAN, LYA DE PITTTI and others. Twenty years of secluded lifeof dormant love—of youth cloistered within the bleak walls of a monastery. Now he was free—free to live ahe pleased—to love as he pleased—to scatter his affections among the beautiful women of Montmartre. But deep in his heart there was room for only one—and she would never know. ALS O — “THE JEL L Y FISH,” a screa mi n g come dy. —l5 c 35c TONIGHT—Art Acord in a biff western drama, “RIDING RASCAL,” also ffood comedy and International News 1 Oc 20 c -25 c

studio recitl was given and musical I < current events were read. After th , business meeting games were enjoyed In contests prizes were won by Madgeline Miller and Erna Lanke nau. A delicious lunch was served by the hostess, who wits assisted by her mother. The program included th. ’ following numbers: Morning Prayer .. Stroabog Marjorie Johnson March of the Goblins Barth Sephun Jackson Song of file Katy Dili .., Kerne , Golden Star Streabo: t Mary Jane Shafer t Fuer Elise Beethoven ( Bernice (’loss Sweet Briar ... Crawford Skating . Klein I Mary (Kohls < Dance on the Green ..... Presser• Evelyn Kohls Gertrude’s Dream Waltz Beethoven Marshia Ohler • Lotus Mazurka Spimll. r Myrtle Jane Aughenbaugh Camp of the Gypsies Daniel Schafer Duet —Just We Two Miss Castle and Violet Smithy . Wanda Bohm Erna Lankenau Crescendo • Lassona Madgeline Miller 'Grande Marche de Concert Wollen Olive Teeters | The next meeting will be held at [the home of Russell Jaberg. Decern iber 16. —4 Locate Mussolini must,feel cheap when his conscience dictates t’ him. Prohibition is too fresh in th’ minds o' th' people fer th’ abolishment o' hell t' get very fer. —Alm Martin. Indianapolis Nows. Mrs. Amos Fisher is spending the day in Fort Wayne with her daughters, Mrs. Virgil Cross and Miss Mildred Fi 'her. Miss Mary Callow, of Fort Wayne, te spending the week-end here with her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Erwin. Miss Lee Anna Van i;, daughter of Mr. and Mis. (>. L. Vance of this city, who is a student in Goucher College, Baltimore, Maryland, is one of twenty-

Goucher students invited to atteir’ the festivities to bo held at the^U.«:-'., Naval Academy at Annapolis, next ; Wednesday night, just before the midshipmen leave for Chicago to play their annual football game with the U. S. Military Academy team frem , West Feint. A postal from Mrs. Fred Patterson written from Chicago Friday eaid they arrived there with Dr. Patterson j feeling very good and would go on to Rochester, arriving there last evening at nine o’clock. It was expected that the doctor would rest a day before the examination. Fred Bell, of Fort Wayne, came down this morning for a quail and rabbit hunt. Fred knows the good spots around here and had a tine day. The Misses Carolyn Acker ami Marcella Kern will spend the week end in Portland as the guests of Mr. am! Mrs A. F. So’te ——- ———. to the Five Hundred Club Tues lay evening at 7:30 o'clock. Attica —Quick action saved the home of Mrs. Albert Cobb from fire. When tier small son curried a lighted fan lie into a clothes closet, Mrs. Cobb grabbed a rug and smothered the flames. Mt. Vernon —Posey county is In cominb an ElDorado for Buzzards An unknsAvn disease is killing rabbi's in this vicinity and the buzzards :ir flocking here.

I DON’T WAIT [! ; —Until you need a few dollars and wish you !; j ! had saved. The time to start is now. :; ; : TOMORROW is the watchword of the Nev- ! ! er-Will-Be’s. Start a SAVINGS ACCOUNT i ! and watch it grow. ; I i THE PEOPLES LOAN & TRUST CO. Bank nf Servin

SCHOOLS HOLO FINE PROGRAM Three District Schools In Blue Creek Township Hold Joint Program The schools of district No. 4. 5. and 7, in Blue Creek township, whose teachers are Russell Steiner. Ahdrew Cook and Byrl Merriman, respectively, held a joint educational week program at district No. 4, Thursday evening. After a program given by the schools. Rev. P. Harris, of the Linn Grove Christian church, gave an in(resting talk. The meeting was attended by an appreciative audience jot more than one hundred people. Europeans See Movies As Powerful Force; Wish To Curb ‘immoral” Films London.—(L’nited Press.) —War lias: been declared against Hollywood. The] United States supremacy in moving 1 pictures, never before seriously challenged, is threatened in several countries. The British Empire, Japan. Mexico and Germany are among the leaders in this new struggle for control of tlie silver screen. Briefly, these nations do not like the ktfid of movies Hollwood sends them. Germany has just complained about the "Four Horsemen of >lie Apocalypse" because German soldiers are the villians of the piece. Japan and Mexico recently protested against certain pic lures for the same reasons. England protests because the pictures of white races in social excesses and orgies are bad for British prestige in Indiana. All together, these foreign nations think that the Hollywood style of society drama is not all that it ought to be. They have done more than make

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protests. English studios In the past few months huve turned out some pictures in opposition to Hollywood. The German films have won a very liigh | place as artistic and worth-while performances. Even Soviet Russia has i produced a director whose ability attracted Douglas Fairbanks' attention on his summer excursion to Moscow. It is a movie war in real fact, 001-j lywood must Ibok to its ammunition. There is plenty of money and brain I behind the foreign onslaught and it is backed by a disgusted public opinion. The prize of the struggle is tho power of movie productions, with the tremendous force of their influence on thousands of screens. The fact is that the moving pictures; have outgrown the stage of I simple entertainment and become forces of government. Wit their mil-

, \ Here Are Jhe Improvements Review this impressive list of improvements —a notable twelve-months’ record of progressive engineering: A new five-bearing crankshaft (replacing the three-bearing type). A newtwo-unit starting and lighting system (replacing the single-unit type). Air cleaner of improved design. Spark and throttle levers placed above the wheel for greater convenience. Rumble seat for Sport Roadster. Stylish new body lines. Rich and attractive new colors. Improved all-steel body construction. Increased driving vision. Indirect dial lighting for De Luxe and Sport types. Far greater riding comfort. Impressive new smoothness and silence of engine operation. . Greater beauty, greater convenience and remarkable new silence and smoothness of • engine operation have followed these vital - betterments. ® Yet Dodge Brothers low prices remain un-. changed—values certainly that no motorist can now aSord to overlook! Touring Car SB6O Sedan $960 Coupe $9lO Special Sedan $lOlO Delivered Saylors Motor Co. Phone 311 x 213 N. First St. Wa Also Sell Dependable Used Care □on be- Brothers MOTOR CARS / I THE ADAMS Theatre | “Where the Better Pictures are shown.’’ «r- . ~e fi SUNDAY AND MONDAY SUNDAY MATINEE AT 2 P. M. !fi | Norma Shearer | then she discovered that IM /tG?" QfQO.'t 0 what gentlemen really yj' | prefer are clinging HIS vines. Blonde or Bin- | netle. Yon never saw a \A/AM|MC R picture so full of rich human comedy. You 11 ie never saw Norma Shear- /-X L \ B er more charming, more /</ '\ Jfi g brilliantly showing her \\ \ X amazing talents than as ) M Lfi h Hie beauty who fought fP with modern weapons / // to hoid her man! Wilh CONRAD NAGEL fi ALSO—Hairbreath Harry in “DANGER AHEAD' a comedy thriller. h • 15c 35c s fi TONIGHT—WALLY WALES in “TWISTED TRIG < GERS,” a red hot, western with a smashing climax: r ALSO—The first of “FIGHTING HEARTS” stories—re with Alberta Vaughn. Larry Kent, Al Cooke. Kit Guard jr|r and Grant Withers. 10c 20c -25 c.

Hoiih of devotees, the movies have come into tho fluid of diplomacy. Governments are interested now in | the movies. Seymour -(Evidently thinking fair (exchange was no robbery, thieves |eft an old tire and u steel wheel when they took the tire and rim from Hugo Auf- ■ fengerg’s new auto. The next night, however they returned and took the [ steel wheel. Gas City—Champion guessera at o 1 straining their minds here in an effort to predict the score of the m 1 high school basketball game. A $5 meal ticket has been offered to n:i> •one guessing tho correct count, by a case here. o / Dancing Sunday, Wednesday and Thursday. Sunday, Nov. 28, final dance. Free Turkey. One big week for all. Lots of extra entertainment at Sri'S’'

FIVE