Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 25, Number 225, Decatur, Adams County, 23 September 1927 — Page 5

rural churches pleasant Dale I Bible School 9 o'clock. Promotion service at 10 o’clock. 10:15 a Kprlal harvest service for the year. ■ Basket Dlnser at 12 o’clock follow- ®(. i by the social hour. ■ Tb,. Home Comming Service will I* ■> o'clock and preaching at 7:30. Kleasant Pale extends a welcome to Hi t)U and if you have ever attended ■'hasant Dale we give you a special 8 .invitation to come and meet old K rietl ds and enjoy the services. gS _— —o Pleasant Ml'ls and Salem F. A. Shipley, Pastor. j Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. ;| Morning worship, Salem, 10:30. Epworth League, Gladys Crownover, Header, 6:30 P- nt. I Evening worship, Pleasant Mills, Bi: 00 p. m. j’rayermeeting, Salem, Wednesday, ■7:30 p. nt. j’rayermeeting, Pleasant Mills, I The Sunday evening service at BPleasant Mills will be in charge of I“Bto. Anspaugh. This is the second meeting of the campaign. Rev. C. A. Maynard, of Decatur circuit will speak at 7:15 o’clock on "The ImperI ative Need of a Stewardship Revival." At 8:00 o'clock Rev. A. L. Weaver will speak on "The World is My Par

SCHMITTS FOR CHOICEST MEATS. ■P— —=aa—PUILUI.IIMIIII ■■rawi.-l . ■!. WiC-agtfflaKSt EXTRA SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY Fancy Spring Lamb Prime Baby Beef I Spring Chickens Beef and Pork Tenderloin Baked Smoked Ham i M— —MgH—Biri Ilf Illi llUbnl'Blfl H l.hl !■> I HWIM THE HOME OF BABY BEEF Try Some for Your Sunday Dinner. SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY ONLY . II A M/IC* Armour's Star or Miller & Hart Smoked OQ» IMabHlLw Skinned Hams, Whole or Half lamb " s,rak 30c KMBmHHWBHaaKB£HE3BBISe«nsamnK»aKI r R A H° me Sugar Cured Medium Bacon 25c DfAVvJI 1 in chunk, pound -Beef Steak;—: 25c H 1 JTn 1 fir All Pork, Home-made, Sausage □AUSAGt Bu,k ’ pound e Smoked Jowels. Home Cured JOWCIS Pound.. 18c; 2 pounds DM Pickles 25c PURE LARD SALE 3 Ih. Pail4Bc 10 tb. Pailsl.4s 5 lb. Pail7sc 50 tb. Cans7.oo These are Wholesale Prices on Lard. Take advantage and buy lard now. * - ” ••"'ijniigMiirg 7i>w'T~-~3iMrniFT |t, *FyF' tf^*Mriw *' CANNED GOODS VALUES BATTLESHIP COFFE QO p 2 pounds for • • • OW FANCY CORN, As You Like It, •)£,, Shoe Peg, 2 cans Oe/V MAPLE SYRUP OKz» 2 cans : LITTLE ELF Peas, Corn, Kidney Beans, Sauer Kraut, Beans, Hominy, Pumpkin and Tomatoes 2 cans for V BLUE RIBBON MALT 60c PURITAN MALT Can '..••• OD U RED TOP MALT XKp Can <WU Try some of our Large Wheel Swiss Cheese, Brick, Pimento, Wisconsin Cream. Amish Swiss, Kay Cheese, Pabst, and Philadelphia Cream Cheese. FOR HEALTH AND STRENGTH EAT QUALITY MEAT. Ph 9 0 s n£S H. P. Schmitt D Xy 96 Meat Market ■ Service

ish"—Wesley. "Shall we follow lu His Train'.’" These men will bring worth-while messages and we hope a good sized audience will greet them. An offering will be taken for district expenses. In the prnyerineeting at bo.h Salem and Pleasant Mills we are studying the book of John. > Come and join us in our study. We feel sure you will be benefltted. We are glad to note the increased attendance In the Sunday School. I.et us pull up to above our average of the past three months. Pleasant Mills has three Sunday School work era who are taking the course at the Community Training school in Deca tur. Every teacher and officer should httve this training. All that we do, without Christ, must amount to nothing at last. In our experience of the will of God every circumstance is sa istactory. •—- ■— Bobo Circuit Rev. E. P. White, Pastor Bobo M. E. Church Sunday School. 9:30 a. m. Preaching service, 7:15 p. m. Mt. Hope M. E. Church Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Preaching service, 10:30 a. m. Clarks Chapel M. E. Church Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Preaching service. 8:00 p. ni. Rev. Stoakes of First church, De-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1927.

-/ — • *• — catur, will preach at Bobo and Clarks Chapel Sunday evening. Lets apprec'ate these pastors coming from a distance to preach, and come hear them. Let* make this fail and wjnter one of the best “•asons we have ever had. — — -o» ■ - NEWS FROM BERNE —byMiss Helen Burkhalter Leo and Ellis Lehman attended the Hardware Dealer's Group Meeting Banquet at Huntington, Tuesday evening. Mis* Flora Franz, who has been teaching the seventh grade for Dale Brann, who was sick with typhoid fever, left Wednesday' morning for Bluffton, Ohio, where she will enter is a senior at Blufttcn College. She was accompanied by her father. Dr. E. Ftanz. who returned in the evening with Mrs. Franz, who visited with her daughter Mrs. Wilbur Howe and family for the last few weeks. Sam Nussbaum was a business visitor at Fort Wayne, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Ferd Mettler were business callers at Lagrange. Indiana, and Sturgis, Michigan Tuesday. Mrs. C. T. ilabegger, Mrs. Roy Girod Mrs. M. E. Stauffer, and Miss Dorcas Sprunger were visitors at Fort Wayne,

You Never See Gasoline i ■ (®) It goes into your tank through a hose —you take it on trust. You can’t examine it. Only a chemist can analyze it. The brand and the company back of the brand are all you have to go on; If you buy unbranded gasoline, you buy a product which no company vouches for. You may save a few pennies in the purchase price, but it will cost you more in the end. It is wiser to buy a known product—a branded product—with the backing of a company with a reputation to ; • sustain. Your car represents a big investment. It is worthy of your care. It requires dependable fuel. You are protecting your car investment to the utmost when you buy Red Crown Ethyl Gasoline or Red Crown Gasoline. The Standard Oil Company [lndiana] is back of them. It is proud to claim them and proud to assume responsibility for the way they work in your car. I Red Crown Ethyl Gasoline makes the engine quick to obey, powerful, speedy and smooth. It costs a few cents more but it “knocks out that knock”. Our famous economy fuel, Red Crown Gasoline, will give you a maximum of power at a minimum of expense without the anti-knock factor. It pays to buy brands known for dependability Red Crown Ethyl and Red Crown. At Any Standard Oil Service Station and at Most Garages I I 1 i' Standard Oil Company (Indiana) DECATUR, INDIANA , 47M - ■- —4

Monday. Mr. and Mr*. Tom Durkin, of Decatur, attended to htisines* matters here on Saturday. , Mrs. Julia Campbell returned to her home at Hillsdale, Michigan, last week after spending six weeks here with' her parent*, Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Tlnkham. Mrs. Ernest Bolds, of Robinson, 111., is staying with her mother,. Dr. Kuntz' since last Thursday. Mrs. Bolds ex-! pects to slay about two weeks. j Mr. and Mrs. Sam Beitler and Mr. I and Mrs. Wesley O. Neuenachwander and facily were guests at the Mark Yager home at West Unity, Sunday. Miss Josephine Rensser and Miss Sohen, of Fort Wayne, spent the weekend with Miss Reusser s parents. Dr. and Mrs. Amos Reusser. Miss Josephine Bentz, who is in nurses' training at the Micheal Reese Hospital in Chicago, is enjoying a two weeks’ vacation with her parents in Hartford township. Mr. and Mrs. Hellnry Boe hr and daughter Esther of Wisner, Neb. and Mrs. Boehr’s aged parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Boehr, of Bluffton, Ohio, motored here last Saturday from Bluff ton for a short visit with friends. • Mr. and Mrs. Menno Lehman, of Chicago, visited with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Lehman, Sunday. | Richard Sprunger had the misfor- '

| tune of accidentally getting hit below his eye Monday morning by a baseball bat, which his brother Avery was swinging. After a physician placed a clamp on the wound, Richard went back to school. I Forest Brlckley left Monday noon for Fort Wayne, where he will take up studies at the extension department of Indiana UnfverMty. After the first semester. Forest wlli go to Bloomington as a resident university student. Frank Kuntz went to Akron, Ohio,

The Styles They’re Wearing On Fifth Avenue, New York Are Here Now — - ■ I ' / Ayl si V 'li *7iT === Biißp f I VA?.:. I U tn II B - -- - : C«prrtgbt fin Han MhatM* • *tan The Hart Schaffner & Marx Four - Winds Topcoats Os Copper Beech, Brown and Greys $25 to $35 These topcoats are of the latest styles and colors, large fancy patterns or plain coats just to suit your taste. You’re invited to come in and see them. SUITS By Hart Schaffner & Marx are the correct styles for business, dress, pleasure, college or high school wear. They are of the latest shades of t copper-beech browns, smoke blues, and Oxford greys, and the latest styles of two and three buttons. Coats, single and double breasted, pants with 19 to 20 inch bottoms. Just the thing if you’re looking for the best and latest styles. $25.00 to $40.00 Holthouse Schulte & Co. For Style and Quality.

. I »■ ,U 1.11 I ■ Mill « •—— — - l i—III - on Saturday In his brother's Ford, sedan, which he returned to the owner after it was repaired at a local garage following a wreck at Geneva several weeks ago. It Is the car that was hit on a crossing of the railroad at Geneva. Ulyses Kuntz stalled the car only an Instant, ahead of what probably would have been a tragedy. Dale Braun, who is ill with typhoid fever, is slowly improving. R. W. Morrison of Indianapolis, visited Miss Edna van der Smlssen here

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-i Sunday. c Good News for I • Pretty Skins t . if the face powder you now use does , not stay on long enough to suit you—does not keep that ugly shine away indefinitely—does not make your skin colorful like a peach — try this new I wonderful special French Process Face Powder called MELLO-GLO. Remember the name MELLO-GLO. There’s Co. nothing like it. The Holthouse Drug