Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 167, Decatur, Adams County, 14 July 1934 — Page 3

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of club ■ Horn.' Department , mb met at the home of r ,., t ,k Young, Friday after- ,, . w.-.-kly sewing period. ■ ■ . . ~f ibe meeting was \ .... had charge of the de- .. ~ I the fourth ’ hapter followed witlr .«■ p„. ..v meeting will he hell .... of Mrs. A. B Brown ‘ one-thirty ~ k \y, Chilcote will eonthe HARRY THOMAS ON BIRTHDAY s „. mid friends of Mrs. plear-. surprised mane Thursday night. \ ~„ ial time enjoyduring the evening and Mrs. ■„. ~..eived several gifts. Bl T . ( . ... k friendly .Juniors dn.!, met July 3 at the home v \:.,m billon I.autzenheiser. r meeting were Iblegger. Wanda Nead:n. Betn White. Mary Ellen H. ,• . ■■■■". Lueilb- Parish, liar lH» ra wa ' ! '’ an<i thp ieader - s - m a. meeting will be July Miss Mabel Manj^BV |BH T ' Minnehaha 411 I|B ~j.i .1: the Kirklan IIH Til . ill enjoyed ice cream, IHv -nod as the refreshI K T •V : -':ng will be held c ; y b> .1: the Kirkland High I T ..■ i Ln.-kv 4 11 the Magley demons'rations 1K...... girls did some IMudging work. ■B T - ■ ai' Margaret and Mm ■ 11.'..run. Ruth and Mary SB . Huth and Crave Cre|K. Bieberi-h. Nadine BarBK.- ■ iTime It., 11.1 Helmrich. |K . G.-rtru ie Barnes, Mrs. Hd Kolter. K B Th' : ’’ v n iueting will be held ICBH. Magley School House T.... M in ■■■ Busy Bee Clab met M mr..e High School ~ ■ r. Be- y sprunger t Romtnania Hannie. .A.i-tz. Marjory Branch. :. on Mounter. Anga- : :• L'.U'IZ. I ‘elores Beer. .in-ter. Louis Niles, 11. sad. and Vera Schr. meeting will .be held ■ Monroe High School. Til 111 Township Mother's ill <”ub met July 10 at Mis Marilynne Clem. •E' ~~ —■— ——— I - Ks.'—— - | Rich in Protein «K| ,'v ICECREAM Approved by Good Housekeeping

Girls Need. So Many Slips 1

ELLEN WORTH r | ''H F; appearance of many a I smart frock is ruined by •earing It with an ill-titting •lip. or one of tbe wrong color Here lea nicely fitted slip that will go well beneath the sheer '••ns and organdies your in* g .M W WIU Burel 7 be wearing this summer. bnm r th ®. Younger girls, the b w sh J? ulder »ne Is best, sll MIM Teen will want her J? 8 ®»J e with narrow ghoul strape. Bre 80 Inexpensive •nen y ou them an(J go haw. eMy make - why not ev«** “ veral —muslin for t»« f y . day and ,1D Kerle silk for in pastel shades to harPlant 16 the ,rockß you i. 11 s a B°od idea, once iXth 8 ? of your •lino »i and 8 Ie ’ t 0 cut Bev eral £? a ’ OD ® time. heir, Fashion Book will Bend ln° your war «irobe. I p.,. 10 06018 for boot for 8 NO i 0 60 ?2 '? deS,Bned years rc. 110 ’ 12 ’ 14 an d 16 J 12 re< iulres 2% rars! ,« , nch material or 2 7 <taL 39 ; t nch “taterlal.) •tamps M»u^ Dtß ln co,n or New vk u „ 1 your order to ty— Fashion Bureau. 222 yZnl h S S New York - Print PrtM addre " B Clearly or bust 1 Wttern n!, mber, size p«?Y r '«bt. »34, United r «tur. Syndicate. IncJ Danna.. . a*.

I^\> w^ i X D ® mocrat ’ Center”, Times Square, P. O. Box Indiana.) ° rR ’ note —Do not mail orders to Decatur,

CLUB CALENDAR I Society Deadline, 11 A. M. ’ Miss Mary Macy Phones 1000—1001 Frldby Presbyterian Ladies Aid Society I church, 2 p. nt. Baptist Home Department Sewing Club, Mrs. Frank Young, 1:30 p.m. Saturday Evangelical C. E. plate supper, 1 church basement. 5 to 7 p. 111. Evangelical C. E. plate supper, church basement, 5 to 7 p. m. Sunday St. Peters Lutheran Ix>ung Peoples Society Fuelling school. Tuesday Psi lota XI picnic. Sun Set park, 6 p. m. Wednesday Zion Reformed Phoebe Bible class, picnic, Lehman's Park, Berne 6 p. m. Thursday C. L. Os C. picnic. Legion Memorial Park, 6:30 p. m. M.E.Ladles Aid Society cafeteria supper, church basement, 5 to 7 p. m. demonstrate the making of a plain seem. Those present were Mary and Martha Blair, Lauretta May, Frances Barkley, and Mrs. Clem. The next meeting will be held July 17 at the home of Lauretta May. The Preble Jolly Juniors 4-H Club met July 10 at the home of Elizabeth and Mary Fuhrman. Those present were Norma and Leona Wefel, Dorothy Ehlerding. Linda Bultemeier, Anita Stolp, Irene Weber, Irmma and Ruth Mcßarnes. Dorothy and Lucile Werling, Juanita and Bernice Cable, Mary and Eliza beth Fuhrman. Donna Belle and' M iry E. Arnold. Marjorie Dilling ( Idabelle and Ethel Worthman. Mir-j iam Ginter. Cleta Hazelwood, and Miriam Hoffman. The next meeting will be held July 14 at the home of Dorothy and . Lucile Werling. Visitors present at the meeting were Betty Carper, Norma Werling, Mrs. Helen E. Mann, county t-lub leader, Verna Meyer, and Margaret Stolp. The St. Marys Kelkionga 4-H Club met July 11 at the home of, Mrs. Bernice MdMillen. Instructions in cutting out and making dresses were given. Those present were Betty and Maxine Noll, Vera Devoe, Geraldine Ray, Betty Burkhart, Mary McCollough, Vivian Riley, •Margaret Ellen Westrick and Helen Nyffler. The next meeting will be held July 26 at the home of Mrs. McMillen. The Berne Club met Thursday. July 12, at Lehman’s Park. A. dem-; onstration on food preparation was j given. There were 26 members present at the meeting. The next ! meeting will be July 18 in the form of a hike to Lake Biberstine. The Pheobe Bible class of the 1 Zion Reformed church will hold its annual picnic Wednesday evening at six o'clock at Lehman's Park at; Berne.

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f~WHAT 1 AMILIARI NAMES MEAN WATCH THIS COLUMN DAILY Copyrighted by DR. HARRY A. DEFERRARI ♦ • , Many persons who are interest-11 ' ed In the origin of family names I have expressed surprise that so 1 J many such names indicate the: | occupations of peddlers and var- I I ious kinds of wandering traders. I In this connection one should re-1' member that in the twelfth and' I thirteenth centuries, the time I when surnames were becoming I hereditary In England the small; towns and villages were far re- j moved from even such ‘ general ■ 1 stores" as are seen in our own I country districts today. Further more, the roads were so poor that ! travel was exceedingly slow, la-1 borious, and dangerous. Such isolation, therefore, was | the source of great profit to the! many peddlers who were willing! to undergo the hardships and dangers of travel in those early days. In fact, so great did the number of such wandering tradesmen become that it was at times necessary to pass laws to reduce them. They generally travelled in groups through the lonely districts which were infested by rovers. and they took care to be well armed and constantly on the alert. The ‘chapman" was a frequent member of these wandering groups of peddlers, and was perhaps the most ambitious of them all. since he often had a small wagon filled with a great variety of goods. "Chapman" is based on the Old English "ceap" meaning “price." “bargain,” and "market.” The modern word “cheap" is an 1 abbreviated form of the original expression “good cheap” meaning 1 "good price" or "good market.” ' The Hundred Rolls mentions a i certain Thomas le Chapman and a Grante le Chapman. o FEDERAL MEN KILL WOMAN (CONTINUE!* FROM PAGE ONE) cartridges were found inside. Blood stains were found on a bed on the floor, indicating Mrs. ' Masterson was shot as she slept. Neither the woman nor her husband lias a police record, the police report said. Agents expected to find a machine gun usid in the recent killing of John C. Johnson, negro star witness at the scheduled trial of four perrons charged with kidnaping Dr. Isaac De Kelley Jr.. so< ialiy prominent nose and throat specialist. After the officers shot the woI man she was taken to city hos- | pital where she died a few minI utes later. Her husband was held I fncommunicado at police headj quarters for questioning. Chief Arrested St. Louis. July 14— (U.R) —Chief of Police McCarty today ordered the arrest of Lear B. Reed, chief , of the department of justice bureau here, in connection with the ■ slaying of Mrs. Desste Masterson I who was shot to death during a i raid here last night. —» O’ - ' Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ahr and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Ahr and son Tom I made a busjnees trip to Pittslburgh ! Pennsylvania. Friday.

RUPTURE E . J. MEI N II A K D I COMPANY SALESMAN OF CHICAGO HERE AGAIN He will show you the “Meinhardi Rupture Shield” privately in his rooms at the Anthony Hotel, Fort Wayne, Ind., on Tuesday and Wednesday, July 17th and 18th, from 1:00 P M. to 7:00 P.M. daily. Ask the Hotel Clerk for the numbers of Mr. Meinhardt's rooms. Only men are invited. The Meinhardi Rupture Shield retains the rupture on the average case regardless of size or location—no matter how much vou exercise, lift, or strain. The Meinhardi Rupture Shield is skillfully molded to each individual as a Dentist makes false teeth. (No leg straps and no cumbersome arrangements). It is waterproof, sanitary, practically indestructible, and may be worn while bathing or sleeping (continuously day and night) until no longer desired. Do not neglect to see him on the above date. There is no charge to investigate. This visit is for white people only. Chicago Office, Pure Oil Bldg.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, JULY 14, 1934.

RCHURCHESa First Evangelical Church M. W. Sundermann, minister "The victor is lie who after every overthrow has the quiet courage to begin again.” The Sunday services should mark new beginning in our lives. The Sunday School opens at »:15 a. m., with a worship service in every department of the school. There will be classes in Bible study for all ages. Following the lesson study, the pastor will preach upon, "Friends Who Are a Comfort.” The choir will sing, "Rock of Ages," by Ashford. E. L. C. E. at 6:45 p. m. Evening service at 7:30 o'clock. The pastor will preach upon, “Vision and Duty.” The choir will sing. "The Ivory Palaces" with a whistling obligato. Prayer meeting on Wednesday night at 7:30 o'clock. o First Christian Church Rev. J. M. Dawson, pastor Bible school —9:15 a. m. W. F. KohLs, superintendent. Communion service—lo:ls a. m. Preaching—ll:ls a. m. The public is invited to these services. Members are asked to notice that the services will be held 15 minutes earlier than customary. Church of God Glen E. Marshall, pastor. Church School. 9:30 a. m. Morning worship. 10:30 a. m. Young Peoples meeting at 6:45 p. m. Evening evangelistic service at 7:30 o'clock. Mid-week prayer meeting Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. o First United Brethren Church Dr. Charles J. Roberts, minister Sunday School. 9:15 a. m. A well organized school with a good teacher for each age. Preaching service. 10:30 a. m. Subject, "A Preacher Down in the Dumps." The Young Peoples choir will furnish the music for the morning service. The Christian Endeavor meetings at 6:30 p. m. Preaching, 7:30 p. m. Subject, "The Twin-Brothers.” The music for this service will be furnished by the Adult Choir. If the weather is warm the evening service will be held in the basement auditorium. Some say the United Brethren basement is the coolest place in Decatur. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening. 7:30 o'clock. Our prayer meetings are being well attended, averaging from seventy to ninety. The Adult Choir will practice after prayer meeting. The Young Peoples Choir will practice on Thursday evening. The general public is most kindly invited to this spiritual and growing church. o Presbyterian Church George O. Walton, minister • 9:30 —Sunday School. Roy Andress superintendent. 10:30 — Morning worship. Sermon, “Eternal Refuge.” Daring the summer months the morning service will be dismissed promptly at 11:15 o'clock. The Ladies Aid Society met yes- ' terday at the church to consider their future program. The ladles responded with a good attendance. There will be no meeting in August. o Zion Lutheran Church Paul W. Schultz, pastor. Divine services in English, 10:15 a. tn. Divine services in German, 8:30 a. m. Sunday School and Bible class. 9:30 a. m. Special congregational meeting after the English services. Allday Walther League picnic at Woodburn. Missionary Society outing Sunday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Carl Krudop. O Gospel Tabernacle Rev. Bert Williams, evangelist Sunday evening services, 7:30 p. m. Services tonight, with Rev. Williams speaking on "A Soul at Auction." Bible pictures will also be shown. The crowd is increasing each night at the tent on First street. Services every night except Monday. o First Baptist Church A. B. Brown, pastor Sunday school, 9:15. Ralph Kenworthy, superintendent. Morning worship, 10:15. Subject: "God, You and A Sparrow.” Solo: “His Eye Is On The Spar-

row." Mrs. A. B. Brown. Violin Obligato, Mrs. Virgil Fleming. Junior Church, 10:15. Mrs. Frank Young, director. B. Y. P. U„ 6:30. Evening service, 7:30. The opening service will be in charge of the B. Y. P. U. assisted by Mrs. Oren Brunner's Sunday school class. Message by thg pastor: "Why I Am What I Am." Home Department. Tuesday, 7:30, at the home of Calvin F. Peterson. Prayer meeting Wednesday 7:30 A cordial welcome to the public. - ■ — First Methodist Episcopal Church H. R. L'arson, minister. Church School at 9:30 a. m. A cordial welcome awaits both regular attendant and newcomer in any class. Service of Divine worship at 10:30 a. m. Dr. Fremont E. Fribley, newly appointed superintendent of the Fort Wayne district of the North Indiana annual conference will be present and bring the devotional message. At the close of the service he will conduct an abbreviated session of the first quarterly conference. All officers are asked to have their reports ready to be handed in. Let us give our new district leader a royal welcome. The Senior Epworth League will meet at 6 p. m. Further reports will be made in regard to the Epworth League Institute which meets at Lake Webster, July 29August 5. Evening service at 7:30 p. m. The paslor will speak on the subject. “A Wise Man’s Recipe For A Happy Life.” o U. B. Mission Church Rev. J. Clair Peters Sunday School at 9:30 a. m. Gospel message at 10:30 a m. Christian Endeavor at 7 p. m. Evangelistic sermon. 7:45 p. m. Cottage prayer meeting Tuesday evening. Prayer meeting at the church Thursday evening at 7:30 p. m. o St. Marys Church First Mass 7:00 Childrens Mass 8:30 Low Mass - 9:45 Prayer Hour, Friday evening 7:30

PERSONALS Rev. and Mrs. Harvey Hocker of Pasa lena, California, are visiting with relatives here. Miss Matilda Sellemeyer has returned from Hanover where she spent the past week as a delegate of th Women’s Missionary Society of the Reformed church. She attended the summer conference of the Reformed Evangelical church. Mr. and Mrs. Phil Sauer and family will motor to Dayton. Ohio today to spend the week-end with relatives. Harry Williams, Fort Wayne, has resigned as editor of the General Electric News, published by the Fort Wayne Works of the G. E. He will be succeeded by Elmjer IF. Baade, newspaper man. Mr. Williams formerly was editorial writer for the Journal Gazette. Otho Lobenstien of Monroe was a visitor here today. Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Schmitt and Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Holthouse and sons Dan and Jim will drive to Detroit tomorrow. The boys will attend the .baseball game between the Tigers and Yankees. Miss Mary Lou Kerlin of Dayton Ohio, has been the house guest of Miss Irene Cosner at the Rev. Charles Prugh residence here for the past week. She will go to Lake Wawasee with a group of Christian Endeavor members from the local Reformed church next week. Bud Williamson, pro at the Decatur Country Club will play in the pro-amateur tourney to'be staged at the Tippecanoe Country Club Monday. o— Two Federal Agents Are Badly Burned Indianapolis July 14 — (UP) - A massive, pugilistic 38 year old negro woman today stood off four federal agents and three squads of police for 15 minutes before she was captured, with the aid of tenr gas to face charges of operating a still and resisting arrest. Two federal agents were burned badly by scalding hot mash thrown by the woman. One of them was George Winkler, special agent operating out of Chicago who has served as Marion county sheriff, police lieutenant and head of the local prohibition bureau. Winkler was treated at City hospital for burns about the eyes, face and chest but returned to the scene of battle. Get the Habit — Trade at Home

Place Stories About Great Adventures Os Hero-Prophet Traveller’s Recollections Os Scenes In Life Os Elijah, The King-Defier—Romantic Champion Os Religion In A Dark Time — One Womans’ Enmity.

By WILLIAM T. ELLIS Elijah’s story summons to travel. For liis heroic adventures are all place tales. There is light on the rtr orJ from the land. This king-defying prophet’s romantic adventures centered in the City of Samaria, the capitol of Israel, where dwelt, in his ivory palace, hen-pei'ked King Ahab, who had become a renegade from Jehova, and a devotee of the gods of his heathen wife. Jezebel. There Is a distinct thrill for the traveller who visits the hill ruins of Samaria, later called Sebastie, the capital of Herod. Harvard University has been excavating there; and ( one may see the very walls and gates erected by Ahaib’s father, Gm ri. Recently, the arehaelogists found ' a scarab seal of one of the officers of a king of Israel. To clamber over I the remains of the palace of Ahaib' and Omri is to get a fresh sense of the reality of the tontemporary re-1 cord of Elijah and Ahab and Jezebel. The Ravine Os Ravens As a punishment for the sins of Ahab and his people, a great drought was sent upon Israel. Elijah told Ahab to his face that it was coming, ami why. Although he had his times of depression, no braver prophet ever walked the earth than this man of Gilead. ■Power to punish implies power to provide. So Jehovah sent Elijah to sojourn by the brook Cherith, near the Jordan, where he would be fed, morning and evening, by the ravens. A Greek monastery now perchesin the deep gorge where once was Elijah's cave. This site 1s a steep and awesome ravine, where the hill of Judea break down onto tho Jorlon Plain. From its edge, along which the old horse road from Jerusalem to Jericho used to run, one may look down upon the birds circling below. Another Woman In The Story Queen Jezebel's vindictive hatred hung always over the hunted Elijah like a cloud. After the brook Cherith had dried up, and God had ordered the prophet to move far up to the northwest, on the coast of the Mediterranean in Jezebel’s own heathen land of Sidon, Elijah met another and a different sort of woman. This was a poor widow, with one son. who was gathering sticks to make a little fire with which to cook her last meal, a handful of grain and a little bit of oil. When the wayfarer invoked her hospitality, she shared her final food with him. But from that hour the barrel of meal and the cruse of oil never failed. In giving, she got. Her sharing provided acquiring. And the widow of Zareplitan has become a symbol of God’s providence for the poor; and of the ■beauty of bounty. Talking Back To The King Now we come to the most spectacular event in the Old Testament. For three years Elijah had been cared for in seclusion, while drought and famine taught a terrible lesson to the land. The hearts of the people were prepared for the great demonstration. So Elijah was sent again to Samaria to confront the king — the wrathful monarch who had been searching for him everywhere, to slay him. There was a terrible audacity at times about this prophet. "Is it thou, thou trowbler of Israel?" cried the king, as he saw Elijah. Back came the bold answer, “1 have not troubled Israel; but thou, and thy father’s house, in that ye have forsaken the commendments of Jehovah.” Thereupon the prophet—no longer the fugitive from the king, but an ambassador from the court of high heaven—directed Ahab to summon the nation to Mount Carmel, with four hundred and fifty of Jezebel’s pet priests of Baal, and four hundred of the prophets of Asherah Awed by Elijah's new authority, the king did as directed, and the plain that lies before the foot of Carmel, like a great theatre, soon swarmed with wonder-filled victims of the wrath of God. The Mountain-Top Duel Mt. Carmel is twelve miles long, lying along the coast of the Mediterranean. At the northern end is the city of Haifa, which Great Brit- »»♦*»*♦♦** *The International Sunday School Lesson for July 15 is; “God Cares For Elijah.”—l Kings 17:1-24; 19: 1-8. ♦ ♦ « • ****** * * * * ******

ain has recently made into the greatest port of the eastern Mediterranean. It was at the lower end of L the mountains, now locally called "The Place of the Burning" that this great testing was staged. A humble monaMery and school of the Carmelite monks marks the site, seldom visited hy tourists. ■ From the roof of the monastery 1 have surveyed the scene, with the Brook Kishon below, and watched a cloud tbe size of a man's hand , rise from the sea. Nature built this stage for sublime drama. When the spectators had gathered, the figure of the wilderness proI phet appeared. At once he threw i out the great challenge, "How long ' ago ye limping between the two ! sides? If Jehova be God, follow Him; but if Baal, then follow him.” Then amidst a hush of exper-t-J ancy more impressive than any outI burst. Elijah proposed a breath- tai king duel between Baal and Jeho- ; vah. He told the four hundred and I fifty priests of Baal to prepare an ■ altar and a bullodk for sacrifice, over an unlighted fire; and he a- . lone would do the same, in the name of Jehovah. "And the God / that answereth by fire, let him be .■ God." What a thrill! i All day the priests of Baal prayI ed and paraded and even gashed i themselves with knives, while EliJ jah openly mocked them. But in ■ vain. The brassy heavens made no response to the frantic pleadings of . the priests. • !>t the hour of evening oblation, II Elijah built his altar of twelve > ; stones to recall the twelve tribes. 1| To make the test more difficult he - poured twelve jars of water over : the firewood and in the surround- - ing trench. (I have drunk from the » perennial spring which flows right - here from the side of the mountain). When all was in readiness, the prophet prayed, crying, “Hear I me, O Jehovah, hear me that this i people may know tliat Thou, Jeho- ■ vah. art God.” "Then the fire of Jehovah fell, i and consumed the burnt-offering, ■ aud the wood and the stones, and • the dust, and licked up the water ■ that was in the trench. And fell on their faces; and they said. ‘Jehovah i He is God; Jehovah. He is God.’ ’’ Down In The Dumps i At Elijah's direction, the proph- ' ets of Baal were slain by the people. To the king—doubtless prostrated ’ by the spectacle—he said, "Get thee up,eat and drink; for there is the sound of abundance of rain." Rain! Sweetest words to a drought-smit-ten laud. Yet the heavens remained as brass, as they had been for three years. Elijah sent his servant to the highest point on the moun- ■ tain to look for clouds. Great was his faith. Six times the messenger went and returned, reporting nothing. On the seventh, he announced the appearance at sea of a cloud the size of a man's hand. Thereupon the prophet hade Ahab ride furiuosly home, lest the storm catch him. And Elijah himself, hardy son of the wilderness, ran before him. But his ecstacy was short lived He soon had to run the other way, for Jezebel, furious at the fate of the priests of Baal, threatened his life. What ensued we shall learn next week. Get your happiness out of your work or you will never know what real happiness is.—l Elbert Hubbard. ♦ ♦ ♦ Religion is the practice of the presence of God; humanism is the practice of the absence of God Anon. * * * Nae treasures, nor pleasures, Could make us happy lan; The heart’s aye the part aye, That makes us right or rang. —■Robert Burns. The best cure for drunkenness is, whilst solver, to observe a drunken man. —Chinese Proverb. * * * •Let the peace of God rule in your hearts, to the which also ye are called in one holy; and be ye thankful.—Col. 3: 15. * * * And 1 will trust that He who <heede The life that hides in mead and wold, Who hangs yon aider’s crimson beads And stains these mosses green and gold. Will still, as He hath done, incline His gracious care to me and mine. —Whittier. * * * The hum of the wind in the tree-

Page Three

tops has always been good music to me. and the face of the fields has often comforted me more than the faces of men.—John Burroughs. * * • o Zion Reformed Church Charles M. Prugh, minister. Sunday School, 9:15 a. m. Mervin Hostetler, superintendent. A large attendance is desired as this is Mr. Hostetler's last Sunday with us. Let us show our appreciation of his efforts by being in Sunday School tomorrow morning. Morning worship. 10:39 a. m. Sermon by student Otto Gerber of Berne, Ind. No evening service. Music for the morning service will be furnished by the Senior choir. The Phoebe Bible class will hold their annual picnic on Wednesday evening at the Lehman park in Berne. Minister for July 22, Rev. J. P. Tapy. o Calvary Evangelical Church Sunday School at 9:30 a. m. James Darr, superintendent. Prayer and fellowship service at 10:30, conducted by the class leader. Worship with sermon by Rev. M. W. Sundermann on Thursday night.

SAVE COLLECTION CHARGES ON YOUR ELECTRIC LIGHT POWER BILLS BY PAYING ON OR BEFORE July 20 The following collection charges o n a 11 accounts not paid by 20th of month following the meter reading have been authorized: 10% on sums up to $3 3% on sums o* er $3 All Rural Light Bills Madison and Monroe townships in All e n county, North Root, Union and Mud Pike lines are due this month. CITY LIGHT & POWER OFFICE CI T Y HALL