Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 45, Number 239, Decatur, Adams County, 10 October 1947 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
<3Br B 's*Bwi Bfl |!mK Umfartn■ ivfdor gg SCRIPTURE: Hebrews 3:l—®:s; »—1». Matthew 4:1-11. DEVOTIONAL READING: Phtllpplans 2:1-11 Apostle of Better Things Lesson for October 12, 1947 *r"*HIS lesson opens, Hebrews 3:1-8, 1 with the explanation that Jesus Christ is the minister of better things in that he is the apostle and high priest of our profession, perfectly faithful to him that appointed him. The comparison is made with Moses, who was also faithful, but within a very small circle as contrasted with the Son of God. Called to God an high priest after the order of Melchisedec, Christ, the
author of eternal salvation, dealt no longer with symbols, but offered himself as the per- | feet lamb to take away our sins. “And for this cause he is the mediator of the new covenant (testament), that by means of death, for the redemptions of the transgres-
■EL 3 Dr. Newton
sions that were under the first testament, they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance,” Hebrews 9:15. • • • Jesus and the Bible I ESUS is introduced in Matthew •* 4:1-4, as he quotes the Old Testament to Satan in the wilderness temptation. Having been reared by a God-fearing mother, Jesus was familiar with the Bible as a child. What is the best thing any parent can do for his or her child? I would answer without hesitation: Teach them to hide God’s words in their hearts in the impressionable years of youth. A Bible verse learned in youth will serve through all life’s testing situations. "I will not forget Thy Word,” Psalms 119:16. • • • He Helps Us Use the Bible THE better ministry of Jesus is reflected in the fact that, “We have. a great high priest, that is passed into the heavens, Jesus the Son of God. . . . For we have not an high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities; but was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin. Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need,” Hebrews 4:14-16. Study the example of Jesus in Ms answers to Satan in the wilderness temptajion, and He will teach us when and what to say to Satan. We are not dependent upon our wisdom and words. Our great high priest will supply wisdom and words to match any situation that Satan ever presents. I think of a story of a junior boy, recently accused of stealing. The boy was the victim of a wicked man who sought to turn circumstantial evidence upon him to cover his own sin. The hoy told me that he was innocent. 1 went with him to the juvenile court. The judge asked him if he teas guilty. He looked straight into the eyes of the judge end said: "Sir, I have not sinned. Who convicteih me of this charge?’’ The man dropped his head, and said: "Your honor, I ask for the privilege of withdrawing the charge.’’ His Laws in Our Hearts i<[ WILL put my laws on their ' hearts, and upon their minds also will I write them,” Hebrews 10:16. Jesus declares, “I do always the things that please him,” and he enables us. by his grace, to do the father's will by his indwelling in our hearts Thus, his will becomes the law of our lives, through the grace of Jesus Christ. It is impossible for us to keep the law perfectly, but Christ, the better Christ, becomes our righteousness, and then his law is kept by his grace. Is the olden times, men claimed to keep the letter of the law, without the spirit, as in the case of Moses. Now, through the offering of Christ, we are enabled to satisfy the spirit of the law. • • • The Sufficient Christ THIS lesson should enhearten every trusting child of God. since it makes clear that, “He is able to save unto the uttermost them that draw near unto God through him,” Hebrews 7:25. He is not only able, but yearns to save onto the uttermost. He wills to save everyone. God has done everything he can do to save every sentient soul on this earth. Those who go to hell do so because they decide to go to hell. It Is not the pleasure of God that any should perish, but that all should repent and be saved. • • • by tke latentatioOs! Couaeil et tteligieus Education an behalf of 46 patestent der.exinttiaas. Released by HSU Ft num.)
| RURAL CHURCHES | • . Mifriri « Calvary Church Evangelical United Brethren Sunday school 9:30. Prayer meeting, following Sunday school. I Group quarterly Conference at Berne. Sessions at 2:30 and 7:30. Fall Institute, Thursday afternoon and evening at Bethany Church. 0 Union Chapel Evangelical United Brethren D. H. Pellett, Minister Sunday Church School 9:30; Mr. Thurman I. Drew. Supt. Divine Worship 10:15. sermon subject “A Living Church.” The Morning services are unified. Youth Fellowship 6:45, Miss Rose Merriman. President. Adult Study. 6:45, Mr. Myron Frank. President. Evening Worship 7:30 sermon subject “The Overcome!’.” Prayer Service Wednesday 7:30, Mr. Omer Merriman. Claes Leader. Choir rehearsal following the services Sunday evening and Wednesday evening. Cornerstone laying next Sunday October 19th. at 2:00 p.m. The Reverend Benjamin F. Smith, D. D., Conference Superintendent of St. Joseph Conference will be our guest speaker, both morning and afternoon and Dr. Smith will officiate at the laying of the corner stone. A very cordial invitation is ex- 1 tended to worship with us. Our 1 facilities may be limited, but the I power of God is not nimited. 5 o ( Monroe Methodist W. L. Hall, minister Rally day and homecoming, 9:30. Dr. Homer Gettle. of Ft. Wayne, will be the morning speaker. There will be a carry-in dinner 1 and fellowship program of music 1 and talks by guests and others. 1 No evening service. Mid week service and choir practice Wed. evening at 7:30 and 8:15. District Youth Missionary Rally at Monroeville beginning with a 1 banquet at 5:30. 0 Pleasant Mills Baptist j Albert Swenson, pastor 9:30 a.m. Sunday school. IP: 30 a.m. preaching services. Sermon by the pastor. When the Salamone Association brotherhood convened with us. you i would have thought there was a basketball game between the Yellow Jackets and Spartans, from the cars, in the village. If you hfe not attending church service somewhere, come to our church. _____o_____ Rivarre Circuit U. B. Church L. A. Middaugh, pastor Mt. Zion 9:30 a.m. Sunday school. 10:30 a.m. preaching service. 7:00 p.m. Christian Endeavor. 7:00 p.m. Wednesday, prayer meeting. Pleasant Grove 9:00 a.m. Sunday school. 7:00 p.m. Christian Endeavor. 7:00 p.m. Wednesday, prayer meeting. Mt. Victory 9:00 a.m. Sunday school. 7:90 p.m. Christian Endeaver. J 8:00 p.m. preaching service. 7:00 p.m. Wednesday, prayer meeting. =_o United Brethren in Christ Willshire Circuit Duane A. Reahm, minister Willshire Prayer and Bible Study, Wednesday. 7:30 (EST). Morning worship and sermon. 9:30. Sunday school, John Tinkham. supt., 10:00. Holy Communion service. Sunday, 11:00 a.m. Winchester (CST) Prayer and Bible study, Thursday, 7:30. Rally day in Sunday school. Fred Zurcher, supt. Sun.. 9:30. Morning worship service with Rev. R. W. Rash, Huntington. Ind., will preach. 10:30. Homecoming and rededication service, bishop A. M. Johnson, will speak, 2:o®. St. Paul Sunday school. Eddie McFarland, supt. Sunday 9:15. Evangelistic service. Sunday. 7:30 p.m. Christian Endeavor, Sunday, 7:00 p.m. Prayer and Bible study, Tuesday. 7:30. 0 Mt. Tabor Methodist Circuit Clifford C. Conn, minister Pleasant Valley Donald Byerly, supt. Sunday school at 9:30. Worship service at 10:45. This will be Communion Sunday and a special offering for the Fellowship of Suffering and Service will be taken. Every Christian should plan to participate in this Holy Sacrament. Beulah Chapel Donald Shady, supt. Worship service at 9:30.
•y DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
MMM fisE *•*»> '‘OKI' / #Mh $888S8S$!8&>* 1 ,-X V* iMI -v ..... BANKRUPT BRITONS launch drive to persuade U. S. to assume all or most of occupation eosts for British-American zone of Germany as a panel of 11 British experts begin series of talks in Washington with seven-man group topped by Assistant Secretary of State Charles Saltzman. Seated are Gen. Lucius Clay (left) head of U. S. forces in Germany, and Sir William Strang, head of British delegation. Standing (from left), Sir’Gordon Munro, financial minister, British embassy; Saltzman; Maj. Gen. N. C. D. Brownjohn, deputy chief of staff for British in Germany, and Undersecretary of the U. S. Army William H. Draper. Jr. Soundphoto?
This will be Communion Sunday and every Christian should be present and participate in this Holy Sacrament. There will be a special offering for the Fellowship of Suffering and Service. Sunday school at 9:39. Mt. Tabor Mrs. Austin McMichael, supt Sunday school at 9:30. Last Sunday was a time for reconsecration. It should now be our purpose to give God more and bet- a ter service. j Mount Pleasant s Mr. David Cook. supt. w Sunday school at 9:30. „ Would you drive your car an t extra mile to bring some one who otherwise will not be there? j 0 f Pleasant Mills Methodist Seth F. Painter, pastor c 9:30 a.m. Sunday school. 10:30 a.m. morning worship. 6 p.m. M. Y. F. 1 Thursday 7 p.m., prayer meeting. c 0 — i CHURCH NEWS j Zion Reformed 1 The annual mission festival serv- 1 ices will lie held in the Zion Evangelical and Reformed church Sunday, with morning and evening • services. The Rev. Harry W. Baumer, pastor of the Eighth Evangelical and Reformed church, 1 Cleveland. 0.. will be the guest speaker at both services. There will be special music at both services. At the 10 am. service the senior choir will sing. ‘‘Hail to the Lord’s Anointed,” by Wilson, and the double trio will sing. “Hymn of Thanksgiving,” by Kremser. At the 7:3ff p.m. service, i “Send Out Thy Light’ by Gounod, j will be sung by the senior choir, and a women's chorus will sing. “God of all Nature,” by Tschaikowsky. All members of the church are urged to be present at both services. Friends of the church are also cordially invited to worship with us. Visitors are always welcome. Beulah Chapel Beulah Chapel Methodist church will osberve homecoming and rally day Sunday with an all day program. beginning with the morning service and including a basket din-' ner served in the dining room and a program of music and fellowship. > Rev. Julian of the Bluffton Evangelical United Brethren dhurch . will be the special speaker for tbe afternoon. Neighbors and friends I ( and former members are especially ■ 1 invited to attend and meet old ' friends and talk over old times. The pastor, the Rev. C. C. Conn, declares, “the church has had much to do with our lives and deserves a warm place in our hearts. Tender memories cluster around the ' old church where we used to go. around that certain pew. and we ’ remember the very spot where we knelt at the old altar.” Monroe Methodist Rally day and homecoming will be observed at the Monroe Methodist church Sunday, the Rev. W. L. Hall, pastor, has announced. Dr. Homer Gentle, of Fort Wayne, prominerft Methodist layman, will speak at the morning service, which opens at 9:39 O’clock. A carry in dinner will be held at the noon hour, fol- ' lowed by a /ellowship program, ■ during which special music will ’ be presented and short talks given i by visiting clergy an«J former mem- > bars of the church. —o— The Mt. Vab Hoe'cohere bob' sled run at Lake Placid, N- Y.. is the only one of its kind uj the U. S.
Monmouth School Activities Junior Play The junior class of Monmouth , high school will present a three act comedy “A Little Honey,” Tuesday and Wednesday, Oct. 28 and , 29. Watch for further announcements. Initiate Freshmen Freshmen appeared Oct. 3 in appropriate costumes and were duly initiated into high school by the seniors. The last hour of the day was devoted to stunts by each freshman. who performed before the entire student body in the gym. The seniors gave an initiation hayride in the evening for the freshmen. The whole high school was invited. After the hayride a weiner bake was enjoyed by ail. Hot Lunch Daily The students are enjoying a hot! lunch program. There are an average of 180 students eating each d day in the lunch room. PTA Meeting Remember P. T. A. meeting Tuesday, Oct. 14. At this time a band P. T. A" will be organized. Class Officers The classes have elected their officers and sponsors. They are as follows: Senior Sponsors — Mr. Haines and Mr. Nussbaum; President, Russell Kruetzman; Vice president, Loren Brentlinger; secretary, Lois Buuck; treasurer, Arnold Getting. Junior Sponsors — Mrs. Haines and Mr. Collier; president, Dorothy Fuelling: vice president, Ray Graft; secretary, Carol Kirsch; treasurer, Betty Hockemeyer. Sophomore Sponsor — Miss Morehouse; president. Roland Bultemeyer; vice president. Marlene Aumann; sec-i retary, Joan Bultemeier, treasurer.! Dorothy Getting. Freshman Sponsors — Mrs. Dewey; president, Lloyd Kiess; vice president, Donald Selking; secretary, Ethel Schmiege; treasurer, Eldora Ewell. o Montreal Geologist Sentenced To Prison Ottawa, Oct. 19 —(UP) — Harold ( S. Gerson, 42-year-old Montreal . geologist, was sentenced to four . years in prison last night for con- ; spiring with Russian agents to diJvulge secret government informaj’tion to the Soviet Union. The government's case against Gerson was based on a page of ( looseleaf notebook paper containing secrets of the explosive RDX.
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WARRANT for the arrest of Hianns Eisler and his wife for deportation proceeding's is being issued by the U. S. Immigration service. Eisler, self-admitted Communist, Jias bean, in the V. S. since 194 C _a,-.rt at present is a Hollywood b-spg
Seymour Mon Dies When Hit By Auto Seymour. Ind., Oct. 10 —(UP) — F. Deputy, 74, a retired restaurant owner, died today of injuries sustained Monday when he walked .into the side of an automobile. 0 HEMMER JURY, ‘ (Contiunert from PnKe It mer were dismissed at the state's request yesterday. One of the remaining counts against him accused him of embezzling $1,445.49. The other accused him of embezzling $945.59. An earlier charge of grand larceny was dismissed. The trial had been in progress since Sept. 29 before special judge
I Rally Day I Bethany Church I Evangelical United Brethren F. H. Willard, Minister SUNDAY SCHOOL — 9:15 ■ MORNING WORSHIP — 10:10 ■ Your interest and cooperation is invited Mi to help us reach our goals. M RALLY DAY I - - - is a good day to begin the habit of regular attendance.
Rally Day Bethany Church Evangelical United Brethren F. H. Willard, Minister SUNDAY SCHOOL — 9:15 MORNING WORSHIP — 10:10 Your interest and cooperation is invited to help us reach our goals. RALLY DAY - - - is a good day to begin the habit of regular attendance.
t**j TJMMd _ ■ ij V T xL3 J *^***'•*«»'*•* ** w< CJXJi wSXS< \/ Jn 1492, Columbus found a new world of wonderment Today, you can find a new world of amazing convenience —use our timesaving, bank-by-mail service. This Bank will Not transact business on MONDAY, OCT. 13 in observance of COLUMBUS DA Y «*FEOt:?At RtSc"- r HHMWCI Mfcr system -FIRST state bank (Jk 7 J^^£caf&(/u, Established 1883 Jl ■■'<»'■ !...■■■■■ 1 I | , I. ■ , „ ,|,|
RoberWßtewart of Brazil, and a included alx farmers. 'mp session yesterday was market by defense charges HemAner was the victim of a political “smear campaign.” Defense attorney James Gray said “all the power of the great state of Indiana had been thrown behind the prosecution.” The political implications in Gray’s statement drew a denial of any intent to “persecute” Hem mer by assistant deputy state attorney Otto Wall who said that the state “does not want to prosecute anv honest man.” 0 r10 NEGROES KILLED (Cantlaued Iron, Page 1) the buildings in the area are old and ramshackle. Firemen fought the fire for an fiour before bringing it under control. It was completely extinguished within two hours after the first alarm was turned in by Corruthers. Hours after the fire was put out, only one of the bodies at the morgue had been identified. She was Mrs. Drucilla Smith, 18, who was identified by her husband, Jenks, 21. 0 TWO DECATUR * (Contlnned from pagr •) The youth enlisted in the U. S. navy on June 23, 1942 —his 17th birthday. He served his boot training at Great Lakes, 111. His death in Hawaii was attributed to internal injuries he received in the fall from the truck. He had two other brothers in service during World War 11. His parents had previously stat-
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ed &at military burial rites would be conducted at the graveside here upon of his body. Members of Limberlost post. Veterans of! Foreign Wars, will conduct the! rites. While these are the nrst bodies of Adams county's war dead to be returned here for burial, it is known that next-of-kin have made application for the return of a number of others. Return of Hie war dead is being conducted under “Operation Taps” of the war and navy departments —the vast reburial program under which more than 250,099 known war dead will be returned from overseas graves In the Pacific and in Europe. The European phase of the operation is scheduled to get underway on October 26 when a transport arrives in New York, bringing back bodies from the U. S. Military cemetery, Henri Chapelle, Belgium. o FOR SALE: 55 head choice Hereford feeding calves. Will sell one or all. Good for 4-H calves. Phone 301, Ken-nett-Murray Stock Yards. South 10th Street. T
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FRiMy, OCTOBfr,. I
— mf.aY This Week-EaSy T -Bone and Sirloin RS Beef Ro aßt t Swiss Steak ' Round Steak Boihn ts Reef c ‘'H a ndl Fresh Ground Bert Beef Live r . Veal Roast ,’fMI Veal Steak . "ft Vs' e - Veal Li, w II), io tn® meat Marku S’. s. 13th st. Ftai! Lyer >
The I • elresiui j y/MWHk leetin? IRS-0 lOSTE \X Mem! vening eser. ■ Othillo was NOT colored man! icetin; —0- lersh. It appears that F wei was not mistaken J ~a nn t thinking that Moor, , P * ■ men. but that Othello J Moor. Captain bridge has discovered J M , was a distinguished v,» M soldier called Maurizio (h who migrated to Hungary» I he was known as , |RLS Mor being the Hungaria-’ ; uiLI Maurizio. Hence the ■ In addition, the Moors arei! H race, tanned, of course, a ■ rin 1 by the sun.
