Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 305, Decatur, Adams County, 28 December 1951 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT 'Published Every Evening Except Sunday By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO.. INC. ' Entered at the Decatur. Ind.. Post Office as Second Class Matter Dick D. Heller „ _ President A. BL Holthouse Editor J. H. Heller Vice-President Chas. Holthopse Treasurer I Subscription Rates: i By Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, $6; *Six months, $3.26: 8 months. $1.76. - < • By Mail, beyond Adams apd Adjoining Counties; One year, >7.00; 6 months, $8.75; 8 months, SI.OO. . ' By Carrier, $5 oents per wpek. Single copies. 5 conjA
A list of the nation’s ten bestdressed men includes Senators Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. of Massachusetts and Estes JKetauver. of Tennessee. Not every holder of 1 elective office would be gratefulfor such a distinction. However, some voters may reason that a man who cannot select a tie which goes well with his suit should not be entrusted with more vital decisions. ( ’ / Within 24 hours after Robert Vogeler announced that he would head a campaign to raise \to pay the tines of the tour imprisoned American fliers in Hungary, pledges amounting to $400,000 were sent to him. 'This ddes not inchide the off v of the Ameri-4 cap. Legion to pay the entire amount. Since fbo government agreed to pay the “ran .-mu," Mi./ Vogeler ha- suggested that the,; fund be usee. ; to .help free young- < Bi ’ (Ttis, the Ann ri; an newspaper ■ '/vor.rcspondtnt. who was “codvict-. cd” by a Hungantn court of . 'espionage.” This country would rg'sfong on that ifuggestion. 5 ’ —-6 o •* The most famous clergyman in , Congress has deeded to leave. Charlo A. Eaton New Jersey, , ranking Republican, member of/; th* house foreign relations com- ; J and its chairman from 1947,. to 1949, has Innonnced that at 83 / he wishes to give up office. In / Congress since 192Lj/be played a 'I ’I : I i • phrr in thv supporting a similar - to that, which the Arthur H. ; Vandenberg play etTjji the Senate, lie was a the United Nations conference in 1945. and had do with the passage -of the first Marshall Plan bill. . .Before entering politics, Eaton ? ■4'. was a pastor of Baptist churches Ju Cleveland and New York. / Although of opposite political parties, Judge George H. Leonard - and Edward H, Knise, the latter / named to fill the vacancy caused by Judge Leonard’s dearth, had a similarity in age. Both were 3$ when judicial duties came their - wayl Mr. Kruse htfs been sworn ■* in as judge of the Allen County ' Superior Court and will sene on the bfnch until a successor is ’ next November/ Judge i Kruse js excellently qualified to* - succeed his noted predecessor. He '• is a young man of fine talents and ’ • ■ --s ; ‘ •- • --•V -,.‘r judicially inclined. His oua term . r 4 " in Congress brought him to the ■ ! * ■■■* ■ . ill ,■ attention of voters and citizens /
: New Drugs In Treating Some Eye Diseases
MOST eye infections, in which there is inflammation and a puslike discharge from the eye. are cured fairly-• easily. Sometimpay however. it Is difficult to clean up the infection, and it may persist,. . JnfeqtiHU of this type may lead lo infl .tin mat ion of the < ornea,. the trahsparen: outerfa yer A through wfcieii we see. Damage to the cornea c«m seriously interfpr®. Jwitn the eyesight, or even lead blidtlnes s. Such iralainiuaUon may occur in diseases of the' eye Rich as luberculosißr syphilis. and virus and bacterial infections. Severe allergies of the eye may also af- ’ the cornea and cause blind'.pels- • ’ The new drug, cortisone,, fcas recently proved very' helpful in preventing eye damage inxthese 3 tabes. - J Cortisone does not fight the germs Causing infection, but rati? er y ards off eye damage and keeps the eye in working order, it is then possible to select one of the. new antibiotic drugs' which ’’*’4ll attack the infection itself. Usually? if the' proper - is used along the cortisone, will bring about a permanent cure. Ojjc of )’!••? rye •|j^otderc'.<M t das bullied doctors fur a uuwbur
and bis selection to fill the Allen County i>ost is considered most fortqnate. I' / Dr. J. Stewart Niblick was an honored son of Decatur who earned fame in his adopted city of Indiana Harbor. He grew to young manhood here and then entered college where he completed bis medical studies, latef engaging in 'the practice of medicine in the twin cities of the Harbor and East Chicago. He was widely and favorably known in the Calumet area and enjoyed a practice recognized as one of the largest in the state. He was manager of the Indiana Harbor Clinic, which is famous for its wide patronage and service to the ill. Dr. Niblick whs a kind-hearted individual and to him was .to appreciate that he performed in’auy acts of mercy through his profession. He was respected and loved by his patients. who canu from every walk of life. Hfs death brings sorrow to his many friends |n this city. 4 New Library:— A $2,000,000 shrine in memory \ of the poet Robert Browning has established at Baylor University. It includes a superb collection, valued at $500,000, of manuscripts and editions of his writings. Students of Browning may now cofhe from all over the world tn be spre of getting the last word on the, master. While he is not studied as much, hs generation ago when almost every city and town had its Browning club, be is by no means forgotten, and will not be as long as people value the great English poetical masterpieces. - • \ Baylor is not the only Texas iiv stitutiou to be proud of its English collections. The University of Texas has long been known for its magnificent material on nineteenth century English authors. At Tulane University in £Jew Orleans there is a vast library on the mysterious Mayas of Mexico and Central America, whose monuments amaze tourists. There are many other special library i in the, South. North Carolina has two great book colj lections of which ’any state might be proyd, at the University Aof North Carolina and at Duke Uni* | versify. ' Tiie universities, all over the nation, are accumulating great resources in books which can be offered to the student. \
Os years is known as “sympathetic ophthalmia." This is a condition in which some injury to a single eye results in damage to the Sound eye as well, and eventually in blindness in both eyes. Cortisone is beneficial treating ad .preventing. this condition. It is also helpful in severe infection or the iris, or ‘Shutter of the eye,’ which up to now has been extremely; hard to tfeat » and has resulted in severe eye disorders.. Promising results have been recorded when cortisone was used for retrolental fibroplasia, ap eye condition which may cause blindness in newborn infants. Another new drug, ACTH, is also effective in treating thise disorder. «, Many are now being kfept from permanent blindness by the fise of cortisone. ; ‘ QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS R.A.C.: Why should I constantly have tartar on my teeth? Answer: The cause of the excessive Vvcumula.tion of| tartar on -the teth is not known. It is true that some persons have more tatfar than others. There is no treatinenvof which I am aware, other than to have the tartar removed h' you* dviitnl at thrcr-iuouth jlHcrrajs. \
1 '
YOUNG MAN WITH A FUTURE J
KodGH XxJ'xV* road* /AL 3. ; ■
- 20 Years Ago I I TODAY 0 ■"■— "<> Dec. 28.—The Rev. A. R. Fledderjobaun gave the sermon at the funeral services for Rev. Ferntheil this morning. Rev. Thompson gave the eulogy. r i ' Newton D Baker of Cleveland, secretary of war during the World War, will give the address at the Wilson day meeting at Winchester tonight, Chris Eicher, county road commissioner, gives dinner for county officials ami employes at the People’s restaurant. John G. Noll, 9ff. of Huntington, father of Bishop Noll, died Saturday night. Bob Voglewede of Chicago is a holiday visitor here. j-; ...—?, ■ One of man’s oldest implements is the needle. Flint stone is made up almost entirely of silica. \ ■ The feminine name Aimee means “Beloved.”
p»|- ALICE R 055 COL.UER Khik Ftmturf SyndiewU. |
SYNOPSIS I Donald K«nt oo ii> way tram New Tort < to nia aiaier '• home in suburban Crealwooa. wnere tie is asaigned to teach a ntgti ectiooi stasa. diacovere lovely Anne Atwood. me xx*. Paraon’a daughter. Alter lour yean absence f college, Anne is returning to Crestwood. Wiu she be content to settle here, to endure the Msnse s genteel poverty? Her tnotner, Constance Atwood, wonders and worries. Reunion with her beloved parents is nappy indeed, out Anne ; resents meir frugal mode ot Ute. Donato twos tnai nia sister. Virginis Moore, ana her ausband. Philip, nave been called away briefly from home, so ne makes nimeelf known to metr next door netgboor. Parson Atwood. Here be is warmly welcomed oy the clergyman and ms wife, out lovely, naugnty Anne remains coldly Aloof. Anpe rebels secretly against ner clrcumstancarbar environment. She is ted up with hidehound convention, penny-pinching poverty, and so alone that night her thoughts turto to Joe Meiick. Crestwood's rich, pampered, eligible bachelor, who already had tried <o woo her. ‘ CHAPTER SIX “TO THINK,” Virginia Moore said to her husband, lifting her head from the barrel she was unpacking in the living room the next morning, “that we should land next door to a minister. \ Os all people!” Philip answered, ”1 <lpn*t see why that should bother you. "We never worried who or what our neighbors were in New York. Why should we here?” "It’s different in the country. In a suburb like this. Have you forgotten your small-town beginnings out tn. Ohio ? The way the two old dames next door to you used to peek out of their windows checking up on you? They knew, every night, exactly what time you got home from that loudmouthed Virginia Kent’s place.” “They must have lost a lot of sleep, then.” He grinned at her across the room. “You’re right. I’d forgotten. Well, so we’re next door to a minister. Shall I put the house on the market again? It ought not to be too hard to , dispose of it. It's a dam cute place.” a She shook her head, her finger at her lips, signalling a caution lest Donald hear them from upstairs. They had bought out here so that they could continue to make a home for her young brother who, ever since he had been left alone by their parents’ death at the tender age of ten, had lived with her, taking the place -of the children she had never had. l They had bought also, it is true, because they had talked yearningly of so doing each spring iince they had been married. But first there had been the excitement of finding themselves in the city, in Greenwich Village, the Mecca of their early dreams. Then inertia at the thought of upheaval; then Don’s college to pay for; then the war; , end then inflated prices. It had rcaUy be«a Donald s st curing a
IWTUB DAXLT DWOCRAT, DECATVB, INDIANA
JSHI INSUMCI # In California], Pvt. Robert L- Haggard, sen of Mr. and Mrs, Harvey Haggard of Decatur route 2, who entered service from Bluffton Dec. 17, has the following address: ' Pvt. Robert L. Haggard 1244078, Plat. 524 (A) Co., ’♦h Rec. Ting. Bn., San Diego 40, Calif. Haggard, who has been associated with the Jahn funeral home at Bluffton, graduated, from the Indianapolis school of nidrtuary science last .September. , ■ . Lbi%s£rich Oversea* Pvt. Norbert A. Lengerich hu.arrived safely: overseas and Is now stationed near Beoul. Korea’. His new address is': Pvt. Norbert A. Lengerich. I’.S. Co. A 44th Engr.. Const'.- Bn\, A.P.O. c o P.M., San Francisco, Calif, Pvt. Lengerich made , his home with p sister, Mis l>t|maV Scott in Monroeville prior to entering servicie last spring. , ’\ r --- Koenemann In Hospital Air. and Mrs. Theodore KoeiiemanA of route one. have received
teaching position in Crestwood that had given them at last the necessary push to action. Aloud, she answered with vehemence, “I should, say not! All my life I’ve wanted a little house with a big fireplace and an outside terrace. Don’t think I’nrtgoing to leave it the first time I get it Not if I were surrounded by ministers!** Philip left his task of removing books from cartons and arranging them tn the built-in bookedse in the corner. "You’re sure, now?" he then, groping again'more wildly, he shouted suddenly, “Whera did you put 4 the matches ?" She straightened up a second time from the barrel she was emptying. She was big, too —a vital, vigorous woman whose deep voice ordinarily held a singing quality. But/now it roared in reply. "I didn’t put them anywhere!” “You must have! They ware here a minute ago'.”
“Not a minute ago! You’ve had them sincte! Where did you leave them? You’re the one that’s the chain smoker—” \
•‘You never know where anything is! And you always contrive to blame me —” Donald caine running down the stairs at the sound of their l bellowing. \ ■ / V “Hey! Cut it!” he said. “Here are some matches, Phil.” He tossed them to his brother-in-law and then glared at them both. “The way you two rave! Do you want our neighbors to think we’re a pack of hoodlums? Not fit to associate with? Well, just keep that up.” y Philip, shaking out tiis match light, stared thoughtfully at Donold. "Thanks for an idea,” he said, and glanced at Virginia in quick questionHer astute gray eyes, in the open friendliness of her face, twinkled in response. "A possibility,’’she murmured, nodding. i Donald inspected them both, a frown cutting his forehead. "Look, you two. I don’t want any funny business. I told you last night those people are all right. You’ll enjoy them ” "Enjoy them! Lambkin.” Virginia’s tone now was dulcet. "Just because your natural predatory instincts have been stirred by the daughter of the family, don’t expect us——” He made a Violent gesture. "The daughter of the family doesn’t interest me in the slightest. It’s her father. He’s something. He’s really something. You’ll like hinj. You’ll like Mr *. Atwood, tpo. He hesitated, search-
Buys Health Bond The Decatur Mooae lodge has voted purchase of a $lO health
bond, officials of f h • Christmas campaign in Adams county announced todhy. Ail proceeds from the annual Christmas seal sales are used in the fight on tuberculosis and to provide free clinics and otherwise carry on the . • - k.
N«lp fight* TB B>y Christmas Seals
tight against the “white plague?’ The sale is conducted by the Adams county tuberculosis association. .A- ? \ 4 ! — •ft ’ a I'* the address of their son. who is confined to the hispital with a fractured knee Pfc. Delbert Koenemann, U.S. 65112242, Ward 46, U.S. Army Hospital. Fort Jackton. S.C, Duty Aboard Carrier A ; fA e (jg) James L. Egley, USN, son of Mrs. Alvin Eglcy and husband of Mrs. Naur ecu FullenkampEgley of 315 North Second St. of this city, has reportedr for duty aboard the aircraft carrier USS llindoro at Norfolk, Va. The* Miudord is doing anti-submarine work gs part of the Atlantic Fleet. Lt., who first entered the naval Hervice Sept. 16, 1942, received his commission at the U.S. naval air Station, Pensacola, Fla. . -—* —~~ ' = c' ■ j » —■■ _' | Household Scrapbook , BY ROBERTA LEK / , I /> ; Ecru Curtains ■ if ecru curtains become faded Ufter repeated washings, they may \be retinted by adding a clear solution of tea to the last rinse water, pulling,the quantity, of tea used to |he shade of ecru ; desired. Usually ' a wet fabric is twice as deep in hLilor as the dry ope will be. P Laundry Bag j J -Use an ordinary wooden coat hanger \for the top bf the laundry , hag. and sew the goods neatly over) this hanger. Then make a slit near the top to insert the soiled cloth As. ' Cuticle Softener Ordinary table butter is effective for softening the cuticle around the finger nails. , Go to the cuurcu or your cbolc» .next Sunday..
ing for the exact word. "They’re r£al. They’re more than that, though. They’re — well, they’re gay!’’ - “Gay!” Virginia repeated. “A minister gay?” She lifted a band and laid it on Don’s foiehead. “The heat has affected sm,” she said gravely to Philip. “How about a i little cooling draught of beer? Or something or something. Eor ai| of us, I mean. I don’t want; to bother Mary, though. She’s having conniptions, as it is, over the smallhess of the kitchen. Will you it, Phil?” \, “Happy thought.” Philip started forward, then halted. “Where did you put the stuff?" “In the refrigerator, of course.” A few moments later, over foaming glasses that they carried out to the screened porch, they returned to the subject of their neighbors. “Seriously, Don,” Virginia said, “no matter what they’re like, we are oof interested in them. We have no time for them, in the first place. We’re busy people. But even if we had, we don’t want to know them. We don’t even want to meet them. We’re not their. type, that’s all,” "The idea,” Doh said, with angry impatience, “that you professional people can only mingle with and find pleasure in other professional —" 1 Virginia interrupted. “That isn’t the point. The point is, we’d shock them. We’d upset them. We’re entirely too unconventional. Look it the way we don’t care how we dress ” She glanced at Philip’s bare torso. “And the way we don’t care what we say. Anc the way we drink beer. Also, look at the way we don’t go to church And,” she added, with emphasis “we have no Intention of being reformed in that regard. We refuse to expose ourselves to any ' coercion whatsoever along « that line. We’d just be rude. And you know wc can be rude.” She shook her “No, the best thing is t 6 stay completely clear of all of them.” "But you’ll have to meet their once, anyway. They’ve already skid they’re coming to call as soon as, you’re settled.” \ Virginia sighed, her glance ahove her glass scrutinizing Dona|d sharply. Was he interested ir that girt? Or wasn’t he? It would make a difference, of course. “Oh, I’ll meet therm I suppose, sooner or later,” she conceded knowing she would discover thea the extent of her brother's feel itigs. "There's probably no duck ing that ” .
[THE A SPEAKS f * S* .J Unions f SuM.r Schad Unnm | j SCRIPTURE: Joshua 23—24. . DEVOTIONAL READ IN O: JoUMia Mt 14—IS. The People's Choice Leeson for December 80. IMil WITH New Year’s* Day right around the comer we should take stock of ourselves. \ What is to become of us as a nation? Can we survive in thia atomic ege? Is our
future curve upward or down? The answer to such questions lies in the answer to another one: What will the people choose? The most important fact about any people, at any prisis in their Lue,. is not what they &ave, not
Dr. Forenoon
what they have <Ume or accomplished or enjoyed, not what they have at the present moment in power or in possessions. It le net their reputation, their income, their history. It is simply their choices, their However grand a nation's past may be, however good their present may be, wrong decisions can destroy everything. What will the people choose? ** * ’ Democracy Means Free Choice qpHERE a're some interesting 7 *■• parallels between the United States, or Canada, today, and Israel of more than three millenniums ago. It was a little nation, so new it could scarcely be called a nation, so small it . could be lost in one of our big oities. But when it was beginning its time in Palestine, it was much nearer a true democracy /than it was in the more famous and glamorous times of David and Solomon. There was at first no hereditary monarchy, the people had no precedents to jo by, they had to pick their way through an uncertain world, much as we do only on a smaller scale. In Joshua’s time there had been a military first Moses and then Joshua- done most of the thinking for me people. But when he grew oln, 'Joshua knew that in the futiire/the people would have to think foi/themselves. When the people do /think, it is democracy; when ttyfey think only what they are told to think, it is a police state. Now Joshua knew that the main choice before the people was basically religious. As he put It: Whom will you serve? • • • A High Way and a Low •pHE choice was not merely between good \And bad theology. If you choose a iSod you choose his way of life. The way of the true God was the high way, other ways were low. The Israelites’ God was the God of the Law, the God of pure strong living. 'Hie gods of the Canaanites were pictured as golden calves, brass he-goats. There is a world of difference between a man, or a nation, whose highest thoughts cannot rise above the level of the animals they worship, and a man or nation whose highest thoughts . ’ are expressed in the hotness, justice and mercy of the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. If any one has a sneaking feeling that all religions are really much the same, let him rememMr what happened in Palestine. The peoples who chose the animal-gods simply rotted away, leaving few traces in the dust of history. The nation that (not everybody, not all the time, but on the whole) chose the true and living God, has made an impression on ipstory such as no nation so small has ever made. Idols of Today > THE Living God still challenges us, a free people. The words of Joshua might stip be spoken in this 20th century: Choose this day whom you will servo. Millions make the wrong choico. Some worship the idol called success •> at - any - price; some fall <h>wn -and worship Mammon; others worship popular opinion; others will do anything for is in a liquor bottle; others give their all for the goddess of sex, others for the "great god luck.*’ The dismissal es ninety cadets from West Point for cheating (who set them the example?), the revelatteas of the Kefauver Crime Committee, the strangle-hold gamblers have an .< national affairs, the crowded divorce courts and race tracks, the ravages of liquor and drugs even on young boys and girts, the general foggy contusion about what is right and what is wrong, the prevalence of the bare-faced lie in public Mfe—all ' nfost cadse a thetigMfol person to aek: What kind of is ( our country making? r Can we be called a God-fearing nation or do w® also still worship idols? * - (CoftriiM 'MI b-r the UivUteo •» Christian Ertncstioa NaHoss! ■ Cet-nel! th* r.hursftw C>»ts f at t>* Vnit*# SUtea. of Amenc*. SleleaacA by WWC Featarea.)
Rural Church News Rivarre Circuit United Brethren in Christ William 4 Elizabeth Ensminger Pastors Mt. Zion st Bobo « 9:30 a m. Sunday School. 16:30 a.in. Class meeting. , 7:00 p.m. Special Christmas program. Wed. Eve. 7 p.m. prayer meeting. Mt. Victory 9:00 a.m. Worship service witn Bishop Eara M, Funk pleaching. 10:00 a.m. Sunday school. Wed. Eve. 7 p.m. Cottage prayer meeting- 1 /V ' Pleasant Grove 9:30 a. m. Sunday school. 10:30 a.rti. Worship service with Bishop Ezra M. Funk preaching. Wed. 7 p. m.. Prayer meeting. God wants men big enough to be small enough to be used’of Him. .. — — " / Wood Chapel E,U.B. Albert N. Btraley, pastor Sunday .school 9:30 (EST). Clarence Abbott, superintendent. Lesson, “The People Make Their Choice,” a series on the history of the Hebrew people/ /A.. Morning worship 10:30 a.m. Sermon theme, “Taking Inventory.” Midweek prayer service Wednesday, Orville Jewteil, class leader. Preble Circuit Methodist \ F. H. Kise, Pastor ML Pleasant Sunday school 9:80 a.m. Worship service 10:80 a.m. Leo King, Sr., Supt. V' . Monroe Methodist W. L. Hall, Minister 9:30, Morning Worship. 10:30, Sunday School. 6:15, The MYF. 7, Evening service. Monday f\om Bto 12, Watch Night. Eight to Communion service. Nine to ten, the Rev. Samuel Emrick. 10 to 11, refreshments and fellowship. 11 to 12, recreation. Young people in charge. Wed. Prayer meeting and choir at 7:30 & 8:15. Thursday 2, WBCB Executive with Mrs. JVinteregg. Thursday 7:30, WSCS ge leral meeting in the church annex. . St. Luks Evan. A Reformed Honduras 4/ H. H. Meckstroth, minister 9_ Worship service with Holy Communion. \ 10 Sunday school. 2 Catechetical instruction. \ January 1, 1.-30 p.ni. New Year Day worship servit e followed by the annual congregational business meeting; St. Paul-Wine Hester Circuit United Brethren In Christ Stanley Psters, Pastor St. Paul’Church Sunday school 9:15. Christian Endeavor 7:00. Evangelistic Hour 7:30. Hour of Prayer and Bible study, Wednesday 7. Meeting of the Administrative board immediately after the hour. Winchester Church Sunday School 9:30. Morning worship service 10:30 Hour of Prayer and Bible study, Thursday 7 (study St. John 2 this week). Meeting of the Administra tive board immediately after the prayer service. • , « ... .? \ , ' Union Chapel Church Evangelical United Brethren Lawrence T. Norris- pastOr 9:30 Sunday school, Wendell Miller supt. Warren Nidlinger, asst. lb: 20 Worship service. Evening Service 6:45 Junior C. E- Rowena Merriman, presient. 6:46 Adttlt C. K. Earl Chaie, presiant. \ p ■ 6:45 Youth Fellowship, Betty Miller, president. ' 7:30 Worship service. ' _7:30 Prayer meeting. Qnier Merriman leader. 1 , • Cash Day“ January 6th will be our cash day for the axx-ordfeu doors for our Sunday school rooms. Youth Revival 7:30 -each evening beginning Jan. 27'continuing for two weeks v.i#h Rev. Blanchard Amstutz of Adburn, lad., as our Evangelist, and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Chase as the music dilators. Pleasant Mills Baptist Robert Schrock, minister Lowell Noll, S.S. Supt. 9:30* a.m. Sunday school. 10:30 a.m. Worship service. Pleasant Dale i Church of the Brethren John D. Mishler, pastor Sunday school at 9::30 am. with Mr' l Floyd Roth rs general superintended and Mrs. Frieda Yager as primary superintendent. \ Morning, worship at 10:3o a.m. Sunday evening services begin at 7 p m. At both njprning and evening services, the pastor will speak on subjects of the Christian's responsibilities' jn the world/and to the world of today. Wednesday cVoning at 7 p.m. is prayer service and Bible study. The Men s churns meet at 8 p.m each Wednesday evening.
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 28, 19&i
Youth Speaker - .’i Cednc Seara, for the past few years vice-president of Youth tor Cnrist International in charge of the upper central region, will speak at the county-wide Youth for.JGhrist watchnight service at the First Meononite church from , 9 to 12 o’clock Years eve. “Regions Beyond,” a sound dolor , film, will be shown during the service, which will be interspersed with a period of fellowship, followed by light refreshments. .3 ; ‘ t j • ’ I r —. , , .....a.w... I, , usmiliim I|III. '■ The Christian church has the only answer to the needs of a world in and turmoil. As you read this line toddy, right now, determine to follow him, who is the way, tha truth and the Hfe. Read the Bible, attend church, know God. V ' —J i > Salem 'Evangelical and Reformed Church Mile North of Magley Rev. H. E, Settlage, mlnlatek 9:00 Sunday school, with eWbvs for every age group. | 10:00 Worship Service. Sermon ,topic: “First Things First." Tuesday, Jan. 1-r New Year’a day service, followed by Annual Congregational meeting. " ;' / Wednesday 3:30 Children’s Choir rehearsal. Wednesday 7:30 Adult choir rehearsal. Thursday, Jan. 3—Regular Ladies Aid pieeting. CHURCH NEWS Watchnight Service Union Watcbnigh't services’ will be held at Mt. Zion United Brethren church as /Bobo Monday evening, beginning at 9 o’clock and continuing into the new year. The Rev. Harold Bpsehore will be the speaker and the film “Lord of All” will be shown. Special music will be provided throughout the entire service. Mt Ziop The Christmas program at Mt. Zon church at Boho, postponed last Sunday, wlil be given Sunday at 7 p. m. In addition to recitations by the children, » pageant. “The Htory of Christmas” will be presented. Roman Sprunger has /barge of the lighting, Hazel Chronister the ’’costumes, and Dollie Sprunger the music. The committee "is composed of Elizabeth Ensminger, Spinahtha Manlier, Rupt Edgell and Hazel Brunner. - Biahop To Speak Bishop Ezra M. Flink, of Hunl--nigton, will speak at| Mt. Victory\ church at 9 a. m. and at Pleasant Grove at 10.-30 a. m. He is senior. bishop of the United Brethren in Christ church and is now bishop of this district. ■ '■ —- ■ 0 < I Modern Etiquette I BY ROBERTA LEE 0 , — -0 .rs Q. When one is to attend a musi-i cale or other seme such performance in a home, and knows lm r cannot stay for the wbpLe performance, what should he do? A. He should, explain this beforehand to his hostess, and then t>it ‘ as near the door as possible. It is 1. discourteous to the performers to ' leave before the conclusion of anV j particular offering. , | Q. What does it signify when a neighbor fails to return a first 1 call within six weeks? , I A. It indicates that the neighbor does not w-i»h to form a friendship. It is rude for one not to return a first call within two wpeks. Q. How long are the bread and butter plates left on the dinn< r table? A. Until the Jimp to serve the l dessert. . /t/ . —jJ — * J
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> Venire Issued | The clerk of the court was ord- I ered to issue a venire for a petit g jury returnable January 8 for the trial of Hazel Follis vs' Lest* Dlmmick, a complaint for datnag* suit venued to Adams cireu.f court from Allen county superior court two. t Motor Court* Jn 1332, there were only 600 meter court* in the whole nation. Today there are 30,000 motor ee'irto •n everafe of 23 room* to efch eewrt
