Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 75, Decatur, Adams County, 28 March 1952 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

12 Persons Killed i In Tehran Rioting Communist Youths In Demonstration Tehran, Iran, Mar. 28—(UP). — Twelve persons were reported killed and an estimated 100 Injured today when police and militia battled 10,000 Communsit youths demonstrating against alleged use of "germ warfare” by x U. S. forces - in Korea. Ploice said they lost two men Pilled. The Communists said 10 demonstators were killed; Twenty policemen were seriously injured, police authorities said. General street fgihting with sticks and stones turned into gun ’ battles when rioters wrested rifles und pistols from polcip arid militia. •Police said 50 Communists were arrested. The mob turned their captured weapons on the government forces in pointblank, fire, supported by a barrage of paving stones hurled by other youths. Two policemen were killed and injured in the first ' .

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fusillade from the rioters. The Communists gathered in Fawzieh square for their protest rally and the troublo started when they tried to parade leflj masse through the streets. U ? I The mob smashed through police cordons around the square arid extra police and; armed militia vere rushed in as the Communists poured into adjacent streets, shouting pro-Stalin pro-Com-munist slogans. Police chief Gen. Hossein panespuhr announced the! polk:e\-asual-txes after control wais restored. ki ; ' ' ' '"' WIWT I 1 I Herman J. Eckrich || Suicide VicHm f Although a formal verdict was not relumed today, j Dr. Edgar N. Mendenluill. Allen cjounty ' deputy coroner, said that Herman J. Eckrich’s death “was suicidal.” Ectrich. 45, president sand, general manager of Peter Eckrich 4b £ons., Inc., meat packers of FoH Wayne, was found dead in hjs room at his hpme. There was a shotgun Wound in his chest and a 12-gat|ge shptgun was found near the body. ’ Funeral services fcjr the packing company executive will; be held Monday at St. June's , Catholic church. — , , , ' ;

Revival Services Al Church Os God Rev. Mervin Taylor Will Be Evangelist The Rev. Mervin E. Taylor, son of Mr. arid Mrs. Leßoy M. Taylor of 568 N. Seventh street, Decatur, is to be the evangelist at the revival services, beginning Sunday at 9:30 a.m. at the Church of God ' • Ji ■ ' -'Mo. ? on Cleveland street, and. will continue until April 13. Rev. Taylor will speak every evening, with the exception of Saturday, at 7:30 p.m. Rev. Taylor was born April 30. 1925, and attended Kimsey grade school. Blue Creek township, Monroe high school, and Decatur high school, having graduated from Decatur in 1943. Rev. Taylor is a veteran of World War u, having served in the navy for 32 months, being hon orably discharged June 1, 1948., He is married to the former Marilyn Carroll, and they are the parents of two boys and one girl. They reside at 104 Oak street. Decatur. Rev. Taylor preached his first sermon at New Corydon and his first pastorate was at MunsOn Chapel. Roanoke. He pastured chdrches at Keystone. Roll, and Poneto, while attending Taylor University at Upland, and in June 1951, he graduated from Taylor, receiving an. A B. degree. Immediately upon graduation 1 from Taylor, he entered the evangelistic field. His first tour took him to the west coast, and since returning, he has held two successful revivals at Hamilton, Ohio, one at New Philadelphia, Ohio, Convo>.\Ohio, Van Wert. Ohio, and Ossian. The public is invited to attend al Ithese services. h \ WEEK END SPECIALS 2 lbs. LARD 425 c with SI.OO Meat Order OUR OWN LARD GROUND . BEEF/lb. _\ 49C FRESH SIDE .1 3 lbs. SI.OO TUBE TOMATOES .-, 19c MINUTE STEAK, lb. „ 69c ROUND STEAK, lb 69c T-BONE STEAK, lb. __ 69c BEEF ROAST, lb. 59c BOILING BEEF, 3 lbs. SI.OO FRESH SAUSAGE, lb. 39c LEAN PORK STEAK, lb 49c VEAL ROUND STEAK A- tt». __ 79c VEAL CHOPS, lb 69c Open Saturday till 10:00 P.M. SUDDUTH MEAT MARKET So. 13th St. Phone 3-2706

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Rural Church News UNION CHAPEL \ ° Evangelical United Brethren Lawrence T. Norrie, Pastor 9:30 Sunday school. Wendell Miller, Supt., Warren »• Nidliuger, Ass’t. 10:20 Worship service. i Evening Services r 6:45 Junior C. E. Rowena Merri- ; man, Pres. 6:45 Adult C.E. Earl Chase, f Pres. 1 6:45 Youth Fellowship, Betty Miller, Pres. | 7:30 Worship service, i Wednesday Jflvening 7:30 Prayer meeting. Qmer Merriman leader. Local Conference Period April 20th will be our next local conference. We will observe Holy Communion in the morning service. and the business session in the evening after the worship service. . x. F. H. Kite, pastor Mt; Ple’asant, Beulah Chapel. Sunday school 9:30 a.m. No\ evening service, we will go L ’’.o Decatur, to hear Dr. > Paul F. I Douglass. '| : I i Our fourth quarterly conference, I Sunday afternoon at Pleasant Valey. time 2:30. Please see that all reports are k in. and attend thlk meeting, it is • important. \ , ? Leo King. Sr., Supt. Mt, Pleasant. Eugene Sommer. Supt. Beulah ’ Chapel, ‘ : i jp _ i' ; Pleasant Valley Wesleyan Methodist Church G. R. Shaw, paster 9:30 Sunday school, our goal for attendance this Sunday is 70. Bob Bailey, supt. 10:30 Morning worship, message by the pastor. .7:00 Young peoples service. Lead-, j 9F Norma Jean Bailey. 7:30 Evangelistic service, message by the pastor. 7:30 Wednesday evening, prayer and praise service. Leader: Leo Sprunger. St. Luke Evan. A Reformed Honduras H. H. Meekstroth, minister 9:00 Worship service. 10:00 Sunday school. 2:00 Catechetical instruction. 6:30 Youth Fellowship. Glen Stralun. leader. Topic. ”The Christian and His Car.” Wednesday 7:30. Girls’ Guild at 1 ibe home of Velma Strahm. Mary • Ellen Schnepp will be the lesson leader. \ — 4. • SALEM EVANGELICAL and REFORMED Church Mile North of Maqley H.E. Settlage, minister Sunday 9:00 Sunday school. Classes for every age group. 10:00 Worship service. Sermon ‘‘The More Glorious Gift.” 7:30 Lenten service. Sermon. “The Angry Christ” offering for “New Church Building Fund.” Tuesday 7:30 Guild j Meeting. . « Wednesday 3:30 Childrens Choir ; Rehearsal. 7:30 Adult choir rehearsal. Thursday regular atl-day meeting : of Ladies Aid. '■ ' ’ ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH Friedheim A. A. Fenner, pastor 9:00 a.m. Examination of Catechumens. 10:30 German service. Monday, Ti3o Church' council mpets. Tuesday, 7:30 Walther League meeting. k 7:39 Male chorus. f f Wednesday, all - day meeting Tabea Society. 7:30, Lenten service. ‘‘lndebted to Christ for Endurance.” i Thursday 7:30 Bible class. “God’s . Law aud the Christian Life.™. Friday, 7; SO Lenten service. “Jesus’ Capture.”

KWianjg J BtT ~ lntwna»K.i4l I’nrfarn. Sunday Schoo) l<Mta» ' SCRIPTURE: r.uk« lil-Ss A«U 111-4: IS: e-10; rrr»; at:l-10; CalQMtew 4:M; « Ttafttby 4:11. DEVOTIONAL READING: Luka 41. Doctor's Hobby Lesson fee March M, 1»U t’sOCTOR Luke Is a man to whom L* we are all indebted- Without him, we in the church would have lost some ot our finest hymns, the “Magnificat” and the “Nunc Dimittis;” without him we might never

have heard of the story es that first Christmas night when the shepherds watched and the angels sang. He was the only Qospel writer who remembered to tell us those matchless parables, the Lost Sheep and the Prodigal Son, and many another.,

It is only frorp him that we know of Jesus’ prayer at Calvary,—“Father, forgive them; they know not ivhat they do." Furthermore, it is I i only Luke who conceived and wrote the book of Acts. • • • . Some Hobbies Are Famous •THE interesting thing is that Dr.: * • Luke was not a professional writer. He was a professional physician. AU the writing he did was what we today might even call a hobby; that is, he got no money for it so far as we know, he just wrote because he loved to write. Very likely he was a good doctor; . he is called the “beloved physician.” and we hope that enough people who loved hiih also paid their bills promptly so that he could make bis living. But it was not the doctoring that endeared him to the church of Christ. It was what he dig in hto spare J time, tt was hie missionary wort and his writing, it is the Gpepel of Luke and the book of Acta that are his main claim to fame. Luke is not the first man nor the last to accomplish more by a “sideline” than by his main job. We remember David in the Old Testament, whose rise to power began not with his sheep-herding, which no doubt he did to perfection, but with his music, which his father may well have thought a waste of time. We remember Marcus Aurelius the emperor not for his military campaigns. which were masterly, but for; the “meditations” he wrote in snatches of spare time on those campaigns. We remember the Apostle Paul not for the churches he founded tmost of which folded) but for the dozen or so letters he managed to squeeze into his busy evenings. \ Other Doctors LUKE was not the last Christian doctor who has found in what, for some, might he a “side-line** his finest means of service and best source of happiness. Dr. Howard Kelly of Baltimore was a cancer specialist of no smaU fame; but he was even better known as a scientist who not only saw no conflict between SC Jence and religion, but who brought his skill and his science to the service of Christ. There was another doctor, a surgeon in a midwestern city, not many years ago. who was ready to retire. He had enough to live on in comfort, and the life of a successful surgeon in a great city is a wearing one: But instead of retiring, he .went out to China, and in a remote province he spent hfs “retiring” xears at his own expense, hardly knowing a word of Chinese, but having the time pf his life and ren- I dering himself if possible more nearly Indispensable out there than he had ever been back in the states. Again there was the surgeon “ Alexis Carrel, who with another scientist first succeeded in keeping living tisaoe (a chicken's heart) alive for years beyond : l|te time when it “should have” died,—a surgeon who also believed in the power of prayer and whose book “Man the Unknown” is valuable aa combining the scientific and the Christian view of man. Or there was Dr. I, J, Archer of Chicago and North Carolina, who operated two sanitariums more easily than some doctors’can run one office, and yet who found his life's deepest satisfactions in the Sunday school class he taught for ■years. ■■ f • • • Life Is More Than Making a Living MANV othieri besides doctors have made the same discovery. What is a “hobby,” after all? It oan be only an elaborate twiddling of the thumbs, sometlwig to “kill time”— horrible thought? It cap be something dpne merely to relieve nervous pressure. It can be something pot really worth doing, But what Dr/Luke found, countless others, including some readers of these lipes, have .also found: that eveq when we have to spend most i of dur time making a living, we can I dedicate our "spare” lime, under God, to making life.

FLtAIANT MILLS METHODIST I Harley T. Shady, pastor Sflnftay School at 9:30 a m. Meriting worship at 10:30 a.m. l*rayer meeting on Thursday evening at 7:00 p. m. j I * SALEM METHODIST CHURCH Harley T. Shady, Pastor " Sunday School at 9:00 a. m. Evening service at 7:00 jp.m. Prayer Meeting on Wednesday evening at 7:00 p. m. Pleasant Dale C Peasant Milla Baatist Robert Schrock, pfator Lowell Noll, S.S. Supt. 9:|o am. Sunday school. 10:30 Lm, Worship service, sermon by the pastor, j \ 7f 00 Children's service. Mrs. Schrock, leader. - | . 7:00 p.m. B.Y.F. 7:|o p.m. Service by visiting Y-F. PREBLE CIRCUIT METHODIST Churoh of the Brethren John D. Mishler, pastor. : Sunday school at 9:90 ajp. with Mr. Floyd Roth as superintendent >nd Mr. Frieda Yager as primary lireclor. Morning worship at 10:30 ».m. with the pastor bringing the mesage “No Hiding Flace." The adults and children of the church vill meet st the Kirkland school for he(r S.S. and morning worship, j This Sunday the Middle Indiana CBYF will hold a district meeting at the Pleasant Dale church. The Sunday School lesson will be taught by Mrs. E. R. Fisher of Huntington, Indiana. This will be at 9:30 a.m. At the 10:30 am. service the speaker will be-Dr. R. H. Miller, bead ot ■ the Bible department of Manchester College, N. Manchester, Indiana. Afternoon services will begin at 1:30 p.m. The evening meeting will be inspirational in nature and will begin at 7:00 p.m. Others are invited- to attend.. Prayer service and Bible study each Wednesday evening at 7:00 p.ip. followed by Men's Chorus practice at 8:00 p.m. Lent is a period ot squl searching preparation to celebrate the victory of Christ over sin and the grave. Attend the church of your choice and accept the responsibilities of Christian service. Enlist others. Monroe Friends Church Vernon Riley, pastor Sunday school 9:30 a m. j r Morning worship 10:30 a.m. Victory prayer band meeting under direction of the Rev. J. R. j Meadows Sunday afternoon at 2 o’clock. Spe< ial singing, special prayer for soldier boys. Evening service 7 p.m. The Rev Roy Johnson, evangelist in the. revival now in progress, will bring , the messages in all these services. Services each night next week at 7 o'clock. The Church of Christ 119 Na. Second St *p. (Above Publix Store) Emost Lohman, superintendent Loyd Rhodes A Floyd Rupert Elders 9:30 Church service. A selection by DeMarbelle and The Beautiful Garden of Prayer will be the prelude and offertorj’ played hy Mrs. Floyd Rupert. 10:90 Comm union service, The muming sermon will be given by Harold Powell, minister. 10:30 Sunday school: ■ prayer meeting, 7:30 p.m. Wed. at'the home of Mr. and Mrs. James Kitchen. Several delegates arp attending the Preaching Rally of (he Churches of Christ at the Church pt Christ in Garrett Rivarre Circuit United Brethren In Christ ! ! f William Ensminger, pastor Mt. Zion at Bobo 9:30 Sunday school. ■ 11 10:30 Class meeting.; 7 , p.m;. Evangelistic services iOtfev. Fraaklin Norris is bringing he messages during the revival yriich will continue all week and if the Lord leads until Easter. In ‘hese services we feel the Jgjwer □f divine love. Inspirational singing every night. I; i Mt. Victory on State Line I ![» Sunday school. ! 10 Worship service.

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Wed. •venlng- at 7 p.m. prayer meeting. ; r ’ Pleasant Grove 9:30 Sunday school. 10:30 Worship service. 7 Christian Endeavor. ? Wed. evening at 7 p.m. prayer meeting. ; ■ Christian friends pray foil our revival which will start April 21 with Bishop Bsra M. as evangelist. >. : II |, A Prayer of David Brainerd “God gave me special assistance in prayer; I wrestled arith much sweetness; intercession Was made delightful employmemnt to me.” Weed Chapel E.U.B. Albert N. Straley, paster Sunday school 9:30 a.m. (BST). Clarence Abbott, superintendent Lesson, “Luke, Physician and His torian.’’ \ Morning worship 10:30 a.m. Sermon theirie, “Redeeming Love,” a continuation of the Lenten meditations at this season. ” Mid-week service of prayer Wednesday 8 p.m. Class leader, Orville Jewell. “Let us npt forsake the assembling of ourselves togeth BT. PAUL . WINCHESTER Circuit \ United Brethren In Christ , Stanley Peters, pastor \ BL Paul Church A group will ’te with us from the Zanesville U. B. church to present the meaning and : need of Self-Denial, at 9:15. Easter season is a time when we can deny ourselves others might hear the gospel. Bunday school 9:15. h Hour of Prayer and Blible study for everyone, Wednesday at Come and pray "With us. i Regular meeting of the; Administrative board immediately afte-. the prayer hour; Winchester Chup:h Sunday school 9:39. Class meeting 19:30. Come and join in thi service w|th the group fro rnthe Janesville U.B. church at 7. The;r will be bringing special music and then present the meaning an<i need of Self-Denial. • s Hour of prayer and BijbJ6 study, I Thursday at 7. I Regular AdminUtratiye board meeting immediately following the prayer service. I 1 ' i'MSBMnBEMXEMaRKM

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■n ; '"W — , ~.r . .: . a METHODIST I LENTEN SPEAKER ~*— SUNDAY, 7:30 P.M. Dr. Paul A. Douglass '" ; . i . ’' L/ 11 Veers President American University Washington, D. C. Former State Senator, Vermont. ■ I ' b • ■•'•s ’f ■ - ' • r, ; 4/ ■si J i Member of Bar of U. 8. Supreme Court. ! -• 4 r i' ' ■;■■-. • i •■ • i.. Delegate to Inter-Church Conference I| , ' In Switzerland In 1952. i i ! Music by youth choir CARRY-IN SUPPER at 6:00 P. M. I ' I : '/ r ? ' J ' ” •- ' \

FRIDAY, MARCH 28. 1952

Monroe Methodist W. L. Hall, minister 9:30, Morning worship.; Iff: 30, Sunday school. 6.30, The MYF. No evening service. Tues. 2:00, WSCS executive at the home of Mrs. Karl (Ray. \ Wed. 7:39, Choir rehearsal. | Thur. 7:39, WSCS monthly meeting. I ——-- j . CHURCH NH*i Decatur Missionary Thb Decatur Missionary church will be host to a group of Hawaiian young people Sunday.. They are all enrolled as students Os the Fort Wayne Bible College, receiving •heir education and preparation ;o return to their own people as missionaries on the Islands. Most of these young people have come out of the Buddhist religion and many Os their parents are still followers of that religion. They will take part in the 19 a. 7 m. worship service and In the 7 p. m. M. Y. F. and in the 7:39 evangelistic service. Among those coming will be Mr, and Mrs. GiJbert Williams. Williams will lie the speaker of the day. He is a fluent dynamic speaker. Oth- • ers of the group will sing and give cheir testimonies. ( ■7f The public is invited to these services. 1 TJ' Bethany Church i ; John Larney, of Winona Lake, chairman of the Indianaprohibition committee, will speak it the Gethany Evangelical United Brethren church Sunday evening at 7 o’clock. It wiH be his second appearance of the day. inj Decatur, as he will speak at titejChurch ot ’he Nazarene Bunday morning. ■ ■ - ADVERTISEMENT — ' LEG PAINS, RHEUMATIC PAINS, HEADACHE, DIZZINESS, Are often a sign that kidneys need attention. If you have these or burning, scanty passages. ; Ask your druggist for WOOLLEY’S K. K. TABLETS 50c At All Drug Stores Take as directed >