Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 133, Decatur, Adams County, 5 June 1964 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
MEXICAN (Continued from Page One> got out to take pictures — just Ralph and I — the others stayed safe in the car. Running From Spider Ralph threw a rock and hit the spider and it started right for him at a pretty good ..clip. You should have seen us run! That was enough spider-watching for us! We also saw some 6-10 inch armored legged worms crossing the highway, looking like moving catalpa pods. At Sabinas Hidalgo, where we stopped for supper, they told us that the spider was a tarantula. very rare, but coming down to the road for water. They are deadly poison, and take many lives of the peons who live in the desert area. We spent quite a bit of time at supper, and started on about dusk, not forgetting to fill up with gasoline at the last station until we reached Monterrey, 60 miles away. And we arrived, finally, worn out and tired, about 9 p.m. We could have easily been there three hours earlier, if we hadn t stopped that long in San Antonio for sightseeing. Miss Adinq Sprunger Is Taken Bv Death Miss Adina Sprunger. 81, of Berne, died Thursday at the Peabody memorial home in North Manchester following an illness of three months. Surviving are two sisters, Misses Zilla and Elda Sprunger, of Berne. Funeral services will be held at 10 a.m. Monday at the First Mennonite church in Berne, with burial in MRE cemetery. Friends may call at the Yager funeral home in Berne.
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Lutheran School To Close This Evening Closing services for this year’s vacation Bible school will be held in Zion Lutheran church, 11th and Monroe, tonight at 7 o’clock. The program will be led by children from each of the school’s departments,. Pupils, their parents, and friends are invited. “God. My Country, and I" has been the theme of this year’s school. An enrollment high of 286 was reached. This included 218 children and 68 staff members. Smith Snively was the superintendent. Mrs. Marlow Schieferstein was the secretarytreasurer. Department leaders were Mrs. Sherman Arnold, Mrs. David Ebeling, Miss Claudia Caston. Mrs. Louis Jacobs, Mrs. Smith Snively, Mrs. Richard Ludwig, and Mrs. Walter Fink. Expenses Are Filed Bv Two Candidates Two primary election candidates filed their expense statements Thursday with the county clerk—the final day to file. Clerk George M. Bair, after rechecking those already filed, said that a few candidates have still not filed their statements. Filing Thursday afternoon were Clark W. Smith, $lB. and John E. Doan, no expense. Smith was elected to the Adams Central school board and Doan was the unopposed Republican candidate for county coroner. Rev. A. H. Sholty, defeated in his bid for the Democratic nomination fourth district representative nomination by Max Hobbs, filed, via mail, a statement showing $335 in expenses incurred during the campaign. Geneva Youth Turned To Juvenile Court A 16-year-old Geneva youth taken into custody by the sheriffs department Thursday evening has been released to' the custody of his parents, and will be referred to the juvenile court. The youth was apprehended for driving an automobile through some fields east of Geneva on state road 116 recently. Some of the fields had crops planted in them. In addition, the car the youth was operating was reported to have no license plates, and the youngster was operating the vehicle without a driver’s license.
...He Forgot One Thing He was prepared in every way but one. All his affairs were in order —his investments, his insurance. In only one respect he failed to relieve his family of a sad responsibility: He neglected his family memorial program. This is a matter so frequently put off because of unfamiliarity. Consult with us without obligation on all details of your memorial program. Ask us about the famous Rock of Ages 4-Way Guarantee of Protection. LINDBAM W This. Rock of Ages f HP 1 Trade-Mark Seal is | Ui |R etched incon spicu- \ / ously into every genu* ine Rock of Ages monument. Trade-Mark See Us Now for a Personalized Memorial. We have four colors of Rock of Ages to choose from. Call Dale Liby for appointment. Liby Monuments East Side Decatur Cemetery West Monroe Street Decatur, Ind. Phone 3-3602 ZnnX
KimQuitsAs Chairman Os 1 Korean Party SEOUL, Korea <UPD — Kim Chong Pil, powerful right-hand man to South Korean President Park Chung Hee, today resigned as chairman of the ruling Democratic Republican party in an attempt to end the wave of anti-government demonstrations. Kim, long considered, the second most influential man in South Korea, had been the target of the student demonstrations which have swept across the nation this week. Hundreds of students demonstarted against the government outside Seoul again today. Park ordered all universities and colleges to start their summer vacations immediately, rather than in mid-July as is normal, in an a tempt to calm down the rebellious students. Martial law was declared in the capital two days ago. Kim was condemned for his leadership in the diplomatic talks aimed at ending bitterness and feuding between Korea and Japan, once Korea’s cotyiial master. He also was singled out as being responsible for alleged corruption in Park’s administration. Although Seoul was relatively quiet today, there were scattered demonstrations elsewhere in the country. About 500 students threw rocks and bricks at police in Pusan, a southern port More than 300 students demonstrated in Kwangju, and others at a college in Kunsan held an antigovernment mass meeting. The Korean army set up two military courts to try violators of the martial law imposed in Seoul to thwart the demonstrations and demands for the government’s overthrow. Thousands have been arrested this week as a result of street clashes with police and attempts to storm government buildings. Similar riots started by students in 1960 led to the downfall of the regime of former President Syngman Rhee. Error In Report On Campaign Expenses A story in Thursday’s Daily Democrat erroneously stated that Richard Lewton filed an expense statement in the county clerk’s office which showed a total of $94.08. Lewton, who won the Democratic nomination for auditor, however, had incurred $194.08 in campaign expenses. , Cuban Exiles Claim Castro Unit Defects MIAMI (UPD — Cuban exiles claim a 250-man Fidel Castro militia unit defeated last April and now is fighting with rebel forces in Pinar del Rio province. The report came from Doel Rojas, a 25-year-old Cuban construction worker who fled the Communist island with four others in a 22-foot boat and arrived here Thursday. RIVARRE circuit United Brethren in Christ John O. Goodwin, pastor MT. ZION CHURCH 9:30 Sunday School, assistant Sunday. 10:30 — Morning Worship. Administrative board meeting following. 7:00 — Christian Endeavor. 7:30 Wednesday — Local Conference meeting at Mt. Victory. This is our third conference for this year so please plan to attend. Friday, June 12 ; — Pleasant Mills Bible school program in the evening. ST. LUKE UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST Honduras Robert R. Oleson, pastor 9:00 a m. — Worship Service. 10:00 a.m. — Sunday School. WEDNESDAY 1 » 6:30 p.m. — Junior Choir Practice! 7:00 p.m. — Adult Choir Practice. PLEASANT MILLS BAPTIST Joe Carter, Interim Pastor Lowell Noll, Superintendent Sunday School 9:30 a. m. Classes for all ages. Worship, 10:30 a. m. Jr. BY. F., 7:00 p. m. Warship, 7:30 p. m. Wed, W. M. S., 7:30 p. m. Friday, June 12, Community Bible school program. ST. PAUL LUTHERAN Preble Norman H. Kuck, Pastor Early service, 8 a. m. Sunday School, Bible class 9:15 a. m. | > Late service 10 a. m.
THE DECATUR
PLEASANT DALE CHURCH of the BRETHREN Dolar Ritchey, pastor Sunday School 9:00. Oscar Geisel, superintendent. Director of Children’s Work, Ellen Leyse. Morning Worship 10:00. Sermon subject, “COSTLY CONCLUSIONS” Evening services 7:30. Sermon subject, “ESTHER’S GR EA T COURAGE.” CBYF.'WjU meet at the Parish Hall after evening services. There will be no Prayer meeting this week. The Gerald Neher family, missionaries to Africa will be with us Tuesday evening 7:30. Fellowship and refreshments in the basement following their message. MONROE METHODIST Charles E .Elam, pastor 9:30 a.m. — Morning Worship with a missionary speaker, Robert Sutherland bringing the message. 10:00 a m. — Children’s Choirs. 10:30 a m. — Church School. 2:00 p.m. — Jr. Hi MYF Yard Party and Hamburger Fry. 7:30 p.m. — Evening Service. MONDAY 7:30 p.m.j— Board of Trustees. WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m. — Adult Choir. 8:15 p.m. — Mid-Week Service. THURSDAY 7:30 p.m. — Official Board. MT. VICTORY CHURCH 9:30 Sunday School, Assistant Sunday. 10:30 — Class Meeting. 7:30 — Evening Worship. Administrative board meeting following. 7:30 Wednesday — Local Conference. SALEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST H. E. Settlage, minister 9:00 — Sunday School. Classes for all age groups. 10:00 — Wprship Service. Sermon, “The Name That Means Salvation.”. ___________ SATURDAY 10:00 — Children’s Choir Rehearsal. • ST. JOHN UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST Vera Cruz Robert R. Oleson, pastor 9:30 a.m. — Sunday School. 10:30 a.m. — Worship Service. WEDNESDAY 1:00 p.m. — Women’s Guild Quilting.* Monroe united BRETHREN IN CHRIST Carey Knittie, pastor Sunday School — 9:30. Worship Service — 10:30. Sunday Evening Service —8:00. Monday Evening Administrative Board — 8:00. Wednesday evening Prayer Service — 8:00. Paper drive —The young people will pick up paper Saturday, June 13. If you have paper, call 2-6257 or 2-6484. PLEASANT MILLS METHODIST Joseph Gibson, pastor Sunday School at 9:30 a.m. Divine Worship at 10:30 a.m. including a sermonette for the children. M.Y.F. this Saturday night at 7:00 at the home of Sharon Workinger. Union Daily Vacation Bible School program June 12 at 8 p.m. at the School. The Bible School • picnic will be Monday, June 15th, at the Berne park. SALEM METHODIST Joseph Gibson, pastor Divine Worship Service at 9:30 a.m. Sunday School at 10:20 a m. Vacation Bible School program Sunday night, June 14, at 7:30. ST. PAUL MISSIONARY CHURCH Robert R. Welch, pastor 9:00 — Morning Worship. 10:00 — Sunday School. WEDNESDAY 7:30 — Prayer and Bible Study. 7:30 — M.Y.F. Service. 7:30 — Children’s Bible Hour. CALVARY F, U. B. Six Miles East and one mile South of Decatur Albert Swenson, pastor 9:30 — Sunday School, Classes for all ages. . 10:30 — Prayer and Praise service. We extend a cordial invitation to the people in the community to worship with us at these services. WREN CIRCUIT EUB A N. Straley, pastor BETHEL 9:30 am. — Sunday School . 10:30 a.m. — Morning Worship. Sermon: “To Remember.” WOOD CHAPEL 9:30 am. — Sunday School.’ 10:30 a.m. — Prayer Service. Evening Service dismissed in favor of the closing program of the Community Bible School in Wren. WEDNESDAY 8:00 p.m. at Wood Chapel — W S- w s THURSDAY, June 11 WOOD CHAPEL — 8:30 p.m — Prayer Meeeting and Youth Fellowship.
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Siasl % ~ SPEAKS Uutom / I < >X. Sunday School Leeaoaa q A Needy World Lesson for Jone 7,1964 Baekrroand Scriptar*: Deuteronomy 10: 18-19: Matthew 25:81-49; James 2:14-17; I John 2:11-18. Devotional Reading: I John 3:11, 14-18. SHARP READERS will have noticed something about these columns since last April. They are all about “The Christian and ...” even if there was no room for the whole title. First we thought about man-in-general in relation
hri Dr. Foreman
eminent and to nationalism; and from now through June we consider our relation to the whole world. —: — Ths top sad the bottom A large order? Yes, indeed, staggeringly large. But two points run through all of this. One is that we are related to all these things, Christian and non-Chris-tian alike. The difference between the Christian and the irreligious man is not that one has responsibility for his relationships and the other does not The difference is that the Christian recognizes, even if too dimly, what his responsibilities are, and tries to do something about it. The other point is that a man's character, indeed his very existence as a human being, is measured in terms of his relationships. You don’t put a man into a solitary cell to find out whether he is a good man; you turn him loose in the world of other people. If you think of the people of this world as a pyramid, the fame thing is true as is true of the pyramids in Egypt: there are very few stones in the top layers, compared with the enormous number of stones in the bottom layers. If you, reading this collimn, are an American, you are near the top of the human pyramid. You belong to a great “Have” nation, while below you are the millions of people who live in "Have-not” parts of the world. Never enough People will say, Oh, why bother with the troubles of folks we can’t see and can’t help? People do seem to get on somehow, wherever they live. They grow up and have babies and they live to be old, don’t they? Well, that’s not quite true. Take the country people, millions of them in one country alone, India for example. The American who travels there is shocked by the large numbers of hungry-looking people he sees. Men and women do grow up, though infant mortality snips off the lives of many before they even get started. They grow up hungry; there is never quite enough food to go around. They wear clothes, yes, but suqji clothes as you wouldn’t put down for a prize cow or cat to lie on. They eat food you would throw away. How can one person help? The world is so big, and there are so many needy people in it, that we often wonder, how can I possibly do any good? The answer is, to be sure you by yourself can’t do much, and you wouldn’t know what to do anyhow. But your government and your church are both working on this problem of a needy world. Every time you pay your taxes, you are helping to support such successful enterprises of good will as the Peace Corps and agricultural aid of many kinds in many nations. Every time you go to church, you are invited to share in what is being done by your denomination for the needy world. If you have a heart sympathetic enough to feel yourself neighbor and even brother to the multitudes at the bottom of the pyramid, the church has all sorts of suggestions. It has enterprises goihg right now that need your help. If you don’t know, ask your minister. It may surprise him—but it will give him a chance to surprise you. And if you still don’t care to help, then read those Scripture passages again from Old Testament and New, and ask yourself: Can I honestly call myself a Bible-believing Christian?
UNION CHAPEL EVANGELICAL UNITED BRETHREN “The Chapel at the Crossroads” Kenneth P. Annie, pastor Leroy Walters, S. S.' Supt. Devotions for all — 9:00 a.m. Bible lesson — 9:15 a m. Lesson Theme —' “The Christian Faces a Needy World.” Scriptures — Matt. 25:31-40. Text — I John 3:17. “If- any one has the world’s goods and sees his brother in need, yet closes his heart against him, how does God’s love abide in Him?” Reading — “I Wish I Had A Dad.” By L. J. Montague. Chat to the Children — Pastor Angle. Offertory Music — Mrs. Earl Chase. Anthem — “Give Me Jesus.”— Crosby. Sermon — “Salt.” Pastor Angle. ** Hymn of Consecration — “Footsteps of Jesus.” — Mary B. C. • Slade. The Commission on Worship and Preaching meets at 7:00 p.m. Evening Family Worship — 7:30 p.m. Bring the family with you. Spend one hour at the close of day. You will be happy. Pastor’s Sermon Theme — “Faith of Abraham and Sarah.” MONDAY Pastor Angle and Robert S. Workinger leave for the Annual Conference at Oakwood Park. Bishop R. H. Mueller, of Indianapolis is the presiding Bishop. TUESDAY Conference convenes. WEDNESDAY Mid-week Services 7:30 p.m. Conference sessions convene. THURSDAY Faith Circle meets — 1:30 p.m. Conference convenes; it closes with the afternoon session. Laymen are invited to attend these sessions. MT. TABOR METHODIST CHURCH Bobo Albert Swenson, pastor 9:30 — Sunday School, Classes for all ages. 10:30 — Preaching Service. WEDNESDAY 7:30 — Prayer service and Bible study. We invite you to attend these services. Come and bring someone with. you.
to the universe; then about the Christian in his family relations and with his neighbors; next about the Christian at work and at leisure. This was followed by the Christian in relation to gov-
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IN THESE SERIOUS TIMES Rev. James R. Meadows Do you go to church on Sundays? Do you spend any part of each day in private devotions? Are you known as a Christian? Do you give anything to the support of God’s work? Do you encourage others to believe and. trust in God? If ever there has gone out to the world a call to turn to God, such a call is going out today. Mighty nations are being threatened. Great cities are being laid waste to attack. People by the hundreds are being killed. Whole continents of people are starving, and virtual bondage has supplanted freedom in countries which until recently have enjoyed the same kind of liberties as we. America itself is in danger of losing this freedom. Don’t make the mistake of blaming God for the conditions in the world today. It isn’t the fault of the doctors when people get sick. Most often 'it is their own fault -directly or indirectly. People turn to doctors however, when they get
CLARK W. SMITH BUILDER , “A Complete Home Building Service” Strickler Mobile Home Park. lae-, 521 8. 13th Street, one of Indiana's leading trailer courts, is located on highway U.S. 27 near the south city limits of Decatur, Ind A modern laundry, outdoor play, ground, new indirect lighting, picnic arfea, a recreation building and a tennis court are provided for the convenience of the residents. Pkaae S-0525 JOHNSON’S STUDIO Candid Weddings Portraits, Commercial, Baby & Confirmation. Roll Film Developing—All Kinds 110 S. 10th St. Decatur Miller’s Grocery Groceries, Fresh Fruit, Vegetables, Meat, Ice Cream 937 N. 2nd St. Phone 3-3307 Fleet-Wine' Products BEAVERS OIL SERVICE, INC. Dependable Farm Service Phone 3-2705 ROTH ELECTRIC Electric Heat & Wiring Home Komfort Insulation FREE ESTIMATES Phone 2-6513 Monroe, Ind. QUALITY PRODUCTS Plus Courteous, Prompt Service. DIAL 3-2501 DECATUR READY-MIX CORP. Treon’s Poultry Market Fresh Dressed Poultry . - Fresh Eggs — Free Delivery Phone 3-3717 SMITH DRUG CO. 149 N. 2nd St. Phone 3-3614 Your Rexall Drug Store “I was glad when they said unto me, Let us go into the house of the Lord.” Psalms 122:1. REYNOLDS ELECTRIC WEMHOFF MEMORIALS Phone 3-2060 Hi-Way 27 - 33 N.
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Jesus is the Great Physician. Do you know of anyone more able to _ cure the ills of the world? If you do, let the world know about it. If you don’t isn’t it the worst kind of sedition to scorn Him or ignore Him? Attend church next Sunday. THIS WEEK’S BIBLE VERSE “If my people, which are called by My name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sins, and will heal their land.” I / —II Chronicles 7:14.
PHOTOGRAPHY by DAVE COLE People Pleasing Photographs 1409 W. Monroe St. Phone 3-3861 Gillig & Doan FUNERAL HOME Thomas N. Sefton, Mgr. HARMAH’S MKT. GROCERIES - MEATS PRODUCE 618 Adams St. Decaiur BOWER Jewelry Store Diamond and Wedding Rings TEE P L E GENERAL TRUCKING Daily Service Between Fort Wayne and z ichmond. ; , ■ Phone 3-2607 STUCKY FURNITURE CO. MONROE, IND. SMITH PURE MILK Oft Your Local Milk Merchant Grade “A” Dairy Products 134 S. 13th'at Adams ‘ ' - ! —— ' V • V. F. Hurst and Son ORNAMENTAL IRON WE FINANCE Phone 3-4489 104 N. 15th St. Decatur, Ind. GAY’S MOBIL SERVICE 13th and Monroe Sts. Phone 3-3609 1315 W. Adams Phone 3-2971 The First State Bank DECATUR, IND. • Established 1883— r - Member F. D. I. C. Decatur Equipment Inc. Sales and Service >Hiway 27 North Phone 3-2904 ADAMS COUNTY TRAILER SALES, Inc. NEW and USED TRAILERS Decatur, Ind. 803 N. 13th St. Phone 3-3138 LAWSON Heating — Plumbing Appliances Sales and Service Phone 3-3626 1835 W. Monroe St. If No Answer Call 3-4539
