Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 136, Decatur, Adams County, 10 June 1954 — Page 9
$1 O A°° TRADE IN ALLOWANCE g For Your Old Refrigerator ■M ■■ REGARDLESS OF CONDITION ON THIS BEAUTIFUL NEW GENERAL ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR rw*- - M H ■ "THl“— lfr- — $449.95 13Sd[d B LESS TRADE IN g|| 1 I IS3 $120.00 _ YOU PAY ffSiiß SB ONLY -H ffwpj MRSm ' 319-95 ggSgg BJHH SIO.OO down H IsHISj wo DELIVERS $ 3.50 Ifiiipll PER WEEK C—l ~ ' GOODYEAR S SPECIAL JUNE TIRE SALE Ji PATHFINDER I by GOODYEAR MARATHONS 6.00 x 16 6.70 x 15 6.00 x 16 6.70 x 15 *lO-95 *11*95 *l2-49 ’l3-95 Plu» Tax ‘ Plus Tax Plus Tax Plus Tax WITH YOUR RECAPPABLE TIRE GOODYEAR GOODYEAR FAMOUS - DELUXE 3-T NYLON SUPER CUSHION CORD TIRES 4-Ply Black SIZE WAS NOW SIZE WAS NOW ffC 6.00x16 $20.60 15*45 6.40x15 $25.85 “ >l*** 16.0 C -— snric” — 25 - 10 1 ? ? 6.70x15 27.10 2l , 55 16**5 7.10 xls 30.05 9. A-90 7.10 xls 25.05 IS-75 7.60 x 15 32.90 AA OC 7.60 xls 27.40 * 2Wf*s> 8.00 x 15 36.10 8.00 x 15 30.10 A 8.10 xls 37.70 ALL ABOVE PRICES ABOVE PRICES PLUS TAX and YOUR RECAPPABLE TIRE pLUS TA TIRE USE OUR EASY PAY PLAN! SI,OO DOWN PER TIRE -AS LOW AS $1.25 A WEEK! I Ufflßß . 121 N. 2nd St. g SERVICE STORE 32t ><> 9 1
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT
Decatur, Indiana, Thursday, June 10,1954
Children To Give Program Sunday Annual Program At Trinity Church Here The annual children's day program will be held at Trinity Evangelical United Brethren church Sunday evening at 7:30 o'clock. The public is invited to the foU lowing service: Prelude. Processional Hymn: “Holy, Holy, Holy." Call to -worship: Responsively by the children. Prayer of invocation —Rev. John E. Chambers. Prayer response: By the children. Scripture: Joe Chambers. Nursery department: Flannelgraph, “Jesus Loves Me” —chorus and solo, Carolyn Sue Hill. Kindergarten department: ‘‘Welcome"—Jerry Morningstar. “Jesus Wants Me For a Sunbeam" — Carol Hoverman, Karen Barkley. 5 Dialogue — “Sunday School” —
I T i 1 . I CONVERTS FAN FROM IM 11 k ■ INTAKE TO EXHAUST J BWBOUHBmI WITH ONE EASY TURN 5Dt UIEEKIV | Lj:; f W llffin I it circulates refreshing 7 v air through your room, I rftf for cooler ’ more com ’ KmbImIHIMHHBBMHM litfi fortabie living. I .1 ■ -JT|T|L ALffM R| Jsl *2 II nmsw B by, WBiMaMMHMMBIMIIiIiMIM I Used as an EXHAUST /? C I tffll KJ QZ. I Fan, it pulls out warm * k ~J-=z 4 j ..H'tBMMMWffMWI and stale air, replacing / ■sb y. I it with fresh, healthful A ~,p N f • air. No cold blasts. W2WWt»Hii3 |l xy. u ,;g w y.s wt mail this coupon • ~. — 1 1 .■ ■. ~, ■ ® COME M ■ \rND 01 ad«rti M d for Ml»s. I wik pay SOV wwkly ■ __: .. ; ■ ni coupon 1 Qtnw u»m.h.fwii l Kic,^ r id. VJI V/ ' 4 ww»» VW | o n.-»«ovm .'’W «’>»'»• •• ">» •«•«< ■ Full emount enc Used C.O O. . 2TZj K'S /MEJ2F g StND NO MONfY t iw £Jr CMKfirfr» B NAME ; —1 *“* lA.JM 123. A*— l7 | AO o»ess | Famous for Values ORPWE ■ - DECATUR FORT WAYNE 3-2513 t--10,. full omouM Wr*«d M w«« e»di»a. AN nrdnra bayead ■* ■ 30 mil* rodivt U>ipp*d «>peM« char*** eallett. ■
Karen Shackley. Steven Morgan, Nancy Hitchcock, Wayne Morgan, Cindy Haggerty. Pamela Davidson, Brad Bayles. “Dressed for Children’s Day"— Connie Conrad. S6ng, “Jesus was a Loving Savior” — Primary and kindergarten departments. Primary department: ‘ Dialogue — "Children’s Day” by Vem Hill, Neil Butcher, Barbara Williams, Janet Winteregg, Ricky Kelley, Tim Singleton, Tommy Davidson, Randy Hitchcock, Jerry Egley, Esther Ryasel, Ernie Feasel. Interpretation of The lord’s Prayer — Eileen Hanni, Danny Butcher, Cheryl Bollenbacher, JAnet Fugate, Kenny Hill, Bobby Andrews, Harold Ballard, Dick Fravel. Solo —“The lord’s Prayer.” Dialogue — “Never” by David Wynn, Kristine Reed, Jimmy Andrews, -Joe Rousseau, Donnie Lough. Donnalu Kiess. Junior department: "Tell the World About the Cross” — Dianna Deßolt, Cheryl Shackley, Dianna Davidson, Barbara Addy. Soloist, Onalee Barkley. Dramatization: “The Church fdf
All People”—Elaine Cochran, Shelia Foreman, Naureen Egley, Dianna Hill, Gebrge Kiess, Steve Hitchcock, Ballard, Ernest Hanni, Dennis Bollenbacher, Miss Gloria Fugate Offering. Closing hymn: “We've a Story to Tell to the Nations". Benediction — Rev, John E. Chambers. Use Folding Doors For Closet Space Surround Storage Area Os Any Size JAMESVILLE, Win., (INS) — The closet that isn’t there is a major bugaboo in many modernday homes. But these days you can make a closet even without being too handy with carpentry tools. You do it with doors, the woodslatted kind that fold much like draw drapes and hang from a ceiling track. These folding doors can be used to surround a storage area of any
• size or shape. Available In a. wide ■ range of decorator colors, they are s handsome enough for any room. : The major part of putting up I these woven-wood doors is to fasten the track to the celling with a drill and screw-driver. To make ' this as easy as possible lay the track out in position on the floor . and do all the fitting before you fasten It to the ceiling. The Houßb Shade Corp, of Janesville, Wis., has compiled a list of suggestions' for locations of these closets, areas which are usually overlooked by the clutterbattling housewife. If you have a kitchen wall that isn’t being used for anything but to hold up the celling, a mere six inches of depth along it can be turned into a handy storage area - without interfering with traffic, x This can be used for floor-to-ceil- - ing shelves to store one-deep rows of canned and packaged foods and i as a neat hideaway for the mop. • broom and ironing board. A bit of vacant wall next to the • front door can be closed off to ’ hold the family rubbers, umbrellas 1 and card table and folding chairs. A similar arrangement beside 1 the back door will bring order to y the chaos of baseball bats, dog
SECTION TWO
leashes and fishing poles that in* evltably pile up there. A corner beside the bedroom door can be fashioned into a aperial storage for hats shoes and handbags to take the pressure oft jour regular closet. If your bedroom is large enough to spare two feet along a whole wall, folding doors can fashion a wardrobe for all your clothing. These folding doors work neatly In a utility room, too. For instance you can enclose the utilities themselves so the room is "dressed up” for other purposes. The doors are manufactured ia a range of sizes, up to 24 feet wide, and come with all the hardware needed. They are available through lumber and building supply dealers throughout the country. Working Women By International News Service Over 19 million women, or 33 percent of all women of working age. are in the labor force, according to the Women’s Bureau of the U. S. department of labor. The average age of the working woman in the 11. S. ia 37 and a half years.
