the chronicle. (pascagoula, miss.). 1963-09-17 [p six].€¦ · wednesday 12:00 general hospital...

1
TV-RADIO TIMES CHANNEL 3—PENSACOLA, FLA. TUESDAY 7:30 McHales Navy 10:16 Sport* 6 00 Hennessey 8:00 Greatest Show 10:30 Bourbon St. 6:30 Combat 10:00 News 11:15 Dragnet 11:45 News WEDNESDAY 12:00 General Hospital 2:30 Who Do You Trust 12:30 News 3:00 Trallmaster 9:20 News 12:45 Caravan 4:00 Lone Ranger 9:30 Love Bob 1:00 News 4:30 Cheyenne 10:00 Price Is Right 1:30 Day In Court 6:30 Report 10:30 7 Keys 1:55 Lisa Howard 5:45 Jack Kenney 11:00 Ernie Perd 2:00 Queen For Day 11:30 Fafher Knows Best CHANNEL 5-MOBILE, ALA. TUESDAY 7:00 Dick Van Dyke 10:00 Picture Thl* 6:15 Home News 7:30 Talent Scouts 10:30 News C:30 Yogi Bear 8:30 Gale Storm 10:35 Wire Serv, 9:00 Keefe Brasselle 11:35 News WEDNESDAY 10:30 Pete and Gladys 1:30 Houseijarty 11:00 Love of Life 2:00 Tell the Truth 1:00 Aha. Jubilee 11:25 CBS News 2:25 CBS News 8:00 Capt. Kangaroo 11:30 Search Tomorrow 2:30 Edge of Night 8:00 Margie 11:45 Guiding Light 3:00 Secret Storm 8:30 I rove Lucy 12:00 Woman’s World 4:30 Popeye 10:00 The Real McCoys 12:38 World Turns 5:00 Sea Hunt 1:00 Password 5:45 Kronkite "It's The Service Behind The Sale n That Counts" CURTIS MATHES * 1 17 Years In Same Location NOLAN'S RADIO & T.V. 810 MAIN ST. MOSS POINT GR 5-8159 CHANNEL 10—MOBILE; ALA. TUESDAY 6:30 Laramie 9:30 I Confess 6 30 NBC News 7:30 Empire 11:00 TonTgm 6.00 News 8:30 Dick Powell 12:00 News WEDNESDAY 10:30 Missing Links 1:30 Doctors 7:00 Today 11:00 First Impression 2:00 Loretta Young 7:30 Today 11:30 Truth or Conse. 2:30 You Don’t Say 8:25 Bob Barker 11:55 News 3:00 Match Game 9:00 Say When 12:00 Dot Moore 3:25 News 9:23 NBO News 12:30 Burns & Allen 3:30 Danny Thomaa 9:30 Play Your Hunch 1:00 People Will Talk 4:00 Adr. Time 10:00 Concentration 1:25 News 5:30 Huntley-Brinkley WPMP PROGRAM SCHEDULE FOR MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 5:15 Sign On 9:35 Woman’s World 1:55 ABC News 5:17 Farm and Home 9:55 ABC News 2:55 ABC News News 10:00 Tradin Post 2:00 Chuck Burgess 5:22 Farm and Home 10:55 ABC News Program Program 11:00 Anything Goes 3:00 Dick Morgan Show 6:00 Mississippi News 11:00 (Monday) 3:55 ABC News 6:05 Farm and Home Baptist Record 4:00 Dick Morgan Show Snow 12:30 Music For Modernj 4:25 Know Your Enemy 6:45 Early Morning 12:00 Paul Harvey News 4:30 Dick Morgan Show Show (ABC) 4:45 Stock Market 7:00 Life Line 12:15 Luncheon Date 4:55 ABC News (ABCi 12:45 Bulletin Board Report 8:45 Musical Clock 12:55 ABC News 5:00 Dick Morgan Shov? 8:55 Know Your Enemy 1:00 Florida Boys 5:30 Baseball 7:15 Weathervane Quartet Scoreboard 7:20 Musical Clock 1:15 Tennessee Ernie 5:35 Dick Morgan Show 8:00 News Around The Ford Show 6:00 Edward P. Morgan World (ABC) 1:20 Gospel Melody News (ABC) 7:15 Musical Clock Time 6:15 Dick Morgan Show 8:30 Rev. Ray Meggisoi 1:45 Quiz Show 3:30 Sign Off 9:00 Breakfast Club Hints From Heloise .. Iron-on Name Tapes Will Withstand Wash Dear Heloise: Iron-on name tapes can be easi- ly made by typing the names and adresses on a strip of iron-on tape .then cutting to the proper size. If you have quite a dark ribbon on your typewriter the labels will wear through many a wash. They may be sewn on or ironed on. Mrs. Harold Murray Mothers: if you don't have a typewriter, try using ball point ink or indelible pencil. Great! Heloise Dear Heloise: Our home is an old house that has been restored. The walls and bathroom give us lots of trouble. Our bathroom walls were plaster and had cracked noticeably. They needed patching and painting. A few months ago I covered the w'alLs, ceiling, and even the medicine cabinet and window sill with contact paper. It complete- ly covered all of the cracks and patches. Furthermore, we no lon- ger have to look “forward” to painting each year! If women cannot afford to do the entire bathroom at one time, they could cover the walls and later when the budget allows, do the ceiling. All this requires is a wiping with a moist sponge. Mrs. David Bradley Dear Heloise: I alw ays used to hate to wash my breadbox because those bread crumbs just seemed to stick in the corners. One day I used the vacuum cleaner attachment to suck up all the crumbs before washing the breadbox. Believe me, it works. Try it when your vacuum is on. Saves time. Mrs. M. W. LETTER OF LAUGHTER Trying to get ahead is nothing .trying to live is something. Mother Dear Heloise: Next time you make a meat loaf, cheat. .just a little bit! If you have an empty frozen juice can, stuff it with a little of that extra meat loaf, and cool along writh your regular meat loaf. This may be put in your deep freeze after cooling or will keep in your refrigerator for a couple of days. It is really cute for parties, Sunday night snacks or to put on top of crackers when company drops in! It may be served cold or reheated. Nice for lunch box- es, too. Helena Dear Heloise: After you have finished knitting a sweater, afghan, or anything that has to be put together, in- stead oif using regular pins, try the long plastic pins we are using these days with our hair rollers! I also find these plastic pins handy when working with net or DEL-PRIDE Mayonnaise [Wednesday Opening Set For Shainberg’s ai nine o ciock tomorrow morn- ing. in Bel-Air Shopping Center on the Old Mobile Highway, the doors of the new Shainberg’s swing open officially for the store’s formal opening festivities. It will be the start of a celebra- tion which will feature gifts for the children, prizes for the grown- ups and bargains for everyone. Tomorrow and every day this week Shainberg’s will be open from 9 a.m. till 9 p.m. to give Pascagoula shoppers ample op- portunity to see the beautiful new one-floor department store and to take advantage of the special opening attractions. To celebrate our opening,” says Manager Jim Elbert, “we are offering specially reduced prices on new fall merchandise in all departments. That means real bargains in clothes for men, women and children, and in home furnishings and in fabrics.” A $100 merchandise certificate will be given away. Anyone who registers will be eligible to win. No purchase is necessary to reg- ister. There will also be free gifts for all children who visit the store. Officials from the Memphis home office of the chain of Shain- berg stores are in Pascagoula for the grand-opening events. Keynote of the store’s opera- tion is ease of shopping. This will be achieved with a radically dif- ferent layout of merchandise. Em- phasis is placed on complete ac- cessibility of all items. Unique new counters and display u n-i t s have been developed to allow the display of 40 per cent more merchandise per square foot than in ordinary stores. Adding to the convenience fac- tor will be the method by which merchandise is displayed by in- dividual sizes. This makes it pos- sible for a customer seeking a particular size to find a com- plete angry of styles, colors and prices grouped according to t h e size in which she is interested. Counters and racks have been flexibly installed so that they may be relocated or expanded as customer needs demand. This advance-design store will any loosely woven material. They are nice and long, do not come out of the material, and best of all. .no finger pricks. Vada Belen Dear Heloise: I save all the wax from the top of my homemade jams and jellies. I put these pieces in a fruit jar filled with w'ater. This soaks off anything that might have stuck to them. When the time comes around to make jelly again I melt this down, heat it to the boiling point (thus sterlizing it completely) and use it to cap jars of jelly over and over and over. Farmer's Wife LAKE THEATRE SHOW OPENS 6:15 P.M. SHOW STARTS 6:50 P.M. DIAL 762-2474 TOES., WED. <J86K LEMMON SHIRLEY MaeUHNE t fc.RLLYm.DB? hm, ' "BiMa Lar.TJE* TECHMCOLCW PAMAVISION* ••hmt !»•» UNITED ARTISTS ADULTS ONLY NO PASSES be aglow with color, with the spaciousness of wide aisles, with light bright airy diplays and fix- tures. Also chosen for its eye appeal in the over-all color scheme is the counter material. This, too, is in pastel colors. All fixtures by Jack Rogan, store planning supervisor for the entire chain of stores. Even the floors of the new Shainberg’s have been installed with emphasis on beauty. They are of a vinyl asbestos tile in a pleasing combination of the same pastel colors. Negroes To Get White School Despite Protest GREENVILLE, Miss. (UPI) Th e Greenville school board planned today to turn over a white elementary school to Ne- groes despite charges it will be “integrating a white neighbor- hood.” Attorney Willard Moll wain i made the charge Wednesday night when he and several other per- sons appeared before the board to protest the change. But board president Roy T. Campbell told the objectors the change would benefit most per- sons concerned. He said there are 600 Negro children of elementary school age living in the school vi- cinity and only 188 white chil- dren. The board is proposing a $458,- 560 bond issue for construction of a new elementary school for whites. FCC Excuses Mobile TV Man WASHINGTON (UPI)—'The Fed- eral Communications Commission today excused a Mobile, Ala., ra- dio station from legal responsibili- ty for misconduct in operations of the station. The FCC ruled that W. O. Pape was technically responsible for the misconduct but could be excused “because of severe health disability.” The commission reversed its earlier order saying Pape must show cause why his license for WiALA-TV and radio station WALA should not be revoked. The FCC said it “believes Pape's present infirmities will present no further problem” be- cause control of the station has been turned over to “four legally responsible voting trustees. The FCC said the misconduct which resulted in its original show cause order stemmed from the Slate Traffic Toll Is Down JACKSON (Special) Three of the nine Mississippi Highway Saf- ety Patrol districts experienced reduction in traffic fatalities this year according to figures releas- ed by the patrol accident pre- vention bureau, accident records division. The statistics, made public by Commissioner of Public Safety T. B. Birdsong, show that District 2 (Greenwood) had a 6 per cent decrease; District 3 (Batesville) had a 14 per cent decrease; and District 6 (Meridian) had a 5 per cent decrease. Accident records division re- ports these figures for the first eight months of 1963 as compar- ed to the first eight months of 1962. Birdsong had this comment, “We are happy that we have be- gun to make inroads on the great toll of death and accidents that have been taking the lives of our state’s drivers. “However, we cannot now be- come complacent. We have the most dangerous time of the year ahead of us, the fall and winter months, with the traditional holi- days. Our officers and men have resolved to make the highways as safe as possible through their efforts. “W’e will continue to use of the selective enforcement instituted earlier this year. Through selec- tive enforcement and the public’s cooperation we can eliminate much of the death on our high- ways.” Almanac Today is Tuesday, Sept. 17, the 260th day of 1963 with 105 to fol- low. The moon is new. The morning star is Jupiter. The evening stars are Jupiter, Saturn and Mars. On this day in history: In 1787, the United States Con- stitution was completed at the consitituional convention a n d | signed by a majority of the 55 delegates. In 1796, President George Wash- ington delivered his farewell ad- dress and warned the American people to steer clear of foreign al- liances. In 1862, Gen. Robert E. Lee’s invasion of Maryland was defeat- ed at the Battle of Antietam. In 1962, nine new U. S. Astro- nauts were named to train for moon flights. action of Pape’s nephew', Wads- worth Pape, and another em- ployee. The Battleground Was His Playground 'The story of a homeless boy’s raw courage, a dog’s fighting heart and three battle- scarred G.I.’s on a suicide patrol I Last Time Tonite "KING KONG VS. GODZILLA METRO-GOLDWfmm STARRING RORY CALHOUN WILLIAM BENDIX AN AC. LYLES PRODUCTION RICHARD JAECKEL RICHARDARLEN• jW/4G4#» Sft uxamAwBEIRNE LAY, JR. Story by RONALD DAVIOSON and HAHRYH SLOTT£i DIRECTED BY IIxAnb TODAY'S WEATHER—RAIN IS LIKELY OVER PARTS of the North Atlantic coast, the Gulf coastal area and in the Pacific Northwest. Showers or thunderstorms will develop for parts of the Plains slates, the upper Mississippi Valley and the upper half of the Plateau area. Warmer air is likely to spread across the Southeast and the Ohio Valley. (Mobile Press Register UPI Telephoto) Modern Glue Industry Outgrowing Old Dobbin ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI) 01* Dobbin can relax, the threat of the glue factory no longer hangs over his hoary head. Today’s adhesives industry is a highly competive search for new- er, lighter and tougher synthetic resins which can patch human arteries or hold a space capsule together. The U. S. Department of Agri- culture’s Economic Research Ser- vice reported recently that Amer- icans annually use about 2 bil- lion pounds of adhesives each year. These chemical bonding agents play a large role in the space race, military programming, road and skyscraper construction, home building, furniture, clothing and packaging. In the last 20 years, glue in a variety of forms has in many fields replaced screws, rivets, nails, pegs and soldering. Glue Helps Smoker It takes nine specific glues to enable you to light up that I smoke, including those used in j packaging and shipping. The medical profession has sue-! cessfully used bonding agents to repair human arteries in delicate brain operations and in treatment ot aneurysms. Other expoxy res- ins are employed to weld broken bones in humans and ai;mals. One of the first to bring resin into the operating room was Dr. Bertra Selverstrone, of Tufts University medical school, who began spraying bulging arteries with the clear resilent glue in the late 1950s. A new product on the market, identified as “resiwell 620” by its marker the H. B. Fuller Co., St. Paul is billed as “stronger than concrete, harder than gran- ite, almost unbreakable, resistant to chemicals, weather and the thaw-freeze cycle.” The material is viewed as a boon to state and local highway departments faced with annual spring road depredations and high repair costs. The garment industry is head- ing for the day when entire suits will be assembled with near-per- fect seams through use of adhes- hesives are designed to withstand about 500 degrees fahrenheit, but synthetic glues which will take temperatures up to 1,000 degrees and higher are on the horizon. Today’s automobile contains between 8 and 25 pounds of ad- hesive material but the day is coming when an entire car will be free of screws, solder and riv- ets, Smith said. Present construction and main- BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY MAX OR WOMAN- PART TIME TOY ROUTE VERY SMALL STARTING CAPITAL GOOD INCOME OPERATE FROM HOME SEVERAL CHOICE TERRITORIES AVAILABLE SOON PASCAGOULA and also Moss Point Biloxi Gautier Kreole Vancleave Point Plus several other areas We will appoint a sincere man or wom- an to use our sales aids in establish- ing and servicing a number of sensa- tional self service “TOY SHOP" Dis- plays in markets, drug, variety stores, etc. You get expert Company advice and guidance. However, you must re- place toys each week and collect money. REQUIRES ONLY FEW HOURS EACH WEEK This is not a Job but a chance to get into something you may have always wanted a business of your own. One that can be handled in spare time and still leave room for full time expansion. NOT A GET RICH-QUICK-SCHEME If you have a desire to better yourself _if sober, honest, and really sincere, have a car Sc $’208 (minimum requir- ed), apply at once, giving complete details about yourself, phone number. Airmail or wire: TOY MERCHANDISING CORP. 34-10 58th Street Woodside 77, New York RITZ THEATRE DIAL 7624655 HEY ALL YOU HOOTERS Hootenanny Is Coming To Townl Where? Ritz Theatre When? Wednesday-Saturday Just for you student hooters we are having something special. Wed. & Thurs. Matinee only 50c Children under 12 ... 25c _ Prices Change at 5 o'clock STARTS WEDNESDAY Its the first! It's theHoofenanniest! LAST DAY METSO GOlPWVN- MaV£R ( Pres*r.ts I \_ to .^.A jtenance procedures will be fre- quently altered by the emergence of new blues, Smith said. “The practice of bull-dozing out a space in the dirt and dumping several thousand parts into the mud and then laboriously assembl ling all these parts by hand just cannot be continued,” he said. “In the near future, houses will be prefabricated and assembled within a mere fraction of the present field time. “With future 'glues’ being stronger than the metal being bonded, the entire framework such as girders of skyscraper* will be held together without riv- ets.” In 1399, President McKinley was shot and critically wounded in Buffalo, N.Y. EXTRA DISABILITY BENEFIT for WOODMEN OF THE WORLD MEMBERS! Here’s how Woodmen of the World's extra Disability Benefit works: If you become totally and permanently disabled after a year’s membership and before age 60, you can turn in your cer- tificate and receive one-half of the face amount in cash. Most insuring organizations do not have this emergency bene- fit. With Woodmen of the World it’s an extra value, written into every certificate except term. Call today for specific details and for the full story on Woodmen of the World's outstanding pro- gram of protection plus fraternal and social benefits. Allen D. Boyd Field Representative 2210 Ingalls Avenue Pascagoula, Mississippi Phone: SO 2-5397 WOODMEN OF THE WORLD uftwsuRocE

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Page 1: The Chronicle. (Pascagoula, Miss.). 1963-09-17 [p SIX].€¦ · WEDNESDAY 12:00 General Hospital 2:30 Who Do You Trust 12:30 News 3:00 Trallmaster 9:20 News 12:45 Caravan 4:00 Lone

TV-RADIO TIMES CHANNEL 3—PENSACOLA, FLA.

TUESDAY 7:30 McHales Navy 10:16 Sport* 6 00 Hennessey 8:00 Greatest Show 10:30 Bourbon St. 6:30 Combat 10:00 News 11:15 Dragnet

11:45 News

WEDNESDAY 12:00 General Hospital 2:30 Who Do You Trust 12:30 News 3:00 Trallmaster

9:20 News 12:45 Caravan 4:00 Lone Ranger 9:30 Love Bob 1:00 News 4:30 Cheyenne

10:00 Price Is Right 1:30 Day In Court 6:30 Report 10:30 7 Keys 1:55 Lisa Howard 5:45 Jack Kenney 11:00 Ernie Perd 2:00 Queen For • Day 11:30 Fafher Knows Best

CHANNEL 5-MOBILE, ALA. TUESDAY 7:00 Dick Van Dyke 10:00 Picture Thl*

6:15 Home News 7:30 Talent Scouts 10:30 News C:30 Yogi Bear 8:30 Gale Storm 10:35 Wire Serv,

9:00 Keefe Brasselle 11:35 News

WEDNESDAY 10:30 Pete and Gladys 1:30 Houseijarty 11:00 Love of Life 2:00 Tell the Truth

1:00 Aha. Jubilee 11:25 CBS News 2:25 CBS News 8:00 Capt. Kangaroo 11:30 Search Tomorrow 2:30 Edge of Night 8:00 Margie 11:45 Guiding Light 3:00 Secret Storm 8:30 I rove Lucy 12:00 Woman’s World 4:30 Popeye

10:00 The Real McCoys 12:38 World Turns 5:00 Sea Hunt 1:00 Password 5:45 Kronkite

"It's The Service Behind The Sale

n That Counts" CURTIS MATHES * 1

17 Years In Same Location

NOLAN'S RADIO & T.V. 810 MAIN ST. MOSS POINT GR 5-8159

CHANNEL 10—MOBILE; ALA. TUESDAY 6:30 Laramie 9:30 I Confess

6 30 NBC News 7:30 Empire 11:00 TonTgm 6.00 News 8:30 Dick Powell 12:00 News

WEDNESDAY 10:30 Missing Links 1:30 Doctors 7:00 Today 11:00 First Impression 2:00 Loretta Young 7:30 Today 11:30 Truth or Conse. 2:30 You Don’t Say 8:25 Bob Barker 11:55 News 3:00 Match Game 9:00 Say When 12:00 Dot Moore 3:25 News 9:23 NBO News 12:30 Burns & Allen 3:30 Danny Thomaa 9:30 Play Your Hunch 1:00 People Will Talk 4:00 Adr. Time

10:00 Concentration 1:25 News 5:30 Huntley-Brinkley

WPMP PROGRAM SCHEDULE FOR MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY

5:15 Sign On 9:35 Woman’s World 1:55 ABC News 5:17 Farm and Home 9:55 ABC News 2:55 ABC News

News 10:00 Tradin Post 2:00 Chuck Burgess 5:22 Farm and Home 10:55 ABC News Program

Program 11:00 Anything Goes 3:00 Dick Morgan Show 6:00 Mississippi News 11:00 (Monday) 3:55 ABC News 6:05 Farm and Home Baptist Record 4:00 Dick Morgan Show

Snow 12:30 Music For Modernj 4:25 Know Your Enemy 6:45 Early Morning 12:00 Paul Harvey News 4:30 Dick Morgan Show

Show (ABC) 4:45 Stock Market 7:00 Life Line 12:15 Luncheon Date 4:55 ABC News

(ABCi 12:45 Bulletin Board Report 8:45 Musical Clock 12:55 ABC News 5:00 Dick Morgan Shov? 8:55 Know Your Enemy 1:00 Florida Boys 5:30 Baseball 7:15 Weathervane Quartet Scoreboard 7:20 Musical Clock 1:15 Tennessee Ernie 5:35 Dick Morgan Show 8:00 News Around The Ford Show 6:00 Edward P. Morgan

World (ABC) 1:20 Gospel Melody News (ABC) 7:15 Musical Clock Time 6:15 Dick Morgan Show 8:30 Rev. Ray Meggisoi 1:45 Quiz Show 3:30 Sign Off 9:00 Breakfast Club

Hints From Heloise .. •

Iron-on Name Tapes Will Withstand Wash

Dear Heloise: Iron-on name tapes can be easi-

ly made by typing the names and adresses on a strip of iron-on tape

.then cutting to the proper size. If you have quite a dark ribbon on your typewriter the labels will wear through many a

wash. They may be sewn on or

ironed on.

Mrs. Harold Murray

★ ★ ★

Mothers: if you don't have a

typewriter, try using ball point ink or indelible pencil. Great!

Heloise ★ ★ ★

Dear Heloise: Our home is an old house that

has been restored. The walls and bathroom give us lots of trouble. Our bathroom walls were plaster and had cracked noticeably. They needed patching and painting.

A few months ago I covered the w'alLs, ceiling, and even the medicine cabinet and window sill with contact paper. It complete- ly covered all of the cracks and patches. Furthermore, we no lon- ger have to look “forward” to painting each year!

If women cannot afford to do the entire bathroom at one time, they could cover the walls and later when the budget allows, do the ceiling. All this requires is a wiping with a moist sponge.

Mrs. David Bradley ★ ★ ★

Dear Heloise: I alw ays used to hate to wash

my breadbox because those bread

crumbs just seemed to stick in the corners.

One day I used the vacuum cleaner attachment to suck up all the crumbs before washing the breadbox. Believe me, it works. Try it when your vacuum

is on. Saves time. Mrs. M. W.

★ ★ ★ LETTER OF LAUGHTER

Trying to get ahead is nothing .trying to live is something.

Mother

★ ★ ★

Dear Heloise: Next time you make a meat

loaf, cheat. .just a little bit! If

you have an empty frozen juice can, stuff it with a little of that extra meat loaf, and cool along writh your regular meat loaf.

This may be put in your deep freeze after cooling or will keep in your refrigerator for a couple of days.

It is really cute for parties, Sunday night snacks or to put on top of crackers when company drops in! It may be served cold or reheated. Nice for lunch box- es, too.

Helena ★ ★ ★

Dear Heloise: After you have finished knitting

a sweater, afghan, or anything that has to be put together, in- stead oif using regular pins, try the long plastic pins we are

using these days with our hair rollers!

I also find these plastic pins handy when working with net or

DEL-PRIDE

Mayonnaise

[Wednesday Opening Set For Shainberg’s ai nine o ciock tomorrow morn-

ing. in Bel-Air Shopping Center on the Old Mobile Highway, the doors of the new Shainberg’s swing open officially for the store’s formal opening festivities. It will be the start of a celebra- tion which will feature gifts for the children, prizes for the grown- ups and bargains for everyone.

Tomorrow and every day this week Shainberg’s will be open from 9 a.m. till 9 p.m. to give Pascagoula shoppers ample op- portunity to see the beautiful new

one-floor department store and to take advantage of the special opening attractions.

To celebrate our opening,” says Manager Jim Elbert, “we are offering specially reduced prices on new fall merchandise in all departments. That means

real bargains in clothes for men, women and children, and in home furnishings and in fabrics.”

A $100 merchandise certificate will be given away. Anyone who registers will be eligible to win. No purchase is necessary to reg- ister. There will also be free gifts for all children who visit the store.

Officials from the Memphis home office of the chain of Shain- berg stores are in Pascagoula for the grand-opening events.

Keynote of the store’s opera- tion is ease of shopping. This will be achieved with a radically dif- ferent layout of merchandise. Em- phasis is placed on complete ac-

cessibility of all items. Unique new counters and display u n-i t s

have been developed to allow the display of 40 per cent more

merchandise per square foot than in ordinary stores.

Adding to the convenience fac- tor will be the method by which merchandise is displayed by in- dividual sizes. This makes it pos- sible for a customer seeking a

particular size to find a com-

plete angry of styles, colors and prices grouped according to t h e

size in which she is interested. Counters and racks have been

flexibly installed so that they may be relocated or expanded as

customer needs demand. This advance-design store will

any loosely woven material. They are nice and long, do not come

out of the material, and best of all. .no finger pricks.

Vada Belen ★ ★ ★

Dear Heloise: I save all the wax from the

top of my homemade jams and jellies. I put these pieces in a

fruit jar filled with w'ater. This soaks off anything that might have stuck to them.

When the time comes around to make jelly again I melt this down, heat it to the boiling point (thus sterlizing it completely) and use it to cap jars of jelly over and over and over.

Farmer's Wife

LAKE THEATRE

SHOW OPENS 6:15 P.M. SHOW STARTS 6:50 P.M.

DIAL 762-2474

TOES., WED.

<J86K LEMMON SHIRLEY MaeUHNE

t fc.RLLYm.DB? hm, ' "BiMa Lar.TJE*

TECHMCOLCW PAMAVISION*

••hmt !»•» UNITED ARTISTS

ADULTS ONLY

NO PASSES

be aglow with color, with the spaciousness of wide aisles, with light bright airy diplays and fix- tures.

Also chosen for its eye appeal in the over-all color scheme is the counter material. This, too, is in pastel colors. All fixtures by Jack Rogan, store planning supervisor for the entire chain of stores.

Even the floors of the new

Shainberg’s have been installed with emphasis on beauty. They are of a vinyl asbestos tile in a

pleasing combination of the same

pastel colors.

Negroes To Get White School Despite Protest

GREENVILLE, Miss. (UPI) —

Th e Greenville school board planned today to turn over a

white elementary school to Ne- groes despite charges it will be

“integrating a white neighbor- hood.”

Attorney Willard Moll wain i made the charge Wednesday night when he and several other per- sons appeared before the board to protest the change.

But board president Roy T.

Campbell told the objectors the

change would benefit most per- sons concerned. He said there are

600 Negro children of elementary school age living in the school vi-

cinity and only 188 white chil- dren.

The board is proposing a $458,- 560 bond issue for construction of a new elementary school for whites.

FCC Excuses Mobile TV Man WASHINGTON (UPI)—'The Fed-

eral Communications Commission today excused a Mobile, Ala., ra-

dio station from legal responsibili- ty for misconduct in operations of the station.

The FCC ruled that W. O.

Pape was technically responsible for the misconduct but could be excused “because of severe health

disability.” The commission reversed its

earlier order saying Pape must show cause why his license for WiALA-TV and radio station WALA should not be revoked.

The FCC said it “believes

Pape's present infirmities will present no further problem” be-

cause control of the station has

been turned over to “four legally responsible voting trustees.

The FCC said the misconduct

which resulted in its original show

cause order stemmed from the

Slate Traffic Toll Is Down

JACKSON (Special) — Three of the nine Mississippi Highway Saf- ety Patrol districts experienced reduction in traffic fatalities this

year according to figures releas- ed by the patrol accident pre- vention bureau, accident records division.

The statistics, made public by Commissioner of Public Safety T. B. Birdsong, show that District 2 (Greenwood) had a 6 per cent

decrease; District 3 (Batesville) had a 14 per cent decrease; and

District 6 (Meridian) had a 5

per cent decrease.

Accident records division re-

ports these figures for the first eight months of 1963 as compar- ed to the first eight months of 1962.

Birdsong had this comment, “We are happy that we have be-

gun to make inroads on the great toll of death and accidents that have been taking the lives of our state’s drivers.

“However, we cannot now be- come complacent. We have the most dangerous time of the year ahead of us, the fall and winter months, with the traditional holi- days. Our officers and men have resolved to make the highways as safe as possible through their efforts.

“W’e will continue to use of the selective enforcement instituted earlier this year. Through selec- tive enforcement and the public’s cooperation we can eliminate much of the death on our high- ways.”

Almanac Today is Tuesday, Sept. 17, the

260th day of 1963 with 105 to fol- low.

The moon is new.

The morning star is Jupiter. The evening stars are Jupiter,

Saturn and Mars. On this day in history: In 1787, the United States Con-

stitution was completed at the consitituional convention a n d | signed by a majority of the 55

delegates. In 1796, President George Wash-

ington delivered his farewell ad- dress and warned the American people to steer clear of foreign al- liances.

In 1862, Gen. Robert E. Lee’s invasion of Maryland was defeat- ed at the Battle of Antietam.

In 1962, nine new U. S. Astro- nauts were named to train for moon flights.

action of Pape’s nephew', Wads- worth Pape, and another em-

ployee.

The Battleground Was His Playground 'The story of a homeless boy’s raw courage, a dog’s fighting heart and three battle- scarred G.I.’s on a suicide patrol I

Last Time Tonite

"KING KONG VS.

GODZILLA

METRO-GOLDWfmm STARRING

RORY CALHOUN WILLIAM BENDIX AN AC. LYLES PRODUCTION

RICHARD JAECKEL • RICHARDARLEN• jW/4G4#» Sft uxamAwBEIRNE LAY, JR. Story by RONALD DAVIOSON and HAHRYH SLOTT£i DIRECTED BY IIxAnb •

TODAY'S WEATHER—RAIN IS LIKELY OVER PARTS

of the North Atlantic coast, the Gulf coastal area and in

the Pacific Northwest. Showers or thunderstorms will

develop for parts of the Plains slates, the upper Mississippi Valley and the upper half of the Plateau area. Warmer air

is likely to spread across the Southeast and the Ohio

Valley. (Mobile Press Register UPI Telephoto)

Modern Glue Industry Outgrowing Old Dobbin

ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI) — 01* Dobbin can relax, the threat of the glue factory no longer hangs over his hoary head.

Today’s adhesives industry is a

highly competive search for new-

er, lighter and tougher synthetic resins which can patch human arteries or hold a space capsule together.

The U. S. Department of Agri- culture’s Economic Research Ser- vice reported recently that Amer-

icans annually use about 2 bil-

lion pounds of adhesives each

year. These chemical bonding agents

play a large role in the space race, military programming, road

and skyscraper construction, home building, furniture, clothing and packaging.

In the last 20 years, glue in a

variety of forms has in many fields replaced screws, rivets, nails, pegs and soldering.

Glue Helps Smoker It takes nine specific glues to

enable you to light up that I

smoke, including those used in j packaging and shipping.

The medical profession has sue-!

cessfully used bonding agents to

repair human arteries in delicate

brain operations and in treatment ot aneurysms. Other expoxy res-

ins are employed to weld broken

bones in humans and ai;mals. One of the first to bring resin

into the operating room was Dr.

Bertra Selverstrone, of Tufts

University medical school, who

began spraying bulging arteries with the clear resilent glue in

the late 1950s. A new product on the market,

identified as “resiwell 620” by its

marker — the H. B. Fuller Co., St. Paul — is billed as “stronger than concrete, harder than gran-

ite, almost unbreakable, resistant

to chemicals, weather and the

thaw-freeze cycle.” The material is viewed as a

boon to state and local highway departments faced with annual spring road depredations and high repair costs.

The garment industry is head- ing for the day when entire suits will be assembled with near-per- fect seams through use of adhes- hesives are designed to withstand about 500 degrees fahrenheit, but

synthetic glues which will take

temperatures up to 1,000 degrees and higher are on the horizon.

Today’s automobile contains between 8 and 25 pounds of ad-

hesive material but the day is

coming when an entire car will

be free of screws, solder and riv-

ets, Smith said. Present construction and main-

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY MAX OR WOMAN-

PART TIME

TOY ROUTE VERY SMALL STARTING CAPITAL

GOOD INCOME OPERATE FROM HOME

SEVERAL CHOICE TERRITORIES

AVAILABLE SOON PASCAGOULA and also

Moss Point Biloxi Gautier Kreole

Vancleave Point Plus several other areas

We will appoint a sincere man or wom-

an to use our sales aids in establish-

ing and servicing a number of sensa-

tional self service “TOY SHOP" Dis-

plays in markets, drug, variety stores, etc. You get expert Company advice and guidance. However, you must re-

place toys each week and collect

money. REQUIRES ONLY FEW HOURS EACH WEEK

This is not a Job but a chance to get into something you may have always wanted — a business of your own.

One that can be handled in spare time and still leave room for full time

expansion. NOT A GET

RICH-QUICK-SCHEME If you have a desire to better yourself _if sober, honest, and really sincere, have a car Sc $’208 (minimum requir- ed), apply at once, giving complete details about yourself, phone number. Airmail or wire:

TOY MERCHANDISING CORP. 34-10 58th Street

Woodside 77, New York

RITZ THEATRE DIAL 7624655

HEY ALL YOU HOOTERS Hootenanny Is Coming To Townl

Where? Ritz Theatre

When? Wednesday-Saturday Just for you student hooters we

are having something special. Wed. & Thurs. Matinee only 50c

Children under 12 ... 25c

_

Prices Change at 5 o'clock

STARTS WEDNESDAY Its the first! It's theHoofenanniest!

LAST DAY

METSO GOlPWVN- MaV£R ( Pres*r.ts I

\_ to .^.A

jtenance procedures will be fre- quently altered by the emergence of new blues, Smith said.

“The practice of bull-dozing out a space in the dirt and dumping several thousand parts into the mud and then laboriously assembl ling all these parts by hand just cannot be continued,” he said. “In the near future, houses will be prefabricated and assembled within a mere fraction of the present field time.

“With future 'glues’ being stronger than the metal being bonded, the entire framework such as girders of skyscraper* will be held together without riv- ets.”

In 1399, President McKinley was shot and critically wounded in Buffalo, N.Y.

EXTRA DISABILITY BENEFIT for WOODMEN OF THE WORLD MEMBERS!

Here’s how Woodmen of the World's extra Disability Benefit works: If you become totally and permanently disabled after a

year’s membership and before age 60, you can turn in your cer- tificate and receive one-half of the face amount in cash.

Most insuring organizations do not have this emergency bene- fit. With Woodmen of the World it’s an extra value, written into every certificate except term.

Call today for specific details and for the full story on Woodmen of the World's outstanding pro- gram of protection plus fraternal and social benefits.

Allen D. Boyd Field Representative 2210 Ingalls Avenue

Pascagoula, Mississippi Phone: SO 2-5397

WOODMEN OF THE WORLD uftwsuRocE