8B -THE CAROLINA TIMES SATURDAY, SEPT. 30. 1067 bowlino DAIRY photographer restaurant shoe repair want ads "J, ' * RATES FOR CLASSIFIED ADVIRTISEMEMTS Display Classified Ads per column inch 91.60 Raader Classified Adts 25c per word lO word minimum) No ads accepted after Tuesday noon. All Classified Ads must be paid for In dvance, prior to publication to guaran tee publication. PHONE 882-2813 or FOR FURTHER INFORMATION. ASK FOR CLASSIFIED DEPT. IMPORTANT NOTICE The Carolina Times will not bo responsible for typo graphical errors not made on its accounts If at fault, tbe advertisement will be printed in following issue without cost to the sdvertlser. Notice of error must be msde within 48 hours after ap pearance of first publication n . » .V. TAXI DRIVERS WANTED Domestic Ava,lable IMMEDIATELY LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING. Eight apply in person { hours a day. Call after 5:00 Carolina Cab Company j p.m. 489-6752 411 West Franklin Street — Chapel Hill. N. C. I « 1 1 ~— ;^ a^sas:s^ r 1 1 These replicas of 17th century European calculating machine# against the background of a modern IBM computer illustrate progress from 1647 to 1967 in processing the information upon which so much of today's civilization is built. The old and the new are part of an exhibit at the 20th anniversary conference of the Association for Computing Machinery in Washington, D.C. - bcj tbffifol iAe GREEK GENIUS MtCHtMEDES INVENTED THIS WATER RAISING SCREW WHICH HAD A TECHNOLOGICAL IMPACT . ALL OUT OF POOPOCTION TO ITS SIMPLICITY. SHOWN IN CROSS MM J)H| SECTION, THE POUNDED WOOOEN BEAM -"W R APPE.D SPIRALLY ' / W| WITH STRIPS OF WOOO ON JF JJK EDGE., ENCASED IN [IN 1867. THE AMEQ/CM GENIUS OF \ &OR6E OABCOCK AND STEPHEN WILCOX \ INVENTED HISTORY'S FIRST BOILER CAPABLE. -ii VEARS,THE COMPANY f NUCLEAR. NAERCHANT VC.SSEL ... AND AUTOMATED IMCHININO EQUIPMENT MORE THAN A CITY BLOCK LONG.' START CLUB MEETING WITH SUPPER FROM FREEZER When the next club or committee meeting is scheduled at your house, invite the guests to come early for a supper that can be en)oyed while the agenda is discussed. With convenient frozen prepared foods that require only defrosting or heating before serving, it take* little effort to provide a meal that's festive and tasty. So that the meal will not interfere with the program, limit the •election of food to a few items. Frozen main dish pies-available in a choice of siaes and fillings including chicken, turkey, tuna beef-are an excellent choice. For deesert, consider a rich m«l filling far oxen cake, pie or other pastry. The menu illustrated above features individual Beef Pies, topped with sour cream and frozen chivee after baking, and Pine apple Cheesecake Torte, made quickly and easily by stacking two pinebpple cheesecakes together. GOOD HARVEST • The Pilgrims observed the first Thanksgiving, in 1621, to give thanks for a bountiful harvest. Today, many Amer icans give thanks by taking bundles of used clothing and l>edding to a local Catholic church during the 1967 Cath olic Bishops' Thanksgiving Clothing Campaign. The great harvest of goods will be distributed to the poor of 80 countries without regard to race or creed. STITCH IN TIME Serviceable used garments donated to the 1967 Catholic Bishops' Thanksgiving Clothing Campaign can be us£d in sewing classes in 80 countries, where people will learn a vocational skill. VIETNAM AID One fourth of the used gar ments given last year to the Catholic Bishops' Thanks giving Clothing Campaign were distributed in Vietnam. Many of the items collected again this year will go to in nocent victims of the war. STEP-BY-STEF LESSON: How to Hem a Float Pleats are "sew-fashion able." Pleats Jean look pert and perky with a swingy bounce, or soft and suitably elegant. A pleat may stand alone as a design detail or be one-of-many for a classic kil tie look. Here's the last word on how to hem a pleat which involves a seam, too. Try on your "all-but hemmed" garment with the shoes you plan to wear. Have someone mark the hemline at a fashionably becoming length for you (Step 1). Turn up the hem along this marking and baste V 4 inch from the hemline to hold it in place. Press the basted hem line to establish the edge (Step 2). Next, trim the hem to an even width. Measure up an even distance from the hem line with a ruler and mark this with a chalk pencil. Cut along this marked line (Step 3). As a guide in establishing the width, usually a 2-3 inch hem is used on a straight skirt, and a 2 inch hem on a gored skirt. Clip the seam allowance at the top of the hem, cutting al most to the stitching. Snip and remove the hemline bast ing for 2-3 inches on either side of pleat seam (Step 4). Working on the ironing board, with the wrong side of the garment uppermost, turn down the hem allowance. Press open the pleat seam be low the clip. Trim this part of the aeatn allowance to l A inch to reduce the bulk in the hem caused by the pleat seam. This step enables you to have a lump-free hem (Step 5). That's all there is to it quick and easy, but an im portant handling technique to know. Now just finish the hem as you would for any skirt, using a turned and stitched or dressmaker's hem. If you have sewing ques tions, write to Meg Carter, McCall's Patterns, 230 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10017. A jJjfOMOON NHOOC /S FHULMQ DOWU! i /\ FAMOUS SPAN ACROSS THE THAMES . A M v 111. WILL BE REPLACED WITH A NEW VERSION ILr \ [a BY 1970. THE PRESENT LONDON BRIDGE, A - COMPLETED IN 1631. IS ACTUALLY THE SECOND, f THE ORIG)NAt - BUILT IN 1209, HAD OVER 100 )# 1 1 \s. 1; TL > —S^gssil «J*i WORLDS LOHKST OA/im/Miocd j j-ir ZAMBEZI BRIDGE IN MOZAM- J/ ,ih^;.T? 6IQUE. COMPLETED IN 1Q35, ,/ i \\V jfl- IT HA9 A TOTAL LENGTH Of Q'V '.— —I2,OMFE£T/ [\ MM my * W V£UVI6" Jr' SMITHFIELD STREET BRIDGE, jWjf/T V, ' Mil IT IN 1861 TO REPLACE A COVERED BRIDGE, " \y ' 1 J *i>± ztf-;' THE CITY'S FIRST. IT GOT A SECOND LIFF IN Wi 1953, WHEN AN ALUMINUM PECK WAS INSTAIIEQ ' AND WILL BEGIN ITS THIRD UFETHIS YEAR '• / XJ' l ?* WHEN THE DECKS REPLACED BY A NEW ONE, jV.fi EMPLOYING DURABLE, CORROSION-RESISTANT AIMyS"?, u m ALUMINUM ALLOYS DEVELOPED BY ALCOA. HO yMI MWJN L o * o LIMITC WILL K NEEDED BECAUSE AlUMimii i IJM M\ " LICHTNECS AMD THE SPECIAL"OKTHOIROPIC PESIGN U\\W/|I I »\ xx OF THE BRIDGE REDUCED DEADWEIGHT M 600 m/f| How To Help Your Child "Join The Band" pPF9 p Vjfl a I it's time to Join the band, it 1 ! time to find out what instru m" I ■ child should play. Are hit arms long enough for trom bon. ? Is hi* jaw properly shaped for trumpet? Should it be clarinet, flute, or ban horn? Tne world's largest manufacturer of band instruments, has recently published a booklet for parents, answering these and many other questions. Modern math, the museum trip, and patrol duty aren't the only new experiences of fourth grade. As sure as popsicles drip, your fourth grader will be offered a seat in the Beaver Band When he races home to ask if he can join the band, what will you say? Your decision doesn't particularly depend on whether or not you think your child is talented. A gift for music is more lavishly distributed among children than most parents realize. If you decide to enrich your child's life through music, you'll discover you are enriching your own experiences, too. The school band director will carefully test your child's aptitude for music and his relevant physical characteristics sue and shape of mouth, lips and teeth. This helps determine which instrument would best suit the child. Instrument rental programs, available at leading music dealers, will provide valuable time for you to be sure the right instrument has been chosen. At about fourth grade you will have the opportunity to chooie* whether vour child shall have music now and for all hi? life. In making this choice you will commit yourself to a genuine in terest in his complete education. Most likely he will be chal lenged by music and will respond to it. While your child may become a lawyer, housewife, or kindergarten teacher, he will never forget the days of the Beaver Band. A pamphlet to help you make this decision is "An Enriched Life for Your Child through Music," from the Conn Corporation, the world s largest manufacturer of band instruments. It answers •V I®* 1 ®** 10 ™ moßt parents have about instrumental music and their child. You can have a copy by sending 25* for postage and handling to Conn Corporation, Elkhart. Indiana 46614 Heart Disease ... Or Gas? Everybody swallowsairand thinks nothing of it, but it can be overdone - overdone to the I>oint at which the symptoms produced are similar to those of gallbladder or In-art dis ease. Researchers attending a re cent New York Academy of Sciences conference reported that swallowing of air which doctors call aerophagia may be the chief cause of gastroin testinal "gas." The situation may he exaggerated by smoking, hurried swallow ing of food and drink, and emotional tension, anxiety, or chronic fatigue. Too much carbonato-d bev erages soda or beer - and Jood with ;u'r whipped into it, such as milk shakes, souffles, sponge cake, and whipped cream, all contribute to the quantity of air ingested. Various vegetables also can contribute to the amount ol "gas" in the digestive system. This results from the fermen tation of fibrous foods in the intestines. , Doctors at the conference said that among the "giisny" I foods are broccoli and other i n>eml>erK of the cabbage fain- i ily, peas, beans, cucumbers, onions, melons or, for that i matter, excesses of most raw fruits and vegetables. Dr. James L. A. Roth, di rector of the Division of Gas troenterology, University of Pennsylvania, School of Med icine said that intestinal gas may mask organic disease. 'l* entrapment in thr gastro intestinal Irurl creates din comfort thai may be mis taken for {iiillhladder disease or angina ixclorin. Dr. Manuel J. Rowen, car diologist of St. Elizabeth's Hospital in New Jersey, who took part in a roundtable dis cussion following the two-day conference, said that "pseu doangina" is actually a pain in the abdomen which feels as if it's in the chest, leading a layman to assume he has heart pain. Actually it is caused by gas which has ac cumulated and is trapped in the intestine. For such patients, Dr. Rowen prescribes Phazyme, a tablet combining a digestive enzyme with a simethicone, a medicinal form of silicone to breakdown gaseous froth. The rr»ulljx relief from gas pres sure mill pain—anil from the fear of imagined heart d in cuse. SOMEONE CARED Photo by CIRIC A shirt that has not been mended and patched—per haps the first he has owned in his life—is a sign to this old man in a Calcutta home for the aged that someone cares about his plight. India is just one of 80 coun tries where poverty-stricken people receive clothing, shoes and bedding donated by Americans during the annual Catholic Bishops' Thanksgiv ing Clothing Campaign. All clothing received will be distributed throughout the year to the world's needy, re gardless of race or creed. Leave a bundle of serviceable used garments at the near est Catholic church during November. I NOTE TO EDITORS During November the nine teenth annual Catholic Bish ops' Thanksgiving Clothing Campaign will be conducted throughout the United States. It is an appeal to all Ameri cans to donate their service able used clothing, bedding, blankets and shoes to help al leviate poverty in 80 different countries around the world where millions of men, wom en and children are in dire need. The cooperation which you have so generously given to this appeal in past years is again sought for the 1967 Thanksgiving Clothing Cam paign. Clothing and other items that Americans have dis carded because they are in need of mending or are no longer in style become gifts of hope to the helpless and destitute in the vast under developed and needy areas of the world. These used gar ments mean that a man can find work or go on working to support his family . . . that a child can go to school without shame . . . that people will have protection against win ter cold, seasonal rains or the blazing tropical sun. All clothing and material donated to the Thanksgiving Clothing Campaign will be packed, shipped overseas and distributed to the needy by Catholic Relief Services, the overseas aid agency of Amer ican Catholics, which is the world's largest private volun tary relief organization, oper ating programs of relief and rehabilitation in 80 countries. Distribution is made entirely without regard to race, creed or color. Reception depots will be set up during November in Catholic parishes across the nation. The nearest Catholic church will accept donations of serviceable used clothing, shoes, bedding, blankets and household items. Any garment in wearable condition, any useable blan ket or item of bed linen, and all shoes in good repair will be gratefully received and sent to those in need. B be THOMPSONI ifJ/U THIS BECOME ILLEGAL ? Mi In W(||jf TO KEPUCE AIR POLLUfIOM. ALL PUEMING... ' HOME FO2NACES, GAS IN AUTOMOBILES, II 111 I | ! P CW WZMKLSB FOR. FOSSIL FUELS, iNPUSHzy AWP UTILITY USERS OF "FOSSIL Ii 8m I FUELS'(COAL ANP OIL) ARE \™ iliaEEg? II Js! I PEVELOPING NEW TECHNIQUES VJSrjT II W I TO EEPUCE AIR POLLUTION. J EFFICIENT COMBUSTION, n SMOKE STACK CONTROL PEVICES, ESI /V ,\ rf) CAREFUL SELECTION OF FUEL 43 I V_,N£ES JPI COM&INE TO CtEA£ THE AIR. Gm /5 /(V MAMV WOPEKN PEDPUCTS'IN y / V (*>/$I fan / SENEEAL USE ARE MAPE. . Rue&ER, nylon, » / V;£ CT=^- L s^r lfca COSMETICS ALL HAVE PECIVATIVES i J Dial 696-8202 for © : S!' "f h * 2505 ****** At *' * Welions Viltw# i n Aja VpkK^(mtey ; ..v y , iLAUNjDEEEES & CLEANERS Phone 682-s+*£ REFRIGERATED FUR STORAGE AND BOX STORAGE 5 iVnrient J||3\initnl3\y UnTSmo. 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