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The Newark Advocate from Newark, Ohio • 4

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Newark, Ohio
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4
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The Newark Advocate 4 Newark (O.) Advocat Sept. 22, 1967 And Frank W. Spencer, Publisher Published daily except Sunday by The Advocate Printing Company, 25 W. Main St Advocate established 1820; American Tribune 1826. Entered as second-class matter March 19, 1882, at Newark.

Ohio, Post Office under act of March 4, 1879. The Advocate Is a member of The Associated Press. Subscription rates: 50c weekly by newspaperboy delivery. Mail: $16 a year In Licking County, available only In areas not served by newspaperboys in Ohio $17 a year; outside Ohio $23 a year. Special military rates outside Ohio.

The Advocate welcomes Letters to the Editor from Its readers on any subect tn the pobllc Interest Letters muxt not exceed 304 words In length, must be signed with full name and address writer. Anonymous letters will sot be published. American Tribune Support Denied By MRS. L. F.

MITCHELL, Rt. 2, Pataskala. Does anyone else see the wry humor in the United Appeals supporting Catholic Child Welfare for years and now denying support to the new Planned Parenthood? This has not been my philosophy; therefore, I have not supported UA in the past few years. I wonder how many others would rather mail their contribution to Planned Parenthood. We're Blessed With Talent By FRAN BAUGHMAN, Box 926, Buckeye Lake.

Please, let me apologize for not speaking up when a resident of Indian Lake said we at Buckeye Lake do not have four intelligent men capable of running a village council. This may be true at Indian Lake, but I believe we are blessed with talent. Let's consider a few. What about these retired men the banker, the minister, the lawyer, the vice president, the school teacher and the younger men, the well driller, the builder-contractor, the TV man, the farmer who tills 200 acres of land, the groceryman, the postmaster, the electrician, and the many other capable persons who have given our community churches, playgrounds, youth buildings, shelter house, fire department, emergency unit. Bill Maugan, would you pay $3 more in taxes to have some control over perhaps It is my contention we cannot stand still; now is the time to move forward.

Are we residents at Buckeye Lake going to stand by and let "dirty pool" prevail? "You Don't Notice The Pain As Much, However When The President Backs You To The Hilt" Some See Light By MARY FLORIAN, 19 Western Ave. Ministers of various faiths who have read by letters about the restoration of the true Bible tongues, who don't see the light on it, will not be fteld responsible by God. However, those who do and then don't teach it will be guilty of Rev. 22-10. After you read that verse, remember I didn't say it; the Bible does.

Then, too, it says not to hide a candle under a bushel (Mark 4-21-22-23). Sept. 15, there was an article in The Advocate, headed "Archbishop Ramsey is convinced that one day there will be a united Christendom again." Now, he surely is an intelligent man, but he hasn't seen the truth about the missing gift or would know what would bring it about. Paul makes it very clean in 1 Cor. Chapter 12, there would be division unless all the gifts of the spirit are in use in the church (1 Cor.

12-25). In other words, all the members of the body of Christ (or church) are necessary in order for her to function properly. If Paul, or the other early disciples were living today, they would bring about Christian unity in a short time. There is a saving "that truth hurts at first but then it is a blessing." God knows what the church needs today and when the people who make up the church know it too, He will bring other Pentecosts everywhere foreigners are living today. The only reason there are so many different faiths today is that there is no church today like the first one.

There will be when all the truth is taught and believed. On another occasion, the Duke of Windsor wanted to play a round of golf with Snead. Freddie set it up at a Miami country club and Sam went around the course belting the ball with accuracy. The Duke was ecstatic. Afterward, he asked Freddie what he should give Sam.

"Should I offer him something? Say, fifty dollars?" "No, no," Corcoran said. "He'd rather have a souvenir. Perhaps an autographed picture." The Duke said: "Oh, I say. Of course He gave the photo to Freddie, who drove Sam home and presented it to. him.

Snead put on his par seven puss. "After this," he said, "let me handle the arrangements. Now you've got me playing for autographed pictures of kings. I can buy a whole deck of cards at the cigar counter." Ben Hogan, ho loves the game but despises the ball, seldom smiles. Once, after a turbulent plane ride with Corcoran, they got off in Dallas, shaking.

"Excuse me," said Corcoran, "I'm going inside and dig my rosary beads out from under my fingernails." Hogan broke up laughing. You had an eight. It's your honor No Crowbars, Please! Golf, Anyone? FITEEN YEARS AGO -(From Newark Advocate, Sept. 22, 1952) Two Licking County service men arrived in Seattle, aboard the Navy Transport Marine Phoenix, with 3,000 soldiers from the Far East. They were Sgt.

William Welch, 260 Race and Pfc. Clefton A. Ander-son, Hanover. Nine building permits have been issued the past week by Royal Keyes, city zoning director. Two were issued to Ora Warner, 64 S.

33rd for a new dwelling to cost $9,000 and to John Messimer, 853 Linnwood $8,000. The East Side Church of the Nazarene was granted a permit to erect an addition to the church at a cost of $12,000. Permits were granted four residents to erect garages. Eleven hundred retroactive pay checks, amounting to $300,000, were handed out to workers at the Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Company plant. When the Federal Wage Stabilization board approved the 16 per cent hourly wage increase filed by the United Steel Workers of America, it carried a clause making it retroactive to Jan.

1, 1952, hence the windfall or Christmas in September. Almost $300,000 is being paid to the 1100 hourly rate employes of the Kaiser Company. Miss Mary Ann Watling, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Watling, 138 Neal graduated from the White Cross Hospital School of Nursing.

She is a graduate of Newark High School with the class of 1949. A total of $96,300 worth of construction was reported by the 39 building permits issued last month by Royal Keyes, director of zoning. Twenty-four were for new. construction; and 15 for remodeling. New construction amounted to $67,550 and 15 remodeling jobs will cost $27,750.

TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO (From Newark Advocate, 1942) CARROLTON Fire, started by the explosion of a gasoline stove, raced through the highly inflammable tent of a midway concession and se fire to the grand-, stand in the fairgrounds during the Carrolton County fair. More than 1,000 persons were routed by the flames. Three persons were injured when the fire struck the shooting gallery and cartridges exploded. Peter (Liberty Pete) Androutsos, who recently was recognized as Licking County's "number one" war bond and stamp salesman, is not going to rest on his laurels. "Pete" is heading a project to buy Christmas 'smokes" for Americans who are serving in the armed forces overseas and already has started collection of funds headed by a personal contribution of $25.

could stand the tension and the losses no longer. So they moved to the quiet little town of Hemet, Calif. That was two years ago. Several days after they opened their new restaurant, a burglar used a crowbar to smash down the door. Since then, their place has been robbed five times.

Each time the kitchen door was broken down. The Gardners have thrown up their hands in disgust but rather with good humor. They now have a sign on their door which reads: "Robbers: no crowbars, please. Kitchen window is open. Thanks a bunch." Quips Quotes The English know how to make the best of Their so-called muddling through is simply skill at dealing with the inevitable.

H. L. Mencken. Alcoholic: Someone you don't like who drinks as much as you do. Dylan Thomas.

When a thing is funny, search it for a hidden truth. George Bernard Shaw. I never knew a man who lived on hope but what spent his old age at somebody else's expense. Josh. Billings.

Let their be spaces in your togetherness. Kahlil Gibran. There is nothing more horrible than imagination without taste. Goethe. Detente Soviets, will not finance and equip a war.

The Arabs are not really pleased or happy. But lacking the capacity to recognize and accept reality, they obtain it from the Soviets. The Russians do not know what is going to happen in China. It is apparent, diplomats say, that the' Kremlin experts are no more able to read the tea. leaves in China's present cup than anyone else.

If the Chinese wish, they could, without too much trouble, begin war on the long border they share with the U.S.S.R. The sore spots of Mongolia and Outer Mongolia are there. The United States does not know what is going to happen. So we have a detente. It is a comforting thing to have at this moment in history.

Nothing is solved, settled, or determined. There are' still the rich oil and gas reserves of the Sahara. There, are still the unstable men in Algeria and Syria. This is still a "power world." But we do have a detente. May it live long enough to grow gray with age! Jim Bishop Wrifes I must go with a man who knows how to write a lead.

Fred Corcoran, who tells a yarn in the manner of a tavern tarrier, wrote a golf book a couple of years ago and opened with the awesome gospel: "What doth it profit a man if he gain the whole world and 3 putt the 18th green?" Maybe he wroe it. Then again, he had help from a literary ringer named Bud Harvey. It sounds like Corcoran. He's a broth of a boyo from Boston, a onetime caddy who ran a Gaelic sense of humor up to the job of director of tournament play for the Professional Golf Association. When Freddie took over, the (Juimets and Vardens were splitting $3,000.

Today, Nicklaus won't even tense up for less than $20,000 riding on a putt. Mr. Corcoran had enemies in the PGA; friends too. He bounced his frolicsome stories off the tanned hides of the sports writers and they recognized Freddie for what he is: a golden tongue in a brassy suit. He polishes anecdotes in the manner of a diamond cutter working over a gem with a spritz of ammonia and a bit of lamb's wool.

There is the one Freddie opens with in his Unplayable Lies, about Tommy Armour, on in years, playing Pinehurst. He studied his lie and asked the caddy: 'What club?" The boy squinted at the pin in the distance and said: "Four iron." Armour removed it from the bag, lined the gleaming clubliead behind the ball, lofted it into the pale sky, and watched it die 30 yards short of the green. The snowy-roofed Scot smiled at the caddy and murmured: "You're not caddying for the Armour of old, laddie. You're caddying for the old Armour." No golfer, of course, is ever happy. It's a game of comparative misery, unless a man can complete his round in 18 shots.

Years ago, Mike Brady, the Oakley Corinne?" A No matter how many police there are, a few cities are so huge and sprawling some criminals cannot help having occasional well-paying field days. Los Angeles is one of these unfortunate cities. Evidently conditions in Los Angeles are so bad that a few places of business have been robbed countless times. One, a restaurant owned by Mr. and Mrs.

Everett Gardner, for example, was broken into three times and held up eight times. Finally, the Gardners Freedom Cry Freedom has been the cry of Timothy Leary freedom to use LSD without interference and freedom to advocate the use of what he contends is not a dangerous drug, but one "beneficial to human health and happiness." Now Dr. Leary may be coming face to face with the responsibility which is the better half of freedom. In Oakland, the parents of a youth who committed suicide during a "bad trip" on LSD have sued Leary and others for $600,000, contending that they were directly responsible for persuading the 20-year-old to use the drug which led to his death. It will be interesting to see the outcome of the trial.

Most of all, it will be interesting to see if it has any braking effect on the thousands who are irresponsibly advocating the use of LSD and other dangerous drugs. had notified Nasser that they would not finance and provide the necessary weapons, munitions, tanks, and aircraft necessary for such a war. Without these, the Arabs cannot go to war. So, for a span of time short or long the Soviets have prevented a recurrence of war. The Soviet decision, too, was one of realism.

They do not wish to confront the United Stales in the Mediterranean area. They already are doing well there. They believe events further will assist them. They do not regard the Arabs as reliable. A Soviet analysis, circulated in diplomatic circles in Europe, finds the Arabs unable to make up their minds as to what they want to be.

Most of the new countries, including Egypt, profess to be "socialist." But there is no Marxist or Leninist socialism in them. There also is the strong determination to be religious nations Muslims. The Muslim brotherhood is a political force that varies in power with each country. So, while there are protestations of "socialist republics," what actually exists is feudalism, a strong adherence to Muslim law and customs, and, where oil is concerned, a class capitalism. The Russians would rather not add war to this picture.

So, they privately inform the Arabs they, the I Ralph McGill Writes: We Do Have A Country Club pro, stored two holes in one on one roun. In addition, they came back-to-back. On the way home, a caddy congratulated Mike. He shook his head sorrowfully. "I should have had three," he moaned.

"I missed the third one by two inches." Corcoran says that the only interesting person he's ever met at six-thirty in the morning is Sam Snead. This would lead me to believe that Freddie has had a hard life. The only time Snead ever picked up a check was when it was made out to cash. At 40,000 feet in a jet, his wallet explodes. Once, Snead was listening to Ted Williams tell about how much tougher baseball is than golf.

"Sam," he said, "you use a club with a flat hitting surface and belt a stationary object. I stand up there with a round bat and hit a ball that is traveling toward me a 110 miles an hour and curving." "Yeah," Snead muttered, popping his gum. "But you don't have to go up in them stands and play your loul balls." Freddie, in his career, went everywhere and met most everybody. He said it is Walter Hagen who observed that, if a ball rolls into a cup, it's a lucky shot; if it stops near the hole, it's a great one. It was I who observed that golf is the only game in the world where they don't permit you to look up and see what you've done, and they also expect you to call your own penalties.

An Indonesian team of golfers, playing in a tournament in Australia, showed up looking like bankrupt ragpickers. One came in after the first round in the high eighties, and lie was kidded about it. "Who has time to play?" he said. "I'm busy giving lessons." Meditate A Moment By JAMES KELLER Paris jaywalkers were shouted, at in mid-street by loudspeakers set up at busy corners last year. The offenders heard themselves hailed and their offenses made public.

This was their punishment for being caught jaywalking at any of 150 of the most congested and dangerous intersections in the city. TIip idea, devised by the Interior Minister to improve pedestrian discipline, was part of a two-week drive called the Fortnight of the Pedestrian. Having public attention called to our faults is not the most pleasam or even the loftiest motive for self-improvement. But it can be highly effective, and at times nearly unavoidable. In the long run, however, there is no substitute for a personal sense of responsibility to others.

God has not only given it to us by our very nature, but He has also revealed His wishes to us explicitly. Try to develop conscience and an appreciation for God's word in such a way that your actions speak well of you. Perhaps the two most important international facts of this moment in time and history are these: 1. The chaos in China. 2.

The successful beginnings of a detente between the United States and Soviet Russia. Those Arab leaders who recently concluded a mini-summit meeting at Khartoum came away in a chastened mood. Their bitterness toward Israel is perhaps greater than ever. But they propose some form of modus Vivendi rather than war. They will not "recognize" Israel.

But they did suggest the necessary face-saving "out." They will discuss a pledge of allegiance to the United Nations charter. Israel is a member of the U.N. Pledging to accept the charter means accepting the presence and existence of Israel. This is a strained bit of subterfuge. But for the Arab leadership, which is notorious for self-deception and for believing its own bombast, the Khartoum concession was a massive piece of reality.

Now, hom do we thank for this? The Soviets. It is inescapable that Nasser took with him to Khartoum the word from the Arabs friends in Moscow that they, the Kremlin directors, did not want a war in the Middle East at least, not now. Not wanting one they The difference between psychoneurosis and nervousness is about $50. Banking 4.

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About The Newark Advocate Archive

Pages Available:
807,741
Years Available:
1882-2024