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The Gettysburg Times from Gettysburg, Pennsylvania • Page 5

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THE GETTYSBURG TIMES, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 190S PAQB FIVE Sam Mele Near Cinch To Be Named AL Manager Of Year; Rolling In Clover By LEW FERGUSON Associated Press Sports Writer MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL (AP)---Sam Mele is working on the biggest parlay of his life, and it looks like he's going to bring everything home at once. The Minnesota Twins' manager has guided his baseball team into the World Series, his wife Connie is due to give birth to their fifth child about the time the Series opens, and the Mele family is moving into a new home in Quincy, Mass. "Bringing the Twins home first may have been the easiest of the three," Mele quipped. ROLLING IN CLOVER For a manager who just a year ago had a very uncertain future, Mele is rolling in clover.

A near cinch to be named American League Manager of the Year, Mele can't resist jabbing lightly at former critics with a little "I told you so." Actually, Mele minimizes his own role in the Twins' surge to their first pennant since moving from Washington to the Twin Cities. He won't admit that he became a more aggressive manager and thus instilled a heretofore missing aggressiveness in his club. SAYS LOPEZ GREATEST "I decided on a more aggressive team," he said. "But I don't think I'm more aggressive. I decided last winter that we would have to do more stealing, more hitting and running and lots and lots of more work on fundamentals to eliminate these mistakes we made last year." Mele admits his admiration for Chicago's Al Lopez has greatly influenced his style of managing.

"I've always considered Al the greatest manager ever," Mele said. "It isn't so much that I wanted to copy him; it's more that I wanted to compare what I would do in a given situation to what he would do. I've talked with him by the hour. Most generally, our opinions coincided, which made me feel very happy that I was on the right track. NOT A "COMMANDER" "And, my uncle, Tony Cucci- nelle (White Sox coach), has helped me a lot." Mele is the type of manager who wants the players to feel he is on their side, and not a 'commander" the players must stand in awe of.

"I still go around the clubhouse and talk and joke with the players," he said. "I want them to think I'm close to them. I don't believe in chewing them out. I prefer to talk to them quietly and explain what is wrong and see if they don't agree." Next: From court to diamond. Meet Opens Monday At Charles Town CHARLES TOWN, W.

Va. -Brisk interest in Charles Town Race Course's autumn meeting which opens Monday, October 4, and continues through Saturday, November 27, has been most gratifying to officials. Charles Town will operate its second night time meet under the auspecies of the new Charles Town Turf Club, headed by Baltimore sportsman Irvin Kovens. Other officers of the new racing organization are Irving T. Schwartz and Robert R.

Stofberg, also Bal- timoreans. Louis Pondfield is executive director of the racing plant. More than 1,600 horses will be stabled on the Charles Town grounds and in neighboring locations. Post time for the night programs will be the usual 7:30 o'clock starting time. SCRAMBLE FOR 8 POSITIONS IN AL FINISH By JIM HACKLEMAN Associated Press Sports Writer Three things are sure in the American League Minnesota will finish first, Washington will finish eighth, and there is a scramble for the eight other places.

After Wednesday's action, and with five days left in the season, the pennant-winning Twins and also-ran Senators have their spots clinched. Otherwise Baltimore's streaking Orioles are in second, just 1V games ahead of the Chicago White Sox; two games separate the Detroit Tigers and leveland Indians in the fight for fourth; New York's sixth- place Yankees have only a one- game edge on the California Angels; and the Boston Red Sox are just games ahead of Kansas City's last-place Athletics. 9TH FOR ORIOLES The Orioles made it nine victories in a row Wednesday night, getting two runs in the fifth inning without a hit and trimming Minnesota 4-2. Danny Cater's llth-inning homer gave the White Sox a first-game victory over Detroit, 4-3, but the Tigers won the second by the same score with a four-run rally in the eighth capped by Jim Northrup's two- run triple. Rocky Colavito's three-run lomer helped the Indians deal the Yankees their sixth straight loss, 6-3.

Joe Coleman 18-year-old son of a former big league pitcher, made his debut in the majors and pitched Washington to a 6-1 victory over Kansas City. The A's won the second game of the doubleheader, 8-6. BOSTON EDGED 4-3 And the Angels pushed across two runs in the eighth inning on an error and a bases-filled walk, edging the Red Sox 4-3. Baltimore netted the two runs in the fifth that proved decisive against Al Worthington, Minnesota relief ace who had been sidelined for three weeks with a sore right arm. He loaded the bases on two walks and a hit batter, then walked Brooks Robinson and Curt Blefary on eight straight pitches.

HARMON HOMERS Harmon Killebrew, recently returned to the Twins line-up after seven weeks absence due to a dislocated elbow, homered with a man on for Minnesota's two runs his first homer since July 28. Coleman, just called up by the Senators from the Class A Carolina League where he had an unimpressive 2-10 record limited Kansas City to four hits. He blanked the A's until two were out in the ninth, then was tagged for consecutive singles by Dick Green and Bill Bryan. The youngster's mother and father, who pitched in the American League for 10 seasons hi the 1940s and 1950s, were in the stands. WAKE FOREST GRID COACH IS RESIGNING WINSTON-SALEM, N.C.

(AP) Colorful Horace (Bones) Me Cinney, tall, lanky head basketball coach at Wake Forest Col- ege for the last eight years, is resigning because of ill health. Jack Murdock, McKinney's assistant and a forner Wake orest backcourt star, will be named acting coach. McKinney, confined to Baptist with a cold, announced his resignation Tuesday in a etter to Dr. Harold Tribble, Wake Forest president. Athletic )irector Dr.

Gene Hooks announced Murdock's appointment. PLANS UNCERTAIN A spokesman said the entire asketball program at Wake orest will be re-evaluated at he end of the coming season. McKinney, an ordained Bap- ist minister, was well known 'or his antics while pulling for his team during the heat of a game, which included excited stomping and jumping up and down on the floor. McKinney indicated his plans or the future are not definite le said, "After a month's rest you can bet I'll be job hunting but not for a coaching job." McKinney joined Wake Foresl as an assistant to basketbal coach Murray Greason in 1952 MARIS RECOVERS NEW YORK (AP) Roger Maris of the New York Yankees was recovering at Roosevelt Hospital today from an operation in which he had a bone fragment removed from the base of his right hand. Maris, virtually idle since June 28 when he hurt the hand will remain in the hospital for a few days following Tuesday's operation.

His hand will be in a plaster shell for about three weeks. IT'S AT SHENANDOAH mmv mu ocr. t. mi TIMF JM WOWM mm worn WOMOOHMtt UNOM THI STAIS CHAHLIS TOWN, WHf VMOINIA nNUWEEI-nNALWEEK-FINUWEEK Junior High To Meet Waynesboro West In SP Game A pair of unbeaten junior high football teams will meet here Thursday afternoon at 3:45 when the Gettysburg Junior High Braves entertain Waynesboro West in a South Penn Junior High League game. Both teams have 1-0 records.

The Braves defeated Faust at Chambersburg 20-6 last Thursday in a league game while West downed Martinsburg, W. 14-6 in a nonleague scrap. In another league game Thursday Chambersburg Faust will play at Scotland. X-COUNTRY ATI BGLER OPENS ON OCTOBER 6 A new varsity sport, cross-coun- ry, has been added to Big- ervillc High School athletic pro- ram and five meets, in addition the district and state meets, lave been scheduled by Arthur Gordon, athletic director. Eleven athletes in grades nine lirough 12 comprise the squad which is being coached by Parker Coble, veteran distance track oach.

Leading the squad are two track ettermen, Ken Sell, a two-miler track, and John Oyler, a Soph- more with excellent track poten- ial. Two other Senior boys with rack experience are Ronald Waggoner and Tony Austin. Good underclass prospects are 'nil Houck, Junior; John White, harles Galusha, Rick Cogley and Steve Heller, Sophomores; Gary Guise and Greg Forsythe, Ninth The schedule: October 6, Spring Grove, away; 1, Greencastle, away; 20, St. Francis Prep, home; 25, Spring rove, home; 27, Trinity, away; 30, district meet at Reading; November 6, state meet. Today's Baseball By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS National League W.

L. Pet. G.B Los Angeles 93 64 .592 -San Fran. 92 65 .586 1 incinnati 88 69 .561 5 Pittsburgh 86 72 .544 7Va Milwaukee 84 73 .535 8 Phila. 81 76 .516 12 St.

Louis 76 80 .487 16 Chicago 72 86 .456 21V 2 Houston 64 93 .408 29 New York 58 108 .316 Tuesday's Results Milwaukee 7, Houston 1 Los Angeles 2, Cincinnati 1 12 innings St. Louis 9, San Francisco 1 Chicago 2, Philadelphia 1 New York 1, Pittsburgh 0, 12 innings Today's Games Pittsburgh at New York St. Louis at San Francisco Cincinnati at Los Angeles, 3S Chicago at Philadelphia, Milwaukee at Houston, Thursday's Games Cincinnati at San Francisco St. Louis at Houston, Milwaukee at Los Angeles, Only games scheduled 6 7V American League W. L.

Pet. G.B xMinnesota 99 59 .627 Baltimore 92 64 .590 Chicago 92 67 .579 Detroit 87 72 .547 12V Cleveland 84 73 .535 14V New York 75 84 .472 24 1 California 74 85 .465 25W Washington 68 90 .430 31 Boston 61 98 .384 38V Kansas City 59 99 .373 40 x--Clinched pennant Tuesday's Results California 4, Boston 3 Baltimore 4, Minnesota 2 Cleveland 6, New York 3 Chicago 4-3, Detroit 3-4, Is game 11 innings Washington 6-6, Kansas City 1 8 Today's California at Boston, New York at Cleveland, Minnesota at Baltimore, Kansas City at Washington, Only games scheduled Thursday's Game Minnesota at Baltimore, Only game scheduled Tuesday's Fights PHILADELPHIA Manning, Philadelphia outpointed Jose Stable, 150 New York. 10; Willie Pep. 137 Hartford, outpointe( Irish Johnny Gilmorr, 131, Phil t. Jim Ward Will Be Ready For Delaware Game Gettysburg College'), football hopes shot upward Tuesday with the announcement that Cocaptain Jim Ward, quarterback and star passer, will lie in the starting lineup agaiast Delaware Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock on the Blue liens' field at Newark, Del.

Ward suffered a slight shoulder separation in the game at Hofstra two weeks ago and missed the Bucknell game. It was also announced that hard-running Rod Albright, fullback will Ix? ready for full time service after missing the opening game and playing briefly against Bucknell. On the dark side it was revealed that Jack Costner, first string center, sustained a fractured hand last Saturday. will be replaced by John Hilty. JOHNSON OF CARDS IS TOPS IN OFFENSE By JACK HAND Associated Press Sports Writer NEW YORK (AP) This will come as no surprise to the leveland Browns.

Charley fohnson, the blond bomber of he St. Louis Cardinals, is The Associated Press" Offensive Player of the Week in the Na- ional Football League. Johnson threw six touchdown passes Sunday against the Jrowns in the 49-13 rout and was only one short of the record icld by Sid Luckman, Adrian Burke and Y. A. Tittle.

Given plenty of time to throw Johnson picked his spots carefully and hit with 11 of 19 passes 310 yards. He sat out the last quarter while Buddy Humphrey ook over. The Browns smeared Johnson behind the line only once for a loss of nine yards. Sonny Randle, who caught seven passes and scored three touchdowns, beat Walt Beach consistently. If Johnson had not had such a spectular afternoon, the honors might have gone to Bob Hayes, the former Olympic sprint champion who plays for the Dallas Cowboys.

Hayes caught a pass from Don Meredith and ran 45 yards for one touchdown and sped 11 yards on an end- around play for another. He also took a 23-yard pass from Meredith in the end zone but the score was wiped out by a holding penalty. "He's bound to be the Rookie of the Year if he keeps up this pace," said Coach Tom Landry. Zeke Bratkowski should win something special from Vince Lombard! for coming off the bench and leading Green Bay to a 20-17 victory over Baltimore. Zeke, 33, replaced the injured Bart Starr and threw the whining 37-yard pass to Max Gee in the final minutes.

BOLT SCRUBS DEFEATED BY HANOVER 13-0 Littlestown High's junior varsity football team dropped a harJ fought 13-0 decision to Hanover on the Thunderbolts' field Tuesday afternoon. Hanover's first score came In the second period on a 45-yart pass play from Quay Stolte to Dave Gass. Stolte passed to Brad Arentz for 10 yards and another score in the third quarter. Joe Sheafer ran for the point. Littlestown's lone threat came late in the final frame when Robin Weaver tossed to Don Crabbs on a play which netted 50 yards to put the ball on the Hanover 20 Crabbs being hauled down from behind by Gass.

Hanover held anc secured possession as the game ended. The Thunderbolts will host Get tysburg next Monday evening a 8 o'clock in a night game on Memorial Field. Score by periods: Hanover 0 6 BIG BEN HAS STATE'S TOP WIN STREAK MILL HALL, Pa. BEN" stands for football in this liny Central Pennsylvania hamlet, but like the famed London Clock, it has become a symbol of pride for the people who live there. Big BEN is Bald Eagle Nit- any, a high school named lor be two valleys between which lies, whose current record of 2 straight football victories is nequaled in Pennsylvania.

BEN hasn't been beaten since Is opening game loss to Bald Eagle Area in 1963. Since then attendance has more than doubled, climbing rom 1,500 to more than 3,000, challenge the supremacy of wrestling as king in this hotbed Actually, Bald Eagle Nittany a blend of eight or nine towns along Nittany a i ange, farm communities producing ideal candidates for foot ball. COACH'S RECORD And behind it all is a coach named Walt Deihl, who in nine years as head man at. the 10 year-old school, has compiled )0-16-1 mark and three slraighi West Branch League champion 0--13 0-- 0 Littlestown 0 0 TDs: Gass, Arentz; PAT: Shear er, run. Named Head Proctor At Ritchie Coliseum Dick Dull, a graduate of Biglerville High School and now a Junior at the University of Mary land, has been selected as heat proctor for Ritchie Coliseum which house the university track suad.

His duties include orients tion of Freshmen, counselin Freshmen, keeping quiet hour and study periods enforced anc general squad discipline. In addition to the above dutie he is also assistant to track coach, Jim Kehoe, in the schoo intramural program. Dull is at tending Maryland University a track scholarship and is major ing in the prelaw curriculum. Hi intendes to enter the Marylanc Graduate School of Law upor graduation in 1967. Me- TO DECIDE ON NLPLAYOFF LOS ANGELES (AP) President Warren C.

Giles of the National League announced Tuesday night he will hold a coin tossing or possibly a straw- drawing here today to decide the site and the date of a possible playoff in the three-way fight for the pennant. The decision will be made in the office of Vice President- General Manager E.J. (Buzzie) Bavasi in Dodgers Stadium. Assistant General Manager Phil Seghi of third-place Cincinnati will represent the Reds. Arthur E.

(Red) Patterson, his opposite number with Los Angeles, will be on hand for the first-place Dodgers. President Horace Stoneham of San Francisco will be tuned in via long-distance telephone from the second-place Giants' headquarters. In the event of a playoff, the winner will be decided under National League rules on a two- out-of-three basis. Los Angeles is one game ahead of San Francisco and five in front of Cincinnati. All have five games remaining.

SHENANDOAH TONIGHT'S ENTRIES 2 YO Real Game 120 Hnpny Qne fur 11 112 Umpire 12 112 Georfre B. 12 120 Cherub's Baby 11 117 Nick's Pick 12 $1400. 3 YO clmR. $1250 Nile Junele Dante's Hope Stray Sea Jean SECOND fur. Do The Honori US South River Potomac Gal 108 Gal 11 Who's On Top 10R Another Don 11 Royal Ridge IIS Brighton View 11 Pavoline Girl 113 Rny's Sis 11 Mike's Gertie 11 THIRD--S1500.

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A Into Fuel Kinds Crume Sir Donald Pin Game 109 Captain Bliirh 11 114 Hvlo Rambler 11 117 Beauty's 114 Admiral 11 ships. Deihl, a graduate of nearby Lock Haven State College, is a thinking man's coach who i never averse to the unusual i it will help. For instance, in BEN's second game, the Panthers met Loyal sock in stiffling 90 degree heat Ahead by only 6 points at thi balftime, Deihl abandoned th usual mid-game pep talk and sent his players for a cold show er instead. Refreshed and reju venated, the Panthers storme back to win 27-13. "We've been fortunate over the years to always have a quar terback that can pass," Deih said in describing his Wing-T 01 fense which runs from an un balanced line and uses the pas about 35 per cent of the time One of the big secrets in Deihl success is'his ability to come every year with underclassme: to plug the holes opened by grac uation.

The Panthers this year ar playing with a junior at quar terback and a sophomore at the starting fullback. Both are doinj the job. "This is traditional wit Deihl," area football experts wi tell you. As for the streak, Deihl say it is big for morale among team members, "But we try not emphasize it too much." STRESS EACH GAME "Nobody, of course, wants be on the team that is respon sible for the end of the streak, he said. "But we try to empha size each game as it comes a long, rather than the streak.

Deihl won't make any predic tions as to how long the slrea will last. "We have a rough one thi week," he said, pointing to un defeated Montoursville which ha scored over 30 points in all thre of its victories. Deihl also singled out Sout Williamsport and Powerful Lew isburg as certain threats to th winning streak. "Anyone of these teams coul end it all," he said. Should the Panthers finish th season without a loss or tie the will have 29 straight.

Right nov they are halfway to the stat record of 46 set by little Brae dock High School in the Pitts burgh area between 1956 an 1960. A number of teams have long cr unbeaten streaks than BEN but all have suffered at least on tie to ruin the perfect record BEN's streak is unmarred by loss or a tie. Allege Football Attendance Is Up NEW YORK (AP) College wtball attendance this season unlinucs to run ahead of the ecord piue set last year. Last week's top 10 games in tlendance drew 593,963 fans-n increase of 59,309 over the revious week. It brought the wo-wt-ck total to 1,128,617.

Official attendance figures flcased today by the National 'ollegiate Athletic Bureau bowed that the biggest college rowd in the country last Satur- ay was the 81,417 for Califor- ia's game at Michigan. HOMER IN 12TH DEFEATS REDS FOR DODGERS By MURRAY CHASS Associated Press Sports Writer Lou Johnson has been bat- ered with baseballs from in ront and from behind. Once in a while, though, he does some battering of his own. One of those times of retalia- ion was Tuesday night when Johnson lined a 12th-inning lome run that gave the Los Angeles Dodgers their llth straight victory, a 2-1 decision )ver Cincinnati, and a one-game ead in the furious National League pennant race. The Dodgers had been tied with San Francisco, but St Louis trounced the Giants 9-1 sending them one game back with their fifth loss in seven games.

Third-place Cincinnat fell five back and virtually ou of the race. The three teams each have five games remain ing. TWELFTH HOMER The Dodgers grabbed the top spot all by themselves for th first time in three weeks whe: Johnson connected off Joey Ja; with one out in the 12th. Th homer was his 12th of the sea son but still left that total thre behind his record for being hi by pitches. That's happened a league leading 15 times this year which is just about normal fo the 32-year-old outfielder wh spent 12 years with 15 mino league teams and three majo league teams before be got a break with the Dodgers this sea son.

He got the break because of a break in Tommy Davis' ankl early in May. But no sooner ha he been called up from Spokan than Johnson found himself hi in the head by a pitch from Houston's Bob Bruce. That pile punctured Johnson's battin helmet and put him in the hosp: tal for three days. OUT OF ACTION Then, in June, New York's A Jackson put him out of actio for 13 days by hitting him on th thumb. In other NL games.

New Yor edged Pittsburgh 1-0 in 12 in nings, Milwaukee whippe Houston 7-1 and Chicago nippet Philadelphia 2-1. Los Angeles broke a scoreles deadlock in the seventh whe Jeff Torborg singled, and pine runner Nate Oliver stole secon and came home as Maury Will singled. But the Reds tied it i the eighth on a walk to Tomm Harper, a sacrifice and Vad Pinson's double. St. Louis' Larry Jaster sea tercd 10 hits in only his secon major league start, shutting ou the Giants until Willie Mays his 51st homer in the eighth Jaster also singled across tw runs while Bill White lashec four hits, driving in three runs CANNERS AND DELONE JVS IN 12-12 TIE The Biglervllle and Delone Junir varsity football teams battled a 12-12 deadlock Tuesday eve- ing in McSherrystown, Delone aining the tie with a touchdown the last play of the game.

In the first period Biglerville cored on a 75-yard pass play, hil Carey to Dave Dillman. Deone intercepted a Canner pass midfield in the second quarter open the way for a score, Paul mith finally going over from the iree. After an off-side penally cost iglervillc a TD in the third ne- iod following a 50-yard drive, Canners went in front 12-6 In last frame when Carey raced ver on a 20-yard end sweep. On the last play of the game be Squires knotted the score when a screen pass to Al Staub was good for 45 yards. Biglerville will meet Northern it Biglerville next Monday, Deone at Lancaster Catholic the ame afternoon.

BIGLERVILLE ENDS--Dillman, Grim, Warner, Haskill. TACKLES-Nelson, Irvin, 8. Guise. GUARDS-Walde, Plank, Galloway. CENTER--K.

Guise. BACKS--Carey, Coradetti, Harlow, G. Taylor, R. Weaver, D. Lady, Hess.

DELONE ENDS--Seymore, O'Brien, Thompson, Marshall. TACKLES-Folmer, Ogbert, Herrell. ulIARDS--Allen, Heiser, Gebhart, Keffer. CENTER--Baumgardner. BACKS--Kecfer, Bowling, Smith, Pisula, Cole, Staub.

Score by periods: Biglerville 6 0 0 6-12 Delone 0 6 0 6--12 Touchdowns: Biglerville, Dillman, Carey; Delone, Smith, Staub. STATISTICS First downs 17 Yards rushing 190 Yards passing 105 Passes 2-5 Fumbles, lost 1 Punts, average 2-18 Yards penalized 45 6 66 55 2-5 1 4-38 10 THIS WEEK'S FOOTBALL Today Littlestown (7th and 8th grade) at Bermudian, 4:00. Elizabethtown at Gettysburg, College, soccer, 3:00. Thursday Waynesboro West Junior High at Gettysburg, 3:45. Biglerville (7th and 8th grade) at Hanover.

Delone freshmen at Trinity. Friday Boiling Springs at Biglerville. Susquehannock at Littlestown. Lancaster Catholic at Delone. Saturday Gettysburg College at Delaware, 2:00.

Gettysburg High at Camp Hill, 2:00. St, Francis Prep at Bermudian, 2:00. Gettysburg College at Temple, soccer. Gettysburg College at Lebanon Valley, cross-country. Mt.

St. Mary's at Towson, soccer, cross-country. West Virginia Team To Cover Wide Field MORGANTOWN, W. Va. (AP) West Virginia's basketball team will play an ambitious schedule with a strong intersectional flavor next season.

Besides 10 Southern Conference games and rivalries with Maryland, Penn State. Pitt and Mountaineers have tests with Duke, Illinois, Marquette, North Carolina State, North Carolina, NYU and St. John's. Tuesday's Start BATTING Ixm Johnson, Los Angeles, lashed three singles, then hit a home run in the 12th inning that gave the Dodgers a 2-1 victory over Cincinnati and a one-game lead in the hectic National League pennant race. PITCHING Joe Colcman Washington, pitched a four- hitter in his major league debut as the Senators downed Kansas City in the first fame of a 3 YO ft up.

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6 fur. 109 115 111 120 Cling- IK 10!) 120 114 Jim's Command 120 Sn-ftum Lout Son 112 To Eternity Craft 117 Kriti Sin 109 Private Property YO A UP. 11250. 1 70 vard.i. 2nd 1-0 Fairfax Ptplnr I I Dear An I Koolnh Sun 111 Brvan Mint RounO The Telloff Corner 120 NEW YORK (AP) If the Cleveland Browns are still wondering what hit them last Sunday, a glance at National Football League team statistics will bring them up to date.

The St. Louis Cardinals, winners by a 49-13 score, lead the league in passing with 645 yards and nine touchdown passes and are tied with Philadelphia with 25 first downs passing. The Cards gained 320 yards passing against the Browns. Six interceptions, all against Cleveland, put the Cards in first place in that department although they rank ninth in elefeBM. "All I said was; Show me a filter that delivers the taste and I'll eat my hat." Try new Lucky Strike Filters Style Tips for.

THE COAT HANDKERCHIEF The handkerchief should be worn In a casual manner, without uniform points, square folds, or showing. Open the handkerchief, grasp in the center to form a 'puff," then fact the and erfgejf into pocket, leaving the casual puff er pontd. PITZER'S.

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About The Gettysburg Times Archive

Pages Available:
356,888
Years Available:
1909-2009