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Nashua Telegraph from Nashua, New Hampshire • Page 5

Publication:
Nashua Telegraphi
Location:
Nashua, New Hampshire
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

NASHUA TELEGRAPH. NASHUA. N. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22,1985 Word Power I Nashua Telegraph I P.O. Box 489, Dept.

08060 I Radio City Station New York, New York 10019 I copta of "The Won! Power Way I Success" it per copy. Enclosed Is my check vt MOMJT trier I Name I I Address 'City State Zip Code, I aote: Be rare to Include your rip Mike tkeeb I payable to "Word Power." Allow three weeks lor delivery.) Word Power Way to Success Test Your Spelling Ky The Reading Laboratory, Inc Written for NBA Special Service! You are to select the properly spelled word in each of the 50 selections below. After you have circled the correct spelling, give the number of the rhyme our preceding column printed them all which explains your choice Each proper selection is worth two points. After you have gone through all 50 below, check your selections with the answers printed below, upside down. You should score 100 if you have been following our series, especially if you memorized the verses suggested by The Reading Laboratory.

Spelling Test 1. eoncieve, conceive arrival, arriveal sufficeint, sufficient parallelism, parallelism desirous, desireous mar (marred, mared) freight, fright stoney, stony jf repreive, reprieve 10. memorizing, memorizeing 11. buoys, buoies 12. craftyness, craftiness 13.

attorneys, attornies 14. men-of-war, man-of-wars 15. advantagous, advantageous 16. porches, 17. anceint, ancient 18.

reversable, it.ersible 19. referrence, reference 20. colloquys, colloquies 21. heinous, hienous 22. defilment, defilement 23.

weird, wierd 24. preceed, precede 25. proceed, precede 16. enemys, enemies 27. irritible, irritable 98.

forfeit, forfiet 29. skinned, skined JO. tying, Uing 31. courts-martial, court-martials 32. rogueish, roguish 33.

seized, siezed 34. changing, changeing 35. changable, changeable 36. slip (sliped, slipped) 37. uninhabitible, uninhabitable 38.

deterrence, deference 39. father-in-laws fathers-in-law 40. nieghbor, neighbor 41. outrageous, outragous 42. liesure, leisure 43.

noticing, noticeing 44. noticeable, noticable 45. excitement, excitment 46. boxs, boxes 47. aide-de-camps, aides-de-camp 48.

foreign, foriegn 49. niether, neither 50. soveriegn, sovereign Answers I) nJraaaiO! (I) (H) (B) (2) aupijon (I) JoqqSian (OT) (I) 'Si '52 Official State Safety INSPECTION STATION B.EGoodrich; B. F. Goodrich 227 MAIN ST.

Station No. 963 (H) UBinSoa '22 (8) 'T2 -02 (01) '6Z (I) 1PJJOJ '83 aiqmuai -O. (g) Botiuena TI pa'ancud '93 (n) apaaajfl 't3 (I) pJiSM -2Z (3) gnaraaujap 'ZZ (t) enonyaq 'iz (i) 'QZ (OT) aiiiajajaj (6) aiqieJaABJ '81 (I) auapire 'it (g) fianaiort '9T (g) BnoaSmmjAprc (8) j-Ejtt-jo-natu 'frT (9) sAsnjonn 'El (2t) BBsmljBJO 'Zl- (9) EAcnq '11 (g) Sutzuomam 'Ot (I) a'AajjdaJ '6 (Z) fiuow '8 (I) insiaaj 'i (OT) pOJJUtu '9 enojieap 'e (or) 'fr (I) inapijjiw (Z) IIAJJM 'B (T) 'T (NEXT: Grammar Needn't Be Grim.) FILM PROCESSING- PENNY PINCHER Vuring 8 ONLY AC ea. 25 ea. Black White JUMBO PHOTOS ONE DAY SERVICE COLOR PHOTOS 2 DAY SERVICE 5 5 ENLARGEMENTS.

Black and White From Square Negatives ea. VISIT THE STORES LISTED BELOW FOR THESE AND OTHER FILM SAVINGS OLIVER'S PHARMACY RICE'S PHARMACY Shapiro's) 59 Main Street 235 Main Street UNITED NATIONS DAY GUY MURCHIE World Famous Author of Song of the Sky Music of the Spheres Resident of Malaga, Spain, on limited sojourn in the United States will Uerura en "SCIENCE ft BMimiHOOD'' Sunday, October 24, 1965 7 P. M. 93 Highland Strart, Hudson, N. H.

Public Invited Auspices: BahaT. of Hodsxw Officers of the Nashua Junior Women's Club and League of Women Voters, of Meet the Candidates night at Crowley School Auditorium, Lake st Monday right at 8, meet with Bernard Streeter (right), to discuss the program format. Streeter, president of the Nashua Jaycees will serve as the timer. State Representative Marshall Coblelgh will be moderator. Left Is Mrs Donald Ayer, president of the Junior Women's Club and center, Mrs Philip Lewis, chairman of the Plan Candidates Night rMwnuMiolt-lhalhMip) League's voters' service committee.

Invited to take part are candidates in the municipal election on Nov 2 Including the aspirants for Mayor, Alder- mcn-at-Large, School Board, Board of Public Works and Assessor. Aldermudc to various wards also have been Invited and will remain following the meeting to answer questions and discuss Issues. Prize winners of the government quiz sponsored by the League and Jayeees will be announced at the meeting. Los Angeles Woman Spends All Profits on Homeless Boys 'it (9) tsxoq '9P LOS ANGELES (AP) Her spare time and modest savings were the assets Miss Ettie Lee used to start a $3-million fortune --all the profits from (which she spends on homeless boys. Miss Lee, 79, a retired Los Angeles school teacher, and an aunt of Secretary of the Interior Stewart L.

Udall, earned the money investing in real estate Over the past 35 years. All her profits go to the Ettie Lee Homes the 14 ranches, for boys she maintains. She lives on her teacher's pension. Her explanation: "As a teacher, I noticed quite a pattern in boys having difficulties. They were boys who didn't have a good home situation.

Man's World "This is a man's world. It takes a man to develop a boy into a man. Ninety per cent of JACOBY ON BRIDGE Right Decision Brings Reward NORTH (D) A A 6 12 WEST 4 9 7 5 4 10 9 4 7 3 8 4 5 4 2 EAST A 10 3 4 2 A 9 4 2 A 1 0 9 8 8 5 3 4Q8 Both vulnerable See article lor bidding and opening lead. Both South players had a bidding problem on board-US of the nternational match. At each table forth had opened with one diamond and rebid to one spade after South responded one heart.

The American South solved his problem pessimistically and merely bid two hearts. This wasn't the worst underbid of all time or even a bad underbid. If North should happen to have a bad heart holding the chances are that two hearts would be the correct bid. Unfortunately for America North held ace and one heart as part of a slightly better than minimum hand. North passed and South had to play two hearts.

The Italians put up their usual good defense. The seven of clubs was opened and East won with the king. He returned the deuce of diamonds to his partner's king. Back came a diamond. East took his ace and played ace and another club.

South discarded a de and the defense had five tricks in before South could make a move. Of course, he did make the rest of the tricks for the part score contract. At the other table South jumped three hearts and North made winning decision. He went to three no-trump! ''c nlay at three no-trump was short and sweet from the standpoint. West openec the ace of clubs and continued with the king and ten to set up two more club tricks for himself.

He also held the ace of diamonds for an entry, but none of this did him any good because North simply ran off the rest of the tricks in spades and hearts. This gave Italy a net profit on the board of 550 points or 11 International Match Points. Q--The bidding has been: South West North East 2 4 Pass 3 Pass 34 Pass 4 4 Pass You, South, hold: A A 8 6 2 A 42 What do you do? A--Bid four no-trump. Ton aren't sure of a slam, but 7011 should plan to go to six if your partner shows one ace. There should be a finesse for it.

TODAY'S QUESTION You bid four no-trump and your partner shows two aces by bidding five hearts. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow the boys in trouble were from homes where there was no strong male figure in their lives. "I tried to find homes for these boys, but I was unsuccessful. I made up my mind then that I'd have to be like the little red hen and do the job myself." This meant she'd need plenty of money, and she never made more than $300 a month as a teacher. But she saved what she could.

Her first real estate deal came in 1930, when she paid for a lot in the Wilshire district. "I sold it two years later for $5,000," she recalls. Their she began looking for larger investments. "I must have bought and sold 50 apartment houses since I started operating," she said. Enough Resources By 1950 four years after she retired from teaching she had enough resources for her project.

She says that when she dies her estate will go to continuing the projects. Miss Lee said it cost from $40,000 to $50,000 to build each home. Miss Lee hires Mormon couples her own faith to run the homes, which, however, are nondenominational. a houses 10 to 12 boys 12 to 17 years of age. Two Americans and a Japanese Share Nobel Prize for Physics STOCKHOLM (AP)-The 1W5 Nobel Prize (or physics was awarded Jointly Thursday to two Americans and a Japanese -Julian Schwinger of Harvard, Richard Feynman of the California Institute of Technology, and Sln-Itiro Tomonago of Japan.

The Royal Swedish Academy of Science said the award was given for "their fundamental in quantum electrodynamics, with deep-ploughing consequences for the physics of elementary particles." Prize Money the prite money--about $55,. MO--will be shared equally by the three winners. Tomonaga, 59, is the oldest of the three scientists. For several yean he has headed a group of researchers in the field of theoretical physics at the Tokyo University of Education, i branch of Tokyo University. Schwinger and Feynman are both 47, and both were born in New York City.

Harvard Poet Schwinger studied at Columbia University, took his doctor's degree in 1939 and worked at Purdue University before joining the Harvard faculty at Cambridge, Mass. Feynman studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and took his doctor's degree at Princeton in 1942. During the war he worked partly at Princeton and partly at the nuclear research laboratory at Los Alamos, N.M. His early and decisive contributions to quantum electronics were made at Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., where he held a chair in physics 1945-51. He moved to Caltech in Pasadena in 1951.

The Royal Academy said the three professors' achievements had proved extremely useful for the understanding of nuclear forces, for the understanding of the new elementary particles within high-energy physics and for the treatment of certain collective phenomena in the subject of solid-state physics. Third of Four The prize is the third of four Nobels to be awarded in Stockholm. Three French, scientists, Francois Jacob, Andre Lwoff and Jacques Monod, won the physiology and medicine prize list Thursday. Soviet novelist Mikhail Sholokhov won the literature prize on Friday. Still to come is the prize for chemistry and the peace prize, which will be awarded in The prize: were set up under the will of Alfred Nobel, Swedish inventor of dynamite, who died in 1896.

Very Promising Future For Men's Hair Stylists By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK (AP) Wish your husband looked less like a bald eagle and more like either of the senators Kennedy? Wish your boyfriend looked more like Tony Curtis? Wish your schoolboy son looked less like a prickly pear and more like Prince Charles? Madam, you should consult your friendly barber beg pardon, your friendly hair stylist. Major Industry But which ever he is these days, he can probably tell you that the ancient craft of cutting men's hair has developed into a rillion-dollar annual hair care industry. The only recession the bar- ers see ahead is that of hair- ines on the masculine head, hdustry spokesmen say they have ways of handling that and that more men than you may suspect are taking to the latter- day techniques of camouflage. There are still more barbers than men's hair stylists in these United States some 300,000 of the basic type and some 18,000 of the newer clique. But the latter say their number is growing fast.

And they hope that the nation's youth training programs will produce a new flock of apprentice barbers. From such will be recruited the hair stylists of tomorrow. New schools are springing up to teach latter- day barbering techniques. Annul Show Both barbers and stylists will be gathering here next week for the annual national barber show. And there'll be a lot more Lex Barker in Hollywood Concert Pianist Stuns Audience BRISTOL, England (AP) Concert pianist Julius Katchen interrupted his rendition of a Mozart concerto Wednesday night, turned to the audience and said: "This piano is in a disgraceful state-" The audience, which included Lord Mayor Tom Martin, gasped.

"The tuner should have come back to retune the instrument, 1 said Katchen, "but he failed to show up. I want to apologize for this ridiculous state of affairs. He turned to go on with the concerto and added: "We carry on under an intol erable burden." Wrld famous Zenith tone quality' Let Our-Specialists Keep Your Car Or Truck Performing In Tip Top Manner! MOTOR TUNE-UP CARBURETORS OVERHAULED GENERATORS SERVICED ALTERNATORS SERVICED MAGNETO WORK IF YOU DEPEND ON YOUR CAR YOU CAN DEPEND ON US. SPEEDOMETERS REPAIRED Iflf NASHUA BATTERY SHOP 2 OTTERSON 883-8271 cause producers couldn't see lim as doing much more than swinging from trees. Another reason was that his marriage to Lana Turner had just broken up.

He had also been divorced by Arlene Dahl and first wife Constance Thurlow. Barker had succeeded Johnny Weissmuller as the screen's Tarzan, and that was both the making and the breaking of him. After playing bits in films, he suddenly became an international star as Tarzan No. 10. Right Physique Born Alexander Chrichlow Barker Jr.

to a well-to-do family of Rye, N.Y., he possessed none of the primitive aspects of the famed jungle dweller. But he was the right size 6 feet 4, 200 muscular pounds and he carried the role off with skill. Tired of Tarzan roles, Lex turned in his loincloth and moved to a contract at Universal, where he was thrust into Westerns. The films did well, cashing in on his overseas fame as Tarzan. At the time of his breakup with Lana, Lex drew an offer for an English film.

He grabbed it and didn't return. By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) One of the reasons Lex Barker left Hollywood nine years ago was be- An Italian producer offered a movie. Lex went to Rome and stayed to become one of the busiest film actors in Rome. He then married a Swiss girl who bore him a son and later died' Wife No. 5 is Carmen Seguras from Barcelona.

Series or Films Lex moved on to France for a series of then Germany. The actor returned to Hollywood last week for a brief visit. On his final day here, Lex went to Warner Bros, to lunch with his old school chum, William Orr, son-in-law and aide to J.L. Warner. They arranged to sit near the door where Warner would make his entrance to the executive dining room.

Finally Warner entered. "Hi there, Lex," said J.L. "Still swinging from trees?" on display than just shears, clippers and whisk brooms. New products include hair gels, hair setting lotions, sprays and dyes that's right, for masculine purchasers. And on display for the whiffing will be a host of bottles labeled "true masculine "The young barber of today has a chance to regain the high status of Figaro in Rossini's "The Barber of Seville'," Hal A.

Salzman says. "Then the barber was a prime consultant on high fashion, business and wordly affairs and even practiced dentistry and minor surgery." Salzman wears three hats. He is president of Odell, which makes tonics and other preparations for the care of hair and scalp. He is chairman of the Tonsorial Information Council- And he is chairman of the Barber Shop Promotion Committee of Beauty, and Barbers Manufacturing Association. Yale Is Planning Major Complex HAVEN, Conn.

(AP) Yale University has announced plans for a six-story, $9-million engineering and applied science laboratory. Training Project Wins Approval MANCHESTER, N. H. AP)A project to train unemployed ot underemployed workers In the Berlin area has been approved under the Manpower Training and Development Act, Sen. Thomas Melntyre, N.

H-, said today. The 12 week training, which will cost more than $33,000, will be conducted at the manpower training center in Berlin. Littleton to Have Federal Building CONCORD, N. H. (AP) A site selection General Services Administration team will be in Littleton Nov.

2 5 to investigate possible locations for a new Social Security Administration building, Rep. James C. Cleveland, N. aaid Thursday. Mr.

Muirhead brings it over in to save you more! "'you save on taxes and shipping costs MUIRHEAD'S LIGHT-LIGHT SCOTCH QT. CODE BLENDED SCOTCH WHISKY, 80 PROOF, DISTRIBUTED ey MCKESSON 3 ROOMS of FURNITURE 299 45 Lowell St. Open 10 A.M. FURNITURE 3 P.M. Sat.

to 6. Closed Wed. TM ACADEMY Model NSOfi Modern decorator styling. Deluxe "Easy-Grip" tuning control for easier station selection. Colors: Brown; Beige; White.

only 14 .95 Zntltk--mrld Itidtr it fiiu home JERRY'S "Your Servicing Dealer Since 1989" 14 West Hollis St. 882-9231 RADIO-TV APPLIANCES ft NORM ADVgTJSlNG. YOU BE THE JUDGE OF OUR SIDING! Come to NASHUA LUMBER this week to let us show you our attractive Insnlite siding and explain to yon how much it can do for your home in the way of weather-protection. We're certain your decision will be to put new Insnlite siding on your place this fall Fix-up your home on budget with values you'll find in our Bargain Corner! OUR DO-IT-YOURSELF ADVICE IS FREE NASHUA LUMBER, flilRWi" PLYWOOD IHSULAJION 22 A Tr'f, 2 1 ton of snow per minute lifting a shovel! An Ariens 6 h.p.Sno-Thro will remove 60 tons of snow per hour. Think of it.

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About Nashua Telegraph Archive

Pages Available:
177,371
Years Available:
1946-1977