Liaturlfrhtf R Sumnn Lirralb Partial Cease-Fire Under Discussion ?

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Liaturlfrhtf R Sumnn Lirralb Partial Cease-Fire Under Discussion ? j*AOE TWENTY-FOUR— MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. MuchMUar. Conn.. Thun., Oct. IB. \V n \®****®n Teachers tinion Asks Election The Weather . Hundred Club HEALTH CAPSULES® Bake Sale (3ear and cold tonight. Ld# Ifl Public liy MIcliwI A. iv til. MJ>- See Page 24 the 20s. Saturday, sunny and cool, To Offer Grant AT WHATAtft ^HfiULP liaturlfrHtf r Sumnn lirralb high near 50. SOU Set Saturday PUTTiMd '/OUR dHILP Records An annual icholanhlp of $1,000 /N A PtAVPfM ^ Then was established by the Hundred Instructor! of the Handicapped WarraoEy Deeds Club of Connecticut at a meeting (lOH) will hold ita annual mobUa MANCHESTER — A City o f Village Charm Edward J. and Loretta A, MANCHESTER, CONN., FRIDAY, OfTTOBER 20,1972 VOL. XCH, No. 17 of its executive board. bake sale Saturday from 9 a. m. TWENTY-FOUR PAGES - TWO SECTIONS PItICBPIPmENCBMf M cL^mb to John E. and Marion It has been named the Anthony to 4 p. m. G. McGinn, property at 38 Ustlanauskas Foundation From their startlnj point at Gardner St., conveyance tax Scholarship In memory of the late Concordia Lutheran Church, the 832.45. founder of the Hundred Club. teen-age volunteers will tour the George D. and Eleanor Gilbert It will be open to competition town In sUUon wagoni. Each and to Paul W. Comer Jr. and Ann L. only by sons and daughters of vehicle wlU have a variety of Comer, property at 10 Gardner members of the police and fire baked goods to bo purchased. St., conveyance tax $29.70. department within the state who Proceeds of the sale will be Mary E. Gardella to Irene B. died in the line of duty. used to buy equipment and pay McCaughey, property at 3 The Hundred Club was es­ operating expenses. Partial Cease-Fire Crestwoi^ Dr.,conveyance tax tablished to provide help to the «TART fAKlUd H/W lOH has a membership of 90 $28.05. widows of policemen and fH6 11016 AT 9 MONTH^ WAI.K9 ( II to I? MONTri^VPI^- volunteers. Every Sunday after­ Gerald Thomas Millington and firemen killed In the line of duty. CARP Trie PLAVPfN. noon, October through Mav at the ...Now Lena Clay Millington to Gary D. It abo provides scholarships for Health CapuiUt ptvai halplol Inlofinalioiv Manchester High School pool, and Christine A. Carpenter, their children. ’The Ustjanauskas II ii nal inlaodad to bo ot a dtafliwillc nalur* they give swimming instruction property at 37 Benton St., con­ Foundation Scholarship is the to about 100 mentally and veyance tax $28.05. newest. It Is also the most physically handicapped dilldien Under Discussion ? generous of the many Kenneth R. and Kathryn A. FAMILY AFFAIR from Manchester, area towns, Ruisinger to John H. Castleman scholarships granted. and the Mansfield SUte Training SAIGON (AP) — Henry A. Deputy Ambassador Charles S. a cease-fire in the South where down, and the South Vietnamese opposition to a tripartite govern­ It will be administered by the CLEVELAND, Miss. (AP) - Jr. and Virginia L. CbsUeman, The graduation ceremony was School. ______________ KlsslMer and President N^yen Whltehouse and Gen. Creighton the fighting is going on." information ministry in a com­ ment proposal,” said one University of Connecticut. property at 154 St. John St., a family affair for Dr. John Van ’niieu conferred for nearly W. Abrams, the U.S. Army chief The chief stumbling block to a munique 'Thursday said the presi­ political foe of the president. four hours today amid reports conveyance tax $28.60. Gibson, dean of the School of of staff. cease-fire agreement has been dent had renewed his vow "never “We feel he is only pretending to that a partial cease-fire was being to accept” a coalition regime. ask for opinions to strengthen his Fiducial Deed Business at Delta State College Read South Vietnamese sources who ’Thieu’s rejection of the Com­ High Society discussed. position. We are not willing to be Elizabeth R. Runde, executrix recently. reported that a cease-fire munist condition that he resign A number of Thieu’s political under the will of Anna C. Rodger, Breaks Tradition Both his son, John, and It was the third meeting in two proposal was figuring In the talks and give way to a three-faction opponents refused an invitation used for such propaganda, so we daughter, Dena, graduated have refused to meet with him” to Nicola and Theresa T. CicoUni, Herald Ads days between President Nixon’s said It probably call^ for only a coalition government including to meet with him Thursday night from the college with honors. chief foreign policy adviser and ’Thieu once before sought the property at 170 Wetherell St., DETROIT (AP) - Emily Post partial truce as a “good will” the Q)mmunists. to discuss the current status of conveyance tax $28.05. the leader of the &igon govern­ gesture that could lead to further the peace effort. counsel and support of his probably never had to decide ment. ’There has been widespread political opposition, in the early Release of Attachment . protocol for putting a girdle on a agreements.' Stanley Svea Oil & Building Ihere was no immediate word “It is impossible to have any speculation that Kissinger is “Many of us feel that ’Thieu Is days of the Communist offensive 3(M)-pound calf or feeding several trying to persuade ’Thieu to step trying to create a myth about last spring. Supply Co. Inc. versus Bernard L. hundred of the social set hot dogs on Kissinger’s next move, but cease-fire that could be enforced, Lozier Inc. and hot tamales because the high some sources indicated he would even by international body,” said Release of Federal Tax Lien society of her era probably didn’t remain in Saigon at least through one South Vietnamese official. Internal Revenue Service play cowboy. Saturday and most likely would “It might mean an ehd to bom­ against Joann D. Culver, 26 But DoUie (Ole and her hus­ see Thieu again. bing and mining of the North and Prospect St. band, General Motors F*resident You Know Fran... Kissinger was accompanied to perhaps an exchange of McGovern, Agnew Share Marriage Licenses Ekiward Cole, covered the blue the m e^ng today by U.S. Am­ prisoners, but it would be im­ Richard Majella Glrardin, blood with blue jeans ’Tuesday for bassador Ellsworth Bunker, possible to guarantee any kind of Rockville, and Jean Elizabeth a minirodeo because hostess (Ole Brown, 54 Jensen St., St. said she’s “bored to tears with all Platform At Charity Fete Bartholomew Church, Oct. 21. those stand-up cocktail parties.” James Harry Howe, East Hart­ It was an intimate gathering for RE-ELECT ford, and Elaine Godbout, 79 several hundred close friends at By THE ASSOaATED PRESS will find a new unity in the very democracy,” and on Sunday, the Walnut St. the Michigan State Fairgrounds, Weicker Boycott For, the first time in the 1972 diversity of America, in the other will center on Veterans John E. Boney, 97 Valley St., and charades and other party presidential campaign. strands of humanity that have Day. and Wendy Patricia Steele, East games were replaced with such FRAN Democratic presidential nominee made us what we are and have ’i^e President was flying to Hartford, Oct. 28. as: calf tying, riding horseback in George McGovern and Vice made us so proud of our cqun- Philadelphia today to sign the Building Permits a suitcase race and dressing Of Agnew Rally President Spiro T. Agnew have try,” he said. $30.2-billion revenue-sharing bill, Nutmeg Homes Inc., new calves in ladies’ underwear. MAHONEY shared a spiking platform. Agnew, one seat away from which will send federal funds to dwellings at 37 Hamilton Dr., Mrs. Cole said the bovine But neither got down to serious McGovern, praised Smith—the states, cities and other com­ political speechmaking at the $25,000, and 45 Hamilton Dr., lingerie was purchased at a shop State Irks Labor Boss 1928 Democratic presidential munities over the next five years. $25,000. which caters to large women. 27th annual Alfred E. Smith nominee—as a man who knew The Philadelphia trip, Qegler Elsted Construction Co. Inc., Representative Dinner in New York Thursday “the true uses of power.” said, is nonpolitical. 'The White night,, a traditional forum for The vice president said the House invited about 200 alterations to condominiums for LBJ To Speak 13 District BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (AP) — Sen. Lowell P. Weicker, White House campaigners. Presi­ United States “must be powerful, guests—governors, mayors and Manchester L o^e of Masons has occupied these two temples, in the center of town, during the the following: R. Peck, 12B Es­ CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. RConn., set himself as “judge, jury and trial” when he dent Nixon appeared at the not because power in and of itself congressmen—to attend the last 100 years. Ine lodge has the longest continuous history of any town society, having been quire Dr., $2,000; A. Robbins, (AP) — Former President Lyn­ boycotted a labor rally at which Vice President Spiro Agnew chartered in 1826, three years after the in co ^ ra tio n of Manchester. Its seven charter members 12E Esquire Dr., $1,500; S. dinner during his 1960 and 1968 is desirable, but because it can be signing in Independence Hall. don B. Johnson will speak at appeared with a labor leader indicted for embezzlement, says campaigns but begged off this had been members of Orient Lodge in ^ t Hartford, of which Orford Parish and later Silverman, 14A Enquire Dr., $1,- used for good.” In another development, the University of Virginia graduation year.
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