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Iianrijphtpr Ieiipning Mrralji

Iianrijphtpr Ieiipning Mrralji

PAGE TWENTY-FOUR - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. Manchester. Conn,, Mon,, June 10. 1974 T ■ • Teacher Tells Bennet Students I About Town MCC Offers Non-Credit Courses

'The Extension Division of presented and analyzed by struction in selection and iianrIjPHtpr iEiipning MrralJi Of Life in the Shadow of Hitler Hollis Circle of South United Manchester Community Richard Dana, who has had 25 prpper usage of basic supplies, Methodist Church will'have a College is offering a variety of years of network radio storage methods and chemicals potluck Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at non-credit summer courses for “I was about your age when until the school privilegJB were experience. This course will and sensory analysis of finished MANCHESTER, CONN., TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 1974 - VOL. XCIII, No. 214 w ar b ro k e out in th e taken away. ^ the home of Mrs. Stanley leisure enjoyment and self begin tonight at 7:30 and will wines. ’This course will start Manchester—A City of Village Charm EIGHTEEN PAGES Netherlands and our family had Mrs. Klemens spoke of Anne Weinberg, 157 Pitkin St. development beginning today. meet on Mondays for eight Wednesday at 7 p.m. and will PRICE: FIFTEEN CENTS moved there from Germany to Frank, whose war diary has weeks! meet for six weeks on escape the Hitler regime.” won literary distinction, and “Exploring the Universe and “Advanced Photography” Wednesdays. Mrs. Ruth Klemens of 232 said she was a young girl like Path to Self Realization” and will deal with camera Two drama workshops, one Ferguson Rd. began an account anyone else, !‘like anyone of Sixth Graders “Continuation of Path to Self technique and advanced for students from 7 to 14 and the Over Wiretapping ^Innuendos of her World War II you here,” she said. Mrs. Realization” are two courses darkroom printing and print other for interested teen-agers experiences by relating to her Klemens knew her slightly in Give Concert which expand the concept of critique. This course will begin and adults, will be taught by an young 8th grade listeners at The Netherlands. She said the At Bentley self and meditation. They will on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. and will experienced professional ac­ Bennet Junior High School Frank family experiences were ’The two sixth grade classes of begin tonight at 7 and will meet continue for eight weeks on tress, Mildred Dana. Both of Thursday afternoon. similar to her own. Mrs. Betty Saunders and on Mondays for eight weeks. Tuesdays. Sylvfan Ofiara is the these courses are studio Kissinger Threatens A member of a Jewish fami- In June 1943, it was Mrs. Richard Ewald of Bentley “ The Best of Old Time instructor. courses in acting aimed at en­ ly, she told how her family Klemens’ family turn to be School will present a musical Radio,” featuring tapes and “ Home Winemaking” will couraging individual creativity. never dreamed there would be called for labor camp. It was an program for parents Tuesday at transcriptions of top radio cover the principles of The “Junior Drama Workshop” any trouble once they moved to unusually hot day for Th'e 7 p.m. in the school auditorium. programs from the Golden winemaking for the beginner. will meet ’Thursdays, starting Holland. “The Dutch people Netherlands, she recalled, and The program is directed by Days of Radio, will be Topics to be covered will in­ June 13 at 2 p.m., for eight To Resign Position were beautiful,” she said, as prisoners could only take Mrs. Mary Kalbfleisch, school clude legal considerations, in- weeks. The “ Drama “ Everything there was so with them what they could Workshop’’ will meet SALZBURG, Austria (UPI) —Secretary music teacher. Scott Roberts called “the impugning of my honor” and held confirmation hearings on Kissinger’s peaceful and nice.” carry and wear, they wore Wednesdays from 7 to 10 p.m., of State Henry A. Kissinger threatened will announce the program. added: nomination last year as secretary. But underneath the outer several layers of clothing, and beginning June 12 for eight today to resign unless what he called a The program is as follows: “If it is not cleared up, I will resign.” At that time and since, Kissinger has calm, she said the older people, carried a knapsack and a weeks. campaign of “leaks and innuendos” based “Jamaica Farewell” with Summer Sessions “This is a question of my honor and I steadfastedly denied he had any direct particularly the refugees, were bedroll, Courses in beginning and in­ on his involvement in national security Bruce Schmidt, Elizabeth told the President what I was going to say role in the wiretaps and said he had* no w o rrie d . The unhappy First assigned to a Dutch termediate classical will wiretap cases was stopped immediately. Neubelte and Mary Neubelt in and he agreed,” Kissinger said. knowledge of the White House situations in Germany were on prison camp, they found things be held on ’Thursday evenings Kissinger, holding a news conference the rhythm section. Kissinger suggested that his name could “plumbers” group set up to stop leaks ^f the increase, she said. fairly good. They could spend a Manchester Community For young people, a series of beginning June 13. “Beginning during President Nixon’s first stop on his “El Condor Pasa” featuring be cleared by an act of the Senate Foreign national security information. \ Even then, she said, being little money, they weren’t too College will offer dual summer week-long morning Guitar” meet^ from 6 to 8 p.m. trip to the Mideast, said a campaign instrumentalists Heather Relations Committee, which heard his Late in the news conference, however^ young, she thought of war as far from “home,” and if they sessions for persons wishing to recreational camps will be and “Intermediate Guitar” against him appeared to be coming from Comp, Penny Elder and original testimony on the background of Kissinger made it clear he intends at pre­ being “another adventure.” were lucky, they could get a continue their education in the offered in baseball, basketball, meets from 8 to 10 p.m. the House Judiciary Committee, which is Richard Spiller. wiretaps placed on telephones of some of sent to proceed with the journey. Her family talked of moving to pass to a shower every week or summer months. boxing, cheerleading, golf, “Intermediate Guitar” is studying possible presidential impeach­ “I Believe in Music” sung by Kissinger’s former aides at the White The taps were directed against at least London, but did not because the two. soccer, and tumbling. recommended for people with ment. Mary Bossidy and Elizabeth The College Summer Session House before he became secretary of 17 National Security Council aides after a Dutch people felt very secur, “But many were put in cattle Information about specific prior reading experience and Speaking in a hoarse, cracked voice at Neubelt. will offer morning and evening state. series of news leaks that disclosed, among she said. cars who were eventually courses, starting dates and some classic guitar an inn outside the Schloss Klesheim “Old Woman Courtship” classes Monday through The matter of wiretapping Kissinger’s other things, secret U.S. bombing of Cam­ She recalls vividly a time in or put in gas chambers,” she costs can be obtained by calling background. ’The instructor is Palace in which he and the Nixons are with Laurie Johnson playing the Friday, beginning on June 24, aides while he was head of the National bodia and the U.S. negotiating position at 1940 when, in the n i^t, her said, the summer school office at an experienced teacher of staying, Kissinger described what he “old woman,” and Robert for six weeks. Courses for Security Council came up when the Senate the Strategic Arms ,Limitation Talks mother woke up all the children Later, her family was sent to 646-2137. Registration can be classical guitar. Wilson as the “old man.” credit will be available in the (SALT) with the Soviet Union. saying, “We’re at war!” completed in person on June 17 For information bn these ah “exchange camp”, Bergen- “There’s a Hole in the Reporters were informed of the news There were air raids, shell Belsen near Hanover in Ger- areas of business, humanities, and 18 in the student center on courses and the enrollment Bucket,” with Richard Colanti communications, mathematics, conference when White House Press fragments in the street—it was niany. Treatment was not the Bidwell St. campus from 10 procedure, call the entension as Henry and Loreen Pillard as sciences, social science and Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, completing a scary and frightening, she said basically bad, she said. They to noon and 6 to 7:30 p.m. division at 644-2137. Liza. public service. routine briefing, told them to stay around “Suddenly, we were a part of could work a little, but they “Greek Folk Dance,” with the war.” Carlyle-Johnson because “Kissinger has something he were not allowed to learn Heather Comp, Penny Elder, An Extension Summer Ses­ wants to get off his chest.” She described the placid anything. The conditions were Susan Golly, Usa Duffy, Elena sion will offer both credit and silence of the Dutch and the “cold, filthy, and there was Kissinger held a news conference Rock, and Debby Joy as the non-credit courses from morn­ Thursday at the State Department in refugees as they watched the very little food,” she said. ; Happiness Is... \ 1 (Herald ' photo by Bevins) dancers, and Susana Sheridan, ing into the evening. Starting, Washington, his first meeting with Germans march into their Their daily diet consisted of Lucille Goodskey, Elizabeth dates will vary according to the town, and the belief of the chopped turnips, a small piece I A REAUY ClEAN LAUNDROMAT ' Chief Strong Horse Visits Keeney St, School newsmen since his return from successful­ Mrs. Ruth Klemens tells Bennet Junior High School 8th Neubelt, Mary ^ssidy and individual courses. Credit Strike Settled ly negotiating the Isreali-Syrian cease­ Dutch that “it still couldn’t of black bread, and coffee. Mrs. graders of her experiences in a German prison camp Janet Sombric as the in­ courses will be offered in sub­ I ^ AIR CONDITIONED \ happen here.” Klemens was there about a First graders at Keeney St. School other Indian artifacts are, left to fire, and apparently expected friendly during World War II. (Herald photo by Pinto) strumentalists. jects like those mentioned beaded head band which Lisa is The 13-week-old strike at Manchester’s Then the hardships began, year where she worked in the ; TUESDAY A WEDNESDAY SPECIAL ■ look at a war club made from swamp right, Lisa Palicki, Tammy Mallard involved many compromises, was reached questioning about his new peace mission. The program will conclude above. Non-credit courses will I 8 Lbs. DRY CLEANING $1.75 ■ wearing. Tlie visit Monday in the Carlyle-Johnson Machine Co. ended today at 1 p.m. Monday. Instead, he encountered strong she said. First, there was no kitchen, chopping turnips, and with “ King Caracatus’’ be offered in French cooking, root shown them by Chief Strong and Lisa Ruel. Lisa Palicki is the school auditorium culminated a study when members of the International Union news. Then there was food also in a factory where they Both Ingalls and company vice president questioning about his role in the wiretap­ featuring John Warrington, home wine-making, advanced I DRYERS — ID Full Minutes for 10* Every Dey | Horse, a full blooded Indian of the granddaughter of Waterfall, who also of early American Indians led by Miss of Electrical, Radio and Machinery rationing. Eventually, all tore apart the shoes the Ger- Clifford Treat today expressed satisfac­ ping case, which the indicia^ Committee picking up others along the hard to foi^ive, -but we have to John Cowing, Richard Spiller, photography, the best of old Narragansett and Pueblo tribes. Also appeared at Keeney. Also known as Margaret Duffy, Mrs. Lucille Bahn- Workers, AFLrCIO, voted to approve a tion with the agreement. is considering as part of its impeachment refugeeshadtohaveanlDcard mans had filched from other way, to Switzerland. Later, Mike Fraser, Philip Duffy,^ time radio, drama workshops known as Kenneth Smith, he lives in two-year contract agreement reached (identification), and had to make an effort.” 309 Green R i Gladys Steiner of 219 Bush Hill Rd., son, and Mrs. Barbara Hooker, first “It was a give-and-take situation,” inquiiy. Kissinger/ristled at some of the prisoners or the dead. The when they reached Marseilles Craig Stevenson and Ronnie and guitar, among others. IBELCON LAUNDROMAT I after lengthy negotiating Monday. register for food coupons. Mrs. Klemens teaches Portland. Looking at the club and she is a Podunk Indian and made the grade teachers. Treat said, “and I think we’ve made a questions, reminding one questioner that leather was salvaged and in , they boarded the French at the O’Brien Middle Barber. Picket lines were withdrawn after the 10 Later, the prohibitions for the reused. / satisfactory agreement.” he was conducting a news conference and Gripsholm and came to the School in East Hartford. a.m. union membership meeting at “It’s very fine,” Ingalls said,” and now Jewish people alone began to be The great day came in that the occasion was not a cross examina­ United States. The presentation climaxed a Fiano’s Motor Inn, and Union field (See Page Eighteen) tion. y ' imposed—limited education, no January/1945 when her family study of World War II by Team representative James Ingalls said the 45 public transportation, no was selected as part of an In concluding her account of B-8 at Bennet conducted by striking production workers will return to bicycles, no radios. She said she exchange to be m ade in her familiy’s experiences Donald Fogg, Ray Cocola, Mrs. work tomorrow. used a scooter that “I pushed Swit^rland. They made their BEST BUY OF THE SEASON! Bentley School Parents during the Hitler regime, she Nedra Miller, and Mrs. Carol The contract agreement, ratified by 35 with one foot” to go to school, way by train “in pitch-black” . said "It’s hard tftJorget.and it’s Auer. union members at this morning’s meeting, Regional Ci^nter grants an llVi per cent wage increase for the first year of the contract and contains a provision for reopening of wage Air Funding Complaints negotiations at the end of the year. Hearing T6niglit TheyHl Attend Laurel Girls^ State The agreement was reached tentatively By JUNE TOMPKINS Monday afternoon. Company and union Tinney, who said he had a “group of the resurfacing, of their playground as a 360,()00 in interest costs. Operating costs Two girls from Rockville is represented by Miss Melissa dent founcil representative, Unscheduled business (Kcupied Monday representatives met for 13 hours last The Manchester Board of Directors will Thursday only this week. Play irate parents on his neck” over the situa­ prime concern, the directors “might have for the facility would be borne by the 15 High School and one from Dudek, daughter of Mr. and meift!|er of the Future will be at 1:30 p.m. at Lottie night’s Board of Education meeting for an Friday, recessed, and resumed conduct a public hearing tonight on a tion, was there to seek some kind of been persuaded to do something about it.” a i ^ towns participating and sending Tolland High School have been Mrs. Walter Dudek, Garnet Teachers Club, Drama Club, Fisk Building, Henry Park. hour before the board could begin its negotiations at 10 a.m. Monday. The ten­ proposed 31.4 million Regional Oc­ appeasement from the board. Thomas said even after the proposed students to it. Within five years of comple­ chosen to attend Laurel Girls’ Ridge Rd. Travel Club, Band, Pep Club, regular meeting agenda. tative agreement, which both sides said cupational Center on four acres at the Historical Society In spite of accusations that the Board of tion, it would be owned by the Town of State to be conducted at the Miss Baum and Miss Cody prom committee, and a Mayor Frank McCoy has Representatives from the Bentley (See Page Eighteen) northeast comer of Hillstown Rd. and School PTA and its president, John Education and the Board of Directors Manchester. University of Connecticut later are both high honors students, member of St. Matthews CYO. asked the Vernon Historical Wetherell St. Following the hearing it will Tinney, were there to present their were giving the parents of Bentley School The board will take actions tonight on this month. members of the Girls Athletic Sewer Work Society to serve as coordinator consider placing the proposal for a Nov. 5 grievance concerning money in the the “run-around,” board chairman Allan several proposed appropriations and The students will be spon­ Activities Club, Future Residents of Lawler Rd. and of the events to be conducted in townwide referendum. proposed school budget, 36,500, which had Thomas explained there was there little allocations (all public hearing items last sored by Dobosz, Ertel, Laboc, Teachers Club, and the Ski Wellwoo^ Circle, until further Vernon to celebrate the 200th Its meeting will be at 8 in Nathan Hale Hansen Unit 14 of the American Club. i been originally allocated for resurfacing they could do, that basically the problem School, Spruce St. / Tuesday), including 337,000 from the notice. Will have access to their anniversary of the country’s in­ was money. Confers Whiton Library Trust Fund for a Legion Auxiliary, L. Bissell & Miss Baum has also served a^ homes by way of Thrall Rd. due dependence. their playground. Recently the money was A second public hearing tonight is on'a re-allocated for use in establishing better Repeatedly, the PTA representatives Bookmobile for Manchester. Son, Inc., the ^vings Bank of band president and band to sewer installation projects. Arthur Lyon, president of the proposed 3100,000 appropriation for fire safety conditions in the schools as the were reminded by members of the board It will consider a proposal by Town Tolland and Cowperthwaite librarian and Miss Cckiy is a Pinochle Winners society, said notices will be sanitary sewers in Garden Grove Rd., Plumbing and Heating. I I result of a report in May from the state that had the people from the Bentley Manager Robert Weiss for partial ter­ member of the Service Club and \ Last Tuesday winners in the sent out soon to all local Erie St. and a portion of Keeney St. The I^ckville High School will be fire marshal stating fire safety deficien­ School area appeared at the Board of mination of a contract the town has with is the recipient of the E. Vernon Senior Citizens’ organizations. He said each Kreisky appropriation would be financed by represented by Miss Marjorie cies at Bentley School. Director’s public hearing in April stating the Eighth District (for fire protection in Stevens Henry Award and the pinochle group were: Lillian organization should be respon­ issuing temporary notes. The notes, in Baum, daughter of Mr. and turn, would be paid from assessments outlying areas) and for construction of a Rennselaer I^thematics and Glessman 764; Jennie Starke sible for one activity in connec­ SALZBURG, Austria (UPI) —President The trip resulted in extreme security Mrs. Lester Baum, 31 Reed St.; against abutting property owners. new firehouse in the Buckland area. Science Award. 665; Evelyn IGneman 652; Irene tion with te event. The Nixon got a report today from Chancellor measures, including hundreds of and Miss Jean Cody, daughter The cost of building and furnishing the The board has voted to meet only once in Miss Dudek is a member of Petersen 641; Emily Brooks Historical Society, - acting as Bruno Kreisky on the Austrian leader’s re­ policemen stationed around Klesheim of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cody, 9 Adler Bid $2.2 Million “Trade School for the Handicapped” July and in August—the second ’Tuesday the National Honor Society, the 716; Marco Piazza 663; Carl coordinator, will see to it that cent Mideast visit, then turned to com­ Palace and more stationed on Austria’s Donnel Rd. Tolland High School would be 100 per cent reimbursable by the each month. As a rule, it meets twice each Junior Board of Directors, Stu- Murphy 649; Vicent Barrows there are no duplications of pleting preparations for his own historic borders, with special instructions to watch month—on the first Tuesday for public 683; Gertrude Edwards 654; events. 1 ^ 1 ' “journey for peace” beginning with a for Arabs trying to enter the country. state upon completion. The town would be For Bennet Renovations responsible for an estimated 350,000- hearings, and on the second 'Tuesday for Martha Mathess 647. A meeting will be held June lavish arrival in Cairo Wednesday morn- Ziegler today defended the President’s actions. NOTICE Thursday tournament 19 at 7:30 p.m. in the Rockville -«ing. decision to make the trip against criticism By SOL R. COHEN for renovations and additions to Illing Away from the cares of Watergate and winners were: Mary St. Louis Public Library for the purpose Junior High. / at home, especially from Sen. Henry M. 624; Edward Flechsig 610; of hearing suggestions from all A Ridgefield, Conn., contractor is the the impeachment proceedings at home, Jackson, D-Wash., that Nixon should stay SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY apparent low bidder for renovations and Bids for the Illing work will be opened Nixon relaxe^i and recovered from “jet CHANCERY DIVISION Lillian Glei&man 597; Martha interested residents and June 18 (next Tuesday) at 7 p.m. in the home while the House Judiciary Com­ Matthess 5^. organizations. Several additions to Bennet Junior High School. lag” at Kleslieim Palace, a baroque, 18th mittee’s impeachment inquiry was going MIDDLESEX COUNTY Ray Adler Inc. submitted a price of 32,- Municipal Building. Paul Phillips, chair­ century mansion on the outskirts of Salz­ There will be games on suggestions have already been man of the Town Building Committee, on and inflation is bothering the economy. proposed. 215,310 Monday night, at bid openings in burg before starting on his five-nation “We disagree with Sen. Jacksoiy and I Docket No. C-2651-73 the Manchester Municipal Building. said today an award of a contract for the trip. Plaintiff Bennet work will be made after the Illing think many senators do,” Ziegler Mid. “I Although bid forms had been obtained by Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler Said noticed Sen. (Mike) Mansfield’/ state­ ADVO-SYSTEM, INC. bids are opened. Mankey Associates is the School Board Meets Tonight seven contractors, only three submitted Nixon would hold his first meeting with ment wishing the President well./believe Defendant architect for the Bennet project and bids— Ray Adler Inc., the J.S. Nasin Co. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat at Qubba that the majority of the American people CHICKEN HOLIDAY, INC., a New Jersey VERNON of Willimantic and Jack R. Hunter Inc. of Lawrence Associates for the Illing Palace in Cairo Wednesday afternoon. cerning extended sick leave; project. Both are Manchester firms. believe that Sen. Jackson is expressing a Corporation, t/a C & H DISTRIBUTING CO. EteWsew*®' Manchester. Sadat, an admirer of the President and minority point ofwiew.” The Board of Education will and the various committees Phillips, commenting on the Adler CIVIL ACTION Nasin’s price is 32,312,360, and Hunter’s Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger, has Ziegler had said Watergate dnd related meet tonight at 7:30 in the will make their reports. price, called it “very favorable.” ORDER APPOINTING 32,329,000. Prices submitted by all three planned a big welcome complete with a problems would not be discussed during Sykes School Cafeteria with the The board will be q^sked to act He said, “Even with the addition of SATUTORY RECEIVER contractors on 18 alternates may, if any of 100,000 cheering Egyptians as partial the trip, and reiterated that /tand today. on a request for a y ^ r ’s leave architects’ and engineering fees, furniture This matter being opened to the Court by Donald E. Clarick, main item on the agenda to be a the alternates are required, raise the base thanks to Nixon for the United States’ “Our intention is not to use these briefings discussion of a proposal to close of absence made by Mrs. and equipment, some alternates and our Custodial Receiver heretofore appointed by Order of this Court With prices. However, Ray Adler Inc. still crucial role in bringing a ceasefire to talk about domestic matters,” he said. Marjorie Osborn, vocal music recommended contingency fund, we still dated April 4,1974, upon the return date of an Order entered on the East School buildings A and would be the apparent low bidder. between his country and Israel. Nixon and Kreisky met fw an hour and B and to reassign students and teacher at the Vernon Elemen­ will be within the limits of our referendum said date, requiring the defendant corporation to show cause' All three prices are well within es­ 40 minutes to discuss the mancellor’s 13- teachers to other schools. tary School; and the resignation estimate (32,719,000). before this Court why a Statutory Receiver for the cr^itors and timates. The Bennet work is part of a 35.6 day Mideast tour in early March as well as The board- will also hear a of Dennis Lauzon, math teacher “I must commend Mankey Associates stockholders of said defendant corporation should not be ap­ million appropriation approved in a his more recent trip to the Soviet Union. report on a Career Education at Rockville High School. and the members of the Town Building Inside Today's pointed; and it further appearing that a copy of said Order was townwide referendum last November — Nixon goes to Moscow a /reek after com­ Also to be acted on will be the Committee for their hard and untiring duliy served upon the defendant corporation in accordance with Seminar Workshop to be out­ with 32,719,000 for Bennet and 32,881,000 pleting his Mideast trip.i its provisions; and it further appearing to the Court that said lined by Dr. Robert Linstone, retirement of Esther defiosAnS work in these plans.” defendant corporation is insolvent so that its business cannot be assistant superintendent of Farnsworth, Grade 1 teacher at conducted in the future with safety to the public and advantage to schools. the Maple St., School. She has the stockholders, and good cause therefore appearing for the A report on the Guidance taught for 29 years, 17 of them Mpralb Heat Wavelltelief making of the within Order; it is on this 7 day of May 1974 Department activities will be in the Vernon school system. Mass T ransit Subsidy ORDERED, that defendant be and it is hereby adjudged insol­ presented by Francis Shorten, Also to be retiring after seven FCO-123T nowoiilyl Area Profile, Page 6 Promised iToday vent, and it, its officers and agents, be and they are hereby director of guidance; Dr. Ray­ years in the Vernon system is Arthur Vinton dead; struck by car, WINDSOR LOCKS (UPI) - The enjoined from exercising any of its privileges or franchises and mond Ramsdell, superinten­ Andrew Nawracaj, custodian at Page 18 National Weather Sejcvice predicted relief from collecting or receiving any debts, or paying out, selling, dent, will report on policy con­ the East School. today from the reebrd-setting heat wave ■ BIG 12.3 CD. FT. CAPACITY that fits even into Session Under Study Top athletes at East Catholic, assigning or transferring or otherwise encombering or disposing that pushed the ther/iometer to 97 degrees HARTFORD (UPI) — A special session Page 13 of any of its real and personal property whatsoever, except to a small kitchens . . . only 30" wide — 59%” high. $ H« with something acceptable to leaders at Bradley Interna^onal Airport Monday. 2 2 of the Connecticut Legislature may be Receiver herein appointed; and it is further from both parties.” pour Eagles on HCC all-star It was the hottest June 10 on record and ■ Automatic defrosting in the refrigerator section. convened this summer to consider com­ ORDERED, that Donald Clarick of the City of New Brunswick, He said local transit district officials team. Page 13 the hottest day of 1974 for (Connecticut promise legislation granting some form of New Jersey be and he is hereby appointed as Statutory Receiver ■ Deluxe interior featuring deep shelf doors, egg from all parts of Connecticut met Monday residents. state subsidy to mass transit systems. Cheney Tech tennis team has for the creditors and stockholders of the defendant, with full CLOSED in Bridgeport to try and come up with The weather service said that today’s storage, butter keeper and accented with teakwood House Speaker Francis J. Collins, R- winning record. Page 13 power and authority to demand, sue for, collect, receive and take *249.95 possible compromises that might be temperatures should be in the 80s, a far into his possession all the real and personal property of every trim and smoked onyx vegetable hydrator. Reg. Brookfield, said Monday he plans to meet generally acceptable. cry from June 11 of last year, when the later this week with Senate Majority description, rights, creditors, books and papers of defendant, and WEDNESDAYS The wrinkle in the bill considered during thermometer went up to 98 degrees. to institute actions for the recovery of any property, damages or Leader Lewis B. Rome, R-Bloomfield, to the regular legislative session was a for­ PARTLY CLOUDY Although Monday was uncomfortable, it 1 f.. discuss a number of mass transit subsidy demands existing in favor of said defendant; and it is further mula for two-thirds state funding with was apparently not too inconvenient for ORDERED, that the stockholders and creditors of defendant, During June, July & August proposals. most Connecticut residents. local transit districts absorbing the rest i ’* • r ' « show, cause before this Court, at the Middlesex County Court Collins said legislative leaders have with a local gasoline tax. Northeast Utilities said New England House. New Brunswick, New Jersey, on the 14 day of June, 1974, • LA. JOHHSON PAINT CO CREDIT Est. 1941 already sought advice from local transit 'The tax would be up to a penny a gallon suffered no power shortage and main­ (Herald photo by Pinto) at 9:00 o’clock in the forenoon, or as soon thereafter as the matter -district officials and the Connecticut or would leave it to district towns to tained normal voltage levels throughout can be heard why the Receiver herein appointed should not be 723 Main Streat, Mancheatar TERIHS Public Expenditures Council for com­ devise their own formulas. Local transit the day. Consolidated Edison reduced Retiring Teacher Honored continued; and it is further promises to the sweeping proposal that district officials objected strenously to the Variable cloudiness cooler with more voltage in New York City by 5 per cent in ORDERED, that a copy of the within Order or notice thereof was acted on in the Senate but allowed to order to divert power to New Jersey, PAUL’S PAINT & DECORATING CENTER gasoline tax proposal. comfortable humidity today. Chance of a The occasion was Sunday afternoon at be mailed by regular mail to all known creditors and die in the House during the regular ses­ Meantime, the legislature is set to meet shower or two. Highs in upper 70s to low Maryland and Pennsylvania. Mrs. Gladys Jones opens a gift of sion. the school where parents, friends and stockholders of defendant at their last known post office ad­ 615 Main Straat, Manchaatar & SON next Monday in a “trailer session” to con­ 80s. Clearing tonight with lows in the mid State police reported no traffic jams, jewelry, one of many gifts presented dresses within 15 day from the date hereof. bT pearl Collins said he envisioned a special ses­ sider overriding a number of bills vetoed to upper 50s. Fair early Wednesday then even though motorists were plagued by to her by Charles Genovesi, Buckland students honored Mrs. Jones upon her Davi(i D. Furman, J.S.C. 649 MAIN ST. MANCHESTER TEL. 643-2171 sion in late June or early July “once we by Republican Gov. Thomas J. Meskill. partly cloudy in afternoon with highs 75 to countless incidents of stalling and School PTA president. The big box retirement from teaching 14 years in have all our ducks in a row and come up 80. overheating during rush hours. contained a fruit basket centerpiece. the first grade. / i i % \ V 'VI

PAGE TWO - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, Manchester, Conn., Tues., June 11, 1974 MMCHESTER EVENING HERALD, Manchester, Conn.. Tues., June 11. 1974 — PAGE ‘niR E E •T h e a tre * Time Schedule Manchester Hospital ISotes I Giles Outlines Rockville Hospital Notes J I __ Public Records Vernon Cine 2 — ‘‘Serpico state — ‘‘Blazing Saddles” Warranty Deeds and Marcia Lorena Brissette, Discharged Friday: John Dart Hill Rd., South Windsor; dwelling at 232 Kennedy Rd., 7;15^:49-10:23 ^ s t 1 - ‘‘Sting” 7-9:15 EEA Hiring Plans Admitted Monday: Dora Merrill H. and Gertrude M. both Meturil, La., June 15, Obenhein, 19 Locust St.; John Anna Schoenholzer, M255 Guillan, Bolton Rd., Vernon; $22 ,000. Burnside ‘‘Great Gatsby” UA East 2 - "Sting” 7:15- Alpert, South St., Rockville; Berry to Hazel St. Associates, Center Springs Park. Stanley, Honolulu, Hawaii; Ellington Rd., South Winder; Peter Pozzato, Mountain St., Jerry Ridel for Lee Bolduc, 7:00-9:30 9:30 purpose,” he explains in a Anna Anderson, E. Main St., property at 9 Hazel St., con­ Buiidilig Permits Clarence Burdick, 25 Hamlin Joyce Madsen, 97 Lake St.\ An­ When the Board of Directors Rockville; Ma^on Stone, alterations to dwelling at 22 Showcase 1 — “ Butch UA East 3 — “Sugarland memo sent the Board of Direc­ Rockville; Janet Brewer, Scott veyance tax $35.20. William P ^ t t a , alterations St.; Wilma Freer, 42 Strong St.; dover; Alexander Hackney, 43 adopted Manchester’s 1974-75 Tudore Lane, Manchester. Garnet Rd., $1,000. Cassidy” 7:20-9:35 Express” 7:30-9:30 tors. Dr., Manchester; Deborah Con­ Green Manor Construction to commercial building at 36A Carol Piacentini, 494 Graham Finley St.; George Knapp, 438 General Fund budget (on May Birth Momiay: A son to Mr. Showcase 2 - ‘‘Claudine” Manchester Drive-In — In recommending an ad­ nors, Enfield; Sandra Della Co- Inc. to Malcolm L. and Sheldon Rd., $3,000. Rd., South Windsor; Gertrude W. Middle ‘Tpke. 7) it approved retaining nine of and Mrs. James Foran, High 7:15-9:30 "McQ” Cahill U.S. Marshall” ditional building maintenance Penna, South St., Rockville; “Cassandra Pigford, unit in Mrs. Richard C. Bell, Stearns, East Hartford; Also, May McLoughlin, East the 42 positions established and St., Rockville. Showcase 3 - ‘‘Survivors” 10:30 mechanic for the Nike Site, he Heidi Hall, RFD 3, Coventry; Northfield Green Con­ alterations to dwelling at 34 W. Maryanne Simmons, 183 Maple Hartford; Donald Broadt, 4 N. paid with EEA (Emeregency 7:40-9:45 Meadows — ‘‘Thomasine & states, ‘‘Without the man­ William Harrington, Rye St., dominium, conveyance tax Middle Tpke., $1,600. St.; Gerald Patria, Strong Rd., Fairfield St.; Blanche LaVigne, Employment Act) funds. Town Showcase 4— “Thiev6s” 7:55- and Bushrod” 8:45; "Gordon power, we will probably utilize Rockville; John Holmes, $36.30. ■ George P. Long, alterations South Windsor; Julienne 13 Goslee Dr.; Daniel Deveau^ Manager Robert Weiss had Third Of Catch From Gulf Town Seeks Bids 10:15 War” 10:30 322 Oakland St.; M argaret private contractors, and the Talcottville Rd., Vernon; Gerry George A. and Bessie L. to dwelling at 40 Campfield Rd., Vernon Cine 1 - ‘‘Lovin Hansen, Stafford Springs. recommended retaining 25 of Houston—One-third of Amer­ Blue Hills — ‘Pack Eye’^ Larsen, 36 Parker St.; work performed will be more Ludden Jr., Windsor Locks; Turner to Richard J. and $600. To Install Tank Molly” 7:30-9:15 Also, Peter Smith, 531 E. the positions. ica’s fish catch comes from Gulf 8.3J"Five Fingets of Death” ‘ Elizabeth Hansen, 119 Pitkin costly.” Noel Michaud, Spring St., Patricia A, Botticello, property Billy G. Stevenson, fence at Bids will be opened June 21 in 655 One of the nine positions of Mexico waters. He proposes to pay the Rockville; Thomas Koehler, at 906 Tolland Tpke., con­ 38 Hilltop Dr., $225. the Municipal Building for in- Talcottville Rd., Vernon; Linda St.; Catherine Lynne, 77 retained is that of a building hnechanic from a $5,000 balance Bunce Dr., Manchester; veyance tax $27.50. L. Bruce Barenbaum for stallig a 4,000-gallon, un­ Warenda, 33 Ridgewooid St.; Ashworth St ; Clint Bowan, 86 maintenance mechanic. Letters $3.41 Each Dogwood Lane, South Windsor; in the Recreation Center Ac­ Harvey Ring, Lewis Circle, HALL FOR RENT Attachment Mar-Lou Sylvester, sign at 748 derground, gasoline tank in the Barbara Ouellette, 75 Mark Director of Public Works Jay Chicago — Increases in the Lyman Peck, io North St. count-added to $10,000 he said Rockville; Ruth Rogowski, PO For parties, showers, receptions, Frank L. Macca Inc. against Tolland Tpke., $200, Manchester Police Department Dr., South Windsor; Daniel Giles, with Weiss’ backing, now the directors indicate they will meetings. Complete kitchen facilities. cost of postage, labor and ma­ Also, Linda Wood, East Hart­ Box, Vernon; Marjorie Usher, Hope Valley Construction Co., Anthony Trascio, fence at 27- garage, E. Middle Tpke. , 1 Ryan, 26 Lilac St.; Twylar is proposing to hire, in adilition Large enclosed parking lot. Inquire: ■ NOW terials have pushed the cost of appropriate to it in the coming parcel in Dougherty Estates, 29 Horace St., $2,870. The tank was purchased by ford; Margaret Pratt, 69 W. to the maintenance mechanic Ellington Ave., Rockville. the average business letter to Williams, 79 Summer St.; Jane fiscal year. The money left over $4,000. Frank J. Brunoli Sr. for the town in January and was B riggs, 211 Ferguson Rd.; Franklin Park, Rockville; June authorized, two maintenance Discharged Monday: Audra Lithuanian Hail $3.41, an increase of 10 cents after the salary is paid would go Marriage Licenses Michael Patulak, add fireplace delivered a few weeks ago. ‘The V L O Z iX G Frances Carson, 17 Oxford St.; DiBattisto, East Hartford; mechanics and two mechanics Adamiak, Steep Rd., South 24 GOLWAY STREET over the 1973 cost. for purchase of materials, he Edward John Giard, 410 Sum­ at 181 Summit St., $1,200. winning contractor will be Donna Avery, 325 Kelly Rd., Lavon Sills, 336 Center Rd., helpers, with one maintenance Windsor; Betty Coirette, East MANCHESTER explained. mit St., and Frances Elizabeth Wentworth B. Johnson, ad­ required to connect it to an Vernon. Rockville; Joseph Schiavetti, mechanic to work at the Hartforci; Carlton Milanese, Call beiore 8 P.M. SADDLES (Ii^\THEATRES EAST The directors received the Gallo, 242 Summit St., June 22, ditions to dwelling at 64 N. Elm existing 2,000-gallon tank and to W'OOLtTf'! Pi-. Also, Victoria Fullerton, East 367 Hilliard St.; Audrey Manchester Recreation Center Prospect St., Rockville; Bertha Phone 643-0618 or 646-9155 Schwartz, East Hartford; proposals last week and have St, Bridget Church. St., $300. install all piping, complete with Hartford; Marc Brannick, 16 (the old Nike Site) and the P/IVL ROBERT Margaret 'ITacy, 20 Bruce Rd.; not indicated their positions on Peter Frank Charles Smith B.T. Peterman Jr., new gate valves and strainers. NEWMRN REDFORD Hemlock St.; Valerie other three in the sidewalks and y MON. - TUES. - 99c Mary Perisho, RFD 2, them. The 1974-75 fiscal year W entworth, 426 W. Middle curbs program. ' Xirtheiqf Perkins • Beau Bridges Manchester; Deborah begins July 1. Tpke.; Paula Hewitt, 26 Birch The board approved 185,000 JM kitroducing Blytiie Dinner niESTIING Cameron, 29 Brookfield St., St.; Susan Adamek, 1238 Hart­ for the Sidewalks, Curbs and HARTFOBO ROAO South Windsor. ford Tpke., Rockville; Special Projects Account. Giles I About JTown j ^ “LOVIN MOLLEY*’ SUGARLAND Also, Alberta Machia, \ Rated (HI Christine Graves, 76 Jan Dr., estimates an expenditure of / EXPRESS” Elmwood; Kathleen Tieman, DAIRY QUEEN i s n d Hebron; Marilyn Peracchio, about $30,000 in salaries for the 530 Spring St.; Mark Yavinsky, Warehouse Point; Louise three men, with the remaining An adult Bible study will be Perkins, 5 River St., Rockville; 1 192 School St.; David Csiki, $55,000 going for contractural conducted Wednesday al 10 West Willington. Gerard LaLancette, 46 Summer services, materials and equip­ a.m. at Zion Evangelical TAKE ROUTES IS ■ 14 • 16 (EXIT SSI St.; Marie Barton, 112 Lak D a i r i f Also, Claudia Hall, West ment. Lutheran Church. CHICKEN HELD OVER - 2nd WKi Willington; Hector Cruz, Hart­ Ave., Adover; Thomas Fagan, “I feel that in order to carry Q u e e n East Hartford. / ALPtaNOlR) 2 JOHN WAYNE ford; Maria Reid, East Hart­ an effective sidewalk repair Mayfair Y Club will have a SHOWS ford; Stephen Mazzeo, 155 Ben­ Discharged Sunday: John program, the town should social gathering Wednesday at LOVERS >‘SERPIC0” ton St. Morrison, 186 Homestead St.; employ a special crew for that 10 a.m. in Cronin Hall of M c Q Dischhrged Saturday: Mary Raymond Favreau, 461 Graham Mayfair Gardens. bm zlei: 99C AT ALL TIMES Pfus Pezzenti, 31 Marshall Rd.; Rd., South Windsor; John CAHILL U.S. MARSHAL William Lanier, East Hartford; Turley, East Hartford; Cora PHONE 649-9333 Margaret Zukis, 54 Foxcroft Irons, 86 Laurel St.; Norma Quasar. Kindergarten Pet Show Entry Everett, 19 Holl St.; Kathleen TELEVISION TONIGHT SPECIALS 'ip- D r.; Edith Mason, 72E Spencer Conde, 51 Plymouth Lane; Karl St.; Jean-Paul LaVerdiere, 80 2 Pc. Crispy A Colar lizard from Colorado is the center of attraction at a live pet :SHCIVCA$E CINEM A/ 1234 Rezman, 152 Birch St.; Kevin frog, to large dogs—German Shepherds, and two small Lhasa Apsos. I-84EXIT58-SILVER LANE-ROBERTS ST. Roy, 324 Windsor St.; Agnes show held by the kindergarten class at Green School. The pets The main event of the day was the birth of four gerbils. All entries irPORTABLE COLOR TV — 6:00 - (18) BASEBALL • EAST HARTFORD • 24HR. TEL. INFO. 568-8810 McReynolds, East Hartford. CHICKEN DINNER ranged from pet caterpillars, worms, salamanders, a lizard and a received prizes. (Herald photo by Pinto) > ACRES OF FREE LIGHTED PARKING - We Honor MASTER CHARGE • (3-8-22) NEWS California Angels vs. Yankees - New Also, June Szarek, 6 (18) SECRET AGENT York 2 Pc8. Chicken, F.F., Cole Slaw, Brichtniss Evergreen Rd.; Ernest (20) SOUNDING BOARD (24) BEST OF DRUMS Roll. 9 9 ’ Automatic ^ \ Color / Hut r i "BUTCH CASSIDY AND^ B U R N S ID E I^ Jourdenais, 34 Village St.; AND BUGLES / FInt Tunini THE SUNDANCE MD” tlLLirn. •S2I-UU •FHirXIUK (24) BASICALLY Students Offer ‘Lost Princess^ ROBERT REDFORD Edith Reese, 15 Hyde St.; BASEBALL — 8:30 — / fLIKEUy''='-*mE See TiriM Clock j Evelyn Seaton, East Hartford; .onsumer Con trait ...... ■»'ivX%vW 11.. i ; . i .. . 1. 11'i'i'i i i.iv ‘TH E GREATI (30) TO TELL THE TRUTH (3) HAWAII FIVE-0 / 3 Pc. Crispy ...... Joseph Horan, East Hart­ Students at Bowers School Mrs. Robert Borello who head a dit’s men; Cindy Katz, Sing Lo, ^ Color (40) BONANZA (8-40) ABC THEATRE Intensity GATSBY" ford; Matthew Babineau, were treated Monday and today technical crew of Mrs. Joanne the nurse; Carrie Thomas, the IN COLOR *PG (20-30) SNOOP SISTERS loncern CLAUDINE’ Glastonbury; Anthony Liseila, CHICKEN DINNER to a performance of “The Lost Brookhart, Mrs. Jean chorus; Pdario Thivierge, the INSTA- MATIC9 99* 7:00 - 0:30 East Hartford; Andrew — 6^ 0 — — 9:00 — Princess,” a Chinese fantasy Gatzkiewicz, Mrs. Irma COLOR TUNING 3 Pcs. Chicken, F.F., Cole Slaw, property man; Robert Just push one button and you (8-22-30) NEWS (24) A DECADE OF CHANGE Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection featuring bandits, soldiers, a Czerwinski, and parents of the w « « m SSUN.MAT.-99ci'TIL4:30- Lussier, 8 Carriage Dr., Roll. •:•: Barbara B. Dunn. Commissioner McQueen, Robert Feragne, and automatically balance color in­ (40) NEWS princess and a roaring green show participants. tensity. hue. contrast, brightness Lebanon; Dorothy Randall, 689 — 930 — Daniel Bissette, the other ban­ and can even activate automatic Main St.PAlso, Claudette (3) HAWKINS dragon with authentic Chinese Properties are contributed by dits. line tuning It's that easy! FILM RATING GUIDE — 7:00 — Country Crisp Chiciien music and oriental costumes. the Lutz Junior Museum. The Rustic, 24 Tyler Circle; Vincent — 10 :0 0 — Also, Lynn Czerwinski, All Migneco, 162 Eldriclge St.; (3-20-22-30) NEWS The performance by the fifth dragon’s head, loaned by Mrs. HAVE YOU AN For Parents and (8-40) MARCUS WELBY, MD Ladies, you have a unique op­ She will make sure your See, the bandit’s mother; Superb Michael Hazard, 733 Boston (8) TRUTH OR and sixth graders will be Gertrude Wolf of Bentley EVENT SCHEDULED Their Children (20-22-30) POLICE STORY FILLET SANDWICH portunity to make your mark in name is placed on the CPSC Richard Peyman, Dean Gustof- Tpke., Bolton; Linda Albert, CONSEQUENCES (24) CONCERTO FOR MONA repeated for parents and School, was made by that son, Todd Sloan, William Corso, THAT CALLS FOR consumer product safety! The roster of consumer volunteers school’s PTA. 173 Spruce St. (18) DICK VAN DYKE friends Wednesday at 8 p.m. in and George Hanlon, all FOOD? GENERAL AUDIENCES — 10:30 — AND FRIES Consumer Product Safety Com­ maintained by their office of All A gn Admitted (24) WOMEN the school auditorium. Members of the cast are: soldiers; Ernest Pallein, the It may be a wedding, a (18) CONNECTICUT Chicken Fillet with our own Special mission, according to Barbara public affairs. No special (40) ABC NEWS Mrs. Mabel Silver, fourth Laura Gatzkiewicz, Tee Wee, scribe; Gerald Solomonson, m iQ i banquet or just an informal REPORT Breading, L&T, Heap of Fries. Hackman Franklin, vice chair­ experience, expertise or educa­ grade teacher, is the director. the princess; Richard White, Joy, the little Emperor; Denise PLUG-IN man, needs your help in tion is necessary since the most Model WP4602KP CIRCUIT get-together of a society, PARENTAL GMOANCE — 11:00 — Assisting her are Mrs. Carole Lo Ho, the bandit; Joseph — 7:30 — developing mandatory safety important qualifications are in­ White, the Emperor’s mother; MODULES lodge or some friendly group. SUGGESTED (3-8-22-30-40) NEWS Howard with makeup, Mr. and Tonski, Hi Lo, one of the ban- (3) OZZIE’S GIRLS standards for consumer terest and common sense, Ms. Paul Lessard, the Emperor’s Crisp, clean color picture. . . in handsome “Wood Most chassis components ere Some MMeriel May Not Be (20) SAN FRANCISCO BEAT BIG FAMILY OR PICNIC BUCKETS Look" Boca Pecan finish plastic cabinet. Motorola on replaceable modules. II i SuHiMe For Pre-Teeoum (8) LET’S MAKE A DEAL products. Franklin says. father; Nancy Curtin, lady of circuit needs lo be replaced, in fFe Are Prepared to (T8) CAN YOU TOP THIS? — 11:30 — the court. modular solid state chassis (except 4 tubes). Insta- exchange mpdule can be plugged A safety standard is a People from all over the In by a service technician Serve You to Your (20) LASSIE (3) MOVIE Also, Leslie Gaouette, voice Matic Color Tuning, Matrix Picture Tube, Instant Picture OF CHICKEN requirement or requirements country are welcome to MEA Banquet on Wednesday and Sound.70-channerUHF detent tuning. Complete Satisfaction (22) BASEBALL ‘The Count of Monte Cristo" (1943) governing the way a product volunteer and since CPSC from the audience; Dawn RESTRICTED (8-40) NIGHT TRAIN TO Oakland Athletics vs. Red Sox must perform if it is to be safe. realizes that consumers often Moriorty, Rhonda Regions, and NOTOHOLA’S 90-DAY CARRY-IN SERVICE GUARANTEE Basic Terms ol Guaran­ Our catering service is set up Under 17 requtrce accompartviog Boston 9 Pc. 15 Pc. 21 Pc. The annual banquet for Partm or Adult Guardian TERROR ton, Grade 1 and pre-primary Brenda Griffin, the orchestra; tee are: Motorola guarantees to pay labor charges lor correction ol product to be flexible enough to ac-' R (24) BRITISH WAY OF Commission safety standards cannot afford to pay their own (20-22-30) JOHNNY CARSON retiring Manchester Education teacher at Verplanck School, 15 Kay McDowell, the herald; defects lor ninety days from purchase date. Motorola guarantees to exchange commodate any size HEALTH 039 039 739 generally pre-empt standards way to another city to attend a defective picture tube lor two years from purchase dale and to exchange all Association members will be years; Mrs. Olive Chambers, Ellen Lutz, Denise White, and gathering. Why not call us and (30) ANIMAL WORLD covering the same product meeting, the Commission may other defective parts for one year from purchase dale. Any exchange will be Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at the Grade 1 at Highland Park Rebecca Harris, the dragon; made with new or remanulaclured parts at Motorola's discretion. Guarantee Is $32995 This printing test pattern is issued by any state or local make travel funds available for talk over the details? (40) ROOM 222 Manchester Country Club. effective only when carried to and serviced by a Motorola Authorized Servicer f4sr wmsoR government. These standards that purpose. School, 43 years; Mrs. Marion Susan Green, announcer. NO ONE UNDER 17 ADMITTED DRIVE-IN ★ RT.5 part of The Herald quality con­ 'The Round Table Singers of during normal working hours. Guarantee does not cover Installation, set-up, (Aga litTMt may vary trol program in order to give can cover almost any consumer Cook, home economics at In charge of lights and sound travel time or mileage, antenna system, adjustment ol customer controls, — 8:00 — Manchester High School, Garden Grove Caterers, Inc. in cartain araad END TO N ITE product used at home, at We welcome suggestions and Bennet Junior High School, 11 effects are Paul Ostrom, foreign use or damage due to owner misuse. you one of the finest SPECIAL directed by Miss Martha White, “SERPIC9” (3) MAUDE school, or in recreation — near­ questions. Answers to questions years; Miss Isabelle Regan, Timothy Whiting, Ricardo Con­ TELEPHONE 6 4 9 -5 3 1 3 - 6 4 9-53 14 newspapers in the nation. EARLY - STRAWBERRY music teacher at the high - M PAA “FBIEMO OF EDDIE COYLE" (8-40) HAPPY DAYS ly everthing from TV to ovens of general interest will appear home economics at Bennet, 26 treras, Martin Joy, Jeff Brown$^ school, will entertain the to rubber ducks. in this column. Address years; Mrs. Lillian Segar, David Gutman, Michael guests. Until now, most safety stan­ questions to: “Of Consumer English at tiling Junior High Lindsey and Andre Thivierge. Retiring teachers of MEA dards for consumer products Concern,” Department of Con­ School, 25 years; Mrs. Lorene The background was con­ SHORTCAKE 59< this year and their length of ser­ structed by Donna Orcutt and 20th CENTURY TV have been developed on a volun­ sumer Protection, State Office Stevenson, Grade 1 teacher at vice *in the Manchester school tary basis by industry groups, Building, Hartford, Conn. 06115, Washington School, 18 years. Teri Ferguson. 528-1554 176 BURNSIDE ML, EAST HARTFORD BOLTON LAKE HOTEL system are: Mrs/Agnes Ather­ RIVERSIDE government safety personnel or dial 1-800-842-2649- toll-free. R9UTE44-A • B9LT9N Call Ahead 647-1076 Or Enjoy It In Our and university experts. Most of UU6EST AMUSEMENT PARK WED Air-Conditloned Dining Room. the people from these groups IN NEW ENGLAND CHEF DANTE who wrote safety standards Cary Middlecoff® Coordinates. .. MRK Now Serving typically came from the make him a FRIDAY EVENING JUNE14 (RAIN OR SHINE) “technical’’ worlds of Made by People who Care...For People who Care!' LUNCHES - DINNERS engineering and science. ‘‘GLAD DAD" EHTIRE, PARK OPEN FRI. 7 P.M. Shown here, ready to serve you one of Ms. Hackman thinks the safe­ FOR RESEIIVXTIOIIS, TEL. B434I73I their weekly specials, is Jim and Jean ty of a product can best be with a Father's Day Moriconi - who with more than 25 years in judged by. the. way it performs Gift from the restaurant business, cordially invite when it is u s^ in everyday life. you to Manchester’s newest and finest More understanding is needed, restaurant. she says, of the human side of REGAL’S... ^EIpNESDAY NITE products — how people use and misuse them. A T MR. STEAK Products users, especially women, she feels, are impor­ t ^Ma-Ma Mia^s tant to the development of safe­ I ^ ty standards. She declares the ’ t CPSC needs women who know how a product is used at home - . i ! C u isin e and women to ask the questions ^'The Familj^ Restaurant' that technicians in the laboratories might overlook. -iV ^ 4 7 1 lliirlford Rd. Corner of MrKee Street Women must help, according to Ms. Franklin, if. we are to ■ i Phone 646-7558 successfully reduce the es­ M timated 20 million annual ac­ They’re here! The country’s most popular FRIED CLAMS MONDAY thru SATURDAY 5 P.M. to 9 P.M. cidents associated with or­ SUNDAY 11 A.M. td 9 P.M. golf/dress slacks now come coordinated with r .0 OR America's dinary household and recrea­ superbly tailored sportshirts. Both boasting It’s a great look, Jaymar’s No-Quit Knit® from Award Winning tion products. Jaymar quality! So, if you’d like to volunteer top to bottom! And with Ban-rol* at the FLOUNDER Musical your help in developing con­ And both feature all the advantages and waistband, you won’t be embarrassed by \ SPECIAL BUFFET MON. & TUES. 5 to 9 P.M. unsightly roll-over. Come in today! You’ll ‘ TE SENSATIONAL k Book by Peter Stone sumer product safety stan­ comfort of 100% quality polyester. dards, send your name, ad­ enjoy this try-on. YOUR CHOICE Music end Lyrics by By Popular Demand dress, phone number and list We’ve got Jaymar Cary Middlecoff Slacks in Sherman f dwards We Are Bringing Back your interests, occupation or a range of 10 fabulous colors...in'plain Cary Middlecoff Slacks $22.00 Our $2.95 Bullet weaves, in fancy patterns. And all teamed up Cary Middlecoff Sportshirts $15.00 •Ban-rol Co. reg. T.M. • DANNY DAViSyV relevant experience in a letter © 1974 Jaymar-Kuby, Inc. Tuesday, June 11 through to Barbara Hackman Franklin, Saturday, June 22 ALL YOU CAN EATI Vice Chairman, Consumper NASHVILLE BRASS^ Curtain 8:15 p.m. (ALL CHOICE TOP DUALITY FOOD) Product Safety Commission Two Special Matinees: Choose From Over 5u * 2 . 0 5 1750 K St., N.W., Washington, ^ IN PERSON-STARTS 8 P.M. ^ * Saturday, June 15 and (Children 12 and Under % P r/cef D.G. 20207. FuU 1'U2 hour concert In the Outdoor Siege eree. Sunday, June 16 at 2 p.m. Hot and Cold Hemal Served with Ranch House Toast At the fully air-conditioned crisp green salad Harriet S. Jorgensen Auditorium WED. NIGHT ONLY! 5:00 to 9:00 P.M. About Town and choice of potato The University of Connecticut AMERICA’S STEAK EXPERT For reservations cali 429-2912 Tickets $3.50 Students $2.50 Fresh Veal The Vacation Bible School Group rates available staff of Zion Evangelical General Admission To The Park COCKTAILS SERVED Lutheran Church will meet Parmigiana tonight at 7:30 at the church.. MANCHESTER VERNON ^ ^ A C K s $ 5001 $ 2 5 0 Served with cup of soup, choice of 901-907 MAIN STREET TRI-CITY PLAZA OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 11 A.M. TO 10 P.M. spaghetti, potato or vegetable, our Wesley-Ward Circle of South 643-2478 872-0538 Adults 8 years and under fabulous salad bar, bread and butter. United Methodist Church will ForilSiioinplwRidtaiaSieiim ^ ^ 569-2800 have a dinner and social MON. thru SAT. MON. thru FRI. F8iMi1dii8iinnFflmMityguNnL « meeting Wednesday at 7:30 9:30 to 5:30 • 10KI0 lo 9:00 677 Silver Lane East Hartford SAT. TIL 5:30 AMPLE FREE PARKING • ROUTE 159 AGAWAM. MASS. NOTE: You May Also Choose From Our Regular Menu. p.m. at the home of Mrs. James THURS. TIL 9:00 ■h Mitcheltree, 1327 Burnside Ave., East Hartford. < PAGE FOUR - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, Manchester, Conn., Tues., June 11, 1974 MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, Manchester. Conn.. Tues., June 11. 1974— PAGE FIVE CCLU Opposes Police Electronic Trackers Use

HimrlirHtrr Sii^uin^ BpralJJ HARTFORD (UPI) - In tor, isaid over the weekend. “If sidered necessary to increase purchase the devices, he said. and unrestrained intrusion by George Orwell’s famous novel the right, of pHvacy means police efficiency in arresting Legal Question the government. “ 1984,” the oppressive anything, it means that persons lawbreakers and cut the time United Press International “ This principle is a cor­ Founded Oct, 1, 1881 governmental spies of “ Big have a right to be secure in investigators now take before disclosed state police use of the nerstone of a free society,” he Brother” seemed to be their automobiles as well as in arresting them. transistorized tracking devices Published by Manchester Publishing Subscribers who fail to receive their said. “Use of electronic everywhere. Ordinary citizens their homes against un­ Stamford police say a signifi­ sometimes known as newspaper by carrier daily before 5:30 ‘bloodhounds’ clearly involves a Co., Herald Square, Manchester, Conn. were constantly under observa­ reasonable searches and cant increase in surveillance in “bloodhounds” and “bumper government trespass. 06040, telephone 643-2711 (AC 203). p.m. should telephone the circulation tion, and any behavior deemed seizures.” robbery and narcotics cases is beepers,” which are attached “It’s incredible that this \ Published every evening except Sun­ department, 647-9946. threatening to the centralized A $6,000 grant to buy the elec­ requiring “an abnormal tq an auto bumper by a magnet. device is being used at a time days and holidays. Entered at the government brought severe tronic devices for surveillance amount of time,” which ■The devices and their use ap­ when there appears to be Member Audit Bureau of Circulation punishment. Manchester, Conn., Post Office as Se­ purposes was made to the acquisition of the new devices parently are legal simply greater public sensitivity to The Connecticut Civil Liber­ Stamford police department could reduce. cond Class Mail Matter. Hard Line Toward because there is no law banning privacy issues as the result of ties Union considers un­ from the Connecticut Planning Connecticut State Police their use, authorities-say. Watergate,” Olds said. Burl L. Lyons, Publisher The Manchester. Publishing Co. TV Advertising constitutional the usp of elec­ Committee for Criminal Ad­ bought similar devices several The CCILU state board last y t r c s t o n c assumes no financial responsibility, for tronic tracking devices which ministration. years ago but found them un­ month adopted the position that let police follow a suspect’s car The Stamford police take a reliable, Olds said. Why Stamford Choaen typographical errors appearing in adver­ use of the devices violates the Subscription Rates WASHINGTON - I await much advertising on children’s unobserved, and 10 years shy of different line from Olds and the The new ones, however, also Fourth Amendment to the U.S. The Stamford application to tisements and other reading matter in (JrwelTs deadline, the organiza­ civil libertarians. used now by private detectives, the Connecticut Planning Com­ DOUBLE Payable in Advance with glee and some impatience TV programs and that govern­ Constitution, which guarantees The Manchester Evening Herald. ment action might be necessary tion is invoking this warning. 'Time Wasted are considered to be highly the right of privacy. mittee on Criminal Administra­ One Month...... $3.25 appropriate action by the Display advertising closing hours, Federal Commission now that to reduce it. “Use of the devices brings us According to the application sophisticated and very reliable, Olds said the Fourth Amend­ tion for the $6,000 said the Fair- BELTED Single C opy...... 15 cease and desist orders issued message at kids “is subject not ’An Institution since 1956” against these lawbreakers and I only to the standards of truthful do not want a lot of advertising; he is...aiso bound bureaucratic discussion and to deal in complete fairness o n c h e / k o r legal hair-splitting in court­ with his young viewers...adver­ rooms, nor a pledge by the in­ tising directed to or seen by dustry, honest Injun, that it will children which is calculated to, orkodo Mideast Trip Proper Step reform. As FTC Chairman or in effect does, exploit their Lewis A. Engman told the known anxieties or capitaiize on The President’s Mideast visit Algeria’s announcement that it will American Advertising Federa­ their propensity to confuse comes at a very propitious time and tion in Richmond, a 10-month reality and fantasy is unfair start selling oil to the Netherlands, “effort” by the industry to within the meaning of Section 5 must be regarded as a proper step in even though that country has made no devise its own new code for of the Federal Trade Commis­ solidifying the vast well of amity important concessions in its attitude children’s television had sion Act.” .JUNE 16 D A ^ F O R “yielded little, if anything.” In short, Engman was saying which has been the result of Secretary toward Israel. I like the way Engman talks. that his FTC has not been SAVE Kissinger’s peace efforts. He is polite, but he gets his properly regulating such adver­ Two smooth-ridin Too, there is some differenced! opi­ body pd !■>» negotiations appeared to be coming to success of his foreign relations efforts Politician: 1974 Model that both FTC and the Federal can testify. Priced as shown at Firestone Stores Comoehiivelv pored ai Firestone Dealers and at aN vsivice siaiion* dispiBving the FK»sioi>e s a successful conclusion. which contrast so sharply with his Communication Commission I say to Messrs Engman and are taking a hard line toward Wiley: Have at it gentlemen. domestic situation. SAN DIEGO, Cali. - The eye out for hypocrisy, sham, If the people are to choose a The only Arab country obviously TV advertising directed at The hucksters will reform and paradox of American politics old-line politics and overblown conservative. Ford’s right-of- courting Russia today is Libya which We feel, however, that there is a today is that the voters are in­ rhetoric. Which means that the children. stop using our kids to hustle a center brand is as far in that FCC Chairman Richard E. fast buck only when they’re ad­ has been rebuffed by both Egypt and real opportunity in the visit and that creasingly Democrats but not candidates will do well to un­ direction as they are likely to liberals, increasingly conser­ derstate, to get across the im­ Wiley belted a group of broad­ dressed in plain English. One Tunisia in its hope to merge into a the President would be derelict if he go. Whether Mr. Nixon leaves casters recently with the blunt word should do the job. It is vatives but not Republicans. print of fresh, even nonpolitical the Presidency or not before his d^ not seize upon it as a chance to personality, to rate on the “at­ statement that there was too spelled STOP. strong Arab nation. The fact itself cannot be denied. term’s end, I don’t see how further foreign relations in an area Its implications for the coming tractive” but forthright side Ford’s Republican opponents — elections vary with the guesser. rather than try for full-scale Guaranteed The Arab oil embargo solidarity including Nelson Rockefeller, where an improvement has been charisma. seems to have been broken with The simplest conclusion is Sen. Charles Percy and Reagan I needed for 25 years. that the candidates most likely Put thse together and you get — can head him off from the to win will be Democrats with a an attractive forthright, in­ Open Forum 1976 nomination. conservative streak in them. dependent Democrat, with a Of the three Democrats in the The auguries don’t look well for streak at once of the conser­ running. Sen. Edward Kennedy Unleaded Gas Shortage Republicans of any stripe, least vative and the populist. Ob­ seems far out in front. Most of Dedicated I have been visited qy nurses of all liberals, but not even con­ viously, this is only a base-line the pros agree that even Chap- once a week for over t^o and a model candidates. But the ones Four months before the 1975 model thirds of the cars on the road could servatives. But neither do they paquiddick won’t hold him back Nurses half years; several of. their look well for out-and-out closest to this base line are like­ because its single lapse of judg­ nurses have come to me\ they cars are due to come off the assembly use it. This raises the prospect of liberals of either party, except ly to be the winners in the ment and character has been DeaH sir: have all been everything\hat Brake lines with their requirement for un­ extra demands on the small supplies. in special constituencies. primaries, the conventions and dwarfted by the monster night­ My name is Mrs. William could be desired, in treatmmt, I add three factors which the the elections. mare of Watergate. In a con­ Eberhardt and I am a victim of kindness and in every way; an leaded gasoline, the question has been There may be enough unleaded gas­ The easy victory of Edmund straw polls don’t measure well. vention held tomorrow, cerebral palsy. Up until five they have all spoken most raised that there may be a shortage of oline but AAA says that the Federal They cut across the liberal- G. Brown Jr. in the Democratic Kennedy would be the choice. years ago, I lived in New Haven highly of Mrs. Bates. race for governor of California this fiiel when it is needed by the 10 Energy Administration’s distribution conservative and party labels. But his two major com­ where the visiting nurses She seems to be a person who First, there is a new Populist is consistent with this model. petitors — Sen. Henry M. helped me but they were not as is most capable, who gets the million new cars. formula is not wide enough to serve Brown has played it cannily, streak in the voter, which takes (Scoop) Jackson and Gov. helpful as the nurses here. For complete cooperation of those 'The shortage issue has been raised all needs, especially in rural areas. An the form of hostility to cor­ has overcome the disability of George Wallace — are likely to the past three years, I have pnder her, while at the same Relin being his father’s son along porations, to tax inequities and lay down their arms in the next been receiving much needed time going about her duties Remember that man on his day. Comfortably seat him in by an internal report of the American FEA official 'assures that there is with profiting from the recogni­ to any form of big power. two years. Jackson is more assistance from Mrs. Mary quietly and thoroughly. tion factor which goes with the Automobile Association. It calls enough gas — “the only question is Flowing from this there is a tough-minded than Kennedy on Jaworski of the visiting nurse When all is going well, when territory. Given Gov. Ronald attention to the introduction, in the whether enough stations will be ready fierce insistence on in­ foreign policy and on energy association. I am really dis­ all those in Mrs. Bates depart­ his favorite chair . . . supply him v/ith the Sunday paper, pipe and dependence, notably on the Reagan’s victory over Edmund ment are happy, thorough and 1975 model cars, of an air pollution for it, when needed.” resources. Wallace will be the turbed by the news I have read question of the size and source Brown Sr., ttie son seems a rallying point for more conser­ doing their job — why would the symbol of the road not taken concerning the resignation of control device called a catalytic con­ There is still another potential of campaign contributions: The vative Democrats, but he is Mrs. Jean Bates and 11 of the 13 Board of Directors wish to slippers... surprise him with super Dad's Day gifts. For the most ful- candidate must be — or seem to by Californians, just as a fresh verter. The converter would be problem. A Chrysler scientist’s study also almost certain to wage a visiting nurses. A lot of other make a change? I be — his “own man.” Finally, tough-minded strain sets him Populist campaign. handicapped people in Sincerely yours, . damaged by leaded gasoline, the En­ seems to show that it is not lead but, as a byproduct of Watergate, off from his more tradionally Don’t count either of them Manchester area are really Miss Virginia DeNoyelles filling selection arounc^, look here! Your best shopped merchants have liberal father. He has turned his vironmental Protection Agency the ethylene dibromide jn the un­ there is an apathy about politics out in a year in which the concerned too. I do hope this 65 Pearl St. inexperience in politics — as and a deep skepticism of all Democratic nomination will be situation can be resolved Manchester states. leaded gas which allegedly poisons the compared with the experience politicians. The voter has a sarp a choice prize to be fought for without the resignation of Mrs. of Mayor Joseph Alioto and been busy rounding up things Dads go for. Like casual and drdss-up Drum-type The AAA report further s^ays that if catalytic converters. The federal with every weapon. Bates or the nurses. Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti Mrs. Jaworski has always the 10 million new car owners who agencies involved are aware of this — to advantage, translating it - Brakes been very kind and willing to into an image of freshness. looks... sports accessories and vacation necessities. There’s plenty of Fords, Chevys, must have unleaded gas can’t get it, claim, but a great deal of previous help my husband who is also, a Herald Even his earlier Jesuit I T od ay’s and they turn to leaded gas, it will research and tests by highly qualified victim of cerebral palsy and Thanks Plymouths and seminary studies worked for Thought myself in any way she could. 1 To the editor: American Compacts. slowly destroy their converters, this automotive engineers and other scien­ I Yesterdays him. A touch of the religious free parking, too. All stores are conveniently situated. Shop now . . . wish to bring to your considera­ The American Legion Other models higher. means a $150 bill to replace them. tists had proved the opposite. Unless and ascetic doesn’t come amiss Remember the words: “I was tion the daily d^ication of this Dilivorth-Cornell Quey Post 102 at a time when sinners are It seems that one of the three com­ far more research and testing cor­ 25 Years Ago sick and ye visited me?” How wonderful woman, Mrs. Bates, and Auxiliary wish to express GUARANTEED 20,1 MILES OR 2 YEARS repenting, confessing and cop­ easy today it is to neglect their thanks to all who helped Manchester Boy Scouts hold and the rest of the nurses. We guarantee our broke lining, used in normal passenger car service, for the panies which manufacture the un­ roborates the Chrysler man’s theory, ping a plea, and when virtue visiting the sick and shut-ins. and supported the recent emergency mobilization test. Nancy Eberhardt specified number of miles or years from dale of installation, whichever comes needs every prop it can get. When visiting there are a few Memorial Poppy Drive. ’The 'The Manchester Parkade Has It AH” leaded gas has been closed by a strike FEA would be unjustified in 12 Trotter St. first. Guarantee will be honored by Firestone Dealer or Store performing the Brown will probably win over don’ts: Manchester success of this poppy distribu­ since April 1. The other two are switching. 10 Years Ago Houston Flournoy in the elec­ o'riginal work and adjustments prorated on mileage and based on prices current Don’t talk about your tion was most gratifying and at time of adjustment. working to capacity but have a four- The prospect of unleaded gas for all William M. Warner is given tions, in a bad year lor the troubles, others troubles or all was due to the loyal support of rank of Chevalier, highest ser­ Republicans. Another Califor­ month backlog. While 10 per bent will new cars — and less pollution on our the bad news you’ve recently the people of Manchester. vice award, by International nian, Ronald Reagan, won’t do heard. This is difficult to do. We also wish to thank,’The An Institution since 1956’I have to use nonleaded gas, nearly two highways — is wonderful. Supreme Council, Order of well in the 1976 presidential Don’t speak so loudly others Manchester Evening Herald for Over 40 Great Stores DeMolay. race. Curiously, California has in the room can’t converse, too. the excellent publicity and the One-Stop Shqppina GUARANTEED CUSTOMER ■ SERVICE EVERYTIME The Almanac Edgar H. Clarke is elected never sent one of its governors Don't lean on the foot of the Why Make Legion and Auxiliary members chairman of Town Insurance to the White House, nor is the patient’s bed, for jiggling it for the time they spent dis­ Acres of FREE ParKing onch^/tor Advisory Committee. rule likely to be broken by may be painful to him. A Change? tributing our poppies. Mrs. Clarence W. Rush is Reagan. He has fudged the Don’t stay over ten minutes The contributions received Variety and Selection 325 BROAD ST. United Press International The evening stars are Mer­ Harding was chosen as the e le c te d c h a irm a n of Watergate moral issue and has for it’s easy to overtire sick, To the editor: will be used exclusively for the Today is ’Tuesday, June 11, cury, Mars and Saturn. Manchester Auxiliary of a stronger strain of conser­ o rk o d o “dark horse” Republican can­ folk. Concerning the seeming rehabilitation and welfare of Fantastic Savings the 162nd day of 1974 with 203 to ’Those born on this date are Children’s Services of Connec­ vatism than the. country can Don’t be gloomy, be cheerful. desire of the Board of Directors the veteran and his family. MANCHESTER foilow. under the sign of Gemini. didate for president. He won in ticut. take. Most of all, he suffers Carry some good news in your of the Manchester Visiting Mary C. Walker in many stores 646-3356 The moon is approaching its German composer Richard November, defeating James Board of Education honors 16 from having had Mr. Nixon pocket. Nurses Association to remove unit chairman Mon., Tues., Wad., Fil. 8>8:30 last quarter. Strauss was bom June 11,1864. Cox, to become the nation’s ' retiring veteran teachers at pass him over to submit Ruth H. Stairs Mrs. Jean. Bates as head of the Guy Mullen Broad Street and West Middle Turnpike, Manchester Thursday 8-8 • Saturday 8-4 The morning stars are Venus On this day in history: reception attended by 200 at Gerald Ford’s name for Vice Community Baptist association office in post chairman and Jupiter. In 1920, Ohio Sen. Warren 29th president. I, Manchester High School. President. Church Manchester: Manchester i. ' PAGE SIX - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, Manchester, Conn., Tues., June 11, 1974 MA^JGHESTE^E^NING h e r a l d , Manchester. Conn., Tues.. June 11. iy?4 — PAGE SEVEN USDA CHOICE Seven Named CHUCK ROAST USDA CHOICE To Thespians BONELESS RIB END At Rham BONELESS $109 CHUCK $129 PORK RHAM DISTRICT Anne Emt ROLLED ■ lb. Correspondent STEAK ROAST Tel. 228-3971 I Seven students at Rham High . School have been inducted into the school’s Troupe No. 2782 of Area Profile the International Thespian 725 E. Middle Turnpike Society. “WOm i selecting a supermarket for buying Those inducted at a recent OPEN MON. AND TUES candlelight ceremony were toef for...... yourinant family, ihare are five Impoi Maureen Heneghan, Carol ^ 8 A.M. to 9 P.M. things to remember...” Koval, Stephen Jeannotte, McCoy Sees U.S. Funds WED. THRU SAT. Jason Osborn, Jeffrey Adams, Bob Vontell and Michael GREEEN 8 A.M. to 10 P.M. STAMPS Donnelly. * liirusDA ch"is *G«dJ b S r" Induction in the society is the Available foe Renovation highest honor which may be “Now 3 Fine bestowed upon high school resolutions appropriating an ad­ struction prices have gone When the renovatidn project • jirpX*.!"'" *• students participating in the VERNON ditional $40,000 of town fund. higher and it was likely that the is completed the town plans to Supermarkets To dramatic arts. BARBARA RICHMOND Federal requirements call for town would have to cut back move the offices of the mayor, Serve You Better!" In addition to his induction, It is pretty certain the federal the town to pay a certain share considerably on its original town planner, and building in­ j'Jason Osborn was also ac­ Economics Development Ad­ toward such projects. plans to refurbish the Memorial spector to the Memorial Supermarkets • It shoul guarantee all cute and refund corded the Best Thespian honor ministration (EDA) will ap­ One resolution passed will Building which was constructed Building to put all of the town’s Wo Aeserve The Rlgh$ To Limit Quantities your money if you are not satisfied. for 1974. prove an amendment which will allow $30,000 of the town’s con­ in 1889 as a monument to those administrative offices under Mrs. Paula Straight, advisor provide the town of Vernon with tribution to come from the men who died in the War of the one roof. • All meat should be sold at money-saving to the society, was presented a additional funds for renovation Capital Reserve Fund and the Rebellion. Mayor McCoy told the council Prices iow prices every day. plaque from the group in of the Memorial Building, other $10,000 will come from ’The last time any alterations that the project has been a very DOUBLE S&H GREEN recognition of her “Decade of Mayor Frank McCoy told a Effective meats We can give you ali five, pius S&H Green Debbie Sharp, student in the fifth grade class of Mrs. Jones, has an afternoon chat with the general fund surplus were made to the building was frustrating one for a long time Service to Drama.” special meeting of the Town expected at the end of this in 1952 when the then City of O R E E N I Gladys and Irving. (Herald photo by Lariviere) due to the continuing rise in June 10 • June 15 L S T A M P S I STAMPS WEDNESDAY Stamps. Shop and compare. We think Council Monday night. fiscal year. Rockville voters spent $7,000 to costs of construction. He you’ii return as a reguiar customer. Mayor McCoy met with of­ Mayor McCoy said while it is make some changes. ADVERTISEMENT - expressed the hope that there ficials of EDA on Friday and not 100 per cent certain that the Plans are to remodel the BURRITT BANK will not be any lengthy -FRANK they told him they were ready federal agency will approve the building to make better use of /cSSr'g* School Pond Home for Mallards HAS SUMMER GIFTS! procedures involved in ac­ Family Pack to prepare the amendment proposed amendment, he has wasted space including the. Fondue sets and/ handy complishing the passing of the which would allot the town an been told it is almost certain it third-floor which is now con­ beverage kits available now for proposed amendment. additional $90,000 of federal will be. J sidered unsafe for use. depositors at “The Big B.” When the contract bids came ANDOVER winter, presumably to Andover money to bring the total federal The available total would A much needed elevator will in much higher than expected, Ellen Lariviere The ducks, named Gladys and Reward your savings with top Irving, took a special liking to Lake, but they returned in the grant to $390,000. The original then be $505,000 and Mayor be installed. Presently a very it was thought, by the mayor, ORK CHOPS interest rates and top gifts from Correspondent $300,000 was granted some two McCoy said EDA officials told wide staircase leads to the se­ Debbie. She brought them a spring. the money piace — the cute lit­ that this may have been due to 742-9117 years ago. him this would be sufficient to cond and third floors. small plastic boat, filled it with tle red bank building opposite the fact that the work was being CHUCK STEAK Two years ago in Mrs. Corene Originally the town had put in do the job as originally planned. The first floor houses the of­ ‘water and taught them how to Cumberland Farms in Hebron done on a very old building and Jones’s grade classroom two Debbie tells the story of how $75,000 as its share of the While no bid has actually fice of the town clerk, the tax swim. As Debbie would run the Gladys, when a young duck, Center. Open daily 10:30 - 6:00; that probably contractors built mallard duck eggs hatched. ducklings would chase after her proposed project. Bids have been awarded, the mayor has collector, assessors and the in larger profit and contingency Michael Sharp, then a student was bitten on the foot bj; a snap­ Thurs. nights ’til 8:00. 228-9471. been put out twice and both been consulting with potatoes judge of probate. The second margins due to the nature of the and before long found ping turtle. The turtle took a in Mrs. Jones class, and his times they came in much too Tourtellote Construction Co. of floor court room is used by Cir­ work and the fact that the of­ themselves airborn. chunk from Gladys’ foot and younger sister Debbie brought high for the amount alloted. Vernon, the low bidder the se­ cuit Court 12. And other rooms fices now located in the building When the ducklings were old this is one way the children are Grade A U.S.DJ. CHOICE the eggs to school from their Monday night the council was cond time around. on the second floor are used by would be operating while the enough the students took them sure these are the same ducks. FIRST CUT OUR MOTTO: grandfather’s farm. As luck to the pond which is part of the TownPicnic asked by the mayor to pass two Since the second bidding, con­ the DAR. work was ^oing on. Long White would have it one of the hatched school’s nature area. After eggs was a male, the other a Now Debbie is a student in California several attempts the ducks lbs. lb. “Always Service female. finally decided that the pond Mrs. Jones’s class and the Tomorrow '5 Because Mike and Debbie would make a good home and ducks still come to her on occa­ lived across from the school sion. Gladys and Irving are full From The Heaif ’ decided to stay. HEBRON East School To Close .they would take the young The children continued to grown now and starting to raise ducklings home on weekends a family of their own. Gladys . Nancy Drinkuth yisit the ducks on occasion and VERNON be used to complete a program when there was no one at the has built a nest on the far side Members of the Recreation which houses Grade 6 pupils on­ Church Carnival watch them grow. They never BARBARA RICHMOND of having all school libraries school to care for them. of the pond and the students are Commission and the Conserva­ ly. This school has been Sacred Heart Church, Rt. 30, attempted to make pets of the The East School buildings A operating full time. Dr. Before long the ducklings patiently awaiting the arrival 6t tion Commission urge all operating as part of the Middle will hold its “Salute to birds as they did not want them & B will end a career of long Ramsdell said this will be dis­ associated the children as their the second generation of An­ Hebron residents to attend the School and is under the jurisdic­ Summer” carnival on the to be dependant on humans for service to the town of Vernon cussed at the next meeting of adopted parents and would dover School ducklings. third annual Town Picnic tion of that school’s principal. grounds of the Parish Center, food or protection. the end of this month. Monday the board. • follow them around the tomorrow starting at 5:30 p.m. Board member Steven Wednesday through Saturday. The ducks migrated for the night the Board of Education He said the closing could classroom. at Greyville Falls. Marcham said he feels there is The kitchen committee will voted to close the school and mean a loss of job for one of the The two town groups will a definite need to create a prin- be making and selling fried piz­ will reassign the pupils and two cafeteria workers. provide hot dogs, beer and soda cipalship at Sykes. “That zas, Thursday and Friday staff to other elementaryelemen He said the move will be ad­ for the event. Temperatures school deserves the autonomy a evenings as well as all day schools. vantageous for the students as are always lower at the park principalship would give it,” he Saturday. Hamburgs, hot dogs, J The board meeting was and tomorrow should be a good it will offer them an opportuni­ said. He said, however, that he french fries and soda and bwr opened to discussion by parents First District Young GOP day not to cook a meal. ty to work at more levels. feels Sykes should be part of the will also be on sale. and teachers. No one spoke Presently they only have two Middle School in concept. Circus Thursday against the plan but ^ome levels at East School. Michael Blake or Leonard ’The ladies of the church will Thursday, for one day only, parents of students in the Dr. Ramsdell said he did not Lucia, assistant principals at have a cake booth featuring To Hear Party Candidates the Hebron Lions Club will Tracey Dr. area who will be receive any phone calls from the Middle School, according to cakes, pies, cupcakes, cookies sponsor a visit of the Royal shifted from Skinner Road parents when the announce­ Dr. Ramsdell’s proposal, will and brownies baked by the Wild West Circus. Perfor­ School to Center Road School ment was made that the school be transferred to Rockville parishioners. SOUTH WINDSOR Persons wishing to attend are Summer Basketball mances at 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. are wanted assurance that their would probably be closed. High School as a housemaster planned at the Lions Club’s Judy Kuehnel asked to call Ernest W. Small, Tryouts for boys wishing to children will not be switched However, Fred Ramsdell, prin­ for the expanded school, Fairground on Rt. 85. There will be a cupcake Correspondent 80 Edgewood Dr., South Wind­ participate on the South Wind­ again. cipal of the school, said he had The special education Reduced rates are available decorating booth for children. Tel. 644-1364 sor. sor team in the Summer Subur­ Students in that area original­ had some calls from parents teachers will go to Skinner for tickets purchased in ad­ On Saturday all rides for I Switri Classes ban Basketball Lfeague will be ly attend^ the Center Road who had questions concerning Road and Sykes; the corrective YGOP vance. Advance tickets are children will be at a reduced Registration for swimming held June 17 at 7:30 p.m. in the school and then were the move. reading teacher will work at The First District Connec­ being sold by all Lions Club price from 1 to 5 p.m. instructions in South Windsor, transferred to Skinner Road. Dr. Ramsdell said he would Skinner Road and Vernon ticut Federation of Young South Windsor' High School Bingo, with cash prizes, will sponsored by the Recreation gymnasium. members at $1.25 for children The plan to reassign the East start today to implement his Elementary; the East School Republicans, South Windsor, and the elderly and $2.50 for be played Friday and Saturday Department, will be held Any boy entering his School students calls for some proposed plan as teachers and secretary will go to Sykes and starting at 7; 30 p.m. in th e : USOA CHOICE (CHUCK) ^ will hold a ‘‘Meet the Can­ Tuesday, June 11 from 7-9 p.m. adults. 200 to go to Skinner Road. There students have to know where KAHN’S VERMONT MAID __ __ didates” night at Holiday Inn of sophomore, junior or senior the Sykes secretary will go to ^ center. ’There will be a BRILLO (GIANT) . in Timothy Edward’s cafeteria. year in September is eligible. is extra classroom space at that they will be assigned next year. Rockville High; the physical Hartford, June 13 at 8 p.m. ADVERTISEMENT - raffU drawing at 10:30 p.m., LONDON BRlilL There will be four 2-week Boys attending registration are school due to a dramatic drop in He feels the moving process education teacher will go full Sati^day when the carnival will LIVERWURST „ 7 9 « SYRUP ,...8 9 « SOAP PADS ,. .3 9 « The gubernatorial candit(ates swimming sessions under the BURRITT BANK birthrates, school officials said. can be accomplished with the HILSHIRE FARMS ^ to be present are: State C ^ p - asked to bring sneakers, T- time to Talcottville with the clo^. VLASIC HAMBURG, HOT DOG or SWEET ^ HANOVER 3 BEAN AND VEGETABLE ^ ^ following schedule: July 1-12; shirts, shorts and a towel. HAS SUMMER GIFTS! In making the proposal to regular staff helping. trainable mentally retarded troller Nathan Agostinelli, July 15-26; July 29-Aug. 9; Aug. Fondue sets and handy close the school. Dr. Raymond While the saving of money is CUBE STEAK „ Manchester; Speaker of the The league starts June 25 and students and will also work with KIELBASA „ * 1 ” RELISHES SALAD „..4 9 « 12-23. concludes with an all-star ver­ beverage kits available now for Ramsdell, superintendent of the last consideration in the the educable mentally retarded Church School SELECT / House Francis J. Collins, No person may sign up for depositors at “The Big B.” schools, assur^ the board that proposal, the plan will result in Union Congregational Church SWEET LIFE __ __ GULDEN’S Brookfield; State Sen. George sus league champion game Aug. students throughout the two consecutive sessions and 8. All games will be played on Reward your savings with top he will be able to reassign all an estimated savings of $70,918, system; service aides will be will conduct its Vacation ROAST BEEF ! „ BEEF LIVER „ 7 9 < Gunther, Stamford; Mayor the instructions are for interest rates and top gifts from East School teachers in the to the town. Church School July 15 through FABRIC SOFTENER ,., 5 9 < BROWN MUSTARD 1 8 « Tuesday and Thursday evenings eliminated; and art and music SWIFT BROWN N SERVE _ ^ FRISKIES / Nicholas Panuzio, Bridgeport, residents aged six and up. the money place — the cute lit­ system as several teachers are Dr. Ramsdell had originally 19 from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. MOP AND GLO PRINCE ELBOWS AND THIN ______and Congressman Robert with a starting time of 6:15. teachers will be rescheduled to The fee for instruction is $2 Other towns participating are tle red bank building opposite retiring this year. prepared three alternatives provide more time to elemen­ Classes will be for children who SAUSAGE Steele, Vernon. Cumberland Farms in Hebron The custodian at East School concerning the closing of the will be four by December of CAT FOOD for children, and classes will be Newington, Glastonbury, tary schools and Talcottville GEM DELI BRAND ^ ^ FLOOR SHINE ,. „6 9 < SPAGHEni „ .7 3 < Also invited to speak are Rep. offered on the following levels: Center. Open daily 10:30 - 6:00; had planned to retire anyway school, they included the this year through those who will WINDEX AEROSOL (20-0Z.) James H. Brannel III, Rep. Wethersfield, Windsor and School. SWEET LIFE ^ ^ GINO’S (24-01.) Beginner, advanced beginner, Rocky Hill. ^ Thurs. nights ’til 8:00. 228-9471. and the librarian will hopefully recommended plan of the im­ be entering Grade 7 in Herbert V. Camp Jr., and When approving the motion to c SLICED BOLOGNA ,. p., 9 9 « intermediate, swimmer. Junior For further information call mediate closing; delaying the close East School, the board September. WINDOW CLEANER 5 9 « PINEAPPLE JUICE « ,. 3 9 « ano ush oom Motor Vehicle Commissioner and Senior Life Saving. closing for one year; one year; SAUCE MEAT « « ...5 9 < Edward J. Kozlowski. All are the recreation office weekday^, agreed it was doing so minus all LIPTON (WITH COUPON BELOW] / SWEET LIFE (CLEAR AND CLOUDY) ^ OCEAN SPRAY __ 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. or not closing the school at all. There will be an enrollment announced candidates for the of these details which it feels Registration Open Dr. Ramsdell’s proposal calls fee of 50 cents per family to FRANKS U.S. Senate seat. may need to be altered and will for making Principal Ramsdell give the administration latitude help defray expenses. Children TEABAGS ,„.,79< ...... CRAN COCKTAIL Art Group Adds Classes For Rec Program principal of the Sykes School in carrying out the plans. must be preregistered. ‘From The Dell TOLLAND Men’s Sctjfiball The Freshest Produce Sold’ “ From The Dalry”i “Frozen Foods BOLTON The Bast Imported Grads A (StrIcUy Fresh) ______Permits Vivian Kenneson Officers Iti Men’s Softball League ac- Ripe, Sweet Juice Swoet Lifs French ■ At its recent annual meeting. Donna Holland tibn, Gil’s Mobil defeated M&M Top Students Named Low Calorie Needed Correspondent Correspondent Oil 15 to 9. Tel. 875-4704 Arts of Tolland elected William BOILED Tel. 646-0375 Bill Mickewicz was the win­ MEDIUM i | A t OREEN O C ( For Pools D’Antonio as president. Other COVENTRY yearbook staff and a member of National Honor Society and the officers elected are Kathryn Registration for the Bolton ning pitcher. Len Boyle hit a m u r The Arts of Tolland will hold Summer Recreation Program home run and Ben Tantillo had Monica Shea the student council for four ski club. riEBRON Kusmin, vice president; Betty Correspondent HAM 1/1 lb. EGGS a second registration Saturday will be held tonight and three hits for Gil’s. years and its president for two She has been a member of the ea. BUNS from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Nangle, secretary; Stuart Dan- Tel. 742-9495 years. forth, treasurer. Wednesday from 7 until 8 at Norm Barnard pitched for 4-H, and sings in the LOUPES Tolland Jail for its summer Herrick Memorial Park. M&M. \ Milton Wilde, principal of She has received the Outstan­ Congregational Church Choir 39 Nancy Drinkuth Trustees are Stanley Bonk, Coventry High School, has an­ The Beat Imported ^ CAF SHREDDED MOZZARELLA Correspondent program, which runs from July ’There will be a $1 registration The Bolton Lake Hotel ding Athletic Award, Laurel and is a member of the Pilgrim CARNATION PDQ ^ _ 8 to Aug. 2. James Cornish,.Barbara Dan- nounced that Raymond Jean Girls’ State Award, Sorop- Tel. 228-3970 forth, Stuart Danforth, William fee for all participants. defeated Three J ’s 11 to 9. Fellowship. SWISS CHEESE .a.. 7 9 « California Iceberg Hats (4-Pack) , Several new classes have There will also be a $1 in­ Larry Stearns was the win­ and Anne Aronson are the tomist Award and was named a Anne plans to attend the CHEESE „ .5 9 « SHRIMP * 3 ” The Building Department has D’Antonio,' Robert Dean, John Students of Distinction for the issued a reminder to all Hebron been added to those previously surance charge for those not ning pitcher. Larry Duhaime National Merit Connecticut University of Massachusetts REDDI WHIP SWEET LIFE Devine, Phyllis Dowd, Molly Class of 1974. Scholar. residents: who intend to announced. These include registered in the town’s hit a home run for the winning where she will major in Gehring, Charles Goodstein, Raymond Jean is the son of LETTUCE TDMATDES purchase swimming pools that Earth-Lore; pottery for ages 9 baseball or swimming team. She is a member of the physical education. TOPPING 6 5 < to 13; printmaking for ages 9 to Carol Gordon, Jean Hopkins, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Jean of Rt. COOKED SALAMI ..,.6 9 < ORANGE JUICE .. .. 5 9 « regardless of size, if a swim­ Kathryn Kusmin, Betty Nangle, program. BORDEN’S PURE BIRDS EYE 13, and 14 to adult; knitting for Registration for the summer Wetlands Map 31. ming pool has a circulating Suda Nargardevlekar, Loretta Stanley Bates, chairman of Jean has been a member of OA a pump or is 24 inches deep, a ages 8 and over. gymnastics program will be CAPITAL FARMS TENDER CASING ^ ^ m i ^ O C t Each course will total 12 Nighingale, Joyce North, the Conservation Commission, the National Honor Society and ORANGE JOICE TASTI FRIES ,.„3 9 « permit must be secured before Carolyn Schulmeister and Lee held tonight and Wednesday MRS. FILBERrS hours of classroom instruction from 7 until 8 at Herrick presented an Inland Wetlands the math and science clubs. He TASTE O’SEA construction or installation is Schulmeister. map to the selectmen showing was junior class president and a FRANKS 2 9 * started. and will meet at the Tolland Memorial Park. „ 3 d * The new board will meet- wetland areas and soil types in National Merit Student. He has head Also, all pools must be Middle School, unless otherwise There is a $10 charge for the ' ^ 1 OLEO QUARTERS .^ 4 9 « FISH STICKS ,. „ 7 9 « arranged. Thursday at 8:30 p.m. at th6 Bolton. been named a Connecticut enclosed by a four-foot-high D’Antonio home on Metcalf Rd. program. It is under the direc­ tion of Richard Nietupski. A copy of the map will be kept Scholar and has received the fence which will keep small at the Town Hall for viewing by National Math Award. children out of the pool area. Attends Seminar anyone interested. Jean has been a member of The fence must have a self School Board To Meet The Department of En­ the indoor and outdoor track —/ locking gate or if the pool is Norman Preuss, probate j 25x vironmental Protection has teams and in his spare time has WITH THIS COUPt WITH THIS COUPON judge for the Andover district WITH THIS COUPON •71 TI *7^ WITH THIS COUPON WITH THIS COUPON above ground it must have a [ « *9.00 PURCHA! A SS.OO PUACHASE TOLLAND which includes the towns of An­ reviewed the recent regulations done volunteer work for the A S7.50 PURCHASE Mk 1 A $5.00 PURCHASE A $5.00 PURCHASE removable ladder, which must 79t WITH COUPON dover, Bolton and Columbia, drawn up by the coptimission mentally retarded. 650 W ITH C O U P O N be removed whenever the pool Education will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at concerning inland wetlands. He plans to attend the is not being used. the Education Administration Building. attended a seminar conducted by the Connecticut Bar Associa­ They are presently being California Institute of There are many other! On the agenda is a proposal which pares down the education checked by town counsel. Technologj' and major in parti- ‘ 40<0FF tion in Meriden recently. 30< OFF 25< OFF FREE 7< OFF 15‘ OFF regulations concerning the in­ budget request of $3,135,000 to the approved figure of $2 987 259 The commission said it will cle physics. 04-02. NuSoft Coconut 100 CL Upton 4 pkgs. Funny Face stallation of swimming pools Policies On diplomas earned in correctional institutes and drug The probate assembly will Box 28-OX. 48-02. hold a seminar Wednesday in begin public hearings very soon Anne Aronson is the daughter which are avjiailable upon policies and procedures will have second readings at the board concerning the regulations. of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Aron­ FABRIC TEA M ^ ra LA STERLING DRINK request from the building meeting. Also, a statement and job description of the school Meriden on New Adoption Laws ^ 5 BOLD (PA 74-164) and the new Following the hearings the son of Bamsbee Lane. She has department. business manager will be presented. regulatipns will be voteef on by BAGS probate rules which, will been a member of the Girls’ SOFTENER OIL SALT MIX DETERGENT Any person who violates this Other items on the agenda is the oceanography field work otos im j«M IB become effective July 1. tpwnspeople. If they are Cross Country team, the girls’ OMdlliniJiMia OMSTInJnM IB BooSTIn Jww IB QooB Thn Jmo IB BotS THn Juno 10 provision is subject to a fine of course, and establishment of a lab assistant program by the rejected the town will be under Ofw Coupon Por Fooilly Ont Coujion Por Fimlly One Coupon Por i^mlly OflO Coupon Por FamHy One Coupon Por Family Ono Coupon Por Family 'The probate office will be basketball team and the track not more than $500 or one year business education department and library-media center at the state guidelines concerning its and field team. high school. closed June 12. « in jail or both. inland wetlands. She has been a member of the "The Store With Heart" "The Store With Heart' y K ’.s

N ▼AiSdVS OaOM PAGE EIGHT - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. Manchester. Conn., Tues., June 11, 1974 MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, Manchester, Conn.. Tues., June 11, 1974 — PAGE NINE

Duplicate Bridge » Thibodeau-Barnowski Emblem Club To Mark I About Town I & Its 20th Anniversary • y needing transportation to the Club will meet Wednesday at 8 X church may call Mrs. Donald S t. Ja m e s C h u rch , The bride is the daughter of The Rev. Daniel Karpiey Lutheran Church will meet p.m. at the home of Mrs. Manchester Emblem Club charge of the arrangements for Wednesday at 9:30 a.m. in Booth, 10 Eleanor St., Vernon. Warren Luoma, 30 Galaxy Dr. Results Friday night in the Barre and Mrs. Mary Manchester, was the scene Mr. and Mrs. John R. Bar- ficiated at the double-rin^ ^will celebrate its 20th anniver­ the event. She is assisted by June 8 of the marriage of nowski of 126 Glenwood St. The ceremony. Mrs. Ralph Mac- Luther Hall of the church for Manchester Bridge. Club game Gangewere, first; Mrs. Faye sary Wednesday with a dinner Mrs. Alfred Ritter, gifts; Mrs. coffee before leaving on a bus The ways and means com­ Lawrence and Mrs. Mollie Rosemary Ann Barnowski to bridegroom is the son of Mr. carone of Manchester was at Manchester Community at the Lord Cromwell Charles Lathrop and Mrs. trip to Mystic. mittee of Center College Student Lounge are; Timreck, Mrs. Frankie Brown Michael J. Thibodeau III, both and Mrs. Michael J. Thibodeau organist. The church was Restaurant in Cromwell. The Kenneth Hodge, decorations; Congregational Church will and Mrs. Mary Willhide, se­ of Manchester. jr. decorated with white gladioli H er North-South: James Baker and event will open with a social and Mrs. Stanley Baldwin, The Senior Fellowship of meet tonight at 7:30 in the cond; Mrs. Lucie Wadsworth and Shasta daisies. Mrs. Sonja Gremillion, first; hour at 6:30 p.m., and dinner reservations. Community Baptist Church will church office. Mrs. Norma Fagan and Bob and Mrs. Betty Launi, Dr. and will be served at 7:30. meet at the church Thursday at e (ju c a te (j Stratton, second; Dr. Saul Mrs. John Gworek, third. Betty Ryder The bride was given in Mrs. Baldwin is also chair­ 10:30 a.m. to go to Elizabeth The Syrian-Lebanese- Cohen and Ernbst Berube, marriage by her father. The Emblem Club, the man of the point awards, which American Women’s Association women’s auxiliary of Park, Hartford, for a picnic and m ind Women’s Editor third. Miss Denise Bujaky of will be presented at the dinner. will return at 3 p.m.There will of Greater Hartford will meet East-West: A1 and Peg A MODERN Coraopolis, Pa., the bride’s Manchester Lodge Elks, is a Assisting her are Mrs. Samuel Wednesday at 8; 30 p.m. at the charitable organization which be a slight charge for bus LaPlant, first; Joe Toce and cousin, was maid of honor. Vacant!, Mrs. Jean Gaboury, transportation. In the event of home of Mrs. Frederick w il Never underestimate the power of a public relations James Polites, second; Mrs. PHARMACY Bridesmaids were Christina contributes to veterans Mrs. John Carson, Mrs. Nassiff, 61 Steep Hollow Lane. man and if he happens to be in show “biz” the results may hospitals, convalescent homes, rain, the picnic will be in Rita Holland and Dennis Barnowski of Manchester, the William Marceau, Mrs. Fellowship Hall of the church. appreciate be astronomical. ' Derafisch, third. bride’s sister; Michele Horila Newington Children’s Hospital, Theodore Fairbanks, and Mrs. The safety committee of Mansfield State Training Anyone of retirement age is in­ Jim Moran, a veteran stunt man, has come up with a of Ashford, the bridegroom’s Frank Toros Manchester Junior Women’s School, Oak Hill School for the vited to attend the picnic. Those new routine, for an old show business venture — tap- Results Friday night in the sister; and Kathy Field of Seiko. Blind, Kennedy Day Camp, the dancing. Andover Bridge Club game at Jam as Manchester. tesses for the evening are Andover Congregational Senior Citizens, and this year^ After viewing MGM’s “That’s Entertainment,” a F. Irs. Joseph Reynolds, Mrs. Church are: Dr. and Mrs. Timothy Thibodeau of awarded two scholarshi[ John Ziemak, Mrs. John cavalcade of highlights from MGM musicials, Moran D’Amato Tanash Atoynatan, Clem Manchester, the bridegroom’s Mrs. Alfred PontideUi is in Callahan, and Miss Julia Dulka. sought out two young tap dancers to accompany him on a Hitchcock and Wilmer Curtiss, BS/UPh. brother, was best man. Ushers tap dance tour of famous U.S. sites. tied for first; Mrs. Glenn Pren­ were Donald Thibodeau of Launching his tour with a press conference at Manchester, the bridegroom’s tiss and Mrs. Robert Crawford, Perspiration itself has no Hollywood’s famed Brown Derby, the trio departed via Mrs. Lawrence Moe and Mrs. brother; Allan Horila of odor^.T^ie problem is due to Ashford, the bridegroom’s San Francisco, where reports are that his two young com­ Francis Haines, tied for third. the effect on perspiration of College Nwes panions tapped their way across the Golden Gate Bridge brother-in-law; and Michael bacteria that live on our skin Barnowski of Manchester, the with extensive coverage by television and press. Results in the June 6 Nutmeg all the time...If you are bride’s brother. No newcomer to “out of sight” publicity stunts, Moran is YWCA open game at the Com­ bathing frequently, you B a rb a ra M. B ehke of College, Manchester, N.H. He Manchester, was among the known for such famous stunts as selling an icebox to an munity Y are; North-South: aren’t giving the tocteria is studying in the law enforce­ Mrs. Frankie Brown and Mrs. A reception was held at the graduates who received BS ment program. SPEWBI ST. (Silver lane) PSTIMIIH PUU Eskimo in Alaska, and leading a bull through a china shop. time to create an American Legion Hall, after Lil Holway, first; Mrs. Geri odor...Body odor is, degrees from Virginia Com­ He also is reported to have painted a cow purple to show to Barton and Mrs. Anne DeMar- which the couple left on a trip to monwealth University, Rich­ Among the students poet Gelett Burgess, who wrote the verse “I never saw a therefore, the result of other New Orleans, La. For tin, second; Dr. Saul Cohen and things... 1) the odor could be mond Va. May 18. graduating from Eastern HUNDREDS OF purple cow.” Ernest Berube, third. traveling, Mrs. Thibodeau wore Connecticut State College June in your clothes; 2) on rare a lavender dotted Swiss jump­ The itinerary, so far, has taken them to Las Vegas, East-West: Mrs. Sandy Craft .occasions, certain foods — James L. Foy of 103F Rachel 2 with MS degrees were: FRAMES IN STOCK where the dancers tapped their way across the top of and Mrs. Carol Dell’Angela, suit with white accessories. The Rd., received his BA degree, Manchester: Bafbara W. Bell for instance, garlic or highly couple will reside at 172P Hoover Dam, through the desert and along the wing of a first; Mrs. Grace Barrett and spiced dishes — can impart cum laude, from Western and Frances V. Hyde. Open Tues and Thurs. tO-6 Case joins matching bracelet Homestead St. Connecticut State College, Dan­ Coventry: Penelope L. Fox. In one smooth line. Yellow top/ Western Airlines plane. Mrs. Mary Tierney, second; an odor tb perspiration...A Wed. and FrI. 10-6 stainless steel back. A splendid Mrs. Ann Staub and Mrs. Linda Mrs. Thibodeau is employed bury, May 26. Hebron: Caroline Lippincott. graduation gilt. Ask lor Next on the agenda, was the Midwest with stops in simple, bland diet may help Saturday 10-S No. ZW442M-17J. Only $89.50. Chicago and . The trio will soon head for , Church Plans Week-Long Bkzaar June 17-22 Simmons, third. the problem...And to m a^ by the Manchester Credit South Windsor: Marcia S. David C. Berube, son of Mr. Davison, Jane E. Ferguson and then shuffle off to Buffalo via the Niagara Falls Peace any odor, use a high-quality Rating Bureau. Mr. Thibodeau Closed Mondays Results in the June 5 Nutmeg perfume...If this problem is manager and part owner of and Mrs. Edgar J. Berube of 50 Jil LaRiviere. Bridge. At the falls, the will perform “Singin’ in the Turnbull Rd., has been named ROBERT TILDEN RONALD R. HAUGH Mrs. Mary Sulots, left, and Mrs. Millie Kos hold some of YWCA novice game at the Com­ persists, then a der­ the Tacorral Restaurant. Rockville-Vernon: Denise Rain,” (what else) as they tap on the decks of the famous games of chance, homemade baked goods and food and munity Y are: Mrs. Grace to the dean’s list for the second Marcus and Katherine M. “Maid of Mist” tour boat. the items to be on sale in the arts and crafts booth during drinks for the whole family. It will wind up Saturday, June matologist should be con­ MMKSia PMUK. Barrett and Mrs. Mary sulted... semester at St. Anselm’s Kelley. Finally, when they reach the East coast, the tappers will St. Bridget’s Raffle and Baaar starting Monday, June 17. 22 with a drawing for the winners of a Ford LTD, a color Tierney, first; Mrs. Sally Beach Photo dance their way across the Hudson River via the Staten ’The church’s entire parking lot will be filled with rides. TV, and two, 10-speed bikes. (Herald photo by Barlow) Heavisides and ^ s . Judy Pitts, Ptoper medication Pinochle alleviates a great amount of Island Ferry saluting the Statue of Liberty and the New second; Mr. and Mrs. Murray Mrs. Michael J. Thibodeau III L tr F A T H E R ^ ! York Skyline as they triumphantly sail into lower Manhat­ Powell, Mrs. Nancy Akin and discqmfort. Fill your Scores iu$ 1 D A Y presci^tions at’ LENOX’ roud i tan. .f Mrs. Ebie Kaemfer, tied for tf/tXT JUNE 16 third. P H A R ® ^ , 299 E. Center Winners in the Manchester f After that, who knows? Moran, who has even been Here’s To Daddy, He’s True Blue! Arthur's Tio*t • y St., Tel.‘'W94)896 for free Senior Citizens Pinochle Group known to sit on an ostrich egg and hatch it, will no doubt Results in the June 4 South delivery. Opqp 8-9. Sun. and game June 6 at the Army and DRUG STORES come up with other ingenious ideas for his troupers. Manchester to visit, he greets Navy Club are: Bea Cormier, Fathers are wonderful peo­ heard him say to my husband, Windsor Bridge Club Swiss Holidays 8-8. “Symbol Of 190 rARMINCTON AVI.. HARTrORD, CONN. SIT-II In the meanwhile, keep your eyes open. You ihay just ple. Especially mine. me with a big bear hug and “you’re a lucky guy to have my Finest Pharmacy Service.” and Katherine Frey, 594 each; team club championship game 949 MAIN ST., MANCHISTIR. CONN. 643-ISOS see two talented dancers, led by Moran, skim through There were times when I was asks, “how’s my little girl?” daughter.” Gift Dept., Film, Cosmetics, Inez Mahoney, 583; and Peg at Wapping Community Hall 144 RROAA ST., WINDSOR. CONN. 68B-S283 “The Bells Are Ringing” in Philadelphia — or shuffle growing up, I didn’t feel that There’s something really nice My father likes to entertain are: Mrs. Barbara Davis and Candy. We honor Master Vendrillo, 572. 40 MAIM ST.. ROCKVILLE, CONN. 8TS-9363 through “Sweet Georgia Brown” a little further south. In way. It seemed that all he did the children with stories of my Mrs. Anne DeMartin, Mrs. Flo Charge Cards. After the game, a roast beef any event, we have not heard the last of Jim Moran. was remind me to pick up my youth and I must confess 1 dinner was served. room and tell me I was wearing never recognize myself. To date, John Gaily has high too much lipstick. According to him I got all A’s score of 688,. and Frances Fike, And Away We Go But today. I’m his staunchest ON on my report card, did my high total points of 21,856. We have been invited to join 100 fashion ^ itors and Iliehe next game will be played ally. Just let anyone pick on my household chores without com­ AIRPLANE-TRAIN- retail marketing people Friday as guests of the Canadian father and they’ll have to deal .THOUGHT plaint, and — the boys in my Thursday at 9:45 a.m. at the Government to spend a weekend in Montreal to view some Army and Navy Club. EAT SAYINGS with me first. class fought for the chance to of the latest Canadian fashions. When my father comes to carry my books home from Tickets • Cruises • Tours We^ve Named The Baby— THROUGHOUT THE STORE J school. (That last part really The group will depart from LaGuardia Friday morning Hotel Reservations • Car Rentals VALU and arrive in the beautiful city of Montreal just after noon. impresses my daughters). HEALTH CAPSULES® I Our By the time his visit is over, by Michael A. Petti, M.D. The ageihda will include tours of the city, time for shop­ Honeymoons • Group Travel ESPECIALLY FDR ESPECIALLY FOR ping, and the fashion presentations. Highlight of the Mon­ the children are looking at me If You HAVe MP A Com- 1 Servicemen with a new kind of respect and Rusiness Travel treal Mode Weekend will be an 18th Century banquet in the Murphy, Dillon Robert, son of Robert and Khthleen pteTe Hy^TiRfd-ToAi/, Po You Treats a man to warm my ego is blissfully floating. ^ H iL WEEP 'fo HAYB manner of Louis Quatorze. Airman Peter J. Leon, son of NO SERVICE CHARGE Eggleston Murphy of Salem, N.H. He was born May 29 at the !lather every day [q iv e DAD THIS SCHICK WAKE HIM UP ON So Happy Father’s Day, to A?APte^T2 „ We are scheduled to arrive back in New York late Sun­ Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Leon, my father, to father’s Lawrence (Mass.) General Hospital. His maternal grandparents LUGGAGE Hennequinn Rd., Columbia, has are Mr. and Mrs. Harry Eggleston of 143 Hollister St. His pater­ Companion N ow 13.99 FATHER’S DAY day afternoon, just in time for Press Week which will be ELAINE C. TONER everywhere. 8-/7. After Tw o Suitar 1.00 N ow 18.99 HOT LATHER U held this tip e at the New York Hilton. Highlighting this 56 West St. been assigned to Plattsburgh about being someone’s “little Long may they live in good nal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. William Murphy of JtiP AFB, N.Y., after completing Hempstead, N.H. His maternal great-grandparents are Mr. and mRp ThraaSuKar .00 Now 20.99 nice blion program will be an Island Bamboushay ( g ^ time) with New England Deaconess girl.” It makes me curl my toes health and good cheer. And — 3 " ilim Attacha $16.99 N ow 11.99 MACHINE Mrs. Melvin H. Evans, the first lady of the U.S. Virgin Hospital School of Nursing Air Force basic training. He is and grin with pleasure. may they always see their Mrs. Peter Fagan of Bluefield Dr. and Mr. and Mrs. John Koubik 6 " king Attacha $19.99 Now 12.99 ONLY Boston, Mass. a 1973 graduate of high school in daughters through rose colored VI of Hollister St. His paternal great-gtandparents are Mr. and Mrs. ALSO S: E ON LADIES Islands as our hostess, at the Pot au Feu in New York City. 15" Cosmatic rag.:$23.00 NOW 11.99 e r i r Hebron. < While he’s with us, he does glasses! Charles Donahue and Mr. and Mrs. William Murphy Sri, all of +iT_Reg. $2.00 4 % oz. size Press Week runs through Thursday, and will include Hours: Mon. thru Fri. 9-5 / Sat. 10-1 Haverhill, Mass. , ' • . 1 8 " Tote rag. $16.99 Now 8.99 S E L F I N Nice Gift! lots of things to help me. Last Puna Tota rag. $16.99 N ow 8.99 viewing of fashions by the top designers in the country, Army Spec. 4. Michael L. time, he chauffeured the kids to SERVICE Ivts. 11.88 with fabrics from notable manufacturers. Remmey, son of Mr. and Mrs. their lessons, balanced my Ryan, Daniel Joseph III, soh of Daniel J. and Joan AMNiy PacToiz^ po a PAP **»I4 w ,i ijfV- With such a full schedule, and exciting programs, we Lewis Remmey of 219 McKee check book and cleaned my Kellerstrass Ryan of Cromwell. He was bom May 20 at Hartford ■AAINGTON® PeR/oPiCAUy RELIANCE N hope to bring ^our, readers many stories and anecdotes of St., received two German oven (even the broiler pan). He Hospital. His maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ernest OF The Possibility ^ IV “ WORLD-WIDE POKER our travels. awards while assigned to the frequently reminded the Kellerstrass of S3 Batea Rd! His paternal grandparents are M r.. Of Rechargeable Shaver. 509th Infantry in Vicenza, Italy. children to “go out in the and Mrs. .Dahiel J, Ryan' of Woodside, N.Y, He, has a sister, BUTANE LIGHTER PLAYING CARDS Hs is a gunner in Company C of kitchen and help your poor Kathleen, 4, r . Happy Father’s Day — Papa B E A U n HMHh CaptuUt h«lpful information. ONLY the Infantry’s 1st Ballation. inother.” And more than once I It i>not intondod to l^ of a diaflnoitk naturo. ^ R e f u n d “Oh my papa, to me he was (is) so wonderful,” are from Remmington words that always come to mind, especially as Father’s SALON on top of our LOW , ONLY Reg. $1.29 JAMES' LOW P R IC E S on any Day nears. From an old Eddie Fisher recording, the words REMIVlINGTON MARK continue to be very meaningful. 143 MAIN ST. TEL. 649-5701 MANCHESTER or Soft Foil Shaver..... 99* Limit Two Decks The idea of Father’s Day was conceived by Mrs. John Our Bruce Dodd in 1910, after she heard a Mother’s Day ser­ Take your time. LARGE SELECTION mon in 1909. “ I like everything you said about i Servicemen' OPEN 10-10 OMLY SMOKERS DELIGHT 8 TRACK TAPES Assort ed'Shapes CAT STEVENS - BUDEAH - THE motherhood,” she told the minister, “but don’t you think When buyirig a diamond 8i Sizes WAUETS fathers deserve a place in the sun, too?” \ ■■ CHOCOLATE BOX - DOABIE BROS. FATHER’S DAY BRIAR PIPES ^ - THE AND ME - ALLMAN Mrs. Dodd’s father, William Jackson Smart,” was a get all the facts. BILLFOLDS - o w e J BROS. - ELTON JOHN - W AR- widower and served as father and mother to his six Miss Cheryl Hackett, ONLY O N E " W h ELEN REDDY-AMERICA- offsprings after his wife died. And above all daughter of Mr. and Mrs. SALE NONE HIGHER Mrs. Dodd drew up a petition recommending adoption of Stanley Hackett, 26 Curtis Dr., 1.99 a national Father’s Day, and after much struggle, June 19, know your Jeweler. Tolland, recently enlisted on D reu or Sport T. O R L A N D O 8i D A W N the U. S. Army for three years SHIRTS All Styles and Colors by2.99 Manhattan I AND MANY MANY MORE 1910 was nominated as the first Father’s Day. Unhappily, to become an art illustrator. 3.99 the petition never led to any official declaration. After taking basic training at Easy Care Undaunted, Mrs. Dodd pushed on and Pres. Woodrow Fort Jackson, South Carolina, Fabrics. THRIFTY SHOPPER SPECIALS ^Health and Beauty Aids d i's c H t S " Wilson in 1916 gave the day national recognition and Pres. Re-elected she will attend school at Fort Huge Calvin Coolidge added his support in 1924. In 1970, Cong. REUSABLE Mrs. Vernon Muse of 691 W. Knox, Kentucky, before being Selection. BAND AID BRAND Roman L. Hruska introduced a joint resolution that the Middle Tpke. recently was re­ stationed there. She is a 1973 I M o e f e s s third Sunday in June be officially designated Father’s Day graduate of Tolland High School DISH ICE , FEMININE NAPKINS elected for her second term as ' PACKAGE OF 40 PLASTIC and it was signed into law by President Nixon in time for chairman of the Manchester where she was active in sports, June 18,1972. Now the holiday doesn’t have to depend on a Auxiliary of Child and Family and also attended Northwestern DRAINER PAK R E G U L A R O R S U P E R STRIPS resolution being passed each year and this Sunday will be Services of Connecticut at its Community College. ONLY ONLY ONLY ONLY the 65th time it has been celebrated. annual meeting at the home of Jerry Wallace of 84 Village J,*""*-" * May you have a happy day with your papa. If that’s not Mrs. Keith Woolpert, 55 Pictured above is Mr. Trivigno Jr., hie wife Linda and hie four Highwood Dr. St., Rockville, recently enlisted Double Knit Reg. $1.69 or 45 strips Beg. 89^ possible, may you be filled with loving memories. # children; reading left to right, Theresa, Christina, Caroline and Reg. $1.49 Other elected officers are \ Joanne. in the U. S. Army for a three- 1.19 assorted d m each Freezes solid Maintains Cold Temperature Mrs. Neal Tyler, secretary and year term to become a combat 89< each M Strips — 1 " wide Mrs. Richard Pabst, treasurer. engineer. After taking basic SUCKS OLD SPICE SWEDISH Committee chairmen are CELEBRATING training and attending school at B u y N o w ONG POLYETHYLENE Mrs. Clifford Treat, program; Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, and S a v e r DUSTPAN STICK TANNING About Town Mrs. Edward Kaminsky and OUR 40th. he will be assigned to Fort GAS CAN Devens, Mass. Wallace, who Mrs. Raymond Peracchio, ONLY lorant SECRET ways, and means; Mrs. Joseph resides with his wife Marilyn ONLY ONLY ONLY and daughter, Pamela, was in r n I > ''I’l v \ ’ Phebe Circle of Emanuel Swensson, publicity; Mrs. ■ iU ) Lutheran Church will have a St. Mary’s Episcopal Church Walter Fuss, volunteers; Mrs. the- U. S. Marine Corps from potluck picnic tonight at 6:30 at will have a Holy Eucharist ser­ ’Dieodore Trudon, telephone; 1967 to 1970. He is a 1966 the home of Mrs. Mildred John­ vice Wednesday at. 10 a.m. graduate of Sanford High Mrs. David Barry, ENTI 4 oz. lotion Reg. $1.55 son, 144 Cooper St. Members A in im s jiR T School. ONE GALLON SIZE ALWAYS HANDY Reg. $1.25 membership. are reminded to bring their The education committee of Also, Mrs. John Hutchinson A L L V I N Y L Dialite or Drowse Alarm Reg. 69< Bottle of too HIGH POTENCY W own place settings. Hostesses Carmelo A. Finocchiaro, North, United Methodist Church and Mrs. Robert Ahlness, THANK YOU MANCHESTER iWESTCLOX TIDE II are Miss Hattie Peterson, Miss will meet tonight at 7 at the ho^itality; Mrs.^Eugepe Mon- The entire staff at James’ Beauty Salon would like to take whose wife Patricia is the SPORT SHDWER Vivian Larson and Mrs. Ann church. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nor­ SHAVE MULTIPLE tqny, Mrs, Robert' Heavisides, the occasion of our 40th Anniversary to thank all of our Scott. Mrg. Johnr*^ Wright and Mrs. man Yvon of 44 Farnham Rd., to Dupee. Circle of South United wonderful loyal customers and friends for their South Windsor, graduated from COATS KIT iVITAMiNS JVilliam Fitzgerald, horse I polyester styles ONLY with Minerals YWCA Drop-Jh will meet Methodist Church wiU haiVe.its patronage during the past forty yearsi It Is indeed most Warrant Officer School at the rALARM SHDWER show; Mrs,* Rqger B agley,, f ONLY ONLY Wednesday fqm 9:30 to 11:30 annual dinnet meqtihg tonight^ legislative; ^aqd Mrs. Donald gratifying to know that we have pleased so many people Marin^Corps Development and IIH I TIOE II EIECT8IC SU M . a.m. at the Community Y. All at 7 at the Terrace 110001 at Riphter, nominating. Education Command, Quan- Popular model 2V hi{li lealuies during all of these yearsi

o a 3 1 w I r n d ' PAGE TEN - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. Manchester. Conn., Tues., June 11. 1974 MANCHESTErt^ EVENING HERALD, Manchester, Conn., Tues.. June 11. 1974 — PAGE EI-FVFM GrassjO Asks She’ttRetire After 30 Years CAWHearing I About Town | Walkway Issue Undecided Scene >ing Emotionally Disturbed Court Cases COEP Program Rated 4.9 I About Town At/Bradley On a scale of 0-5, Manchester By MAL BARLOW to have the linear park pa^s on eWE/DO’s high rating. 50 students. He also met with Temple Chapter, OES, will Jay Stager, chairman of the ef­ High School’s Comprehensive Whether to have one or two both sides of the Ho^anum After spending 30 years The evaluators used a com­ Richard Clark, president of the From Here ' Congresswoman Ella Grasso, have a business meeting fort, noted the need for more “So many young parents Work Experience in Diver­ walkways beneath the proposed River from Vernon to East helping children with emotional CIRCUIT COURT 12 prehensive instrument of 13 Greater Manchester Chamber S t. Margaret’s Circle, 'D-Slxth District, today urged Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the trash barrels and their regular today feel a great sense of in­ sified Occupations (CWE/DO) bridgeover the Hockanum Hartford. / problems, Mrs. Alice Yeomans Manchester Session elements with as many as 21 in­ of Commerce, and four Daughters of Isabella, will the Civil Aeronautics Board Masonic Temple. pickup. adequacy as parents and if program was given an overall % By Sol R. Cohen River at Adams St. was the He noted the state puts in two Moe, chief psychiatric social Calvin M. Arey, 32, of East dividual assessment criteria members of the COEP advisory meet tonight at 7:80 in the (CAB) to conduct public something goes wrong with a rating of 4.9 in a recent evalua­ question the Conservation Com­ walkways under/every new worker at the Community CJiild Hartford was fined $200 after under some. The elements used board. lower hall at the KofC Home. hearings at Bradley Inter­ • State highway officials will child, they immediately feel tion. Manchester Lodge of Masons mission failed to resolve Mon­ bridge and plans to continue Guidance Clinic, will retire at pleading guilty to possession of were program objectives, The program was particular­ Mrs. Mary Schauster is hostess. national Airport—to determine come to Manchester ^ n to dis­ guilty,” she said. The early-spring evaluation will meet at 7:30 tonight at the day night. this policy, despite expense, the end of June. marijuana . He was arrested written local policy statement, ly c it^ for excellent related what environmental impact, if cuss plans for 1-86 and 1-291, ac­ "FYessure is very great on included 46 state-approved Masonic Temple. The Entered Town Engineer Walter with new bridges including the Mrs. Moe, who'has been May 27 in Wickham Park by advisory committee, training class facilities and general Eta Chapter of Beta Sigma any, there would be if the air­ cording to Chairman Terry young kids to keep up with their CWE/DO programs throughout Manchester Democratic Chairman Ted Buckland area has prompted th e ^ a rd of Apprentice degree will be con­ Senkow spoke to the commis­ proposed bridge over the associated with the clinic in her Manchester police. plans, training agreements, related resources and Phi will have its final meeting port were granted gateway Parla. peers, aiW I think the problems the state and was conducted by Cummings is interested in receiving Directors to schedule a specipi session ferred with George R.. sion about plans to build a new Hockanum by W. Middle Tpke. present post since February The charge of sale of nar­ training stations, facilities, materials. of the season tonight at 8 at the status. an out-of-state team headed by home-town backing for the post of state with the Planning and Zoniqg Commis­ Ouillette, junior warden, bridge with a span of 107 feet Senkow said one walkway un­ 1969, will be honored at a recep­ we see or did see with the older cotics was nolled. related class instruction, The innovative use of COEP- home of Mrs. Jeff Williams, 20 presiding. teen-agers, we are now seeing John Wanat of the New Jersey central committeeman from the Fourth sion. compared to the present 45 feet. der the Adams St. bridge would • Changing Case Mountain’s tion June 21 from 3 to 6 p.m. at In a companion case, Charles teacher-coordinators, student developed video tapes was Cardston Circle, Windsor. ’The CAB is holding hearings in the very young teen-agers in State Department of Educa­ Senatorial District. Consequently, he has It will be June 25 at 8 p.m., in the It will have one walkway on top cost $7,000 and two would cost name to Lookout Mountain was the clinic’s facilities on N. Main Merrick, 17, of East Hartford, selection, public relations, noted. Unique classroom in Washington, D.C. on a report the 12 to 15-year range,” Mrs. tion. He was assisted in the called a meeting for Wednesday night with Municipal Building Hearing Room. of the bridge running parallel $14,000. ’The town must pay for (Wussed along with signs at St. charged with possession, was program’s methods of evalua­ material from court-tried ar­ by its Bureau of Operating Moe aid. Manchester evaluation by those 10 Manchester delegates to the Invitations to attend have been sent also with the road. the full cost of the bridge now new entryways. The signs Looking forward to her referred for youthful offender tion, and administration. bitration labor cases r Going On Vacation? ; Rights. Bradley is one of Warren Downey from the Democratic State Convention who reside to Eric Potter, town planner; Jay Giles, The commission and the expected to run over $200,000 are to note the hours, sunrise to . retirement, Mrs. Moe said she The clinic, she said, trys to status. In completing the evaluation, researched by Rodden and I WE BOARD several airports in the country Electric Model T Flopped Center for Occupational Educa­ in the Fourth District. director of public works; and Frank Linear Park Committee have without the walkways. sunset, and rules of use. The was trying not to make any stress prevention and “I think Downey visited many work Molumphy, CWE/DO teacher- being considered for the both asked that some kind of we feel that as people are more tion, Jersey City, (N .J.), State I PMUKEHS & GIUIlUiKS! | If he receives their support, he will an­ jodaitis, water and sewer administrator. Detroit — A t one time Henry The commissioners asked commission added another commitments about anything; Thomas J. Popick, 28, of 147 stations in' the community and coordinator, and used in an gateway status. walkway be made under the knowledgable about the College. MANCHESTER I nounce his candidacy formally to the state Ford planned to manufacture an Senkow for more figures, and rule, "Motorized vehicles “because I’ve worked a long South St., Rockville was fined talked with cooperating effective team-teaching ap­ electric car powered by batteries new bridge to allow the linear The evaluator’s summary PET CENTER convention delegates from the other seven The latest petition for town sidewalks tabled the matter. prohibited.” time, and now I would like to emotional needs of children, $150 for operating motor vehi­ employers. He interviewed proach was especially \ Mrs. Grasso said she favors built by his friend, Thomas A. park to pass. called Manchester’s program ^OMaptoSt 840^7^ towns in the Fourth Senatorial District. comes from residents of Squire Village on have the time to do some of the they are more comfortable cle while under influence of members of the staff and about acknowledged. Spencer St. They request sidewalks to K- the designation, “provided Edison. The electric Model T about coming to us,” she said. “highly successful.” The sum­ Manchester is split among two Dr. Douglas Smith, a Other matters before the things I think I will enjoy doing. liquor. Mart and Pathmark. there are assurances the people was planned for production in • Atty. John Fitzgerald The clinic has been doing mary also recommended this senatorial districts — with about 47 per member of the linear park com­ commission included: I guess I just like the idea of not in the surrounding towns will 1915 but fizzled because the set wrote a letter to appear in program be used as a model for cent of it in the fourth and about 53 per • Pouring rain washed out having to go to work quite a bit with parent educa­ Hugh A. Rhodes, 21, of East suffer neither pollution nor of batteries weighed nearly a mittee, appeared at the com­ residents’ water bills telling Mrs. Alice IVloe cent in the third. The Board of Directors has voted to the first annual Case Mountain everyday.” tion particularily with mothers other state CWE/DO coot^ added noise, and provided they thousand pounds, would run a mission meeting to insist on them of the newspaper collec­ Hartford, charged with first- In the Third Senatorial District, which meet only once in July and in August — on cleanup planned for Saturday, Her plans for this summer in­ 0^ young children. This started dinators to follow. The interest, give dad the gift he wou)d be neither disturbed nor car only 65 miles on one charge two walkways under the bridge, tion at curbside every second degree armed robbery in con­ consists of part of Manchester and all of July 9 and. Aug. 13. It suspended its rules, and needed replacement after one on either side of the river. June 1. But much work was still clude a vacation in Maine and “ Social values and moral several years ago with a group nection with the June 1 robbery enthusiasm and over-all which call for meetings on the first and se­ inconvenienced by a change in collection day of the week. of mothers from the YWCA East Hartford, John Hutchinson and Mary three years. He noted the long-range plans done on the following Monday. working around her home on values are certainly different in of McDonald’s restaurant on W. cooperation on the part of all would choose himself... cond Tuesdays of each month. Bradley’s status.” . LeDuc, both of Manchester, are seeking Bunker Hill Rd. in Andover. In terms of breaking up of the Nursery School, and this year Center St., had his case bound six Manchester CWE/DO coor­ the posts of committeeman and com- / the fall, she will be busy family and different life the clinic opened the program over to the next session of Hart­ dinators was called a credit to Black a D ecker The Republican Platform Research mitteewoman. working with the elections, she styles,” Mrs. Moe said, as she to mothers with children in ford County Superior Court. the program, “but most impor­ Committee is meeting toijight at 8 in the said. She is a member of the discussed the changes she has area nursery schools, she said. tant, it is beneficial to the State Capitol, Hartford. David M. Barry of Manchester, a can­ Andover Dem ocratic Town seen during her 30 years as a She also feels that if a child has Mary Stager, 51, of 34 Clinton students.” The Democratic Platform Research didate for the Democratic nomination for Committee as was her husband, social worker. She feels that a serious problem, the pre­ St. was given a six-months The coordinators are Mrs. V4" Varlabla Committee will meet there next Tuesday, Fourth District state senator, reports Lawrence, who died in June people are a little bit more in­ school age is a good time to pick suspended sentence and placed Joan Jacobson, David Speed also at 8 p.m. On July 8 at 7:30 p.m., it will campaign contributions totaling $30 for 1969. clined to accept the need for it up. on probation for one year on a Molumphy, Paul Varcoe, May — $25 from Alice Moriarty and $5 meet there again, for a “wrap-up” ses­ Remiiijscing about her help earlier. “It’s much easier to help a charge of failure to report in­ Robert Narus, David Brysgel, DRHIKIT from Michael and Mary Mello. sion. 71/4" career,,.^he said,. ‘T think I “It used to be that you only child at an early age stage than come. A second count of failure and Tom Rodden, department He started reporting contributions on The platforms will be presented for started in social work in 1933. went to a head shrinker if you a kid that goes on and on and to report income and a charge chairman for COEP SAWKIT March 1. They total $500 to date. adoption at the July 19-20 Democratic When I was married, I didn’t were off your rocker. I think gets to be 10 or 12,” she said. of third-degree larceny were (Cooperative Occupational State Convention and the July 26-27 ^ *19.99 work for a few years and went today more and more people “My interests,” she said,” both nolled. Education Program) of which Speaking of the fourth, the third, etc., Republican State Convention, ^ th at back to work when Lawrence feel T m kind of troubled, or I “have been not only working CWE/DO is a division. we’re reminded of the newspaper ad Bushnell Memorial Hall, Hartford. *24.99 went overseas. When he came feel depressed, or I wonder with the family and children in­ Wayne Abair, 21, of Hartford Mrs. Roberta Walnum, placed by an enterprising package store back, I didn’t work for a couple what’s wrong with me, maybe I dividually but also working with was fined $60’ for reckless career education specialist in #7302 owner: We just can’t pass up the opportunity to of years, and then went back ought to talk with somebody’,” other resources within the com­ driving and $10 for being found the Manchester school system, “Because the Fourth is a holiday and tell you of this former politician, of whom again. So I ’ve had in all more she said. munity and working closely intoxicated. The charge of has also worked with the COEP we’ll be closed, buy your Fifth on the it was said, “He had an open mouth and a with the schools and nursery than 30 years, but I haven’t had The mobility of families these evading responsibility was team in helping to achieve Third.’’ closed mind.” a break since 1949.” days is one of the many things schools. I’ve been going out to nolled. We might add — he also was lazy. In an She was interested in the that affect children and is hard the Hockanum Valley Day Care Concern over problems encountered at attempt to end it all, he threw himself in Center as a consultant and a beginnings of the Community on both the parents and the The companion cases of Ira vehicle while license Manchester’s Secondary Treatment Plant front of a parked car. consultant with schools and Child Guidance Clinic while she children, according to Mrs. Friedman, 17, of 7 Lexington suspended, nolled. and questions raised atrout its capacity to was still director of casework Moe. working closely with other Dr. and Curtis W. Walker, 18, of Also, Richard Scott, 36, of take sewage from two propos^ multi­ for Child ^ d Family Services “ The other thing which I agenices in the area looking for 33 Thayer Rd.,charged with Westfi\ld, Mass., operating million dollar developments in the unmet needs,” she said. of Connecacut. think we see reflected is the fourth-degree larceny and motor vehicle while license “Once in a while, you feel you Variable Speed >■- “ I didA’t have anything higher incidence of divorce, tampering with a motor vehi­ suspended, nolled; John W. TAG SALE POSTERS have made a little progress, specificauy to do with it, but broken families and cle, were nolled. Sawitzki, 25, of Willimantic, like the Community Services JIG SAW 2 Speed Dustlesa NORDICS BOOK LEADERS met witn their committee a remarriages. There are not discharge of firearms within Council. When I came here, Deluxe DuaNAction Oslo, Norway — The Nordic couple of times to discuss only the problems of a mothec Other dispositions included: the town (Manchester), nolled; BELT SANDER countries publish more books per needs,!’ she said. "Coming here bringing up children alone, but there wasn’t any way the agen­ Robert N. Roy, 17, of 31 4 Michael McKeon, 26, of Wind­ FINISHING SANDER inhabitant than any other large wasn’t' such a change for me as the combining of families. I cies in the town officially got Finley St., reckless driving sor, disorderly conduct, nolledf, *29.99 publishing nations. Between 70 When you place a Tag Sale together. The council sort of *73.99 I knew the area and I knew the think there is not the security reduced to failure to drive in es­ Horace Hughley, 44, of Hart­ Njl7524 started with a few of us #7420 #7460 i and 100 books a year are pub- people. Plus the fact that I for the child as there used to be tablished lane, $20; Ronald J. ford, operating while license *29.99 / This is the lished per 100,000 inhabitants in worked at getting a Child and when there were more intact meeting for lunch,” Mrs. Moe Strong, 25, of 40 Olcott St., suspended, nolled; Philip the Nordic lands; the average said. seaso n for Family Services office opened families,” she said. reckless driving reduced to Defeo, 30, of 244 Main St., South in other countries is about 20 Classified Ad Another thing she sees is M rs. Moe’s friends and failure to drive in established Windsor, violation of probation, to 30 books. in Manchester and its director, colleagues are planning to lane, $20; William C. Ulm, 43, MANCHESTER HARDWARE BLACK Margaret Parker, and I worked young mothers who get feeling nolled; and Robert Fitzsim­ honor , her at a testimonial together for many years start­ pretty overwhelmed with the of 128 S. Main St., illegal left mons, 18, of Brookly, fourth- 877 MAIN STREET P H O N E 643-44251 dinner June 30 at Dunfey’s CARPENTER ANTS for 3 days or More! ing back in 1947 or 48,” she responsibilities of bringing up turn, $15, and operating a motor degree larceny, nolled. Tavern in Windsor. INVITATION In addition to being said. children. unsightly and unsanitary, TO BID Biack Ants excavate Sealed bids will be received extensive galleries in wood in the Office of the Director of to serve as nesting places General Services, 41 Center V and may cause extensive Size shown Street, Manchester, Connec­ damage to your home. Is Vz actual size ticut until June 14,1^4 at 11:00 ) a.m. for the following: 21’’ ASPHALT COATED METAL PIPE Bid forms, plans and specifications are available at the General Services Office, 41 Center Street, Manchester, Connecticut. for a Preventive Maintenance program Town of Manchester, Connecticut 6 WAYS TO WIN Robert B. Weiss, General Manager. 649-9240 INVITATION TO BID BLISS EXTERMINATOR CO., INC. Sealed bids will be received in the Office of The Director of The Oldest & Largest in Conn. General Services, 41 Center Street, Manchester, Connec­ ticut until June 21,1OT4 at 11:00 THE $100,000 LOTTER a.m. for the following: Installation of gas tank — Special Attention is called to the Davis Ba?on Act Wage Rates and Employment a Standard Requirements WANNA • /'i Bid forms, plans and specifications are available at the General Services Office, 41 Center Street, Manchester, ^Connecticut. Town of Manchester Connecticut TRADE Robert B. Weiss m m , General Manager NOW IS THE TIME TO TRADE. WE Receive 2 posters Free at ARE OFFERING UP TO *100^* FORi the classified counter when you pay for your ad. YOUR OLD TV SET. ' ' - r Extras may be purchased for 25S each. \ We Need 100 Used TV Sets For Summer Cottages. Your Trade Doesn’t Have To Be In Working Condition. A 15 word ad running 3 consecutive days wouid coat $200 $^000 $1^00

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Cashing-in is easy. Bring your winning ticket to your sion on Special Revenue, 1290 Silas She Heratti nearest participating Savings and Loan Deane Highway, Wethersfield. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Asscxriation, M otor Vehicle Office $ 20 and $25 winners can get "Instant (with the exception of Wethersfield), Cash Payoff" at any participating Savings MANrHE.STF.R or directly to the Office of the Commis- and Loan and at Lottery drawings. r

i m CONNECTICUT'S $100,000 LOTTERY PHONE 643-2711 thousands of winners each week. NEXT TO STOP & SHOP FOR ASSISTANCE IN PLACING YOUR AD This wieek’s drawing will be held at Elizabeth Park, Rose Festival, Asylum Ave., Hart­ ford, June 13, 10:30 A.M. / t. ■ PAGE TWELVE - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, Manchester, Conn., Tues., June 11, 1974

MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, Manchester, Conn., Tues., June 11. 1974 — PAGE THIRTEEN Official Red Sox Comedian t s TMmiiHiS Herald Angle Eagle Golfers No.2 American League

' EAST By Earl Yost No Laughing' Matter for A’s W L Pet GB Just missing out, the East Catholic Brad Strella paced East with a 76 Boston 31 25 .554 golf team copped second place in which tied him for fifth in individual Sports Editor Milwaukee 28 24 .538 yesterday’s Division TV^o State Golf play. Mike Cooney and Jeff Torrance Cleveland 27 27 .500 3 Championship at Timberlin Golf tied for seventh with 78’s and Gordon Detroit 27 28 .491 3% TONIGHT’S GAMES NEW YORK (UPI) — Nobody ever knows what to expect from Luis Course. ’The Eagles came home with a Daring came home with an 83. Rudi Persico and Russ Kuc- “If a guy’s got a good curve or a slider, it makes his fastball that much New York 29 30 .492 3% total of 315, being edged out by Old Barbers vs. Oilers, 6 - zynski hit well for the winners Tiant—from smoking a cigar while taking a shower to crossing up his faster.” * Baltimore 26 29 .473 4% Medalist honors went to Old Verplanck Saybrook which toured the course in Saybrook’s Russell Wolff with a 74 with Gordon Ployfee pitching catcher while on the mound. “If he had to throw the fastball 90 per cent of the time, he’d be in trou­ WEST Wipco vs. Police, 6 - three good frames. 314 strokes. over the 6,497 yard par 72 layout. Unusual Name for Team The light-hearted native of Havana, Cuba, the Boston Red Sox’ official ble. Tiant doesn’t have that fastball like he had in Cleveland in 1968 when W L Pet GB Waddell Bob Nelson and John Dupont team comedian, probably throws a greater variety of pitches than any Oakland 32 25 .561 Medics vs. Miles, 6 ■ hit well for the losers. he could say, Tm going to throw a fastball; try to hit it.’ But he has all Texas 30 27 Buckley' Most unusual name for any entry in the softball program other pitcher in the major leagues. those other pitches.” .526 2 in Manchester has to be the Full of Baloney team in the Chicago 26 25 .510 3 He can still throw a sizzling fast ball at times but prefers to throw The Texas Rangers defeated the Detroit Tigers, 6-3, the New York AMERICAN FARM newly formed Women’s Senior League at Martin Kansas City 26 28 .481 4% NATIONAL Runs were plentiful last night batters off-stride with a variety of pitches which includes palm balls, Yankees beat the California Angels, 7-5, and the Minnesota Twins routed Field...and that’s no baloney!... Whatever Happened to Minnesota 25 23 .431 7% Pulling off a mild upset, at Valley as Army & Navy sliders and knucklers thrown with different motions. It was once es­ 23 ,'Ji V CheneyCompletes Department; the Baltimore Orioles, 9-1, in other AL games. California 33 .431 7% Cowles Prexy Nichols outlasted Nassiff nipped Dillon Ford, 11-10. timated that he has a total of 14 pitches when the different curves and The Red Sox scored all their runs off Vida Blue in the fifth inning with a Muntlay's Results Arms, 11-6, last night at Allie Sherman, former head coach of the New York foot­ (jhris Levine had three hits motions are taken into account. three-run opposite field homer by Dwight Evans capping the outburst. Boston 4, Oakland 1> Buckley. It was the first win for ball Giants, is now in the brokerage business on Wall Fine Tennis Year for the Servicemen who won Tiant was at his best Monday night when he dazzled the Oakland A’s and Evans’ drive came after a walk to Carlton Fisk and singles by Carl Texas 6, Detroit 3 Sharing the spotlight at Nichols after eight straight set­ their fourth straight. Andy Street in New York...The halfway point will be reached in a national TV audience in pitching the Red Sox to a 4-1 victory. The win Yastrzemski and Rico Petrocelli produced Boston’s first run. New York 7, California 5 the annual banquet of the backs while Nassiff’s fell to 3-6. Fritz hit tWo afeties including a all Rec Department-sponsored slow pitch softball leagues Minnesota 9, Baltimore 1 was Tiant’s sixth in a row, all complete games, and raised his season Tiant, who walked two and struck out seven, yielded an unearned run in Winding up a successful tennis Reason yesterday was Manchester Chapter of Martin Weinbaum led the grand slam homer and Bob this week...Effective this weekend, the system for ob­ (Only Games Scheduled) record to 8-5. The Red Sox lead the American League East Division by one the sixth when Sal Bando beat out a single, continued to second on Mario Cheney Tech with a 3-2 win over Prince Tech of Hartford. Baseball Umpires last winners with a grandslam Sawyer struck out 12 to pick up taining starting times for golf play at the Manchester game. Tonight's Games homer. Bill Herlth contributed Guerrero’s low throw and tallied on Reggie Jackson’s double. The loss (Herald photo by Pinto) The Bcavers conclude with a 6-5 record. night at the Colony were the win. Country Club Has been changed. Members wanting a time Oakland (Hunter fr6) at a homer, double and single. Phil Duffy, Tim Valente and “I’ve been throwing a lot of different pitches all year,” explained Tiant. was Blue’s sixth against five victories. Dave Bellefleur and Gary Caravella won singles the Cowles brothers. will make out a card listing their foursome and showing Boston (Cleveland 4-5) Top Spring Athletes at East Andy Wickwire added a homer Chris Hoyng each had a pair of “I’ve been throwing the palm ball and the slider in every game but I’ve Rangers 6, Tigers 3 Donald was elected time desired, one for Saturday and one for Sunday. They California (Lange 1-2) at New matches and the doubles team of (^ravella and John Libro while Leo Diana singled twice. hits for the losers. only used the knuckler once in a while this season. Jim Spencer singled home two runs in the first and Duke Sims hit a two- York (Stottlemyre 6-7) won by forfeit, the latter deciding the match. president and Alton an­ must be put in the box at the Pro Shop Saturday thru Cited for their outstanding efforts with spring sport teams at East Catholic were, left Benny Pagani topped “I don’t always throw the pitch the catchers ask me for,” Tiant ad­ run homer in the fourth'^s the Rangers pounded out 17 hits and tagged Joe Texas (Clyde 3-1) at Detroit Results: Bellefleur (C) def. Matiskas 6-4,6-3; Caravella nounced his resignation as Nassiff’s with two bingles with Wednesday night at 6. Starting times will be assigned on m right Mark Ertel, most improved track; Joe Martens, most valuable track; Kevin NATIONAL FARM mitted. “Sometimes he calls the palm ball and I throw a change or a Coleman with his sixth straight loss. It was Billy Martin’s first game in (Fryman 2-3) (CT) def. Shirley 6-1,6-3; Desalva (PT) def. Strycharz 6-2, an active mem^r, Alton three other players getting one Nassiff Arms registered their Thursday and members must then contact the Pro Shop in Yungk, most valuable tennis, and Ron Semiao, best baseball pitcher. Absent were curve. But I never throw a fast ball when he calls for a curve.” Detroit since he became the Rangers’ manager. The crowd of 22,696 Milwaukee (Wright 5-6) at 2-6, 6-4; Matsikas-Shirley (PT) def. Caron-Deyorio 8-3; Cowles, who has handled each. fourth straight victory with a person. No phone calls will be accepted...Veteran baseball “He’s probably the most fun to catch of any pitcher on our team,” said Kansas City (Fitzmorris 5-2) Joe Banning, leading hitter; Mike Cooney, most valuable golfer, and Brian O’Neil, the umpires’ clinics for 16-9 decision over Nichols last cheered him before the game but booed when he removed winning pitcher Caravella-Libro (CT) won by forfeit. AMERICAN umpire Jim Tymon scored a double eagle in sharing the Boston catcher Carlton Fisk. “Luis just breaks down the hitter. Really, Baltimore (Palmer 2-7) at most improved track. years, will continue in that night at Bowers. Jackie Brown in favor of Stev^ Foucault in the eighth. Keeping its unblemished winner’s circle in a member-member golf tournament at he’s just great fun to catch and the fans love him, too.” Minnesota (Blyleven 5-7) Scott Yeomans had two Twins 9, Orioles 1 capacity. The latter and record intact. Army & Navy Blackledge last week. His partner was Jerry Dunnack, Cleveland (J. Perry 4-5) at bingles for 4-5 Nassiff’s with Even Oakland manager Alvin Dark enjoyed Tiant’s variety show. Tony Oliva’s two-run single and Bobby Darwin’s two-run triple were the Jim Norvath were made scored a come-from-behind 11-6 former well-known local Twi League baseball player, one Chicago (Bahnsen 5-6) Steve Cichowski and Mike Mar­ “Tiant’s got some of the greatest moves around, that’s for sure,” said big blows of a five-run sixth-inning outburst which brought Bill Butler his honorary lifetime win over Dillon Ford last night of several brothers who made the grade in pro ball. Wednesday’s Games Wisecracks, Four East Players tin each stroking a double. the first-year A’s boss who managed Tiant in Cleveland in the late sixties. members. at Waddell. The Servicemen first win of the year. Darwin had four hits and Oliva and Glenn Borgmann California at New York Chris Young had four RBIs for Smiles Few Other officers named lead the league with a 9-0 Hank Not Always No.44 three each in the Twins’ 15-hit attack. Dave McNally was the loser. Oakland at Boston, N Softball Results the winners. were: Don Beerworth, viojfe record while Dillon’s suffered Cleveland at Chicago, N Earn HCC Berths Dave Timbrell had three Perhaps the most famous No.44 on the back of a baseball For Trevino their 10th straight loss. Texas at Detroit, N president, and Leo Diana, doubles and a single for the 3-7 uniform belongs to Hank Aaron of the Atlanta Braves. Dave Parks had three hits in­ Baltimore at Minnesota, N MAMARONECK, N V; (UPI) secretary-treasurer. The losers with Keith Merritt ad­ The new all-time career home run king didn’t always cluding a homer and Cary Cof­ Ford^s Son Milwaukee at Kansas City, N TONIGHT’S GAMES singles with Bill Hearhvadding — The wisecracks/and the Four members of the East Catholic baseball team were latter was renamed. ding a three-bagger. fin also homered for the wear that double digit on his baseball uniform. Crispino’s vs. Nelson's, 6:15 • three hits. Carlo Petricca and smiles may be fewer and more named to the All-Hartford County Conference team, it was winners, who turned over four When Aaron first reported to the Braves in 1954 with the Signs With National League^ Fitzgerald Frank Cuneo each had two hits. infrequent, but one thing announced by Eagles’ Coach Jim Penders. ROOKIE Wayne Miner and Len Ric- doubleplays. club then stationed in Milwaukee, Aaron was given No 5 EAST Acadia vs. Honda, 7:30 • remains the sajne about Lee First baseman John Riccio, second baseman Joe Ban­ The Cards belted the Pirates, during spring training. Fitzgerald cio each stroked a pair of hits Dean Tully and Tom Owens W L Pet GB Trevino — he still can play his ning, centerfielder Ron Soucier and pitcher Ron Semiao 37-13, last night. Boston Sox Gorman's vs. Groman's, 8:45 for the losers. each had two hits for Dillon’s. Before the season started, Aaron asked traveling Philadelphia 31 26 .544 game. / were the East selections. Mike Bugnochi, David secretary, Don Davidson, for a double number. - Fitzgerald The Merry Mex is getting his Laliberte and Carl Gothberg BOSTON (UPI) — Shortstop St. Louis 28 27 .509 DUSTY Banning led the regulars in batting this past season with Yarborough Leads INTERNATIONAL %' Oil Heat vs. Renn's, 6:15 • first look these days at the homered for the winners while 'The latter remarked that the great players all had single Ed Ford, son of Hall of Fame Montreal 25 25 .500 Vittner’s Garden Center kept a .377 average (29 for 77) with Soucier in close pursuit at Scoring four runs in the New York 23 32 .418 Keeney Winged Foot Golf Club course William Taylor socked two numbers. Babe Ruth No.3, Lou Gehrig No.4, Joe DiMaggio pitcher Whitey Ford, Monday a lock on first place with a 14-2 .338. Riccio, with a late season flurry, hit at a .279 clip DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. opening frame, Stevenson’s Chicago 21 30 .412 Jim’s vs. HPMarket, 6:15 • where the U.S. Open begins homers for the Pirates. No.5, Stan Musial No.6 and Mickey Mantle No.7. signed a contract with the thumping of the Jaycees last (UPI) — Cale Yarborough of Exxon held on for a 4-3 upset Nebo Thursday, and he’s going about while playing well defensively. Semiao was the surprise Gay Bradstreet and Don “I still want a double number,” Aaron said. Boston Red Sox and will report Pittsburgh 20 33 .377 night at Robertson. win over Ansaldi’s last night at Cut & Curl vs. David's, 7:30 - it seriously, and for him, quiet­ ace of the Eagles’ mound corps with a 7-3 won-lost record Timmonsville, S. C., took over Logan played well in the field. Friday to Bristol of the Eastern WEST Mike Escavich and Greg Bir­ Verplanck. The only number available was No.44. Nebo ly. and 0.96 earned-run-average. East recently concluded a 14- th e Winston Cup Grand League. W L Pet GB mingham led a 19-hit attack Manny Brainard paced the 3-6 Four times during his 20-year career, Aaron wound up ^ j Dean vs. Centers, 6:15- Nike / “I think,” he said Monday National point race and the AMERICAN ROOKIE Los Angeles 42 17 .712 with three apiece. Don Maxim 4 season, second in the HCC, and a quarterfinal berth in the winners with two hits with John with 44 homers in a season. Ford, the No. 1 draft choice of /tnnulli's vs. Bob's, 7:30 - between whacks at several money winnings l^ad last The Indians outlasted the the^ Red Sox last week, batted Cincinnati 32 23 .582 and Dave Roth added two, Class B Tournament. It was the second best record com­ Prignano adding a double. i d Nike dozen balls in a practice range weekend when he won the Tigers, 28-23, last night at .288 at the University of South Atlanta 31 26 .544 10 safeties each.' The winners are piled in the school’s history and the finest turned in by Tuborg 400. Eric Gauruder homered and Seaver Non-Committal (!BT Blue vs. Vets, 6:15 - sand trap, “the USGA is mad at Robertson. Carolina! , Houston 30 29 .508 12% now 6-1 for the season. Penders. singled for 6-3 Ansaldi’s with Tom Seaver, the No.l glamor boy of the New York Mets, & Robertson us for last year.” Peter Balfe socked four The Red Sox also announced San Francisco30 30 .500 12% Chuck McDonnell homered Skip Moreau adding a double Dorn’s vs. Vito’s, 7:30 • Last year was when Johnny NASCAR said Yarborough’s homers for the Indians with isn’t winning any new fans these days with his refusal to the signing of shortstop Mike San Diego 24 39 .381 20 for the 3-4 losers with Tom and two singles. Robertson Miller blitzed through with a point total is 1,176.280 and his teammates Mark Walling and talk with members of the baseball working press. No doubt Townsend of Campbell College, r o ____ Monday's Results Harrington getting a pair of AllrStar Team Selected m oney winnings $129,695. Wholesale vs. Economy, 8:45 finbl-round 63 to win the Open INTERNATIONAL FARM Mark Strasser each going his below-par pitching record has a lot to do with his move. Norfolk, Va.; second baseman Montreal 3, Cincinnati 1 hits. / Richard Petty is second in both - Robertson at Oakmont, Pa. No one Erupting for nine runs in the three-for-three at the plate. In the past, Seaver — when winning — was one of the most Chuck Reilly of Hicksville, Philadelphia 12, Houston 0 ^ categories with a 1,073.450 point INDY LEAGUE CANDLELIGHT believes something like that fifth inning. Independent In­ Mike Hebert, Mike Pallein and accomodating six-figure salary players in the major N.Y.; outfielder Sam Bowen of San Diego 9, Pittsburgh 8 total and $121,825 in winnings. Keeping hold of the top rung, Behind a 17-hit attack. Ar­ will happen again. surance topped Ansaldi’s, 16-9, Jim Bosse homered for the leagues in meeting with the media...Little League baseball Valgosta, Ga., State College, M St. Louis 4, Los Angeles 2 NHL Announces Walnut Barbers, outlasted mory Tavern clobbered WINF, “Not here,” Trevino said. last night at Charter Oak. Tigers. and outfielder Jerome (Only Games Scheduled) standings will be published if received. The small fry Bonanza Steak, 10-8, last night 18-4, last night at Robertson. “This is a defensive course. Register, also Valgosta; and Tonight's Games baseball program is on the home stretch with the regular at Keeney Field. Armory leads/the loop with a You’re not gonna see too much pitcher Bill Sutter Jr. of High New York (Seaver 3-2) at season ending in three weeks...Each major league Bob Coroso paced the 6-1 10-2 ledger while WINF is the of an offensive move. It’s not Point College, Towson, Md. Atlanta (Capra 5-2) Speed Up Rule baseball team on the road received 17V2 cents on every ad­ Cincinnati (Nelson 4-3) at winners with three hits and cellar-dw eller with a 2-11 the type of course where you mission ticket sold...Joe Brooks of the Manchester State Montreal (Blair 1-1) three RBIs. Len Morse, John record. birdie the first two holes and Bank entry in the Candlelight Softball JLeague was struck Marichal Out, Philadelphia (Ruthven 3-4) at Quinn, John Siemienski and Jim Jim Jackson and Bill Peoples figure you can shoot 10-under. MONTREAL (UPI) — The , over the eye by an errant toss last week and 32 stitches Houston (Dierker 3-3) ^llivan each added two hits to each had three hits for the Anyone gets one or two-under til moving to prevent any delays in the game, adopted a were needed to close the wound. The toss broke the police Pole Recalled "■< Pittsburgh (Brett 6-4) at San a 14-hit attack. winners with Jack Holik and here, they’ll just try to hold Diego (Jones 3-10) Scott Hanson led the 4-3 Roger Talbot each adding a on.” number of rule changes at the opening of its annual sergeant’s glasses...Bill Arnsparger is the ninth head BOSTON , (UPI) - Juan fss, St. Louis (McGlothen 7-3) at losers with four hits. Ed Cran- roundtripper. Little has been heard from meeting Monday designed to speed up play. coach in New York Giants’ history in the National Football Marichal seems to be nearing Los Angeles (Messersmith 6-1) dal, Ralph Taft and Rex Cran­ Ed Litwin and John Stanizzi Trevino lately, although he has the end of his high-kicking, In other items of business, the NHL executives* also > ( League. The Giants will be marking their 50th anniversary Chicago (Frailing 4-5) at San dall each contributed two hits had a pair of hits each for the won a tournament this year — fireballing career. modified the intra-league draft so that only six players in the NFL when the 1974 season opens...An all-star team Francisco (D'Acquisto 4-5)\ to a 14-hit attack. ' losers. at New Orleans — and more The man who shares the title changed teams and they named the 12 selections to the from the Bolton Ice Palace Junior A Hockey League has .Bobby Orr, center and scored eight runs, drove in 10 and Hit four homers. His Oliva, Minn New York came back with one in the first when Maddox ALUMNI JUNIOR 167 56 .335 Mike Maloney each adding two Pete Neese wfent four-for- Thursday, the MB’s face right wing were named to the first team while so SIZES IN STOCK... three hits against the Astros Monday night raised his bat­ Blomberg, NY; 1 reached- on an error, moved to second on a wild pitch by Fireballing Ray Gliha struck 136 44 .324 bingles. four at the plate' for the 4-9 Volkswagen at St.Thomas ting average for the season to .319 compared to the .196 Robinson, Balt Bruins left winger was selected for the California starter. Rudy May and .scored on a single to out 15 in leading Police & Fire Dalton Pondering' 197 63 .320 Ernie Cox and Bruce Pennell winners with Fran Macchi get­ and MCC hosts Bristol at WIDTH 6>/z 7 7Vz 8 8>/2 9 9 ‘/2 1 0 11 ll* /2 1 2 13 Burroughs, Tex second squad. center by Thurman Munson. over Groman’s, 8-2, last night mark he cbmpiled in his rookie season last year. 224 71 .317 paced the 1-6 losers with two ting three hits in four tfips. Ron Mt.Nebo. Bando, Oak Philadelphia’s Bernie Parent was the first All-Star team at the West Side Oval. In the only other NL games, San Diego rallied for five 133 42 .316/ hts apiece. Anderson, Bill Monroe'and Rich Chris Chambliss’ third homer of the year kicked off a Kelly, Chi goaltender choice while teammates and 8 X X Gliha, who gave up just two runs in the ninth inning to edge Pittsburgh 9-8, Montreal Shakeup of Angels 159 50 .314/ Belekewicz each stroked two X X X three run rally by the Yanks in the second inning. Fernan­ Yastrzemski, Bos 192 60 .313 Barry Ashbee, who announced his forced retirement do Gonzales singled and was forced at second base by'Jim hits, helped his own cause with beat Cincinnati 3-1 in a game called in the ninth inning FELINE hits with Macchi and a triple and three runs scored. Raising its record to 3-4, Belekewicz each blasting a earlier this month, were named to the second team. C X X X X X X X X X X Magon. Maddox then singled and both miners advanced on because of rain, and St. Louis topped Los Angeles 4-2 in 11 NEW YORK (UPI) — Harry Dalton remains “the man HOME RUNS Out Six Weeks X X John Pelletier stroked two hits innings. Moriarty Brothers nipped homer. Chicago’s was-named netminder on the a groundnut by Lou Piniella. Murcer then delivered a two NATIONAL LEAGUE; including a double for the in the middle” in the California Angels’ plunge to the bot­ Scruse Wallpaper & Paint, 9-8, Greg Karakashian led a 15-hit PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - second squad and his teammate Bill White was selected D out, two run single to center.. ' Padres 9, Pirates 8 Wynn, LA 17; Schmidt, Phil 14; X X X X X X X X X X X X X winners. tom. last night at Mt. Nebo on Joann attack with three hits in four Philadelphia Phillies outfielder for the second team’s defense. Home runs by Clarence Gaston Hnd Dave Winfield keyed Bench, Cin and Garvey, LA 12; Joe Lahoud’s seventh home run in the sixth inning cut Tom Boland and Roger That’s how the Angels’ general manager described his Perotti’s lead off homer in the tripis to the plate. Tom Vincent, Greg Luzinski, who twisted his Ranger defenseman and Buffalo left winger Perez, Cin, Cedeno, Hou ami E the Angels deficit to 5-4 and the Angels tied the score in Willhide had the only safeties a nine-run attack in the last two innings for San Diego in its position Monday night when asked whether a major bottom of the seventh. Frank Gonzales and Gary knee in a game with Atlanta X X X X X X X X X X Smith, St.L 11. Rick Martin were the other members of the first team the seventh on Winston Llenas’ sacrifice fly which scored for Groman’s. triumph over the Pirates. Former New York Yankee change —possibly one that would make Frank Robinson Judy Keeney and Lauren Hall PawlqWski each had two hits last Wednesday, is expected to AMERICAN LEAGUE: while Detroit’s rounded out the second Tom McCraw. Horace Clarke, playing his first game for the Padres since had three and two hits respec­ for the 5-7 losers with Gonzales be in a cast for six to eight EEE X X baseball’s first black manager—was imminent. Jackson, Oak 15; Horton, Det All-Star team selections. X X X X X X X X ALUMNI JUNIOR moving into the NL, drove in the winning run with a single tively for Moriarty’s with Dale clouting a four-bagger. weeks. Dalton watched Monday night’s game with Angel owner 14; Allen, Chi 13; Mayberry, Exploding for eight runs in Bycholski adding a home run. to score Derrel,Thomas from second base. Willie Stargell Gene Autry and Yankee general manager Gabe Paul. He KC, Briggs, Mil, Nettles, NY the fourth, Moriarty Fuel Jean Halloran had three and MannyjSanguillen hit two-run homers for Pittsburgh. saw the Angels bow to the Yankees, 7-5, for their 11th loss and Burroughs, Tex 12. T h e BERNARD A. LOZIER, INC. registered a come-from-behind Expos 3, Reds 1 in 14 garnes and drop into the American League West safeties for the losers with Wendy Comp and Marianne Muffler That’s KARATE Celling Repairs & Replacements 16-6 win over Silk City last night Pitcher Steve Renko scored one run and tripled home cellar. Self Defense at Cheney Tech. another to lead Montreal past Cincinnati in a game with RUNS HATTED IN McCluskey each getting two. Guaranteed for REGAL MEN'G GHGP “I will consider a lot of trades before Saturday’s Scruse is now 3-4. ■THE COMPLETE MEN'S STORE" Bryan Daigle paced the two rain delays totalling 95 minutes before the contest was NATIONAL LEAGUE: Physical Fitness Now Introducing winners with two hits including deadline that I haven’t even thought of yet,” said Dalton. Wynn, LA 52; Garvey, LA and as long as you cut short in the ninth. Rookie catcher Barry Foote “I am the man in the middle watching the performance of Confidence Quality Carpentry Work, Patios - a bases loaded homer. Bill Mo- Smith, St.L 51; Cey, LA 45; EASTERN own the car... MAIN ■siggafi PLAZA dean picked up the win in relief homered in the third inning for the Expos’ first run while the club and making decisions as it goes along. Cedeno, Hou and Schmidt, Phil Scoring in every frame but BEGINNINQ Additions & Remodeiing along with adding two hits to Cesar Geronimo homered in the fifth for the Reds’ only “My main concern is that the club has been losing more 42. the first. Lock, Stock & Barrel 875-2517 YOGA CLASSES MANCHESTER VERNON the cause. tally. Cincinnati’s Joe Morgan was robbed of a possible than it has been winning,” Dalton continued. “Whever you AMERICAN LEAGUE' topped Millers Falls, 15-11, last \Free Estimates PHONE 649-4464 Dave Keeney was best for game-tying, two-run homer in the eighth when Expos right try to assess the club’s performance you have to look at 31 Burroughs, Tex 53; Jackson, night at Mt. Nebo. Both clu |^ HWANG’S 643-2478 872-0538 Silk City with three hits in four fielder Ken Singleton made a leaping catch of his long fly Oak 43; Allen, Chi and Rudi. are now 3-4. OLENDER’S MUFFLER SHOP INSTRUCTOR MR. HWANB TAE KWON DO MON. thru SAT. 9:30toS:30 MON. thru FRI. 10:00 to 9:00 people—25 players, four coaches, a manager and a general ROUTE 83 trips. ball. manager. Oak 42: 'Bob Coloumbe paced the ROCKVILLE THURS.'TIL 9:00 SAT. T IL 9:30 . winners with a homer and three For hUoniMrtlon M l 64S-474B B40 HILLIARD, MANCHESTER

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PAGE FOURTEEN - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. Manchester. Conn.. Tues., June 11. 1974

MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, Manchester. Conn.. Tues., June 11, 1974 — PAGE FIFTEEN

□ N O TIC ES Homes For Sale 23 Homes For Sale 23 Homes For Sale 23 Nomas For Sale NOTICES S( HAPPY ADS. 23 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 — Loll and Found / MANCHESTER - 2-family, 3-3, Trio Gains Three Firsts 2 — Peraonala / large rooms, excellent condi­ Lost and Found i 3 — AnnouncamanM tion with extra building lot. WE FIND r a E HOCSE, INTERNATIONAL 4 — Entertalnmanl Vernon — Ehccellent oversized 5 — Auctions/ Char-Bon Agency, 643-6683. YOU MAKE THE HOME. LEAGUE LOST in Oakland Street area, Cape, 2 full baths, fireplace, three-year old, light colored Rosters FINANCIAL recreation room, walk-out REALTOR chocolate point Siamese male 6 — Bonffs-Stocl screened porch, garage, treed ------Larry Van Houtryve, Richard PARIS (UPI) - “Usually could play. Jauffret was suf­ insurance benefits. Metronics, Center Street, 646-0129. Manchester wants two girls To Supply and Sarvlca Accounta 646-8714, 423-9291. almost completed rec room, LONG JUMP - 1. J. Lombardo (13’- Orantes, and Chilean Patricio fice work. Good typing and Company Eatabllahas In the Local lot. Only,$42,900. Keith Real REWEAVING burns, holes. Haberen, Randy Travers, Bob .0‘V ) ; 2. J. Wilson; 3. G. Dayon; 4. T. it’s Kodes that makes that fering from a pulled muscle he Cornejo. Inc., Route 6&44-A, Bolton. with property and casualty in­ garage. Asking $36,000. math background a must. Plea- Area lor you. Company raquiras NO COVENTRY - New listing, im­ Estate, 646-4126, 649-1922. Zippers, umbrellas repaired. Gentile, Ken Brown, Bob Cam- Grier, M. Buczek, tie. ” sustained Saturday, but it didn’t HEY KIDS! surance experience and EXPERIENCE ol Applicants In IMa Frechette & Martin Inc., SOFTBALL THROW - 1. G. Dayon kind of comeback. This Fourth-round matches in the TOY DEMONSTRATORS sant working condition, maculate, two year old, eight ------L------Window shades, Venetian REAL ESTATE sales person. Want to make good money working only a few hours excellent clerical skills. Phone Bualnass. Realtors, 646-4144. panelli, Scott Carone, Brian (170'-2"); 2. M. Belanger; 3. M. Buczek: evening it was my turn.” show. lower half of the draw were set Earn 25% commission selling best line excellent benefits. Apply at room raised Ranch, four MANCHESTER-Three family, blinds. Keys. TV for rent, 4. R. Koepsel. Established office seeking am­ a week. No limit to how much you can earn. Three 643-1155. Company raprsaanlativs will por- Steely, Mike Mazzotta, Dean Francois Jauffret was talking The win put Jauffret into the for today with favorites Bjorn of toys and gifts! 20% to hostesses, 4- Meadows Convalescent Center, bedrooms, fireplaced family separate furnaces, ceramic tile Marlows, 867 Main St. 649-5221. 100 YD. DASH — 1. J. Lombardo bitious individual. High com­ color catalog, no delivering or coiiec- nights per week. We train. ;> aonaily work with you to lamlllarizo Gressman, Mike Keeler. (13.7); 2. T. Grier; 3. M. Wright; 4. S. tournament quarterfinals, Borg of Sweden and defending 333 Bidwell Street, Manchester. room, formal dining room, baths, appliances, two car gar­ about his surprise 7-6, 7-5, 7-5 mission schedule. Experience ting. S4H Green Stamps to HATE GETTING UP In the you wHh ths tsrvIcliM ol thoso Ae- Anderson. where he had previously ad­ counla located In Drug, Varlaty, beautifully landscaped, view age, excellent location. Char- .„ h a d -rDPC' c t ANSALDI’S- Coach John victory Monday night over champion Hie Nastase desired by willing to train demonstrators. We handle the details A.M.? Change your attitude. WELL CARED FOR 50 YD. DASH 1. J. Lombardo (7.2); Super Markata and Discount Stores. for miles. Mid 40s. Lessenger Bon Agency, 643-0683. MILLAR TREE Service, Inc. Luby. Kevin Boushee, Joe 2. S. Anderson; 3. M. Wright; 4. J. second-seeded Jan Kodes in the vanced to in 1966 and 1970. scheduled to play. qualified person. For confiden­ — you run the parties! DO YOU have these advantages Call us regarding great spot Removal, pruning, lot clearing, Call 647-9946 Company Realtors, 646-8714, 7-room Colonial In top condi­ 'Tanguay, Bob Nelson, Paul Wilson. $200,000 tennis Also advancing to the Orantes beat third-seeded tial interview call Jan or Helen, American Home Toy Parties, Inc. on your present job? 1. oppor­ :iS open with company east of Profit Potential Is moat attractiva and spraying.Fully insured. quarterfinals Monday were ______Tel. 7496526 river looking for dependable virtually unlimited. An IM M E D IA T E 423-929 tion. Three bedrooms, sun- Tan^ay, Pierre Thiviergo, championships., i Arthur Ashe of Miami, Fla., Village Charm Realty, 643-1509. tunity to earn highiigh w(weekly in­ Manchester Evening Herald IN V E S T M E N T ol $3485.00 for Star­ porch, carpeting, siding, TWO-FAMILY. Quiet, dead-end Licensed. Free estimates. David Monahan, John Dupont, Hans Jurgen Pohmann of West come. 2. no lay offs,iffs, 33..1 manage- secretary, with good typing and ling Inventory puts you In your OW N street enhances desirability of Phone 633-5345. Midget Boyg The 32-year-old French Monday. It was tljeir third MANCHESTER - Duplex 7-6,3- Joe Rossetto, Mike Perry, Scott Germany, Spaniard Mnauel PART-TIME Evening cleaners. ment opportunity, 4. life In­ ¥ shorthand. Excellent ^ and BUSINESS RIGHT NOW. WRITE fireplace, garages. Zoned for this newer Garrison Colonial 1.06 number one took the first sej, meeting. car garage, excellent location, 1 Phone 649-5334. PART-TIME maintenance surance policy, 5. stock benefits, good hours, etc. Call TODAY (Includs Phono Numhor) home and professional of­ style , 4 over 5, two-family. TREE SERVICE (Soucier) Reyer, John Luby, Dan LONG JUMP - 1. G. Melendy (12'- but then a surge by Kodes put good income. Upper 30’s. 4"): 2. J. Lautenbach; 3. B. Jones; 4. C. man. Call between 9 a.m. and 4 purchase opportunity. 6. Sharon, Rita Girl Personnel, M.S.C.I. fice. $39,900. Excellent condition, private Trees cut, trimmed or topped, Damato, Mike Luby, Tony GRINDER Surface grinding, LaPenta Agency, Realtor, 646- McKee. the Wimbledon champion ahead p.m. Laurel Manor, 649-4519. freedom. And most of aU, get­ 164 East Center, Manchester, Box Numhar 336 drives, appliances, large family stumps removed, fully insured. Chiabutti, Doug Gaboury. SOFTBALL THROW - 1. J. Voiland close tolerance ;e work. Blue Ball, Pa. 18422 2440. 5-0 in the second. ting paid what you think you are AR-CiUFT COMPONENT 646-3441. room, gdod income. $47,500. Got a tree problem? Well worth INDEPENDENT (133-2); 2. c. McKee; 3. J. Maher; 4. D. Overtime and pai3 insurance RICHARDS & KEHMNA MacBryde. “At that point, I kept my con­ FEMALE WAREHOUSE office worth. If you don't have these Penobscot Tool & Gage, ASSEMBLER Principals only. 872-4094, a phone call. 742-8252. INSURANCE- Coaches Bill 100 YD. D A SH - 1. J. Maher (13.9); 2. PART TIME or full time, $5. MANCHESTER - New listing. fidence,” Jauffret said. “I had clerk for regional distributor of advantages, phone at once for Merrow Road, Route 15, & it FINANCIAL security is not ob­ 528-1731 evenings. Belelewicz, Rich Belekewicz, J. Lautenbach; 3. G. Melendy; 4. J. with some machine per hour average commissions, Immaculate) 6-room Cape plus Voiland. a feeling that the set was not RCA and Whirlpool. immediate employment. Call 99, Tolland, 875-8083. tained by muscle power but by TRUCKING, odd jobs, moving Coming June 29 623-1051. experience. Capable of excellent advancement oppor­ family room, 1 1/2 baths, Dick Dudek. Jason Giuggolz, 50 YD. DASH - 1. J. Maher (7.3); 2. G. lost.” Experience in truck terminal brain power. Own and operate COVENTRY - New listing. large appliances, cleaning repairing turbine assemblies tunity. Arts and crafts fireplace, garage, aluminum Chris Turner, W.C. Anderson, Melendy; 3. J. Warren; 4. N. Murphy. From that point on, Kodes, distribution or warehouse office RESPONSIBLE Driver for Mr. your own business part-time. Seven-room Raised Ranch, two cellars and attics, also some BABYSITTER wanted for to blueprint specs. demonstrators needed by the siding, lovley treed lot. Scott Verbridge, Roger Dee, winner of the French cham­ procedures helpful but not Softee truck. Must be 18 or Full training provide. No in­ MANCHESTER - Seven-room years old, only $34,900. Pasek tree work done. 64^1775. required. We expect to train. working mother. Must be Call for appointment fastest growing home party Convenient neighborhood. Call Colonial, living room, dining Realtors, MLS, 289-7475. Gordon Plouff, Mark St. Onge, pionship in 1970 and 1971, held over, neat and reliable. Call vestment necessary. Full infor­ on this one - it won’t last. I An equal opportunity employer. reliable and over 15 years old. plan organization. Call 872-8^, room, kitchen, den, fireplace, Brian McAuley, Rudy Persico, Senior Girlg 649-21)73 between 9 a.m. -1 p.m. mation by appointment only, Belfiore Agency, 647-1413. LIGHT Trucking - Odd jobs, his serve only one time. Call Mrs. Matthews, Eastco, 95 Call 646-5285. 649-6004 872-2780, 875-9722 or 633-9023. two full baths, three bedrooms, MANCHESTER - Two-family Mike McGuire, Wes Brown, call 564-7596 between 9 and 5 cellars and attics cleaned, LONG JUMP - 1. N. Downing (14'- Jauffret’s victory was all the Street, East Hartf rd, garage, central location. Only duplex. Separate furnaces and Russ Kuzczynski, Paul IVi"); 2. S. Manning. LAW OFFICE - Secretary, p.m., Monday through Friday. lawns mowed, small tree work. more surprising since it was not $37,500. Frechete & Martin basement. Only $31,900. Pasek Lalancette, Dick Dudek, Bill 50 YD. D A S H -1. L. Maher (6.5); 2. N. art-time for summer. Hours WAITRESSES - Part-time, TREES Free estimates. Phone 643-6000. Downing: 3. S. Manning. sure until the last minute he LAUNDRY WORKER - 8 to lexible. Phone 643-2405. MANCHESTER - Pizza house, Inc., Realtors, 646-4144. Realtors, MLS, 289-7475, 742- Belekewicz. 100 YD. DASH - 1. L. Maher (12.1); 2. after school hours, experience Beautiful 7-room U&R Raised I WOMAN WITH own car to 4:30, five days per week, in­ MULTI-CIRCUITS INC. fully equipped. Priced to sell. 8243. PRO BARBERS- Coach N. Downing; 3. S. Manning; 4. K. Man­ [supervise two children. Bolton cluding Saturday. Good starting not necessary, three days per Ranch on a wooded acre. ODD JOBS - Carpentry, pan­ ning. WAITRESS - part-time. Good week, some Saturdays. Plea­ Owner has other interests. For M A N C H E S T E R - F o u r - Dave McNally. Bob McNally, iLake area, private beach. 649- salary, regular pay increases. MANCHESTER - Six-room eling, rec rooms, offices, 220 YD. D A SH - 1. N. Downing (28.4); salary. Experience necessary. sant surroundings. Good Small manufacturing firm details call Stanley Agency, 646- Spectacular deck, sliding bedroom Colonial, 2 1/2 baths, 2. L. Maher; 3. S. Manning. Women’s Senior 7251 after 5:30. Excellent fringe benefits. On Ranch. Garage, fireplace. household repairs. Phone 649- Sean Byrne, Mark Pategchek, Apply in person Hilliardville gratutities. Apply in person. has immediate opening in 4 3618. glass doors, wall-to-wall, walnut paneled first floor fami­ 440 YD. DASH - 1. L. Maher (64.0); 2. bus line. Apply in person. East Aluminum siding, nice yard 4594. Dick Danforth, David L. Veal: 3. J. Meyer. Softball League Luncheonette, 303 Adams Brass Key Restaurant. 829 of their departments for male fireplace, custom birch ly room, spacious kitchen, with Hartford Convalescent Home, loads of cabinets and built-ins. with mature trees. Only $31,900. McMahon, Dick Rhodes, Kevin MILE - 1. L. Lemieux (6.04); 2. L. LIFEGUARD WSI. For full- Street, Manchester. Main St. and female, first and third Situation Wanted 15 cabinets. Great area. 10 TWO HANDY men want varie­ Veal; 3. G. Plante; 4. R. Washington. Rosters 745 Main Street, East Hartfot'd. Impeccably maintained. Pasek Realtors, 289-7475. Byrne, David Blair, Paul I time employment. Call for ap­ shifts. Please contact Per­ minutes from downtown ty of jobs, raking roiling, GROMAN’S- Coach Dick Manicured lot in desirable McMahon, Dean Collins, Tom pointment, 528-1300. sonnel Department, 50 WILL BABY SIT, my home, Manchester. Only $38,900. liming, fertilizing, mowing Carley. Lisa Blinn, Debbie COUNTER HELP - over 18 Porter Street area. 60’s. Lots-Land for Sale 24 Odegard, Keith LaPine, Bud Harrison Street, Manchester. day or night, any age. Some lawns, attics, cellars cleaned. Junior Girlg Dawson, Eva Emerson, PAINTER WANTED - Must preferred. Experience un­ transportation availanle. Call Warren E. Howland, Realtors, Reynolds, Jim Laraia, Randy Reasonable rates, 643-5305. LONG JUMP - 1. T. Mazzotta (12'- Caroline Flood, Theresa Frank, A special edition highlighting have experience and be necessary. Please call 646-9313. PRINTING PLANT 649-^7. WARREN E. HOWLAND 643-1108. NORTH WINDHAM - One acre McNally. 6jl6-3S00 9” ); 2. K. Manning; 3. L. Schwarz; 4. J. Chris Fedorchak, Alicia familiar with new construction. REALTOR 643-1108 ^proved lot, rural residential. H T F D . R D . Meyer. MANCHESTER - Beautifully (Jail John Rogalsky in PDQ PRINTERS - Post Road 50 YD. DASH - 1. M. Reynolds (6.7); Hagler, Carolyn Jaworski, Phone 649-7770. PART-TIME mornings, East FIRST SHIFT LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING plaza, Vernon. Letterheads, Manchester and the surrounding maintained six-room Cape. Middletown, 1-346-8320. ENTERPRISES- Coaches Ed 2. C. Swallow; 3. T. Mazzotta; 4. J. Leslie Libby, Rachel Rosen, Hartford, Porter work and floor available, transportation envelopes, bills, quick copy, Vilga, Charlie McDonell. Mike Meyer. [COUNTER GIRLS - for fast polishing. Phone 649-5334. • FOLDER OPERATOR provided, during summer MANCHESTER - 7 1/2 room Fireplaced living room, dining 100 YD. DASH - 1. C. Swallow (12.6); Lisa Taylor, Qiris White, Sandy SCREAM FOR JOY - Bxand wedding Invitations, Xeroxing. Doyon, Pat Derby, Mark food operation, must be fast Experience necessary months. Phone 646-3116. center-entrance Colonial, first room, sunny eat-in kitchen, Investment Property 25 2. M. Reynolds; 3. L. Binks; 4. T. Maz­ Von Deck, Tati Pina, Kathy area. All Herald subscribers will new position, immediately floor family room, 2 fireplaces, 875-4819. zotta. and willing to work nights and JANITOR - for Saturday and first-floor bedroom and bath, Maulucci, Mike McDonell, Kaslovich. available, with local company MANCHESTER, 8-room 220 YD. DASH - 1. C. Swallow (28.4); weekends. Full time days or Sunday, phone 528-2167, or app­ • CUTTER OPERATOR laundry off kitchen, basement two large bedrooms up. Wall-to- Greg Coulter, Tony Lefebvre, 2. M. Reynolds; 3. J. Meyer; 4. T. Maz­ who will pay well for recep- aluminum sided building on LAWNMOWERS repaired and PERSONAL TEE-, Coach nights. Write Box DD, ly in person, East Hartford Con­ Experience In cutting stock for presses as well as rec room, 2-car garage, large wall carpeting electric eye ear- Dave Green, Eric Zinsser, zotta. receive “Profile 7 4 ” on June 29. tionist - secretary with go6d lot in prime Porter Street area. age door. Low 30’s. Call East Center Street. First floor, sharpened, pick-up and Marianne Pemberton. Jenine Manchester Herald. valescent Home, 745 Main □ REAL ESTATE delivered. Call Sharpall now for Sreve Pirog, Steve Brown, Bob finished work, using 42" Polar Eltromat. Wping and accurate shorthand. Low 50’s. Warren E. Howland, Suzanne Shorts, 646-3233, J. former dental office, amesited Cain, Nancy Downing, Sandy Street, East Hartford. your spring tuneup. 643-5305. Ames, Laurent Jean, Ken Right hand to Controller. Realtors, 643-1108. Watson Beach Real Estate Co., parking lot, ideal professional Duva, Colleen Ferguson, Cindy Order extra copies for friends and • RECEIVER Hurry! Call Sharon, Rita Girl Marshall, Norman Hebert, Tom Midgetg Homes For Sale Realtors, Manchester Office, location ..... Martens Agency, Hanson, Sandy Irish, Nella Personnel, 164 East Center, Duff. LONG JUMP — 1. R. Washington (13'- Receive and move heavy skids of paper utilizing fork B O LTO N - N ew on 647-9139. Realtors, 646-2550. CASH Registers and adding 6'/<' ); 2. B. Tobin; 3. S. Rydel; 4. C. Leigher, Maura Linsey, Robin Manchester, 646-3441. relatives now. I truck. Lift heavy cartons of paper. Must be 21 years MANCHESTER - two family, 4- market...Stone house of eight machines. - Sales, service, Scott. Lagassee, Kathy Me Conville, SALESPERSON 50 YD. DASH — 1. R. Washington of age with driver's license. 4, second floor vacant, very rooms on three private acres. MANCHESTER - New listing - supplies. 15 years experience, DEMONSTRATORS - sell toys Resort Property (7.3); 2 B. Tobin; 3. C. Scott; f . S. Maure Shea, Arline Tripp, Kate I W AN T good condition, ideal starter House in good condition, Attractive full dormered six 27 formerly with NCR. Free and gifts. Name brands: Rydel. Warren. home. F. J. Spilecki, Realtor, fireplace, 1 1/2 baths, four room cape on wooded lot, quiet, Estimates. C.R.S. Company, 100 YD. DASH — 1. R. Washington YOU Fisher-Price, Fenton, Nordic, NASSIFF ARMS- Coach ) LIBERAL BENEFIT PROQRAM THAT INCLUDES 643-2121. bedrooms, plus a private studio child safe street. Three or four Coventry, 742-6381. (13.6): 2. C. Scott; 3. S. Rydel; 4. G. A M ailed etc. Earn up to 30%. Free Kit. Plante. NON-CONTRIBUTORY PENSION PLAN. arrangement. Immediate oc­ bedrooms, several rooms Doug McGillvary. Ellen Burns, Managership openings for If you can sail, giva a good appaaranca, hava Intargrity M A N C H E S T E R - F o u r - cupancy. T. J. Crockett, carpeted. $35,900. Eastern, 643- LIGHT TRUCKING - Attics Sign Five Ellen Donadio, Nancy Donadio, V Anywhere In APPLY IN PERSON OR CALL 643-1101 experienced demonstrators AMSTGN U K E and faal you can atruggla along on $15,000 to $25,000 a bedroom Colonial, V k baths, Realtor, 643-1577. 9969, 646-8250. and cellars cleaned. For free CINCINNATI (UPI) - The Cindy Formica, Kelly Grady, also. Call “Miss Jean” collect year, aalllng Rock of Agaa camatary mamorlala. walnut paneled first floor fami­ estim ates phone 647-9610 Cincinnati Reds Monday signed Chris Jarvis, Karen Jones, The U.S.A. ALLIED PMNTING SERVICES M C. 491-2100, or write Treasure ly room, spacious kitchen, with VERNON - 7-room Raised VERNON - Spacious, im­ Three bedroom cottage, anytime. five more of the 37'piayers they Colleen MacGillvary, Kathy House, (ioshen. Conn., 06756. loads of cabinets and built-ins. 579 Middle Turnpike W. maculate, convenient 7-room kitchenette, dining area, drafted last week and have McCarthy, Patty McNiff, If you ara a aaH-atartar, hard Impeccably maintained. CUSTOM MADE draperies, Mancheeter, Conn. WANTED mother’s helper to Colonial. Four bedrooms, two living room, full bath. Minutes assigned them to report to their Colleen Shane, CoTeleen Strat­ workar, writa or call collact for Manicured lot in desirable from lakefront. Asking $16,- very reasonable, work An equal opportunity employer. Male/Female do light housework, cooking, Crockett, Realtor, 643-1577. lavatories plus full bath. At­ rookie team in the Pioneer ton, Linda Templeton, Gina a paraonal Intarvlaw (9f4) 035-2122 Porter Street area. 60’s. tached garage. Nicely 500. guaranteed. Call anytime, 649- and baby sitting (2 year old) at Warren E. Howland, Realtors, League. Zazzadelli, Gri Lombardo. batwaan 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. landscape^!. Above-ground pool. 4266. beach, whole summer. 643-1108. FOR SALE BY owner, older The piayers are catcher Brad FULL OF BALONEY- Coach Just mail or bring this coupon to The Herald Treed and shrubbed lot. Many References. 232-5421. six-room Spanish motif house, LUPACCHING AGENCY G&H PAVING & Construction Bush of Paris, Tex.; outfielder Dave Schwartz. Cathy extras, immediate occupancy. along with 754; per copy and we’il do the rest. TIMROD Rd. - New 7-room one-car garage, corner lot. All Company - Paving, sealing, Banavige, Cindy Blasko, Kathy HELP FOLKS settle their in­ Low 40’s. Mr. Matthew, 646-5432 Paul Marshall of Sheridan, Raised Ranch. Two fireplaces, redecorated. Stove, concrete work, septic systems BOWER MEMORIAL, INC. surance claims. Claims assis­ Belfiore Agency, 647-1413. Wyo.; infielder Robert Constan­ *"■'Soccer---i Carpenter, Mary Carroll, 2 1/2 tiled baths, appliances, refrigerator, draperies, cur­ installed. Commercial and $1,500 - $2,500 CASH SONUS tant needed for local company. tine of Altamonte Springs, F la.; Doreen Downham, Jennifer Pleasant Vallsy, N.Y.. 12569 city utilities, plasters walls, tains, wall-to-wall carpeting all residential. 26 years pitcher Randy Walraven of Krascella, Sharon Maher, Cin­ 1 odaYs Army now ha$ 25 jobs that pay a cash bonus In Experience desired but Will patio. Two-car garage. Shade to stay. $34,500. Phone 643-8711 MANCHESTER - 564 Wetherell experience. Free estimates. i»i;i; \x E i; tram. Good salary and benefits. Alvarado. Tex., and pitcher dy Millis, Lynn Odergard, sddmon to rsgular psy snd bsnsfHs. Ths bonusss trees. Built by Ansaloi. Charles after 6:30 p.m. Street, six-room Colonial, Real Estate Wanted 28 649-5233. . The Tornados overtook the Call Sharon, Rita Girl Per­ Steve Hughes of Los Angeles. Denise Poudrier, Dawn rangs from $1,SOO-$2,500, dspsndtng on ths job. It you Lesperhnee, 649-7620. possible seven rooms. 1 1/2 Stars last night, 1-0, on a qualHy, youll bo paid ths bonus In a lump sum aftsr sonnel, 164 E a st C enter, TOLLAND - On busy Route 195, baths, roomy attic, extra large SPECIALISTS - East of CUSTOM MADE draperies and Schlehofer Lisa Schwartz, Jodi Manchester, 646-3441. by John Janenda with three Thorpe, Cari Waddell, Cheryl ]“PROFILE 74” I you’vs compistsd training. COLUMBIA - Seven room five-rooni home and large kitchen, garage. Lot 107x200’. Manchester. Need a speedy bedspreads, wide selection of minutes left in the final period. RN Raised ranch, five years old, private off ice...ideal for beauty Panoramic view. T. Shannon, sale? We buy, sell, finance, for fabrics. Phone 649-1786 Wilhelm. MEN AND WOMEN with sales Tom Finnegan played well Manchester Evening Herald Circulation S SUPERVISOR - FULL-TIME, 3-11 NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED, Mala and Famala situated on a one acre treed lot, shop, professional use, etc. Live 568-6652. just about anything to help you anytime. and managerial ability. You two car garage, close to lake. in the nouse amd work in the of­ out. Lessenger Company for the winners' while Paul Herald Square, PO Box 591 S FULL-TIME, 11-7 can build rapidly to excellent Rubin and Angelo Morson were Among the Jobs — Stanley Agency, 646-3618, 643- fice. 150x300 lot, business Realtors, 646-8714, 423-9291. TREES removed, sites cleared, Manchester, Ct. 06040 | R N S - L P N S incom4 family security, early 5724. zoned. Sensibly priced tb sell at save money on tree removal. best for the Stars in a losing $50f000 Bonus retirement. For interview call Manchester FULL and PART TIME, 7-3, 3-11 NIKE TEST EQUIPMENT REPAIRMAN $M,900. T. J. Crockett, Realtor, SELLING your home or Free estimate, fully insured. AND cause. NEW YORK (UPI) — Dennis From: , i | 423-8052 after 5 p.m. MANCHESTER - Small two- 875-6279, 643-1577. ROCKLEDGE acreage? For prompt friendly Call 646-1330. Lee Sherrill of Miami, Fla., an NAME AIRCRAFT FIRE CONTROL REPAIRMAN family, ideal investment. Good New 7-room Raised Ranch. 3 service, call Louis Dimoefe MIDGET 18-year-old' shortstop for South Compotative salary plus company paid life, health, major locationtibi and condition. Low VERNON - Six room Ranch in bedrooms, 2 baths, spacious Realty, 649-9823. WILL DO odd jobs, very RADI( ADDRESS ------meoicai and disability Insurance, makes this truly one of RADIO TELETYPE OPERATOR . kicks played a major Miami High School, was signed ZIP MEDICAL LABORATORY 30’s. Paul W. Dougan, Realtor, desirable Skinner Road, area. formal dining and living reasonable. Phone 643-87^8. the best benefit packages available. 643-4535, 646-1021. Three bedrooms, covered patio. ALL CASH for. your property role last night as the Toros by the New York Yankees Mon­ I t o w n ------STATE HAWK MISSILE CREWMAN TECHNICIAN room, eat-in kitchen, family topped the Olympics, 3-2. Apply, DIractof of Nursing Sarvlca to laarn more about paneled reo room, pool, large within 24 hours.Avoid red tape, COMPLETE junk cars day for a bonus in excess of t room, aluminum siding, 2-car instant service. Hayes Agency, Jimmy Voiland tallied a pair 1 the health care opportunitlaa at: j RADIO RELAY AND CARRIER ATTENDANT Must be experienced and MANCHESTER - Benton lot, ttwO-car garage! A cream removed free in Manchester, $50,000. To: puff! Mid 30s. Warren E. garage. Wooded acre. 646-0131. South Windsor, Vernon and TONIGHT of goals for the winners on familiar with modern StrMt. Well cared for six-room 7:30 Red Sox vh. A'h. Sherrill, the Yankees’ No. 1 NAME MISSILE TANK TURRET MECHANIC Oa^ with expandable attic, Howland, Realtors, 643-1108 Tolland. Call Bill’s Auto Parts, penalty kicks with Pete Saglio draft choice, batted .471 and hit methodology and equip­ WE WILL buy your house. Call Route 74, Tolland, Conn, 649- u ii.22, w t k ; ADDRESS ~ ------fireplace, garage. Only $30,900. scoring what proved to be the f(3ur homers in 24 games for his ZIP MEADOWS CONVALESCENT CENTER ment. Private medical lab. T. J. Crockett, Realtors, 643- KIDS WILL love the in-ground anytime, Hutchins Agency, 4578, 875-6231. 7:30 Mets v». Braves, winning marker. TOWN 333BMwaUSL For More Information: Excellent salary commen­ 6 4 6 -1 1 8 0 Realtors, 649-5324. ------1— WINE high school team this year. He STATE 1577. pool just off Florida room of -s Tim Reynolds and Myles will join the Yankees’ Ft. 647-9191, 9 - 3 P.M. surate with ability. this lovely six-room Ranch. •r^ TEMPORARY clerical, child 8:00 Yanks vs. Angels, Call your Army Repreaenlatlve at SELLING your house? Call us McCurry recorded the scores Lauderdale team on June 18 ■■ ■■ H i ■■ m ■■ ■■ ■■ MANCHESTER - $29,500. West One-car garage. Big workshop, MERRITT AGENCY care, indoor and outdoqr Uh.l8 643-9462 first and w e’ll make you a cash maintenance jobs sought by stu­ for the Olympics. after he graduates. 643-2966 side, 3-bedroom Colonial, 2-car choice Bolton Center location. garage. Immediate occupancy. Minutes to 1-84. Louis Dimock, l:!| REALTOR offer. One day service. T. J. dent job bank in South Windsor. Cole, Realtor, 643-6666. Realty, 649-9823. Crockett, Realtor, 643-1577. 644-2500 or 644-8596. I PAGE SIXTEEN - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. Manchester. Conn., Tues., June 11, 1974 MANCHESTER EVENING HERAl.n, Manrt,,,,,,, r .nn 1, Serv/ces Ottered 31 Roottng-SIdIng-ChImney 34 Articles tor Sole 41 Apartments For Rent S3 Apartments For Rent 53 Autos For Sale 61 Autos For Sale 61 Autos For Sale 6 f BUGS BUNNY OCT OUB WAV BY NED COCHBAN oUB BOABDINC HOUSE ,l.h MAJOB HOOPLE STEVEN EDWARDS Contrac­ ROOFING AND Gutters in­ RAILROAD TIES for sale, THREE-ROOM furnished APARTMENT for rent, duplex, ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ KNOCK ting Agency. All paintiii„ stalled. Reasonable prices. excellent condition, apartment, couple or older per­ what's IT DOESNT SEEM RIGHT TO Eliminate middle man. M3-9735 6 rooms, $185. monthly. Call LU NCH , I KNOW YOU S P E N T A LOT O F TIME carpentry, masonary, concret 8’6”x8”x8” . Phone 872-6754, son, Convenient location. 224 WRONO? EAT A SALAMI SANDWICH IN A FEW MORE REMARKS L KE ALL GREAT DISCOVERIES, IT'S BASICALLY' 7-9 a.m. and 5-9 p.m. 872-7103. No order too large or 646-0714. Charter Oak Street, SYLVESTER/ VACUUMING AMP CLEANING 'CAUSE LIKE THAT AND YOU'LL work, fences, floor cleaning THESE LUXURIOUS WE'VE GOT COMPANY COMING-- FIND YOURSELF BACK SIMPLE! TOMORROWS HOMES WILL HAVE THERES small. Contractors welcomed. Manchester, 643-8368. MAYBE YOU b e t t e r PROP M E For any job, call 649-159(1 398 HARTFORD ROAD - four SURROUNDINGS ' UPSTAIRS SITTING IN LARGE MAGNIFYING GLASSES FOCUSING JUST ^/HWTAVA ROOFING - Installation and AGAINST A WALLTILL YOU ■rOUR ROOM.' SO L A R HEAT ON WATER IN GLASS PIPES! between 8 a.m. and 7 p.m. rooms, $135. per month. Second MAKE UP VOUR MINP WHERE SOTTA V USE repairs, gutters, storm win­ KELVINATOR gas stove, 30”, FIVE-ROOM Apartment, gar­ MANCHESTER HONDA I CAN SIT DOWN.' I DON'T ► BE ^ r FDR floor. Phone 649-1946. dows, doors. Experience^ like new, only one year old. Call age. Cellar storage and yard. WANT TO G E T BLAMED A T L HEAT quality workmanship. Fully in­ 646-4822 after 5. $165 monthly. Manchester. 649- FOR MESSING UP TH' PLACE SNCE WATER AT THE BOTTOM RECEIVES FLAW r AT. Painting-Papering 32 WE HAVE customers waiting THE MOST HEAT IT NATURALLY RISES! sured. Free estimates. 2871. 1 NIGHT for the rental of your apartment THE RETURN IS ON THE SHADY SIDE PAINTING - Quality work done Reasonable prices. Rick MUST SACRIFICE - Bedrooms OF THE HOUSE.' _____ S 7 I Burnett, 646-30(». or home. J.D. Real Estate reasonably, experienced. and living room furniture, Associates, Inc. 646-1980. NEWLY DECORATED three- Please call Steve after 5 p.m., carpeting and draperies, all room apartment, 613 Main BIDWELL Home Improvement 644-1443. custom made, excellent condi­ LOOKING for anything in real Street, across from Center CO. Expert installation of L tion. Call after 4 p.m, 569-1625. estate rental — apartments, Park, on bus line. Heat, hot aluminum siding, gutters and water, refrigerator, gas range, CALL ME for painting homes, multiple dwellings, no Sri wallpapering. Reasonable.Reasonal trims. Roofing installation and WALK-IN VAN lunch wagon, parking provided. References. repairs. 649-6495, 875-9109. fees. Call J.D. Real Estate Free estiimates. Phone 56W)527. completely equipped. Stub bus Associates, Inc. 646-1980. Security required. No children, drive camper for sale, com- no pets. 643-0578 after 6 p.m. MICKEY FINN PAPER HANGING and ceiling HORACE Tetrault — Siding, pletely redone, excellent condi- BY HANK LEONARD roofing, storm windows, aw­ ROCKVILLE - three room painting. Neat work. tion. 6i\9-7398. apartment, heat, hot water, Reasonal)le rates. Phone nings. Quality workmanship, free estimates. Fully insured. stove and refrigerator, I JUST RETURNED FROM DIP \ Leonard Spiegelberg 643-9112. KITCHEN SET, formica top, carpeted living room, $145. SWITZERLAND.' MY FATHER'S \ YOU 872-9187, 649-3417. PRESIDENTIAL SHERIFF FINN —I'M LL RIGHt T ^ drop leaf, metal legs, two air- Adults only, no pets, security LAWYER INFORMED ME THAT ) WITH- conditioners, like new. ROBYN GRABIDALL lYN-LET'S PART OF HIS ESTATE WAS / DRAW COLLEGE Graduate students deposit required. Parking for VILLAGE APTS. AND I NEED YOUR INTO MY ' it , available for exterior and in­ ROOFING — Specializing Reasonable. Call 647-9670. ■■■ ‘ SWISS BANK! V THE repairing roofs, new roofs, one car. Call 643-9678. MANCHESTER MONEY? terior painting.Six years 'ACK experience. Fully insured. Free gutter work, chimneys, cleaned and repaired. 30 years FREE CANNED HAM, 5 lbs. One and two bedrooms. T O THE estimates. Call our com­ with purchase of any THREE-ROOM apartment, DRAWING experience. Free estimates. WHY M OTHERS GET GRAY' petitors, than call us, 649-7034 refrigerator this week. near hospital. Heat, hot water, Near schools, churches Bo a r d ?- ...... 'll Howley, 643-5361. H.< t , KiA liK IM Bw u s Pji on Montgomery Ward, 643-2185. stove, refrigerator and cooking and shopping center, on INSIDE - Outside painting, gas. Wall-to-wall carpeting, ROSSI ROOFING, siding, bus line. Call anytime. CAPTAIN EASY fe c ia l rates for people over 65. SOFA - Simmons hide-a-bed, $165. Adults only, no pets. BY CROOKS & LAWRENCE Fully insured. Estimates given. chimneys, gutters, free es­ Security deposit required. 646-2623 YOU'VE timates. Fully insured. Days, green, excellent condition. HMPHi PO$5IBLY.,.nG AN Call 649-7863. Phone 643-8894. Phone 643-9678. Re-Cyclii^ Sale! THOUGHT OF OLD CAVALRY TROOPER ' WELL. 5IR...ONE NIGHT I HEARD ' evenings, \S29-8056. Paul S O M E B O D Y IN H.M.BOMBAY HUS5ARG B EA U T IFU L ClOCkWOKK CHIMES COMING FROM A TEACHERS have saved Cosgrove 643-53M. MANCHESTER - Older four- WHO MIGHT'VE I OFTEN TAKE AN FREE TOPSOIL, load your EVENING CANTER, NEARBY MANSION! homeowners 20-50% on quality own. Phone 649-7441. room apartment on bus line. D' Y E G E E y house painting. Fourteen years BARRETT HOME Improve­ Includes heat and appliances. Up to *50 for your old bicycle ment Company, aluminum rooms, heat and appliances, experience, fully insured. 643- COMPLETE MODERN $135 and $155 per month. Paul air-conditioned, first floor, gar­ 16W. siding, make your home look W. Dougan, Realtor, 643-4535, like new. Save fuel with in­ bedroom and dining room sets, age, quiet but convenient PRISCILLA’S POP BY AL VERMEER walnut finish, $150 for each set. 646-1021. neighborhood. $200. 649-6985 or towards the purchase of a new Honda sulated backing, Kaiser, Alcoa ) 1974 by NCA, li B. H. MaGowan Jr. and Sons. Call 643-6341. 649-7544. ^ STUART; Yt>u OON'T B. Rag. U S. m. 1 f t h a t ' s w h a t Interior and exterior painting, products. Complete trim. Save BRAND NEW three bedroom HAVE TO BE SCARED I 'M S c a r e d paperhanging. Thirty years good money and get a job done duplex, appliances, wall-to-wall MANCHESTER - Five large Re-cycle your bl-cycle now, during ride-able working condition. All es­ OF TWE LIBRARY^ OF=’.' experience. Four generations. right by local craftsman. Dogs-BIrds-Pets 43 carpeting, private driveway Manchester Honda’s SUMMER RE­ Financing available. Roger G. rooms, second floor, appliances timates are up to MUnchester Hon­ Free estimates. Fully insured. and basement.Security, $250 included, basement storage, CYCLING SALE. Get up to fifty da, and trade in allowances are sub­ Publi 643-7361. Barrett, Webster Lane, Bolton, BOARDING only cats (must be monthly. Frechette & Martin 649-0822. garage. $185 monthly. Amedy . dollars for your old pedal-pusher, no ject to ride-ability and condition of .1 altered and innoculated). Realtors, 646-4144. Realty, Realtors, 875-6283. u h COLLEGE PAINTERS - Five Fenros Cate^, established matter what make, model, or style, your bike. All bikes taken in trade years experience. Save 30-60%. ROOFING-Installation and 1952. 875-9131. By appointment. just as long as It’s all there. That will be donated by Manchester Hon­ repairs, gutters, storm win­ 635 CENTER STREET - 4 1/2 Appraisals. Peter Tilley, 742- room Townhouse, all means seat, handlebars, wheels, da to charity. Sale ends June 30, 6117, (toll free) after 4:30. dows, doors. Experienced FREE - German Shepherd- STEVE CANYON BY MILTON CANIFF quality workmanship. Fully in­ appliances, fully carpeted, two frame, chain and pedals, and In 1974. Labrador spayed six-month old VILLAGER air-conditioners, neat, hot CEILINGS, inside painting, sured. Free estimates. dog. Call after 4 p.m., 643-2838. water, storage and parking, on papering, floor sanding- Reasonable prices. Rick APARTMENTS bus line, $225 monthly. Charles DON'T FRET, POTTY. /Meanwhile.., wh-why- ah Burnett, 646-3005. POMERANIANS, all colors, WHAT IF YOU HAD WON w e l l ; MRS. reiinishing (specializing in Ponticelli, 646-0800, 649-9644. OUT OVER SUMMER-THEN older floors). John Verfaille, poodles, apricot toy-minature, Two-Bedroom townhouses. Available July 15th. WILL YOU y / ,, CANYON... peke-a-poos; Siberian husky Fireplace. Wallrto-wall 'fit . n ± LEARNED STEVE HAP 646-5750, 872-2222. Manchester Honda ^ ENTERED A MONA-STERY Heating-Plumbing 35 and White German Shepherds. carpeting. Two air- MODERN Three-room first- THE BORN LOSER BY ART SANSOM J. P. LEWIS & SON - Custom Willimantic, 487-0944. conditioners, appliances, heat floor apartment, electric stove 'F 24 Adams St. Manchester decorating. Interior painting. LYNN’S PLUMBING - and hot water. Tiled bath. No and refrigerator, heat, hot TWO - AKC, male honey-color Paper hanging. New Ceilings. Repairs, remodeling, new con­ pets. water, electricity, parking. IT, DEAR, I WAVlgP THAT...lH((l)()l)UUOuO«Ul«)(;uouOPS Remodeling. Exterior painting. struction. Water pumps. Cocker Spaniel pups to a coun­ Responsible adults only. $200 a ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★ oF?v Gutters and leaders. Carpentry. French spoken also. 8^-7263. try home with children. $85. month. Call 649-2865. Ay each but would prefer to sell as Call 649-7620 Fully insured. For estimate call 1973 BARRACUDA - Excellent 649-9658. BOTTI Heating and Plumbing a pair. 742-7536. Business lor Rent 55 — Prompt, courteous service. Manchester □ AUTOMOTIVE condition, low mileage. Call 649-8807 between 4 and 7 p.m. DOES YOUR house need pain­ Call 643-1496. COUNTRY HOME needed for HOMESTEAD PARK VILLAGE medium size crossbreed dog, TWO BEDROOM - luxury OFFICES AVAILABLE Autos For Sale 61 ting? We do all types of exterior By Raymond F. Damato 1970 Chevy Malibu, power work. Free estimates. 872-3357. SEWERLINES, sink lines, male, innoculated. No charge. Townhouse, located in Highland 3-room suite. Main Street cleaned with electric cutters, 289-6184. Park section of Manchester, New one and Two bedroom location. Inquire NEED CAR? Credit bad? steering, automatic, low by professionals. McKinney wooded and private. For infor­ mileage, mechanically TEACHER - Experienced Townhouses. GLENNErS MEN SHOP Bankrupt? Repossessed? excellent, damaged fender and exterior painter, spray painting Bros. Sewer Disposal Com­ FREE TO good home, female mation, call 646-1616 or 649- Honest Douglas accepts lowest bird dog. Mother Brittny, A Heat or phone 643-8022 bumper. $1,000 or best offer. 1- a speciality. Reasonable rates. pany, 643-5308. 5295. * Appliances down, smallest payments. 456-1882. THE FLINTSTONES Phone 649-5873. Free estimates. father German Shorthair. 646- A Carpeting Douglas Motors, 345 Main. in-- BY HANA-BARBERA NO JOB too small, toilet 0633. TWO bedrooms in small brand ★ Air-con­ rwTQV TWO-room office and waiting 1974 by NLA Inc. T U fltq US Pjt OH new building. Perfect location. ditioning SAAB, 95, station wagon, 1969, *’-11 Building-Contracting 33 repairs, plugged drains, kitchen AUTO INSURANCE - compare O A GIVb B GET O.K. Livestock 44 Silver Lane, East Hartford. * Full b ase­ room. House & Hale Building, V-4 engine, 67,000 miles, radials ALLEY OOP faucets replaced, repaired, rec 953 Main Street, Call 643-48W. our low rates. For a telepnone plus two new snows on rims. BY V.T. HAMLIN P B 3 & V O U T O F X'LL G O - rooms, bathroom remodeling, Electric kitchen, patio, ment quotation call Mr. Dolin at 646- OH, MASONRY - All types, ★ Patio $900. 649-4349 after 4. MGS* HERE, 3 U T TH E IR heat modernization, etc. Free ROLLING ACRES - Boarding carpeting, $220. Phone 568-3740. 6050. I n e v e r \ THEN WHAT \ I WANTED T'SEE IF THE PRISONER HAS THEN HE KNOWS TOO FOR fieldstone, brick, concrete. OFFICE - Ground floor, ap­ CAME HERE j WERE TOU ) TH' GENERAL WILL D A Y IS , Free estimates, after 5 p.m., estimates gladly given. M & M space, box stalls, show ring. Model Open Daily PETERS English riding^lessons. Instruc­ 12 Noon ’til 8 p.m. proximately 12x18, private 1971 VOLKSWAGEN Squareback TO S P Y ------you COMING/... 643-1870 or 644-2975 Plumbing & Heating, 649-2871. lavatory and closet. Heat, air- SAVE - Buy rebuilt engines ON VOU! SAKE tor nas Pony CJIub and Potomac MANCHESTER - Unusual one- Directions: End of Congress from Lloyd’s Auto Parts, 191 in excellent shape.New tires background. Call 649-3353. bedroom Townhouse, includes conditioning and parking in­ and battery. One owner. Phone new to n H. Smith & Sons - TOWNE Plumbing Service, Street off West Middle Tpke. cluded. Lappen Building, 164 Center Street. Open 7 days. 643- '■ 'T V repairs, alterations, vanity heat, appliances, carpeting, full 1558. 649-0529. Remodeling, repairing, ad­ private basement, patio, en­ PAUL W. DOUGAN, East Center Street. 649-5261. ditions, rec rooms, porches and cabinets a specialty. Call to Boats-Accessorles 45 8:30 a.m., 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. 649- trances. $215 per month. Paul Realtor JUNK CARS removed free. 1966 RAMBLER American, roofing. No job too small. Call W. Dougan, Realtor, 643-4535, SMALL BUSINESS space for 649-3144. 4056. 15’ O’DAY JAVELIN with 646-6363 646-1021 Call Joey, Tolland Auto Body. two-door sedan, automatic trailer, good condition, ready to 646-1021. 643-4535 store or office. Phone 643-6441. 528-1990. transmission, good tires, $250. 0-0 CARPENTRY - Repairs, FRANK SCOTELLA Plumbing, sail away, $1,050. 649-0630 after Phone 649-1448. 3. o o remodeling, additions, roofing. repairs and remodeling, THREE rooms, second floor, 1973 HONDA Civic, hatchback, Call David Patria, South Wind­ specialize in hot water heaters. heat and appliances, available MANCHESTER - Five good under waranty, must sell, $2,- Motorcycles-BIcycles 64 sor, 644-1796. ' Prompt service on emergency. Sporting Goods 46 size rooms, second floor, 450. After 5 p.m, 646-6483. July 1st. One month’s security DOWNTOWN 6-11 643-71)24. required. $145 monthly. Cen­ appliances included, carpeting, LOW COST motorcycle In­ Q.O WES ROBBINS carpentry SET OF Weights to 100 pounds. ample storage, middle-aged 1969 FORD-LTD, 4-door, surance, immediate binding. Good condition. $15. Phone 647- trally located. No pets,. 646- MAIN STREET remodeling specialist. Ad­ Flooring 36 1098. couple preferred. Handy to economy V-8, power steering, See us for your needs, Crockett WIN AT BRIDGE ditions, rec rooms, dormers, 9605 after 3 p.m. buses aiid shopping. $185 OFFICE automatic transmission, dean, Agency, 643-1577. MR. ABERNATHY built-ins, bathrooms, kitchens, FLOOR Sanding-Refinishing, MANCHESTER Large three or monthly. Amedy Realty, one owner.644-2942. BY ROLSTON JONES and FRANK RIDGEWAY 649-3446. (specializing in older floors). Garden Products 47 Realtors, 875-6283. four bedroom apartment, on • Free Parking. L ^ than $2 HARLEY-Davidson - Motor- V O U R . > Ceilings and inside painting. convenient quiet street. Large 1969 CHEVROLET Station ^cles, parts and accessories. THANKS, DUPLE)^ BUT ^ ,. .AND IN THE SECOND RANEL, V < F C H R D J !? a a ; « 4 square foot Includes heat. EVENING F)APeR, HAVEN^T YOU FORGOTTEN North-South lose ‘blame’ tiff LEON Cieszynski builder - new John Verfaille, 646-5750, 872- WHEEL HORSE RDINilMMiERi' attic, private cellar, first floor. ROCKVILLE - Two rooms, wagon, 9passenger with trailer Expert service. Harley- J THE FUNNY BEAR CHASES The bidding has been: 11 2 2 2 2 . AAR. A B ER N A T H Y . gOYiETHING? J------y homes custom built, 7 hp electric 12 volt starting 26” Lease and security. Phone 649- heat, lights, appliances, $33 hitch. Asking $850. 742-9092. Davidson Sales, 49 Park Street, THE AAAN OVER THE FENCE „ , remodeled, additions, rec mower. Serviced, delivered, ready to 1924 or 643-5144 days. weekly. Ellington, five room Hartford. 247-9774. West North East South rooms, garages, kitchens mow. duplex rent with option to buy, • Will Redecorate to suit. 1971 SUPER BEETLE - 14 Double Pass ? remodeled, bath tile, cement SPECIAL $489 • E-Z T«rma $225. monthly, yard, cellar. Excellent condition. $1,500. MOTORCYCLE Insurance - You, South, hold: work. Steps, dormers. Residen­ STICKELS ROCKVILLE - Four rooms, Phone 872-0359, 7:30 p.m. to Phone 742-8289. Lowest rates a v a ila b le . Call Inability to see the forest If East didn’t ruff. West’s 4 6S4?J 7432 4AQ9743 tial or commercial. Call 649- □ MISC. FOR SALE Route 83, Vernon 643-0787 redecorated, first floor, securi­ 9:30 p.m. Immediate binding. Prompt NORTH 11 What do you do now? 4291. ______Open NItee 'III 9 ty. no pets. $135. Phone 643- MR.MATRICK 1964 VOLKSWAGEN sedan, Claim service. Call Clarke In­ A A J 4 because of all the trees is a best play would be to lead a common fault of many bridge third club. East would ruff; A—Bid three hearts. Your dis­ 9743. THREE LARGE rooms,,stove, sunroof, rebuilt engine^ great surance Agency, 643-1126. ?1095 tribution and seven high-card Articles tor Sale 41 refrigerator, heat, hot water, for Dune buggy. Best offer. 644- players. South would overruff and CARPENTRY - Porches, gar­ Antiques 46 ,. ♦AKJIO points cail for a strong bid. Inci­ MANCHESTER - New deluxe near Center. $45 weekly. 9004. ' ♦K73 North wanted to know why draw trumps. Then he would ages, additions, bathrooms, DINING ROOM set, $95; coffee 64$-1700 EXPERT bicycle repairs, all dentally, this particular jump is kitchens, houses, repairs. Free two-bedroom Townhouses. 11/2 Security. 647-1145, 649-6896. makes, models and speeds. WEST EAST South made such a light vul­ lose the diamond finesse but table $15; china cabinet, $40; WANTED Antiou 1972 PLYMOUTH - Fury III, JONES <»• nerable opening bid. South would not have to take a not an absolute force. estimates. Small jobs. Stephen square oak table $35. All in good glass, pewter, oil paintings, or baths, includes heat, Peugeot, Raleigh dealers, Rl(%EWAy 47 4863 Martin, 646-7295. appliances, carpeting, full 4'/2 ROOM Duplex, newer, body man special, good Manchester Bicycle Shop, 649- TK8 ?J76432 wanted to know why North heart finesse because dum­ TODAY’S QUESTION condition. 872-6j486 anytime. other antique items. R. mechanical condition, can be hadn’t doubled four clubs and my’s fourth diamond would West bids three spades. North Hardison, 643-8709. private basement. $275 per soundproofed, appliances, gar­ 2098. ♦ 532 4 Q97 month. Paul W. Dougan, age, laundry room, heat, prime Resort Property driven as is. One grand. Call WINTHROP BY DICK CAVALLI b i taken a sure profit. Neither be a parking place for the and East pass. What do you do TIMOTHY J. CONNELLY FULL SIZE Professional elec­ 4AQJ10985 Carpentry and general contrac­ Realtor, 643-4535, 646-1021. location, no pets, I references. For Rent 56 649-3173. SOUTH (D) one noticed that South had a heart queen. now? tric accordian. Seven tone Wanted to Buy 49 HANDLE BARS - factory ting. Residential and commer­ $205. 649-4138. cinch way to make his game. (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.) tabs,s. $300 firm. Phone 643- seconds all styles, $5. each. WHAT I NEED IS V 4 KQ10952 Answer Tomorrow cial. Whether it be a small FIVE modern rooms, new CAPE COD - Chatham, D^TSUN 510,1972,4-speed, low Connecticut Cycle Accessories, A G O O D ^ f AQ West opened the ace of 0188 after 6 p.m. CASH FOR antique furniture, Homes tor Rent 54 available weekly during July, mileage, excellent condition. clubs and continued with the repair job, a custom built home clocks, paintings, pewter, stove, refrigerator, carpeting, 316 Hartford Road. RETORT WRITER, ♦ 864 Answer to Previous Puzzle electricity, parking, vara. Good two-bedroom, cottage, near 5^-2830 after 4 p.m. queen. The king was played or anything in between, call 646- YAMAHA CR-700 stereo glass, lamps. Call anytime. 643- Manchester. 4 6 2 Olio 1379. neighborhood, $230. Phone 649- MANCHESTER - Four room beaches. Phone 643-1073. from dummy. East ruffed and £ c receiver, $330 new. Three 6535. North-South vulnerable Z. 8350. home, immaculate, fully fur­ YAMAHA, 1973, TX-750, 2,700 led back a heart whereupdn C O L. i [e I months old, sacrifice at $260. D 1 n Ig I nished. modern, garage. Subur­ LAKE WINNEPAUSAKEE - South had to lose a finesse in ACROSS DOWN A STEPS sidewalks, stone walls, 1970 SAAB-95 station wagon, V- miles, excellent showroom con­ West North East South B 5" Phone 1-429-5802. ban location. No pets. No Waterfront cottage, sleeps six. that suit and one in diamonds fireplaces, flagstone terraces, BOLTON - Large one-bedroom 4 engine, newly rebuilt dition, extras. Call 649-9842 U 1 Deep-toned 1 Overturns Y 31 concrete repairs, inside and apartment, quiet neighborhood, children. $275 monthly. Lease, All utilities furnished. Call 1- transmission and new brakes, evenings. 44 P a s s P a s s to wind up one trick short. 1 SPINET - Musette- saxhorn 2 W estern outside. Reasonably priced. □ RENTALS carpeting, electric kitchen, references. Hayes Corporation, 603-524-4948 or write Mrs. 57,000 miles, good running con­ 5 Venturesome L A c stale E 643-0851. mahogany case., $475. good con­ fireplace, sundeck. References 646-0131. Yolanda Dinan, P.O. Box 4, dition. $1,100 firm. 742-7536. Campers-Trallers All South had to do was not 9 Light blow _ T H dition. Phone 649-2146. O p en in g le a d —4 A 3 Fabulous _ £ . N e A required. $195 momthly. 643- Lakeport, N.H. 03246. Mobile Homes 65 to play dummy’s king of clubs 12 B rain British king A T T T MASONRY WORK - Brick, Rooms tor Rent 52 5983. MANCHESTER - four room 1970 CHEVROLET IMPALA, 4- when he did. If East ruffed p assage « 4 Sphere of E E X R S DARK, RICH loam, 5 yards, 13 T urkish H N G E l O 1 house plus laundry room, large MISQUAMICUT - R.I. - Four the second cliib to lead a action bi A T p f F T block and stone. New work and door, rebuilt engine, new 1967 APACHE Hardtop E D E a Il I Is Ip 1 T E $27.90^1us tax. Also sand, FURNISHED bedroom, share 4 PIOC By Oswald & James Jacoby heart South would win; draw reg im en t 5 B aseball fLl g repairs, reasonable prices. Call riil enclosed porch and garage, rooms, heated, families only, brakes, shocks and muffler, Camper, sleeps elight, built-in 14 P u b brew IM 3 s E SI IT E N E T 643-9508. stone, ^avel, pool and patio 1/2 room apartment, Bolton, no heat included, security deposit, walking distance to beach, $185 power brakes, power steering, heater, stove, sink, ice-box, fc-ii CAIALU trumps and discard his queen club sand. 643-9504. security, no lease. Will take low of hearts on that nice club 15 Holy Land 6 Dickens 24 Im pudent 40 Cuban city APARTMENT $275 per month. 646-1379 after 6 per week. 643-0491. air-conditioned. Asking $1,1%. other extras, $795, 647-li^. 17 Three limes Tw ist 25 A m erica 43 M usteline ANY TYPE Carpentry and weekly rent. Call 646-7378 or p.m. Call 649-4677. BY FRANK O’NEAL king. (comb, form) ALUMINUM sheets used as 643-7380. RENTAL OFnCE 7 N arrow (ab.) m am m al masonry work, additions and GIANT’S NECK Heights - Next 18 G leam 26 C ertain 45 OL’erm atcbes printing plates, .007 thick, PLAZA HOMES - 1348 Wilbur lassageway remodeling. Free estimates. A. We have a large variety of BRAND NEW Condominium, beach to Rocky Neck. Cottage 1971 BUICK Estate 9 passenger Cross. Highway, Berlin ’Turti- OKA^ MEN. 'THIS IS. IME WINNER WILL BE 'THE OBJECT IS., JO STREAK FROM HERE 19 E xperienced 8 ^als bedding 46 B urrow er 23x32”. 25 cents each or 5 for $1. 21 C ulm ination THOMPSON HOUSE, fur­ deluxe one and two-bedroom three bedrooms, living room, sleeps seven. $130 weekly. wagon, loaded with extras, pike, Berlin, Ck)nn. “(Quality m UTIMAT£TB12-26-38-49 18 Con 46 Wrapped 7BDIsogrecm«n 9 5- 9 - ^ 5 4 / 'fe 19 Of 49 Be 79 Your 62-68-81-85V 53 Poem and fill. George H. Griffing, LADIES ONLY - Furnished (^51-76-79-86 38 40 41 appliances, clothes dryer, heat building of 30,000 square feet, and another building of snow tires. $125 or best offer. sleeps 4, excellent condition. 20 Lucky 50 In 80 From 54 Of the sea RooHng-SIdIng-ChImney 34 Inc., 742-7886. LEO AQUARIUS rooms for rent, completely fur­ included, full basement and 649-8933. $650. Phone 649-6889. 21 Help 51 Answer 81 Facts 56 Ignited ■ 36,000 squdre feet. Shipping and receiving docks. JAN. 20 42 43 44 45 nished with all utilities in­ patio. One month deposit 22 Letters 52 Moy 62 Savings 57 Sea eagle $1.25 per square foot. Contact Mr. Keough: 23 Your 53 Pretend 83 Is R(X)FING, SIDING, gutters, LOAM, topsoil, fill, gravel for cluded, convenient to bus line, required. No pets. $195 per 1973 OPEL MANTA, automatic 1968 APACHE EAGLE tent . ^ —AUG. 22 eel. It 58 A natom ical 48 49 50 SI awnings, lighting complete 24 An 54 Your 84 Apparent 46 47 sale. Excavating, septic, sewer community kitchen and bath. month. Call 644-2427. transmission, sunroof,, camper, sleeps ' four. Asking 2- 8-14-28 25 Sociol 55 Necessitate 85 Stroight 3- 6 -1 9 -2 2 /0 tissue protection. Expert service. work. Latulippe Brothers, Inc., Call after 4 p.m., 644-0383. IONA COMPANY excellent condition, low $450. Phone 6464)355. .g/32-43-56 26 Advice 56 Favor 86 Problems 27-61-78 ' 59 A bstract 5$ 54 55 27 Con 57 Thrilling h Lowest possible prices. All 646-5114, 742-9477. VIRGO 87 To PISCES being FOUR ROOM renovated apart­ mileage. Phone 643-2938 after 6 28 Grant 58 Up 88 To 56 57 58 work guaranteed. Insured- REGENT STREET, MANCHESTER AUG. 22 ret. If 9^.. 60 M easure of FURNISHED EFFICIENCY ment, appliances, heat, p.m. 1970 INVADER - 4 rooms, w-w 29 Aren't 59 But 89 Be paper budget terms. E. Steve Pearl, LOAM FOR Sale - Sand and apartment, $130 includes parking, central location, 643-2111 carpeting, air-conditioning, 30 In 60 Some 90 Happen MAR. 20 59 60 t1 Beacon Lightning Protection 61 EEur uropean 11 gravel delivered. Phone 646- parkirig, heat, hot water and security, $190 monthly. 649- 1969 FIAT SPYDER, Phone 649- kitchen appliances, 37’ porch. 1-25-33-59 (y)G ooa 23-39-44-5(10 region 3109. jj64-77-80jaHn ^ H jA Jvtrse Company, 643-5465. gas. Security deposit. 649-4454. 3340. 1590 after 5 p.m. No entry fee. 429-7536. 69-7tV83j4'^ (NEWSPAPErt ENTERPRISE ASSN ) ' r l

PAGE EIGHTEEN - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. Manchester. Conn.. Tues., June 11. 1974 Police Report Obituaries Bentley School \ climbing the poles-holding up (Continued from Page One) MANCHESTER Police were on the alert but no further reports of prowling the netting over the Hartman The following resignations were ap- A white male with long, blond school budget was adopted by the Board of hair, in his late teens or early came in. , Tobacco ( i . fields off Burnham Vinton Dead; proved: St. From the poles the youths Education, there would be adjustments Mrs. Hollace Brooks, a Unit A teacher twenties, was reported in T lEtitntnn within the budget because of certain items different parte of town Monday Other police action included: leap into the nettiog leaving at the Manchester Green School, has been large holes and destroying the Struck by Car which were not yet settled. He referred to accepted at the University of Connecticut night and this morning • Kirk E. Owen, 19, of 83D MANCHESTER, CONN., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 1974 - VOL. XCIII, No. 215 teachers’ salaries as one item. prowling. Rachel Rd. was charged with plants beneath, according to Manchester—A City of Village Charm Law School. She has taught in the school John Banas, company I'O R'i'v i*\(;i<:s — r w o s e c t io n s , In response to an accusation that the system for four years. At 10 p.m. Monday, a woman breach of peace Monday at PRICE: FII-TEEN CENTS Arthur Vinton, 82, of Rt. 31, celebration in 1962. He also was superintendent. Police are in­ Doard was neglecting the children’s safety Eugene Gordon, teacher/dlrector of the on Congress St. heard footsteps 11:45 p.m. on Center St. after he Coventry, died last night at a member of the School in neglecting the playground. School in her apartment and called out was charged with runningj the vestigating. 11:28 of injuries suffered when Building Committee at one Head Start program this past year, is Superintendent James Kennedy said resigning for personal reasons. to her roommate thinking it light at Broad St. He is he was struck by a car earlier time, and a former trustee of COVENTRY “What is safety is what we’re using the Louis Saloom, presently on leave of was her. But the person ran out scheduled to appear in Circuit in the evening. the Second Congregational money for, fire safety.’’ of the apartment. She and a Court 12 on June 24. Stanley R. Morton, 19, of Mt. Coventry Police said Vinton Church of North Coventry. absence and former principal of Nathan Vernon Apartments, Vernon, Although the PTA members finally left Hale School for three years, has accepted neighbor then saw two youths • Paul J. Kirol, 20, of East was crossing Rt. 31 and was Born May 1, 1892 in North with little satisfaction, it was later voted running through their Hartford was charged with dis­ was charged with illegal con­ struck by a car driven by James a position as coordinator of elementary in­ trol of controlled substance President in Egypt Coventry, he, grauated from that the administration apply for a state structional program in the Meriden public backyarrds One had a T-shirt orderly conduct Monday at J. Misiek, 19, of East Hartford. Rockville High School and grant for resurfacing the playground at and long, blond hair. 11:05 p.m. after urinating on Monday night by Coventry schools. Police. ' Police said Vinton w a r return­ Morse Business College and Bentley School, and report to the Board of 'At 11 p.m. Monday, a person Fairfield St. Court is June 24. ing from attending a meeting taught in the local school The board expressed regret at losing He is scheduled to appear in Education on terms of state reimburse­ Saloom from the administration, but . fitting this description was seen • A group of about 30 youths at the firehouse which is across system for two years. He ment. looking into several apartments were at the upper pond of Case Circuit Court 12, Manchester, the street from his home. wished him luCk in the fulfillment of his July 1. served with the Army overseas In an updated report of the physical position. along Sycamore Lane. When a Mountain Monday afternoon The accident happened at during World War I. VERNON education and athletic program in the Leaves of absence were granted to: resident asked what he was when police were called to the 9:55 p.m. Vinton was taken to For many years, he operated A car being driven by' On Peace Journey ^ Manchester schools, Davis Wiggin, who is Mrs. Mary Jane Biase, a sixth grade doing, he said he was looking scene. ’There were no arrests Manchester Memorial a grocery store across from the Kathleen Murphy of Mt. Vernon • director of the department of physical teacher at Keeney St. School, for a mater­ for his car. ’Then he left the although police advised the Hospital. The accident is still North Coventry firehouse, and Dr., Vernon jumped when the education and athletics, said that with the nity leave for the 1974-75 school year. area. youths they were on private CAIRO (UPI) — President Nixon, riding under investigation. also operated several types of driver accidentally hit the gas “I am fully aware that you share with increased athletic program for girls, the Mrs. Nancy Cion, a third grade teacher At 1:27 a.m. today, a woman property. TTie ponds and water­ side-by-side with E g y p ti^ President crowd. “It is indeed a great day for us,” Mr. Vinton was treasurer of businesses in Coventry over the on Birch St. reported seeing a fall are not part of the Case pedal instead of the brake, Ver- ^ me the belief that this is a unique moment, Sadat replied. program probably now ranks with any at Bowers School, for a maternity leave non police said. Anwar Sadat, today began five nation a major turning point which should not be the South Coventry Water Co. years. similar program in the state. With the pre­ youth in his late teens with long Mountain purchase by the town A roaring cheer from a quarter of a for the 1974-75 school year. ’The car struck the front of the “journey for peace” Mideast trip to the lost—but rather grasped with vigilance, and licensed voting machine He is survived by his wife, sent setup, girls can now compete for hair step onto her back porch. from Wells and Robert Den­ million at the airport echoed down the Mrs. Miriam Kellsey, a third grade Hops and Schnapps Package . cheers of 2 million Arabs. persistence and dedication—to build an en­ mechanic for the Town of Mrs. Zoetje Schell Vinton; a .league standings, said Wiggin. She ask^, through the bedroom nison and their sister, Mrs. tree-lined parade route into Cairo where teacher at Waddell, for medical reasons Store on Rt. 30 causing damage In a scene of friendship between the two durable and honorable .peace.” Coventry granddaughter, Mrs. Kathy After many hours of discussion and window, who it was, and the Dorothy Beach of West Hart­ Interibr Ministry police headquarters es­ Active for many years in for the 1974-75 school year. to the door and the window. No - leaders that would have seemed a dream Nixon shook Sadat’s hand and after Ulm of Ellington; and several workshops prior to Monday’s meeting, prowler took off running east ford. six months ago, Sadat shook Nixon’s hand timated at least 2 million persons Coventry’s civic affairs, he nieces and nephews. A conditional leave of absence granted police action was taken. exchanging humorous remarks away from John Yavis, finance committee chairman, in May to Mrs. Mary Ann Steinnecker was through the back yards. • Youths age 10 to 12 are as he got off the Spirit of ’76 jet. The two ntustered with such banners as “May served as a selectman for 27 Memorial service will be ELLINGTON the microphone, he replied: presented the final revised proposed 1974- rescinded as the leave was no longer men then climbed into an open car and Allah Bless Nixon” and chants of “Nix­ years, for two sessions in the Saturday at 2 p.m. at Second Edmund Gallagher, 30, of 127 - “You have spoken of the fact that we on...Nix-on.” 75 school budget of $12,100,000 which was necessary. She will return in the fall. rode into Cairo, waving to the vast throng. stend here at a moment of time and State Legislature and as a Congregational Church. The Prospect St., Rockville, was There was not a word about Watergate adopted by the board. The board authorized Dr. Kennedy to es­ Nixon’s first official action in Arab history which could well be remembered justice of the peace. Rev. Robert Bechtold, pastor, arrested Monday night on a and Secretary of State Hery A. Kissinger’s Paul Greenburg, building and sites tablish a bank account and appoint a custo­ territory was a courtesy call on Sadat and centuries from now as one of thosc/great He organized the North will officiate. Burial will be at warrant issued by Circuit Court resignation threat Tuesday was put in the chairman, said three bids had been opened dian of funds for the K i^ McGugan his wife, followed by the first business turning points which affect mankind for Coventry Volunteer Fire the convenince of the family. Most A&P Stores 12 charging him with third- background of one of the largest public for renovations at Bennet Junior High Memorial Fund. Kinv, a student of the conference between the two leaders. Department and served as its The Holmes Funeral Home, degree asssault. the better. It has been too long between gatherings ever for a U.S. President. School. The low bid was from the Ray special education class at Keeney St. In a speech from the balcony of Koubbeh our countries a period of mis- chief for seven years. He was a 400 Main St., Manchester, is in State Police said the arrest! The Star Spangled Banner blared forth Adler Co. Inc. from Ridgefield with a bid School, died May 7. As of May 24, there Palace—the 400-room mansion that will be understandng.” charter member of the Cbnnec- charge of arrangements. Closed by Strike was made in connection with as Nixon arrived and American flags were of $2,215,310. The estimated cost was $2,- was a total of $704.50 in the fund. Nixon’s home during his visit— Sadat told “Well, this is a great day,” Nixon told ticut Fire Marshals’ Associa­ There are no caliing hours. the investigation of an incident 1 everywhere in a country that only a few 771,000 as approved in last November’s Money from the fund is to be used to his guest: Sadat as he glimpsed the huge welcoming tion and a member of the The family suggests that any that occurred at Wayside Lodge J months ago had no diplomatic relations referendum. No bids will be awarded until provide services or purchase supplies and Connecticut Fire Chiefs’ memorial contributions may be I'nilecl Press Inlernational The union and company are in Ellington on May 29. ’The with the United States and for decades had after the bid opening on the filing Junior equipment that would be of benefit to the Association. made to the Memorial Fund of Most A&P stores in western reportedly about $15 a week complainant was David Sher­ been closely aligned with the Soviet Union. High Schooi project. children in that class, and which would be Mr. Vinton was chairman of the Second Congregational New England have been shut apart but the company wants to man of Wayside Lodge, police Egyptians Cheer President Nixon Sadat, an admirer of Nixon and In other business, the board approved over and above those regularly provided the town’s 250th anniversary Church of Coventry. down by a strike of some 2,200 extend the present contract said. Kissinger for their efforts to bring peace several personnel actions. by the Board of Education. Transit Subsidy Plan union workers in a wage dis­ with the new wage levels to the Gallagher was released on his • An estimated two million people lined arrival as a part of his tour of Middle as a motorcade winds through the to the Mideast, led his guest down a red pute. fall of 1975. promise to appear in Circuit the streets of Cairo today to greet East nations. The throng cheers him carpet, past dozens of smiling Egyptian The chain Monday shut down Court 12, Rockville, July 2. streets en route to Koubbeh Palace. President Richard Nixon on his and, Egyptian President And war Sadat (UPI photo) Announced by Meskill officials and military officials who led the Robert H. Murray ' Salvatore Valvo 67 of its 79 stores in the region. country’s fight in the October war and into Robert H. Murray, 38, of Salvatore Valvo, 63, of A spokesman for Local 10 of HARTFORD (UPI) - Gov. Thomas J. • a special VIP lounge built especially for Hartford, former executive Carlyle~Johnson the Amalgamated Meatcutters needs of towns and regons, in effect taking Wethersfield died Monday at a Meskill today announced the formation of this trip. assistant to Hartford Mayor and Butcher Workmen of North ,, _ NOTICE d^ision-making from local governments private hospital in (Continued from Page One) pany recently, said he assumed the charge 8iven that the annual meeting of the Eighth five transit districts and pledged to double and regipnal agencies. Sadat organized a 125-car motorcade to George Athansotj, died Monday Wethersfield. He was the America, AFL-CIO, termed the show Nixon off to the throng that jammed Carlyle-Johnson will be a much better will be dropped now that the strike is over. Utilities Dwtrict of Manchester, Conn., will be held Wednesdav Referendum for $1.4 Million the state’s financial commitment and, Terming the program a "firm founda­ at St. Francis Hospital, Hart­ brother of Sebastian Valvo of strike, voted on Sunday, 100 per downtown Cairo and then plann^ a state place to work.’’ The strike, which entered itsT3th week manage “basic level” transit service tion on which to build an effective transit ford. He was the brother of Manchester. cent succesful. j Bentliv’