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Hartford Courant from Hartford, Connecticut • 4

Publication:
Hartford Couranti
Location:
Hartford, Connecticut
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE HARTFORD COURANT: Me-tfay, May tion Schlichting, all of Ellington; Plax Corp. To Open .1 70 Prisoners To Ask Nov Plant in Ohio CINCINNATI -Plax Corp. Mercy Releases Today Bloomfield, makers and a brother, Donald of Broad Carl Warren of WOR and W0R-' ook' The funeral will be held Tv Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Grace Epis- The elder Weidenhammcr was! Pal Bl0ad Brook- The also orchestral musician in Con-j Rv fct" W1 1 necticut and New York, He plaved wlllJe Wind-the violin in the Bridgeport tcry. I riends may Connecticut Symphony orches- CitJ he J- Bassingcr Fu-" i noral Home.

29 Pleasant St. plastic containers, plans to build $1,250,000 plant in nearby By GERALD J. DEMEUSY I aded as a woman servant In Mrs. Seventy prison inmates, two of Wegner's home before the rob-them women, will present peti- bery-slaying. linne (nr oarlu rrlnyc tn lIlP Annfhnp tiller.

arpnmnlif whn Sharronville. F. P. McGehan, Phoenix Mutual Executive, Dies Frederick P. McGehan, 48.

assistant purchasing agent of Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance died Sunday evening in St. Francis Hospital. He lived at 620 Bloomfield Windsor. The firm announced the move Saturday night and said produc- stele Pardons Board at State Pris-j will appear before the board this Services will be held here Tues-1 (Wai'dl01'sc, from 2 day I 4 an( 7 to 9 p.m. TAKL'SHIRO HATTORI '1 tRXEST WALLACE 11, .11..

A tion at the 60.000-square foot on I morning is John Petotabella, of nlant will siart lator thi vpar it Those seeking mercy, the only Providence, R. serving a life TOKYO (AP) Ex-Col. Taku-' "dlwce OI -apieion will employ up to 100 persons. Plax, owned by Monsanto died Sunday morning in grounds upon which the board can; term for a 1952 robbery-slaying commute sentences and pardon in Berlin. He and the late William convictions, will address the board, J.

Lorain, executed three years in person or through paid coun-' ago, were arrested in connection Hattori, a top strategist in 1t was horn in Hartford. Oft. the oM Imnnrial i opnnglieia. He W3S born sel. with the killing after State Police 10 Lifers Included in the unusually heavy docket of cases are 10 men serving life terms for murder.

Those include Vincent McBrien of Hartford who shot and killed his sister in 1939. He has spent the ensuing 21 years at Welhersfield and in mental institutions. Also seeking mercy will be Robert Rossf of New York who was Chemical Corp. and Emhart Mfg. 1 of Hartford, has other plants at Stonington and Deep River, and Ligonier, Ind.

Richard S. Light, vice president of Plax said Sunday the new plant would not affect Plax operations at either of its two Connecticut plants. He said the new plant would make the same kind of plastic containers that are currently being made at these plants. I 1 f-W" Si "i I traced them through their victim's stolen watch. Killed Husband One of the two inmates of the State Prison for Women who will ask the board for mercy today is Mrs.

Irene D. Annis of Manchester who killed her policeman husband as-Jie slept with a shotgun blast to the' head in 1955. aMrs. Annis drew an eight to 12 year term after she pleaded guilty to the charge of manslaughter. The board will hear the mercy petitions one at a time, then decide the cases during an executive session at the close of the day.

20, 1911. and lived in died Saturday of a cerebral heov North Carolina and livod in five years. He began with Phoenix orrhage. He was 59. the' Hartford area many years.

Mutual 30 years ago and was i Hattori served in 1942 as secre-i He was an Arm' veteran of made assistant purchasing agent tarv to Prime Minister Hideki'World War He was employed five years ago. who was executed by the a liaid for Mercer and Dun- He leaves his wife, Mrs. Doris lies for major war crimes. Later har Car Service. He Clough McGehan; a son.

Fred- he became chief of military oper-i leavcs a stepdaughter, Mrs. Leo erick P. McGehan of Wind- ations at general headquarters. 1 McKicrnao of Hartford; and a or; a daughter, Miss Shirley Mc- After the surrender he was eni-Protner- M. D- Wallace of Smith-Gehan of Windsor; two brothers, ployed by the historical section of ie'd- C.

Funeral services will Philip McGehan of Manchester Gen. Douglas MacArthur's general' be 'ie'd Wednesday at 8:15 a.m. and one out of state; and four headquarters to write a history ofat tne Thomas F. Farley Funeral sisters, Miss Martha McGehan of the Pacific Home. 96 Webster with a Sol- Hartford.

Mrs. Arthur Haake of ADOLPH G. RLTHMAN em'n Requiem Mass in St. Augus-East Hartford and two out of; los ANGELES Calif (UPI) line Cnurc at 9- Burial will be state. Adolph Gerhardt Rutliman.

Soldiers Field. Northwood Funeral services will be held former senior ner of Giman Cemetery, Wilson. Friends may at the F. W. Carmon Funeral Xjcol, and Ruhmarli a call at the funeral home today Home, 6 Poquonock Wind-' publisher, representatives, Tuesday from 2 to 5 and 7 sor.

at a time to be announced. Saturfjav to 9 p.m. Friends may call at the funeral I mui spared from the electric chair by the Pardons Board in 1945. He and his brother, Nicholas Rossi, were convicted of the 1944 killing of Mrs. Hedwig Wegner of Plainville.

Robert Rossi masquer- Weather, Tides GOVERNMENT FORECAST Local: Fair and cool today. High 54 to fiO. Partly cloudy, not horn tonieht from 7 to 9 and GLSTAV P. KAISER Ruthman had worked for several; May Dav Celebrations Put Millions On Parade Tuesday from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 newspapers before becoming asso- Gustav P. Kaiser.

71, of 156 Becker Circle, Wilson, died Sat- usu'6 with the firm in 1919. rmrance. quite as cool tonight. Low in the 40's. Tuesday, considerable cloudiness with a chance of showers and little change in temperature.

High 55 to 60. Connecticut: Fair and cool to- DRUMMING IN THE RAIN: These three members of a Colonial type drum corps covered their drumbeats with plastic sheets to keep them dry in the driving rain that lashed the Veterans of Foreign Wars' Loyalty Day parade through down-town Hartford Sunday. An estimated 10,000 persons marched, while spectators huddled under awnings and umbrellas to watch them go by (Courant Photo by Arthur J. Warmsley). jurday" night in a local convalescent hospital.

He was born in Germany and lived in Wilson 32 years. He leaves a son, Paul Bv ASSOCIATED PRESS Obituary FHILIP WEIDEXHAMMER BRIDGEPORT CP-Philip Wei-denhammer, 82, a former Bridge The Russians marched soldiers. i 1.. William Kaiser of Wilson: and aj i brother and five sisters in Ger- uay xdiuy c.ouuy. inn.

quue tank, an(J rockels througn Moj. cool tonight. consider-1 port health officer and father of I GEORGE H. CAPEWELL a iduiu diiu icicwmuii able cloudiness with a chance r.onrrro Panou-nii en nf im manv. services will be 5 New Building Dedicated Bnnntmiat irA rriAi irOf A i 1 1' a.

jt i Tokyo demonstrators hanged showers and little change in -u St died Saturday ai p.m. ai Sunday a hospital after a gecret Avon. He was the F- w- Harmon Funeral Home, temperature. week's illness. io'oo 6 Poauonock Windsor.

Buri- A 4- W4- Lanniin LI 1 iu.3. urpinmcni or Lommini Weather Bureau Local Weather Report 1 Hartford Conn. My 1, I960 His son, Carlton Weidenham-J ajn and lived in Hartford 35 vear'al will be in Palisado Cemetery. '-tt Ul llclllLld llUdJllCll mer. is known professionally AS it.

a i-ti Winrlcnr Prionrlc mav rail af the President Eisenhower and Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi in effigy. Cubans thronged by the thousands into Havana to hail Prime Minister Fidel Castro. Carnival reigned in Peiping, imp whs a wni'm ai tra it: t-. Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford. funpral nome today and Tuesday! A ncw tw' story building.

The physical medicine and re- lmZZ limmary it. i frntn 2 fn 5 anH 7 in whirli will hniisp pvrianrlpfl rlpnartmunt inrlnrfps Deaths ne leaves ins wue, nirs. Louisej 4' 47 Red China caDita fiarrwr ranpwpll- twn sfprnn: UIA.NM. h. Di.NALLU and occupational tlierapy la-'ii pvamination and treatment T.

(deg. advertised in a speech to the Supreme Soviet last January. Radio Peiping said the Peiping celebration was the biggest and most lively in the city's annals. Red flags, white doves and giant balloons marked the line of march of perhaps 450,000 Hungarians in Budapest. Similar displays were put on in ether Red nations.

Poland's Communist party boss, Wladyslaw Gomulka, held out hope for higher living standards in a speech to almost 100.000 persons in Warsaw, but declared greater investments first must ba made to expand the Polish economy. From the Vatican, Pope John XXIII broadcast a speech marking not the labor day but the Roman Catholic feast day of St. Joseph, the artisan. The pontiff rebuked communism "mistaken ideologies that on 30 oi 2T9 29i! 'In these and other cities, mil- D'LLLnn; NkT.H ml Earl C. Spring of Secret Lake! Dianne Kawa DjNallo, 13-year-cilities and an enlarged central rnoM crnnm PXprcl lTlTZ i.

Broadview Terrace, dauahter of Mr.i-,j rimmiitor nt Air nnJ utrc contror deDartment. was dedicat- x-Highast Temp. 51 al 12:50 a.m. lionS turned Otlt Sunday to Cele- and Mrs. Francis OiNallo.

Funeral f- c. rooms. Waiting room for patients x-Lowest Temo. 46 at 4 00 m. r-Mean Temp.

Uldie inay ua. ervice will be held Wednesday at i Stepdaughter. MISS LOUl.se hnrilll rranCLS UlAailO 01 tM Bfoaaview puuuc. ci i. oi.riaiiv.is jiusiji- and enlarged facilities for hydro- a.m.

from the Rose Hill Funeral, Hartford- bi tiavpni Mr anH i Terrare. dipd Saturday at Crape- ta! Home. Elm street. Rocky Hill, with Z. The ceremonies were attended therapy and electromyography.

Normal Temp. 54. i parades, rallies and speeches x-Degree Oavs 6. (x-Based on temperature observations to marked the tlOUdav, a foreign eTt'Temo. vear iequivalent of the.Labor Day that Mrs.

Frederick and Edna Squires New Haven Community Hospital Capewell; and three grandchil She was a student at Louis W. by about loO hospital oiticials, jhe occupational therapy section Batchelder School in members of the clergy and hos- the United States and Canada ob Lowest Temp, year ago 44 a Solemn Requiem Mass at In St. Lawrence O'Toole Church. Burial wit' be In Rose Hill Memorial Park, Rocky Hill. Friends may call at the funeral home Tuesday, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.

Friends wishing transportation call JA 9-3381. dren. Funeral services will be I .13 I .1 rl doff i serve the first Monday in Record High this date in 19,56. Record Low this date 34 in 1943. Highest Temp, since Jan.

1, 11, Lowest Temo. sinro Jan. 1. 1 i printing and ceramics and has neia ai ine layior ana ane was a communicant oi at. i'ual Funeral Home.

233 Washington Lawrence O'Toole Church and a Blessed By Archbishop member of the Junior Sodality! The Most Rev. Henry J. OBri-: space ior me acimues adiiy of Children of Mary of the church, i en. archbishop of Hartford and living, intended to prepare the Besides her parents, she leaves president of the hospital, blessed handicapped person to care for Tuesday at 1:30 p.m: Burial wil be in Cedar Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral Accumulated departure from normal this East Berlin Parade month, through April 30, -45.

i Total degree days since Sept. 1 through Jack-booted troops and ar- degree days same period 585S. m0I ed UnitS Communist East Total degree days this month, through Germany 110.000 man army April 30, 440. tViwuint. Pool in DeLANY.

At St. Francis Hospital. April 30, 1960, Mrs. Frances Oelany, widow of George S. Delany of 52 Arnoldale West Hartford, Funeral services her home Tuesday at 2 o.m Interment, Cedar Hill Cemetery.

Friends may call Monday afternoon and home today from 2 to 4 and 7: her paternal grandparents of; the wing which is part of the hos-: himself after release from the Hartford: and a brother, Ronald Pal five. million dollar build-hospital Normal degree days same oeriod one hand exalt uncurbed liberties 1 'F rii'a nf Hartfnrrl Funprai ins Droiect. i The central control deDartment. pretioitntinn tnmnm wAa tw I. phi 3o.L laNAVAhlS serviccs wiU be held Wednesday! Mrs? Beatrice Fox Auerbach.

also blessed and dedicated by the Vay ,0 7:00 m- declared in a statement to i and 00 other suppression of ta'st'L ft a' a 8:15 a.m. at the Rose Hill Fu-president and treasurer of G. Fox archbishop, centralizes all steril-! To precipitation this month through be "a threat to public order." .1 workers rtcZ" d.fd.Thuray 8t Cc.dar-ineral Home, Elm Street. Rocky was honored at the cere- king procedures for hospital 'departure from nor-' Mayor Willy Brandt' of West) t0 Joseph the humble is am. followed by 'a solemn He was Dorni Hill, with a Solemn Requiem monnies.

The Auerbach Founda-equipment and includes new and mat this month through April 30, .15 Berlin drew cheers from 700,000 carPenter of Nazareth. 1Z yuCr a 'U: Mass at St. Lawrence OToole tion and Mrs. Auerbach ccntri-! complex equipment. precipitation from Jan.

1 West Berliners at a rally in front LA nnT northwood cemetery. Friend, ma 2. a 1 p1' Church at 9. Burial will be in buted $108,600 toward the The building projects north 14 33 of the old ReichstaC buildinc with KiVeCt bUD call at the funeral home today fromllaylor and WOCleen lineral fl, rilU niWin peri8a I SYDXEY. Australia (AP) IU6t; rlill iViIHUl tai IcUK, IVUCKV lllt-llllg luioi nl vi n.oi-iUUlll ilic uilkVll wii year i.oj intnes.

UtrUclllLC ui ou ICi UUCcHS iu mc 2 to 4 and 7 to 10 p.m. iHome, 233 Washington with at I i.m. 10.2 feet. Hill. Friends may call at the fu- cai medicine departments ex-' Ashley Street.

The major portion mo Conn. River stage city and a call on the Western More than 50.000 people lined Svd- 7 lOAfl Warrv I acv. 7A. hiichjinri flPP3 finmP I llPSflrt lrflm A Ifl UailUCU idCiillllfft. 1I1C ULUdl LlilcllL 171 Luc UUiJUlIlli LMU-iiCllU, all CI til I n.yit I MAnlr n.tUfln.

1 ZtOH)vGreek Orthodox Church. Burial, line Avenue. Bloomfield. Funeral I wjij be jn Northwood i 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. is a memorial to Moses and There-story wing on Woodland Street, 1 2:1 sa Stern Fox, Mrs.

Auerbach's'is expected to be ready for m- Episcopal ChurchCh'apei; Wa'lden Street. Wilson. Friends may Call at theT n-irrnt Zt Fairview: funeral home tonight from 7 to'l TCniier VOWS arcnls Cemeterv. West Hartford. w.b.,v ipancy by May 1961.

low Allies to remain until Germany ney Harbor Sunday to watch tha so amJis reunited. arrival of the U.S. atomic subma- :49P.m.: "Here stand and live men who rine Halibut. The submarine, a.m. have shown that they de-which will take part in m- serve the right of self-determina-jtidns of the Coral Sea victory over a.m.

tion." Brandt said. I the Japanese, is the first atom- i The Tokyo hanging of Eisen-' powered craft to visit Australia. 3:1 a.m. 1 4: 14 p.m.' At New Havtn 1 4:04 a.m. 4:45 p.m.

inower ana Kisni in emsy was Windsor Expert Denies Radiation Death Reports Malkasian. in Hartford m' i Continued from Page 1 baPnrd S' JE.mWLLIAM E- CAREY be enforced most carefully and ff'Fi rvi'c trRom ZT william K. Carey of 43 Carroll completed by them." ior and Modeen Funeral Home. 233, East Hartford, died Sunday; Foreign Minister Fatin Zorlu in St. Francis Hospital, -said it is possible there are Com- may make donations to st.

George's He was born in Berlin and lived rnunist iniluences among the stu- Armenian Apostolic Church building. J-f 'fnc tkfan1ine u-hnca Aotn. Chants Sweep Castro Rallv staged by one union at a rally whose dominant theme was oppo- HAVANA wu-A huge May Day tion of th rpvisp, A Combustion Engineering Co. were absolutely no deaths fromjraiiy to sh0w support for Prime fund in his memory. "bi iidmoiu 10 years.

Me was an PYamimr in fh lifA Ho. onstrations have brought trOOOS. thnirian Sunlav niefht flatlv rnn. nA mini- thov i Tinin rn treaty. -11 1 lauiauuii uicit, emu jl iiiinr munciu iUtl VdMIl IUI IltfU 11110 Thp tanks martial "thur c.

MasoToTo'woodbridfle partment of the Travelers Insur- and law to Ankara tradicted Pittsburgh. news' nicked that number of exposed 'a thntvlernns anti.i-nitcri c.ow1 1 ew NEED Combination Screen And Storm Sash Buy Reliability CALL Manchester, husband ot Mrs. Clau- U- and Ictanhiil i "DiaUse 110m Hie CTOWOea SiailQS. da (Beniamin) Mason. Funeral services "as "'VT rHUnS iiuim.uu a uuuu- people oui oi me air.

tomous- Demonstration Sunday night. There was no dNDlav however of be held Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. at ployed for 33 years. He was But I cannot say for sure. ijng jn that city has caused sev- tion Engineering was engaged to chants of -Cuba ves vankeeJi f.

9ton -ember of the Travelers Men's Zor.u to.d news conference, be- eral death, i decontaminate The buildfn. and; no th! 1 stiS chSrkhr'K in Paiisado Cemetery. Windsor. Friends Club. He leaves his wife.

Mrs. cause they have not yet been The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and has been working on the problem hv nnrmrn it -n nnn -nn nnn vernier jvnrusncnev Advertisement Danahy Carey; a judged." Sun-Telegraph said Saturday the; for the past several months. Hoov-j and for 15 mies inLTupWd1 Mrs- L-vma11 B- Brain- In answer ,0 a story of a five-story building; er was a technician on the job. the bearded orator whr, nntilLJ 3rd Jr. nf Kni-f Si fUla a QUeStlOll.

tfie military COVeinor Ot hac heon rnntaminntorl cinf.D r-anc I f- 1 iKlflflHlli Am father of Mrs. Alexander Jarvis ef citr Mre rhi-ictnh Tcfanbn ha re f.isprl ctur pnts alt. i. r. UH Iuu-U 1 ARTLETT 24 Alexander Manchester.

Funer-I u. ya i mcu um.a ouSUOn engineering removea COfl- lhusiasm among hjs jsteners Backache Nerve Tension SECONDARY TO KIDNEY IRRITATION Thousanrisaieuow discoverlni how much tervices from laminated materials from the had started to leave hnildinp nlarpd thpm in spalpd 1 RAIKARD rnchesteTe' TudavWfat aim' a grandson. Jeffrey M. Brainard will have to be taken" Radiation Xot Cause 113 'Jo. I i.i VI- Ha A tl np A I cor i- i a hnrl Vi I l.i,nnr.i t-nt it I iwi, In litlill-n I no IIP nAi I ourioi vi" ii.

i ui i utii. unci aci nv-ts win vunn.niv iu u.a,u. v.iv. nf. nailers saia several oersons rnniampre and tnrnpri tnpm nvpp.

up its roar. je7o held Wednesday at 8:15 a.m. of the country. had died from radiation contacted I to a waste disposal firm. The Annarpnth? fiv w- i rtpparenuy pieasea in the building and less than ILo'jJ a nd Better tney can feel by ordina at the Newkirk and Wiitney Fu- It was not clear whether this 1,000 Pittsburgh Health Department m5uj was thpn: Citations.

These IrriUtiom often occur and ltm.it no. in KOCKVine. pr.i ju, Mf 11 neral Hnmp Sta Rurrmirlp Ap reference to all student ivkj, t. towaro acniicnnng or saars ijtrisuua ikiu uccu cauuscu 10 10- was OUOieu DV me neWSD3Der 3S i i "ii no r.lwE,au.1 r.iEast Hartford, with a Solemn Re- pects or to the 2,000 sit-down strik- iati0n. i saying the building is now "more "Chc 1 PRODUCTS CO.

AD 2-4475 Distributors of Rationally Knonn RUSCO SI New Park West Hartfor Showroom Open-P4' Sat. 111 ireS win b. held Tuesday at i o.m.'duiem Mass in St. Marv's Church ers removed by troops Saturday; RpvnnlH t. Tinftvir nf winAr i.

wiai f.I"if' Reynold L. Hoover of or afp Onlv thp fifth flnnr fer from Headache, ftarkiirh tnri ft X2S.at 9- Burial will be in St. Mary's from the Istanbul University cam-i heat safety manaeer at Combus- of Hp hitilrfino affprtPd panng "an aggression against Cuba through Guatemala." He also derided elections as a terv. caning hours today from 2 'o Cemetery, East Hartford. Friends pus to a detention camp.

tjon Engineering said "There! cordimr to news reoorts o'd. tired, depressed. In uch Irritation, CYSTEX usually brlnss fast, reiaxinj eomfori by curbing irritating germs in strong, acid urine and by gmng analgesic pain relief. Safe for young or old Get CYSTEX at druggists. Feel better last.

i and 7 to pm. at the J. n( I Tha mlniclnr nanisi-nJ il.av at llic illl.Cicl. IU- mi titii vliillicu linger Funeral Home, Pleasant democratic process. warehouse Point.

jday from 7 to 9 p.m., and fire on the opposition Peoples ZZi iAfnrp iVnt iiViIpc ako returned some law books i 1.1: Wilson. At home in Wetherstieid, Mrs. nom 6 io ana to 9 p.m. nepuuuean party oi iormer mm Ult (IllbUII UUltflV. Blanche (Bander) Wilson of 440 Main! out second to Mende.es" Uemo-i Continued from Page 1 he destroyed, others he packed.

48, of crats in three national elections he felt il is their province, Wetherstieid. Funeral services will BENJAMIN J. VENESKI be held Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Rose Hill Funeral Home. Elm Street.

Rocky Benjamin J. Veneski, p'ii, ourta, ue in nif nm prm' ni hjs U.o. viin.tr is iJtaitr "if the court refuses him to- At Funeral of Lt. Lee morial Park, Rocky Hill. Friends rianiSMlie, aiea since libU.

call at the funeral home tonight from suddenly at his home Sunday plnttinir rharcrpH 7 to Friends wishing 1 t-tldlgeo tail ja 9-3381. i morning, corn in cnsioi, ne uvea. in T1 atil ci-illp 01 i T.it i He asserted the opposition has morrow, that will end it," Brown SEOUL, Korea (API An Amer- PATiTUCCt. In Hanford, April 1960, a ramnak'n of sairl Lu-gi Patitucci of Gartieid hui- employed as a guard at the Stan- a campaign ot said. army lieutenant was among 111 1 I band of the late Mrs.

Corinda (Fer- sabotage and subversion against chessman's petition, as- paiioearers ior ine aaopiea son oi new ley Works, New Britain. He was thaTlsrFunVai a'member of the Immaculate Pper workings the govern-' innoCCnce. was filed Sat- evident Syngman Rhee Fri dav. urday and asked delay in the ex- Reauiem Mass in St. Justin Church Conception Church of Soutilington.

at a m. Burial in Mt. Si Benedict his uifp Aire ffono. PUDhcans. whom he did not ldeiV Rhee's foster son.

Korean army wi lujiti wil. iwivnii aiikiy petition unti attornev srenerai in -1 i i i Cemetery. r.iniu, i.teiT tan Wi lite I 11 Ill't'll U' 111 -ro- It 1 An rt c-t Ir rhnl hie In hAn eh.pel today. 2 to and 7 to pm. jVieve Kama Veneski; two vsti.ato ronld find thr mnn iinuw iciiiic.

ne mm ice President-elect Lee lu-poong, ers, John of Chicopee Falls, Mass. and Stephen of Plattsburg, X.Y TU r5 there was opposition encourage- his mother and vounger brother in JAfiltS T. PKATT UU.i:S ment for "mob rule and lawless- was not the 1948 "red-light ban- CllirilVlfl nipt licr T'Vltlfpyl'aif iand two sisters, Mrs. Eugene Jo- dit of Los Anceles lovers lanes, i TU i ti ff- Lt. Theodore J.

Rimer, of Bos- ness. chim of Chicopee Falls, and Mrs. "But the vast majority of our inn tacc ti'h had Irnmirn thav ueiDins vasaivace or bhsio ser-' a 11 Funeral Service 71 FarmingtoB Avenue Telephone 4 A 5-3189 Ample Parking Facilities vices will be held Wednesday at people are remainin caIm and r.a' TbV, lieutenant since they were mi.cs ik aeiu neuueud oi.ijji iPTOitv rnncii the cock for the three men. 10 a m. at his home and at 10:30 0 Zod a Chcssman was moved t0 his n-jTT I a.m.

at Immaculate Conception U- waitinic cell he showed few sins mng' Ga" served as pallbearer at Church. Burial will be in ImJ Diplomats in town for the AT0 U-he showed few s.cns funeral for aU at maculate Conception Cemetery. exceptions to the mo his own request. FrienHc ti, curfew for Mav Dav, a labor hoh- inree "0UIS aunaay Friends may call at the home rf morning with an attorney. Rosa-; T.

today from 7 p.m. and Tuesday I iilllllrV 1 nr inn unr nnr ctarton nrivntn iiiiri m. from 2 FARLEY FUNERAL HOME. INC. TEL CH 9-5681 Wtbiter St.

at Benton Air Conditioned ww.MHvm 'un- 1 1 Other visitors and minu.te exercise period with other sa runerai Home ot Aew Britain condemned men i TiirkKh riti7Pii in h.innpiifiri In tuiHieiniitu mm. U7etro Heflftet? Tilt flttliaral ftf Vtchan -TL aa nas cnarge ot arrangements. He plaved cards for a bit and bo abroad without moving special nr R(1 Tk E. EDWARD SCIILICHTINC. passes were stopped by troop pa- Ernest Edward Schlichting, 41'trols for questioning.

thw offlf.prs M. m. at the Taylor and Modeen At 3:30 D. three officers es- P-m- ot Sadds Mill Road. EUincton.

uociois, oaKers. miiK venaors. 1 1 1 jJ rl ,1. Morrison W. Johnson, Inc.

FUAEIIAL II03IE 719 Albanv Ave. runerai Home, wasningion at. s- i i i lui it: ii vinrsiiiciii iiuiii uudiii iuv. cued urday night at Rockv.ne.- on the sixth floor, down to the Burial U1 be in Zion Hill Ceme- Hospital after a brief lUness. Ho no.

respondents he.e tor the Th amilv was born in Miilbury, son! NATO meeting besieged the memorial donations be made to of the late Robert and Emma; garters of the militarv command- aoor Uom 11 meniarl Apostolic Schlichting. He had lived in Lt Gen. Fahrt Ozdilek, for fc jchurch building fund in his mem- FDER1L DIRECTORS area nioa oi nis -t aiih nmri ory, life. He was employed at wait for nours- SINCE 1902 inmates and told them. "I'll see Iran Quake Toll 3,500 ton Standard, and was a mem- Bridge CollapSe Kills 4 you in the morning." An officer TEHRAN, Iran uP The gov- rh VITERBO Italy bridge'? thai a standard remark CONNECTICUT has America's highest family income.

The Courant covers four busy prosperous counties. Courant color can help you sell this rich market. Jfertfofb (Coufant bocicty and the Mustache collapsed at nearbv Sutri Sundav. for mcn sLx-Door trip. jment owned Teheran radio falling on a group of children who' Onelnmat was asleep.

Chess- said Sunday last weeks had just received their first com- nwn did ml wake him- i at La "sed 3..00 casual- Club CHARLES H. VINCENT end SONS. INC. ttMslURT C0LLIHIVILU1 ClS'ltH I I'll OWan l)H all of Broad Brook. He lea SchlirhUnr nZ-t Four were killed and four thumbing ties.

It said between and 500 sen it wing, a son, Robert through his papers when the offi-: persom were killed and the rest Schlichting; and a daughter, Mar. sw.iy. rf nffered irjes 1 I.

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