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Hartford Courant from Hartford, Connecticut • 7

Publication:
Hartford Couranti
Location:
Hartford, Connecticut
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE HARTFORD COURANT: Thursday, December 2, 1965 4TH Dr. C. S. Bailey-Gates, 53, Dies, Prominent Dentist Dr. Charles S.

Bailey-Gates, 53, of 23 Visgrove West Hartford, prominent West Hartford dentist, died Wednesday in Chicago, Ill. He was born in Brooklyn, N.Y., moved to East Hartford as a child and lived the rest of his life in this area. He graduated from East Hartford High School, attended Holy Cross College, and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania Dental School in 1939. Affiliations was a member of the Hartford Dental Society, the Connecticut Dental Society, 1 the American Dental Delta Sigma Delta a dental fraternity, Monsignor John F. Callahan Council of the Knights of Columbus, Bishop Assembly and St.

'Timothy's Men's Club. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Mary McQuale Bailey Gates; six sons, James S. Bailey-Gates, Peter R. Bailey-Gates, Paul C.

Bailey-Gates, Christopher S. Bailey Gates of and West Brian J. Hartford, Bailand C. David Bailey-Gates of New Orleans, a daughter, Miss Mary Therese Bailey Gates of West Hartford; a sister, Mrs. William Lawrence of Hartford, and three grandchildren.

Funeral Saturday Funeral services will be held Saturday at 9:15 a.m. at the Molloy Funeral Home, 906 Farmington with a Solemn Requiem Mass at St. Timothy's Church at 10. Burial will be in Fairview Cemetery, West Hartford. Friends may call at the funeral home Friday from 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.

Dr. Michael C. Niekrash, ADAMS. In Springfield, Nov. 2.

1965. Laura (Galacar) Adams, wife of Robert Winthrop Adams, Services private. Friends are requested not to send flowers. BELO, In Hartford, Nov. 30, 1965.

Miss Cosmina (Mina) Belo of 740. Prospect Ave. Funeral at the Fisette Funeral a.m. Home, with 20 Sisson Solemn Friday at 8:45 a Requiem Mass in the Cathedral of St. Joseph at 9:15.

Burial will be in St, Patrick's Cemetery, Huntington, Long Island. Friends may call at the funeral home today from 2 to 4 and 7 to p.m. CHIZ (CZYZ). In St. Francis Hospital, Nov.

30, 1965. Louis Chiz, husband Mrs. Nellie Busta Chiz of 52 Oakwood of West Hartford. Funeral at the Fisette Funeral Home, 20 Sisson Friday at 9:30 a.m. with Solemn Mass in St.

Mark the Evangelist Church at 10. Burial will be in Fairview Cemetery, West Hartford. Friends from may 2 call at the funeral home today to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. COLTON. In McCook Memorial Hospital, November 30, 1965, Grace W.

(Hawkins) Colton, wife of Edwin B. Colton, 99 East Harold Bloomfield. FUneral services Friday, 01 p.m., Taylor and Modeen Funeral Home, 12 Seneca drew's Bloomfield. Burial, Old St. AnCemetery, North Bloomfield.

Friends may call at the funeral home today from 7-9 p.m. CONBOY. In Springfield, Dec. 1, 1965. Francis T.

Conboy of 53 Spring Windsor Locks. Funeral will be held Saturday at 8:30 a.m. at the Thomas W. Johnson Funeral Home, 105 Oak Windsor Locks, with a Solemn Requiem Mass at St. Mary's Church at 9 a.m.

Burial in Mary's Cemetery, Friends may call' at the funeral home today from 7 to 9 and Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. DOWNING. In Arlington, December-1, 1965, John P. Downing, formerly of Cambridge, died at his home. Husband of Cecilia (Priest) Downing; formerly of Farmington.

There will be Solemn Requiem Mass at St. Agnes Church, Arlington, Mass. Saturday at a.m. with burial at St. Ann's Cemetery, Avon Saturday at 12:30 p.m.

Friends may call at the George L. Doherty Funeral Home, (Powder House Se.) 855 Broadway, West Somerville, today and Friday from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. HAYWARD. In Hartford Hospital, November 28, 1965, Clinton Dewitt Hayward, 654 Broadview husband of the late Florence (Cleaver) Hayward.

Funeral services today, 11 a.m., Taylor and Modeen Funeral Home, 136 South Main West Hartford. Burial, Cedar Hill Cemetery. LOOS. In Broad Brook, December 1, 1965, Elizabeth (Reichle) Loos of 22 Maple Broad Brook. Funeral will be held Saturday at the Grace Episcopel Burial Church, Broad will be at Windsorville Cemetery.

Friends may call at the Thomas W. Johnson Funeral Home, 105 Oak Windsor Locks, today 7-9 p.m., Friday 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. OSBORN. In Hartford, Dec. 1, 1965.

Ernest A. Osborn, 83, husband of Mrs. Julia Mahoney Osborn of South Main vices Street, Saturday Warehouse at 2 Point. at Funeral p.m. home.

serFriends may call at his home after 3 p.m. today until the time of the funeral. The J. M. Bassinger Funeral Home in charge of arrangements.

RYAN. In Hartford, November 27. Miss Mary Ryan of 177 Homestead Ave. Funeral from Ahern Funeral Heme, 180 Farmington Friday 10 a.m. With Requiem High Mass Cathecral of St.

Joseph at 10:15 a.m. Interment, Mt. St. Benedict Cemetery, Bloomfield. Calling hours, today 3-5 and 749 p.m.

SIGNOR. In Rocky Hill, November 30, 1965, Walter E. Signor, Senior. Husband of the late May (Morrison) Signor. Funeral services today, 1 p.m., Taylor and Modeen Funeral Home, 233 Washington St.

Burial, Center Cemetery, South Windsor, In Memoriam There will be a 5th Anniversary High Mass for the repose of the soul of Rose a.m. at the Church of St. Brigid, New Britain Elmwood. FARLEY FUNERAL HOME, INC. TEL.

249-5681 Air Conditioned Webster St. at Benton Deaths O'BRIEN FUNERAL HOME 104 MAIN ST. Tel. 522-3735 Morrison W. Johnson, Inc.

FUNERAL SERVICE John D. 70 Ave Obituaries MISS MARY JANE RYAN FRANCIS T. CONBOY Miss Mary Jane Ryan of Homested Ave. died suddenly Saturday at her home. She was born in Hartford and lived here all her life.

She was employed at the Travelers Insurance Co. and was a member of the Travelers Girls Club, the Ladies of St. Joseph and St. Francis Hospital Auxiliary. Funeral services will be held Friday at 10 a.m.

at the Ahern Funeral Home, 180 Farmington 1 with a Requiem High Mass at the Cathedral of St. Joseph at 10:15. Burial will be in Mt. St. Benedict Cemetery.

Friends may call at the funeral home today from 3 to 5 and to 9 p.m. MRS. GIUSEPPE MACCHI Mrs. Giuseppe Macchi, 86, wife of Giuseppe Macchi of Santa Margherita, Sicily, Italy, formerly of East Hartford, died Nov. 25 in Santa Margherita.

Besides her husband she leaves two sons, Frank Macchi and Joseph Macchi, and a daughter, Mrs. Lucia Leo, a all of East Hartford, another daughter, Mrs. Concetta Maggio of Santa Margherita; 11 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren. Funeral services were held in Santa Margherita. MRS.

NATHAN HOCHMAN Mrs. Esther Mintz Hochman, 74, wife of Nathan Hochman of New London and mother of William Hochman of West Hartford, died Monday in New London. Besides her husband and her son in West Hartford, she leaves three other sons, min Hochman of Cleveland, Ohio, Maurice Hochman of Norwich and Louis Hochman of New London, and eight grandchildren. Funeral services and burial were held in New London. to MRS.

ROBERT W. ADAMS Mrs. Laura Galacar Adams, formerly, of Adams Hartford, died wife Nov. 25 of Master home in Springfield, Her father, the late Charles E. Galacar, was for several years vice president of the Phoenix Fire Insurance Co.

of Hartford. She graduated from Hartford Public High School, class of 1893, and Smith College, class of 1897. Besides her husband she leaves a niece, Mrs. Turner Marsh of Longmeadow, and a nephew, Charles Galacar of Ipswich, and several grandnephews. Funeral services will be private.

DEWEY R. SELANDER Dewey R. Selander, 43, of 44 Woodland New Britain, died of natural causes Wednesday at New Britain General Hospital. Born in New Britain, he was graduate of New Britain High School and was employed at Sears, Roebuck Corbins Corner. He was formerly sales manager of New Britain Motor! Car Co.

and Motors in Southington. He was a member of First Lutheran Church, New Britain. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Bette Weber Selander, and his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Dewey O. Selander, all of New Britain. Funeral services will be held Friday at 10:30 a.m. at the Carlson Funeral Home, Franklin Square, New Britain. Burial will be in St.

Mary Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home today from 2 to and 7 to 9 p.m. REV. ALCIDE LACHAPELLE The Rev. Alcide Lachapelle, M.S., of Montreal, Canada, ordained in 1919 at LaSalette Seminary, Hartford, died Wednesday in Montreal.

He leaves his father, Louis Lachapelle of Pawtucket, R.I.; eight brothers, the Rev. Alphonse Lachapelle, M.S. of Attleboro, the Rev. Henry Lachapelle, M.S., of St. Louis, Robert Lachapelle and Albert' Lachapelle, of Hartford, Ralph Lachapelle, of East Hartford, Theodore Lachapelle of Newington, Gabriel Lachapelle of New Mexico and Lucien Lachapelle of Pawtucket, R.I.; and three sisters, Sister Marie Antoinette of Fall River, Miss Anna pelle and Mrs.

Alfred Champagne, both of Hartford. Funeral services will be held Friday at LaSalette Seminary, Enfield, N.H. F. ALBERT BURKE F. Albert Burke, 78, of 174 North Quaker West Hartford, died Wednesday at his home.

He was born in Hartford and for many years was the proprietor of Burke's Greenhouse in Bloomfield. He was a member of St. Petersburg Lodge 139, AF AM. He leaves his wife, Jeanie Johnson Burke; two sons, Charles E. Burke and Harry J.

Burke, both of West Hartford; a daughter, Mrs. Clarence Hotchkiss of Windsor; four grandchildren and three Funeral services will be held Saturday at 1:30 p.m. at the Richard W. Sheehan Funeral Home, 1084 New Britain with the Rev. Ralph Lewis officiating.

Burial will be in Mountain View Cemetery, Bloomfield. Friends may call at the funeral home Friday from 12 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Causes Aches president of the Hartford Dental Society, has designated the following to serve as honorary bearers: Drs. William T. Barto, Robert H.

Bernert, Eugene M. Clifford, Louis F. Coroso, Francis L. Finley Alfred J. Gengras Merrill C.

Hills, Robert P. B. Hughes, Joseph Nassau, William F. O'Meara, Sidney Rafal and Philip J. Sheridan.

Friends may call at the funeral home Friday from 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. Memorial contributions, the may be donor's made: choice. to a Ruins Yield Ties to Lost Civilization ful place as a great 1 monument of the classical world. Miss Goell's expeditions to WASHINGTON An extraordinary woman archeologist has braved 10 seasons of wind, blistering heat, and cold to excavate the ruins of a lost Anatolian civilization in southeast Turkey. Through the zeal of Miss Theresa Goell, of New York, a series of colossal stone statues again stands in brooding splendor on a peak in Turkey's AntiTaurus mountains.

Behind the statuary looms the 150-foot-high funeral cairn of King Antiochus I. Antiochus built his shrine 2,000 years ago on Nemrud Dagh (Mount of Nimrod) when he was monarch of the tiny but strategic crossroads kingdom of Commagene. Miss Goell's efforts have restored the all-butforgotten sanctuary to its right- Nemrud Dagh are supported by the National Geographic. Society. Nemrud Dagh is a bleak and uncomfortable place.

There are no trees for shade, no water. The wind blows and howls without ceasing. In summer 'the temperature rises to 130 degrees during the day and sometimes dips below freezing at night. Scorpions lurk beneath stones. "The wind was so awful during the last season," said Miss Goell, "that six-foot-high stone walls had to be built around our tents.

We were being blown away." The lofty shrine of Nemrud Dagh can be reached only by foot or donkey. It is a one-day journey up steep, stone-littered slopes from the nearest village of Eski Kalita. Despite Nemrud Dagh's inaccessibility, Miss Goell has brought the latest scientific tools there to investigate a tantalizing mystery the whereabouts of King Antiochus's tomb-chamber with its expected royal treasures. His was a rich kingdom. Until recently, Miss Goell had believed the tomb was somewhere in the 150-foot-high cairn of chipped rock behind the stone gods and a complex of terracelike stone altars.

Now the has been thoroughly explored with the magic eyes of seismic equipment, gravity meters, and magnetometers. There was no trace of metal belongings that certainly would have been buried with Antiochus chariot, crowns, scepters, swords, and adorn- Bishop Albers Dies in Michigan LANSING, Mich. (AP) The Most Rev. Joseph H. Albers, bishop since 1937 of the member Roman Catholic Diocese of Lansing, died Wednesday in a Lansing hospital after a long illness.

He was 74. The diocese takes in 15 counties in southwestern Michigan. Bishop Albers became its spiritual leader when it was estab-1 lished May 22, 1937, by the late Pope Pius XI. DIES: Mrs. Omar N.

Bradley, wife of the five-star general and former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, died Wednesday at the Army's Walter Reed Hospital in Washington. Death was attributed to acute leukemia. She had been in the hospital four days (AP Wirephoto). Francis T. Conboy of 53 Spring Windsor Locks, died Wednesday at Wesson Memorial Hospital, Springfield, Mass.

He was born in Thompsonville and lived in Windsor Locks for the past 30 years. He was assistant treasurer of the T.A. Pearson Associates Inc. of West Springfield, where he was employed for the past 25 years. He was a communicant of St.

Mary's Church Windsor Locks and member of St. Mary's Men's Club. He leaves a daughter, Miss Nancy Conboy of Windsor Locks and four sisters, Miss Catherine Conboy, Miss Eleanor Conboy, Miss Margaret Conboy, and Miss Elizabeth Conboy, all of Thompsonville. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 8:30 a.m. at the Thomas W.

Johnson Funeral Home, 105 Oak Windsor Locks, with a Solemn Requiem Mass at St. Mary's Church at 9. Burial will be in St. Mary's Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home today from 7 to 9 p.m.

and Friday frim 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. FREDERICK W. LaPOINTE Frederick W. LaPointe, 11 Caya West Hartford, died Wednesday at his home. He was born in Canada and lived in Boston for many years before coming to West Hartford six years ago.

He was a communicant of Our Lady of Sorrows Church. He leaves three sisters, Mrs. Zeno Forbes and Mrs. Peter Wiellette, both of West Hartford, and Mrs. Oscar Beaupre of Windsor.

Funeral services will be held Saturday at 8:15 a.m. at the Richard W. Sheehan Funeral Home, 1084 New Britain with a Solemn Requiem Mass at Our Lady of Sorrows Church at 9. Burial will be in St. Mary's Cemetery, East Hartford.

Friends may call at the funeral home Friday from 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. The financial headache of a Bridgeport package store operator is giving the State Liquor Control Commission the biggest bookkeeping headache in its history. In the commission's file are 60 cards all under one name. On the cards the operator is catalogued as a delinquent bill payer 2,376 times in the past six years for some $234,403 in liquor bills. In the same period the same operator is down for issuing bad checks totaling $29,780.

Each time the commission posts the man as a delinquent tells the commission he is a little jammed up for cash. So far he has been given one warning and one 15- day suspension. The next time, officials say, they definitely will revoke the man's license. Reason A shortage of filing cabinets. Woman Injured In Rt.

91 Leap EAST WINDSOR (Special) A 45-year-old Springfield, Mass. woman tried to commit suicide Wednesday morning by jumping off the Rt. 91 overpass at Bridge Street police said. Mrs. "Florence Blair of 179 Longhill St.

was reported in critical condition at Hartford Hospital with multiple injuries Wednesday night. State police said an eyewitness saw Mrs. Blair park the car on the overpass, walk to the railing and jump. The Rev. Thomas Dwyer of nearby St.

Philip's Rectory, who administered the last rites, said, "it was evidently planned." "She stopped on the overpass," he said, "and immediately jumped over the sidewall. She fell face forward." The overpass is approximately 20 feet high. Isolated Area of Nepal Half Out of 20th Century WASHINGTON The entire populace of Mustang, a lost kingdom in the high mountains of Nepal, goes to bed each night in fear. The 750-square-mile kingdom with 8,000 inhabitants juts into Communist held Tibet. Unruly warriors called Khambas roam at will.

It is neither the Chinese soldiers nor the Khambas that worry the people of Mustang, however, writes French anthropologist Michel Peissel in the October issue of National Geographic. What terrifies the Mustangese are the "416 demons of land, sky, fire, and water." To Blame for Everything "Thousands of expedients have been employed to fend off these evil spirits that cause the 1,080 known diseases as well as the five forms of violent death. Butter lamps burn before altars in the private chapel of every residence; monks, dukes, and peasants recite prayers throughout the day; thousands of prayer flags flutter on poles; prayer wheels and prayer walls clutter every open space," Peissel writes. "But still the spirits prowl, especially at night. Even the intricate demon traps set on every house, and the horse's skull secretly buried below each doorstep, cannot stop them.

When the sun sets behind the eternal snows to the west, no resident is truly Peissel is the only foreigner ever permitted to enter Mustang and reside there at length to make a study of the people and customs. His route led through one of the great Himalayan river gorges between 26,810 foot Dhaulagiri and the rugged massif crowned by Lacha-504-foot Annapurna. Mustang's King Angun Tenzing Trandul, a solemn man of about 65, received the French visitor on a wooden throne painted with gold dragons. "Is France near Lhasa (Tibet's capital)?" asked the king, "or the island of America?" It turned out that the king did not know that the earth is round. For him and his people, the world is flat and in the shape of a half-moon.

The king may not know much about geography, Peissel comments, but he is well aware that his land may be thrown into today's political conflicts in Asia. Though Mustang's inclusion within Nepal wss confirmed by a 1961 border agreement between the Nepalese and Chinest Communists, the king said, "I and my people are afraid. We hear great explosions from Tibet that bring the hills crashing Mustang was founded in the 1380's by a fierce soldier named Ama Pal. Its Tibetan-Buddhist background, as well as a long (history of independence, give it PRETTY NICE MOVE: rects two of his Swedish who appear to prove his more you move the prettier better you feel. Idla, who of gymnastics that stresses Dirksen Joshes LBJ's Program NEW YORK (AP) Sen.

Everett M. Dirksen, joshed some of President Johnson's pet projects Wednesday, but endorsed the administration's Viet Nam policy. In a speech to 1,500 delegates of the 70th congress of American industry of the National Association of Manufacturers, the Senate minority leader made fun of Johnson's antipoverty program and beautification law. He said he had heard that 700 young men will be trained under the antipoverty program to operate a diaper service. "That's really getting to the bottom of things," he said.

"I'm tempted to say it's time for a change." Weather, Tides GOVERNMENT FORECAST Local: Variable cloudiness and a little milder today, high in the 40's. Considerable cloudiness with little temperature change tonight, low in the 20's. Friday fair with seasonable temperatures. Probability of precipitation increasing to tonight and Friday. State: Variable cloudiness and a little milder today.

Considerable cloudiness with little temperature change tonight. Friday fair with seasonable temperatures. Temperature Summary for Dec. 1, 1965. 7 a.m.

1 p.m. p.m. Temp. (deg. F) 15 40 30 Rel.

Humidity (p.c.) 77 43 61 Bar. Pres. at S.L. 30.23 30.16 30.15 Based on data to 7:30 p.m.: high 40 at p.m.; low 15 at 7 a.m.; mean normal 34, degree days 37. High yead ago, 29; low 20.

Record high this date 65 in 1908. Record low this date 10 in 1936. Highest Temp 1, 100. Lowest Temp. since Jan.

1, -8. Accumulated departure from normal this month, through Nov. 30, -47. Total degree days since Sept, through Nov. 30, 1289.

Normal degree days same period 1182. Total degree days this month, through Nov. 30, 753. Precipitation 0. Summary This month through p.m., Nov.

30, 2.21 Inches Depadture from normal this month through Nov. 30, inches. Total from Jan. 1 through Nov. 30, 27.43 inches.

For same period last year 30.04 inches. Conn. River stage at 8 a.m. 3.3 feet. Tides Dec, 2, 1965.

High Low At New London 4:18 am, 10:48 am 4:19 pm, 11:00 pm Af Saybrook 5:18 am, 11:48 am 5:19 pm, 12:00 At New Haven 5:58 am, 12:13 pm 6:18 pm, Tax Free BOSANSKA Age KRUPA, Yugoslavia (P) Daut Ezic is 107 but still works regularly at his little grocery store. In tribute, the town council has exempted him from all taxes. Barkers DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES MEN'S NIGHT FRIDAY, DEC. 3 10 to 12 Midnite Private Sale for Men Only! Shop leisuely for your Sweetheart's Christmas Gift at Low Discount Prices. REFRESHMENTS FASHION SHOW EXTRA SALES GIRLS 1231 E.

MAIN MERIDEN Ernest Idla di- ing, leaping rhythmic dancers New York theory that the hibition and you look and the girls in his created the form the trip to swinging, sway- days (AP and bouncing rubber balls, is in with the Idla Ensemble for an extelevision appearance. The 16 group are all amateurs and made the United States on their holiWirephoto). 'New Haven' Still Aims To End Passenger Runs (Continued from Page 1) ly as the hearing opened and asked that Gov. Dempsey be granted permission to speak at 9:30 a.m. Dec.

15 when the hearings move to New Haven at the Southern New England Telephone Co. auditorium, 300 George St. ICC Commissioner William H. Tucker granted the request. Kanell also requested that the ICC determine how much public money each of the states and the Federal Government should be expected to put up to keep J.

H. Johnston, Thomaston, Dies THOMASTON (Special) Joseph H. Johnston of Branch Road, a former selectman, died at his home Tuesday night after a short illness. A Republican, he was elected to the Board of Selectmen in 1945 and served until 1959. He was a retired employe of the Plume and Atwood Mfg.

Co. and a member of Eagle Rock Congregational Church. He was the uncle of George Johnston, a member of the Board of Selectmen and a brother of the late William Johnston who was Thomason's representative in the General Assembly. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Ruth Johnston; sons, Floyd Johnston Middlebury; Fred Johnston of Cheshire a and Harold Johnston of Akron, Ohio; a the ailing railroad's passenger service running.

Tucker replied that this isn't the purpose of the hearings under way here. "We're here first to process this matter as required by law," said Tucker. Kanell said, however, that the ICC also has the responsibility to preserve essential public services. Tucker assured him that the ICC would live up to its responsibility. The hearings will resume today at 9:30 a.m.

daughter, Mrs. Charles Puzacke of Harwinton and nine grandchildren. Funeral arrangements in charge of the Hotchkiss Funeral Home, 46 High are incomplete. special status in Nepal. Foreign relations are administered by Nepal, but the kingdom preserves much of its autonomy, National Geographic says.

So high and barren is Mustang that not a single tree grows on the wind-swept hills. People plant barley and buckwheat in the stony soil. The simple economy is based on the salt trade: Lo-bas, as the Mustangese call themselves, fetch salt from Tibet on yaks, goats, or ponies, and transport the precious merchandise down into Nepal to trade for grain and silver coins. One day, a salt trader told Peissel, "The Chinese know everything you are doing." Having nothing to hide, Peissel did not care. But out of curiosity he asked, "How do you know?" "I told them," the trader replied.

Like many other peoples of the Asia mountain world, the Lo-bas are intensely superstitious. The state religion is Tantrie Buddhism of a sect similare to that of Tibet's Dalai Lama. If a family has two sons, at least one is expected to become a monk. ATHENS (P) Athens Mayor George Plytas plans to plant 100,000 more trees along the city's streets and squares. They will be eucalyptus, lemon and pine.

Before you give a gift of stationery, consider the handwriting of the person to whom you are giving it. GIVE HER A COSMETIC GIFT SET ARTHUR DRUG CYBIS PORCELAINS Baby Owl This elfin little porcelain owl with his heart-shaped face is exactly as he looks irresistible! In fine porcelain high, in color $18. Hartford Store Open Tonight 'til 9 P.M. COMPANY 65 Pratt Street Hartford 249-8621 60 LaSalle Road West Hartford 236-5811.

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