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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 46

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
46
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

48 The Boston Globe Friday, September 27, 1968 Final SUPERINTENDENT WELCOMED-Mrs. Nancy Sizer (left) talks with Cambridge Schools Supt. Edward A. Conley and Mrs. Conley at open house in Morse Elementary School.

Reception was sponsored by the Cambridge School Volunteer Project. 2 Held Without Bail in Natick By ROBERT L. WARD Staff Reporter NATICK Two of three men charged in connection with an armed holdup at the First National Bank of Natick branch in a shopping plaza a week ago were held without bail for the Middlesex County Grand Jury Thursday. A third man, also charged in the $12,000 robbery, was continued on bail until today when Judge Thomas F. Quinn resumes the probable cause hearing.

Held without bail until today, when decisions on additional charges against them will be made, are Robert F. Guarante, Saratoga East Boston, and Thomas J. Parry, 30, of Erie, Pa. Probable cause against both was found on a charge of armed robbery while masked. Judge Quinn refused to release them on bail overnight despite the pleas of counsel that not to do so was a violation of their rights.

The third defendant, John A. Michaelson, 32, of Gore Revere, is charged with armed robbery and conspiracy. Judge Quinn reserved a decision in his case following argument from Atty. John F. Zamparelli that an affadavit to the court for a search warrant was improperly drawn Sixteen witnesses were sworn in and 12 called during the seven-hour session which was continued at 5:30 p.m.

They included police, bank personnel and others who saw the alleged robbers flee the bank scene at Rtes. 9 and 27. At least seven witnesses during testimony pointed out either Guarante or Parry as two of the four men police claim robbed the bank. No one identified Michaelson, and the fourth man is still sought. Mrs.

Joseph Motta, 25, of Pilgrim road, Wellesley, said Parry was the man who forced his way into her car and ordered her to get him out of the area. Mrs. was riding with her year-old son. Mrs. Dennis L.

Reagan of Lake Shore road, Natick said Guarante was the man who entered her house and remained for nearly an hour before surrendering. Mrs. Reagan was alone with her infant son who is one month old today. In a surprise move, Zamparelli said he will place his client, Michaelson, on the witness stand today. He added that he will attempt to have Parry, represented by Atty.

John Sullivan of Natick, also called to the stand. Guarante is represented by Atty. Victor J. Garo. Both Parry and Guarante were taken to the Billerica jail overnight and will be returned for court appearance this morning.

Free Legal Aid Starting in Waltham By GARY KAYAKACHIOIAN Staff Reporter WALTHAM Mayor Richard F. Dacey on Thursannounced that free legal service will be avail- a able to needy residents of the Greater Waltham area starting, program today. is sponsored by Boston College, which will have a select staff of 40 second and third-year law students available to the public. The college has extended a $28,000 grant to cover costs. The mayor said the one- year free service is expected to render legal assistance worth $100.000.

No money producing cases will be accepted, but will be referred the Newton, Waltham, Watertown and Weston Bar Assn. he added. The inauguration of the unique service, follows more than six of planning and talks with the Bar Assn. and its president, Atty. Robert Leblanc of Waltham, officials of the Waltham District Court and Robert O'Donnell, head of the Boston College Legal Assistance Bureau and John F.

Sulli- van, assistant to Mayor Dacey. The city is allowing the use of the second-floor offices of the old fire station at 21 Lexington st. with only a modest rental. The complete legal service staff office will be open Monday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.

and on Saturday from 10 a.m. to noon. Sullivan says there will also be Spanish and French-speaking interpreters on duty to translate. Massachusetts law allows the students to handle legal cases, according to Sullivan. Brooke Warns on Tolerance By RICHARD H.

STEWART Globe Washington Bureau WASHINGTON Sen. Edward Brooke Thursday sent more than 400 letters to newspaper editors around the nation warning against the "intemperance and intolerance" of the current national election campaign. Although the letters were general in nature and Brooke declined to be specific as to their targets, sources close to Brooke said he was referring specificially to the presidential campaign tactics of former Alabama Gov. George Wallace. "This year.

more than at any time in a generation, passions and distemper flood the land: they threaten not only to poison the election of 1968 but to undermine the capacity of the next administration to serve," Brooke wrote. "Intemperance and intolerance serve no one, save those who would corrupt our political life by destroying rational debate and by sowing contempt for our institutions. "Those who love this nation, who are devoted to its ideals and committeed to resolving its problems, must meet this threat by combining energetic effort in behalf of their preferred candidates with courteous restraint in regard to their opponents," he advised. Aides to Brooke said his recent campaign travels on behalf of Republican presidential candidate Richard Nixon had brought him in touch with the wide spectrum of the American public and he was distressed by some of the comments he had heard. Brooke's letter called on candidates.

commentators and citizens to exercise special restraint during what he called "the climactic period of this year's electoral contest." Brooke wrote, "our higher responsibility is not to elect one candidate, rather than another, but to protect the integrity of the system which permits us to choose among various candidates, to Twistagram succession are and (Answer tomorrow.) Answer to Yesterday's TWISTAGRAM RU EUR RUES CURSE CURERS SCOURER RECOURSE NEWTON Newton Aldermen will reconsider their approval for a $15.4 million campus-style high school campus at their Oct. 7 meeting. The move comes as a result of a controversy caused by the Newton Taxpayers' Assn. which claims the city should consider what savings could be made with the renovation of two of the existing three buildings constructed more than half a ce tury ago. The taxpayers cited a law passed by the Legislature last Summer which allows the State School Building Assistance Commission to reimburse communities up to 40 percent for school renovation projects.

Moonship Win for U.S.. Predicted By ROBERT L. TURNER Staff Reporter Two Americans will stand moon by the of nexthe year if no snags slow the project before then. That was the prediction made in Boston on Thursday by representatives of the North American Rockwell Corp. of California, prime contractors for the Apollo moonships.

The statement reinforced a similar one made by the National Aeronautics and Space administration last week. It stressed that the men responsible for the mechanics of the trip feel they will have the "hardware" to do the job. The "if" remains a large one, containing thousands of questions still to be answered. But many of these questions will be settled when Apollo 7, the first manned of moon-trip components, is completed. off on the 11-day mission is scheduled for Oct.

11-two weeks from today. S. I. "Jose" Jimenez, a North American training specialist, said Thursday the Apollo 7 flight could key the rest of the project. "If Apollo 7 is highly successful," he said, "I have confidence that we will land on the lunar surface before 1969 is over." Jimenez said he was "not impressed" with the Russian flight last week in which an unmanned vehicle was sent within 1000 miles of the moon, returned to earth and recovered.

He said it was a feat the United States could have accomplished months ago and did not indicate Russians would reach the moon before the United States. William Bergen, president of the North American Space Division, said, however, Russia might have a better long-range space program. "Russia probably has a firm program beyond the lunar project, I'm not sure that we do," Bergen said. At the two-hour briefing at the Museum: of Science, the space technicians cated the susnense up to the coming flight. Body in l1orgue 9 Months Gets Burial Today After nine months, during which his body laid unclaimed in the Northern here, Albert Mitchell, 42, Roxbury, who was murdered New Year's Day, will be buried today.

A recent Boston Globe story concerning Mitchell's body prompted Christopher C. Mitchell, general manager of the Tobin Funeral Home on Massachusetts South End, to make arrangements for the funeral. Mitchell, no relation to the slain man, said burial will be in St. Joseph's Cemetery, West Roxbury. A requiem Mass will be sung Saturday at Holy Cross Cathedral, South End.

A former Detroit resident, Mitchell was murdered in Steve (Crusher) Casey's bar on Massachusetts av. Three men, who apparently did not know Mitchell and sought entrance to the bar after it had closed for the night, later were convicted of his murder. After Dr. Richard Ford completed his autopsy, the body remained at the mortuary so long that officials, when questioned, were surprised to learn that it was still there. Mitchell, a former college football player, coached a neighborhood teen-age boys football team.

There had been several attempts to raise funds to pay for funeral costs, but they were all unsuccessful. Lederle's Son Bound to Tree AMHERST The 21- year-old son of University of Massachusetts Pres. John Lederle was found bound and gagged in a cemetery close to his home on the campus Thursday morning. According to a university spokesman, Thomas Lederle said he was on his way to work at Amherst College when two unidentified persons siezed him at 6:30 a.m. and took him to the cemetery.

There they tied him to a tree. Shortly after 8 a.m. a caretaker heard shouts and found the young man. Amherst police were investigating. Max Richman Rites Today for Tailor, 81 Max Richman, 81, of 1444 Blue Hill widely-known Hyde Park area, died Thursday.

Mr. Richman owned and operated Richie's Cleaners in Hyde Park for the past 20 years. He was a member of the Workingmen's, Circle Pythias, and and also a longtime member of Congregation Agudas Israel on Woodrow av. in Dorchester. He leaves his wife, Pearl; a daughter, Sarah, and two brothers, Louis and Abraham Richman, both of Dorchester.

Services will be held today at 2:30 p.m. at the Schlossberg Memorial Chapel. 1257 Blue Hill Mattapan. Burial will be at Sharon Memorial Park in Sharon. Mrs.

Fanfani Dies in Rome United Press International ROME Mrs. Biancarosa Fanfani, the wife of Italian premier Amintore Fanfani, died early Thursday of a blood clot on the brain. Mrs. Fanfani, 54, had been in a coma since Monday night. The cause of the blood clot was from a neck injury which she received in an automobile accident Feb.

12, physicians at Gemelli Clinic said. Her husband and their seven children were at her bedside when she died. Mrs. Joseph Tweed Hingham Resident Was 58 HINGHAM Mrs. Helena A.

(Hackett), Tweed 58, 147 Otis died Thursday at the University Hospital in Boston after a short illness. She leaves her husband, Joseph A. Tweed; three brothers, Rev. Felix Hackett, of Hartford, Francis X. of West Roxbury, and Paul W.

Hackett of Oakland, and two sisters, Sr. Regina Margaret of Kearney, N.J., and Mrs. Gordon Wilson of Cambridge. Mrs. Tweed was an employee of the Mass.

Civil Service Commission for many years. A concelebrated Mass will offered in St. Gabriel's Monastery, Brighton, on Monday at 11 a.m. Amherst Girl Falls -Killed by Subway A young woman was killed Thursday when she fell into the path of a subway train as scores of commuters looked on helplessly in Central sq. station, Cambridge.

Sandra Smith, 23, of Amherst, was dead on arrival at Cambridge City Hospital. It took firemen a half-hour to extricate her body from beneath the train. Police said Miss Smith removed her shoes and placed her pocketbook on the platform before leaping in front of a train running to Ashmont station from Harvard sq. Body Discovered On Carson Beach The body of an unidentified man was found at 5 p.m. Thursday at the water's edge at the foot of st.

on Carson Beach, South Boston. He was described as about 55, five feet, nine inches tall, fully clothed and wearing a red wig, straw hat and eyeglasses. Police said he also had a deformed right foot. The was taken to the Southern Mortuary pending body, identification. DEDHAM In Dedham District Court Thursday, Judge Gilbert W.

Cox found probable cause against three men in connection with a burglary at a department store warehouse in Needham. They will face Superior Court action. The men, all former members of a protective burglar alarm firm, were charged with larceny from a building. They are Donald P. Price, 30, of Beal Wollaston; John G.

Fitzgerald, 36, of Alleyne West Roxbury and Edward R. McGray, 34, of Rutledge Peabody. During the hearing, Needham Police Sgt Wedo Sammarco said he placed three men under arrest on Sept. 15 when he saw them carrying cute bags containing $163 with of clothing. Cscar Henricksen, a representative of the protective service, told the court central head' quarters dispatched Fitzgerald to the warehouse when the alarm was sounded.

All three men were freed on personal recognizance, Capt Holt, 26, Service Set In Reading READING A memorial service will be held Sunday for Capt Robert Alan Holt, USMC, 26, who died in action in South Vietnam on Sept. 19, at the Old South Methodist Church here at 2 p.m. Born in Reading, Capt Holt was educated at Reading High School, and was president of his sophomore and junior classes. also played varsity football and baseball at Reading High. Capt Holt graduated from Phillips Academy, Andover in 1961.

There he participaseccein and football, track. basketball, In 1965 he graduated from Duke University, where he had been on the soccer and lacrosse teams. He also was a member of the Beta Omega Sigma fraternity. Capt Holt was serving with the Marine Fighter Attack Squad 542, First Marine Aircraft Wing, based in Da Nang. He leaves his parents, Clifford W.

and Shirley (Burbank) Holt of 8 Gardner a brother, Richard N. of Reading, and his grandfather, Winfield Holt of Reading. John Nolan Jr. Was Firestone Dealer; at 77 BRAINTREE John J. Nolan, 77, of 55 Brierwood a retired Boston merchant, died Thursday at Carney Hospital after a lengthy illness.

Born in South Boston, he attended Boston schools and was a World War I Army veteran. He moved here from Boston's Dorchester 13 years ago. Mr. Nolan ran a Firestone dealership in South Boston, and later in Boston's Roslindale prior to retirement 12 years ago. He was a member of Dorchester Post 154 of American Legion.

Mr. Nolan leaves his wife, Hazel I1. (Hayes); four daughters, Louise F. Nolan, at home, Mrs. Katherine Noble of Dorchester, Mrs.

Virginia V. McClafferty of South Easton and Mrs. Dorothy A. Keyes of Abington; a son, William V. Nolan of East Braintree, and 14 grandchildren.

A requiem high Mass will be offered Saturday at 9 a.m. in St. Francis of Assisi Church, South Braintree. Interment wili be in Holy Cross Cemetery, Malden. Cab Driver, Doctor Robbed An optometrist and a Cambridge cab driver were attacked and robbed in Roxbury early today.

Dr. Henry Sandridge, 69, of 20 Gaston Roxbury, was slugged as he walked near his home shortly after midnight. The doctor was taken to Boston City Hospital and treated for concussion. He lost his glasses and $90. An hour later taxi driver William A.

Silva, 30, of 95 Pine Cambridge, was stabbed by a passenger as the cab moved along Adams st. The assailant took $20. Silva went to Boston City Hospital and was treated for a wound on the right forearm. BCH to Dedicate New Lab Today Boston City Hospital will dedicate a new five-story infectious disease laboratory building today. The $1.6 million structure will house the department of medical microbiology and the Channing Laboratories where more than 135,000 tests are performed every year.

The new facility is described by Dr. Edward Kass, department director as "one of the finest of type in the nation, with its diagnostic laboratory being recognized as one of the outstanding ones in the world." Present at the dedication today will be Comm. of the Department of Health and Hospitals Dr. Andrew P. Sackett, Chairman of Trustees David S.

Nelson and Richard Cardinal Cushing, who is scheduled to give the invocation. The Market Basket features the following itemsAir Airplanes--Services Conditioning Mail Order Business Let's Swan Antiques Medical Supplies Art Supplies Miscellaneous Billiards, Pool Music Instruments Books Musical Cash Business Registers Machines Personal Patents Clothing Furs Photographs Supplies Cameras Coal. Coke, Oil Wood Refrigerators Desks. Store, Of. Furn.

Sales Diamonds Jewelry Sewing Machines Dolis Toys Sporting Goods Electronic Equipment Stamps For the Garden Storage For Sale Typewriters Furniture Appliances Vacuum Cleaners Heating Plumbing Wanted Wallpapers Radio Hotel Restaurant Supplies Washing Machines Antiques, Stamps and Coins WAREHOUSE SALE ANTIQUES Bric-a-brac. tables. picture frames, etc. Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., rear 44 Harvard Waltham.

ANTIQUE SALE 522. Western Brighton. 9-5 Steins, china, furn. bric-abrac. I BUY ANYTHING WILL CALL OR GO ANYWHERE.

LA 7-8635-CA 7-9807. STAMPS-Open st. 10-4, Brook- Palemay Stamp, 9 Station opp. M.B.T.A. Riverside line sta.

Call 734-5400 for appt. BILLIARDS, POOL BRUNSWICK. installed. 4x8 $495: equipped Also bumper tables, $139. Call 878-1312 or 337-5867.

BOOKS ENCYCLOPEDIAS Like new late used, off list. Open eves. We buy. N.E. Encyclopedia Exchange 557 Bedford 18) Whitman, 1-617-447-2151 Mass.

(On Rte. Call 876-5733 after 8 p.m. Desks, Store and Office Furniture and Fixtures FURNITURE Used matching blond oak, 1 desk. 6 chairs, 2 tables. excel.

cond. $200 or best offer. 396-1313. FOR SALE KITCHEN CABINETS FRENCH, below PROVINCIAL wholesale. 442-4411.

ADMIRAL refrig, 11 cu. lg. freezer auto. defrost, perf. cond.

Ladies roller skates, size 6 W. case, Formulette comp. W. bottles. After 6 Sat.

CO 5-6651. EIGHT dryers, Hoyt. coined Westport 50 cents, lb. ten gas minutes, in use now. INSTIT.

COIN A LAUNDRY CORP. Sunapee. N.H. (603) 763-2780. TWO MODEL POOLS Must be sold.

Also, end of year clearance on above in ground Redwood Stained Pools. Will install. Call 963-2469 or 588-9732. 250 G.P.M. positive, displacement pumps for lube oil service with 15 h.p.

explosion proof motors. MOBIL OIL 567--4080. ext. 242. Mr.

Houseman. 36 WINDOW shutters, $1.50 12 porch screen, $1.50 18 wooden storm windows, $1.50. Hotel, Restaurant Supplies WATER HEATERS Gas 130, 160 gals. each with 140 gal. glass lined reserve Tellier.

tank. excellent condition. Mr. CHEZ DREYFUS RESTAURANT. 44 Church Camb.

547-4311 HEATING and PLUMBING PACKAGE BOILERS 300 h.p. 30 h.p. Used. Mr. Lunt, 617-864-6000, ext.

6313. Hi-Fi TELEVISION Radio RCA, Philco, GE, Admiral. color TV's. show samples: cabs. scratch.

$167 up. TW 4-4546. Admiral portable, 22 inch. roll about stand. Call 523-0164 after 5:30.

TAPE recorder, Viking 85. high fidelity, dual channel, 50 exc. cond. 566-7553. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS ALLSTON PIANO co ST 2-9877 or 254-7210 FENDER Mustang bass guitar.

6 mo. old. 2 pickups, ask. $150 Call 472-9482. ask for Mike.

FOR SALE Sonla Accordion amplifier, 120 Bass, new. Call LO 7-7158. GRETSCH guitar, also Kay guitar for sale reas. Call after. 5:30.

969-5807. KAY Amp. mod. 780. plus extras.

Orig. cost. $700. Like new. $425 or best offer 436-8842.

p.m. MOSRITE MARK I. $300 with case: HONDA S-90, '67. $200. Call 442-2689.

PLAYER piano. excellent condition. also teacher's upright piano: priced low. By appt. 862- 4067.

SPINET piano, like new. Also organ, priced low, by appointment. Lexington. 862-4067. TOP quality poodles.

blk. toys sired by Belle Fleur Bossa Nova, gd. heads eye. 963-0649 PIANOS-ALL KINDS BOUGHT, SOLD RENTED MISCELLANEOUS JAPANESE bi blown fishing floats. limited number, $25 each.

Call 862-5343. PRIVATE party interested in old canes and walking sticks. give quantity, description and price, Write 68. Globe office. MUSIC PAIR of Friday aft.

season Symphony tickets, 2d balcony. $99 ea. Call 448-6780. Groton. PHOTOGRAPHS, CAMERAS HASSELBLAD 1000 camera Ekta lense 2-backs.

Exc. cond. HU 2-7800 ext. 549. 9 a.m.-noon.

REFRIGERATORS, ETC. USED refrigerators, guaranteed, $29.95: new 2-door automatics. $148.95. Call TW 4-4546. MACHINES UNCLAIMED LAYAWAYS 1968 Zig Sewing Machines, never used, must be sold.

Sews on buttons. makes designs. makes button 5 holes, binds hems monograms. Yr. parts guarantee.

Complete price $49.00 or $5 per mo. Call Capitol Sewing til 9 p.m. at 918 Providence Highway, Norwood. 762-9031. TYPEWRITERS LATE MODEL Smith Corona elec.

typewriter. $76: Inoks and runs like new. AV 2-5656. Have the Globe delivered to your home. Call 288-8000.

FURNITURE, ETC. UNCLAIMED LAYAWAY 4 Modern Rooms of Furniture and Appliances LOT 14-Pc. Danish Bedzoom Set 10-Pc. Modern Living Room 9-Pc. Spare Bedroom 28-Pe.

Kitchen Set. sessed refrigerator OF TV. NOW ONLY $300 Easy Terms Arranged FIRST PAYMENT IN NOV. REPOSSESSED 4 Complete Rooms of Furniture and Appliances 12-PC. BEDROOM SET 3-PC.

LIVING ROOM SET BUNK BED O'TFIT INCLUDES REPOSSESSED REFRIGERATOR A COMPLETE HOUSEFUL Easy Terme Arranged NOW ONLY $164 FIRST PAYMENT IN NOV. SUMMERFIELD'S FURNITURE 33 TRAVELER BOSTON CALL LI 2-9635 9 to 6 Opel 9 to LAYAWAY UNCLAIMED NEW FURNITURE FOR 3 ROOMS RECON. REFRIG, OR TV 12 BEDROOM 10 LIVING ROOM 22 PIECE KITCHEN WITH ALL EXTRAS NOW $198 TERMS ARRANGED LLOYD'S FURNITURE CO. 165 Harvard Allston AL 4-0320 BRAND NEW FURNITURE KITCHEN TABLES $25 KITCHEN CHAIRS CHESTS END COFFEE TABLES BAD. SPRING ATT.

$15 WORD BEDS 4'0 MATTRESSES $20 MAPLE FIN. BUNK BEDS With Mattress's $15 CALL LA C. C. WHITNEY FURN. MFG.

CO. 203 PORTLAND BOSTON Take elevator to 4th floor Opp. Hotel Madison, No. Station Mon. to Sat.

'til 5 p.m. Closed Oct. 2 FURNITURE RENTED ATTRACTIVE NEW furniture. Largest display! Minimum rates, used furniture at LOWER rates. Estimates cheerfully given, prompt free delivery; 30 years of reliable experience and service.

COMPARE PUTNAM FURNITURE CO. 1045 Mass. Camb. EL 4-3358 FURN. IS OUR THING Rugs, bedding, Danish style sofas, chairs, desks, unpainted chests.

great colors. Honest price tags. friendly service. Prompt deliver Come see us. KENNEDY FURNITURE, 2100 Massi Cambridge.

Open week nights 'til 9. Saturday 'til 5:30. 876-5949. PROSPECT UPHOL. CO.

SINCE 1913. Finest workmansnip and lowest prices, extra savings when mill ends used. For free estimate call 776-3535 anytime. REUPHOL. DIRT CHEAP USING remnants, Respringing $15 up.

Slipcovers, 924-2300, 963- 2523. LION-RICHARDS CO. select leaders responsive to popular, changing concerns, needs to cope by change of the individuals and institutions which shape public policy." Brooke asked that there be an end to the "searing, cruel and unjustified personal attacks which deffmorb deform public debate." He said, "let us remember that lively give and take need not be vicious, rough and tumble and that to praise one candidate does not require us to damn an other. "Let sreplace the vituperation and condescension which produce lasting cleavages with honest argument and mutual consideration. Let us do nothing in this campaign or thereafter that will set class against class, race against race, region against region.

"Let us, in short, so conduct the political contest now underway that the President inaugurated in January will take up his burden in full confidence that the nation will rally to his standard." DRACUT Federal Court Judge Frank J. Murray ruled Thursday that John Zurawski, 19, of Burdette Dracut, was not forced into joining the Marines. Zurawski argued that a probation officer of the Lowell District Court and a Marine, induced recruiter to in join Lowell the him service in July of 1967 after he had been charged as being a stubborn child. The charge was dismissed when he enlisted into the Marines. "There was no coercion here," said Judge Murray.

"This young man made a free choice to join the Marines." "Let us replace the vituperation and condescension which produce lasting cleavages with honest argument and mutual consideration. Let us do nothing in this campaign or thereafter that will set class against class. race against race, region against region. "Let us, in short, so conduct the political contesst now underway that, the President inaugurated in January will take up his burden in full confidence that the nation will rally to his standard." FURNITURE WANTED ALSO antiques, rugs, clocks. bronzes, paintings, bric-a-brac.

KAY-BEE CO. 266-4487. WILL BUY YOUR FURN. Antiques other items. Call DICK.

884-9600. 284-2823 BOYS Maple bedroom set incl. Gov. Winthrop desk. brand en new set, air early Amer.

kienmoving soon. Call 566- 3103. BEDROOM SET 6 pc. custom built Chinese Chippendale style, best offer. 784- 2251.

DUAL garage sale at 8 and 9 Kenwin Winchester, 10 a.m. Sept. 28. furniture, antiques, glassware, rugs, mirror and miscellaneous items. LEAVING for Calif-Must sell entire 3 rm.

apt. this week. Reas. RE 4-1609; if no ans. AS 7-3619.

LEAVING country must sell. year old furniture. Call 782-1222 after 5 p.m. NEW furniture. 3 rooms, living din.

best offer. Call 267-4565. RUGS, never used, 9x12, $25; 12x 15. 12x18, 12x24; pads, $9. Orientals.

$35; bunk beds. CY 6-2880. SOFA olive green Danish end table and low coffee table. Walnut good condition. Reasonable.

Call 449-0491. WANTED OLD WOODEN CLOCKS Wall clocks, mantle clocks. any cond. Call mornings or' 734-0807 or 566-2486. OLD FASHIONED DOLLS Any cond.

332-7135, 969-6023. WANTED Old Dolls, estates, marble top and used furn. paintings and bric-a-brac. WA 2- 0082. Copyright 1968 by J.

Langdon Sullivan Start anywhere. Some find it more fun to work from the top down. Each line of the the answer contains all the letters in the line above it, usually rearranged. 2. Two initials of poet Longfellow.

(The 6th and 8th letters of No. 8.) 3. A hawthorn berry. 4. Thin coat of water -color.

5. Commands (to a horse) to stand still. 6. Inseparable companion Or follower. 7.

Plane-builder Hughes' first name (possessive.) 8. Touring company of performers (two words). (LETTERS ADDED: After No. 2, the letters added in THE DEADLINE FOR ALL CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING COPY FOR THE SUNDAY GLOBE'S CLASSIFIED SECTION IS TODAY, 5 P.M. Place your advertising early phone now! 282-1500 1.

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