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Fitchburg Sentinel from Fitchburg, Massachusetts • Page 2

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Fitchburg, Massachusetts
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Fltchburg Sentinel, Tuesday, April 18, 1972 The U.S.-Soviet Summit: Why Is It Still Scheduled? By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent What has been happening lately In Vietnam could have been enough to wash out President Ninon's visit to Moscow. It hasn't--yet. The Kremlin and the Nixon I live benefits from such a meet" Administration alike have good reasons for wanting the Moscow summit to take place as scheduled. But in each capital there must be a point where prospec Obituaries MYHON E.

CORSE ATHOL Myron E. Corse. 81, of 177 South St. died Saturday in Athol Memorial Hospital. He was the husband of Edna Corse who died in 1936.

Mr. Corse was born in Eead'sboro. a son of the -Wednesday at 9.30 a.m. in the Joseph A Langone Jr. Funeral Home, 58 Merrimac and New a Edwin and Hattie (Wheeler) Corse and lived in Athol for many years.

He was employed at the former Athol Foundry and Machine Co. and also worked for the Union Twist Drill Division, U.T.D. Corp. He was an Army veteran of World War I. He is survived by a sister, Mrs.

Bertha Stowell of Westminster. Private committal will be held today in Highland Cemetery. Arrangements are in charge of the J. Edward Murphy Funeral Home. MRS.

WALTER O'HAHA TOWNSEND Mrs. Martha She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Ruth Dyette of Brighton, and Mrs. Virginia Ingersoll of California, and a grandson, Paul Scanlon of Brighton. Funeral services will be held Chardon Streets, Boston.

Burial will be Wednesday at 11.30 a.m. in Forest Hill Cemetery, Fitchburg. a i hours in the funeral home are 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday. MISS JULIET L'HOMME LEOMINSTER Miss Juliet L'Homme, 64, of 14 Spring St.

died Monday Hospital. in Leominster She was born in Gardner, a daughter of the late Arthime and Clara (Marion) L'Homme and was last employed at the Sheldon Hospital in Connecticut as a registered nurse. She is survived by two brothers, Ernest L'Homme of A. (McBride) O'Hara, 33. of Gan er', and Emile L'Homme Worcester Road, died Monday.

Tampa, and four in New England sisters Mrs Alflda Goguen and Hospital, Boston, after a i Eva L'Homme of illness. She was the wife ofij jeom ns er Mrs. Clara Mason Walter O'Hara. lot Bedford, and Mrs. Notre Dame Cemetery, She was born in Fitchburg.

I Adrienne Foisy of Marlboro. Sept. 9. 193B. a daughter of the The funeral wUl be held late Francis and Pauline Wednesday with a funeral Mass (GUlis) McBride and was a at 10 am in Holy Rosary farmer' employe of the New Church, Gardner.

Bunal TMll be England Business Service. Besides her husband, she is survived by a daughter, Miss Patricia A. O'Hara of Townsend: a brother, Francis McBride of Fitchburg; two sisters, Mrs. John Healy of LaMirada. and Mrs.

George Yore of Lincoln. The funeral will be held Wednesday from the Mallahy Funeral Home, Fitchburg. with a funeral Mass at 10 a.m. in St. Bernard's Church.

i burg. Burial will be in St. Bernard's Cemetery, Fitchburg. Calling hours in home are 2 to 4 the funeral and 7 to 9 Gardner. Calling hours in the Lamoureux Funeral Home, Gardner, are 7 to 9 p.m.

today MRS. HARRY M. BUNNELL LEOMINSTER Mrs. Alice G. (Hood) Bunnell, 82, of 165 Sylvan Terr, died this morning in Leominster Hospital.

She was born in Boston and lived in Leominster a number of years. She was the widow of Harry M. Bunnell. Mrs. Bunnell was a past president of the 25-Year Club at Foster Grant's.

She is survived by three sons, Roland J. and Raymond F. Bunnell, both of Leominster, a Richard Bunnell of treenfield; two daughters, Mrs. ing become too costly. That point is close now.

It wouldn't take much to bring about collapse of plans for the Moscow visit. The Russians, probably to their dismay, find themselves now on the receiving end of the same kind of finger-pointing they directed at the Chinese Communists when President Nixon was headed for Peking in mid-February, Moscow had done its best to make Peking uncomfortable. Among other things it eagerly sponsored a big rally in France under the name of World As sembly for Peace and Inde pendencc of the Indochinese Peoples as Nixon was about to meet with the Chinese leaders. The object was painfully obvious. The U.S.

ambassador to the Paris Vietnam talks can celcd the session that week in protest against what he called horde of Communist-controlled agitators." The Chinese leaders declined to be embarrased. Meanwhile, an expected offensive of the North Vietnamese timed to the Peking summit failed to mate rialize. The buildup had been detectable enough. Why did the North Vietnamese hold off? Was it more important for Hanoi to hoard those forces for a more important time? Did Hanoi perhaps feel that the Moscow summit had much more meaning for North Vietnam's future? Whatever the reason, Hanoi chose to wait. Now.

according to U.S. military men, it has enough wherewithal to keep the current offensive going for a couple of months, or long enough to embarrass the Kremlin around May 22. the scheduled opening date of the Nixon summit. i Leominster, A. and Twichell of Mrs.

Agnes Saaum of Brooklyn, N.Y.; 11 grandchildren, and five great- 'randchildren. The funeral will be held Thursday from the Thomas F. p.m. today. The Class of 1956 of St.

Bernard's Central Catholic High School will meet tonight at 7:30 in the funeral home. MRS. GILBERT P. ESTES TOWNSEND Mrs. Lillian D.

(Blanchard) Estes, 77. of 20 Brookline St. widow of Gilbert P. Estes. died Monday at Keystone Drive.

Leominster. She was born in Springfield, Maine, May 26.1894, a daughter of the late Allan and Emma (Crockett) Blanchard. Mrs. Estes was a member of the G.A. Spaulding Rebekah Lodge No.

124 and was a past noble grand, she was a member of Emma Lacey Circle and a member and pat president of the Ladies Benevolent Society of Townsend Congregational Church, a former member of the Grange and a founding member of the Birthday Club. She is survived by three daughters, Ethel, wife of Raymond Amiro of Townsend. Dorothy, wife of Earl Stone of a N.H., and Elizabeth, wife of Joseph Seger of Westbrook, Maine; eight grandchildren, and three great- grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 2 p.m. in the Knight-Anderson Funeral Home.

Burial will be in Hillside Cemetery. Calling hours in the funeral home will be Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Rebekah Service Wednesday at phelps of Peabody. and a 8 p.m. grandson, David Phelps of MRS.

AARON J. FORRESTER uneral Mass at Holy Name of Nazareth Church at a time to be announced. Burial will be in St. Leo's Cemetery. Calling hours in the funeral home are 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

Wednesday. ROBERT McNAUGHT PEABODY Robert Me- Naught, 83, of 17 Anthony Road, formerly of Fitchburg, died Monday night in the Twin Oaks Nursing Home, Danvers. He was the husband of the late Margaret (Brown) McNaught. Mr. McNaught was born in Westbrook, Maine, Sept.

17, 1888, a son of the late Alexander and Janet (Reid) McNaught and came to Fitchburg in 1900. He lived in the city for 70 years and was employed at General Electric Co. in Fitchburg until lis retirement in 1953. He was a member of Clan Leslie, Order of the Scottish Clans, the Retired Men's Club, and the Golden Age Club of Fitchburg. BRIGHTON Mrs.

Mae E. (McCormick) Forrester, formerly of Fitchburg, -widow of Aaron J. Forrester, died Monday in Waltham. She made her home in Brighton. Deaths BUCKLEY In West Palm Beach, Mrs.

Hannah C. (Doherty) Buckley, widow of Andrew Buckley, formerly of Committal service Wednesday at 1 p.m. In St Bernard'! Cemetery, Fltchburg. Mallahy Funeral Home In charge of arrangements. LITTLE Miss Edna E.

Little, 70, of 276 Northwest Townaond Road, Lunenburg. Funeral Wednesday at 10 a. m. In tha Bosk Funeral Hom4. The family requests no calling hours.

VcNAUGHT Robert McNaueht, 83, of 17 Anthony Road, Peibody, formerly of Fltchburg, FuneYal Thursday, 10 a.m. In the Bosk Funeral Home. Calling houri In the funeral home from 3 to 4 and 7 to 8 p.m. Wednesday. In lieu of flowers contributions may be made to thtf Guild for All the Blind, 770 Centre Newton, Mass.

O'HARA Mrs. Martha A. (McBride) O'Hara, 33, of 7 Worcester Road, Townsend, wife of Welter O'Hara. FuneVal Mass Wednesday 10 t.m. In St Bernard's Church.

Calling hours in the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today. ESTABLISHED Publtibed Daily Eteept Saudi; 808 Hall Fltchbnrf, Man Phone Second class roitagt Paid. Fltchburr Masi. TERMS: Delivered by cirrler, 70 cents a week.

Single copy sale 1 at 15 cents. Outside the RTZ Zone by mall $38.00 per year payable In advance. Mall coit In RTZ Zone $36.00 year. Member of The Associated Preii Tht Aiioclted Press Is entitled exclusively to the uitf ttpubllcauon of all local printed In thU ai ill AP fltwi Reading The At The State House; What Does It Meah? New Assistant Named Ron Wolfram, left, looks over Pclletier, General Manager- ad layout in recent Issue of Editor, right, announced new Fitchburg Sentinel. J.

Robert position of assistant ad- Sentinel Names New Assistant Ads Manager Ron Wolfram, of 9 Harrison Thus, whether by design orlst Leominster, will fill the new otherwise. Hanoi has made imposition of assistant advertising hot for Moscow. If the summit I manager of the Fitchburg should take place on schedule. Sentinel. J.

Robert Pelletier, it would lay Moscow open to General Manager-Editor, an- what, from the Communist nounced today. Fair viewpoint, would be more serious accusations than those leveled at Peking in February. Moscow would be host to Ninon at a time when the "fraternal" Communist Hanoi was vcrtislng manager will be filled by (Sentinel photo by Bob Jollimore.) Weather New England Forecast a Massachusetts -variable cloudiness Weather Elsewhere By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Wolfram 25, attended Fitch-1 tonight and Wednesday. LOV.O, burg public schools, graduating tonight upper 30s to lower 40s; Albany, clear from Fitrhburg High School Wednesday in the Albu que. dy a graduated from Winds becoming gentle south-1 Amanllo.

clear Chamberlayne Junior College, west tonight, increasingjo. 15 to Anchorage, cldy from the direct lunist regime in.RTM." majoring in ad- 20 m.p.h. Wednesday-Probabil-1 Asheville, clear under an attack I TM rt a a of precipitation 10 per cent Atlanta, clear Americans much The new assistant 20 per cent on Wednes- Birmingham, clear and heavy than mana ger joined the Sentinel on day. anything that took place in Dt 17 1958. He is married February.

After all, the Amen-! 0 the former Judith Ann cans have resumed bombing in the areas of Hanoi and Hai- phong and, by Russian account. Soviet ships in Haiphong Harbor have been hit. The Russians have been advertising their "realistic, businesslike approach" to the Nixon summit. Would that approach be so realistic that the Boston and vicinity; Bismarck, cldy Tonight i Boise, clear Wright Funeral Home with Russians would choose to ig- grandson, David Jaimaca Plain. Funeral services will be held Thurday at 10 a.m.

in the Bosk Funeral Home, Fitchburg. The Rev. Ruth E. Thompson, pastor of First Baptist Church of Gardner, will officiate. Burial will be in Forest Hill Cemetery, Fitchburg.

Calling hours in the funeral home are 3 to 4 and 7 to 8 p.m. Wednesday. MRS. LAURENCE V. HENDRICKS YOUNGTOWN, Ariz.

Mrs. Margaret (Johnson) Hendricks, 76, ot 476 West Ranch Drive. Muskegon, mother of Franklin Hendricks of Westminster, Mass, suddenly April 9 while visiting in Arizona. She was the wife of Laurence V. Hendricks.

She was born In Milwaukee, Wise. Oct. 17, -1895 and moved to Muskegon in 1920. She was a graduate of Western Michigan University and taught school In i a and Muskegon, retiring in 1966. charter member United Methodist She was a of Temple Church and superintendent of the Beach School District.

Mrs. Hendricks, -was. guidance counselor for the M.A.I.S.D., past president of the Retired Teachers life member of the M.E.A. and the N.E.A., a member of Delta Kappa Gamma and Alpha Betta Epsilon matron sororities, of Mizpah a past Chapter O.E.S., a former director of the Mothers Singers, a life member of the W.S.C.S. and a member of the Woman's Club.

Besides her ton of Westminster, she is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Margaret A. Roell of Muskegon, and 'Mrs. Catherine Landers of Frultpdrt, a brother, Arthur Johnson of Sun City, and eight grandchildren. Funeral services and burial were In nore the propaganda setback such time? That depends upon what Mos- iu me and Wednesday; fair with vari- Boston, clear Givens His hobbies are scuba able cloudiness.

Lows at night Buffalo, clear divine 'camping and reading, inear 40; highs Wednesday in City, Leominsfer Victory Stores Cease Operation The owner of the Victory inherent in such a summit at Supermarket chain said today that the Lunenburg St. store in Charleston, clear Charlotte, clear Chicago, cldy Cincinnati, clear Cleveland, clear Denver, snow DCS Moines, cldy Detroit, cldy Duluth. fain variable around ten knots Fort Worth, cldy the 60s. Winds becoming gentle southwest tonight increasing to m.p.h. Wednesday.

of precipitation 10 15 to 20 Probability per cent tonight, 20 per cent Wednesday. Eastport to Block Island: Northwest winds will become tonight. South to southwest winds 15 to 20 knots on Wednesday. Fair weather, visibility Fitchburg and the over fj ve miles. cow'hopes to get out of it andlSt.

store in Leominster whether those gains outweigh I closed permanently. prospective losses. Moscow wants a lot of things: increased trade with the United States, eased tensions in Europe to permit greater attention to problems in Asia and elsewhere, access to Western technology and possibly some sort of agreement on limiting expensive strategic arms. Moscow seems to want to invest more in its troublesome domestic economy. At what point, too would the U.S.

side feel the circumstances no longer permitted a presidential trip to Moscow? For the Nixon administration there is a good deal of importance in the public relations clout of such a journey in an election year, to say nothing of the major importance to the between 60 and 70 workers. Meanwhile, there were no ln S5 old ante. i I i LU JU3 1 continued to appear at tne New Hampsn re Tonight in- slores. DiGeronimo showers in the higher eleva- Rapid City, snow Mr. McNaught is survived by United States and the world of a daughter, Mrs.

Margaret M. a possible accord on limiting weapons of mass destruction. But such a summit could hardly be held, for example, if North Vietnam's offensive produced something that would seem to the world clearly a major military victory for Hanoi. The victory would be attributable of course, to Soviet military hardware. What is going on now, evidently, is a progressive tightening of tension in Soviet- American relations and nobody can say just when or where the snapping point might be.

whether he has had any per-; Wednesday mostly cloudy, sonal contact with 1011 chance of showers except snow representatives, or striking employees. He added that the matter has been placed in the hands i of my lawyers in DiGerommo said further variable cloudi me 20 to 25 workers who ne ss, highs in the 60s. walked off their jobs "have I returned to work." He repeated People, Programs 80MMTOION a d'Arc Circle, Daughters of Isabella, will hold its communion supper Monday night. There will be a mass aC 6.30 p.m. at the Nagel Chapel Presentation Convent on South dinner will follow in the cafeteria.

Rev. James a chaplain of the Newman Center at Fitchburg State College, will be, the speaker. Tickets may be obtained by calling Mrs. William H. McNally or Miss Catherine Sheehan.

CAMERA CLUB Camera Club of Fltchburg will present William Stockdale and ws feature length color motion picture "Backroads and Friendly People" Wednesday night at 8.15 In Guild Hall of Christ Church. Tickets are available from Camera Club members, at the Camera Shop, and at the door. MIDWAY AUTO BODY IHVICI FALVUB RD. DAY OR NIGHT 342-5725 UflCU fICl lliu.s»~....j Anthony DiGerommo said that Vermont: Variable cloudiness tonight; chance of a few showers, lows in the upper 30s and the closings stemmed 'from a 40s. Wednesday mostly cloudy.

walkout of more than 200 em- 1 occasional ram likely north and The two today. some upper 20s north. Wednes- in the 40s north to 50s south. declined to creasini say j30s will cloudiness, lows in the some upper 20s north. Green Bay, cldy Helena, cldy Honolulu, cldy Houston, clear Ind'apolis, clear Jacks'ville, clear Kansas City, cldy Little Rock, clear Los Angeles, cldy 61 Louisville, clear Memphis, clear Miami, clear Milwaukee, cldy cldy New clear New York, clear Okla.

City, clear Philad'phia. clear Phoenix, cldy Pittsburgh, clear Pt'land clear Pfland cldy lions, highs in the 40s north to 50s south. Connecticut: Partly cloudy tonight, low in the low to mid could return to work providing their jobs have not been filled by new employees." In a strike related incident, John Danizio, 47, of 7 Glenwood Woburn. pleaded innocent in Fitchburg District Court today to a charge of assault and battery on a police officer. Sgt.

Francis C. LaPrade. Special Justice Thomas M. Dooling granted a continuance 8. Danizio was on personal The charge stemmed from an incident Monday at the Victory Market off Summer Fitch.

burg. Police did hot release "irHetails of the incident. The only other strike-related incident- was reported today when milk was emptied out of cartons at the Park Hill Plaza store. Ptl. Emery J.

Robichaud Investigated. until May a recognizance The BLOODMOBILE Church the Good Shepherd will be the site of the Weyerhaeuser Co. Bloodmobile Wednesday. Donors will: be welcome either on a walk-in basis or with between 10 and 4 p.m. It will be.

to the general public as well! as Weyerhaeuser employes. 12:25 to Monday 12:36 p.m. Richmond, clear St. Louis, clear. BOSTON (AP) Thirty-nine i members of the Massachusetts House missed more than 100 roll calls during the 1971 legislative session.

Seven missed more than 200 roll calls, and nine didn't miss any of the 602 that were held. Roll calls, at best, provide a limited gauge for judging absenteeism, but it is the only gauge available. The following Is breakdown of roll ealls missed hy elected offlcUls from this area: Representatives George J. Bourque, Fltchburg, 27; Gerald Lombard, Fit- 67; Angelo Plcnccl, Leominster, II; Thomas F. Fallon, Clinton, 48; Raymond W.

LaFontalne, Gardner, 41, and Sen, Joseph D. Ward, Fitchbnrg, 67. Many legislators pride themselves on their roll call records. Some use them in campaigns for re-election. Others use the campaigns against jislators who are not record- ifgh percentage of roll And, quite often, many of the least effective legislators have better roll call attendance records than many of the more effective ones.

Being a legislator in Massachusetts is not the "public service" sort of job that it is in a state like New Hampshire. It is a political business. And in supporting proposals for increased pay, members and the leadership have frequently used the argument that being a legislator is increasingly becoming a fulltime job. This, despite the fact that a conservative estimate woulc put at more than .50 per.cenl the number of legislators with a significant outside income. To back up their contention that legislative work is becoming fulltime work, members frequently cite the 8.000 or.

so bills filed each year and the number of months each a that the legislature is in session. High Low Pr Yet sn mentioned that fil 36 80 42 83 58 40 29 .06 74 37 75 53 73 49 46 31 44 27 64 45 50 36 81 61 75 45 73 54 68 44 60 42 77 39 78 56 .01 66 43 43 33 .20 86 65 58 44 41 25 81 74 .08 80 66 72 45 85 56 78 62 78 43 68 53 0 45 74 49 85 68 54 42 77 36 .03 80 51 72 48 81 61 70 44 90 62 65 39 53 33 .02 50 37 52" 32 75 44 76 53 meets "formally" generally only on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Thursday, generally, Is an Informal session. No "con- issues" come up during informal sessions, which means no roll calls are taken. And that means there is no record of who Is around and who isn't.

Most members aren't. Friday Is like an off day. The legislature doesn't meet, and the State House' is virtuallj empty. In considering the roll call records of House and Senate members, several factors must be taken into consideration. Roll calls frequently are missed by individuals because of illness.

Many legislators, particularly those from urban areas, miss roll calls on occasion "-because they are involved in constituent work. Roll calls are missed when legislators are traveling on legislative trips. Several House members were -for mayor of their communities during 1971 and undoubtedly missed roll calls for that reason. Sometimes committee work takes precedence over roll calls on relatively minor issues. But committee business also frequently scheduled so as not to interfere with members' outside interests, and therefore conflicts with activities in the House and Senate Chambers.

The Judiciary Committee, for example holds hearings in the afternoon--conflicting with the formal legislative sessions--but providing committee members, most of. whom are lawyers, time to attend to their legal businesses. On the other side of the coin, the House leadership has made it easier for members in the State House to respond to roll calls. A spokesman for Speaker David M. Bartley said the telephones in all the members' offices are equiped with a signal device which alerts them when a roll call is being taken.

In the-Senate, a spokesman for President Kevin B. Harrington said members in the build- thousands of bills each year are i reported unfavorably by com- OI1 uc mittee and killed on the floor in ing are alerted and vote gener- the wink of an eye. It also isn't ally unless they are tied up gt a mentioned that the legislature'hearing. bombing of North Vietnam and a negotiated peace of the Vietnam war. Guy D.

Rosmarin Republican nomination for the Fourth Congressional District seat now held by U.S. Rep. Robert F. Drinan, D-Newton. Rosmarin, 32, is i a Bo 653, Westminster Hill Road an i Avenue, voiceles Engine 2.

2:30 'to 2:44 p.m. Engin 1 to 16 Cherry wate problem. 8:52 to 9:02 p.m. Box 7623 Hotel Raymond, 35 Day. St malfunctioning system.

Engine 1, 3, 4 and 5, Ladders 2 an 3, Rescue 1. 9:14 to .9:35 p.m. Am balance. John Conway, 18; 7 McDowell Ayer, from Civic Center to Burban i a Injured playin hockey. Births Vie Do Exciting Things With Long Hair Creating 3 naw looks THE' PACiTTI THE PLAYMATE Thl MOM IMIril.

Maxl) Ino (nil bill loll of llylll John Filch Mm 143-SMS Pirkhlll Plita 342-2900 40 Summir 143-6(19 Thursday, April 20th 9.A. M. 4 P. M. Agudas Achim Synagogue 40 BOUTELLE FITCHBURG, MASS.

Sponioied by Flrchburg Chapter of Hadallih Brought to you Stork Diaper Service Tel. 343-7977 Gift Certificates Available Sargenf Aide Seeks Congressional Seat Calling for an end of U.S. I find a way to end the senseless killing and destruction that li going on now," he said. Rosmarin also called for assistant Sargent to Gov. Francis W.

and is assistant secretary of Transportation for the Commonwealth. He announced his candidacy press conferences in Newton during morning and afternoon and Fitchburg. Rosmarin said President Nixon should "direct Ambassador Porter to return to the Paris Peace Talks to resume negotiations immediately. The issue is not whether we will bargain at the point of a gun. The issue is whether we will continue to seek a formula for peace in Vietnam." bombing of North Vietnam should cease and should be limited in South Vietnam to what efforts are necessary to protect our troops which are being withdrawn," Rosmarin said.

I firmly 'believe that the i United Nations must be involved in an effort to seek an mmediate cease-fire in In- lochina. As difficult as it may ie, the Great Powers must limitations on the number consecutive terms that can be held by representatives and senators, and for solutions to of economic development, manpower and a problems, en- i social security, education and youth, health care, transportation and foreign policy. Rosmarin has worked with Sargent since May, 1970. He has practiced law in Boston, pecializing in environmental, i i 1 a live and tran- law and was counsel conservation organizations, j'rom 1966 to 1968, he was a aolitical-economic consultant in political cam- strategy planning fun- and economic analysis At Bnrbank Hospital A daughter to Mr. and Mrs Villiam A.

Bergeron 2d (Lind A. Hodgman), 590 Elm St. LEOMINSTER HOSPITAL A son to Mr. and Mrs. Jon Aliskevic'z (Pauline Sethelette), 31 Howard St.

A son to Mr. and Mrs. Job E. Quinn (Anne T. Collette), 51 St.

A daughter to Mr. and Mrs Daniel Hinckley (Jan-Mari iatstat), 197 Main Soutl ancestor. Our mt Sentiritl Want Adi for Buying, Selling, or FIVE DOOM APARTMENT, III utllltlii Includ.rf, pirtly fur- nlihld. $35.00 wllKly. Clll 000-0000 inytlmt.

YOU, TOO, CAN GET QUICK SENTINEL CLASSIFIED RESULTS! CALL CLASSIFIED -343-6911 oaign ions programs. is a former assistant In he office of Mayor Robert F. iVagner in New York City. IN LOVING MEMORY William J. McCarthy Who Died April 18, IMS Sadly Missed, And Lovingly Remembered by His Family YOU DON'T HAVE TO BEG FOR EXCELLENT SERVICE AND COMPLETE SATISFACTION wntn you 10 la Ids ixpstls it Mod.rnt II tomli lyl And It won't coit you pinny xlr! You "n't It wnni whsit you tllht hs MliHs it Modirni- Km, RU6CLEANIN6 SALES SAtlSfSIRVICf.lNJIALlATION 343-3216 DUCK MILL UpAD.OfF HOUTIU FiTCHIUjtO.

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About Fitchburg Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
317,153
Years Available:
1873-1977