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Hartford Courant from Hartford, Connecticut • 1
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Hartford Courant from Hartford, Connecticut • 1

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Hartford Couranti
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Hartford, Connecticut
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1
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2ND ED. I EH. THE HARTFORD "ic ir 5TH ED COURANT; Friday, H) 4TH ED. 3RD ED. Obituaries brother, Herbert L.

Chamberlain of San Francisco, two sisters, Mrs. Lillian Schmidt and Mrs. Carol Gilbert, both of Newington, and eight grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 2 p.m, at the Rose Hill Funeral Home, Elm Street, Rocky Hill. Burial will be in Rose ROBERT G.

ELLIOTT Robert Greene Elliott, 62, of 122 Maplewood West Hartford, died Wednesday at Hartford Hospital. He was born Sept. 27, 1900 in Dannemora, New York. He worked for the T. D.

Bross Inc. as an electrician. He belonged to the local union 764, IBEW, and the Asylum Hill Con-gregalional Curch. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Bertha L.

Elliott; two sons, Robert G. Elliott of Wilmington, Vt. and Donald E. Elliott of West Dummerston, a daughter, Mrs. Berte M.

E. Evans of Southington; two sisters, Mrs. Francis Lindtveit of Houston, Tex. and Mrs. Gertrude Es- penscheid of New Jersey and 11 vVxts til sk 1 grandchildren.

Funeral services be held Saturday at 9:30 a.m. will be held Saturday at 11 a.m. I at the Benjamin J. Callahan Fu-at the Gross Memorial Chapel, 814 neral Home, 1602 Main East Asylum with the Rev. Dale Hartford, with a Solemn Requiem Griffith officiating.

Burial will be Mass at 10 in St. Mary's Church. compartment. The pressure chamber was brought into play Thursday night to aid one-day old Patrick Bouvier, son of President Kennedy. Patrick's condition was listed as improved but still serious (AP Wirephoto).

CHAMBER USED TO SAVE PRESIDENT'S SON: This is an interior view of the Hyperbaric pressure chamber an unusual breathing apparatuswith a medical team si work. At right is the mail lock through which instruments can be passed from the outside into the operating Prominent Drug Store Owner Dies flyman Katz, 58, of 44 Lawler West Hartford, a prominent drug store owner, died Thursday fit: St. Francis Hospital. Katz was bom March 1, igp5, in Russia and was brought to the United States as a child. He attended schools in New York City and Rockville and graduated from the New Haven School for pharmacy in 1925.

Founded Stores Katz founded the Quality Drug Store on Park Street, which he operated for 20 years. In 1939 he opened the first drug store in Newington under the name of Town Hal! Pharmacy. later lie owned Hy's Pharmacy on Broad Street, which he operated unlu his illness a year and a alf ago. He was a member of the Teferes Israel Synagogue, the Mr. and Mrs.

Club, the Connecticut Pharmaceutical the Hartford County Druggist Assn. and the National Assn. of Retad Druggists. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Sarah Gordon Katz; two sons, Marvin S.

Katz and Warren G. Katz, both of Blonmfield; a daughter, Mrs. Lawrence Lassoff of West Hartford; a brother, Jack L. Katz of Bioomfield; two sisters, Mrs. Simon Schlar of Hartford and Mrs.

Minnie Haber of West Hartford, and six grandchildren. 'Funeral services will be held today at 2:30 p.m. at the Wein-stein Mortuary, 640 Farmington with Rabbi Haskel Linden-thai officiating. Burial will be in the Wolkowy-sker Society Cemetery, Tower Deaths DONNELLY. In August 7, 1963, St.

Francis Hospital. Dr. W. Allen Donnelly at 4 p.m. in Clark Warren Ceme-1 tery, Marlboro, Vt.

Friends may call at the James T. Pratt Funeral Home, 71 Farmington today from 7 to 9 p.m. The family suggests that contributions be marlo to the Asvlum Hill Congre gational Church Memorial Fund in his memory. MRS. JOHN GRANT Mrs.

Alice Grant, 40, wife of John Grant of 8 Jerome New Britain, died Thursday at Capitol City Named Bushnell Developer (Continued from Page 1) 1 eludes the Reynold Aluminum experts to cut down to a certain Service Corp. of Virginia; Archi- Mansfield Hospital after a long tery, East Hartford. The Benja-illness. A New Britain native, J. Callahan Funeral Home, Helen Cyr of Glastonbury, and four grandchildren.

Funeral services will be held Monday at 8:15 a.m. at the Fisette Funeral Home, 20 Sisson with a Requiem High Mass in St. Ann's Church at 9. Burial will be in Mt. St.

Benedict Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Saturday and Sunday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. MRS. FILOMENA GALLO Mrs. Filomena Gallo, 72, of Redding Street, widow of James Gallo, died Thursday at a local convalescent hospital.

She leaves two brothers, Alfred D'nofrio and Anthony D'nofrio, both of East "Hartford. Funeral services will Burial will be in Mt. St. Bene dict Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

ANTHONY PAGANO Anthony M. Pagano, infant son of Francis and Elizabeth Syden- ham Pagano of 225 Woodlawn East Hartford, died Thursday at St. Francis Hospital. Private funeral services will be held Saturday at the convenience of the family in St. Marys Ceme 1602 Main East Hartford, is in charge of arrangements.

Friends may call at the funeral jhome today from 7 to 9 p.m MRS. HARRY SILVER Mrs. Ida C. Goldberg Silver, 64, served at the home of her daugh- ter, Mrs. Irving Smith, 36 Cot tage Grove Circle, Bioomfield, The family suggests that memor- ial contributions may be made to 'a charity of the donor's choice.

J0HN J- CAREY John Joseph Carey, 71, of 34 Garden Stratford, died Wed- nesday while visiting his daugh- ter in Knobnoster, Mo. He was born Oct. 7, 1891 in Philadelphia, she leaves, besides her husband, four sisters, Mrs. Gerald Goodwin of Manchester, Mrs. Joseph Piasecki of Middletown, Mrs.

John Balascak of Meriden and Mrs. Auburn Sprouse of New Britain and three brothers, Hill Memorial Park. Friends may call at the funeral home today from 7 to 9 p.m. Bicycle Bandit Flees Hospital In New York NEW YORK (UPD A tough two-gun bicycle bandit who was shot four times and critically wounded in a gunfight with police escaped from a hospital Thursday possibly in the nude. Robert Anderson, 28, ripped the needle used for intravenous feeding from his arm and disappeared from a ward in the Kings County Hospital in Brooklyn.

His police guard noticed the empty bed and sounded the alarm. Anderson was accused of rob bing a grocery of $30 Wednesday then hopping on his bicycle and riding two miles to another store he allegedly held up for $60. As he pedalled off, he was spotted by a police patrol car. He fell off his bicycle, ducked behind a parked car and with a revolver in each hand fought a duel with Patrolmen Roy Esperti and Hugh McCann. Police said Anderson fired seven times and the two patrolmen fired 20 shots.

Anderson was hit in the left shoulder, left leg, hip and back before he surrendered. Singer's Husband Is Hospitalized In Auto Smashup SANTA MONICA, Calif, Producer Sid Luft, husband of singer Judy Garland, was taken to Santa Monica Hospital on Thursday following an auto acci dent on rain-soaked Wilshire Boulevard. California Highway Patrol officers at the scene said Luft com- i 1. piainea oi pain in nis nee, auu back and was taken to the hospital by ambulance. Investigators said Luft, 47, crashed into a traffic light pole after glancing off a car in front.

No other persons were injured. A hospital official said X-rays didn't indicate any broken bones, but Luft was being admitted for observation. Employes at Kaman Tn AiH RlnoH Drive lO 1J1UUU XJllW Senate Prodded To Speed Ban (Continued from Page 1) of a continued unlimited nuclear arms race." The treaty is to be policed by existing means of spotting nuclear explosions. The teams include air sampling, acoustical and electron ic devices and intelligence. Kennedy sought also to point out that Republicans as well as Demo crats have been committee to the test-ban proposition in the past.

He noted the treaty "grows out of the proposal made by President (Dwight Eisenhower in 1959" and a Senate-passed resolution that year, and said it also "carries out the explicit pledges contained in the platforms of both parties in 1960." "This treaty is the first concrete result of 18 years of effort by the United States to impose limits on the nuclear arms race," he said. "There is hope that it may lead to further measures to arrest and control the dangerous competition for increasingly destructive weap- 0ns. 7 Die As Auto Slams into Bridge FONTANA, Calif. UP) A 41- year-old man and six youngsters number of stories. When the tie developed, Ritter said that in view of the situation it would be appropriate for the developers to be invited to submit additional plans.

Mayor Glynn said he felt that the height was a minor considera tion in the over-all objectives of the Capitol City plan. McDonough then asked Heard what his position would be if there were no legal question involved. Heard said he would have voted for Capitol City "In viou, nf thi u-ill rhanfo mi, In tin nn rYinttfll- McDonough declared. The initial action was then reconsidered, with Heard opposing, and the second vote cast. Aetna Spokesman 'Pleased' Following the decision a spokes man for Aetna said he was pleas- ed at the selection ol Capitol City Associates ana Keynolds Alum- inum Service Corporation.

Stephen Arasimowicz of New of 37 OgUby wue 01 nauy Britain, Sanford Arasimowicz ofjS. Silver, died Thursday at St. Schenectady, N.Y. and Joseph Francis Hospital. She was born Arasimowicz of San Francisco, in Hartford Aug.

14, 1898 and Calif. Funeral services will be lived here all her life. She was held Saturday at 8:30 a.m. at the a member of the Congregation Niesiobedzki Funeral Home, New Augudas Achim. Besides her hus-Britain and at 9 a.m.

in Sacred i band, she leaves a son, Stan-Hcart Church, that city. Burial ley M. Silver of South Windsor; will be in Sacred Heart Cemetery, a daughter, Mrs. Irving Smith New Britain. Calling hours at the of Bioomfield; two sisters, Mrs.

funeral home will be 6 to 9 p.m.! Meyer Schulman of Meriden and today. Mrs. Alfred Clavan of Johnson- ville, Fla and five grandchil-Mrs. Jean M. Post 'dren.

Funeral services will be Mrs. Jean M. Post, 68, of 70 held today at 1 p.m. at the Wein-Otis Manchester, widow of stein Mortuary, 640 Farmington Russell H. Post, died Thursday with Rabbi Abraham N.

Av- band of Mrs. Helen Crandall Donnelly. Country. His petite bride of four Funeral services Saturday at jv. tho fnrmpr Tnan Tarnl Mar-am.

from the Moiioy Funeral Home, flays- trie tormer Joan Laroi Mar at Manchester Memorial Hospital Rutick and Cantor Lipot Pollack after a long illness. She was born officiating. Burial will be in the in Hartford on Oct. 9, 1894, a Congregation Agudas Achim Cem-daughter of the late Malcolm and etery, Cleveland Avenue exten-Emma Cowles Mc Mie and lived sion. Memorial week will be ob- "Aetna Life welcomes this op- was put in the chamber.

The first portunity to contribute to the fut- indication of this came late Thurs-ure growth and progress of this day afternoon when President city which has been our home for Kennedy flew by helicopter from more than 110 years," he said. Cape Cod nearly six hours be- During the session leading up fore he had planned to do so. died today when a station wagon' opinion ol Agency Counsel: slammed in Manchester for six years. Pre viously she lived in Hartford and West Hartford. She Was a member of Second Congregational Church, Manchester.

She leaves a daughter, Mrs. Thomas Daw ikins, Manchester; a son, Robert iPost of Elmwood. a brother, Mai- 'colm Mc Mie, Duxbury, Mass. jand five grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Sunday at 1 p.m.

at the First Congregation al Church, Vernon. The Rev. Fe lix M. Davis, pastor of the ond Congregational Church. Chester, will officiate.

Burial will; 906 Farmington Avenue, West Hart' ford, with a Solemn Requiem Mass St. Timothy Church at 9 a.m. Burial In Mt. St. Benedict Cemetery, Friends may call at the funeral home today -1-5 and 7-9 p.m.

GOLDEN. In St. Francis Hospital, August 7, 1963, Edward F. Golden, husband of Rita (Cotto) Golden of 674 Broad Hartford. Funeral services be held Saturday at 8:30 from the Taylor Modeen Funeral Home, 233 Washington Hartford, with a Requiem Mass at Immaculate Conception Church at 9 o'clock.

Interment will be in Mt. St. Benedict Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. There will be a recitation of the Rotary at 8 p.m.

HQLLISTER. In Hartford Hospital Aug. 6, 1963. Raymond W. Hollisler of 320 Silver Lane, East Hartford.

Husband of Mrs. Fayella (Clark) Hollis-ter. Funeral services Friday at 2:30 pjn. In the First Congregational Church, East Hartford. Interment, Center Cemetery, East Hartford.

Friends wish may make contributions in -his memory to the Remembrance Fund of the First Congregational Church, East Hartford. HORAN. Mary B. of 95 Newmarket Rd Garden City, L. I.

on August 7, 1963, beloved wife of the late John T. Horan, dear mother of Mrs. Victor N. Cannizzaro, sister of Mrs. Viola B.

Rice, Mrs. Frank A. Chrlstensen and Miss Marguerite J. Brumbaum, loving grandmother of Carol Ann Can-hizzaro. Funeral from The Garden Chapel of Walter B.

Cooke Funeral Service, Franklin Ave. at 15th Garden City, L. I. Solemn Requiem Mass, St. Joseph's R.

C. Church Saturday at 9:15 a.m. Interment, Holy Rood Cemetery. KUETTEL. In Middletown, Aug.

7, 1963, William e. Kuettei, husband of Ethel Ceok Kuettei, formerly of stepfather of Clayton Northrop of New- FbUT Ba1ieVyCeFuneraiy Home' 273 South Elm Wallingford. Friends may call today from 1 to 2 p.m. Burial In Memorlam Cemetery, vn Air.L. -Z.

into a concrete bridge! auuuneni un uie aan cernaraino i iL. t- j- Freeway. Three other youths sur Thp ornnn was rp nrnincr from uimciiLc tunica. ine driver, rorresc Lewis Los Angeles, and two children were killed instantly. Four other ijuiyiujca vi iiu.i.-u du calui siun lo miiuud.

submitted craft will be asked to help The survivors, all 13 Heard maintained that the Re-Sllil eiirL SCaleS- Agency could not. son of the late John and Carey. He was a retired Thomas Heslin who said he fou fWo u.a. ial rnnfiit the fad that a1 the develop. ers exceeded the height limit in leuec 3c tne time proposals were nant n-nrwzolc -WW vrtlataH zoning ordinances over which it has no control.

Heslin replied that existing eight ordinances would have pro- hihilpri thp rnnstrnr'tinn nf stitution Paza Bonee and Glvnn. both lawyers. ag Teed with Heslin-S Iegal opin. business accountant and lived be in Elmwood Cemetery, Ver-most of his life in Philadelphia, non. Friends may call at thePa.

He leaves three daughters, Holmes Funeral Home, 400 Main! Mrs. John Whitehouse of Manchester, Saturday from bury. Mrs. Francis Condon of youngsters died before reaching1 i .0 HYMAN KATZ Avenue. Memorial week will be observed at his home.

The family suggests that memorial contributions be made to the building fund of the Teferes Israel Synagogue. Douglas Gives Hiking Shoes To Young Wife FORKS, Wash. (AP)-What did Supreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas give his young bride for a wedding present? "A back pack and a pair of hiking boots," she said with a smile Thursday. The two, holding hands as do newlyweds the world over, mapped plans for a honeymoon on Washington's rugged Olympic Peninsula which will give the gift plenty of use.

Cookouts, overnight hikes on coastal beaches, fishing and looking for a summer home site will occupy most of their time. Bride a Tyro The 64-year-old Douglas, an ardent outdoorsman, will be doing uat mmsi natnrallv in familiar tin, 23, ol suburban auttaio, in.y.. will find it "new, strange and wonderful." "I can do all right with hotdogs, hamburgers and steaks," she said, but admitted she's a tyro on the trail and at camp cooking. Douglas said he'd help out and perhaps teach her the secret of his "famous baked beans." The honeymooners, traveling under an assumed name to shun publicity, arrived by plane at Seattle on Tuesday evening and spent the night at a lake lodge on the peninsula. They came to this logging community Wednesday and are the guests of Mr.

and Mrs. August Slathar, old friends of the jurist. Douglas was divorced by his second wife. Mercedes. 46, last week in Goldendale, on grounds of cruelty.

Pike Crash Kills Bay State Man FAIRFIELD Charles M. Davis, 28, of Worcester, was killed Thursday when the tractor trailer he was operating veere(j nrr Connecticut Turn- piKe, Stl'UCK me aOUtmeni 01 an overpass and plunged down an em- bankment. Davis, thrown from the vehicle, was pronounced dead on arrival tion Co. of York, Pa. Greenwich Service Set For James B.

Maher GREENWICH IA) -Funeral services for James B. Maher, 63, president of a Greenwich coal and building materials firm, will iiT.u.p Unwn Maner was also Known the Owner of as a show and racing horses. He leaves his Mrs. Mary 'Walker Maher, two sisters in addition to Dorothy, Mrs. Robert A.

Lee of Greenwich, and Mrs. nf pnrt Chet. William i. Kearaon Ol ron V-neS- ter, N.Y., and a brother, Joseph. (Jiai'leS JT lSnCl- UlCS Founded Body Firm DETROIT (AP) Charles T.

isner, 81, One OI ine automotive hrothprs ApA Thursdav in lsner DrOineiS, eu uiuisudy ui a Detroit hospital, p. otui uiaries isner was me secona Eldest of the seven brothers who founded the Fisher Body Corp. I Hits Air Ruling WASHINGTON tfi Senate investigation of the Civil Aeronau tics Board's recent decision denying Northeast Airlines a permanent certificate over its New York-Florida route was asked Thursday by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.

"This decision." Kennedy said, "will have grave economic consequences for New England. In ail probability, it could mean the death of the only major airline based in our region. It will jeop- nardize the jobs of 2,000 employ ees." Stratford and Mrs. Harry Zeus-U p.m chner of Knobnoster. and nine! Wednesday, it will be at ion.

Cronin said the agency should jand 2-year-old John are both rely on its counsel. He said hen Cape Cod. M. Ludorf and the Associated Con struction Co. The nomination of Capitol City followed the recommendation of the special Board of Review named to evaluate the three plans of the finalists.

The board was composed of Olindo Grossi, dean of the school of architecture at Pratt Institute; Christopher Tunnard, professor of city planning at Yale University, and John Robert White, senior vice president of IUI lum ul Crown, tu i-i Harris, Stevens Inc. I 1 Kennedy Baby Slightly Better (Continued from Page 1) an improvement in the baby's condition. However, the infant's condition had worsened up to the time he y- summer White House in Hyanms Port was the President's second visit of the day to his ailing son. After each visit he remained nearby at a hotel. Shortly before the prematurely born infant was placed in the chamber, the President telephoned his 34-year-old wife Jacqueline who was recuperating at Otis Air Force Base Hospital from -the Caesarean section delivery.

Patrick is the third child for President and Mrs. Kennedy and the first in 70 years to be born while his father was in the White House. The other two Kennedy children, 5-year-old Carolina Connecticut Authors Speak Up Two talented Connecticut women air their views in two profiles in the World of Women Sunday. Watch for these provocative interviews in Sunday's HARTFORD COURANT 2.25 Cole Slaw Tel. 249-7651 leas i.

m. re ana Henry j. a nospital. i ne Highway Patrol said Lewis passed a truck, sped off the free- ay an ewudiiMiieiu and rammed into the abutment Weather, Tides GOVERNMENT FORECAST Local: Sunny and warm today, high 80 to 85. Fair with little temperature change tonight.

Low near 60. Increasing cloudiness, warm and a chance for showers Saturday. State: Sunny and warm today, Fair with little temperature change tonight. Increasing cloudiness, warm and a chance for showers Saturday Temperature Summary tor Aug. 8, 1963 7a.m.

p.m. 7 p.m.l Temp. (deg. F.l 68 Rel. Hum.

(PC.) 87 Bar. Pres. at S.L. 29.89 83 2597.84 29.84 75 1 grandchildren. Burial ana tuner- a services will be held today in warrpnhurp Mo Mo.

MRS. STANLEY SOBANSKI Mrs. Doris Chamberlain Soban-ski, 56, of 253 Maple Hill Newington, wife of Stanley Soban-ski, died Thursday at her home. She was born Aug. 19, 1906 in New Haven and lived in Newington for 30 years.

She was a member of the First Church of Christ Congregational, Newington. Besides her husband, she leaves a son, Herbert S. Sobanski of New Britain; three daughters, Mrs. MATARESE. In Newington Veterans, at Uiy ttospiiai in neaiDy Hospital, Harry (Chief) Matarese 1 RrMnpnnrr 500 Edgewood St.

husband of Vera 101 luel" l- Booth Lewis Matarese. Funeral Satur- The tractor-trailer, which had day at 8 a.m. at the Giuliano-Sagarinoli fU Funeral Home. 247 Washington traveling eastbound on the with a solemn Requiem Miss in st turnpike, landed on its side near Michael Church at 1 a.m. Burial will be in Rose Hill Memorial Park Ceme-jMlll Plain Road.

DaVlS Worked for tery. Friends may can at the funeral Eastern States Transportation today from 2-5 and 7-9 p.m. American Red Cross during the coming week The bloodmobile will be at the company's plant on Old Windsor i f- IJ noaa, jsioomneia, wunudy mini of 3580 Main st- from 8 10 10 a m- ana on inurJay 31 a.m company's installation at Bradley Field from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. Also on Thursday blood will be collected at the Connecticut State Prison in Wethersfield. State Man Drowns ROCHESTER, N.Y.

(Nicholas R. Mullen of Wilton, drowned Wednesday in Ironde-quoit Bay, about four miles outside this city. The 23-year-old victim had been swimming with friends when he Water Resources Commission eft-er state dam inspections, Wright said. The hundreds of dead fish, visible from Route 15 where it crosses the river and odiferous to East Hartford residents near the re- gion, died from lack of oxygen in 1UA I 7 to 9 p.m. WALDO PAULETTE Waldo Paulette, 64, of 76 Main died Monday at his home, Ti ii.

i I Born in South Brewer, Maine, he lived in the Hartford area 25 years. He was a machinist for Pratt and Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford, retiring four years ago. He was a veteran of World War serving with the 12th Cavalry. He leaves a sister, Mrs. Rose Ha-den and a stepsister, Mrs.

Florence Pouter, both of Waterville, Maine. Funeral services will be held Friday at 7:15 a.m. at the Maple Hill Chapels, 382 Maple with a Requiem High Mass in St. Peter's Church at 8 a.m. Burial will be in Soldiers Field, Wilson.

ALFRED B. FROEHL1CH Alfred B. Froehlich, 74, of 827 Park died Thursday at Cedar-crest Hospital, Newington. He was born June 21, 1889 in Germany and lived in Hartford for 50 years. He was retired from the Merrow Machine Co.

where he worked 30 years. He was a member of the Hartford Liedcr-kranz and the Workmen's Sick and Death Society of Hartford. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Bertha Jansen Froehlich; a son, Alfred MCMAHON. At his home, August 6, 1963.

Hugh T. McMahon, husband of Irene (Burns) McMahon of 644 Bioomfield Bioomfield. Funeral will be held Saturday at 8.15 a.m. from the Thomas F. Farley Funeral Home, 96 Webster with a Solemn Requiem Mass in Sacred Heart Church, Bioomfield, at 9.

Burial will be in Mt. St. Benedict Cemetery. Friends ray call at the funeral home today from 2 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. Barbara Paulser, Miss Jeannettejapparently attempted to dive into Sobanski, both of Newington, Mrs.

the bay from a railroad trestle, Katherine Lancaster of Kittery, jpolic said. her mother, Mrs. Emma, Witnesses said he did not sur-Chamberlain of Newington; a face. Based on data to 7:30 p.m.: high 86 at controls in its invitation to p.m.; low 66 at 4 a.m.; mean 76, i normal 72, degree days 0. High yearjders bill it Went OUt Of US Way ago 38; low 63 to encourage flexibility and im- Oarnrri hinh th i al Oi In 101A McNEIL.

In Middletown, August 8, 1963, be Md lcre Saturday. Mrs. Evelyn (Southmayd) McNeil of; 68 court cromweii, wtfe of j. Rod- Maher was found dead in bed ney McNeil. Funeral from Coughlin Fu- j- unm.

at Wednesday bv neral Home, 491 High ms nome lale "eanesuay uy Saturday at 8 a.m. followed by Sol- a sister, Dorothy. Fish Unfortunate Victims Of River Dam Repairs was prepared to go ahead. "I've made my position clear," added Heard. "I'm going to vote no." Brandon recalled that during the hearings Capitol City said it could not consider cutting down the size of its project; the First Hartford Realty would not change its design regardless of the zoning change and the Urban Hartford Company said it would increase the height but no other aspect of its plan.

Encouraged Flexibility Agency Director Robert J. Bliss said the agency had set certain agination. He said as a member of the special Review Board, he felt the Capitol City plan was "far superior." Bonee added that he felt the Capitol City plan was "head and shoulders above the other plans. The decision is not difficult for me," he added. Capitol City Associates in- WILLIAM H.

PEHL Oculists' Prescriptions Filled Broken Lenses Repaired Repair Work of All Kinds 11 ASYLUM ST. RM. 303 247-6570 FRIDAY Record low this date 49 in 1950. Highest Temp, since Jan. 1, 95.

Lowest Temp, since Jan. 1, -10. Accumulated departure from normal this month, through Aug. 7, 0. Precipitation Summary Departure from normal this month through Aug.

7, Inches. Total from Jan. 1 through Aug. 7, 22.39 Inches. For same period last year 21.01 inches.

Conn. River slaqe at 8 a.m. 3.2 feet. Albany 84 62 Miami Beach 89 78 Atlantic City 80 70 N.Y. City 85 66 Buffalo 81 62 Phila, Chicago 86 67 Phoenix Denver 85 60 Pittsburgh Duluth 85 50 Seattle Fort Worth 99 78 Tampa Kansas City 98 71 Washington Los Angeles 13 66 Tides 87 63 101 75 83 63 85 58 92 78 89 66 1 HIGH LOW 1:08 fm am' 7:50 Pm ai ayorooK 2:07 pm, 8:12 am, 8:50 pm At New Haven 2:28 am, 2:48 pm, am.

9:05 pm property and human lives 11, lUCllUUII VI IjOOI 11U1UV1U, a brother and two sisters in Ger manv. three grandchildren andFnursav mc ouauuw woici 5, sdiu LyiKM New London Dead fish in the Hockanum River near the East Hartford Manchester town line are the victims of circumstances that may save i in future years, it was learned The fish mostly carp or gold en sunieia ne ueau on ine mud flats of the river that has dropped several feet since Mon- i a. day, while others fight for life near the surface of the murky waters. Drainage from the river and connecting Laurel Park Pond, just south of Route 15, began Monday when Case Brothers pap- er manufacturers started repairs on a dam at the company's East Hartford mill. Dam Back In Operation But the dam, with its south abut ment rebuilt, will be closed this morning, according to plant sup erintendent Kenneth A.

Wright, emn High Mass of Requiem in m. John's Church, cromweii at a.m. Interment In Rose Hill Memorial Park, Rocky Hill. Friends may call at fu-, neral home Friday evening 7 to 9 p.m. Morrison, in.

Hartford Hospital, Auq. TMTiTn Comanche East Hartford. Funeral will be held Saturday at 8 a.m. from he Rose Hill Funeral Home, Elm Street, Pocky Hiii, with a Solemn Requiem Mass in Blessed Sacrament Church, cast Mamorn, ai inierninu, Hill Memorial Park, Rocky Hill. rnenas wisnmg nonsiioi lauun 529-3381 before 6:30 p.m.

REDDINGTON. In Hartford, August 7, 1963, G. T. Reddington, hus-l bond of Mrs. Elizabeth (Flattery) Red- dinqton of 23 Carpenter St.

Funeral from Ahern Funeral Home, 180 Farm- Ington Saturday morning at 8:30 with a Solemn Requiem Mass in Our I i dv of Sorrows church at 9 o'clock, interment Mt. st. Benedict cemetery. Home today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. ROACH.

In St. Francis Hospital, Aug. 7, 1963. Laura L. Roach of 194 South Whit-rev St.

Funeral from the Thomas F. Farley Funeral Home, 96 Webster today at 8:15 a.m. with a Requiem High Mass in St. Joseph's Cathedral at f. Interment, Mt.

St. Benedict Cemetery. Morrison W. Johnson Inc. FUNERAL SERVICE John O.

Murdoch 74 Albany Ave. 522-7159 FARLEY FUNERAL HOME, INC. TEL 249-5681 Air Conditioned Wbstr St. Benton Thorpe, director of the State Board of Fisheries and Game. Most Fish Make It They became stranded on the mud flats while others tumbled! over the old dam in the Burnside area of East Hartford.

Case Brothers Thorpe ex plained, was exercising an an cient mill right, which permits it to draw out the water at will. The only obligation in this case, which was mandatory, was that the company notify Thorpe's de partment when it draws water out of the pond or river "so as to endanger Thorpe says the fish can't be five great-grandchildren. Funeral! services v.il' be reid Saturday at 11 a m. at the Rose Hill Funeral Home. Elm Street, Rocky Hill.

Burial will be in Rose Hill Me-1 Imorial Park. Friends may call at the funeral home today from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m HENRY G. FOURXIER Henry G. Fournier, 55, of Oak Road, East Haddam, formerly of Hartford, died Thursday at Hart-; ford Hospital. He was born in; Fall River, June 29, and formerly was a foreman forj the Green Acres Bloomiield.

He leaves his wife, Mrs. Mildred O'Brien Fournier; a son, Henry M. Fournier of East Haddam; two daughters, Mrs. Shirley Talbot of Moodus and Miss June Fournier of East Haddam; a brother, Joseph Fournier of Hart ford; three sisters, Mrs. Yvonne jFroment and Mrs.

Jean Saucier, both of Fall River, and Mrs. LOBSTER French Fried Potatoes and Laurel Park Pond will begin and, as products of the filling up again. Wright says that polluted Hockanum, are undesir-he hopes Sunday will see a return able for other streams anyway, to normalcy. The water level at "The forces of nature" sea the dam dropped six feet, he gulls, crows, skunks and caccoons said. will take care of the situation Work on the dam was a safety faster than most people think, he measure ordered br the State.savs.

440 Asylum St. FREE PARKING.

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About Hartford Courant Archive

Pages Available:
5,372,000
Years Available:
1764-2024