Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
Hartford Courant from Hartford, Connecticut • 6
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Hartford Courant from Hartford, Connecticut • 6

Publication:
Hartford Couranti
Location:
Hartford, Connecticut
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ft THi HARTFORD CO RANT: MonJv, S.pl. 17, p.m. at the Morrison W. John Weather, Tides son, i uneral Home, 749 Al oany Ave. tfunal wut De in Cedar Hill Cemetery.

Friends may call at the funeral home Golf Assn. Co-Founder Dies At 82 He leaves his wife, Mrs. Alwina Handke Wolff; four daughters, Mrs. Helen E. Gubeth of West Hartford, Mrs.

Earl D. Hemen-vvay of Somersviile, Mrs. John L. Broomfieldof Harvard, and Miss Minnie A Wolff of Glastonbury; a son. Robert P.

Wolff of East Hartford; 13 grandchildren; and 22 greatgrandchildren. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Lowe Funeral Home. 28 Naubuc Glastonbury. Burial will be in Green Cemetery.

ouran Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m. Lions To Launch Safety Campaign In New England BRISTOL, Sept 16 (Special) Harry Ives Bartholomew, 82, one of the founders of the Central uiastonoury. tnenus may call PROVIDENCE, R. Sept. 16 at the funeral home today from! District governors and in-7 to 9 p.m.

t'rnational counsellors from all GOVERX5IEXT FORECAST Local: Cloudy and not as cool today, with showers and scattered thundershowers during the afternoon. High 65 to 70. Gearing and cooler tonight, low in mid 40s. Fair and cool Tuesday. Connecticut: Cloudy and not as cool today, with showers and scattered thundershowers during the afternoon.

Clearing and cooler tonight. Fair and cool Tuesday. U.S. Department of Commerce Weather Bureau FORECASTS Local Weather Report Hartford, Sept. 16, 1956 (Time is Eastern Standard Time) Temperature Summary 7:30 1:30 7:30 a.m.

p.m. p.m. Temp. (deg. 52 100 100 Rol.

Humid. (Vo) 96 100 100 "My office work necessarily limits my shopping time so I shop mostly by phone from Courant ads" said Mrs. Kay Gorman, typist at the branch office of Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection Insurance Company. Connecticut Golf died to- 14 New England districts of Lion Miss Anita Marie Gvara International todav endorsed the i (J Miss Anita Marie Gvara. year- ihiehwav safety camnaien con- day at Hartford Hospital after a brief illness.

He lived in Bristol all his life, where he headed his own old daughter of Joseph and ducted last spring by Rhode Is- Marie Dlugolenski Gvara of 11 land Lions. Tunxis Poquonock. died Sat- A committee was named to uroayin waterbury alter plans for a similar cam. illness. Besides her parents, she paign on a New Lngland-wide basis next year.

John B. Christy leaves two brothers, Joseph J. Gvara and Michael A. Gvara, I Cranston, was named chair- the II. I.

Bartholomew Mfg. manufacturers of printers' rules. He lived at 57 Maple Ave. A native of Bristol, he was the son of Harry S. and Sabre tPeckJ Bartholomew.

Golf Affiliations He was widely known in golfing circles. In addition to the Central Connecticut hei v. mu ii.iu- man. utner members are nal grandmother Mrs. Rosalie charles Naylor of New Canaarii HARRY I.

BARTHOLOMEW Ul aim Curtis Lovell of Sanford her paternal grandmother, lira. jIe-t Frank Buckley of Derry Frances Gvara of Hartford Earl A Ricof Winds day at 8.1a a.m. at the Merwm Mags Chippanee Country Club, and the Country Club of Farmington. ijccr, aim oueenan uneral held memberships in the Connecticut State Golf the State Seniors Golf the He also was a member of the Bar Pres at SL 29.93 29.90 29.94 Highest temp.x 53 at 9:30 a.m. Lowest temp 50 at 7:20 p.m.

Mean temp. 52. Normal temp. 64. Degree Days .3.

(based on temperature observations to 7:30 p.m.) Highest temp, year ago 73. Lowest temp, year ago 56. Record high this date 92 in wnH. "ulc u'c'. it-Kisuar ui Sache 'us neao.

xacnt ciuo motor vehicles who Dra sed the Miconhncnttc -R-ictrti PntuTOi. a mass oi me Angeisu: Tinwhistles of Pinehurst, N.C., the National Seniors Golf the Pequabuck Golf Club, the Club. Bristol Yale Club and Bel- St- Puon- tatk)n of tnousands of safe driv. lontame (Uhio) lotlge, ak ana, ponnn; circulars, told the Lions he AM. lie was a member of First ruiiuunu.

tt vuld toe of other Friends may call at the funeral mo- tor vehicle Deaths 1941. home today from 7 to 9 p.m. registrars in New England to help promote the Record low this date 39 in Congregational Church. Funeral Set Tuesday He leaves his wife. Mrs.

Alice Mrs. Dora D. Plotkin campaign 1913. Highest temp, since Jan. 1, 97.

Lowest temp, since Jan. 1, 1 ARNOLD. In the Masonic Home. Wallingford, Sept. 13.

1956. Mrs. Helena Domenic J. Minicucci of Nau- (Ward) Bartholomew. Funeral Mrs.

Dora Dobkin Plotkin, Rose Amoid, widow of waiter t. services will be held Tuesday '85 0f RFD 3 Fllineton died atuclc was elected chair- 2 p.m. from the Barnes Me Et ftSe" of the New Enland Cou- Accumulated departure from normal this month, through Sept. moria! Chapel. The Rev.

Ros-. Hosnital aftpr- a hnf iilns 15 -24. p.m. in the Newkirk Whitney Funeral Home. 776 Farmington Ave.

Interment. Cedar Hill Cemetery. The family requests in lieu of flowers that well F. Hinkieman, pastor of I She was born in Minsk. Russia, First Congregational and had lived in Hartford for Total degree days since Sept.

Shipwreck 1 through Sept. 15, 50. wiu omciate. tsunai will he in, 30 vears. movintr to Ellineton in JL I Normal degree days same pe 5 1 West Cemetery.

There will be 1933. She was the widow of Reuben Plotkin, and a member (Continued from Tage 1) nMliimimfimmitii nmn ir-ri-i in of the Garden Street Synagogue; its Sisterhood; a charter mem contributions be sent in her memory to the Masonirr Charity Foundation of Connecticut, care of Masonio Home, Wailingfoid. BROOKS. In Hartford, Sept. 14, 1356.

Pr. Alfred R. A. Brooks. 319 Fairfield Hartford.

Hartford Public High School science teacher. Husband til Barbara Hurlbut Brooks. Funeral ervices today at 1 p.m. at South Congregational Church. Hartford.

Cre swept seas, the only reward of the searchers was the finding by no calling hours. Friends are asked by the family to omit flowers. Florence D. White GREENWICH. Sept.

16 IIP) Florence D. White, former gen ber of Hartford Yeshiva; the Hebrew Home for the Aged; and the Misrachi. She leaves three daughters, Mrs. Isadore Borden and Mrs. Anna Cushing, both of eral manager of the old New York World and the St.

Louis Hartford, and Mrs. Bernard the German freighter Kelkheim of a lifebuoy marked "Pelagia" an! some wooden debris from the wreckage 30 miles south of the ship's last given position. Then the Bodoe rescue center received a message that a Cat-alina search plane had sighted Post-Dispatch, died here of Detroit, a son riod 21. Total degree days this month, through Sept. 15, 50.

Normal degree days same period 21. Precipitation Summary Precipitation Sept. 16 to 7:30 p.m. .16 inches. Totalprecipitation this month through Sept.

15, 2.13 inches Total precipitation departure from normal this month through Sept 15, .33 inches. Total precipitation from Jan. 1 through Sept. 15, 29.14 inches. Total precipitation for same period last year 42.94 inches.

Connecticut River stage at 8 a.m. 1.4 ft. Tides Sept 17, 1956 Max Plotkin of Ellington; two night at the age of 94 a lifeboat with five or six sur mation will take place in Springfield, Mass. DAII.EY. In Meriden, Sept.

35, 1956. Frank E. Dailey. husband of Julia Shea Dailey of Sylvan Avenue, t'nion-ville, and fathe- of John M. Dailey of Farmington.

Funeral services today at 2 p.m. at the John A. Hangen Funeral Home, 111 Main Cnionvillc. Burial in St. llary's Cemetery.

DALY. Suddenly in Unlonville, Sept. 16. 1956. Catherine Glynn Daly, widow of John Daly of Sylvan Avenue, Union-ville and Mrs.

Michael A. Hartney of Bristol. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 8:30 a.m. from the John A. Hangen Funeral Home.

Ill Main I'nionville, with a solemn mass of requiem at St. Mary's Church, L'nionville, at 9. Burial in St. Mary's Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Tuesday from sisters, Mrs.

Max Mitnick of West Hartford, and Mrs. Emma Litwin of Hartford; two brothers, Aaron Dobkin of Manchester, and Samuel Dobkin of Hawkinsville, six grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be held today at 3 p.m.' at the Herbert L. Granstein Funeral Chapel, 826 Albany Ave. Burial will be in Kaplan Society Ceme White retired from the newspaper business in 1931 when the World was sold.

He had been vice president and general manager of the Press Publishing Company which put out both the World and the Post-Dispatch and also the World Almanac. Donald C. Cottrell WESTERLY, R.I., Sept. 16 I.W Donald C. Cottrell, 64.

of Stonington, president of High Mrs. Gorman and her husband live at 54 Easlview Street, Hartford. They have been Daily and Sunday Courant readers "for Mrs. Gorman also told us, "The shopping information that I get from Courant ads is very important to me. And that covers everything from department and specialty store advertising to food marketing.

I check The Courant's various grocery store ads on prices, special items and seasonal buys." Mrs. Gorman continued, "I recently phoned and replenished my linen supplies at G. Fox Co. through a Courant ad." When we asked Mrs. Gorman what features she particularly enjoyed in The Courant, she said, "I like everything in general; the local news, advertising information, editorial page and women's page for fashions and recipes.

And my husband," she concluded, "is a great Courant sport page fan." vivors off tiny Traena Island, 30 mles farther south than the wreckage, and just a shade south of the Arctic Circle. Anxiety Follows Gloomy confusion beset the rescue efforts when the cutter Hydrogutten rushed to the spot and reported finding no trace of the lifeboat. One erroneous report, attributed to the Hydrogutten, said earlier that the cutter had picked up four survivors and one dead. The Hydrogutten latter explained this re tery, Elmwood. Memorial week will be observed at her late ut' Low 1:19 a.m.

1:40 p.m. 2:19 a.m. 2:40 p.m. the Cottrell printing press manufacturers, died today at home. The fami requests that 7 to 10 p.m.

and Wednesday liom 2 At New London 7:21 a.m. 7:34 p.m. At Saybrook 8:21 a.m. 8:34 p.m. At New Haven 8:55 a.m.

to a and to 1U p.m. rt'CHS. Entered Into rest, Sept. 15 1956. Morris Fuclis of 18 Darien St I uneral services today, 1 p.m., in the chapel of the Weinstein Mortu 2:47 a.m.

3:08 p.m. port had originated from one of 9:14 p.m. ary. Interment, Congregation Ados Is rael Cemetery. GORALSKr.

In Boston. Sept. 14. Dept. of Commerce Report Westerly Hospital.

Cottrell was the third mem-jj, Alice Wadlow bcr of hi family to head the; graphic arts firm which was es- Mrs. Alice Buchanan Wadlow, tablished in 1855. He was named 80, of Kennebunkport, wid-president of the concern in 1949 i ov of Louis Wadlow, died Sun-and spent all but 12 years of his1 day at Beechwood Manor, New business life with the company. (London. She was born in Phila- On Sept.

7 he announced plans delphia, July 22, 1876, and resid-to retire the end of this month. ed most of her life in Kenne-Hours later he was stricken. ibunkport. Me. She was stricken Cottrell leaves his wife, a son, two weeks ago while visiting in the search planes.

The Hydrogutten, when she failed to find any survivors, reported that the Northern Duke had been in Temp. Temp. 1956. Thomas Coralski, 48. 45 Eastern Southern Buffalo 47 63 Charl'ton 73 89 the area and it was hoped the Albany 50 54 Miami 79 87 trawler had saved the men.

Hours of anxiety followed. Donald C. of Lake Forest. London. Mrs.

Wadlow was Jaques Somerville, beloved husband of Alice Dombrowski Gorals.ci and brother of Mrs. Genevieve Swanson of La.lolla, Calif. Funeral Tuesday morning at 7:45 from the Talarski Funeral Home, 381) Maple with a solemn requiem mass in SS. Cyril and Methodius Church at Burial 'n Mt. St.

Benedict Cemetery, Friends may call at the funeral home today turn 2 to 4 and 6 to 10 p.m. however, before the Northern Boston 53 57 New Or. 67 87 New Y'k 58 71 Western Phila. 58 80 Kans. C.

60 95 Wash. 63 85 St. Louis 66 92 Central Rocky Mt. Chicago 57 87 Denver 51 83 and two daughters, Mrs. James P.

Balding Jr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Jacobs both of Milwaukee. Duke finally was contacted by radio and confirmed the rescue.

Koervik Coastal Radio, which monitored all rescue operation radio calls, received a message a member of St. Ann's Episcopal Church in Kennebunkport. She leaves four sons, Augustus H. of Hartford, Wilson B. of South Norwalk, Thomas S.

of Old Lyme and Louis A. Wadlow Jr. of New London. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 3 p.m. at St.

Ann's Episcopal Church in Ken- Henry W. Allen Cincin, 62 77 NEW HAVEN, Sept. 16 IB-Henry W. Allen. 65.

vice president of a New Haven investment from the Northern Duke which quoted the survivors as saying their lifeboat was the only one launched from the Pelagia. But police at Bodoe, who took over coordination of the rescue efforts, said they still held hope firm, died today in Grace New, neounKport, we. tfunai will De in Arondle Cemetery in that city. Haven Hospital. "I make a point of getting up a half hour early in order to read the Daily Courant" said Miss Dawn E.

Ludington, receptionist at the branch office of Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection SC Insurance Company. Mis. Morgan Campbell, 43, of Rockville Dies ROCKVILLE, Sept. 16 (Special) Mrs. Doris Hewitt Campbell, 43, wife of Morgan I.

Campbell, chairman of the Vernon Board of Education, of 6 King He was a native of Wallingford, Mrs Hattie B. Gilyard and had been connected with Ed the other three lifeboats had Mrs. Hattie B. Gilyard, widow! teen safelv lowered after the ward M. Bradley and Co.

since of Major Gilyard of 7 Westland first lifeboat drifted off in the 1909 GAOE. In West Hartford. Sept. 15, 1956. William Henry F.

Gade 65. of 69 N. Main St. Husband of Cora B. Pierce Gade, and father of William Henry F.

Gade Jr. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Newkirk and Whitney Funeral Home, 776 Farmington Ave. Cremation will take place in Springfield. Friends may call at the funeral home this evening Irom, 7 to 9.

GRAHAM. In Hartford. Sept. 15, 1956. Marv D.

Graham, wife of James J. Graham, of S3 Coolidge St. Funeral arrangements are Incomplete, and in charge of the Thomas F. Farley Funeral Home, 96 Webster St. Friends may call at the funeral home after 7 p.m.

this evening. GRtXT. I.eon Grant fGranstein), of 7900 Collins Miami Beach, Sept. 15. 1956.

Funeral services Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Herbert L. Gran-stem Funeral Chapel. 826 Albany) with burial in Springfield. Mass.

He leaves his wife, Mrs. Jennie died Saturday afternoon at stormy darkness Saturday night, The storm howled northward died suddenly Sunday night Knapp Allen, and a brother, Clif-; her home after a brief illness, ford D. Allen of Wallingford. Fu- She was bom in Atlanta. into tut Arctic today, andtte; Fan nenitJ1, Hart.

neral services will be held Wed-; and had lived in Hartford for 10, search continued in excellenTf0" ford. nesday at 2:30 p.m. in Walling- years. She leaves a son, Wesleyi visibility though swells were lord. Moore ot Hartford; and a daugh-l heavy Capt.

T. Booth of the Grimsby ter Mrs. Mary Lou Grady of Pinkhill, N.C. Funeral services, in the charge of the L. B.

Obituary trawler, Northern Scepter, sister ship of the Northern Duke, said he was close to the posi- Barnes I uneral Home, 2148 Friends may call at the chapel to will be announced at at ion given by the Pelagia when Paul Urner later date. she broadcast the first SOS yesterday. He said he went full speed to the exact spot and passed over it several times Paul Urner of 32 Winship St. died Sunday morning at a local ailer n'gnton convalescent home. He was! Walter Knisrhton.

5-vear-old son night between 8 and 9 p.m. GRIFFIN'. In N'eu- Haven, Sept. 14. 1956.

Thomas .1. Griffin of 643 Winchester Ave. Funeral today at 8:30 a.m. from the Mollny Funeral Home. 906 Farmington Ave.

Burial in Jit. St. Benedict Cemetery. BALI, At his home, Sept. 14, 1956.

John F. Hall, husband of Mary (Barneit) Hall of 25 Brookline Bloomfield. born in Germany. Jan. 21.

1879, 1 of Mr. and Mrs. James Kniehton without result. He said he and had lived in Hartford for 60 of Pequot St died Saturday at I passed close to nearby Skom-years. He was a communicant McCook Memorial Hospital.

Be- vapr' lighthouse in hope of sight-of Sacred Heart Church. He was I sides his parents, he leaves three inS survivivors tossed on the a member of Tutonia Lodge No. sisters, Miss Ann Knighton, shore, but saw none. Five 9, ODHS. He was a retired em- Dorleathe Knichton.

and Miss! o' her ships were close to the i ft 'V56 i Til''' 1 i The funeral will be held this morning at 9:15 from the Thomas F. Farley Funeral Home. 96 Webster with ploye of the Underwood Type-'lola Knighton, all of Hartford- a'area a the. time, he added. 'S tn vvrite" Col'P- He leaves his wife-1 brother, Willie J.

Knighton, also Tfiu Steri" Mrs. Margaret Sekoll Urner; of Hartford; and his paternal, 18 Die in India RlOtS Piease omit Ilowjrj. jand two sons, Frank H. Urner grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.

Ma- and Paul J. Urner. both of Hart- inr k-nirhtnn nf uvma luuciitcui uuur UVIV1, AUIIX' MII.I.F.R. Tn Walerburv, Sept. Li.

im MM FiiMnMnl t.nw'itne ti-ill ViO 1 -n i .1 Mrs. Addie Mae -Bumham. Miller of "Vv 1 7, 31 services win oe neici luesaay NEW DELHI. Sept. 16 S.i Bloomfield Hartford, widow, new i uesuay a n.m.

i at 1U a.m. at tile L. O. Barnes tnrinv cntintprl 18 rlpad and mnvp She was born July 29, 1913 in Hartford, daughter of Mrs. Elizabeth Rau Hewitt and the late Archibald Hewitt, and had lived in Rockville all her life.

Mrs. Campbell was an active member of the Rockville Methodist Church and was a soloist in its choir. She was also a member of the Northeast PTA. Besides her husband and mother, she leaves a son, David Campbell; two daughters, Devon and Sharen Campbell; a brother, Karl F. Hewitt, all of Rockville.

The funeral will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the Ladd Funeral" Home with the Rev. Norman VV. Spellman, pastor of the Methodist Church, officiating. Burial will be in Grove Hill Cemetery.

Friends may call at the funeral home Tuesday from 2 to 9 pm Ike Wires Greetings To Nurses Convention President Eisenhower Sunday wired i greetings to the National Federation of Licensed Practical Nurses meeting for its annual convention at the Hotel Stafler- Eisenhower said it "is my hope that more schools of practical nursing will soon be established under recent legislation enacted by Congress." The message was read to the group's executive board by Mrs. Margaret Baird of Richmond, president. The nurses' convention will continue until Sunday on theme "Meeting the Challenges Is Progress." than 100 injured in two weeks of of Robert c. Wilier. Funeral services: the Taylor and Modeen Funeral I Funeral Home ''118 Main St vTe remJ Home, 233 Washington St.

with Burial will be in Northwood Cem- I TT i Bloomfield. Friends may rail at hen a requiem mass in osli eu iilcu i i eierv Wilson, nendS mav Call home this evening from 7 to 9. New-: Church, Hartford, at 3. Burial at the funeral home todav from kirk and Whitney enice. vvili be in cedar Hill Cemetery, i 7 to 9 sporadic rioting over an American book which some Moslems claim defames the prophet Mohammed.

Latest reports from Jubbulpore, central India, said one person was tm 4J Mrs. Robert II. Brown Mt-RPHY. In Hartford Hospital, Sept. menus may can i im- is, 1956.

Jame j. Murphy of so home today from 3 to 5 and 7 Heath Hartford. Service from thei to 4 1. OQ CI i 1 29 Park Mrs. Mary Ann Brown, 60, of killed and four injured there in Burke Funeral Home, Rockville.

Tuesday at a m. Sol-i ijj- MSIIo 77 Linwood Newington, died new outbreaks of violence yester-Sunday morning at Hartford! dav. The totat arrested exceeds mn requiem ma's in St, Bernard Church at 9 a m. Burial, St. Bernard' Mrs.

Addie Mae Burnham Hospital after a long illness. She was born in St. Damien. 1,000. including 600 in Jubbulpore.

The book is "Religious Leaders" Burke Funeral Home today 2 to 5 and Miller of Bloomfield Ave. 7 to 9 m. died Saturday night at Water- r.v.. ti.rtfM i iQiR bury Hospital'. She was horn in and had lived in Newington for published in India by a Bombay ci iH 1 i.v irtoj.

inu' i ram Linn, ii.ini .1.. a. I ui cu in iiaiuuiu niiu in 1 1 1 id 1 1-1 i a mnuu, musiem Msuaiois aervicea at 8 30 a.m. Tuesday at the had lived there all her life. She (jc cup Pavcs husband rhavtrp tho hivik is a Hindu attack T.vinr and Modeen Funeral 1 oi-tfinM i "Uhiwmi, Cliat ge ine DOOk IS a llinuu auatK 233 Washington St.

Requiem mass at 1 KbPrt Brown: tW0 ROb" religion. ert M. Brown of Niagara Falls nVlnrlf in Suited Heart Church ninoivu inn i mi- a N. and L. J.

Brown of Yale Medical School Burial in Cedar Hill Cemetery. Frienda may call at the funeral home from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. today. Miss Ludington, who lives at 12 Valentine Street, Newington, is also a Daily and Sunday Courant reader. She further stated, "I tead The Courant rather thoroughly from tKt news right through the advertising where I check the store ads especially for sales and I recently saw and bought shoes from a Sage-Allen ad.

Miss Ludington told us some of the features she enjoys in The Courant are, "John Crosby's TV column, The Courant's photography work, and the Real Estate news to check current price trends, particularly in Colonial style homes." Gels $300,000 Grant Newington: ner mother, Mrs. Theonille Moore of Willimantic; two brothers, Leon Moore of Wil Guild of that church; Bloomfield Chapter. OES; and the Bloomfield Garden Club. She was the widow of Robert G. Miller.

She leaves two sons, Robert Jay Miller of Cleveland. Ohio, and James A. Miller of Funeral Directors limantic and Phillip Moore of NEW Sept. 16 (Special) The Ford Foundation announced grants totaling Quebec, Can. and a sister, Mrs.

Eva Racine of Willimantic. Fu $21,750,000 to strengthen mstrue Glastonbury; two daughters, neral services will be held Tues Talarski Funtral Homt 880 MAPLE AVENUE Phone CH 6-1371 tion in the privately supported Mrs. Joseph San Angelo of Nau-jda 2 at thp gatuck, and Mrs Oliver B. Mpmorial Funeral Home, 20 Bon- medical schools now in opera tion in the United States. Ellsworth of Hartford, with air Ave.

Burial will be in Cen The grants are in the amount of $500,000 to each of 43 four-vear institutions, including Yale Morrison W.Johnson, Inc. FUiVERAL HOME 740 Albany Ave. University School of Medicine, and $250,000 to the two-year tre Cemetery, Newington. Friends may call at the funeral home today from 7 to 9 p.m. Arthur L.

Marks Arthur L. Marks of 232 Main St. died Sunday afternoon at a local convalescent home after a long illness. He was born Sept. medical school at Dartmouth Taylor Modeen Funeral 111 WASHINGTON IT.

TEL. JA Mill whom she had lived; three grandchildren; and six greatgrandchildren. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. at her home. Burial will bo in Mountain View Cemetery, Bloomfield.

Friends may call at her late home today from 7 to 9 p.m. The Newkirk and Whitney Funeral Home, 778 Farmington West Hartford, is in charge of all arrangements. Paul H. Wolff Paul H. Wolff, of 1197 Main Glastonbury, died Sunday afternoon at East Hartford Hospital.

He was born Nov. 8, 18G9, in Germany, and had lived in Glastonbury for many years. 17, in Hartford, son of the Two-Headcd Kitten Bom in Ridge field RIDGEFIELD, Sept. 16 If) Fanner Harold B. Jones had to count his new-born kittens a couple of times to make sure.

He counted five Kittens but six heads. One of the kittens has two heads. Dr. Jardan R. Dann.

a veterinarian, reported the rare birth today. "A pretty remarkable thing," he said. The kitten, born in a barn Friday, has two ears, but two noses' and two mouths. Dr. Dann isnVsure about the eyes.

There may be two eyes, he said, or possibly one big one. The kitten seems perfectly normal, Dr. Dann said, but he considers its chances of survival slim. In any case, Is nursing normally and with a bit of an advantage over the other kittens. College.

Power Back, Danbury Almost Normal Again DANBURY, Sept. 16 l.fv-Dan-bury. hard hit by Friday's rain storm, was almost back to normal tonight with the restoration of electric power to most of the stricken areas. An official of the Housatonic Public Service Company, whose emergency crews had worked around the clock to restore FARLEY FUNERAL HOME, INC. W.btttr St.

at Benton TEL CH 9-5681 Air Conditioned late William B. and Harriett Button Marks. He was a member of Trinity Episcopal Church; the Sons of Union Veterans; past chaplain of the United Commercial Travelers a 50 year member of Morning Star Lodge No. 28 AFandAM. lie leaves four sons, Laurence R.

Marks of Hartford. Kenneth A. Marks of Zypher Hills, Arthur T.j Marks of New Britain, and Al- Daily Courant circulation is now over 100,000. Sunday Courant circulation is over 145,000, by far the largest circulation of any Connecticut newspaper morning, evening or Sunday. fe Iaftfirfi gjwftmi JAMES T.

PRATT GO. service, said. "We still have a jen juarns or naniorn: nvoifow snots to clean up. naugmers, iirs. r.mvara m.

mo- FLOWERS Say It BETTER! rum of East Hartford, and Mrs Yugoslavia has agreed to pay $3,750,000 in damages to com Funeral Service-71 Farmington Avenut Telephone JA 5-3189 Ample Parklnc Ftcllitiei George R. Fister of Manchester; pensate Turkish nationals for 1 12 grandchildren: and 12 great grandchildren. Funeral services! properties seized by Yugoslavia will be held Wednesday at Hand wartime, Belgrade learns,.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Hartford Courant
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Hartford Courant Archive

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