The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio (2024)

22 THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER Friday, March 12, 1965 Edwin Boothe Dies At School Game AUGUSTA Services Franklin who fell dead School gymnasium near be at 2 p. m. Saturday at the Mr. Boothe, a long time Augusta, suffered a coronary attack as he and his wife were watching the Augusta High- -Bourbon County High basketball game a at the 10th region tourney. Surviving are his wife, Mrs.

Hester White Boothe, a teacher in the Augusta public schools; two daughters, Mrs. Mary Ann Woosley, Cincinnati, and Mrs. Elwood Cooper, Plymouth. two brothers, Robert Boothe, Carlisle, and James Boothe, Ravenna, Ohio; three sisters, Mrs. Catherine Collins and Mrs.

J. W. Berry, both of Augusta, and Mrs. John Wutherich. Muncie, Ind.

Visitation after 1 p. m. today at McCarty Metcalfe Funeral Home, Augusta. John Hall John Taylor Hall, 92, a great-great-grandfather six times, died Thursday morning in the Dry Ridge Convalescent Home. A retired farmer, he worked a farm in Glencoe.

Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Hal Marksberry, Warsaw, Mrs. Roy Wynn, Dry Ridge, and Mrs. Ray Sipple, Covington; five Post Office Gets Award Covington Post Office has been presented a safety award for the operation of it fleet of three wheeled mailsters. Postmaster John F.

Murdock said the National Safety Council cited the fleet for its perfect record in the past fiscal year over 50,000 miles without an accident. He credited the 17 postal drivers of the vehicles, whose routes cover South Ft. Mitchell and Erlanger areas as well as those routes originating at the main office. Included in the postmaster's credit were Neal Streutker, safety supervisor, and George and Bernard Biecker, maintenance supervisors. Three File For Campbell Posts Two Democrats and a Republican Thursday filed their declarations for candidacy for public office at the Campbell County clerk's office.

The Democrats: John R. Merritt, 227 Prospect Bellevue, for Bellevue city councilman, and Noble G. Payne, 203 Main Dayton, for Dayton city councilman. The Republican, Clarence E. Vance, 319 Eden Bellevue, filed for Bellevue city councilman.

He is only the second GOP candidate to register thus far for the primary election May 25. $12,000 Verdict Given In Suit Mrs. Ruth Thomas, 59, 20 Forest Erlanger, Thursday won a jury verdict of $12,000 in a damage suit that was heard for three days in the Kenton Circuit Court of Judge Rodney G. Bryson. Mrs.

Thomas sought damages of $51,000 and $1000 in medical expenses the Auto Parts, whose truck she charged struck her on August 23, 1962, while she was crossing the Dixie Highway at Gravey Avenue, in Erlanger. She was represented by attorneys Robert C. Cetrulo and James A. Nolan. Chamber To Elect Covington-B e-Kenton Chamber of Commerce will hold its annual election of officers at its board meeting slated for 6:15 p.

m. Monday at Town and Country Restaurant. Robert L. Kays, chamber executive vice-president, said new and retiring members of the board of directors will convene at the meeting. All members and prospective members are invited to attend, he said.

Judge To Speak Kenton Circuit Court Judge Robert O. Lukowsky will speak at an executive committee meeting of the Kentucky Sheriff's Association Saturday at Hofbrau Haus, Ft. Wright. Sheriff Carl J. Ruh, chairman, said Judge Lukowsky will talk on "The Relationship Between the Court and Sheriff's OfficeAn Association for The Effective Administration of Justice." Bonn Rejects Israel Deal: Spurns UAR BONN (UPI) West Germany Thursday rejected an Israeli arms-for-ambassadors deal but shrugged off Arab threats of a complete break with Bonn if it establishes diplomatic relations with Jerusalem.

Chancellor Ludwig Erhard turned down an Israeli proposal that West Germany resume arms shipments to Israel as the price for the creation of formal BonnJerusalem ties, officials said. They said the offer to establish dipolmatic relations still stands. The Bonn government meanwhile insisted it was unconcerned over United Arab Republic President Gamal A del Nasser's threats of economic and political reprisals if the West Germany-Israeli diplomatic relationships materializes. Germany decided to cut off arms shipments to Israel in an attempt to induce Nasser to cancel an invitation to East German Chief Walter Ulbricht. When the visit came off, West Germany, which regards itself as the sole representative of the German people, cut off economic aid to Egypt.

-AP Wirephoto Arrested In Beating Three men have been arrested in Selma, in the beating of three out-of-state white ministers during racial demonstrations in that city. They are, from left, Elmer William Stanley Hoggle, 36, and R. B. Kelley, 38, all of Selma. fourth man was arrested late Thursday.

One of the ministers died Thursday night in a Birmingham, hospital. Cites Federal 0.K. It's March Or Else, Dr. King Tells Court MONTGOMERY, Ala. (P)- Dr.

Martin Luther King Jr. took his spreading Negro voter drive into Federal court Thursday and told the judge that unless his people could march, a racial explosion result. 'Strong Man' Urged On Berkeley Campus BERKELEY, Calif. (P) The University of California at Berkeley, shaken for six months by student disorders, faculty dissension and administrative temporizing, confronts a showdown Saturday at a special meeting of the Board of Regents. Chairman Edward W.

Carter summoned the 24- member board into emergency session Saturday afternoon "to discuss appropriate control over student conduct and problems relating to principal university officers." A top California legislator, meantime, predicted appointment of man" president which he said could lead to mass faculty President Clark Kerr, who presides over the university's nine campuses, and Berkeley Chancellor Martin Meyerson resigned Tuesday in a statewide argument over discipline in student demonstrations at Berkeley. Jesse Unruh, a member of the Board of Regents, made his comments about a "strong man" at a joint news conference in the state capital with Hugh M. Burns, Senate president pro tem. Senator Burns said, "There is no discipline at U.C. they are running loose.

Disciplinary action must be taken now." He was referring to discipline against three students who were among nine persons arrested on the Berkeley campus week for publicly displaying or speaking a four-letter sex word. Kerr referred to the demonstration as the "filthy speech movement." It was an extension of a free speech movement on the campus last fall which culminated in the arrest of approximately 800 students in a sit-in demonstration. In both cases, students and non-students claimed the right of free expression on the campus without university interference. Meanwhile, students and faculty generally rallied behind Dr. Kerr.

Lt. Gov. Glenn M. Anderson, a member of the Board of Regents, said that chancellors of all but one of the university's nine campuses had urged him to try to persuade Mr. Kerr "to continue his productive administration." Student legislative bodies at Los Angeles and Berkeley adopted resolutions urging Dr.

Kerr to stay, and the faculty of the university's medical school in San Francisco also urged him to remain. House At Play Rayburn Building Can Cut Down On Capitol Hill Dullness WASHINGTON On the theory that all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy, the House has fixed itself up with a play area that should help banish dullness from Capitol Hill. Tucked into three floors of the massive new Rayburn Office Building are a swimming pool and a gym full of devices for soothing the flesh and restoring the spirit of the weariest legislator. There are rowing machines, stationary bicycles, vibrating belts, a mechanical horse, a tiny trampoline and three gleaning hardwood paddleball courts. There are heat lamps, whirlpool baths, a masseur, a steam room, a dry heat room and a flood of comfortable cots.

But the crowning touch is the swimming pool, something the House has pined for ever since the Senate got one over 30 years ago. No one seems to know, or at least no one will say, how much all this added to the $84.6 million cost of the Rayburn building, which is coming into use after eight years of construction. The pool and gym were opened Thursday in the lavish building, one of the most expensive ever built. Some estimates of its cost go as high as $122 million, but these include such auxillary items as a subway to the Capitol and two adjoining underground garages. Although only 169 members have suites in the building, the pool and gym are for all 425 male members.

The 10 women representatives have a lounge of their own. There is talk of letting them use the pool at least two mornings a week--when the men would be barred. The House has had a gym for years, but nothing like the one in the Rayburn building with its handsome courts, marble-topped steam Cook Reportedly Declines Treasury Cabinet Post for Edwin Boothe, 65, 307 at the Mason County High Maysville Wednesday night, will Augusta Methodist Church. employee of the F. A.

Neider Kentucky sons, Jarvie, Cincinnati, Fred, Owenton, Ernst, Elliston, Kelsie, Glencoe, and Herbert, Dry Ridge; 27 grandchildren, 26 greatgrandchildren and six greatgreat-grandchildren. Services will be at 2 p. m. Saturday, Vine Run Baptist Church. Visitation after 2 today, Coates Funeral Home, Williamstown.

Mrs. Lillian Edna Dietz, 80, 1001 McKinney Dayton, died at her home Thursday morning. She had been a resident of the community for 50 years. Surviving are her son, Walter Dietz, Dayton; two daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Harris, Dayton, and Mrs.

Ida Mae Bennett, Wilmington, a brother, Jim Sokamp, Dayton; two sisters, Mrs. Agnes Mandery, Harrison, Ohio, and Mrs. May (Marie) Christensen, Copenhagen, Denmark; five grandchildren and five great grandchildren. Services will be at 2 p. m.

Monday at Dobbling Funeral Home, Bellevue. Visitation, 3-9 p. m. Sunday. Mayme Thiem Lillian Dietz Mrs.

Mayme Thiem, 82, 5341 Old Taylor Mill Covington, died Thursday at her home. She is survived by nieces and cousins. Requiem High Mass will be at 9 a. m. Saturday at St.

Anthony Church. Visitation, 4-9 p. m. today, Connley Bros. Funeral Home, Covington.

Florence Zecher Services Mrs. Florence Zecher, 73, formerly of Newport, who died Wednesday in a Middletown, Ohio, hospital, will be at 9 a. m. Saturday in Radel Funeral Home, Newport. Visitation before services Saturday.

Mrs. Zecher resided at 1605 Florence Middletown. Henry Mallory FLEMINGSBURG Services for Henry Mallory, 90, retired Cowan farmer, will be at 2 p. m. today at Price Brothers Funeral Home, Elizaville.

He was found dead in his home Wednesday. Surviving is a sister, Mrs. Mary Clark, Carlisle. Held On Moon Charge A Williamsburg man was turned over by Cincinnati police Thursday to the Federal Alcohol Tax agency, after six gallons of moonshine was found in his car. Delbert Claxton, 25, was charged with driving left of center, when Patrolmen John Farrell and David Sturm stopped him at 12:30 a.

m. Thursday at 15th and Race Sts. After police had the charge dismissed in Traffic Court, Claxton waived a hearing before U. S. Commissioner Graham P.

Hunt who set bond at $1000. NAACP March Is Slated Here The Northern Kentucky Branch, NAACP, will sponsor a march Saturday to support Negro registration rights in Selma, Rev. Edgar L. Mack, first vice president, said Thursday. The march will begin at 11 a.

m. from St. James AME Church, Lynn Covington, to Covington City Hall, where songs, speeches and prayers will be delivered. Seeks Trailer Law MAYSVILLE Maysville City Housing Inspector George M. Duley asked the city commission to outlaw use of trailers in the city except on the city's two trailer courts, located on Hill Avenue and State Avenue.

He said 12-14 trailers in the city are not on lots. Break-Ins Reported Police Thursday said $115 was taken from Town House Restaurant, 1303 Highway Covington, in a breakin before dawn. Dixie Sign 1036 Prospect Covington, told police an intruder took a $69 drill during the night. WASHINGTON (U PI) New York executive Donald C. Cook has informed President Johnson that he will not become Treasury secretary, sources said Thursday.

The President, tightlipped as ever, is presumably out looking for a new candidate. Mr. Cook is president of American Electric Power a New York holding company whose subsidiaries supply electricity to seven states from Virginia to Michigan. Persident Johnson was known to have been pressing Mr. Cook to take over the Treasury Department after Secretary Douglas Dillon carries out his long-announced plan to resign.

Secretary Dillon has been delaying his departure while President Johnson sought a successor but now is understood to be ready to step down April 1. It had been rumored for some time that Mr. Cook would come to the Treasury as soon as he straightened out pension and other company matters. The word here is that he had succeeded in this task. But then other personal problems came up that finally pursuaded him to turn down the President's officer, informed sources said.

Mr. Cook, 55, would have been no stranger to Washington. chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission in 1952-53. For a dozen years before that, he held various posts with the SEC, the Justice Dr. King said he led a massive street march in Selma two days ago in the face of a court ban only after he was assured by a Federal spokesman that "I think everything will be all right." The Negro leader sought a right-to-march ruling for his twice-thwarted 50 mile pilgrimage from Selma to Montgomery.

IN A PACKED courtroom, Dr. King testified of tension among demonstrators when he led a Tuesday march of 2500 Negroes and white clergymen at Selma. He said the tension followed Sunday's march when state troopers clubbed and tear gassed the demonstrators. "And then you directed these people into the streets in masses, did you?" snapped Attorney Maury Smith, representing Gov. George C.

Wallace and Col. Albert J. Lingo, commander of the state police. "I did that," the stocky Negro minister replied, "knowing that it would give the people a creative, nonviolent way to relieve the tension- it would explode some other way." He told Judge Johnson that there was no intent to defy the judge's ban on the abortive Tuesday demonstration, turned back peacefully by state troopers. "It was our opinion that we would not be in violation the court order," he said.

"We all agreed that we would not try to break down the wall of troopers that we knew would be there." Judge Johnson directed a suspension of the 50-mile march until he could decide the legal issues. BUT THE JUDGE denied a motion by attorneys for Sheriff James G. Clark of Dallas County that Dr. King be held in contempt. "Any contempt or order to show cause is a matter between this court and the alleged contemptor," the judge said.

Dr. King said he talked the march over with LeRoy Collins, director of the Federal Community Relations Service. Did Collins provide a suggested march route? the judge asked. He did, Mr. King replied.

"Were you informed it would be permissible to march along that route?" continued te judge. "Governor Collins said that was the route they would like us to follow," Mr. King replied. "He said, 'I everything will be all Mr. King testified that Mr.

Collins first asked that the march be abandoned but after a lengthy discussion sympathized with Mr. King's position. Three Drivers Are Sentenced To Workhouse Three motorists, charged with driving while under the influence of alcohol, were given Workhouse terms Thursday when convicted in Traffic Court by Judge John W. Keefe. Heaviest sentence was given to Robert Ellerhorst, 31, 3163 Jefferson Ave.

He was sentenced to six months. fined $200 and suspended from driving for three years. Police records showed he was convicted on a similiar charge in 1963. Glynn Vanderpool, 37, Hollywood, received three days and Edmond Rose, 39, 2905 Woodburn 10 days on drinking and driving charges. They both also received $100 fines and one-year driving suspensions.

Crater Still Spits HILO, Hawaii Makaopuhi crater continued to bubble, spit and drool a little lava Thursday, lowkey activity that has gone on since the volcano's initial fiery outburst Saturday. Department and congressional committees. The current Number One candidate for Treasury secretary is not known. President Johnson is keeping the name pretty much to himself and even many Treasury White House sources. say they are in the dark, Among the names mentioned with Mr.

Cook's several months ago were David Rockefeller, the persident of the Chase Manhattan Bank, Henry Alexander, Chairman of Morgan Guarnty Trust and Rudolph A. Peterson, president of the Bank of America. If Secretary Dillon declines to postpone his departure a any Johnsons and President cannot find a successor by April 1, then Undersecretary for Monetary Affairs Frederick Demming will be acting secretary. Secretary Dillon is said to feel strongly that he is in no way running out on the job. On December 9, he gave President Johnson formal notice of his desire to return to private life.

He gave informal notice even earlier. Mr. Dillon originally hoped to be able to leave by January, Then, as Johnson still had not found a replacement, he put off his departure until early in March and subsequently had to postpone it a third time. Dillon is reported to be planning to rest and travel for about five months and then to return to New York to help manage his family's investment banking firm. He has been with the Federal government for 12 years.

Under three presidents. Besides secretary of the treasury, his posts have included' ambassador to France and undersecretary of state. Dillon's departure will further deplete the top ranks of the Treasury. Already vacant are the posts of undersecretary, assistant secretary of international affairs and general counsel. Whitaker Hurr Gregg Westerman Names John T.

Witaker has joined Sorg Paper Middletown, as vice president of marketing. Formerly vice president of Nationwide Papers, he was general manager of the Whitaker Paper Co. and the Indiana Paper Co. prior to his appointment at Sorg. I.

J. Hurr has been named eastern sales manager for kraft paper and paper board products of the Forest Products Division of Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp. He has been with Olin since 1961. The Women's Program of Frisch Plans $850,000 Construction New units and remodeling programs for Frisch's Restaurant's, in Greater Cincinnati totaling more than $850,000 were announced Thursday by company officials. In addition to the $145,000 opened in Ft.

Mitchell, three other new stores are scheduled to open this spring and summer at Seventh and Walnut Streets, Cincinnati; Fifth and Philadelphia Streets, Covington, and Ohio Route 32 and Roney Lane, Mt. Carmel. The $150,000 downtown Cincinnati unit, scheduled to open in May in the HibBuilding, will be franchised to Steve LaPille, who operates three other downtown Big Boy restaurants. Scheduled to open in July are a $250,000 companyowned unit in Mt. Carmel and a $180,000 Frisch's in Covington.

The three new units will employ 90-95 workers. Three remodeling projects totaling $130,000 will be completed at the stores at 4546 Spring Grove Ave. and 8000 Reading Road and in New Richmond. Meetings Delta Nu Alpha transportation fraternity will meet at 7:30 p. m.

Tuesday at the Cincinnati Club. The film "Claims Cause and Prevention" will be shown. The Cincinnati chapter of the Ohio Society of Certified Public Accountants will have a dinner meeting Tuesday at the Cincinnati Club. Reed K. Storey, research director of the American Institute of CPA's, will speak on "Research and Accounting Principles." The Women's Personnel Association will meet at 6:15 p.

m. Wednesday at the D. H. Baldwin Co. The film "Hands of the Masters" will be shown.

The 1965 Electronics and Instrumentation Conference Exhibit, co-sponsored by the Instrument Society of America and the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers, are scheduled for April 14 and 15. The exhibit will be held each day from noon to 9 p. m. at Cincinnati Gardens and the conference at Carrousel Inn from 9 a. m.

to noon and 1:30 to 4:30 p. m. CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO (AP) (USDA) Potato arrivals 41; on track 107; total U.S. shipments 608; old--supplies light; demand good; market firm; carlot track sales: Idaho russets 8.65; Idaho utilities 7.00; Maine katahdins 5.10; Minnesota North Dakota Red River Valley round reds 5.80; Wisconsin russets 8.00; new--track offerings limited; demand rather light; market dull; track trading 100 limited to quote METALS NEW YORK, (AP)-Spot nonferrous metal prices Thursday: Copper 34-35 cents pound, Connecticut Valley. Lead 16 cents a pound, New York.

Zinc cents a pound, East St. Louis. Tin 1.66⅜ 8 pound, New York. Foreign silver 1.293 per trov ounce, New York. Quicksilver 475-480 per flask, New York, In News the Cincinnati Advertisers' Club will meet at m.

Wednesday at the Hotel Terrace Plaza. Dr. Dorothy Gregg, of U. S. Steel's Public Relations Department, will speak on "The Three Challenges to Women." Bob Westerman, owner of the Brentwood Texaco Station, has been elected president of the Brentwood Plaza Merchants Association.

Other officers are Charles Atherton, vice president, Arlan's manager, and Stenger, secretary, Brentwood Savings Association manager. A. Dombar Schulzinger Partnerships Formed Two partnerships for the practice of engineering and architecture have been formed by Benjamin Dombar, Maurice Schulzinger and Irvin Lazarus. The two partnerships will have joint offices at 2436 Reading Rd. The architectural firm will be Dombar, the Schulzinger engineering firm will and Associates; be Lazarus, Schulzinger and Associates.

Both firms will have as a consultant designer Abrom Dombar. The partnerships hold registrations in 10 states. More Turnover Is Goal Of Food Chain Study CHICAGO (CDNS)-While the lady of the house is buying more of what supermarkets sell, food chains are spending more time finding out what she'll buy. This is the observation of Michael J. O'Connor, executive director of the Supermarket Institute.

"'The supermarket operator may well be the biggest purchaser of consumer (marketing) research by the end of the next 10 years," O'Connor told the American Marketing Assn. recently. A number of the bigger chains, according to O'Connor, already are engaged in research activity. "And we'll see more supermarkets turn to this marketing vehicle because they have to in the face of competition." Supermarkets, he said, "are more in touch with the shopkeeper today but most of them haven't learned to evaluate her desires." New Look For Louis Louts the Florist, 7416 Paddock will build a new building at the present location. The triangular structure will have a 50-foot all glass front and parking for 40 cars.

Benjamin Dombar Associates are the architects. Louis Lessure is president of the florist firm. Dividend. Northside Bank directors have declared a regular quarterly dividend of $1.10 per share on the $50 par value capital stock payable March 31 to shareholders of record March 23. Lazarus B.

Dombar room benches and blue-tiled 80-foot pool. There is only one masseur, but a machine gives what is called a water massage While the member stands under a tubular frame that shoots a needle spray at him from 16 nozzles, an attendant blasts him with ice water or hot water through high pressure nozzles from about 15 feet away. Paddleball, a game apparently invented years ago by House members, is the most popular pastime. It is like one-wall handball, played with a wooden paddie and a tennis ball without any felt cover. Won't Need Kev For 90 Days; Called Firemen Robert Holland, 58, 408 E.

Liberty found firemen little help Thursday in aiding him to remember where he put his door key. However, Judge Robert V. Wood, saw to it that Holland will not have to worry about a key for the next 90 days. Holland could not find his key when he got to his home at 4:30 a. m.

Thursday so he walked to a nearby fire box and pulled the alarm. Six pieces of fire equipment responded. After Holland explained his plight to the firemen they charged him with sounding a false fire alarm. Judge Wood gave Holland the 90-day sentence after Holland admitted he had been drinking. Taken Ill Mrs.

Della Vize, 83, 4776 Rapid Run was taken to St. Francis Hospital Thursday after she suffered a possible stroke at her home. O'Connor noted that the average supermarket processes 10,000 women shoppers a week and "that's a good audience to research." Research has become a necessary tool for supermarkets, O'Connor told the AMA, "because the name of the game today is 'turnover in The retailer, he said, is becoming more sophisticated-not only in what he buys from manufacturers but what he sells the consumer. The average supermarket carries about 4000 groceries, about one-ninth of the number of items offered by manufacturers. "When you consider that only 120, on the average, of those 4000 products sell three or more cases a week, you can see why the supermarket is concerned with improving turnover." O'Connor also told the AMA that profits of supermarkets "have pretty much stabilized" at after taxes.

A survey by the AMA shows that 81 cents of the supermarket's dollar goes to purchase of products. LIVESTOCK MARCH 11, 1965 CATTLE: 300, calves, 100; not enough of any one class for market test; package choice, 900 lb. steers, few good 800-900 lb. steers, utility and standard Holsteins, lot mostly high good 650 lb. heifers, other good 700-850 lb.

Cows and bulls: utility and commercial cows, canners and cutters, Stu couple utility bulls, Calves: choice vealers. couple prime, $33; standard and good, few utility. HOGS: 1243: barrows and gilts active, steady to mostly 10 higher: spots 15 higher: sows fully steady. Barrows and gilts: No. 1-2, 190-220 125 head $17.75: No.

1-3. 190-235 235-250 lb. lot No. 3, 285 medium to No. 1, 175 $16.50.

Sows: No. 1-3, 250-525 No. 2-3. 525- 640 SHEEP: 100: not enough to test trade..

The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Recommended Articles
Article information

Author: Kelle Weber

Last Updated:

Views: 6131

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (53 voted)

Reviews: 84% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Kelle Weber

Birthday: 2000-08-05

Address: 6796 Juan Square, Markfort, MN 58988

Phone: +8215934114615

Job: Hospitality Director

Hobby: tabletop games, Foreign language learning, Leather crafting, Horseback riding, Swimming, Knapping, Handball

Introduction: My name is Kelle Weber, I am a magnificent, enchanting, fair, joyous, light, determined, joyous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.