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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 11

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Cincinnati, Ohio
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11
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Saturday, September Till: CINCINNATI ENQUIRED Jit Plane Hose-Dives Into Tree In Fort Weli-Governed Mysore Is Example To India And Pakistan, Visiting Engineers Declare Pilot Is Injured Severely, Companion Shaken II' I it a 1 i Ji' Nose-diving through a willow in the back yard of a North Fort Thomas Avenue home last night, a light plane crashed with two passengers, injuring one of them seriously. Charles Davis, 26, 44 Hertford Natick, the pilot, might lose his right eye, physicians at Speers Hospital, Dayton, aid. Fred Lense, 20, 704 E. Ninth Newport, Davis's prospective brother-in-law, escaped with a lip cut and loss of one tooth. He was walking a ay from the plane when R.

C. Reeves, 1404 N. Fort Thomas at whose home the crash occurred, ran to his side with Howard Smith, operator of a grocery next door. "Get my buddy out of there!" Lense mumbled to them. They found Davis in the crumpled cabin nd were able to extricate him.

if 1 Mysore State in India, ruled by a Maharaja who is a ronsiilution.il monarch and efficient admin istrator, by example may determine! the progress of strife-torn Hindu India and Pakistan toward peace and stability. B. R. Manickam and K. S.

Gan-gadhara, civil engineers employed by the Public Works Department of Mysore, who have spent seven months inspecting American dam installations and irrigation projects, declared at the Hotel Sinton yesterday that Americans had a false conception of Maharajas as playboys. Democratic rule by a line of Maharajas who traditionally have rejected autocratic power has made of Mysore a prosperous and peace ful state free of the religious wan which has made the world pessimistic about India's ability to govern itself, they declared. In Mysore, factional feuds do not take place because separate electorates operating on a proportional basis give all minorities representation in both houses of the Legislature. Moslems and Hindus, at each other's throats in Pakistan and Hindu India, are at peace in Mysore because each group is sure of its civil and religious liberties. The present Maharaja, Manickam declared, though in theory a supreme ruler, has URed his veto power less often than President Truman.

Manickam was confident that i what had been accomplished In Mysore, second largest of the independent states ruled by Maharajas, would be accomplished in the rest of India. "The communal disturbances now occurring in India need not give the impression that the people ire unfit to rule themselves," he asserted. "Withdrawal of British power, which had hitherto kept the different communities together, and the division of India are respon sible for the disturbances." The division of India into Mos lem and Hindu slates had accent u- Prelate To Lead Pilgrimage To Old Franciscan Missions -to- Kmiuirpr ICiH'lu-anl Photo. Two civil engineers from Mysore Slate, India, K. S.

Gangad-hara, left, and B. II. Manickam, who are making an inspection tour of American dams and irrigation projects to collect technical data, view plans of the Millcreek Barrier Dam. Their country, they declare, is a model for the rest of Indai. Archbishop Francis J.

Beckman, Who retired recently as Archbishop of Dubuque and who is now residing at Crusade Castle, Linwood, will lead a pilgrimage to the Franciscan shrines and missions of the West and Southwest September 28 to October 14. Several Cincinnati priests and laymen will take part in the tour, which Is sponsored by the Confraternity of Pilgrims. The pilgrimage will be under auspices of the Franciscan Fathers and under the patronage of Our Lady of the Rosary. The miracur lous statue of the Blessed Virgin from the famous shrine of Cap de la Madeleine in Quebec will be taken on the pilgrimage. This is the first time that permission has been given to take the statue out of Canada.

Religious services will be held daily in the chapel car of the pilgrimage train. Prayers and meditations will be conducted through a loud-speaker system throughout the train to enable the sick aboard to take part in them. LIFE EiiDS For Retired Printer. William T. Mnnn, Compositor On Eniiiirpr Fnr 2fi Years, Dies In Covington Hospital.

William T. Moran, 21 Cliffview Fort Thomas, a compositor for The Cincinnati Enquirer for 26 years until he retired in 1941, died yesterday at St. Elizabeth Hospital, Covington. Born in Maysville, he had lived in Fort Thomas for 14 yeRrs. A Past Master of Covington Lodge 109, Free and Accepted Masons, he was a Past High Priest of Jeffries Council, Royal and Select Masters, Newport, and a member of India Consistory of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite Masons of the Valley of Covington, Ethassa Temple, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, Ashland, Daylight Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star, Covington, and Newport Com-mandry, Knights Templar, Newport.

Mr. Moran was a member also of the Order of Amaranth of Cincin nati, Kishmee Grotto, Covington, Olive Branch Chapter, Royal Arch Masons, Newport and the Cincin nati Typographical Union. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Edna Moran; two daughters, Mrs. Leisla Howell, Fort Thomas, and Mrs.

Edna Goebel, Columbus, Ohio; three brothers, Robert, George and Harry Moran, all of Cincinnati; two sisters, Florence and Agnes Moran and one grandchild. Services will be held at 2 p. Monday at the A. C. Dobbling Son funeral home, Fort Thomas Burial will be In Highland Ceme tery, Fort Mitchell.

OHIO GRANTS To Vet Groups Valid, Attorney General Rules In Suit Filed Ity Cincinnati Fighter To Block Appropriations. Legislative grants of to 10 veterans' organizations In Ohio were construed as legal yesterday by Hugh Jenkins, Attorney General, supporting the state's case In a suit filed by Brunner Dickman, Cincinnati veteran, according to Associated Press dispatches from Columbus. Dickman, an attorney who was wounded when in armed service. filed the suit August 15 in Com mon Pleas Court of Franklin County to enjoin state officials from assigning funds to the vet erans' groups. Dickman, as a taxpayer, and Jerome Goldman, another Cincinnati attorney, charged that such payments would violated a state constitutional rule against "giving credit of the state In aid of private individuals, associations or corporations." Jenkins's demurrer said that no constitutional restriction applied in the case; that "the power to make the appropriation in question lies exclusively with the General Assembly." Filing in Dickman's suit brought much adverse comment from veterans' organization officials, who said the state would actually- lose money hy discontinuing support of their service work.

Beverly Hills The show on the hill got off to a fairly snappy start with Harbers Scottish Rite Masons On Way To Cincinnati Teen-Agers Form Canteen To Serve North Cincinnati 1 UVlllLXO) husband flew in from Massachu- setts early this week to join her putting his plane up at Lunken Airport. The two sisters had gone to Lunken Airport with Davis and Lense yesterday. When police notified them of the crash, the sisters were waiting for the fliers to return from what was to have been a short sightseeing trip over Cincinnati. The Fort Thomas Fire Depart ment and Life Saving Squad responded to an alarm sent in Imme diately after the accident. The two victims were taken to the hospital by Firemen Ray Mueller and Joseph Beckmeyer.

The crash was only two squares from the spot where a four-place plane out of Asheville, N. crashed in the yard of a private residence several months ago just after leaving Lunken Airport. Four persons were injured in that accident. Latin Quarter The enthusiasm shown by all the headliners in the new all-sepia revue at the Latin Quarter is infectious. Getting under way like a slow-moving sirocco, it gathers momentum among the customers and has them all applauding the antics of the "3 Chocolateers," June Richmond, Freddie Gordon and a line of Zanzibeauts who arrived here by way of Manhattan's Club Zanzibar.

This type of revue a welcome relief from some of watery pastel entertainment seen around town from time to time Miss Richmond, whose antecedents go back to the recent Broadway production of "St. Louis Woman," is mirth personified. As she sings she chews off her phrases like a woman munching caramels; she evidently relishes them herself. Gordon, as emcee, has an excellent line of patter, some delectable songs like "Give Me A Fat Woman Every Time," and some good soft-shoe steps. The six comely Zanzi beauts throw themselves gracpfully into three routines, inspired by swing-, hot jazz, and oriental themes and their costumes are a stage designer's dream.

Two of the girls step out of line for some very fancy tap steps, with an accent on the acrobatic. The whole show, accompanied by Verne Vorwerck's orchestra, was designed by Clar ence Robinson, who staged similar productions at New York's original Cotton Club and the Zanzibar. Thereis also an unnamed pianist who gets in some potent hot licks on the piano during Miss Richmond's numbers. Let's hope a few of these people stay around town awhile JPR. Glenn Rendezvous Little Jack Little, Cincinnati's own, was up to his old tricks last night at the Glen Rendezvous.

He was making that old piano talk. As the star of Glenn Schmidt's new revue, which opened a two-week stand, Little showed up for the first show with a bad case of lr.rynggitis, making it impossible for him to give out with his swell whispering tenor routines. But what he lacked in voice he cer tainly made up with, his pianap-peal." He chipped in with a whole raft of numbers, including several of his own compositions "Jealous," "Cecelia," etc. And just because he was vocally incapacitated, Liittie wound up the "kick-off" show by playing several old-time numbers while the patrons did the vocal renditioning. Little is capably sup ported in the new show by Marthe Errolle, a lovely looking young lady, who was the star of the re cent production of "The Red Mill;" Ben Bed, a very clever juggler, who mixes comedy in with the usual routine's, and Hector and Milar, an oriental dance team which does its stint with the Yvonne-Armon Dancers in their pening number.

Neil Fontaine, singing me oienn new had his inning of song along with, the Yvonne-Arman group in its second number, a cute Irish folk routine. Wally Johnson's Orchestra, its usual good style, gives out with music for the revue. G. S. Loss Listed At $122 In Holdup, Robbery BNQV1HER lUBIin iPK'lAI, DISPATCH.

Hamilton, Ohio, Sept. 12 A holdup man and burglar obtained $122.50 from two victims here last night, police were told. James Harris, 1344 Central said that $24 in cash and a watch worth $25 had been taken from him by a thug who struck him in the face as he was walking on S. Second St. M.

D. Humphries, Apartment 4 Dorona Apartments, reported that clock and other articles valued at $73.50 had been stolen from his home. VETS TO BE HONORED. A plaque honoring Parkview Heights residents who served in World War II is to be displayed at the fall fete to be conducted today and tomorrow by the Parkview Civic Club at the community grounds, North Bend Rd. and Warder Dr.

The plaque, obtained by a committee headed by Herbert Austing and Paul Borke, is ts be jplaced on the community building. Another feature of the fete is to be an exhibition drill at 3 p. m. tomorrow by the Northern Hills fire department, directed by Chief Wes ley Harris. No explosion of fire followed the) crash.

The plane had flown low over Fort Thomas, clipping the tops of several trees before tan-fling in the top of Reeves's weeping willow. The two-place cabin ship had developed motor trouble over Covington, Lense told officials, and Davis was trying to get it back to Lunken Airport when the motor cut out over Fort Thomas. Davis received internal Injuries and a severe cut across his face, extending over his right eye, nose and mouth, physicians said. After treatment, Lense remained at the hospital to go to his friend's bedside if he should be summoned. Lense is to be married January 10 to Miss Janet Phillips, daughter of Mrs.

Catherine Phillips, 60 16t.h Newport, officials were told. Another daughter is Mrs. Kathleen Davis, the pilot's wife. She had been visiting her mother, and her ARCHBISHOP BECKMAN. Youth Aid Bureau, that a successful canteen is controlled by the youngsters themselves and guided by an adult adviser.

He recommended that citizens of each community provide assistance to the youngsters through their adviser. Officers of the North Cincinnati Canteen were announced last night, at a dance given by the group at Niemarol Hall, Vine and Daniels Sts. They are Ben Martini, President; Patricia Gangloff, Vice President; Francis Scholle, Treasurer, and Joan Clingner, Secretary. Mrs. Dolores A.

Lipka was unanimously chosen by the teen-agers as their adviser. The officers were installed by Harold M. Baron, Chairman of the Hamilton County Child Welfare Board. Temporary headquarters of the canteen is at the home of Mrs. Lipka, 6 W.

St. Clair St. The group will give a second dance at 8 p. m. Friday at Niemarol Hall.

registered for the fall term at the University of Cincinnati. Capt. George Pearcy, Night Chief of Police, said suicide was indi- cated. A note found in the room, written in ink on hotel stationery, said: "Perhaps I am wrong, but my belief is, if a man is no longer beneficial to posterity, his life is no longer essential In this world, R. M.

Bradley. S. If perchance we meet at a later date, we may discuss this point further. P. S.

Please! No autopsy. I've seen too many of them!" A pawn slip found among Bradley's effects showed he had received $700 for a two-and-a-half-carat diamond ring August 16 from the Ideal Loan and Jewelry 608 Vine St. A box of shells lind a pair of Navy flier's wings also were iouna. Successor To Be Named For UC Fund Secretary A three-man committee has been appointed to nominate a successor to J. Robert Sutherlin, who is resigning October 1 as Executive Secretary of the University of Cincinnati Fund and the Alumni Association.

The committee members are Kelly Y. Siddall, comptroller of the procter Gamble Co and chairman of the fund's controlling committee; Arthur W. Schubert, Vice President of Emery Industries and a member of the fund's committee, and Dr. Norman P. Auburn, UC Vice President and ex officio member of the fund's committee.

Sutherlin has accepted the position of assistant sales manager of the Orr Iron Evansville, Ind. PICKS WRONG COUPLE. A man and a woman walked from Union Terminal last night and were hailed by the driver of a 1947 automobile, who asked them if he could take them to their destination. The couple asked to be taken to Sixth and Vine Sts. Then, when he wanted them to pay $1 for the trip, they charged him with operating a bootleg taxicab.

The couple were Patrolman Ca.l Wittmnyer and PoHce Woman Elizabeth Degenhardt. The driver was James Felder 31, 842 Ridge-way Ave. The. overnight bag that the policewoman was carrying contained the officers' raincoats. CALL TOR TYPE BLOOD, A call for tvrje hlood for 13.

1917 If in a it, Organization of the North Cincinnati Canteen by teen-agers of Corryville and the Inwood Park area was announced last night by Oscar F. Hild, President of the Cincinnati Musicians' Association and Managing Director of the Cincinnati Summer Opera Association. The canteen was the second formed as a result of a recent teen-age project initiated by Hild to stimulate citizen action in establishing canteens In Greater Cincinnati. Hild conceived the idea of aiding youths of the city when he read and heeded an appeal in The Enquirer's Opinionnaire by Ernia Osborn for a teen-age canteen in her community. Ernia now Is Executive Director of the newly formed Camp-Teen of Camp Washington.

The canteens were formed on a tiasis suggested by Capt. John A. Turigliatto, Superintendent of the STATE APPEALS To Building Trades Against Tving I Puhlic Works Willi (irii'Minres Ohin Council Offieers Reelected. A plea not to tie up state projects because of grievances was directed to construction workeis yesterday by George Soweis, Ohio Director of Public Works, at. a convention session of the Ohio Stat Building and Construction Trades Council at the Hotel Ncth-erland Plaza.

Pointing to a shortage of skilled workers which affected progress on state construction, Sowers declared that If complaints occurred, "let'l alt down and iron them out." Sowers said that the Public Works Department had $63,000,000 lo spend for schools, hospitals and other projects. Construct ion now in progress will cost $8, 750,000, he 'said. I Two new Lake Erie state parks will be opened next summer. At a concluding business session, delegates reelected all officers. John E.

Breidenhach, Dayton, is President; Robert O. Pale, Columbus, Secretary-Treasurer, and Luke Craig, Cincinnati, Representatives at Ijarge. Vice Presidents are C. J. iMahrr, J.

Filch Cleveland; W. Cunningham, hi and Harry Proctor, all of Cincinnati; W. Rhoden, Dayton; K. D. St a tier, Akron; Frank Converse, Cleveland; Oliver Myers.

IToledo; T. E. Waller, Columbus; Jack Burns, Cleveland, and Jack Whitney, Warren. HOTEL RAIDED, Beer, Whisky Seized. Proppiclrm Of Itilt more Arrsled With Ilcr Son, Siispi'dcd Of Xarcoiif Traffic.

Swooping down upon the Bill-more Hotel, 24 E. Eighth Vice Squad detectives under Lt. Stanley Schrotel arrested two members of the Bezennli family, mother and son, nnd another man and woman yesterday afternoon. Louis Bexennh, 50, who gave the hotel as his address, wns being held for Investigation. Schrotel and Itoy Anderson, V.

S. Narcotic Agent, said he was suspected of obtaining narcotics fraudulently. At the hotel, said beer and whisky were being sold, although the hotel has no liquor licenses. Thirteen cases of beer and a case of assorted liquors and mixers were seized. Mrs.

Ella Bezenah, fiS, proprietress of the hotel, was charged with keeping a place where liquor Is sold nnd with failing to keep a hotit registry, was cited to appear in Police Court Monday. A man and woman found In one of die hotel rooms were charged with disorderly conduct. They registered as Willinm Meyers, 29, 1928 W. Eighth and Miss Eleanor Stevens, 21, 111 "York St. Detectives John Green and Lytln Young assisted Anderson and Schrotel in the seizure and arrests.

Expert Is Concerned By "Underestimation" Of A-Bomb's Power The Rev. John Schiller, chaplain of Divine Providence Academv. Newport, and a graduate student In the physics department at the University of Cincinnati, expressed concern about "a growing tendency" to underestimate the tremendous power of the nlom bomb at yester day's meeting of the Public Health Federation Cancer Council. "What Is hard for all of us to realize Is that release of nuclear energy Is something very different, not just another phase of some thing done before," staled Father Schuler, who whs on the staff of radiologists assigned to the Cruiser "Pensacola" for the "Operation Crossroads" at Bikini In July, 1946. the dangers of radioatlon, Father Schuler enumerated the pre cautions that were taken to prevent loss of life at Bikini.

In conclusion, the speaker told the doctors and nurses of the Cancer Council "your work has as Its basic motivation a humani tarian purpose which gives it an outstanding place In the field of science." Former Red Billed For Speech In City Victor Kravchnko, former So viet official who repudiated the Communist Government and has testified before the House Un-American Activities Committee on Russian policies, will speak at a national convention of Exchange Clubs at the Hotel Gibson September 27-29. Herman B. Cohle, President of the Cincinnati Exchange Club, said yesterday that Kravchenko's ad dress probably would be given at a dinner September 28, which is expected to be attended by 1,000 persons. Other convention speakers will include Tom Clark, U. S.

Attorney General, and Kenneth- C. Royall, Secretary of War. Cohle said that Kravchenko still was under subpoena by the Un-American Activities Committee fnr further questioning. Kravchenko recently testified that "every responsible representative of the Soviet Union in the United States may be regarded as either an economic or political Bpy." Norwood Eagles Accused By State Liquor Board Operators of two Cincinnati cafes, a private club and a fruit market were notified yesterday to appear in Columbus Wednesday to answer charges of violating liquor regulations. Those cited by the State Liquor Board were: Fraternal Order of Eagles, High land Aerie 449, 2122 Washingtoi Norwood, charged with pos session of four slot machines.

Stanley Manchester, Fruit Market, 13 W. 15th having beep and wine carry-out permits, charged with sale to a minor, William Hendrickson, Ken Mill Cafe, 719 E. McMillan charged with Sunday sales. George Bradley, Windsor Caf, 116 E. 6th charged with rac horse betting on premises.

Deer Park Flier Found Dead In Room In Downtown Hotel The body of a former Deer Park and nervous since his discharge Naval flier, clad only in shorts. from the Navy and that he had and Dale giving their version ofjDegree, ballroom dancing a la mode. After meeting. i inspected the Millcreek Barrier Inni nnd the Newport floodwall ve.slerday. The technical data that they compile on their tour, which is to last five months more, will be applied In the construction of a dam and Irrigation project In Mysore.

Obituaries MRS. SARAH WILLIAMSON. Services for Mrs. Surah Klhi Williamson, widow of William E. Williamson, formerly superinten dent of schools at Terrace Park, will be conducted at 2 p.

m. today at Armstrong Chapel, Indian Hill, where Mrs. Williamson was baptised Into the Methodist faith. Hurinl will lie In the chapel ceni- I I cry. Mrs.

Williamson, who was 89 years old, died Wednesday at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Lyle Lord, 3M20 Broadview Hyde Park, Born at Plqua County, Ohio. Mrs. Williamson, who would hav. celebrated her 90th birthday Sep tember 22, moved to Indian Hill an a girl, She whs the organist am an active church worker at Arm wtrong Chapel when she whs a young woman.

The ground on which the chapel Is built was donated by a member of her husband's family Mrs. Williamson had been a mem her of Grace Methodist Church Norwood, for many years. Besides her daughter, who Is the wife of a retired grain merchant, Hhe is survived by another daughter, Mrs. Victor Heintz, wife of a Cin cinnatl attorney; two sisters, Mrs. Albert Miller, Hamilton, Ohio, and Mrs.

Thomas Earhart, Cincinnati; a brother, 1. D. Clephane, St. Petersburg, former principal of Evanston School; two grandchildren and a great-grandchild. AUGUST BAUERLIN.

August Biuierlin, retired Police Lieutenant, died yesierday his home, 7710 Montgomery Kenwood, after an Illness of two months. Mr. Baiierlin, who was K2 years old, retired more tnan i years ago after serving with the Cincinnati Police Department for 35 years. He was a member of Vat-ller Lodge 386, F. and A.

and the JOUAM. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Meta Bauerlln; five daughters, Mrs. Fannie Kirkpa-trlck, Mrs. Edna Allman and Mrs.

Myrtle Rader, all of Kenwood; Mrs. Pearl Keinhardt, Newport, and Mrs. Elsie Bnckls, IjOs Angeles; a brother, William Baiierlin, Kenwood; seven grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Masonic services will be conducted at 8 p. m.

tomorrow. Other services will be at 2 p.m. Monday at the Denman funeral home, Sllverton. Burial will be in Vine Street Hill Cemetery, MRS. CAROLINE RUDLOFF.

Requiem High Mass for Mrs. Caroline Rudloff, former head housekeeper at the Hotels Sinton and Gibson, who died Thursday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Edwin Von Lehmden, 3988 School Section Cheviot, after a six weeks illness, will be sung at 9 a. m. Monday at St.

Aloysius Church, Bridgetown. Burial will be In St. Aloysius Cemetery. Mrs. Rudloff, who was 81 years old, served at the Hotel Sinton until 1912 when she became assistant housekeeper at the Hotel McAIpin, New York.

She returned to Cincinnati In 1914 to take charge of the then new Hotel Gjbson and was employed there until she retired in 1927. Besides her daughter, she is survived by a grandaughter, Miss Georgeane Von Lehmden, and a brother, Gustave Stark, Cincinnati. Gl, AW0L, Repeats; So Do Patrolmen Bartholomew Pico doesn't like the Army. Pico, who Is 19 years old and lives at 619 Athens wns stationed with the Army somewhere In New Jersey. On August 23 he was arrested his home on a charge of being absent without leave by Patrolmen Leroy Brown and Ralph Barron.

A few days later he wns turned over to Army authorities at Columbus. Last Wednesday, Pico and three other men who were being transferred to Ft. Knox, Ky jumped off the Army truck on Dixie Highway, Fort Mitchell, and escaped. Irfist. night the cycle was completed when Patrolmen Brown and Barron again arrested Pico at his home.

He is being held for Army ated the fears of minorities living in each, he Indicated, adding that they were the product of transi tion period which would "disappear within a very short period." Manickam and uangndhiii'n, escorted by persnonel of the United States tDivision Engineers Office, From Abroad MI'XYIN JOHNSON. degree work will attend the session. Arrangements for the Council meeting are in charge of Illustrious Will R. Atkinson, 3.1 i-l degree, active for Ohio; Eversull, Commander-in-Chief of the Ohi'i Cansistory, and Illustrious R. I'.

Compton, 33rd degree, Secretary of Ihe Cincinnati Scottish Rite bodies. Mrs. Eversull is In charge of arrangements for ladies of tho Scoltish Rile brothers. Police Hunt Police As Crime Suspects After Gun Exhibition Excitement ran high at police headquarters yesterday afternoon before police found out they were looking for police. It started when four police recruits and a policewoman recruit walked Into a Reading restaurant and ordered lunch.

They had just left the police pistol range, Lock-land Road, Lockland, and all were armed. After they left, polin received telephone calls telling of the armed quintet and the license number of their automobile. But it was all explained when the license number was identified that of one of the recruits. Capt. Karl ncynoms.

in cnarge oi police instruction classes, issued an immediate order to the rookies to the guns at the range when go to lunch Films To Mark UN Week At Branches Of Library Motion pictures and folk music recordings at three branches of the Public Library will commemorate United Nations Week. "Brotherhood Of Man," and the Much of Time films, "Greece" and "Palestine," will be shown Monday at the Price Hill Library by Miss Mildred Bishop, librarian. On Wednesday Miss Alice Is-phording, librarian at the Hyde Park Library will show "Brotherhood Of Man" and the award winner, "Seeds Of Destiny," on the library lawn. Miss Pearl Portnoy, librarian at the Avondale Branch Library, has arranged a program which includes the films, "Greece" and "Palestine," and the recording of Norman Corwin's VE Day broadcast, "On A Note Of Triumph," to be given Thursday. All programs will start at 7:30 p.

PLASTICS CLASS OFFERED. A new course In plastics will be offered at Western Hills High School starting at 7 p. m. Thursday, Robert E. Finch, Director of Adult Education for the Cincinnati public schools, announced yesterday.

It will be a two-hour course offered once a week and will provide recreation for the amateur, additional skills for the student, and training for the craftsman in business, Finch said. The class will give instruction in fabrication! design, polishing, forming, cementing, dyeing, carving, engraving and Sri I Scottish Rite Masons from Eng land, Scotland, Wales, France, Can ada, Mexico and Cuba are expected to join their American fellow members in attending the 135th annual meeting of the Supreme Council, 33rd degree, Ancient Accepted scheduled to be conducted in Cin cinnati next Friday through Thursday September 25. The meeting will be the fiflli conducted in the Queen Ciiy, sessions having been conducted previously in 1870, 1883. 1898 and 1910. The illustrious Melvin Maynard Johnson, Boston, 33rd degree, Most Puissant Sovereign Grand Commander, will preside.

One of the features of the meeting will be the Vesper services fa 111. OCJJLTTIIllCTl 41 111 I.I1C Cincinnati auditorium of the rite. Illustrious Lynn Harold Hough, D. LL. 33rd degree, dean of the Divinity School of Drew University, will deliver the sermon.

His subject will be "Loyalties and the Great Loyally." Others who will participate are Johnson; Illustrious Mcllyar H. Lichliter, D. LL. 33rd degijt'e, Grand Prior; Illustrious Benjamin F. P.

Ivins, D.D., LL. 33rd degree, Bishop of Milwaukee, and Illustrious Harry K. Eversull, D. 33rd degree. Music will be provided by the Cincinnati Scottish Rite Cathedral Choir under the direction of lllus- trious J.

Walter DeVaux, 33rd Grand Organist, for the Provisions have been made to take care of the overflow crowd, expected to attend the services, iwith a public address system In Taft Auditorium. Thirty-second de gree Masons and their wives have been Invited to attend. Lichliter, Chairman of the Supreme Council Committee on Rituals and Ritualistic matters, will be in charge of a conference scheduled for the afternoon of September 23. Members of subordinnta bodies who engage In Scottish Rile Dr. Wilzbach Going To Polio Conference At Warm Springs Dr.

Carl A. Wilzbach, of Health Commissioner, will he of the nation's health among 20 authorities attending a throe-day conference on Infantile paralysis opening Monday In Warm Springs, Georgia The conference, arranged by the Georgia Warm Spring Foundation, will review advances In the han- dling of polio cases. Dr. Wilzbach said he hoped light would be thrown on how polio spreads. This still baffles health rOUndatlOn and the Board of Health Cincinnati Drive Copied In Traffic Safety Effort A rule of the month traffic safety campaign, patterned after the Cincinnati drive conducted by the Traffic Safety Council and Police Department, Is to be conducted in Quincy, it was learned yesterday.

Edward W. Hodgetts, Chairman of the Traffic Safety Council's Education Committee, said that a request for permission to use the local rule of the and cartoons hns month slogans been made by Executive Vice James M. Riffe, 'President of the Quincy Chamber of Commerce. Riffe is a former Cinclnnatian, having once been in charge of the Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce's Civic Department. HOPKINS'S WIDOW WEDS.

Ardmore, Sept. 12 (INS) Mrs. Louise Gill Macy Hopkins, widow of Harry Hopkins, was mar ried today to Geoffrey Gates, socially prominent architect, In the home of her sister, Mrs. Nicholas Ludington. their warmup, this young dance! team went to town with a iive version of "The Anniversary Song," which, our Mr.

Yeiser expertly says, is but a modern rendition of "Waves Of The Danube." Their medley dance done to variations of "Oh Suzanna," and other Old South stuff, wag a bit of all right. Sylvia Froos, In a nightingale act, showed complete stage presence and an excellent voice In her stint much better than many other names doing similar turns. "More Than You'll Ever Know," got a good hand, while her slightly Ozarkian edition of "Wonderful, Wonderful Thing," rang the bell. La Froos gave an excellent parody of Fanny Brice's "My Man," while her Jerome Kern selections and slightly Spike Jonesey "Chloe" rang the bell. Alan Gale, billed as a "gale of laughter," had to start as a small breeze, but by dint of hard work with a possibility lackadasical audience, built the set up to billing.

Incidentally, Gale, in his impromptu repartee with the audience, showed his versatility and displayed a much wider selection of patter than many comics we have seen recently, His Satchmo Armstrong rendition of "Ain't Misbehavin' was better than good. Excusing the pun, the Gale exited on a hurricane note. with a revolver clutched in, his right hand, was found on a bed; In a Hotel Metropole room by a' maid shortly before 10 p. m. yes-.

terday. Death was caused by a bullet fired into his right temple. A driver's license identified the man as Robert Marson Bradley, 24, 4179 Linden Deer Park. Hotel records showed he had registered August 22 as R. M.

Bradley, 4159 Essex, Dayton, Ohio. A brother, Arthur E. Bradley, of the Deer Park address, told police that the flier had been despondent University Students Pay For Beer Mug Episode Nine youths, all university students, were fined $25 and costs last night by Justice of the Peace William Holtke of Columbia Town-nhip of charges stemming from the tossing of a beer mug througn the windshield of a Mariemont police cruiser. The $25 fines were remitted, but $5 in costs were paid by each student. Patrolman Rayner Prince of Mariemont reported the trouble resulted when he tagged an automobile in a driveway at 515 Wooster Mariemont, Thursday right, I- Prince and Deputy Harry Clarke arrested the nine youths in anight spot near by, after the youths came out of another cafe and found Prince putting a tag on their car.

Revised Plan Is Received For Lake-To-River Canal A revised plan covering the proposed Lake Erie-Ohio River Canal between Pittsburgh, and Ashtabula, Ohio, was received yesterday by Brig. Gen. Douglas L. Weart, Cincinnati, U. S.

Division Engineer, from the District Engineer at Pittsburgh. General Weart said he would review the plan and submit it and his recommendations to the Chief of Engineers at Washington within 30 days. Details will be available to interested persons only after submission to the chief, he said. Before final action by the chief and the Board of Rivers and Harbors, a public hearing would be held, General Weart said. Original plans for this project submitted in 1939 provided for a waterway nine feet deep via the Beaver, Mahoning and Grand Rivers.

GENERAL PRODUCE Chlcmo. Sept. 12 (AP)-(URDAl Mve rultrjr unifttlfd; receipt 35 truck, no rum, o. b. prion; roa.ter 3S(31c, Leghorn brolleri J8SS-5c, othen unchansed.

Butter AA 93 wore 8 3 18 5r, A 03 S3.c B83.5P, 00 7S(81c, 89 7373. 25e. Itt' lrreulir; lre No. 3 extrw SlSpSdc, medium No, 3 extra S3iS4c, itandardi 48c (649c, current recelptu 44847c, dlrtlei 86c 37c, checks 3S3t)c, The Duffy Dancers gave he said, explaining that usual good precision performance, 'tne Illness does not follow the pat-but if a suggestion is in of any other contagious illness. "Minnie From Trinidad" is develop- Dr.

Wilzbach will report on the ing flat tires on the cart wheeled conference to the Hamilton County about the stage, Johnny Bowman Chapter of the Infantile Paralysis Pole Broken, Children Safe! Telephone Company Worker Thinks Fast-Smashes Glass. Diverts Runaway Truck. Chester C. Bird, 42, 3148 RosInalSafety Patrolman Rex Burdsall nnd his nrrh eartie thrnno-h wifh excellent cueing and some pretty smooth stuff for the jive and hoof shaking contingent. D.L.B.

reported. Bird had stopped to investigate another accident In front of 2614 Glenway Ave. in which a friend, JameS Roach, 1886 Huron was, Involved. Bird stopped when he recognized the license number of Roach's automobile, which had been struck by the tractor and trailer operated by William Maxey, 28, Louisville, Ky. Bill first asked a wrecker employee to thiow him a chock to stop the huge vehicle but there was none to be had.

Then he went into action. Meanwhile Roach had gone to Central Station to file charges of reckless driving snd leaving the scene of an accident against Maxey. Covington, a conduit inspec tor for the Cincinnati and Suburban Bell Telephone saved the lives of six or eight children on Glenway Avenue yesterday afternoon, but he had to wreck one of his company's poles to do police reported. Noticing a driverless tractor and trailer rolling down the Glenway Avenue hill toward the children, from the window on the driver's side with his hand and steered it against a telephone pole, cracking off the pole but stopping the truck in front of 2526 Glenway Ave. Bird suffered a cut right hand but refused polic assistance, Howard Berleman, 15, son of PaulBild eaVeA on the "inning; board Berleman, an employee of the CitViof the vehicle, broke the glass Highway Maintenance Department, was made yesterday by Bernie Schmidt, business agent for the Federation of Slate, County and Municipal Employees.

The boy is In General Hospital suffering from lukemia..

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Years Available:
1841-2024