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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 14

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Cincinnati, Ohio
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14
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THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER Friday, April 1918 PRINTERS 1 One-Act Plays Marine Services Set For Harrison Flier; i I 7TTT 1 11 RESENTMENT Is Voiced By FCA Major Roles To Be Played By Fire Spreading Devices Chemist Says' Lost In Air Collision Services are to be held at the ine Corps base in Hawaii Sun-for Lt. Kenneth L. Barnes, 30, Harrison, and three other fliers who disappeared in the Pacific Monday after a collision of two planes engaged in night maneuvers. Mrs. Mary Etta Bauer, Iliff Avenue, Harrison, mother of Lieuten-j ant Rarnpe eoM vctprHav that ichpl had learned by telephone from her son's wife, Mrs.

Jeanne Barnes. n- A I I. "i 1, In Next War, Production and improvement of incendiary weapons will be a major task of the Army Chemical Corps tuilIC jy that the Navy had discontinued Typographical Union lAFL, de-its search of the crash area. iclined to disclose the contents of Arrangements have been made 'the proposal, for Mrs. Barnes and her nine-l The union has been on strike month-old son Jeffrey to leave against the papers since Novem-Hawaii for the United States by'ber 24.

Submit Own Terms In Answer To Chicago Tapers' $6 Offer-New York Asks Elimination Of Chicago, April 8 iUP The striking printers union today submitted a contract proposal to pub lishers of Chicago's five struck newspapers. jonn j. pilch President of the Chicago local of the International Pilch said a meeting with the after publishers had studied the proposed settlement. Earlier this week, the publishers offered a $6 weekly general wage increase, re- Ifrnnrtive in the date of exmration daily newspapers have asked their union typesetters to abandon what the publishers call union-enforced "wasteful practices," unnecessary to the operation of a newspaper. The newspapers, represented by the Publishers Association of New jship Wednesday.

They will be met! in San Francisco April 20 or would be held Monday Black, center, chief of the Supplyjwar. He also discussed the "single I mf TV and Procurement Division of the service cross-procurement methdMt. Healthy, and a brother of the contract. Corps, declared last night. Army began using early tr.is.Robert Rofes of the Harrisoni Colonel Black came to Cincinnati year to simplify problems the Army ajaress New York.

April 8 (AP) Pub- from Washington to address the' encountered in World War II. i llishers of New York City's 14 major "Yes. dear, I brought your slippers, now just slip them on" by Mrs. Barnes's father, Carl Tonne, 1510 Marlowe College One Gils Identified; Effort Is Abandoned At Potter's Cemetery Organized Reserve Corps and the! local chapter of the Chemical Corps Association. He is pictured at! Lehrman's Restaurant with Col.

Alfred Gus Karger. left. Commanding Officer of the First Ohio Chemical Battalion, and C. E. Trotter, Vice President of the Association.

Hopes Fade For Early Pact In AFL-Van Drivers' Strike; Operators Meet Again Today Hopes for an early settlement of I April 3 and run to March 2, 1949, a strike involving 200 Cincinnati with no retroactive pay involved. ine montn-om attempt oy n'York City, and the International Amy officer to determine whether Typographical Union's Local No. 6 three men- buried in Cincinnati's AFL) currently are negotiating Potter's Field were veterans wasfpr a new contract to replace the abandoned yesterday after that March 31. one of the bodies was identified I Chief amone the practices that Young Physician Succumbs After Illness Of Two Years American Federation of Labor van and the cemetery was found to newspapers asked to have elimi- i varif "Ko1 eho tin I i a a in "bad nated from the new contract is thejdrivers and helpers dwindled late Library Site Meeting "Another Texas City" May Be Riverside, Delegates Say Tanks Cited. Charges that the public meeting on a ne.v library site at the Hotel Gibson Wednesday was "packed" and other charges that "another Texas City is going up in River- aide" were voiced at the monthly meeting of the Federated Civic As-aociation at the Hotel Sinton last Bight Conditions which resulted in almost blasting Texas City, off the map in a series of explosions which caused heavy loss of life are being repeated in the building of gasoline-storage tanks along Western Cincinnati's river bank, delegates from that territory complained.

"We're jarred for a half-mile when iust a. easoline truck blows up think what it would be jf; those tanks started:" one delegate (aid. Another pointed out that the proximity of the railroad and of plane traffic for the Greater Cincinnati Airport in Boone County, just across the river, created danger of accidents which might touch off a series of blasts. LETTER IS REQUESTED. Louis L.

Meyer, President, asked the delegates to submit to the FCA a letter of protest they are send ing to officials, so that the FCA also may take the matter up form- ally. The next meeting of the FCA will have the problem of a public library site as its principal business. Sherwood Reeder, who showed elides at the Gibson meeting, will be asked to repeat the program and tell why the Master Plan favors a Fourth and Main Streets ite. Charles J. Armstrong was appointed to provide a speaker to present the case for other sites.

The FCA went on record last year as favoring a site as near as possible to the present one on Vine Street above Sixth. Delegates expressed resentment in last night's discussion because the FCA, representing more than 60 civic associations throughout the county, had not been asked to Join in sponsoring the meeting. Armstrong said there had been a "claque" for the Fourth Street site. ON BRIGHTER SIDE. On the brighter side, the Federa-i tion heard reports that: (1) a half-dozen industries are eager toia take over the Southside Avenue Standard Brands plant, which long has provided employment for many families in down-river communities; (2) permanent lights for night games may be in place on Bank Street playground by midsummer, and (3) theater managers in many I a 2 A.

at a Ilast nieht when representatives ofito April 3. with retroactive pay, very Maj. Walter B. Bradley, Quarter- master Corps of the becond Army.j Ft. George G.

Meade, Md told veterans' organization and military officials meeting at the Soldiers' Relief Commission Office, Post Office Annex that one body was identified as that of Louis Coleman, who lived on Front Street between Main and Sycamore Sts. The meeting was told that rec- ords of burials had been badly kept. tional work by newspaper com-Major Bradley pointed out that it positors. was impossible to say definitely! The "bogus" clause at issue Garvey, Business Agent of where the men had been buried in'been carried in the local contract Locaj 140, Furniture Piano and Ex- Services for Dr. Ralph C.

Reece, 26-year-old physician who be came ill before he could establish private practice, will be held ar p. m. tomorrow at the Clarence Baiter funeral home. Crema- tion will follow, A graduate of the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Dr. Reece, who had been in ill health for more than two years, died yesterday at General Hospital, where he had been a patient since January 19.

He served his internship General Hospital. "Rnrn in Tprrp Hnntp Tnri Dr. Pppre vi'hn wna a mpmhpp nf Nil I i Sigma Nu, medical fraternity, had resided in Cincinnati since comins here to attend premedical school at UC. He lived with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Ralph C. Reece, at 54S McAlpin Clifton. Besides his father, who is sales representative for the DoAll Machine Tool 342 Reading Rd and his mother, Dr. Reece leaves a sister, Miss Margaret Reece, and brother, Robert Reece, both of the McAlpin Avenue address. JOHN F.

RAWE. he By Mage Inc. Wednesday, April 14, at 8:30 p. the Laboratory Theater of Stage, Incorporated will present an evening of one-act plays at the, auditorium of the YWCA, NMnth and Walnut Sts. Four one-act will be presented for the benefit of the YWCA Reconstruction Fund.

Tickets at $1.20, including tax, may be obtained at the Registra tion Office of the YWCA. The evening's performance will include "Emotions Under Glass, an original play by Robert Douglass, member of the Laboratory Theater; "The Flattering Word," by George Kelly; "The Booklovers," by John Kirkpatrick, and "If Men Played Cards As Women Do," by Georg Kaufman. Author Robert Douglass will also direct his play. The cast of "Emo tions Under Glass" includes Dor othy Visser, Ethel Fuhrman, Em-mylou Sturm, Edward Englehart, Robert ureen. The cast of "The Flattering Word," directed by Marjorie Man ning consists of Phil Goyert, Gayle Goyert, Helen Louise Stapleford, Elma Pollock and Paul Lauhmann.

Maurice Jacobs, chairman of Stage, Incorporated's, Laboratory Theater, will direct "The Booklov ers." The cast: Clinton Jones, Sue Cahill, Eugene L. Jacobs, Marl Boc, Marianne Stevens and Kay Meyers. "If Men Played Cards As Women will be directed by the Lab oratory Theater's cochairman, Tim othy Hinckley. The cast include-j Carl Phares, Bert Bchrman, James Nelson and Hinckley. The Laboratory Theater is the ex- siPerimental' branch of Stage, Incor- porated, Cincinnati's new civic thea ter.

It is designed to showcase the talents of both the veteran acior and newcomers to the stage. In the Laboratory Theater members are afforded an opportunity to in all phases of acting and directing. Interesting plays of the "arena" or "penthouse" type in which audi ence and actors change places have been produced in the Laboratory Theater's current season. Here Managing Director Paul Fieldin? finds much of the talent for f. palys produced in Stage, Incorporated's subscription series.

The April 14 evening of one-act plays for the benefit of the. YWCA is one of many produced by thf; Laboratory Theater as a service to the community. The committee headed by Maurice Jacobs, with Timothy Hinckley as cocnalrman, includes Sam Meser, L.ue Meser, Ethel Fuhrman, Sue Cahill, David Upton, Joseph Reams ana Dorothy Stone. Convention Of Variety Clubs Variety Clubs International are readying their annual show under the Big Tent which will be pitched this year in Miami Beach next Monday, continuing till Saturday. This is the 12th annual Variety Convention and some thousand barkers from all over the country, Canada and Mexico already have made reservations for the affair.

Highlights of the convention will be reports of various tents' Heart Committees on charity accom plished during the past year, the amount of money spent, pledges for the coming year, the election of officers, and a grand finale on Saturday night with announcement of the winner of the 1947 Variety Humanitarian Award. Thirty members of the Cincin nati Variety Club's Tent 3 will journey southward headed by the club's official family Irving So-chin, Chief Barker; Alan Moritz, National Canvasman; Bill Onie and Maurice White, local delegates, and Noah Schechter, press representative. Goldsand In Final Town Hall Recital Robert Goldsand, member of the artist faculty of the Cincinnati Con servatory of Music, will give the third and final piano recital In a series, on contemporary composers at Town Hall, New York, tomorrow. Goldsand will play Rachmaninoff's Corelli Variations, Schoenbach's Piano Pieces, op. 11; Teleman Vari ations, by Max Reger, and a group by Bartok, Milhaud, PoulJhc, Bar ber and Cowell.

Area Theater Gives Lusty Gogol Farce Yellow Springs, Ohio. April 8 (Special) Two old-timers of the Summer Theater, Sheldon Piatt and Richard Kaplan, have been cast by Director Arthur Lewis In the lead ing male roles of the next Yellow Springs Area Theater play, Nicolai Gogol's "The Inspector General." The lusty continental comedy win be the Yellow Springs troupe's only venture into the realm of farce this season. It is to be presented at the Opera House, April 21 through 25. and Mav 1 at 8:30 p. with a matinee May 2 at 2:30 p.

m. Carol Goodson and Frances Oliver Loud, who both have held stellar roles earlier in the season, have the leading feminine parts in "The Inspector Solemn Requiem High Mass nH t. iff. TVloof ths fioM Two of the bodies disinterred for identification were reburied in their original graves. The body of Coleman is to be sent to New Albany, today, where arrangements for a military funeral will be completed.

Last Rites Tomorrow ForWendell Campbell Services for Wendell Braxton Campbell, President of the Braxton W. Campbell real estate dealers, will be held at 10 a. m. tomorrow at the home of Mr. and Mrs.

Louis Coffin, 2344 Vista PI. The Rev. Hugh Bean Evans of Seventh Presbyterian Church will officiate. Burial win be in Spring Grove. Mr.

Campbell, who was a former President of the American Manufacturers Export Association, died Wednesday of a heart attack at the Hotel Metropole, where he had stopped to rest after attending a motion picture with his wife, Mrs. Fay S. Campbell. He was 62 years old. Besides his widow Mr.

Campbell, who lived at 2324 Park leaves two sons, Daniel S. Campbell of Cincinnati, and Dr. John S. Campbell, Minneapolis, and his mother, Mrs. Braxton W.

Campbell. The Schaefer Busby funeral home is! in charge of funeral arangements. in charge of burial arrangemnts. DEAD BABIES STREWN IN SHANGHAI STREETS Shanghai, April 8 (AP) Bodies of 405 Chinese infants were found on Shanghai's streets in the first week of April. Most of these were victims of an epidemic of measles.

Bodies of 26 adults also were found. The toll of disease, starvation and cold totals 7,307 for the first three months of the year 6,957 of the victims being children. communities actually are Hill, where he was a store- zinanciai losses in order to provide wholesome Saturday afternoon programs for children. A report by John J. Behle, Chairman of the Industrial and Business Expansion Committee, said the Plans to move the Standard The union, Ferguson, added, wanted the contract to run from April The Conciliation Commissioner has been meeting with operator and employee representatives for more than two months in an effort to reach an agreement.

McNamara said last night that the opposing factions "are so close together on the issues that the difference is hardly perceptible." Postal Employees Called To Hear National Officer Postal employees from South western unio and Northern Ken tucky have been invited to a meet ing of Branch 43, National Associa tion of Letter Carriers, at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow at Legion Memorial Hall, 322 Broadway. Strategy concerning the Baldwin bill, which provides an $800 annual permanent salary increase, will be planned. The bill was brought out of a Sen ate subcommittee yesterday, Thomas L.

McNary, President of the branch, was informed from Wash ington by William C. Doherty, Cin cinnati, National President of the union. The bill now is ready for a vote by the full Senate. Peter J. Cahill, Boston, national officer of the union, will be the principal speaker tomorrow.

Movie Timetable KEITH'S: 10:40, 12:35, 2:25, 4:20, 6:10, 8:05, 10. ALBEE: 10, 12, 2, 4. 6, 8, 10. GRAND: 10, 12, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. LYRIC: 10, 12, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10.

PALACE: 10, 12, 4, 8. 10. CAPITOL: 10:55, 1:37. 4:19. 7:01, 9:43.

SHUBERT: 10:05, 12:04, 2:03, 4:02, 6:01, 8, 10. Art Shop Opens Library Of Original Paintings The Trojan Horse, craft, antique and art shop on the northwest cor ner of Third and Sycamore Sts. has opened a rental library of origi nal paintings by several Cincinnati artists. Among those represented are John Imhoff, Robert Fabe, Joseph Meert, Sigmund Valin, William Harry Gothard, Paul Craft and Edith McKee. Part of the monthly rental fee applies to the purchase price if the renter decides to buy.

Featured in the current art exhibit at the Trojan Horse are 12 wood carvings by Nicholas Macharniuk. Other exhibits include of the weaving, dying and metal working crafts, reminiscent of the prod ucts of the old craft guilds of past centuries. Conservatory Vacation AH activities at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music will cease during the coming week for students and faculty to enjoy the annual spring vacation. Classes and recital programs will be resumed during the week starting Sunday, April 18. HELD FOR KENTUCKY JURY.

Pleading guilty of automobitc theft, Dilton McGowan, 21, 3747 River Cincinnati, was ordered held for Kenton County Grand Jury investigation by Judge Eugene' Benzinger in Covington Police Court yesterday. Bond was fixed at $1,000. McGowan is accused of stealing an automobile owned by Lonzie Neal, 2908 Vaughn Cincinnati, from Sixth and Main Cincinnati, last Sunday. CASH REGISTER RIFLED. A burglar took $65 from the cash register in the Orange Juice stand of James Coomer, 103 E.

Fifth after climbing through a window, Mary Callahan, 217 Mulberry a clerk, told police yesterday. ROOM AM HOARD. Brands operations to an Illinois'--1 Club and Recording Secre-plant already were too far of the 5-13 CIub. both social vanced to save the industry for theiclubs' Enquirer i Cochran Photo. In discussing the future of in cendiary weapons.

Colonel Black intimated that a large portion of them would be channeled for use tne Air forces in me etm The new method has been devisid to improve relations between indus try and the Armed Forces and to end "competition" between the armed forces over material pro duced by private industry. Colonel Black returned to Wash ington immediately after speaking. DR. RALPH C. REECE.

was transferred to the Bureau of Mines after serving with the U. S. District Engineers in Cincinnati, was active in amateur dra- matlpa with tha Tnpcnnion TVioafl Mra Walu Mi Marianne Walle, who joined her mother in Hollywood Monday, arrived in Cincinnati yesterday with the body. Besides his mother and his sister, Marianne, Mr. Walle leaves another sister, Miss Marcella Walle, and a daughter, Miss Sandra Walle.

all of Cincinnati. JOSEPH H. BUSSE. The Board of Trustees of Good Samaritan Hospital and members of the Western Hill Country Club will be honorary pallbearers when Solemn Requiem High Mass is sung for Joseph H. Busse, President of the Busse Borgmann funeral directors, at 10 a.

m. today at St. Antoninus Church, Green Township. Burial will be in Spring Grove. Mr.

Busse, who lived on Neeb Road, Green Township, died of a heart ailment in Miami, Mon day. He was 54 years old. The hospital trustees are Walter E. Schott, Thomas E. Wood, Arthur Massa, Louis Richter, Nicholas Janson, John Dempsey, Thomas Earls, Jerome Kuertz, Francis X.

Rudolph and Edward Bettinger. The country club members are Harry Blaney, James Wilson, Frank Wente, Fred Bott, John Barth, Harold Reimeier, Joseph Boppert, Herbert Murrer, James Fleming and August Kesslerl Active pallbearers will be Russell Willenborg, Edward Price, Pete Budeke, B. W. Brink, Emmett Bernens, Joseph Imholte, Ralph Kohnen and Clifford Dieterle. NICHOLAS J.

H0KEL Requiem High Mass for Nicholas Joseph Hokel, who retired two years ago after 33 years of service with the New York Central Rail road, will be sung at 9 a. m. tomorrow at Holy Name Church, Mt. Auburn, following prayers at the Wrassmann Barfknecht funeral home. Mr.

Hokel, who served in various capacities with the rail road, including inspector of the dining car service for four years, died Wednesday at his home, 3144 Vine followiig an illness of two years. He leaves his widow, Mrs Winifred Hokel. and two nieces, Mrs. Joseph Kennelly and Mrs John Kelly, both of Canada, where he will be buried. Roofer Is Injured; Condition Serious Howard Thomas, 28, 4121 Judd Avenue, Rossmoyne, was in serious condition at Jewish Hospital last night from the effects of injuries suffered when he fell three stories from the roof of the home of Frank Williams, 4'512 Lafayette Nor wood, yesterday afternoon.

Thomas received a possible spine fracture and fractures of both heels hospital attendants reported. Thomas, a roofer, was working at the Williams home when the accident occcurred. His brother, Thomas Thomas, said Howard slid down the slanted roof and grabbed cornice, but that the cornice gave way and he plunged to the ground. scsVj6 CYCLIST IS SLASHED. Paul Smith, 19, 1118 Sherman reported to police that he was attacked with a knife by a shabbily dressed youth as he rode a bicycle at Liberty St.

and Free man Ave. at 9:20 m. yesterday. Smith said thq youth ran to the curb and slashed at him, cutting his light arm, then fled. Smith was treated at St.

Mary Hospital. He could give no reason for the attack, At1 igppra fpii s0-rallpd "bogus" clause. Tne clause provides that all local; advertising material must be set up from scratch In the composing room of the newspaper using it. The practice, under the contract, must be followed even if the advertisers already have had the ads set in outside shops and have sent the newspapers matrices or photo- engravings which require no addi- since 1907. Union negotiators had no imme-j idiate comment on the proposal, Three thousand, 'five hundred printers have returned to work in New York City's book, magazine and job-printing plants after a 26-day stoppage.

Awnings Destroyed; Smoker Causes Fire Fire destroyed two awnings and damaged three others on the first and second floors of the People's Bank 406 Elm at 4:30 p. m. yesterday, Marshal John Hall reported. Hall attributed the blaze to a careless smoker. A spark from an incinerator started a $75 roof fire at the two-story brick and shingle building at 2803 Clifton Ave.

at 3:15 p. m. yesterday, Marshal Robert P. Williams reported. Neighbors fought the blaze from a ladder until firemen arrived.

FIREMEN FROM Montgomery, Sycamore Township and Madeira battled for more than an hour yesterday afternoon to extinguish a grass fire which swept over 400 acres of property owned by the Archdiocese of Cincinnati off Mont gomery Road, between Weller and Cornell Rds. No buildings were lnreaceneQ' lne 1,1 FIRE DAMAGES TRUCK, Sparks from a welder's torch ignited gasoline fumes in the cab of a tractor-trailer parnea at tne Philip Carey wayne j-iock- land, causing $300 damage, yester day afternoon, Fire Chief Louis Wade of Lockland reported. The welder was working on a water tower on roof of a building next to the spot where the truck was parked. The truck is owned by the Midwest Transfer Cooper Rd. and Hosea Lock-land.

Death Sentence sentence was reduced several times until finally it was fixed at three years. Recently transferred to the Federal prison at Terre Haute, in anticipation of his parole, Cooper was reunited with his family late yesterday st the neighborhood clothing store of Philip Rothenbusch, 2145 W. Eighth whose wife, Nellie, is another sister of Coopers 27 Cincinnati moving and storage companies failed to reach a decision on employee demands. The strike first made itself felt yesterday morning when the drivers failed to report for work after a union ultimatum to operators expired at 4:30 p. m.

Wednesday. Because a last-minute settlement appeared likely, picketing was withheld yesterday, but following last night's meeting of operators, 'press Drivers and Helpers Union, id active nicketinsr would be becun todav Operators of the 16 companies composing the Cincinnati Van Owners' Association and 11 non-member companies told James McNamara, U. S. Conciliation Commissioner, that they would go Into meeting again this afternoon in an effort to reach a decision. Garvey said last night that both the union and the operators had agreed upon an 11-cent-an-hour overall wage increase, but were still differing on the starting date of the new contract.

James Ferguson, operators' representative, said the operators wanted the contract to be effective from MISERY FACED In World Of Future Unless Wounds Of Today Heal, Presbyterian Leader Warns In Hyde Park Speech. "Unless we heal the wounds of today we will find an avalanche of misery tomorrow," Dr. Charles Tudor Leber, New York, Executive Secretary of the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions, declared last in a talk outlining the board's work at Knox Presbyterian Church, Hyde Park, Dr. Leber warned his audience, 500 members of the Presbyterian Men of Greater Cincinnati, of the dangers of an "invasion of the forces of barbarism and paganism into the minds of men." The speaker returned recently from Europe, where he surveyed the work being done under the church's $27,000,000 restoration fund for the rehabilitation of war-torn countries. "If barbarism wins" he said, "we are doomed, damned and lost." There is an unprecedented demand for the church to be about its business of propagating the truth that shall make men free, Dr.

Leber said. The church fund administrator pointed out that the world today faced two alternatives: Utter despair, atheism and suicide or hope, fait'h and life in Jesus Oririst. The cult of brutality, the mask of materialism and the fallacy of fear are the three great weapons of this barbaric invasion, Dr. Leber said, adding that there was no other salvation from these weapons than through Jesus Christ. Truck Driver Held After Fatal Mishap A Cincinnati truck driver was free under $1,000 bond last night after a technical charge 0 manslaughter was placed against him in connection with a fatal traffic accident five miles east of Kings-port, yesterday morning.

Sgt. Sam Davis of Kingsport po lice said the Cincinnatian, Wolf gang Heingold, 23, was driving a truck owned by the Fuller Manu facturing and Supply 712 Central which sideswiped the automobile of William A. Johnson, Kingsport furniture store owner. Johnson was injured fatally. Heingold, who escaped injury, Is to appear in Sullivan County Gen eral Sessions Court next Tuesday morning.

Bike Rider Injured In Crash With Auto A possible skull fracture, cut and bruises were suffered by Edward Becker, 36, 3135 Jefferson Ave. when his motorbike and the automobile of Elmore King, 2327 Fowler collided in front of 938 Ludlow Ave. at 7:30 a. m. yesterday.

Becker was taken to Good Samaritan Hos pital. Francis Manning, 53, Chicago, suf fered a left leg fracture when he was struck by a truck operated by John C. Rowland, 326 Poplar Ludlow, at Third St. and Central at 10:16 a. m.

The Life Squad, in charge of Capt, Irvin Martin, took him to General Hospital. Rowland was charged with failing to yield the right of way to a pedestrian. Norwood Soldier Comes Home; Once Under John F. Rawe, custodian of St. Church, will be held at 11 ra- tomorrow at the church Burial will be in St.

Joseph Ceme tery, Enright Avenue. Mr. Rawe, who was 66 years old, died Wednesday at Good Samaritan Hospital following a brief illness. He lived at 1110 Pendleton Street. Mr.

Rawe had many friends in a i 1 keeper for the Schneider Grocery Co. for many years. He was General of Commandery No. 248, Knights of St. John, and an active member of the St.

Vincent de Paul Society and St. Aloysius Orphan Society. He was President; of the Mr. Rawe leaves his widow, road, where he was employed. JOSEPH SCHEUERLE.

Services for Joseph Scheuerle, widely known painter of American Indians and wildlife, will be held at 10:30 a. m. tomorrow In the Spring Grove Cemetery chapel, with burial in Spring Grove. Mr. Scheuerle died Wednesday at his home in South Orange, N.

J. He was 75 years old. Boi i in Vienna of German par ents, Mr. Scheuerle, who came to Cincinnati at the age of nine with his parents, began his art career with the old Henderson-Achert Lithographing Co. A former student of the Cincinnati Art Academy, he worked also with the Strobridge Lithographing Co.

be fore moving to Chicago in 1903, where he was employed by the National Printing Co. to turn out posters for railroads, road shows and the like, Included were Buffalo Bill's show and Barnum, Bailey and Ringling circuses. One of his most widely known pictures is the white goat on the Great Northern freight cars. Examples of his work undoubtedly are included in the lithography show current at the Cincinnati Art Museum, although that type of work rarely is signed by the artist. Mr, Scheuerle leaves his widow, Mrs.

Carolyn Lohrey Scheuerle; a daughter, Mrs. William J. Grierson, South Orange; a brother, Ernst Scheuerle, a retired patrolman living at 1435 Thompson Heights, Northside, and two grandsons in South Orange. RICHARD F. MARQUARD.

Requiem High Mass for Pharma cist's Mate 2c Richard F. Mar- quard, who was killed in action July 21, 1944, on Guam, will be sung at 9 a. m. tomorrow at St. James Church, Wyoming.

Burial Glendale. Military honors will be accorded by veterans of Green Township. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Marquard, 84 Fern-dale Hartwell, Mate Marquard served 20 months with the Navy before his death.

He was 21 years old. Surviving him are his parents, a brother, William Marquard, South Cumminsville, and two sisters, Misses Helen and Margaret Marquard, both of the Wyoming address. CARL M. WALLE. Requiem High Mass for Carl Walle, Hughes High School graduate who died Sunday in Holly wood, will be sung at 9 a.

m. tomorrow at St. Monica Cathedral Burial will be in St. Mary Ceme tery, St. Bernard.

Mr. Walle, who was 33 years old, died unexpectedly shortly after his mother, Mrs. Margaret Walle, 2402 Fairvlcw Fairview Heights, arrived In Hollywood for a visit with her son. jy former employee of the Western Southern Life Insurance Co, and Shillito's, Mr. Walle had lived in Arizona and California for many years because of his health.

In Tuscon, whers he Cincinnati community. One reason given for the moving, he reported was that the company figured the sewage disposal system which Cincinnati must build would cost $500,000. But Mrs. A. H.

Mincow said persons threatened with loss of employment by the move should find comfort in reliable reports that a half-dozen lively industries were eager to get the plant. It also was Mrs. Mincow who reported, as Chairman of the Child and General Welfare Committee, that a survey among theater managers and parent and youth groups disclosed many managers, although obliged to take certain pictures tinder block booking, were running ethers instead for children's mati nees, at a loss to themselves, First Will Upheld In Galvin Contest A jury in Kenton Coimty Ciicuit Covington, returner! a directed verdict yesterday upho.d-ing a will drawn by Mrs. Mary Galvin in 1939 distributing her estate and setting aside a second drawn in 1947. Judge Joseph P.

Goodenough ordered the jury to find for Mrs. Grace Galvin Nelson, proponent. stepdaughter of Mrs. Galvin, after a surprise conference between her attorneys ani" counsel for benefici aries under the second will. Though no settlement figure was announced, it was learned that between JId.OOO and 517,000 would be given to beneficiaries under the Bcuonu win, wnicn included provisions for gifts to charitable institutions.

The first will establishes trust funds for grandchildren and leaves the remainder to Mrs. Nelson. POLITICIANS BLAMED FOR BEATING EDITOR Joliet, 111., April 8 (AP) Wil liam R. McCabe, Joliet publisher and politician, said today that "political intrigue" was the cause of a brutal beating inflicted unon him by two men who left him un conscious in a roadside ditch. A former State Legislator and one-time Will County Stae's Attor ney, McCabe, 65, was found last night on a highway near his farm, two miles east of Lockport.

Both his legs and one arm had been broken. A candidate for committeman of the 46th Precinct in Joliet's downtown district, McCabe is publisher of the Spectator, a weekly publication with vigorous political views. Authorities said they were In vestigatlng reports that the publish-' er was- threatened recently by a man representing handbook curl slot machine interests In Will County. McCabe Is seeking to unseat A. F.

Fchupp as Committeeman, Both rr? Republicans. Enquirer (Kalnl Photo. James F. Cooper, 33, Norwood soldier, who was sentenced to death for the killing of a Chinese woman in China in 1945, enfolded his wife, Thelma, in a warm embrace yesterday upon his return to Cincinnati. tlNXV WrfY I SAW VOU OUT THE lf WINDOW, GAZING VERY yk UPZ viv' INTENTLY DOWN INTO MY WELL-" AHAA" WERE YOU I WAS JES'A? ZT I LOOKING FOR LOOKIN'TO P- Y'KNOWANY SEE IF THERE i HI It OF THE GAMINS WHO WAS ANY "SB HAVE BEEN PURLOINING tm POLUWOGS IN I fV THE SMALL CHANGE Im T'---WWY Ife-.

Jjfth 'iV. OUT OF IT MOULD MONEY ifr" '-1s r-A BE IN YOUR. gj'i "1 A I I James F. Cooper, 33, 2017 Nor wood Norwood, who was sentenced to death in 1945 for the accidental killing, of a Chinese woman in China, returned home a free man yesterday. A Private First Class In the Army at the time, Cooper succeeded In having his sentence commuted to 20 years of hard labor.

Later, through the efforts of his sister, Mrs. MinnieiHis three-year term would have Clements, 2145 W. Eighth hislexplred May t..

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About The Cincinnati Enquirer Archive

Pages Available:
4,581,893
Years Available:
1841-2024