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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 12

Location:
Cincinnati, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 Mil THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER Saturday, April 20, 1968 Lassies A-Plenty! 'Rich American's Marriage Offer Brings Heavy Mail From Scotland DUNDEE. Scotland (UPI) A mountain of mall piled up Thursday from eager lassies offering; to marry a man who Identified himself as a wealthy Calif or-nlan seeking a Scottish bride. The deluge was touched off by a letter to the Lord Provost of Dundee written by a man who identified himself as John J. Andrews, a 25-year-old real estate appraiser from Newport Beach, Calif. The letter said Andrews Inherited $105,000 under the will of his Scottish-descended aunt whose wish was that he marry a girl from Scotland.

The letter asked the lord provost, Alexander Mackenzie, to help find a "compassionate redhead or blond" between 18 and 27. Mackenzie's secretary said the lord provost has received more than 350 letters from Scottish girls offering to marry Andrews, despite reports that Californian newspapers have been unable to locate him. The secretary said Mackenzie is so delighted with the resulting publicity for this industrial town in northeastern Scotland that he has decided to use town funds to mall the pile of letters to Andrews. "The lord provost was thinking about sending out the mall by sea route because of the quantity and weight," the secretary said. "But because of the wonderful publicity It has given the town he considers that it would be well worth the money for the town to'pay for it going by airmail to California." "After all," the secretary added, "the townspeople could not afford to, pay for the world-wide publicity that John Andrews has given Dundee and we shall make him very welcome when he comes to Dundee later this year to choose a bride." Mackenzie has undertaken to personally acknowledge at his own ex pense each reply on behalf of Andrews, the secretary said.

Applicants Included a girl serving in the Women's -Royal Army Corps, who said' she was doing it for "love, no money." A lassie from Glasgow ad- mltted her cooking was fancy" but hastily I assured Andrews that he -would "not go hungry if we hit the road to the altar." The Weather Snow Piles Up Oala fr.m U.S. WiAIM IUIM MA j- kJ MJ 11 M.MJLM M. kJ V' i 1 Requiem For A Restaurateur lata 1.. i Ullln, IIM'llljJI VL Jit: Shawart EUS E33 4UMicrv riuitlai l'l 90 Figutn Shaw Nigh Tamptralutn iipacttd For Daytima Saturday relatives, mourn the pass-i ing of Karl Mohaupt, pro- i prietor of Grammer's Res-1 taurant. His sons, Karl R.

and Richard Mohaupt, have: been managing the restau- rant for some time and will continue with the operation. Cooking Up A Short Course That's what the Greater Cincinnati Restaurant Ass'n. is doing right now with a committee under the guidance of Mrs. Doro- thy Larsson. They're get- ting up a Short Term; Course to start Oct.

7 at the University of Clncln-. natl. We'll have more news about this later. JLU' delated Precipitation Nl Indicattd Coniult local Feroca I Due At Taft Friday head the show at the Tait The Mothers of Invention Friday, at 8:30 p. m.

-AP WireDhoto A major portion of the nation, except for the Southwest and California, can expect precipitation. Rain is forecast for most of the precipitation area except for the northern Rocky Mountain region where snow is due. Little change in temperature is predicted except for a cooler trend in the central Mississippi Valley. Saturday Movie Timetable Karl Mohaupt The culinary world as well as many friends and High Low Cincinnati 71 48 By Associated Press Snow continued to pile up Friday in the Rocky ACADEMY: "The Russians Are Coming" 7:30, 12:30. "In The Heat of the Night" 9:30.

"Party's Over" 11.05. ALBEE: "Guess Who's Com-- ing to Dinner" 11:57, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. WEEK-END SPECIAL ap Greater Clncy AP 70 Lunken Airport 70 Milford 73 tFernbank 71 'Cheviot 69 49 46 44 45 46 RIB EYE (Em DANTE ENTERTAINERS stirring up a lot of applause at this popular dining spot are Seldon Reed and Mary O'Brien, appearing Thursday through Saturday nights. Meanwhile, Tuesday through Saturday nights, Danny Forman performs magic of a sort at the piano in the lounge. Drive out to Harrrison Rybolt Rd.

and 1-74 to the Imperial House West (Skyline Lodge), for a fun evening. STEAK Albuouwaua Amtr Ho 1 oz. 02S .01 cv Ashavlll Atlanta Playhouse in the Park MISALLIANCE Serving Complete Dmiun .13 Steakl. Choai. Seafoad Birmingham CY Bismarck CY Boise Boston Buffalo Charlotte CY Cincinnati CY Onpn Dallv Till a.

in VtafianVhn 2411 BOUDINOT Sunday 7:30 to 7:30 TODAY AT 5 and 9 .421 -388 dsa's Eh. .1 1 nflTpfiTKi I Cleveland Call (513) 894791 Columbia 70 I Davton A CTSl .44 Authentic Old World Atmosphere Imparted anal Domestic Wlies Beautiful Cocktail Bar anal Leungs Other Italian Specialties 10 Vito Antonio's LAST DAY I LASAGNA M0N- IHIIU S1-" M. Till 2:30 A. M. mi.

at EVE. at 8:30 .29 1 tSOOD SEATS AVAILABLE RESTAURANT AND LOUNGE CHEF SPECIAL RAVIOLI juniMi nuun uniiL n. iti ciiiB.m F0R NERVATIONS 481-7949 VEAL SCALLOPPINI for guest paging tbumk ALPHA: "A Man and A Woman" 6:30, 8:30, 10:30. AMBASSADOR: "Secret War of Harry Frigg" 2:30, 4:40, 7:20, 9:40. COVEDALE: "In Heat of the Night" 9:36, "The Russians Are Coming" 7:30.

I FOREST AUTO: "Thunder I Road" 7:30. "Track of Thunder" 9:30. "Funny Thing Happened" 11. GRAND: "The Graduate" 11:43, 1:55, 4:07, 6:19, 8:31, 10.43. HOLLYWOOD: "Black-beard's Ghost" 1, 3:15, 5:20, 7:20, 9:25.

KENWOOD: "Camelot" 8. MARIEMONT: "Black-beard's Ghost" 3:15, 5:20 7:20, 9:25. MT. HEALTHY: "Hotel" 9:45, "Bonnie and Clyde" 7:45 11:55. OAKLEY: "Naked Runner" 7:45.

"Bonnie and Clyde" 9:53. "Nutty Professor" 11:47. PIKE 27: "Heat of Night" 7:35, 12. "Russians Are Coming" 9:50. PRINCETON: "Planet of the Apes" 2, 4, 6, 8, 10.

RIVERVDZW; "Track of Thunder" 9:15. "Thunder Road" 7:35. "Riot On Sunset Strip" 10:45. TIMES: "The Party" 11:30,. 1:10, 2:50, 4:30.

6:10, 7:50, 9:30, 11. 20TH CENTURY: "Bedazzled" 7:25, 9:40. A EY: "Gone. With Wind" 8. VILLAGE: "Bonnie and Clyde" 7, S.

WESTERN WOODS: "Black-beard's Ghost" 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. 7 34 42 45 60 60 37 36 45 44 39 49 48 46 46 28 49 49 31 18 39 39 72 71 47 63 33 59 66 50 51 34 67 70 38 45 60 45 56 51 37 37 48 34 52 53 30 37 37 28 67 38 52 .95 PRIME RIB OF BZEF, BAKED POTATO. SALAD Plus Selection from Our Famous Fiesta lir atatal FREE Birthday or Anniversary Cakel ENTERTAINING AT THE ORGAN, LARRY SHIPP GREENHILLS SHOPPING CENTER Phone 825 0682 OPEN DAILY FROM 4 P. M. CLOSED SUNDAYS Denver CY 50 Dej Moines 52 Detroit CY 69 Duloth PC 45 Fairbanks 34 Green Bav CY 51 Helena CY 47 Honolulu PC 82 Houston CY 82 Indianapolis CY 69 Jacksonville 92 Juneau PC 45 Kansas City 68 Little Rock CY 77 Los An oe I 68 Louisville CY 72 Marquette CY 33 Memphis CY 83 Miami Beach 79 Milwaukee CY 40 Minneaoolis-St, Paul CY 63 New Orleans 80 Nw York 70 Oklahoma City CY 73 Omaha 59 Philadelphia 75 Phoenix 75 Pittsburgh 68 Portland, Ores CY 50 Richmond PC 84 St.

Louis 61 Salt Lake City 56 San Francisco 52 Seattle 52 Spokane PC 46 Temoa 85 Traverse City 55 Washington 82 CANADIAN riTIFS. .01 Mountains in Colorado and cold rain, mixed with snow, dampened the northern Plains. The weather bureau issued warnings to stockmen in parts of Nebraska and the Dakotas for overnight conditions hazardous to exposed livestock. Craig, In northwestern Colorado, recorded two Inches of new snow in six hours. Leadville, had four inches of snow on the ground.

Late Friday, the storm system moved out of the Rockies Into the central plains. Showers and thunderstorms were imbedded in a sheet of low hanging clouds under which rain, drizzle and fog augmented the heavier ralnshowers in an area from the western plains the Mississippi Valley. Mineral Wells, about 75 miles west of Dallas, recorded 2.36 Inches of rain in six hours, and other communities from Kansas and Oklahoma to Arkansas and Missouri measured more than a half Inch In the same period. Cold maritime air In the Pacific Northwest produced rain along the coast that became snow in the mountains to the east as far as the northern Rockies. The southwest was unseasonably cool, but dry air kept skies clear.

The southern tier of Gulf states continued on the warm side with afternoon temperatures in the upper 70s and mid 80s. The east coast basked under mostly sunny skies. FORMOSA RESTAURAXT 12 W. COURT ST. NEAR KROGER BLDG.

Open Daily 11 and Sunday P.M. Phone 421-6151 irreoarea uraera lo laKe out) tJi--hr ek.1 I 0- I -sw k5.A5iri LtmWl-U I ate I III Town sCaififtm 'AX. RESTAURANT JT BEEF afld BIRD aSSJi AF iSYf Petite Mignon and Breast Cl fiC VWl I I i. pfF iUiI f. 1 1 Edmonton CY 49 27 .08 Montreal PC 68 39 Winnioea 59 29 .01 (C-Cleao CY-Cloudyj PC-Partly Cloudy.

R-Raini S-Snowi Mrace.) TWO WEEKS BEGINNING APR. 22 -MAY 4 8:30 55.7.9:45 Na MttlaNi No Sun. Ptrfarmancai "MOST LAUGHS IN YEARS. Cincinnatians IN CLIFTON NEAR UC CAMPUS Featuring the finest in American and Italian Foods BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCHEON DAILY STEAKS CHOPS SEA FOOD LASAGNA RAVIOLI Spaghetti MEAT BALLS PIZZA RESERVATIONS AND CARRY OUT PHONE 911.7400 tv Mushroom Crown. Baked fj I 7 Apple TrJloung, 'ff A BLOCKBUSTER PRIVATE RnnM A.VAIIA0IB KAD eonilB Mluruclue An STAN SEIDEN I HARRY ZEVIN PreienH .1 I If 1 WAWil I I UMiJ II ViJ US 28 and 42.

Covington, Ky. I I PH0NE2f1.732MW I i DAVID'S is WWW aTS I 'Ne'l Simon's SMORGASBORD FISH. CHICKEN. RIBS. BEEF, HAM sfats iinw a nnv nrrinr Plus Other Specialties "EAT AS MUCit AS YOU W1KFS 40 SALADS 12 DESSERTS With ICE CREAM COFFEE, TEA, MILK mararEii $2.93 luxciieox Reduced Prlees For Children 3 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS EVENDALE MT.

WASHINGTON WESTERN HILLS Ticket PrlcM-AH Perforituncut Nightl: Orch. SJ.50; Men. Balcony S1.S0 Ma S2.S0 For JB( Braise- Beef Pot Roast IT Buttered Noodles Plan Reunion In Washington Enquirer Bureau Special WASHINGTON Several members of the Walnut Hills High School graduating class of 1960, now living In the a i area, will hold their first "reunion" here Saturday. The guests will be U. S.

Education Commissioner Harold H. Howe II and Mrs. Howe. The commissioner was principal of Walnut Hills from 1954 through 1957. Organizing the reception are Judy Morris Frieder, a caseworker In the office of Rep.

James C. Gardner N. C); Daniel Swillinger, a Washington lawyer; and Marlaina Kiner, an attorney in the Department of Health, Education and Welfare's Office of Civil Rights. The gathering will be in Miss Frieder's apartment at 700 Seventh St. S.W.

Among the 1960 graduates who are expected to attend are Judith Hilsin-ger, an executive producer of the Fred Gale comment program 'on Washington's radio station WWDC; Mrs. Borge Here Tonight Borge gives a concert tonight at 8:30 at the Taft. tf SUNDAY DINNER Wwf 'ifli Braised Choice Potted Swiss Vt fv 0rrf Steak with Vegetable Gravy Fine Food Cocktail Lounge Bowling Lanes "njelsipVV1 iff Bottoms Up A Ceal Van Leeuwe at the Organ American Express and Diners Club I see Credit Cards Honored ll A Ian II: Relaxing Olde World" Atmosphere 96 Years of Satisfied Customers SYRIAN TEMPLE Tax Claim Against Massengale Upheld WASHINGTON The U. S. Tax Court has upheld the government's claim of about $35,000 In deficiencies and fraud penalties against Jack C.

Messengale, a lawyer who operated various businesses at 123 E. Sixth Cincinnati. The claim covers th years 1961 and 1962 when Massengale engaged in the detective and guard business at the Sixth Street address and conducted various real estate transactions. Massengale, who received an LL.B degree from the Simon P. Chase Law School of the Cincinnati YMCA in 1953, claimed he was not the beneficiary of the income of the Federal Detective Bureau, the Lakes Detective Agency, and other business enterprises, but the court found otherwise.

WMM) naV XV mm, CINCINNATI'S1 OLDEST AND MOST FAMOUS TOMGIIT 8 :30 P. M. GARY IGRAFFMAN f- piano Dennis Larson, oboe Goeisani Oboe Concert Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 2 Htydn-Symahony No. 10 R.

ef the Seven Veil" from Salerno TICKETS: $2 to $3.50 GERMAN RESTAURANT Since 1872 FREE PARKING 1440 WALNUT AT LIBERTY MjjB 721-6570 11 AW 1111 IA aB0pjaVO4aBBa()4l thistorkT ffj Apr. IS thru Apr. 20 (1 CINCINNATI GARDENS II TTrrrflT COMING EVENTS April 24-27, Ham Richter-Haaier. piano May 3-4, Beithoven Symphonies No. and 7 Charge Tickets at Shllllt o't Matinees: Mon.

1 Sat. 1:30 Fri. 4:15 A Sat. 9:30 A.M. (Prt-Show 7:43 P.

Nightl IP. M. Admission $1.50 (inc. tax) (3 Children en I Ticket) Reserved Seats $3.00 Lamont Lawson, the former Louise Mitchell, who Is a former schoolteacher; Mrs. Robert Taylor, the former Helen Hollings-head, a Washington social worker; Miss Judy White; Thomas Dickman, a graduate student in political science at George Washington University, and Emily Raab, a schoolteacher.

Tomorrow's SINCE 1828 luteins THAT YOU SLOW DOWN Stip lack lit Yean Isrtt An Atmespkert at 1 TT Tickets at Gardens i mi cove McClain Seeks Road Extension Tertenreer LUNCHES DINNEKS COCKTAILS CALL COLLECT FOR Drive Hire Easily tka Exertuwav Ltavt It the Misntiikwre, Exit. Take Route 713 to Seatk RESERVATIONS 864.5m Second Street, en Secant'. MIAMISBURG, 31 S. SECOND OHIO Om" Dally Eicea Man Not Open fee Satweev Lwick -anaaa' -asspax )asp( )apa i paj Zimr it. 1 Iff EAiWS THE INNER CIRCLE resentt Donnie Sanders and the Don Juans featuring 7 males plus beautiful girl vocalist NOW through April 28 2627 VINE ST.

Now open TUESDAY thru SUNDAY starting April 30 thn Mai Vic and the Versailles fnoy four Favorite Food and Drink at Acting City Manager William McClain recom-mencieu city council an ordinance authorizing expenditures for the extension of Este Avenue between Mitchell and Chlckering Aves. This new 44-fcot-wide street will be one of three in the $2 million improvement of Este from new Mitchell Avenue to Center Hill Avenue. The improvement is needed to better accommodate the growing area through which it runs and also as a relief route for Spring Grove Avenue, according to Joseph Bis-chof, city expressways engineer. The city and county will split the cost of this first $328,000 leg. WCKT In Association with Roger Abramson.

present Dally Hoiirn 1:30 A.M. te I KM, "We're Glad to See Yosi" BIRTHDAYS Mrs. Jane Kampf, Clara iVopperer, Florence M. s'ease, Mrs. Edna Stock, Mrs.

Gertrude Brucker, Mrs. Irene Skinner, Mary Felder, Kathy S. Spelman, Mrs. Betty Knox, Betty Wilson. Harry Yaeger.

Robert Steuer, Hilary Evers John Riehle, Kenneth Fie-big, Robert O. Aders, Harry M. Dunton, Alfred E. Fang-man, George R. Hunter, Paul R.

King, Robert Tat-genhorst, Jack A. Thornhlil, Clarence Abrams. Charcoal Chef RESTAURANT STEAK HOUSE Tennessee Near Paddock Reserve Af 242-5404 Presenting in the Lounge RON STEWART Plane Vocals Comedy DANCING NI6HTLY Complimentary Wine With Dinner Private Party Facilities l-l A. M.j f.JA.M. IN THE COCKTAIL 10UN5I TOMORROW NIGHT 8:00 P.M.

MUSIC HALL SERGIO MENDES and BRASIL '66 TICKETS; $2.5 (OX OFFICE NOW OPEN COMMUNITY TICKET OFFICE 29 Weft Fovrth St. (Baldwin's) 241-1038 000 SEATS AVAILABLE Sheraton-Gibson Hotel Jehe H. Sthoibly. Gen. Mar.

J9.

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Pages Available:
4,581,458
Years Available:
1841-2024