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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 15

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Cincinnati, Ohio
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15
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111 II I Friday, Nov. 10, 1967 8 Parade To Highlight Vets Day FranK iifi mi The chimes atop the Central Trust Tower will play "Taps" at 11 a. m. Saturday, and the Veterans Day parade will pause for two minutes, while all marchers face east in a silent tribute to veterans who have given their lives for their country. It was at 11 a.

m. November 11, 1918, that the armistice was signed ending World War I. Ever since, that hour has been one for reflecting on the sacrifices made by the men and women of this country engaged in wars. the parade will be Mayor Bachrach, Councilman Gordon Rich, Safety Director Henry Sandman, Police Chief Jacob Schott, Fire Chief Bart Lu-gannani, Judges George S. Heitzler, Olive L.

Holmes, Joseph A. Lueb-bers, John W. Keefe and Ralph B. Kohnen, Sheriff Dan Tehan, County Commissioner Vincent H. Beck-man, State Senator Stanley J.

Aronoff, State Representatives William F. Bowen and Gordon M. Scherer, Congressmen Donald D. Clancy and Robert Taft, Jr. former Murder Victim's Daughter Is Hurt In Parkway Crash Mrs.

Franklin's Vehicle Page 15 THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER NEWS MORE AREA NKVI ON FOLLOWING PAGE Cost Doubled For Sewage Treatment Begiming in February some 89,000 residents of Cincinnati and Hamilton County will pay double the amount they now pay for sewage treatment. The additional charge is the result of a county-wide sewer service charge adopted unanimously Thursday by Hamilton County commissioners. Affected by the sewer fee will be some 75,000 customers in the county and about 14,000 customers in the city whose sewage is being treated by the City of Cincinnati, but is carried through county-owned trunk sewers. They will continue to pay a sewage treatment charge to the city, but they will now pay a like amount to Hamilton County to help maintain and reconstruct faulty sewerage conditions in the county. County officials say the average homeowner in the city or county will pay $18 a year more than he now pays for sewage treatment.

Customers will continue to be billed quarterly for the treatment service by the Cincinnati Water Works. Jail, Please Judge Obliges Youth, 18, Who Asked For It Ronald Page's request was granted Thursday. He went to jail. Patrolman Robert Weidinger of the Traffic Bureau testified that after he stopped a car for speeding north on the Mill Creek Expressway near Lincoln Park Drive Wednesday night he suddenly saw Page running toward him down one of the traffic lanes. He said that Page.

18, 779 Crest-ville who was not a passenger in the car he had just stopped, wrapped both arms around him and said, "I want to go to jail." The policeman obliged him, charging the defendant with drunkenness and disorderly conduct. But in Cincinnati Criminal Court Thursday, when Judge George S. Heitz-ler asked Page how many days in jail he wanted, the youth changed his mind. "None," he said. "I don't want to go to jail." "Ten days in the Workhouse and court costs," the judge replied.

$9 Million Shares the Transfiguration, Glendale; $5000 each for Elizabeth Bradley Palmer. Silvia L. Frey, LaJolla, Edith Chatfield, Indian Hill; Mildred Now-land, Cincinnati; Virginia B. Wright, Cincinnati, and $2000 for Ida Gen-sler, housekeeper. There was no estimate of the estate.

ftPPY Mr. McMannon's Car Congressman Carl W. Rich and Col. Alfred Gus Karger. At noon, Congressman Clancy will be featured speaker at a public luncheon at the Sheraton-Gibson.

He will be introduced by Carl W. Rich. The parade and luncheon are sponsored by the Hamilton County Veterans Day Committee, of which Robert Burck is chairman. The group has been sponsoring the Veterans Day observance since the end of World War I. Houk, was credited with possibly saving Mrs.

Franklin's life at the scene Thursday. He applied a tourniquet to the injured leg. Others involved in the three-car crash are Michael McMannon, 24, 4015 Paxton Hyde Park, driver of one of the cars, and Robert Schmidt, 41, 2336 Norwood Norwood, the third driver, and his wife, Norma, 39. McMannon was treated at Be-thesda Hospital for scalp and face cuts and released. Schmidt was not injured.

His wife was reported in good condition at Bethesda, with a fractured knee. The 6:47 p. m. accident caused an enormous traffic tie-up in both east and westbound lanes of Columbia Parkway. Police said Mrs.

Franklin's foreign-made small bus suddenly veered into the westbound lane and crashed head-on into McMannon's sedan. Her vehicle skidded about 90 feet into a retaining wall, veered off and skidded westward another 40 feet into the car driven by Schmidt. At that impact, Mrs. Franklin, a waitress at Wiggins Restaurant, was thrown from her bus, her body traveling another 30 feet west on the Parkway. The accident occured just east of Collins Avenue.

Eastbound traffic backed up all the way to Kemper Lane, and westbound lanes were jamed from Taft Road to Seneca Road. Hearing Held At Home Of Injured Woman The law took a court hearing to the home of the defendant Thursday. The woman had been arrested by FBI agents moments after discharge from a hospital with her mouth wired shut. She was Mrs. Edna G.

Rucker, 26, wanted by Detroit authorities for grand larceny. Agents here charged her with unlawful flight to avoid prosecution. U. S. Commissioner Charles C.

Ebel set an own-recognizance bond of $1000 and continued her hearing until November 17 to allow her to obtain counsel. Mrs. Rucker fled Detroit September 29, FBI agents said, and was injured in an accident October 26 on Reading Road. The hearing was held at the third-floor apartment of her mother, Mrs. Ida Williams, 512 Findlay St.

Ebel, three FBI men and a deputy U. S. marshal were present. 6 Jurors Seated In Murder Trial Six jurors were seated tentatively Thursday in Common Pleas Judge Fred L. Hoffman's court for the first-degree murder trial of Lonnie O.

Miller, 18, 881 Blair Ave. Miller is charged with the fatal shooting of Gary Herman Renzen-brink, 27, 774 North Hill on April 28 in the Little Butcher Shop, operated by him at 3665 Vine St. Renzenbrink died May 3. Calvin W. Prem and Dominic Perrino, assistant county prosecutors, say the evidence will show that Renzenbrink was shot during a holdup.

Miller's attorneys, Bernard J. Gilday Jr. and Donald L. Weber, have indicated they will plead that Miller was so under the influence of drugs and alcohol he could not form an intent to kill. The trial will resume Monday.

Contracts Ratified By Photoengravers Photoengravers employed at The Enquirer and The Post Times-Star as well as those working in commercial printing shops ratified new union contracts Thursday. John Gabbard, president of Local 13P of the Lithographers and Photoengravers Union, said the vote by the 115 members of the union was unanimous. The photoengravers struck the two newspapers for three days last week until a tentative agreement was reached. The vote Thursday makes the agreement final. The photoengravers bargain separately with the two newspapers and with six commercial printing shops here.

The newspaper agreement is for 33 months and calls for $26 in raises during the course of the contract. The commercial printing shops signed a 36-month contract also allowing for $26 in The parade will form at 12th and Race Streets and move promptly at 10:30 a. m. down Race to Fifth, east on Fifth to Main and north on Main past the Courthouse reviewing stand, then disbanding. George Moehringer, parade commander, reported that the 237th Cavalry will be in the parade with eight tanks and 30 jeeps.

The tanks are the M-48 model, weigh 50 tons and are armed with 90-mm. guns. Serving on the honorary staff for Enquirer (Herb Heise) Photos of revealed truths which are to be accepted on the authority of a log-standing and well-established church tradition," he said. "The idea is that man by himself is incapable of finding out the answers to the great problems which confront him is origin, his final destiny and the way he should live. "People are quite properly concerned to know whether Christianity has the resources to give guidance to mankind in facing the urgent problems of the world today," he continued.

"If it can give this guidance, men will listen to its claims to be a revealed religion; if it cannot, men will not go to the church for road maps of heaven, hell and purgatory. "An arduous quest for the ultimate meaning of life is perhaps not for everybody. But for those who have gotten involved in it, every other activity seems secondary," Father Dulles said. Roger Tilford. The Ach students had been busy working on signs, birthday cards, name tags and decorations for some time.

Everyone knew about the party, except Captain Dixon, who was "overwhelmed." The Ach school band had a short program of partriotic songs; student Gregory Crowell read congratulatory telegrams from Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover and Ohio Attorney General William Saxbe and a proclamation Church Has New Task, Priest Says Police Keep Tabs On Killing Suspect WHAT'S NEW in the murder investigation surrounding the brutal killings of Gerald Bricca, his wife and daughter? This was a question I put to a high ranking Hamilton County police official. His answer follows: We're just about living with the suspect.

A policeman checks on him from the time he leaves home in the morning and stays nearby until he returns for bed. One of our men even has lunch in the same restaurant where the suspect eats." The knowledge that police are watching him apparently is having some effect on the suspect. I understand that his lunch cocktails are Increasing. At first he had one drink, but now he Is having three drinks with his lunch. I also learned that the father of Gerald Bricca was in town recently and tried to talk with the suspect, but was unable to get an appointment.

Meanwhile, police continue to check and re-check every clue in the now 13-month old triple murder. BUS RIDERS who wish to turn in their bus tokens for cash can do so, but they will take a loss. The tokens, which are sold for 25 cents, can be redeemed for 23 cents. The price cut has nothing to do with the strike. It is a "handling charge" put into effect in May, 1966.

SEVERAL AREA CAFES are adding a little sport to their usual supply of beer, whiskey and football cards. "It's called LUCKY SEVEN. For 25 cents you get a packet that looks like a match book cover. It contains five numbers. If the numbers match numbers printed inside the packet you can win $10.

Word is the "lucky seven" game is catching on and brings backers several hundred bucks a day in profit. DON'T FORGET tomorrow's Vet-erans's Day. How about displaying a flag as a sign of support for our servicemen in Vietnam. Whatever your feelings about the war may be, our troops deserve all the support we can give them. WHILE ON THE SUBJECT of the military, officials of the ROTC program at the University of Cincinnati tell me that there is no truth to a report that students who oppose the Vietnam war have shown up on the ROTC practice field and attempted to give a drill unit some flowers.

Cord Blamed In Fire A defective electric extension cord plug caused a $1600 apartment fire late Thursday afternoon In a building at 209 W. 70th Carthage. Owned by Arthur Coffey, 17 Escalon the apartment's bedroom, rented by Edgar Turner, was destroyed, Marshal Pete Weron reported. Two other first-floor rooms in the two-story dwelling received damaged. Lee Leaves In Co.

Charles Shepard Lee, Cincinnati philanthropist, gave away more than 115,000 shares of Procter St Gamble stock, of an estimated value of $9.2 million and cash in excess of $200,000 under his will filed Thursday with Probate Judge Chase M. Davies. Mr. Lee, 74, member of a wealthy Cincinnati family, with a home at Wold and Dexter died October 25. The latest large charitable contribution made during his lifetime was the establishment of the $l-million Marjorie Lee Home for the Aged, Victoria and Shaw in 1963.

His will, filed by Murray Season-good, attorney, of the firm of Pax-ton and Seasongood, showed that 25,000 shares of stock had been set aside for the home and the will directed that the stock be made available to the home up to that amount if he had not already made the contribution. Bequests of 10,000 shares of the stock were left to Harvard College, for cancer research; Harvard College Library; Society of St. John the Evangelist, Cambridge, 5000 shares to Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Boston; Order of Holy Cross, Protestant Episcopal Church, West Park, N. Memorial Center for Cancer and Allied Diseases, New York; General Theological Seminary, Protestant Episcopal Church. New York; Berea College, Berea, Children's Hospital, Cincinnati; Church of St.

Mary the Virgin, New York; 1250 shares to St. Michael and All Angels Church, 3612 Reading and Church of the Advent Walnut Hills. The Diocese of the Southern Ohio, Protestant Episcopal Church, was left 25,000 shares for the endowment fund of the Marjorie P. Lee Home for the Aged. There were cash bequests of each for his brother-in-law, Stuart S.

Purves. and for Marjorie Deering Colpitts and Pamela Deer-ing Payson, nieces of his wife. Other cash bequests included $10,000 for his sister-in-law, Audrey Purves Deering, and the Society of The flaughter of the victim of an unsolved murder in the East End last month was critically Injured Thursday night in a three-car accident on Columbia Parkway near Collins Avenue. A massive traffic jam resulted. Mrs.

Robert Franklin, 38, 2404 Findlater Mt. Washington, was listed in serious condition with multiple injuries at General Hospital. Police and Life Squad members at the scene said one leg was almost severed in the crash. Mrs. Franklin's mother, Mrs.

Emma Peddicord, was found fatally shot October 6 on the front porch of her home, 109 Wilmer Ave. She died about 12 hours later at General Hospital. An off-duty fire lieutenant, Jake Son Sentenced; Mother Held In Juror Offer A mother and son appeared in U. S. District Court Thursday, the son to receive a 10-year prison sentence, the mother to be arraigned on a charge of jury tampering.

Judge Timothy S. Hogan imposed the sentence on Kenneth A. Lundy, 29, 1836 Huron Evanston. Lundy was convicted by a Jury last month on two charges of inducing a 17-year-old girl to go from Cincinnati to New York for purpose of prostitution. The sentence was five years on each count.

Judge Hogan ruled that they are to run consecutively. Mrs. May Lundy, 50, also of the Huron Street address, pleaded not guilty to a Federal grand jury indictment charging her with jury tampering. The indictment said Mrs. Lundy offered money to a woman juror in her son's trial to attempt to bring about a favorable verdict, or a jury disagreement.

Mrs. Lundy's case will be tried, without a jury, on November 21 before U. S. District Judge David S. Porter.

Others receiving prison sentences Thursday from Judge Hogan included John Turpin 20, 4017 De-laney who got five years, after he pleaded guilty to interstate transportation of a falsely-made security, and William B. Huff, 55, 2015 For-aker Norwood, Ohio, who was sentenced to 28 months on a plea of guilty to a similar charge. It's A Holiday Some 88,000 Cincinnati School children will have a holiday today. Veterans Day, which falls on Saturday this year, will be celebrated today. City schools and system offices will be closed.

-Enquirer (Tom Hubbard) Photo from WLW making Captain Dixon "Citizen of the Day." And, if a sign carried by one of the Ach students is any indication, our politicans had better watch out. The sign urged "Dixon for President." Many of the youngsters had participated in a march to the District Four station last Christmas, when they took small gifts to the men in the district. The men in District Four knew about the party too they had refreshments for everyone. The task of Christian theology today is to find a middle course between symbolic, prescientific biblical imagery and the throwing of all doctrinal heritage overboard, a noted Catholic theologian said here Thursday. "The task is to be severely critical of all traditional formulations of faith, to weed out what is due to an antiquated world view and to translate the essential message into terms meaningful and credible to modern man," said Rev.

Avery Dulles, professor of fundamental theology at Woodstock College in Maryland. Father Dulles spoke on "What Should We Believe?" in the Xavier University Armory as part of the university's Forum Series. A convert to Catholicism, Father Dulles is a son of the late John Foster Dulles, secretary of state under President Eisenhower. "Christianity in the minds of most Christians is a massive array When he arrived he discovered that 600 teen-agers from Samuel Ach Junior High School, Reading and Rockdale Roads, Avondale, also were at the police station. So were Tom Dixon's wife, Barbara, and daughter, Sharon, Colonel Elmer Reis, Capt.

Howard Rogers, and a host of police brass. Everyone was there to help Capt. Tom Dixon, commander of the district, celebrate his birthday. Plans for the party were made many weeks ago by Ach teacher A Surprise Parade By Avondale Teens 600 strong, they arrived at the District 4 police station in Carthage to honor their favorite police official It's 'Happy Birthday, Capt. In District 4 BY PEGGY LANE Of The Enquirer Staff Tom Dixon was a little perturbed at having to report to work on his day off.

He was, he thought, in trouble with his wife and daughter because of it. It was his 43rd birthday Thursday and his family told him they had plans. But, after 17 years with the Police Department, he obeyed orders and reported to the District Four Police Station Thursday afternoon. i.

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