Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 12
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 12

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

Probe Spindletop Waterfield Suggests type but not the "substantive" type that is really AJREA. NEWS buildings, special projects and personal service contracts. "When you spend that much money, you ought to know what you're getting," Waterfield said. He indicated he does not believe the state is receiving its money's worth "I have top. He made the suggestion Thursday.

FINANCE data shows the state has pumped $4.6 million into the firm. An LRC estimate is $5.2 million, but includes money authorized and not yet spent The aid is in the form of appropriations, land and field's views, Gov. Edward T. Breathitt replied that he thinks Spindletop has rendered a public service. The governor also departed from his prepared speech to Appalachian industrial leaders in the mansion to claim that Spindletop deserves (credit for obtaining Appalachian road aid for Kentucky.

Page 12 Deaths And Funerals Mrs. Frances Mack, Active Li Musical, Civic Affairs Mrs. Frances Meyer Mack, 49, 1 Annwood widely known in musical and medical circles, died Friday at Jewish Hospital. Mrs. Mack was the wife of Dr.

James R. Mack, surgeon and associate clinical professor at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. A native of St. George T. Quinn, Company Founder Ed Sliafer Views Car Wreckage apparently stalled on tra cks of south of Trenton Trenton Man Injured In Auto-Train Crash Enquirer Bureau Special HAMILTON, Ohio A Trenton area man was injured critically shortly before noon Friday when his automobile was struck by a Baltimore Ohio Railroad train at the Wayne-Madison Road crossing, south of Trenton.

Butler sheriff's deputies said Ernest Edward Frary, 25, 5257 Kennedy was driv- seen some of the Spindletop reports." One difficulty, he said, is that Spindletop was supposed to expand with research laboratories, but these facilities never developed as planned. The result, he said, is that the research is the "report" was active In women's affairs In support of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. A talented pianist, she organized a series of house concerts by the LaSalle Quartet She was a Democratic precinct chairman and a member of Rockdale Temple and the Woman's Auxiliary of the Academy of Medicine. Also surviving are two daughters and one son, Miss Claire Friedman, attending business school in Topeka, and Miss Barbara A. Mack and Ralph J.

Mack, at home, and her mother, Mrs. Lester Meyer, also of the Annwood Place address. Services will be at Hillside Chapel, 525 Dix-myth at 11 a. m. Sunday.

Richard M. Asbury Services for Richard M. Asbury, 71, 3615 Erie Hyde Park, will be held Monday at the convenience of the family at Stanley High Funeral Home, 6546 Montgomery Road. Interment will be at the Rest Haven Memorial Park, Blue Ash. Mr.

Asbury died Thursday of a coronary failure at Good Samaritan Hospital. Mr. Asbury, a stockbroker for 48 years with the W. E. Hutton Cincinnati, was a member of the Kenwood CounL Club, the Whist Club, am the Sons of the American Revolution of New York.

He leaves his wife, Pauline Trask Asbury; two daughters: Mrs. Harold M. Patrick, Mt. Washington, Mrs. James M.

Clark, Seal Beach, one son, Richard T. Asbury, Fairfield, one sister, Mrs. William L. Mccracken, Staten Island, N. one brother, E.

Bennett Asbury, Rockville Center, L. and 12 grandchildren. Friends may call from 3 to 8 p. m. Sunday at the funeral home.

Matthew Dorsey, Sr. Requiem High Mass for Matthew J. Dorsey, 75, 2737 Alberts Oakley, will be held at 9 a. m. Tuesday at St.

Clement Church, St. Bernard. Burial will be at St. Joseph (New) Cemetery, Price Hill. Mr.

Dorsey, who died Friday at his home, had been a receiving clerk for the Trailmobile Cincinnati, until he retired eight years ago. He had been married 52 years and had also been a member of the Fourth Ward Democratic Club. He leaves his wife, Hilda Langenbahn Dorsey; one son, Matthew Dorsey, Cincinnati; one daughter, Mrs. Peggy Cunningham, St. Bernard; 14 grandchildren; and three greatgrandchildren.

Friends may visit between 4 to 9 p. m. Monday at the Albert L. Boehmer Funeral Home, 4617 Vine St. Bernard.

Case Continued Charles R. Hilton, 27, of 1042 Marshall charged with punching a police officer after ramming the police car with his own vehicle had his case continued Friday because he is receiving treatment at General Hospital. Hilton was arrested January 15 after police chased him on Grand Avenue. He was scheduled to appear before Judge William S. Mathews in Municipal Court.

valuable. "If we're not getting any services, we might as well give our money to General Electric," Mr. Waterfield said. "They have a research department." THE WHOLE matter ought to be aired at hearings, he said, and the next legislature should receive the benefit of findings. Sen.

Lawrence Wetherby Frankfort) suggested turning over the matter to the audit committee, which has just got its feet wet by auditing four minor agencies. Sen. Shelby Kinkead Lexington) recalled that his economy and efficiency commission, no longer in existence, was thinking of delving into the. Spindletop matter years ago but held off on the understanding the University of Kentucky was undertaking a similar study. Rep.

Harry Hoe Mld-dlesboro) said "There is no quarrel with the purpose of Spindletop's research, but with its efficiency." He made a motion to refer it to the audit committee. This is not the first time Mr. Waterfield has criticized Spindletop. Two years ago he charged state contracts were being used to provide tax funds for projects not approved by the legislature. HE CITED one $20,000 state contract to Spindletop "to do a 60-day study to determine ways to improve communication between the state health department and the county health departments." Commerce Comissioner Katherine Peden, whose department pumps a good deal of money into Spindletop, has defended the "special project" funds as wisely spent for needful studies.

A 1966 sales breakdown by President Beardsley Graham indicates 51 of its business came from within Kentucky and 54 from government. The finance department said the state has appropriated $1,260,000 directly to Spindletop, $2,242,209 for land buildings, $226,500 for special projects and in the form of contracts for various reports. Asked about Mr. Water- Three Deaths Being Probed By Coroner Three deaths Friday which may have been suicides are being investigated by Dr. Frank P.

Cleveland, Hamilton County coroner. The coroner's office said Donald Buckshorn, 63, 3104 Banning was found hanging by his neck from the upper hinge of a closet door at his home. He had been under medical care. Wilbert George Reinklng, 56, 8805 Livingston Colerain Township, was found dead in the front seat of his car parked in a garage at his home. Two garden hoses, the coroner's office said, were run from the exhaust Into the automobile.

Joseph Edward Anderson, 61, Smalles Lane off 5979 Kellogg was found shot through his head in the yard of his residence, the coroner's office reported. He had been in poor health, the coroner's office said. Carpenter Falls A Winton Place carpenter escaped with only minor head injuries Friday when his scafolding collapsed, dropping him 15 feet to the ground. Charles Clark, 38, 756 Froome was, dismissed after treatment at General Hospital where he was taken by the life squad. He had been working on the Hummel Building, 1330 Tennessee Bond Hill, at the time of the accident, police said.

Saturday, February 4, 1967 -Enquirer (Clark) PhotJ" were sounding on the train and the headlight was on. The engineer said the train, which included five engines and 115 cars, was traveling about 45 miles an hour. William A. Winner was listed as conductor on the train. Investigating officers included Sgt.

Robert Wright and Cpl. Oram Fisher of the sheriff's department. Two persons sustained head cuts early Friday when their pickup truck went off Stillwell-Beckett Road, east of Ohio 177, and careened into a creek, deputies said. Hurt were Jerry Lee Plaugher, 28, 214 N. Beech Oxford, driver, and Thelma Creech, 39, Vine Street, Oxford.

Both declined medical attention. The driver told officers he apparently dozed at the wheel. 'Unloaded 5 Shotgun: Tragedy FELICITY, Ohio Boys playing with a shotgun they didn't know was loaded brought Instant death to Harley Tull, 16, when David Shaw. 12. aimed at his heafl; pulled back the hammer;) and fired.

1 The tragedy happened a 1 the Shaw home on Bolender Road, near Felicity, aftef' Harley had stopped playing with the gun and was slt-r -ting watching television. David propped the weap- on, a .410 gage shotgun, with its stock against the-back of the couch where! both boys were the barrel at Har; ley's head, and then pulled the trigger, he told Deputy! Sheriff Richard Carson. David's father, was in the room at the time; Other members of the Shaw; family were in other parts of the house. Dr. Philip Pfalsgraf, act! ing Clermont County cor4; oner, gave a verdict of acci-' dental shooting, Sheriff; Donald Watson said.

Services will be at 2 p. mi Sunday at Hayden Funeral i Home, Felicity. Visitation: after 5 p. m. today.

i 'FRANKFORT, Ky. 1 Lt. Gov. Harry Lee Water- Held said Spindletop re- search Institute should be 'investigated to determine what, If anything, the state received for spending nearly $5 million. Spindletop is a private research firm that was set six years ago at Lexington with stdte sanction.

The Legislative Research Commission responded to Mr. Waterfeld's suggestion by voting to direct its legislative fiscal affairs committee to "study and analyze" the Spindletop situation. Mr. Waterfield, the LRC chairman, said he has heard "many questions and reports" about the institute. "The suspicion is that when Spindletop gets be- hind in its bills, it comes to the state for a contract that we're lifting them out of the hole periodically, he said.

Mr. Waterfield said he asked the finance department to supply him with figures on direct and in- direct state aid for Spindle R. V. Schullick missing since Tuesday Educator At OLC Missing Robert Von Schullick, 24, psychology teacher on the faculty of Our Lady of Cincinnati College, has been missing since 11:05 p. m.

Tuesday, Mariemont police reported Friday. Less than four hours later his automobile, keys in the ignition was found abandoned on the Public Landing at the foot of Broadway. Mr. Von Schullick shared an apartment at 3722 W. Center Mariemont, with James Wasserman, also of the OLC faculty.

Mr. Washerman told Mariemont police Mr. Von Schullick apparently was under emo- tional stress when last seen. Mrs. Pauline Von Schul-' lick, the young mart's mother, said also to be a teacher, is recovering from surgery at Youngstown, Ohio, her home, Mariemont Police Chief Donald L.

Shanks was told. Mr. Von Schullick also has a brotherln the armed forces In Vietnam. Mr. Von Schullick is 6 feet 7 inches tall, weighs 210 pounds and has brown hair and blue eyes.

When last seen he was wearing dress and a dark blue ski jacket with hood. Iax Board Will Hear Cincinnati's Plea Cincinnati's appeal from the County Budget Commls-' slon's 1967 allocation of the local governments fund will be heard here by the State Board of Tax Appeals at 1 I p. m. February 27 in the Court of Appeals in the Courthouse. A notice of the hearing was received Friday from the board by James G.

Flick, city finance director. The city is challenging the methods used by the budget commission In ar-1 riving at allocation percent-. ages. The city's share of the local governments fund was cut from 40 in 1966 to 19 or $1.5 million In 1967. i I wis, ji BY Enquirer LYNCHBURG, Ohio ing north when his car apparently stalled on the crossing.

The vehicle was struck and pushed 210 feet down the railroad tracks by a southwestbound freight train before coming to a halt against a metal building along the railroad right-of-way. Parts of the vehicle were strewn along the railroad tracks, officers said. The victim, who was alone in the car, was extricated from the wreckage Louis, she had lived in Cincinnati since her marriage 20 years ago. She had studied at Birch-Wathen School, New York; Bradford Academy, Boston, and Columbia University, New York. She was on the boards of the Jewish Family Service Bureau and the Cincinnati Chapter, American Jewish Committee, and mass will be sung at 9:30 a.

Monday, at St. Teresa Church. Burial will be in St. Joseph Cemetery, Foley Road. Friends may visit between 3 and 9 p.

Sunday, at the Harry Meyer Sons Funeral Home, 4898 Glenway Ave. Louisa Outcalt Services for Mrs. Louisa Crook Outcalt, 66, 3635 Archer Lin wood, widow of former Hamilton County Prosecutor and Judge Dudley Miller Outcalt, will be at 10 a. m. Monday at the Wain A.

Bolton Funeral Home, 3042 Harrison Westwood. Burial will be at the Rest Haven Memorial Park, Blue Ash. Mrs. Outcalt, who died Thursday at Good Samaritan Hospital, had worked for 20 years In the Children Services Division of the Hamilton County Welfare Department. After her retirement in 1965, she did volunteer adoption work for the agency.

Mrs. Outcalt was a native of Davenport, Iowa, and attended Wellesley College-She was past president of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon Mother's Club, the Welles-ley Club, and 14th Ward Women's Republican Club, and was a board member of Catherine Booth Hospital and the College Club of Cincinnati. She leaves one son, Peter Outcalt, Cincinnati; one daughter, Mrs. Hendrlck, Carbondale, eight grandchildren and three great-gidchildren. Friends may call from 4 to 9 Sunday at the funeral home.

Herman Bressler Requiem High Mass for Herman G. Bressler, 61, a Nortnside druggist nearly 30 years, will be at 9:30 a. m. Monday In St. Clare Church, College HUL Burial will be In St.

Joseph Cemetery, Foley Rd. and Pedrettl Ave. Mr. Bressler, 1503 Hollywood College Hill, died Thursday at Good Samaritan Hospital after a long illness. He was a member of the Economy Drug Co.

board of directors, an assistant secretary of the Cincinnati Loan and Building Co. and formerly a member many years of the Xavier University athletic board. He was a member of the Xavier Musketeers Club, the Veterans Apothecary Association and the Knights of Columbus. He leaves three daughters, Mrs. Bonnie Fellinger and the Misses Sue and Kathleen Bressler, all Cincinnati; a son, John, at home; his mother, Mrs.

Louis A. Bressler, Cincinnati; two sisters, Mrs. Betty Froelicher, Cincinnati and Mrs. Sylvia Terwort, Ft. Mitchell, Ky.

and a granddaughter. Friends may call from 2 p. m. until 8 p.m. Sunday at the Charles A.

Miller Sons Funeral Home, 4138 Hamilton George T. Qulnn, 70, vice president and founder of Metal Photo of Cincinnati Carthage, died Friday at Good Samaritan Hospital. His residence was at 4920 Western Hills Ave. Mr. Qulnn, a World War I veteran, was a member of St.

Joseph Men's Society of St. Teresa Church, Price Hill; Seton Council. Knights of Columbus, and the Men of Milford. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Mildred Meyer Quinn; three sons, Connell, Jerry and Gene Qulnn; a daughter, Mrs.

Robert Peterson; a sister, Mrs. Frank Kluemper and 25 grandchildren, all of Cincinnati. Solemn Requiem high A. M. Ehrnschwender Services for Arthur M.

Ehrnschwender, 73, 6880 Euclid Kenwood, will be at 10:30 a. m. Tuesday at the Bethlehem Methodist Church, 3215 Wood-burn Ave. Visitation will be 5 to 9 p. m.

Monday at the Bamber Funeral Home, 3011 Woodburn Ave. Burial will be In Rest Haven Memorial Park. Mr. Ehrnschwender died at his home Thursday after a short illness. He retired in 1958 after 44 years as an industrial salesman for the Standard Oil Co.

of Ohio. He was a board member at the church and treasurer of its Sunday school for many years. He was a 50-year member of the Cynthia Lodge, the Scottish Rite, and past chairman of the Cincinnati Division of Sohio's Quarter Century Club. Active in bowling circles here for 55 years, he was a past president and life member of the Greater Cincinnati Bowling Association and secretary of numerous leagues. In 1929 he was a national champion in doubles competition of the American Bowling Congress.

He leaves his wife Lydla; sons Arthur Mt. Washington, and Paul Yard-ley, daughter, Mrs. Ruth Single, Denver, and six grandsons. Thomas E. Banks Thomas E.

Banks, 95, resident of Cincinnati from 1892 to 1922 and frequent visitor for many years afterward, died Sunday at Jamaica, British West Indies, friends In Cincinnati learned Friday. Services were In Jamaica Wednesday. Mr. Banks, a maintenance man and stationary engineer for large buildings, lived on Foraker Avenue in Walnut Hills for many years before he became a traveling representative for the Watchtower Bible Tract Society. He was transferred to the West Indies in 1938.

Surviving him are two daughters, Mrs. Doyle Shackelford, Cincinnati, and Mrs. Ernest Jarrett, Detroit, one son, Thomas E. Banks, Columbus; eight grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren. Amelia Schools Ask Voter Aid AMELIA, Ohio The first of two public meetings called to try to find a solution to West Clermont school district's desperate financial situation will be at 8 p.

m. Monday at Amelia High School. West Clermont schools won't be able to open this fall and taken by sheriff's ambulance to Mercy Hospital where attendants said he suffered head and chest injuries, a right arm fracture, multiple cuts and bruises and other injuries. Harry F. Seurkamp, 47, 799 Ivy Hill Cincinnati, engineer, told officers he applied an emergency brake on the train but was unable to stop the train in time to avoid the accident.

He said the whistle and bell Complicating matters further, the school district has another eight-mill operating levy that comes up for renewal this year. Everett E. Park, the new superintendent of West Clermont Schools, said Friday that one of the speakers at Monday night's meeting will be M. Byron Mo-torn, assistant state superintendent of schools. The second public meeting has been set for 8 p.

m. February 20 at Glen Este High School. Both meetings are open to the public, Mr. Park said, adding that any interested group may have a representative speak for a limited time by requesting time in advance. In an appeal to all residents of the district to accept the responsibility of helping to find a solution to the serious dilemma, the school board said, "We are turning for help to the people we represent; the people who certainly share our responsibility in the ultimate sense we are asking for advice concerning the course of action we should choose." for the 8000 pupils in tne big district unless some source of a lot of money is found.

The latest financial statement of the district shows an additional $398,307 will have to be raised Just to keep the schools going to the end of 1967, and that without this money the schools will have to be closed long before the end of 1967. As a practical matter, if the school board cannot assure teachers they will be paid for all of the 1967-68 school year, there will be very few teachers who will start the new year. The real pressure comes from the fact that teacher contract signing time is this spring and for that reason the board must know whether it will have enough money for the entire new year by April. Twice voters of the district have rejected an eight-mill operating levy. Now it appears that an even larger levy will be needed because the school board has had to borrow to continue operations, and interest must be paid on the loans.

Lady Lawyer Marks 35th Year tmsyr jut JLVVv if hi i jj fr-vVv 1 1 1 lif a jf f'ty rnNi I "i rr 'v yn i fi Hi urn fell flit fr 1 SARA McCANN Contributor Helen Pulse Roades, first woman admitted to the bar In rural Southern Ohio will have completed 35 years in the practice of law February 12. She began her career In the legal profession In her hometown, Lynchburg, as the Junior member of Pulse and Pulse, attorneys. She was indoctrinated In the principles of legal proceedings by the senior member of the firm, her father, Harley Pulse, an illustrious defense attorney and trial lawyer. Admitted to the Ohio bar in 1897 he was widely known for the eloquence of his pleas which saved many innocents and possibly a few scoundrels from "the chair." His frequent appearances before the bench brought many victories In the practice which was terminated by his death in 1952. IN ADDITION to a liberal education In law the younger member of the firm Inherited a vast collection of legal volumes to which she has added, from time to time, until an extensive law library lines Mrs.

Roades' offices. Harley Pulse was admitted to the practice of law In the Oklahoma territory In September of 1907. Here he garnered experience In settlement of land and title disputes. This was broadened by a "land selling" stint in Texas before he returned to his hometown practice in Ohio. Always at her famous father's side in the courtroom, the tiny, soft-spoken woman was in his shadow but was always learning from the master.

Mrs. Roades was admitted to the U. S. District Court and the U. S.

Circuit Court of Appeals in 1933, a year following her marriage to Orland Roades, also a native of Lynchburg. BOTH SHE and her husband were admitted to the U. S. Supreme Court March 4, 1958, under the sponsorship of Sen. John W.

Bricker. Orland Roades began his first term as judge of the Probate Court of Highland County In 1944. He was re-elected for subsequent terms and served as Judge of this court for 21 years, until his death March 21, 1965. Mrs. Roades concentrates her Interests In her profession.

"I can't stand flowers," she replied to a query as to whether she liked She said, with pride, "I've been the attorney for Home Builders Association of Lynchburg for several years and have taken Orland's place as a member of the board of directors." SHE AND HER late husband enjoyed horseback riding and kept pleasure horses In the stable behind their home. They were supporters of both the Lynchburg annual horse show and the Highland County Fair Horse Show. Judge Roades served as horse show chairman of the county fair show several years and as the announcer for both shows on numerous occasions. Mrs. Roades was usually at his side, efficiently taking entries or performing secretarial duties always seeing that "the show goes on," without a hitch.

1 ii II Mrs. Roades, Father's Certificate Bhe learned her profession from a master mmmmmmmswmmmm.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Cincinnati Enquirer
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Cincinnati Enquirer Archive

Pages Available:
4,582,258
Years Available:
1841-2024