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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 1
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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 1

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Cincinnati, Ohio
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THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER NO. 122-FINAL EDITION FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 9, 1963 PRICE 10 CENTS HOME DELIVERED 42c A WEEK YEAR Little Patrick Kennedy Improving TOP OF THE NEWS GREATER CINCINNATI BULLY SENT UP: Youth. 18, gets one-year Workhouse sentence and $410 fine for leading three 17-year-olds in reign of terror against smaller youths of Cumminsville area. Page 1. IN TAX TROUBLE: Frank (Screw) Andrews, his brother Dan and two other men listed on almost $500,000 of Federal gambling tax liens filed in Recorder's office.

Page 2. STEPS ON BRAKES: City Manager William C. Wichman notifies all departments under his control of rules restricting use of city-owned automobiles as economy measure. Page 4. WASHINGTON APPEAL: President Kennedy sends the nuclear test ban treaty to the Senate with a plea for approval; representatives of 31 nations gather to sign.

Pages 1 and 2. CHECKUP: A new test for detection of diabetes indicates that the disease is much more prevalent than anyone had suspected. Page 2. WORLD-WIDE OUTSHINING JESSE JAMES: A masked gang ambushes British mail train, gets away with $2.8 million in the world's biggest train robbery. Page 3.

WHIPPED: Rebels straggling back to the Dominican Republic admit defeat in an attempted invasion of Haiti. Page 3. STATE AND NATION IMPROVED: Day-old Patrick Kennedy is put in a new and revolutionary breathing device, and is reported improved. Page 1. TRIMMING: Ohio's state finance director claims state spending has been pruned from the level of last January.

Page 4. FOR JOBS: A citizen campaign for a $250 million bond issue is launched in Columbus in a move to generate jobs for Ohioans. Page 7. SPORTS REDS WIN: Home runs by Frank Robinson and Tommy Harper spur Reds to a 6-3 win over Philadelphia Phillies. John Tsitouris is the winning pitcher.

Page 33. Fisher Body Founder Dies DETROIT (UPI)-Charles T. Fisher, 83, second oldest of the seven Fisher brothers of automotive fame, died Thursday. Surviving brothers are William Edward F. and Alfred J.

Fisher. The brothers made millions of dollars on their vast automobile body building operation which they sold to General Motors Corp. The present Fisher Body Division of GM builds automobile bodies for all GM cars except the luxury Cadillac line and the Chevrolet Corvette sports car. Ohio Gets 58 Seats At GOP Session COLUMBUS, Ohio each congressional district Secretary of State Ted W. and 10 at-large, at the GOP Brown said Thursday that convention in Chicago.

Ohio will have a 58-member Democratic National delegation at the Republi- Chairman John M. Bailey can national convention in notified Mr. Brown that the San Francisco next July 13. makeup of his party's Ohio Ohio tentatively has been delegation would be deterallocated 12 delegates, at- mined later by an apporlarge and two of tionment committee. The the state's 23 congressional convention will be August districts, Mr.

Brown ex- 24, 1964, in Atlantic City. plained. Ohio's delegation to the He said the allocation 1960 Democratic convention drafted by GOP National in Los Angeles had 64 votes. Chairman William E. Miller Forty-six delegates from was subject to approval by congressional districts had the party's National Com- a vote each and 36 atmittee.

large delegates, elected Ohio's 1960 delegation statewide, had a half vote had 56 members, two from apiece. COME TO THINK OF IT: but he always got to go on picnics with us!" Even if the family pup can't go along, try dining out now as a change from Summer picnics. The many fine airconditioned restaurants in our area offer inviting menus. Baby In Huge Condition Is Serious MARSHAL 5 HOPPLE PKWY COLERAIN ARLINGTON One More Minute On The Long Thin Ribbon You'll travel another minute on the lengthening Mill Creek Expressway as of around 10 a. m.

Friday when this section in color from the old Colerain Avenue exit to a new temporary exit at Marshall Avenue is opened to traffic. Travel will be limited to southbound automobiles for another week or so until the northbound lanes are completed. The Hopple Street interchange, in center, ought to be open next month, while the section of the route from Marshall to Flint may be ready by the end of the year unless right-of-way problems delay it till next summer. The section from Flint to Fourth Street should be ready by the end of the year, while it is hoped that the section from Fourth to the new Cincinnati-Covington bridge will be ready when the bridge opens early in November. View is toward (Bob Free) Photo.

Test Ban Treaty Sent To Senate For Approval WASHINGTON (P)-PresIdent Kennedy sent the limited test ban treaty to the Senate Thursday with a call for speedy approval "to make the most of the present opportunity to achieve a more secure and peaceful world." In a 10-point message, Mr. Kennedy said the security of the United States and of all mankind would be increased by adoption of the proposed ban on nuclear testing in the atmosphere, in space and under water. Here are the 10 points in order that Mr. Kennedy advanced them: "This treaty 1s the whole agreement." And U.S. negotiators at Moscow made no contingent deal in reaching the accord with the Soviets.

"This treaty advances, though it does not assure, world peace; and it will inhibit, though It does not prohibit, the nuclear arms race." The ban will curb harmful pollution of the Earth's atmosphere caused by radioactive fallout. The treaty protects future U. S. rights because it cannot be amended without U. S.

consent and any party can withdraw on three months notice. Crash Injures Local WAVE A Navy WAVE from Cincinnati was hurt Thursday in a Portsmouth, R. automobile crash which killed another WAVE." Pamela Ann Reis, 20, daughter of Frank Reis, 326 Crestline Price Hill, was injured and Claranne Parlette, 20, of Kill Devil, N. killed when their compact car jumped a curb and crashed a utility pole. A third WAVE, Patty Evans, 20, of Asbury Park, N.

was injured critically, wire dispatches said. Miss Reis, graduate of Western Hills High School, was hurt less seriously. Both were taken to Newport Naval hospital. Miss aunt, Miss Minnie Reis, 1798 Pulte Fairmount, said her niece joined the Navy in February, 1962. BOSTON (P)-The ailing Mrs.

was placed breathing late Kennedym peared improved half a dozen Pierre Salinger, presidential an 8:30 p. m. briefing that day-old Patrick Bouvier Kennedy "continues to show improvement in respiration and oxygen input." However, Mr. Salinger added, the baby's condition was "still serious." The baby, born weeks prematurely Wednesday at Otis Air Force Base hospital on Cape Cod, was placed in the unique chamber-31 feet long and eight feet in diameter at 3:41 p. m.

(EST) THE PRESIDENT visited the hospital twice after that, appearing much more and relieved. His brother, Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, joined him at the hospital after flying here from Washington.

The chamber, the only one of kind in the world, was provided by Harvard University. The first fivemember medical team of doctors, technicians and nurses stayed inside it with the tiny new Kennedy baby more than four hours, emerging at 8:05 p.m. Mr. Salinger said two medical teams planned to 'Terror Gang' Member, 18, Gets One Year An 18-year-old Cumminsville youth was sentenced to one year in the Workhouse and fined $410 on two counts of assault and battery Thursday by Judge George Heitzler in Police Court. Police said the defendant, Kenneth Kleinfelter, 2930 Spring Grove and three 17-year-old companions had terrorized teen-age boys recently in the Cumminsville area.

Testimony showed the gang had tied victims to trees and then assaulted them. Witnesses said the neighborhood has been living in constant fear for more than a month as gang ran rampant through the area. Ima reaps what want-ad Ima Want Ad had no trouble finding for the a buy- sew- Ima ing machine Went ad advertised by Mrs. Jack Lantry of 4801 Poole. You can reap plenty of success, too, when you rent or sell things the low cost, fast moving Enquirer Classified way! Just call 421- 6300 and have Ima Want Ad start working for you- do it today! infant son of President and in a huge, submarine-like Thursday and his condition aphours later.

press secretary, said at Drorbaugh and Dr. William Bernhard, are in the breathing chamber as part of a team, Mr. Salinger said. Dr. Drorbaugh was one of the first specialists to reach the baby after the birth.

Dr. Bernhard is a surgeon from Harvard University. The call also went out for another expert on premature births, Dr. Samuel Levine of Cornell University, who was flown by jet from New York City and then given a fast police escort to the hospital. THE APPARATUS, termed a hyperbaric chamber, can accommodate a five-member medical team with the baby at one time.

Its primary function is to raise the air pressure as much as desired. Patients seem to absorb oxygen much better under pressure than under normal atmospheric conditions, or even in incubators, work two-hour shifts throughout the night inside the chamber. The chamber is used to force air into the baby's tiny lungs. "WHAT IS BEING here has never been done before," Mr. Salinger said.

He said the baby is suffering a lung ailment. All other babies who have been treated in the machine' have had heart problems, he said, and thus there is no precedent. Shortly before midnight it was learned that the President was staying overnight at the hospital. Asked why, Mr. Salinger said merely: "The President decided to stay here." Mr.

Salinger stressed that the baby's condition had not changed in the past several hours. The press secretary also disclosed that the baby now was being fed intravenously. Two specialists, Dr. James Drorbaugh and Dr. William About Baptism "Any new-born child of a Catholic parent who in any kind of danger is baptized immediately," Rev.

Andrew J. Hoying, chaplain at Good Samaritan Hospital, said Thursday. His explanation was in connection with a story in The Enquirer which indicated that immediate baptism of premature children is not customary. Father Hoying explained that the public ceremonies surrounding the sacrament of baptism are held later in the parish church. such as the Kennedy baby occupied for most of Wednesday and Thursday.

Surgeons and patients enter a door in the central compartment of the chamber and pass through an interior door to another compartment which can be outfitted as a small operating room. Instruments can be passed from the outside into the operating compartment through a mail lock. The central lock is used to make metabolism tests and chemical analyses of the patient's blood before and during surgery. DOCTORS HAD SAID that it would be four days before anything definite could be determined on the infant's condition. Even as the President hurried into the hospital, Richard Cardinal Cushing, spiritual leader of the Boston Roman Catholic Archdiocese and a close friend of the President, asked for "the prayers of all citizens for the speedy recovery of the child." Patrick was born at 11:52 a.

after Mrs. Kennedy was rushed to the Air Force base hospital by helicopter from her summer vacation home on Squaw Island, some 22 miles away. A corps of 10 Air Force doctors and nurses assisted Mrs. Kennedy's obstetrician, Dr. John W.

Walsh of Washington. Nothing in the treaty alters the status of unrecognized governments. Signing by Communist East Germany, for instance, in no way implies U. S. recognition of that regime.

"This treaty does not halt American nuclear progress" because testing will be continued underground. The treaty does not diminish the need for continued Western and American military strength to meet all contingencies. U. S. security will be better assured by the treaty ban than by continued unlimited testing by both sides.

The risks from sneak violations of the treaty are far smaller than the risks in unlimited testing. "This treaty is the product of the steady effort of the U. S. government in two administrations (Eisenhower and Kennedy), and its principles have the explicit support of both political parties." As the President formally submitted the U. treaty to the Senate, nearly one-third of 114 other nations of the world were signing it in ceremonies in Washington, Moscow and London.

At the State Department, envoys from 31 states queued up to sign the treaty and more are due in Friday. Ratification by the U. S. Senate is the key to whether the treaty will take effect. Ratification is deemed automatic in Russia and Britain.

But the treaty does not take effect until all three original signatories ratify. Kennedy ad ministration authorities seem confident the Senate will approve by the required two-thirds majority of those voting. Committee hearings start next Monday and a final vote is expected after floor debate in September. In his 1500-word message accompanying the short treaty document, Mr. Kennedy said: "It is rarely possible to recapture missed opportunities to achieve a more secure and peaceful world the United States should move swiftly to make the most of the present opportunity approve the pending treaty." In saying the ban against all except underground atomic explosions would boost U.

S. and world security, the President sought to counter objection to the pact. He said that should the United States make further progress in atomic weaponry by testing in the atmosphere, so would Russia. And if still other countries develop their own atomic force through atmospheric testing, this spread of nuclear weapons "might well lead to a weakening of our security," he said. Inside The Enquirer Page Page Amusements Sports Bridge ..18 Star Gazer .16 TV-Radio .18 Business, Markets .37, 40 Women's 11-12, 14 Classified.

.20, 32 Word Game ..18 Columnists .7 Comics. Today's Weather Crossword .19 Deaths ..20 Mostly fair and a little warmer, with a low in the Editorials low 60s and a high around .6 Horse Sense 17 90. Friday night the low will be in the upper 60s. Society News 13 DETAILS, MAP ON PAGE 17 Five Star News, Features Page 8 Telephone 721-2700-Classified 421-6300 CIRCULATION SERVICE 721-2700 7:45 A. A.

M. M. TO TO 8 10:15 P.M. P. M.

WEEKDAYS SUNDAY the Little Pat's Battle Had A Local Prelude Little Patrick Kennedy carried the hopes Thursday of a Cincinnati mother who in 1944 gave premature birth to a son "so small he'd have fit into a cigar box." So grateful were Mr. and Mrs. Irwin S. Rhodes, 3815 Erie Hyde Park, for their son's survival they gave Jewish Hospital an iron lung. "WHILE OUR son, Larry, lived, we were told he'd have had a better chance of survival if the hospital had had an iron lung, so we donated one in honor of his recovery," Mrs.

Rhodes pounds he was so small have fit into a cigar box." Mrs. Rhodes said. "Little Patrick weighed just a little over four pounds at birth." Kept in an incubator six weeks, Larry grew healthily into a strapping, six-footone-inch tennis player, who will enter the University of Pennsylvania this fall, Mrs. Rhodes said. "We were told that the lung we donated saved from 50 to 100 babies a year," she explained, "and I'm sure there have been many 1m- provements in iron lungs since 1945 when we gave said.

ours." Young Kennedy, second Patrick's presumably 1s son of President and Mrs. the most advanced device Kennedy, was placed in a of its type, and Mrs. Rhodes vast, breathing said she felt he will be okay. device Thursday after its "He certainly has my birth Wednesday weeks hopes," she said. prematurely.

Her husband, a retired "Larry was born eight lawyer, is on the faculty weeks premature and of Our Lady of Cincinnati weighed only about three College. -AP Wirephoto President In Contemplative Mood Mr. Kennedy leaves hospital after visit with wife.

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