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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 1
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The Cincinnati Enquirer du lieu suivant : Cincinnati, Ohio • 1

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Ist-Place Reds Win Twin Bill, 6-2, 9-3 (See Details In Sports Section) THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER 121st YEAR NO. 64 DAILY MONDAY MORNING, JUNE 12, 1961 FINAL EDITION PRICE 7 CENTS England, Soviets Appeal Ike Here Today For GOP Dinner Cease Fke mm In Lsnos ry" i 'Mil fii El Diplomats Set Session Today OENEVA, June 11 Britain and the Soviet Union today Issued a Joint appeal to the warring forces in Laos to atop fighting and announced that the 14-natlon con ference would get started again. British Foreign Secretary Lord Home and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei fit r- it LED nribJ fry I 1 BY MICHAEL MALONEY Of The Enquirer Staff Cincinnati will roll out he red carpet today for Oen. Dwlght D. Elsenhower, former President of the United States, who will be honored at a $loo-a-plate fund-raising dinner at Music Hall.

Eisenhower, who will be making his first visit to Cincinnati since September, 1952, Is scheduled to arrive at Lunken Airport from his Gettysburg, home at 11:15 a. m. In 1952 it was candidate Elsenhower who came to Cincinnati the home of Sen. Robert A. Taft who Elsenhower had defeated for the Republican presidential nomination to make a foreign policy speech.

THOUGH THERE obviously were strained relations between "Ike" and some of the late Senator Taft's supporters, more than 100,000 Hamilton Countlans turned out to cheer the GOP standard bearer as he traveled downtown streets by motorcade. Today, It will be Elsenhower the elder statesman and in recent weeks principal critic of Kennedy a i nistratlon domestic policies who will be Today, nine years after the Eisenhower convention victory over Taft, there till Is some strong feeling among Taft men. It is not likely to show, however. An efficient telephone and personal contact campaign to get a welcoming crowd for the airport arrival and for the downtown motorcade has been underway for more than a week. Accompanying Elsenhower to Cincinnati will be Sen.

Thruston Morton, Ky.) until recently the Republican national chairman. Morton will make the principal address at the dinner. The former President's party will be met at the airport by Joseph B. Hall, pres- WirlDhoto) Gable's Son Christened John Clark Gable, 10-week-old son of the late film star, was christened yesterday at St. Cyril Roman Catholic Church In Enclno, a Hollywood suburb.

His mother, Mrs. Kay Gable, patted him and smiled nervously as several friends looked on. Present for the ceremony were Marilyn Monroe, Jack Benny, Fred Astaire, Robert Stack and many other celebrities. U. S.

Jury Meets Ratterman Probe Likely On Today Fof FIRM STAND Taken By Germans Will Not Agree To KhrusiYs Terms Unification Must Come First, Leaders Assert BERLIN, June 11 lowest Germany's a or leaders united today in rejecting Soviet Premier Khrushchev's latest terms for a German settlement Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and Socialist Mayor Willy Brandt of West Berlin both termed unacceptable a peace conference without prior German reunification. The 85-year-old chancellor told a rally of Silesians at Hannover: "This Soviet proposal we will never accept We want self determination and freedom for the entire German people." HE'S CONFIDENT In a broadcast from Communist-surrounded Berlin, Brandt said the Soviet proposition of a peace treaty without unification "cannot be accepted by the German people." Brandt expressed confidence the Western allies would never accept a onesided breach of four-power rights by the Soviets. That would be the equivalent of the appeasement of Hitler at Munich In 1938, he said. He said Oerman must brace Itself for new Eastern pressure and a renewed war of nerves. Although the 47-year-old Brandt and the aged chancellor are rivals In September's Federal election, there was no disagreement about their answers to Khrushchev.

Erich Mende, chairman of the small opposition Free Democratic party, told a news conference in Koblenz the Soviet demands were extreme but he doubted that the Russians would go so far as to Injure allied feelings over Berlin and thus set off armed conflict. One of the proposals in a memorandum Khrushchev handed to President Kennedy In Vienna was that if East and West could not agree to hold an Immediate peace conference on Germany the two German states should be given six months to hammer out a solution between themselves. If that did not work, he added, he would then go ahead with a separate peace treaty with Communist East Germany. NEVER ACCEPT' Speaking today to a rally of 300,000 people expelled from the former German province of Silesia In Hanover, Adenauer said: "This Soviet proposal we will never accept. We want self-determination and freedom for the entire Oerman people." He said President Kennedy had already made this Western attitude clear in Vienna.

Adenauer said the Vienna summit meeting brought unmistakable clarity about Soviet Intentions. The Soviet memoranda, as published last night by Tass, showed the Russians were Interested only In consolidating the situation which developed in Europe after the war, he said, with all hardships Imposed on Germany to be maintained. Adenauer and the Western allies have long held that a German peace treaty can be written only by the wartime coalition which defeated Adolf Hitler and a freely elected government representing all of a reunited Germany. They have steadfastly refused to sit down at a conference table with East Germans. Western and Oerman officials in Berlin and Bonn said they could find nothing basically new in Khrushchev's memorandum, as published.

"It Is Just a repetition of the Soviet proposals at Geneva two years ago," a Western official said. A Bonn government spokesman said there was no need to comment on it because it contained nothing new. guests. V. K.

Krishna Menon, Indian Minister of Defense, came In for coffee. In the course of these talks, matters were arranged with Gromyko by telephone. The British spokesman also announced that the three princes heading the major Laotian factions had arreed to meet In Zurich later In the week. Nothing was said either In the official statement or by the British spokesman about a cease-fire in the areas held by royal Laotian troops behind the lines of the pro-Communist forces. Padong was of these.

Earlier in the talks, Western insistence on doing something about troops In these pockets had been a subject of disagreement with Qromyko. What would happen to the royal troops In the pockets of resistance waa not Immediately clear. There have been no reporta or new attacks on them since Wednesday, but the pro-Communist forces seem Intent on cleaning them out. One suggestion that has received some support: U. 8.

planes would drop them only food and supplies no arms or ammunitionand the pro-Com-munnlsts would cease their attacks. Carpenter Drowns In Little Miami A 37- year -old Kenwood carpenter drowned yesterday In the Little Miami River. The victim, George L. Cannon, 6734 Kenwood was pulled from the river by the U. S.

Coast Ouard at 3:65 p. m. Three companions told police they four! Cannon missing when they returned to their boat after a swim. Patrolman Emeran Snider said police have no Idea how Cannon got Into tht water. He was dressed In swim trunks.

Snider said. The body was taken to the Yacht Haven Marina, Kellog Road, where it was turned over to Cincinnati police. a n's companions were Jerry Wellman, 8825 Plum Newtown; David Pelzer, 7344 Richmond Deer Park, the victim's brother-in-law, and Jim Tate, address unknown, Snider said. Cannon's body was found about 200 yards from the Ohio River. Ed Maxwell, dock master of the Yacht Haven, said the four were in a catamaran-tpye boat Cannon's estranged wife, Dorothy, lives at 3542 Atken-slde Ave.

CIimIII OA 1-1100 25 U. S. To Consult Allies On Soviet's German Memo Dwlght D. Eisenhower ldent of the Kroger Co. and chairman of tht dinner; Nell H.

McElroy, chairman of the board of the Procter to Gamble Co. and former Secretary of Defense, and Mayor Walton H. Bachrach. FOLLOWING welcoming remarks and responses by Elsenhower and Morton, the party will leave be airport by motorcade for downtown. The motorcade, with Elsenhower and Morton In an open car, will proceed from Lunken Airport to Kellogg Avenue, to Stanley Avenue to Columbia Parkway.

Downtown, the motorcade will turn south on Pike Street, west on Fourth Street to Elm Street, north on Elm Street to Fifth Street and east on Fifth Street to the Hotel Netherland-Hllton. At 3:45 p. Eisenhower and Morton will meet city and county Republican leaders at reception in the hotel At 4:30, they will hold a press conference; at 5:30 attend a reception for members of the dinner committee and their wives, and at 7 p. m. attend the Music Hall function.

In addition, Morton, Ray C. Bliss, Ohio OOP chairman, and Mrs. Katharine Kennedy Brown, Ohio's Republican national commit-teewoman, will hold a clinic on political organization chief said that the United States first would consult its allies before drawing up a reply-. And President Kennedy himself, Rusk added, is "very much" Interested In the Berlin Issue. RUSK WAS interviewed at Washington National Airport where he welcomed the prime minister of Italy, Amlntore Fanfani, here for a two-day visit.

Fanfani is seeing Kennedy on both days and Rusk said the German question would be discussed. The Soviet memo called for an immediate conference for working out a peace treaty on Germany. If that does not suit the Western powers at the moment, West Germany and Communist East Germany should in the next six months try to work out an arrangement between them, Moscow said. If that did not work, Khrushchev said, he would then go ahead with a separate Leave For U. S.

ROME. June 11 (UPI Italian Premier Amlntore Fanfani and Foreign Minister Antonio Segni left today for an official five-day visit to the United States. On the visit they will meet with President Kennedy, Secretary of State Dean Rusk and other U. S. Federal grand Jurors probably will begin their Investigation of the George Ratterman case today or Tuesday in Lexington.

"It is likely the matter will be taken up Monday," Jean Auxler, U. S. district attorney, told The Enquirer yesterday. "A decision will be announced Monday after we have conferred with the Civil Rights Division of the Department, of Justice in Washington." HE SAID the decision would hinge upon the progress of the Federal Investigation to determine if the clyil rights of Ratterman, Campbell County reform candidate for sherrlf have been violated. Ratterman, former football star, was arrested with a dancer, Juanlta Hodges, in a Newport hotel room by police last month.

He said he had been drugged sometime before when eating and drinking In Cincinnati and Newport with Thomas Paisley, a friend, and Tito Carlncl, manager of the Glenn Hotel, whera the arrests were made. The Ratterman charges were dismissed after a sensational trial in Newport Police Court SUBPOENAED by the Federal grand Jury today were Miss Hodges, alias April Flowers, strip tease dancer, and Thomas Wlth-row, commercial photographer. Withrow testified during the Ratterman trial he had been contacted in advance to take pictures of a "man and woman" in the hotel, "If the grand Jury takes up the matter, other witnesses will be called," Auxler said. "Some will be FBI agents." Charges against Miss Hodges and Carlncl, are pending in Newport PoUce Court. Carlncl and Paisley, Medina, Ohio, businessman, are scheduled to go on trial June 19 In Campbell County Circuit Court.

They were charged by Campbell County grand Jurors with conspiring to frame Ratterman. fair share of the goods of this world." He said these nations are going to get their "fair share" and the question Is "whether we help them or Communism does." He called "unlikely" the prospect that Communism will take over the entire world, as Soviet Premier Nlklta Khrushchev has predicted. He said this has been a boast of emperors and religions and of such dictators as Adolf Hitler, but that none succeeded. Up to now, he said, the advantage of the Soviet Union has been that It has been less-known than the West. "It has been less known and less disliked," he said.

'The West has been more known and more disliked." But he said as the Communist nations become more known, this factor will "equal out." He also said there is a possibility that a "universal state" will develop gradually, perhaps by the end of the century. Gromyko Issued this statement: "Lord Home, as chairman of the next session of the Laos Conference has decided after consultation with Mr. Gromyko to convene the 14th plenary session on Monday June 12 at 11 a. m. "The United Kingdom and the Soviet co-chairmen have agreed to send a joint message to the International Control Commission which will be dispatched tomorrow.

The message reiterates the appeals of the co-chairmen to the parties in Laos on April 24 to cooperate with the ICC in effecting a control over a cease-fire." The three-nation ICC Is composed of India, as chairman; Canada and Poland. The commission la a neutral body charged with supervising the cease-fire. The Western powers have been urging the Soviets to send It new and stlffer instructions, so that it could move freely to prevent new fighting. A British spokesman, who gave out the Joint statement, said nothing about this effort. Apparently it was abandoned at Soviet insistence and with U.

S. approval On April 24 Britain and the Soviet Union appealed to the waning factions to halt their fighting. Such a cease-fire was a condition of the Western powers for-attending the conference. It was proclaimed on May 3, and on May 16 the conference started. But the cease-fire was not effective.

Repeated violations were reported, by both sides. Last Wednesday pro-Communist forces took an Important position at Padong from the army of the royal Laotian government. In protest, the Western delegation refused to allow a meeting of the conference to be held and said they would not attend again until they got satisfaction on the cease-fire. The British spokesman said there were certain developments on the ground which seemed to Indicate that the ICC Is operating on Its own Initiative. He refused to say what these developments were.

According to the latest report from the ICC, It was unable to move to trouble spots because pro-Communist forces said It would be difficult to guarantee the safety of truce teams. Earlier in the day, Gromyko declined during a 50-mlnute meeting with Lord Home to Join In the call. The agreement was reached In a telephone call. Lord Home had U. S.

Ambassador W. Averell Harrl-man and French delegate Jean Chauvel as dinner Generally fair, warm and humid with chance of a thundershower in afternoon or night Low 65. High near 89. DtUlU, MAP ON fM tt Tsltphini A I 2700 Page Abby 13 Amusements 43 Birthdays 25 Bridge 44 Business, Markets 8, 9 City Mirror 25 Classified 28-38 Columnists 8-7 Comics 44-45 Crossword 28 I STANLEY Parade Route for about 200 former members of the Volunteers for Nixon-Lodge. Elsenhower probably will leave Cincinnati tomorrow.

peace treaty with Communist East Germany. The Soviet proposal envisaged the Western forces getting out of Communist-encircled Berlin. This and other aspects of the Moscow plan were described by U. S. officials as similar to past Soviet proposals and to what Khrushchev told Kennedy orally.

The West has rejected these schemes before. ASKED WHETHER the latest Russian statement was unacceptable to the United States, Rusk said it should be obvious "that we don't agree with it." "That should be self-evident on its face," he added. When asked what the U. S. reply would be, and when, Rusk said, "anything involving Germany and Berlin is something that will have to be discussed with other governments." The Secretary of State indicated that Washington would go over the matter with the Western occupying powers France and Britain plus West Germany and a number of other free world governments as well.

Storm In Pacific May Be Violent MIAMI June 11 JP Stormy weather, possibly of hurricane intensity, formed along the southwest coast of Mexico, in the Pacific Ocean, and moved Inland near the town of Manzlnlllo, the U. 8. Weather Bureau reported today. Highest winds reported from the sparsely populated region were 45 miles an hour, Gilbert Clark, forecaster, said. An unidentified ship in the area said winds reached hurricane strength.

Communications are poor into the area. Clark said, and the extent of damage. If any, was not known immediately. JfU WASHINGTON, June 11 wi Secretary of State Dean Rusk said tonight it is "evident on Its face" that the United States does not agree with the new Soviet memo on Germany. Rusk declined to spell out at this time what the U.

S. response would be to the proposal which the Soviets handed to the United States following Premier Khrushchev's meeting with President Kennedy a week ago. The U. S. foreign affairs Trio Swept Over Niagara Falls; Believed Killed NIAGARA FALLS, June 11 Two women and a man in a motorboat were swept over Niagara Falls tonight as several tourists watched helplessly.

There was no sign of life in the maelstrom below the falls and no hope was held for their survivaL They were not identified Immediately. They went over within a few feet of the Ontario shore and either Jumped or fell from the boat before disappearing over the 162-foot falls. Witnesses described the boat as 14 to 16 feet long, powered by an outboard motor and named Pink Lady. It's Childish Says Famed Historian Of Race To Get On Moon NEW YORK, June 11 British historian Arnold J. Toynbee said tonight the race to reach the Moon Is "a childish competition." He said the money being poured Into rocket research by the United States and the Soviet Union could be used better to raise living standards on all parts of the earth.

Toynbee was interviewed on the "Meet the Press" television program (NBC). The historian also predicted somewhat hesitantly that there will be no Third World War. He said the only way to prevent it, however, would be by a mutual reduction of armaments. Toynbee was critical of the use the United States has made of Its production and material resources. "Most people work too hard to buy things they don't need," he said.

Toynbee said the great challenge to the West is to help the underdeveloped nations of Asia, Africa and Latin America "to get their RENT: A RED ROSE LANCASTER, Pa, June 11 (LTD The congregation of Zion Lutheran Church at nearby Manheim paid its annual rent today a single red rose. The presentation of the rose at the 68th annual Feast of Roses fulfilled the request in the church deed by Baron William StiegeL famed colonial ironmaster and glass maker, when he gave the congregation pay "one red rose in the month of June" to him and his heirs. C. S. Sen.

Burn D. Scott (R, Pa.) made the presentation to Mrs. Don Shettel of Harrisburg, representing the SUege! heirs. Page Deaths 26 Editorials 6 Foreign News 1 Radio-TV 20-21 Society News 14-15 Sports 37-41 Star 8 Suburban News 42 Women's 13-18, 22-23 Word Game 44 5-Star Page .42.

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