The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio (2024)

May 21, 1945 THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER Page 15 HIDING PLACE Of Loot Is Bared As Police Are Led To Farm In Kentucky. Jewelry Stolen In Bond Hill Burglaries Found On Mountainside. An escaped convict, whose alleged burglaries have been a plague to police of Cincinnati, Dayton, Ohio, and Philadelphia for two years, led Cincinnati detectives yesterday to a spot under an oak tree on a mountainside in Estill County, Kentucky, where he had buried jewelry worth approximately $2,000. Detective Sergeant Jacob Schott told Detective Chief Clem W. Merz that the recovered jewelry had been taken from Cincinnati and Dayton homes.

The suspect, under arrest because Sergeant Schott remembered a deep dent in his chin, as shown on a police circular sent from Philadelphia after a Philadelphia policeman was shot and wounded critically, is Theron King, 29, forof Harg, and King led Sergeant Schott and Detectives Millard Schath and Adolph Mezger to the mountainside two miles from his father's home in Harg. The officers said the jewels had been placed in a gallon can which had been buried six inches deep and covered with pine needles DETECTIVE IS PRAISED Detective Sgt. Jacob Schott was receiving congratulations from his superiors and fellow detectives yesterday for his excellent judgment in trailing Theron King, policeman-shooting burglary suspect. Sergeant Schott, driving his police automobile, recognized King from a poster sent out by Philadelphia police after the shooting of a policeman and trailed him to a rooming house on Highland Avenue. pistol and jewelry, some of which had been stolen from Cincinnati homes, were recovered in the room, King escaped from the State Reformatory at Mansfield, Ohio, three years ago, when servinng a one to 15 year term for a series of 40 burglaries in Dayton and Montgomery County, then scaled a wall with two other prisoners to escape from the La Grange, Reformatory in 1943 when serving a 10-year term for burglary in Lexington, Ky.

"I had nothing to lose," he said when asked why he shot Fabian Dailey, Philadelphia policeman, last April 3. He said he started shooting when the policeman asked for his draft card. He had no card. The suspect said that when he fled after shooting the policeman he left $20,000 in jewelry in the automobile in which he had been riding with two other men. He said he had lived in Chester, for more than 18 months, in which time he broke into numerous homes.

Captain Merz said Philadelphia and other Pennsylvania community officials had informed him that King was suspected of 350 burglaries. Philadelphia police immediately asked that King be turned over to them. said the disposition would decided upon later. Meanwhile King is to be questioned further. LOOT IS IDENTIFIED.

Part of the recovered jewelry already has been identfied by detectives as loot taken in Cincinnati burglaries. However, some of the stolen articles were not found. Sgt. C. Geralds Detective Robert G.

Reed, Dayton; Lt. H. H. Farler, Oakwood, Ohio, and Alan DeAngulo, Montgomery County investigator, who questioned King, said that part of the loot taken in 18 burglaries in Montgomery County were found yesterday in Kentucky. Sergeant Geralds said that a caliber pistol found in King's room was stolen from the home of Eugene S.

Hack, 726 Acorn Dayton. King had a loaded pistol inside his belt when Sergeant Schott, Lt. John Oman, Frank Harrison, Charles Auckerman, Henry Zimpleman and Schath seized him in his rooming house at 2625 Highland Mt. Auburn, Saturday night. Asked if he intended to shoot another policeman with the pistol, King said: "No.

I had that to commit suicide with, but you were too quick for me." The pistol was not the same one he used to shoot the Philadelphia patrolman, King said. STEALS AS POLICE WAIT. A $5 wristwatch King had in his pocket when arrested was identitied as the property of Virgil Kilburn, 3739 Woodburn whose home was ransacked Saturday night while police were waiting or King to return to his room. King said he broke, into another home Saturday but found nothing worth taking. No report of this offense has been made to police.

burglary suspect said he used the butt of the pistol to break windows in the homes he looted. The loot taken from the Cincinnati homes, most of which were in Bond Hill or Roselawn, was King is said to have admitted valued at $759.65. The homes looting were those of Edward Con-, roy, 1903 Adina C. T. Nearing, 1711 Greenview John Friedman, 705 E.

Mitchell Herman Krabbe, 1804 Catalina Howell McCuliough, 1810 MILITARY Cert SUPPLIES PATCHES. SERVICE RIBBONS and INSIGNIA FOr All Military Services EAGLE ARMY STORE 533 Main St. WarDept. Auth. AGPD-MON APPAREL MILITARY INSIGNIA COMPLETE LINE FOR OFFICERS AND ENLISTED MEN War Dept.

Authority-AG-095 ALBERT'S 125 E. Fifth St. Opposite Post Office Past. 26 Yrs. Open Sat.

TIll 9 P. M. wITH the MILITARY A Corporal Loses Life In Action In Italy; Never Saw Daughter Corp. Granville band of Mrs. 1824 Baymiller action in Italy Department has widow.

Corporal infantryman with He had been He leaves a Carol Ann, whom Two brothers are James Schoettle Broth brother-in-law, Donald is serving with Division in the Wearer of a tinguished Flying dential Citation, Grossheim, 15 returned from the ter to assume (instructor at Field. the heavy bomber Simon D. Katz, has been promoted the Fifth Air KATZ. the Air Forces in Maj. George E.

ton Crest is tologist officer Corps at Langley was a practicing cinnati before June, 1942. in Charles isbury has Star for heroism crawled through heavy enemy a wounded man. technician with Howard Third Reading, combat mission Force before V. Day, He is a nose turret gunner on a Liberaa tor bomber. He wears the Purple Heart with one cluster for flak wounds 1 he sustained in mis.

sions over Ferrara, Italy, and Vienna. He was out of action only three days on each occasion. Schoettle, husDelores Schoettle, was killed in May 2, the War informed his Schoettle was an the Fifth Army. overseas two years. 17-month-old daughter, he never saw.

overseas, Corp. in Germany, and Schoettle in Iran. A Sgt. Harold Wilson, the First Cavalry Philippines. Purple Heart, DisCross and Presi1st Lt.

Edward H. Sheehan has European theanew duties as an Dyersburg, will train crews. 3561 Bogart to Major with Force in the Philippines. He is group engineering officer with a. B-25 bomberunit.

A graduate of Hughes School and the University of Cincinnati, he was employed by the W. F. McConnell Engineering Co. before entering July, 1941. Clarke, 885 Clifserving as dermawith the Medical Field, Va.

He physician in Cinentering the Army in E. Stiles, 1119 Sal-, received the Bronze on Luzon. He an area under artillery fire to rescue He is a surgical the Sixth Division. L. Franks, 633 tallied his 50th with the 15th Air FRANKS.

Corp. Charles E. Durham, 325 Kilgour received honorable discharge last week at the Greenville, S. Army Air Base, under the regulation granting releases to men 42 years old. He will go to the Camp Atterbury, Separation Center before returning home.

Richard Stemshorn, 966 Windsor won five battle participation stars in service with the 438th Troop Carrier Group in the European theater. Pvt. Arnold W. Harris, 128 Maple Loveland, has recovered from wounds suffered at Aldenhoven, Germany, February 8. He has been from the 98th General Hospital, England, for return to duty with his engineers unit.

Philip G. Oenbrink, 21, son of Mr. Henry J. Oenbrink, 1404 Franklin recently was commissioned an Ensign after completing intermediate training as a Naval Aviator at the Pensacola, Naval Air Training Base, A graduate of Purcell High School, OENBRINK, Ensign Oenbrink was an apprentice at the Cincinnati Milling Machine Co. and a University of Cincinnati Evening College student before entering the service in June, 1943.

A twin brother, Henry Oenbrink, is attending the Naval Flight Panel School at La Guardia Field, New York. Another brother, Thomas, 18, is enrolled at the Merchant Marine Cadet Engineer School, San Mateo, Calif. Lt. Comdr. Charles A.

Castle, former assistant medical director of the Hamilton County Tuberculosis Sanatorium, has received a Bronze Star Medal from Adm. Harold E. Stark, commander of U.S. naval forces in Europe. According to the citation, he worked under repeated enemy fire at Cherbourg, Brest and LeHavre.

Commander Castle graduated from the University of Cincinnati in 1936. ins tle Star Carrier Front. Jerome Frank, 867 Hutchhas received his fifth Batfor participation in Troop sorties on the Western Harley L. Auble, Winton Road, has been promoted to Technical Sergeant at the 160th General Hospital in England, where he is noncommissioned officer in charge of the operating room, Loring K. Becker, 412 Carmalt has received an Oak Leaf Cluster to his Air Medal for meritorious achievement as aerial engineer on a C-47 of the Troop Carrier Command in France.

Electrician's Mate Gordon L. Bartlow, 725 Hermosa and Robert A. Parr, 5454 Rolston Norwood, served aboard a destroyer escort which patrolled the Nazi-occupied Channel Islands from D-Day in Normandy until the fall of Germany. Seaman Eugene Losh, 6307 Sierra served aboard a battle(ship in the shelling of Okinawa PISTOLS Flashed By Pair, Soldier Beaten At Inn, Officers Report. Covington Youth Fined And Sentenced--Companion's Hearing Tonight.

STUDIES STOLEN JEWELRY Theron King, suspected burglar for whom police of Philadelphia, Dayton, Ohio, and Cincinnati had been searching for two years, stared pensively as he sat at a table with jewelry which police recovered from a Kentucky mountainside yesterday. Detectives Frank Kammer and Crampton looked on as King tried to recall where he got the loot. The jewelry was buried in the can shown at the right of the display. Island Defenses Are Vital To Panama, Roberts Says Naval strength notwithstanding, this country must maintain a protective ring of island defenses on the approaches to the Panama Canal, Dave Roberts, Enquirer war correspondent and editorial writer, declared yesterday in an NBC World Front broadcast from Station WLW. Roberts returned recently from a 46,000 mile trip to Army bases and capitals from Chungking to Alaska.

A soldier in Paris when 1918 armistice was signed, The Enquirer correspondent was also present in the French capital when Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower announced V-Day. "The end of the war i in Europe," he said, "does not mean the end of food conservation in this country. We must realize that the more we can send abroad during Catalina Ave; Harrison Zeiher, 1836 Blackstone Jacob Horne, 1840 Blackstone Bernard A Wachendorf, 1817 Bluefield Louis Canter, 1711 Carrahan and John Ausdenmore, 1564 Elizabeth Pl.

The Dayton detectives said King was suspected of breaking into 18 homes in Montgomery County immediately after he fled from Philadelphia. King's mother lives in Dayton. NOTED PRIEST Dies At Holy Cross MonasteryRev. Jerome Reutermann Was Ill For Year. The Rev.

Jerome Reutermann, C. noted priest and missionary, died last night after a year's illness at Holy Cross Monastery, Mt. Adams, where he had been serving as a missionary for the last nine years. Father Reutermann was January 21, 1874, on Mt. Adams, to George and Adelaide Ahaus Reutermann.

Joining the Passionist Order May 31, 1890, he was ordained September 19, 1896, and was rector of Holy Cross Monastery from 1905 to 1908. He served a as Provincial of the Western Province from 1908 to 1914 and again from 1926 to 1928. In teh intervening years he held several other offices. He is survived by three sisters, Mrs. Harry J.

Duwell, 1117 Belvedere Mt. Adams; Mrs. Joseph Overberg, Covington, and Miss Rose Reutermann, 3531 Michigan Hyde Park, and several nieces and nephews. John Gilligan Son are in charge of funeral arrangements. MISS CATHERINE S.

DOYLE. The funeral of Miss Catherine S. Doyle, Treasurer of the R. J. Patton awning dealers, will be held tomorrow from the Gilligan funeral home, Woodburn and Lincoln Avenues, with Requiem High Mass at 9 a.

m. at St. Francis de Sales Church. Burial will be in St. Joseph's New Cemetery.

Miss Doyle, who had been associated with the awning concern for 37 years, died Saturday at her home, 3134 Durrell Avenue, following an illness of three weeks. She was 63 years old. A native Cincinnatian, she was a member of the Young Ladies Sodality of St. Xavier Church. She is survived by a sister, Miss Mary G.

Cincinnati, and four nephews, John and Bernard Doyle, Cincinnati; Capt. James Doyle, with the Seventh Army in Europe, and Sgt. Joseph Doyle, who was home on furlough the time of his aunt's death. JOHN J. GREEN.

Requiem High Mass for John J. Green, former sales representative for the Coca-Cola Bottling Works will be sung at 9 a. m. Wednesday at St. George Church, Calhoun St.

Burial will be in St. Joseph's New Cemetery. Mr. Green, who was 67 years old, died Saturday at Good Samaritan Hospital after 8 two-week illness. A ican War veteran, he employed Spanish by the company for 24 years, retiring seven years ago.

He lived at 39 W. McMillan St. A half-sister, Miss Elizabeth Williams, and an aunt, Miss Gussie Green, both of Cincinnati, survive him, BIRTHDAY A triple birthday, the return of a Navy pilot from the Pacific after 73 missions, and a baby that pilot is seeing for the first time, wil! make today a gala occasion in the Martz-O'Connell-Rohe household. Today is the birthday of Mrs. Augusta Martz, left in the photo, Mrs.

Marie O'Connell, standing next to her mother, and one-year old Susan Lynn Rohe, before the invasion by Marines and 10th Army troops. Two Cincinnati Wacs have won the to wear gold wreath of Meritorious so Service Award richter upon their sleeves. They are Pvt. Florence A. Carr, 3950 Eastern and Corp.

Ellen M. Hendrixson, 51 Burley Circle, Greenhills, both in the WAC section of the 1550th Service Command Unit, Ft. Knox, Ky. Three Cincinnatians have been graduated from the Aviation Machinist's Mate School at Memphis, Tenn, They are Dennis McBride, 3317 Milton Richard Maurice Leahr, 6211 Manuel and Camuel S. Wyly, 2626 Melrose Ave.

Metalsmith Huntley Robert Callan, 273 Craft is serving in a ship repair unit at the naval repair base at New Orleans. action in Italy May 2, the War Department has informed his widow, Corporal Schoettle was an infantryman with Fifth Army. had there been overseas two years. He 1 ve a 17- month- -old daughter, Carol Ann, whom he SCHOETTLE. SCHOETTLE.

never saw. Two brothers are overseas, Corp. James Schoettle in Germany, and Pvt. Donald Schoettle in Iran. A brother-in-law, Sgt.

Harold Wilson is serving with the First Cavalry Division in the Philippines. Musician Floyd O. Biddle, 5727 Peabody does double duty on a battleship in the Pacific. As a member of the band he entertainment programs arranges. crew when the ship returns from battle zones.

But, when the going tough and Jap planes zoom over, he passes ammunition to an antiaircraft gun crew. Aviation Radioman Charles M. McLaughlin, 3655 Burch has returned to the States after six months in the Pacific as radioman on a carrier-based torpedo bomber. He flew five combat missions over Luzon and six over Okinawa. Capt.

James O. Bradley, son of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Bradley, 1024 Gilsey stationed at the Grand Island, Army Air Field after nine months of service in the European theater.

He won a Distinguished Flying Cross and an Air Medal. Another an at the field is Lt. George E. Dalton, 2221 Madison a veteran of 13 months of service in the Aleutians. He wears an Air Medal.

For two days Pfc. Charles E. Edwards, 3522 Leland working with his signal unit, tried unsuccessfully to string a communications cable across the swift-flowing Pulangi River in Mindanao. Finally he solved the problem by ing the river hand over hand on 175 yards of ferry cable. Using two safety belts, he hoisted himself across with the communications lines in an hour and 15 minutes.

Aviation Cadet Richard J. Bomkamp, 3407 Brotherton has completed a course at the Navy's Pre-Flight School at Chapel Hill, N. C. He has been transferred to the naval air station at Bunker for primary flight training. Richard Lansing, 6278 Orchard Lane, has been promoted to Major in the Philippines.

Robert M. Muenich, 3813 Lansdodwne is a signal clerk on Negros Island in the Philippines. Corp. Frank B. Merkt, 36 Wuest was a volunteer member of a dismounted cavalry patrol which killed and captured 119 a nine-hour battle in the Philippines.

The mass annihilation of enemy troops was the largest single operation of the 40th Division's cavalrymen against the enemy. Three Cincinnati airmen, recently returned from duty in the European theater, are awaiting reassignment at the Miami Beach, redistribution station, They are George J. Giesken, 3294 Daytona veteran of 80 missions as a radio operator; Sgt. Robert FOR THREE OF FOUR held in the arms of her Navy father, Lt. (jg) Vincent W.

Rohe. Mrs. Rohe, Mrs. O'Connell's daughter, who has no birthday to celebrate, but plenty of other reasons to be happy, is the other woman in the photo. Lieutenant Rohe is on leave after more than a year in the Pacific as pilot of a B-24 bomber.

He met Susan Lynn for the first time upon his Momberg, 4121 Harding 15 missions as an armorer-gunner, and Corp. Aloysius J. Eicher, 2321 Langdon Farms aircraft Inechanic, John W. Eyles, 7719 Arlington A served for 10 months as a radio maintenance technician in European area, at the station. Robert J.

Minning, 3519 Cornell has been promoted to First Lieutenant at the Los Angeles post of embarkation, He has been on duty there with the Transportation Corps since July, 1944. Keith D. Fowler, Graves Ina dian Hill, has been promoted to First Lieutenant with a heavy bombardment squadron of the Seventh Air Force in the Palaus. A Liberator navigator, he has flown combat missions. He wears an Air Medal with an Oak Leaf Cluster.

Marine James C. Curry, 1911 Northcutt has returned from the Pacific area for furlough and reassignment. A radioman with a Fourth Marine Air Wing transport squadron, he was based in the Hawaiisn, St. Matthias and Marianas Islands. Three Cincinnati men flew with the "Jolly Roger" heavy bombardment group in the first mass daylight raid on Hong Kong from Fifth Air Force bases in the Philippines.

They were Sgt. Richard A. Murphy, 3073 Lt. Roger E. Patten, Madisonville, and Robert F.

Duffy, 2227 McGregor Pl. Lt. Edmond H. Niesen, 2775 Queen City has been graduated from the Army's School of Military Neuropsychiatry, Mason General Hospital, Brentwood, N. Y.

He attended Xavier University and the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. He interned at Good Samaritan Hospital. Second Lt. Louis C. Brizzolara, 8 Parkwood has arrived in the Philippines to serve as a pilot with a Liberator group of the Fifth Air Force.

YOUNG FLIER From Lexington, Uninjured When Plane Crashes Near Country Day School. A Lexington, student pilot came grief late yesterday when his plane crashed in a toe 1,500 feet from the athletic field of the Cincinnati Country Day School, Indian Hill. The youth, John Weldon Barker, 17, told Lt. Richard E. Valentiner of Indian Hills Rangers that he flew from Lexington to Lunken Airport, to the Day School grounds, where some of his friends were waiting.

When he took off again the plane, failing to gain altitude, barely missed several trees and crashed. The plane was badly damaged, but the youth escaped injury, Lieutenant Valentiner said, Four More Liberated News of the liberation of the following Cincinnati soldiers from German prisons reached their families yesterday: Second Lt. John P. Selmeier, husband of Mrs. Jeanne Selmeier, 1914 Crane B-17 pilot captured October 5, 1944.

Lt. James Yamazaki, 28, husband of Mrs. Aki Yamazaki, 740 Oak son of the Rev. and Mrs. John Yamazaki, Chicago, captured December 17, 1944.

Sgt. Loren H. Hicks, husband of Mrs. Lois Hicks, St. Pfc.

Marc C. Christopfel, son of Michael Christopfel, 2915 Lehman Rd. THREE MORE IN CIVIES. Three more Hamilton County soldiers were discharged yesterday from the Atterbury, Separation Center. The new civilians are Malvey L.

Pierson, 3112 W. Eighth X. Monahan, 1932 Greenley Norwood, and Vernon H. Young, 4909 Vine St. Bernard.

DOG RAVAGES COOP. Davis Heis, 424 Elstun Mt. Washington, reported to county police that a neighbor's dog got into his chicken coop and killed hens and 15 chicks worth $44.50. I GENERATIONS. return.

Before entering the service, he was an accountant for Albers Super Markets, Inc. He is a graduate of Western Hills High School. The Rohes reside at 3221 Stanhope Ave. Mrs. Martz, who has 25 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren, was the proprietor of the Martz Hotel at Ross, for many years.

She resides at 2803 Erie Ave. Her daughter, Mrs. O'Connell, resides at 3425 Michigan Ave. CINCINNATIANS In Kentucky Wreck In Which Estill County Man Is Killed -Hurts Are Suffered By Five Others. Winchester, May 20-(AP)Six persons were injured, one fatally, when an automobile in which they were riding no left the Winchester-Irvine Highway and overturned late today, county police reported.

Officers said P. B. McIntosh, 65, Estill County Kentucky, died in a hospital here an hour after the accident. His wife, 63, and Albert Chism, 62, were under treatment at Clark County Hospital here. Attendants said Mrs.

McIntosh suffered a broken right collarbone and cuts on her head, and Chism a wrenched back and broken right arm, Mrs. Fannie McIntosh, Winchester, daughter of Chism, was treated for cuts. Police said the driver of the car, James Arvin McIntosh, son of P. B. McIntosh, and his wife, of Cincinnati, also were treated.

McIntosh is survived by six other sons, Walter Burt McIntosh, Clark County; Floyd McIntosh and Howlard Benton McIntosh, Cincinnati; Pfc. W. J. McIntosh; Lloyd McIntosh and Andrew Clinton McIntosh, in the Armed Forces, and two other daughters, Mrs. Roy Horner, Norwood, Ohio, and Mrs.

Dean Moberly, Cincinnati. CITY IN BRIEF Garage Held Up-Leslie Postan. 1056 Wesley night attendant at the Hipp Garage, Ninth and was robbed of $58 land coupons good for 150 of gasoline by two thugs early yesterday. Postan said one of the men pressed a revolver against his head and said "I should blow your brains out." Two Slashed In Fight--James Philips, 26, 1605 Dana and Thomas McGuff, 27, 1808 Elm were treated at General Hosiptal early yesterday for injuries suffered, police said, in a fight at 1835 Vine St. Phillips was cut on his head and back.

McGuff was cut on his right hand. Rifled In Cafe-Mrs. Jean Dressler, 22, 2215 Kennilworth told police yesterday that $19 and a government allotment check of $52 were stolen from her purse Saturday night in a cafe at 2555 Vine Street. She gave the name of a suspect. ALLIED POLICY QUESTIONED.

4 New York, May 20-(AP)-Moscow commentators, calling for an end of "the dangerous political game" of dealing with the "Ersatz Doenitz government," questioned today why some Nazi war inals "have not been caught for some reason or other" by Anglo-American Military authorities. Soviet newspaper comment, transmitted by the Russian Tass News Agency, also reviewed the Allies' handling of the "Doenitz incident" and asked "how do they prepare to punish the Hitlerite criminals?" SEYSS-INQUART IN LONDON. London, May 21-(Monday)-(AP)-The Daily Mail said today that Arthur Seyss-Inquart, former Nazi High Commissioner in Holland, has been brought by plane to England for questioning. SeyssInquart, captured by the Canadian First Army, heads a list of war criminals compiled by the Dutch Government. The Daily Mail did not say where he was held or when he arrived.

HOSPITAL FETE AUGUST 26. Good Samaritan Hospital will hold its 18th annual Mardyale Garden Fete on the hospital grounds August 26, according to an announcement from the Board of Trustees. The fete will be in progtress from 11 a. m. to 11 p.

m. PET DUCKS STOLEN. Two pet ducks stolen yesterday from a pen in the rear of the home of John Cooper, Summit and Belleview Roads, Blue Ash, county police were informed. Acused of flashing pistols and assaulting a soldier at Flicker Inn, Taylors Creek, and firing a shot outside the Clarence E. Sears Nite Club, Miamitown, two youths were lodged in county jail last night.

The soldier was Pvt. Lawrence F. Ketterman, Sheed Road, Green Township, who was seated in Flicker Inn when, he said, he was assaulted by Earl Ashcraft, 19, 423 Covington. "After Ashcraft's pistol reportedly had been taken from him by his companion, Kimbler French, 21, Hamilton, Ohio, Ashcraft "dared" Ketterman to "fight it out" under Marqius of Queensburry rules outside, officers were told. Ketterman, who was wounded slightly when fighting in Germany, refused.

Acting upon a report that two inn, Elmer Deputy Elyouths were flashing, pistols at the mer Bowersox of County Police arrived on the scene a minutes after the party had left in an automobile. Having obtained the license number of the car, Janson and Bowersox, aided by Deputy Sheriffs Urban Ebert and Joseph Brechelt, trailed it to Miamitown, where Ashcraft, upon alighting, fired his pistol, which then was taken from him by Lieutenant Janson. Arraigned before Justice of the Peace Clifford Pahner, White Oak, Ashcraft waived a jury trial and demanded an immediate hearing. Magistrate Pahner obliged, penalizing Ashcraft $50 and costs and 30 days for discharging firearms, $100 and costs and six months for carrying concealed weapons, and $50 and costs and three months for assault and battery. Magistrate Pahner said he would try French at 7:30 p.

m. today at Cheviot Town Hall. Charges against French are disturbing the peace and assault and battery. The latter charge was filed by Harry Steiner, 338 Springdale who said French struck him at Flicker Inn a week ago. A Hamilton young woman, who was with youths, claimed ownership of the car in which they were riding.

County police, however, have taken charge of it until she proves ownership. the next months, the more quickly the world and our own economy can return to normal." Roberts pointed out that although every available inch of soil in Europe now is under cultivation, these crops will not mature for some time. "Food conservation in United States must be practiced as it has never been practiced before," he warned. Roberts cautioned against "fooling ourselves" on reports of Japanese peace feelers. "Perhaps in a year from now, when we have placed upon the lands and waters the Orient, armies and fleets of irresistable strength, Japan will be willing to sue for peace.

But before she will do that, Japan must be physically chastised still further. We must actually, portion complete of our the European transfer of and Atlantic battle strength," he said. MEN ABOUT TOWN Honored By Ohio K. Of M. Walsh, 4232 Mad Anthony was elected Warden of the Council of the Knights of Columbus yesterday at a meeting in Columbus.

An employee of the relief department of the Baltimore Ohio Railroad, Wash has been active in Knights of Columbus work for 20 years. He is a Past Grand Knight of North Side Council, K. and former District Deputy the Cincinnati Council. of Other officers elected at the meeting in Columbus V. J.

Paul, Cuyahoga Falls, State Denuty; T. E. Andrews, Marion, Secretary; Emmett Garrity, Cleveland, Advocate, and Paul R. Gruhler, Dayton, Treasurer. Fifty representatives of the nine councils in Cincinnati attended the state meeting.

Officer To Address EngineersCapt. T. Dickeman, Director, Base Department Charles. of the Navy's Bureau of Yards and Docks, is to give an illustrated talk on "Logistic Support of the Seabees" Thursday night at the Herman Schneider Memorial before the Engineering Society of Cincinnati. It will be the society's final program of the year.

Gus Schwartz Honored--In honor of August R. Schwartz, who is beginning his 13th year as its Secretary, Cincinnati Aerie 142, Fraternal Order of Eagles, will initiate a class of 500 candidates at 2 p. m. Sunday at Aerie Hall, 1117 Walnut St. M.

L. Brown, Springfield, Ohio, managing organizer of the Grand Aerie; John A. Abel, Kansas City, Grand Chief Auditor, and Robert Hansen, Milwaukee, Editor-inChief of the Eagle magazine, will be present to pay tribute to Schwartz. Research Society Officers--Dr. J.

C. Bova recently was elected President of the Cincinnati Chiropractic Research Society. Other new officers are Dr. Frank H. Burch, Vice President, and Dr.

David Shaw, Secretary-Treasurer. The following appointments have been made by Dr. Bova: Dr. A. R.

Keller, Chairman of research; Dr. H. R. Reaver, Chairman of legislation; William B. Schmees, Chairman of publicity, and Dr.

P. H. Keller, Chairman of the Chiropractic 50th Anniversary Convention. Hollister To Speak Todaymer Rep. John B.

Hollister is to address the Young Men's RepubClub at noon today at the lican, Sinton. He is to evaluate the job ahead of him as administrator of. the Dutch Branch of the United Nations Relief. Administration in its relation to the peace. War Films For Moose--A program of new war pictures will be shown tomorrow evening at a meeting of the Cincinnati Lodge of Moose, Henry E.

Dean, Governor, announced yesterday. Because of the realism of the movies, only members will be admitted, Dean said. JUST MATTER OF COURTESY. Minneapolis, May 20 (AP) A police car sped to a North Side home. Entering, the policemen found Mrs.

John Moore, 49-year-old invalid whose husband works on the night shift. Would they, she asked, please get her some tooth powder? They President Happy, Too, Thanks To Veteran New York, May Jake William Lindsey of Lucedale, 24, the 100th hero of World War II to win the Congressional Medal of Honor, was a little worried today when he learned that arrangements for President Truman's joint address to Congress tomorrow depended upon his arrival in the United States. Reaching La Guardia Field after a flight from Czech Lindsey was shown a newspaper story stating that President Truman would present the medal to him before the joint session of Congress. "Boy, that's something, holding the President," he exclaimed, "I'm sure glad I made it on time." CHILD HURT When Struck By Automobile On Covington Bridge--Newport Man Is Arrested. James David Kirby, three-yearold son of Mr.

and Mrs. James Kirby, 3589 Wilson was ininjured, by critically an late automobile yesterday on Banklick Creek Bridge near 47th Street and Decoursey Avenue, Covington. The automobile was driven, police said, by Edward Enslen, 32, 912 Orchard Newport, who was arrested on charges of reckless driving and assault with an automobile. Police said the child, with his parents, was walking across the bridge at the time of the accident. After striking the boy the car skidded against the side of the bridge, carooned across the structure and crashed against the opposite side.

A paser-by took the injured boy to St. Elizabeth Hospital. TRAINEES DUE TOMORROW. Service officer trainees of 'the Disabled American Veterans are to arrive in Cincinnati tomorrow for a final week of training at DAV national headquarters before being assigned to veterans' facilities in various parts of the counof study at the Univertry. They have completed, a course sity, Washington, D.

C. TO COPY U. S. FEATURES. San Francisco, May 20-(UP)When White Russia's cities-ravaged by the Germans and also by the Soviet "scorched earth" policy -are rebuilt, they will incorporate the best features of American architecture, but without skyscrapers, George Baidakov of the Belorussian delegation said tonight.

For Ladies and Men BILLFOLDS 970 to $10 Plus Federal TAI Your Name In Gold Free to $10 REMEMBER HIM WITH A NEW PIPE We'll Pick A Shape To Suit You KNOW PIPES -DON'T SELL THEM JUST AS A SIDE LINE HORWITZ VINE ST. AT SEVENTH.

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