The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio (2024)

to ward. eryday, anymore, Miss visit the Elma Booth but her lady Van Hospital in heart Pinkies Dyke the is very doesn't makes there children's much the get ev- For She's "pinkies" for the youngsters confined at the Salvation Army institution, and since she took over the task in 1967 she has put together 2365. And she is still working at the task. A visitor to her apartment at the Old Ladies Home, Seventh and Garrard, Covington, can see her handiwork before the puppets are picked up for distribution to the children. A sewing machine sits by the window where the light is good.

Pink yard goods are at the ready on nearby chairs and a table. And the doll's head of them are stored nearby. As a member of the Booth Women's Auxiliary she visited the hospital to join friends in a sewing bee. But more recently she decided to do her work in her own quarters. She's enthusiastic about her work, and quotes doctors as reporting that the tiny puppets, which fit over a child's hand, makes for good therapy.

It gets youngster's mind away from an illness or ailment and It supplies entertainment for other little patients. "pinkies" are actually known nation Back in 1957 the auxillary of Cottage Hospital, Santa Barbara, developed the tiny toy and it won a citation from the American Hospital Association. In this area, the famed Ruth CASHIER Thoroughbreds At The Track Women Rime 'n' Reason By Alice Kennelly Roberts HAPPY 40th WEDDING ANNIVERSARY, Mr. Mrs. Milton Waldenmeyer (1129 Orchard Newport, Ky.

married Sept. 8, 1930) For folks who like to barbecue Have picnics; sometimes fish For those who like the great outdoors 4 We have a 'special wish We hope that many happy years will be allotted you. To thrill to Nature's every mood And love it as you do. To take your beagle, "Dutchess" And enjoy retirement's hours To see the beauty of God's hills The forests, streams, and flowers To know that in His handiwork There is a strength each day Which lingers with you through the years And will forever stay. IF WINNING SMILES indicate winning tickets, these members of the Junior Board for Crippled Children just struck it rich.

They are, left to right, Mrs. Paul Becker, Mrs. Thomas Noll and Mrs. Stanley Meihaus, junior board members of the sponsoring group for "A Day at the Races" set for Saturday at Latonia Race Course. Thoroughbreds will be on the track, and proceeds will benefit Opportunity School for Crippled Children, 212 Levassor Covington.

Mrs. Charles W. Fedders I11, general chairman of the day, states that racing tickets are available at the above address, but that reservations are closed for the buffet dinner to follow at Summit Hills Country Club. Kentucky Deaths And Funerals A funeral Mass will be at 10 a. m.

Thursday at the Blessed Sacrament Church, Ft. Mitchell, for MRS. CATHERINE (KATE) KENNEDY, 85, 2431 Dixie Ft. Mitchell, who died Sunday at her residence. Mrs.

Kennedy, whose husband, John Kennedy, Ft. Mitchell plumbing owner who died in 1965, is survived by six sons, Owen, William and Thomas Kennedy, all of Ft. Mitchell; John Ludlow; Robert, Ft. Thomas, and James Kennedy, Erlanger; four daughters, Mrs. Catherine Bain, Erlanger; Mrs.

Mary Kruetzkamp, Mrs. Ellen Meihaus and Miss Ruth Kennedy, all of Mt. Mitchell, and a brother, William Ziegler, Ludlow. Visitation, from 4 to 9 p. m.

Wednesday in the Middendorf Funeral Home, 917 Main Covington. Burial, in the St. Mary Cemetery. TERRY LANE SNOW, 24, RR 2 Dry Ridge, died Sunday at his residence, following several months of illness. He is survived by his wife, Mrs.

Rita Jackson Snow; a son, Terry at home; his father, Earl Snow, Lexington; his mother, Mrs. Clarice Cheak, Georgetown; three half-brothers, and three half-sisters. Mr. Snow was a veteran of the army, having served in Vietnam. Services will be at 2 p.m.

Wednesday in the Elliston-Stanley Funeral Home, Williamstown. Burial, in the Hill Crest Cemetery, Dry Ridge. Visitation, after 2 p.m. today. MRS.

MARIE F. HULL DELLER, 59, 305 Ward Bellevue, died Monday at the Booth Hospital. Surviving her are her husband, Walter K. Deller; a son, Kim Deller, Bromley; daughters, Mrs. Kay Hill, Latonia, and Miss Kori Deller, Highland Heights; a brother, Edward Hull, Dayton, and a sister, Miss June Hull, Dayton.

Services will be Wednesday at the convenience of the family. There will be no visitation. The Dobbling Funeral Home, Bellevue, is in charge of arrangements. ERVIN MIDDLETON, 68, RR 1, Walton, died Sunday at the St. Elizabeth Hospital.

He is survived by two sons, Clyde, Walton, and William F. Middleton, Owenton; four daughters, Mrs. Betty Wyatt, Walton, and Mrs. Bonnie Klette, both of Covington, and Mrs. Beverly Cobb and Mrs.

Mary Ann Bertram, Hidalgo; two brothers, Fred Middleton, Dry Ridge, and Dewey Middleton, DeMossville. Services will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday in the Allison and Rose Funeral Home, Covington. Visitation, from 4 to 9 p.m. today.

Burial, in the Williamstown Cemetery. MRS. BERTHA H. RUDE, 80, died Sunday at the Rosedale Manor, Latonia. There are no immediate survivors.

Services will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Allison and Rose Funeral Home. Visitation, from 4 to 9 p. m. today.

Burial, in the Highland Cemetery. Tots Total Over 2000 THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER Tuesday, September 8, 1970 especially GEORGE HENRY STARKS, 47, 17 Lavasser Covington, died Sunday at his residence after a long illness. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Helen Kendall Starks; two sons, Rommie and George Starks, and a daughter, Rebecca, Starks, all at home. Services will be at 1 p.

Wednesday in the Allison and Funeral Home, "Rose Covington. Visitation, from 4 to 9 p.m. today. Burial in the Highland Cemetery. The Latonia Lodge 746, will meet for services at 7:30 p.

m. today. CHARLES E. RANKIN, 83, 264 W. Water Flemingsburg, died Sunday at the Fleming County Hospital.

He was chairman of the board the Farmers Deposit of Flemingsburg, a member of the board of trustees of Asbury College, and formerly was on the board of the Good Samaritan Hospital, Lexington. He is survived by two daughters, Miss Ruth Rankin, Richmond, and Mrs. Gerte Cannon, Glennville; two sisters, Mrs. Ruth Flemingsburg, and Mrs. Tom McKee, Hillsboro, and a brother, E.

C. Rankin, Flemingsburg. Services will be at 3 p.m. Wednesday in the Denton Funeral Home, Flemingsburg. Visitation, until the hour of services.

Burial, in the Fleming County, Cemetery. The family requests any memorials be made as contributions to the Methodist Childrens Home, Memorial Fund, Flemingsburg. Swimmer Rushed To Hospital Mrs. Joanne Hagar, 36, 623 Church Ludlow, was listed in critical condition in Booth Hospital Monday night after being rushed earlier from the LudlowBromley Swim Club, Stokesay and Sand Bank Rds. Ludlow police said that an emergency squad was called to the swim club about 4:25 p.

m. after Mrs. Hagar left the water, and complained of being Hospital officials said it had not been determined if Mrs. Hagar's condition was the result of a near drowning, or another type illness. I-64 Plans Told ASHLAND (AP) Highway Commissioenr B.

E. King said that contracts for completion of I-64 in Boyd and Carter counties will be let this year. King also announced that the four will of U. S. 60 from Ashland I-64 be completed by next summer, but he added there are no plans to keep 60 open to any but local traffic during the period.

Following completion of the 60 project, King said, work on 23 through Ashland will begin. Bickel ACTION Dial 241-8005 LINE Bick's ACTION LINE gets tape, stands up for your rights! Dial Monday through Friday, or write, to Bick's ACTION LINE, The Cincinnati, Ohio 45201. THE MAN next door built a patio with a railing next to our driveway. We park our car in the driveway and the grease and everything pops up. If he puts a lot of charlighter fluid on his grill, it might throw a spark in our car.

G. Globe Avenue. Tell you what -why don't you clean the grease and everything from your driveway. That ought to take care of your problem! WOULD LIKE to know where I could get tickets for the college football double-header to be played at the Stadium September 19. How much will they cost? A.

Covington. Pasteboards go for $4.25, $5.25, $6.25, plus postage, obtainable from the Athletic Departments of the four schools. MY DAUGHTER took her car to the dealer to have the air conditioner repaired The bill was $44; they were supposed to call her if it was a major expense They left on their vacation and the air conditioner went out compressor was weak. When they returned the dealer shop said it would be about $75 more to fix it. The $44 worth of work was to find out if the compressor was weak? MRS.

J. D. Got hold of the service manager, who said you had good reason to doubt their word, since notation wasn't made on the bill that the compressor was weak. Said they would install a new one and credit the 44 bucks against the cost. Nice, what? THERE'S ONLY one street light on Fontainbleau between Winton Road and the high school, in Springfield Township.

I would like to know if anything can be done. there just aren't enough lights. F. W. C.

Sir, there are four street lights along that stretch of Fontainbleau, but, says Charles 0. Helwig, Springfield Township trustees chairman, power will be increased from 2500 lumen each to 7000, in- answers, solves problems, cuts red 241-8005 between 5 and 8 p. m. GIVING NAME AND ADDRESS, Cincinnati Enquirer, 617 Vine GEl desolate Lyons Fund picked up the idea and hospitals receiving money from that source co in the sewing and dis distribution venture. Miss Van Dyke also has other interests, her church, the First Methodist of Covington, and she sews MISS VAN DYKE "wears" a pinkie she just made aprons and other fancy items for the church bazaar.

She formerly held offices in her church groups but, as she put it, "not at present." However, her influence is felt and her good works seen at both Booth Hospital and at First Methodist. Fashions For Football Is Theme FASHIONS FOR BENGAL BOOSTERS will be featured when the Erlanger Junior Women's Club holds its dessert fashion show at 7 p. September 29, at the Lookout House. Mrs. Joseph Parker, below center, co-chairman of the event with Mrs.

Donald Thomas, is aided in the filling favor baggies by Mrs. James Collins, left, and Mrs. John Binzer, right. Costumes will be from the Village Hut, Ft. Mitchell; shoes and accessories from Mr.

Jim's Shoes, and Miss Rita's Casa del Wigs will style hairpiece to suit each outfit. Reservations are being taken by Mrs. Binzer and Mrs. Richard Schafstall. Road Toll 12 For Holiday ET CETERA By Associated Press Three persons were killed on Kentucky highways Monday, boosting the Labor Day weekend traffic toll to 12 in the state.

Rita Forgey, 19, a Georgetown College student from Columbus, was killed when the car in which she was riding went out of control on US 460 and struck a utility pole about six miles west of Georgetown. In another one-vehicle accident, George F. Head, 26, Owensboro, died when the truck he was driving struck a tree in Daviess County nine miles south of Owensboro. Clifton Lexington, was killed as he returned home from a hunting excursion and his car collided headon with a truck on US 60 about one mile north of Lexington. The deaths moved the 1970 Kentucky traffic toll to 671, compared with 741 through September 7 last year.

Few delays despite heavy traffic were reported on highways and turnpikes in Kentucky Monday night as the Labor Day weekend drew to a close. A. three-to-four mile backup in traffic on northbound I-75 over the Ohio River in the late afternoon was causing delays of 10-15 minutes, but cleared up within an hour, State Police reported. Other temporary delays were reported at the intersections of Interstate 75 and US 27, I-75 east-bound off I-64, and at the Shepherdsville toll plaza. Traffic on the toll roads in the state peaked about 5 p.

m. EDT, and continued to move smoothly through the early evening. The Kentucky Turnpike reported 2400 cars hourly northbound during the early evening hours, while the Western Kentucky Parkway east-bound and the Mottedaless than Parkway 500 est hour. re- Alexandria Fair Attendance 29,076 The 114th Alexander fair wound up Monday night with the attendance of 8234 making it the second largest attended fair in history of the Campbell County exposition. Four day attendance was 29,076.

It was a few hundred behind the 1961 fair attendance, and fair officials believed a record would have been set if it were not for rain Friday. Top attractions Monday were a dune buggy show and the horse show championships. Among horse show winners were: Jeff Hessler of Washington, on Dean," in the roadster class, and Billy Calvert, of Flemingsburg, riding "Highway Patrol" in the pony class. cluding one at the corner of Peachblossom. That should throw light on the problem! THIS WEED FIELD at Silliman Drive, by the Alexandria Cemetery, is snakey and we cannot see the road good.

The people should be made to cut it every year I don't feel like I want my place polluted with snakes. H. Alexandria, Ky. They're as bad as the snakes that come out of the bottle! Mayor John Nueslein of Alexandria doesn't like high weeds, either. He contacted the owner (who lives out of town), who thought the weeds had been cut.

However, all's well now and, says Mayor Hueslein, "thanks to the citizen who noticed this situation; we are ever striving to keep Alexandria a cleaner place in which to live and work vacant lots with high weeds do not help." AT OUR RANCH on Galbraith Road we do nothing else every day than gather empty bottles, cardboard "boxes from fried chicken and similar stuff Would it be possible to place at various places along the street signs with Litter- Violators Will Be Fined When Captured!" C. N. A. Well- not in those exact words. But Col.

Kent W. Rollins, county engineer, has erected signs designed to discourage littering and dumping. SOUNDING OFF r. Bick, now that the leaf-falling time is upon us, please print in your paper about leaves falling in other people's yards. My neighbor is complaining about leaves falling in her yard from our tree.

I had the tree trimmed in early spring. She rakes them up and throws them over the fence in our yard. "There is no compliant all summer, when she enjoys the shade. We get their leaves, too. Thank you.

MRS. R. Bond Hill. The Weather. Jaycees Treat Children The Covington-Kenton County Jaycees recently played host to disadvantaged youngsters, taking 20 children on a tour of The Enquirer, an outing to Coney Island and a night at Riverfront Stadium.

The Kenton County Welfare Department co-operated in the project. Sight Saving Month September is annual Sight Saving Month for the Kentucky Society for the Prevention of Blindness. Concurrent with the society's educational campaign will be a drive for funds to support such activities as pre-school vision screenings, public clinics to find early cases of glaucoma and promotion of safety eye wear in industry and laboratories. Police Pistol Shoot The Ft. Thomas police department has invited all Northern Kentucky police officers to take part in a pistol shoot from 9:30 a.

m. to 4:30 p. m. September 15 and 16 at the Tri 1 City Gun Club Range, Rifle Range Road western Campbell County. Clyde Graven, special agent for the FBI, will be the instructor.

Officers interested in the shoot are to contact Ft. Thomas police for further information. Joins Goodwill Center David H. Jackson has been appointed a work evaluator at the Northern Kentucky Goodwill Rehabilitation Center, Covington. Jackson holds a masters degree in political science.

He has taught at Prestonsburg Community College and has been a social worker in Los Angeles, Calif. Man, 65, Held After Stewardess Told Of 'Bomb' LOUISVILLE -A 65-year-old passenger on an American Airlines 727 Jet was arrested by the FBI Monday after reportedly telling a stewardess that he was carrying a bomb. A search of the man, John Krushenski of Brooklyn, N. and his baggage failed to reveal any bomb. He was arraigned before U.

S. Commissioner Glenn L. Schilling on a charge of interferring with crew members, and was held in Jefferson County Jail under $500 bond pending a hearing later this week. The jet, flight 247, was scheduled from New York to Los Angeles, with a stop in Louisville and was not delayed by incident. The captain of the flight, Lee Pisel, said Krushenski was not belligerent and permitted a search of his person.

60 Data From U.S. WEATHER BUREAU ESSA 60 70 70 COLD WARM 80 Rain 80 90 90 Showers ($1881 FORECAST Figures Show High Temperatures Expected For Daytime Tuesday Isoleted Precipitation Not Indicated Consult Local Forecast Showers will occur Tuesday in a band from the Great Lakes to the Gulf Coast. Showers also are forecast in parts of Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Arkansas and Missouri. Showers can also be expected in parts of Montana, Wyoming, South Dakota, Nebraska, Nevada, Oregon and Idaho. Local Forecast, Today will be humid and warm tures will cool to around 70 tonight.

will be a chance of rain High will be in the upper 80s. Cincinnati Weather Bureau record for September 7. Temp. Prec. 7:00 a.

m. 71 .01 7:00 p. m. 80 0 Sunrise 7:12 a. m.

Sunset 8:00 p. m. Records with a high in the 90s. TemperaRain probability is There Wednesday with continued humidity. 1970 '69 '68 Nml.

Highest Temp. 87 82 80 83 Lowest Temp. 70 66 54 60 Precipitation .01 .19 0 .09 River at 7 p. m. 26 feet, stationary.

Tri-State Forecasts OHIO -Variable cloudiness today with a chance of showers or thundershowers. Warmer and more humid today, highs in the 80s and low 90s. upper KENTUCKY-Today, partly cloudy with chance for thundershowers west and north portions with continued upper 80s and low 90s. warm. Highs today -Mostly cloudy continued warm and humid with chance of showers and thunderstorms today.

High 84 to 90 80s ot mid 90s north and upper south. Temperatures In Foreign Cities Aberdeen Geneva Acapulco Hong Kona Amsterdam Kingston Athens Lisbon Auckland London Berlin 63 Madrid Bogota Mexico City Brussels Moscow Buenos Aires New Delhi Copenhagen Paris (C-Clear; CY-Cloudy: PC-Partly Cloudy; PE 2881 Rio Rome de Janeiro 88 Sydney 70 Sofia Stockholm Saigon 000802 Tel Aviv Tokyo Vienna Warsaw F-Foggy: R-Rain: H-Haze; T-Trace) Temperatures Throughout North America Albany 73 46 Albuquerque 74 45 Atlanta CY 84 49 Bismarck Boise 74 Boston Buffalo Charlotte Chicago 89 Cleveland 84 Columbus Dayton Denver Des Moines Detroit Fairbanks Fort Worth Helena Honolulu Indianapolis Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City Los Angeles 000802 75 Louisville 85 Memphis 94 Miami 87 Milwaukee 88 .76 Minneapolis-St. Paul New Orleans New York Oklahoma City 100 Omaha Phoenix Philadelphia 83 Pittsburgh Portland, Maine Portland, Oreg. Rapid City Richmond St. Louis Salt Lake City San Diego San Francisco Seattle Tampa .05 Traverse City Winnipeg Washington 0g .01 .62 84:.

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