Article clipped from Cincinnati Times Star

-w. -'ipnv . iippwinCINCINNATIVOL. 101—«0. *05 djul*Associated Press Wlrephotos WEATHER—Increulnt cloudiness today and tonight, followed probably by light rain tonight; tow 35-J3*; Tuesday rainKOITDAT, Dionm St, X05TAsaodatad Praia HewsThirty-eight P»g«a SflcCINCINNATIAN HELD IN MURDEROFFICIALS BLASTED BY JUDGE IN IRONTON CASEUC Student Is Killed in Auto Crash«rCourt Suits Waived as Publishers and Pressmen Sign New Five-Year ContractAccident Occurs at Oil City, Pa., Soon After Arrival TTiere. *A Universltyof Cincinnati pre-medical student was de»d Monday, as the result'tof an automobile accident only a lew hours after he arrived home at Oil City, Pa., for the Christmas holidays. At Richmond, Ind., funeral services were completed for the wife of a Ctn-j cinnati man. She was killed in: in automobile accident near Richmond iate Friday.The tTC student, James V. Petul-la, 22, a sophomore in the Liberal Arts College, was killed Sunday when an automobile in which he was a passenger, skidded and over-) turned on a slippery road, accord-i ing to the Associated Press. His two companions, unidentified in the dispatch, were injured slightly.1Kenneth T. Wilbur, who residedIn the Men’s Dormitory, 3035 Clifton Avenue, with Petulla, said thelatter -and Joe Quinn, a student also from Oil City, left the campus Friday for a Christmas holiday at home.A Navy veteran, Petulla was un-‘j married and was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Petulls.Victim of the Richmond accident1 was Mrs. Carrie McGeorge. Authorities said the husband, CIo-1 cus McGeorge, has been residing on Fourth Street, Cincinnati. Rich-; mond authorities were unable to supply a more detailed address. 'Services for.Mrs. McGeorge will be held Tuesday at 11 a. m. In the Jones A Plackehnm# RirhmnnH Kho willShown signing a five-year renewal of their 41-yfear-old arbitration agreement are officials of the International Printing Pressmen and Assistants’ Union of North America and the American Newspaper Publishers’ Association Monday at the Neiherland Plata. Standing, left to right, are Charles V. Ernest, vice president of the union, and Col.. Lewis B. Rock, Dayton publisher. Seated are William H. McHugh, secretary-treasurer, and MaJ. George L. Berry, president of the union, and George N* Dale, chairman of the committee which repreeented the ANPA—Times-Star Photo.Court to Get NLRB Case Against ITUPrinters Refuse to Produce Subpoenaed Records at Hearing*WASHINGTON, Dec. 22—m—SJtil $20,000Fire Routs Six In SuburbSlave Ring to Operate.U. S. District JMfe John H.blaroffTlaw en-Druffel Monday foreement officials who permit the existence of houses of prostitution in their communities after he sentenced five men and a women who pleaded guilty to violating the Mann act LastThe AFL International Typo-[Thursday the Federal grand graphical Union today refused to jury indicted 17 persons as the produce records subpoenaed in the result of the Federal Bureau of Taft-Hartley Act case brought Investigation’s pfobe of an Iron-against the union by the American ton (O.) white slave ring. lt;™ Newspaper Publishers Association, Sneaking to Assistant U. S. At-JP* thereby tossing the proceeding into torn7y wiflism J. Dimmarell, thel*Extra Companies Join in Fighting Blaxe Monument' Company*Self-Styled Auto Salesman “Best Suspect,” Columbus Police Say. ‘the court [court asked whether these condi-Allen Sinsheimer, attorney rep- uons could exist if state, county resenting Robert N. DenhanL gen- and city officials charged with en-eral counsel of the NationaiLabor foreement of the law, did not tol-Rejations Board, announced the arate them.A spectacular fire routed the owner and five employes and resulted in estimated damage between $15,000 and #20,000, at the Beeco Granite A Marble Co., monument dealers, 3001 Spring rove A*enue, CumminsviUe, onday shortly before noon.The blaze destroyed a one-story frsme building, 60 by 30 feet, adjoining the display roomand office ! of the firmA 28-year-old Cincinnati self- , styled automobile salesman Monday waa called “the best g| suspect yet” by the Columbus detective chief in the Investigation of the Dec. 10 slaying of a crippled real estate dealer at the state Capitol.Louis Sehaefer, 14 Glen Este Place, Avondale, who returned voluntarily to Columbus for questioning, was named in open charges of burglary and larceny by Columbus Detective Chief Glenn C. Hoffman.Hoffman commented that **12 I haven’t got the right man. then I’ve never had a right man.Denham office would go into alt; “Doesn't the fact that such Federal District Court for en- state law existsJ■XgSrtthM thl ^SarSSnSTSonforeement of the subpoenaes dir 1 only way these condition* can behUL i*I7lv*1 to combat the fire £*,26,*5? t!'eKTTU2orl ****'*• .th« permitted to continue Is that them* which was rapldljr on a bridge irecords at NLRB hearings. people are paying off city off!- throughout the structure. on nonage iSf-Jw,*r' •lt;•)lt;»»«• IcUto who *re In ch.r«. ol the1 sui^cS! Si ISSutami“S ?■ lt;■ fhl- enforcement ol th. low? Jud,e LT r,2)^7'™ ^ i SSThey wUi be resumed at Druffel asked that time whether or not the courts have acted on the subpoenaesRoad, Cleves, die owner; hisDammareU then replied that the Alcorn f ’23^2^“Government wasn’t through with | _He added that all circumstance*Tire Marthal JRlchard Spelman warranted holding him In jnvestj-- - - * ^ — tion of the murder of Elmo C.whose body, punctured bullet wounds, was found bridge after he had gone tor a prospective buyer automobile.THREE ADDRESSESSchaefer, who Columbus policeBefore the adjournment, how- this investigation” He would noti^^ ^^*^ Henrv ’ Smfth mobiks^houW^ ecer, Trial Examiner ArthurLeff comenr further on his statement.|-bout the time Rice was killed,reinstated a charge of slowdowns against the printers. The - JUST AS GUILTY * Rein, Cherry Street,Denham office has asked permit- The court then continued; “It «sc*p«lt;l injury. jsion to amend its complaint to seems to me that any public official The. elder O Connor, who esti-Include the charge. who takes money to protect this mated the damage, reported theLeff’% ruling on the sipw-down kind of traffic Is just as guilty as Jr® started In me engine room of charge was made over the objec-j these people who have been sen- .thetlons of Gerhard Van Arkel, coun-1 tenced here this morning. I can't ’contained considerable stock scl for the unionNorthsidc, addresses, ones - inandMarking of Papers InOfficials of the International Printing Pressmen’s Union and the American Newspaper Publishers' Association Monday signed a five-year renewal of thkir 40-Van Arkel also accused the five-man NLRB of discourtesy” and thoroughly rude treatment because it overruled Leff last week and restored to the official complaint a charge that the union refused to bargain in good fa|th.and Pittsburgh in addi-to the one at Cincinnati, where he lived with his father, Charles F. Schaefer.Cincinnati police were asked to search for the weapon when Schaefer told Columbus police that he a .32-caliber revolver.understand why, I? they have equipment. Heat cracked a num-been taking money, they shouldiber of monuments, inclinding one . .be permitted to hold their po*i-'»f *n angel valued at $2,500 and Newsmen were refused permission lions and go around and mingle stored in the building, he said, -to talk to the suspect in custody at with respectable people, because Only pdrtions of the walls re- Columbus.they are just as guilty—and more mained after the fire waa extin- His father termed his son men-* defendants. guished. „Marshal Spelman said the fire started when oily rags were ignitedso—than these defendants.* (Continued on Page SO, Col. S)telly ill” and said he had always imagined himself an automobile dealer, but never so far as 1 know.
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Cincinnati Times Star

Cincinnati, Ohio, US

Mon, Dec 22, 1947

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Cincinnati A.

OH, USA 30 Apr 2024

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