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News-Journal from Mansfield, Ohio • 3
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News-Journal from Mansfield, Ohio • 3

Publication:
News-Journali
Location:
Mansfield, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

.0 .6 I Sunday, April 18, 1982 News Journal, Mansfield, O. Page 3 -A Police seize weapons, ammunition ster Defense Association leaders in a raid on the UDA's fortified headquarters in the Protestant stronghold of East Belfast. i itanic Survivor's ashes scattered at site where his father died BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) Police seized "a number of weapons and a substantial quantity of ammunition" and arrested five Ul OPEN 1- ece OPEN dbOd SUNDAY 0 SUNDAY ri -COUPON ,1., 1 ENTIRF $4.99 ti S599 STOCK 1 1 i LINEN WEAVES -A Open moN. 714134- 4 DAYS 1 ONLY, 14-: Iserff ril ti9 thru All 0 -i COUPON 14 't, 1. PON zi, 1 t9 co rni ipnQ rAnnir 4 DAYS 1 i tf.

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"My father said to me, 'So long, Frank le, I'll see you later." Goldsmith told a News Journal reporter in 1974. "I never saw him again." About 15 minutes after young Frankie and his mother had departed the Titanic, they heard explosion aboard as water hit the ship's boiler compartment. Part of the Titanic broke off and sank. The stern portion raised up in the air with the propellers and rudders Jutting out and hung there for several minutes. Some survivors thought it might remain stable there.

But it slipped below the surface with a near-silent whoosh. Emily Goldsmith pressed her son against her so he would not see what was happening. Goldsmith and his mother were among 790 survivors, mostly women and children, put aboard the Carpathia. Some 1,500 others died, including his father, a 16-year-old English boy the Goldsmith family was chaperoning on the voyage and an adult friend of the family. He and his seamstress mother went on to New York, where they were housed temporarily by the Salvation Amry, then sent on to meet relatives in Detroit.

PRINTe-S'AP -1 ri 1 -I '1 I e'er 7 I 1-, HO bl Ilt-Itt el 34 iltEfiS 04 MCI 1 it I sittl'ICUSI 69 a A it "Fa bric Pac.kages, Fabric Packages I HARDANGER SIDDSIRS -0 i 1 iv-vpIts I s'11116 SI 69 94 's )6 act II 1 710 1 SI 69 I I t. I coo 1 Igg 7p- gTz's'z -ILK LK SILK SILK tl $9.99 to $29.99 v. COUPON ULTRA SUEDE ZVI7111-, It REG ir? S45. I) i slu REG. td3.99 PRE CUT, SEW-IN INTERFACING soil 6 YD.

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lik, tl- S45. imc, 0 Int) l'i Asla MIR 1 i 7 it: mi 4 GABARDINE Z- I 41 'i 3.99 Sloffl 4 113) 4 trl 111. I 416,7 Eg.7'...K- COUPON ''-'1. PRE CUT, SEW-IN INTERFACING 4 I 4 v-4111 ---11----Aoh, sing :,1 fKG. NOP 1,8:6 102 ONLY A a alt I i 1 1 1 I 1 On! .1 i Frank Goldsmith and his mother, Emily, shortly after they were rescued from the Titantic in 1912, and Goldsmith 60 years later when he owned Mansfield Photo Supplies in Mansfield her crying on the day his mother 1:1 REG.

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It 1 io'', 2.99 -41Ftowili 1 COUPON '--77-' ENTI FE S2 99 STOCK COTTON PRINTSA! IE IDE ,5 4040N 'IV 0 lc. caTigNs ALM 7CAT COUPON 1 Werifelm I SHANTUNGS; 1 60 t' D.1 REG. 4.99 ii7q COUPON PRINTED KNIT 4 4r-m4A1111p' 1757Z a 60" PONTE' k.1KNIT AMICI'- REG. It 2.99 POIL ENTIRE S2.99 STOCK In accordance with a love that stretched more than 70 years, the ashes of former Lexington resident Frank J. Goldsmith, 79, were scattered last week off the coast of Newfoundland over the site of the sinking of the Titanic where his father had died exactly 70 years before.

Young Frankie then 912 years old and his mother, Emily, were among the 790 survivors of the tragedy. Over the years, the Goldsmith collected memorablia of the sinking and repeated his story hundreds of times before friends and strangers, becoming one of many survivor-spokesmen and recalling his memories of the last night aboard before English and American television crews. Goldsmith died Jan. 27 in Orlando, Fla. Last Thursday, at the direction of his wife, Victoria, his ashes were put into the hands of Coast Guard Petty Officer John Flynn and flown in a reconnaisance plane out over the North Atlantic, where they were scattered into the sea along with a wreath honoring victims of the tragedy.

This weekend, Victoria Goldsmith presented some of her husband's papers and memorabilia to a Philadelphia museum in the name of the Titanic Historical Society, which was holding its convention in the city and to which her husband belonged, according to their son, James, of Urbana, Ohio. Goldsmith was 912 years old when he and his family boarded the Titanic to emigrate from England to America in the spring of 1912. The ocean liner was making its maiden voyage. It was near midnight on April 14 when the ship grazed an iceberg while in a fog off Halifax, Nova Scotia. Later, Goldsmith would say it was the silence of the engines, rather than the sounds of a collision, that woke the passengers.

He and his High court WASHINGTON (AP) President Reagan's plan to give tuition tax credits to the parents of children in private schools is likely to have a tough going before the Supreme Court even if it gets through an already hard-pressed Congress. Reagan, fulfilling one (Allis 1980 campaign pledges, formally unveiled the plan last Thursday in an address to a Roman Catholic educators' group in Chicago. "It's uphill, but I wouldn't rule out the possibility," Harvard law professor Lawrence H. Tribe says of the chances the high court would uphold the tax credits. The key element in what would be a certain Supreme Court challenge to the credits is the constitutional ban on the "establishment" or undue governmental favoring of Frank began working at the age of 11, selling papers for 7 cents a week in wages.

He later found employment at General Motors as an assistant advertising manager, became a city sales manager in Detroit for R.L. Polk and manufacturers of city directories, and spent the years from 1929 to 1942, he was a salesman in the wholesale dairy business. He served three years in the Air Force. Goldsmith came to Mansfield in 1945, where he became owner of Mansfield Photo Supplies and a founding member of the Richland Camera Club. III health forced him to retire from work in 1972, and he has frowned on tuition credits and Victoria left the area for Florida in 1979 Throughout his life, Goldsmith retained a keen interest in the history of the Titanic and all things concerning it.

He was a featured speaker at the 1979 convention of the Titanic Historical Society and was interviewed by a British television network which flew to Lexington to interview him in 1977. His feelings of closeness with his father were a continuing theme. For some time after the tragedy, young Frank held out hope that his father had somehow escaped death and would walk into the family home some day. Later, he would remem around that its views on the establishment prohibition have been "too rigid." "The court might show greater deference to Congress than to the states," he said. University of Chicago Law Professor Antonin Scalia agrees that the court shows greater deference to Congress.

Because it struck down the state plans doesn't necessarily mean it would invalidate a similar federal law, he says. Scalia cautions that the court's decisions in "establishment" cases to date are "utterly muddled." Generally, the court applies a three-part test in deciding whether a governmental action violates the required separation of church and state. That test asks: though draped in the ceremony of the U.S.-Dutch bicentennial, is intended primarily as a visit to the Netherlands' No. I strategic ally, the government source said. Although her speech was written by officials in the center-left government of Premier Andries van Agt, Queen Beatrix had substantial input, according to the source, who asked not to be identified.

Her congressional address comes at a time when tensions have surfaced between the two economic and strategic allies over such issues as U.S. policy in El Salvador, and The roar of the crowd at a ballpark near where he and his mother lived in Detroit had a peculiarly piquant sound it reminded him sometimes of the gasping he heard in the lifeboats as the Titanic went down. He told his wife long ago of his wishes to have his body cremated and the ashes scattered where his father went down. A barrage of letters and phone calls to strangers in several parts of the county helped accomplish that wish. On Thursday, Frankie Goldsmith was united with his father again.

Does the action have a religious purpose? Is its primary effect to advance or inhibit religion? Does it foster "excessive government entanglement with religion?" If the answer to any of the three questions is "yes," the court traditionally has outlawed the governmental action. Richard Larson, national staff counsel of the American Civil Liberties Union, contends that Reagan's tuition tax credit is unconstitutional. Justices Powell, William J. Brennan, Thurgood Marshall, John Paul Stevens and Harry A. Blackmun joined with then-Justice Potter Stewart to strike down the New Jersey law.

Of those five, all but Stevens, who was not on the court at the time, joined in striking down the New York law in 1973. nuclear rearmament in Western Europe. The queen's tendency to say what she thinks threatens a replay of the last time a Dutch monarch spoke to a joint session of Congress. Her mother, Queen Juliana, raised eyebrows in 1952 by criticizing the U.S. role in the Cold War with the Soviet Union.

Queen Beatrix's regal style and tendency to "call them as she sees them" has at times alienated the Dutch, but has also evoked their Li 'ICING FiRiVionE INVESTMENT FLEXIBILITY 111 YOUR R. LL ACC 0 UMT Queen Beatrix not a monarch who straddles fence Think FIRST System and FDIC. A majority of those benefiting from Reagan's plan would be parents of students in church-run schools. The Supreme Court has struck down state tax-break plans for parents of private school students in New York and New Jersey, on the grounds they unconstitutionally aid religion. "Special tax benefits cannot be squared with the principle of neutrality established by the decisions of this court," Justice Lewis F.

Powell wrote in the New York case in 1973. All five members of the majority that struck down the New Jersey plan without a written opinion in 1979 are still on the Supreme Court. But, says Tribe, the Supreme Court may be persuaded this time burg, on Saturday and planned to go to Washington today. In her address to Congress on Wednesday, she is expected to continue the Dutch tradition of queenly outspokenness begun by her grandmother, Queen Wilhelmina, who broadcast resistance pep talks from London to the Nazi-occupied Netherlands during World War A government source close to Queen Beatrix said she would bring up "serious" issues during her 18- minute address, including "differences of opinion" in the 200-year-old U.S.-Dutch alliance. The queen's week-long tour, al Sendcrt NOAA.

U.S. Dept. el Catintme THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) Queen Beatrix, on an official state visit to the United States this week, is a constitutional monarch who often speaks her mind in public. Government sources here say a joint session of the U.S. Congress will get a piece of it Wednesday.

Queen Beatrix, 44, also is known as a stickler for court protocol and respectability. Last month she gave a reception for municipal officials and told the married ones that spouses were welcome but that single ones were not to bring girlfriends or boyfriends. The queen arrived in Williams Weather ioe rtA 5 I You may want to use an I.R.A. "Rollover" Trust Account at First Buckeye Bank Trust Department. A "Rollover" Trust Account means quite simply, that you can place a lump-sum payment of accumulated retirement pension or profit sharing funds or transfer your present I.R.A.

account into a federal income TAX DEFERRED Retirement Plan. The I.R.A. "Rollover" offers an alternative to CD's by providing you with investment flexibility. Let one of our Trust Officers talk it over with you. TRUST DEPARTMENT I KtJa I idErmK 1 mLim i 0 RI, No 1873 BF2fl11 N.A.

7982 tH) Regional forecast The Mansfield weather station predicts mostly sunny weather today with a high between 50 and 55 degrees and winds of 10 to 20 miles an hour. Tonight should be mostly clear, with a low in the mid-30s. Monday's forecast calls for partly cloudy skies and a high between 60 and 65 degrees. The extended forecast for Ohio includes a chance of showers and thunderstorms Tuesday, changing to fair weather Wednesday and Thursday. Highs are predicted in the mid-50s to mid-60s Tuesday and from the mid-40s to the lower 50s Wednesday and Thursday.

Lows are expected to be in the low to mid-40s Tuesday and in the upper 20s to mid-30s Wednesday and Thursday. eeee Alk 1 1111.1. 60 60 70 16 Ilk NAL. 70 Flom shale 11111. thethpretwroi 90 0 4.

ir WOO. IER3 AmcId imm Worm Seeptinty Occholled NATIONAL WEATHER SLAVIC'. 46 MI6 kt14 Sthow SO 11117lic I' VI 00 .0 Worm 11,... cos3 Cold ummimn Sh000ft Siotionoty Cioce boded igotos sham 0 high A toporotoros Ir tor woo. 000004 40 NATIONAL WEATHER III VICI.

I CIMINO en En M1111 1 ----i Nation A cold front pushed thunderstorms across the Mississippi Delta and the Tennessee Valley Saturday, soaking parts of Louisiana and Mississippi. A tornado swirled through northeast Mississippi early Saturday, destroying a furniture store in Holly Springs. No injuries were reported. The thunderstorms moved across the southern Atlantic Coast, and rain persisted along the Gulf Coast and from Indiana into Pennsylvania. High winds battered southern Indiana, toppling a mobile home in Orleans and injuring the two women inside.

Record book Precipitation 24-hour period ending at 5 p.m. Saturday: 0.20 inch Yesterday's high: 61 Overnight low: near 40 Record high today: 82 in 1976 Record low today: 30 in 1961 Normal high and low today: 61 and 41 Temperatures a year ago today: 62 and 40 Sunset today: 7:12 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow: 5:46 a.m. When Experience Counts Member Federal Reserve.

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Pages Available:
1,468,925
Years Available:
1891-2024