Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 24

Publication:
Chicago Tribunei
Location:
Chicago, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
24
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

-W" Af- -i PAKT 3- PAGE 4 SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 1961 CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE Good Use for Water Pistol Eichmanrfs Trial Courtroom 1 3 JUDGES BUT iAFTER 9 DAYS, FOOD LICENSE; NO JURY WILL si I' t. RUSSIANS COLD TO NEW A-TEST OFFER DY U. S. MOSCOW, March 24 Reut STATE'S EARLY RULER BURNED AT THE STAKE Frenchman Slain 225 Years Ago BY ROBERT HOWARD (Chicago Tribune Press Service Springfield, 111., March 24 Pierre d'Artaguiette, one of the early governors of the TRY EIGHMANN mmhmm -v, 1 it ers The soviet government BY GWEN MORGAN Chicago Tribune Presi Service JERUSALEM, March 24 A court without a jury will newspaper Izvestia said to 0 IV NEAR END Judge May Consider Evidence Monday A controversy over whether four companies are rendering in Chicago without city rendering licenses remained night that new United States proposals presented at the try Adolf Eichmann, chief of fC'1 inim J-W 4 unresolved yesterday as testi- mony was concluded in trial then French territory of Illinois, waj burned at the stake by Indians 225 years ago tomorrow. A career soldier and a romantic figure, he was the fifth European to be governor or commandant of the Illinois country and the first to hold his appointment di-rectily from the king of France.

Killed Near Memphis During two years as governor, his territory was occu Geneva nuclear test ban talks failed to provide an acceptable basis for successful completion of the negotiations. The newspaper's Geneva correspondent, Mikhail Mik-hailov, said that the American proposals appeared to be a repetition of former American positions whose unac-ceptability the soviet government and its representatives Courtroom, near completion in Jerusalem, where Adolf the nazi Jewish office, here in April on charges of committing mass murder upon the Jewish people. The absence of a jury is one of the chief differences in procedure between an Is-rali murder trial and one in the United States or Britain. The Israelis, also, use three judges for murder trials rather than one judge. No Panel of Equals As a jury in its essential meaning involves oath-taking by persons equal or similar of a suit by a-hoodlum domi-l hated company to force the city to issue it a rendering "license.

Eichmann will do on trial April 11 as accused Nazi executioner James Sullivan (right), a candidate for policeman's 'job, showing Panayotis Gazis the water pistol he used to cow and capture a robber fleeing the Gazis store at 516 N. State st. after holdup. of Jews. Eichmann will sit in the dock at left, enclosed by bullet proof glass.

The three judge tribunal will sit behind the high bench. cap Wirepnotoi Attorneys for this hoodlum at Geneva have exposed more THREAT ON LIFE POLICE ARREST 26 IN SERIES OF pied by a few French villages and belligerent Indian tribes of shifting loyalties. dominated concern, Twin Food Products company, 3250 Wentworth contended the four companies are rendering, is the process of con-averting animal carcasses into WOULD-BE COP USES TOY GUN TO NAB BANDIT hr eat ens to Fire, Gunman Stops than once. One Pill a Day Mikhailov said that Arthur Dean, phief Amprican riele- The end came March 25, 1736, near the present site of 8Y SCAVENGER to the offender, you can see how difficult it would have aio wac nnHinct fnrwnrH hi Pinpiua wane umidgUIeue, -shortening, glue, or otner -products. But Sidney Horo 38, was leading a utile at- considerations in the! general an encampment of i iv: i tiia.n.

un the rate of a pill a day. In Geneva, Semyon Tsarap- GAMING RAIDS Nab 1 as a Walking Bookie Twenty-five men are facing charges as a result of raids by the gambling unit of the police organized crime division. Five wire rooms, two handbooks, and a policy turn-in station were raided, and a man charged with being a walking bookmaker was HEAD ALLEGED Bernard L. Samson, president of Standard Disposal and Metal company, 3800 Ogden testified yesterday that his life was threatened be kin, soviet delegate, told the been for the jury system to have taken root here with the number of varied peoples," my companion, an Israeli legal expert, said. The of having juries never began here, he said.

In the days of the British mandate of Palestine, test-ban conference that the witz, assistant chief clerk in the city collector's office, was unable to produce records they applied for ren- -dering licenses or received -them. Recess Until Monday Judge Julian Wilamoski, acting Circuit court judge, recessed the case until Mon American proposals appeared A candidate for the police force, using a toy pistol as a weapon, captured a gunman fleeing from an attempted holdup of the grocery at 516 N. State st. yesterday. James Sullivan, 25, of 4518 Greenview had just finished taking his physical examination for patrolman, when he heard shouts of help i cause he allegedly took a cus to be a package deal and he would await a detailed explanation before giving a considered reply.

Tsarapkin said the proposals were so closely inter- Britain never imported juries tomer from a rival scavenger Chickasaw Indians who were supported by 30 English traders. The Chickasaws had an obnoxious way of ambushing the bateaux in which the French traveled the Mississippi river from Kaskaskia and Fort Chartres to New Orleans. Tortured with 16 Others Gov. Jean Bienville of Louisiana was slow in arriving with a second force, but d'Artaguiette's Illinois and Miami allies insisted on attacking, and then deserted. Wounded in the head, foot, and thigh, d'Artaguiette was captured and tortured to TRIBUNE PhotoiJ Roosevelt Holtz, the robber, captured by Sullivan.

service. arrested on the street Samson gave depositions The alleged walking bookie that jt would be for the second day in connec from the grocery owner who rcrc Constantine Boznoz, 30, of tion with his company's suit was pursuing two men despite its own well developed jury system at home. Upon independence in 1948 Israel, with a population even more diversified coming from war-torn Europe and from oriental countries, retained British legal practices including the no-jury system. asking IVij million dollars SHIFTS IN U. S.

day, when final arguments be heard, and indicated he would take it under that day. Testimony had been presented for nine days. William Kafka, assistant corporation counsel, and Horowitz said it was not up to their respective offices to find out if the four companies are rendering without city rendering licenses. Horowitz said 404 W. 79th was arrested in front of 1305 W.

103d st. Records of horse bets were found in his clothing. He is scheduled to appear in court he accused of trying to rob him. Threatens to "Shoot" Sullivan had just entered his auto parked In the mouth ARMY IN KOREA Gen. agruder to Retire June 30 of the alley between Grand avenue and Illinois street at Dearborn when he heard the damages from the Chicago and Suburban Refuse Disposal association for alleged violation of anti-trust laws.

Names Albert Dickerson The threat, Samson said, came from Albert Dickerson, president of the South Central Scavenger association, a branch of Chicago and Suburban, in the fall of 1960. "He claimed I took a stop Washington, March 24 LT) President Kennedy today an shouts of Panayotis Gazis, 71, the grocer. he did not know which, city -office should make any such investigation. Horowitz was ordered to -bring records dealing with these four companies and nounced a shift in the United States high command in Korea, along with a series of other changes in assign Adopt British Practice To spread the burden of having to judge the facts as well as the law of a case, the Israelis, like the British, also began appointing several judges for the hearing of serious cases. But the atmosphere of the courthouse is largely similar thruout the world, I thought upon entering the quadrangular building here which shelters Israel's law courts.

Once a czarist Russian hos The police force aspirant joined in the chase in his March 30. Patrons Seized The handbook raids were made at 1650 Belmont av. and at 1138 N. Clark st. Gene Isaacs, 45, of 3239 N.

Ashland was arrested at the Belmont avenue address and charged with being the keeper of a gambling establishment. He is to appear April 14 in South State Street court. Victor Passantino, 38, of 1619 Sedgwick was arrested in the Clark street raid and charged with being the keeper of a gambling establishment. He and seven men, arrested as patrons, are auto and drew alongside one of the two pursued men, four others to court as part of impossible to answer them separately. Seek Early Treaty The proposals, offering wide-range concessions to the Soviet Union, were made in a bid to get an early treaty to ban testing of nuclear weapons.

Dean offered to give Russian scientists access to nuclear devices used by the United States for research explosions and to extend from 27 to 36 months the length of a moratorium on small-scale underground tests. Dean also offered Russia parity on the commission which would control the test ban, an increase in the number of inspections on American territory, and a reduction in the number of control posts demanded by the west in Russia. Silent on Blast Russia refusetl to give details at the Geneva meeting of a 3,500 ton underground explosion which soviet scientists last May said was menaced the fugitive with away from a scavenger who was a member of his association," Samson said. He said that if I did not give the stop back, I would meet with a lot an effort by Twin Food attorneys to prove their con ments for key generals. Gen.

Carter B. Magruder, commanding general of the 8th army and commander of United States forces in the United Nations command in Korea, retires June 30. He will be succeeded by Lt. Gen. Guy S.

Meloy of trouble." death along with 16 others, including a Jesuit priest and Jean Baptiste Vincennes, for whom the Indiana city was named. A woman who had been a Chickasaw slave and escaped said that, During the preparation of this barbaric tragedy our French sang, just as is the custom of the Indians, who judge the value of a warrior by the loud or weak sound of his voice at the moment they are making him die." Favorite of Indians Too D'Artaguiette, who started his Illinois service with two Indian wars on his hands, earlier had brought the Fox tribe under control in the north. He was described as young, chivalrous and joyous, a favorite of the French and Indians alike, and his regime was recorded as the "roman Two days later, Samson tel for Holy Land pilgrims, said, Dickerson returned with the quadrangle now houses Israel's Supreme court, Jerusalem's nine District courts, and a host of Magistrate the toy gun, and shouted, If you don't stop I'll shoot." The pursued man obeyed, and Sullivan took from him a loaded .32 caliber pistol, and held him for police. He identified himself as Roosevelt Holtz, 22, of 6135 Prairie av. His companion got away.

Holtz, police said, admitted the attempted holdup. Victim Hit in Face The action started when two men entered Gazis' store now deputy commander of the 8th army. President Kennedy nominated Meloy to the to appear in court April 27. Six men were arrested in courtrooms. tention the city has been discriminating against Twin Tood.

Plant Closed Jan. 31 The city closed down the company's rendering plant last Jan. 31 after disclosure by The Tribune that the company was dominated by crime syndicate hoodlums and that it had been operating four years, even tho its applications for licenses were rejected by city departments. The other companies were Injected into the case over strenuous protests of Kafka temporary rank of general. Litigants, including Arabs, the alleged policy turn-in station at 355 E.

55th pi. Three Stepping into Meloy's post two other men. "He grabbed me by the arm and he threatened that if I didn't leave this stop alone, I would be buried," Samson said. Tells of Contract Loss For June and July, 1960, Samson said, he had a contract which netted $1,000 to $1,200 a month for hauling refuse from the Ambassador will be Maj. Gen.

Andrew P. McNamara, now quarter were arrested as patrons and three others, Packe McFar- distinguished from Jewish Israelis by their black banded, flowing, white headdress, crowd the corridors. master general of the army, land, 52, of 4151 S. Parkway; Upshaw Bacon, 58, of 4718 Calumet and Howard and announced a stickup. Lawyers Minus Wigs who was nominated to the temporary grade of lieutenant general.

planned for this year as part When Gazis complained, one Lawyers, gowned in black Bernard, 54. of 355 E. 55th i of the Soviet Union's seismic bandit struck him in the face tic age of early Illinois." with a gun. The pair then were charged with pos-; research program. iihe wuaras dui minus IIc said hoteI officiais British occupation of Illi- betting rec- bntish lawyers wig, hurried told him they would have policy appear in terminate the contract "un-jords.

AH are to David Ormsby-Gore, British nois was completed 29 years delegate, asked whether the later at Fort Charters when explosion had taken place or the last French flag on the when it would take Dlace. North American continent less I could 4 square with the court April 21 Tsarapkin ignored the ques and Edward r. rarlee, another assistant corporation counsel. In his testimony yesterday, Horowitz disclosed an unusual city policy on rendering licenses. He said that once a company obtains a rendering license, its applications for license are renewed automatically without investigation of the licensee.

in dim uul oi touriroums. a small cafe did a big business in coffee and buns. I could see why the Eichmann case had been moved to the big new white marble community center. The District courtrooms were extremely small with three or four wooden benches for was hauled down. Because of the difficult spelling and pronunciation of his name, d'Artaguiette's association." So he had lunch, he said, with Harold V'andermolen, an association member who had the contract before Standard.

He said V'andermolen told him, No young punk com i tion. SAFETY UNIT fled without loot, with Gazis is pursuit, calling, "Help, holdup." It was these shouts that Sullivan heard. Sullivan had been to the Chicago board of health quarters at 54 W. Hubbard st. to take his physical examination.

Sullivan said the toy gun had been left in his car by the child of one of his friends. Sullivan is a route salesman for a soft drink company. The grocer was treated in Henrotin hospital for head cuts. Four Are Arrested Four men arrested in an alleged wire room at 3714 Roosevelt rd. were charged with being keepers of a gambling establishment.

They are Lou Gordon, 50, of 2136 N. Kedzie Joe Schubert, 68, of 1432 N. Clark Jerry Stone. 58, of 6912 N. Greenview and Sam joUj tLiAo 1 iL (by the naming of any Illinois BAG WARNING or stream- ing into business is going to those attending a case.

The take away any of our stops." The National Safety coun-Two Try to Break cil said yesterday that thin in Flat; One Killed Army Chief Retiring Kennedy tapped Lt. Gen. John L. Ryan now commanding the 1st army corps in Korea, to succeed Lt. Gen.

Robert M. Cannon, who will retire Aug. 31 as commanding general of the 6th army, with headquarters in San Francisco. Ryan's present post in Korea will be filled by Maj. Gen.

Hugh P. Harris, who was nominated for the temporary rank of lieutenant general. Lt. Gen. Frederic J.

Brown will relinquish command of the 5th army corps in Germany and take the place of retiring Lt. Gen. Gordon B. Rogers as deputy commanding general for development of the continental army command, Fort Monroe, Va. Rogers will retire Aug.

31. Waters Goes to Germany Maj. Gen. John K. Waters, nominated to the temporary grade of lieutenant general, will replace Brown in Ger Turner, 50, of 16o N.

Central used 0f PROBE FAILURE OF ACTION ON SWINDLE CASE The failure of the state's attorney's office to draw esti- Robert Hansel, 25, of 2810 Harrison st. was shot to death last night at 1029 N. Clark st. bamson said he was unable to square with the association and lost the con-tra-t. 2 Bandits Get $1,140 Two men, one with a revolver, took $1,140 yesterday in a holdup of a liquor store at 2001 E.

75th st. dark paneled bupreme court room was only a little larger. From windows facing the small, neglected looking courtyard I could see the long robed figure of one of the few Russian nuns left on the premises from czarist days. She was hanging up her washing. mated 114 deaths last court April 7.

Mike Coco, 31, of 716 S. year Most of the fatalities were when Leo Poliquit fired twice IKeeler and Frank Russo, thru his front door as a pair of men attempted to break into his apartment. The second man described by Poliquit as being short, escaped on foot. Poliquit, a waiter at the Shangri-La restaurant, 46, of 1111 S. Monitor were arrested in an alleged wire room at 707 S.

Francisco av. and charged of being keepers of a gambling house. Thev will appear in court on April 27. John DeVito, 46, of 5925 A Lurch Into a Porch HOFFA OFFICIAL WASTES 5 DAYS IN WRONG JAIL Washington, March 24 ffl William Presser, Ohio teamsters union official who got in and out of the wrong jail a week ago, found the right one today. Presser, chairman of the! indictments after a grand jury reportedly voted true bills in an alleged international confidence game case was investigated yesterday.

The incident occurred during the administration of former State's Atty. Benjamin S. Adamowski. A principal figure in the investigation is Frank Ferlic, former first assistant state's attorney. children less than 3 years old who were suffocated.

The council said it does not believe that legislation prohibiting the use of the material would be a solution and that responsibility for safety rests with parents. The council first expressed concern about the number of suffocations from the plastic early in 1959. A hundred such deaths were caused that year. i mi i jiii iinn jjuuiaiiriiiiMjiwA.uii'w told Chicago avenue police he heard the invaders trying to pry open the front door. He said he fired after warning them to go away.

Hansel died on the street outside. many. Other retirements an Ohio conference of James Hoffa's teamsters, began a 60 day term for contempt of Congress. The five days he served in a Cleveland jail W. 55th who was arrested when police raided that address, and John Mann, 33, of 3620 N.

California who was arrested at 2136 Berteau will appear in court April 14, to answer charges of being keepers of gambling houses. Five Go Free Two men were arrested at 5655 N. Clark st. and are to Senate Hears Plea to Aid Underprivileged Penguins nounced without the designation of successors were: Lt. Gen.

Emerson C. ltsch-ner as chief of army engineers on March 31; Lt. Gen. Thomas L. Harrold as commandant of the military war college on June 30; and Lt.

Gen. John A. Dabney, deputy won count. Aids of State's Atty. Daniel P.

Ward are studying transcripts of the grand jury proceedings to determine why the indictments were never drawn and returned. Reportedly named in the true bills were Victor and Bedriska Lonsmin, both 40, of 2310 E. 96th st. They were accused by Ladislav Stulkin 1643 Kenilworth BY WILLIAM MOORE Presser was convicted here a year ago for refusing to tell Senate rackets probers in 1958 whether he had destroyed personal and union I il if I i I i i 1 1 i I i i I i i i tv.IiMifiiiJIJifill till 1 i be in court April 27 to answer similar charges. They are Walter Oski, 46, of 5823 (Chlcaio Tribune Press Senice Washington, March 24 An aid to penguins program, to assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs Sept.

30. financial records that he had been commanded to produce establish the United States as Presser, 52, turned himself 3,000 SCIENCE in to a federal marshal in Cleveland last week because N. Winthrop and Joseph Lotto, 41, of 964 Taylor st. Yesterday, Judge Cecil Corbett dismissed gambling charges against five persons arrested Monday in raids on two alleged wire rooms at TEACHERS HOLD MEETING HERE he was "nervous, couldn't si'vX bJ fk a great humanitarian in the eyes of the underprivileged birds of the world, came under discussion in the Senate today. The proposal was made by a constituent of Sen.

William Proxmire who read the Senate a letter from the constituent. We new frontier thinkers accustomed to the perpetual hand-out. Then the program can get going. Heated shelters with padded nests can be moved in, and nobody will have to do any work. Provides Jobs Too Under the plan, the United States would expect some reforms, such as free elections and honest balloting.

The program would provide jobs here for workers who would build the shelters and business for the steamship lines that would transport them to the south pole, the letter said, while at the same time reducing the gov Berwyn, and Pavel Svacina, 4033 W. 31st of accepting $6,600 in a plan to spirit relatives from communist Czechoslovakia. The plan failed and the money was never returned, they charged. Ferlic said the case was dropped because he believed there was insufficient evidence for prosecution. Guard Blind German The 9th annual convention of the National Science Teachers association convened yesterday in the Sherman hotel.

1633 N. Richmond st. and 2627 N. Francisco av. because the raiders carried no search warrants.

sleep, and wanted to get his jail sentence out of the way." Authorities discovered five days later that Presser still had an appeal pending before the United States Supreme court, and so they turned him loose. Monday his appeal was rejected. 30,000 Attend Cave Approximately 3,000 science teachers from all over the United States are expected to attend the sessions which end Wednesday. know how to run tne penguins' affairs better than they do," the constituent wrote. Fire Destroys Indiana Farm Implement Firm Fishers, March 24 (LTD Fire destroyed a large farm Accused of Being Nazi The group has 14,000 mem bers, all science teachers.

Killings Memorial Male Egg Sitter implement company today with a loss estimated by the owner at $200,000 to $300,000. looks down on car S. La Crosse Stan Policht, 6425 wedged under porch. Firemen blamed an explosion in an oil furnace for the blaze at the Reynolds Farm Equipment company. Mrs.

Penguin, the letter said, lays her single egg and then goes on a vacation, leaving her mate to hatch it. He sits there by the south pole holding the egg against his body with his foot, and by the time the egg is hatched the father is almost starved to death, because he can't get More than 400 different seminars arid sessions, all having to do with science teaching, have been scheduled. Glenn T. Seaborg, recently appointed chairman of the Atomic Energy commission, will speak at the annual dinner in the Grand Ballroom of the Sherman at 8 p. m.

Monday. Wake of the News My wife didn't get it when BUENOS AIRES, Argentina, March 24 (LTD Police in Buenos Aires province are guarding the home of Dr. Lothar Hermann, a blind German immigrant believed py some newsmen to be Dr. Josef Mengele, fugitive Nazi war criminal. Hermann told police he had been harassed for two months by newspapermen who believe the story, which he labels untrue.

Police investigations indicate that Hermann has lived in Argentina since 1840. ernment grain surplus. The plan would make it necessary to retrain the penguins, to get them to eat grain instead of fish, but this would furnish jobs for government researchers and diet advisers. Over a 10 year period, the penguins would be encouraged to rehabilitate their economy, with grants or loans that would enable them to establish new industries in depressed areas. ROME, March 24 Reuters About 30,000 Romans today attended annual Catholic and Jewish memorial services at the graves of 335 persons in the Ardeatine caves killing by the Nazis 17 years ago.

The Ardeatine caves are near the ancient Appian way. Former S. S. Col. Herbert Kap-pies, whom an Italian court found responsible for the killings, is serving a life sentence in an Italian military prison.

Close Wabash Av. Span Tomorrow for Repairs TRIBUNE rtiotol the car shot over the sidewalk and front yard and plunged under the porch, clipping one of its supports and causing part of the porch to collapse atop of the car. He was taken to Belmont hospital with lacerations of the scalp. Albany Park police charged him with negligent driving. 1 The automobile of John F.

Bernhard, 40, of 5827 N. Cicero a salesman, veered out of control last night and plowed under the porch of the home at 3829 N. Kildare avenue. Bernhard told police he was southbound on Kildare avenue when he lost control and to the sea to catch fish. Proxmire's constituent ad The Wabash avenue bridge over the Chciagp river will be closed for "repairs tomorrow from 6 a.

m. to 6:30 p. m. I told her my pay raise was in vised a modest start, putting grain near the feeding grounds, to get the penguins the cards. Malar of St.

Charles J1.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Chicago Tribune
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Chicago Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
7,806,023
Years Available:
1849-2024