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The Daily Herald from Chicago, Illinois • Page 64

Publication:
The Daily Heraldi
Location:
Chicago, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
64
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ft -1 i 4 Cook County 86th Year 31 Arlington Illinois THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1958 4 52 Pagea $4.00 A Year lOc A Copy 1 I Lonetree Resident i Flooding (GNS)--A resident of the I' Lonettee subdivision ha-slfem to the Ex er doUar housmB deVClOP testified before the Elinois Francirdy that, flooding has The treated effluent: fronrthe Commission that water continued in the area for several prosed airport into a tributary of the 3690 north branch of the Chicago river. ing from an open ditch be- years tween North and South Park ROBERT BOISSELLE, rouaK rey- i--j Oak- street in the subdivision, ATTORNEY B. rouaK, rep: lane- in the the said resenting the airport said earlier I HA It ij hJ I A 1 area north and west of 1125 families belonging to the civic the Northbrook floods his more than 2.hours. an nrAa bounded bv 15-inch rd PfinSten rd. erty and then discharge into the perty-each time it rains for Techhy rd.

and the Northfield open ditch running across the sub- township line. divisxon. BoisseUe said the civic group Norval E. Anderson, a a "not-for-profit" charter politan sanitary distnct engineer THE RESIDENT, Jaines M. rom tnc stafe ho approved the sewage plan.

Petersen, 2888 N. Park is a Qari Dummann, 514 Pfingsten said the effluent discharged into member of-the Grove, Civic asso- subdivision, past presi- the open ditch would, not be harm- ciation, which along- Sky de jj of tn group, said no repre- ful to persons living, in the area. Harbor airport objects to Lone- Uentative of the utility company petition fron the developer. tree Utilities Company's or tne Metropolitan Sanitary Dis- L. Salzman Sons, 3o24 Peter- tion to operate -a water and sewer Chicago-had discussed the son Chicago, to operate tnc plant in the area.

I application with him before going proposed $200.000 plant ed 'the case at the request of the THE LONETBEE subdivision, since September 2 gSups? which 'contend that consisting of 40 acres laid out in The Grove fluent running through the 120 lots, is 1.5 miles west of represented ditch would 1 create a health prob- 1 Northbrook. as a 2.5 I Downing. 1957. ahon i Attorney Robert ii. i in ed A a Weathers'Storm' ommuters Ask by MORT LEVE United Fund is here to stay.

A canvass of representative residents in Northbrook reveals a wholehearted favoring of the combined appeal over individual solicitations. Disputed Fares Dm a (CNS)--A request that 6 per'cent interest be paid by alone would.amount to $3,000 a single segment of the Milwaukr per cenu Jiueiebu puu uy Was pointed out by roads intrastate operations i vflnpol rrf a nrrlinanrp ffivinjr Northbrook the Chlca Milwaukee, St. ley Attorney S. Ashley Guth- linois did not meet out-of-pockc repeal Ol a lybl Oldinance giving aP ifi railroad on rie. representing the Milwaukee costs there was an undue diF the option of rejecting Disapproving the various charitable Lj iuudu commuters association, crimination against the.

roads in. frrnnm United Fund will con- $650,000 collected since April which bro ht the suit jointly operations, without re groups, wm uuu OA nca -J A1 Jgard to the contribution of othe tinue. The annual meeting is slated for Feb. 18 at 8 p.m., in the new village hall auditorium. Roy Ityberg, 2176 general chairman of the 1957-58 United Fund drive, is confident that there will be' continued support.

"Villagers have accepted the United Fund way of- giving," he declared. WHEN QUESTIONED on the purpose of the Controlling ordinance, the chairman pointed out, "Principle aim of the ordinance I remember. was -hot: to ban solicitations by. reputable organizations but to avoid those 'shady' requests that were becoming more and more prevalent." a 90 IQfifi nnripr flip rHsrmtpd the state of Illinois gard to me contnoution or otne tions. Nominations maybe made 20,.

1956, undei the disputed Supreme revenues, freight from the floor along with those 21 per cent commuter fare court ruling would average passenger, which, th HIT TiAminflrinf? I i I i AU 3 A Ant? rt nnmnnwii rrf Ed I increase, unless an immedi-1 for each of the 16,000 records find findings are. entirely committee composed ,01 many are expected not to silent. Greist, Robert Bailey, Richard ate refund IS made to 16,000 have stub think this is a case wherr Bates, and George Murray. suburban riders, was made! ICC cannot sustained Also on the agenda will a final-report on tlie 1957-58 United Fund drive. At.

the last, meeting the.board of directors had voted to grant the final 10 per cent each of the per cent previously having been WHAT WILL BE done with the day. The Illinois Commerce com rt a i. saS could ASSISTANT Attorney General Harry R. Begley made suburban service. General Harry R.

Begley made suburban service. the request as Judge Walter J. ice should as nearly as may be THE U. S. SUPREME court LaBuy continued to 27, for hearing by 3-judge court, the I opinion written by Justice Bren-1 Tesponsfbi'J railroad's petition to continue col- nan, a copy of which- was filed ity in instate achieve jg ity the desired funds turned down by the 3 or- lecting the fare increase, here Monday, stated: gaiiiratipns heretofore mentioned ing to a day, pending action Thi case.presents once again I h-ve wiU bedecided by the board after by the Interstate Commerce.Com- the adjusting state the rail A Vini7 A mv.

miccirtn rt a now i-UIlie in me XflLL recommendations have been giv- mission on' a new hearing. and'federal interests'in the regu- dustry and it has 1 I A A A v- I II en them by a 3 of local udg Philip L. Sullivan of the lation of intrastate rates. These sary to ftTVn TT TiiHerO 1 area physicians. In retrospect, the advantages of these neces deficit? District court and Judge primarily, rom mere remunerative serv- before the United Fund idea.

Schnackenberg.pf the concern and federal power is ces The ICC has recognized thir He explained further that the United drive are ofeyious. Appeals -sit 'only so far as neces- practical reality of today's rail- ordinance was put into effect long Jt overcomes the high pressure LaBuy to hear the sary to alter'rates which injur- road i ng and has Changed its rate- publicity that one organisation affirming by the iously -affect interstate com- fjxi policy so that if intrastatf may have advantage of over ah- U. S. Supreme court oh Jan. 13 Thus, when federal passenger service inevitably am' 1 other.

People may. entirely neg- of their decision enjoining the rate er. is exerted within what would inescapably cannot bear its direc 'I lect some very worthwhile group increase. The high court sustain- otherwise be the domain of state C06ts an( it of joint or in giving to a "favorite pet" the -finding that the Interstate -poser, -the justification for its direct-costs the IOC feels com i- i I I ft Wl Bt I A A was acUrin A- SOAKING tJP THE SOUNDS and of Arlington Heights and Chicago are 2 young in the Stephen Juruo household at 217 Windsor. Maria f'lerinelli (left) ami Josephine Pierinelll (center) are stopping off in the village fot several months before re- luuiing to their homes in Lima, Peru.

They recently completed 9 months of study in Italy, the bigness of the informality of American dress are two of the things that have impressed them most. At right is hostess Mrs. Dee Jurco. Set March 6 on Trailers Counter-claim Hearings tions made in 1955. The goal not reached in 1956, falling some 15 per cent short.

IN 1957 THE DRIVE was con- I manpower, organizers, sidered the most successful fund- and adyer- raising campaign conducted tismg. Thius, the money that in the Northbnx)k area. The es- would have to be expended from tablished goal was exceeded mak- solicitations for sucn announce- ing it possible to allow each bene- ments is cut down tremendously ficiary the amount set: ui-num-1 py the joint effort oering 7. National Foundation of infantile VILI.AGERS ABE assured that Paralysis, Heart associa- the agencies covered in United A ft I charity--thus creating a poor bal- Commerce, commission granting exercise must pelled in a 'general rate case t- ance. of the increase was improfper "in the instant case the inter- take the passenger deficits 'int Added too, the combined effort Prior to full study of the roads state Commerce commission, in- account in the adjustment of ir eliminates duplicity of soliciting rate structure.

terfered with suburban commuter terstate freight charges and de; 1 fnvnm THE INTEREST on the sum I rates and found because this icits." tion, and American Cancer so- are entirely reputable. No For ciety refused their shares, de- longer need they be in doubt as manding individual solicitations, to the value of one charity over It appeared that a test case would another. There is the constant be made and when it became ap- aggravation and nuisance of the parent that it would cost the vil- numerous door ringings but the lage at least to'contest main objective is toward a fair, A such action, the ordinance was and equalized division of the (CNS) Cook county, forest i i A -i- VH4 teV QKs New Lake Preserve Hearings are set for March 6 on a counter-claim against Cook county filed by the operator of a Northfield township trailer park seeking tin injunction restraining the county from further prosecution of a a pending in Circuit court, Arguments by the county on a motion to dismiss the counterclaim wilJ also be heard on the March 6 date before Circuit court Judge John T. Dempscy. THIS IS THE county's second court battle in 3 years with the house trailer park on 30 acres north of Glenview fit 2450 Wtui- kegan road, operated by repealed.

funds. Village President Bertram Pol- County Mobile Homes, Inc. The county lost the first battle, when the courts nullified farm zoning of surrounding property to permit expansion of the mobile home park. It had about 85 trailers then and about 100 now. i At the opening of second battle, Judge Dempsey 'denied the county's motion for a temporary injunction against expansion of the trailer which plans to expand facilities to accommodate eventually 500 to 600 trailers.

The counter-claim, drafted by Attorney Kalman S. Lieberman, charged a conspiracy existed between the county and the State's Attorney's office for the purpose himself an attorney, explain- preserves system is. gaming another new lake at no cost this i I W.l*W.l* 41V Tl Individual associations such as time in Potawatomi Woods, east the 3 Assenting groups, can con- wheeling committee ij.1 01 vvneeang. that this money could not be reasonably expended in litigation, Kllf if it ftrtile to more apparent I Thi 5 one, like 'the others, willbe in comoari- out by contractors -seeding ravel and fil1 con- bringing suit a second "YOU CAN'T away a toe. hese in CH of the toll roads wme.

i 0 ng drawn out legal entangle- TTn i tpf1 im1 ments. lumworuna. Again, Myberg was.emphatic in court order, Liberman a i sta ting, "We are convinced that com tined effort will continue success ful. I honestly be- out to share in if they do not collections School Continues i With Facelifting when asked'whether the situation was. changed by a county I ji ing ordinance amendment enact- ieve such groups as the national ed last August.

caJ icer so'ciety should The amendment a i i trailer a as special uses needing county board approval thW can foUow "on their "ywn. following public hearings to es- tablish one. I THE QUESTION whether will cooperate in acting as solicitors for the agencies named. Several persons we questioned had never been approached by the March of Dimes Small Bomb at THE COUNTY BOARD, sitting as commissioners of the forest preserve district, Monday approved an agreement in which the -new Jake will "be created in a 10-acre section of Potawatomi north of Dundee road and east of the pes Plaines river in Wheeling township. The site to be worked is now an old gravel pit, considered a nuisance and a hazard by Charles G.

Sauers, general superintendent of the forest preserve district. In a joint the William O'Neil and D. L. Winkleman construction companies will pay the district $5,000 for the gravel and also agreed to do $18,500 worth of landscaping work on the new lake. The job must be finished by August 31, Sauers said.

THE LAKE WILL BE about 10 to 15 feet deep in its cente and will be stoc ked with fish Sauers added. The contractor. agreed to give the new body water sloping shores. This con trasts with steep and dangerous slopes 'now at the pit. The contractors will take put cubic yards of material.

They are to bring in top soil ant also seed and grade the area. secondary pit at the south em will be filled in, Sauers said. The lake for Potawatomi Woodis the seventh such project ap proved for various preserves ij the county by the district. High School Policeman Cracks What was described as a "small request. Two of the United Fund bomb" exploded in a washroom officials said they thought a so- at Arlington high school Tuesday licitor had not contacted them be- morning.

School authorities said cause they thought it would be fu- that the explosive had be tile to do so. placed in a small brown bottle There is still the question of em- and deposited in the second floor barrassment caused when a lavatory during the passing pe-1 A youth who passed a bum 1. A I Check Rinq neighbor will ring the bell and riod between first and second ask for an. individual solicitation, hour. in an Arlington Face-lifting at Wheeling school is going ahead on schedule, school board members disclosed Monday night.

Camm Construction has been hired to repair the acoustical tile ceiling and leaky roof vents. Ths ceiling, installed about a year ago by the Airtite Chicago, was damaged by water seepage during the heavy July rainfall. LOCAL CONTRACTOBS licve the vents, also instnllea by Airtite were the wrong kind for the type of roof over the An ultimatum, to pny for ceil- Ing repairs or face a lawsuit, was rccentlv sent to Airtite acc i to Arthur Aronsen, school board president. Trustees approved ordering wire cages for 22 lights in the gym ceiling. Work on the showers and dressing room for boys and dressing room for girls in the school basement is progressing rapidly, school board members learned.

STEAM RETURN PIPES at the school arc badly corroded and in need of immediate attention, said Jack Norris, School 21 superintendent. Several sections of corroded pipe had been removed for the. board's examination. Trustee Robert Brower suggested that a new policy of-discipline be worked out by Wheel- i school principal Marion Omiatek and Norris. The suggestion was made during a discussion of how problem children Whole Milk Whale milk tastes slightly like oil.

Happy Ending To Ratty Talt 698 Fe W. Wayne, and no serious damage was done. fairness the poJio The" power of the explosion was group, it be the not only people in the budget set; for 1957 was vicinity, heard the blast. frigerator. planners reasonably assumed that Despite full support of.

United THE BOMB, believed to be a Heights, clothing store last 60 16 ti mixture of magnesium and sul- mO nth made the mistake of had additionally contributed to-the phur exploded shortly after sec- TM a fll 0 March of Dimes rather than turn ond began. No one boasting to a. girl behind the fr iend Wh had made th I vva in the washroom at the time counter about his football- playing days in high school. The boast was picked up by Arlington Heights police Wheeling, village po-1 ttSteSSSSFS ten I to Sg t. Oscar'E.

Johnson. It led lice there'was a rat in his re-1 the -highest but toe. United 1 FUnd of a had bilked merchants in 10 Wisconsin and Illinois cities out of hundreds of dollars, say ARRESTED AMD locked up awaiting trial are 4 young men, all from Round Lake Lake Beach, who had successfully the scheme for a month, vcording to local police. The check passing incident that led to their capture occurred at Lingren's Menswear, 17 W. Davis Officers Ray Widing and Ar- it was no longer necessary to nold Krause went to Pagano's contribute the biggest slice to that house and attempted to flush organization, the rat out of-the refrigerator.

the rat was stubborn, so the! RED CROSS HAS-'gone along officers took the refrigerator with combined appeals, and Ny- out of the house. Then, the. rat berg told, us that it participated came out. I for the first time in the Chicago Combined Appeal this past year, and -so did the Chicago Commu- contributi United Fund Mrs Algot Rudeman told members are invited to attend Wheeling police February 6 that next Tuesday's meeting. The a- a hole was broken in a large genda Will include the nomma- i and clection of directors to -vacancies on term expira- IN Billbonrd Bowling Scorr Church' News Deeigh for lAvlng Ed it or! I Farm Picture Page '-Sports Page Part 3 3 Hsmemftking Want Ada Back TVfcen I 4 3 3 2 2 4 1 dressed youths cashed a check for $28.97 there and purchased a sport coat with part of the amount.

One of the youths, later identified as Arthur W. Kellogg, 20, a comment to a clerk about playing football at Barrington high Sgt. Johnson, learning of the remark when questioning clerk, asked Barrington -police Chief Reynold E. Smith if he recognized, the names of persons to whom the checks were made out, R. Kellogg and Martin O.

Oirisfiansen. CHIEF SMITH remembered that Kellogg "had attended Barrington high school and had a record of petty thefts. The chief furnished an address in Round Lake -Beach, for the pair arid said their' i i matched those of the persons who cashed the checks. Arlington police notified Round Lake Beach police who picked up Kellogg and Christiansen Sfcbru- ary 1 for questioning in connection with the LingrenV check and same'day at Burling and the Arlington Camera shop, 7 S. Dunton, for the same amount.

The pair at length admitted passing the checks and implicated two other members of the ring. They were apprehended by Waukegan police last Thursday at their Round Lake home and also charged with writing fraudulent checks. They are brothers Herbert, 22, and James Stout, 27. HERE IS THE way the group operated, said police: Herbert Stout wrote the checks, endorsing them with the name of William B. Nachman and drawn on the First State Bank of Grayslake.

There was no account in the bank for such a person. James Stout drove the auto and the other 2 cashed the checks. Sgt. Johnson estimated the total amount of checks passed might rti-i to more.than He said they "-were cashed in store." in Des Plaines, Barrington, Round Lake. Antioch, Fox Lake, Waukegan and Arlington Heights and in the Wisconsin cities of Racine, vn i.

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About The Daily Herald Archive

Pages Available:
470,083
Years Available:
1901-2006