{ title: 'Nassau daily review-star. (Metropolitan, Long Island, Nassau County [Freeport], N.Y.) 1937-1954, February 28, 1953, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1953-02-28/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1953-02-28/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1953-02-28/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1953-02-28/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
tnd Year No. 281 * HEMPSTEAD TOWN, LONG ISLAND, N. Y. | SATURDAY-FEBRUARY 28, loss ||| < ‘ - PRICE FIVE CENTS TIRED BY TRIAL - Pat Ward, testimony was most damaging to Minot (Mickey) Jelke, appears worn out by the long vice trial the 19-year-old red head whose which ended yesterday in. con- viction on two counts for the youthful heir to an oleomargarine fortune. Jelke was found guilty of forcing. Pat and another girl Into lives of prostitution for the/Cafe Society trade. I L1 Jet Pilot In Mystery A Port Washington jet pilot is listed today as one.of| Killed Crash four whose planes crashed mysteriously in mid-Atlantic last Saturday. The Air Force identified him as Lieutenant John W. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard B. Smith of 23 Central Drive, Port Wishingn. Smith was flying his Thun der-jet in a flight from Labrador to join NATO Af Forces in Burope. The Air Force says the flight had almost reach84 the mid-point in the Atlantic trip when the flight lead- er's auxiliary wing tank stopped feeding into the main fuel line, He ordered the entire flight to return to the Labrador base. The four jets plunged into the oceanen route back to the Labra- dor base, The squadron leader said he saw them plummet into} the ses , , . one by one. | Reds Seek Trade Of Prisoners LONDON (A-Authoritative sour-| ces said today the Communist led Hungarian government has offered to trade British businessman Edgar Banders - now serving a 13 - year prison sentence in Budapest for al- leged spying -- for a 25 = year - old woman Red leader under death in Malaya. Sanders was tried on spy charges by a Communist Hungarian court in February, | 1950, . alongside American citizen Robert Vogeler. BOY GORILLA COOL TO HIS BRIDE - TO - BE Sumaill, 5 « year « old fe-. mal mountain poriila, was tak- en courting yestérday but re- celved only a cold reception front the ape in her life. Mambo, three - year - old lowland male gorilla, played hard ito get. The gorillas, neither of whom had ever seen another creature of their king since Infancy, were brought logether in a cage at Bronx Park Zoo. A kteper helg Sumaill by a paw as she strained to reach . Mambo, who dodged so as to | keep the keeper between him and the female. He appeared disconcerte® and frightened. © For 10 minutes Mambo dedr- ed, and Sumaili strained: Then they were taken back to their own cages. Redhead Hunted in Baby Probe \Toronto (INB) - Authorities} pressed a search today for an n»; tractive redhead known so far only as \Joyce\ as a key figure in an international baby smuggling ring, \Joyce said to be the friend of} Dr. Joseph ChaiKoff, now free on $2,000 bail, reportedly engineered) the adoption of a six - day - old |baby boy by a Brooklyn couple whose arrest started unraveling the alleged racket. MR.. AND MRS. Jack Shinder, both 29, told Toronto police after their arrest at the Toronto airport! that they had paid $400 for the baby plus $63 for hospital expenses. They reportedly said that they had been contacted by \Joyce\ who then arranged an interview with 'Dr, Chaikoff in New York where the details were worked out. The tearful couple, who said Mrs. Shinder was incapable of hav- Ing a baby, are free on bail but charged with falsifying a birth cer- tificate, Dr. Chaikoff, who allegedly deli- vered the baby to a 16 - year - old unwed girl at St. Mary's Hospi- tal, is charged with the same of- fense, I L U TORONTO police said Dr. Chai- Koff is Canadian - born and has been medical advisor to several Toronto Communists, Police said he has been affiliated with a num- 'ber of left » wing organizations. | Former Brooklyn Assistant Dis- trict Attorney Louis Almon arrived in Toronto last night to represent 'the Shinders and said he would ap- peal to the U.S. Consulate because the couple, though granted bail, has been denied permission to leave Canada. BIGGER and Police Identify BETTER - 39 C - -- R C - <--~-S beginning ~~ Sunday, Mar. 8 IN THE LONG_ISLAND © gUNDAY PRESS Stolen Car Driver 'The-driver of a stolen car who killed: when it crashed headon a on Front Street, East carly yesterday was by police as Lawrence 28, of 4 Honeysuckle Lane, town. According to police, Rutt, 'a car- penter, was the father of five chil- dren. & . Tpe car was owned by Lou De- Pichy of 850 Brian Lane, North Wantagh. DeFichy had been howl ing. in' Hempstead, when his car was stolen. At 2:36 AM., 'the' car, heading east, smashed Into a tree opposite the Labor Lyceum. Mutt died on the way to Meadowbrook Hospital. Ei i if 'City Orders to prevent an epidemic of were fond. By JAMES L, KILGALLEN Playboy Minot F, (Mickey) Jelke, convicted on two counts of compulsory prostitution, today could repent at leisure. - and in. jail - and worlder what part of a 40- year possible maxmum sentence he will be ordered to serve on March: 20. The squat, black-haired 23-year-old heir to a $3-million Chicago oleo fortune was found guilty on two counts of \compulsory. prostitution\ and acquitted on one count by a blue-ribbon, all-male jury which recommended mercy. « + HE FACES A PENALTY of anywhere from a suspend- ed sentence to a maximum of forty years. The jury of 11 married men and a bachelor reached 'its verdict after deliberating four hours and 28 minutes. Judge Francis L. Valente had instructed the jury to pass on only three counts ~- counts one, seven and eight, which posed the question of whether Jelke had \com- pelled,\ \induced or \attempted to induce\ three girls Rat 'Holes' By FRED M. MORROW Department of Health inspectors. rat rabies in Richmond Hill, served an ultimatum 'today on 25 home and store owners to clean up their premises which were found to bar- bor rats. The drive was' touched off by the discovery 'that & rat which bit 4 year-old Dorinda Dern a week ago was suffering from rabies in an advanced stage. The child is re- ceiving anti-rabies injections. The Health Department's rat cleanup campaign is concentrated in a nineblock area. 2x00 HEALTH inspectors, making a {door-to-door canvass, warned the |owners . of ratinfested premises that if they did not clean them up immediately, they would be taken to court. The law provides fines up !to $500 and a year's imprisonment [for failure to obey the health de- partment's order, A crew. Of 10 'health inspectors yesterday ~distovered almost tin: believably cluttered cellars and | rear yards. They set two dozen! strong, steel-jawed traps. t‘ Agents of the Jamaica ASPCA worked at their side, roun ting up | stray dogs and cats. The animals will be tested for rabies. ) £00 TRUCKS were stopped, apt-CL; ally those carrying food and vans | transporting horses to and from | Aqueduct Race Track, but no rais Madman as Attacker Suffolk police, with definite\ leads The Dern child was bitten last |O\ & Suspect in the brutal assault | Friday as she reached out to pet on a Riverhead. mother, said | a huge rat on a neighbor's front|yesterday two other homes in the xzhyllmrlem:sd “7:1an Vicinity were recently ward Dern, and turned over to the PY the phantom attacker. Jamaica ASPCA shelter, where it | Mrs. Dorthy L. Royce, 34, whose died Sunday. On Wednesday, head was battered by the bottle-| Health Commissioner John F. Ma- |wiciding maniac, honey reported the rat had rabies Wm‘lch reported | improved, yesterday. She attacked last Wednesdny‘ morning in her bed by a man be- lived bent on murder. | Mrs. Browder Posts $2,000 us name as YONKERS, N.Y. (M - Mrs. Earl has' walked into two other homes Browder, wife of the former head|in the general area of Mrs. Royce's of the American Communist A manhunt has been lat has posted $2,000 bond fof her free- en faunch dom pending disposition of a de- portation warrant, was was ed for him. Police decline to name the suspect. WATCH OUT, REDS - This is the steel skeleton of the administra- ton buliding of the Grumman jet plane plant siated for completion at tre end of the sommer in Calverto®\Th@-plant wilt testing the super speed jot fighters. Cops Seek | y Heir to Millions: to engage in the vice racket. Their \clients\ were so-called men-about-town many in Jelke's own Cafe Society set. The jury ruled \guilty with the recommendation of merey,\ on count one dealing with Pat Ward, a 19-year-old beauty and ex-sweetheart of Jelke, who lived with him, and then started dating \Johns\ at the defendant's alleged instigation. On count seven, the jury decided that Jelke was not guilty of having prevailed upon a 23-year-old, tawnyshaired California girl named Patricia Thompson, to enter' a life of shame. (She previously was mixed up with an ex- convict, alleged panderer and mavie bit player, Richard Short, before she ever saw Jelke.) + « \GUILTY WITH the recommendation of mercy,\ was the verdict on count eight, dealing with Marguerite Cordova, 23, a slim, petite, former night club hatcheck girl. Jelke faces a maximum sentence of two to twenty years on each of the guilty counts to combat communism around the 000, -will be an wltrs-modern layout with two huge rupways for $22 Million Jet Plant To Open Next Summer 1 The $22,000,000 Grumman jet plane plant at Celverton will swing into operation the end of this summer. The giant aviation project will include two runways, one more than 10,000 feet long and the other more than 7,000. They are at right angles to each other. With & total length of more than three miles, ~~~ ~~~~~ they make \ihis ultra-modern plant one of the greatest mihtn‘ry-lhxht \ Ike to Welcome centers in the world,\ a spokesman} ffi'£2:’.I‘.T§L‘.L\{:Jif°“’°\'\m10|d_ Go|fing Pal More than 900 persons will be employed at the outset of opera:) AUGUSTA, Ga. (P- President tions, Opening-day operations reportedly disappoint- take place in a group of bulldinkS eq mbout hx golf game, fixed his which include an assembly planumzhu on a score in the 80's toda warehouses, hangers, flight opera- ° i b Y tions, a steam plaht, a paint shop 40d R64 ready to welcome Bobby and an administration building. Jones - an old friend who made The new plant - located on a golf history. site which was covéred with sorub pine and potato farms only a year Continued on Page 2 weekend at the Augusta National Club, arranged to turn over |Jones a portrait of him which the |President painted. \ Jones, unable to play: golf any more because of a back ailment, was scheduled to arrive from At- Eden Leaves For U.S. Talks LONDON (INS) - Foreign Sec- | | lant late this afternoon. He “13“ feet long, of the type usually} The. subcommittee is investigat - retary Anthony Eden left England Yesterday for \unity\. talks wiln‘rng‘\ the printing from Eisen- President Eisenbower aimed at a (hower at the club house. common approach to world prob-| Eisenhower is living at the golf lems. . [course in Jones' white frame cot- Eden, nccompanied by Chancel-ltage. The President flew here from New York City: from tomorrow Bouthampton aboard the liner Eisenhower spent a good part of Queen Elizabeth. the day on the links yesterday and Also aboard the liner are U.S./was said to have been somewhat Ambassador Winthrop Aldrich of|¢hagrined about his score for 18 Lattingtown, L J.. and Lincoln Gor: holes don, U.8. Mutual Security chief in \All I'm going to Say is that he Britain, who are retusfiing to Wash- {didn't shoot under 90,\ said James Ington for the Anglo-American|C. Hagerly, the president's press talks starting Mar ' Paris Spring Fashions? Review Plans Preview The next best thing'ta' Paris in spring is springtime fashions from the City of Light's top couturiers. And that's exactly what the Nassau Review-Star will bring you . . . starting Monday! An exciting preview of the spring lines from famed « Parisian fashion houses will appear daily next week i . . illustrated by specially selecte tographs. Written by Carmel Snow, editor of Harper's Bazaar, the six-part series will treat you to a glimpse of the color- ful style openings of France's leading designers . . . and brief you on what's a la mode for spring 1953. Don't miss this glamorous, pitcure-filled series! Watch , (not the {mt article on the Dior collection in Monday's -Star. ' a Cougarjets for UN filers in Korea and wherever they're needed Eisenhower, vacationing over the! to | ”a Into the matter carefully.\ if _Jelke Faces 40 Years on Vice Conviction His chief counsel, Samuel Segal, said he 'will appeal , the verdict immediately after Judge Valente imposes sentence 20 days from now. In the meantime, he will try to get Jelke out on bail. Jelke took the verdict hard, The muscles of his jaw worked convulsively as the foreman of the jury, Edwin S. Reynolds, an advertising director, announced the fateful words of \guilty.\ The playboy's face paled, and he bowed his head. Jelke was ill at ease when a court attendant asked him to stand and give his pedigree. + + NERVOUSLY WRINGING a handkerchief in his hands, Jelke said he is 23, that he lives in mid-Manhattan. When asked his- occupation, he seems nonplussed and turned to one of his lawyers, Martin Benjamin, After a whispered conversation with the attorney, the Continued on Page 2 Senale Seen Solid for Red Tyranny Blast By JACK BELL wasHINnGTON (aP) The Senate's 79 to 0 vote for a resolu- tion condemning Russlan persect« tion of Jewish and other minorities points toward similar overwhelm- Ing support for President Eisen- hower's denunciation of the Soviet'a \subjugation of free. peoples.\ The Senate was as unanimous as it ever gets in formally criticis« ing \the vicious and inhuman\ per- secutions by Russia and its satel lites of ethnic and religious groups. Fifteen of 17 absent Senalors sent word they would have voted for the resolution, leaving only Benators Guy Cordon (R-Ore) and William Jenner (R-Ind) not official= ly recorded. * As approved yesterday, the reso- lution put the Senate on record as asking the President to appeal to the United Nations for \sultable\ action agninst Soviet acts of per- secution, The resolution needs po action by the House. a # i | world. The plant, to cost $22,000,- - ‘ll'ECIFICALLY. | protested the persecuno'n $1 31:22; UN A - Film se Found in Trash Can Congressmen Hear Monaghan Today Police Commissioner George P. Monaghan was called today before congressmen seeking to determine whether New York City's police were illegally exempted fromt PBI scrutiny of alleged brutality, h Tnspecto trash receptacle Wedpesday mcrn-‘ersgninfimmczf‘h m: ing. Upon opening it he found the Tine officer, were listed 23 Wit film strip. The strip of film was aboul 00\ committee prepared to resume pub» Jand - a - quarter inches wide 200 hearings. harrassment of Protestant denom« inations suppression of Moslem communities persecution of the [scattering of racial groups in Po- land, the Ukraine, in Balkan and {Baltic states, and the \increasing persecution of the Jews, : Senator Paul Douglas (DDD | Nassau detectives puzzled 1a5t/iog the Senate before It acted that imam over a strip of United Nation Russia's anti-Remitic campaign was film . . . found in a trash can DY|qirected at \winning over the a bank janitor . . . and wondered|Arab States\ and gaiping access jwhether they had stumbled on top|\to the oil of the near and Middle secret government information. East.\ ' | Considerable mystery surround-| Chairman Alexander Wiley (R, ed the case and police kept mum|Wis) of the Foreign Relations Com» jwhen news of the film discovery/mittee said the Russian actions Pll'il leaked out, With memories have \horrlfied the entire civilized {of the atomic spy trials still fresh, world.\ police were leery about disclosing anything. | Federal Bureau of Investigation lofficials were checked but pro- fessed to know nothing about it. The first inkling of the case came from First Squad Detective: John' Rodgers early this morning. Deng-w Rodgers said Vincent Bareill® of 60 Granada Avenue,! Roosevelt, employed as a Janitor ‘ul. the Freeport Bank, fished a circular metal container out of a {rum off by a 16 MM. film projector. /jng reports that New York City lon the metal can were stencilied|police and the U.S. Justice Depfrt« in” words \Atomic Energy and.ment had an agreement last year United Nation. \ [sparing local police questi by | Bareille held or to his find untilthe FBI in cpmplaints of Yor of the Exchequer R. A. Butter, Washington Thursday and will when he brought it tolity. Federal civll rights procedure sailed for {Freeport police headquarters ‘pruvides that the FBI probe- such Detective Rodgers, who was cases; assigned to the case, studied the! Since reports of an agreement film under light last night, He|were first aired publicly about two the strip was Wed: \Present-/weeks ago. Monnghan has repeat» ed by the United Nations Fiimjediy said the police had no stich (Board. Problems of Control and |ARZ¢ement with Justice department, Formation of Atomic Energy Com- -- ~ mission.\ It bore a date stamp of | 'October 24, 1948. I Police speculated that the film | might prove to be nothing more sensational than an educational strip distributed by the UN as a| public service, and discarded by | its last owner, But they couldn't, be sure until laboratory exptan! at Mineola Headquarters hnd‘ examined It today. DON'T WISH FOR MONEY That won't par those after holiday bills, You can eri It by selling thhige' you n@ longer use that art stored dik ° your attic, basement, gurig@® or closet thru uni. sive Classified Want Ad. TW Okay for Clare Luce Held Up Temporarily WASHINGTON uM - Senate con- Uirmation of Mrs. Clare Boothe Luce as ambassador to Italy has been\ held up temporarily at the i request of Senator Olin D, Johns- ton (D, 8.C.). \ Johnston' said yesterday he bas | received protests concerning Mra. Luce, the wife of magazine editor Henry R. Luce, \bo T. intend 'l the measure Inesses as a House Judiciary mub -