The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, October 19, 1951, Image 6
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Crime in America
By ESTES KEFAUVER
United States Senator
Six of a Series
Miami: Polluted Playground
As we opened hearings in Miami, it oppressed us that an area
so blessed by nature could be so polluted by man. The fabulous
coast had become the plunder-ground as well as the playground for
America’s most vicious criminals.
With the nod of well-paid so-called law enforcement officers,
Miami was the winter capital of the national crime syndicate.
A great deal of this has been changed. The senate crime com
mittee’s investigation bolstered the efforts of Miami’s decent citi
zens to strike back against the underworld.
Even months after our disclosure in Miami, the lid still was
clamped tight upon illegal bookmaking, in so far as any large scale
activity was concerned, and many
of the gambling casinos run by out-
of-state hoodlums were shut down.
Let on begin with the story of
Walter Clark, sheriff since 1933 of
neighboring Broward County, of
which prosperous Fort Lauderdale
is the seat. In \,neriff Clark’s baili
wick, there were three notorious
gambling Joint*. Among the out-of-
state racketeers said to be associat
ed with them—as well as in Miami
casinos — were the infamous Joe
Adonis, the brothers Meyer and
Jake Lansky, Vincent (Jimmy Blue-
Eyes) Alo, and bookmaker Frank
Erickson (since imprisoned), all of
New York City and New Jersey;
and, from Detroit, Joe Massei and
William G. Bischoff, alias Lefty
Clark.
I asked Clark why he violated his
oath of office by ever letting them
operate. He gave the brazen reply:
“I was elected on the liberal tick
et, and the people want it and they
enjoy it.”
Clark went on to reveal he had
been well acquainted with gambler
Jake Lansky for 12 or 15 years and
that Lansky among others, “con
tributes to the campaign.”
In Miami (Dade County), we
looked into the activities of James
A. (Smiling Jimmy) Sullivan, a
former traffic policeman who had
been sheriff since January, 1945.
The voluble Jimmy, who wasn’t
smiling much toward the end of his
examination, admitted that his as
sets jumped from $2,500 to approxi
mately $70,000 auring his five years
in office.
• • •
Oi Smiling Jimmy’s performance
on the witness stand, the committee,
In its report, had to conclude:
“Much of Sullivan’s testimony was
vague and evasive and the com
mittee Ooes not consider it credi
ble.” The fantastic aftermath, how
ever, was this:
After a grand Jury indicted Sul
livan, charging him with neglect
of duty, failing to enforce gambling
laws, and permitting deputies to
accept bribes. Governor Fuller War
ren, in October, 1950, suspended him
from office. Early in April, 1951,
however, the indictment having been
dismissed on a technicality, the
Governor reinstated him.
A tragic sidelight was told us
by George Patton, who, after serving
his country honorably in World War
II, became a Miami Beach police
man and later a deputy. He de
clared hi had intended to be an
honest of fleer but soon ’learned
that law enforcement didn’t always
operate the way I thought it did.”
Patton said that when he later
became a deputy of Sheriff Sullivan,
he collected “close to $50,000” in
bribes over a period of nine months
for protecting gambling on Miami
Beach. He was the
collector, h said.
’bag man,” or
Two other Miami Beach hotels
had special prominence in the op
erations of mobsters. One was the
Sands hotel operated jointly by Al
fred (Big Al) Polizzi, one - time
Cleveland mobster and Dave Glass
and Benny Street, both of whom
had convictions in Philadelphia as
horse-book operators. We also
learned from questioning Polizzi that
his good friend, John Angersola,
silently held half of Polizzi’s 25 per
cent interest in the Sands. Anger-
sola, in addition to interests in the
Wofford and the Sands, had a piece
of still another mob-favored hotel,
the Grand.
Purely local and state political
matters, of course, were outside
of our jurisdiction, but we had a
legitimate interest in Governor War
ren’s 1948 campaign financing be
cause of a $100,000 contribution from
William Johnston, the Chicago and
Miami horse and dog track opera
tor, and long time associate of the
Capone gang.
Johnston insisted, of course, that
it was merely his “strong friend
ship” for the governor which
prompted the gift.
The gigantic operation of the S&G
bookmaking syndicate was another
major avenue of inquiry. The syn
dicate, which itself admitted that it
grossed $26,000,000 in 1948, was
^started in Miami Beach in 1944 by
five “local” boys.
For a long time, the S&G mo
nopoly over Miami Beach bookmak-
VOTED DOWN
ing was almost 100 per cent com
plete. Even the then-powerful Frank
Erickson, who had paid $45,000 for
a three-month bookmaking conces
sion at Meyer Schine’s luxurious
Roney Plaza hotel, came to grief
when he attempted to buck it.
Schine, after he broke off an ar
rangement with S&G and made the
contract with Erickson, was visited
by Detective Pat Perdue of the
Miami Beach police. Schine said
that Perdue told him he should not
let the contract go to Erickson.
• • •
There was only one flaw in the
S&G’s highly efficient operation.
It became so profitable that it
aroused the cupidity of the pros
perous crimesters from Chicago
who, in the approved manner of
upper bracket - hoodlumdom, win
tered on beautiful Miami Beach ;
soaking up the sun on their daily
walks from hotel to horse parlor.
Then, as our Committee recon
structed the story, the ubiquitous
and sinister partnership of Guzik
& Accardo entered the picture. It is
the Committee’s contention that
Guzik & Accardo acting for the
Chicago - Capone Syndicate, d i s -
patched Harry Russell, a Chicago
gambler to S&G early in 1949.
Understandably devoted to their
$26,000,000 business, the S&G part
ners didn’t want to be “muscled.”
They declined. The Chicago interests
were disappointed but gentlemanly
about it. Nothing crude transpired.
Their Mr. Russell simply began
building up a syndicate of his own,
and bookies at a number of plush
hotels, dominated by the Chicago
mob. flocked over to Russell.
• j,
• • •
Next, Governor Warren’s crime
investigator, W. O. Crosby, ap
peared. Here things get a little
complicated: His friend, RusselL
Crosby conceded to us, started feed
ing him information on various
books that he might raid, and Cros
by started raiding them. All were
places operated by S&G bookies.
Finally came the crusher: S&G
was buying its wire service from
the local distributor of the same
Continental Press that already had
undergone the experience of being
squeezed by Guzik and Accardo.
This service was abruptly shut off,
leaving S&G paralyzed.
In just about 10 days, the S&G
partners took another look at Harry
Russell and decided they had been
wrong. They decided to recapitalize
their business—though they admit
ted to us that they really did not
need any capita f—and to let Russell
have one-sixth interest. The price
they asked for this one-sixth in
terest in a business that had grossed
$26,000,000 the previous year was
$20,000.
At the same time Mr. Russell
bought into the S&G for $20,000, the
S&G “boys” happened to buy a
boat named the Clari-Jo. The price
of the Clari-Jo happened to be $20,-
000, and the owner of the boat—lots
of coincidences here— just happened
to be Tony Accardo.
Accardo, when we had him in
the. witness chair later, refused re
peatedly to answer questions about
it. Finally, however. Senator Wiley
innocently inquired, “Who baptized
that name, Clari-Jo? Accardo, mo
mentarily off-guard, replied. “That
is my wife’s first name and my
middle name.” As spectators roared
With merriment, the crestfallen
hoodlum rubbed his jaw with the
hand that has a dove tattooed be
tween the thumb and trigger-finger.
“I fell into that one!” he blurted.
Guzik and Accardo’s 1949 tax re
turn showed a loss of $7,252 due to
“S&G Service.”
Anyway, the S&G squeeze hit
lemons instead of the jackpot. The
combination of the senate commit
tee’s disclosures and the opposition
of the law-abiding elements in Mi
ami Beach finally generated a heat
that even the powerful S&G syndi
cate could not cool off. Abruptly,
“the boys,” without consulting their
Chicago associate, Mr. Russell, de
cided to go out of business.
Next Week:
Murder.
Tampa. Wholesale
Condensed from the booMf. “Crime In
America.by Estes Kefauver. Cpr. 1951.
Pub. by Doubleday, Inc. Dist. General
Features Corp.—WNU.
Attempt To Re-Create Crime Body Fails
WASHINGTON — A Republican
proposal to re-create the Senate
Crime Investigating Committee
and give it $150,000 for a new probe
was voted down by a Senate Com
merce committee.
Chairman Johnson (D., Col.)
said that the proposal was defeat
ed because Democrat members of
the committee felt the Senate Dis
trict of Columbia committee, now
looking into crime conditions in
Washington, has the authority to
extend its investigations to other
parts of the country if necessary.
He also pointed out that the pre
vious committee investigations had
left a big calendar of legislation.
The session did approve four
anti-gaming bills, three of which
were recommended by the Kefauver
committee.
Intamational Uniioro
Sunday School Lanom
BY DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN
SCRIPTURE: Exodus 1—2.
DEVOTIONAL READING:'
27:7-14.
P a • 1 m
Seeing God's Hand
Lesson for October 21, 1951
Dr. Foreman
l^rOBODY is ever, in all his life,
^ actually as wise as he thinks he
is when he is about 17 years old.
We have a remarkable case of this
in the Bible, the
story of a man
whose viewpoint,
between his 17th
and 56th birthdays,
completely changed.
It is the story of
Joseph.
At the age of 17.
Joseph was about
as nearly insuffer
able as any one
ever has a chance
to be. He was the oldest son of the
favorite wife of a wealthy cattle-
owner named Jacob. Old Jacob
needed all the hands he could use,
to look after his sheep and cattle;
and he put all twelve of his sons to
work. Eleven of them had real
work; Joseph, though next to the
youngest of them all, was a kind of
boss or overseer. At least that is
what his father intended.
He dressed the boy not In
working clothes like the others
but in fancy clothes, and used
to send him around to see what
the other boys were up to. Natu
rally Joseph’s brothers did not.
take to all this;' in fact they
hated him so h&rd that they
were on the point of murdering
him. «
On the very day,of the proposed
murder, however, the brothers dis
covered a chance to sell him as a
slave. So Joseph was sold off to
some traveling slave-traders, and
for all his brothers knew or cared,
he was off to a lingering death.
• • •
Where Was the Hand of God?
r DSEPH expressed no opinion about
this at the time. (He was proba
bly gagged.) But judging from his
general character and behavior at
that time of his life, it is no trouble
to guess his thoughts. He was “fit
to be tied”; indeed, he must have
been tied on a camel’s back, for no
slave-trader in his senses would
make Joseph walk the 200 miles to
Egypt.
The better his condition on ar
rival, the higher the prfee. (As
It turned out, a very wealthy
man bought him; perhaps only
a wealthy man could afford
him.)
If you had asked Joseph while
he was being hauled down to
Egypt and the slave-market. Where
is God in all this? Joseph might
well have answered: “Nowhere. The
devil is in this, or my devilish
brothers. Nobody means any good
by it. Hie only reason they are sell
ing me instead of killing me is that
they are making a little by it; these
slave-traders are certainly not in
business for their health. I am the
only son my father trusted, and
now I shall die a wretched death in
a strange land.”
• • •
The Wisdom of the Years
T HAT was Joseph at seventeen.
At the age of 56 he saw a dif
ferent picture. Many strange years
had passed; Joseph had been slave
and then prisoner; then by a dra
matic turn in his fortunes he had
risen overnight to be the top food
administrator, price controller and
economic stabilizer, all in one, for
the great empire of Egypt.
His brothers, driven by famine,
had fled to Egypt for help, and
Joseph, after playing cat-and-mouse
with them for months, at last told
them (to their great terror) who he
was. But he had returned good for
evil: had invited down his whole
family, father, brothers and all, and
given them refuge in a corner of
Egypt. At last Jacob died.
The brothers, who made the
mistake of thinking Joseph no
better than themselves, had sup
posed that all Joseph was wait
ing for was his father’s death.
Now would be the time for
Joseph’s long-delayed venge
ance. Possibly Joseph the boy
had dreamed of just such an
hour. But Joseph the man was
wiser. To his brothers, cower
ing before him, he said a
memorable thing: “You meant
it for evil, but God meant it
for good.” (Gen. 50:20.)
He still had no illusions about his
brothers. They had been a bad lot.
But God “meant it for good.” That
wicked act, selling him into slavery,
had been the unintentional means
of saving hundreds of lives. Joseph
now, with the wisdom of his 56
years, can see the hand of God
which his 17-year-old eyes could
not see at all.
So in times of distress the thought
should come to each of us: God’s
hand may just now be out of sight,
but some day, looking back even on
this distress we too shall see the
hand of God.
(Covyrlcht 1951 by the Division of
Christian Education, National ConncU
of the Chnrchos of Christ In the United
States of Am'rlea. Released by WNU
Features.)
Quantity Cooking
For Church Suppers
Requires Planning
IT’S ABOUT that time of year
when clubs and groups are getting
organized enough to plan a large
dinner or luncheon to feed most of
the group. To
run these af
fairs smoothly
requires advance
planning as well
as an under
standing of what
foods are likely
to go over nice
ly with a crowd.
These recipes are planned to give
first aid for the homemaker who
suddenly faces the task of feeding
25 to 50 people in her group. The
recipes given will serve 25, and they
are easily doubled to serve 50.
Plan the work far enough 'in ad
vance to avoid lack of supplies and
disappointment when the work ac
tually gets under way. All groceries
should be ordered in advance and
checked the day before the event in
case something is missing and the
menu has to be changed.
If you have help, assign one or
more of the foods to be prepared to
individuals. Consider who can best
do each type of work, and let this be
your guide in assignments.
Check equipment and dishes to be
used so that you have made ample
preparations for the actual work,
One woman who is capable can di
rect the preparation and serving.
HERE’S A GOOD community sup
per menu which is bound to please
a group of people:
Meat Loaf or Ham Loaf
Boiled Potatoes or
Scalloped Potatoes
Green Beans or Harvard Beets
Rolls or Bread Butter
Apple-Cranberry Salad or
Cabbage-Carrot Salad
Shoofly Pie
Coffee
• « •
EITHER MEAT OR HAM loaf is
economical for a big supper, and
it’s easy to serve:
*Ham Loaf
(Serves 25)
5 pounds ground, smoked ham
1% pounds ground fresh pork
2 eggs, beaten
IK quarts dry crumbs
IK quarts milk
K cup mustard
Combine all in
gredients and
place in three
loaf pans 4~x8*.
Bake in a, mod-
e r a t e (350°F.)
oven for IK
hours. Let stand
15 minutes be
fore slicing.
Meat Loaf
(Serves 25)
8 pounds ground beef or veal
IK pounds ground perk
9 cups (IK quarts) bread
crumbs
3 eggs, beaten
4K cups milk
94 cup finely chopped onion
94 teaspoon dry mustard
94 teaspoon sage
8 tablespoons salt
94 teaspoon pepper
Mix all ingredients together and
pack in three greased 4*x8 /, loaf
pans. Bake IK hours in a moderate
oven (350 9 F.).
Meat or Ham loaf makes an
excellent meat coarse for a large
crowd because it’s easy to pre
pare, pleasing to a large num
ber of people and slices readily
for easy serving. Either loaf can
be baked In home-sized tins, thus
eliminating the necessity of get
ting special equipment.
LYNN SAYS:
Here are Hints
For Quantity Cookery
If you’re planning rolls for a
crowd, three dozen rolls will serve
25 people, allowing some of them
seconds. For heavy eaters allow
four dozen which will give you 48
rolls. #
Brick ice cream is an easy des
sert for large cSowds. Unpack from
dry ice 45 minutes before serving
and then slice with a knife dipped
in warm water.
-•JBglgJfc;
ami
Shoofly pie tops off the large
quantity supper nicely because
of the failure-proof recipe. In
place of large pie tins, the 8-
' inch size may be used, allowing
four to serve 25 people. The pie
slices easily thus simplifying
large quantity serving.
CHURCH SUPPER MENU
*Ham Loaf
•Green Beans
•Scalloped Potatoes
•Apple-Cranberry Salad
Rolls Butter Relishes
•Shoofly Pie
Milk Tea Coffee
•Recipes Given
•Scalloped Potatoes
(Serves 25)
6 pounds potatoes, peeled,
thinly sliced
1 tablespoon salt
K teaspoon pepper
K cup floor
94 cap batter or substitute
1 quart milk
Place layer of potatoes in greas
ed baking pan and sprinkle with
salt, pepper and flour mixed to
gether. Dot with butter. Repeat un
til all potatoes are used. Pour over
heated milk to cover. Bake in a
moderate (350°F.) oven until pota
toes are tender, about IK to 2
hours.
If you plan to have boiled pota
toes, you’ll have to use 8 to 10
pounds. Green beans may be can
ned for easy preparation. A No. 10
can contains 3 quarts and will serve
25. Use 4 tablespoons salt and 1 cup
bacon drippings for seasoning. Or,
use 6 pounds fresh green beans or
294 pounds frozen for 25 people.
Cabbage-Carrot Salad"
(Serves 25)
4 pounds finely shredded
cabbage
2 pounds carrots, grated
1 pound celery, diced
1 quart boiled salad dressing
Blend all ingredients together and
serve with lettuce.
• • • N
•Apple-Cranberry Salad
(Serves 25)
5 cups cranberries
2K caps water
2K cops sugar
2K tablespoons gelatin
5 tablespoons cold water
IK cups diced apples
IK cups diced celery
Pick over and wash cranberries.
Cook gently with water until «lcina
burst. Put through sieve and add
sugar r let stand 9 minutes. Soften
gelatin in cold water, then blend in
to hot cranberry mixture. Let cool
to thicken, fold in apples and celery.
Pour into mold or pan. Chill until
firm. Serve with lettuce and mayon
naise, mixed with whipped cream.
•Shoofly Pie
(Serves 25)
3 cups sifted all-purpose flour
2 cups light brown sugar
K teaspoon nutmeg
K teaspoon ginger
K teaspoon cloves
2 teaspoons cinnamon
1 teaspoon salt
K cup shortening
4 egg yolks, well beaten
IK cups light molasses
2 tablespoons baking soda dis
solved in 2% caps boiling
water
4 6-inch pie shells, unbaked
Sift together first seven ingredi
ents. Cut in shortening until mixture
resembles commeal. Combine egg
yolks, molasses and soda in water.
In pie shells, alternate flour mixture
and liquid having the flour mix
ture as a base and topping. Bake in
a hot (450*F.) oven for 10 minutes.
Reduce temperature to moderate
(350°F.) and bake 15 minutes until
pie is set.
Keep hot rolls and bread from
drying out in the oven by covering
them with a slightly damp towel.
For tossed salads, made in quan
tity, wash and prepare vegetables
ahead of time, then cover with a
damp cloth or place in a plastic
bag until just before time to serve.
Toss and add dressing.
Biscuits and pie crusts may b«
prepared in advance; if you make
either mix and refrigerate it. Then
only the liquid needs to be mixed
in, and the shaping done before
baking.
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Sight Restored to Man
Romping With Children
GLENDALE, Calif. — Some peo
ple may frown at the sight of a
grown man romping around with
children at play—but not Gilbert
Sawyer.
’ Sawyer, 42 year old musician, re
cently regained his sight after a
year-and-a^ialf of blindness while
bouncing around in a backyard
romp with his wife’s three year old
grandson.
Plunged Into a world of darkness
by an explosion in 1949, Sawyer’l
vision began to return to him
he stooped to kiss little Michael
Humburger, grandson of his
Frances, who he met at the Brai
institute.
It's Wonderful the Way
Chewing-Gum Laxi “
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Shade trees require trimming
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Dense foliage of street trees
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Corrective pruning will elimi
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There are few trees that cannot
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DRASTIC PRICE
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tf Tour Drvggl* Connor Supply. Ordbr Mnoct
-CRAZY WATER COMPANY. MC. Minor al WoN*, TonoO
f if Peter faiN chain# your votJNGsnR wini
CHllDRENi COWS
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the blue
FOR EAST RELIEF. of^egulw
FOR special, mil* :* Ue ving agents,
only the ^^e^ensitive skinl
so » won’t nntate se _
WMM.
QUICK!
RUBIN
FOR CHILDREN-
THC ORIGINAL ’
BexvGau
DREN-IN THE BLUE PACKAGE V