Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Nov 1961, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

'Wshan Killed In Port Perry Six-Year-Old ~ ty WwW rah WEATHER REPORT THOUGHT FOR TODAY he day and Wednesday. Not much , Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash, It's time to check ski equipment -- skis, poles, boots, wax, Blue 0 Cross. r] Still Pressing For Wider Talks MOSCOW (Reuters) --Russia agreed today to a Western call for the resumption of talks on change winds, in temperature, VOL. 90..NO. 270 10 ee Net Over OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1961 TWENTY PAGES REPO ee eT TE RACE Girl, 6, Killed | In Port Perry PORT PERRY (Staff) -- Ajrear seat, Paula apparently ran ix-year- Scugog Township|'o the back of the car. banning nuclear tests in Geneva ers es atl a in a traffic| Police believe that she darted] | f NOU eee % lr accident Monday night as she | out in front of the Hart car} @ 3 J The Soviet Union's acceptance ran to her home on Highway |from the rear of the Collins car.| lof the Western suggestion was \disclosed in nutes handed over to the British and American em- bassies here. But at the same time the finotes continued to press. Rus- sia's demands for broader talks on '"'general and complete"' dis- jarmament. The notes also de- clared that if any of the Big Three nuclear powers resumed tests while the talks were going on "the other side would be forced to make corresponding conclusions. .. ." The talks among the United States, Britain and Russia broke down in September after Russia unilaterally ended a three-year they contributed toward narrow- ing the difference between the Communist and Western points of view. The Soviet reply continued, however, to press for negotia- tions on "general and com- plete" disarmament and called for the establishment of a body in which such talks would be carried out, The reply said Russia -had agreed to the resumption of the talks keeping in mind that the three powers taking part had announced a common aim of general and complete disarma- ment. WOULD TEST AGAIN If at any point during the test-ban talks any of the pow- ers carried out atomic tests "the other side would be forced to make corresponding conclu- sions also concerning nuclear tests," the notes said. Soviet Deputy Premier Anas- BS ee 'MORE BERLIN BARRIERS The impact hurled her body mile east of the border 7A 'about one io the westbound lane of the village of Port Perry. : Pre Paula Wilhelmina Mariajhighway. . | Schillings, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Collins turned her car| Mrs. Hubert Schillings, of RR 3,)around and rushed the girl to) Port Perry, was pronounced|the Port Perry Hospital. \@ dead at the Port Perry Mem- Paula's father -told police} orial Hospital after she wasilater that he had just missed ARTHUR LUCAS, OF DETROIT straek by an eastbound car as picking his girls up in Port | Police Find Gun In Murder Probe ground, The screen was put | up to shield workers laboring under armed Red guards as ainred Gar. they erected reinforced con- crete barriers and tank traps | --(AP_ Wirephoto along the border. Two West ' from Berlin) British soldiers peek over | the top of the new 12-foot fiberboard fence erected by the Communists along the Berlin east-west border near | via_ radio WASHINGTON (CP) -- Quali- Brandenburg Gate in back- the side of the road minutes. He had been in Lind- Police identified the driver of say and arrived home to learn the car as Nelson Hart, 32, of of the tragedy. : ( RR 1 Nestleton. Normally, he drives the girls Paula and two sisters, Lies-|to school in Oshawa on Tues- lbeth, 7, and Frances, 8, were|day, Thursday and Friday of " ' rr A i, Theyjeach week. TORONTO (CP -- Policel man. Wwe f d vith heir| ™ M 1 The chancellor, the informant\ing to fear from negotiations as\the accident happened They One ee ee yi lice , were found with their| a ont powerful explosions in fied West German sources said alae hari that the Westernjlong as vital issues are made|had come from Oshawa by said ee ee ant res eee one man with murder|throats slashed. The man also the Arctic Monday night that Chancellor|powers make clear in talks with/clear, has refrained from mak-|and had alighted in Port Perry Ais vine of the Whites and issued an open warrant/bore four bullet wounds in his| A' the time the talks broke tas Mikoyan indicated to diplo- Konrad Adenauer demands that|the Russians that the wall must/ing clear a he fully sup-|where _ = yng 'ins See AD aa, at the OPP NM comes erga, ye om sori gb eer couple moved|down, Russia was apres mats last week that ividing East and West)c down: in any agreement/ports the West German position) Mrs. Gertrude 10 ins, | ae an saute jsecond person with murder as/here from Detroit last Septem-|haye a nuclear test ban dis- eS tere toon on a con coached. There also must be ajon the wall issue. |3 Port Perry, on her way home,| The body is resting at the|they pressed an intensive inves-|ber, | planned to accept the Western had found a man's ring on the| The United Nations General ; ; Perry. Mass of The Angels to| Arthur L 58, of Detroit ' ie Russia wound up its series of - ia-/Berli West Germany. __|day, Adenauer and Kennedy arejon their way home from school. z ur Lucas, 53, of Detroit,/bed where the woman's nude bly passed a resolution oe seeing East-West negotia-/Berlin with West Ge y jsaid to have reached an under-|She gave them a ride to their be sung at ave Church poh who was picked up for ques-\body was found, tae thar fesumaption Of tis nuclear. wit flere month, uThe chancellor is not posing| WOULD AGREE ding that. any deci they/home, which is. about midway) [ome eur ednesday at 10. a.m.( emg BY Police of that city) A 200-man squad of Metropolsitaixs." he "United 'States a faa aeties with . pei age for : eh AER than. fermany. mould work-out -must., be subject to}netween the Lake Scugog Cee orriont will be fn the Homan after "the bodies of Therlandiitan 'Toronto police sought fur-| Britain followed up this resolu-loreater than 50 me: neo = these negotiations," the inform-/48ree to increase techm further discusstow British|way and the Centre Road on Crater, 43, and Jean Crater, 21,/ther sives while Detroit policejtion with notes urging the Rus-|equal to 50,000,000 one of TNT. U.K. Cauti AK. Cautious No Ulti d o Ultimatums Posed returning home from St. Greg- each week. They take the bus dition for settlement of the Ber-|firm pledge to the political and| In a dena petiole discus-|recognized the three little girls|Chapel of McDermott-Panaba-|tigation into the gangland slay- |eussed as part of the broader|cuggestion for the resumption ant added in commenting on the|relations with the East German) and French leaders. \Scugog Toland. Catholic Cemetery, Uxbridge. were found in a midtown Tor-|werebusy questioning. persons|"0",™! notes urging the Rus Over Soviet Fo Ent g Talk r ory's School in Oshawa when|on Monday and Wednesday of! i r i i i Police reported Tuesday they|problem of disarmament. lin crisis but not as a condition/economic "viability" of West|sion at the te House Mon-|as ones she had often picked up ker Funeral Home in Portling of a former Detroit couple. P ie talks Ah Gadan first day of talks between the) (PE. Libary a Ba Md power oral _ the pres- When the car arrived at the oe onto rooming house, was named) in that city in an effort to solveltaiks cy ar aout Nov. 2 85-year-old German leader andjit recognizes the East German) ident intensive) c.hijlings driveway, Mrs. Col-| s "4 |in one warrant issued Sunday|the case. | President Kennedy to help un- cere tal either formally or round | Sparco ye 1odsy hhins Gorosd and Paula, who had Councillors Won't a iy held dn Detelt, th Police said they believe the EXPRESSES WILLINGNESS ite the West and prepare for a|informally. inal talk is expected to be heidi, oa sitting in the front seat,| Cross Pi k t Li | Lucas is held in Detroit with-/Craters were killed by'imported| Today's Soviet reply, distrib- possible conference with the) Kennedy, who supports the Wednesday, with a communique) ot out first. As Mrs. Collins ICKET LINE {out bond on a fugitive warrant| executioners to prevent his tes-|uted to correspondents at the Kremlin. iBritish view that there is noth-'to follow. ltipped the front seat to allow| TORONTO (CP) Severall or an extradition hearing Dec. |timony for the state in a De-|foreign ministry after being de- : ous Metropolitan Toronto council-| 29: --| The prospects are that the W. Germans Try To Destroy Wall BERLIN (AP) -- West Berlin police brandishing night sticks Monday night rolled back hun- dreds of West zone youths who tried to sterm the Communist- built border barrier with cries that '"'the wall must go." East Berlin police also opened up on the angry demonstrators with water cannon and tear. gas grenades and drew tear gas fire in reply from the West Berlin police. Authorities estimated that about 200 grenades sailed over the wal! during the ex- change. The demonstrations marked the 100th day since East Ger- many started erecting the wall which virtually sealed off the main escap* route for residents fleecing the Communist regime. There were no reports of se- rious injuries. but many were drenched by cold blasts from the Communists' water gun The flareup came as East Berlin labor forces strengthened the 25-mile wall into a concrete- and-steel tank trap. The work communique will call for re- jmoval of the wall and will stress eventual reunification of East and West Germany as an objective of allied policy. Adenauer appears at the Na- |tional Press Club for a major |speech Wednesday. He is to re- turn to Bonn Wednesday night. got under way Sunday and) Kennedy and Adenauer were prompted speculation that the reported 'to have found no dif- Communists were preparing for/ferences in their concepts of a complete shutdown of the pasic Western policy on Berlin East-West border. which provide for the continued] The youths' charge on the presence of Western troops as| wall followed a torchlight pro-|a guarantee of West Berlii's} cession in which an estimated|freetom from Communist rule 20,000 marched five miles|and the need for free movement| through downtown West Breliniof goods and people between in an anniversary observance|Berlin and West Germany. led by Errst Lemmer, West German cabinet minister, and Otto Bach, speaker of the West Bach, speak Four Drown When Berlin city parliament. Before the thousands who Car Enters Water gathered at the eternal flame ey peg Re 4 in the Reichsk anzlerplatz-- _, LEWISPORTE, Nfld. (CP)-- Which is supposed to burn until, Four teen-agers were drowned Germany i§ reunited--a student|4t nearby Burnt Arm Monday leader condemned what he "ight when their car plunged off called the criminal actions of 4 Wharf into 15 feet of water East German Communist boss of the Walter Ulbricht Away with Two other occupants car escaped, the Communist. Police said they drove down criminals -- away with Ul-to the wharf to turn the car bricht," shouted Juergen Wohl- around. Apparently the wheels rabe. chairman of the West Ber- slipped and the vehicle slid into lin Student I*ederation the water. FLEMING, MACMILLAN TALK ENDS LONDON (CP) Finance Minister Fleming came away from a talk with Prime Minister Macmillan Monday still lacking the information on the Euro pean Common Market that Can- ada sought more than a month ago. "He didn't say he would give it and he didn'! say he wouldn't give it." Fleming said, refer-' ring to a British document which is of the 'highest import- ance" to Canada Fleming 1o!d a press confer- ence that ai the half-hour meet- ing with the British leader he had renewed Canada's request for a full text of a statement made in Paris Oct. 10 outlining Britain's approach to member- CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 ithe essential points covered in} |the document have been com-! monwealth {| The Canadian complaint about| wealth? British reticence has subject of unofficial comment} for some weeks. British news- papers accused the Ottawa ad-| ministration of obstructiveness. Fleming said that in general his talk with Macmillan and his| of a part" of the statement. meeting with President de} Fleming's remarks marked|Gauile in Paris Saturday indi- the first officia! confirmation of cate that '"'very great difficul- a difference of view betweenjties'" are inherent 'in reconcil- Canada and Britain regarding\ing British membership in the| the process of Commonwealth'Common Market with full pro-| consultation on the current ne-tection of Commonwealth inter- gotiations for British entry into ests. | the Common Market Lord Beaverbrook's Daily Ex- : : Sat SES press says today the British PAPER CONFIDENTIAL public is "distressed by the bad Britain feels that the re-\feelings between Brilain and quested texi i one of the Con- Canada ove: the Common Mar- ference documents that the ne-yo» gotiating parities have agreed) he Pynrecc re "it. | should be regarded as confiden- ie opposed to: Brit tial, for circulation only in the closed group of direct partici pants. Whitehall also says that allithe Six. It has not been given! Ito the governments of the Com- ship in the six-eountry Euro- pean Economic Community--or Common Market. / The Canadian. government, he said, has been trying its best to} get the document, but all it has received so far is a "summary been a Fleming is seeking. municated to the Canadian gov- "Is it any wonder that there ernment. \the two sisters to get out of the| Girl's Story Of Bloodshed, Death At Sea MIAMI, Tila. (AP)--A little girl's narrative of bloodshed and death at sea has the ear- marks of mass murder by a man gone berserk, a U.S. Coast Guard officer says. The officer who made that in terpretation of Terry Jo Duper- rault's account of a tragic night aboard the yacht. Bluebelle would not be quoted by name Officially, the coast guard said no findings will be announced until its investigation is com- plete The bizarre story told by the ll-vear-old Green Bay, Wis., girl: was made public the coast guard Monday. Earlier Capt. Julian A. Har- vey, skipper of the Bluebelle, said all seven persons aboard the ketch jumped into the At- lantic as the vessel burned and sank after a Bahamas squall snapped its mainmast. All ex- cept Harvey were presumed lost by | were in the back yard when the} Still No ECM Information "On. them the door. is slammed. And, inside, Britain carries on her confidential ex- changes with Germany, Italy, France and the rest. "At the end of the discussions Britain fobs off Canada with a summary of her argument. "For Germany the full dis- closure. For Canada a_ hand- out!" The Daily Mail takes a dif- ferent view. "At first sight this seems scurvy treatment but there are good reasons for it. It has al- ready been explained that Brit- ain has agreed with the Six not to circulate an extended report of this confidential document. , . "Mr. Fleming has returned ain entering the market, com-|from Paris to say that Presi-|old deputy governor of Dutch| ald Wahi, 2, jments on the British statement/dent de Gaulle believes it will|New Guinea, was interviewed |be. extremeiy difficult for Brit-|by telephone at Hilversum, near|of the family, Rolfe, 3, escaped "The statement was made to) ain to safeguard Commonwealth! Amsterdam, interests. "Dare we suggest that Mr Fleming shou'd give a full ver- sion of this important state- is resentment in the Common-| ment? Or does he think a sum-|area where Rockefeller is miss-|driver of the truck, are also in imary suffices?" lors have refused to cross; Lucas was arraigned in re-jdue to be heard Dec. 12. picket lines at the Royal York|Corder's (criminal) court Mon-| In another development De- Hotel to attend a testimonial| day and remanded to jail pend-|troit police seized a 1962 model |dinner Thursday for retiring|ing the hearing car with bloodstains on Metro Chairman Fred Gardiner.| Meanwhile a gun was found|front seat and containing two At least eight of council's 24Jon the Burlington Skyway|blood - stained handkerchiefs. elected members say. they will| Bridge carrying the Queen Eliz-|They said the car bore Mich- brave the pickets,however. abeth Highway across the Ham-|igan licence plates.in the name They include Toronto Mayorlilton harbor entrance and first|}Of Gus Saunders, 44, a defend- Nathan Phiilips. |reports said it was one of the|ant in the drug trial Ald. Margaret Campbell said|weapons used in the double kill- mI she wouldn't go even if the hoteljings. Police also are looking fore THREE employees were not on strike./a curved knife. | The strike over wages began| Crater and the woman, last April. s.-C m J 2W-lo te | lack known as Carolyn Ann NeW-/caturday on suspicion of mur- ers and Lester say also} Ramsay, 6 ® }murder. Whitb Townshi | Meanwhile Lillian Boykin, 20, jof Detroit, described as a friend }of Lucas, gave herself up to Detroit police Sunday. Police} questioning her about | | of Miss Boykin that she wa: Fire, beheved caused by anj|and Oshawa bri overheated furnace on Monday| ance. drove a Whitby Township), The Chie! said that fire ran couple and their nine children|up through partitions in the out to seek emergency shelter|centre of tue house and flared in five neighboring homes. Fire|out in the attic. It is estimated Chief James Watson estimated/that about half the furniture in jthat the home of Mr. and Mrs.|the seven-room house and much| Jean Paul Lemery, of Rossland of the clothing were destroyed} road, at Garrard road, suffered|or damaged. sa ' $5,000 damage. | Rev. Fr. N. Gignac arranged scares thing a bring Mrs. Anne Lemery, 30, and|temporary accommodation £0r eerie te fuatic the eed three of the children, Dennis, 4,|the family in five area homes, |SWUUY '0 Justice, he said. on the day of the killings. Attorney - General Kelso Ro- ized crime in Ontario. "The best way to solve this * |troit narcotics smuggling case|livered to the U.S. and British the! 'Four Children In addition to Lucas, Saund-jents' top floor apartment, died 47,;early today when fire swept a |havé been held in Detroit since!four-storey apartment building. jder and conspiracy to commuit|youngest cnild into a fire net jand then jumped after it. All three escaped without injury. her|on to the ground--to escape the H whereabouts at the time of the|flames. Others scrambled down ome Destroyed | | |Slayings were told by a friend|fire truck ladders. gades for assist-\with him in Detroit at 4:30 a.m,|there were no apparent serious jinjuries, police said. berts said Tuesday that despite|/der control about an hour after the double slaying he still does| it was first reported at 1:15 a.m. not think there is any need for|More than 106 firemen with 26 a royal commission into organ-|pieces of equipment fought the is to catch thelof 'flames when we arrived," them|said Sgt. William Erickson of Embassies, said. Russia was ready to resume the talks if Agreement _LONDON (AP)--Britain cau- tiously welcomed today the So- viet Union's agreement to re- sume negotiations in Geneva for | suspension of nuclear 'weapon | tests. But the Pritish declined to be drawn into any promise to par- ticipate in a moratorium while nuclear talks go on. At first glance, the Soviet note appeared to suggest that a world-wide moratorium on tests would have to be observed if the Geneva negotiations were to be resumed. The foreign office spokesman, however, main- tained that test treaty talks and a moratorium were two separ- ate matters. The spokesmah said: "The text has only just been received in London and now is being stidied We welcome the Soviet reply in so far as it indi-~ cates that the Russians are will- ing to resume serious negotia- tions at Geneva on Nov, 28, "Until we have had time to study the text, we do not know what conditions--if any--are at- tached to the acceptance of the Western proposals." Die In Blaze DETROIT (AP)--Four young children, trapped in their par- The parents tossed their Many of the estimated 40 to 50 tenants leaped from windows-- some into fire nets and others Except for the four deaths, The four-alarm blaze was un- fire. "The building was one mass the fire department." Louise, 3, ard Ann-Marie, 19) Mr Lemery, an employee of} ,. months. were home when fire|Smith Transport, in Oshawa,| ; broke out at 2.35. p.m. Mrs.|was at work at the time of the| Lemery, Dennis and _ Louise| fire. | Now the family is faced with mother spotted smoke coming|the difficult problem of finding| out a window at the rear of the| suitable accommodation for the} house |winter. Mr. Lemery said they) She fan into the living-room) Tequire a home of at least seven) of the smoke-filled house and|'0oms. snatched Ann-Marie, asleep in|, The other members of the) a crib in tne living room, and| family, at school during the fire, | ran outside to safety. The other) ave Lucy, 12, Claude, 10, Leise,| six Lemery children were at|8 Paul, 7, Roger, 6, and Mich-| school at the time of the fire.|@@l 5. A passing motorist, Orville Ashby, saw smoke Serge eg H b d Wite the house and notified the Ger-| rard Road Fire Brigade. Chief] uspand, Watson, fearing ve his "poral . might be hampered by a s or I C h age of water, called in Brooklin 1€ n Tas. ne Caen aor ae CHATHAM (CP) -- A _ hus- band and wife were killed and| 'six other persons -- including the couple's four children--were injured Monday night in a jhead-on car - truck crash on Miracle If Young Rockefeller Alive THE HAGUE (AP) -- It will| Highway 2 be a miracle if Michael Rocke-| Dead are Helmut Wahl, 40, of feller is fuund alive, a New/|Windsor, and his wife, Else, 35. Guinea expert said today. In satisfactory condition in' A. Boendermaker, 5l-year-| hospital are Heidi Wahl, 7, Ron- and Evelyn Wahl, 19 months. The sixth member on with minor cuts | vacation. Mrs. Willy Muller, 31, of War- Boendermaker has had manyj|ren, Mich, < passenger in the years "experience in the jungle,|Wahl car, and Americo Mantini, including several years in the/48, of RR 4 St. Catharines, where he is Two truck drivers were injured in a freak accident | on Highway 401 yesterday when a fuel truck collided ing. satisfactory condition. TRUCKS IN FLAMING CRASH truck. Both | the tanker had to be pried from the wreckage. Driver of the gravel truck was Gerald Lazin, 27, of Maidstone. --(CP Wirephoto) with a gravel trucks were heading west into this city. Lee Abrams, 23, of Port Lambton. driving 4

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy