Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 23 Aug 1962, p. 1

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

Whitby Council Adopts Code ma Eth She Oshawa Fimes THOUGHT FOR TODAY The boss says the longest day is Saturday, which seems to start at noon on Friday. ics -- Page 5 WEATHER REPORT Sunny today and Friday, warmer. Winds light becoming southerly 15 Friday. VOL, 91--NO. 197 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1962 Authorized as Ottawa Second Class Mail Post Office ae for payment of Postage in TWENTY-FOUR PAGES S. Testing Red Move In E. Berlin BERLIN (AP) -- U.S, Army; cut one mores lice from West- cars made unopposed excur-|ern occupation rights in the sions into East Berlin during | campaign to force the Allies out | the night to test whether Mos-/|of the. divided city. Communist cow's abolition of the Soviet propaganda organs were ex- commandant office would be pected to argue that the Soviets followed by efforts to limit West-|no longer needed a military au- ern movement in the Commu-|thority in Berlin and neither did nist part of the divided city. | the Allies. East Germaa border guards; The United States, Britain and made no attempt to interfere| France took the view that the with the vehicles. But U.S. au-| sudden switch of command on thorities said it was too early|the Soviet side did not effect to conclude that harassing| Western rights nor the Soviet measures were not in the offing. | responsibility for what goes on One U.S. Army vehicle/in East Berlin. Ottawa Killer 'Clues Sought OTTAWA (CP) -- Police heard any unusual sounds dur- hunted for fresh evidence today|ing the night. to solve the sadistic slaying of} Another resident said he crossed from West Berlin' into President Kennedv told a the Communist sector just be- press conference that Soviet fore midnight and _ returned) Union could not affect rights of without difficulty through) the four occupation powers by a Checkpoint Charlie, the entry| one-sided decision. point through the Berlin wall} This, Kennedy said, will be for military personnel. Two|the main theme of an announce-| more U.S. Army cars followed|ment the Western Allies are later without meeting any. de-|now drawing up in response to lays. the sudden Russian action. The Russians announced Wed-| While Kennedy spoke, ambas-| his duties "temporarily" to Gen.|sadorial representatives of the nesday that they were doing|United States, Britain, France away with the office of city}and West Germany were con-) commandant and transferring|ferring at the state department his duties "temporarily" to Gen.}on the Western' reaction and Ivan Yakubovsky, the Soviet'strategy for dealing with the commander for all East Ger-| newest Berlin crisis. many who has headquarters at) A few hours earlier, the state Potsdam, West of Berlin. department had issued a state- SEEKS ALGERIAN SUPPORT a 44-year-old Ottawa woman, |heard what sounded "'like a dog| GIRLS' TIP AIDS HUNT FOR KILLER | Two Girls Get Calls, ' Probably From Killer TORONTO (CP) -- Two girls |Wednesday night gave police a jlead in the hunt for the killer of /16-year-old Julian Wolanski. The girls said they received telephone calls similar to the one that lured Julie Aug. 7 from whose nude and slashed body|being strangled' before mid-|her home and to her death. Her was discovered in a gully in the| night Tuesday night, but did not|ear-nude body, shot and raped, swank residential suburb of|investigate because he was re- Kind Old Men | political fort to gain Deputy Premier Ahmed |- Ben Bella, left, listens as his | right-hand man, Mohammed | Khider, exhorts crowds at a mass rally in Algiers yester- | day to win support for the! bureau in its ef- | political bureau which appear- control of | ed headed toward a_ show- Algeria. At right, in dark | down with local guerrilla war- glasses, is Mohammed Bou- | lords opposing the politicians. diaf, another member of the | --(AP Wirephoto) de Gaulle Close Call Sparks Wide Manhunt PARIS (Reuters)--A country-;Joigny, in the Yonne depart-|lets, stopping only. at the en- wide hunt was pressed today|ment of central France. | trance of the airfield to permit for terrorists who ambushed| The attempt came as de Gaull|the president to change to an- President de Gaulle's car Wed-|was being driven to Villacou- | other car, nesday night in an assassinatign|blay military airport for a| He flew from the airport as 44, by the husband, an Ottawa|the body and called police who | tailor. Ontario Provincial Police said) barricades | she also had previously gone un-|found a dark green dress of der the names of Jean Briere and Jeanne Liboron in Mont- real. They said the killing may be |the 'work of a sadist and ad- lvanced the theory that the |woman willingly accompanied |her killer into the bush and was | stabbed with a knife after a vio- }lent argument. County Coroner Dr. John Thomson said an autopsy per- formed Wednesday night showed death was caused by a stab wound through the heart. "There were three wounds in the region of the heart and one in the abdomen," he told re- porters. The woman's right | | | blocked off a large area with and rope. They | Rockcliffe Park Village. covering from an illness. The body was positively iden-| Mrs. Pauline Durofi, 52, aj Said Mi aid Mistaken For Perverts tified today as Mrs, Jean Bond,| maid, en route to work spotted TORONTO (CP) -- A police oo away. No weapon Bivona ins parents .to | . : é | guar eir children from sex i s pling ae vite tence Soh | deviates has prompted a Tor- ara = ~ y ina lindioation| onto psychiatrist to caution way "a ced tp thie € | 28ainst interpreting every kind- it had been dragged to Po! ness toward children as perver- |it was discovered. | sion, F c a ° seo bad -- - pete our onvicts ulian Wolanski and the abduc- Break Prison, |cheap material, a slip, panties | and one shoe near the body. The other shoe was in bushes about | | jtor of 10-year-old Thomasina | Baker still at large, Chief In- |Spector Harold Graham of the | Provincial police criminal inves- | tigations branch urged parents to.tell their children not to as- attempt that failed by only a/flight to his country home at fraction. | Colombey-les-Deux-Eglises. De Gaulle escaped uninjured} i ta | SPRAY BULLETS but his car was hit by at least} Aroampaiating Wat: wesc tite jand the American, British and | French commandants in Berlin. | The Soviet commandant was! the official to whom the West-| | One Shot Down scheduled and arrived safely at| breast was almost severed. -- Colombey. The, body was found lying The only injured person in| face up clad only in nylon stock- the attack was a passing motor-|ings about 10 a.m. Wednesday. oooh a tong poder: ot @scapes: Sociate with strange men. He said deviates are usually 'shy, SANTA FE, N.M. (AP)--Four| retiring types, lacking the abil- convicts, including a urdererjity to associate with women their own ages." Western officials viewed the/ment declaring that the Rus- action as a Communist effort to|siang still are responsible for i their Berlin obligations. It ac- E Germans Pick cused the Russians of trying to if | absolve themselves from ten- |sion-provoking Communist acts New Commandant }in the German capital. | P nvoreg gear 4 = --_ The Soviet action, however, | serman Maj. - Gen. Heimut) had the effect of severing con. ane has st ---- pee nections between the Russians erlin commandant by the East German defence ministry, the East German news agency ADN said. , ADN said the appointment) ern commandants delivered pro- yoni mate by Dalene Minister} tests beget on ag = Ss en. Heinz 'mann, in ac-|German regime ecting West cordance with a decision by the council of ministers. Berliners and allied personnel | |in West Berlin, JFK Hints Need Of Summit Talk WASHINGTON (CP) -- Pres-, sponded-to the question of a pos- ident Kennedy, who once pro-|sible meeting with Khrushchev fessed a dislike for summit con-| seemed to indicate the president ferences without. prior assur-| wants another talk with the So- ances that they would bear) viet leader on the tense Berlin fruit, has hinted he would like|issue and other troubles. to confer with Soviet Premier Khrushchev if Khrushchey APPROVES PROBE comes to the United. Nations) Closer to home, Kennedy ap- this fall. provd a sy coal At the same time, Kennedy investigation of profits on stock- threw a wallop at the self-es-| Piling ve $8,000,000,000 in strate- teem of Americans, warning|®!¢ materials. that the United States is well; The president said and re- behind Russia in the space race peated that extremely large and may stay behind for years| Profits were made by the Hanna before catching up and _possi- Mining Company with little risk bly moving ahead by the end of|to the firm, that he could un- the 1960s. | derstand the desire of some wit- "Anybody who attempts to! suggest that we are not behind misleads the American people," said the president. "We are well behind but we are making a tremendous ef- fort,"" Kennedy said in referring) yy | nesses "'to- limit the investiga- tion by charging it is an attack on President Eisenhower, but I think the Congress ought to do its job. The conference opened with news from Kennedy that the! 1 hail of machine-gun fire on the} 0 boHets as it sped trough | wife aad his son-in-law, Col, Al-| outskirts of Paris. One of the|#i® de Boissieu, who also es- bullets. missed him by about|C@Ped uninjured despite 'the two inches. spray of bullets that smashed Police immediately launched | the Rea cpa oer aig an all-out search for the would.| tires an oye e body e be assassins, believed to be) Presidential car. linked with the 'French Al-|..Police said between 120 and geria" European terrorist Se- 150 rounds of ammunition were cret Army Orcarization. fired. Grenades and incendiary) Within two hours of the at-|bombs also were amet ao tack, police found an abandoned |the roadside. They _believ truck which had been stolen, -- 10 men took part in. the containing two heavy machine- | 4'tack. oer guns used in the assassinauop Interior Minister Roger Frey attempt on the 71-year-old pres- said despite his narrow escape} ident. de Gaulle "retained his usual} Police said they. believed a imperturable calm but TI think similar attempt on de Gaulle, this time he found it a little or a rehearsal, was planned for close. : : : Aug. 8, the last time the presi-. Escorting the presidential car| dent was in Paris were motorcycle policemen and They also said they had/@ Carload of security men. |traced the truck to.a garage at Two bullets whizzed through! list he" aloo' enlveculonsty es | WHITBY BAND | WINS AT CNE | caped injury. The attack was the second as- WHITBY (Staff) -- Whitby Junior Brass Band won first sassination attempt on de Gaulle} within a year. Two other plots} against his life also have been juncovered during the last year. | prize in the junior all-brass | band section at the Cana- dian. National Exhibition in Toronto this morning. CAME NEAR DEATH Wednesday night's attempt,! however, was considered to The band, directed by |have brought de Gaulle nearer| Stanley Redfearn, was given a total of 161 points. Sec- ond prize went to Lakefield jto death than at any District High School with time) isince he returned to power in| | France in 1958. His car was hit by bursts of | ist, Roger Sillon, whose hand was nicked by a stray bullet. FRIGHTENS HER Mrs. Sillon said her husband was driving slowly along the road when '"'suddenly I saw the Tt was in a gully about 30 feet /from the home of W. E. D, Hal- lliday, registrar of the federal jcabinet, and few hundred yards from the entrance to the resi- dence of the United States am- bassador. broke out of the New Mexico! pr. Ronald E. Stokes of the penitentiary just south of here) Toronto Forensic Clinic said in was found in a suburban ditch a week later. Deputy Chief George Elliott said today the man who made the calls to the two Scarborough girls is probably the killer. He said several other girls have received like calls in the past year. The deputy said: "The man represents himself as a member of the board of education or a doctor on the board. "He told the girls they needed to pass a physical examina- tion." Julie left home when a man told her she must take an ex- aination to go into Grade 10 at Givins Senior Public School. The two girls who came for- ward are aged 15 and 19. CALLED LAST YEAR The younger said she was called in May or June last year by a man who said he was on the board of education. She said he asked intimate questions with the excuse that he was con- ducting a survey. The other girl was called July 25 this year by a man wieo claimed to be "Dr, Lang" of the board of education. He said the girl would have to pass a physical exaination, and he asked her other things about het schooling. Canadettes May Wednesday night. ,. ., | am interview however, that it is One shot from a guard's ri-| often hard to tell the difference fle felled one man as he ran| between a man who loves chil- past a tower. The other three} dren, and one who molest them. got away and were still at large.) There is no typical personality to the space race during Wed- g S. nuclear submarines Skate] nd Seadragon, one from the At-| 142 points. _ Whitby Senior Brass Band machine - gun fire from two {groups of men separated by! nesday's press conference lantic Fleet and one from ihe SPENDS HUGELY Pacific, had met under the arc-| The United States currently is UC !@ cap and surfaced toge- spending about $2,400,000,000 a ther through a hole at the North year in civilian and $1,500,000,- Pole. Kennedy called it an '"'ex- 000 a year in military space C@Ptional technical feat." programs. Kennedy said he didn't know what military ad- vantage Russia may have gained with its superior rockets and ships "but it is very possi- ble that there will develop mil- itary significance and it is for that reason that the U.S. milit-| ary program is being carried on at $1,500,000,000."" Kennedy also said Soviet bloc countries have been sending large quantities of supplies and many technicians into Cuba in recent weeks. He didn't believe this was a springboard for Com- munist aggression in La- tin America but said the signif- leance of the shipments is be- ing examined. signed by the foreign secretary, Kennedy's reference to\Lord Home, which claimed Khrushchev came amid rumors Crown privilege -- the right to that the Soviet leader might at-| refuse to divulge information. tend the fall sessions of the UN.| The convicted Soviet spy's Kennedy said he didn't know|chief defence counsel, Elwyn whether Khrushchev will make! Jones, earlier' had subpoenaed the trip, but "'of course, if he/Home Secreiary Henry Brooke did come, I would hope I would to produce tne messages. have a chance to talk with The court was formally hear-; him." ing an application by the con-| The alacrity with which he re-|victed Soviet spy for a writ o! habeas corpus requiring author- CITY EMERGENCY tention in London's Brixton pri PHONE NUMBERS atterhe - General Sir John POLICE 725-1133 FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 LONDON (Reuters) The British govennment today re- fused to make public messages received from the United Siates about Dr. Robert Soblen on the ground disclosure would harm good diplomatic relations. The court was handed a note Hobson today began his rebut- tal of Jones, who had spoken for a total of seven hours Wed- nesday and today. Jones argued, to no avail, that 'Crown privilege could not $e }on the second day of resumed about 50 yards on a dimly-lit} 'road near a crossroads four miles from the airport. De Gaulle's chauffeur, who} was driving at high speed, roared through the hail of bul- is also competing at the CNE today, but results were not available by press time, U.S. Notes On Soblen Kept British Secret claimed in habeas corpus pro- could not inquire into the dis-| ceedings. cretion of the home secretary. COMPLETES ARGUMENT |," (00! Wednesday Soblen fle He completed his argaments wanted to continue the fight tol High Court proceedings on Brit- ee oe ence: rR ain's bid to deport Soblen to the|, S°blen_has been in jail dur-| United States, where he faces a| 198 his 53 days in Britain. He] life sentence for spying for Rus- failed to win his freedom in two ia ferdenrg be ae -- bea ed us : refused political asylum before . The attorney-general. handed 4), ; a aie in a certificate to the court, ee bl al signed by Home, claiming if & ' Crown privilege on the ground Hobsen said Soblen, suffering that disclosure of the messages from leukemia, was not in AM | asked for would be injurious to) ™@diate danger and that his dis- good diplomatic relations ease could remain the same for : several years. Soblen, who sat with his head 4 ' : oe He said 'that, according to a in his hands during most - of medical specialist who exam-| Jones' . statements left the ined "Soblen last week, "Dr. courtroom for 10 minutes while) Soblen has not deteriorated in his lawyer was completing his any way while here and he is submission and returned after} in no immediate danger."' Hobson began to speak. He left) The 61-year - old psychiatrist again an hour 'after his frst)had to be assisted from the exit court three times during Wed- The attorney-gener defend- nesday's six - hour session. He ing the imposition of Crown, was fed drugs to dull-his pain privilege, suggested the court, and coffee to. keep him awake. a : tin 1 in June because he) men produce their sub-machine-| yy. Halliday told police he guns and fired several bursts." slept in a closed-in porch at the| But beyond that she said 'jrear of his house but had not| was so frightened I did not no-\--------------------"-- The wounded convict is Charles Wayne Willmer, 26, of Big Rapids, Mich., who has {been in prison since 1959 on a isentence for writing bad | cheques. The break occurred at 7 p.m. while the prisoners were in a recreation area. They crawled under a 10-foot wire fence, scaled an outer 'fence, 12 feet high, and fled on foot. At large were: tice what the armed men did."| a Several eyewitnesses said a 0 h M grenade was thrown at the car| s awa an 5 but did not explode. A radio) store on the side of the road| B B was badly damaged by the bul-| oats urn lets. | . Only one car of bodyguards | W h B h us | was following the presidential! it oat 0 | car instead of the usual two. In-| PORT CARLING, Ont. (CP) i 37, White terior Minister Frey said if) Three power boats and a large| gic dora" Weve serv- there had been a second it could| boathouse were destroyed in ling life for murder; have stopped and returned the| fire early today on an island in| Roy E. Ledoux "96 Duluth fire. |Lake Rosseau, an offshoot of] 4; ew d May 14. 1962 oe --I|Take Muskoka. inn., sentence ay 14, if | Residents of the iskand a halt|'® one to 10 years for ebtaining Lo A | mile from shore were awakened | money with intent to defraud; an Pprov around midnight by an alarm|_ John 'Edward Bostrom, 44, | given by an unknown man boat-|Minneapolis, sentenced May 1, F 0 h ling on the lake, and a few|1962 to one to 10 years for rusti- or Ss aWa nearby cottagés were tempor- ing. : RE PIOOR EH arily evacuated while flames | burned thrugh the bit boat-} 4 ® Sewage Plant | house and its contents. | Girl, 16, Killed | The island and property are| The Federal Government has| owned' by Richard E. McLaugh- By Farm Tractor Oshawa $103.333 to assist with|of Oshawa. It is located about) BRADFORD, Ont. (CP) sewage treatment plant in the/50 miles north of Orillia. Linda Culbert, 16, of Bradford, Pp. } ; | south part of the city. Firefighters fought the blaze|was killed Wednesday night agreed to lend the City of|lin, General Motors executive,| The money will be used for! With portsble equipment. It was|when the farm tractor she was a secondary digester and four| brought driving overturned on Conces- additional sludge drying beds,|3 a.m. There was no estimate|sion 7 of West Gwillimbury The announcement was made| 2 the loss, confined to the boat-) Township. She was pinned un- under control about! \for the pervert, he said. He warned that the public of- }ten 'thinks any old man who |buys a little girl an ice cream cone is a pervert. "They take him to court and \lock him up," he said. 'This | Go On U.S. Tour TORONTO (CP) -- The Cana- dian National Exhibition grand- stand-packing Canadettes may go on tour of the United States. CNE producer Jack Arthur said Wednesday night he has been discussing the proposal with E. M. Loew, owner of a chain of New England theatres jhas happened in our commun- jity." and Boston's 4,300 - seat Music Hall. Police Hold Man In Kidnap Case | | BEETON, Ont. (CP)--Police today were holding a man for questioning in the abduction of 10-year-old Thomasina Baker. Ontario Provincial Police said the man was one of two sus- pects. Const. Fred MacDonald, search co-ordinator, said they were trying to find the second man for questioning. Although Wednesday's search ended still without a tangible clue, Insp. James Harris of the provincial police said there was no intention of giving up. "As far as we are concerned, until we find a body, she is still alive." Some 200 soldiers from Camp in Oshawa today by the Hon, | house and vessels. jder the tractor, Michael 'Starr, Minister of| : ss Labor. ! The 15-year loan is at 5 and) % percent interest, based on! an estimated total cost of $155,- 000 for the project. ; The deal was made under the | National Housing Act and calls | for completion of the job by March 31, 1963. } Central Mortgage and Hou- sing Corporation may forgive repayment of 25 percent of the interest that has accrued by| that date if the project is com- pleted by the March 31 dead- e. Schooners Arrive In Oshawa Today TORONTO (CP) -- The! schooner Thomas - Marie, skip-| pered by George Greenberger| of Buffalo, led Tiki into port} at Belleville late Wednesday on! the fourth leg of the Canadian National Exhibition around-the- lake race. The sea scouts from St. Cath- arines, manning Renown _III,| were in third place followed by} Jupiter IV, owned by Norman| K. Green, of St. Catharines. | Tiki, skippered by owner Al| Downer, Niagara - on - the- Lake, was six minutes behind | the Buffalo boat on the trip from Kingston to Picton to Belleville. The schooners were expected) to arrive in Oshawa at about 6) p.m. today. For the third time this year a car was pulled out of the Oshawa harbor. The wreck was discovered by two Osh- awa divers about 50 feet north of the south wall of the har- bor, when they went in for a practice dive, Wednesday afternoon. The car is shown as it is slowly lifted out of the water by a crane truck. Look- ing on in the water are divers Bob Gibbs and Bob Stephen- rgon, who found the wreck. No " body was located in or near the car, bearing 1961 licence plates, had been reported stolen last year, presuably in Toronto. i --Oshav'3 Times Photo Borden, Ont., Wednesday were added to the 600 RCAF mem- bers, Boy Scouts and volunteers from around Beeton, about 20 miles south of Barrie, and some 100 members of the Emergency Measures Organization were ex- pected to join in today. ' Insp. Harris also said he would welcome 200 volunteers from the Teamster's union to aid in the massive hunt. The girl disappeared Sunday night. She and her three-year- old brother were playing on the farm of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Baker, when, the boy said, a man took her away in a car. LINK TO SLAYING? Police apparently feel there may be some connection be- tween Thomasina's abduction and the recent killing in Toronto of 16-year-old Julian Wolanski, who was found beaten, raped and shot 10 days ago. At the start of Wednesday's search, OPP Det.-Sgt. Robert Smallet asked searchers to be on the lookout for clothing of the Toronto girl, who was found nearly nude. The soldiers, asked to join the small army of volunteers, by Attorney-General Kelso Roberts and Beeton Reeve Leonard Ab- ernethy, have been accompan- ied by portable army kitchens. E|Beginning today the kitchens were to feed the entire search force. Previously, the force de- nded on sandwiches and ked foods supplied by area women for their meals. # | CHECK MANY LEADS Meanwhile, the search moved deeper into neighboring Peel, Dufferin and York counties as police continued to check and double-check dozens of leads. Attorney-General Roberts has offered a $5,000 reward in con- nection with the disappearance. Mr. Baker says the worry is killing his wife, who was sol' bing quietly yesterday as she forced herself to do day-to-day chores around the farm. "If Thomasina doesn't turn up soon the shock will be too much," Mr. Baker said, "'It will mean the end of her.'

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy