Daily Times-Gazette, 3 Oct 1952, p. 1

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HE A mT A OSiAWA DAI ' TEEILS BS sow wre LY TIMES-G ama Times and Whithv Gazetie and Chronicle T WHITBY Price Not Over VOL. 11--No. 232 nd-Class Mail, "Authorized os Post Office ent, Ottawa. OSHAWA-WHITBY, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1952 \ go HFIGHTEEN PAGE! $ Cents Per Copy SCENE OF JAILBREAK IN WHITBY EARLY TODAY . During the. early hours of this morning two prisoners, Gordon Reid of Toronto and Nicholas Marchuk of Brantford, escaped from the Ontario Ceunty Jail at » RE | Whitby and made good their es- | roof is believed to indicate the | cape by stealing an auto belong- | spot where the prisoners cut ing to Allan Lavis, caretaker of their way through the. Yool be- the county buildings. This view of the pffrene Bee of the cell | fore using blankets to drop to the ground. block. The circled portion of the : ® Lg ABSOLVES GUARD Governor James Sutherland of Be Ontarie County jail at Whit- who absolved Night Guard William Outwin from blame in the jail this morning. He said that, under the regulations, Out- win had done the best he pos- sibly could. USS. Increases the escape of two prisoners from | Pair Flee From Jail In Caretaker's Car foundation for the new Loblaw | groceteria at the north west corn- er of Athol and Celina Streets. It 'is hoped that in six month's time {the building will be open to the | public. An official of the design- [ing and draughting staff of the Loblaw Groceterias- headquarters in Toronto said today that the new store would be the most modern type of building' with all of the new marketing improvements in- corporated in its design. BASEMENT PARKING | A feature of the new building | will be the basement parking area. | Work Is Started On Super Mart Work began yesterday on the provide parking space and the fact | frequently with large windows. that the corner lot upon which the store will be constructed is no The store will be 98 feet Wide and 158 feet six inches in length. larger than the size of the build- |It will be a single storey structure | ing made the basement parking | in the usual plan of the newer necessary. {| Loblaw grocery markets with The parking area will be the ample aisle space and many check- full size of the store and will have | ing ports through which customers. capacity for 65 automobiles. The | can be cleared quickly. | entrance to the garage will be on | Company officials said today that Celina Street as will,a truck port |the Foundation Company of Can- which will allow loading and un- ada was doing the preliminary loading to take place inside the work and that machinery would be building. {moved in during the next few days 'TwoCutThrough Roof In Break At Whitby Jail { Cu | then using their way through the ceiling of their cell and hrough the board and slate roof of the jail building, steel leg pried loose from one of their beds, two pris- oners awaiting removal to the Ontario Reformafory and Kingstor\ Penitentiary, escaped from the Ontario County jail at WiKtby about 3.15 this morning, stole the jail care- taker's car Irom the jail garage, andsmade a clean getaway. The two. escaped prisoners are Gordon Reid, 17, Toronto, convitted of motor manslaughter on September 11 and sen- tenced to two years definite and two years indefinite in the The store will face on Athol | Street and will have a full six | glax front inset in primose mo- to make a quick start. Once the basement was 'completed, they said, work would be started with- Recent passage of'a by-law mak- | catta (enamel fired on stgel with |out delay om the superstructure and ing it compulsory in the erection |a concrete backing). Along Celina | would not stop until the store was of new commercial buildings to! Street the brick wall will be inset | completed. Dodgers In Third YANKEE STADIUM, New York | (AP) -- It was southpaws Preacher R (11-2) for Brooklyn and Ed | Lop | 10-5) for New York as the | Dodg®rs and Yankees moved to the | Yankee Stadium for their third | game of the World Series Youay. | Each team has won one. Both pitchers, who count on soft | stuff and a maximum of control, | are 34. Each has had a good rest. Roe hasn't pitched since Sept. 19. | Lopat hasn't worked since Sept. 26. | Neither has ever lost a World | | Beries game, The Brooklyn veteran | has pitched only one game in the | classic, a beautiful 1-0 victory over | Vic Raschi and the Yankees in 1949. { Lopat, who won his last five games | this season after having shoulder | | miseries, is 3-0 in series games. He | | defeated the Dodgers but needed {help in 1949, and twice beat the | Giants in 1951. | Each manages Chuck Dressen of | {the Dodgers and Casey Stengel of | 1 1 lout. Rizzuto gathesed in Reese's Tie lt Inning ins moved up to second and Hank | | Bauer dropped to sixth. A capacity crowd of close to 70,000 was on hand in the cool and partly cloudy weather. The tem- perature was in the 60s. | The starting line-ups: | BROOKLYN NEW YORK Furrillo rf Rixcuto ss Reese ss Collins 1b Robinson 2b Mantle cf . Campanella ¢ Woodling -1f { Pafko If Berra cs { Snider cf Bauer rf Hodges lo McDougal 3b Cox 3b Martin 2b Roe p Lopat p Umpires: -- Goetz (NL) plate; | McKinlegr (AL). lb; Pinelli. (NL) 2b; Passarella (AL) 3b; Boggess | (NL) and Honochick (AL) *foul | lines. | FIRST INNING DODGERS: Martin fielded Fur- ille's sharp grounder and threw him Thinks British Exploded H-Bomb PERTH, Australia (Reuters) --An Australian physicist who watched today's British atom test from the mainland, W. J. Mangini, said tonight the weap- on '"'could have been a hydro- gen bomb of the dimensions of a plutonium bomb." Mangini said he believed Brit- ish scientists had concentrated on producing '"'a mere effective atomic weapon than the world has seen before." CATTLE SALE STARTS WIARTON (CP)--More than 8,000 sale was sponsored by the Grey tive. Prices ranged from 18 'to 23 cents a pound as more than 1,400 cattle went on sale. About 200 farmers participated. Ontario Reformatory, and Nicholas Marchuk, 34, of Brant- ford, who was yesterday, at- Uxbridge, sentenced to two vears in the Kingston Penitentiary for a car theft, and who is also facing trial on a charge of hreaking and entering the { Uxbridge Co-operative Store. { The flight of the two prisoners® was discovered almost immedi- ot and yin police in the district to Hons, lo eiier Save the Jail jor {be on the lookout for the stolen, | 4 0 two men had been-locked last {car and the fleeing men. [HEARD SUSPICIOUS SOUNDS |Disht, he Jovken SUL Of the. jell William Outwin, alone on duty | {as night guard in the jail, heard {Continued on Page 2) ish FARM HOUSE IS TOTAL LOSS AFTER EARLY MORNING FIRE - The farm home of Mr. and Mrs. [coming from an upstairs window, {Horace Hall, and their four sons, Mr. Hall who works at the Good- {half-mile west of Tyrone was|_ {completely destroyed by fire at | Year Tire and Rubber Company NT some suspicious sounds on the roof. Unable, on account of regula- lmersons yesterday attended the dis- 8.30 this morning. The family were |Plant in Bowmanville on the night | triet's first feeder cattle sale. The lable to get out with their clothes | shift, had just had his breakfast jon, and managed to save a side- 4nd was in bed on the point of |and Bruce Feeder Sale Co-opera- board with some dishes in it. The (sleep when he heard the shouts | boys Russell and Wilfred were-just outside. He broke a window and {about to leave for school, and | jumped out in his nieht atfire, es- Russell, who was putting the cows | HOME RAZED out to pasture, observed smoke | (Continued on Page 2) Atom Bomb Blast Opens | the Yankees, revamped his batting | pop fly inside the foul line. Robih- order to meet the southpaw situa-|son walked. Campanella lined to Air Strength : tion. Carl Furillo was moved up | Bauer in short right. No runs, no n orea al | from eighth to the lead-off spot in | hits, no errors, one left. | the Dodger line-up and Duke Snider | YANKEES: Rizzuto walked on a : and Billy Cox were dropped to sixth | full coimt. Collins struck out on a TOKYO (AP) 3 The , United | gpg eighth places in the order. to States Far East Air Forces is being | pp; Rizzuto took over the lead- boosted by 50 per cent for its un- 'Way To U.S. Co-operation | | (point at Rough Range, 65 miles |thunderhead that leaped a mile in a minute and then rose more slowly to 12,000 feet. A brisk wind By LIONEL HUDSON ONSLOW, Australia (Reuters)-- almost due south of the centre of | | Britain's first atomic explosion to- the targei area. . { | half swing protesting bitterly WORLD SERIES (Continued on Page 2) This picture shows the exact Spot at which Reld and Mar- chuk came down a blanket rope fastened to a bathroom vent pipe on the roof of the jail gov- relenting air war on Red Korean targets. This was announced today by the United States air secretary, Thomas K. Finletter. He said some reinforcements already are on hand and air attacks could be stepped up considerabl short notice." For security reasons, he declined | to say how many planes are being | added to the F. E. A. F, He also said over-all production | in the U. S. has caught up with! Russian output. Finletter, just back from a tour | of Korean air bases and front, said he had been informed the Soviets have moved jet light bombers to! Siberian bases OSHAWA TRAFFIC TOLL | Yesterday Accidents ver vi NO} Injured 0 Killed 0 into the flower bed underneath. The dotted line shows the posi- tion of the blanket rope when it was found by jail officials after the escape. Photos by Dutton--Times Studio EET ER ernor's residence and dropped | Laborities Adjourn in Internecine Feud To Attack Tories By FRASER WIGHTON MORECAMBE, England (Reu- ters)--British Socialists today end- -ed a week of internal conflict and hit out against Prime Minister Churchill's Conservatives on the last day of their party conference. 878 | Injured 36 | Killed 2] PLEASE DRIVE CAREFULLY | | off spot for the Yankees, Joe Coll- | day ripped a tiny slit in the veil | Suchan's Father Collapses "anes On Stand for TORONTO (CP)--Joseph Lesso, | father of convictefl murderer Steve | ody rigid. Assisted from the wit-| Suchan, collapsed in court yester- day while under cross-examination | by Crown Counsel Arthur Klein. Lesso and his wife, Elizabeth, are jointly charged with harboring Edwin Alonzo Boyd and William Russell Jackson after their first escape from ghe Don Jail here last November. convicted this week of bank rob- bery. ; Yesterday's session ended abruptly with Lesso's collapse and marked the close of the Crown's case in the trial. A native of Czechoslovakia with a limited knowledge of English, Lesso was being questioned about his state- ment that he did not know the two men were escaped prisoners during the time they stayed in his Toronto home. Several women in the court cried out: "Look out, look out, he's going to faint." ; Lesso swayed back then righted ackson and Boyd were | of secrecy surrounding her atomic- | weapons program, A British newspaper said it] gives Prime Minister Churchill the | "trump" he needs to reopen ex-| change of atomic secrets with the United States. The blast blazed briefly like a rising sun over the barren Monte Bello Islands 85 miles off Aus- tralia's northwest coast. A ragged cloud soared swiftly to 6.000 feet, spread out untikit was a mile wide n the centre, then rose to 12,000 | Harboring" (himself, his eyes staring and his ness box, Lesso collapsed again. | HELD FOUR HOURS | Earlier in the day, Lou Herman, | counsel for Lesso, drew admission |} |from two Toronto detectives that feet and began dissipating. ; {Lesso had been arrested at his| A screened handfdl of newspaper . . men watched the explosion at. 8 home on March 19 and held for | 5:30 EST "Thursday that four hours befo i i a.m, d |and then charged, beta sautiongd made Britain the third power One officer, Detective Charles | known to have a working atomic | Cook, read into evidence over de- | Weapon. They watched the historic fence protests an unsigned ; sjate- | detonation from a hilltop vantage ment attributed to Lesso. In it NO OUTSIDERS No United States observers were | bloated its belly to a one-mile width among those present. Britain bar- and at the top hung a gigantic red newspaper men from outside | Z-shaped formation. the Commonwealth as part of a| A heavy air shock struck the tit-for-tat security program started rough range observation point 4% when the U.S. banned the exchange | minutes after the flash, accompan=- of atomic-research information af-|ied by a thunderous crack and a ter the war. The weapon was the 37th of its type ever exploded. The U.S., be- ginning with the test blast in 1945 that" preceded the two U.S. war- time atomic bombs dropped on Japan, has exploded 33. Three | atomic explosions have béen repor- | ted detonated in Russia since the - |have worked out new techniques war. The bomb itself appeared some- what differen. from those explo- ded in U.S. #¥sts. The shape of its | cloud, instead of the familiar mush- room formation, was a ragged | prolonged rumble. There was no ground shock. The explosion seemed to bear | out reports that the bomb was pri- {marily a tactical weapon rather than a. super-bomb. One possible | explanation for the reduced brile | liance of tite cloud was suggested {in reports that British experts | for triggering atomic blasts. These | reports say British scientists have | reduced the size of the fissionable | material used to make the blast Lesso gletmed his son Val Lesso, alias Stéve Suchan, brought Boyd > and Jackson to his home without | THE WEATHER his knowing who they were. | Lesso claimed it was after the | two had left the rooming housc| Cloudy, clearing this after- that his son, later convicted of! moon, clouding over again Sat- killing a Toronto detective, told| wurday afternoon. Light frost to- {him they were escaped prisoners.| night. A little warmer Satur- | Carl Herman, acting for Mrs.| day. Winds northwest 15, shift- I Lesso, moved for a dismissal of the | ing to southwest 15° this after- charge against her. But oak noon, Low tonight and high Robert Forsyth ruled that the case| Saturday 35 and 65. Summary: | must go to the jury. Mostly sunny and warmer, | | { | | The delegates, anxious to get {home and assess the effects of the {Bevan row in their own towns, to- day quickly agreed on resolutions !attacking the conservatives. WASHINGTON (AP) -- For pos- sibly the first time in the 1952 pres- They protested una nim ously idential campaign all major candi- | Ike Would Leave South Koreans To Carry Main Burden Of Fighting at the next stop at Appleton, Mc- Carthy's home town. "For four days Labor party dele- against government cuts in the gates have wrangled over left-wing | education service. They condemned ABOARD THE EISENHOWER | dates and their top supporters came | | TRAIN (CP) -- Gén. Dwight Eisen- | rebel Aneurin Bevan and his de- mand that the Yearmament pro- gram be cut. The Conservative gov- ernment, which threw Labor out of er a year ago, has scarcely n mentioned. One of Bevan's lieutenants, Ian Mikardo, today told the 1,200 dele- h gates: "We might as well spend Pp" a couple of minutes having a go at our opponents instead of having a go at one another." Bevan and Mikardo and four other Bevan supporters were elect- ed to the party executive this 'week, displacing two right-wingers, Heroert Morrison and Hugh Dal- ton. And yesterday the Bevan group drew more thas 2,000,000 of party's 6,000,000 proxy votes . far its arms-cut policy. : / paigned simultaneously today: Ste- told the Labor executive t6 study | venson, Eisenhower, Taft, Kefauver {Proposals fory'public ownership of and McCarthy in the mid-west, the building industry. Nixon and Sparkman in the border ! Equal pay for equal work done states of the south and President |by men and women was urged in| Truman in the far west. {apother unanimous resolution. The | ABOARD EISENHOWER SPE- [party leaders promised to include | CIAL (AP)--Gen. Dwight D. Eisen- {Such a plank in their next election | hower and Senator Joseph R. Mc- | platform. A ed Carthy rode into Wisconsin aboard | The leaders were beaten on a |the same train today to share at resolution from the agricultural (least for a day the political spot- workers urging legislation to stop {light of the presidential campaign. a system under which many farm | The burning question was: Would laboreYs are forced to live in hous- | Eisenhower give his full endorse- | es provided by the farmers. Many | ment to the candidagy of McCarthy Socialists claim these houses are .the most controversial figure in /in bad condition, but the party | American politics due lo itis Com- {leaders opposed being tied down |munists-in-government campaign? (00a definite timetable for -legis-!. That answer could. come. at the lation, first whistle stop at Green Bay or |Churchill's housing program, and | | hower, campaigning through isola- | tionist-minded Illinois, told audi- | | ences yesterday that the time 'has | come for Scuth Korean troops to | take over the main burden of fight- ing in Korea. At several points the Republican presidential candidate said = it makes "no sense" for United States soldiers to oing most of the fighting in Kore "That is a job fdr the Koreans," {he said. "We do not want Asia to | | feel that the white man of the west | is his enemy. "If there must be 4 war there, | Jet it be Asians against Asians, with Lour-support-on-the Side of freedom." He did not further elaborate on / - Id this reference to the U.S, relation- Korea rearmament program," he | hip to the Asiatic countries in ev- |said, "fair deal policies might well | ; {have headed us right into the mid- | ls Lent of war. FALSE PROSPERITY Later, in a speech at Peoria he | asserted that a "false prosperity" | Govemor | CINCINNATI (AP) -- |exists in the U.S. and that "what- | Adlai E. Stevenson chose Robert A. | | Taft's home town today to accuse | the Ohio Senator and the Republi- | can "Old Guard" of fostering a new | isolationism #hat could lead to "na- | tional tragedy." | The Democratic presidential nom. | inee said Republican candidate Dwight D, Eisenhower "is support= ing the isolationists in the party and asking their support." { In an' address to a Democratic | luncheon rally, Stevenson said the | iret of war to create and main- [results could parallel those of the | in prosperity." 11920 campaign when the League The Korean' War had bolstered {of Nations was an issue; Warten 6. | U.S. economy just as it was begin- | Harding was clected and there | ning to weaken. . were "terrible consequences | "If it had not been for the posts ever economic gains have been made since 1932 have been due, not to administration ingenuity, but to war or threat of war," , "War, not the fair deal, brought abouf the end of unemployment," he said. "The legacy of war, not the fair deal, helped to Sustain a high level of economic activity." "There is no future for America in economic policies that depend upon the stimulus of war and biood and- disaster." PRESS TIME FLASH come off. 'Want Ambassader-Recalled WASHINGTON (AP)--Russia today demanded the immediate recall of U.S. Ambassador George F, Ken- nan for a recent "slanderous attack" on the Soviet government. Will Not Return Ships OSLO (AP)--Norway declared today that she intends . to keep three ships which Britain and the United States announced would be Police Charged with Manslaughter returned to West Germany. KENORA (CP)--Police Constable Jack Terrell has been committed to stand trial for manslaughter in | dle of a serious. business recession." | in | connection with the shooting of a man who tried to break through a police roadblock in a stolen car. New Attack on Martyr PARIS (Reuters)--A new attack was launched today by the French Communist party against its expelled leader Andre Marty. \ Record Gold Reserves OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's reserves of United States dollars and gold has reached an all-time high of $1,- 856,000,000 Finance Minister Abbott announced today, Life for Manslaughter ROR LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Archie Senaca was today sen- tenced to life imprisonment for manslaughter in the : death of Mrs. Lydia Riley, one of three Muncey Re-_ serve residents shot to death May 11. he -

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