Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 9 Jan 1956, p. 1

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TIMES-GRZETTE TELEPHONE NUMBERS Classified Advertising. . RA 3-3492 All Other Calls .RA 3-3474 Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETT Weather Forecast Cloudy, snow, freezing rain, Light winds. High today 35, low tonight 32. OSHAWA-WHITBY, MONDAY, JANUARY 9, 1956 Authorizod as Second-Class Mail FOURTEEN PAGES VOL. 85--No. 6 Post Office Department, Ottawa IMAN, 45, KILLED Wife Leaves | Kirkland To ' Go To Russia : | KIRKLAND LAKE (CP) -- A i [young Kirkland Lake wife separ- : lated from her husband since 1948 has gone to Moscow to live with him because he couldn't come to Canada. The mother of Mrs. Branko 1 Vukelic said Saturday she has re- --Times-Gazette Photo ceived a cable from her daughter, ~~ [the former Mary Segina, that she has been reunited with her hus- band Mrs. Segina said Mary met her husband in 1946 when he was mili- driving conditions on the road | accidents along the highway this | caused the car to go into a slide.| morning. It was only one of numerous passengers injured when it crash- ed into a tree alongside Highway 401 this morning. Hazardous Emil two this killed car and The driver of Sausscle was ---- * [5 Auto Deaths LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Police chief Earl Knight said flatly today "Somebody knows something", and appealed to London's entire citi- zenry for information which might lead to the deviate who lured Susan Cadieux away from happy) play in a churchyard and left her "to die alongside cold railway tracks. scrap of information available." Chief Knight asked the London ate pegan when Dr. F. W. Luney, Free Press to publish a sketch of pathologist at St. Joseph's Hospital, | with the mourners at the church |and later at St. Peter's cemetery "We need information", the po-iop * lice chief said. "We need every misht attend. Says 'Someone Knows' ' About Tot's Assault are cross checking the find- ; Luney, who reported mother and her two children. ate telephone call from anyone who|today thinks they recognize him." ings of Dr. The special appeal for informa- tion was issued as a Mass of the Angels 'was celebrated in St Mary's church for the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Walter Cadieux POLICE AT FUNERAL Plainclothes detectives sure pendent were made mingled CHARGE IN DOUBT the chance Susan's abductor The all-out search for a sex devi her death by cause of death as cold and expo- Police said it is the first time in London criminal records that inde- hi ; examinations of a body/in Which they were most serious charge which could Chatham Area | | CHATHAM. (CP)--Five persons vere killed in trafiic accidents in this area Sunday, including a Mrs. Theresa LeBlanc, 38, her {son Hector, 10, and daughter De- nise, 3 were killed when the car passengers blew out a front tire, causing the car to crash into a concrete bridge railing. But, they said, although the at- - | tacker was responsible for Susan's| death, he may never be charged 10 miles southeast of here, with murder. The man did not ac- and Mrs. Murray John Welch were| tually kill Susan. He contributed to Killed. molesting her and abandoning her. As a result, the pe learned, police said. In another accident, at Blenheim, Mr. | Cause of the accident could not ary attache at the Yugoslav em- bassy in Washington. He had been in Kirkland Lake to make a speech. They were married the same| year in Washingt/n and moved to| wa, where Mr. Vukelic be- came assistant ambassador. | In 1948 he was recalled and be-| cause he had criticized his govern-| ment during his stay in Canada he| was imprisoned for five years. | When Mr. Vukelic was released | from prison he went to Albania, moving on last spring to Moscow,| where he got a job as a metallur- ist. | 4 Mrs. Vukelic tried to get her hus-| band to Canada, but since she is| not a Canadian citizen he was not| allowed into the country. So "she applied for admission to Russia, 'In Crashes ' On Icy 401 | One man was killed and at least seven people injured in a series of accidents along the snow and ice covered 401 highway this morning, Killed instantly, when the ear he was driving crashed broadside into a tree west of Oshawa, was Emil Sauselle, 45, of 285 James Street. Two passengers in his car were taken to the Oshawa General Hos- pital for treatment of injuries. The accident occurred on High- way 401 about one and one-half miles west of Oshawa. The three persons had been on their way to work at the Redifit Plant in Ajax. Police say the car skidded on icy pavement and struck a tree in the centre boule- vard. The main impact struck the driver's door. Saussele, a native of Germany, came to Canada on May 4, 1954. He is survived by his wife, Lore, and three children, Klaus, 15, Rose Marie, 7, and Eva, 5. The injured are: Paul Slerkezek, 48, 327 Al- bert street and he was dis- charged from hospital this morning. He was treated for facial lacerations. W. Jordan, 31, 231 Conant' street, Oshawa, is in a satis- factory condition. He is suffer- ing from scalp lacerations, ' Many Hurt g who was seen , from ex- dha Strange a So, be- Tepuitad Busan ad Se "lia Jakd against him would be ma) - - " p q IT nd TOR RE te gn tod vem HH ret nes, ons Cr@@S Clann Exploitation isan, 0 0 dropped 'near thé tracks in pre- hourly, was offered for information| Posine prettily for the photo | grap s these two six-weeks- | bred 15 champions and many | and Marquis of Kobe, whose fa- old Samoyed pups, owned and | other prizewinners since she jer Champion Pring S2do of bred by Mrs. D. L. Perry of | first started 30 years ago. These Whyteleafe (Surrey), who has | two pups are Karloff of Kobe, J OH URED ~~ were |pdmitted to Oshawa General Hos- Ipital this morning following an |accident involving their cars on possible fractured pelvis and ! vis "churchyard at anectsmhout p. m. Friday. "Susan's brothers seemed con-|dawn darkness and died of expo-|leading to the abductor's arrest) vinced the sketch is a good like-|sure. The child's cheeks were!and conviction. It was started by \ ness of the man, the chief said.|crusted with frozen tears. a $100 donation from Mayor Den-| By Northern Fur Buyers 3 | years running at Crufts, 401 at about 8 a.m. "We would appreciate an immedi-' Pathologists at Victoria Hospital nis. 3 -- | . By AUSTIN JELBERT |, The buyers can buy cheaply, | Canadi Press Corre dent [knowing the Indians cannot hold KAPUSKASING (CP)---A group out fer a {of Cree Indians { |tario said Sunday they are being | normal prices for extra-large pelts ' ht 3 y Bride-That-Wasnt | exploited by some fur buyers as|but pay less-than-normal prices for 1 h t | badly as their ancestors were 350 small or medium skins which make uns oca ee |years ago when white men first/up most of their catch. | . 2 . started the fur trade. 5 . ROCHESTER, N. Y. (AP) Early Saturday morning Juliette] The charges were confirmed by Ike Is Undecided | Pretty, wealthy Juliette Wehle and turned up at a private party with sources close to fur-trapping activ- | the pilot she left waiting at the Stephen Hahn -26-year-old son of tie throughout the area. 0 El 1 church, have parted company--for another socially prominent family. The Indians said they are re- ver Re- ection a Year at least. ia ; ; Miss Wehle 3S lad in a negligee ceiving 30 to 50 per cent less than| WASHINGTON (AP)---President Loot Lp Mim ating gto bo cliowing up at the they should for their furs in some gjsenhower settled down today to COS y Sate a On a AT ow -ases. Prime Beaver pelts worthinormal duties at the White House a te Eterm : arty. Mise Wehie wi ad 8 cases P i F: S 2 se | commissioner, and Air Force Lieut. party, Miss Weble bortoved somes, northern markets are being fier declaring. that he has made, Ties in a "seven-hour conference wagon *and the pair took off for purchased for as little as $15, they| no final decision on whether to; S as apy. said retire a year from now. here Sunday. Syracuse. From there they flew to 52lC . ADD in t Bank fon o, F 1 Owens told newspaper men New York. Later in the afternoon The Indians gle {Fapping 3he wi k Irom a 12qsy say in Rey accidental deaths reaching 28. "I'm going to Japan to think Juliette called her family and said Moosonee and Moos , "Fan Mash eet Manes, : ic.| Seven of the children died things over for a year. She's they were returning tricts, near the mouth of the Moose|press conference Sunday in dis- New s a ) She's they w g ry : teussing whether h |pretty mixed up. I'm positive shel The turn of events stunned just river at the southern tip of Jamesicussing waster he may run for a bec. didn't realize what she was doing. | about everyone, including a local bay . ST phe N ! : : . : 5 d : 3 3 " i 2 Ty at this ent is | She made a terrible mistake. paper which came out with the| Sources watching the Situation cd £5504 at ¢ =" momen Bi not youngest was eight months. The "terrible mistake" wa® Jul-/story of the girl's flight with Hahn|say buyers are taking advantage hers a ray Thdl | iette's pre-dawn flight with an old (on the first page and another story of the Indians' superstitions, ig-|""®" 167°, fixed to such an ex-| boy friend, eight hours before she describing her wedding in the soci-|norance and hardships to bilk A € ; by % : | tent that it can't be changed. |was to have married Owens. ety section. them. | same | Crazed Kenora Rail Laborer In Three Fires By THE CANADIAN PRESS The lives of 10 children ing of the holiday. Not one of the: victims E. FRANK CAWKER can be changed seemed to indi-/Mas tree in their home. cate pretty clearly that Eisen-|GAS EXPLOSION flower has reached a tentative de-| were snuffed out in three weekend fires! | in eastern Canada as death stalked ice coated the northeastern United| all. Scores of highway accidents|ed left femur and shock. He has the very young. Six of them died States early today, forcing traffic| pi {in a fire which started in a Christ- ; ve mas tree turned dry with the pass- The three separate tragedies con- ibuted fo an extremely high fa-|on the ice sheet. ality toll for a non-holiday week- end, with the cross-Canada total of | Brunswick and three in Que- [tit ns, st. was n| more than five years old. The/New Jersey and one in connecti-| 1 TUCK Blows Up were blamed on highway ice| All six children of Mr. and Mrs, |bazards. Workers in New York City were was at Ste. Anne de Madawaska, N. B., advised to "get a running start"|truck exploded, setting fire to the|details this morning, because the Although sanding machine shop in which the truck |crews had been working since Sun-|was standing. |day night, the continued freezing x-| Reginal Pelletier died in one bed That remark that his mind still after sparks ignited the dry Christ- to On 'Ottensive-Weapon' Count jhe Night of his Sept. 24 heart at. fire started by a gasoline explo- | 1 | 1 | NEW YORK fo a ways. crawl on treacherous high-| cities spun and skidded helplessly|llegan and the 2 | forecast temperatures generally in Milder temperatures later today| were 'expected to end the prob- | : + hig Kori a gg WAR. Sgn 81, otidaal Tots Perish Ice-Glazed Roads Tie Up N.Y. Traffic (AP)--A glaze of western part of the area by night- | walks. However, several th 40s for today. | | {lem of freezing rain for most s' Man Killed As 0il Two deaths, including one cut, their jobs. | | The icy especially along the coast. Ten miles away, near the com- rainfall kept ahead of their efforts |cision whether to try for another munity of Green River, three-year- to provide a firm footing on the |four vears in the White House in|old Gisele Soucy died in a house|c ty's streets. rain hit eastern New, | EDMONTON (CP) Norman Labelle, 35, of 117 Mec- IRoberts Street, Toronto, was ad- mitted with a possible fracture of the left wrist and elbow, and hem- |atona to the left eye. Condition is [reported to be satisfactory. | Stewart Pottell 39, of 34 Glen- shaw Crescent, Toronto, was also |treated at the Oshawa hospital. His reported injuries are fractur- re reported and numerous in-|been transferred to the Toronto ries from falls on slippery side-|Fast General Hospital. hours Pedestrians and autos in|after the freeze, a general thaw Was kept very busy this morning. a2 sae bureau|Peputy Fire Chief W. Murray said | The Oshawa ambulance service today that the two ambulances at headquarters were kept busy for about two hours this morning at the peak of the accident period. MINOR ACCIDENTS A large number or accident vie- tims were taken to hospital by trivate cars, he Added. In Oshawa there was a rash of --A man accidents, but all of a minor na- {working around an oil tank truck|ture. killed Saturday when The force of the blast was re- | ported to have blown Peter Stetsko, ta., |about 25, of Elk Point, |through a partition wall. the Two others--Alex Kliciniski and England Sunday and spread to the! Robert Missel--were injured. KENORA (CP) -- A railway la- police-surrounded cabin. Timo-| borer, whose wild gunfight with po-|cenko was unarmed and surrend-| lice lasted more than 24 hours, ered quietly. appears in court today oh the nom-| The arrest came after two On- inal charge of possessing an offen-|tario Provincial Police, heavily| sive weapon. armed and wearing gas masks and | Mike Timocenko, 38, arrested armored chest protectors, had Friday night two miles east of/burst into the tear gas-filled four-| Niddrie in northwestern Ontario, room cabin, only to find their| had battled police in a tear gas, quarry gone. shotgun, rifle and pistol war from| Police then recalled mention by his log cabin. {two newspaper men that they had Police caught Timocenko with/Passed a couple walking down the his wife as they walked along the railway tracks toward Amesdale. main CNR line between Niddrie, ter escaping in the dark from the erish | | " | In Que. Fire | VALOIS, Que. (CP) Two men and two children were burned fo death today when fire destroyed] | their home in this suburb west of] | Montreal. | The victims were identified as| Richard A. Hunter, 37, his children, | Brian, 8, and Arlene, 4, and Mr. Hunter's father-in-law, identified] only as Mr. McClelland. Mrs. Hunter was taken to hospi- tal in serious condition. CAUGHT ASLEEP Details of the fire were sketchy but it was believed the blaze broke out while all members of the fam- |ily were asleep. Its cause was un-| | known. | The house, a two-storey building, ! was burned to the ground. It was owned by Mr. McClelland, a re tired civil servant. Valois is about 10 miles west of Montreal along the main railway line between Montreal and Ottawa. ent in 1945 he had worked at the cutting block nter for 47 years. PAST RECALLED At the time of he recalled that century, Osh about 4,000 ) r E. F. CAWKER (Continued on Page 2) i i ker, CH E. F. Caw @Y, Canada May Produce | . 500,000 Rutos, '56 i Lon Cit OSHAWA (CP) -- The Canadian | automobile industry in 1956 may . |reach a goal which has long eluded ho it, the production of "half-a-million esl en 1S vehicles in a single year," W. A. Wecker, president of General Mo- E. Frank Cawker, who saw Osh-| tors of Canada, said Sunday in a awa grow from a small town to|review of the industry a prosperous industrial commu-| Production in 1955 is estimated nity, passed away at the Oshawalat 451000 units made up of 380,000 General Hospital on Sunday, Janu- passenger cars and 71,000 trucks sry 8. Mr. Cawker, who was in his|anq commercial vehicles. Compar- 24th year, lived at 363 Athol street tive figures in 1954 were 357,083 east. He had been in failing nits made up of 287,191 passenger health for two years and seriously|...c and 69,892 trucks and com- i jo 1 weeks. Miclligan on mercial vehicles. orn a omeo, Mic July 14, 1872, the deceased was The 380,000 Passenger cars phi a son o: the late John Cawker and 1955 were 20,000 more an ia le |Maria Langrill. Coming to Osh-|previous record year, 1953 awa at the age of six years he - was, at the time of his retirement] in 1945, the oldest businessman in| HE point of service in the city. FAMILY TRADITION A member of--a long line of butchers, Mr. Cawker's grand- . ' father, John Cawker, came from 7 Vet Escapees Captured England to settle in Bowmanville 1 -- Seven teenaged boys, five i well over 100 years ago. Continu- COBOURG (CP) ne nx nag 4 ing the family tradition his grand-| described as 'veteran escapees," were rounded up father's five sons were all butch-' hetween here and Toronto early today after eight ers > Ps Mr. Cawker's father, John, was hours, freedom from the boys training school. fa partner with a brother in the, Police said the "veterans" stole two cars before they operation of a butcher business yo, . located on Simcoe street north, were recaptured. bE just north of the Four Corners in . . NE hor bicsect whet U.K. Security Silent On Bomb Report Mr awger himself entered e - TY : he butcher business for himself in LONDON (Reuters)--British security authorities 38 where ibe Mode! Shoe Store| today dropped a curtain of silence over measures d rl ls street, they are taking to counter a reported plot to explode 1912. At the time of his; a bomb in the House of Commons. Boy Alive After Put In Morgue CHARNY, Que (CP) -- A nine-year-old boy remained in critical condition today in hospital here, some 20 hours after he had been pronounced dead by a doctor and placed in a morgue beside the body of his elder sister. been followed by a vast search for a tall thin man who was seen talking to her before her | body was discovered next day in the yard of a warehouse one mile from her home. Doctors | say that the little girl was likely THE DEATH of fiveiyear old | Cadieux who was lured from the playground of St. Mary's School in London, On- tario, by an unknown man, while playing with her brothers has his retirement Susan at the turn of the town of were not two hours before she was found with tears frozen to her face, but died after she must ave stumbled from a nearby shack where the sex crime was committed. Rewards of more than one thousand dollars have living | her brothers saw her talking be- | The | | already been offered for the cap- ture of the stranger to whom fore her disappearance. little girl is seen (left) and her mother, Mrs. Walter Cadieux (right). City police were unable to give | accidents were happening so fast |that "officers haven't had time to write out their reports." BADLY SMASHED . A car driven by Walter Frewen, 132, of Peterborough, was [smashed today when it and whipped around on Highway No. 2 at Greenwood Rd. and was saved from a 14 ft. drop by a Dept. of Highways guard cable. The automobile driven west to- ward Toronto, came to rest on a shoulder of the highway, and the driver escaped uninjured. PC Harry Smart of Pickering Township Police investigated after the accident was reported at about 9.45 am. Reports of a collision between two trucks on Highway 401 be- tween Oshawa and Bowmanville were confirmed today by an offi- cer of the Bowmanville OPP de- tachment. UAW Pledges Hit $40,000 Fund - chosen from strikers have raising "missionaries' the ranks of GM received excellent response from union groups throughout Canada, it was an- nounced today by Clifford Pilkey, financial secretary of Local 222 UAW-CIO. The team which addressed un- ionists in Vancouver and the Win- nipeg area returned with pledges totalling $40,000, Mr. Pilkey said. He added that three teams left Oshawa during the weekend to solicit cash support from union groups at Sault Ste. Marie, Tim- mins, Montreal, and surrounding area. John Brady and James Free- man will campaign in Sault Ste. Marie; Joe McCloskey and Jimmy |Lee at Timmins; and Leo Lavio- |lette and Stewart McKinley will canvass Montreal. The teams will line up their own speaking programs, and are expected to be gone for at least ten days.

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