A 2 URN WEATHER REPORT The long cold spell 'has finally ended. The weatherman assures us that summer is finally here. THOUGHT FOR TODAY The single man yearns for a woman; after marriage the "y" is silent. SAINTE AN Ent Rey Oshawa Some TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JUNE 26, 1961 SABOTAGE FEARED IN FOREST FIRES Oshawa Youth Vanderbilt | Water Hose Cut, ¢OL. 90--NO. 148 area and lost control right in front of the Start-finish- line crowd. Best lap time in this race was one minute and 50.8 seconds, an average of about track in the Formula Junior race at Mosport, Saturday. McAuley went into a slide in the last turn before the pit . y A oon coisa genes . DISGRUNTLED IAN Me- AULEY sits on grass while a track official prevents his car om rolling back onto the % 3 3 : By GEOFF HUSSEY British driving ace i i i 77 mph. The Formula Junior | race was held between the two heats of the "Players 200". 'Moss Wins At Mosport world governing body of motor Saves Family | A 15-year-old Oshawa youth |saved his mother, sister and | brother from a fiery doom early Sunday morning when he awoke in their smoke-filled Howard | street home. Edward Gionet said there was smoke everywhere when he awoke in his second floor bed- room soon after 2 a.m., Sunday. The blaze was in the living room across the hall. Edward said he first banged lon the wall to waken his {mother in the next room. Then Stirling sport). Moss collected the Play- |, 0 ot Raymond, 9. out of the "| Moss, driving a Mk. 19 Lotus, er's Trophy and $2700 in prize 8 y |bedroom and downstairs. Next | coolly took a drive over the new money. Bonnier's share was $1 he took Margie, 12, downstairs "| Mosport Park motor racing cir-|750 and Gendebien's $900. i cuit to score a decisive win in i : day afternoon, Scoring an incredible Third place in the second Sadler Mk Five, piloted by {from her bedroom. | Mrs. Priscilla Gionet said the | the Players "200 race Satur- heat was stolen by the powerful) smoke in the hall was so |thick she couldn't breathe and 86.4 Grant Clark of Georgetown. In|she had to crawl on her hands mph for the fastest lap of the overall standings Clark finish- and knees to get past the blaz- race, Moss (who claimed not tojed fifth, He was seventh in the in have used fifth gear all day)|first 100-mile round. steadily lapped the field of 18 k cars, including second - place er events are on Details of the "200" and oth- the sports winner Joakim Bonnier of Swe-| page. den in a works Porsche RS 61, The race officially opened the and Olivier Gendebien of Bel- $750,000 circuit. Attorney-Gener- { gium in a privately entered RS|al Kelso Roberts who flew in 61 with a 1600cc engine, who by helicopter to officiate at the finished third. opening ceremony, said: "When The crowd, estimated as being|I looked down and saw all high- the fifth largest crowd in Cana- Ways leading to the track blocks totalled about $2,600. The dian sports history, was com-|ed with traffic, posed of 31,180 paid, and thous- ands who, unable or unwilling to be processed through the en- trances, climbed over perimeter es. In all; probably. more 1 38,000 watched Can- ada's first international sport car race. In interviews with The Osh- it looked like they were all h to a ma- g living room. The home is owned by Mrs. | Nicholas Rogozinski and is at 481 Howard street. Mrs. Rogo-| zinski and another tenant, Wil- liam Laundrie, were also home mainder of the house suffered town, S.C. at the time of the fire. She said a next door neighbor was re- turning from a dance, saw the smoke and turned in the alarm. Oshawa firefighters estimated damage to the house and con- living room was gutted. The re- | | | | f and the window open. She told 3 § cisco from their northern Cali- | EDWARD GIONET mainly smoke damage. This was the second time Mrs. Rogozinski was hit by fire this year. She lost her business esta- blishment, Nick's Poolroom, in the recent $500.000 fire that de- stroyed an Oshawa business block. jor sporting attraction in a large metropolitan centre. I am most impressed." Fans started to arrive at Mos. port Friday afternoon. Unable to get into the park thousands camped on secondary roads and lanes outside. British Empire awa Times the two European|Motor Club President Ronald aces said they knew Moss would ¢ win, The car was the thing they said. A Lotus, similar to Moss' car to have been driven by Pe- White, called from his motel room in Bowmanville, hurried out with other 'officials and be- gan to sell tickets. By 3 a.m. ter Ryan of Mont Tremblant, Saturday more than 5000 peo- failed to appear on the starting grid. The identical Porsches, driv-|The | ple, after juggling for choice positions, were inside the gates. younger set didn't get en by Bonnier and Gendebien, much sleep. Every third group had engines of a litre less capa- had so much camping equip- city than the Coventry-Climax ment it seemed as though they engine in the winning Lotus. planned to encamp there for the Moss told The Oshawa Times Summer. after the first heat: i Wn ta i fifth gear. finish-line view of it, however. | The race he is taking so cas- IT APPEARS THAT an Eng- lish gentleman was out with "Oh, this car is a go-er, but I didn't get a chance to get the thing into The stocky Briton liked the |track: "The circuit has a lot of |a lot this year. I drove around minate the Jews Mr. White said: "We learned EICHMANN PLEADS pape"; wo "Pontius JERUSALEM (AP) ~--Adolf| Eichmann today likened his role in the Nazi slaughter of the Jews to that of Pontius Pilate and said he was able to wash] his hands of any feeling of guilt. | The former Gestapo colonel in| charge of "Jewish affairs"| reached back into Christian his-| {tory to describe his thoughts of| {almost 20 years ago when the decision was reached to exter-| "as the final! Ithe track some time early in|Solution to the problem." | {the morning and was bombard-| All three Israeli judges leaned ed by empty bottles and other|forward in rapt attention asirepellent or hideous but which things. I don't know what else|Eichmann compared himself to|was practical and feasible. | went on, but we shall take pre- {the Roman governor who al-| Pilate' Of The Nazis Heydrich, who had expected some opposition, "exulted at the success" of the meeting which required only an hour or so, said Eichmann, Defence lawyer Robert Serva- tious asked Eichmann about his own reaction. The defendant re- plied: "Here I felt a certain solace] and appeasement, considering I| had done my utmost despite my| relatively low rank of lieuten-| ant-colonel and I had thought of a 'final solution' which was not "I did my best to bring order| Suicide Mystery SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--Cor- oner's deputies Sunday ruled the death of George Vanderbilt III a suicide but the reason for his plunge from a 10th-floor hotel suite remained a riddle. Vanderbilt, 47, who inherited $40,000,000, was found dead Sat- urday night by a bellboy after his bride of three months missed him in their rooms. No notes were found. Mrs. Louise Vanderbilt said her husband had called to her and she had gone into the suite's sitting room, found him gone Pp! d vi a 8! d ei police she was afraid to look down and called the hotel desk. The couple drove to San Fran- fornia ranch for a Saturday h night at the theatre. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at the Vanderbilt Arcadia plantation at George- §| 1 Girl Killed forest fire sitation in eastern Newfondland was slightly im- some of the equipment used to fight the fire in this area was forester, said the RCMP is in- pected. of the fire Friday, in which 12 houses were destroyed, water hose was cut. It was felt seven of the homes were lost water tanks mysteriously dis- the cause of the huge fire which spruce and fir in this area 120 miles northwest of St. John's. It was believed to have started in a sawdust pile. ity of light showers today, the freifighters felt the fire was be- ing licked. The most explosive dangerous fire was under way about three miles inland. How- HARE BAY, Nfld. (CP)--The roved today, amid reports that eliberately sabotaged. Ed Ralph, the province's chief estigating and arrests are ex- He said that during the height a s a result. Carrying straps on portable ppeared, he said. USPECTS ARSON Stuart Peters, Newfoundland eputy resources minister, said arlier arson was thought to be as destroyed 25,000 acres of Meanwhile, with the possibil- pot was Trinity, a community 0 miles north of here, where a Harness Vanishes ever, there was hope it would be contained. Trinity was the only com. munity of six previously evac- uated where most of the resi- dents had not returned. Two fires headed directly at the vil- lage Sunday before subsiding and sheering away. One fire, located behind a 30- foot hill to the west of Trinity died down then shifted course slightly after moving to within two miles of the village. Another, further away on a rise of land southwest of Trin- ity, had also advanced no closer and it too appeared to have sub- sided, although a 20 mile southwesterly wind was still blowing. WILL USE BOMBS Mr. Ralph said planes would attack the fires today with water bombs. He said several bombs dropped Sunday were quite effective. Earlier Sunday, it was feared the fires would advance through Trinity toward the communities of Wareham, Par. sons Point and Indian Bay scat. tered along the edge of Bona- vista Bay. The 2,000 residents of these communities, Hare Bay and Centreville were evacuated Friday. Mother Hurt Man Charged KESWICK (CP)--Donna "Mc: Dougall, 14, of Hanover, Ont. died from a .22 - calibre rifle shot Sunday at her mother's Lake Simcoe area cottage. Her mother, Dorothy Mec- Dougall, 50, who is estranged from her husband, is in hospital in" Newmarket with bullet wounds in the head, chest and arm. She is in fair condition. Police arrested Lowell Guy (Tom) Widdifield, 37. He was charged with murder. I 8! |a i i 3 | protocol cannot be the basis for Police broke into the Foliage! our discussion, nor can it be early Sunday morning afte Mrs. McDougall, driven by a neighbor, arrived at hospital and said her daughter had been shot. The girl who was at the cot- tage for the weekend, was found fully clothed, lying across bed in the four-room building. | 5 | Cf Si Ci There was a bullet hole behind one ear. p munist China today rejected Franco-American proposals as a basis for discussion on the Yi told the 14-power conference three-day recess: the Soviet proposals. the democratic republic of Viet Nam {ment with the French-American his shooting stick to do some birdwatching in Mosport Park Saturday 'when he suddenly found himself in the middle of an international sporting event -- along with about 40,000 other people. Most of the other visitors didn't get a character, From the spectator | standpoint it has numerous ad-| |vantages over many European {lowed the crucifixion of Christ. | Relatives said Mis. Me- Dougall bought the cottage a month ago and Widdifield was helping her prepare it for the winter. The girl lived with her father, |Clifford McDougall, in Han- over, about 30 miles south of cautions the next time." ; ,"(into all the turmoil in deporta-| Came the dawn and people] The key of Eichmann's testi-'tions. My unflinching efforts ini (were still streaming into the mony lay in the Wannsee con-|could be seen in the Radom plan |racke. 1 shall gefinitcly be backi, yy. The traffic jams around|ference of top Nazi bureaucrats and later in the Madagascar ee a 5 per. | the gates tempted thousands to|outside Berlin Jan. 20, 1942. |plan (for shipping the Jews to | x S a i G | myself that i ite of - Thited. (FIA is Federation In. hop the fences. Later, traffic] It was there that Gestapo/myse at in spite of my de . "was lined up for several miles/chief Reinhard Heydrich said|termination, I had to toe the ternationale de FAutomobile, |, three highways. At one time the final solution was death for|line. What was done was not ually is the Formula Junior 100-mile jaunt that was held at intermission during the "Players 200". Stirling Moss, a fellow Britisher, won the big event. | --Oshawa Times Photos g a g cf 00 European Jews. Eich-\my doing. I had the feeling of French draft points submitted by U.S. dele- week, spelled out exact powers power commission, consisting of China Rejects GENEVA (Reuters) -- Com- nternational Control Commis- ion in Laos. Chinese Foreign Minister Chen s it went into session after a "The French-American draft ompared and reconciled with "The delegations of China, the oviet Union and Poland and (North Vietnam) have learly indicated their disagree- raft protocol." The French - American pro- psals, comprising a 12 - point and additional ate Averell Harriman last nd step-by-step procedures to ive effective supervisory and ontrol functions to the three- Plan For Laos Communist delegations want the commission's powers lim- ited severely to avoid an ine fringement of Laotian sover- eignty. Earlier, the two co-chairmen had a discussion on the issue of technical equipment for the con- trol commission. The co - chairmen, Malcolm MacDonald of Britain and Georgi Pushkin of Russia, met just before the conference, which began six weeks ago, went into session. The West wants the control commission to have its own equipment quickly to police the cease-fire in Laos effectively. But the Soviet and Communist delegations say the commission should get its equipment from the political parties in Laos. The conference headed back into session while a permanent neutrality plan was reported circulating among the three Lao- tian factions in the wake of last week's "summit" meeting in Zurich between the rival {a line of cars stretched for 13! - 4 PEL | way 35, to Bowmanville. At the| £0 1 onvic =] SCA {height of the big race the hills |and slopes were festooned with | people, cars, tents and more| ® . fcars. It looked like somthing out n biggest Pe Freer . . | Accommodation was at a pre-| mium on the cold Friday night. LONDON (CP) -- At least|prisoners were selected as a| The prisoners are thought to Bowmanville residents reported eight of the 10 men who went gang detailed to pull off a big/have made for a central head- that people knocked at their over the wall of London's tough robbery in the near future. It is quarters, changed their clothes doors requesting shelter for the Wandsworth p ris on Saturday thought original plans called forjand acquired money, then night. Oshawa hotels, although were still free early today. only six to make the break but headed for separate hideouts. not filled, said that the differ- The breakout--the largest in the others came along at the |ence in trade was noticeable. | Britain this century--startled a last minute. | Sport car afficionados came | heat - wave sleepy London and| Scotland Yard has thrown| Kennedy May {from far and wide. Seen were set off a massive manhunt every available member of its cars bearing plates from as far, through the city. crack flyfng squad into the! {afield as West Virginia, Alberta, One of the men was recap- hunt. M T E d | tured Saturday after breaking Police were questioning] ove 0 1] his leg during the bid for Fee. friends and relatives of the es-| .it - dom. Unconfirmed reports said{caped men and combing Lon- M S k a second was picked up Sunday don's underworld iri They! aritime in e cation might in Liverpool, 200 miles have been warned that at least WASHINGTON (AP) -- Presi- I north of London one of the prisoners may be Ee rari : Two newspapers, The Daily aimed. dent Kennedy is expected to de- of the Sketch and The Daily Mirror,| The escape started with a say police believe the escape mock fight in the prison's sack- was organized from the outside making shop. Three guards who a man they call Mr. Big. He|tried to break up the brawl : : | " DY onan obo | p jberg is scheduled to give the|the gates. As the sun dipped, the master- were overpowered, bound and oi ; mind behind a number of recent|gagged. The prisoners then President the results of a week- young groups sang camp songs. robberies. \walked to the outside wall, "4 Survey on the strike's im- Perhaps they were waiting for the escaped looking like an ordinary work- the July 1 motorcycle races. | Key man among the escaped, ry. If the president decides the Then they wouldn't have risoners is 45-year-old George|ing party. { the $ 4 % f gi strike imperils national health climb the fences again. "200, end the 11-day maritime strike. started to leave. It was two s 2 of the top safe-lcoaren w Deen bo The CONEY. Several SCALED WALL or safety, he could seek an 80- tences for armed robbery. Lay : |20-foot wall and dropped down ied : . THINK MAY BE GANG [the other side. One man, 2. lhree maritime unions. mean Takeg Seven Lives leg in the fall, junction process with an offer BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)--West- , Dragging Travi with them 1 ; " CITY EMERGENCY accident in many years took| " section of wooden fence, made! 1hey asked Kennedy to ap-|seven lives Sunday night as two| . PHONE NUMBERS their way across a bowling|Point an impartial board that the peak of a hump-back bridge icar. The car took off a' high were essential to the health. in suburban Danev FIRE DEPT. RA 5-6574 [vehicle drew along side and States, Sivikite seamen then Benbynek, 22, of Depew wa some of the men climbed into/would work ships carrying these HOSPITAL RA 3-2211 is n c d into Pp ying | critical condition in Sisters Hos- | « sing sen.| USiNg ropes and home-made day court injunction against i land { of the others were Serving sen-| ing hooks they scaled the continuation of the strike. Buffalo Accident | Newspapers speculate t h | year-old Leslie Travi, broke his| While, moved to head off the in-| Sunday to keep critically needed ern New York's worst highway | the prisoners battered down a|SuPplies moving. automobiles collided head-on at| green and piled into a waiting Would determine which cargoes POLICE RA 5-1133 speed. Moments later another Safety and security of the Unitec supplies. pital Ry | Saskatchewan, Ohio, New York, a Canadian Press survey, 29 Michigan and Illinois. Also seen|were traffic mishaps, 27 drown- was a small imported car bear-|ings, one a fire death and two ing Hamburg, Germany identifi-| deaths by unclassified causes. At the end of the second heat|counted between 6 p.m. local when the P.A. times Friday and Sunday mid- cide. today whether to seek a speakers were quiet and the night, with traffic fatalities and Taft-Hartley act injunction to|track was untravelled, people drownings bracketed, Labor Secretary Arthur Gold-| hours b (10,3); Alberta 7 (1,5); British y x ours before many got clear of Columbia 5 (4.1): {Nova Scotia 3 (1,2); Newfound- land 1 (0,1); Prince Edward Is-| "| Manitoba, The sole survivor, Anthony hy a car as she crossed 2 killed Saturday while crossingiland Canal at St. Catharines. 10 000,0 {Owen Sound. Poland, Canada and India. princely leaders. aid he wae unaware of Pontius Pilate. I felt I was not this when he prepared tie ina-jguiily. What was laid doy ; chinery for the meeting at Hey-|done by the elite, the popes of| drich's request. the regime." Drownings Near Highways Toll By THE CANADIAN PRESS the Queen Elizabeth Way near Rivers, lakes and pools were Port Credit. almost as much an accidental] Kenneth Hannahson, 54, of death trap this weekend as the York Township, killed Saturday highways. {when struck by a car near Bol- Of a national over-all total of ton, about 24 miles northwest of 59 accidental deaths reported in| Toronto; Nicholas Hurchat, 37, of Kill- aloe killed Saturday when his| {car went out of control on High-| way 127 at Killaloe, about 60 miles west of Ottawa. Lawrence Walt, 11, drowned Sunday in a canal near Frank- ford, about 11 miles northwest of Belleville; John William Gallagher, 37, of Beaconsfield, Que., died Sun- day after being hit by a car at the Rockcliffe RCAF station, near Ottawa; | John Andrew Brown, 18, of land 1 (0,1); New Brunswick 9, (RES, Ingersoll, Adiney Saye E The ie death as In Quebec. Thom, 17, bth of Thamestor, A and there was one <iled Sunday when their car other unclassified death in Al|crashed into the side of a train, | ria ji {a Soringaold, about 15 miles Ne : east of St. Thomas; _ These figures do not include "no 04 baton 20. of Markdale industrial accidents, natural gic lot about 25 miles south of deaths or known suicides. Owen Sound, killed Saturday The Ontario Dead: |when his car skidded and rolled Robert Lockie, 21, Toronto,|over; drowned in Balsam Lake about| David Grainger, 3, of the Tor- 30 miles east of Orillia Friday; onto suburb of Etobicoke, Mrs. Rose Steele, 47, Scarbo-/drowned in a water - filled pit| rough, killed Sunday when hit/near his home, Sunday: An unidentified woman killed street; Sunday when a car crashed into James Kirk; 54, of Toronto|an embankment east of the Wel- The provincial figures, were: Quebec 21 (11,9); Ontario 13 Manitoba 4 (2,1); Saskatchewan 4 (0,4); GOLDBRICKING GOVERNOR-GENERAL 50-pound gold brick on the | knee of his artificial right leg. He lost his right leg above the knee during the First World War. At right is mine mana- ger Murray Pickard who Governor - General Vanier shows Mme. Vanier and mine officials at Yellowknife, N.W.T., how to balance $20,000 on one knee. The go ernor-general balances the Folds another gold brick. Gove ernor-General and Mme. Van. ier are on a tour of northern Canadian communities. (CP Wirephnto)