The Oshawa Times, 4 Jul 1961, p. 1

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tem ------ a EE Ran LA THOUGHT FOR TODAY The man who drinks like a fish forgets that a fish doesn't have to drive home. Nighi g tL a he @shavon Time REPORT Temperatures dropped below freezing in north Ontario last night, and were in the 50's here. Tonight 'will be warmer. VOL. 90--NO. 154 OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JULY 4, 1961 Authorized es Second Cless Mall Ottawa Post Office Department, EIGHTEEN PAGES YOUNG SUSPECT ESCORTED BY POLICE Girl, 15, Questioned In Buffalo Murder BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP)--A 15- year-old girl with a history of mental illness is in custody to- day in connection with the kid-| nap-slaying of the three-year-old Andrew Ashley. Cheryl Jolls was arrested Monday in the search for the slayer of the blonde, blue-eyed child whose body was found in a park lake June 25. Cheryl faced psychiatric tests and more questioning today. said Cheryl in the past had un- (Benedict, also 5, experienced a similar treatment. She was found and returned home. Susan also identified the Jolls girl as [ the person who had left her tied The first to identify the girl by a railroad track. Hoffa Seeks Own She denied any connection with the crime. No charges have been placed against her. Investigators said two other «children who were taken from their homes, bound and gagged and Jeit by railroad sidings on the city's north side identified Cheryl as their assailant. FIND NOTES Police said they had found a series of scribbled notes in her| bedroom at home which traced the progress of search for the Ashley child's slayef. The infor- mation, which mentioned the Ashley boy several times, could] have been taken from newspa-| per accounts, police added. The girl, one of seven chil- dren of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Jolls, was arrested last week about an hour before little Andy's trussed body was recov- ered from the lake but released) later. Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation inter- cepted a telephone call at the home of Andy's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Ashley. | She admitted calling Mrs. Elderly Man Bound, Robbed dergone treatment for mental { disturbances. IDENTIFIES HER | changes proposed to the 1,700, {000 - member union's constitu- % Ashley and telling the mother that the boy was safe and would be returned when the police hunt | was called off. | The federal agents caught the |girl in the telephone booth. She was tied hand and foot and a| told them she had called only| to console the parents. She was released because at the time she! did not answer the description] of the boy's slayer. Detective Chief John Whalen| |the bag from his head. More KUWAIT TOWN, Kuwait (AP) More men and materials flowed in today to boost the three- country defence force in Ku- wait. By dawn the total forces available to the British com- mander, Air Marshal Sir Charles Elworthy, exceeded 10,- 000 well-equipped regulars in- cluding 5,000 Britons and 10,000 Arab volunteers. The airlift continued through the night into Kuwait's Far- wania Airport bringing the 1st Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers from Kenya and other British units. Some moved straight into main defence positions north- west of the capital. Others took over from the 2nd Coldstream Guards who have been guarding the vital plant to distill fresh water from the sea, the largest in the world. The Coldstream Guards were ordered into the desert to join British paratroopers and Royal Marine commandos on guard against Iraqi forces that British intelligence agents said were continuing to build up north of the frontier. ARABS CONTRIBUTE The night's airlift brought the British contribution to Kuwait's defence to 5,000 men plus air and navy support. Saudi Arab- ian units totalling 1,800 men al- ready 'were reported in forward positions. Kuwait's own defence lured from his playmates by a|force totals roughly 4,000 regu- young woman. Threatened with lars well trained in the han- drowning, Richard said, he then|dling of British tanks and arm- ored cars. plastic bag placed over his| The British troops and Arab head. He was left by the rail-| volunteers sweltered in slit road siding, but managed to|trenches and om sand hills to- shake free of his bonds and rip|day along an 80-mile desert line {near the ill-defined Iraqi bor- Several weeks before, 'Susan der. More British forces were ex- pected to be flown in today. British jet fighters, bombers and tanks also are in Kuwait. The buildup of British forces in forward areas continued de- was Richard Edington who the day before Andy was slain, was Labor Fe MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)-- James R. Hoffa called a U.S. Independence Day convention session today to clinch absolute rule over the giant Teamsters Union and obtain a free organ- izing ticket to workers any- where. In one of more than 100 tion, Hoffa seeks power to cre- ate his own labor federations to rival the AFL-CIO and woo al- ready-organized unions into his growing domain. The holiday session of a spe- cial Teamsters convention was scheduled to ask the practically solid pro-Hoffa delegates to ap- prove a wide range of proposals to cement his power in Ameri- can labor for a- jumpoff into wider fields. "You ain't seen anything convicts from union member- spite a whistling sandstorm along the line. A paratroop bat- talion, administrative units and cooks were flown here Monday. Arab volunteers with new rifles squatted among sandhills OUTRAGEOUS MISFORTUNE LONDON (AP) -- Hamlet and Laertes were battling away at the Strand Theatre Monday night when Ham- let's sword flashed through the air and landed in the lap of a girl sitting in the front TOW. Hamlet and Laertes were frozen in mid-fight. The girl stood up and graciously handed Hamlet back his sword. The fight went on. deration certain crimes from holding un- fon office. The law does not bar ship. Here are some of the Hoffa- backed convention changes ex- pected to be adopted -- just as delegates were ¢ idered sure 0 elect the 48-year-old former warehouse boy who never fin- ished grammar school to a new five-year term as head of the largest U.S. union. 1. Virtually all top Teamsters aides will have to bow to Hof- fa's bidding or forfeit their jobs K. Lands Men At Kuwait around Fort Multa, the most forward security post between Kuwait town and the Iraqi bor- der. The post overlooks the main road to Iraq. ASKED HELP Kuwait asked Britain and Saudi Arabia for help to guard against annexation after Iraqi Premier Abdul Karim Kassem June 25 claimed this Persian Gulf sheikdom as an "integral part" of Iraq. Kuwait ended 62 years as a British protectorate June 19, but Britain maintains close ties with the government. | British Consul - General John Richmond said here Monday night that Iraq's contention was "like the Indians claiming America." U.S. Plans Rid For Drought Area WASHINGTON (CP) -- The United States has decided to halt the exports of oats and barley under barter programs and to conserve corn and other feed in an emergency drive to aid western farmers hit by drought that has extended from Montana to Minnesota. The parched area, bordering on the Canadian Prairies, also sion of grasshoppers now infest- ing rangeland in three states. The federal government is ab- sorbing one-third the cost of at- tempting to control the grass- will spread into Canada. Barley and oats still will be available for export under nor- mal commercial deals, but gov- ernment-owned surpluses will no longer be exported under special credit and barter pro- grams. Government stocks in the disaster area -- Montana, North and South Dakota and Minnesota -- will be available mainly for emergency livestock feeding in those states. In addition, all land in the stricken area which had been diverted from normal produc- tion into hay under soil-bank operations will be reopened to farmers. They can send their cattle into the areas for graz- ing or they can cut the hay for their own use or for sale to oth- ers in the area hit by the drought. None of this hay can be moved out of the disaster area. Manitoba tried to buy some of this soil-bank hay but was blocked by U.S. law, Canadians, however, can buy American feed through normal commer- or generous expense allowances. 2. No member can run for na- oh ional union office anymore; ° * candidates first must have served in local union offices, pPpPing over which Hoffa has some say- so too. 3. The union will be author- LONDON, Ont. (CP)--An eld-|yet" js Hoffa's ambitious srly landlord preparing a bank!iheme in shoring wn the Team deposit oi more han $400 wasigiers for a far-ranging organiz- bound hand and foot and robbed ing drive into industries already of the money at his rooming occupied by other unions. Hoffa house by two men today. said wherever they failed to or- Charles C. Smith, about 60, ganize, he's going to hop in. said the two men walked in the, In another change, Hoffa is front door and grabbed him be- deleting from the Teamsters fore he knew what was happen-| constitution a provision that ing. They used a rope from a members convicted of crime laundry bag to tie his hands and|can be ousted, or that convicted feet. A handkerchief was tied racketeers must be expelled. ized to provide legal defence funds for Teamsters echarosd willy law violations, 4. Hoffa would be $20,000,000 a year to spend and unlimited power to hire organ- izers and directors to ride herd over area Teamsters affairs. 5. Local unions also could spe- cifically keep their money in non - interest - bearing bank a counts -- a matter that stirre up considerable criticism for given up to| | NEW YORK (AP)--Shipping companies hurried preparations [today to get strikebound ships |maving again after a federal judge ordered a temporary halt to the national maritime walk- out, now in its 19th day. A number of lines posted sail- ing dates beginning Wednesday. U.S. District Judge Sylvester around his mouth, He was found by Mrs. Marion Brabant, 23, when she entered the building. This, however, has been made unnecessary to some extent by * provision of federal law barring persons convicted of PREMIER SPERKS Hoffa in connection with an Or-|Ryan issued the order Monday lando, Fla., land deal in which|night after President Kennedy he is under indictment for mail|acted under the Taft-Hartley la- fraud. bor law on the basis of reports 'Well Make Decisions' TORONTO (CP) -- Canada's foreign policy will continue to be based on close liaison with its friends but final decisions affecting Canada's position in world affairs will be made by straining influence even on the| Kremlin." The prime minister, speaking to an audience largely made up of American delegates to the conference, dwelt mainly on veloped north and the underde-|continue to maintain and veloped south of the hemis-|our defences. phere. GIVES THE ANSWER He said he was "Canada neutralist? Canada's perfect speaking bluntly in response to President record in two world wars, when Canada, Prime Minister Diefen-|U.S.-Canadian relations. baker said here Monday night. | His speech was expected to In a major foreign policy|become a key document for speech to 10,000 delegates to a/government foreign policy for Kiwanis International conven-|/the next several months, possi- tion in Maple Leaf Gardens, [bly into the next federal general Mr. Diefenbaker said the nextelection campaign. six months will be critical, with] "It is not anti-American for Russia's preparations for a new| Canadians to wish to make their drive to spread communism to/decisions on international af- the whole world. AE {fairs in Canada's interest rather "The mounting tension is rem- than to be unquestioning follow- fniscent of 1914 and 1939, With|ers of the views of other na- one difference," he said. "The tions, however friendly," he knowledge of the awfulness of said. nuclear war must exert a re- BE DIFFERENT "We can be different from CITY EMERGENCY Americans without 'having dif- PHONE NUMBERS ferences with Americans." POLICE 725-1133 On Latin America, Mr. Dief- enbaker said Canada was WIRE DEPT. 725-6574 HOSPITAL 723-2211 "deeply interested in everything pertaining to this hemisphege," and said this country is willing to do more to bridge the "abyss of affluence" separating the de- Kennedy's frank speech to Par-|freedom was at stake, gives the liament in Ottawa in May, but|answer to the neutralist conten- he did not mention the Organ-|tions. ization of American States,| «There is no neutralism wh which Mr. Kennedy urged Can-|freedom is at stake." = | ada to join. | i # i | Mr. Diefenbaker, his eyes In the field of defence, .Can- flashing and at the peak of his ada and the United States have|oratorical form, recalled the a close and effective partner-|founding of the United Nations ship, based on a mutual regard|in 1945 and V. M. Molotov's for each other's sovereignty and statement as Russia's delegate |rights. In the missile age it is|that freedom would never again {only by collective efforts that|pe challenged in the world [the demands of an adequate de-| "wy o oa though Jence against communism can yon of the as gr dy re is a vociferous mi = Ja0sil. Ciba? : . § minor-| ."The Communists believe that ity who plead for neutrality. I|their cause will triumph be- (have no ear for the lullabies of cause the rules of history so de- the neutralists in the world in|cree. Communism believes that which we live. {the course of history is deter- "Indeed, until such time as an mined by the immutable laws effective international disarma- discovered Karl Marx. ment agreement has been nego-| "We beli fs that man can, tiated -- which at the moment under God's providence, shape seems far distant -- we must'the future." 3 cial sources. Moves 'On Court Order that continuation of the strike would imperil the national health and safety. Three unions went before U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Charles Clark secking a stay of Ryan's temporary restraining order. Clark, who held a two-hour hearing late Monday night at his home at Hamden, Conn., re- fused a stay. He said he saw no compelling reason for him to in- terfere with Ryan's ruling. | Ryan's order was directed {against the five striking mari- time unions, two maritime un- ions whose members had re- fused to cross picket lines, and several employer associations. The order restrains both labor and management groups from "engaging or taking part in a strike or walkout" or otherwise "interfering with or affecting the orderly continuance of work {in the maritime industry." Korean Leader | To Be Arrested Hint Red Link SEOUL (Reuters) -- South Korea's ruling supreme council |announced tonight that former premier John Chang and his cabinet would be arrested within a few days for investiga- tion of alleged links with North Korean Communists. Chang was toppled from office by an army coup in May. His government was replaced by a right-wing military junta. Chang himself had taken power in April, 1960, following a student-led revolt against for- mer president Syngman Rhee. Today's move against Chang military juaat. is being threatened by an inva-| 3 hopper migration which likely] §& Mr. and Mrs. Edward Stahl of Mesquite, Tex., watch a brilliant aerial fireworks dis play in Dallas last night. The display, to be repeated tonight, is the annual public fireworks FOURTH FIREWORKS display held in the Cotton Bowl on the State Fair of Texas fairgrounds. The picture was made by a series of expos- ures. (AP Wirephoto) Lack Of TORONTO (CP) -- A project engineer said Monday a subway collapse that killed two men would have been far less seri- ous if jacks supporting the con- crete had been cross-braced. Andre Marcel Fortier, an en- gineer for McNamara - Ray- mond Construction, was testify- ing at the inquest into the deaths May 26 of John Blaney, 29, and Fdear Osthamn 24 They were crushed when tons of concrete and steel dropped on them as a section of the subway roof was being poured. "Where does the responsibility lie?" asked Coroner Morton Shulman after the statement about the jeks. "With Frankel," said Mr. For- tier. Frankel Steel Construction is a contractor on the job with McNamara-Raymond. NEEDED CALCULATION Mr. Fortier, in reply to a question by Elliott Pepper of the attorney - general's department, said whether the section would shift or not could be determined by calculation only. He said a drawing of the job, submitted by the Frankel firm and approved by the Toronto Transit Commission, did not contain enough information to warn of any shifts. "Then why didn't you ask for Braces In Subway Cavein it?" said Mr. Pepper. The wit- ness did not answer. Mr. Pepper said virtually every witness at the inquest has testified the form needed cross- bracing. He asked the engineer why it was not used. Mr. For- tier said it was considered un- necessary theoretically and had But been done before on similar jobs. MONTREAL (CP) -- Bank of Nova Scotia officials today were questioning holders of 377 safety deposit boxes looted during the weekend in an effort to calcu- late the total loss in the smoothly-executed robbery. First reports were that the loot from the boxes might be even larger than the original $1,000,000 estimate. The huge vault which the thieves broke into at the St. Catherine and St. Alexandre Streets downtown branch was being combed by detectives from the newly-established west- ern division bureau and the cen- tral criminal investigation bu- reau. Fingerprint experts examined tools and fragments of explo- sives left after the robbers broke through a four-foot thick concrete floor to get into the vault. Ironically, the spectacular robbery was discovered only a few hours after the city's new criminal investigation bureau a city drive to cut down crime. came into existence as part of of the robbery, is made up of three former specialized squads, including one devoted to bank robberies. NOT RUSHED Police said the burglars, parently operating under a we laid plan, had about 21 hours to complete the robbery while the bank was left without a watch. man during the weekend. They believed the burglars parked a car or truck behind the building housing the bank and entered the next - door premises. They presumably had a key to those premises, police speculated. Once in the building, the burglars smashed through the cellar wall separating the bank from its neighbor, bringing them under the bank's vault. They then cut and blasted a hole through the floor of the vault, climbed up and rifled the boxes. One of the officers called in to investigate was Sgt. Leo Pouffe, Montreal's police bomb expert who was injured while trying to disarm a bomb left The new bureau, which at once took over the investigation outside a private home last week. EDMONTON (CP) -- Prairie states and provinces in distress from drought Monday were ask- ing God for rain and govern- ments for money. The Roman Catholic arch- diocese of Regina asked 101 parishes in southeastern Sas- katchewan to say special pray- ers this week for rain to save deteriorating prairie crops. Spe- cial masses were scheduled for today, Wednesday and Friday in Regina's Holy Rosary Cathe- dral. Congregations in many Angli- can, Presbyterian, Baptist and Lutheran churches throughout southern Saskatchewan offered special prayers Sunday for more seasonable weather, Most Rev, George Flahiff, Ro- man Catholic Archbishop of Winnipeg, instructed Monday that a prayer for rain be said at all masses in the diocese un- til further notice. The Dominion public weather office reported that last month was the warmest June on rec- ord for six cities in Alberta and New Hotel For Whitby Gets Licence A license application has been approved for a proposed hotel at 1213 Brock street south, Whitby. The hotel is to be is- sued lounge, dining lounge and public house licenses. The applications were made in the names of S. S. Vassar, of 847 Simcoe street north, Osh- awa, and Donald Ross Durno, of Toronto, it was disclosed today. The property in question is and his ousted government fol-|part of the old Sleep Farm. At lowed the resignation Monday|noon today, no property sale had/h Mrs. Suzette Ford is kissed night of Gen. Do Yung Chang,|been made, a usually reliable by her husband, Raymond, as who had headed the country's|source reported. There are .at| she waits to be freed from ele- present three hotels in Whitby. | KISS vator trap in New York yes- terday. She wagstuck between second and third floors for half an hour before police freed her. She did not suffer serious Prairies Appeal To God, Ottawa Saskatchewan and Regina had the driest June ever logged. Temperatures at onton, Calgary, Lethbridge, Medicine Hat, Saskatoon and Regina av- eraged from seven to de- grees above normal. Total pre- cipitation for June in Regina was .54 inches--.06 less than the previous low in 1918. Saskatchewan Provincial Treasurer Woodrow Lloyd said Monday he had two chief wor- ries: Red China Paper Attacks U.K. Action PEKING (Reuters)--The Chi- nese Communist party newspa- per People's Daily said today Britain had "created new ten- sion" in the Middle East by sending troops to Kuwait. The newspaper said in an editorial that "British imperial. ist armed intervention in the Kuwait situation is provocation against the people of Arab con- tries and poses a grave threat to peace in the Middle East." injury. By coinciden ¢ Ray. mond is an elevator engineer. (AP Wirephoto) BURGLARY MAY TOP SMILLION Police Checking For Fingerprints

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