Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Nov 1961, p. 1

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° _ The Drive To The Community Che eter ie She Oshawn Cimes It isn't human to be perfect, but too many of us take advan- Authorized as Second Ciass Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa anc for payment of Postage in Cash. GIRL'S BODY FOUND ING IN ATTIC Police Question 14-Year-Old Boys ® st Goal WEATHER: REPORT Clearing » this pee G - Sunny with cloudy periods Wednesday. Cooler, becoming warmer Wed- nesday afternoon. Price Not Over 10 Cents. Per Copy Theoretically 15 Cities Are j CP)--. i in-| pri inister, he yer| clos g border to} OTTAWA (CP)~An imagin-|prime minister, had taken over|close enough to the ary force of 250 Ae and 70) the reins of government aticause fallout problems for a-| |missiles swept over North) Camp Petawawa, 10 \America during the night andjnorthwest of the capital. e into theoretical nuclear war) The sprawling military camp destroyed were Vancouver, | | graveyards. at this moment is in theory the|Lake, Alta., Fort Churchill, | | The attack that wreaked|capital of Canada. Its team of Man., Frobisher in the Arctic, |AVO AROSS, aneda and even|some 200 experts was counting North Bay, Toronto, Ottawa,| spread into the United States|up the dead and injured and|Montreal, Chatham, N.B., Hal- was the first phase of Exercise|directing the re-entry of bomb-|ifax, Stephenville, Nfld., and Tocsin B, the second nation-|hit communities by. the rescue|Goose Bay in Labrador. wide test this year of Canada's|troops. They were also tracing} Al' were hit by five-megaton) national warning system and its|the patterns of fallout, which|strikes. In addition, a 10-mega-| |survival plans. |was spreading an ominous ser-|ton bomb fell on Detroit and) OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1961 _FORTY-SIX PAGES VOL, 90--NO. 264 100 miles|nadian centres. : Canadian points theoretically ORDERED HOME Hans Kroll, veteran Ger- man diplomat, has been ord- ered home by West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and may lose his post as am- bassador to Moscow because of his talk with Khrushchev | on the Berlin crisis. He is due in Bonn tomorrow to ex- plain why he made what Wes Germany calls unauthorized proposals on the future of the divided city. (AP Wirephoto) Now follows the assessing ofjies of patches over the country wiped out most of neighboring damage caused in the theoreti-| VorTH BAY STRUCK Windsor. jeal attack and counting the! eee < ENDS ." tyae los Montreal, for example, was|ATTAK ENDS : number it oh a cure blanketed by fallout from| Army officers at the national Chief public feature of the strikes at North Bay and Ot-|warning centre in Ottawa said Cat teenie cosa ae tawa. The North Bay fallout|the attack was over, but the '"'all ay : : a als : pe ihe iy cana nee not be given for Canadians un- f STAYS IN SHELTER # | One of the first persons as- . |000 persons killed, injured and| United States will propose this trade. VICE-PRESIDENT Fc onsnge oo he. pee jonoso, a re eutenan colonel, sits at his desk in the senate chamber in Quito to- day during the counting of ballots which named him as Ecuador's new vice president. The National Congress named him on the second ballet at the special election. He re- ceived 78 votes against the 25 for Alfredo Chiriboga. Va- rea Donoso succeeds Carlos Arosemena (CP Wirephoto) . : : During the attack period from til later today. e ie Sg sae ee ae 7 p.m. to 4:15 a.m. EST there) The "'all clear was to be ae et y sh a t k for per-| Were 14 nuclear hits in Canada given on radio only. Sirens were wav pi es ould take for Pper-| snd 30 on United States cities'used ony to warn of attack s s y 'th tb of atta US. To Propose Increased Output WASHINGTON (AP) -- The:ments and to expand world sumed killed when a bomb hit the capital was Prime Minister Diefenbaker, who--in theory-- |had elected to stay in a fallout |shelter at his official residence about two miles from Parlia- jment Hill. There were an estimated 175,- |caugl yrec week that the 20 members of; The United States believes, GD Otawe, ce Seidinnen ithe Atlantic Community in officials said, that with the Eco- | Buildings were destroyed. jcrease their combined economic nomic recovery of western Eu- Defence Minister Harkness,|Output 50 per cent by 1970, U.S.jrope comp eted and with the designated Monday night py | officials said today free ccenvertability of western \Mr. Diefenbaker as acting| George W. Ball, under-!European currencies generally Canadians ana la leration and Dev>lopment in Pa-|$900,000,00C,000. a year to: $1,- jris Thursday and Friday, Can-|350,000,000,000 within nine year hf jada and the U.S. are full mem-| The annual gross national pro- nyur n jbers of the OECD. Finarice Min-| duct of the United States would] } lister Donald Fleming of Can-|increase from $52,000,000,000 in| U.S ganization for Economic Co-op-20 - country bedy from about 'B C h jada is chairman of the body. |1961, to $780,000,000,000 by 1970 The organization has three|if the goal is reached. | us Tas |declared aims: To work in the; The gross national product is | . ¥ linterest of achieving the high- a measure of a country's output} | PLATTSBURGH, N.Y. (CP)-- est possible economic growth,'of goods and services. | Frisk At five persons, most of|to assist less-developed areas of} A top-ranking diplomat said em Canadians, were injured|the world with capital invest- adoption of the U.S. proposal-- ; it pe today when a Montreal. plus what he called necessary bound Greyhound bus went off changes in dorrestic economic idl pr pour erg etl policies--would show that West- > 60. 7 hha ithe d ern countries recognize their nity, 60 miles south of Montreal. écononiy: fiust gpow IF kis 16 Filipinos Vote A police spokesman described survive. o drifted onto Camp Pet- clear' signal over radio would) | | | | "|secretary of state for economic achieved, it is time to set a} affairs, will present the propo- new goal. It would raise the pre-|| sal at the conference of the Or- sent gross national output of the); LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Police today questioned two 14-year-old # boys in their investigation of the |death of a seven-year-old girl 4/found strangled Monday night jin the attic of a vacant store jwithin 100 yards of her home. | Sylvia Fink was sent out Mon- day by her parents, Mr. and \Mrs. Ernest Fink, to buy a jnewspaper. Neighbors who Sistarted a search when she \failed to return found her body |hanging by her belt in the dusty | attic. | Police said the two boys ad- mitted being in the ramshackle building in gentral London about ithe time that Sylvia was throt- itled. They also planned to ques- : f ition transients who -ysed the . " : 4 three-storey building for a hang- se : out. : ----< : CS HANGING FROM WIRE Sylvia's body was hanging from an electrical wire which drooped from the ceiling. The lower part of her body was rest- ing on the floor. Police said a_ preliminary medical examination indicated she had not been sexually at- tacked. Dr. John Fisher was performing an autopsy today. toria Hospital, past the vacant store at about 5 p.m. That was half an hour} thing came out of such a little »rrand, I must know what hap- pened--what went on in that juilding. Mr. Fink, 38, who came here from Latvia 12 years ago, said Sylvia would not have entered the vacant building by herself. "Although not a timid girl, I'm sure she would have been afraid." Nearly six years ago Susan Cadieux, 5, was raped in the same area. She subsequently died of exposure. Sylvia, who had short blonde hair, was wearing a tweed coat when found. Her shoes were neatly arranged beside her body. Her brown socks showed evidence of grime, as though dragged along the floor. Police were forced to move | two windows to get at the body. |They said the windows may have been there before the the strangling or placed there in an effort to hide the body. | Entry to the section of the jbuilding where the girl was \found is gained by a side door |which opens onto a stairway. Mr. Fink, an er Police Charge | Toronto Man, after Sylvia set out on her er-| jrand. He found that she had} {called at two stores in the dis-| aS a -- es : trict but the afternoon papers $450,000 Fraud RESCUE TOTS FROM FIRE ie not jet: bout anlvectd. | TORONTO (CP)--Max Bot: Then he notified police and|nick, 36. of Toronto was ar- Policemen and a newspaper | last night. The children of | flames suddenly began to Prone egy a a looking ees pcg rey: Mg by children as" flames from a | been removed with their | ace wward them. The sceng | agra. gag Serene Sarees ates Se brush fire in the hills north- | mother from their hillside | 5 in Kagel Canyon, about be wire -- y hi aoe pee ger a Pp west of Los Angeles suddenly home and were being walked | 20 miles northwest. of Los | mi et rag ee sl val ie Gane ane tas teeta advanced toward the group | to a patrol car when the jdows in the attic. Police said|curred during June and July of |den behind a pile of storm win- Angeles. (AP 'Wirephoto) | One jthe building, vacant for twojlast year when a number of -- several of the injuries as "crit- Amid Violence But 2-Year-Old Killed By Shotgun Blast '-ESTAIRE, Ont. (CP)--A two. year-old baby was torn apart by | treatment today and its a shotgun blast mother critically wounded miles south of Sudbury on High way 69. Police said first reports were 'the Rolly car of a meagre, but that Mrs Goulet, 25-year-old wife highways department employee was taken to hospital in Sud bury The baby--it was not immedi ately known whether it was a boy or girl--was killed instantly | "HELP The Chest CLIMB $215,000 -- $200,000 $175,000 $150,000 $125,000 $100,000 $75,000 $50,000 $25,000 Start ' at Brooklyrt N.Y id th eci- their home in this centre 20\q i ei es och he denied that the pro- ical" and at least one woman, MANILA (AP) Scattered|Posal is designed as an answer jan unidentified M 2 ; Soy Sremier Khrushchev's a ontrealer, un violence and terrorism was. re- (0 Soviet Premier Khrushchev's derwent emergency surgery. ported today as Filipinos voted|@mbitious economic program The victims--23 of them Ca- to choose between Carlos|Unveiled at the recent Commu- -\Champlain Valley Hospital for gal for the presidency. old war considerations played Reports of stabbings, maul-/0 part in the U.S. recommen- vote buying came from@eities| ~ 2 and remo'e villages through the . s Russia Demanding tion campaign was marred by| at least 22 political slayings.| 2 000 voting districts were calm HELSINKI (AP) a a Some 16,000 national constab.|¥@nts inner political stability in the polls. mand military consultations, Garcia, 65, sought re-election Patiiamentary sources in the ruling Nacionalista 4 . ticket, campaigning on a "Fili--and Foreign Minister Ahti Kar- tric saws. nationalism. Macapagal, 51,'leaders about the aims of the Dave Britten, 21, of Ottawa, vice-president in Garcia's ad- Russian note to Finland at a real, both told of seeing fellow|o* the opposition Liberal party,/ing, and asked Passengers fly through the air,which accused the Garcia ad-;\committee for recommenda- : the time of impact. ruption. the note. Bus driver George Binns of ent occurred shortly before 4 "a.m, when he was forced off the road after being blinded by lights of an approaching The bus struck a tree with > enough impact to wrench all "the seats from the floor and drive the tree itself some seven feet into the bus. Several people were jammed between the free and their seats and at least one woman had to nadians--were 'aken to nearby|Garcia and Diosdado Macapa- nist party congress in Moscow C ings, illegal gun - bearing and/dation, he said. island republic whose pre-elec- . * "45 vings.| Finnish Stability But most of the country's 42,- ulary and army troops guarded Finiand or it will otherwise de- to a second four-year term on Finnish capital said today. tbe cut out of her seat with elec-|pino first" policy of economic jalainen informed the party and Mrs. Iyenee Pilou, of Mont-| ministration, headed the' ticket closed-door meeting this morn- ) and crash through windows at ministration of graft and cor-\tions regarding an answer to 'South Africa Facing Double Threat In UN UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- South Africa today was faced with a double-barrelled United Nations demand for change of its racial policies and a threat of. expulsion from the world body But despite two heavily ad- verse votes inthe UN special) political committee Monday] them to prevail upon the South night, South Africa apparently | African government to change} harsher demands will be de-|France and some South Amer- feated by the assembly. ican and Scandivanian countries rato oj j BACKS RESOLUTION voted against the resolution. Canada backed a resolution The vote of Canada, which other countries. asking all na- year, was one of the factors that tions to take whatever 'single gave or cvuilective" action is open to!" ~ the resolution barely a two-thirds majority. cerned. 7 abstentions Twice within an hour the 103-|United States member committee hammered! France. The South Africa by approving reso-| Sources said they considered voted lutions that inp the over-all vote|Canada had taken its toughest! resolut had sufficient majorities for the;stand in the UN so far | two-thirds necessary for pass | age later in the UN General A semb'y. \year. | But key paragraphs and) he harsher of the two reso- clauses relating to expulsion) jytions sponsored by Ghana, 29 {and sanctions showed in sepa-|other Afro-Asian countries' and| The j rate voting that they lacked the/Cuba passed by a vote of 55 to| today support nevessary to make 96 with 3% abstentions. It con-| again Wedne South Africa the first country' tained references to expulsion far only del tes from Liberi to be banished from the UN and sanctions. Canada the and ce ngo governmen | External Affairs Minister Ho- first time did not oppose sanc- in Leopoldvi te have been heart jwatd Green of Canada, observ jtions, abstaining instead from. Both demanded UN ac Jing the scene, told a reporter} But the United: States, Brit- he considers it likely that thelain, Australia, New Zealand,! including Britain. and ing Canadian delegation the C ye " e Commonwealth earlier this ASK UN CONGO ACTION Elsewhere in the UN: day afternoon. S niral tanga province. Russia | Cow's lat the and other reactionary people in!main institutions party Premier Martti Miettunen Yu the political bania sponsored by India and seven Plumped. against sanctions last 'Not Critical' But paragraph-by - paragraph leader of a hunger strike by/from other onlookers: weathered the storm as far as|its apartheid (racial separation)| voting told a cautious story and|imprisoned Algerian rebel lead- Vh | ; ; expuision or sanctions are con-| Policy 'This passed 72 to 2 with|Green predicted this would be|ers now in its 14th day, today way? | Police said early today 11 per-| the} reflected in later assembly vot-|was described by French offi- against the clause in the Bella n lovking toward expul-|leaders fasting with him would a,|sion of South Africa. The vote|be force-fed if they lose con- against South Africa, which left} was 47 to 32 with 22 abstentions.}sciousness -or if their lives ap- Security Council debate on|Mohammed Khidder, were/man was killed and two other| Storey wooden Gatineau Club. {formerly the Canada Hotel and Congo was in suspension|transferred "against their will') persons wounded in a shooting} The council will meet} tion to end the secession of Ka-|for treatment as political pris- West Africa. Hunger Striker Said To Be cials as "not critical." The 'officials said that. Ben. from a sealed off area around} }years, was scheduled to be torn | work. On E. Germany hour, I started to worry. sides with the Soviet Union on/work past ali that remained of} At first there was no an- carefully what he called Mos-|small heap of refuse. signs and the noise of in\Becomes Teen-Ager | At the same time Tito accused the late Russian djctator's name} | : [REPORTS CHANGE Mrane, re-| Prince Charles. to military and other aid to Stalinstadt near here was Ported the changes. ' e East Berlin) Cheam,. the prince's exclus. He told a meeting at (Ironworks City). ' jrule that birthday celebrations can never agree and that Al-|stood ceased to be Stalinallee|Of the personality" at con-| no exception and he must wait "TI say that Albanian leaders headed to work '0 earth-moving| Although the. East German ing his cake, cooked by Buck- and that Chinese leaders are,once had been Stalin's monu-|now there had been no indica-|left him presents before they a new hotbed of war danger in'glance. But one teen-age boy|------------------------ of the Soviet Union." that had been the flower beds Two policemen hurried up to "Who really ceres?"" he mut-- SASKATOON (CP)--The 109-| building, sounded the hotel fire spanking new street signs pro-'night in a _ spectacular fire | warn guests. Some didn't take jdistant Gatineau Club went up them to leave. laden trucks rumbled awayjof the hotel! still were not he: eeeres helped some elderly and two. other insurgent i ei @ ( ' not in the, hotel when the fire) and others left by 1 Killed, 2 Hurt Firemen rescued an uncon-| were permanent residents, most * . e President Tito t t f |down Nov. 1 but negotiations '@ | ue a in jover its resale delayed the = 2 5 | With Soviets |. "I sent her for the paper," \Mrs. Fink recalled. "When she u fs) n ree jdidn't return home in half an BELGRADE (AP)--President) EAST BERLIN (Reuters)--jthe statue amid the reverbera-| It's horrible. Such a bad Tito said Monday Yugoslavia|East Berliners today trudged to/tions of air hammers. the German problem. He urged Joseph Stalin's bigger-than-life/nouncement of the changes-- U.K. Throne Heir the Western powers to study,)Statue in their main street--a!just. the switching of the street st proposals on Ber-| It symbolized the overnight wrecking crew made them obvi-| LONDON in removal of the last vestiges of/ous. ' | today had a teen-age heir to the "certain circles of capitalists from ail of East Germany's A 7 j Then the Communist. news-|try t¢ mark the 13th birthday of America" of advocating an end) The post - war steel town of Paper .Neues Deutschland r The new| But there will be no birthda goslavia at a difficult time: merged with nearby Fuersten-/name for Stalinstadt was on|cake for the prince today ' in the. country's history. berg as Eisenhuettenstadt)Page 1 under an 'os mass re _ |¢ity council announcement. jive school near London, has a Skoplie he believes the Soviet The show-place main street in| No mention was made of the} Union and Communist China|East Berlin where the statue attacks on Stalin and his "cult/can only be held on a Wednes- Poa i last| day or Saturday. The prince is represents the Chinese and became Karlmarxallee. | months Communist party party in Europe, adding: Even as East Berliners/gress in Moscow. | represent a great danger for/machines were drawn up to\press recently joined in the|ingham Palace's chef. |peace in this part of the world complete the erasure of: what) Russian attacks on Stalin, up to! The Queen and Prince Philip doing a bad service to human- ment. ¢ ity if they wish... to create| Most hurried by without ajhis monuments. this part of Europe and over stopped' to stare as 20 workmen * our backs quarrel with leaders trampled vver the muddy earth Guests Mi ® and. lawn_ surrounding the ssing | Statue. : |IS FORBIDDEN I H t l Bl him and curtly told him: n O e aze "It is forbidden to watch." tered as he sauntered away. room King Edward Hotel here|alarm and ran along all the Another youth gazed up at crumbled :n_ ashes Monday corridors pounding on doors to PARIS (Reuters)--The condi-\claiming Karlmarxallee and which was no sooner extin-|the alarm seriously, he said, tion of Mohammed Ben Bella, |quizzically asked among titters| guished than the four-block-|and he had to force a few of "Who is this Karl Marx any-jin flames. ESCAPE THROUGH WINDOW Through the night rubble-|sons listed on the guest register| Fire Chief Tom Lennon said counted for. They said' they|men through a window, some hoped to find the guests were|Tesidents used the fire escapes began or escaped without noti-/ doors ; . fying anyone. Of 46 guests registered, 32 During Shooting |scious woman from a cafe on! of them retired pensioners. PORT ARTHUR (CP)--One|the main floor of the three-| Flames at the Gatineau Club, pear in danger Ben Bella and the other two; rebel leaders, Ait Ahmed and (Reuters)--Britain| until Wednesday before. enjoy-| # tion of moves kere to removelleft on their current tour of} the main! the company's Montreal office. jNames of signing executives jwere forged to them and the | cheques made payable to fix fic- titious Toronto contracting |firms and deposited in six sep- jarate accounts in the Royal Bank of Canada in Montreal. | Since then, more than $250,- 000 was withdrawn from the ac- counts, police said. | Botnick was arrested after po- |lice were told a man claiming to be a Montreal contractor had arranged to have his account jtransferred to Toronto. Bank jrecords indicated he was not a Montreal contractor and the To- na bank became suspicious, | |blank cheques were stolen from | | | 1 | | | } Paul Gorm, manager of the| the hospital at Garches be- incident in a downtown apart-|55-year-old downtown hotel, es-! te sa, ~ Somatic is yg sid latent block just before midnight timated loss. at $250,000, a dwelling piace, spread so rap- | Monday, police said today. He said a crippled man idly guests fled in pyjamas | SEGAN FAST NOV. 1 A man and a woman were|rushed into the hotel and told Police said the Gatineau blaze | All three have refuse to eat taken to hospital for treatment. the desk man the hotel® bever- may have started from an over-| ince Nov, | to back demands Police withheld all names |age room was ablaze..My Gur-/heated hotplate in one' of the| No other details were immed-|ski,. who lived on the second|building's light housekeeping liately available, floor of the three-storey brickirooms. condemned about a year ago as| oners. "a APPLE LOVER Six-year-old Karyn Manes of Streetsville, Ont., has a sweet tooth when it comes to apples. Here she enjoys one of a number, of prize apples at the Royal Agricultural | Winter Fair in Toronto. (CP Wirephoto) a

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