THOUGHT FOR TODAY It's wonderful to believe in yourself but don't be too easily convinced. The Oshawa Times 2 ORAEE PLN AT PBA INP TERI AN pe yo NE WEATHER REPORT Scattered thunderstorms today and Thursday, warm and humid. ver I OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1961 Price Not O 10 Cents Per VOL. 90--NO. 183 Authorized es Second Class Mail Ottawa Post Office Department, TWENTY-TWO PAGES : 3 Face Charges § $500,000 Fraud QUEBEC (CP) -- Two men|summer and winter residences, were charged Tuesday and a allowing police to collect ex- third was to be arraigned here penses while working in federal today for allegedly taking part or provincial election campaigns in defrauding the Quebec Iquoz Allowing smuggling and theft of i +t. 1, 1953, and liquor. Jee bebop or rai least $500,- Laforest is charged with hay- a ing, alone or in connivance with Scheduled to appear before others, drawn up false expense So N A REMAINS OF CAR AFTER CROSSING COLLISION Fall May Bowmanville Man Expect Rai Paralyze [Dies At Crossing Not Affect Tuesday when his car collided|ville, and Russell, of Brooklin; rsgalt wis 7 Fest ed Mines {Judge Achille Pettigrew is Leo- statements totalling $30,221 and {pold Perrault of Quebec City, ato have defrauded the govern- former liquor police inspector ment of $16,608. : : here. Lemire started his police ca- Already charged are Rosario reer in Montreal. He became a Lemire, '73. retired district di-|provincial police detective in rector of the liquor police, and|1931. The following year he be- his stepson, Dellray Laforest,|came chief of detectives for the A Bowmanville man was killed|two sons, Leroy, of Bowman- 30 provincial force in Quebec dis- AFTER ORDEAL Peter Wayne Clark, 19, of Kingston sways with fatigue after spending 48 hours in bush north of Kingston, Clark, shown with his aunt, Mrs. Margaret Pride of King- ston, wandered away from a fishing party Sunday after- noon and spent two nights Jost in the bush without food. He walked out of the bush about 6 p.m, Tuesday. (CP Wirephoto) WEST TO PROPOSE PARLEY ON BERLIN Action Depends On Soviet Move PARIS (AP)--The Western al- lies are planning to advance a proposal within the next few weeks for a meeting with the Soviet Union on Berlin and Ger- many--if the Russians fail to propose one first. Highly-placed Western inform- diplomatic manoeuvres on the Berlin crisis. American, British, French and West German for- eign ministers discussed the moves during the weekend. That was followed by a briefing for the NATO council by U.S. State Secretary Dean Rusk. The timing of a call for nego- tiations on Berlin is a delicate matter involving tactical advan- tages. The decision has been coupled with plans for a West- ern military buildup to confront Soviet threats. The Western diplomatic move probably will be launched after, the West German elections Sept. 17 and after Western firmness has been made evident. Other factors in the timing are the Oc- tober Communist party congress in Moscow and the United Na- tions general assembly session opening in New York in Septem- ber. Rusk already has given the NATO council an outline of the diplomatic plans. Rusk's report included a pro- posal to push allied military strength in Western Europe to its long-standing goal of 30 divi- sions with an additional 75,000 to 80,000 men. Most of the rein- forcements would come from Britain, France, West Germany Shoot To Rescue Attack V | PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (CP)| Giant Girl Nild. Fi lan 1 with a CNR freight train at the|three sisters, Mrs. Norman - 1res Montreal Tuesday following al When the Union Nationale girl says doctors have told him|at the crossing. iville, Mrs. Phil Brownson (Lil- pected to have little effect onlexpense accounts, smuggling, force, but was rehired after the Alfred Hare, 64, visited histo) apout 2.30 p.m.) where he| Funeral services wil two months. tions. The Quebec liquor force nol 17-year-old Carol can't move her|hay, according to his family.|cutt and Smith Funeral Home in I ey apraled Jolo through spruce and fir forests pourg some time before they can tell|train caught the front left cor-'K. Houselander, Bowmanville women and children from their June 1960, provincial elections|Tesage's administration. at his home here. ling the driver. EE Doating and Ragged Harbor, in-| when he appeared before Judge ing her on liquids." lin two. Although the roof was | Invalids were flown to Gander|was arraigned on {wo on Of St with little change. She tripped| mhe train was bound from PETERB O R O U G H (CP)--|coastal fires filled some homes.| The attorney-general's depart- i : i 26 ar- Carol Here is abou! # Mise Short. was. born in Taun- suffered in a car accident Sat-|for Fogo Island 15 miles from| Lemire and Laforest were yi eR : lashed the coasts of Britain to- retion of the pituitary gland is|He was a member of the United he was riding crashed into a ,o.4 PATE 6 FEN CEHCT chose to be tried him: | ; ] vy 4 {and disrupting ferry services to i irdi i jus In the meantime, they are be- since infancy. wife, the former Birdie Burk; River road, just north of the behind to' fight the fire. , beck, which berthed at Harwick| |ford street, Oshawa, and was an|Who flew over the area Tues-|was set at $15,000, Laforest's at about the most horrible thing| vA r10US CHARGES was two hours overdue from | failed to negotiate a turn to the by expense accounts, payroll pad- all night because of the buffet- with the head continuing. {cover up work on his personal | HAVANA (AP)--Fidel Castro|amounts of the old Cuban cur-|liard street, Ken Sloan, 21, of {ered large areas of southern | Const, D. K. Ross, OPP Peter- | Midnight rescues: yere organ. eq [arge smounts during the) B overflowed. Floods in one dis- i . | ilies scrambled to Any deposits above that sum|only 20 to 30 cents on the free Death Camp OSS |feet and families | ment since they had been try) T D 4 i wo eputies day reopened his slashing at-jwho saw Eich mann actually that no one would be prose- 1] - . ecutive today amended the had either direct or indirect| The prosecutor recalled testi- Firefighters | persons deposited more than 10,- Soviet Astronaut Nehru instead of one. | Hausner, nearing the end of | Eichmann had complete control| Firefighters had a chance today | i ounts of cash # pileq up istge amounts made public the following mes- | avoid a contest between cabinet ganized completely the "model" | JANGED AS CRIMINAL Prince George forest district. An exception was made for Prince Albert Sask. where he which has been brewing since pacame a staging centre for|war. of two fires which had threat- COLLINGWOOD, Ont. (CP)--|Sintson Ave. level crossing. Welch (Florence), Oshawa, Mrs., on jouN'S (CP) -- Showers six-month investigation. Police party won its first election in his daughter may be paralyzed] Blake Short, 63, 102 Scugog|ian), Oshawa; four grandchild- fo oct fires that have ravished payroll padding and theft within| Liberals came back to power fare, $1, visited Dis I be held cl fore aug ni in : onger exists as a separate po- huge daughier Tuesday nig After two days of gusty windy ppp FORCE p p legs or arms. Police report he was turning Bowmanville, with burial in the left the force when the dor the terms of sweeping re- if the paralysis will wear off," ner of his 1958 model car,|United Church, will conduct the homes in the coastal settle after 20 years' service. SiX|- "It's from the neck down now.| Police described the car as Oshawa Man's habited by a total of about 2,000| Pettigrew, The hospital reported todaylintact, the sides were shorn in the interior 40 miles away, counts after being arrested Mon-| on a broken sidewalk Friday montreal to Toronto, and was|farry Martin, 22, of Oshawa Women and children were put|ment said no other arrests are, I B ag wm In Britain % 3 y t four-inches tall and San an|ton. He lived in Be®manville urday. { shore. raigned together and were no thir preliminary hearing was| day for the second straight day, ei g $ blamed for her extraordinary Church. tree. the male population in the three 4 . .1.|the continent. Peterborough Golf Club at 7.15 ing held by authorities for fail-| Premier Joseph Smallwood, on the east coast with British ( 'ash Of ( 'ubans {employee of General Motors. day, described the fires as "just|$10,000. | that has ever happened in New-| "| amire is charged with fixing The Netherlands. {east and struck a tree on the | 1 Winds of about 20 miles an|ding in Laforest's favor, fabri-/a% Also admitted to hospital \ announced Tuesday night the rency into the country's black|228 Dublin street and Patricia {Scotland after torrential over- maximum of only 10,000 pesos|the Cuban peso and finance anti- ed he. Glascow area Tues borough detachment, investi- : government . ordered exchange) Castro government at $1, the -- {trict reached depths of seven i s in small boats. will be taken over by the govern-| money market outside the coun- ; | safety in sma JERUSALEM (AP) -- Israelilall the inmates of that camp hoarded in violation of the anti-| _~_ S NEW DELHI (Reuters)--In-|tack on Adolf Eichmann, charg- take part in a selection at the cuted. ' party constitution to provide for control over Nazi extermination mony by Auschwitz death com- 5: *h. But it was be- 90) pass each, Bo OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min- 2 The move, made at Nehru's|the summation of the prosecu- Over Jews shipped to Ausch-/to gain control of fires raging o i b (4 9 t did not declare it because they I er oming mee ministers for the post. ._|concentration camp at There-| Hoess was hanged as a war The wind dropped sharply on | has been holidaying: The father of a giant teen-aged| There is no wigwag or signal/Ted Clarke (Audrey), Bowman: goo. 0" oo today were ex-|said there had been fabricated 1936 he was dismissed from the for life as a result of a fall. gt was leaving a field on his|ren. northeastern Newfoundland forthe Quebec district liquor opera-/late in 1939 j ing rsday, Aug. 10, at the North. : 2 4 a Toronto hospital and said that| had just been checking some Thursday, Aug a e ; A and 80-degree heat, fires raced| "y.mire of suburban Charles- "The doctors say it will be|south on Sintson Ave. when the Bowmanville cemetery. Rev. W. with new fury Tuesday, chasing Liberals came to power in thetorms effectd by Premier Jean Mr, Hare said in an interview| wrecking it completely and kill | services. ments of Musgrave Harbor, charges were read against him S d D She can swallow. They're feed-|looking like "a grapefruit cut persons. Laforest, 30, of Quebec City, Y Injuries Fatal that the girl's condition is fair|away. juries ata Iwhere smoke from the. 30-odd day night. facning. suttering facial Injur|o, a main line of the CNR. died today from head injuries|aboard the coastal vessels bound| Pending. E LONDON (Reuters) -- Gales] : . sel. Q. | estimated 300 pounds, Over-sec-|{0r 40 years, operating a farm.| Police said the car in which gpa number of persons evacu:| oP Gon on Ag : tor A 15 damaging many small vessels size, which has been apparent] Surviving relatives are: his| The accident occurred on the fivhing Comrites Toi ies set for Aug. 15. . nc hai The troopship Empire Wans:.| p.m. Martin lived at 763 Gif- ure to post bail. Lemire's bail troops on leave from Germany, Police said a northbound car foundland." Troops said they had not slept Goes To Castro [est se: hour were forecast for today cating of expense statements to/ in were Kenneth Martin, 21 of Hil- 8 ; Meanwhile, floods which cov- Cuban government will return a| market to unsettle the value of| Marsden, 16. of RR 2, Lakefield. | har e | 1chmann night rain were subsiding today. per person to those who depos-|Castro activities. g day night when local rivers (While officially valued by the gated. € Sunday and Monday. Cuban peso is actually worth N h T H | mnie prosecutor Gideon Hausner to-|We have heard one witness here » . hoarding law, he said. He added, 1n Iop 1 S | PM Congratulate dia's ruling Congress party ex-|ing the former Gestapo colonel | camp." Castro said an estimated 3,000 two deputies to Prime Minister camps in Poland and Hungary. mander Rudolph Hoess that i Jubans who had, A A lieved many Cubans Who ha ister Diefenbaker's office today suggestion, was designed to|tion case, said Eichmann or-| Witz. |over 5,000 acres in the giant 1 acti feateq legal action sent by Mr. Diefenbaker from It was expected to end a cri [sienstadt, Poland, which later|criminal at Auschwitz after the Tuesday night, halting progress | "On behalf of the government the former sole deputy leader, | "old persons and cripples," who Castro said would be given cre- ' ; i real dit for deposits to a maximum . i rs Shinbe Cur. | nor Boi ioe opined remote sawmill communi- and the Canadian people and for|G. B. Pant, minister for home| ¢"$ shipped from all over Eur Hausner pointed to Jortions of ties and albabie timber myself 'personally. 1 should like affairs, died in. March, ope "to. the: gas chambers « at|Hoess' testimony in which Eie "| stands. to congratulate you, Mr. Chair-| At one time, the party was|Auschwitz. {mann was named as the man » 1 | party and the government." TORONTO (CP)--Police to- day fired on a fleeing car to rescue a teen-age rape victim, arrested a youth on a rape charge and searched fields north of Toronto for a second suspect. The victim, a 17-year-old girl, was hysterical when police reached her. She was admitted to hospital. | | | Spencer Soriska, 20, of subur-| The detectives opened fire, hit- ban Scarborough, was charged|!ing a rear tire of the fleeing with rape. The victim's 'girl friend, Lynda| Lawrence, 19, said they both ac- cepted a ride from two men as they were walking home in suburban Scarborough and the men refused to let them out of the car. Two men leaped out and ran . } ° Miss Lawrence said she es- caped when the car stopped at a traffic light ran to a nearby house and telephoned police. Two hours later, two Scarbor- ough detectives tried to flag down a car north of Toronto but had to leap out of the way as the car kept going. | car and forcing it into a ditch. away. Soriska, bleeding from wrist injuries turned up in a Mark- ants. gave an outline today of|R and the United States, but les- ser increases are needed from various other governments as well. The council endorsed the West- ern Big Four's plans to stand firm on Berlin but to keep the door open to negotiation with the i "on ar ble ba- sis." NO COMMITMENTS Delegates were unable to make commitments on new ex- penditures or other measures without first consulting their governments. But most of those addressed by Rusk expressed agreement with the objectives and early replies were expected. The council also reaffirmed the policy adopted by the NATO foreign ministers at their May meeting in Oslo. This called for a "peaceful and just" solution to the Berlin and German prob- lems on the basis of self-deter- mination. The Oslo declaration also said any move, such as a separate Soviet peace treaty with the East German regime, could not deprive the Western powers of their rights in Berlin nor relieve the Russians of their obliga. tions. Lake Ship Damaged, No Danger MANISTIQUE, Mich. (AP)-- A 91-foot motor vessel and a for- eign vessel collided in fog. shrouded northern Lake Michie gan early today. The motorship Mackinac Is- lander suffered heavy damage to her bow and stern but was re- ported to be in no immediate danger. An earlier report had said she was in "imminent dan- ger." She was reported to be carry- ing a crew of three, headed by Capt. Richard Lyons of Charle- voix, Mich. There has been no positive identification of the second ship, although the United States Coast Guard's district headquarters at Cleveland said it may have been the Zermat, a Greek flag vessel known to be on the lakes. The Coast Guard said she ham township railway office early today and asked for police to be called. was reported moving northeast toward the Straits of Mackinae following the crash: Moscow Goes Wild MOSCOW -- Soviet Spaceman Gherman Titov returned to Mos- cow today for a. hro's wel- come and warned that if the "enemies of peace unleash an- other war, the Soviet Union has the wherewithal to crush the ag- gressor." Standing atop the Lenin-Stalin tomb, the 26-year-old cosmonaut told the applauding multitude jamming Red Square that his space flight was dedicated to peaceful purposes and '"'we use our mighty rocket technique for the sake of progress." But he added: %N "We have all the means neces- sary to rebuff an imperialist at- tack, and I as a military pilot am ready to fulfill any task given me by the Communist Reviewing his flight, Titov said that his space ship, al- though completely automatically controlled, could be guided by manual controls to a landing on any spot on the globe. Premier Khrushchev, standing at the spaceman's elbow, led the applause after each of Ti- tov's sentences. The Soviet premier, following the new hero to the microphone, said it was symbolic of the greatness of the Communist party that for the second time Moscow was greeting a Russian of 20,000 pesos. ACCUSES U.S. ; | i S Castro made the announce- man, and the Soviet people on threatened by internal rift when! "Eichmann dealt with the se.| Who supervised personally the she: Bizgeyt blajes wore tue ment in a television speech inthe great scientific accomplish-|two top-ranking cabinet min-/lection of Jews at Theresien.| {ransportation of Jews to Auscht? heast of here and the Tsus which he accused the Unitediment achieved by Maj. Gher-|isters prepared to contest the|stadt for Auschwilz," Hausner! Wit% and selected which trans. | mile ) t, which States of smuggling huge man Titov." vost of prime ster's deputy. (said. "Eichms as known to Ports would be run directly to| fire, # yailes 10 the esl, Wie $ S gg g huge m Titov." post of prime minister's deputy. said. "Eichmann was known to|f, gas chambers and which covered 31,000 acres. Jet would be put aside in so-called] The Grove blaze was swinging "family camps." away from the communities of FISTS AND $20 BILLION Ininates of the family camps| Willow River and Giscomb. For- were forced to write letters back estry officials said it was 10 home, describing the "good liv-| miles from the communities. . ing conditions" at Auschwitz. |The other 66 fires in the district "Eichmann admitted here were under control. that he visited Auschwitz five| There were 750 men and 50 nN y [ or six times," Hausner said. bulldozers battling the out- "Why did an officer, who says breaks. {he handled only timetables, have! PUNTA DEL ESTE, Uruguay 33, accused the United States of, The five also junked the dis-! He said the Kennedy plan to visit Auschwitz? . (AP)--Five major Latin Amer- plotting to assassinate Fidel Cas- puted American scheme for an/would never have been con-| "As far as timetables were] Goldberg Seeking ican nations called on the United tro's brother, Raul. elaborate information and cul-|ceived if it had not been for the!concerned, there was no need Sta. and other foreign aid] When Guevara finished speak- tural campaign to publicize the Cuban revolution. ito visit Auschwitz." | Met Settlement sources to funnel $20,000,000,000 ing, several Cuban exiles in the economic and social reforms "A little push," he said, and| Hausner laid stress on evid- during the next 10 years into|audience screamed 'Assassin' that are the aims of Kennedy's'the United States would ante up|ence showing that the Nazi in. NEW YORK (AP)--Federal President Kennedy's alliance foriand two leaped on the stage Program. [the $30,000,000,000 in aid Castro|stitute for anatomical research|Labor Secretary Arthur Gold- progress program. |shouting. Firsts swung as secur-| The United States already has|called for two years ago. at Strasbourg applied several|berg has stepped into the labor They urged the governments|ity guards hauled the demon. Promised to contribute more] "A new stage is beginning in|times to Eichmann personally dispute that forced cancellation to get their long-range develop. Strators from the packed cham. than $1,000,000,000 a year to get the relations of peoples of Amer- Jor Sule and skeletons of Jew-jof the Metfopolian Opera Com- ment programs ready in the Der, but order was restored in|the program started. Douglas ica under the sign of Cuba as a ish death camp victims for|pany Wl eon 1 h IE perth a few moments. Dillon, U.S. secretary mentioned symbol of the conference," Gue-|Study. aod erg S24 Toes! ay Night The $20.000,000,000 resolution. The $20,000,000,000 resolution Japan and nations in western vara said, and this conference ; dt L2ppH re Siges i : 5 was submitted by Ar i 'urope as potential sources to has the stamp of Cuba, like it | od was introduced after a night ,Sudbm y gentina, | i o " 4 TrucK-irain Lras had already spoken to the pres session' of the inter-American|Brazil, Chile. Mexico and Peru. make » the Dalance, os or not. He denounced the con- |ident of the union and Would Econontic and Social Conference It differed from U.S. proposals oe Sule? lind ° Closet erence a 8 political menoey 0 Thicks n Ro d [talk to Met representatives to- ister Ernesto (Che) Guevara,] First, the resolution watered Rn They bog th all me yal Setmg for A tractor-trailer truck, towing, While officials battled to fore- down the U.S. proposal for a|five-nation resolution and other] "I dissent in the name of a large crane, was struck by ajstall what muse Jovers consider] CITY EMERGENCY powerful committee of 'seven proposals and will draft a final Cuba from almost all the af-|CPR freight train about 1 p.m. Ee pri of an p Met's| {wise: men" to coordinate evo-ideclaration to be signed before|firmations thus far made here," today at the Thickson Rl ingore made clear they still PHONE NUMBERS nomic planning for Latin Amer-|the conference closes Aug. 16. |he declared. crossing just outside Oshawa. Sn themselves Under Cor. ica. The five nations made clear| Guevara, his open - necked Guevara asserted the first! An observer who reported the|, act to the world-famous opera| POLICE 725-1133 they intend to plan their own'khaki uniform shirt in sharp necessity in economic planning incident said the truck was company economic programs and substi- contrast with the conservative for Latin America was to put stalled on the tracks when the rppe American Federation of | FIRE DEPT. 725-6574 tuted a proposal for an inter-/garb of the other delegates, | political power in the hands of collision occurred Musicians' demand for a wage) HOSPITAL 723-2211 {American planning staff with heaped scorn on the alliance forthe working class and wipe out| The driver, not immediately increase led to the cancellation! ladvisory powers enly. Iprogress program. |"imperialist monopolies." lidentitied, was uninjured. Mo! > 1 newly returned from space. The first Soviet ® cosmonaut, Maj. Yuri Gagarin stood nearby and shared in the plaudits. Tens of thousands of Musco- vites turned out in the flag- draped streets to cheer Titov for his 25 - hour flight 17 times airport as the Ilyushin-19 ar- Vostok II landed Monday. Khrushchev and made a formal ier stood with a beaming smile a yard away. crowd and a bone-crushing hug from Khrushchev. . Bright sun beat down on the rived from Saratov on the Volga, near which Titov's spaceship Titov strode quickly toward report to him on his 17 orbits of the earth as the Soviet prem- Titov stood with one hand raised in salute as he reported. The Khrushchev hugged him around the world last weekend. (4 At Vnukovo airport the hero was greeted by a rapturous A n Welcoming Titov for more than 30 seconds, clasping his arms around the spaceman's broad back. The 26-year-old Titov, emerge. ing from Khrushchev's hug, then embraced his wife and relatives. A group of pretty girls pressed bouquets of summer flowers on the major and kissed him in turn. (The airport building was dec- orated with a huge portrait of the spaceman, flanked by other pictures of Lenin and Khrushe chev.)