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The Ottawa Journal du lieu suivant : Ottawa, Ontario, Canada • Page 3

Lieu:
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Date de parution:
Page:
3
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

I For Everybody In the Ad NW! A NmwUtlMi at it ente an4 Parli mmm went alanj mm TCA raven tMwfiiftl fbjfti Lm P.rM mm Vsa thsssa mi TKi Iwmi Nenj ue Merswith im suie Ml a im aei sua. Every ParUiaa Is sa entertainer. Even the elevator boys sre disappointed if they can't! get a laugh out of )tu between' the first snd aeventh. The greatest of sll Parisian entertainers, sre, of course, the taxi-drivers. Mot only do they entertain, but they will act as guides, counsellors and collectors of maasive metre charges, if one will only listen to 'them.

Wherever you want to go sl-i wsys turns out to be the wrong place. "For the kind of entertainment you want. Monsieur. I know Just the place. "It sl-wsys seems la be IS miles far ther on.

Walters, tee, pat performance. I order a aaeal la predactiea la tfe the weed, worthy of BUly Ease. An indivudal appears whom you Uke to be the head waiter, tanked by IS different flunkeys in vsrious uniforms. Actually, you learn later, he la not the head waiter. You don't meet the head waiter until you have lived in Paris 23 years.

You are permitted only Slowly to asrend the hierarchy. There is a waiter wka takes year order lee heea SV eeevren. another lakes the eeup, a third the aah. a earth the meal, a gfth the beverage, a sixth the deaeart. The ethees are assistants.

The effect Is impressive aa they aland fca Uaa, Uke a The effect Is siso Im pressive when time comes for the tip. However, the meals sre worth It Canada has noth ing like French cooking. Wlta every change as eeerae. a new hind of wise, fee the ordinary, plala-Mvtag Ceaa dksa. dmaer la.

a race wnetaer ae win eeiupse neat frees aa attack ef scats Ud leas or gouge, er some similar Instrument, wsa used. When finding of Barber's body touched off whst proved he one ef the ewtfUat-movlng ponce investigations ever car ried out la this district. Provincial Inspector Tom Wright, of the Criminal investigation Branch at Toronto, waa assigned to the case. Warning, surertlr' sjnder film rTovineuu ogl. Bam Er- vine, ef Perth, and members of the Killaloe Provincial Police Detachment.

Aa RCMP fingerprint and photographic experta from Ot La- began combing Barber a home for clues to his killer, a hunt wss underwsyj for any strangers who heeTbeen seen in the sres. Ceastskle's Mesaorjt Bcorca. That's where Constable Crubb scored. He remembered seeing Wyse In the Golden Leka restsursnt. Saturday word that Barber's stolen car hsd been sold -to Niagara Falls' csr 'dealer -Andrew Simon by a "tall, slim, clean-shaven 160 pounder' resehed KUUloe.

Tsxi driver Costello remembered his conversstion with Wyse, snd knew whst Wyse looked like. He got in touch with police. "From there Inspector Wright ssid, "it wss relsUvely simple. "CIB Inspector Frsnk Kelly wss sent to Niagara Falls, picked up the suspect's trail, and fnllowedLJh im from Nisgsjra raue oaiuraay 10 namuion. There we asked city police to lend us some men, snd they assigned Detective Sgt.

E. Bar rett snd two of his boys. Bill Slack snd Bert Connolly. "Wyie-waa arrested in a beer parlor there at six o'clock Saturday night." Police ssid Wyse hsd boarded a bus in Niagara FslU Snd hsd gone to Hsmilton. where he registered at the hotel where he was UUr arrested.

They said he hsd checked out of the hotel and boarded another bus for Toronto, but -hsd then ehsnged his mind and headed back for the same hotel sgaln. rerentlng a room. Police said Simon, the csr desler from NUgsra FslU, hsd picked Wyse out of a police lineup at Hamilton Sunday. Police ssid Wyse wss planning to lesve his NUgsra FslU lob snd hesd for work on the Alssks Highwsv, On street corners. st the lunc- iiona oi county roan a.

ana everywhere man meeU man, knots of people ulk and speculate. Peliee Get Praise. On sll lips praise for tht speed shown by police In making an arrest. Yesterday one of the largest crowds ever to attend a funeral In this district gathered at St Ann's Roman Catholic Church at KUUloe to mourn Lloyd Barber. The sen Ice wss simple, but the feeling was there.

The town hsd lost man 'who for the past four jeers hsd served the townsfolk well as a member of Town Council. He wss a respected member of the community, known and liked by an. Laugh a ot to in ta I The Ottawa Journal MONDAY. APRIL 16, 1931. The Third Page I LLOYD BARB Eft (top), 60-year-old Killaloe town councillor and taxi driver, who murdered and robbed in hii heme there Thursday I MBS.

BARB LB (bottom), hu estranged wife, who runs an Ottawa rooming bouse, sobbed at the requiem high mass held in the parish church at Killaloe today. A Golden Lake man has been arrested and charged with the killing. (Journal Photos.) Murder 'Chaser Ended reatiaeed treat rife Oh. But at eight 'clock showed tip la a small lunch counter at Golden Lake, spent an hour and a naif there, and then went to Killaloe by bus. Constable Crubb, en highway patrol In the ares, stopped eft for coffee during that 00-mlnuU period, saw Wyse.

and mentally tabbed him as a stranger. "I hadn't seen the man be fore Constable Crubb md-lto later. '-He lived around there, but he had been away from home most of the time and 1 just hsdn't seen him before." William Mack in. driver of the bus which took Wyes to KUUloe on the fatal night, said he had dropped man off near Barbers borne. The regular atop is sbout three blorks further Msckin told police.

"But this guy asked ma to stop, so I let him off Police have ascertained that the apprnximste time the bus reached Killaloe. Wyse entered the Beresford Hotel in KUUloe sbout 10 minutes after the bus which brought him from Golden Lake reached town. Seea by Hotel Maaager. He came Into, the lobby and thea went into the beverage Allan MacPhail. owner-msnsger of the hotel said.

"He was in the beverage room drinking beer until It closed st 1 1 o'clock, snd he-left the hotel bout IS minutes Is'ter." MacPhail told police Wyse Wsa standing "not more than four fret from Barber" shortly after the beverage room bar Closed. "Wys-ss talking -to me through the service counter opening-. MsrPhsll is Id 'Bar-her, who hsd come in to have a beer Just before we closed, was still sitting st his table. Neither wyse nor Barber showed sny Signs ot Barber bought a newspaper In the lobby after he finished his brer snd then left the hotel. He wss followed "nut a few minutes leter by Wyse, Msc-Phsil ssid.

JhTrber'g body wss found sprawled on his second-floor bathroom floor the next morning shortly after 10 o'clock by Thomas Rysn. who runs an auto-aupply business with office space In the ground-floor front of Barber's home. SUbbed 12 Times. The murderer, had sUbbed Barber "st least 13 times- In the hesd snd neck, police ssid. The man hsd died from loss of blood He hsd been stUcked' while in -bed.

police assume, ar the bed snd bedding were blood 4esawhlle, all through this oaked. Renfrew County area, the ssv-. In final effort tn aave his aeanaaa lire, narocr naa araggca nun-it the bathroom and fumbled for a towel to staunch the blood pouring from hU bead. Both bathroom and bedroom were blood-spattered from floor celling. Barber was wearing only bis Underwear when found.

The clothing he was wearing when last seen alive was missing from hU room. list Car Geas. HU car registration, wallet, keys, and driver's permtt-were gone, as waa hU 1030 Plymouth eedan. Police today are still searching for the murder weapon. Examination of.

the wounds in Barber's hesd. none of which Punctured the skull, lead them le the briirt a carpenter I cnisri 'April in Poris JUST LIKE AN and Constable Jerry Raymond, who flagged a fast freight on the CPR main line early Sunday morning, just in time to (top the train before it plowed Into car stalled across the tracks between Roxboro and Woodroffe avenues. 4 Jpurnal Photos.) Police Race Fast Freight When Car psvt easvr mnt Quick action of. two Ottawa a aS from piling i. cjir West End of the city early Sun day morning.

Uea ae tamble ever the table la a eta pee. i It Is the quality of sincerely attempting to entertain that mskea the and makes Psrisian night spots different from those anywhere else In the world. The performers give yea the feeliag they'd ge right ea with the set, evea If they aaddealy feead eat all the easterners were broke. i There's Negro )oint In Mont' ajipf n. im ga-wftnaaiail Amnm- ITrv tM LjiJ 77mZnJt iT-Ji' hJSTJSJssriir: and are free of seU-con-.

aclousnem of ever having 1 Uhored under r.cl.1 debility. I tbw aseatmartra ewite baa a ear aeUira, bat all Ue action takaa place dewastalra. la a ream aet maeb bigger than the ss pUyiag and Ova ban died people, mere er leas, are daaclag. mere er leas. Dancing coruusU of adopting the conventional pose' and then moving the hips rhythmically without moving the feet.

In that crowd it's impossible "to move the feet snywsy. The 1 dancers are whites and NegroeeJ Indiscriminately mixed. The i 1 wmnvn wur vrigm reel skirts, white shirts sag red aad ysllew silk lareaae. (Wwlfc VbUUlU -Halt way through the evening! there's a CaUUn gypsy art, A brisk BritUh genersl who Negro snd a white girl ap-; kept hU own counsel about re-parently Spanish do a singing porU a statement he made In and danclne hit that i. im.

1 Phony to synchronisation. The band a oUno. bass drum. fx. clarinet and trombone beating it out, now hot, now slow.

The music it mostly Spanish and South American. After the customers thla eat, area ad fear ta the meralag, the band starts te Use through same eld alow bias Bankers. Bat before that there a samba aamber la which the pUae player ta tolling Carmen Cavallare aad Xavtar Cagst they sheald ge tar, far away, LAllrthroughthe evening, In ihi. k.i.k.. tk.

IIV IIIUV BUI IS IOTUI IV Wltn the face of a Negro Little Nell. ri. i i i nw iiiuv iwy naa oiaca, curiy hair Snrl a nat 1 "IS' face. Ha is a handsomely Inde-' dependent Ud ot about six. Round about four in the morn Ing.

they are getting tired and. am In .1 1 near the bandsUnd. Even the boys in tha band are getting; urea, ss are ine lew customers i remaining, ine Dana is lazing out a siow -auraust wnen a Negro, as bUck as the pis no snd about the same build, comes across the floor, and bends" down the children. He so big he slmost bursting out of hit suit, and- so blsck ha looks even bigger thsn he U. All the pUyert the band immediately show when a big grins and look down at the) Nr? ulkin anu iir mains 10 wave ms hands snd pound on the Uble.

The two kio look up st him with sbsolutely no chsnge of expression. The big Negre gives ap for the moment aad siu dawn la a chair1 folded ea the back ef It. He glares al them, thea hta face slowly breaks Into a fat African chackle. The kids smile aad the 'big Negre freesea right back again. Tha whale band ta Uagb-Ing, eajeytag a performance that appareatly a nightly eccar- ranee.

The kids Just won't go tot waw4 tnir Hatrlw XKavea rUaaee-e I woman. In a red skirt, white' shirt, turban and earrings, comes, down the stairs and motions to the kids. They run out quickly, snd daddy follows slowly smid the laughter of the band. Retlremeat ef the children the sigasl tar the bead te pack i rr. MELLEB -DRAMMEK! Five Miles I The two policemen are Sgt.

William Cowan and Constable Jerry Raymond. The cw owned FrJnk of Hurdman i Mpm tmimm Mwth.M mm druaaeevdriving count 't Jehaaea was resaaaded ens iht i1(hted tew hundred ysrds i twacklrceaW akeTdri- sway. Magistrate two charges ei dreakea driv i ea lag and aalawfally ehetreetiof railway. ef fit wsa eealiaaed. Police reported Johnson wss a shallow ditch, angled across a railway line sna sows ine trsrks.

Three hundred feet as-" h'i 't -urted nd Proceeded bumping 00 "s- pouw tnu n. wini Th. Pr. he veered J12! -i" the nose ot his car in I the the rear wheels on the south rail of the main line. A quirk check by police who were called by a civilian witness, brought a gasp from the CPR despatches- and knowledge that an east-bound, high-speed freight was due al the crossing In 10 minutes Mska WUd Dash.

ih. aouth nil the mainlin. Sgt. Cowan and ConsUble Mum on Story Of Reprimdnd fnln MAnrirfe ik. tT.iiLTsiiJ.il u-j IM.

hJT "TT AT' I tawa for Halifax and horn. vea. rZl' urnrn sar nicnara i.a ip. director of Army training in the United Kingdom, waa aaked in Ottawa whether it waa correct that -Londdri had protested to him sbout an interview he gave in Washington, supporting Genersl MaeArthur'a opinions on Fsr Eastern policies. The Interview was before the UN eon, mender was dismissed by Presi dent Trumsn.

At KinastoiL and in OUsas 1 K. ......1 true 1 I rnm.rfB.M.ki. troop. In World Wsr II. Genersl l.a le in Katurnsv eonferrH v.

with 7.. i sun emicers si national "prfwe headquarters on trs un ing meutocis sna orgsnizstio With visiU to Kingston On Fri u. omnK.s tour on schedule. OaUlde. the shattors bang rt at against the treat of the BOM xa4 fr eUTUnM aaether faniilr hosne.

We troop out Into the sweet PsrU dawn. A patrol wsgon disgorges a platoon of flics with capes snd sticks, to their respective beat and two passing pros- titutes-csll: "Uo. Is' la Dawn comes to Psris. Imjrtl II 11' Smiths Falls Driver Suffers A -Smiths Falls driver wsi seriously Injured and 12.000 eight o'clock last nigh, when the car he was driving sideswiped an OtUwa car and spun out of control into a panel truck on we Richmond road, one-quarter mile east of Brought to OtUwa Civic Hos- wltat bv Exclusive Ambulance i i i Glen Beckwith. 21, of 27 Ander-1 son avenue.

Smiths Falls, -who wss sdmitted with hesd injuries, possible Internal injuries snd shock. A passenger In the' Beckwith csr. Miss Joan Mullens. 17. pf It McGill street.

Carleton SrL WUliam Cowan (right to Flag on Track Raymond headed west la sepe- rste cart with their sirens wide open. mile, west of the. cross- where the mam tin. eroa-s 11 -i ihm KL' Cowan luninl fmm KU r. gisUtietl two truck nsrea rwM IK.

Im.k mwt auk lighted flare in each hand stood waving Ms arms at the onrush- freight Conauhui 1 7" croasine at Britannia, a hundi where the sergeant made his HlVmAM anlaWI IirhlM mtA w.7k fllr. afu trluv Vngmeer saw the aer. beiir I alae lighted ik I ond a flash. 1 Get Driver Owl ef Car. ConsUbl.

Ernest lae left at the rad-riding car. got Johnson out from behind the -jkw, WnwrT i ilnlUea Amwmil wheel; a tow truck Net result: a00 doUsrs dam age ta Johnson's car from-the bumpy ride, along the track, and a three-minute deUy hi schedule for the freight trsin. $445,000 Estate -Left by Widow" Of Henry Kuntz Application for probate of the' will of the late Marie A. KunU widow ef Henr Kuntx h. m.w -7.

ii n. i the afternoon and saw a fire- and The Royal Trust Comnanv executors. After legacies of 500 esch to Oaitt Church Csthedrsl. the Canadian Red Cross and tha Ot-: Uwa Antl Tuberculosis tlon. the income from ber esiaie was given to ner tnree children.

Mrs. Kathleen Van Duyse. Mrs. Marguerite Fits- Simmons sna ur. Aiirea E.

nf.nr esiaie; "Ute which toUU 443 msde up of estste 000. cash 4 000. stocks snd bonds $400.000. Solir-1 ors for the estste are Hill and oi. Russia Won't Return fYV.

Art Trencuret BERLIN. April 16 Pv The 920.000 German art treasures es'rted off to RussU since 104J. the newspaper Welt Am SonnUg reported yesterday. Rumisn authoritiea notified the director of Esst German museums that the treasures sre I considered wsr booty, the news paper said. received treatment for a ankle injury.

Police said fh" accident Car. traveUing west en the Rtchmond road, sideswiped the east bound OtUwa csr driven by Weldon Lewis, 103 Elmgrove avenue, causing an estimated $300 damage to the Lewis car. Going out ot control after the Initial. crashJhe ca driven by Beckwith travelled 1 13 feet and i ie a aunuJ truck driven by Edwsrd 437 Athlone avenue. Both the Smiths FslU Csr and the truck overturned in the ditch following the collision.

The truck was a total wreck. Consumes Lionel Lefehrra and William' Lyile investigated. 1 to I i minor Storm Bogs Battle i At Almonte aiMsua hsaa at ae lea real auS. You could call it "Opera Uoe Rain, Snow, Hail, Mud sad Frus-s trs Some of the more then 200 reserve soldiers from Otuw. Prescotl snd A I a I whd thumbed, their noses st the I weatherman and slogged it through special fieJd exercises I ever the week-end celled it worse than that.

I "But it's woreer thea this la Knees said 11-year-old spec-lalor Bram Wallow up in Al-moote yeslerdsy afternoon ss be watched a 14-ton Sughouhd armored car bog down hub-deep In fk wnttA fUmniill Prlf while iu crew of 4 lb. Princess Louue Dragoon Guards tried te beat eel an attack from; aa antitank gun manned by a crew of Governor General's Foot Guards. While he spoke a' smoke- screen laid down by carriers curtained -the field where 1ft i district's part-time soldiers witn rifles, machine guns, flarra and 1 thunderflashee sought to snake the theatre of operstions St least as noisy as the real thing tfaito a Spectacle. TscUcally eund but a fine public spectacle la spur reserve recruiting an Almonte's three- months-old Squadron of the PLDG's. the exercise went off as scheduled.

A reconnaissance troop of SUgheunda, Foxes (armored rJil, mlnM lhJ. skirting the north of Oemmill h' PLDG snd sod iurier squsdrons from Ju, Squad on roro Squadron from i Almonte. They were spotted by a deUU oi ine uuarcur support company manning an anti-unk gun sup- ttorUKl hv Brens and rifles. the south sme of the park. The battle was en.

When it wis aver, theoretical ly, the Guards had knocked out SU Ves I I rers VitlJ by armored cars sweeping U. from the fl.nk: one of ine riugs carriers, oniy Aa hour earlier, the PLDG's. liivunnii unorr cvminanaina officer ll Cnl Roy Menisou. uneo up prouo in sunsnine VarreruBggarv sisgMa, otk. vvv, commander of the Eastern On- arie Area, accompanied by Brigadier It! B.

K. Gordon. DSO. s-3. Ottawa garrlase eoeaman- snd officer commanding the 7th Infantry Brtgsde.

Weather -Tarsia "Bad. As the Inspection begs the sun gave way to a driving ram. forcing abandonment of the scheduled march-past following the Inspection. p7r.de were "y.st Also on 1 the 4th PLDG Cadet Corps 7 Zl, tr Ji, 1 i'h demonstrstion sVss enjx part of noi thew.e, BHdi.e!lh progremT wJuThked' Their Support Company, led i i m.i r.ni n.via White nrf th. Richard Newsll.

BrilUh Army Jfefran of campaigns in Africa, M.B anuin. mmimjm nan I Jfl 1Z X. I roa into nnt snap, as uiejr six weeas mey were as well drilled as soldiers of the RHInk Armv waulft hn in thrM months Equally proud of the spirit -i i i u.i H. MorrU. OC of Prescotts Squadron; Major J.

Sal- r. MC. OC of OtUwa Squadron: Major J. I. Nicol, MBC Cf SqtiSdron snd Ms lor I.

Oeilvle. ED. of the bquaai Sgt. Major H. E.

Schryburt 4 I have been held In the campus HST Burned in Effigy By Ottawa sn mi vh vs-rajaa, niuuuy, aSTsUtdri sar lh ISO yards from the end of Clegg rl in Otuw. Ea- a pair of charred brown esfnrds snd some mm. im. mim M'r-H. "u.suii of Jii nsrry s.

i ruman LT" rr "VL" "7 handful of Ottawa University studenU Iprotrst against the dismissal of General Mac Arthur by the U3. Aa the distinguUhed scare- crow smouldered, the boys shouted ann-Truman. Acheron, snU British and anti- pro. led the smart PLDG Band from Ottawa. Far the ftovernoe flrierl i': recently recruited No.

Rifle 'company led by Maior Colin raf inAiMWf A nnrin.hl Earle moved I Ranges Saturday a a wnrT9 pranisea rixie lire where thev nraC power demonstration ef tracers. fUres snd two-inch morUrs put on by the Support Compsny thst I nigni. neveille for the Ousras csma f' m- a.nlr by 7 J0 had a field exercise under their belU. Advance la Rsla; Med. Four patrols had crept foe.

I srsTrrm the ram andrnud and half light to stuck a hill de- 0 1-nJAc) HVv'i i 4 Students we a piBCnriflUr TVUnWim inq WleiTl placard a prorUiming that "peace at any cost mesne free. 1 eZ, tost sod -a baa Acheson- (down with Aehaannl i iktt In am mnw -the- demons tra lore were all alone. Nearby residents who heard the shouting and aaw the fUmes around 10 10 pm. merely supposed that some boisterous rushing the weiner-roast sewso Aa the bjjue damp, chilly rnghl bjjue died out the ghl air cooled the political ardor of the students. They folded their plecarde and silently stohs away.

fended by personnel from the Support Compenyr At 1010 am. the Suooort V.LT. 20 miles to Almorm- Remainder of the Guards spent hsr -g' mfsnW gection wotk. hmnt and back st their fulUlime lot while therr nart'- on irrs. ni.u aott ouser rsnas of both the awards and the PLDG's were satisfied they'd measured up to eaerrisee under ss unpleasant conditions ss they are likely to.

mret In the reservO jarmy EDINBURGH tW) Mors) than 4.000 aewntisU. atudenuk, Uymen and emateors are ex-perted to sttrjod the' 13th anausl meeting of the British Associa tion here iA-Augist. The mala theme wilt hi, "100 ysn British srienre" snd tha Duke of Edinburgh; tk'01 speak. i 1 1 1 -v I mMi V- 4 I I ill -a SWEETHEAslTS ON PAEADE--ThU smiling, )igh-tppirjsj sextette, repreaeriting Ottawa South, provided a lot of the sparkle. in a star-studded Teen Talent Show held Saturday night in the Glebe Collegiste Auditorium.

Left to jight In the lineup of loveliness are LoU Presley. Nancy Millard. Connie Hanna. Marf Kuhna, Claudia Peters, and Jnvce Cottee.v Taking part in the varirtv show, sponsored by the Ottawa Recre ation Cnmmifjion were teen-agd to "Teew-Age Talraf, Psgp ON THE BANKS OF THE RIDEAl', THE PBIS1.V-DENT COMLS I DEB IKILed. says the University faculty, by members of.

some outside organization, Ottawa University students gathered last night on the banks of the Rideau and bvrned President Truman in effigy. A pro-MacArthur rally was to Friday right, but was rained out. Even as the smokt rled UJ "ind Mr. Truman's ears faculty man said such goutgs-on were frowned on at Ottawa and students pait HPUlfl be "disciplined if caught mem ben of district community centfes Please rnr- 24, for report of the show, (Journal Staff Photo1.) i.

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À propos de la collection The Ottawa Journal

Pages disponibles:
843 608
Années disponibles:
1885-1980