Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Jul 1965, p. 17

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r . THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, July 19, 1965 J Records Fall In Swim Meet 'Deeply-Researched Report Says Ripper Buried In Dorset school's top cricket team, really was Jack The Ripper, two mys- teries have to be answered. How did he acquire the surgi- eal knowledge displayed in the murders, and how did he know the east end alleyways intj- mately enough to escape twice when a constable was hot on his trail, only minutes behind? MEDICAL BACKGROUND Cullen says since Druitt's father and grandfather were prominent surgeons in the Dor- set town of Wimborne, it is likely he sat in on operations. As for knowing the London slums--in those class-riven days almost as remote as the African jungle from the fashionable cit- izens of Kensington and Bel- gravia--Cullen suggests Druitt's reformist political leanings at Oxford might well have led him, as they led many other undergraduates, to work among the poor at the newly - built Toynbee Hall, close tu the scene ON, Ont. (CP)--Seven| | it was alleged that he was sex- on rm eg ually insane." Macnaghten referred briefly to his suspect in his memoirs published in 1915, which formed' the basis of the popular "mad doctor" theory about the rip- per's identity. The killer obviously had a knowledge of anatomy, since most of the 'bodies were evis- cerated and some organs re- moved, The police,.who badly bungled their investigations, seemed to lose interest in the case after December. A member of White- chapel vigilance committee, formed when the terror was at its height, was summoned to Scotland Yard and told in strict confidence the Ripper was dead and had been fished out of the Thames in December, so they might as well disband. Criminologists . writing later tended to discount Macnaghten By CAROL KENNEDY LONDON (CP) -- Under a stone cross in a Dorset ceme- tery family plot lies the body of a man who may be history's most famous unmasked villain --Jack The Ripper. In a deeply-researched new «book on the unsolved crimes that shocked the world, Au- tumn Of Terror, American au- thor Tom Cullen makes the thost convincing claim yet to Ses siouitsten ta'thp oust ond ve in the east en slums of London 77 years ago. His candidate: A_ brilliant young Oxford-educated barris- ter named Montague John Dru- itt, who probably returned after each killing to the last hideout the police would think of-- chambers in the Inner Temple, home of London's most eminent lawyers. Druitt, 31, was reported miss- ing by his relatives Dec. 3, 1888 ing the weekend at a _five- country rowing' meet at Bags- vaerd Lake. ; Robert Fielwalker and Olym- pic gold medallist Roger Jack- son, both of Vancouver, won the coxless pairs event Saturday in the time of 7:25.3 over the 2,000- metre distance. They won by a _ boat-length over Holstebro of Denmark. However, the Vancouver Row- ing Club's coxless fours entry finished last in a four-country field against winning Kvik- Skjold of Denmark in a second race Saturday. Allemania Ham- burg of Germany and Molndals Rodderklubb of Sweden were second and third respectively. A Vancouver Rowing Club team also finished fourth and last in the coxed fours event Sunday, won by Denmark's K. from 1:09.2. 4 The Etobicoke club set a Ca- nadiah and Ontario record in he 11- and 12-year-old girls' medley relay as Diane Martelo, Nancy Tomson, Ann Fitzgerald and Debbie Knowles lowered the Canadian record to 2:38.8 from 2:39.2, The Ontario record had been 2:44.3. Prudhommes Club from St. Catharines broke the Ontario boys' 11- and 12-year-old med- ley relay record of 2:47.2 with a time of 2:40.5, Debbie Woods of Toronto set two Ontario records--the 10 and SLAMMIN' SAM U.S. golfer Sam Snead is entered in the Canadian open cig tournament July 12 to --(CP Photo) Australian Toll "Aunt Jennie' Gaglardi is a minister's wife in more: than one sense. Her A Phil is British Columbia' well as itecostal clergyman. However, Aunt Jennie -- the name derived from a radio program on which she read children's stories for 19 --three weeks after the last and most gruesome slaying, that of Mary Jane Kelly in Miller's Court, Whitechapel -- and, sev- gral weeks later his body was lished out of the Thames. Cullen, a journalist working in London, bases his new theory on the private notes, never be- fore published, of Sir Melville Macnaghten, head of Scotland Yard's criminal investigation department from 1903 to 1913. He joined the CID six months after the ripper crimes. The notes had been in the posses- sion of his daughter, the dow- ager Lady Aberconway. SUSPECTED 'DOCTOR' Macnaghten named his chief); suspect as M. J. Druitt, a faa year-old doctor of good family, on the grounds there was no M. J. Druitt listed in the medi- eal directory at the time, nor lwas any such person among lthe records of bodies found in the. Thames in December, 1888. |MADE DISCOVERIES Author Cullen says his pre- decessors did not search far enough. In two obscure London suburban papers of early Jan- uary, 1889, he found reports that the body of a well-dressed man, identified as Montague John Druitt, a 31-year-old bar- rister, had been found in the of stones. The inquest verdict was: icide during temporary insan- Although age and profession were different and the date who disappeared soon after the) last murder, He wrote that! Druitt was found floating in the Thames Dec, 3, adding: "From private information, I have lit-| tle doubt but that his own fam-| ily suspected this man of being} the Whitechapel murderer; and! given in Macnaghten's notes for the finding of the body was the date this Druitt disappeared, the coincidences are too re- markable for them to have been two different people. If lawyer Druitt, once the) pride of posh Winchester! of the Ripper murders. A sensitive mind might easily have become unbalanced, thrust into the sickening sights of slum life in the 1880s. George Bernard Shaw may ROSE PANELS By ALICE BROOKS have been right, in fact, when| : he suggested in a letter to a| Dramatize a wall, mantel, London evening newspaper dur- ing the murders that they were the work of some perverted so- jhall, with lifelike, long-stemm- led roses in natural, colors, Cross-stitch roses in popular cial reformer trying to rouse/slim panels! Pieces that will be the conscience of the west end rich to the plight of the east end poor. Still the question. remains: river Dec. 31--his pockets fulllwhat made the police so cer-jeach pattern ltain Druitt was the man? Au-|please) to Alice Brooks, care "Su-|thor Cullen, drawing on hints injof The Oshawa Times, Needle- uspects|craft Dept., confided| West the Macnaghten notes, s Druitt's own family jheirlooms. Pattern 7206: trans- Ifer two 8 x 21-inch panels; color \charts. Thirty-five cents (coins) for (no stamps, 60 Front Street ,sToronto 1, Ontario. On- their fears that he was linked|tario residents add one cent disappeared. known if Druitt's suicide note inquest, is ever discovered. Max Bell Colt Is Among Greatest Money-Winners By HAROLD MORRISON ASCOT, England (CP)-- Meadow Court, the chestnut colt Canadian publisher Max Bell picked up as a yearling for about $12,000, has become one of the great money-makers of the British racing season and one of the most stunning per- formers on the track. After romping home in an easy victory. in the 1%4-mile King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes Saturday, the powerful three-year-old now is considered a favorite for the St. Leger classic at Doncaster in September. "Tt consider Meadow Court 'the greatest horses in all modern history," trainer Prendergast said Sun- day in a telephone interview from his Curragh home in southern Ireland. The Irish-bred Meadow Court was beaten by Sea Bird II of France in the great Epsom Derby earlier this season but has improved to such an extent that the 55-year-old Prender- gast said: "I'm not worried about Sea Bird any more." writers, the challenge is still ahead, Involved in the St. Le- ger, which closes the. classics for. the season, is a purse of about $75,000 Then Prendergast will have to determine on the basis of the colt's performance in the 1%- mile St. Leger whether to see! revenge against Sea Bird in the Paris in October. The Irish trainer hinted that while he has not made up his mind about the Paris race, a lot will depend on whether Meadow Court's performance in the St. Leger is "impressive enough." Meadow Court also has been invited to the International at Laurel Race Track, near Wash- ington, D.C., and again Pren- dergast is playing it cautiously, saying he won't make his rec- ommendation to the owners un- til the St. Leger. Jockey Lester Piggott has no doubts about the St. Leger. "Everything we planned went perfectly," he said of the Satur- day race. "I was not in the least surprised that he won so comfortably. He is - improving "You get a lot of praise when the going is good,"said Pren- dergast when asked how the owners reacted. While Meadow Court has won all the time and is a good thing lfor the St. Leger. The longer {distance will suit him even bet- Iter than Saturday's race." 'Meadow Court' Is Winner At Ascot Race Course ASCOT, England (CP)-- Meadow Court, the Irish-trained favorite and Irish Derby win- ner, charged to a_two-length victory Saturday in the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes at Ascot Race Course. The three-year-old chestnut colt, owned jointly by Cana- dians Max Bell and Frank Mc- Mahon and U.S. crooner Bing Crosby, made it a runaway in the final 200 years of the % mile race. ' §Soderini was second, with Oncidium third, another three lengths back. Meadow Court, who merited sthe £31,000 ($93,000) purse, was held back by champion jockey] Lester Piggott until late in the race while stablemate Khalife set the pace. WIN COMFORTABLE Two furlongs from home, Piggott challenged, and smoothly passed the leaders to win comfortably, Oncidium made a great effort in the straight but could find nothing extra and failed even to catch Soderini. The victory was the first in this race for Jockey Piggott, who had recorded four seconds and two thirds. The race, watched by Queen Elizabeth and the Queen Mother was run in fine weather on a\Saturday in the third annual/son, St. Louis, 157. smooth' track. Meadow Court was favored at 6 to 5. Soderini was 100 to 9) and Oncidium 5 to 1. | Meadow Court's victory, after the Irish Derby triumph June 26 and a second place in the Epsom Derby, made the colt prime candidate for Horse-of-| the-Year honors. cf WINS $283,000 | The two victories and the) second have been worth a total , jof $283,089 to co-owners Bell, a Calgary publisher, McMahon, a Vancouver industrialist and Crosby. Bell led Meadow Court, who jraced under his stable colors, to the winner's circle. Origin- ally sole owner of the colt, he revealed hours before the Irish |Derby that he had sold one- ithird shares to McMahon and Crosby. McMahon joined Bell in the winners circle but Crosby wasn't present. He is making a }movie in Hollywood. John D. Shapiro, president of |Laurel Park, Md. race course, |said after the race he has in- vited Meadow Court to run in) the Washington, D.C., Interna-| tional in November. Shapiro promotes the interna- tional in November, Shapiro promotes the interna- tional race. Leaside Wins Trip To U.S. Tournament | TORONTO (CP) -- Suburban Leaside won its way into the All-America Amateur Baseball Association championship Aug.; 18 at Johnstown, Pa., with a 4-3) win over Toronto Western City} jJunior Baseball tournament. | | In semi-final games in the sudden-death tourney, Leaside downed Thorold. 2-0 while West- ern City banked Oshawa Le- gionnaires 8-0. REALLY IN DARK BOURNEMOUTH, Englana (CP)--A_ witness in a _ recent court case, at this south coast resort said he did not know what year it was, the praise of many British turf] # Prix de L'Arc de Triomphe at) ie " BIG GOLFER Nick Nicklaus, golfer from Columbus, Ohio, is entered in the Canadian open golf tournament. --(CP Photo) written to the headmaster of a school in South London where he did spare-time teaching, and referred to in one report of the ~|5§ beautiful room settings, : _| Pillows, *itains, appliques, more! 60 cents. with the Ripper when he first/sales tax. Print plainly PAT- |TERN NUMBER, NAME, AD- The final answer may only be|/DRESS. 1965 NEEDLECRAFT CAT- ALOG -- 200 designs, 3 free patterns! Newest knit, crochet fashions, embroidery. 25 cents. Now! Send for elegant, new "Decorate with Needlecraft!" 25 complete patterns for decora- tive. accessories in one book! wall hangings, cur- Value! Deluxe Quilt Book -- 16 complete patterns. 60 cents. COOL BACKWRAP By ANNE ADAMS Most beautiful backwrap -- in-curved at the waist via dia- mond insets that become soft sash ties, Ultra-smart and easy in cotton, linen, Printed Pattern 4556: Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 requires 4% yards 35-inch fabric. FIFTY CENTS (50 cents) in coins (no stamps, please) for each pattern. Ontario residents add two cents sales tax. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, AD- DRESS, STYLE NUMBER. Send-order to ANNE ADAMS, care of The Oshawa Times, Pattern Dept., 60 Front Street West, Toronto 1, Ontario. | COMPLETE FASHION RE-| PORT in our new Spring-Sum- mer Pattern Catalog plus cou- pon for ONE FREE PATTERN! Everything you need for the life you lead -- 350 design ideas! Send 50 cents now, With Chartered TORONTO (CP)--Among On- tario's chartered accountants "publicity" is a dirty word. And even when one of the most dignified of its members permits itself to be publicized in print it's likely to get its wrist slapped. Clarkson, Gordon 'and Co., a 101 - year - old Toronto firm called "the Eton of Canadian commerce," has been solemnly reprimanded by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of On- tario. : It resulted from a_ iight- hearted article in The Globe 'Copters Help Flood Rescue PADERBORN, West Germ any (Reuters) -- Thirty West German helicopters flew dawn rescue missions over flooded Westphalita today as troops of three armies fought to save victims of floods which have al- ready taken eight lives. Helicopters swept low over) flooded towns and farms to} |winch to safety, families which| jhad clung all night to the roofs} of houses. | An estimated more than 200 persons were still stranded on rooftops, mostly in the Lippe valley. Some 2,000 German, British and Belgian troops took part in the rescue operations. The floods, worst ever known in the area, followed days of heavy rain. They also caused damage and drove people from the homes in part of the neigh- boring states of Lower Saxony and Hesse. BASEBALL LEADERS By THE CANADIAN PRESS National League AB RH Pet. 293 58 99 .338 332 52 112 .337 345 58 114 .330 Mays, San Fran. Clemente, Pitts. Clendenon, Pitts. Aaron, Mil. 305-63 100 .328 Allen, Phila. 325 50 104 .320 Runs -- Harper, Cincinnati, 76; Robinson, Cincinnati, 69. Runs Batted In -- Johnson, Cincinnati and Stargell, Pitts- burgh, 69; Banks, Chicago, 68. Hits -- Rose, Cincinnati, 115; Pinson, Cincinnati and Clen- denon, 114. Doubles -- Williams, Chicago, 27; Harper, 23. Triples -- Callison, Philadel, phia, 11; Clemente, 10. Home Runs--Mays, 23; Star- gell, 22. Stolen Bases--Wills, Los An- geles, 61; Brock, St. Louis, 38. Pitching -- Koufax, Los An- geles, 16-3, :842; Jay, Cincin- nati, 7-2, .778. Strikeouts--Koufax, 204; Gib-| | American League ABR H Pet. Yastr'mski, Bos, 211-39 72 .341 Hall, Minnesota 308 49 99 .321 Mantilla, Boston 298 32 94 .315 Davlillo, Cleve. 333 40 104 .312 Robinson, Balt. 262 37 79 .302 Runs -- Oliva, Minnesota, 63; Versalles, Minnesota, 61. Runs Batted In--Mantilla, 65; Colavito, Cleveland, 64. Hits -- Davalillo and Oliva, Magazine, a Saturday supple- ment of the Toronto Globe and Mail. Moon, Gordon as effective finishing school . . for young men of the upper class." ' Written by Barbara it described Clarkson, "the unofficial but 'Publicity' Rated Dirty Word -- .|the standard of dignity of the R. Team in a time of 6:30.3, only nine tenths of. a second under the course record set by a Berlin club. TRAIL BY SIX The Canadians finished six boat lengths behind the winners in 6:54.5, The Vancouver team, which had a Danish cox, was beaten almost from the start. Kvik-Skjold was in second place only one-tenth of a second behind the winner. In. third place was Oresjoe SS of Sweden in 6:48.1. Pete Johnson of Worcester, Mass., United States and Cana- dian lightweight single sculls champion, failed to make the final of his event Sunday. Johnson collided with a buoy in the first heat, Johnson said he was very tired after a month-long European tour. The single sculls final was won by Harald Kraakenes of Norway in 7:24.4. YESTERDAY'S STARS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pitching -- Mike McCormick, Washington, pitched a two-hit- ter for his first shutout in more than four years as the Senators stopped New York Yankees 3-0. Batting -- Jim Lefebvre, Los- Accountants including Finance Minister Gor- don, grandson of Col. H. D. L.| lip Royal Military College grad- uate who, Miss Moon wrote, gave the company the tone that persists to this day. The institute conceded that the article was initiated in- dependently by the magazine. When approached, officers of the firm concluded the story would be written with or with- out their help, so they agreed to co-operate, asking that the article emphasize the account- ing profession rather than Clarkson, Gordon. It didn't turn out that way, however, and the 82-year-old institute found the firm guilty of conduct tending "to lower profession" in failing to be guided by the "'institute's gen- Gordon, a dignified, stiff-upper-| 104; Richardson, New York, 101, It went on to mention some of the firm's famous alumni, eral position that personal or firm publicity is to be avoided." ~ SINGLE "ayes COMPLETE WITH FRA SEE KING AND SAVE. PRESCRIPTION SUNGLASSES AT SAME LOW PRICES © BUY DIRECT FROM THE LABORATORY AND SAVE @ FIRST QUALITY LENSES ... SATISFACTION GUARANTEED @ BROKEN FRAMES REPAIRED OR REPLACED WHILE YOU WAIT WE FILL ALL PSI, OCULISTS AND OPTOMETRISTS PRESCRIPTIONS KING OPTICIANS OVER 17 BOND ~y AGP 2nd Floor PHONE 728-1261 OSHAWA BI I LENSES AND CASE \ ME, ae ) ATIS CUSTOMERS HOURS: MON, TO SAT, 9 am. - 5 p.m. Closed All Day Wednesday Angeles, tied the game with a two-run single in the ninth in- ning, then gave the Dodgers a 4-3 victory over Chicago Cubs with, a run-scoring double in the 11th. under 55-yard backstroke in 38.7, and the 55-yard breast- stroke in 46.4. The backstroke record had been 40.1 and the breaststroke record 49.0. Andrea Kalisch of Bobbs Ferry, N.Y., broke the Cana- dian and Ontario records in the girls 10 and under 55-yard breaststroke. The former rec- ord was 45.1 seconds compared with Miss Kalisch's 44.3. Anne Buringer of Enid, Okla., set an Ontario record for the 110-yard breaststroke in the 13- and 14-year-old class with a time of 1:20.3. The previous In Traffic High SYDNEY, N.S.W. (Reuters)-- Australia's rapidly rising road death toll has shocked; many Australians. Already this year in New South Wales, Australia's most populous state, there have been 509 deaths, 30 more than in the same period of 1964. In the last 10 years, road deaths in Australia have in- creased by more than 50 per cent, and the rate of increase shows no sign of slackening. More and more motor vehicles take to Australia's inadequate roads each day. The truth is that Australia's much faster than its population. In the post-war period, number of vehicles registered in Australia has more than tripled, from 1,010,000 in 1947 to 3;800,- }000. Australia has 500,000 miles of roads but only about 74,000 miles are surfaced, and the pressure on them is intense, Last year, Australia's roads claimed 2,992 killed, an increase of 394 over 1963, representing a 15.2-per-cent rise. This is a death rate of 8.5 persons per 10,000 vehicles -- higher than Britain. FARMER GOES MILES land. vehicle population is increasing human the Canada, the United States or The Pakistani farmer, using a bullock-drawn plow, may work 100 hours and walk more than 100 miles to plow one acre of mark was 1:21.4. The Golden Lions Swim Club of Detroit set a Canadian an Ontario record for 11- and 12- year-olds in the 220-yard med- ley relay, bettering the old rec- ret Mg 2:39.2 with a time of years -- avoids the political whirl and is deeply involved in the work of her' husband's church, the Calvary Temple in Kamloops, (CP Photo) Revolt Seen In Sarawak KUCHING, Malaysia (AP)-- About 26,000 Chinese who side with Peking are believed pre- pared for armed revolution in the Malaysian Borneo state of Sarawak. British security officials. fear the situation could degenerate - into another Viet Nam because of the rugged jungle and pres- ence of combat-ready Indones- ians waiting on the border, MAN BECOMES MOLE LONDON (CP)--Several cities in land-short Britain may go underground by the end of this century, says a planning expert. Professor John Kolbuszewski says the cities 'would show only isolated huge towers above the surface of the earth. JOE MISSES BY ONE CHICAGO (AP)--Joe Louis, former heavyweight boxing champion, missed by one stroke a first-place tie Saturday for the Chicago amateur golf cham- pionship. Louis, 51, shot 69-67- 70-68--274, two under par for the distance at the Jackson Park course. Two players, Bud Gunn and Bob Augustine, tied for first at 273, and Gunn won the title on the first hole of a sudden death playoff. The British believe that the Clandestine Communist Or g- anization, as the Communist Chinese settlers are called, al- ready has started a move to take over the state. They ex- pected more raids like the at- tack last month, supported by Indonesian regulars, on a police post and neighboring house. .. The .CCO has about 2,000 hard-core members, British in- telligence estimates, Most live in the Kuching area but there are some in the central river town of Sibu and the eastern coastal town of Miri. A militant potential of 4,000 prepared to take up arms if ordered to do so and 20,000 potential support- ers and sympathizers are also believed spread through these areas, learn these skills, BOYS! Make Your Application Now! GIRLS on them rests the responsibility of bridging the gap between newspaper and the reader. The newspaper they deliver represents the combined labour of thousands of people both here and abroad, plus production costs that run into the thousands of dollars, It is therefore a Job that cannot be taken lightly, the success or failure of the route depends entirely on a keen sense of detail and strong inter- est in business. Both strong prerequisites in today's world of business. But few people have such an inbred instinct and the carrier's job affords an excellent opportunity for a young boy or girl to You Can Earn Money and Gain Valuable Business Experience as a TIMES CARRIER Sturdy are the shoulders of the newspaper boy for Address OSHAWA TIMES CARRIER APPLICATION ee ee NOM@ 655 iss 64k rs Cans A es - ed HY Cais ee ce SCHOO! 6. isc is coco ress tees yas PHONE «cece ed Your Application Will Be Considered As Soon As A Route Is Open In Your Area. " Mail or Bring Your Application to the Times in Oshawa or Whitby Oshawa Zines CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT

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