Career-Girl Murders Baffle Investigators niece of|ually unmolested, was in: Miss an as-|Hoffert's room, the nearest ref- NEW YORK (AP)--Th vic- tims were unlikely. The loca- tion was unlikely. The crime was unlikely Yet, on Aug. 28 in their fash- ionable $250 - a - month apart- ment, Janice Wylie and Emily Hoffert, two young career girls with well - to - do backgrounds, died beneath the slashing 'nives of a killer. In the frenzied at- tack their slayer broke off the blades of two knives, flung them aside and got still a third from the kitchen of the four- room apartment. Was it the impassioned sav-| agery of a madman? Was it the} cold curming of a killer with superb presence of mid? | These are only two of the questions puzzling detectives. The killer took nothing--ex-| cept the two lives, And he left nothing behind. "There was nothing there that wasn't supposed to be there," ome veteran said. "There is nothing to. check out." Still, 24 detectives and some specialists work round the clock, continuing the routine checking which they hope will turn up a lead They have questioned 400 per sons, ta'ked with police in vir- tually every state and with Scot land Yard about knife crimes evaluated more than 1,000 tele- phone calls, and taken the fin gerprints of friends of the girls Offcers checked known per verts of the type who make anonymous telephone to women, such a had bothered Miss Wylie No solid lead has emerged LIVED TOGETHER Three girls shared the apart- ment -- Miss Wylie, 21, daugh- ter of television producer and Rural Ca calls Willing To Move OTTAWA (CP) -- Rural Ca-| nadians are more willing to ac- cept » 'idea of movi from their homes to find better em-| ployment conditions than they ever have been in the past, a Senate committee was told Tuesday. een the Agricu! and Dev Davidson, director of 'al Rehabilitation} ment Act (ARDA) told the S$ te standing com- mittee on land' use he believes there now is a high degree of acéeptance of the principle that rn people, could be relocated el here if community re-) sources were not adequate. "But we do not believe. that people should be exports d to the cities ned and unemploy- abiec," Mr said standards of the Atlan- of Quebec,! iral areas of| s of the west- es were. "unaccept- Ontario provin y low." VE LOST HOPE any of the people living in as have lost hope. I Gordon Views Zierans As 'Colorful' OTTAWA (CP) --. Finance Minister Gordon described Que- yenue Minister Eric Tuesday as "a color- » whose _ state ments always' agree with He made the comment in the Common hen Opposition r referred to n é eech at Mont- ay night leader asked: he would P by "one by. Mr. Kier-}Vith' writer Max Wylie; novelist Philip Wylie; pring actress; an editorial assistant by Newsweek magazine, --Miss Hoffert, 23, daugh- ter of Dr. Henry Hoffert, Minneapolis surgeon; process of moving into an- other apartment with a for- mer college roommate. Hamilton College, ton, N.Y.; an_ editorial sistant for Time magazine. Police reconstructed events of Aug. 28 at floor apartment at 57 St., between Fifth and Madison room. No one javenues. \ Miss Hoffert left about 9:25 a.m. to return a car to a friend Bronx and pick up her own Car. She had borrowed the larger car to move some furniture to her new apartment. Five minu es later, Miss Tolles departed for work, leav- ing Miss Wylie asleep in the bedroom they shared. Miss Wy- lie had planned to go to Wash- ington for the civil rights 'mar h that day, but changed her mind and agreed to work in pace ef another Newsweek employee beginning at 1 p.m She slept nude About 10 a.m., Miss Hoffert arrived in Rivrdale, where she stayed for about an hour DOORBELL RANG Sometime after her friends' depa ture, Miss Wylie appar- ently was awakened by theig doorbell and rently n swered it in a rain 7 yat was found: by trance Her body nadians still nude bu don't think the situation is im-° proving. I think it is tending to get worse." Mr. Davdson saw the answer to the problems of underdevel-| oped areas in what he called} the "package" regional - devel- opment approach . being at- tempted through ARDA. This would, include agricultural re- organization, land: use projects, soil and water conservation, as- sessment of recreational and tourism potential and man- power. training with re-estab- lishment where necessary. He. told the senators that some 275 projects to which the federal government will contri- bute $50,000,000 by March, 1965, have been approved and are be- ried out by ARDA additio,. to this, said Mr. Nayidson, the. federal govern- ment plans to spend another $5,000,000 on a cross - country) inventory of soil capabilities 50.20 Cents Paid | For Tobacco Sold | TILLSONBURG (CP), -- The} 1,779,802 pounds of tobacco auc-| tioned ne Ontario Flue-| Cured Tobacco Growers' Mar- keting Board exchanges Tues-| day fetched an average price of 50.20 cents a pound | So far, the exchanges have| sold 24,816,801 pounds: of to-| bacco at en average 51 71 cents ing In on Soviet-Owned Picasso | Paintings Shown | OTTAWA (CP) -- Five So-| v1 s by. Pablo} exhibited on dis-| rallery of} and ) art larger ?icasso and in Toronto and Montrea a uary to so 000 in the pr hree-month p : don said it was due ment of the U.S ion tax on in foreign r€ oa Mr Go to the announce inter equaliz rican investment al is be- here ie to be a consid in the flow of the U.S. to Can- Police Say Accused Sobbed Over Graves QUEBEC (CP) -- Sgt, Andre Ste. Marie of 'the pr ( testified Thursday nigh that old Dion, 43, led po! ves of three strar d 5 and stood by bodies were dug boys ery up on his instructions A court room filled to over flowing testimony as Dion's capital murder trial (went. into a two- hour night sittin has he charged ng four boys last spring trial specifically. con with bu h cerns one death, that of Pierre) Marquis, 13. and cr ; and critics listened silently to the|-- According to Russie ials here 2 t i] $400,000.-! France. Some 50 the world-famous Span are owned by galleries and vate collectors in t An artist] pri-) U.S.S.R.} lyani officially opened the} t, which was loaned to} Jational Gallery by the So-| i Inion's Ministry of Culture.| Gallery. director Charles F Comfort, who arranged for the Picasso paintings to be brought) to Canada, said it was largely] due to Picasso's work that the conception of art as a power ful emotional medium, r than a search for perfection of} 'ideal forms of beauty," had come to: be 'accepted by artists Russian ador Shpedko F t reporter| Asked by a whether arrangements. are un-} lder way to have Canadian paint-| ings sent to the Soviet Union| ltor exhibit, Dr, Comfort replied] t is "very likely" that such al exhibit would be sent to the U.S.S.R, 'within the next two sas later CANADIAN STEAMER The first steam-driven vessel to operate in Canadian waters) was the paddle wheelsr Accom-| modation; built in 1809 in Mont- ral, | employed as uge lay across the wire which tric radio-clock, stoppe d at has offered a $10,000 reward. | 10:32 Was : : ajdeath? Or was it meant to ap-|of succession to the U.S. presi-|state's. | in the) pear thus? Or § : : g se President Johnson's an-|f} ironic circumstance without particularly. now since next in)nouncement Tu meaning? No --Patricia Tolles, 21, daugh- Miss Hoffert return, but it must/senator. ter of Dean Winton Tolles of have been after 11:30 a.m. be-| Clin- a the distance from! succeeded when, as now, there event of any contingency" does as- Riverda'e. y Did the killer wait for her? |caused varying degrees of dis- the Or did she walk in by chance to the third-|her. execution? : | East 88th! The killer washed in the bath- ing a son im the area, Newsweek in the Riverdale section of the| ment during the afternoon, with- out answer. The magazine also lealled Miss Wylie's parents and at this time Miss Tolles at work, find out why Miss Wylie had mack, the white-haired Speaker not come to the office. of GRUESOME SCENE Miss 6 p.m. and door é turned furniture. She oody stained Mis b Hoffert's room, on tween and the window Fach had bee soft drink bottle, Miss Wy hard as to cri 1 had tims gether by each clothed There prints cept two: One on the bedr \dresser room Poli st THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, December 4,1963 27 INTERPRETING THE NEWS | President's Heir from the front door. She of an ele>-| of House Speaker and president inserted | tary of By BARRIE MARTLAND ' ;Canadian Press Staff Writer/pro tempore were this the time of her| The shortcomnigs in the plans|ahead of the secre Or was it mereiqency are causing concern--| Even sday that he \line is a 71-year-old representa-|has instructed that McCormack se2ing|tive followed by an 85-year-old)he kept informed on matters of {U.S. security 'to ensure conti- belnuity of government in the one remembers How the president will lis no vice-president has always)little to lessen the concern, The question is: How can | ' McCormack do his job in the It reaches its peak when a|House and stili be prepared for president dies in office, as|"any contingency?" | eight -- almost one quarter--| He holds a busy, powerful po-| drifts) litical office. Unlike the speaker ofjof the Canadian House of Com- led the. apart-| political science professors to}mons he is expected to be in- await the next emergency. volved in partisan polities and Concern is particularly acutejit is his job to see his party's content. remembers see- or rumpled per-|have, but then it slowly into the academic domain bloody cai because the presi-|measures successfully through trying to'dential heir 1s John W. McCor-|the House. Representa-| MUCH SPECULATION | tives, be 72 this} There has been much specu- jmonth. jlation about what McCormack | Iles came home about! If President Johnson should! might do if Johnson died but} her. front die before. he or someone else'so far he has made no public a , of over-lis elected president next No-| comment. saw the, vmbr, McCormack w ould} One intriguing suggestion is bathroom and the take office--to become the old-|that he might then step down | knife and. called est president to be inaugurated|as Speaker and allow the House | Wylie's fat into probably the most onerous immediately to elect a younger found the bodies in Miss and crucial job in the world replacement who would then » floor be-| William Henry Harrison, who fill the office of president. bed|pecame president in 1841 when And there have been dozens he was 68, is the oldest presi- of alternatives proposed by sen- n struck with aldent to be inaugurated. He died| ators, representatives and oth- ie 80/31 days later, President Eisen- ers to offset the deficiencies of Each| hower attained the oldest age in the 1947 Succession Act. and! office, 70, but he was inau-) h, about gurated at 62 Two broken -e there with SUCCESSION CHANGED nk tle Next in line behind. McCor- bound the;mack is Carl Hayden, the 85 of the vie-3 president pro tempore s tied them to-|0f ate who was a lad in h wrist, facing knee nts while Queen Vic-} Miss Hoffert fuiy | tora reigned over the British House of will the who to there the blood-drenched n her been . iin, even @ --That two vice - instead of one, be elected. One would succeed to the presidency and the second would become next in line --In the event of a president's death, the new president would offer a list of candidates to| Congress from which it would) Empire elect a new vice-president. ready, reasonab'e| The present presidential Suc- The lack of a better system | anations: for ail the --\cession Act was set up in 1947.)is not because of partisan poli- in the ap ment Before that, succession beganitics. It is just that no two peo- om with the secretary of state andiple seem to agree on what on the bath-|went down through the cabinet! should be done and neither --all non-elected officials And, if history is any guide to Because of the. belief the|the future, it is not likely. that| , don't know whether the|presidency should go to some-jan acceptable solution--if one is) ry was a man or a woman, 'one who was at least elected by possible--will be soon forthcom- 3C some of the people, the offices|ing. 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