Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Feb 1965, p. 2

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2 THEOSHAWA TIMES, Monday, Febrosry 15, 1968 | Bien Se * iii eo * TWENTY - ONE - YEAR- * OLD Marianne Vandervliet a Kitchener Public School teacher was shot to death at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Foort .Yan-. dervliet, 2% miles south of Dublin, Ont. 'WEATHER FORECAST 'Light Snow Due Colder Tuesday , TORONTO (CP), -- Forecasts issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m.: ' Synopsis: A few hours of snow appears likely around the lower lakes late today or to- fight. Clear, cold weather is Anticipated in all areas around the upper lakes on Tuesday as a high pressure cell settles in just north of Lake Superior. The cold front moving through southern Ontario overnight will! stall just south of Lake Erie} and there are signs of a dis-| a few hours of light snow to- wards evening. Sunny with cloudy intervals and colder Tuesday. Winds becoming northeast 15 tonight. Northern Georgian Bay, Al- goma, Southern White River, Timagami, North Bay, Sud- bury: Clear and much colder tonight and Tuesday. Southwest winds near 20 becoming north- east 15 by this evening. Northern White River, Coch- rane: Clearing this afternoon. Clear and cold tonight and turbance developing and mov-|Tuesday. Winds light. ing northeast from Arkansas. This poses a definite threat of law gome snow in areas just north of Lake Erie and could move into localities bordering Lake Ontario late in the day. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Southern Lake Huron, Windsor,| London: -Clouding over this aft- érnoon. A few hours of light snow late today or early to- night. Cloudy and cooler with Occasional light snow Tuesday. Winds increasing to southwest 20 this afternoon and becoming) northeast 15 overnight. | Niagara, Hamilton: Cloudy with a few hours of light snow tonight and turning colder by morning. Cloudy Tuesday with snowflurries particularly near Lake Ontario. Winds becoming southwest 20 this afternoon and northeast 15 by Tuesday morn- ing. Lake Ontario, Haliburton, Killaloe, Toronto: Cloudy with a few hours of light snow tonight. Sunny with a few cloudy inter- vals and colder Tuesday. Winds becoming southwest 20 this aft- ernoon and northeast 15 by Tuesday afternoon. Northern Lake Huron, South- ern Georgian Bay: Clouding ever during the afternoon with | Windsor |St. London |Kitchener ... Forecast Temperatures tonight, high Tuesday: 25 32 Thomas. Mount Forest Wingham Hamilton St. Catharines.... Toronto Peterborough sebeeeres North Bay........ S Earlton . Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing White River...... Moosonee Timmins udbury se eeeeeeee -30 -30 +25 Observed Temperatures Low overnight, high Sunday: Dawson ..... -23 Victoria Edmonton ... Regina .. Winnipeg .... Lakehead White River.... Sault Ste. Marie... Kapuskasing seeeeene aee HERE and THERE. The current issue of The Ontario Gazette states. let- ters patent of incorporation have been granted to two Oshawa companies. They are: Ontario Motor Realty Limited and Keith Peters Realtor Limited. Oshawa Golf Club bridge scores: Mr. and Mrs. H. Mackinnon, 73; Mr. and: Mrs. E. Henry, 70; | Mrs. Graham and Mrs. Braith- waite, 61; Mrs. R. Ruddy and T. R. Prest, 55; Mr. and Mrs. B. White, 51; Mrs. R. Beaufoy and Mrs. R. Henry, 50. The setting up of the Darl- ington Crown Game Pre- serve was announced this week by the Ontario gov- ernment, Under the provi- sions of the Game and Fish Act, the preserve includes the southerly half of Lots 6, 7 and 8, Concession 2. A fund-raising euchre night was held recently by the -Kingside Park Neigh- borhood Association when prizes were won by the fol- \ lowing: Don Wetheruys, ohn Williamson, Florence Williamson, 'Jerry, Stile, Peggy Etanski, Rita Ver- ral and Robert Tulk. The euchre night is one of a series held to raise funds Mrs. K. Marden, 108: J, Miller and R. Niglis, 101%; Mrs. S. Sheridan and Mrs, R. Drew, 93144; Mrs. R. Heron and J. Patterson, 8914. East and West: Mrs. R. Barrand and R. Morris, 112; Mrs. Bovay and D. Mce- Craig, 104; H. Winter and R. Howe, 10314: Miss Bo- vay and W. H. Barker, 97. General Motors Bridge Club scores: Mrs, J. Pat- terson and J. Miller were winners last Thursday of the General Motors Inter- club Trophy with 198 points. Runners-up were: Mrs. M. Clarke and L. Peel, 18814; R. Niglis and Mrs. K. Hun- ter, 188; Mrs. R. Morris and Mrs. R. Drew, 186; Mrs. R. WOMAN, 21, FOUND DEAD NEAR SARNIA Chemist, 23, Teacher Slain, Seek Farmhand capital murder, was issued after Miss Vandervliet's body was found in her parents' farm- house at Dublin, 15 miles north- west of Stratford, Pitman was employed on the Vanderviiet farm, and police said the woman had come home for the weekend and was alone in the house during the day. Miss Vandervliet was found dead on a kitchen couch when parents. and ' two younger SARNIA (CP)--Police concen- trated a search in this area to- day for John Pitman, 21, a farm hand wanted in connection with the slaying of a school teacher near Dublin, Ont., Sunday. A 1962-model car belonging to the dead woman, Marianne Van- dervliet, 21, was found on a side street here early today by city police. It had apparently run out of gas. Feared Dead In N.Y. Cave DOLGEVILLE, N.Y. (AP) -- James Mitchell, 23, a chemist, was presumed dead as state po- lice turned to earth-moving ma- chines today to free him from a labyrinth-like cave that has held him captive since Saturday. Cave-exploring experts Sunday night abandoned attempts to re- move Mitchell, of Winthrop, Mass., by efforts entirely inside Schroeder's Cave, near here and about 25 miles east of Utica, Mitchell had been wedged in a narrow shaft, near the top of visiting friends about § p.m. Sunday. Police said the girl, a teacher at Stanley Park Public School in Kitchener, had come home for the weekend and was alone in the house during the day. A graduate of Mitchell District High school and Stratford Teachers' College, she began teaching last fall. She and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Foort Vandervliet, came from Holland A warrant, charging Pitman, formerly of Nova Scotia, with'brothers returned home from an underground crater several years ago. into which he had descended "This would mean allowing less water to flow down the St. Lawrence River in times of re- duced rainfall and more water in times of excess rainfall so that we would require both gated structures to hold back water in times such as these TORONTO (CP)--The most practical solution to low water levels in the Great Lakes would {be to install regulatory works so that the flow of water could be controlled throughout the entire lakes system, says the director of the Great Lakes Institute. | Addressing the Royal Cana- dian Institute, George Burwash Langford said Saturday night that even during winter when water levels are lowest in the lakes, "we are wasting water down the St. Lawrence River at a prodigious rate." "Some 200,000 cubic feet of water goes past the port of Montreal on its way to the sea each second. This is waste water which we could well use on the upper. lakes but unfor- tunately we have no means of holding it on these lakes." Mr. Langford said that while |the levels of lakes Superior jand Ontario can be controlled, the levels of lakes Huron and |Erie cannot be maintained. PITTSBURGH (AP)--I. W. Abel says he has won the United Steelworkers union pres- idency, and plans to make ex- tra sure through protests that could wipe out "many thou- sands" of opposition votes. The USW secretary-treasurer broke a. three-day silence over the weekend by issuing a state- ment saying he defeated incum- ebent David J. McDonald in! May Control Flow Great Lakes Water Won Race By 10,000 Votes | Steelworkers Prexy Says Saturday as two fellow mem- bers of the Boston Grotto Club watched. The numbing, cold un- derground waterfall that had helped to prevent his ascent also drenched his body with freezing water and hampered rescue efforts. William Karras, part of a res- cue team flown here from Wash- ington, D.C., made three crawls Sunday to the crater opening-- and enlarged channels to per- mit inereased flows." a . He said the United States| aout 300 "alg tala oa asa Corps. of Engineers already has| Yo said he used a stethescope concluded this plan is possible.|anq could not detect any sign of He estimated the plan would /jife in Mitchell. Karras lowered cost "something in' the nature/him to the bottom of the 75-foot of $1.000,000,000. crater to facilitate earth-moving ie Sa |operations. ASK FOR EQUIPMENT State police requested owners 'of. bulldozers and other heavy equipment to help rip away jpart of the hillside over the crater. Tuesday's election by at least} Rescue efforts inside had 10,000 votes. |bogged down in mud and were Earlier, McDonald predicted|cramped by the 12- to 16-inch- victory for himself. wide passageway leading to the The Abel statement said: crater opening. "We are in the process of col-| Mitchell, Miss Hedy Miller regularities in a number of/Charles Bennett, 21, a Harvard places and we believe that as a/graduate student, had squirmed result of the protests which will|their way through the passage- be filed, the incumbent president|way to reach the crater and an will lose many thousands of ad-|underground stream Saturday. ditional votes." Miss Miller and Bennett then {helped lower Mitchell into the "If we had similar controls on lakes Huron and Erie, then }we could maintain the levels of all the lakes at whatever eleva- itions were most suitable,' he |said. /HE WAS BRITI 'POLITICIANS | DON'T RELAX LONDON (AP) -- Patrick James O'Connor of the Royal Engineers decided the army life was no longer for him. He skipped and sought ref- HAD HIM HALF-BELIEVING pit. The underground stream feeds into the crater, and the 185- pound Mitchell was soaked by |the time he reached the base of the crater. Mitchell faltered on the hand- over-hand ascent. Miss Miller told what happened: SH DESERTER search of Hugh O'Connor, late of the Royal Irish Fusiliers, In Luton, north of London, they brought Hugh O'Connor § slower. Finally 'he didn't into magistrate's court and swer. His head lolled to one lecting information on voting ir-|22, a Boston, Mass., nurse and|24a Limited's plants here sent "He kept talking slower and} an-| z Sai Rescue workers hold on to rope that is lowered into cave where James Mitchell, 23, a chemist, has been trapped since Saturday. Ef- forts to remove Mitchell by cave-exploring experts have been given' up and. today earth-moving machines will WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)--Strik- ling workers at Chrysler Can- a letter to Prime Minister Pear- son Saturday protesting what the United Auto Workers (CLC) called the company's "Strike Breaking Program." | The letter, sent on behalf of 17,000 striking members of Lo- eal 444 and the international junion, claims that Chrysler is \"importing U.S. - manufactured| lautomobiles to supply the Cana- dian market while its employ- ees are legally on strike." The letter says the cars are being imported duty-free under provisions of a new Canada- United States tariff agreement. The letter urges the govern- |ment to intervene and prohibit | | "Strike-Break 'Charged To Chrysler Aussies Raise Canada's Flag SYDNEY, Australia (Reuters) Canada's new maple leaf flag was formally raised for . the first time today in ceremonies at Canadian diplomatic and trade posts in New Zealand and Australia, | The ceremonies were at- tended by Canadian residents. ' CHURCH OVERSEAS The Lutheran Church in America has conducted mission work in Liberia for 104 years, and the African affiliate be- be used by state police in the cage near Dolgeville. Mitchell is presumed to be dead in the narrow shaft where he became wedged while exploring the cave with another man and a woman, who reached safety Saturday night. " " Tactics City-Wide Delivery MITCHELL'S DRUGS 9 Simcoe N. 723-3431 Open Evenings Till 9 P.M. | If the company's action con- tinues, says the letter, it nulli- fies collective bargaining pro- cesses with Canadian subsidiar- ies of American-owned compa- nies. The strike, which began Jan.| 28, involves workers at three) plants and at Walker Metals Limited, a Chrysler subsidiary. Office staff are not affected, Company officials were not} available for comment. | Special Offer 10% REDUCTION Off our large selection of modern cemetery memorials, Evening ap- pointments welcome. OSHAWA MONUMENT CO. R.R. 4 -- OSHAWA John Martin Oshowe Tel, 728-3111 Evenings call 723-6264 Located Yq mile east of city limits on Highway 2. Remodeling? | WASHINGTON (AP) -- To | Dr. George Calver "there's no difference between a Republi- can bellyache and a Demo- cratic bellyache."' He's been treating both for 36 years as Congress" '"'fam- ily doctor,"' a practice that is | growing by leaps and bounds because, he says, Democrats and Republicans alike "either | | won't or don't relax enough." Now 77 and well past retire- ment age, Calver has no plan | to quit. And he is a picture of | health. | "I follow my own advice," he said in an interview. 'I ex- | ercise regularly, take a good walk every day, 'work in my | garden and fool around in my workshop." "IT have no intention of be- uge across the Irish Sea, well beyond the reach of British law. But the military police found a Patrick O'Connor still in England. The name matched, the ages matched, the accents matched, so they took him in. Patrick spent five days in an army guardroony until his AWL namesake read of his plight. He phoned from Dublin and told the army they had the wrong man. Said O'Connor the civilian: "Tt was fantastic--in the end they even had me half believ- ing I was a deserter." MPs STRIKE AGAIN This weekend the MPs struck again. This time in charged him with being ab- sent without leave from the Fusiliers. Once again the descriptions matched. Same brown hair, same blue eyes, same vacci- nation marks, even similar tattoos on the. arm. But the O'Connor in court produced documents to prove he was only 14 years old. He admitted telling people he was | 19 but said that was to get a job in an auto plant. The magistrates let him go, and Hugh O'Connor set off to rejoin his family in Dublin. "If I stay here,' he said, "TI shall have to go to school." Fourteen is the minimum school-leaving age in Ireland, 15 in Britain. coming a victim of nervous | | tension." Then he explained: Nervous tension is the major occupa- | tional hazard of Congress. Senators and representatives are exposed to too much eat- | ing, too much talking, too much writing and too many | pressures from their constitu- ent. "They either won't or don't relax enough. If they'd devote five per cent of their time to | keeping well, they wouldn't | have to spend 100 per cent of | it getting over being sick." carpet of fresh flowers, mingled cold winter Winston Churchill's grave dur-jends it's: a crowd.' ' Carpet Of Fresh Flowers BLADON, England (AP) -- A| their piercing the covered Sir scents air ng the weekend--just as they] St. Martin's church-} Cover Churchill Grave "It's like this. all the week long," he said. "It's a steady trickle, Always there is some- one standing here. But week- Will the crowds change this have every day since he was|sleepy village of 413 people? buried in Slight side. "At that point Charles went for help." Makes Charge At 'Agnostics' MONTREAL (CP) -- Welfare |Minister Emilien Lafrance said Saturday "some little Quebec | | | | intellectuals have ~ taken over key posts in the public adminis- tration." As a result, he told a gather- ing of La Famille Terrienne de 1965, "unhealthy currents" gre flowing through the province' La Lafrance said agnostics are so powerful in certain areas that there is reason to fear they will create havoc. He said they not only hold key government posts but also. im- portant jobs in news media where they control "the moral climate of our society." "It isn't surprising to see the increasing number of honest men who question the value of the great social institutions that have assured the survival of our people through the family, the school and the parish." agnostics disguised as would-be) \"'improper abuse of the new tariff treaty." STOMACH MISBEHAVES PANAMA CITY (AP)--Carlos Ortiz' defence of his world lightweight boxing title, sched- uled for Saturday, was post- poned Thursday until the cham- pion recovers from an _ upset stomach. Ortiz' manager, Bill There's no better time to make home improvement plans a reality. Service is better; and you can save on lower off-season prices. Don't let lack of money hold you back. Get an HFC Householder's Loan-- Redecorating? Daly, said the boxer definitely) up te $2500. Do the needed work now--even replace worn-out furni- ture and appliances. Then, repay cenven- lently. See HFC now. would not fight Ismael Laguma of Panama as scheduled, ASK ABOUT CREDIT LIFE INSURANCE AT LOW GROUP RATES based on prompt repayment, We Insurance. PLANNING A... © BANQUET © CONVENTION AJAX: 66 Harwoed Avenue South HOUSEHOLD FINANCE GZ: 2 OSHAWA OFFICES Suite 208, Oshawa Shopping Ctr.--Ph. 725-1138 (northwest corner, over Fairweather's) 64 King Street East--Telephone 725-6526 (next to the Genosha Hotel) aeeee. Telephone 942-6320 (over The Advertiser) @ MEETING yard two weeks ago last Satur- day. | One bunch came from a | former Dutch resistance fighter; Of Boy 5 land his wife. The card gave es ' names. It simply said; | HAMILTON (CP) -- Police| "A small token of our tre- \said Sunday they are investigat-|mendous admiration and sor-| jing the Dec. 19 death of a five-|row at your departure. From a) jyear-old Grimsby boy, a hemo-jcouple whom your voice in-| |philiac, who died in hospital ajspired." }week after he was injured in a| A bouquet of delicate light-| }car accident. blue flowers was flown from a} | A police department spokes-|garden in Greece; a freshly-| jman Said the investigation into|plucked bunch of red poppies | |the deatn of James Mercer was|came™from a field in France; ordered by the attorney-gener-|and a score of wreaths came) al's department. jfrom men and women all over fhe boy suffered @ bump onjBrilain, | the head when his grandmoth-- A_ policeman stood by. the) jer's car was involved in a mi-|grave Saturday, along with two 'nor accident on the Queen Eliz--men and three women who | Probe Death Heron and J. Coles, 178%; Mrs. A. G, Rundle and Mrs. S. Kandel, 176%. {miles east of here. | \doctor the next day, but no se-| {rious injury was discovered. On) Dec. 19, he became ill and| taken to hospital. He was placed | under the care of a neurosur- | geon but died a few hours later. | | An autopsy showed that a) small blood vessel in the brain, | damaged in the accident, may | have caused the boy to bleed to | death. A person suffering from | hemophilia tends to bleed even with a slight injury. The police spokesman said there is no question of medical negligence involved. Oshawa Fire Department answered four fire calls over the weekend, none of them serious. Two calls were tu cars, one for leak- ing gasoline and the other for a small electrical fire. One cai! was made to help a person into his locked home and there was one false alarm early this morn- ing. Oshawa ambulance an- swered nine routine house calls over the same period. for the association's pro- posed building on Dean ave- nue. | The following are scores from the Brooklin Duplicate Club. North and south: Mr. and Need Mortgage Money? CALL Real Estete McGILL *:...: He was checked by the family} = jabeth Way near Grimsby, 20|were 'hooking at the grave and| its flowers, SI already are| visible--the traffic policeman, for instance, And bulldozers are moving in on a large meadow at one end of the village to turn it' into a parking lot. "During the weekend traffic builds up and at mid-day there are a thousand cars an hour on the road from Oxford to Bladon," the policeman said. | changes HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS GOOD FOOD | BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH | First Class Facilities: For 20 to 400 Guests Quality Service Experienced Staff RESERVE YOUR FUNCTION NOW! _- 723-4641 | H norm | 12 Noon to 2 P.M. DINNER 5:30 to 8 P.M. FULLY LICENSED DINING ROOM ROTEL LANCASTER 27 King St. W., Oshawa WHAT'S WRONG Lack confidence Outdated steps GOnt Lead. occ Can't follow .. Need practice ? oeeee seeee THIS MONTH MARKS 7th Why Pay More... SAVE!! C ON FUEL OIL gal. Phone 668-3341 'DX FUEL OIL Serving Oshawa And District Day or Night - 728-4285 Anniversary OF OUR OPENING IN OSHAWA Special Anniversary 6 PRIVATE DANCE 6 CLASS LESSONS ARTHUR MUR W. MARKS, 11% Simcoe St. S. DANCING? mission. 4 4 ae ea. There are other produ j ' ee not sell to children or te we think they might be pharmacist's duty to pro' ally interested and your mmo Dtn sq Offer (this month only) LESSONS $15 RAY STUDIOS LICENCEE 573 Hi 728-1681 SOMETIMES WE REFUSE TO MAKE ASALE There cre some medicines we cennot legelly sell without @ prescription, We will protect your health by obeying the law. Of your physician for you, if you wish to get his per- than any immediate profit. e YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need « medicine. Pick up your prescription if shopping n by, or we will deliver promptly without extra charge. A great many people entrust us with their prescrip- tions, May we compound yours? EASTVIEW PHARMACY PHONE 725-3594 Fost --- Free -- Motorized Delivery course, we will eal cts we carry thot we will en-agers or even adults if harmfully used. It is¢@ tect you. We are person- health is more important King Street East Oshawa TUESDAY AND ALL DAY WEDNESDAY SPECIALS LEAN TENDER CLUB STEAKS PURE PORK SAUSAGE LEAN : RIB STEW 2 ibs. $00 2 ins, 3.00 A ins. §]00 FREEZER SPECIAL al: "CUT AND WRAPPED FREE" HINDQUARTERS OF BEEF UEHLER'S 12 KING ST. EAST -- 723-3633 -

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