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Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Nov 1964, p. 3

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BACKYARD CRASH This was the scene in the backyard of a Pomona, Calif., home today after a light plane crashed there following an air collision with another light plane. The pilot and his pas- senger were killed, but the house was not damaged. The <0, a ee a PES rp Communism Is Jewish Says "Thunderbolt" Man By STEWART MacLEOD OTTAWA (CP) -- The Amer- lean newspaper Thunderbolt, banned from Canadian mails as "scurrilous," was defended Monday by a Gooderham, Ont., man who said it was similar to the teachings of Christ. "The Thunderbolt in a force- ful manner is trying to , bring the truth to the public," said Ross Taylor. 'Truth with chr was a bombshell--they crucified him for it." Mr. Taylor and David Stanley of Toronto appeared before a A\ post office review board on be- half of the National States \Rights Party of Birmingham, 4\Ala., banned from using Cana- second plane landed in a street several blocks away, killing its pilot. \ (AP. Wirephoto) Birth Control Issue Unresolved By RCs By BENNET M. BOLTON VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The Vatican ecumenical council's 1964 session left birth control an issue still unresolved, but it posed questions that imply the possibility of historic changes in church teaching. Some of the council's prelates took the floor during debate on pen ymerd and marriage ity to ask might not centuries of church teaching have been misfocused? Might not the Roman Catho- He moral laws on conception be in direct conflict with the need of.man and wife to express their mutual love physically? Experts see in such chal- lenges to traditional teaching-- raised by cardinals Paul-Emile Leger of Montreal, Loe Jozef Suenens of Belgium and others --a milestone in Catholic think- on birth control, even though Catholic teaching re- unchanged. = CHIEF PURPOSE That teaching long has been that precréation is the one chief purpose of marriage, that any interference with sexual inter- course by means of interruption or the use of contraceptive de- vices is sinful. In recent decades the rhythm system to avoid pregnancy has won conditional church accept- ance, and in the last few years Catholics have been told they ean can follow it to space out their families, if they consider i necessary, without consulting a priest. The latest high-level debate on birth control follows the devel- opment of contraceptive pills, The Vatican council's schema (draft decree) on the church in the modern world includes a section on marriage and fam- ily. It notes that science and| ------ psychology have made recent advances and gained new in- sights affecting the biology and the human relations of mar- riage. It asked Catholic couples to be patient while experts look into theological and scientific possibilities. DIDN'T SEEK ACTION Neither the schema nor the cardinals and bishops who spoke about birth control last month pushed for any council action on the new pills. Pope Paul an- nounced five months ago they would be the subject of a spe- cial study "as wide and pro- found as possible, as grave and honest as it must be on a sub- ject of such importance." Most speakers endorsed the Pope's announced study. But the speeches of progres- sives went deeper than that. Cardinal Leger of Montreal brought up the matter of con- traception, saying the child- bearing duty should not be tied to each individual act of inter- course. The Canadian cardinal said he thought it wise that the schema made no distinction of primary and secondary goals in mar- riage. But it does little good "'if the schema does not speak of conjugal love except in so far Cornwall Womens' Jail Decision Is Postponed OTTAWA (CP)--Justice Min- ister Favreau announced in the Commons Monday that he is postponing for several years a decision on whether to proceed with the construction of a pri- son for women at Cornwall, Ont. Mr. Favreau's predecessor, Lionel Chevrier, announced the project last January just before he left the cabinet to take up his new post as Canadian high commissioner in Britain. Mr. Chevrier, a native of Cornwall and MP for Stormont for many years, drew criticism for his announcement from cor- rections groups and opposition parties. Mr. Favreau said the existing women's prison at Kingston, Ont., will be retained. Convicted female drug addicts from the four western provinces would be detained and treated at a new institution now being built at Matsqui, B.C. The minister said the opening of the Matsqui institution for 'both male and female drug ad- dicts next September will re- duce the prsesure for space at the Kingston women's prison. After studying the operation of the Matsqui instition, the government would decide whether to build a new wom- en's prison in Eastern Canada or to detain and treat all fe- male narcotics convicts in pri- son complexes where non - ad- dicts are . detained. Mr. Favreau spoke as_ the Commons resumed study of his departmental estimates. * as it has relation to fecundity," he added. Cardinal Suenens of Brussels urged the council not to be afraid of re - examining tradi- tional church moral marriage. Building Collapses KANSAS CITY (AP) A three-storey apartment building collapsed early today with an explosive sound that was heard and felt more than one half mile away. At least 15 persons were injured; four of them children. Two small children were missing and presumed buried under the rubble. Only one of the injured was admitted to hospital. Fire Chief James Halloren said faint cries were heard for a time from under the debris but firemen had been unable to locate where they were coming from. Eber N. Foster, 66, manager of the building, said approxim- ately 30 persons lived in the apartments, including about 15 children. The cause of the blast had not been determined but there was a smell of gas in the area. To Appear In Lion Death QUEBEC (CP) Baker, 54, is to appear in court Friday for preliminary hearing on a change of criminal negli- gence in the death of a baby killed by a lion Baker owned. Judge Gerard: Simard issued a warrant for Baker when he did not appear in court at the scheduled time last Friday. However, he arrived later and explained to Judge Simard in} chambers he was held up by| traffic in a snowstorm and the warrant was cancelled, warrant, he Canadian Press cancellation. Baker, of suburban Sillery, was the owner of an 11-month- old lion which Nov. 6 killed uay, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jean-Paul Tanguay. The Tang- uays were tenants in the home where Baker kept the lion as a pet. laws on) Georges In reporting the issuing of the| erred in not also reporting its} three-month-old Manon Tang-| dian mails under an interim or- der by Postmaster - General Nicholson, The three man board, under Mr. Justice Dal- ton Wells of the Ontario Court of Appeal, is hearing evidence to decide whether the ban should become permanent or be lifted, Mr. Taylor told the board that 'communism is Jewish and has been right from its incep- tion." "The race-mixing campaign financed by Jewish sources," he said. "Every Communist spy ring in America has been run by Jews." SEES JEWISH CONTROL He said most newspapers, magazines, television stations and publishing houses are owned, controlled or are under the "subtle dictatorship" of Jews. And, he said, "nobody stands for racial understanding more than I do." Mr. Taylor was before the CROSS COULD BE OBLIQUE TORONTO (CP) -- Either the catalogue printers or the Toronto Art Gallery is wrong, but patrons aren't sure the gallery hasn't got some of its abstract art hanging upside down. The catalogue on a current exhibition indicates how three of the abstracts should be hung. .Not so, says the gal- lery, the catalogue illustra- tions are upside down. "I'm certain all the _ paint. ings are right-side up," said Brydon Smith, the gallery's assistant curator, "It's just that some of the photographs in the catalogue have been printed the wrong way round." Happy in their certainty, the gallery put out an denda correcting the errors, but it still isn't sure about Cross, a work by Sam Fran- cis. It has mo markings on its back, as do the other can- vasses, but it does have some labels in one corner and Mr. Smith said he took these to indicate topside. But, he said, it's still pos- sible the painting is hanging on its side. bdard for the entire afternoon. He wanted to prove, he said, that the writings in Thunderbolt were true and therefore not scurrilous. He quoted from a wide variety of pamphlets, pub- lications and books, including the Bible, and said he would later refer to the 'famous anti- Jewish and anti - Communist = of Sir Winston Church- About 40 pieces of literature were brought before the board for examination. The board had asked the Alabama organization to produce its literature as part of its appeal. Some of the titles: Segrega- tion or Death, Jewish Ritual Murder, Marxism and Judaism, and The Jews and Their Lies. Because the interim order was issued on the grounds that the postmaster-general consid- ered the literature to be scur- rilous, board lawyer Gordon Blair said one of the most im- portant tasks was to establish the well-understood meaning of the word. DISCUSSES MEANING Professor George B. Johnston of Ottawa's Carleton University discussed the word at length with the board and said the gen- erally-accepted meaning is abu- sive or insulting; While defini- tions varied somewhat between different authorities, "abusive' seems to be the word that is common to them all." Mr. Stanley questioned Mr. Johnston about a pin he had been wearing in his lapel rep- resenting the committee for nu- clear disarmament. Mr. Stanley said an official of the commit- tee was Rabbi Abraham Fein- berg, the subject of his book, The Red Rabbi. He told the board he was "trying to bring forth possible bias and preju- dice on the part of this wit- ness." Mr. Taylor said the mail ban could be- considered the thin edge of the wedge in tuming Western nations into Commu- nist nations. The order was "a complete denial of the freedom of the press." It was also "the official persecution of the Chris- tian religion." "The banning of The Thunder- bolt is the first step of banning States where the Lord' 's Prayer is banned in schools." HEARING IS CANADIAN Mr. Justice Wells said this was a Canadian hearing. "But the international forces|Court here behind this hearing are using it as a test case," said Mr. Tay- lor. "There are ao international forces behind this at all," said the chairman, "just a Canadian P cabinet minister." Mr. Taylor said he believed in the segregation of the races "because I believe in unity in diversity. ... I consider myself as one of the greatest friends of Jewish people and colored people," The public never was told the other side of the story, he said, if a particular Toronto newspa- per were to write anti-Jewish articles it would be threatened with cancellation of advertising from chain stores. At one point he referred to the mail ban as '"'impertience." Other members of the board are Rodigue Bedard, associate deputy minister of justice, and the New Testament. It has al- ready started in the United G. Douglas McIntyre, a lawyer with the revenue department. WARREN COMMISSION TRANSCRIPT By STERLING F. GREEN WASHINGTON (AP) -- Moun- tains of newly - disclosed evi- dence have pinned the sole guilt of president Kennedy's assas- sination firmly on Lee Harvey Oswald, the Marxist who said he hated the United States but found that Russia "stunk." The 26 volumes of Warren commission hearing transcript, released Monday, disclosed the charges of those who hold that Oswald was. only the trigger- man for a conspiracy or--as his mother testified -- a scapegoat for murderers still uncaught. But the testimony revealed that those witnesses offered only admitted speculation, opin- ion, or unsupported theory. Most of it was rebutted by the hard evidence against Os- wald, piled up in thousands of pages of testimony and still more thousands of exhibits. There were disagreements even among those at the centre of the nightmare events of Nov. 22, 1963. Did the dying presi- dent speak? No, said the wi- dow, Jacqueline, who was splashed with his gushing life blood. Yes, said the Secret Serv- ice agent in the front seat, the president. said, "My God, I am hit." : HEARD TWO SHOTS Texas Governor John B. Con- Cramp Runs For Office ORILLIA (CP) -- Former Orillia mayor Wilbur M. Cramp who appears in Simcoe County Court in Barrie next week to face three charges of munici- pal corruption involving North- ern Ontario Natural Gas share transactions, qualified Monday to run for the deputy reeveship in the Dec. 7 municipal elec- tions. He has been mayor of Orillia four times, a councillor seven lyears and a reeve once. | Last year, before the charges were laid against him in the NONG case, he was defeated in the mayoralty race by Mayor |/Mrs, Isabel Post. | He is charged with accepting | shares as a consideration for jgranting a NONG franchise in Orillia and for blocking a fran- chise with Consumers' Gas of Toronto while he was mayor in 1956. He was committed for trial in !October. ALBERT WALKER AT WELLAND HOME Two members of the prov- ince's the Aging visit Sunset Haven in Welland where they in- spected a proposed sculpture of reinforced concrete. depict- Select Committee on ing an elderly man and his wife. Shown, left to right, are E. Weightman, county chair- man of the Sunset Haven com- mittee; Lawrence Crawford, representing the Department of Health and Welfare; Doug- jas Rapelje, superintendent of the haven; Albert V. Walker, member of the Legislature from Oshawa; and Alex Car- ruthers, member of the Legis- lature from Durham riding, and chairman of the commit- tee, The group recently in- spected some of the Prov- ince's homes for the ageff in the southwest area of Ontario. |nally heard only two shots, his wife heard three. On some other details those closest to the vor- tex of sudden swirling tragedy disagreed. But 'the inexorable thrust of the mass of evidence was that: Oswald, 24, a truant son who once drew a knife on his mother and contemptuously refused to see 'a head shrinker or a nut doctor," had the capacity, the opportunity, the means and the will to assassinate a president. And, as Chief Justice Earl War- ren and his six. investigative colleagues found, did so. The question asked ever since --could it have been prevented? --was answered negatively by Secret Service Chief James J. Rowley. His agents in Dallas per- formed "in an exemplary man- ner," said Rowley. Laden as it was with hind- sights and might - have - beens, the testimony also was illum- ined with grisly scenes etched forever on memories. The widow of John F, Ken- nedy remembered: ". . . and just as I turned and looked at him, I could see a piece of his skull and I remember it was flesh colored. I remember think- ing he just looked as if he had a slight headache .. . and then he sort of did this, put his hand hg his forehead, and fell into my ap.' Governor Connally, conscious despite grave wounds, saw on the' pale blue upholstery a "chunk of brain tissue as big as almost my thumbnail." Secret Service Agent Clinton Hill, who leaped on the accel- erating car as it sped off to Parkland Hospital, thought he knew why Mrs. Kennedy crawled out on the rear deck of the automobile -- an episode she said she could not recall. Hill said he thought she was "reaching for something coming off the rear tail of the car." He grabbed her, put her back in the seat. ". . - the next day |A southern Alberta sugar beet we found the portion of the president's head . it was found in the street." 2 The testimony released Mon- day was the basis for the com- mission's findings, issued eight weeks ago. It was scheduled for distribution to reporters Wed- nesday and for release in news- papers and for public sale next Monday. RELEASES EVIDENCE The Associated Press ob- tained access to some of the volumes and sent out stories Monday after some prior publi- cation elsewhere. A few hours later, the White House released the entire set for publication and public sale. The testimony dealt at length with the motives of Jack Ruby, the Dallas night club operator convicted of murdering Oswald during a jail transfer two days after the assassination. A cur- ious sentence highlighted that testimony. "T guess I just had to show the world a Jew has guts," Ruby told Forrest V. Sorrels, Secret Service agent in charge of the Dallas office. Oswald's mother, the twice- widowed Mrs. Marguerite Os- wald of Fort Worth, insisted to the commission, as she has in paid lecture appearances, that her son might have been a se- cret agent of the Central Intel- ligence Agency who was set up to take the blame for the as- sassination. "My God, I'm Hit' Gasped Kennedy She acknowledged she had no supporting evidence, however. OUT TO MAKE MONEY And Lee's half-brother, John Edward Pic, testified that he believes his mother "is out right now to make as much money as she can on-her relationship with Lee Harvey. Oswald." Lieut. Francis L. Martello, who interviewed Oswald in New Orleans after the former mar- ine became involved in a street brawl while distributing pro- Castro literature, said Oswald considered himself a Marxist, not a Russian-style Communist, and said he hated the United States. 'I asked him what he thought of the form of commu- nism in Russia, since he had lived there for two years, and he replied 'it stunk.'" In the Dallas jail, after the arrest, Oswald gave arrogant denials to every question about the assassination, Dallas Police commission. And his secrets died with him. Frantic and futile efforts to obtain a deathbed statement, just after the fatal shot from Ruby's pistol, were described by Dallas Police Detective B. H. Combest. Oswald heard and recognized Combest and appeared to un- derstand the officer's urging that "if he wanted to say any- thing he was going to have to say it then." "(Oswald) just shook his head," Combest said. By ALLEN SACKMANN LETHBRIDGE, Alta. (CP)-- farmer with thousands of dol- lars tied up in equipment is not as happy as a housewife when sugar prices drop. He considers the price of sugar in Canada too low--a bar- gain he gives grudgingly as he hopes for a higher floor price on his product, He's one of 1,600 growers in a $20,000,000-a-year Alberta in- dustry who says it is costing more each year to grow the beets. Higher costs mean lower profits because the selling price of refined sugar remains low. R. L. Jensen, president of the Alberta Sugar Beet Growers' Association and a prominent Mcgrath district farmer, says average investment in 1958 was $57,000 for an average return of $3,350. This year, investment ran up to $75,000 "and I'd say the return is even less." The heavy investment results from mechanization and the low return comes from' Canadian sugar policy, he says. Mechanization has cut manual labor 50 per cent in the last 10 years. Machines have replaced Sugar Price Drop Sours Farmer has been spent on specialized equipment that can't be used in other farm operations, says Mr. Jensen; "We're not interested in talk- ing about new labor saving de- vices and mew farming tech- niques," says Mr, Jensen. "We want city people to know what a bargain they're getting at the er re som soe me -- iis Sorel poe ne 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, November 24,1964 3 BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE Homeles Gets 30 County Jail is the only home it was learned in ------ Monday. Mi Harry Jermyn sentenced rape 45- man to 30 days, Henry could not receive welfare benefits. because he had no home, and that he could not get a home because he had no money. Despite pleas by a fel- low worker and his own wife, Danny Gallagher was sentenced to four months in jail on a con- viction of assault causing bodily He was convicted fast week of the offence, which involved the beating unconscious of Val- erie Joseph Legere in front of his home. Gallagher, 21, of 274 Celina street was remanded in custody at that time for a pre- sentence report. William Harding, Gallagher's union representative at Gen- eral Motors, described him as "conscientious worker", His wife said Gallagher had "re- formed" since their marriage. "I feel sorry for anyone in trouble" said Magistrate Jer- pet "but I have a responsib- ility". A PAIR OF DRIVING con- victions cost Douglas Morrison, 25, of 39 John street west, a total of $175 and costs or 35 days in jail, He pleaded guilty to failing to remain at the scene of an Oct. 20 accident, and to a second charge of not having insurance, He was fined $100 and costs or 20 days on the first, and od James Sandford Henry can find,|/in s Man, Days A fifth offense of being drunk public gave William Love, 31, of 314 Ballard -- option of a $50 and costs or 30 days in jail. Love, pleaded guilty to the charge and was fined $100 and costs or 15 days. His licence was suspended: for 12. months in light of a previous conviction for drunk driving. Black was administered the was involved in an accident at the corner of Athol and Albert streets. brought a 16-year-old into court and led him to a one-year suspended sentence. David William Potter of 47 Colborne street pleaded guilty to entering his grandfather's (William Brown's) home and taking the money from a metal box:in the bedroom. Restitution was made, the court learned. The assault of Sgt. James Powell of the Oshawa Police Department sent Robert Brun- ton, 21, to the County Jail for 30 days. Brunton was remanded out of. custody following a con- viction last week. A plea for reduction in bail by Ian Rosenberg of Toronto was denied by Magistrate Jer- myn. Rosenberg, 25, is being held on $5000 bail pending a hearing on a charge of fraud. He was arrested last month in connection with the theft of the|72 windshields from Duplat and costs or 15 days on second. Canada Lid., Oshawa. WINDSOR, Ont. (CP) -- Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Martin said Monday Canada would be Treaty Organization, any trend affecting the United States' role in ensuring collec- tive security. He told a Rotary Club lunch- eon that Canada has never ac- cepted any idea that NATO is solely a military alliance di- rected at the defence of Eur- ope. "We have looked upon it as an instrument for bringing to- gether the Atlantic nations into a community united as closely as possibly in policy and pur- pose," he said. Canada did not believe that inc! deeply concerned over any trag- Chief Jesse E. Curry told theymentation of the North Atlantic NATO A "Togetherness" Instrument Says Martin (ments of NATO, and that these claims can be met within the existing machinery of the alli- ance, Commenting on what he luding|calied a European revolt against the so-called American nuclear monopoly, he said he doesn't think anyone would dis- pute the fact that the defence of Europe would be impossible in present circumstances with- out this-U.S. commitment. NEED Mortgage Money? LL Cc Real Estate Broker Day or Night - 728-4285 continentalism, whether Euro- pean or North American, was compatible with Canadian inter- est. "By the same token, we could not conceive of an effective al- liance in which France was not participating," he said. 'We re- gard the contribution of France as essential to the alliance and she forms an integral part of the framework of our interna- tional life." Mr. Martin said Canada ac- [knowledges the claims of Euro- pean members of the alliance to a greater degree of partici- VISIT pation in the nuclear arrange- expense of the farmer." Housewives may not agree but Ian Angus, general man- ager of the Canadian Sugar factories, says: "'Oanadians buy the cheapest sugar in the world." Canadian Sugar Factories work hand-in-glove with produc- ers with sugar revenue divided on the basis of 63 per cent to the producer and 37 per cent to the factory. Last year, Alberta producers received $11,300,000 on the | pro- duction' of 150,000,000 p of PAUL RISTOW LTD. REALTOR 187 King East 728-9474 braemor ga rdens (Stevenson Rd. N. and Annepolis Ave.) Community For. Young Moderns and So-o-0-o Convenient sugar from 44,000 'acres of beets. Alberta producers raised 528,- 000 tons of beets last year, nearly half Canada's total pro- duction of 1,287,300 tons. The balance was raised in Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec much of the back-breaking la- bor of thinning, weeding and harvesting the beets. An annual work force of 8,000 persons, working ffom sunrise to sun- down, has dropped to 4,000, mostly Indians. GOOD FOOD NOON SPECIALS HOTEL LANCASTER 27 KING ST WEST But the | ing 0 on n labor costs Saving is automatic and easy when you invest in PERMANENT PERSONAL POLICIES of Life Insurance which may be converted to income He EXCELSIOR LIFE Soctstidece Company you cannot outlive. 66Witha termDlan loan "we found we could afford the ciel size low-cost, Hfedasured When you finance in advance at the Royal you keep your borrow- ing costs down -- can often buy a better product for the same money. Next time, use your credit this businesslike termpian loan, Wayeoed Finance in advance at ROYAL BANK Shore ee es Beet oe ean

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