4 RAGE ALN ANG WDNnawa bai Laie, 1NULAY, AUGUS LE 30, 1940 MEXICAN BISHOP TALKS T0 PRESS | Prelate Says Obregon | Death Only Delayed Re ligious Controversy Mexico City, Aug. 29.--The as- sassination of President-elect Ob- zegon of Mexico, has only delayed not defeated, efforts to settle the religions controversy. Monsignor Minurel Maria de la Mora, Bishop of San Luis Polisi and spokesman of the Catholic bishops living in hiding in Mexico, told a group of newspaper correspondents. Monsignor de la Mora, himself in hiding, emerged from his con- cealment long enov_h to meet by Arrangement the foreign corre ndents at a rendezvous near exico. He revealed that he is one of two Catholic archbishops and eleven bishops who have sought concealment in the country, First of ali, Archbishop de la Mora denied emphatically that Catholic prelates or priests has had anything to do with either the as- sassination of Gen, Obregon or of any military movement against the Government. "If occasionally some priest has participated in the military move- ment," he said, "he has done so entirely on his own private n- itiative, 1 must confess that a few priests, but not more than twelve, have done so. Of these the ma- jority went with the rebels as chap- lains and did not carry arms. NO arahbighop, no bishop or priest! with the sanction of the Churen has sustained the rebel movemem in any form." The Catholic prelate, while pointing out that any statement of the religious dispute in Mexico must bear the full sanction of the Pope at Rome, declared his belief, which he said was also the belief of Mexican Catholics, that 'no temporizing agreement will be sat- {sfactory."" He declared that a mere agreement on the part of the Mexican Government not to enforce the religious laws would not settle the religious question, which could only he solved by the amendment of the constitution and its enfore- ing acts so as to establish religious truth as a fundamental principle of the Mexican Governnient. The life of a proscribed clergy- man in Mexico is not an easy one, the Archhishop told the corre- spondents, "Sometimes we go out the hack door while agents seeking us come TIME TABLES CPR, TIME TABLE, Lex Schedule, taking effect 12,01 ay, April Ne West 5.48 a.m, Daily, gat Daily y Daily except Sunday, pai ye seeps Sunday, , Daily Dally" except Sunday, , Daily except Sunday, , Daily, Daily, A mes shown above sre times trains iepart oe Oshawa Station, C.N.R, TIME TABLE Effective June 24, All times given are ay on Daylight ving, thound 82 am, Dail Lig Sunday, .m, Sunday on am. Daily, y iy except Sunday, y ay: except Sunday. daily. , Daily, .m. Daily, , Daily. Wes! .m, Daily. .m. Daily, y Jail. m, Dal except Sunday, Sunday, in the fromt," he said, smiling. He continued: "Some of us have at times lived in five houses im three days. 1, myself, have lived in at least six different houses in the last two years, "There were 4,000 Mexican Cath- olic priests in Mexico. Perhaps forty per cent. are still in the re- public. You understand that it is most difficult for me to give pre- cise information because we have no communication system. , Many Priests Catholic priests have been killed during the last two years. The total is probably nearer 100 tham 60. None had a trial and all were ex- ecuted summarily. These priests were taken .from their hiding places in different villages and shot without trial." Monsignor de la Mora denied that Archbishop Oroze¢o y Jimenez of Jalisco had participated in an armed revolution as. had been charged by the Government, "He fs in hiding in the mountains of Jalisco, but has never been under arms," he said, The Archbishop declared that in- structions by the Pope were for- warded to the episcopate and priests of Mexico two years ago which forbade them absalutély to mix in polities, "We have obeyed," he said, New York, Aug. 29.--The New York City News Association an- nounced yesterday that six prison- ers were held at the Federal Building in connection with the murder of President-elect Obre- gon of Mexico. FORMAL CHARGE AGAINST TORAL Slayer of Mexican Presi: dent Elect is Indicted Mexico City, Aug. 20.--Jose de Leon Toral, slayer of President- elect Obregon, and 17 other per- sons were charged in formal in- dictments made public Monday with "Responsibility for the as- sassination of General Obregon,' and "Conspiracy against life ana property." In addition to De Leon Toral those charged included the Mother fuperior Conception Acebeda de La Lata, her sister, the Nun Jose Pina, and twelve persons with a conspiracy to poison General Oh- regon and President Calles at Celaya last spring. Others named in the indictments are Senora Maria Luisa Pina de Altamira and Jose Fermadez Gallardo Y Davon, The indictments were filed hy the attorney general of the Wederal distriet in the Court of First In- stance at San Angel, the little town in the suburbs of Mexico City where Gen. Obregon was slain. The formal charges were hrief and did not enter into details of the allegations of the acecnsed, One editor describes the dog days this August an being so dull that even people with hay fever have Jost the ambition to sneeze.--Galt Re- porter, 1 (1927) Essex Coupe Chadburn Motor Co, HUDSON-ESSEX DISTRIBUTORS 0 Prince 8*-, Oshawa hone 1160 18 Simcoe Strest Somth V. A. Henry Insurance & Loans ¥13% Simcoe St. 8. Phones 1198W--0Office 1858J --Residence Killed ' "Between fifty and one hundred MALTESE PROPOSE IMMIGRATION PLAN Would Send Settlers to Canada With Govern- ment Guarantee Malta--famed home of the cru- saders for generations a fortress of the Knights of St. John who had te have 16 quarterings to belong--wants to send settlers to Canada... Malta will stand behind its settlers, guaran- tee that they will not become a charge on the Canadian Government. Malta will train its citizens so as to qualify them as settlers. That, in brief, is the proposition that Sir Ugo Miisud, Prime Minister of Malta, and now leader of its op- position, will iy before Hon. Rob- ert Forke, Minister of Immigration, in a day or so at Ottawa. Sir Ugo, in his political life has seen prosperity ebb and flow in his own country with the vicissitudes of war, as Malta depended on war for its livelihood. When the naval dock- yards there practically closed down after the great war, thousands of Maltese were thrown out of work, He and Prof. Hon. 'R. V. Galea, M.L.A., Minister of Health, are the Maltese delegates to the Empire Parliamentary tour of Canada, now in Montreal. Smaller Than Montreal But the Maltese now number about 2000 to the square mile of their little colony--it is less in arca than the Island of Montreal. Sir Ugo pointed out that Malta is a very important point of the Em- pire due to its stragetic position as a naval and airplane and airship base, It commands the highway of the Me- diterranean and is the door between England and the Orient. "As regards immigration," said Sir Ugo, "we have made an arrange- ment with Australia, which is prov- ing very satisfactory, "But in Canada we are hit by leg- islation, not aimed at us, of course, but for Asiatics, Your Canadian Rw gives access to Canada for all ple from England and the Bia proper of the Empire. Malta is not a Dominion proper. We have seli- government, it is true, but with cer- tain reserves and limitations. "We passed from the status of a colony to that of a state within the Empire in 1921. Our evolution has been obtained like Canada's, in the fullness of time. We became a Brits ish possession of our own free will during the Napoleonic Wars, Napo- leon, as you know, had taken Malta from the Knights of St. John. For a few months it was a French Do- minion and then the Maltese, aided by the British, rebelled. Adter driv ing the French from the capital, we asked and obtained British protee- tion." He likened the general situation in Malta to that of Quebec. In Malta they also have a bi-lingual situation, In parliament Italian and English, the' languages of culture, are the of- ficial tongues. Maltese is spoken by the people. Up to 1921 Italian was the language of the courts and laws, Now English is also used. In connection with their laws, like Quebec, the Napoleonic code, the Lit- tle Emperor's great gift to Europe and the world, prevails in Malta, Employment Question "Our experiment ol self govern- ment," said Sir Ugo, "has proved a SUCCCeSS, "But with the cessation of work at the big dockyards the unemploy- ment question has hit us hard and our population of 250,000 is too hig for our little island, every square inch of which is cultivated to the highest degree. "Our people are all Catholics, have heen: since the year 56 AD, and their culture in the past has been Latin. They are good settlers, ev- erywhere they have gone, law abid- ing, hard working. Most are farmers or artisans." He said that education has reached a high standard in Malta. Most of the revenue of the country is de- voted to it. New schools have been erected everywhere and compulsory attendance is in force. The University of Maita is one of the oldest in the Empire outside of Great Britain, be- ing founded about the middle of the Eighteenth Century. "We are prepared to assist any settlers, leaving our country for Can- ada," he said, "and we have institu- ted a selective system so that no set- tler will leave our shores uncquipped to cope with the problems of pioneer farm work, or whatever he migrates to do. "what is more our government will stand behind its citizens with a guarantee that they will not be- come a public charge." Many Maltese, Sir Ugo said, have gone to the United States, Over 9,-| 000 of them went to Detroit alone to work in the factories there. These were mostly artisans out of the 18,- 000 thrown out of work when Mars' anvils ceased to be used. Then the quota system, based on the propor- tion of. European migration to the States at a time when there was hardly any Maltese leaving their country, stopped that port of outlet for surplus population. "In any case," sair Sir Ugo, "we much prefer our people to stay with. in the Empire" Every marri dn man will 8 soon wish it were as cheap to get a fur coat as it is to get a coat of tar Money to loan at 6% per cent, first mortgages. J. H. R, LUKE Phones: 871 931; 68TW. We have the best buy in Oshawa in a new rug brick square plan house, on Mec Laughlin Boulevard six -- JONES' REAL ESTATE Cor, Bond & Simcoe Sts. OPEN EVENINGS LYCETT Your Real Estate and Insurance Broker AUCTIONEER 25 King St, E.,, corner Celina, Phone 205 lw.) PHONE 716J SULLEY, Auctioneer | Loans, Insurance Collection and Auctioneer Reirson | a 846 Simcoe St, 8, Oshawa REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE Cutler & Preston 64 King St, West Telephones 572, 223 Night Calls 510, 1560, 2468F 3 and 4 roomed apartments, heated, hot wader, electric refrigeration, stoves, wash- ers and dryers. Use of laundry. Immediate posses- 398. Rents from $45 to Heated office in Disney Block--opposite Post Office. 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