"Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bow- manville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring. centres in On- tario and Durham Counties. ' * YOL. 94 -- NO. 231 Be PK, Eng ON { on ¥ OSHAWA" ONTARIO, MONDAY, "OCTOBER 4, 1965 -- She Oshawa Times row, 52. Weather Report _ Mainly sunny and a little warmer. Winds to be light. Low tonight, 30. High tomor- ON HISTORIC N.Y. VISIT AS PAPAL MOTORCADE MOVES ON MANHATTAN : AP Wirephoto | 'Johnson Opens Doors be disappointed. VATICAN CITY (AP)--Pope Paul's trip today to the United Nations in New York brings a new dimension to Vatican dip- lomacy and opens the way for further papal travels, even to the Communist East. By stepping on American soil --the first pontiff to do so--he will be making a visit to one of the great protagonists cf the East-West struggle in today's world. His next trip might be to the other side, to Communist Poland. me Such a trip has long been ru- mored. Some Vatican aides have been dismayed at the throught of his going to a Com- munist-ruled nation, but a trip to New York will supply the element of balance in advance. Just as his Holy Land and In- dia pilgrimages brought a flood of invitations from around tie world, his New York journey is bound to spur a fresh flurry of requests for visits. Vatican aides have mixed feelings about this prospect. They realize that Pope Paul cannot accept every invitation, so some Catholics are bound to Trip Seen To Poland Pope Paul, 68, relishes travel. Before his election to the pap- acy in 1963, he had made two visits to North America--on one of them he visited Canadian cit- ies--and \an extensive tour of Africa. He had the mood and outlook to break the papacy out of its Vatican confinement -- and he did. His pilgrimage to the Holy Land in January, 1964, was the first papal trip outside Italy in a century and a half. His trip to Bombay last December took him 3,954 miles from Rome on history's longest papal journey. The trip to New York will be even longer, 4,066 miles. TRIPS ARE PROOF Pope Paul has spoken re- peatedly of internationalizing the largely Italian central ad- ministration of the .church at the Vatican. His own travels have become a demonstration of his role as spiritual leader| of 550,000,000 Roman Catholics, not just the 50,000,000 in his na- tive Italy. Both the trip to the Holy Land and to India were basic- ally religious. Speech Text NEW YORK (AP) -- The original English text of Pope Paul's remarks on his ar- rival at Kennedy Airport New York (as made public by the Vatican press office in Rome): We reply without delay to the greetings presented to us by the distinguished repre sentatives of the United Na- tions, and we express our sin- cere thanks for the invitation to us to address that great assembly. We are thus given the honor jand the good for- tune of meeting that greatest of all international organiza- tions. It gives us particular pleasure to mark in this way the 20th anniversary of the founding of the United Na- tions, and to express our best wishes for its permanency and its development. Our encouragement and support have, we believe, a special meaning. This is be- cause we come from Rome, that city which, first of all in the history of our civilization, promoted and represented the political union of peoples un- der the rule of law; and con- sequently in liberty, in cul. ture and in peace. We come from me, where there is locat the central seat of |\Council-Prays For Pope On U.N. Peace Mission VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The Vatican ecumenical council prayed today for the success of Pope Paul's peace mission to the United Nations, then heard appeals for a new Vatican sec- retariat to deal with preblems of poverty and social justice. The prayers were offered in a special mass celebrated in St. Peter's Basilica as the Pope was flying over the Atlantic '>- ward New York. Prayers also were said for all leaders and institations so that they too might work for peace. The prelates said other suffered from wars and perse- To Cuban Refugees NEW YORK (AP)--Standing| where the Statue of Liberty has|said in a Havana speech mon- at the foot of the Statue of Lib-| stood since 1866 as a symbol of|itored by radio in Miami that erty, Presid Joh opened! freed to arriving refugees. | "we have won a battle for lib- the United States doors Sunday} Castro was not mentioned injerty" in his offer to open en, to Cubans "who seek freedom."'| Johnsgn's text. However, the} gates to Cubans. He said the U.S. will seek ajpresident obviously was re-| "They (the Americans) had diplomatic agreement with Pre-| sponding to Castyo's offer to| no alternative and no other way mier Fidel Castro to permit|permit free exit of Cubans if| out" than te accept, Castro de- them to come. ithe U.S.. would negotiate an clared. posal, Johnson said: | channels. |payun ey} }0,, :aouaTpPNe "I declare to the people of States permit any citizen to Cuba that those who seek ref-| MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- Fidel| come freely to Cuba. Let them cation of America to our tradi-| Johnson Sunday night to open organizations to visit, Cuba so tions as an asylum for the! doors to. Americans to go to they can see how racial dis- oppressed will be upheld.' Cuba as he has offered to per- crimination has disappeared in of a new U.S. immigration law) United States. on the New York harbor island) The Cuban prime 'inister| e GETS TO ALTAR Key Figure In Revolution DESPITE MISHAP : MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP)-- Guevara Has Left Cuba fies 8k thing like a slip on the altar steps trip: up her wedding ister Fidel Castro says Ernesto) revolution _in your territory,"') broke her foot. (Che) Guevara, one of the key the letter 'said. Mrs. Detaitus, 21, the for- leaders of his revolution, fin- 'I formally resign from my| mer Diane Bartmann, twisted months ago and moved on tojin the Cuban army), as minis-| as she reached the top 'step revolutionary activity else-|ter (of industries), and my sta-| of the sanctuary at the Mother where. 'tus as a Cuban (he was pro-| of Perpetual -Help. Roman mer close associate in a speech! in 1959). The bride, clutching her to a rally Sunday night. He did) *«.y only mistake of any se-| groom's arm, proceeded with not say where Guevara, a na-| riousness," the letter continued, | her vows despije the pain. where he now is. . {in you since the first: moments Guevara's Cuban wife was inlof the Sierrg Maestra (where the audience, dressed in black.|¢ a §tro's revolution started), . a ~~ and she ap-| derstood your qualities as di- From One Family peared near aap rector and as revolutionary." | RIDGETOWN, Ont. (CP) -- Guevara had been minister of, «4, the new battlefields 1/Four persons were killed, three PoP a foreeres Seatsted Oelt,, to, fight against imperial-/head-on crash near here Sun- 4 4 gece +.) 48m erever it may be," the'day. re ne were: 80k since letter \said. Dead are: Lambertus W. Bo- conflicting rumors about his : : whereabouts and fate. jgards to Cagtro and other and son Robert 20, all of RR1, Castro read a letter which he| friends. It also expressed con-|Ridgetown;* and Clayton Irvine, fidence the Cuban people would/70, of RR3, Ridgetown. 1. -It said "other lands of the) '@! world" needed his services. . | Wife and children. Irvine's wife, Leatha, 68, were . Castro said he was "'confident|both in critiéal condition in DUTY FULFILLE In responding to a Castro pro--agreement through diplomatic Castro shouted to a cheering uge here will find it. The dedi-/C astro challenged President permit representatives of Negro Johnson spoke at his signing mit Cubans to..come to, the our country." | Mrs. Edward S. Deraitus was HAVANA (AP)--Prime Min-|my duty that bound me to the ceremony--even though she pished his work in Cuba six) post as major (the highest rank| her foot and-felt a bone snap Castro talked about his for-| claimed a native Ciban citizen! Catholic church Saturday. tive of Argentina, had gone oF) *was not:to have confided more 4 Persons Die The crowd gave her an ovation! and not having sufficiently un- industries and in the first years shall carry on .. . the obliga-'from one family; in a two-car then there have been numerous} : 1 The letter expressed fond re-jers, 54;. his wife, Jacoba, 53; said Guevara gave him April p take good care of Guevara's| Marlene Boers, 16, and Mr. jthis explains everything" about|Chatham Public General Hospi- "| have. fulfilled the part of| Guevara. tal. cution. The prayer done, the council |fathers turned to their regular | business and debated a schema prayers for all those who have) (document) on modern wo ty problenis, taking up a chapter on economic and social matters. They called on the church to) take a more active role in eas- ing' the plight of the poor and underprivileged. More than 100 bishops asked that a special secretariat be es- tablished to handle problems of social justice after the council itself ends for good, probably in December. Coadjutor Archbishop Angelo Fernandes of New Delhi, India, speaking for more than 100 pre- lates from various nations, said of such a secretariat: "It would show to all men, including those of the underde- veloped nations, the church's concern with the problems of poverty and hunger." that religious society not ates i wi his the Catholic Church, We. are happy to note that natural ¢ympathy existing be: tween these two universali- ties, and to bear to your ter-- restrial city of peace the~ greetings and good wishes of our spiritual city of peace. One is a. peace which rises from the earth, the other a peace which descends from heaven; and their meeting is most marvellous: Justice and peace have kissed one an- other. May God grant that this be for mankind's greater good. We also wish to reply with- of delay to the greetings of- fered us by this great coun- try in the person of the presi- dent's representative. A coun- try so free, so strong, so in- dustrious, so full of wonders, this country of America, the America of the states, where we have so very' many broth- ers, sons and friends in the faith, and where a. populous To Bar Visit Of To Bar Visit LONDON (AP) The Na- tional Union of Protestants has announced it is- preparing a nationwide petition against any possible visit to Britain by Pope Paul. John Cardinal Heenan has said in Rome that the Pope might 'come here for consecra- tion of Liverpool's new Roman Catholic cathedral in 1967. Rey. Matthew Arnold Perk- Petition In Britain Planned ins, general director of the| The Pontiff union, said Saturday his organ- ization would send its protest to the Queen and to every mem- ber of both Houses of Parlia- ment. He said: "Such a visit is against the highest interest of this free and. Protestant realm. Our members feel most strongly about this and we shall do everything we can to see that the proposed visit does not take place;" nation f its very modern cilization upon the brother- hood of its citizens. Greetings to you, America! | The first pope to set foot upon your land blesses you with all his heart. He renews, as it were, the gesture of your dis- coverer, Christopher Colum- bus, when he planted the cross of Christ in this blessed soil. May the cross of bless- ing which we now trace over your skies and your land pre- serve those gifts which Christ gave yew and guarantee to you: Peace, concord, free- dom, justice--and above all the vision of life in the hope of immorality. God bless this land of yours! "HD. WESTFALL VISITS HIS HOME TOWN Ed Westfall (right), a product of the Oshawa Minor HockeyAssociation, shakes hands with the current pres- ident of the association, Cliff Maddock. Ed, who has toil- ed for several with Boston Bruins of the Nation- al Hockey League, returned to his home town Saturday night for an exhibition game against Oklahoma City Blazers of the Central Pro- fessional League. "Bill" \ Kurello, manager of Oshawa Civie Auditorium where 'the ge: was staged, looks on. Okla. a, City upset their parent club => a 1 count, --Oshawa imes Photo By ALEXANDER FARRELL NEW YORK (CP) -- Pope Paul arrived in' New York three minutes ahead of sched- ule today on an unprecedented missidn of peace to the United Nations. The first papal flight to the new world touched down at Kennedy International Airport at 9:27 a.m. EDT after a nine- hour trip' from Rome, Thousands of spectators, most of whom had*been on hand for several hours, watched his Ali- talia plane land and taxi close to a small raised platform where the welcoming ceremony took place. Secretary-General U Thant of the United Nations led the of- ficial greeting party. Huge delegations of Roman Catholic school children were among the crowds lining the 24- mile motorcade route from the airport to St. Patrick's cathe- dral in midtown Manhattan, where the Pope was scheduled to lead noon-day prayers. The city's 706,000 Catholic school children have been given a holi- day. Police barricades were in place at numerous intersections along the motorcade route and all traffic to and from Kennedy airport was frozen immediately before the Pope's arrival and during the motorcade. The papal plane flew over "Canada. en route to New. York, The pope sent this message, in French and English, to Gov- ernor-General Vanier: "To your excellency and to all Canadians, we express our warmest salutations and good wishes from the airliner pass- ing through the air space of Canada on our journey of inter- national peace to the United Nations, and we call down upon Canada and its people abund- ant divine favors and graces." It was the first journey of a Roman Catholic pontiff to the Western Hemisphere. In New York, hundreds of thousands waited to see him. Many were already lined up, with blankets and chairs, on swank Fifth Avenue around St. Patrick's Cathedral, and at points along the motorcade route from the airport on Lon, Island into central Manhattan. Some said they got into posi- tion after mass Sunday, so they, would be sure of getting a good look at him. It has been a long wait, in rather bleak and chilly autumn. weather, Signs of preparation were vis- ible at every turn. Wooden po- gic street intersections. Shop windows and news-stands dis- played colored portraits of the pontiff, some draped in royal purple, and souvenirs were on sale, a The Pope's original, and principal, purpose in 'coming here is to address the United Nations General Assembly, but enough other events have been crowded into a 14-hour schedule to' give it the appearance of a civic visit as well. It was the longest trip ever made by a pope, but not by much. The vatican press office said his trip to Bombay last December covered a> 3,954-mile route, and his trip to New Hork 4,066 miles. Police Commissioner Vincent Broderick has assigned 18,000 of his 26,000 men to duty during Knife Found As 2 Die +g ye hic-ddaiiougiies an er five-year-o ughter are dead and an eight-year-old boy is in cfitical condition in hospital here-after police found them in their blood-spattered east - end home today, Mrs. Hilda Richart died Shortly after she was taken to East General Hospital, Her daughter, Heidi, was dead on arrival at hospital. Robert Richart was in critical condition in Hospital for Sick Children. Helmut Richart, the dead woman's husband, was also taken to hospital but his -in- juries are' not: serious police said. Bet. Sgt. Norman Hobson of the homicide squad said a knife All N.Y. Traffic Frozen To And From The Airport lice barricades stood at strate-| the entire 14 hours of the papal visit. This is the largest commit- ment of police to a single job in New York's history, Brode- rick said. Some 10,0¢9 men were posted along the roads to be taken by the pope, the 8,000 at the places where he will stop. The Pope is coming to the United Nations gt the express invitation of Secretary-General U Thant. Accepting the. invitation, the spiritual leader of the world's 550,000,000 Roman Catholics said it was an opportunity to make a~-possible contribution to world peace that he could not forego. ASKED PRAYERS At the vatican Sunday, he asked a cheering crowd of 30,- 000 to pray for the success of his mission. Then he withdrew from public view to prepare for his midnight departure from Rome. President Johnson came to New York from Washington Sunday to await his meeting with the Pope. The Pope was to meet John- son in the Waldorf Astoria Ho- tel suite of Arthur Goldberg, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, early this afternoon be- fore going to the United Na- tions. It would be the first time a U.S. president had - met building was scheduled p.m In addition to his speech to French, the Pope was to have separate, private meetings with Thant and with Amintore Fan- fani, Italian president of the as- sembly, and to say a few words alloong staff of the UN secre- tariat. the assembly, to be given, in} POPE PAUL'S. NY. SCHEDULE NEW YORK (AP)--Follow- ing is the schedule for the visit of Pope Paul to New York (times EDT.) 9:30 a.m. Arrival at Ken- nedy Airport and receptign ceremonies. : 10:00 a.m. Motorcade through Queens and Manhat- tan. Noon. Arrival at St. Paf- rick's Cathedral and Fran Cardinal Spellman's residén which will be. the Pope's tem- porary .residence. 12:30 p.m. Visit President Johnson at Waldorf Towers. 1:30 p.m. Depart Waldorf Towers for Cardinal Spell- man's residence. 1:45 p.m. Lunch, rest and preparation for the meeting at the United Nations. 3:05 p.m. departure for UN. 3:20 p.m. Arrival at UN. 3:30 p.m. Address the UN General Assembly. 4:00 p.m. Meetings with heads of delegations, the pres- ident of the General Assembly, the secretary - general and other UN dignitaries. 5:50 p.m. Address to UN staff in the General Assembly. 6:05 p.m. Brief visit with Roman Catholic, Protestant. and Jewish groups at Holy: hurch. : the UN 'for 3:15). Yankee Stadium. 9:45 p.m. Departure for brief visit to Vatican Pavilion at the world's fair. 10:30 p.m. Arrival at Ken- nedy Airport for departure ceremonies. : 11:00 p.m. Departure for . Rome. NEW YORK (AP) -- Pope Paul's peace pilgrimage today fell on the church's first day of the "man of peace," St. Fran- cis of Assisi. . Thousands of copies of the fa- mous prayer attributed to that gentle 12th - century Christian were being distributed in the metropolitan area by Francis- cans, in connection with the Pope's visit. It goes: Lord, make me an instru- ment of Thy peace. Where there is hatred... let me sow love. Where there is injury ... St. Francis' Peace Prayer Distributed In New York Where there is doubt... faith, : Where there is despair ... hope, Where there is darkness .- » light, Where there is sadness e+ Joy. © Divine Master, grant that.I. may not so much eek to be consoled as to console, To be understood--as to understand, To be loved... as to e. 'or it is in\giving . .. eee pardon, a it we receiv the airport to Manhattan. a Pakistani attempt to cross met today in the presidential corted by Ambassador Lloyd chief of protocol. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS N.Y. Police Get Bomb Threat NEW YORK (AP) -- An anonymous telephone caller told police today that Pope Paul's limousine would be bombed as it passed through Queens. The caller telephoned Brooklin police headquarters at 10:45 a.m., when the Pope already was enroute to Manhattan from Kennedy Airport. Police were warned that the pontiff would be bombed en route from Claim Pakistani Attempt Checked NEW DELHI (AP) -- India claimed today it has halted the United Nations ceasefire line in the Lahore sector of the western front. Pontiff Meets President Johnson NEW YORK (AP) -- Pope Paul and President Johnson suite of the tightly-guarded Waldorf Astoria hotel for the historic first meeting of a U.S. president and pope on American soil. The Pope went to the midtown Manhattan hotel from St. Patrick's. cathedral, es- Hand, U.S. state department Ann Landers -- 13 City News -- 11 Comics --- 17 Editorial -- 4 Financial --'21 Obits -- 21 and a chisel, both stained with Wood, were found in the house. ...In THE TIMES today... Wildcat Drivers Close 5:City Firms -- P. 11 Rosebank Subdivision Approved By Board -- P. 5 Okichome City Downs Bruins Here -- P. 6 @tssified -- 18, 19, 20 Sports -- 6, 7, 8 Theatre -- 16 Whitby News -- 5 Women's -- 12 13 Weather -- 2