The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, 16¢ Siri Copy B0c Per Week Home Delivered VOL. 94 -- NO. 94 Che OSHAWA, Oshawa Times Authorized as Second Ottawa ond for ONTARIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1965 Weather Report Sunny with cloudy night, Friday, High tomorrow, 48. Class Mol! Post Office Department payment Cash. of Postage in Cold. periods. Rain toe Low tonight, 40, THIRTY-TWO PAGES aude NAZIS 'SIEG-HEIL' IN TORONTO TORONTO (CP)--Hitler is a had sung "Happy Birthday you're a good Jew, you've got hero to a group of young men who set up shop here this week. They call themselves the Ca- nadian Nazi. Party and held open house for the press Wed- nesday. Rhodes Avenue was a quiet east-end street. Now there's a Nazi party Lge seal il there and neighbors don't approve. "Firstit was termites--now this!" exclaimed a woman who watched as William Beattie, a to more traditional Nazi ideas Dear Hitler'? Tuesday in honor of what would have been the Fuehrer's 76th birthday if he had lived. Mr. Beattie, a customs clerk, said he is a friend of David Stanley of the Toronto suburb of Scarborough. Mr. Stanley 23-year-old with a swastika arm band, alternately begged and commanded 50 non-sympathiz- ers to set off his front lawn. Mr. Beattie said he doesn't necessarily support the Second nothing to worry about. If you are a Communist Jew you will be hung." Later, Mr, Beattie gave vent now is recruiting Nazis in Brit- ish Columbia, Mr. Beattie and two youths calling themselves Commander Marcel Jacques de Kock and Captain Peter Reed -- aged 17 and 18 respectively--gave news- paper men a guided. tour through stacks of Nazi propa- ganda leaflets, swastika decora- SHERWOOD FOREST WAS NEVER LIKE THIS! Constable Robert Watton night Thompson was arrows. The man surrender- when he said that he And he admitted his really care much for any Jew. didn't World War Nazi doctrine of ex- termination for Jews. He said to one onlooker: tions and portraits of Nazi leaders. There was also a .22- calibre rifle. group ie In Bloody Homicide-Suicide VANCOUVER (CP)--Six chil- 'dren and their parents are dead/ Vancouver police force said|have knowledge." |in a murder-suicide police have| Hogue, 34, had been under sus- in mutilated money, | The young victims, stalked jand slain in their own home, itied to a robbery of $1,250,000 picion in the Feb. 11 robbery|railway warehouse, was carried Deputy Chief John Fisk of the other people who we feel might geez February's robbery, from a here of cancelled money being jsent to the mint in Ottawa to be destroyed. out with precision by four men. Holes: had been punched in the bills to make them worthless, carries a bow and two quivers of arrows as he es- corts David Thompson from charged with possession of a dangerous weapon after police were held at bay by were found early Wednesday by| Joseph Percival, a former) but the money recovered in Ed- At Yugoslav From Reuters-AP PEKING (CP)--China today rejected an appeal signed by 17 non-aligned nations for negotia- tions on Viet Nam without con- ditions and lashed out at what it called Yugoslavia's "Tito \clique." | An editorial in the People's |Daily, organ of the Communist party, classed supporters of Yugoslav President Tito and the British Labor government under the heading of "monsters and freaks" hastening to the rescue of their American overlord. But it did not criticize Afro- |Asian signers of the appeal, in- \stead calling on such govern- Family Of Eight Slaughtered grr. The April 1 appeal came from Afghanistan, Algeria, Cey- lon, Cyprus, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guinea, India, Iraq, Kenya, Ne- pal, Syria, Tunisia, the United Arab Republic, Uganda, Yugo- slavia and Zambia. The People's Daily said the appeal "completely caters to CHINA REJECTS PEACE PLEA BY NON-ALIGNED NATIONS Peking Paper Flays Out 'Tito Clique' |the interests of U.S. imperial- ism and has become a shield in the hands of the Johnson ad- ministration to ward off world- wide condemnation of . . . U.S. crimes of aggression." BLAMES 'CLIQUE' ' North Viet Nam rejected the jappeal earlier. The Chinese said |they support ed North Viet Nam's demand for "with- drawal of foreign military per- sonnel' as one of four condi- tions for any settlement. In Washington, President Johnson and Italian Premier Aldo Moro issued a joint com- munique expressing hope "con-. ditions would materialize which will permit a peaceful and stable solution in freedom, jus- tice and security," in Southeast Asia. UN Secretary - General U Thant said in New York he con- sidered the situation in Viet Nam had deteriorated in the |past few days. But in a state- ment he said he was continuing jhis efforts to achieve a peace- {ful solution, Cong Butchers Viet Army, ed after police surrounded the house. horrified policemen dispatched) cjty constable, was arrested re- to check on the absence from/cently in Edmonton and |duty of a city police constable,| charged with possession of $12,- professional skill. monton had been patched with Turns Attack Into Rout a Toronto house Wednesday aman with @ bow and --CP Wirephoto Pearson Offers Hints Of Change In Cabinet Mr. Pearson scheduled a | Leonard Hogue. Hogue and 'his wife lay dead jin their bedroom. Their chil- drens' bodies were scattered| labout the home's three blood-| stained floors. Some of them) had tried to hide as shots rang} from their father's .357-calibre magnum revolver. Both city police and RCMP © termed the Hogue tragedy a > murder-suicide. The RCMP is in charge of the investigation because Hogue's suburban Co- | quitlam home lies within RCMP ; jurisdiction, RCMP Supt. F. B. Woods- 000 of the money. Deputy Chief Fisk said Hogue may have known he was being investigated. Other members of the force were questioned Wednesday. Deputy Chief Fisk said the de- partment "'is still investigating Johnson said the murder scene was the most gruesome sight he / i|miles from the key U.S. air OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Min- ister Pearson dropped what appeared to be a hint of com- ing cabinet changes in a brief encounter with reporters at the He was asked by reporters whether he will have any min- isterial changes to announce soon, press conference for 4 p.m. to- day. He said there will be \"'nothing shattering" to be an- School Religion May End; has encountered in 20 years of | aneulepole ham. CONST. LEONARD HOGUE The place was in a sham-! . . « Used Magnumon "There will be nothing today|nounced but he would be ready From Reuters-AP SAIGON (CP)--A strong gov- ernment force was dealt a bloody defeat today and re- treated after attacking strongly fortified Viet Cong positions 30 A Us mille kesman and Spo! said the fovetneann 'troops were "operating in another di- rection." The setback came as U,S. Marines engaged in their first brief encounter with the Viet Cong near Da Nang and the start of a cabinet meeting to-jon that," he replied, with ap-|to reply to questions. day. |parent emphasis on "today." | He also said he may have |something to say about the dou- s \ble anniversary being marked Two Milestones For PM: iss ime fers a today that he formed his mi- nority government and Friday TORONTO (CP)--Clerical re- action was mixed Wednesday| night to a report that the On- |tario government is nearing a decision that could mean the Clergy Has Mixed Feeling..." said one policeman.) children, then self'. . . round-the-clock bombing raids ter, welcomed the plan for &/ where," mmittee. } "he. Harold Trinier, editor of| Police established the time of The Canadian Baptist, said he/ the deaths as early Tuesday. thought the committee should' jj eight members of the fam- |"'We kept finding bodies every- Physicians jhe celebrates his 68th birthday.| end to religious instruction injhave clergymen on it, ily were shot through the head. Birthday, Triumph a Day ;/RUMOR CHANGES eR a cin OTTAWA (CP) -- Lester B. fearson celebrates two anni- versaries this week--his 68th birthday Friday and the start of his third year as prime minis-| ter of Canada Thursday. | His cabinet colleagues plan a} celebration at a regular weekly cabinet meeting. And his staff and the staff of the Privy Coun- cil office have baked a birthday cake for the prime minister an Mrs, Pearson to cut Friday A five-day rest at the prime minister's country residence in| the Gatineau Hills north of the capital has put the bloom back in the Pearson cheeks after! parliamentary sittings stretch-| ing back more than a year. As he embarks on a third year in the country's highest politi- cal office, the prime minister is said by associates to be in good) health, a relaxed and confident) frame of mind and ready for) any eventuality. Luxton of Regarding possible tions of being prime minister|.panges there has been specu-\of Huron, said he was sur-| and the heavy demands on him|;,tion this week that Rev, Arnold Thaw, minister, of South Peel Unitarian Congre- Rev, Clement Crusoe, director of Jesuit educa-| «not as she was asleep. apparently fade into the back-\Counci] President George Mcli-\the legislature would throw re-jtion, said it is important that) -------- lsat -- ground behind the satisfactions! sith government leader in the|ligious instruction open to com-|young people be given reli- and inspiration Mr. Pearson|commons, may finds in his job. portfolio of justice minister, Perhaps his greatest personal|placing Guy Favreau. 'There satisfaction came with Parlia-|has been no indication of what schools. ment's adoption of a Canadianjcabinet post Mr. Favreau might] The Globe and Mail reported) flag last summer, though in the/occupy in such a change. ithat the government may ac-! process Mr. Pearson's favorite) jt also has been rumored that|cede to a 1964 resolution of the| design was set aside by a pal-/yjines Minister Benidickson is|Ontario Federation of Home| liamentary committee in favor!neaded for a Senate seat and and School associations calling} of the single: red maple leaf. |that Postmaster-General Trem-|for a. committee of child psy-| His colleagues see other satis-/blay's health may cause him to|Chologists, psychiatrists, social factions--a buoyant economy, alleave the cabinet. workers and teachers to study portable pension plan, expand-|-- - -- --j|the existing courses in reli-| ing trade, parliamentary redis- gious instruction, tribution, Many of the govern-| Bishop Luxton said such a ment's actions have been under-| an egro P committee would be the result} of continued demands by small} s but vocal minorities to do away! Sappeals |with religious education. | Rev. R. H. N. Davidson, a) NAMPA, Idaho (AP)--Police Toronto United church minis-! taken despite the perils of gov-) erning with only a minority of Commons seats. The adoption of the flag was followed closely by one of two events regarded by associates as the most trying periods for intensified a search today for move to the|mittee discussion after what he) gious instruction. re-|Said was 15 years of happy ex-| ' iperience in teaching religion in|secretary of the Canadian Coun- icil of Churches, said: Rey, W. F. 'sitcher, general sat! No Charge cacuns possibility ss ue In Chief's committee's terms of reference) would make it possible for it to} A . recommend abolition of the C Pp t present religious instruc- Cl n tion courses in public schools. The paper says the commit- tee would determine if the course is achieving its intended purpose It would study the possibility of teaching morality and ethics to all students regardless of their religious backgrounds. Committee members them- selves would come from a vyari- ety of religious heritages. TORONTO (CP) Deputy |chief John Murray, head of the |traffic division of Toronto Metropolitan police, said today no charges will be laid follow- ing an accident involving a car carrying Police Chief James Mackey Wednesday, since there Acting Crown Attorney W. Herbert Langdon said he had not been consulted by police on -- yg Peony Maas rice Mr. Pearson. This was the Paul Bellesen, a Negro who month's end to make up his charge of attempted bribery seed be onerdyy wenn a ic THE TIME ind. But the meetin cur-i@nd coercion against ministerial ruary "as Grand : Titan of the : ae aides which a judicial inquiry Idaho Ku Klux Klan. rently is against one in June. Twenty - four months in of- fice have left few visible marks on the prime minister. His manner remains informal, even boyish, and the people around him say he is too stimulated by his job to express any interest in retirement FINDS SATISFACTION the sharpest for Mr. Pearson'sports car Tuesday and had not} the first budget brought down later in a residential neighbor-| jemploying outside experts in its/tain, Ga. Bellesen said he joined Associates say the frustra-'preparation. has been held. Huge $16-Million, 5-Yr. Capita The other Bellesen's wife told police setback, possibly;Wednesday he left in the family Man With Trumpet -- Habs' : [--- ( personally, is said to have been returned. His car was found) Ann Landers 4 "a City News -- 17 Knights Of Columbus Honor City Leaders -- P. 5 Sports -- 12, 13, 14, 15 Television -- 25 |the case, but added that his of- fice would not normally be on- sulted over such an accident. A car driven by Charles Stanyon, 51, had stopped at a pedestrian crosswalk when it 'was struck from behind by a S today... | Forecast Approved, -- P, 17 Biggest Fan -- P. 13 a |Elmore Walker, who was driv- ing the police chief from a by Finance Minister Walter hood Classified -- 26, 27, 28, 29 mpoatre -- 29 funeral. Six persons, including |Gordon. Important provisions of 'Bellesen, 33, got Klan creden- Comics --' 25 Whitey News =< |chief Mackey, suffered minor it had to be withdrawn and Mr.\tials from Imperial Wizard) Editor Ww are 18 9. " jinjuries. Mrs. Stanyon was ta- 4 : i | et ' | iditorial -- 4 omen's -- 18, 19, 20, 21 | ; ; | Gordon came under attack for'James Venable of Stone Moun-| Financial -- $0 Weather -- 2 |ken to hospital with head and} back injuries and was reported! the Klan "to show what it was." SOCIAL SCIENTIST EXPLAINS THE SLAUGHTER today in satisfactory condition.| Killing Reconstructing the rampage, : ' Pade ' i gue's wife Vera : t|London, Ont., Anglican Bishop|gation, said: 'I'm delighted." |police said Hogue's wi ' cabinet} na-|was probably the first to die,! epor | Privy(|prised at the possibility that/ tional were no independent witnesses. | car driven by civilian chauffeur) _ Spring: Season For Family Flail Mode | MIDLAND, Ont. (CP)--Doc-| ltors in this area Wednesday) criticized the manner in which| ja report Tuesday had linked) the deaths of three persons) lafter infection by an influenza} |virus. | Dr. C, A. Talbot of nearby] Port MeNicoll described Dr. H. B, Cotnam, Ontario's supervis- ing coroner, and the pathologist who conducted the autopsies on the three bodies as alarmi ts) and said much was being made} of the reports. | Local doctors all complained of a flood of telephone calls from patients concerned over jthe report, | Dr, Cotnam said in Toronto) Tuesday that a virus form of pneumonia that killed three children in the Midland district had similar symptoms to the |disease that swept across Can- jada in 1918, but has by no {means been identified, | "It should be stressed that jthere is no epidemic," Dr. Cot-| nam said, The critical doctors said they knew nothing of influenza being involved in the three deaths-- the first of which occurred in) December--until it was dis- closed by Dr. Cotnam. Steel Strike set -- May 1 PITTSBURGH (AP) The Steelworkers union promised to- day to strike the basic industry May 1 to back up its 18 cents an-hour contract demands. At the conclusion of an exec- on North Viet Nam continued. U.S, naval aircraft kept up strikes against North Vietna- mese military traffic while South Vietnamese fighter-bomb- ers attacked military buildings. In today's bloody defeat on the ground, six battalions of South Vietnamese ground forces retreated after losing 26 dead, and 86 wounded--including five American advisers. | Two defected and 28 were re-| ported missing. The government claimed at least 53 Viet Cong killed. But sources said this claim ap- peared to be exaggerated. The guerrillas captured more than 20 rifles, three mortars, one recoilless rifle and about 10 machine-guns from the govern- ment units. Only four Viet Cong weapons were captured. The government retreat came as U.S. Marines on' patrol around Da Nang had their first brief encounter with the Viet Cong. One marine was wounded but reported in -good condition. During an eight-hour patrol into a valley, outside the Da) Nang air base, the marines tangled twice with the Commu- nist guerrillas. One man was wounded, and two others col- lapsed 'ith heat prostration. The operation included the first helicopter 'assault landing of U.S. Marines in South Viet Nam, Three squadrons of South Vietnamese air force propeller- driven fighter - bombers -- the flown so far--attacked a base in North Viet Nam and reported they destroyed it, U.S, Navy fighter - bombers made five raids during the night on road traffic in North Viet Nam, No planes were lost and ire was reported minimal. ae Pilots reported destroying nine trucks and damaging eight in strafing attacks on three sep- arate convoys. The attacks cen- tred around Vinh, midway be- tween the border and Hanoi. U.S. Air Force and marine jets flew 43 sorties against Viet Cong installations and guerril- las in South Viet Nam. In An Xuyen province, 19 B-57 jet bomber sorties resulted in claim of 53 Viet Cong structures destroyed. On the ground, the . marine patrol from Da Nang exchanged machine-gun fire and hurled grenades across a hard, hot rice field as the Communist | guerrillas retreated, U.S., Peking Reps Confer WARSAW (Reuters) -- The American and Communist Chin- ese ambassadors to Poland met for more than three hours Wed- nesday, with the lengthy talks believed to indicate important discussions on Viet Nam. The meeting between China's Wang Kuo Chuan and U.S. en- voy John Cabot was one of their longest in several years. Be- cause the U.S, and Communist China have no diplomatic rela- tions, their only contact is through their Warsaw ambas- sadors. Both men kept a pact of se- crecy about the talks. Asked whether they had dis- cussed the possibility of Chine jese-American contact by means of a conference on Cambodian neutrality, Wang said only: "T thank you for your concern on largest Vietnamese air unit this matter." NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Two Men Charged In Kingston Killing KINGSTON (CP) -- Kenneth Harbour, 21, of Fabreville, Que., and Harry Moore, 23, of Montreal have been charged with capital murder in connection with the Christmas Eve holdup - killing of Paul Lawrence, a Kingston brewery store manager. The two men were ar: rested Wednesday in Montreal. Hees Ducks Questions On Leadership MONTRCAL (CP) -- George Hees, president of the Mon- treal and Canadian stock exchanges, ducked questions Wed- nesday on whether he will seek the Conservative party lead- By LARRY FRIEDMAN Life is frustrating. It is a time one and not meant to provide . In Vancouver, police found mitted to police she strangled utive board meeting, Director NEW YORK (AP)--A prom- of inadequacy for them. any answer for the slayings of the bodies of Leonard Hogue, their three sons and a daughter, Paul Hilbert said: inent social scientist offered a "They have to lash out at entire families in recent days in- a Vancouver policeman, his ranging in age from 2 to 7, She "No contract, no work." possible explanation todaw for someone and often they do it cluding a family of eight in wife and their six children in begged hospital aides to 'let me The union's wage policy com- the outbreak of recent family against those to whom they are Vancouver Wednesday their suburban home in Coquit- die' after slashing her wrists mittee was scheduled to meet slayings that have cost 25 lives most devoted." lam, "We are assuming ... and heels Tuesday. No charge later in the day to give final Orange General Hospital. boxing's Hall of Fame. in North America alone--some- Lee, 58, a professor of soci- 'SOMETHING SNAPS' the man shot the other mem- has been filed. strike authorization. thing snaps inside frustrated ology and anthropology _ "Of course,; it. is difficult to bers of the family and then . In New, London, N.H., John Both sides remain far apart people in the spring. at Brooklyn College and author understand the tensions that committed suicide," an RCMP Sargent, 32, a Korean War ma+ on any plan for averting a "Spring always is a bad time of many sociology -- texthooks build up in some people in spokesman said. The children rine veteran who is unem- strike .of 425,000 steelworkers for these things," Dr. Alfred quoted a line from Thoreau on spring,"' Lee said. 'We do know were between 3 and 13 years ployed, has been charged with | May 1. No bargaining sessions McClung Lee said in an inter the subject that something snaps inside. It old first-degree murder for the slay- jare scheduled, view : "Most men lead lives of quiet often is resolved by either vio- In South Bend, Ind., Mrs ing of his wife, Janet, 30. The |. Steelmakers are bracing for a All life is reawakening in the desperation." lence, desertion or divorce." Deanna Hanbey, 28, whose' hus- couple's four children, ranging jstrike, Preliminary shutdown} spring, the roads are open and But the sociologist stressed These slayings without appar- band often was away from in age from 3 to 9, abso were jinstrugtions have gone out to these people can't use them. that his theory is only a general ent motive have occurred; home on business trips, 'ad- found shot to death Wednesday. | mill dicerin\endiets. | monia. Dundee, whose real won the featherweight crown i ership if and when it becomes available. ; about a Toronto newspaper report that he will seek the leadership, said there is no vacancy at the moment. Johnny Dundee Dies In New Jersey EAST ORANGE, N.J. (AP) Johnny Dundee, world featherweight boxing champion, died today at He was 74 and a member of Dundee entered the hospital April 9 with an upper respiratory infection complicated by pnet- Mr. Hees, asked former East name was Joseph Carrfora, n 1923. ne