'JAMAIS', SAYS ASSASSIN IN ACTION AGAINST CBS Princess Never Bait' For Rasputin NEW YORK (AP) -- Prince Felix Youssoupoff denied Thursday telecast statements that he used his wife as bait io-jure Raspatiini; the powertul Mad Monk of Czarist Russia, to his death in 1916, The frail, 79 - year - old prince, his voice cracking, completed his direct testi- mony before a New York state Supreme Court jury in his $1,500,000 invasion - of- privacy suit against the Col- umbia Broadcasting System, The prince answered in Fre.oe -- "jamais" (neyer)-- to a long series of questions dealing with the script of the January, 1963, telecast en- titled If I Should Die, Through his lawyer, Her- | bert Zelenko, the prince at- tempted to show that the pro- } gram was based on fiction rather than history in connec- tion with the Dec, 16, 1916, slaying of Rasputin in Yous- soupoff's Moika Palace in St, Petersburg (New Leningrad), Tue--prlnes - denied --that--he had ever said; 'My wife is nobility, wealthy, beautiful, everything Rasputin desires among his feminine followers. He believes that his interview here tonight is the beginning of her conversion." The statement was attri- buted to him in the TV show, The prince also denied the following exchange attributed to him in the script: Rasputin - "Ah! My little friend, you have come just in time. I have just got rid of my visitors, Why do you hide your face?" Prince - "I told you no one must know anything and my wife's reputation... ." Another script passage that THE CHIEF HAS INDICATED Harkness, Hees, Fulton the prince denied making was: Rasputin ~- "You are ashamed of my company?" Prince' "No-F ater Grex ory, not at all. The princess prefers to meet you privately, She regards this as a very delicate matter." In the telecast, this conver- sation allegedly took place in a basement dining room of the palace, where the poison- ing and shooting of Rasputin was undertaken by the prince, Wednesday, the prince teati- fied that his motive in join- ing the plot to kill Rasputin was his repugnance over the monk's debauchery, Thursday, his lawyer asked the prince to define dehauch- ery. "A kind of corruption," he said. Mackenzie King's cabinet during \the Second World War for the |same reason. He also said no deals have! been made to achieve the re- stored party unity. "Deals never will be made as The generally accepted ver- sion has been that Rasputin was slain to break the power he held in the court of Czar Nichalae The ovzar'« aan anf. fered from hemophilia and the czarina believed Rasputin could cure him. The monk was thus able to influence the ezarina and, through her, the ezar, and became virtually the highest authority in the country. Under cross-examination by Carleton Eldridge, the CBS lawyer, the prince identified two books he has written deal- | ing with the Rasputin episode. These were Rasputin, pub- lished in 1927, and Lost Splen- dour, published in 1953. The prince was asked, in | reference to the assassina- tion: "Have you ever been prosecuted in any court of | law for this crime?" The prince answered: "Never, because I am not a professional assassin." He said he left Russia vol- | untarily for exile in Paris, How to relieve THE CSHAWA TIMES, #; » Octeber 22; 1068 3 34 Pay With Their Lives For Part In Africa Revolt BUJUMBURA, Burundi' (Reu- tera) --Tinity oul eomscre ane police were executed by firing squad here Thursday night for their part in Monday's short- lived revolt, Two others, condemned with them. by the council of war Thursday, escaped as they were being taken to the: execution ground near Bujumbura's sports stadium. _The 4 shot included five DOMI SPECIAL Clark's in Chili Sauce Pork « Beans army officers and two office Sf ths -astonsl-poul They were among the muti- neers who attacked the royal palace at Usumbura, 5! and injuring Prime Minister Leopold Biha. pol 3 A number of leading political figures in this former Belgian trusteeship territory were un- der arrest or being sought by security forces in connection with the revolt, NION | In Diefenbaker Cabinet By DAVE McINTOSH | In a speech before a packed BROCKVILLE, Ont. (CP) --/theatre audience of about 1,000 Opposition Leader Diefenbaker|here Thursday night, Mr. Dief- |has indicated that if the Con-|enbaker said the Liberals in the servatives win office Nov, 8 he|1957 campaign had stated that will invite Douglas Harkness,|the Conservatives couldn't form|, ; George Hees and Davie Fulton,|an adequate cabinet if elected,|!{ the Liberals don't get @ ma-| among others, .nto the cabinet. He said the Conservatives|!ority he hopes another party Mr, Harkness and Mr, Hees\now. have cabinet experience|Will. We are going to accommo- lresigned from the administra-\and could form a government|date him. tion in 1963 in a split over nu-jafter Nov. 8 with experienced) Mr, Diefenbaker blasted back clear policy and Mr, Fulton left;men at- Privy Council President Guy jit to become Conservative) Mr. Diefenbaker said minis-| Favreau who said in a Montreal Alliters left his cabinet in 1963 on|speech Wednesday night that the Use Dodd's Kidney Pills for prompt relief from the systemic eondi- tion eausing the backache, Soon you feel better | rest better, Dw pend on Dodie jong I'm leader of the party," | he added | One reason Prime same BACK Pearson had called the election was that he thought the Con- 15-oz. Tins servatives were divided "The prime minister says that MAN AND THE SEA' ning novel, "The Old Man And The after him (Hernandez), (AP) OLD MAN OF 'THE OLD Anselmo Hernandez, 89, a arriving from Cuba, The re- battered Panama hat on his fugee says the late novelist head, talks to reporters this Ernest Hemingway pattern- morning in Key West after ed his Pulitzer Prize win- 'THE BEST BATTLES -- 9 | With 'Red' On Ice Fulltime, York West No Sure Thing de- \leader in British Columbia, | lare candidates in the current|questions of principle. Ministers|Conservative leader is a separa- Jelection 'had quit Liberal Prime Minister|tist and dangerous to Canada, | LET'S SAVE THE OSHAWA CREEK VALLEY Sea" i we JOHN LeBLANC political wars, and George|$1,000,000,000 venture for (CP) -- Hockey|Hogan, a businessman who has|veloping power in Labrador retirementibeen close to the top in Pro-| Another credential is the cer-| gressive Conservative councils. |tainty that he'll join the Pearson In the pre-Kelly era, calcula-|cabinet if he and the govern-| By TORONTO star Red Kelly's from politics has removed York! West from the Liberals' sure-| ment make the grade. And in thing column and made it the} arena for a match between a pair of political heavyweights. tions were simpler. Since a 1914 redistribution, only one Liberal had sneaked in, and that by 60 the background is the fact. that) the personable and smart Mr.) Winters is also a good bet as next Liberal leader. This could) depend to some extent on his) Until the Toronto Maple|votes in 1935. The 1958 Conserv- Leafs' winger-defenceman camejative plurality was a record on the scene in 1962, the big/18,619. But in two elections Red riding in the north and westjran that up to 17,001 in the environs of Toronto had a de-jother direction by 1963. | cided reluctance to send anyone HAS SHOWN SUCCESS but a Conservative to the Com-| Besides this solid cushion, Mr. mons. With Red, the pendulum/Winters has going for him a na- swung all the way over for the/tional reputation as a bright Liberals. isuccess in politics and business. This new-found tendency has At 56, his career has encom- cancelled out any assurance passed three federal portfolios that the old-time or more re-|---reconstruction, resources and cent electoral mood will hold in|public works. the Nov. 8 federal election for} He's a director of more than| either of two newcomers, Theyja dozen big firms and an off- are Robert H. Winters, a busi-|and-on headline-maker as chair- nessman and former Liberal|man of British Newfoundland cabinet minister returning to the Corp., currently engaged in a DIRECTORS MeFADYEN, N. $, MeNEIL, Harold MARTIN, Geo. OSTAFICHUK, Dr, N. OWENS, Bill ROBINSON, Herb ROSS, Keith SAYWELL, Steve MILLMAN, Norm -- AKER, Reg. CONANT, Mrs DAFOE, Finley DEHART, John DOHERTY, Dr. Brian DRYGALA, Jon EDWARDS, Tom GREENE, Arn GRINDLEY, Frank THOMAS, T, WOODS, Dr, Barry WOOLCOTT, Rob't SINOLAIR, Rev. D, MARKS, & FULTON, Dr, A COLLACUTT, L. ARMSTRONG, Mrs. H. Consultant G. D. WOODBINE Taha GREENWOOD OPENS MONDAY, NEW POST TIME 1 P.M, I Shulman ordered an in- SIMCOE HALL SETTLEMENT HOUSE (SIMCOE ST, S$.) Good Nemes To Remember hen Buying or Selling REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker--President Bill MeFeeters--Vice Pres Schofield-Aker Ltd. 723-2265 Simcoe Hall Settlement House serves Oshawa in many ways, In addition to @ very active boys' and girls' recreation program, Simcoe Hall provides material welfare assistance, fomily counselling assistance and educational services, In the field of education Simcoe Hall pro- vides speech correction classes, nursery school, piano musie school and facilities for the Deaf ang Hard of Hearing Association School. The Simcoe Hall Speech Correction Classes are held Saturday mornings, The majority of the children attending are school age, a number are pre-school age, and assistance has also. been given to adults who have lost their speech through illness, During 1965, there were forty-eight children who took advantage of these closses. A number of the children ottending these classes ore from Whitby, Ajax, Pickering and Newcastle, The majority ore referred by their doctors or Public Health Nurses Patrick O'Hanley this when he ad In court Thursday Saturday ! showing in York West, where $60 000 | | e losing a 12-year grip on his na- tive Nova Scotia constituency of} Mr. Hogan, 37, head of a large| automobile dealership, is secre-| Conservatives and one of the) party's deep thinkers, though He was tour manager of John Diefenbaker's miracle - working also of the one in 1962, by which jtime he had become a national He took sharp issue with the Diefenbaker government's trade! ' 6 H r S Sh ] |promotion with Castro's Cuba in| 1962, and the next year he be Killed Her', Says Shulman vice-president. He has written a! The woman apparently re-\D00k on politics, The Conserva- Love, 61, of suburban Scarbor-|ceived a transfusion of 500 cu-|""" ough died in hospital of jaun-|bic centimetres of the wrong|resular political column in the | Toronto Telegram incompatible blood, Dr. Morton/ago, he added. She died Thurs-)°" gsey an, Metropolitan Tor:\day. West's 117,000 votes, Mr. Hogan has been contending that inter- day. quest. 5 : | e : | C. Douglas Wickenden, as-2t Odds with nationalistic as- This mistake shortened her bide pe pects of Liberal economic pol Kast General Hespital> "said! probably srould not have lived wes Love was seriously i1/|Cepts the Liberal platform another year,"' he said . Mrs. Love's husband,|Brewin, 24, of the New Demo showed the woman had a mas-'Thomas, a former Scarborough|cratic Party, A lawyer, she is sive stomach hemorrhage, a | been in poor health since hav-/NDP member for Toronto creas, hardening of the arteries Greenwood, Third-party candid-| and a recent heart attack. three years ago ates far up the track in York West, BRINGS 'BEEF' INTO COURT . TORONTO (CP)--A_ hus- that he threw a roast at his roast of beef but if he ment in their home Oct, 19. | throws it at her "that comes Magistrate F. C. Hayes 'eee sault."' within the definition of as- | James sault" and gave O'Hanley mitted or serve a 10-day jail term. Pa VOTE COUNT! he is making his first run since ( Queens-Lunenburg in 1957. : an ' ¢ | anadian h M hi ome | eer Pen | C G ampionsnip tary of the Ontario Progressive not always along orthodox lines. caravans of 1957 and 1958, and Woman Given Wrong Blood "stor sven lcame--and remains--a former 'Oo (CP) Agnes} TORONT -- tives in Canada, and conducts a dice caused by transfusion of|type of blood about six days In the campaign for York onto's chief coroner, said Thurs-| Dr : national businessman Winters is life. hut she was en sick she sistant administrator of Torontoli Sis Wintabe cave haces. vhen admitted Oct. 13 Third contender is Martha Dr. Shulman said an autopsy fire chief, said his wife had|'he daughter of Andrew Brewin, | lung clot, cancer of the pan ing surgery.for a duodenal ulcer i {| tes have customarily finished . | VER-ROAST' BITTERNESS | band can serve his wife a wife, Olga, during an argu- within the definition of as- said: "I think that comes learned two weeks to pay a $50 fine MAKE YOUR The Simcoe Holl Nursery School for children 4 years of age is conducted five mornings @ week. It is licenced and inspected by the Day Nurseries Branch, Ontario Department of Welfare. The aim is to' provide o setting in which children may come to know each other and take direction from adults other than their parents. The child is helped to develop @ sense of trust in the world outside his own home and a trust in his own ability to cope with the life outside his home, Each child's home is visited by one of the nursery school staff and this liason between the home and the school is of great help to the teachers in the understending of the child Piano lessons ore provided for children at Simcoe Hall, Most of the lessons are given by teen-age girls who are advanced pupils recommended by Mrs. L. W. Parrott. A number of the children who take lessons donot have a piano at home and use the pianos at Simcoe Hall for practice periods RE-ELECT HONEY ATTENTION BUSINESSMEN... ! We serve a special businessmen's lunch, including main course, soup, bread, butter, vegetables ond desert, for 80¢ and up. Tea Or coffee 5c: extra, TRY US TODAY! We also speciolize in delicious @ LIGHT LUNCHES and toste tempting © CHINESE FOODS Including f\ake-Out-Orders, wi Sui set Simcoe Hall provides space for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Association, The Association conducts a school for pre-school children who are referred by an eor specialist, At the present time the school is in operation two days a week Simcoe Hall Settlement House is under the direction of the Women's Welfare. Leogue of Oshowa and is financed by. the Greater Oshawa Community Chest United Appeo! GREATER OSHAWA COMMUNITY CHEST 11 ONTARIO STREET FOR CANADA RESTAURANT Upsteire 14% KING ST. E. 728-4666 -- 725-0073 : Ligh Herold &. Pierson, Pres, PHONE 728-0203 Robert J. Branch, Executive Secretory LIBERAL ©