NORMAN 3X BUTLER THOMAS 15X JOHNSON TALMADGE HAYER RCMP Card Negro Claims He Aided Withdrawn In Malcolm X Slaying House Told OTTAWA (CP)--The RCMP have withdrawn an RCMP iden- tity card held by a man who was "executive assistant to ihe first minister of justice in the former government,'"' Justice Minister Cardin told the Com- mons Monday He didn't name the executive assistant. The first justice min- ister under the former Conserv ative government was Davie Fulton, now MP for Kamloops Mr. Cardin said the with- drawal followed an RCMP in- vestigation. The identity card was dated 1959 and "establishe the bearer as an officer of the RCMP and a justice of the peace. This is why there is no possibility of prosecution." Gilles Gregoire (Creditiste-- Lapointe) raised the matter last week during debate on justice estimates. He said he had asked Mr. Car din last fall whether two men purporting to be RCMP officers tried to get affidavits at that time from a Montreal restau- rant owner. Mr. Gregoire said it was al- leged then that the men, with Dr. Guy Marcoux,, then Social Credit member for Quebec- NEW YORK (AP)--Talmadge;colm X. He then sought to ex-|Justice Charles Marks and a Hayer, a 24-year-old Negro, onerate two other men on trial| jury that he now wanted to "'tell dramatically confessed in open|with him for the murder. courtroom Monday that he par- Hayer, who last Wednesday the truth." Hayer said he "did take part"|tions of all children could rise/talking about." ticipated in the assassination of swore under oath that he was|in the assassination with others, Black Nationalist Leader Mal-\innocent, told Supreme Court CANCER VICTIM VOLUNTEERS FOR RARE TRANSPLANT TES BUFFALO (AP) -- Doctors at Roswell Park memorial institute said Monday they have located a cancer victim who has agreed to participate in a rare cancer transplant with a Tucson, Ariz., business- man. The unidentified 65-year-old man from Philadelphia, and Robert F. Allen, 28, of Tucson, will come to Buffalo for the operation, perhaps this week, a spokesman said Allen, father of three, has osteogenic sarcoma, a rare type of bone cancer, and has been given two to six months to live by his doctors. His life could be saved, the doctors said, if a person could be found with the same type of cancer and the match- ing blood-type, O-positive. The treatment, which in- volves transplanting a portion of the tumor from each into the thigh of the other, also could save the life of the other | man, doctors said. Dr. Sigmond H. Nadler, as- sociate chief cancer research surgeon at Rosweli Park, New York state's cancer research and treatment centre, said he decided on the Philadelpia man. Monday afternoon Nadler and Dr, George E. Moore, also of Roswell Park, have performed a successful tumor transplant They said they have erated to combat tumors by transplanting them from one patient to another. Montmorency, had tried to get affidavits 'to the effect that a wealthy Newfoundland manu- facturer had tried to bribe cer- tain members of Parliament." Mr. Gregoire asked whether it is true one of the men with Dr. Marcoux was a former cx-! ecutive secretary to a former Conservative justice minister and held a card identifying nim as a member of the RCMP ' though he wasn't. Mr. Cardin said the RCMP 2 gad investigated and withdrawn | ' a card from a ma National 'Labor Council Protests U.S. Route For Gas Line OTTAWA (CP)--The Fort Wil- ouncil filed a protest with the Energy Board today gainst a proposal by Trans- 'anada Pipe Lines Ltd. to bring n who was Western natural gas to Ontario via a United States route. ing Canadian crude while only liam-Port Arthur District Labor|about a year ago we lost a re- fining plant in Fort William. One of the main factors in the} closing of this refinery was the! added cost of tanking crude oil from the pipeline at Duluth." operation. | found | that anti bodies can be gen- | but refused to name |federates, | Under cross examination jlater, Hayer said he was hired jto kill Malcolm X. But he de- jnied the person who hired him |was connected with the Black Muslims, as the state contends. Hayer said he had with his co-defendants, N: 3X Butler, 26, and Thomas 13} |Johnson, 30, during a luncheon jrecess Monday. | He told the court and jury: | "I told Butler and-Johnson I |know they did not have any- jthing to do with this crime-- jthat I did take part in it and what I know they weren't there I wanted to tell the jury and the court the truth." Malcolm was shot down in the Audubon Ballroom. Feb. 21, 1965, as he prepared to address a gathering of black national- ists. CURE VANDALS' SIGNS | BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (AP) |Forest rangers here have found a natural "way to obliterate painted signs and daubs left by vandalistic tourists. Marked rocks are sprayed with fertilizer which causes the growth of 4 layer of moss or lichen. his Con-| -- . rane - gone EAR te pr Se SR A A TE, IR NE AD A EE I, MAKE -OR - BREAK YEAR -- WILSON Britis LONDON (CP)--Exactly 500) jqays after taking office, Prime) |Minister Harold Wilson has} jcaneu @ new general election \for March 31, so Britain can |face |with a government backed ) h Election Slated March 31 "J don't think anyone thought|cannot be put in the position of we could have lasted as Jong as|holding up essential legisla- we have," Wilson told a tele- | tion." Mike mmnemen in alantmed Whecrer so csccteuy or majority should be EA SPREE ie GE TRS EY LS EE | . Vrwn wWerviewel MU wa 7) night, a few hours after he an-|ernment press statement. "Now this is|gin now held by Labor in the our make-or-break year, and we /630-seat House of Commons, he sen parliamentary support. 'Alberta Eases Curbs 'On Child Adoptions By THE CANADIAN PRESS The Alberta government moved Monday to wipe out re- neiwes restrictions in adoption of children by introducing a re- vised Child Welfare Act. Welfare Minister L. C. Halm- rast said he hoped the new act | would help find homes for the | 1,000 Metis children now in the) |eare of the province. Most of| them are Roman Catholics. | He said that by dropping the) jreligious provisions of the pre- 'vious act. the number of adop- | by about 60 a year Other sections of the bill pro-| vide that an unmarried person) }21 years old or over may apply} }to adopt a child. Mr. Halmrast| |said the section Was added be-| |cause many single women with the financial means to care for! a child have applied, | Also sitting Monday were leg-| /1-man bean growers marketing jnations for the election wit tl Manitoba, Island, Nova |Prince Edward Scotia, Saskatchewan and New-) ment's budget was criticized by|assemble April 18 to swear in| \foundland. The Quebec House resumes sitiing.today after al one-week adjournment. Developments in other legisla tures included Nova Scotia--The government was criticized by A. Lloyd Mac-} Donald {L---Pictou East) who said tie province's farming con-| ditions had been allowed to de- cline A stir was caused in the house when RCMP delivered a note to Premies Robert Stanfield say- a government office across the} Street. RCMP said in the note that they had received a call from a person saying a bomb was set |to go off and "we want justice." When the premier read the note alsud H was greeted by laugh- ter, ing a bomb had been planted in} said. Heath immediately accused the prime minister of '"'cashing in on a temporary advantage'-- the advantage of a substantial Labor party edge in public fa- vor, as reported by public opin- ion polls--to hold an election _ |*before the consequences of Manitoba -- Agriculture Min-|their mismanagement become ister George Hutton said the/opyious." province's farms would have clear sailing this year with a continuing trend toward special- ization, Last year was a "'rea-| ; sonable year" for the industry.|S°2'8_ are held. by non-youne D. L. Campbell (L--Lakeside)|members (the Speaker and his said the agricultural cost-price| 'eputies) Fe Bd Mees agen squeeze in Manitoba is too big that the opinion samplings had for a provincial government to}. ' ee handle. "We need programs| influenced his decision to call an election now. that are beyond the powers of this government completely atid TAKING NO RISK it is these that we should be) The prime minister contended jthat a heavy program of legisla- Ontario -- John Spence ag oo ard geese can ap He " }could not risk having the gov- Kent East) called for an exam-|.oment crippled by the deaths ination into the bean industry.|o¢ one or two elderly MPs. He protested the "Gestapo-like| is schedule calls for Parlia- a used When the Ontario) ment to be dissolved March 10, arm Producers' Marketing after dealing with temporary Board appointed a_ three-man money supply measures and board of directors to replace the) <gme 20 government bills. Nom- rent House, the Tories 302 and the Liberals nine. Three other board Saskatchewan -- The' govern-| close March 21, The new Parliament would re- A. EF. Blakeney (CCF--Reginajits members and elect a West), opposition finan@al|Speaker. The state opening of critic, for failing to ease the tax| Parliament by the Queen, with burden on lower income groups|the new government's program and open educational opportu-| outlined in the speech from the nities throne, would be held April 21. Conservative Leader Edward) Labor has 314 seats in the cur-| re "THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, Merch 1, 1966 3 TORONTO (CF)--Goaded by opposition criticism, 'Provincial Treasurer James Allan turned in a shouted defence in the leg- islature Monday of salaries paid Ontario's civil servants. Kenneth Bryden (NDP-- Woodbine) had spent much of ithe afternoon attacking Reform Cs. nn | Tlasantaden a "make-or-break year"|nounced the election in a brief |larger than the three-seat mar-| WAAAVAALOLD NLAYo 'Riot In Miami MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--About 150 union men -- some wield- ing pipes, clubs, hammers, wrenches and knives--staged a bloody riot at a downtown con- struction project Monday. Six were admitted to hospital and 14 others arrested. Police said the fight--quelled by more than 50 officers and firemen--was caused by a juris- dictional dispute. One of those in hospital suf- fered a deep stab pround in the shoulder. Another had a broken arm. The other four had head and scalp wounds, The battle involved members | Of Local 349 of the International |Botherhood of Electrical Work- jers and Local 487 of the Inter- | national Union of Operating En- gineers. A spokesman for the elec- jtrical workers said it began | with a dispute over which union jshould lay underground cables |near a new bridge over the Mi- ami River. Civil Servants' Pay Sparks Bitter Dehate institutions Minister Allan Grossman about salary scales for* social workers and correc- tional officers in his depart- ment. Mr. Allan interjected that - Civil servants salaries were not imposed by the government's Civil Service Commission but Service Association and the commussion. "As far as I know they are entirely satisfactory to those who yeceive them," he said. Mr. Bryden replied that pub- lications of the Civil Service As« sociation showed a long his of grievances and dissatisfac- tions among civil servants, "You don't negotiate at all," he added. Mr. Allan demanded a retrac- tion. "I made a statement and it is the truth,'"' he said. "I ob- ject to being told it's untrue." Mr. Bryden countered: 'As far as I'm concerned your in- terpretation is 100 per cent wrong and anybody with any brains could see that it's wrong." He alleged that every stage of civil service negotiations is a bitter fight. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. | Good Names To Remember When Buying or Selling REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker--President Bill MeFeetereVice Pres, | Schofield-Aker Ltd, 723-2265 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS TELE-BIBLE FINAL FUR CLEARANCE | 75 King St. E., Oshawa Tele-Bible Millions Direct Their Lives By the Hol Its words Bring Meaning To Life Dial 728-2221 for Confidence, Meaning, and Hope 728-222) rer executive assistant to a former Conservative justice minister. It asked the board to refuse the application and force Trans- Canada to move the gas on an all-Canadian route. 'The board's public hearing on the Trans- Canada proposal opened today. Guards Also Have Records _|,,7'2, comet's bret. sup OTTAWA (CP)--The criminal|Lakehead Chamber of Com- records of men charged with|Mmerce, said the present gas guarding Canada's criminals pipeline through Northern Onta were enumerated in' the House/T!0 is unable to supply the of Commons Monday. growing demand for fuel by In a written reply for Frank northern industries Howard (NDP--Skeena), Solici Some mills and plants had tor- General Pennell told the|been hampered Jy a shortage Commons that since Jan. 1,/of gas supplies during peak de- 1965, 12 emplovees in the peni mand periods this winter tentiary service have been be The brief recalled arguments fore the courts on a variety of; made 10 years ago that a line charges through Northern Ontario was Of this number fi were not economically feasible. Yet found guilty of being intoxicated! it had turned out to be a com- in a public place, three were plete success with 25 per cent found guilty of theft and thereof its capacity taken up in the was one guilty verdict each of north. gross indecency, assault and) 'The present line extends east impaired driving, A charge against the 12th Man"rane, and then south to Tim- was dismissed. mins and North Bay, following Three of. those convicted Of the route of Highway 11. intoxication still are working for the service. Two resigned SHOULD FOLLOW SHORE Two of those found guilty of The labor council said an ex- theft were kept on staff but/tension should be built from the moved to other institutions. One| Lakehead along the shore of resigned, Lake Superior to Sault Ste. Ma- The employee who was found rie, following the northern route guilty of gross indecency was,of the Trans-Canada Highway fined $200 and placed on $500 which had not been built when bond to keep the peace for three the original line went in years. He resigned. If the gas was routed through An employee charged with the U.S. there was no guaran- assault was found guilty and is tee that Canadian customers still on staff pending an appeal. would get it The employee charged with "The people of northwestern impaired driving was found Ontario know from sad experi- guilty and released from the ence that once any transmission service line enters the U.S. neither Ca- 23 nadian or any provincial gov- ernments has any control over it," the brief said When an oil pipeline from the West was routed through the U.S. there were assurances that e Syrian-Communist Link Tightens? DAMASCUS ¢AP)--Syria will not a drop of Canadian crude move closer to the Communist oil would be processed in the driving |from:the Lakehead to Coch- DECIDES MAJOR SPENDING The hearings, which may. last two weeks, will decide $100,000,- 000 worth of construction in| Canada and $200,000,000 worth in the U.S. The proposal in- volves movement of nearly 765,- 900,000 cubic feet of.gas a day but only 87,600,000 in net ports. Trans-Canada proval for 1, Addition of 21 compressors | in new and existing Stations 2. Construction of 143 miles of new pipeline in Canada 3. Addition of more than 242, miles of pipeline "'loop," in e° fect twinning the existing line in such a way that its gas-car-} rying capacity is more than dou-| bled 4. Export of an additional 677, 000,000 cubic feet of gas a day| at Emerson, Man., and impor- tation of that amount at Sault| Ste. Marie, Ont. and Sarnia to) service northern, central and eastern Ontario, and Quebec. 5. Export of 87,600,000 cubic) feet a day at Emerson for sale) in the U.S. Trans-Canada al-| ready is licensed to export up to 240,000,000 cubie feet a day. | PLANS EXTRA PIPELINE Associated with this applica- tion is Trans-Canada's proposal to build, in association with the American Natural Gas Co. of Detroit, a 1,000-mile 36 - inch} pipeline from Emerson south of} the Great Lakes to Sault Ste. Marie and Sarnia. In its present application Trans-Canada has the support of gas distributors in Eastern Can- ada--Consumers" Gas Co. of} Toronto, Union Gas Co. of Can-| ada Itd., Chatham, Quebec Natural Gas Corp., Montreal, and the newly-formed Northern and Central Gas Co, of Toronto. Trans Canada spokesmen | point to the support of their ap- plication by Northern and Cen- tral, and say the entry of nat- | ex-| is seeking ap pumning| bloc under the left-wing social ist regime that seized power ir a coup d'etat last week, the offi- cial newspaper of the new lead- ership reports In the first declaration on for eign policy made since Wednes day's military revolution, the governmem newspaper Al Thawra declares Syria's new regime "will look more posi tively to the socialist (Commu nist) countries to bring about a practical formula for a joint struggle against world imperial- ism." Syria, the newspaper says "will also try to consolidate economic and technical co-oper ation within the socialist exper ment with the socialist camp."') U.S "Yet today there is a thriving through us- refinery in Duluth, Minn., ural gas into Northern Ontario Sault Ste. Marie will lead to industria) expansion DON'T Che KRih Room NOW OPEN SUNDAY 4 TO 7:30 P.M. Continental French Buffet Served Daily 11:30 - GENOSHA HOTEL FORGET 2 p.m, -- 5 to 8 p.m, jel May we su ggest a Save-for-the-Little-Things-you-might-otherwise-never-buy Account? CANADIAN IMPERIAL BANK OF COMMERCE