Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman> ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties. Weather Report Tuesday cloudy, windy and cold, with occasional shower or snowflurry,.. Low tonight 85; high tomorrow 40, Dshawa Gimes | Post Office Department Authoriged os ecard Clows Laer Pest Chee pany / VOL. 98 -- NO. 239 ase nol elie PBaiveree OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1966 TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES ArmA CITY PHILATELIST, 10, HAS RARE STAMP Budding young philate- list Paul Seveik, 10, of Whit- by intently studies. a very special stamp from 'his col- lection, It is one of a set of four commemorating the birth of his great gand- father, Ottokar Sevcik, who was a famous slovakian "violinist. 'Pa wl) who lives at 1008 Byron Street South, has the com- ete set. He has been col- Tecting stamps since he was five and also collects coins posteards, and miscellan- eous objects of interest, (Story on page five.) ~--Oshawa Times Photo 18-Year-Old Tojo Will Certified As Authentic From Agence France-Presse TOKYO (CP)--The will of the executed General Hideki Tojo, Japanese prime minister during the Second World War, found after 18 years, has been certi- fied authentic by experts, it was learned Sunday. | |Britain and the U.S,: The document was received from an anonymous sender in August by Ichico Kiyose, for- mer speaker of the House of Representatives, who submitted it to experts two months ago. He is writing a series of art- ~ficles in the newspaper Yomiuri on "unrevealed facts about the Tokyo tribunal proceedings on 'jthe Japanese war criminals'. The testament is divided into three parts: To the people' of Britain and the United States, To my compatriots, the Jdpa- nese and To the youth of Japan. In the first part, Tojo told "We lost the war because you were Stronger and not because you had right on your side, History will eventually prove this to the case.' He then denounced the United States for using atemic bombs 'to kill more Thon O00 GOA tenn nnns nanntn than $00,000 innocent- people. WARNS OF MORE WARS had words of admonition wars and the whole of mankind will be destroyed," Tojo wrote. In his message to the Japa- nese people, Tojo said the "greater East Asia war' was provoked by "them" and "we were forced to fight for the sake of national existence and in the people's self-defence." "If fair public opinion were to judge who was responsible for the war, it would be apparent that they were responsible and not we. We lost the war, but the fight was with us." Tojo enjoined Japanese-not to lose heart because of the defeat, but to believe in the destiny of Japan, "which is a nation of the gods, an eternal and imperish- able state," For the youth of Japan, ie e told them "'not to be subservi- ent-to the strong, not to follow |Special papal | straight: forward path of loy: By RAY KOHN NEW YORK (AP) -- Police say they have arrested 20 mem- bers of the right-wing Minute. men organization, seizing tons of ammunition and weapons and breaking up what they called a plot to blow up three rivate camps in New York tate, New Jersey and Con+ necticut. 2, _Nahtning | predawn _Talds Weatcnester ed on Long Island, and at upstate Syracuse, more than 166 siaie, Gouniy and local po- we went into action, They said confiscated arsenals that Included mortars, b re. ue Attorney Nat Hentel, He would not disclose the identity of the tars get camps, but added that the Minutemen group is dedicated to destro: "Communist, left wing and liberal' installations of any kind. Hentel said the. camps were scheduled for destruction Sun- day, a few days after the start of the hunting season. Six of the men all Avessed in hunting garb, were seized in a Queens diner. Officers said guos, ammunition and bombs were found in the car of one of them, Another man was ar- rested in his Katonah, West- machine guns, semi-automatic rifles, homemade bombs, ma- ehetes, crossbows, garroting and a million rounds of ammu- nition, The raids were announced hester County home, LAY CHARGES Hentel charged the men with conspiracy to commit arson and most received additional charges of violation of the anti- POLICE NAB MINUTEMEN, weapons law and unlawful as- sembly, During an investigation which began last January, police said they learned the following about the Minutemen: That they tried to infiltrate the army reserve's special forces--the Green Berets--in Staten Island, to learn guers rilla tactics, --Tuat memoers Of the group distributed racist literature in Queens, purporting to be from Neere extremists and urging Nog roes to 'kill white devils," at field manoeuvres were held in Suffolk County and in the vicinity of Ellenville, Robert B. DePugh, of Nor- borne, Mo,, who established the Minutemen six years ago, was not available for comment, De- Pugh also is national chairman Ano ENAL of the newly-organized Conserve ative Patriotic party, Membership. in the Minute- men has been estimated from a few thousand to 1 5 In Milford, Conn., Thomas Hart, Connecticut state chait- man of the Patriotic party, rr the arrests were "'an apparen hoax" or that authorities had confused the Minutemen with another organization. : DePugh has said his organ- ization has units in various parts of the United States and Conducts gueiTilia Ueining iw resist any Communist takeover of the U.S. Minutemen meotings are secret, as are their training operations. New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller said, "there's no room in New York State for this kind of extremism and these kind of misguided ane " vreaivt tH NEGLI best cigar - puffing form, boomed: "I have come to en-|' ijam the one who needs | |couragement, Erhard Stands Firm 'TREYSA, West Germany Reuters -- Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, apparently unshaken by the collapse of his West German government coalition, assured a state election rally today that he will remain head of govern- ment, The 69-year-old chancellor, in courage you, You may think I @n- but that is not true, "y shall continue in office," Erhard made a brave show In his barnstorming tour, designed to win votes for his Christian Democratic party in the Hesse state election Nov, 6, But his days as chancellor ya ge to he binge ah Rw j cabinet 'Thursday of mad Free Wife Sees Ex-Minister Ordained ROTTENBURG, West Germ- any (AP)--A former minister of the ---- Church was or- Catholic priest at a cateoneny Saturday at- tended by his wife and five of his seven children, The ordination of Rev, Harold R. Bronk, a 38-year-old native of New Jersey, came under a special dispensation granted by Pope Paul. Catholic sources said they believed Father Bronk was the first former married Anglican pastor to be granted such privilege. Father Bronk was ordained at Martini Chapel here by Bishop) Carl Joseph Leiprecht of Rotten- burg. The bishop personally pre- sented him to his new parish at Se ANN dF "ROBERT DE PUGH +s One Of 20 Held In N.Y, ot 4 ul Greets ith Big Welcome REV. J. L. O'ROURKE (left), Roman Catholic priest, and Anglican minis- ter Rev, Frank Tomkinson, father of the bride, offi- ciate at the marriage in Stratford, Ont,, Saturday of Patricia Elaine Tomkinson and Richard Gary Smith. RC And Anglican Priests Otficiate At Wedding STRATFORD, Ont. Roman Catholic (CP) --| Ecumenism took another step forward here Saturday when al and an Angli-/tual marriage vows, Father O'Rourke conducted the marriage service at St, Jo seph's Church, He took the ac- Mr, Tom- the village of Dusslingen near|can were married in a church) kinson took the epistle and con- here Saturday night. SAYS FIRST MASS | Sunday, Father Bronk said) his first mass in the village's | new prefabricated church. Most! of Dusslingen's 400 Catholics turned out to meet their new pastor, In the history of the Roman Catholic Church in the United! States, Father Bronk is the sec- ond .married former Protestant! minister to be ordained under! permission, former pastor of | e-Hely-Trintty Luthveran atl "Tt the use of the atom bomb/|to the emperor and love ot {Church in North Bergen, N.J,, ig not banned there will be a} 'your country, the very spirit o Miithird, fourth and fifth world! Japan," FALSE CHARGES Joe Truhill, an escapee from a Brazilian lockup, said at a press conference at. his Richardson, Tex., home, a suburb of Dallas, that 'he and three other Americans spent nine months in jail on false charges because of Brazil- ian official's quest for a fabulous diamond. .He claimed innocence of Brazilian charges of smug- gling, on which he and two Arkansas men were sen tenced to three years in prison and an Oklahoman sentenced to seven years (AP Wirephoto) Man Bitten By Rabid Dog t Found.In Nick Of Time SOUTH BEND, Ind, (AP)--A Siyoung veterinarian "unknow ingly infected by a rabid dog was found returning from his honeymoon during the weekend and started receiving injections just 24 hours inside the time limit Dr had Wayne A, Endres, 24, {been the object ot a search be- jtween Iowa and°the East Coast and lookouts were posted at Canadian border points, Authorities had feared he would not be found before the two-week incubation period for rabies had expired. He was jhe left on his honeymoon stopped by a passing motorist jjust 24 hours before the period | expired, and he received shots in Ume A basset hound died the day Tests the dog was) later confirmed rabid. But Dr. Endres was with! tueky and Indiana.' his bride, presumably headed for Niagara Falls, N.Y. It wasn't until the couple was] returning home Saturday after- noon that an unidentified mo- torist flagged down their car in Indiana and told them the dog was rabid The motorist told Endres he recognized the car from a de-/ scrption broadcast over a tele- vision station Andres received his first of a series of anti + rabies shots shortly after at an Indianapo- lis hospital, He said he was un- aware of the widespread search, "We were headed for gara Falls," Endres said, "but ¢ | became a Catholic priest, | Nia | decided to see a friend in Car-! bondale,. li." "The scenery was just beau tiful down there so instead we) went to southern Illinois, Ken- also| in Germany. U.S. WORKS IN MAXIMUM SECRECY can priests officiating Rev, J, L,. Joseph's Roman Church. and Rey kinson, of St can Church wedding of | daughter, lvis, 22, Smith, 22, Ont, It officiated Mr in and of New was the first time ding ceremony here. "T don't know if it was the| was O'Rourke, of St.| Cathodicicisions of the Vatican Council Frank Tom-jlast year, which declared that Stephen's Angli-ia non-Roman Catholic the;|man could assist. with a mixed Tomkinson's| marriage in a Roman Catholic Patricia Elaine Ma-! Church Richard Gary) Hamburg, | that/Guinea on In| priests of the two.churches have|service said it was a_ history Ihlindly the distorted doctrines | £964, Father Ernest Adam Beck, |participated jointly in a wed-| making event, The report said) Shaw had continued his hunger| leurrent new," but to follow the lhe 4i, and |with Roman Catholic and Angli-| cluding prayers. Mr, Tomkinson said the cere- mony was made possible by de- clergy> The ceremony compared al- most identically with a report of a wedding in Rabaul, New Saturday. A wire tthe New -Guinea first.time iT" the nony "probably ifirst in history but I'm sure it's|such a joint ceremony has been the first in Stratford," Tomkinson said, Mr. |celebrated anywhere Thailand's Buildup Strong the bombers of the U.S. Strategic SINGAPORE (Reuters) -- In maximum secrecy, the United of state and defence, Dean Rusk and Robert McNaimaia, in the world," take give All are of Stratford. The marriage took place in St, Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, (CP Wirephoto) U.S. Student Found Guilty ADELAIDE, Australia (AP)-- An American student who led a hunger strike with other stu- dents on the steps of the South Australian state parliament to protest U.S. President John- son's visit to Australia was found guilty today of loitering, Daniel Joseph Shaw, 24, was penalized only for the cost of the case, It came to $14.56, Shaw, a graduate student at Adelaide University, was icharged with six other students lof loitering on the steps of Par- liament House Oct. 21 after po- lice requested them to move on, SEOUL (AP) -- President Johnson was welcomed to South Korea today by an estimated 2,000,000 persons who broke ' metal fences, swarmed _ aaedaptopel tet a out the : 'of a) Furnes no eastern Tim ol The | preside srevoanded by|wielded t dozen teas to mix ih Py fetti-tossing, flag-waving throng. Once he climbed down a road- side embankment to a hear rice paddy to inspect new! ar stalks to wipe the dirt sen Johnson's shoes, Facing massed crowds esti- mated by police at 350,000 in City Hall Square, the president voiced concern for the safety of those who pushed, shoved and trampled each other in an effort to get a better view. He urged courtesy and caution "so we don't hurt anyone," Children caught in the crush were escorted weeping to the sidelines, Harking back to the Korean War in which 54,246 Americans died, Johnson said he was standing on "hallowed ground," "T have come to express our gratitude for the brave and generous help you are giving to our common ally, Viet Nam-- both on the battlefield and in rebuilding the countryside. This is the act of a nation that under. stands the nature of aggression and that knows what it means to have help in resisting that aggression," There was a variety of home- made placards and banners-- "Welcome to king of democ- racy,"' "You are sunlight of all free nations," 'We love big shot of free world," and "We love brave Johnny," One banner, presumably for Mrs. Johnson, said "Welcome bluebird," '|vested rice, An aide us Shaw's lawyer told the court jstvike in jail after refusing to accept-bail, Shaw has refused to give his| home address in the United States, B-52 Strato-Portress States has achieved a huge mili- tary buildup in Thailand, with powerful air bases under the Thai flag from which a number of raids on North Viet Nam are believed to have been launched Washington has admitted to having 25,000 men. there, but press estimates say the number is 35,000 and still rising The three-day visit to Bang- kok last week of President John- eon has spotlighted the Ameri- ean buildup In Thailand, which critics of the administration like Senators Wayne Morse and Wil- liam Fulbright fear could em- broil the United States in an- other conflict as serious as the Viet Nam war, The Johnson administration has refused to let the secretaries public testimony on Thailand be- fore Senator Fulbright's foreign relations committee, The official reason for the presence of U.S. forces in Thai- land, a member of the South- east Asia Treaty Organization, is that they are helping to equip and train Thai troops, at Bangkok's request, to deal with insurgents, GIVEN HUGE AIRFIELD In 'August, chanting Buddhist monks, fireworks, and a cere: monial march past of U.S. and Thai troops marked the handing over to Thailand of a $40,000,. 000 military airfield at U-Tapao, the largest and most modern in Southeast Asia, Ite 11,000 - foot runway can Air Command, which are too big to use in any. South Viet- namese airfield and are. cur rently launched from Guam, a Pacific island 2,200 miles east of Viet Nam Five miles from U-Tapao, a port is nearing completion on the Gulf of Siam in the Sattahip area, The new port will be able to handle nine ocean-going ships at deep-water berths at the same time, Two othér major air" bases and abdut 40 airstrips are be- ing built elsewhere in Thailand, The Americans are also de- veloping radar, telecommunica- tions and read networks along the hitherto almost inaccessible areas bordering Laos and Cam- bodia. 2,000,000 Break Fences, Swarm Around Police So much. confettl and was tossed at the pres! limousine. that Secret Service rennin our around them: to Johnson had confettl in. his hair and a_ flower blossom lodged under his tie, The trans» parent roof of the auto was covered with flowers, There was no sign of hostile demonstration at any along the way, re son's bodyguards got one scare when a young man raced inte-- the street directly in front the presidential car, As security men dashed to. the youth, the car took a sigzag route for about half a block, The young man wanted to Johnson a flag, STEELWORKERS REJECT OFFER OSHAWA (Staff) -- Strik- ing steelworkers today voted to reject a new contract offer made by Ontario Mal- leable Iron Co, Ltd, Ratification of the terms of the new agreement was recommended by Local 1500's negotiating committee, About 500 steelworkets, on strike since June 15, met at the United Auto Workers Hall on Bond street at 16 a.m, A secret ballot started at 12.30 p.m, Terms of the new contract were negotiated last Wednes- day in Toronto at a concilia- tion meeting called by the department of labor, ea oo NEWS HIGHLIGHTS | British End Color Bar In Army LONDON (Reuters) -- Britain has ordered an end to # recently exposed color bar in army recruiting, it was learned today, The now lowered barrier applied to cers tain elite sections, but non-white recruits now can enter any part of the army. In THE TIMES Apartments Robbed----P. 13 Has Unique Stomps--P, § Generals Win, Lose--P. 10 Ann Landers----14 City News--13 « Classified---18 to 21 Editorial---4 Financial--9 Comies---23 Obits----21 Sports---10, 11, 12 Theatre---7 Weather--2 Whitby, Ajax--5 Women's--14, 15, 16, 17 RAUBER LEAS AP SANG RIAD Yo TEN SAUER TA NAR Now in its thirteenth day the Greater Oshawa Com: munity Chest has raised $102,450 of the $345,325 objective. AIRS AN oc | q