Juan Falero Martinez is shown at a press confer- ence Friday in Guatemala City where he said he is not the Nazi Martin Bor- mann. Falero, arrested Thursday by Guatemalan secret police, said he was .born in Uruguay 68 years ago and entered Guatemala 2 ee Oe Em Oe OO wr 2 ee 88 © noe 8 teen SAYS HE IS NOT BORMANN illegally from Mexico. His arrest touched off specula- tion that he may be Bor- mann, Hitler's deputy fueh- rer at the end of World War Two. There have been many reports, all uncon- firmed, that Borthann is alive and in South America. --AP Wirephoto 'Colonial Officials Calm 'As Hong Kong Riots Flare By CARL MOLLINS Canadian Press Staff Writer British colonial authorities in sist on official composure while heads are broken and' stree riots spread in the Crown colony of Hong Kong. "As far as we are concerned the trouble in the colony is a labor dispute," said a spokes- man in London Friday. With almost hourly reports of spreading violence, demonstra- tors wearing Mao Tse - tung badges and shouting Maoist slo- gans, the official attitude has an air of whistling in the dark. Trouble in Kowloon, where about half of Hong Kong's 4,000 000 Chinese live, sprang from a labor dispute at a plastics fac- tory. But it is the latest in a If China ervor in Hong Kong, the argu- nent runs, China likewise could vall a halt if necessary. The weakness of the argument can de seen with a glance across 'he border at the troubles Chi- nese authorities are experienc- ing in trying to cool off the cha- otic ardor of their own Red Guards. Continuing violence and per- sistent demands by the press in China for British acceptance of "the just demands of our com- patriots in Hong Kong" may yet force British authorities to make a more positive gesture than a shrug of resignation. MAY CRACK DOWN As a start, colonial officials inspires rebelliousmight decide to crack down harder on employers accused of jexploiting local labor, including women and children. Two parliamentary questions buried among the scores posed in London this week asked, first, what proportion of employed Hong Kong women and young persons worked a 40-hour week and, second, about convictions for employing such workers more than the legal maximum of 60 hours a week. The answers: Four per cent of women workers and 15 per cent of young persons work 40 hours, the rest more. A total of 8,216 convictions for violating the 60-hour maximum carried fines that averaged a wrist-slap- Staunch Enemy Of Bormann Uruguay-born Carpenter Says GUATEMALA CITY (Reut- ers)--A man arrested on sus- picion of being Hitler's former deputy Martin Bormann told a press conference here that if he had known the Nazi fuehrer he would have killed him. Denying that he was Bor- mann, the man told reporters Friday night that he was Juan Falero Martinez, 68, a drifting carpenter born in Montevideo, Uruguay. But he said he knew no one who would vouch for his iden- tity. Police here have sent his fin- gerprints to West Germany in an attempt to establish whether he is Hitler's former aide. The man was arrested Wed- nesday on information received from a truck driver who fol- lowed him for two years before reporting him to police in the The unnamed truck driver, who said he was deeply inter- ested in the trials of Nazi war criminals, was convinced the man was Bormann, who disap- peared from Berlin in May, 1945. As reporters fired questions 66; A reward of $25,000 awaits his captor. STAYED BY HITLER Bormann, believed to have stayed with Hitler until the end in an underground bunker in the ruined Berlin of 1945, was sentenced to death in absentia by the Nuernberg war crimes tribunal. The international court de- cided there was no proof to back reports from captured {ecuted war criminal In 19534, West German au- thorities declared him officially dead. But 10 years later, as ru- mors persisted that Bormann had escaped to South America with other Nazi leaders, Bonn officials offered a 100,000-mark ($25,000) reward for informa- tion leading to his capture. Early in 1966, the son of ex- Adolf Eichmann said his father told him Bormann was in South America after having plastic Nazis that Bormann was dead. at the balding, shabbily-dressed figure, he told how he had ar- rived at. Mariscos after wander- ing throughout Latin America. Wearing faded trousers, sneakers and a soiled shirt, he said he could speak Spanish, Italian and English. He once lived in New York, where his daughter committed suicide at the age of 27, he said. He denied that he ever un- derwent plastic surgery. Acting Interior Minister Au- gusto Casteneda said earlier it was believed the man had' re- village of Mariscos, 150 miles Ping $14.40. from the capita). ceived plastic surgery. | If alive, Bormann would be surgery to change his face. NOW IS THE TIME TO CALL cv F Ow McLAUGHLIN 723-348 COAL & SUPPLIES Take advantage of it! 24 hour ser- vice; and radio dispatched trucks always ready to serve you. Fuel Oil Budget Plan Available OVER 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE! King St. W. 110 By PHILIP DOPOULOS ATHENS (AP)--The military ee ered domi Dictatorship In Greece Has Absolute Dominance nesdays except in first-class res- taurants and hotels. : The Orthodox Church of 1. dictatorship in three weeks has Greece, which has a history of * asserted its absolut *: Greek public life. }: King Constantine, rs *; had no visible role in day-to- day government operations, well-informed on decisions. The junta's decrees, coming th unheard--of swiftn : agi behavior of youths to the appointment of leaders in the | Greek Orthodox Church. Trying to improve the moral calibre of Greek youth, the re- gime banned mini-skirts for schoolgirls and long hair for echoolboys and told them to go to church regularly. It moved * to keep wandering beatniks out |. of Greece. } ABOLISHED PATRONAGE Claiming public administra- {. tion was corrupt, it abolished ; political patronage jobs. Gov- ernment offices were given 15 * days to clean up: pending busi- ness, Civil servants were told they no longer were considered '"'per- manent" employees. All labor strikes were banned, but the government moved to win support from the working class. Employers were told they could not lay off employees and could not cheat them out of promised wages. Several own- ers of business were jailed for allegedly shortchanging em- Ployees. The regime froze commodity prices and eliminated middle- men selling agricultural pro- duce. Potato and mutton prices dropped. To cut down large beef imports, the government Friday banned the sale of meat on Wed- 2-8 Oe tee Sw 8886 OC OT BOSOE Ce TE eaceesecice GARY NESBITT Representative | SUN LIFE Assurance Company of Canada : Oshawa Shopping ' Centre Phone 725-4563 } is reported to be/fitn Most are still z disag: it with the state, lost t\ ever virtually all aspects oflits rights to elect bishops. The 86-year-old primate of Greece, like all/Archbishop Chrysostomos, was * other figures of Greece's "old" |forced out of office by a govern- ' tical scene, appears to have|ment rule retiring all clerics 80 m no more than a bystander. jor older. The 26-year-old monarch hasizan, suspects Thousands of politicians and|°#! youth clubs. suspected "'dangerous Commu- were rounded up in the|izations, including unions and early hours of the April 21 coup.|sports and cultural clubs, were confined, |disbanded, apparently on the ess in|Screening committees began ex-|grounds they were leftist-domi- ': this country where governments |amining the cases of more than|nated. are quick to change and/6,000 political prisoners on the| So far six mayors and com- to act, have dealt with sub-|Aegean island of Yioura Friday.|munal leaders have been dis- ranging from appearance; The Communist ~ line United|missed as unreliable. string of worker protests that have taken on political echoes of the Red Guard revolution in neighboring China. Seamen, taxi - drivers, cement workers and students have been in- volved. The protest pattern in Hong Kong is similar to trouble last year in Macao, Portuguese col- ony a ferry ride away. Macao authorities finally were forced to knuckle under to local Chi- nese demands--backed by pres- sure from the Chinese govern- ment. COULD END RULE The most alarmist estimates of the Hong Kong situation in- clude predictions by Asian ex- perts that, evidence of Red Guard influence signals the be- ginning of the end of 135 years of British rule. Official British response main- tains that China needs Hong Kong as a trade and diplomatic link with a largely-hostile out- side world. China earns an estimated «me- third of its foreign exchange through Hong Kong. Foreign currency thus earned is a con- China depends on outside com- tinuing necessity as long as modities, including Canadian wheat. DALLAS, Tex. (AP)--Wom-|-- en's golf will be 54-hole tourna- ments in the United States from now on and it will take $12,500 in prize money to get on the tour list, Lennie Wirtz, tourna- ment director of the U.S. La- dies Professional Golf Associa- tion, said Saturday. 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He was disclosure the comm Gabon pa police Sat There v that as a officials o ions planr for assure lomats an senatives respect dt It was conferenct at least | would be of the 'Af: ,PREVIOU But sor said the question | uled, as aimed at tions of a African pi Another closed th general 0 Daniel A panion we police sta incident, ° traffic lig The Ex Assouma alleged th through a Police : official w man nam identified an econor per NO\