If It's Good For the lsland The Guardi 4 hob Three of the Red Cross first aid instructors attending a refresher course at the Basil- ica Recreation Centre on Sa- turday stand in front of a chart showing the increase in accidental deaths over the FIRST AID INSTRUCTORS ATTEND COURSE an Is For It vince attended the course which offered demonstrations on.such things as mouth to ‘mouth artificial respiration, control of bleeding, splinting | and “bandaging. The course | ran from early morning to late afternoon: last few years. They are LEFT - TO RIGHT: Harold MacDonald, Summerside; Sis- ter St. Angel, Miscouche and Mrs. Lila Flavin, RCAF Sta- tion -Summerside. About 40 Appears H . By GEOFFREY WHITEHEAD , The poll underlined a belief looking for a big impact on tele- __LONDON (Reuters) — Prime persons from all over the pro- Poll Indicates Wilson's Party — eaded For Major Win ‘|links. iFrench - Soviet non - aggression ‘rocked -France’s 14 NATO part- ‘possibly dangerous manoeuvre ineutralist position between the jwithout continuing to contribute | ince, China, CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, ulton WEATHER Clear, clouding over this, morning, a few — snowflurries in afternoon; winds light... , ° Low-high 12 and 32. 14 PAGES ’ MARCH 14, 1966 Nor MORE SEVEN CENTS Claims By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER {promise course in an effort to -WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi- retain maximum French co-op- {dent de Gaulle js expected toleration on de Gaulle’s terms. seek new ties with Russia as U.S. officials are against any jhe euts his Atlantic Alliance |such policy. U:S. officials think he| But they have not come up \probably will conclude aj\with any counter-move so far rance’s position in Europe ts too . important |withdraw the American defence who umbrella from. it. pact when he June. The French visits Moscow in leader, strategically to | ‘Astronauts Get Ready | : f For Flight Plenty To Say ~ CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) Furthermore Johnson admin- The Gemini 8 astronauts, ree NEW .WESTMINSTER, B.C. |cer inquiry, the Liberals would istration leaders still hope that Jaxed and confident, Sunday re- (CP)—Opposition Leader Dief- bring up the Munsinger affair. when the 76-year-old de Gaulle viewed a complex flight “plan enbaker and former justicé min +—‘Phe former —justi¢e minister relinquishes power some day that will keep them busier than ister Davie Fulton said Saturday jin the Diefenbaker: cabinet said new leaders with popular previous U.S. astronauts Tues. night the Liberal government at- that eight days after his meet- French backing will modify, if \day when they begin to whirl tempted to ‘‘blackmail’’ the Con- ling with Mr. Favreau, Justice not renounce, his lone-wolf dip- around the world. servatives into dropping their |Minister Cardin made the Mun- 4omatic policy. -| Neil A. Armstrong. and David.demands for a judicial hearing |singer case public. ; De Gaulle has compelled /R. Scott spent some time in a into the Spencer spy case. Mr. Cardin claimed last week Allied leaders to face up to the |spacecraft simulator, rehears-. The charge was made first at that Gerda Munsinger, a Ger- probability that the North’ At- ing key phases of the flight an impromptu news conference ™an, had been’ involved with ners with breakaway messages | last week, is considered here to | be engaged in an intricated and ‘Quake Ja rs Formosa, Okinawa | TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)—Six- persons died in an earthquake which jarred Formosa and Okinawa early Sunday. ' Nearly two score _ buildings were wrecke@-or damaged. The weather bureau here said 37 tremors were registered in the Taipei area, with the big- |gest jolt rated ‘at four on the Formosa scale, whieh has a top realign France in the East- West power balance. He is moving France into a two major world powers—the Soviet Union and the United | States—while retaining the pro-| tection of -American nunclear | strength against Soviet military might. . Frustrated U.S. officials, who have watched de Gaulle pa- tiently -shape and impose this policy for seven years, wn- ddéubtedly would like to block his design. But they see no way i to do so. ass ‘ a figure of six, in the Taipei area. They are annoyed at what} TOKYO (AP)—Peking radio they consider de Gaulle’s bid said Sunday~, that Internal Af- ifor a free ride in the Western fairs Minister “Tseng Shan is | Alliance, gaining protection touring villages on Hopeh Prov- stricken by ‘an to the military organization. ‘earthquake last Tuesday. jlantic Treaty Organization de- during which they are to hitch by Mr. Fulton. two Diefenbaker cabinet minis- [fence structure is obsolete. \Gemini 8 to another satellite.. In a speech later to the B.C, | ters while living in . Proposed by Canadian Liberal |Scott is to walk in space. Conservative — Association, Mr. | \government leaders in 1948, and Officials reported the astro- Diefenbaker said there was a a fe ee |fashioned in the early - 1950s nauts were relaxed: and looking blackmail attempt ‘‘but we don’t | i.¢ involved in the case as Mrs. jwhen Soviet policy was much forward to the mission, to start blackmail easily in the Conserv- |wunsinger was engaged in espl- {more aggressive than it is to-/at 10 a.m. EST Tuesday when ative party.” onage work when she lived in day, NATO provided a structure {an Atlas rocket boosts the Mr. Fulton told reporters he |fast Germany. The minister of “conventional and nuclear Agena target satellite into orbit. had been called into the office said she had died after return- military power, including. Ger-| . Armstrong and Scott follow at of Privy Council Chairman Guy jing to Germany. i man rearmament, which inte- 11:41 a.m., riding a Titan II Favreau about two weeks ago.| However, a Toronto Star re-- jgrated European and North rocket. They rendezvous withHe said Mr. Favreau warned |porter found Mrs. Munsinger ;American strength to a degree the target after 5% hours and that if the Conservatives did not lalive in Munich Jate last week ‘never known before. jhook up with it an hour later. drop their demands for a Spen- Feature Agency Promises #ne"strs Shocking Serial On Gerda MUNICH, West ‘Germany, But, he said there is no mis-|from a New York City police- (CP)—The owner of a West taken identity involved in the |man, Mike Munsinger, first was |German feature agency prom- |éase. He said that by this after-|tracked down in Munich by Tor- } | Cardin of ‘‘waiting lised Sunday to produce noon he would be prepared tojonto. Stax reporter Robert I was inaccessible and could Liberals Made Blackmail Effort |West Expects De Gaulle To Seek New Russian Ties Dief Promises / ~ Mr. Diefenbaker arrived here that. middle-of-the-road The also Minister Wilson's Labor party who abandoned the Conserva-|Heath and the party in general. tegration if de Gaulle's- move appears headed for a major vic- |tives for the minority Liberal; And the widespread belief that lereates dissension among tory in the March 31 general election on the basis of the latest opinion-poll findings. But some: observers said the opposition Conservative party’s clear-cut plans for labor uw reform, coupled with the over- confidence of Labor supporters, party. in the last election now have begun to swing furthér to the left—to Wilson's socialists. Three factors still could help the 49-year-old Heath and his Conservatives. Heath’s plans for labor-union could narrow the gap by elée- reform were believed popular tion day. iwith the voters and coincided The Gallup poll published Sun- With reports of victimization day appeared to confirm other | within some big unions. This reports. showing the Conserva- jcould be an unexpected bonus _tives have so far failed to make the breakthrough they hoped for in--the..campaign,.,..-..--.- Labor, which_had only a three- seat margin in- the’ 630-seat seat House of Commons at dis- solution, was said to be. sup- ported by 51% per cert of the electorate, with 41 per cent backing the ig edness seven per cent the Liberals the remainder other candidates. Labor's 10'4-per-cent margin | over the Conservatives showed | barely any shift from the 11 per’ cent recorded by this poll just} various before Wilson’ announced the | election date two weeks ago. } Analysts said only an unpre-| ecedented shift toward Edward Heath’s Conservatives in the 18 days before the election | give the Opposition any hope of | reversing its narrow defeat in | 1964. French-E te ‘ Seen In Ranks Of Liberals By RONALD LEBEL jfor the Conservatives, who have itaken”’-a~ tougher’ “stand toward: unions than the Labor govern- ing and financial support from The Conservatives also are ment, which gets most of its vot-" a big Labor victory is certain | could hurt the governing party | on election day. Labor support- | ers are traditionally poor at | turning the intentions -they~pro- -ailies ‘and’ perhaps Canada |fess. to'doorstep Canvassers into | jvotes. A low turnout March 31 | could upset all the forecasts made by the opinion polls. ~ | | But an indication of Labor's | firm lead is shown by the odds given by London bookmakers— 7 to 1 in favor of Labor and 5 to | was to ban_ the ‘Communist | ober'’s attempted coup was the | largest outside China and Rus- | \sia. : Sy | | Organizations In Indonesia j | | i 1 against the Conservatives. f One’ “of Suharto's---first—-acts-- party, which before last Oct- {support Supporting Lt.-Gen. Suharto ae eas . Indonesia ae cars and the troops | ers)—Enthusiastic messages of who were brought in prior to | “from-<Indonesia’s mass | > 5 ; organizations poured. in during | the weekend;for=-Army Minister over. Lt.Gen. Suharto, who Satur- he Associated Press quoted | day was given full state powers travellers arriving in Singapore | by President Sukarno. ‘Sunday from Indonesia as-say--| The city returned to normal ing 16 ministers out of the 99 | with the virtval disappearance in Sukarno’s cabinet have been | of barbed wire barricades, nglish Division ihappened to Mr. Cardin, Privy |cabinet. He said Immigration | ing the wildcat strike. OTTAWA: (CP)—The continu- Council President Guy Favreau, Minister Marchand and. several {ng political crisis over security former state secretary Maurice other Quebec ministers were | risks has stirred up consider- Lamontagne’ and former’ immi- ready to quit in protest if his. able resentment between /gration minister Rene Trem- resignation went through. French- and English - speaking Liberals. Reliable party sources say friction between the two lan-' t groups reaches into the justice minister last’July after ical figures who guage cabinet and complicates the search for a widely respected | blay: : |’ Mr. Lamontagne and Mr. \Tremblay resigned in Decem- ‘ber. Mr. Favreau resigned as ‘being criticized in the Dorion re- iport. Mr. Cardin submitted man to succeed Prime Minister resignation, both as. minister Pearson whenever he cetires and MP, Tuesday, then with- from. politics . drew it. - “Displeasure with Mr. Pearson was voiced by some Liberal leagues and many French- UNDER: PRESSURE? back-benchers after he abruptly ‘reversed himself March 4 and granted a judicial inquiry. into the post office department's fir- ing of George Victor Spencer for his involvement, in a spy case. French - speaking MPs were paricularly incensed. They com- plained justice minister Lucien Cardin, who stoutly opposed the inquiry. appeared to be cast in the role of a sacrificial lamb to appease the Commons. epposi- tion. when the minority Pearson government was in_ trouble. The French-Canadians thought | they saw. a pattern: Whenever a squall blew. up in the Commons, | speaking minister | @# French - caught abuse from the opposi- | tion and had his political career damaged. while English-speaking _ ministers looked on in silence. | Quebec MPs say this. is what ' Mr. Cardin’s Quebec col-. Nearly all..French - speaking | \Liberals are loyal to Mr. Pear- | son and regard him .as one of | the few English-speaking polit- understands (French-Canadians. his |: Which leaves “the! question. |\~#% Why did the prime minister un- | expectedly over-rule Mr. Cardin | ‘and approve the Spencer in- | |quity? , | speaking MPs felt strongly that | One theory in Liberal circles he should not be made a scape- jis that Mr. Pearson was under goat too, pressure from some English- The justice minister told re- speaking ministers. who feared ‘porters Thursday he withdrew ‘that if the Spencer debate~con- ithe resignation mainly to avert tinued much longer they would a French-English. split in the ‘come tinder personal attacks. Some Quebec MPs say many ‘of the English - speaking min- isters are in the unofficial race | for the Liberal leadership and | are reluctant to assist any of their colleagues who get into hot INSIDE TODAY |beader Diefenbaker had done’ in Sea water. | = MME osssdciine Mr. Pearson is, reported. to | CONE i coves cccties \have told his followers. that | mee. whenever they feel the time has | Wemnea's ...... come for him to retire he will Editorials oblige them gladly. It is further | Summerside yoras reported that he told them he | Kings, Queens, City ..., §) |Would not hang on desperately. Prince County ~~ >..:-.. 2 '© power as he said Opposition recent years. N remaining 14 Allied ments. i In consultations -new . begin- ning, some of, the European with popu- com- govern- its large French-speaking lation—may urge. some.. lle LONDON (Reuters)—A Labor The illegal court, whose exis- | tence was disclosed last week, | in prior ‘© \was_condemned by. the .coun- : the “announcement that Suharto, |try’s three major parties. It |ards’ court for failing to join an anti-Communist, was taking (sparked a sharp weekend clash |a wildcat strike. between the Conservatives and | the governing Labor party, He which has ‘strong union backing. The trial, with shop stewards | sitting as judges, took place un- | der a hangman’s noose on the | in aif tral England. Seven BMC workers were | No sooner had a wave of pro- | are concerned about |~ ys. ¢ ; voters |vision and in the newspapers by the future of Allied military in- | TS four and reports that res- cue squads still are. at work in- |dicated that- the tremor |been extremely severe. The ra- |\dio has made no mention of jcasualties, but has reported | wideepread damage. Tt also said ‘‘great numbers” \0f medical personnel iffive bees ‘sent to the region southeast of | Peking: gal Trial By Union: parks Weekend Clash when it was discl turd. union rege gh for re lone there = gga ye fusing to join a wildcat strike \ynion ‘ovem!| threatens to become a major is- Se ee 9 lsue in Britain’s March..31..gen- FINED BY COURT ‘eral election. | had been a similar A factory inspector at a re- frigerator plant west of London said he was one of 15 men and women fined by a shop. stew- | Conservative Leader Edward ath told a meeting Satudray government le gisl-a‘tion has given some union men the im- pression they have immunity to ‘shop floor of the British Motor jintimidate others into breaking ‘Corp. plant_at Cowley, agreements. ei =: Leadets. of -the 1,500,000-mem- ber Transport and Gen- ¢ fined by the stewards for defy- eral Workers - Union—Britain’s biggest — announced Saturday they will begin an inquiry into test over the incident passed-the BMC trial. |*shocking” serial of the life of |issue -a statement signed by iGerda Munsinger, 37, named in|Mrs. Munsinger declaring that. |Canada's sex-and-security al-|she is the woman involved in legations. ithe Canadian allegations. |~ Josef von Ferenczy, who Mrs. Munsinger refused ‘bought the world rights to the |through her lawyer to see any | |Munsinger story, said. the West Newspaper men or make any ‘German blonde vehemently Statements—except to a_ small denied being a spy. eoterie’of Canadian and an F |newspaper, magazine television Ferenczy said he bought the | rights of Mrs. Munsinger’s story aed ocak ene for a six-figure sum of marks and already has two writers Tights for her story of alleged z linvolvement with highly placed i i gan age She entered Canada would be published. jin 1985 and departed for good Mrs. Munsinger slipped out of | her small Munich apartment | Heinrich A. Kutzer, said a new Sunday- night after staying. holed.’ contract-with. Ferenczy_ Presse | up for 36 hours while a proces-| Agentur prevented Mrs. Mun- sion - of . cheque-waving Visitors | singer from ‘making any” state- called about her story. |ments to the press. Kutzer said Two unidentified mén were that an agreement with The with her as she dashed. out of /Toronto Star would expire Mon- the apartment building Thto a |qay night. car that had halted in front of| He said the agreement with the building only moments be- the Toronto Star had been a fore. One reporter was pushed | had one. ‘away by her escorts and an-| | “In long negotiations, we have. a by the car a8 finally succeeded ig, limiting |this agreement,” he said Sun- TURNED HER BACK in 1961." Mrs. Munsinger’s lawyer, ‘day. “‘Tomorrow at the stroke | One press car followed’ the |of midnight, the deal with ‘tt os ne 5 ‘ 7 5 id:** _party for six ‘blocks but. then | Toronto Star is at an. en lost it in the downtown traffie.| Kutzer, who talked to a re- Mrs. Munsinger, wearing a/Porter, did not mention the beige cpat/ and a white scarf, |amount involved in the new con- turned back to the car tract. window. About 30 reporters who had Ferenczy, who bought the |been waiting in front of Mrs. Munsinger story rights for his | Munsinger’s Munich _ apartment ‘feature agency, Ferenczy since Friday did not lift their Presse Agentur, said Mrs. Mun- | siege, however. They spent Sat- singer was undecided as to|urday night on the stairway of whether she would. go to Can- | the modern apartment building, ada*‘‘to clear my name” as she | with one Canadian sleeping di- had originally planned. jrectly in front of the apartment | Ferenczy said Mrs. Munsinger 490r. 3 is ‘‘very distressed.” Mrs. Munsinger, divorced MAN DIES IN FLAMING WRECKAGE: , Wiliam Arthur Sellen, 52, of Rothesay, NB. formerly of ‘Toronto, died in the flam- ing wreckage of his car Satur- get back to Ottawa a made his chafges.”’ . \, by, hae ~~ i. a iyoct ago jin wa that s. Munsinger "T SURPRISED jhad. died of leukemia after -re- Oa -in his speech turning to East Germany, has surprised by Mr. 7 also said she had been involved lactions_ In revealing. the in espionage. ore coming singer case... ‘Cauda in 1955.. « ye Mite In an interview with Reguly, |din was be the woman said she knew Pierre |Prime Minister Pearson Sevigny, former Conservative |‘‘pulled the rug. out from associate defence minister, dur- him” by ordering an ing the years 1958-60 but had |into the Spencer case not tried to get information |inquiry ‘into Canada’s from him. _ }system nga justice minister knew |had said ne’ was necessary. Sevigny has sald be knew |'"Mr, Diefenbaker said he was Mrs. Munsinger socially but that denied a charge by Cardin that |surprised to learn Mrs. security |Munsinger was alive. peo acne er “Mr, Cardin told us the Main Interest —talk about a re . Appeared Fun . Not once during his hour-long speech did Mr. Diefenbaker OTTAWA (CP) — Pierre Sev- | igny says Gerda Munsinger's l i Ege i ul mention Mrs. Munsinger by iname. He referred to her only as ‘‘the woman.” . He was asked on his arrival main interest appeared to be here whether he knew Mrs. fun and it ‘never crossed my |Munsinger. He replied: mind” she, might ,be a spy. “Never. Mr.’Sevigny, former associate; Asked by a whether reporter he had not at one time sat at a table with her during a s0- cial function, “Mr. Diefertbaker- defence minister in John Delif- enbaker’s cabinet, said he knew the central figure -in Canada’s sex-and-security “case — casually |said: - and that the facts will prove’ ‘I don’t know anything about the controversy is a “big story |her as far as it being a per- |about- nothing.” ~ sonal matter is concerned.” | Hush-Hush Police File Reported On Munsinger | ‘MONTREAL (CP) — A Mont- file, refused Saturday to com- real ‘city police spokesmen said ment on published reports that ‘Saturday that the department Mrs. has a hush-hush file on Blonde for a time by Montreal detec- German beauty Gerda Mun- tives in. February 1961. singer. +" | -The reports said she had been Munsinger was detained The spokesman aaim the file, with detaile of investigattear made by. the. department, has been removed from the central identification department and. is in the office of the senior mem- ber of the force. | Chief Inspector Leslie Hobbs, the senior officer holding the Immigratio LONDON (CP) — Canadian \immigration authorities would have to give their approval be- being held under lock and key | ‘arrested in connection with av {imcident at a Montreal depart Tosi wom Se was released § jfew days later an? flew back to iGermars Asked why the file is being kept undér lock and key. Chief- \Inspector Hobbs said: ‘I don’t want to make any comment whatsoever on this ease.” Mrs. Munsinger Needs n Approval Canada as a visitor. No special visa is required. However, the question of fore Gerda Munsinger could re- whether such a national can get enter Canada, a Canadian em- jadmitted to Canada would de- bassy official in West Germany pend on the decision of Cana- says. -|iMirs... Munsinger, who resides in Munich and‘ who figures in an alleged sex and security scan- dal, telephoned W. F. Hoogeg- dyke, first secretary at the-Ca- out whether her passport would be sufficient to allow her to en- ter Canada. phone interview Saturday. de- fi |clined to comment on this re- mm, (ported action, it is understood from other embassy Officials. he a nadian embassy at Bonn, to find | While Hoogendyke, in a tele) idian tmmigration authorities. In ‘Mrs. Munsinger’s case there ! ee OR ‘| would-be~a~ question of-whether—....... she would. be. considered a. de- sirable. person f®r entry consid- ering her background. Dutch Princess Said In Mexico | MEXICO CITY ‘(Reuters)— 'Dutch Crown Princess Beatrix land her German-born husband,, iPrince Claus, were reported’ pat he e day following a two-car head+ ~ from Saint! John, NB.‘ Two on collision about seven miles other persons were ‘injured. informed her that normally a hoheymooning in Mexico, but no West( German national to enter-/Sunday. valid passport is. sufficient for a |confirmation- could be» obtained _