§ : \ if It’s Good For The Island The Guardian Is For It VOL. LXXIX NO. 97 3 ec Ori pen L 2 rs Prince Bicard Island Like The € ove CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1966, |. == Is Quoted iw Dew”’ At Wave Of Thunderstorms CW | Arson Charge Follows Fire | unsinger . . Sevigny, Hees —GLACE BAY, NS— (CP) | ‘Ronald Nicholson, —25,— of — Re=} Names Appear son, guest speaker, who spoke on “the adolescent in this stressful world,’’ outlined prob- lems of youth today, . As sociation Aims Given _ ~ AtMental Health Meeting Objectives and achievements | was outlined “by President G.; with thanks the co-operation re- of the P.E.1. Division of the Can- | Reginald MacNutt who chaired ceived from the superintendent DR. JOHN Maloney of Char- lottetown, LEFT, and Dr. Fraser Nicholson of Halifax are seen speaking prior to last. night's. annual meeting of the Prince Edward Island Divis- ion of the Canadian Mental Health Association. Dr. Nichol- : 5 ob : sn thee | 2 : ; bout tinue its. surge eastward Royal min- th adian Mental Health Association | the annual meeting held in the | of Riverside Hospital, the board |$5,000,000 of that had been ote | i Carr of East Royalty was no — ———— Charlottetown Hotel Jast. night. | of governors of the Association, Mlsed a vision nrvincre ees ee ates -couneliier fot Daniel Com | Her aneniblyman, three ee |—Mr. MacNutt, in his annuat the professional staff, and others er, it took—time.for , Residents around. The’ convention was in Belfast|[#™mes were brought before the Parlia ment | report, said that the Island Div-| “20 gave support. He also-thamk- |commitments to be fulfilled and |Caddo, north, of Marshall, | hall. —— meeting: George ‘MacPherson of gt ll ision. ‘of the, Conadian ‘Mental ;¢4 the news media who assisted about $25,000,000 had ac-jworked feverishly Mom| Mr. Compton taced the con-| St. Georges, Allan: MacPhee of At A Gl : Health Association was been con- ts ee mental health i@'tually been spent thus far. day: moving their possessions te | vent un . He was nominat- eee. inated by George = CANCE ducting workshops for clergy, | the Province. le ; = ed by Hancock, Wood! ciow of Murray Harbour North, MONDAY, April 25, 1966 | school supervisors, school “prin- ~The ‘executive director's oS a : i a: sec _ by Robert | seconded ‘by Sinbar Brown of The Munsinger inquiry was | “P2s teachers ged hat been | port submitted by Urban J. Mc- | I er a ee 7 Eldon: ~—-—-PRed House: told-an RCMP file says Gerda | Workiné with patients in an ef | Quaid: revealed~ that six—work-~fhas ame Mr. Carr_won a two-way Roddy Pratt of St. Peters, 5 fort to rehabilitate them through | shops had been sponsored by the Munsinger was a former So-. |... go es A eC y viet @bpionage “agent who car- ; Various programs outlined by | Association in 1965 to promote ried on an “illicit sexual rela- | ‘* division. + mental health. Four of these in- tionship with former cabinet | He said the aims of the CMHA | Yolved the school superintendents “minister Pierre Sevigny. jis to see that the mental hos--; 2% guidance personnel for the “Criticism was expressed in- | pital, as one of several elements | Province and two other work- side and outside the Commons | of comprehensive mental health S#0PSwere sponscred for _ high about the attitude of the services, provides persons need- , School principals and for teach- CBC board of directors to- | ing hospitalization with the best | ers local conventions: “wards” the parliamentary” in-— treatment aimed at the patients” Frank Zakem, in the financial | quiry into the. Seven’ Days | éarliest return to the commum- report, stated that the Division’s oe : | ity. : | budget for 1967 had been _pre- ommons opened de- “The objective of the Canad- | sented to the United Fund Ap- ‘lheavier flooding im northeast |. Twisters that smashed By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS downed and property damage A new wave of violent thun-|ran into the millions of dol- derstorms threatened even lars: indo Problems ~ jhigher grounds as the rain- jswoHten Cypress River was raising the lake's level at the | rate of two inches- an~ hour. Minor flooding was reported in a number of Texas cities | Monday as additional rains con- | Texas Monday after a rash of |Kenedy arid. Runge demolished | tornadoes broke out in the ja numbe: ildings and left southern part of the rain-soaked | a imhately 80 homeless dur- state. ~ ing . the early-morning hours. At least 10 persons were Another southwest Texas tot- more than three, four and five | jnado damaged homes in San |inches were common and were Antonio while a fourth twister |welcomed by ranchers and touched.the ground south of farmers in west Texas and the New Braunfels. In west Texas, panhandle-plains where —mois- | Pickersgill | were repcrted in the Corpus tures. were badly. On ADB Fun night: Winds up to 75 miles an hour |and a lodge building were de | There were no and cains of up to seven inches molished and 20 other struc-|blaze, which police said started |an executive assistant to a damaged jin the back portion of the second |inet minister. roared |floor of the two-storey frame}~Mr: O’Brien did not identify} minister. was- used. (population |school. The building contained |the executive assistant. — serve Mines, N.S., Monday was charged with two counts of ar- | ‘\ son. in a $100,000 fire which -de- stroyed St. Joseph's Elementary School at Reserve Mines Satur- day. Nicholson did not appear_be- fore Provincial Magistrate A.O. Gunn at Glace Bay where the| charge was read, He. was ‘com- | to the Nova Scotia Mental Hos- | pital at Dartmouth, N.S. : The charges involved fires at | the schoo! and others in a gar- | Christi. area _ when _ thunder. hed hen we tornado ' Gulf of Mex- | throu USTEAWA. (oP Tam ttn’ MEE ES rahe ister Pickersgill said- Mon- U.S. weather bureau /Sunday nine day the atlantic development board hasn’t run out of a violest - thunderstorm money, | , i in, a just committed it to various ee ats = gee projects. _ | Waco in central Texas to near Mr. Pickersgill was- replying | Shreveport, La. It included the in the Commons to Thomas M. | cities of Marshall, Longview: Bell (PC — Saint John - Albert) where who asked confirmation of a eee pang was | statement by the board’s chair- | centred. man that the agency had run | TRAF out of money and needed more. | DISRUPTS rc Rail and highway traffic was ae teen. is financed by the | sicranted-as-rains of_up to 21 inches poured down on — north- east Texas during the weekend. federal government in its work of providing money for hydro- electrie and other developments | : to attract industry: | The Sabine River was due to | _.' crest at 10 feet above flood ; A ~board~official—here—-said—stape—-at—-Gladewater,-—-where later. that the agency had | more than 21 inches of rain fell started out in 1963 with a $100,- in a 72-hour period, then con- 000,000 fund. All but Progressive Conservative party candidates for the May 30 elect- ion were nominated last night for Fourth Queens and Fifth Kings’ Kings in conventions held at Eldon and Georgetown. For Fourth Queens H. Bennett against Gay Judson, Pownal Mr. Carr was nominated by Alex e e MacRae, Waterside, seconded by George Grant, Orwell. Mr. Jud- n irs rince Son was nominated by Fred Ss Pound, Tea Hill, with Arthur : pb - Moore, Pownal, seconder. ALBERTON — Robert E. bell, leader of the Liberal Party The name _of Sinclair MacTav- Campbell,.Elmsdale and Prosper |Mr.. Arsenault and Lester E. | ish was also put before the con- A. Arsenault, Howlan, were un- Wallace, a past president of the vention but. Mr. MacTavish ask- | animously nominated at a Liber- {Provincial Liberal Association. | 6d that his name be awn, al vention in Albert | ; | before the balloting started. convention on last Russell Perry of Tignish, pre- : night to contest the First District sident. of the West Prince Liber- | Guest speakers included J. | Angus MacLean and Heath Mac- 5th Kings, 4th Queens Candidates Nam by Archie Lanigan of Sturgeon nd second by Ralph MacDonald of Souris East RR 4. His oppon- county chairman of the Progres- sive Conservative was chairman. The speakers were Premier W. R. Shaw, John Kenny, presi- Federal Team ifile . By DAVE McINTOSH {quaintance to be on a first- OTTAWA (CP)—Chief com- name basis with Mr. Hees and mission counsel J. L. O’Brien an executive assistant to. a cab- said Monday an RCMP security inet minister. 7 3 states Gerda Munsinger| In Montreal, she had assocl- was a prostitute, petty thief /ated with people thought to be and former Soviet espionage connected with the underworld. - agent who carried on an “illicit | sexual relationship’’ with Pierre | tinued to sweep the state. Rains mitted for an indefinite period Sevigny, former Conservative associate defence minister, «- He told the Munsinger~ inquiry- lthe file also states the 36-year- | old German woman, who lived | in Canada from 1955 to 196t, | cab- | midnight |classes for students up to grade| yy, O’Brien said RCMP Com- missioner George B. McClellan and former RCMP ™ commis- sioner C. W. Harvison testified in secret session April 6 the Munsinger file was submitted to the minister of justice—he didn’t say which one—but that “they have not testified as to the facts” in the file. Mr. O’Brien said former Con- servative justice minister Don- ald Fleming has—asked to _ap- pear before the commission Thursday. . SEVIGNY WILL APPEAR - Jules Dupre of Montreal, Mr. intends to appear after cross- examination of the RCMP wit- nesses. ; i Mr.: Justice Wishart Spence, inquiry “paid lationship with Mrs. Munsinger lwas social and ‘very casual” and that the facts would prove the—controversy__was__a .“‘big story about nothing.” Mr. Hees has“ said he lunched with a woman who might well have been Mrs. Munsinger but that he didn’t know her by that name. _ Mr.. O’Brien gave this sum- mary of the RCMP dossier on {Mrs. Munsinger: |The “RCMP _ investigati E ithe woman. began as.a routine |security inquiry in connection with her June 28, 1960, applica- Sevigny’s. lawyer, .said_ his client | into | bate on®a government _resolu- tion to provide a system of collective bargaining for the civil service. : Prime Minister Pearson - gaid the government is pre- - pared to allow strikes by civil servants except. in serv- ices essential to public safety and. security. The resolution attracted sup- port fro spokesmen for all peal and that no increase had jian Mental Health Association | been requested. The expenditur- is to see that persons recovering | from mental illness are provided | °§ for 1965 amounted to $10,523. with co-ordinated aftercare and | The report of the scientifie ‘rehabilitation services —in- each Planning committee was given community in order to help re- | 5Y Dr. M.N. Beck who mention- store them to the fullest physt- ed the critical situation in the cal, mental, social vocational | Child welfare service and called and economic usefulness af | '° the attention of the board of which they are capable,” he directors the need to undertake said. W a public information program: of Prince in the May 30 election. | al Association, presided. Both —— were Liberal | members 0 last Legislature, oa e MiGs Avoid Yank Planes Mr. Campbell as councillor and SAIGON (AP) — US. war- Mr. Arsenault assemblyman. “The nomination of “Mr: “Arsen- planes returned to North Viet Nam Monday to rip key targets laghan of Ebbsfleet and second- ed by Lester Wallace, Cascum- pec. Mr. Campbell’s nomination was moved by Russell Stewart, Elmsdale seconded by Joseph parties. Mr. MacNutt acknowledge@ The newly-elected committee Gallant, O’Leary and supported ault was moved by Patrick Cal- in the Hanoi <:ea but met. 20 COMMONS BRIEFS ~ HousingloanRetusals e225 — Spark Many Telegrams ctc Backs OTTAWA (GP) — Telegrams |whether he has pointed out to are pouring in to the govern- ment about refusals of applica- tions for housing loans from the Cental Mortgage and Housing Corporation, Prime Minister Pearson acknowledged. Monday. “I'm getting these messages too,’ he said in a Commons reply to NDP Leader Douglas, who asked for a decision on whether funds available for CMHC loans will be curtailed: Mr. Pearson said the matier will be discussed at a cabinet meeting today*‘and he hoped Labor_Minister_ Nicholson would be able to make a statement following it. Mr. Douglas said there have been complaints in a flood telegrams and letters that ap- plications made as far back as March are being returned. He asked the government to) consider: accepting such applica- tions, made in good faith before there was any question of cur. tailment. Mr. Pearson said he would be _ lad to look into this. OTTAWA (OP) — Opposition Leader Diefenbaker said Mon- day the CBC showed contempt of Parliament im criticizing “In- tervention of a parliamentary committee into the controversy over. the —television__program This Hour Has Seven Days. He asked - Prime — Minister Pearson m the Commons the publicly-owned corporation the ‘‘type of language” used in ja OBC statement Saturday is “contemptuous of Parliament.” | The prime minister replied he hasn't seen the text, of the state- | ment, issued to the press altér |a CBC board meeting in Halifax: |but has read reports of: it. He would ask State Secretary | |LaMarsh, who reports to Par- |liament for the OBC, to get the texi. : The final paragraph of the CBC press release Mr. | baker_veferred-to_says: “The board stated the belief |that the direct intervention of a |parliamentary committee of | garding a—managerial decision |has made more difficult its task | and that of management.” | (CP) Saturday | OTTAWA |midnight is the deadline |told the Commons |when asked for an extension. ; Alfred D. Hales (PC—Welling- ‘ton South) had ‘asked whether |a deadline of midnight Monday, |May 2, would be considered |since April 30 falls on a Satu- }day, when civil servants are off | The minister said he would |“look into’ the question’ of an ‘extension but at the same time \said the mailing deadline-—set lout on all tax forms—provided sufficient. time. Diefen- | for |mailing federal income tax re- y | turns, Revenue Minister Benson Monday consists of the following: Regin- ald_.MacNutt, president; _vice- | president-at-large, Dr. L.1. Duf- | fy; vice-president Queens, Mrs. Frank Ross; vice-president — Kings. Ralph Beck: vice president — Prince, Dr. Henry Moyse; chairman of the board, Arthur Peake: treasurer, Frank Zakem. Seven Days | WINNIPEG (CP)—A move to |give Canadian Labor Congress support to the CBC. television jprogram This Hour Has Seven |Days.won unanimous approval |Monday at the opening — session of the CLC’s biennial conven- tion. Three resolutions on the CBC vention committee with instruc- tions to specify the Seven Days dispute. Harry -dian—B-etherhood—of—Railway, |Transport and General Work- jers, Ottawa, suggested the |move after. the 1,600 delegates |had applauded other. speakers who praised the Seven Days procvam. INS"DE TODAY | Classified Births see e eee wees eee Comics epee rere ee 7 Finance, markets Editorials Summerside Kings, “ueens, City Prince County ‘ were referred back fo a com-| Jacks, of the Cana- | challenge from North Vietnam- by Ralph Adams, O’Leary.- ese aircraft as they had the day Speakers~included Alex Camp- betore. Po ee TTT ms secr » | | | ae REUNION IN PRISON | Steven Truscott” @LEFT), — Kingston, Ont., Sunday. It was says goodbye to his father, chapel visit day at the pen‘ten- Dan Truscott of Richmond, tiary. one of three days in the year when prisoners with good chanel-attendance records are allowed a family visit-over and above the normal visiting Ont., after his parents and bro- ther Ken visited him at Col- lins Bay penitentigry near — Mr. McConnell was “nominated | Quarrie, members of parliament | for Queens, Hon. Lloyd MacPhail jand Alan Scales, president of the | Queens County PS Association. |The chairman was Tom McKen- | -Na.- ~ en = | AT GEORGETOWN | At the Lions Club hall in Georgetown Harry McConnell, Georgetown merchant was nom- sat Belt-Island, Néfld.,- who - will tion for Canadian citizenship. \ REFUSED VISA : The same person, Gerda Hes- sler, was refused a visa to enter Canada July 15, 1952, because of security information against her. The RCMP had obtained from counter - intelligence sources information about her To Aid Miners OTTAWA (CP) — A team of top federal officials’ is being set up to help resettle 850 miners be jobless when the Dosco iron ore- mine there closes, Prime Minister Pearson told the Com- mons Monday. | inated councillor and Dr. J.C. Sinnott. of Charlottetown assem- | blyman, Both positions were contested. “| Joseph lyear sentence for espionage activities and ‘‘im- moral life.” The woman was arrested by the West German border police lin. mid-September,-.1949. She ad- Two Escapees Being Sought mes ree, this. She also admitted to be- ~ \ing imprisoned in both East iand West Germany in connec- tion with faulty documents, lpetty thievery and prostitution. She was. refused entry into the U.S, in May, 1953. She en- SPRINGHILL, N.S. (CP) Police —continued their search Monday for two: prisoners who escaped from the minimum se- curity prison here Sunday night. Roadblocks were thrown up in ~“Thorthern Nova Scotia and in?) : ; Pa ne *|southern New Brunswick soon tered Canada in August, 1955, her married name Mun- when her file in Europe the name of Hessler have been destroyed. O’Brien did not éxplain the Hessler file would under after Laurie Robert Silliker, 23, singer of Port Elgin, N.B., and Leslie | wee Doucette; 28; of Toronto; |" id lescaped. © = ~ te Police were warned to ap- |why proach the pair with caution. ~ |pave been destroyed). Silliker was serving a two-| | auto theft RELATIONS WITH. SEVIGNY while Doucette was serving four Mrs. Munsinger had an illicit years for breaking, entering sexual relationship with Mr. and theft. Sevigny and had sufficient ac- Walkout Moves Made To Stall hoe TORONTO (CP) — “i cause.’ Where disputes arise meetings continued Monday as |the association. wants compul- -CBC President Alphonse OQui- sory arbitration by a mediator met tried to forestall an immu- appointed by the federal labor nent strike. by television pwo- department ducers. , The association also The strike-threat was made’ qeamanded CBC management ‘Sunday by 41 members of ‘he make no production decision on Toronto Producers’ Association television programs wit h- after a 7% - hour emergency | out consulting producers and meeting. ' supervisors In a statement, the assocta- ' periods! Steven has heen in prison since his conviction seven years\ago in the slaying -of_a_young girl. However, the federal government has an- nounced plans .to review his case, (CP Wirephote) * tion said its member producers MET WITH HAGGAN te would withdraw their -services| After Mr. Ouimet arrived unless Mr. Ouimet accepted a here wom Ottawa early Mon- three point ultimatum. day, hemet with the CBC: pub- Demands include a CBC guar- lic affairs supervisor, Reeves antee no firings or ‘‘disciplin- |Haggan. He then began nego- ary transfers’’ be made with: tiations with the producers. Re- “showing — demonstrative | known, and was paying proteciton lev- ied on_prostitutes. Pons Before leaving Canada in February, 1961, for Germany, “‘she-—and-another. prostitute went on a buying spree,” pay-. ing with rubber cheques. This resulted in the two_pros- d social hall owned by St ‘ . son | a tornado was sighted near Am- |ture had been short. ic patdieene Y St. was on a first-name basis with | titutes spending the night in. Comments nas _|* At least five: homes-a-ehuren ;5ePh’s parish. iGeorge Hees, former Conserva- | jail during which threats were no injuries_in the |tive trade minister, and with uttered that persons in high places would hear of it and the. name of the associate defence no indication that Mrs. Mun-- singer, while in Canada, was in touch with Russian intelligence., But it was a fact the opportu-- nity was there and the Russians knew of her background. THOUGHT VULNERABLE He said the RCMP believed she was extremely vulnerable . to pressure and that any per. sons associated with here were prime targets. for blackmail by racketeers. mer justice minister Fulton in December, 1960, and were not. "|requested to make further iny vestigations at that time. testimony a week ago Mr. Hees had stated the first he had heard of the RCMP reports was to: interested parties by Mr. Justice Spence. ean He quoted Mr. Hees as say- discussed the case with him in 1960 or there- after. : Mr.__O’Brien listed 20 doen- ments which he said have been submitted —-to—-the—commission, nine of which the judge said were confidential and not to be made available to the press. These nine, Mr. O’Brien said, included the following: A copy of an RCMP report on Mrs. Munsinger dated De- cember, 1960, “A condensation of this with one additional fact, - also dated December, 1960. Another RCMP report appar- ently identical with the orevl- ous condensation with a second part. added, dated January, 1963. A Two of the documents made public stated that Joseph Charles Armand Gaston Le- vesque was appointed execu- tive assistant to Mr. Sevigny Sept. 21, 1959, at a salary of $8,000 a year, raised to $9,000 June ‘1, 1960. '- REJECTS DEMAND Mr.- Justice Spence rejected Conservative counsel, Charles Dubin, that Justice Minister Cardin be required to specify charges, if. any, of misconduct against former prime . minister Diefenbaker. Mr. Dubin contended if the charges weren’t specified, Mr. |Liberal cabinet he couldn’t pro- ‘ceed further with the. inquiry. | The judge said the cabinet has {mot charged. anyone but has merely directed that an investi- gation be made into a series of {statements by Mr. Cardin. Mr. Dubin said Mr. Cardin himself stated he was making charges in a March 11 letter to |Prime Minister Pearson which jhas been placed before the in- |quiry. | “I’m not. responsible for the |verbiage used by the minister jof justice,” Mr. Justice Spence isaid.. “Those are his words; what was referred to me is his | statement.”” Mr. Cardin has said two or more ministers in Mr. Diefen- baker’s cabinet were involved with Mrs:~Munsinger—and—Mr, Diefenbaker mishandled the lease when it was brought to his attention. . Mr. O’Brien said “no one can make charges of misconduet against anyone at this stage of ithe proceedings."’ The judge said to attempt | (give charges,counts and indict- — iments now would indicate he was prejudging the case. He added if he does make a report alleging any . miscon- duct against anyone, notice will be given to the accused so that they can make the fullest rep- resentations to the inquiry. Mr. Justice Spence said it | would be inappropriate for the | commission to subpoena mem. hers of the Privy Council (ip former leause.” Where disputes arise | sults of the meetings are not)the main, present and | out leabinet ministers). —_ The RCMP reported_-to—for--— in a precis of them distributed - the---demand— ofthe, associate - Mr. O’Brien said there’ was. “~ —Mr-—-0'Brien--said—in.. secret _ acti Justice Spence should tell the