Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman. ville, Ajax Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- ario and Durham Counties, b \ Weather Report End of cold snap means rain for Southern Ontario. Low tonight, 40. High Thursday, * She Oshawa Simes Post Office Department VOL. ,95 -- NO. 96 soe v0 cetera * OSHAWA, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 11,-1966 Miers and tet conan ot Fosse toe THIRTY-SIX PAGES " of & & Diefenbaker Quoted . By Gerda, Spence Told PACIFISTS ARRESTED New Hampshire State Po- lice carry David Read of Voluntown, Conn., one of seven pacifists arrested as more than 10 demonstra- tors began a march on the University of New Hamp- shire campus at Durham, N.H., today. The march it- self and a 30-minute vigil were without incident. Po- lice did not specify what charges would be brought against those taken away. (AP Wirephoto) Concern About Wife Expressed By Accused SAULT STE, MARIE, Ont. (CP)--William Daiton Barber, 55, on trial for capital murder in the Dec. 3 death of his wife, Marjorie, 53, expressed deep concern for her mental and sical health hours before her a witness testified Tues- wrence Brown, administra- tive assistant to the president of Algoma Steel Corp., said Barber, staff assistant to the he had talked with his prife's| sister and learned there was a history of depression. When she had been young the sister said the only way to get her out of these depressions was to strike her. "Dalton told me this was something he could never do," Mr. Brown said. He said the last time he had seen Mrs, Bar- ber was last Aug. 20 and at that time she was in good vice-president, operations, came to his office about 4 p.m. Dec. 2) and said he feared his wife was) a manic depressive. | Mrs. Barber was found dead of carbon monoxide poisoning) in the bedroom of their $45,000) home here in the early morning! of Dec. 3. , Mr. Brown testified that Bar-| ber told him his wife often rushed out of the house in 'the evenings to go for a drive. Her) attitude toward her husband) changed completely between) the time he left for work in the morning and the time he re- turned in the evening, Barber said his wife had be come abusive 'and vicious in talking of other people. and friends were no longer inviting} her to their homes, Mr. Brown said, Barber told Mr. Brown that Tremors Tar Tashkent Again MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Thou-| sands of persons were made homeless and hundreds of houses were destroyed or dam-| aged by a new series of earth! tremors which hit the central) Asian city of Tashkent Tuesday, | it was reported today. | The quake came exactly two weeks after a tremor rumbled) across the central Asian city| and left some 4,000 families homeless. Moscow radio said the latest} tremors began early Tuesday,| blacking out several districts of} Tashkent, a city of more than| 1,000,000. No casualty figures were available, but several people were taken to hospitals for treatment, Tass news agency reported. } | | Tax Board | Thumbs Down OTTAWA (CP)--The jax ap- peal board has dismifsed an| appeal by Tilbury Hotel Ltd. against a revenue department finding that it failed to report! # SWINGING AT THE SMITHSONIAN $2,859.60 of taxable income when it-filed its 1960 return! showing net income of only $3,-| 229.94. The nase of the 24-room hotel at Tilbury, Ont., 35 miles east} of Windsor, was dismissed in a judgment by J. 0. Weldon which scathingly criticized the com-| pany's accounting methods and} its bank for cashing a $1,000 cheque for an individual, al though the cheque was made payable to the company, |me he would not | Dec. health and perfectly all right mentally. Mr. Brown said that when the two parted, Barber "reassured strike his wife," When Mrs. Barber was found dead, Barber lay unconscious across her feet. The two were discovered by a doctor respond- ing to a telephone call from Barber. John B, Barber, brother of the accused and a vice-presi-| dent of Algoma Steel, said he was present when police inter- viewed his brother at hospital 6. Mr. Barber said he interjected during the question- ing that it was physically im- possible for Dalton to have car-| ried his wife into their house when he found her unconscious! in their car as he said he did.| White House Press Secre- tary Bill Moyers, left, in full swing at the Opera Ball in the Smithsonian Institution's new Museum of History and Technology, ' May 6. Mrs. Rudolph Car- ter, right, wife of a State Department officer, after she had gone home to put a slip under her white lace | 4 "I felt that Dalton was in a confused state when he gave po- lice this statement and was reaching for things -- drawing more on his imagination--and this was not characteristic of him at all." Special Crown Counsel §. A.| Caldbick of Timmins asked the witness what he did at the Bar- ber home early Dec, 3 when he learned of the carbon monoxide mishap. Mr. Barber said he checked |the house and grounds with po- lice officers and discovered the Cun - Runner By Air And $ | SAIGON (AP)--U.S, ships and | jplanes aided by the South Viet- |namese Air Force and navy jdrove a gun ~ running coastal |freighter ashore at the southern | tip of South Viet Nam Tuesday jnight and broke it in two. U.S. and South Vietnamese \frogmen seized large quantities jof weapons and ammunition, jsome with Soviet markings, jafter the 100-ton freighter broke up on the Cao Mau Peninsula 1200 miles soutwest of Saigon. The freighter's port of origin was not immediately deter- | mined, U.S. paratroops of the 101st | |Airborne Division clashed with} \a battalion of North Vietnamese jregular army troops 95 miles |northeast of Saigon, the U.S, |command said today | The paratroops killed 22 of the estimated 300 Communists| Grounded ea Forces and captured four, Light U.S, casualties were reported, TWO PLANES LOST Two U.S. F-105 Thunderchiefs were shot down over North Viet | Nam, One pilot was rescued by a} helicopter 105 miles northwest of Hanoi. The other pilot, shot 17 miles south of Dang Hoi, ap- parently was unable to eject) and was listed as missing | By U.S. count, this brought | the total American planes re-| ported lost over North Viet Nam | to 235. American jets attacking North| Viet Nam spotted five MiG-17s| northwest of Hanoi but did not engage them, \ Air force and navy plafies flew 83 missions over North Viet) , Nam. Targets near the Mu Gia} Pass supply route to the south) also were hit. 'Common Market Members Reduce Tarif From AP-Reuters BRUSSELS (CP) Minis-| 'ters of the European Common} Market cleared a major hur-| die today by agreeing on financ- ing of agricultural subsidies and reforms. They also agreed to do away with the internal trade barriers on agricultural and industrial {goods by July 1, 1948 -- 18 months ahead of schedule. The farm financing issue has been one of the most controver- lsial in the Common Market's eight-year history and. threat- lened to disrupt the West Euro- jpean trade bloc last summer, | f Controls therlands and Luxembourg. The common fund will draw its financial resources partly from customs duties on im- ported farm products and partly. from direct contributions of the member nations, It was esti- mated that the fund would spend some $1,500,000,000 a year on financing exports of farm surpluses, price supports, and structural improvements in ag- riculture. The principle behind the op eration is that the six have agreed to pay the subsidy cost of exporting high-priced farm surpluses and of keeping inter-| | | motor of the car in the attached| The ministers agreed on the|nal market prices stable, garage was cold, while the mo-|joint community financing of} France and The Netherlands tor of the other Barber car in the driveway was warm He and acting coroner F, P.|cover all Common Market farmjuce. Italy and Luxembourg are Sparks examined a garden hose hanging on the garage wall, and lthe cost of farm supports by! July 1, 1967, It is expected to |produce by july 1, 1968, | To raise the level of farm ef- will draw the main benefits as} major exporters of farm prods) the expected to benefit from | im- joint financing of farm Dr. Sparks may have smelled|ficiency throughout the commu:| provements, the end of it, Mr. Barber testi- fied. Mr. Barber said that in the nity, particularly in the most} backward areas like southern} jItaly, the cost of farm improve West Germany and Belgium as the largest. importers will -|make the greatest sacrifices in| Ney course of their walk around the| ment willbe borne partly frgfm|paying a share of the market's house, "We were frankly puz- zied. . . . We were looking for a hose... . But we found noth- ing unusual," Mr. Barber described his brother as a quiet, passive well-read person who had done some brilliant studies for the company about five years ago. community funds. The means by which the six) countries individually used to| protect their farmers will then be replaced by a joint system and they will jointly finance jsubsidies tg dispose of sur- pluses on the world market, The Common Market's mem- bers are France, West Ger- |many, Italy, Belgium, The Ne- 'Atlantic Probe Hears | N.Y. Financier Vanished TORONTO (CP)--The royal) 'commission investigating the | }collapse last year of Atlantic Acceptance Corp, was told Tues-| sonior partner in the Toronto] school children and 27 adults. day that C, Powell Morgan, then president of Atlantic, and New| Which represented Mr. Weinrott| at Morley Elementary School York financier George Weinrott| i" incorporating Cimcony. That|three blocks away on Detroit's ;made common cause in a num- ber of companies, chief of which! was Cimcony of Canada Lid. surplus production, Belgium's main reward will) be that the common financing | will cover its sugar beet pro duction, It also' will cover Ger- many's increasing production of} poultry and eggs. West Germany's sacrifices will be counterbalanced by get-| ting France to agree to a free) market for industrial goods. aN | } | | | | The witness said he urow up a personal contract for his em-| ployment with Cimcony and) gave 'it to Senator David Croll, law firm of Croll and Borins, was the last he ever heard of it, he testified, The next thing} he knew he was told he would) down while attacking a bridge| @ TESTIFIED FOR SECOND DAY Pierre Sevigny (right), Gerda Munsinger Affair, at former Conservative Associ- which Mr. Sevigny testified ate . Defence Minister, is for the second day. With seen leaving Tuesday's him is Jules Dupre, his hearing of the Mr. Justice counsel, * Spence Inquiry into the Erotic Act Or Pornography? Court Reserves Decision TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario | Court of Appeal Tuesday re- served its decision on whether seven pictures by three Cana- dian artists are pornography or| PRESENTS ARGUMENT erotic art, | (CP Wirephoto) "Each of the drawings mani-| fests an undue, unnecessary ex-| ploitation of sex," Mr, Hach-| born said of the seven pictures. | onto art dealer, has appealed) ™meron by the Civil Liberties As-| her conviction and $350 fine last|S0ciation, said earlier who ruled obscene sever pic-/Content and circumstances sur-, tures in the Eros 65 show at her| founding the exhibition, gallery | To-this Mr. Hachborn replied} E. G. Hachborn, of the attor-|hat Mr, Williston was trying to} - general's department told| argue there is one obscenity law the five appeal judges that if|for the rich and another for the} artists reach a high imagina-|P0or, He said Mr, Williston was tive level they will produce|claiming the pictures were not) merely erotic art, But if their)obscene benause they were dis- imaginative level is somewhat|Played in a well-appointed, well- less, they will produce porno-|regarded, commercial gallery, an ramshackle slum building, it would detract from their artis DETROIT (AP) -- One manjthe history and purpose of art, died today and 15 remained in|Miss Cameron's counsel sub- hurt }past and present, The blast at the Wayne Soap; Mr. Justice J, B. Aylesworth} Among the injured were) 83 them or not," graphic matter, Mr, Hachborn said the de- tic merit, hospital from injuries suffered) mitted a list of 27 art books Co, was-biamed on a naptha de-|accepted the submission but said State Of Siege ===" |fence argument was that if the Blast Kills M Arguing that the court must| Tuesday in a soap plant explo-/showing reproductions of erotic rivative which leaked from aj"it will be for the court to de- | same pictures were put in al In Detroit Plant . |have a working knowledge of sion in which at least 110 were|paintings by great artists of the machine and ignited, |termine whether they look at | | | | The blast shattered windows south side, hurling glass splin-| ters into classrooms filled with! children, Eight children were Opposition Leader's Aide Calls Story Smear, Gossip By DAVE McINTOSH OTTAWA (CP) -- An allgged statement concerning a pprine| minister of Canada by a woman described as a common prosti- tute and one-time Soviet spy was made public Tuesday by Mr. Justice Wishart Spence of jthe Supreme Court of Canada. Mr, Justice Spence, head of the Gerda Munsinger security inquiry, said a commission-pre- pared summary of police re- ports containing the alleged statement evidence at the royal commis- sion inquiry, The summary quoted Mrs. Munsinger, described in RCMP evidence before the inquiry as a prostitste and one-time spy, as saying the prime minister of Canada "had told her she was doing a great thing for Can- ada," A spokesman for Opposition Leader Diefenbaker, who was prime minister from 1957 to 1963, said: 'We treat this whole state- ment with the contempt it de- serves, It is a smear, The re- lease of this kind of unverified and unsubstantiated gossip or rumor, or whatever it is, is to- tally irresponsible" DENIED EVIDENCE Evidence has been that Mrs. Munsinger, who lived in Canada from 1955 to 1961, was the mis- tress of Conservative associate defence minister Pierre Se- vigny, He has denied this. The 3,500 - word summary, made public by Mr, Justice Spence at the request of chief commission counsel J. L, O'Brien, said at one point with- out specifying the source: "Mrs, Munsinger pointed out that the pressure and tensions is not part of the) arising from being associate de- fence minister, and domestic problems, had been prime fac- tors in Mr. Sevigny's quest for companionship and solace, "She made it clear that her relations with Mr. Sevigny were not just an 'affair' but that she would marry him if it were pos- sible for him to obtain a di- vorce, "She claimed. to have done everything in her power to as- sist Mr. Sevigny with his do- mestic problems and his work }and she recounted that, at a s0- jcial function in Ottawa, the |prime minister of Canada had jtold her that she was doing a great thing for Canada and that |Mr, Sevigny had great things |to offer Canada, "This, she said, gave her a |great sense of pride in the knowledge that she was of some assistance to Mr, Sevigny," 'MADE HER PROUD' | Mr. Sevigny was still in the | witness box when the document was distributed in mimede graphed form to the reporters at the inquiry. He was asked no questions about what Mrs, }Munsinger allegedly claimed were his domestic troubles and possible marriage to her after a divorce. Mr, O'Brien asked that the re- port be made public because a question of the validity of the police reports had risen. He did not elaborate, Mr. Justice Spence said the summary was a "handy docu ment" but that "of course it is not evidence and can't be con- sidered as evidence in the preparation of a report," JUSTICE REFUSES Continued On Page 2 Guarantees Against Threats Asked For Non - NEW DELHI (Reuters) -In-| |. Walter Williston, one of five|dia warned the atomic powers | Dorothy Cameron, former Tor-|!awyers retained for Miss Ca-|today that non-nuclear nations] would have to make their own and blackmail, External Affairs Minister Sar- dar Swaran Singh toid Pariia- ment that countries could not be allowed to suffer just because \they refrained from joining the| nuclear club. The nuclear club powers are |the United States, Russia and| ®& |Britain, All have signed the|the test-ban treaty in 1963, |treaty banning all nuclear test-| ling except underground, France| and China, the other atomic powers, have refused to sign the treaty. nent M NEW MM HIG Nuclear Nations Speaking in a debate in the upper house onthe latest Chi- nese nuclear test, he said: | that the|atomic bombs if they were not} "The government still feels lyear by Magistrate F, C, Mayes,|main factor was the manner, | guaranteed from nuclear threats |the interests of world peace and jour own security are better |served by. giving all support te |the efforts for world disarmas jment than by building our own {nuclear weapons," But he added that the Geneva disarmament. talks had made {@ progress since signing of He demanded that the main But he added that the Geneva talks had made little progress since signing of the test-ban treaty in 1963, | disarmament iT YUTH EL FOEONRENP ELE HLIGHTS LBJ Says U.S. Restrained PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) day' the power of the Unit -- President Johnson said to- ed States "is tempered by great restraint'? in Southeast Asia and elsewhere. 'What nation has announced such li mited objectives or such will- ingness to remove its military presence once those objec+ tives are achieved?" Johnson ton University, asked in a speech at Princes a Police Shoot Nightclub Singer TORONTO (CP) -- Two men were suspended today criminal negligence after a above the ankle at a ~downt men were examining a revolver in Metropolitan Toronto police- and one was charged with nightclub singer was shot own tavern, Police said two a- washroom above | The royal; commission was) told Monday that Commodore) Sales Acceptance Ltd., an At- |lantic subsidiary, lent Cimcony $1,818,071 and repayments of {principal and interest reduced }the outstanding amount to $1,- 727,728 by June 30, 1965, the }month in which Atiantic folded The money was used to finance operations of other companies ;contralled or. directed by Mr | Weinrott The commission expressed desire Monday to hear from Mr Weinrott himself hut was told the whereabouts of the 76-year-| old financier were unknown and jhe was believed to be out of the jurisdiction of the commission Thomas Stevens, who left Cen jtral Mortgage and Housing | Corp. in 1963 to become presi }dent of Cimcony at $10,000 aj | year, told the commission Tues |day that his job lasted 60 days and he severed his connection with Cimcony. afier a money settlement | dress, at the suggestion of the ball's executive com- mittee. Rep, H. R. Gross, R--lowa, in remarks on the floor of the House, said the administration's "mink coat set'. should its late White House' parties and dancing in the Smithsonian in view of the world situa- tion, sto; n Mr s 0 mself, | He said'relations. bet Weinrott and othe: ithe firm, includir lwere conspicuous! _ad, be given a probationary con-| treated at hospitals and 75 oth- tract for 90 days. ers received first aid at the "Who would leave a job after) school. seven years to take a proba-|. Joseph Sajewicz, 48, of subur- tionary job with a man Wh0/pan Southgate died today of wouldn't tell you what he was|pyrns, He had been working in doing?' asked Mr. Stevens. the plant, "George Weinrott was doing things and nobody knew any- thing about it. The position be came quite untenable."' Production Cut At Chrysler's DETROIT (AP) -- Chrysler |Corp, announced Tuesday a re- duction in its aulo production schedules for June. It thus fol- He told the commission that/jqwed the lead of General Mo- on a visit to Thompson, the town) tors and Ford, which previously administrator made a deroga-ltrimmed their car - building tory reference to Mr. Weinrott, | schedules for May, sear oagel iggy pie Se It said all other Chrysler auto to sae hiv.' ' and truck plants would Work five-day weeks in June and that BLAMES EXPENSES output was scheduled at 136,000 On one occasion, Harry Wag-|cars. That, still would be better man, chartered accountant,| than 1,500 units ahead of June, came to Mr. Stevens and urged| 1965. him to bring. in business be-| .A spokesman for Chrysler cause Mr. Weinrott's expenses; Canada Ltd. in Windsor said the 'were running away with|company will -- not things."" Cimcony and two other com panies, Ticonderoga and Briar- dale, were concentrating in land development and erection of homgs and other properties. at Thompson, Man., Mr. Stevens said GUATEMALA -- (AP) -- The} government Tuesday night de-| jclared a state of siege only jhours after Congress elected Julio Cesar Mendez Montenegro to the presidency, Government spokesmen said| the move. was prompted by the| kidnapping of two officials last | week, Two other persons were} Slain during the abduction A 30-day limit was set on the} | State of siege, a modified form of ma?tial law Earlier Mendez Montenegro, leader of the leftist, non-Com- munist Revolutionary party,| was elected president by depu- ties for a four-year term Mendez Montenegro's election, jhad been virtually assured since | the March elections when his} party won a majority of the 55 seats in Congress, The new president, a lawyer, outpolled two 'other candidates for the office in the March bal loting but failed to win a clear majority. The. final selection thus rested with Congress Mendez Montenegro succeeds | Col. Enrique Peralta, who| reduce helped overthrow President Mi-! |scheduled production in Canada,'guel Ydigoras March 20, 1963, |; * the entertainers' lounge when one of them pulled the trig- ger, not realizing the gun was loaded. Reds Launch Missile Attack SAIGON (Reuters) -- Communist jets Tuesday launche ed their first reported attack with air-to-air missiles on American aircraft over North Viet Nam, a U.S, military spokesman said here today. The attack, in which 1,000 mile-an-hour MIG-17s fired two heat-seeking missiles at a flight of American planes rescuing a downed pilot, took place only 50 miles from North Viet Nam's border with China, ... In THE TIMES today... Traffic Safety Checks In Force Here--P. 13 Whitby Merchants Set Store Hours--P. 5 Ann Londers--14 City News--13 Classified--30, 31, 32, 33 Comics--27 Editorial--4 Financial---34 Obits Sports ~33 8, 9, 10, 11 Theatre--6 Whitby News----5 Women's--14, 15, Weather--2 16