City 2 = -- VU UL Pe % a i im a 3S et THOUGHT FOR TODAY Many a reputation for wisdom has been acquired simply 'by a lack of anything to say. cil Votes Capital She Oshawa Times Irn FR 2 a ~™ WEATHER Cloudy with sno ense Cuts--Page ll REPORT wfiurries today, Mainly clear tonight, clouding over again Wednesday. VOL. 90--NO. 283 Price Not Over 10 Cents Per Copy OSHAWA, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, DECE: Authorized os Second Class Mall Post. Office Department, Ottawa and for payment of Postage in Cash. MBER 5, 1961 TWENTY-TWO PAGES SUE COMPANY oal HOUGHTON, Mich. (AP)--A| |disabled Canadian coal eer |with 28 men aboard wallowed |helplessly on heaving Lake Su-| |perior through the night as res-| cue ships sped toward it. | A sister ship stood by th | e \stricken C. D. Secord awaiting ,|Duluth, Minn. | |was expected to reach the scen */a night of coast} from} hi e arrival of the U.S. cutter Woodrush The Woodrus the guard about mid-morning. : The Secord, after weathering) 10-foot waves and ' winds up to 40 miles an hour, was in no immediate danger,| 'ithe coast guard said. The Golden Hind, sister ship '\of the Secord, stood by to at- '\tempt to take the disabled ves sel in tow upon the arrival of :|the Woodrush. The 542-foot Secord had lost ; part of her propeller and was GILBERT ADAMS, top, and William Smith, former co- managers of Brandon Packers Limited, have sued the com- pany for wrongful dismissal and breach of contract. They were hired while the firm was under control of Hugh Paton and D. Hubert Cox, Toronto businessmen convicted in No- vember of stealing from the firm. being towed by the steamer Sir| Thomas Shaughnessy toward 'Duluth when the towline parted lin high seas at 7 p.m. EST Mon- day night. TOWLINES SNAP The pounding seas broke sev- leral other towlines and the, /9,000-ton Secord was left adrift} about 10 miles south of Rock. of | Ages light station of the western jtip of Isle Royale in northwest Lake Superior. At word of the danger, the 620-foot Golden Hind, with the] Secord part of the fleet owned iby the Mohawk Navigation Company of Montreal, raced to the scene from Port Arthur. (CP Wirephoto) | The Golden Hind reached the|bhuckled down to a long, stormy easiest | Final Municipal | Election Results -- The following are election re-| Young, 500; Arnold Tipper, 441;|Malalsekera charged that the sults from various Oshawa dis- Fred Stewart, 366; W. E. Brad-|United States was building up a trict municipalities. DARLINGTON Reeve -- Garnet Rickard accl.) Deputy - Reeve -- Arthur Andrews (accl.); Blanchard (accl.) Council (3 elected) -- Harold (accl.). Muir, 990; Sidney Cornish, Frederick Smith, 813; Mary Budai, 445; Elmer lard, 324, 968; Mrs Pol- Public School Board (3 elect- ed) -- Sidney Worden, 624; Mrs¢ Ruby Courtice, 597; Herbert Mackie, 536; Robert Cook, 465 SCOTT Reeve--Francis Hockley, 544 St John McGillivray, 204 Deputy - Reeve--Chesley Old- ham, 368; Alan Lockie, 328 Council (3 elected) -- Elwood Nicholls, Walker, 513; Norman 473; Norman Oldham, 380 ris Sanderson, 377 ORONO VILLAGE Trustees (3 elected) -- H. M Mercer, 183; R. C. Forrester, 181; J. L. Lowery, 153; G. E Simpson, 146 UXBRIDGE Reeve--John A. Bali (accl.) Deputy-Reeve--Wilfred Gould (accl.) Mayor (1 elected) -- Stanley Beach, 520; Fred Kelland, 269. Council (6 elected) Bert Simpson, 581; Mrs. Nellie Kydd, 547, Stewart Ball, 540; Howard Lyons, Mor- the drive Monday with one of the sharpest assaults ever made bury, 347; Mrs. Estelle Willis,| 275; Leila Hvidsten, 219; Fred| eavy Sea isobles Ship stricken vessel at 3 a.m., Te- living the Shaughnessy, which) proceeded toward Duluth. CREW OKAY "Everyone aboard the Secord is all right," an officer on the) Shaughnessy told The Associ-| ated Press by radio-telephone| | this. morning. "But they've| | taken quite a beating. The fur-| | niture's all smashed up." t By 6 a.m. the Secord had) } drifted to about 23 miles south| ; of Rock of Ages light station on Isle Royale, the Shaughnessy officer said, and was drifting at about two miles an hour. But the helpless ship still had about 25 miles of open water between| , it and the nearest point on Michigan's Keweenaw Penin- sula. A coast guard seaplane cir- cled over the Secord during the night. The plane could land cn the rough water to rescue the} Secord crew if it had to, the coast guard said. Long, Stormy Debate Starts On Red China UNITED NATIONS (CP)--A concerted Afro-Asian attack on the United States' attempt to bar Communist China from the United Nations built up steam! today as the General Assembly} oe debate on the Chinese seating Ulla Lindstrom, left, Swed- econ {17 Afro-Asian| 15% minister of state and G. P. eylon, one © ro-Asian 2 : countries which has diplomatic| Malalasekera, right, of Ceylo relations with Peking, launched | ------------_----- spoke yesterday at General | | Assembly meeting of the | n United Nations. Both support- | in the UN on Washington's China policy. Ceylonése Ambassador G. P. Review West's "wall of hatred' between the American and Chinese people SUPPORT RED CHINA ADMISSION Macmillan, JFK Injunction Halts M Plant Pickets May Oust Negroes FIGHTING BREAKS OUT BETWEEN UN, KATANGA Fleeing * | City In Panic | UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- |Acting secretary-general U |Thant today ordered jet planes |flown into Elisabethviile for use in support of United Nations jforces in the strike-torn capital }of the Congo's secessionist Ka- tanga province. ELISABETHVILLE -- Fight- ing broke out in. Elisabethville today between UN and Ka- tangan forces, and many Ne- groes fled the city in panic. All members of President Moise Tshombe's cabinet were reported by diplomatic and UN sources to have left this capital of Katanga, secessionist prov- ince of The Congo. Mortar fire and heavy firing were heard outside the tele- graph office, near UN headquar- ters and in the direction of the airport, seven miles outside the city. The fighting broke out soon jafter Brian Urquhart, specia |UN adviser in Katanga, told a press conference that plans for a sneak attack on UN units by Katangan forces had been dis- covered. MOVE TOWARDS AIRPORT Charging a "final act of bad faith," he said Katangan. troops ed seating of Red China in the international organization, He Said the United States' opposi- tion to Red China's admission is building up a wall of hatred that could lead to World War Int. (AP. Wirephote) through thick bush toward the airport now held by the UN. (Shortly after this despatch was filed, telephone connections between Brussels and Elisabeth- |ville were interrupted. After India Force had been discovered advancing response to new UN Security Council orders to the UN com- mand to use force if necessary to remove the mercenaries. The resolution declared Katanga's secession illegal. "We don't all have rifles and automatic weapons but we have our poisoned arrows, spears, pangas (knives) and axes," Tshombe said. The fighting broke out today jafter Foreign Minister Evariste Kimba, acting as ranking offi- cial in the absence of Tshombe in Paris, agreed to removal of a road block thrown up Monday between the airport and the city. Indian troops guard the airport. Urquhart said the Katangans not only did not po gen agreement but set up other bar- riers isolating Swedish and Irish UN camps from the city. | Then the UN official an- {nounced the discovery of a Ka- tangan battle plan, and said fighting was unavoidable. He declared orders were given to UN troops not to fire before at- tacked. He said Katangan ministers, quitting the capital, handed over government affairs to the province's military comm:>"? Then mortar fire wa' aud from near the camp of the In- dian Gurkha troops at UN head- quarters. Katangan workers began flee- ing their jobs and an exodus from the city began. | they were restored, communica- tions officials in Elisabethville said their broadcasting antenna iTshombe Says UN Preparedness | that could lead to a world war. A temporary injunction pro-,tioned in the General Motors in- | He assailed U.S. Ambassador} WASHINGTON (CP)--Prime hibiting striking members of the junction, said last night team- Clarence John-| Adlai E. Stevenson's speech to| Minister Macmillan and Presi-Local 880 International Broth- ster members will abide by it Taylor, 182. Public School Board -- Lorne P had been damaged by shelling. )| S ldi Killed The fight th 4;nNOIGIeCrS Kl ortuguese dof hostilities between UI PARIS (AP) President {round of hostilities between UN} land Katangan forces. ston (accl.); Gordon MacKellar|the assembly urging the UN to dent Kennedy will meet in Ber-/erhood of Teamsters car-hauling and refrain from picketing Gen- NEW DELHI (Reuters) -- An On Sept. 13 UN forces moved Public Utilities -- John Low (accl.). Question: In favor of reducing the number of Councillors to) keep the door closed to Red muda Dec. 21 and 22 to review division from picketing General China. the state of Western readiness|Motors of Canada Ltd. plants "There are apparently not for possible Berlin negotiations!here, was issued Monday after- only two Chinas in American With Russia noon by Judge A, C. Hall. thinking but also two Steven- Informants suggested the two-| A hearing on the injunction eral Motors property. influential Indian newspaper] in The three others mentioned/S#id today the "situation may|, include Leo Labombard, Local| Wl! arise" soon in which Indian 880 president, Robert L. Wilson troops will attempt to oust the secretary-treasurer and Ken./0rtuguese from the Indian en- to Elisabethville and occupied ey points in an effort to rid |the secessionist province of for- jeign mercenaries alleged to be jundermining efforts to bring four instead of six in 1963 --|sons," the Ceylonese said.|day talks, announced Monday,'has been set for 11 a.m. Dec. Yes (538); No (233). |"There is the Stevenson of the;may be followed by a con-!11 at Osgoode Hall. : . brilliant premises, and alas, to|certed Western bid to Moscow, Sydney McAfee, Local 880's BOWMANVILLE my disappointment, the Steven-|to begin four-power, East-West|business representative, one of Reeve -- Sidney Little (accl.). de Gaulle to go along with the neth Delves, a member. About 100 members of Local 2, United Automobile Work- ers, CLC, joined Teamster pic- ket lines at the General Motors south plant for about two hours Saturday morning. No new cars were shipped from GM during the weekend. However, shipping continued from the plant on a normal basis Monday. Dealers and their drivers picked up new cars at] oficial government view is that wonieons after Tshombe made his "poisoned arrow" speech in the plant, without interference during the day. Meanwhile, Mr. McAfee said, the Local 880 executive is ap- plying to Teamsters Internation- clave of Goa. The political correspondent of |The Statesman made the asser- |tion in a report apparently based on a } briefing and representing the gy government's lline." | \territory "'if there is no allevi-| ation in the next few days." The correspondent said ne. He indicated the possibility of the \the Portuguese "have continued| But troops moving into Panigueselinial Katanga back under the wings of the central government in Leopoldville. The fighting ended in a cease- Relations under |RELATIONS WORSEN the top-level official) fire agreement after UN Secre-| _ne/tary - General Dag Hammar-| "official) skjold lost his life in an airplane crash en route to truce talks, intermittent clashes con- truce Moise Tshombe of Katanga said today he had been advised that several UN soldiers have been killed in the latest outbreak of fighting between Katanga and {UN forces. Tshombe made the disclosure at a press conference. He charged that United Nations troops had started the fighting. | Tshombe, who arrived here last Friday presumably en route to Brazil, conferred by tele- phone with his foreign minister after receiving reports of the fighting. Tshombe denied that the Ka- tangans had any plan to attack the UN forces, as charged earl- ier by a UN official at Etlisa- bethville. |to indulge in warlike postures"| concerning the 1,300-square-mile| jterritory which has a 180-mile border with India. son of the same old conclu-/negotiations perhaps in the four Teamster members men- Deputy Reeve Ross C. sions." |form of a foreign ministers con- evens (accl.). ference Mayor -- Ivan Hobbs (accl.). | Pa 2. These prospects are based on T h b C ll Council (6 elected) Roy Unofficial Finish American expectancy that West S om e a Ss reap ie ag S German Chancellor Konrad "| iw 4 1,086; Annie Oke, 1,036; Glen- : ili C 0 B holme Hughes, 793; Kenneth To eaway Season Adenauer will be able to per- ruise rien Hooper, 786; Wesley Fice, 708;) MONTREAL (CP)--Two lake) suade French President Charles 1 "8 a Owen Nicholas, 650; Keith|freighters are scheduled to slip A Criminal Shackelton, 530; George Cawker,|through the St. Lambert locks lana of WastWeat Hecwal 515; J.C. Coyle, 505; Jamesjearly today to bring an unoffi-/'¢¢@ 0! Mast-West bargaining. CP from Reuters-AP Crombie, 501; Glen Fry, 482;|cial end to another season of Th Adenauer-de Gaulle meet-| President Moise Tshombe of Maurice Prout, 394; Harry Kil-/shipping on the St. Lawrence,ing takes place at Paris Satur-/Katanga, on his way to a Moral patrick, 173; Herbert Knapp. Seaway. . day. De Gaulle is reported op-/Re- Armament conference in PUC Frederick M. Van- stone, Lawrence C. Mason! (accl.). School Board--Ivan Woolsey, Jack Lander, Charles Cattran, John Phillips, Paul Chant,| Frank Blunt (accl.), WHITBY See Page 5 for results CANADIAN UN DELEGATION Warning On Space War UNITED NATIONS (CP) -- Canada has told the United Na- tions that if man exports his quarrels into space his days on earth may be numbered. "The spectre of titanic strug- le for mastery of space fills the most complacent of us with foreboding for the future," Senator Alfred J. Brooks, vice- chairman of the Canadian dele- gation, said Monday in the 103- member UN political commit- tee Brooks, announcing Canadian sponsorship of a United States resolution for the peace- ful uses of space, said there are indications that neither of the spaee powers--the U.S. and the CITY EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS POLICE 725-1133 FIRE. DEPT. 725-6574 H*2-6O" " 23-221) end co i ever to be envisioned. . . Soviet Union--intends a '"'selfishjno nation or group of nations, Nations with the opportunity to conquest"' of the outer regions./can ick | "Nevertheless, none of ourjouter space or any planet or/role, especially in the long term.|quit the Republic of Ireland's/eral MP for Nipissing, today. |---- countries can rest easy while'celestial body it contains." nagging concern remains that the earthly rivairy of these twojopposition when he mentioned ognize that powers, and perhaps of other the possibilities of UN resolu- states, may yet be carried into|tions to this effect but the So-|(UN) charter, the infinite reaches of the uni-|viet Union quickly challenged|mankind's him on a more down-to-earth space."' "If we fail to meet the chal-|point--the lenge of wisely ordering man's UN's 24-member outer activities in space, another mea-|committee. ' yerse ..... sure of certainty may be added to the growing possibility that/has been able to do little in its the days of life on planet earth two-year life mostly because of national law be applied to outer Russian demands for unanimity | space and celestial bodies to en- "If we are successful in meet-|but Soviet Deputy Foreign Min-|sure that they are not subject to} are numbered. ing it--and why should. we not/i succeed?--our planet may yet't face the universe with unity of|had reached agreement on An- purpose... sure our children's children a new horizon of beckoning prom- ise, perhaps the most significant ' t "It is also equally essential that there should be universal acceptance that outer space is / free for peaceful exploration and use by all states whatever their strength or size, and that, I We may thus as-/tarctica through unanimity.'clearing house for all informa- Why well? sized also co-sponsored by Italy and!placed on advancing man's abil- outer space provided the United| weather modifjcation. The inland waterway closed) posed to negotiations with the Brazil, says Ireland's Conor| officially at midnight but the| Russians under the present|Cruise O'Brien is a 'criminal' freighters Hochelaga and Porto- state of Soviet-initiated world) who should be prosecuted for doc were unable to clear the tensions. his Congo policies. locks in time for the final trips) But the Britis h-American O'Brien, the resigned United upstream to the Lakehead this| view is iiat Berlin negotiations Nations chief in the secessionist year. are necessary to prevent 8! Congo province, accused. the! The seaway was closed to|shooting war and that willing- British government and British downstream traffic last Satur-'ness to negotiate does not bY| «cutter millionaires" of sabo- day midnight. itself represent appeasement. ltaging UN efforts in The Congo by encouraging the continued secession of Katanga. | Tshombe and O'Brien jpress conferences parts of the world Monday. Tshombe met the press in Paris, where he is stopping for a couple of days on his way to) Brazil, while O'Brien spoke at} a hotel near UN headquarters) in New York. | M RARE Tshombe showed open con- lay claim to appropriate|play an even more significant|tempt for O'Brien, who also held} in different : a / "Certainly it is imperative foreign service after 19 years.| Brooks ran into no immediate that the world community rec-| "T rejoice that he has quit," ¢ international law,|Tshombe said. including the provisions of the} ©'brien blamed pressure applies to all of/brought by Britain and France| activities in outer/for his resignation. Both coun- __ |tries have denied they used such of the; 'The foui-power resolution in- pressure. space troduced by U.S. Ambassador, Adlai Stevenson embodies these committee points 1. That the principles of inter- functioning Police Probe Into Shooting Of Woman CAYUGA (CP)--Police today claim of sov-'investigated the death of a woman found in a barn near That the UN be made a here. The body of Sharon Stringer, not on outer space as'tion on outer space activities, |37, Cayuga resident, was found including launchings of satel- Sunday night. Brooks outlined scientific and/lites and co-operation for peace- died Saturday echnical questions, as empha-|ful use of outer space ¢ ; re ' She"had been shot in the chest in the U.S. resolution--| 3. That special emphasis be with a .22-calibre rifle which was found lying nearby. Police ity to understand basic physical! would advance no theory on the the legal as- forces affecting climate and shooting peaceful uses of the . possibility large-scale} Cayuga is 20 miles south of 'Hamilton. Brooks said the ster Valerian Zorin retorted!appropriation by hat an international conference ereignty 9 Police said she Australia. He added "However . pects of the of |department fought two hours to} Landslide Victo iplosions. al President, James Hoffa, to get sanction to stop all truck transports, including freight} haulers, from delivering to Can- adian "Big Three" plants. Mr. McAfee put a call into a Miami Hotel where Hoffa is re-|m ported staying, Monday after-| noon, to get his order prohibit- ing truck transports from haul- ing to Canadian automotive manufacturing ° plants. | He said that Portuguese frig-| ates have been out on "'aggres-| sive patrols' and Indian gov-} -._/ernment circles were "further automobile | ruffled by accounts of Portu-| )guese atrocities in Goa." Meanwhile, the Indian govern-| ent appeared to be trying to| NEW DELHI (Reuters) keep the Portuguese guessing|prime Minister Nehru said to- by publicizing troops move-|day that India would go to war ments and military manoeu-|ig necessary to end "Chinese ag- jvres. : : gression" on Indian territory. ls bone report said India felt that) He told legislators that if the Yov. 24 incident in which ania hi Communists move Indian fisherman was shot and|v "7&5 @ ™ | . s | \ki ' ; across the line dividing India 3rd Major Fire Portuguese anvaty passing the|trom 'Tibet "we shall resist and In Few Weeks jsouth of Goa, was "'the ctilmin.|"ePel them," jating point in a whole series of | He made the statement -- i i ; g|incidents of a provocative na-|reporting that the Chinese Com-| NORTH BAY (CP)--The third|ture spread over a number of|munists in a Dec, 2. letter Pax cnelda ere in recent weekSivears, during which many acts|threatened to send troops into estroyed a two-storey bpilding|o¢ brutality were inflicted on|India's Northeast Frontier) belonging to Jack Garland, Lib-| eople of Goa." lagency. Pt Sean alee sc Nehru said the Chinese re- jected Indian charges of new} ;Chinese incursions into Indian) territory which were contained} 1 ry In Trinidad Vote | | PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad| rt (Reuters)--The ruling People's| Firemen set the loss at $200,-| National Movement headed by 000. : : Prime Minister Eric Williams| Mr. Garland said the loss was|won a landslide victory in a} partly insured. general election here Monday. | The two other fires recently By early today, the PNM/ also involved persons promin-|was assured é6f 20 of the 30 ent in this city's politics. On)seats in the House of Repre-| Nov. 10 fire destroyed the Mer-/sentatives lin Hotel, owned by ex-mayor| The opposition Merle Dickerson, and the Pa-|/Labor Party was langio Building. On Nov. 24 the|nine seats. Price Signs Limited building,|ing seat will be contested Dec. | owned by another ex-mayor|29 because a candidate died. Cred Price, was razed. The victorious party formed Damage in the three fires to-|the outgoing government led by| tals more than $1,000,000. Williams, a 50 -year - old his-| No cause has been found for|torian educated at Oxford Uni- | any of the blazes. Today's out-/ versity. break, made worse by a 40-| The Democratic Labor Party mile-an-hour wind, was punctu-|is led by Rudranath Capildeo, a ated by a series of small ex-|former University - of London lecturer, i The whole North Bay fire bring the blaze in the soft drink| bottling plant and warehouse under control. A large stock of soft drinks prepared for the Christmas trade was destroyed. Democratic} assured of The single remain-| JAWAHARLAL NEHRU Indias Nehru Warns Chinese {in an October letter from India to Communist China. Saying India would if neces- sary go to war to stop Chinese aggression, Nehru told parlia- ment: 'I do not rule out war. How can I?" He added that India would prefer peaceful means, but also |had to consider other methods |"'short of war' and then war itself. 'My whole soul reacts against \war,"' he said. Asked what India would do if the Chinese Communists moved across the line which divides India from Communist - con- trolled Tibet, he replied: "Obviously, if that is what is one, we shall resist and repel them," He said that the Chinese in their reply to India's October note counter-charged that India had increased military activi- ties in the border area, estab- lished new checkpoints,' per- mitted Indian planes to violate | Chinese air space, and ordered Chinese patrols not to come | within: about 12% miles of the | Chinese side of the border. He said the Chinese letter contained '"'a hint that if our military activities continue they may have to take steps for de- fence by sending some troops Fj across the McMahon line." The 850-mile McMahon line, named after British official Sir Henry McMahon who drew it up, was adopted as the demar- cation of India's northeast fron- tier with Tibet in 1914, when In- dia was under British rujp.