] '. Five THOUGHT FOR TODAY The wife said, "Be an angel and let me drive". He did, and he is, tie Diet thle: Mill Mindi, Sil Sis Mile Tk A Ber Sie LE AE i itn ie toni WEATHER Mainly clear and Homeless In Bloor Street 1 East Fire -- Page 11. very cold to- day. A little milder Wednesday. Winds west 15 today, south- west 20 Wednesday. are VOL. 92 -- NO. 12 TWENTY'SIX PAGES MEMBERS OF the Chinese Communist delegation are shown at opening session of 'he East German Communist Party Congress in East Ber- lin today. In centre is the dele- gation's head, Wu HUHsiu Tschuan. Others are uniden- tified. They heard Walter Ul- bricht, East German Com- munist Party chief, denounce Red China's.attacks on Soviet | Premier Khrushchev. --(AP Wirephoto via cable from Berlin) Ulbricht Urges End To India-China Rift Ps og (AP) -- East Ger- ny's Communist leader, Wal- today called on Communist China and India to settle their border dispute at or "Ulbricht, once. In a speech to a world gather- ing of Communist leaders, Ul- bricht criticized the Chinese for tion launching the border bg India without consulting other Communist states. "8 Western troops into a United) Nations command or: replacing them by troops from other coun- tries. Khrushchev received a warm ovation from the delegates in East Berlin's barnlike Werner Seelenbinder Sports Palace. He shook hands with many leading Communist personalities and Chinese communist dele- Premier ited Khrushchev with ales the world from nnciear apd Pick reaching a compromis _-- crisis with ann Preaaest Ulbricht proposed a vague so- lution of the problem of divided Berlin which would involve ral moving the NATO flag from) the Western garrisons in the} Western part of the city and Deal Planned To Get SIU Back In CLC OTTAWA (CP)--Some top Ca- jnadian labor leaders are being sounded out informally on a Substituting a United Nations/deal to get the Seafarer' Inter- flag. With Khrushchev listening from the stage, Ulbricht told the opening session of the East Ger- man Communist party's sixth congress that the Soviet pre- mier's Cuban compromise kept communism alive in Cuba. The Russian leader also had "prevented the world from ex- periencing the horrors of nu- clear war." Khrushchev nodded agreement. | CHARTS SAME LINE Khrushchev, whose major pol- icy speech is not expected until Wednesday, had charted the same line in a rip-roaring talk when his train. pulled into Ber- lin Monday. In evident warning to the Chi- nese, he declared he was not prepared to fight a war to bring about the victory of inter- national communism, "The burial of capitalism will be brought about by the work- ing class in each country," Khrushchev declared, adding national Union of Canada (Ind.) back into the Canadian Labor Congress, reliable sources said Monday. The proposal involves the early departure of American- born SIU President |Banks from. the leadership of Hal C. the union, with three "moni- tors'"' taking over control on a six-month trial to reform the} IU. | The sources said no formal |offer has been made, but the jidea is being tried out on some |key union leaders who also hold influential positions in the CIC's executive council. Indications are that at least two top-ranking unionists are opposed to any compromise which would get the SIU or Mr. Banks off the hook before the federal investigation beimg con- ducted by Mr. Justice T. G. Norris into labor strife on the St, Lawrence and Great Lakes. gation received only light ap- plause. No major Chinese fig- ure is here. The group is headed by Wu Hsiu-chuan, who has made the rounds of Europ- ean communist meetings with charges that Khrushchev is soft on capitalism. There was powerful applause for the Yugosiavs, back as full) . [since Marshal Tito's break. with, Stalin in 1948, The also had a big hand for the Cubans. Ulbricht said 70 delegations 'were present. SALISBURY, Southern Rhode- sia (Reuters) -- President Moise, Tshombe of Katanga province, has announced thai Katanga's secession from the rest of The Congo is over, ac- cording to reliable, but unoffi- cial reports here today. The reports said Tshombe is- \ sued a statement from Kal- weiz, where he went Monday, announcing he is ready to give the United Nations complete freedom of movement in Ka- tanga. The statement was reported to have said Tshombe is ready to "co-operate loyally" with the United Nations and accept UN Secretary - General U Thant's plan for unifying The Congo. The reports were strength- ened by a statement issued by the Rhodesian federal prime minister, Sir Roy Welensky, who Eight Canadian Banks Seeking Freer Powers OTTAWA nadian> charfered banks today asked to be freed from '"'out- In his arrival speech Monday,|dated and unnecessary restric- Khrushchev blasted the West-|tions" including the legal six- ern alliance and West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. He went out of his way to dem- oastrate support for Ulbricht, in sore need of bolstering in theif: midst of an economic crisis. it After embracing Ulbricht/t twice, once so hard that thelt German's fur cap nearly top- pled off his head, Khrushchev shouted: "He (Ulbricht) is a book- keeper. I am a mechanic, I and my friends like Ulbricht. We are together in this struggle against the exploiters." | Ulbricht blushed visibly with pleasure JANUARY SALE SECTION TODAY Today's edition of The Oshawa Times carries a special section for the Osh- awa Shopping Centre. It de- tails the items the Shop- ping Centre merchants are featuring in the big January Clearance, lending powers per-cent ceiling on bank lending rates. They also asked for broader such as the reedom to make mortgage oans, They now are restricted 0 government-guaranteed Na- ional Housing Act mortgages and even had to vacate that field when the NHA rate went over six per cent in late 1959. These were the two key rec- ommendations made by the Ca- nadian Bankers' its voluminous brief to the royal commission on banking and fi- nance, One of the commission's main tasks is to review the leg- islation under which the banks operate. Association in The brief said '"'many other financial institutions now hold large portions savings of the public under con- ditions from those which applied to banks in the days before the development guards to protect the investor. of the liquid not greatly different of modern safe- "It may be that the very suc- cess of the measures for assur- ing strong and sound banks has lulled the authorities and the public alike to the a of 'unregulated banking, . (Northern Rhodesia, this morn- The eight Ca- : Katanga Break| Reported Over) went unexpectedly to Ndola, ing. "Phe statement, telephoned to Salisbury several hours after Welensky left the capital, read: "I think that ingall the cir- cumstances President Tshombe} | has acted wisely. "I bope the United Nations and the central Congolese gov- ernment will recognie that, and recognize there can be no pos- sible justification for aggressive action." According to a reliable source, the text of Tshombe's "surren- der" statement said: "We are ready to-declare to the world that Katamgan seces- sion is over. "We are prepared to give the United Nations troops freedom of movement throughout Ka- tanga. "We are also prepared to re- turn to Elisabethville to settle the arrangements for the ap- plication of the U Thant plan (for reunificaion of The Congo). LEFT HOMELESS Three-year-old La- 'Ver Me- from the burning house. ll in his f McFadden, abov: at arried Ser three votkgalare OTTAWA (CP)--Veteran Con- servative MP W. Earl Rowe, prominent harness racing breeder and active in politics for 43 years, will become lieu- tenant - governor of Ontario March 1, Prime Minister Dief- Mr. Rowe, 68, succeeds J. Keiller Mackay, Ontario high court judge for 22 years and lieutenant-governor for the last five years. Mr. Diefenbaker, announcing the appointment as he entered a cabinet meeting, ranked Mr. Mackay as "one of the great- --Osha 3 Times Pate nesty - provided for in the U Thant plan in order to guaran- tee the security and liberty of the president and government of Katanga, all their officials and agents amd all the people who have worked under them. "We have decided to co-oper- ate loyally with the UN in ex- ecution of their mandate and are asking that the date and time for a meeting should be fixed to spare the population from suffering. "We hope that our proposition can he executed very shortly," the statement concluded. U.K. Embassy Sacked In Congo Riots LEOPOLDVILLE -- Rioting Congolese students shout- ing 'Down with the English," sacked' the British Embassy here today, smashing wind Mr. Milk Marketing System Requested LONDON, Ont. (CP)--H. H. Hannam, president of the Cana-| dian Federation of Agriculture, called today for a couhtry-wide quota marketing. system for milk to bring stability to the over-production constitute aoe of the most ungent items of na- tional agricultural policy facing us at this time." Unless present conditions change considerably, form of regulated marketing of milk" will be the only answer, Hannam told the annual meeting. of the Dairy Farmers of Canada. Presidert J. M. Hartwick of the National Dairy Council - of and hurling papers and files into the street. The rioters were protesting alleged British support of the secession of Katanga province. They were finally dispersed after an hour of violence by Robert K. A. Gardiner, Ghan- aian head of UN operations in The Congo. Congolese police made only ineffectual attempts US. Sues GM To Get Rid Of Diesel Plants CHICAGO (AP) -- |favor of the small dainy farm- Canada said 1963 may actually show a milk 2 rhe if 8 ee Dief Insists 'He's Not Ill, Raps Devoir OTTAWA (CP)-Prime Minis- his Dufferin-Sim not announced but Mr. baker indicated it will be soon along with a byelection Newfoundland's St. John's declared vacant by Pa ree tm Supreme Court Rowe Takes Over Post On March 1 est of lieutenant-governors" and said Mr. public service fits him admir. ably for this appointment.' Rowe's "lifetime of Mr. Rowe, a politician of the rough - and - tumble school, chalked up his 11th rewocagey , |general. election victory June 18, equalling the cue. dian record for consecutive election wins. He also won one federal byelection. His career in Parliam spanned the prime ministries Mackenzie King, Arthur governme: mt in 1935, Date of the byelection to filt coe seat was ter Diefenbaker, maintaining that he Gas never felt: better, is identical to that conducted in 1882 against Sir John A. Mac- donald, He was commenting to re- porters as he entered a cabinet/ ond meeting on a story in Montreal Le Devoir that three ministers, \delegated by their colleagues, had demanded his resignation for reasons of health. "The hopes and expectations and feed conditions fail below 1962 levels. Retention of the present consumer butter price or even a slight reduction increase per-capita use by a pound this year. Mr. Hannam suggested a plan uader which each "'home mar- ket" for milk would be divided among local producers on a fair basis. Each producer would be limited to a specified quantity of milk deliveries each week. Similar plans had worked well for 30 years in. some of Canada's major cities. Fluid milk -producers 'had increased their bargaining power and were getting higher and more stable prices. "Lower-income milk produc- ers say there is too wide a mar- gin between the. price they re- ceive and the top price the fluid milk men receive--and they are right." Mr. Hannam suggested that the price gap be narrowed in of the Liberal party in propa- gating that type of perfidious comment are their own an- swer . "T never felt better and I think that is one reason they feel so badly." RECALLS SIR JOHN A. He said the same sort of thing had happened to Sir John A. Macdonald and was re- minded that Sir Jobn had said "if my health were influenced by the prayers of my opponents I would be awfully sick." Mr. Diefenbaker challenged any of the group of reporters to take a physical examination with him. His initial reaction-to requests for comment on the story was a loud laugh. Veterans Minister Churchill, who conferred with Mr. Dief- enbaker and External Affairs Minister Green in the prime minister's office before the cab- inet met, said the story "'is the culmination of. the most insidi- ous campaign of vilification that has occurred in Canada and is ers, completely untrue." office, Prime Minister Macmillan's ca. binet, said the British intend to press on with the Common Mar. ket negotiations in Brussels. LONDON (AP) -- The British government today expressed mee that France will have sec- thoughts about its rejection of U.S. Polaris missiles. At the same time the foreign with ¢he authority of President de Gaulle's rejec- tion of the Polaris missile offer and his tough stand on Britain's entry into the Common Mar. ket were widely viewed in Eu- rope as a double blow to the Western alliance, On the specific question of de Gaulle's rejection of the Nassau agreement between President Kennedy and Macmillan -- to promote a NATO nuclear force --a foreign office spokesman told a press conference: : "The NATO nuclear force is under discussion between all the NATO. allies and we would hope that France herself would one day have Informed sources here the French leaders blunt ere. sad ming - up of the conditions he thinks join the Common Market came at a most embarrassing mo- ment for Macmillan. Britain must meet to Market cannot be treated lip colonies." ues i | 'Western Ontario Hit By Snow, Wind, Cold government sued Monday to compel General Motors Corp. to ¥; divest itself of its diesel locomo- Belg i um, W. G erm any to break up the riot. One British official, Joha Ure, was seen with a bloodstained face during the outburst. But the embassy said he suffered only superficial face cuts from the flying glass, as did several that he would still be alive to| "shout hurrah when capitalism| is buried." Ulbricht, bald and spade- bearded, told the congress the Cuban compromise had forced Kennedy to abandon his idea of| tive manufacturing division. The civil suit, filed in U.S. District Court, also asked di- vestiture of such other assets' as might be necessary to enable aggression . "Cuba was freed of the threat of aggression and now is able to build up its country on the basis of socialism." Ulbricht also demanded the termination of Western occupa- tion rights in West Berlin. He called for the United Nations e the United States, Britain and France in the West- ern half of the divided city. He said such an arrangement "wojid only be acceptable to us izes our sovereignty, ' it i on the access routes a tl fe jJand, water and in the air." A Is NOT CLEAR The Franc ing war- troops ir was Jnited States, Britain and insist they are exercis- rights in keeping st Berlin. Ulbricht clear whether he ing putting these By THE CANADIAN PRESS Heavy snow and high winds hit scattered areas of western Ontario Monday, claiming two lives, blocking highways and iclosing several schools. Weather forecasters predict little relief from the cold snap with temperatures today ex- pected to drop 30 to 40 degrees below in northern areas of the province and to anchor around zero in the south. Winds, however, were ex- pected to ease: slightly with snowflurries along most of the snow belt. The worst of the snow was in | Perth, Grey, Bruce and Huron counties. Both fatalities occurred in the Georgian Bay region where a snow storm, raging intermit- tently since Thursday, has kept road teams working desperately to keep highways 'open. [DIES IN COLLISION Mrs. Orville Mclivecn, about 52, was killed in a two-car col- lision 15 miles northwest of Owen Sound and Percy Steip, . 725-6574 23-2211 42, of Marr, Ont., died in hos- pital after he was critically in- | jured in a two-truck collision on Highway 6 near Wiarton Both accidents occurred. dur- ing blinding mow storms and police blamed poor visibility which at times was zero. They warned motorists to keep off dis- trict roads, Local residents say the storm, which has piled up to 20 inches of snow since it started, is the area's worst this year. Hundreds of school children had a day at home because buses were not able to reach tural areas. In the Stratford area, some rural schools were closed and attendance at others was down to 50 per cent. At Niagara Falls, chunks of ice plunged over the falls into the frozen ice-jammed river, raising the water level 39 feet above normal and causing $10,- 000 damage to the Maid of the Mist steamboat company lim- ited. SNOW PILES UP Driven by winds gusting to 25 miles an hour, a storm piled up eight inches to a foot of snow between Port Hope and Brock- ville Monday. However, police said the storm at no time reached more than 30 miles in- land from Lake Ontario. Provincial and Kingston po- lice reported a rash of minor accidents, but most highways were clear of heavy snow Owen Sound, almost paralyzed |by eight to 12 inches of snow overnight Saturday, was hit with another six inches Monday. Three snow plow operators were injured during the storm. Norman McIntosh of Tiverton was taken to hospiztal in South- ampton with chest injuries after he was struck by a car ear Tiverton, Bruce Count. He was in satisfactory condition. An occupant of the car, Doug- las Pendergast, 20, of South- ampton was in hospital with facial lacerations and shock. LEG IS BROKEN Francis Campbell, 50, of Ti- verton, a snow plow assistant, suffered a broken leg on High- way 21 north of Kincardine, Bruce County, when he was struck by a pickup truck as he stepped from his plow. He was taken to hospital in Kincardine. Jack Stacey, 48, of RR 2, Mit- chell near Stratford received fractures of both legs when he Stopped his snow plow near Stratford to investigate a minor collision with an abandoned car He was in serious condition in hospital in Stratford. A second car, driven by Har- old Boyd, 22, of RR 4, Mitchell, loomed out of the swirling snow and pinned Mr. Stacey -- the abandoned car. other embassy employees, No one was severely injured. rioting started after a speech by a studer' leader from Louvanium University charging that British brains were behind Katanga President Moise Tshombe and his defi- ance of the central Congo gov- ernment in Leopoldville. "Hang Tshombe!"' the dents chanted. YOU'LL FIND INSIDE... stu- Near Lockport .... Tribute Paid East Whitby Treasurer .. Page 11 Page 11 Children's Arena Breaks Records .... Page 11 E. Whitby Austerity Plan Urged age 11 Fire Hits Cottage Near Whitby ...... Group Fails To Unseat Assessor ... Farm Land Taxation Cut Turned Down .. Page power no nocence the GM locomotive works to op- erate as an independent factor in its field. The suit, parallelling a crim- inal indictment returned against GM in 1961, accused the com- pany of using its vast economic to monopolie the locomotive industry. It said GM, using its position as the biggest U.S. commercial shipper, gave preference in the shipment of GM freight to rail- roads buying GM-made locomo- tives. At the same time GM re- duced or withheld freight busi- ness from railroads not buying GM locomotives, the court was Oshawa Plane Wrecked told. The court was asked to order GM to divest itself of its Elec- tro-Motive Division at La Grange, Ill. In New York, General Motors declined on the justice department an- nouncement. GM officials in Chicago made statement called attention to comment of Frederick Donner, man and chief cer, who said in 1961 when the government's criminal antitrust action was filed that GM's in- "will be clearly estab- lished at the trial." illegally immediate immediate ir-/Market was necessary for eco- executive offi- BRUSSELS (Reuters) -- Bel- gium and West Germany, with the reported backing of The Netherlands, today lined up in opposition to French President de Gaulle's statement cold- shouldering Britain's bid to join the Common Market. Belgian Foreign M'nister Paul Henri Spaak said that the Bel- gian government disagreed with de Gaulle's Paris statement and added that the Dutch govern- ment shared the Belgian view. Spaak said de Gaulle's state- ment "has obviously embar- rassed us," coming as it did "at the very moment"' when Britain was resuming negotiations with the six Common Market states for membership in the trade bloc. The West Germans also is- sued a statement saying British membership in the Common nomic and political reasons. Spaak told reporters Belgium could not remain silent "and thereby give the impressicn that we agree" with the declaration of de Gaulle. Opposing De Gaulle "After all is said and done, ag considering the possibil- we think we should clearly statejity of British entry. But they could not our feelings," he said. joint action to ensure "We must state that this ques-/S€ay what form such tion in the eyes of the Belgian] might take. government is quite different from that as seen by the pres- ident of the French republic." As for Britain, British Deputy Foreign Minister Edward Heath , said he was "determined to press cn with the negotiations" despite de Gaulle's statement. Heath had been asked whe- ther he was prepared to con- tinue the negotiations after de Gaulle's cold - shouldering of early British entry. He spoke just after a private meeting with Belgian Foreign Minister Paul-Henri Spaak, a staunch supporter of B ritish membership, and Deputy For- eign Minister Henri Fayat, who is presiding over 'the current resumption of negotiations, Meanwhile, informed sources said France's five Market-part- ners--West Germany, Belgium, Italy, Holland: and Luxembourg GEN. DE GAULLE ~