PHONE 3-2233 FOR WANT AD RESULTS h HE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle night Weather Forecast Cloudy, showers tonight; cooler, clearing tomorrow afternoon. Low to- and high Thursday, 35 and 45. /OL. 12--No. 65 Authorized as Second-Class Mail, OSHAWA-WHITBY, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18, 1953 Price Not Over 5 Cents Per Copy TWENTY-FOUR PAGES OSHAWA AIRMAN GOES T 5 Members of the RCAF's 413 adron at Bagotville, Que. craftman C. L. Best, left, To- ronto; Aircraftman A. J. Bar- bour, Toronto; Leading Aircraft- man F. S. Whittaker, Oshawa; LAC D. W, Junkin, Oakville; Aircraftman W. R. Whitehead, Brampton, and LAC R. F. Hen- Post Office Department, Ottawa gee 4 0 derson of Toronto, are among the | personnel moving to Europe when three RCAF Sabrejet squa- | drons fly the Atlantic from Goose Bay, Labrador, via Greenland, Iceland and Scotland to Zwei- brucken, Germany, to form No. 3 RCAF Fighter WING. This is | the third aerial transatlantic mass movement of RCAF Sabre- | 4 | companying the fighter on the ARB SI Gm 4 Ag i ; a =. - + EUROPE jet fighters, bringing Canadian fighter strength in Europe to nine squadrons. North Star transport aircraft of' 426 squadron are ac- a flight, with ground crews and equipment. This assures the squadrons of servicing by their own ground crews, familiar with the aircraft and pilots. RAF Jet Display 2 Meteors Collide In Full View Doubt Inquest, DUXFORD, England (AP)--Two British jet fighters collided today before the horrified gaze of Mar- shal Tito, killing both pilots. Then the shaken Yugoslav leader for the first time saw and heard another jet crash the sound bar- rier. Britain trotted out its hottest nil itary aircraft for inspection by Tito who is anxious to get similar planes for the Yugoslav air force. The collision occurred during tight formation flying by Meteors. Twenty-four jets in all were in- volved. As four of the Meteors were changing position one ran into the tail of another. The wreck- age fell six miles away from this RAF airfield in Cambridgeshire. When the meteors ret to land, Tito saluted the planes in tribute to the dead pilots, The accident wiped the "mar- shal's usual wide smile from his face. leaped up in horror as the planes came together. Later he was pale and disturbed as he entered the officers' mess for luncheon. It was the second incident of its kind Tito has witnessed since he left his homeland to pay an offi- Shakes Tito; 1,000 feet today at the time of the ® crash. The scattered wreckage of | the Meteors sent flames and smoke hundreds of feet into the air. Both planes crashed on open ground about a mile from each other. One was burned out. The other had exploded into small pieces. M Before the Meteors took off the Yugoslav leader witnessed an #n-| pressive display by a Canberra jet bomber, The bomber took off | in a steep turn and made high speed runs only about 100 yards in front of Tito's chair. A» RAF officer said Tito had twice asked before the flying began to: cancel the Aisplay Decgute > the . weather. After the crash he turfled" to. Lord Tedder, marshal of the RAF, and sald: "Please, do not have any more." = - But Sqdn. Ldr. Neville Duke-- one of Britain's hottest, best known pilots--already had taken up a gleaming Hawker hunter into the heavy overcast. Then Duke came roaring down. As his engines screamed he pushed past the speed of sound. Tito who had started for his car thinking | | To Be Held In 2 Fatalities Although most Oshawa citizens don't know it, the city has a snow removal bylaw which has been in effect for years. The Ontario legis- lature is only now considering an amendment to the municipal act which would give all local coun- cils the ppwer that Oshawa coun- cil took unto itself in the duys when the city had boardwalks. 4 The proposal before tie legisla- { ture would enable authorities to clear snow and ice from sidewalks in front of houses and charge the cost to the owners. ° Oshawa's' bylaw goes further than that. Couched in old-time terms it lays down that every oc- cupier of premises, or if there is no occupier then the owner, shall before 10 a.m. every day in the year remove and clear away all snow, ice, dirt and other cbstruc- tions from the sidewlaks. If the premises have roofs which overhang the sidewalk the occupier or owner, according to the law, must clear the roof of snow and ice before shoppers get out on the streets at 9 a.m. every day cf the year. Occupiers and owners can sleep in on Sundays for the Sabbath is excluded from the bylaw. The bylaw, which is as much in force in 1953 as when it was first put down, on paper, specifies that city police who see infractions must lay information and prose- cute. The police are also ordered | "to" cause the snow and ice to be | removed' at the expense of the | corporation. When the lazy occupier or own- er is successfully prosecuted he becomes liable to a fine which is | city of clearing the snow. law is given by the maximum 2nd minimum fines laid down minimum fine ts 50 cents and the moving the snow, is $10. publicity. Over the years Oshawa's nored. OTTAWA (CP)--Transport Min- ister Chevrier says the govern ment intends to control television to provide Canadians with the full It is unlikely that an inquest will be held to investigate Sunday night's tragic three-vehicle crash in which two city residents were killed on Highway 401. R. D. Humphreys, QC, the act- ing crown attorney, announced this morning after considering Jost. mortem reports and a etter from Coroner Dr. H. M. MacDonald. Killed in the accident were Mis. R. H. Brown, wife of Bob Brown, of Aberdeen Street, and Alex To.i- osey, of Mary Street. A post mor- tem held on Monday showed that both victims died of fractured benefit of their own developing cul- | ture and to prevent an invasion by | "canned" American programs. {on TV in the Commons, said Tues- gest Hist private enterprise, left to itself, will provide Canadian pro- grams, Private interests would be out to make money and the most money could be derived from im- ported U. S. programs. "I believe what the people of Canada want more than anything else is that in the field of television the programs should be of Can- skulls and other injuries received when their cars plowed into the side of a Charlton transport stand- {the display was over stopped and | ing broadside on the highway. | looked up. Three sharp bangs and | adian origination and of Canadian | content and should not be canned {programs coming United States. The minister, resuming a debate | | day that it is "nonsense'" to sug-| CBC Cultural Diet Qusts U.S. broadcasting in this country, as they might without control. The minister, whose department is partly responsible for granting radio and TV licences, spoke dur- ing a debate on a government mo- tion to establish a committée on broadcasting. The committee will | review - activities of the publicly- owned CBC, the controlling body for broadcasting in Canada. Mr. Chevrier received support from M. J. Coldwell, CCF leader {loops) describe government policy {as one of "monopoly" and actual {restriction of Canadian talent. Mr. Coldwell said the incentive for radio and television "should be service to Canada as a nation and to its people as citizens." To adopt any other policy would "be in from .the an act of treachery and treason | 29 last. {on the part of this Parliament to | That did not<mean there would those who for the last 86 years ative of Miss D'Amour's has been | Injured in the crash were Mr. be no American programs on Can- | have endeavored to make Canada {a whine signalled that Duke had Brown and his daughter Jean, 17,{adian TV. There would be some, a free, independent and distinct rr MANCHURIA GUNS FIRE ON U.S. B-29 BOMBERS New Snow Plan Old Stuff Here LJ Planes Plaster "Supply Centre SEOUL (AP)--U.S. B-29s virtually wiped out the | Communist supply and troop centre of Pungha in north- | west Korea today in the fourt | Korean war. Red China anti-aircraft guns from h largest bomber strike of the 2 inside the Manchur- ian border fired on the U.S. planes as they plastered the en- tire area. There was no report whether any were hit. Behind the li€, four unidentified, | 5 | | The Ontario government's propec- | sal has been greeted with wid e| bylaw has been so far out of the | limelight that it is practically ig-| Telecasts | but heard E., D. Fulton (P-Kam-| | not less than the expense to the | Some idea of the age of the by-| The | maximum including the cost of re-! ACE READY TO GO Pleased with himself here and justifiably so is Col. Royal N. Backer of McKinney, Tex., who smacked down his 12th MiG in Korea recently to become the world's top ace in the jet figh- ter field. Col. Baker scoffed at reports that the USAF is now using a new "miracle" gunsight in Korea. He said he used the 'same old reliable gunsight' for his 12th MiG as he used to clob- ber the other eleven. And case anyone wonders, he's ready to use it any time any red pilots planes. Hand Identifies: Slain Woman; Hold Three Men MONTREAL (CP) -- Provincial police said today three men are being held in connection with the | eastern frqnt. The 8th army re- | ported there were no casualties. Forty Okinawa-based Superforts, 27 of which smashed against Pun- , gha's 320 wooden buildings, plowed | through 40 miles of anti-aircraft fire and braved Red night fighters | to reach their target. The other 13 | hit Red lines. | One airman said the Communist supply, troop and factory complex at Pungha "went up at once, as | aircraft stfafed positions on the | Glory blasted targets from Taetan to Haeju on the west coast, Sev- | enty-six sorties there resultea In | damage or destruction of 19 build- | ings and a railroad bridge. { On the ground, Dutch and South | Korean troops teamed to smash {| Chinese attacks on two advanced | positions in the western sector | northeast of Yonchon. { Dutch and RoK infantry beat | back seven Communist probing at- | tacks before dawn--the largest in | a bitter 45-minute battle northeast | though someone had spilled gun-| of the Hook on the western front. powder over the area and lit it." British planes from the carrier The 8th army reported they killed or wounded 80 Chinese. Find Eight Children in | "try any funny stuff" with U.S. | SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (CP) | Parents who left eight children |alone in a two-room cabin at | Searchmont, 14 miles north of here, were convicted Tuesday of abandoning, neglect and desertion. They will be sentenced Friday. Francis and Christena Reid told the court they left for am outing {in the Sault on a Thursday morn- [ing. Their car broke down and they did not return until Saturday | afternoon. | Their four-month-old baby may | have pneumonia. Left with little food, firewood or | clothing, the children were brought | here 24 hours after they were left | in the shack, lighted only by ker- | osene lamps. Hungry, Dirty, Cold Provincial police constable Elvyn Somers testified he found the 14- year-old boy and girls of 12 and 10 trying to cook spaghetti, In .the other room, five more children were lying on two beds. All were scantily clothed, The baby wore only a diaper "which looked like it hadn't been changed for two days," and a thin shirt. A wet mattress was frozen to the springs. There was no wood cut and the only food found was a package of yeast, a loaf of bread and salt, Somers said the parents weren't {reached until Monday afternoon, | when the father was found in & | beverage room in the Sault. The children are temporarily in custody of the shelter. decomposed body Hip Ase Liquor Law Fights Highlight Sessions gravel pit at Shawinigan Falls Dec. | A police spokesman said a rel-] under questioning since Monday. - Tuesday night two other men | tish naval aircraft crasnea oir | broken the barrier again. | who are in Oshawa General Hos- but they would not monopolize TV | nation." | were arrested in Tillsonburg, Ont., | ial visit to Britain. 8ix days ~~~. ¢: he was en route here, three ibraltar. Four men were listed as miss and presumed dead in that accident. Visibility was down to about The Meteors were engaged in ex- ercise "Scramble,'"" designed to demenstrate to Tito how fast the RAF can get jets into the air Continue All Flights, Can't Scare Us: US WASHINGTON (AP)--The United, The state department had the States Air Force will continue to| bare facts of the Kamchatka clash fly 'ts world-wide missions despite | early Monday, it was learned, and Russia's shooting challenge to the advised caution in announcing the use of air space over international | event because neither the attack- waters of the North Pacific. That was the word from top de-| fence department spokesmen after | their study of reports on the first! confirmed U.S. and Reda military planes out- side the Korean war zone, Military officials who may not be named also let it be known that the defence department had talked down a state department sugges- tion to postpone any public an- nouncement of the incident. two-way fight between | | ing MiG-15 nor the defending U.S. B-50 suffered human casualties or any apparent damage. The line of reasoning of some diplomats ran like this: 1. Silence by Washington might help to shake out Russian inten- tions. | pital and *'progressing favorably." Toronto Woman Wins Ajax Coronation Trip 'AJAX (Staff) -- Miss Irene Den- ham, 26 Galt Avenue East, Toronto, was declared the winner of a free Coronation tour for two people of- fered by the Ajax Rotary Club, the draw for which was made at musical evening held Iast night in Rotary Hall in aid of the Easter Seal Campaign, The draw was | made by "Timmy" symbol of the 1953 Easter Seal drive in Ontario. James Morrison, Burcher Street, Ajax, the seller of the winning | Reds Stall Decision On UN Secretariat UNITE DNATIONS, N. Y. (AP) |uled to huddle behind locked doors | | The Russians are reported going | |'Y. Vishinsky returns March 26 | from his Moscow conferences with |the new Malenkov regime. [1in has ordered its delegate Valer- ian A. Zorin to make no commit- ments in security council negoti- ations with the West for a suc-| cessor to Trygve Lie until Vishin- | | sky arrives. | The five permanent members of {the 1l-country security council-- | 2. Publicity could weaken the|ticket, won for himself a prize of | Russia, the U. S., Britain, France sychological impact of the strong J.S. and British protests in recent d The air force pinpointed the Sun-| Germany. day incident 25 miles from the The defence department won the coast of Russian Kamchatka, and|decision to announce the Kam- and air force spokesman said the|chatka affair Tuesday after main- U.S. photo observation craft was taining the military view that it operating with standing instruc-| would be better to get out the tions to stay 25 miles from Russian factual story before Moscow could ays over the unopposed shooting | {down of two Allied aircraft over territory. This is in line with| use a perverted version for propa- 1 | . and Nationalist China--were sched- | I | today in an effort to end the East- confer directly with Nationalist China's T. F. Tsiang indicated the { Informed sources said the Krem- | meeting would have to be split up. | | The general assembly's political | committee also was to meet today, | opening a debate on world disarm- ament. Vishinsky, demoted from foreign minister to chief UN delegate as he embarked for Moscow after the death of Stalin, is expected to bring back - new instructions from the the government of Prime Minister Georgi Malenkov. Zorin, sitting in for Russia at the two security council meetings held thus far on the question of a new secretary-general, vetoed both Can- ada's L. B. Pearson, who polled a nine-vote majority, and U. 8S. backed Carlos P., Romulo of the Philippines. Ru s s i a's candidate, Polish Foreign Minister Stanislaw and brought here for questioning. Provincial police did not identify the relative under questioning. - The two men arrested have been | identified as Real LeBlanc, 29, and | Jack Tremble, 40. They were taken | into custody after a downtown res- | taurant in Tillsonburg, of which | LeBlanc is an owner, was closed by police. Body of the woman was dis- icovered by truckers loading to stall off any decision on a new | West eadlock over Lie's succes- gravel. Only the extremity of the UN secretary-general until Andrei|gsor, Zorin's announce refusal to! Woman's right hand was intact. | Identification was made by the RCMP at Ottawa who traced a i conviction for vagrancy. | Police: established {woman travelled frequently be- { tween Northern Ontario and Shaw- | inigan Falls. No other address than { "Ontario" was available. There was no further action taken in the case until provincial | police detained a relative of the | woman Monday. i 6 Piemen Collapse In Toronto Station {| TORONTO (CP)--Six firemen re- | quired inhalator treatment when a | = By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Administration of the liquor laws |in Nova Scotia and Saskatchewan | came up for discussion Tuesday in | the provincial legislatures. The opposition in the Nova Sco- tia house accused government {members of the public accounts | committee of using 'Iron Curtain' | tactics. The charge was made after | a motion to call evidence on liquor {agents and purchase and sale. of | beer bottles had been defeated. At Regina, the legislature gave first reading to suggested amend- {ments to the Liquor Act, which that the call for non-alcoholic drinks or cer-| {tain foodstuffs being sold in Sask- | atchewan beer parlors, At present, | such sales are not allowed, but the | liquor board may require them if the prohibition is removed. Alberta members want the fed- | eral government to implement their | 1945 scheme to grant provinces un- | conditional subsidies for health ser- | vices. They passed a motion stating that provincial governments cannot bear the cost of a comprehensive health insurance program from their own | resources. | The British Columbia government {fire of unknown origin burned out |will try to stop an oil pipeline | |to cancel . the licence granted for | construction of the pipeline. | James Bury (CCF--Vancouver Centre) said nine persons died in | Vancouver city jail last year. He | claimed that one of them, who died | Christmas Eve, would be alive toe | day if it had not been for a scuffle he had with police. Mr. Bury asked (if the attorney-general will give special attention to the actions of | police officers when arresting per~ ns. A bill to bring employees of the | New Brunswick electric power com- | mission under the provincial Labor | Relations Act was introduced in the legislature at Fredericton. | Duff Roblin (PC -- Winnipeg |South) attacked the Manitoba gov- ernment for not fighting the loss |of the freight rate agreement on assumed mileage between Winnipeg | and the Lakehead, abolished by the | federal government Dec. 12. He de- | manded restoration of the agree | ment, | License Deadline Set for Midnight TORONTO (CP) -- Today's the |a Canadian National Railways rec-! being constructed from Suma, B.C. last day Ontario motorists can jord room in the sub basement of {the Union station here Tuesday | to Ferndale, Wash. | Mines Minister Robert Sommers {drive their cars with 1952 licence {plates and J. P. Bickell, regis- night. Damage wasn't given. The said in the house his government |trar of motor vehicles, said there Skrzessewski, got only Zorin's vote. | News. of the Russian delegation's | mark-time until Vishinsky's return | set other delegates to wondering | whether the Malenkov government | intended to back up its peace talk with concrete action here. But al- most no one had much hope of any change in the Soviet attitude toward Korea and other major | world-troubling problems. | orders to airmen to avoid provok- ganda purposes or to exert diplo- ing trouble. | matic pressure. Orders Fire Back' FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP)--The| The ' attack occurred as the guackacting Lo mmaner nti | United States plane,-on a routine ni Ss ce pla | : : Tuesday night he ordered the chief | weather flight, cruised north 25 gunner to "fire back" when his| miles out to sea from the Siberian B-50 bomber was attacked by a | coast. The air force said appar- Russian-type MiG-15 high off the ently neither aircraft was damaged police a®son squad was called to|is preparing a protest to be sent won't be any extension of the dead- investigate. 'to Ottawa, asking the government line for buying 1953 plates. New Survival Lessons Emerge As A-Blast Flattens Home, Cars By BILL BECKER LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)--On the | ation at 300 feet swept the radio-| plosive power equal to 15,000 tons coast of Siberia Sunday. in the third such sky encounter Lt.-Col. Robert S. Rich, 35, told | between planes of the East and a press conference at Eielson air West. in a week, force base near here that he tried | The shooting scrape, the first re- to escape the attacker with a 390- | ported by the air force in which mile-an-hour dive into a cloud bank | an Alaska-based plane had actu- and fired only after the MiG had opened up. ally been fired on ogcurred March Beat Quick Retreat FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP)--A "I fired a burst of 20 rounds Tot Dies of Polio After 3 Months KITCHENER C(CP) -- Stricken with polio Dec. 18, Judith Ann Bundscho, three-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs, James Bundscho, day. I'M THE HOPE Milverton, died in hospital Tues- friendly practice field of the U. atomic energy commission civilian new lessons to wrest victory out of atomic war, These are the pointers indicated by Tuesday's double-barrelled nu- clear test: For civilian -- 1 | opent the windows and crouch down | as far as possible on the seat, or the floor," said J. Slayton Jenner of .the federal civil defence admini- and soldier alike may have learned | In a car, I would stay in it; | active column and cloud eastward | of TNT, was only three-quarters * across the flat, where it hung|the strength of the Nagasaki or threateningly for hours. But troops! normal bomb. But it made itself were able to march north through heard or felt in a number of com- the vicinity of "ground zero"--base | munities including Las Vegas, 75 |'of the explosion. | miles away, Medford, Ore., about | 3. The bomb can be a friend if | 60Q miles distant, and Los Angeles, | instructions are followed. Like their | nearly 300 miles away. | predecessors in atomic manoeuv-| The blast destroyed the first of i res, the 1,000 soldiers and 500 ob-|the two experimental homes built | servers found little to fear in fox-| for the test, placed 3,500. feet | holes. Most said it wasn't as bad | (about two-thirds of a mile) from as they expected. Elton Fay, As«<! ground zero. The second--at 7,500 sociated Press military affawrs re-| feet--stocd up through the blast, | year-old U. S. Air Force gunner |from each of the six guns. I don't stration. | porter, found himself most impres-! but suffered about 50 per cent think I hit him because there was I pres- | p 2 the fire of a Soviet MiG-15 over the Bering sea last week, probably was one of the first persons to sweat at 58 degrees below zero. That was the temperature when t. Jesse L. Prim pulled the trig- ger that sent six guns into action in the top turret of the B-50 bom- r. Prim said the Soviet jet was eoming in fast and flames from his guns were plainly visible. | li ' so little time to aim. The minute I began firing, the Soviet jet broke its attack and dove underneath us. It came up on the other side, curved away from us and flew home. '"'He never expected us to fire back at him and he was plenty surprised when we did, We gave that attacker a hot recéption on a cold day." Prim is a veteran of 10 years Prim sald he didn't hesitate when | of service in the air force. He was the bomber commander, Lt.-Col. | a bomber-gunner in European com- Robert S. Rich shouted "fire back." !bat in the Second World War, French soldiers wounded in Korea and Indo-China are cheer- Ridgway, wife of the Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, ed by visit of Mrs. Matthew B. | CHEERS WOUNDED VETERANS Mrs. Ridgway is showing one of the men, at the Val de Grace Military hospital in Paris, a a television set which she re- cently presented to the hospital. I plaque which is to be plced on | OF LOSERS When folks lose something they pin their hopes on me to recover their loss. Being a Lost ad, they know I'm good at it! Frankly, I'm proud of my record. I've brought together hundreds of losers and finders! If you've lost something you'd like to get back, let me help you. In a few hours I. spread the word all over town, Just dial 3-2233. | 2, In a house, try a basement-| sed by "the unearthly white light" | structural damage. type bomb shelter, but make sure as he crouched face down in a| Flying glass from shattered wine you huve a solid concrete base-|five-foot trencr. | dows might have killed or badly ment. | 4. Earth shock can be as potent injured tenants. Of the make-be- 3. If caught in the open, lie flat | a weapon as blast in a low-level | lieve family of manneduins, those on the ground if no good shelter explosion, Fay concluded. The pro-| upstairs were knocked down or is available. i longed shuddering, of the desert, | broken, those in basement shelters For soldier-- | Fay and other observers believe, | were virtually unmoved. 1. Crouch in a foxhole or lie flat. | contributed greatly to the quick col- | Most of the 59 cars on the flat U. S. Army officers now think the | lapse of the first civil defence test! were damaged. Two at distances of dug4n soldiers could have remain-| house, 3,500 feet froin the tower. 3,800 and 5,000 feet burned: three ed above ground, lying prone, at| For the scientist, the first atomic | others at a half mile were twisted their two-mile distance from Tues-| test of 1953 brought reaffirmation |into scrap. In many cases where day's blast tower on Yucca Flat. |that-- | all windows were left closed, the 2. Watch the wind and stay be-| Smaller bombs can pack a real | hie pach the wind oi Hh ) ] | oe of the cars were caved in by J r the deton-| wallop, The device, packing the ex- the blast pressure.