Thanksgiving Weekend Claims Toll Of 51 Lives In Canada THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE 22 Fatalities Mar Autumn Weekend In Ontario Alone By The Canadian Press Fifty-one persons died violently in Canada during the Thanksgiving weekend. A Canadian Press survey early to- day showed that, with highways jammed with holiday-bound motorists, 36 persons died in Four persons were drowned and two died in fires. There was a hunting accident, a tractor accident and two coal field ac- cidents--all fatal. street and 'highway mishaps. A series of miscellaneous mish-® aps accounted for the other deaths. | Twenty-two deaths were reported | from Ontario, 13 from Quebec, | seven from New Brunswick, three from Alberta and two each from Nova Scotia and British Columbia. One death each occurred in Mani- toba and Saskatchewan. Of the 36 persons killed in traffic mishaps, six died in a single three- car pile-up near Chicoutimi, Que. They were: Mrs. Henri Brodeur, of St. Hyacinthe, Que.; Florent and Henri Blouin, 31 and 39 of nearby St. Felicien, Que.; Dr. and Mrs. Florent Bernier of Carleton, Que., and Charles Auguste Gaucher, 59, of Quebec City. 6 PEDESTRIANS KILLED Six Quebec pedestrians were killed when they were struck down by motor vehicles. They were Rene Quevillon, 6, of Valleyfield, Que., 'Mrs, Antoine Couet, 44, of Ville Jacques Cartier near Mont- real; Joseph Labrecque, 40, of St. Fereol, Que.; Rene Heroux, 5, of 1'Assumption, Que.; Emile Tho- bodeau, 35, of St. David, Que.; and | Jacques Simard, 7, of Albanel, Que., near Chicoutimi. In Montreal, eighteen-month-old Pierre Martel was burned to death when fire destroyed his home. Four persons were killed near Hearst, Ont., when an automobile ran into the rear of a panel truck. They were: Conrad Archambault, 33; Benoit Normandine, 36; Josa- phat Ste. Pierre, 43, and Laurice herriault, 31, all of Hearst. Near North Bay, Ont., Reginald M. Goslet, about 36, of Montreal, his daughter Lynn, 4, and Rodney Palfrey, were killed in a head-on auto collision. Atthelle Deryack, 25, of Tilbury motorcycle collided with a car near East, Ont., was killed when his Merlin, Ont. s Russell Tone, 36, of Damascus, Ont., and his son, John, 7, suffered fatal injuries when their auto crashed into a tractor 30 miles west of Guelph, Ont. - Killed in collisions were: Mrs. Stella Malhiot, 38, of Woodstock, Ont., and Anthony Borghese, 70, of Guelph, Ont. OSHAWA WOMAN KILLED Mrs. Alice De'Marse, 72, of Oshawa, Ont., was killed when her car missed a curve and crashed into a ditch near Belleville, Ont. Also killed in ditching accidents were: Joseph Walton, 53, of Haw- kesbury, Ont., and Mrs. Vida E. Hudson of Oakville, Ont. Albert Walduck, 11, of Humber Summit near Toronto was killed by an automobile as he walked along a highway near Toronto. The bodies of Walter Hicks, 45- year-old Guelph, Ont., barber and his son Donald, 10, were found in the front seat of an automobile, parked on a sideroad near Guelph. Police said they died of carbon monoxide fumes fed into the car through a rubber hose running from the exhaust. In Toronto, Chong Dong, 47-year- old waiter, collapsed and died dur- ing an argument with a customer. Kenneth Paxton, 12, of Brampton, Ont., was found dead in a field he had been hired to plow and police attack or been thrown from his tractor. Armonde Champaigne, 20, of Ra- more, Ont., was drowned in Lake Erie when he fell from a dredging scow near Nanticoke, Ont. BURNED TO DEATH In Delhi, Ont., a girl, about 26, was burned to death. when fire razed a two-storey farmhouse. She was tentatively identified as Ther- ese Moreau of Timiskaming, Que. Harris Videto, 35, of Berwick, N.S., and Graham Hadley, 35, of Fredericton, both associate profes- sors of forestry at the University of New Brunswick, were drowned at Oromocto, N.B., during a duck- hunting expedition. Gordon Kelly, 20, of Rothwell, N.B., and Harold Day, 30, of.... N.B., and Harold Day, 30, of Chip- man, N.B., were killed in a level crossing collision near Chipman, Raphael Martin, 22, of St. Anne, N.B., died as the result of injuries suffered when the car in which he was riding struck a girder of the bridge between Edmudston and Madawaska, Me. Near the Glades, N.B., Mrs. Ben- jamin Cameron, 56, of Kensington, P.E.I., was killed in a collision. Seventy - seven - year - old Wil- mot Clark, 77, of Dipper Harbor, N.B., was killed when the floor of the shack in which he lived col- Tin Miners Don't Get Pimples Because Cornish tin miners ap- peared to avoid skin blemishes, British chemists suggested the use f tin in treating Boils, Acne, mples. Now convenient, tasteless tablets « ataining 42.5% metallic tin are available under the brand name "Tinoxid." Papid, satisfactory re- sults are «claimed for this inexpen- sive treatment. oe Tinoxid Tablets are sold without prescription at all drug stores, 75c. A-Bomb Raid Takes 60,000 Casualties Kitchener, Ont. (CP) -- A mock atom-bomb raid was staged here Saturday. Theoretically, it left 60,000 "casualties." Mustang and Harvard airplanes from a London reserve squadron roared over the city, and bombs, rockets and smoke canisters were fired from the ground. Rescue and firefighting demonstrations were held in the downtown business section, and troops moved through the streets. The demonstration was staged by the Civil Defence Association of Waterloo county as the climax of a week-long educational program in Kitchener-Waterloo and Preston in Kitchener-Waterloo and Preston on civil defence. The association intends to com- pile data on mutual aid among the cities and towns of the county with particular attention to accommo- dation for evacuees. Believe King Afflicted By Lung Cancer London (Reuters) -- Doctors at- tending the King have not dis- closed why they had to operate on his lung -- and probably never will. But outside medical circles a | certain that the purpose was re- | moval of a cancerous growth. The silence of the royal doctors on the subject is itself significant as cancer is an "unmentionable'" in hospitals here, even when the patient is much more humble than | the reigning monarch. It is probably no accident that | the current issue of one of Bri- tain's leading professional maga- zines, the British Medical Journal, has an article on treatment of pa- tients with bronchial carcinoma (cancer of the bronchial system.) It quotes a paper written by six specialists, including Clement Price Thomas, the surgeon who operated | on the King, to the effect that in this disease "pneumonectomy of- fers the best hope of long survi- val." lapsed and he fell into the cellar. MINE ACCIDENTS Two miners died in. separate Cape Breton coal field accidents. Gus Bojag, 46, was killed under a fall of coal in a eolliery. A native of Hungary, he was eating lunch at the time of the accident. Buddy McDonald, 44, a former Glace Bay, N.S., police constable, was killed when he fell down the shaft of. a colliery. Four persons were killed in accl- dents in the prairie provinces. They were: William Diks, 46, of the New Norway district near Edmonton, | killed in a hunting accident on his | farm; Mrs. Marjorie Bell, 20, of Rosedale, Alta., killed when pinned by a tractor; Nathan Pelly, 60, of The Pas, Man., killed by a truck and Stephen Jagaby, killed in a collision 'at Calgary. In British Columbia, two-year-old Douglas Wright was drowned in a river near his home at Courtenay on Vancouver Island. Judy Daig- nault, 4, was killed in Vancouver when she was struck by a car. --l OSHAWA WHITBY VOL. 10--No. 23¢ OSHAWA-WHITBY, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1951 PAGE THIRTEEN ~ Coming In on a Chute ! The scenic beauty of the Canadian Rockies provides the seiting; the subject provides a striking photograph of an RCAF para-rescue student completing his first jump. As he commences his "roll," designed to prevent possible injury, the shroud lines "break" and he appears in an attitude of thankful prayer, but a split second after the click of the shutter, he was tumbling forward, safe and sound on good ol' terra firma. Before being allowed to jump, students of the RCAF's third peacetime para- rescue course at Henry House Field, near Jasper, Alta, must spend many hours practising the various aspects involved in making a successful drop. --Central Press Canadian. I switched fo Marvelube for dependable starts You get more engine protection under all drivimg conditions with Marvelubé--the Heavy-Duty motor oil that meets car manufacturers' specifications for correct lubrication. Marvelube is a detergent motor oil. It not only lubricates--it cleans. A clean engine--free from gum, sludge and abrasive particles--lasts longer and gives you more trouble-free performance. Let your Imperial Esso Dealer protect the investment you have in your car with his "Care-Saves-Wear" service. IMPERIAL Esso DEALER the sign that cays [3 fo stop for CROWN DIAMOND PRODUCTS ARE SOLD BY: . McKenna Point & Wallpaper, Oshawa, Ont. ® Harry Peleshock Store, Oshawa, Ont. ® Vivian BA Service, North Oshawa, Ont. N WATT EELATRY- PALL Irn 3 Rescued 2 Boats Sink In Lake Gale Keswick, Ont. (CP) Morley Myers, 23, yesterday braved high winds and treacherous waves on Lake Simcoe to rescue three To- ronto men from a 30-foot cabin cruiser to Keswick for winter stor- age when the engine failed. Their plight was noticed by cottagers on the shore and by Myers, who went to the rescue in a rowboat. When last sighted, the cruiser was 800 yards off shore and still drifting. Two other cabin curisers were sunk at their moorings in Kempen- feldt bay on Lake Simcoe by the storm that swept the area. "Six others were beached as $8000 worth of damage was reported to small boats on the lake. U.S. 'Security' Irks Visitor Adams, N.Y. (AP) -- A 60-year- old policeman said yesterday he had stopped a Canadian tourist from taking snapshots here because of a 'village rule" covering inter- nal security. Mayor Avon Greenly said he knew of no regulation restricting camera enthusiasts -- Canadian or home-grown. But Patrolman Dan Thompson said "we have a village rule here." Adams has no A-bomb plants, navy yards or military air fields. Not even a college football prac- tice field. Eric Adams of Toronto wrote to a New York city newspaper last by the policeman from taking pic- tures here. Adams said he was snapping the "Adams hotel," "Adams fire department" and other scenes because the name was identical with his own. "Poor panicky United States," week saying he had been stopped! -- Ontario Spotlight PLAN PLANT ADDITION Brampton, Ont. (CP) -- T..C. Currie, Canadian general manager of the Dixie Cup Company, yester- day announced plans for construc- tion of 'a $250,000 addition to the plant here, expected to be complet- | ed by spring. The addition will per- mit the employment of 30 more workers. 7 4 . GRAPE HARVEST CUT Toronto (CP) Ontario's grape harvest may total 55,200 tons -- 6,000 tons below pre- season expectations, the De- partment of Agriculture esti- mates. This would be 1,400 tons more than the 1950 crop. De- partment officials said grape wrote Adams. "The only other time I've had trouble taking pic- tures was in dictator-ruled Argen- tina during the war." ; Patrolman Thompson told a re- porter he had acted after villagers had insisted he 'do something" about the picture-taking. bunches were smaller than ex- pected this year. SPRAY WORKS BURNS Beamgville, Ont. (CP) -- The bij Bartlett spray works near hen which manufactures spray for the surrounding agricultural area, burn. ed down last night. Faced by a shortage of available water, fire. men were almost helpless to stop the flames. DIDN'T NEED GUN Toronto (CP)--William Hunt, 90, a former Tcronto police cone stable, ss that in his 45 years on the force the only time he fired his gun was to shoot a horse that broke its leg. In 1912 he captured four danger- ous escaped convicts using only his billy. "I was satisfied with my stick," he said. ROSE BUSHFS FOOLED Galt, Ont, (CP) -- Exceptionally warm weather before Thanksgiving fooled rose bushes here. An early June blooming rose hush produced its second crop of flowers for thi} year. Canada's first commercial cheese factory was established by Harvey Farrington in Oxford County in 1864. Mr. Farrington had come from Herkimer County, New York, where cheese had been made in commer= cial factories for a number of ..and Im Saving Dollars with my new OTPOINT That's because the Hotpoint Washer saves in three MODELS FROM 517950 important ways. Hotpoint saves clothes -- the gentle but thorough 3-zone washing action keeps clothes new-looking, new-feeling wash after wash, makes the clothing budget stretch further. Hotpoint saves time too -- its speed and convenience features give you more hours to yourself every week. Equally important, Hotpoint saves work -- no more back- break and lots more energy to enjoy the time you save. 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