The Oshawa Times, 24 Mar 1960, p. 14

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14 THE OSAAWA TIMES, Thursday, March 24, 1960 U Of M. Series Includes By ATHOL RETALLACK Northern Truck Drivers Travel In 70 Below Zero t i | : here is less traffic, it is easier| | ov food--eating places are at|along the route. Two loads of coal the driver, assigned permanently Whitehorse untfl their return 31 to the same diesel truck, takes hours later. his load out at mid-afternoon for | "It is impossible the eight-hour, 50-minute run. In| diesel engine at 15 or 20 below," the summer they travel in pairs. Mr. Embree explains. |During cold weather they run in| On the return run, two loads of |close convoy. {mine timbers are picked up each Although they carry no emer- Right at a camp about half way to start a |tire," Mr. Embree said. "There : are' 18 tires pounding under ine] Hurricane Names weight of the truck and the 34-| *|foot trailer. Each tire weighs 170] Semi-Permanent {pounds and is kept at 90 pounds pressure. | MIAMI, Fla. (AP)--The United "It is hard to tell when one|States weather bureau has an- becomes flat, so company regula-{nounced its list of semi-perma- tions are that we make a thorough nent hurricane names. check every two hours." | They are: Abby, Brenda, Cleo, A flat tire 'could burst into] OUI pil, Florence, Glad, flames and quickly destroy 2 Molly, Nita Odette. Panis Roxic, ! {} 2 y s s y complete ynit, ; Stella, Trudy, Vesta and Winny. Another peeve is the motorist| Five letters of the alphabet are says Howard Embree of Oxford, ied. of startin & to giv nstea arting over ea iy re give the trucks year with a new list, the weather od bureau plans to pick up each hur- to see and in summer our tires run cooler on the gravel roads," 70 mile intervals--the trucks are|also are picked up at the com- | equipped with heavy clothing. z |pany's producing mine at Car- NS a driver on the run Sve "Tie worst session was last Macks, 115 miles north of White- DAILY RUNS {winter," Mr. Embree recalls. «yt | horse. Each evening the year round was 70 below for two weeks. We| In the nine years since the «ix 21-ton trucks leave White-/travelled in close convey, always haul began, the gravel road has horse, heading north along the|/watching the truck behind us, | improved to the point where a road leading to Dawson City,|Whenever it froze up, the driver|trip which took 10 hours now is branching northeast at Stewart|got in with the driver ahead. To|less than nine hours. By next fall Canadian Press Correspondent DAWSON CITY, Yukon (CP)-- {The giant red trucks of United Keno Hill Mining Company brave snow, rain, mud, summer heat and 70-below winter weather on the 290 winding miles between the mine at Elsa Camp and the railhead at Whitehorse. Loaded with 24 tons of silver, Fine New Book On 'Canada' living only at the price of cen-'HIGH STANDARDS | turies of adventure, originality,| In other words, Canada is al- and hard work. The Canadian most uninhabited, or, to put it tradition and the aspirations that/in another way, Canada has at- infuse modern Canadian litera-/tracted and held a share of the ture and art can be understood population of North America only in the knowledge of how 10|roughly corresponding to her, The University of Michigan "History of the Modern World" series has published its latest publication, a book that should be of interest to all Canadians. It is "CANADA" by J. Bartlet Brebner (Ambassador Books Ltd.) and it is edited by Allan Nevins and Howard M. Ehrmann, as are all books in this series. This handsome volume on "CANADA" provides a thrilling pageant of Canadian history from the search for a northwest Pas- sage to the triumph of the St. Lawrence Seaway. Here is the in- tegrated story of a vast country when pioneers. The late J. Bartlet Brebner was Canadian-born and was Gouver- peur Morris Professor of History at Columbia University for more than 30 years. This book claims that six out of seven persons in this Dominion are Canadian-born. The French generations of European in- capacity to maintain for them a cessors) translated endless trial|Canada's thickly populated re-| and error into health strength. size in relation to her population|U-S. vaders (and their Indian prede-|North American standard of life.lead and zinc in two-ton ore boxes, the vehicles travel in con- and |gions are more sharply separated voy along the lonely route during from each other than they are|the sunlit The author adds that Canada's|from corresponding areas in the the crunching frigid nights of winter, summer nights and Crossing on the Stewart River be left would be to freeze in that to Elsa and the .Keno Hill mine. | temperature." At the same time six loaded ve- KEEP ENGINES RUNNING - {hicles are southbound with ore] From 20 degrees above zero) fed, as much as four hours may are| |for trans-shi t at Whiteh [for the smelter at Trail, B.C. | "We travel at night becausel After an overnight stop at Elsa, time they leave the garage at se/down the big diesel kept running constantly, from He FLATTIRE WORRY {when all three rivers on the route will be bridged and the loading of trucks onto ferries is elimin- "Our biggest worry is a flat ricane season where it left off in NATURAL GAS |the alphabetical list the year be- Sales of natural gas in 1959 fore. However, if one storm stands Teached 222, 556,000,900 suble feet, ut for destructiveness, forecast- more than one-third higher than| ers will substitute a new name for 1958. the same letter the next go-round. is one of her most serious prob-| These 16 million people and lems. Her 16 million people|these millions of square miles amount to about a tenth of the have combined to make Canada population of the slightly smaller|an enormous producer for the! United States, Practically all of world's markets, the sixth great- them live within 100 miles of the|est trading nation in 1939 and the U.S.; in fact, thanks to the south-|third or fourth during and since ward dip of the Great Lakes and the Second World War. {the St. Lawrence river, about| This new book on Canada will |{three-quarters live south of the not only serve as a valuable ref- 49th parallel which forms the |erence edition, it will also help northern boundary of the U.S. millions in other countries to from the Lake of the Woods to| understand our great Dominion stock is the oldest and amounts to about 31 per cent. The British Isles, either directly or through the United States, furnished about 48 per cent. Continental Europe provides practically all the rest, and these "New Cana- dians" move gradually into the English rather than the French- speaking culture. Nevertheless, the existence of a minority of three in ten, concentrated for the most part in one area of Can- ada, constitutes a test of national existence and action which groups Canada with Belgium and South Africa in the society of na- tions. In addition to formidable geographical divisions, Canada must accommodate herself to a profound cultural. The French- Canadians, menaced as they feel themselves to be not only by their English-speaking compatri- ots, but by the much more power- ful and pervasive civilization of the U.S., cannot help being driven fn on themselves to some extent. fn their passionate desire to re- main themselves they are capable of clinging to the tradi- tional and the introspective at the cost of ignoring the very steps needed to meet changes in their environment, says the author. He says: ". .. clearly Canada is an extraordinary country, a standing rebuke to the habit in Americans and Britons, her close partners, of taking her for grant- ed. Many observations from out- side have been frying to tell the world this for generations, but nearly all of them, for instance Walt Whitman and Ruper Brooke, have tried to do it on the basis of some travel, some conversa- tion, and some contemporary analysis of cross sections. Can- ada will not yield her character to that kind of diagnosis. She has been a hard land to master, and has provided a generous way of the Pacific. better. YY OLILES All These Items Are "Green Tag" Specials Featured For Value And Price During March New feature-packed suite 58" Triple Dresser Gives You 7 Drawers... Topped With 30" x 44" Mirror Serpentined Centre Drawers ~~ Co) LET'S GO ~EVERYBO The Get Together Club is sponsor- ing a clothes drive to help Simcoe Hall build up their clothes reserve. We urc 2ntly need children's cloth- ing and bedding. The drive runs from TKURS., MARCH 24 TO THURS. MARCH 31 If you have any of the above articles please phone If only an illustration could portray to you the beauty of this new Hec'&2r Walnut finish with the tops hand-rubbed to highlight the fine grain- ing. At last, you'll have enough storage space with the 7 drawers in massive triple dresser and 4 more in oversize 36" chest. The bottom drawer of dresser is full-width size for blankets, etc. Veneered bottom. Large 30" x 44" mirror has bevelled edge. Bookcase bed with sliding panels. REG. 279.95! 3-PIECE SUITE 18995 i : ONLY 27 MONTHLY PAYMENTS OF 11.50 A picture you will see many times- il you will o | talk of it. : If never before this is the unpainted double dresser Generously Proportioned with 6 Spacious Drawers Just a few hours work saves you extra dollars ! "Green Tag" Special. Each 4.95 7 Ideal for a master bedroom or for household linens. Built of choice woods and well sanded for easy finishing. 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