Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Feb 1965, p. 2

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es Popa aang ay ny "I'M ALL RIGHT; I'M ALL RIGHT" -- cer, Quebec Progressive Con- Says Liberals _ Ask Opinions ORILLIA servative leader, had done the Yight thing in renin in the party to continue his fight for a leader, Mr, Templeton said, ; (CP)--Charles| Templeton, vice - president of the. Ontario Liberal party, said pwn ha oe glad to young erals ar, for} jj abolishing the counting be- cause it is a cause in which they believe, He said he is personally in favor of retaining the pHa archy, Its benefits far outweigh the expense of keeping the: gov-! Tough B.C. Miners Cry At Family Reunions | By JACK MORRIS VANCOUVER (CP) ~-- Tough hard-rock miners and construc- tion men from the northern wil- derness spilled unashamed tears Saturday. night as they greeted their families after the Granduc mining camp disaster. They told of the horrors of the crushing glacial slide that obliterated the camp, burying some 30 fellow workers and in- juring 17 more. "T'm all right: I'm all right," cried one miner, tears coursing down his cheeks, as he hugged his wife. The scenc was repeated many =\times as the 110 able survivors arrived by chartered turbo-prop aircraft from Ketchikan, Alaska. The injured were still in hospita) at Ketchikan. One woman later sat alone in a corner, weeping silently. The survivors of the slide at northwestern British Columbia mine told of the groans and screams of men dying beneath the crushing weight of up to 18 feet of snow; of finding some men alive and finding others crushed lifeless; of living on chocolate bars while digging with bare hands in the snow. They spoke of a small slide that tumbled down one of the surrounding mountains the night before Thursday. morning's slide and of the rumbling mountains after the big slide. Innis Kelly of Vancouver, a Pacific Western Airlines radio operator, saw the big slide com- ing. "Tt was noiseless, not a sound. It was like watching a huge white wave with bulldozers and cats and.men rolling on the top "When it was over the men were just gune. Just gone, that's all." Kelly patched together a radio transmitter -- using bulldozer batteries for power--and sent distress calls for 16 hours, not knowing whether anyone was receiving them, HELPED SEARCH Between calls, every 15 min- utes, he helped look for buried men, * "It was just terrible. Every- body in my bunkhouse. . "The night shift, 35 men, were sleeping. 'They were buried|i alive. We got some of them out . . they were crying and beat- ing their heads against the tim- bers trying to get free when we found them." f t of the crest. Asser Louste, 59, of Edmonto spent more than five hours buried alive in the snow, thing I knew I woke up under- ground with 10 or 12 feet of snow over my head. for a while. I had some air but I could hardly move, Every- thing, my feet and hands, were all numb, and the snow was mixed with a lot of water, JUST STOOD THERE was sure I would get out. I didn't give up hope, And I made ceded the slide. minute during the whole three d: 0 "T didn't hear anything. First "IT guess 'I was knocked out ernor - general, he told a meet- ing of the Central Ontario North Liberal Association. Mr. Templeton also said the party welcomes opiniéns on the|| Liberal leadership. Leon Bal- "TI just stood there, hollering 'or somebody to come,,and I ae The survivors also told of hree days of snow that pre- "It didn't stop showing for a lays,"' said Alfred Wiegand, 34, f Merritt, B.C. 'The night be- -------- A fore the slide we heard a small one come down in the moun- tains. It didn't come near the WHAT'S WITH YOUR | ONE OF FIRST B.C. DISASTER PICTURES STEWART, B.C. -- One of the first pictures taken at the Granduc Mine disas- ter scene in Northern Brit- ish Columbia. Vancouver Sun photographer Ray Al- lan took the picture Sunday. He was the only newspaper photographer to reach the scene. --(CP Wirephoto) Winter Blitz Hits E. Coast, Prairies By THE CANADIAN PRESS As residents of the Maritime provinces today dug out from under one of the worst snow storms of the season, the Prairie provinces were bracing them- selves for the second blizzard in four days. Storm conditions across Can- ada during the weekend contrib- uted to a rash of traffic deaths and accidents. There was little hope of re- spite for the Prairies as bliz- gard warnings were posted in southwestern Saskatchewan for a storm moving in from south- ern Alberta and gaining mo- mentum. Three persons died in a wind- whipped fire Saturday as winds up to 68 miles an hour buffeted Manitoba, stranding motorists and curtailing air and ground traffic. The fire in Lac du Bonnet, 70 his two pre - school children, Michael, were burned to death. the brunt of the storm after it moved off the Prairies Sunday night. Winds up to 40 miles an hour piled drifts in southern sections of Ontario most of the weekend. KILLED FOUR IN N.S, caught under 15.6 inches of snow durin, four blamed on the storm. Glace Bay area. then moved out into the' Atlan- tic after catching a portion of Newfoundland. miles northwest of Winnipeg, destroyed a bakery shop and three adjoining business build- ings. Michael Baldess, 34, and 2, and Veronica, 5, Northwestern Ontario took Cape Breton Island was the weekend. At least leaths in Nova Scotia were Hardest hit was the Sydney- The storm HERE and THERE A 13-year-old boy escaped with only minor cuts Sun- day evening after being in- volved. in an accident' with a car driven by Wayne War- ren, of Warren avenue, The accident took place on Wil- son road south near the junction with Olive avenue. Oshawa Police reported the boy, Clifford Topping, 420 Nevis. avenue, darted in front of the car while walk- ing with two other children. Oshawa Fire Department answered two minor kitchen fires over the weekend. Both were cooker fires. One was to 76 Southwood, home of John Dutrizur, where grease in the oven had caught fire. . The other was to 177 Church street, home of Mr. S. Gibbs, where plastic equip- ment on the cooker ignited. Oshawa Ambulance answer- ed 17 routine house calls over the same period. No one was injured Satur- day in a three-vehicle colli- sion on Park road south near Elmgrove avenue. The three drivers involved were Marguerite Carey, 85 Kee- watin street north; Bertus Vanderheyden, 27 Park road south and John Kelso, 1 Griggs street, Toronto. tulations are ex- tended to Clayton Smith of 16 Larry avenue, Oshawa, who celebrates his birth- day today. The Whitby Brass Band under the direction of Eric Clarke, captured second place for Brass Bands, Class A, in the Kiwanis Music Festival in Toronto over the weekend. Eugenen Laczkiewicz, of Oshawa won second place in the 14 years and under accordion solo in the Kiwa- nis Music Festival in To- ronto over the weekend. Oshawa Duplicate Bridge: High scores, master point night Feb. 15 -- A section, North and South; Mrs. R. Heron and J. F. Patterson, 131%; Mrs. R. Morris and Mrs. R. Drew, 127%; R. Morris and D. McCuaig, 116%; Mrs. V. A. Silgailis and C. Nelson, 114%. East and West: Miss Vir- ginia Drummond and K. B. Marden, 12914; Mrs. J. Wild and Mrs. A. Dowdle, 11714; Mrs. C. Nelson and J. Drum- mond, 115; R. L. McCord B_ Section: North and South: E. P. Coles and S. A. Coles, 1254; J. M. Coles and Mrs. H. Cruwys, 116; Mr. and Mrs, R. B. Davis, 114; Mrs. E. H. Webster and Mrs. J. A. MacLean, 113. East and West: Mrs.W. R. Hunter and J. H. Winters, 141; Mrs. E. M. Culp and Mrs. G. A, Rundle, 1304; Miss G. Bovay and Mrs. William Medland, 124; Mrs. E. Bovay and Mrs. R. G. Smyth, 111%. Oshawa Golf Club Dupli- cate Bridge: High Scores, North and South: Mr. and Mrs. E. Henry, 83; Mr. and Mrs, R. Vickery, 76; Mr. and Mrs. E. Bastedo, 6714; Mr. and Mrs. D. Mackin- non, 66; Mrs. C. Clifford and Mrs. E. Jamieson, 6414. East and West: Mrs, A. Armstrong and Mrs. 0, Mills, 73%; Miss G. Wil- son and Miss R. Higgins, 70%; Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Walker, 6714; Mrs. R. Gra- ham and Mrs. K. Braith- waite, 67; E, Anderson and F. Harding, 67. GM Duplicate Bridge Club: North and South: Mrs. R. Hunter and Mrs. . K. Marden, 132%; Mrs. E. Wadsworth and Mrs, R. Morris, 128; J. Patterson and J. Miller, 125; Mrs. M. R. Clarke and W. Cox, 119%; Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Davis, 119. East and West: Miss G. Bovay and Mrs. C. Bovay, 133; Mrs. T. Nichols and FE. Coles, 130; Mr. and Mrs. G. Swindells, 120; Mr, and Mrs. E. Jefferys, 115%; Mrs. R. Barr and Mrs. H. Webster, 10714. Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Wilcox, 57 Hillcroft street, have made two much-appre- ciated donations for the use of the old people in Hills- dale Manor, Mr. Wilcox has donated (wo electric razors, only slightly used, while Mrs. Wilcox has sent to the Manor a bushel basket of balls of knitting wool in various colors for the se of the old iadies who are fond of knitting. WINGED GUESTS There are some 500 species of birds in Florida during the winter, more than half of which come from northern areas of The heaviest snowfalls oc- curred Friday and early Satur- day, followed by winds gusting at 60 miles an hour at Sydney. Visibility was reduced and driv- ing conditions were hazardous. Police said poor visibility was a factor in two head-on col- lisions which killed four per- sons in northern Nova Scotia|"@ Saturday. More than 100 cars were aban- doned on the Sydney-Glace Bay highway and one bus that left Glace Bay Saturday morning on a 13-mile run to Sydney reached its destination at 3 a.m. Sun- day. Most bus services were dis- rupted in the Sydney area and in eastern New Brunswick and Prince Edward. Island where highways were blocked for brief periods. All highways wert reported clear Sunday night. Only province to escape the wrath of the late season storms was British Columbia where rain fell on the coastal areas and some snow was reported in the interior. Partial List Of Deceased -- VANCOUVER (CP) -- A par- tial list issued by the RCMP and the Granduc Mining Com- pany of men involved in the Feb. 18 avalanche disater in- cluded: DEAD Franklin Rose, Vancouver Rodney L. Rose, Vancouver R. Blake Rose, Vancouver George Gieger, Burnaby, B.C. Jerimiah. McNulty, Richmond Hill, Ont. Arthur. Poulson (home unavailable) James A. Scott, Burnaby, B.C. Andrew Burdick, Holtyre, Ont. John A. Tellam, Calgary MISSING - Home towns unavailable .. Dalton Shannon C. A. Pelmar Steve Saltesz Robert J. Lloyd Aldege Davis John Clausen Craig S. Anderson S. McLeod D. McKinnon H. Orlaw C. Crawford R. Currie Injured Marcel Bouchard, Holptre Rene Jollie, Madison, Ont. Survivors--Uninjured Allan Barger, Matheson, Ont. Algerdas Mitalas, Port Arthur Ray Miller, Cobalt, Ont. Forced Down Plane Found TRENTON, Ont. (CP) -- A DC-3 civilian aircraft that made a forced landing on a frozen lake near the eastern shore of Hudson Bay late Satur- day night has been located, the RCAF announced Sunday. The pilot decided to land after he lost directions and ran low on fuel. He and his two passengers were not injured. The RCAF is flying in fuel for the Austin Airways aircraft, which was not damaged in the | and R. Healy, 109. ( the U.S. and Canada, landing. sithe| Traffic accidents and fires ac- counted for 33 of the 35 acci- dental deaths reported across Canada during the weekend. A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday local times showed 24 persons died in traffic mishaps, nine in fires, one by drowning and one by carbon - monoxide poisoning. Ontario had 11 dead, including 10 on the highways and a 17- year-old Toronto girl who died of carbon-monoxide poisoning. Road Mishaps, Fires Kill 33 On Weekend Quebec reported five road deaths while three small chil- dren perished in a fire near St. Jerome, northwest of Montreal. In the West, Manitoba also re- ported a triple fire death and Alberta and British Columbia each had two traffic and one fire death. Saskatchewan had one highway death and one in a fire. Nova Scotia reported four fat- alities, all in traffic, and New- foundland recorded the lone drowning. Prince Edward Is- VANCOUVER (CP) -- Exter- 1 Affairs Minister Martin said Saturday that the haggling over debts in the United Na- tions has crippled the interna- tional body at a time when it is badly needed in world af- fairs. "It's a tragic situation for this organization to be in the particular position at this time," Mr. Martin told a press conference, "At a time when discussion would be valuable, here you have the whole thing HE DOESN'T OBSERVE DATE BUFFALO (AP) The George Washington born in Canada does not observe his birthday today, but he goes along with those who think he does. George Washington resides in suburban Kenmore and was born Feb. 9, 1902, in Sony Creek, Ont. But he is a iamesake of the George Washington who was the first U.S. president and whose birthday is ob- served today by Americans. "Without fail, I get a dozen Or more phone calls every year at this time wishing me happy birthday," says the Kenmore Washington. Says "Haggling" On Debts Cripples United Nations being postponed because 0! $140,000,000 (the amount Russia is in arrears). The Soviet Union is anxious to emasculate the United Na- tions. They don't believe in the kind. of body we believe in. They believe in a body where the five great powers, including China, have exclusive author- ity, a body that would meet once a year, hold a discussion and that's it. "That's not our kind of United Nations." Mr, Martin also warned that a war of Korean size could de- velop if the Viet Nam situation continues to disintegrate and Communist Chinese troops en- ter the confiict. baker. land and New Brunswick were fatality-free. The survey does 4rt~fictude industrial or natural deaths, known suicides or slayings. The Ontario dead: SUNDAY camp, scared, c tains but not over the camp. tains rumbling all night." late bars, the only food, and was buried. Dozens but we were a little "Then the next morning it ame-down. And all that day and that night the slides kept coming down from the moun- "You could hear the moun- The survivors gulped choco- ug in the snow with their hands -- their power equipment of men were found, Some were not. Claude Rouleau 20, Alfred, Ont., in hospital following a car- truck collision at Rockland, near Ottawa, Maryanne Zielinski, 17, Tor- onto, in a parked car of car- bon-monoxide poisoning. Paul Nielsen, 19, Oakville, when his car plunged through a guard rail into a creek near Cooksville, about 15 miles west of Toronto. Diefenbaker Ill With Cold OTTAWA (CP) -- Opposition Leader Diefenbaker was _ re- ported Sunday to be suffering from a cold that probably will keep him confined to his res- idence until Tuesday or Wed- nesda: [et MONUMENTS Special Offer WRONG ? Lack confidence ..., Outdated steps ...., Can't Lead .... / Can't follow ...eeeee Need practice ...... THIS MONTH MARKS 7th Anniversary OF OUR OPENING IN OSHAWA Special Anniversary Offer '** ~enth only) 6 PRIVATE DANCE LESSONS 6 CLASS LESSONS $1 B00 ARTHUR MURRAY STUDIOS W. MARKS, LICENCEE 728-1681 DANCING? 11% Simeee St. S. 10% REDUCTION Off our large selection of modern cemetery memorials, Evening ap- pointments welcome. OSHAWA MONUMENT CO. R.R. 4 -- OSHAWA John Martin Oshawa Tel, 728-3111 Evenings call 723-6264 Located 4 mile east of city limits on Highway 2. y An aide said Mr. Diefenbaker left Parliament Hill early Fri- day because of the infection which is centred mainly in his throat. He has been running a slight temperature, Because of the illness, he was unable to attend the annual din- ner of the parliamentary press gallery Saturday night. T. C. Douglas, leader of the New Democratic Party, spoke at the dinner in place of Mr. Diefen- Peterborough Area Crash Kills 3 Saturday Night PETERBOROUGH (CP)-- Three persons were killed and two others injured Saturday night in a three-car collision on Highway 7, about seven miles east of here. Dead are Ivan Stewart But- ler, 54, of Peterborough, his wife, Sybil Pearl, 50, and Terry Waddell, 11, daughter of Mrs. Jean Waddell of Norwood, about 20: miles east of Peter- borough. WEATHER FORECAST - Seen On TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m.: Synopsis: Scattered snowflur- ries are forecast for southern Ontario today with local squalls and three or four inches of new snow and severe drifting in snowbelt areas near Lake Huron. Flutries and winds will both diminish gradually tonight ~Wind, More Cold The Way tinued cold. Winds diminishing to light Tuesday. Haliburton, Killaloe, North- ern Georgian Bay, Eastern Al- goma, Timagami, Cochrane, White River, North Bay, Sud- bury: Clear with a few cloudy periods and very cold today, to- night and Tuesday. Winds dim- inishing to light Tuesday. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Tuesday: with temperatures expected to drop to zero and below in south- ern Ontario. Fair and.continued cold weather is forecast for most regions on Tuesday. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Niagara, Lake Ontario, South- ern Georgian Bay, Windsor, Hamilton, Toronto:: Windy and extremely cold with a few cloudy periods and an occas- ional snowflurry today and to- night. Tuesday clear and con- tinued cold with increasing cloudiness in the afternoon or evening. Winds light Tuesday. Lake Huron, Western Al- goma, London: Mostly cloudy. Windy and very cold with-snow- flurries today and tonight. Oc- WIG? cisssvsics § St. THOMAS... ..000 London ...i. Kitchener .....006 Mount Forest..... Wingham .....e006 Hamilton . Toronto .... Peterborough .... Trenton .. Kingston .. Killaloe . hs a 8 AEC Earlton ........ Sault Ste. Marie Kapuskasing ..... White River... Moosonee .. casional snowsqualis and. con- siderable drifting near Lake Huron and Lake Superior. Tues- day variable cloudiness and con- RECORD PLAYER REPAIRS e ALL MAKES FREE Pick-up and Delivery Call 723-3867 GOOD FOOD BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH 12 Noon to 2 P.M. DINNER: 5:30 to 8 P.M. FULLY LICENSED DINING ROOM HOTEL LANCASTER 27 King St. W., Oshewa The girl died in Peterborough hospital of injuries suffered as a passenger in a car driven by Frederick Bye, 25, of Peter- borough, who suffered a broken right arm and facial cuts. Ronald Osborne, 19, of Peter- borough, driver of the third car, suffered a broken jaw. Both men were in satisfactory) condition. Police said the Butler car and the Bye car collided head- on, with Bye's vehicle continu- ing down the road out of con- trol until it. smashed into the Osborne car. PLANNING A... © BANQUET © CONVENTION © MEETING First Class Facilities For 20 to 400 Guests Quality Service Experienced Staff RESERVE YOUR IS YOUR DIETING TOO FAST TO BE SAFE? Losing weight tee quickly can be harmful. It cen lead to ulceration of the h and. develop of gall eee ° short time. There are other ly if do not exercise while dieting. 4 ss 1 you ere everweight you will be healthier if you reduce. 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