2 ‘Three of ‘the nine Island gauche, 2 es HT): Ke re, . garet Dolliver-@karlottetown) © delegates attending the’ third 3 Vv, Ka- i - eanual Maritiine Church-Scou- ber Mé&cDonald (Charlot and assistant scout master, town), district cubmaster. Mar. arker Jewell (York). SS last. ters.'Conference at Tatama-. Taxi Driver’ Recalls An Springhi I: Mine-In:’ ficere for something te do to help, was finally handed: the” vials of blood and told to.drive« road; nearly two hours when | the Mounties flagged him. | i McBurnie's stubble. He | the 130 miles to Halifax. When the RCMP car. croneed his right foot hard,om | There the blood would be Ss = pore ne matched for transfusions. 4 $1 .25 | ed Ty a. tired, McBurnie stuck to. back ee eyes squinted _ is to avoid the heavy: traf- = _ FULL COURSE : ~ to keep the speeding fie: already pouring into’ & daily special q & Vandlecte us 440 i fated ee ee cen =: " , other cars~weré rac west cf red I fen tay tad = Mount- | serrying mine rescve special- 2 ree = teket ‘ready for McBursie. “fal oe. a Pleten« <¢al 2 ee S| | HILSIDE MOTOR | LTD. Hi “i | ed | - 1962 PONTIAC radio and 6 cylinder siandard and,white and see this beauty, — Pe $425 Nat ff ‘ af i BE uit | H SESE? if F i 1964 FORD Falcon, 4 door with radio, 6 cylinder standard ae walls. Black in in = Enea. for with new winter. tire $1550 Tinemith, Silver Plating, pS: lating. -Spécializing | types of metal and jf stereos repairs. . . Burnie recalls. - Séiurnie had been on. the |< PRES 14 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mit, Oct. 9, 1968.1 ating hare 20W. "But T'm fis- “| yeached the blood bank,’ Me- ‘Burnie paced -back and forth earls to start ‘the, trip poe But a Mountie told him elax. The blood would be hoe to Springhill by. heli+ copter. “When she blew it was like ‘an atomic explosion,”’ Mc- “You couldn't imagine ,the feelings on those « faces there at the - pithead. There were. thousands of them milling around. Every-— body felt helpless.” .° But there were some could help. Rescue stood by. as: No. 4 Colliery, a big coal producer for more than 25 years, continued to belch smoke and flame. As soon as firemen put out the fire in the bankhead area, rescue crews started down on the first-of anger ofle secon a! who - before the danger ofa second explosion forced a ha SAVED 88 MINERS 2 he rescue work, carried ‘by draegermen equipped with gear .to protect them against the deadly fumes in the mine and by: “‘bare-faced”’ miners, was back - .breaxing “and “heroic—But—it—paid= off. Eighty - eight. miners were brought . out _,alive in four nights and 2 days. Several of “the survivors scrambled out -of their wire stretchers. when they reached WALLPAPERS — Visit Moore & McLeod's For Ready Pasted SUNWORTHY @ Phone for home book—894-6541, Moore & re & Mcleod tid. 1965 4 door sedan, 6 cylinder engine, standard transmis- sion, radio, white wall tires, wheel discs. Rowzeun $2295 = Gmc |. % TON gine and turn indicators. Biue in colour. and just what: the farmer needs for on the farm. $1450 . condition. |, Pithead to wafting ambu- “I'm coming.out the way 1 ¢went teams’ | }~ing* No: 2-Colliery-until--it-was: battered by an underground | 23, 1958. Sev-" | . énty-five men died in that dis- @ Immediate ‘delivery 8Se up ming samples PONTIAC the surfate, insisting on waik- ing the last few feet from’ the lances. : One of these was Con Em- bree, survivor of two earlier mine accidents: and son of a map who survived the 1891 No. 1 Colliery disaster here which killed 125. Embree, whose leadership after the ex- plosion was credited with sav- ing many Hives, scrambled out of his stretcher and said: in—on my feet.” A -erowd of several hundred set off a deafening cheer. But 39 men, including the seven-on_the surface and two .; rescue workers who were')) overcome. by poisonous gas, One of the. survivors, 40- year-old’ Ken Gilbert, now is a correctional officer ‘at the federal penitentiary at nearby Dorchester, N.B. Gilbert Feached thessunface 50 hours after ‘the explosion, vowing never to return to the» mines. ‘OUT FOR GOOD’ But like so many of his companions, Gilbert did go’ back. He worked in neighbor- upheaval Oct. - aster. Gilbert even worked for a time in the small, mine~ “yper- i Ld. 1963 RAMBLER Wagon, brparlathaoh fh rexel rea This station wagon is clean and has: good tires. “$1395: ally out’ for good,”. he says. Springhill today ‘doesn't look much like a coal town. Gone are the big surface’ -installa- tions, the mine whistles and the endless criticism of the bosses. Even the railway— like the mines owned by the Cumberland. Railway and. Coal.Co.—is no more. The Cumberland company pulled out completely follow- ing the 1958 disaster in No. 2 Colliery.. The surviving mine employs about 100—a far cry from. the. 1,585 who worked™ here ‘when Nos. 2 and 4 were hoisting. But everyone here’ ‘remem- bers the days when every _able-bodied_man_.in_town_ had. a lamp and a coal company number ard: could ‘bring liome a good pay envelope every week;. when the Springhill ' Fencebusters lived up to their name in baseball} parks around the Maritime .prov- -inces; when the high-pitched whistle of the steam Roomot- the junction with the sistawcios aan CNR main Ine three sei te the ‘south. MINE EMPLOYS 100 ~ se The mine in psoduction here . now is tiny by Springhill standards. No. 2 Colliery, for instance,--had working areas 15,000 feet from the surface But the 100-man operation is one of the town’s major em- ployers today. Several small industries have been estab- lished .and the federal. govern- ment has placed a minimum security institution “not far from the former pithead areas. And there are jobs—such as the’ one Ken _ Gilbert worked hard to qualify er. in neighboring towns. mining is a tradition *waeas are_the hazards that. go with it. Freak- geological structures in the Cumberland field’ provide conditions sub- ject to “bumps”. — upheavals © of the mine flbor and walls « vinclal investigating caused by. build-ups of gas. It | was a massive bump bg wrecked’ No. 2 Colliery. * 1958. But the explosion that | erupted at 5:07 p.m.' Nov. 1, 1956. in No. 4 colliéry was ‘something completely differ- ~~ ATTENTION pia As of November 1sf,-1966,-the: Ane q ance Service Charges for’ this sone | will be—local $7.00. Other ‘than local, ‘$2. 00 i 50c per mile one way. P.E.I, FUNERAL DIRECTORS _ and EMBALMERS hd EVANS AeccarON 1965 BUICK 4 door sedan with V8. automatic trans, radio, wind- shield — back ans. lights, power steering, power . —— and tinted ‘$2995 radio and 6 - SRY aS ares rot Office, Charlottetown. Stes ent, completely unpredictable. Thirteen months after: the disaster, a ‘Nova Scotia pro- commis- sion repotted ‘the explosion was caused by a deadly chain reaction. The comraialon said a rut- away trip—or on touched off the ane cars loaded: uncoupled as <2 wine hoisted up the mine. hee ak “slleed. nee oe electric cable. An are from the broken cable ignited clouds ‘of coal dust stirred up by the run- ‘dway and the explosion that we ee eee at methane~gas. ——- es The investigators said ‘‘the explosion ‘resulted from’ the “unfortunate ‘comb ination of circumstances for which no se blame ean be attached ei any individual:”’. Company officials and union leaders got-little sleep during the early days of November, 1956. But ‘their worst hours were those of early morning, éxplosion. Twenty - men were still unaccounted for, but-rescue_ agreed there was ‘no. chance --any of them were alive: MINE oe oe ae of: further rescue operations was tob great, they decided. The mine was sealed. The task of announcing the grim decision fell on Harold Gordon, chief ‘of coal opera- tions for Dominion Steel and grey: his life milany times in leading rescue workers into the shat- tered mine, had tears in his eyes when he said: " MOVED To eae er aanernnen . “NEW LOCATION > ocak RT merch nearly five days after : Ress rvtictimensetingt i ocd ures Alex W. Matheson, QC, Barrister, will | be located at 8&5 Queen St. nextto the | we } A.W. MATHESON 85 — St. Q.0., BARRISTER — Charlottetown 2 you buy a Hillside used car you buy. will give’ you carefree winter driving. . eo’ ; , f "te SEE THESE S Preston Wood, George ragher, Alden Rodd, John Smith, ‘Rollie John- “ston, , Leigh Crabbe and Keith Myers. , Gerry Car- 1962 “CHEVROLET 4 door sedan, blue in colour, . Equipped with cylinder standard. White walls and ‘ clean inside and out. FREE alesse: dena hood this one too. $1450 __ ‘1964 a with clean and ter winter” 4 door, two tone with radio, 6 cylinder stand- white walls. This in good “$1595 = |e ACADIAN economy ‘car is condition. This one is ready Charlottetown, P.E.1.“ . WATCH 1963 CHEVROLET | ’ @ door sedan with radio, heater and 6 cylinder i] standard. White walls and is in tan colour. * This fine used car has a good record and is ready for the cold weather. $1545 Mondays at 7-p.mi. See the exciting films pre- sented each week on SKI- DOO, sponsored by— — , Keith ee ~~ ~ Brackley Pt. Rd. Sherwood | S Diat 4-6425 ) aa! ST. PETER'S ROAD. ‘ Wed at “1965 FORD Galaxie 4 door with radio, heater, aera windshield washers, white walls, p lights, power steering and power brakes. This beautiful red car is fully equipped hari is going for only— ° $2495 V8 auto- back 1964 PONTIAC -4 door with radio, 6 cylinder standard whitewalls. This car has been ie = giant sales event, Come - $1850 — LSIDE MOTORS LTD. and reduced "21963 CHEVY II 4 door ‘black beauty*with radio, 6 cylinder and whitewalls. This one will give you so and, the gas mileage you like #o brag abot Sl 350_ “WHERE SERVICE & SATISFACTION COME FIRST’. & . re: SRRRRAARARARRRARAAAAAAAAAL _* 1962 PLYMOUTH 2 door with V8 standard: reconditioned engine that will give you miles of carefree driving and ‘the price is right. $895 7] 8 ! "DIAL 2-1243