Winnipeg Free Press

Monday, February 01, 1965

Issue date: Monday, February 1, 1965
Pages available: 34
Previous edition: Saturday, January 30, 1965

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  • Publication name: Winnipeg Free Press
  • Location: Winnipeg, Manitoba
  • Pages available: 34
  • Years available: 1872 - 2025
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Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - February 1, 1965, Winnipeg, Manitoba Winnipeg free press monday february 1. 1965 Union trustee friction revealed continued a spokesman for the trustee ship said sunday or. Millard s charges Are both inaccurate and illogical. It was revealed last week that or. Mulnard split with his fellow trustees late in 1963 when they voted to abolish the Post of Siu administrator which he had held up to that time. The Deci Sion coming after the Siu elections made the trustees jointly responsible for Siu affairs. Or. Millard seemed deter mined to run the Siu a by the source said. He t want any there were complaints that or. Millard s eventual aim was to give the Siu Complete domination of the maritime Union Field the same goal that was sought by Hal Banks deposed by the trustees last March As Siu president. Judge Lappe who has refused to take part in the Public de Bate Over the issues was re ported to be preparing a Pri vate letter to the Csc opposing or. Millard s stand for a private trusteeship. The split within the trustee ship will get a full airing within a few weeks however when a commons committee meet to i study the trustees report and question the three men about it. Or. Justice dryer even though he has resigned has agreed to appear before the committee. I was nearly crazy itch itch Verr first us of soothing. Coli in liquid . Prescription positively relieves Rwy red by edema rashes irritation itch troubles. Gre Uelen. Stainless. Trial bottle mint or Money Back. Don t suffer. Ask Dragish for .d.presduption his memory can never die Massey declares Ottawa we thank god for having had him amongst us and take Comfort from the knowledge that his memory can never Vincent Massey spoke those words for All canadians at a simple solemn National Cere Mony of mourning saturday for sir Winston Churchill. The ceremony held in the White Stone Entrance Hall to the parliament buildings was at tended by 600 men and women from every facet of the Capi Tal s political diplomatic Church and military life. It began with a toll ing of the peace Tower Bell and a slow cannonade almost at the moment when sir Winston s body was being lowered into a grave Miles away. Governor general Georges Vanier and mme. Vanier headed the impressive Assem Bly of mourners a sombre crowd in which the dark formal attire of the men and simple Black dresses of the women contrasted with the occasional Glit Ter of military braid or the Scarlet of an ramp tunic. Use dais nothing was added to the Sim ple carved Stone setting except a Low carpeted dais set up in the main Rotunda facing the audience seated in two rows Down the hallway. There was no crepe or fun eral drapery. No picture of sir Winston was displayed. J the Only spoken word at the 28-minute service apart from the Sharp commands of the Mil itary guard was a Eulogy by or. Massey former governor general and Canada s High commissioner to Britain during the second world War. Subdued emotions broke to he surface momentarily when he muted band music played the opening bars of Beethoven s 5th a notes Jia t Churchill made the signal of an embattled Britain 25 years ago. Another emotional moment came near the end of the Cere Mony when a solitary Bagpiper pacing a floodlit gallery above the audience played a lament. Heads bowed and eyes were wiped As the doleful notes drifted Down. Acting prime minister Paul Martin head of government during the absence in London of prime minister Pearson who attended the Churchill funeral shared the dais with Gen. Van Ier mme. Vanier or. Massey and senator a. B. Baird of St. Johns fld. Places Wreath Gen. Vanier placed a 30-Inch Wreath of poppies and natural leaves at the base of the carved Stone column that Arches up from the main Rotunda under the peace Tower. The Wreath bore a simple White card Irise Riberl in English and French from the people of Canada. , 77, delivered the Eulogy in a firm resonant voice switching at one Point to French. He spoke of Churchill s dynamic leadership his inspiring oratory and his matchless prose. His presence lives on and nowhere More than in the Halls of parliament that were his other or. Massey said. He was As he said a child of parliament a Man it seemed who walked with destiny whose life was but a preparation for the greatest trial and his peo ple s finest now Winston Churchill has gone to stalk history to its Lair. Holiday Churchill had stroke in 1949 continued through a triumvirate of which Cripps was to be one member and others named by him or he would resign. I was fully conscious to my own weakness at that moment and had great doubts As to whether i would withstand such a crisis. By this time-1 knew that the Anglo american landings in Al Giers would be made within a few weeks and they were to be synchronized w i t h the 8th army s Al Alamein offensive. I knew that if these great enter Prises failed i was done any Way. If they succeeded and i had Faith that they would succeed my position would be Strong enough to Deal with Cripps or anyone else. I Tempo sized. I asked Cripps to defer the mat Ter until after the Landing. While the resounding Victor ies on both fronts were being acclaimed with the ringing of Church Beius i sent for Cripps. I told him that he was not Al together satisfactory to me As Leader in the House at the same time stressing the importance of aircraft production. I sent him to this ministry where he quite Well. The tide had moderate climate Auckland . There Are no big barns or silos As new zealand farms because the livestock stays outside All year. Captures claimed Tokyo a communist China claimed sunday that be tween july 1964, and january 1965, she killed or captured 196 nationalist c h i be s e armed who had planned to carry out harassing activities after Landing on m a i n 1 a n d China. She said they came from Formosa by seven groups in eight vessels which were captured or sunk. Vender urges Unity in Jubilee address Regina up governor general Vanier carried a plea for under standing Between French and English canadians into the heart of the Prairie provinces sunday. He spoke Here at an after noon ceremony marking the be ginning of Saskatchewan s year Long Celebration of its Diamond Jubilee the 60th anniversary of the province s creation and entry into in a 30-Riiinute address the 76-year-old former Soldier and Diplomat and is Canada s first French Canadian governor general called upon canadians to cast aside pettiness selfish Ness and intolerance and substitute understanding brother Hood and Confidence in Che an the icy 14-degree-be Low Zero temperature and a brisk 15 Miles an hour wind out Side about people heard the governor general speak. The stood for the first few minutes of his speech and then sat in an Arm chair to Complete it. Queen s message earlier he read a message from the Queen to Premier Ross Thatcher of Saskatchewan. It said in. Part As the Celebration of your Diamond Jubilee begins i Send to my people of Saskatchewan my congratulations and my sin Cere Good the governor general spoke in French for part of his Greet ing and so Saskatchewan Public works minister j. W. G. Gardiner when he introduced Gen. Vanier., following the address 15-year-old Bernadette aussant of Gravelbourg thanked Gen. Vanier for taking part in the ceremony. She spoke first in English and then repeated her thanks in French. There is in Canada a French fact he said. This is nothing we Are All strands of the Canadian fabric and where by ourselves we might Well be torn and broken together we form whole cloth that can re Tain its strength despite the hardest Wear. This in sum is the great lesson of your history As it is also the lesson of Canada s his tory. For it obvious that the two Are so entwined nation and provinces that the Prosperity of one is almost by definition the advantage of the unrest seen the cancer of unrest or malaise of depression infect ing either the provinces or the nation would surely Lead to weakness and possible collapse in the part not infected. There was a marked sence of urgency in the governor general s address. He said please believe me this is the time for action this is Hangman favors penalty Toronto Ellis one of two official hangmen a Canada using the same pseudo nym says he s in favor of re Taining the death penalty. He said in an interview thursday on a Toronto radio station the other John Ellis is usually inactive because of ill health and advanced age. The younger Ellis said he favors keeping capital punishment because there Are so Many people unemployed that just Don t want to work. I contend that if a Man is a born bum when capital punishment is abolished All he has to do is shoot some one in the Street and he is sentenced to life with three meals a Day in a warm room and has a and that is More than what a bum our flood tide. This is the time to push Forward bunder its impetus. This is the time to knew one another to understand one another not tomorrow. Tomor Row May be too late. Tomorrow we May regret that we not get together when the tide was rising and the tempers Gen. Vanier said a. Great Optimist about the fun one condition we must work together and Noarch Forward All of in hand in he paid tribute to the people of racial origins other than French and English for their contribution to Canada. The people of Saskatchewan Are of Many origins. Here the founding races French and British have a sizeable representation but even together they do not form a majority. Here each racial group is in a minority but All Are work ing together to build a unique and distinctive National fabric of our among Best almost half the population of Saskatchewan was made up of twentieth Century canadians. I Admire and thank for the wonderful help they have Given to the British and French stocks in Canada. They Are among the Best from their the governor general also reflected on Canada s nationhood. Are we a nation some peo ple say we Arent Basing them selves on the a serious diversities which compose the pattern of our land on our inability so far to. Understand one another on endless sometimes futile controversies which result. If we Are not a nation then we have done something quite phenomenal in the past. Can Ada with a relatively Small population raised during two wars Well Over a million men and women to fight in the cause of Liberty. Of these., Laid Down their lives. 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