Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - November 22, 1965, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Cecil our counsel uni will Sovei Yoy says Ond your next Security Torace us 3-7171 by Carrier 40c per week monday november 22, 1965 authorized As 2nd class mall by the . Drpt., Ottawa and for payment of pm tace in rash. Be a pan am la a Fred games or i 337 Booster i he cabling breweries i tractor kills 2boys Alfred Brian Ericsen 12, and his six year old brother John Benjamin died saturday after noon when a tractor which Alfred was driving overturned in a drainage ditch near Fisher Branch Man. The two boys were the sons of or. And mrs. Henry Friesen of the Fisher Branch District ramp said. They said a third brother m e i v i n age unavailable was Riding on the tractor at the time but was believed uninjured. The hemp said the mishap occurred at . On a municipal Road near Fisher Branch. Or. S. O. Thompson Riverton Coroner said no inquest will be held. Fisher Branch is about i Miles North of Winnipeg. A policeman stands outside the fire ravaged Home of n dead colleague who perished with his Young wife and daughter monday. Dead Are const. Icay it Crick Liis wife Al Dynna and one year old Shannon Vitae. A ruined Chesterfield lies in the Snow. Inside lilo scorched Walls of hip House Anil the buckled window Frame show How fierce Hie Blaze was it its lid lil. See Story Page 1. Will Start smelting sask. Copper in dec. Flin flon Man. Special Copper concentrates from the Anglo Rouyn mine North of Lac la Ronge sask., arc expected to Start reaching Klin finn in december for smelting at the Hudson Bay mining and smelt ing company Plant. Mac Cam transport Ltd. Of Moose jaw. Has been seeking truck Drivers for the past week to haul the concentrates from the Lac la Ronge property Over 200 Miles by Road West of Here. Pool packers Roblin Brandon Plant Premier sees meat packing operation As Boon to livestock producers lies in preventing crime Macleod funeral parlor in St. Boniface hit by Blaze an overheated pan of cooking lard in a second floor suite of a St. Boniface building housing a funeral parlor resulted in a fire which caused Between and damage to the building and contents saturday night. The fire which broke out at . In the Philip Coutu funeral chapels Ltd. Building at 15g Marion Street was confined mainly to the second floor suite Kitchen an attic above it and the building s outside Walls near the Kitchen. The rest of the Storcy Frame stucco building sustained h e a to smoke and water damage. St. Boniface fire chief e. E. Proulx said Mary Saxony the building s resident caretaker was cooking in the Kitchen of her suite when she was called away to answer a Call at the downstairs funeral Chapel. While she was Cone chief Proulx said the cooking lard apparently boiled Over and burst into flames. The fire blew the Kitchen window out and spread to the outside Walls surrounding the window and to the attic. However 12 St. Boniface fire fighters and two trucks managed to contain the Blaze and had it under control an hour after it began. Project approved Portage la Prairie special construction of a Assembly Hall in the City of Portage la Prairie has been approved under the Federal provincial Centennial Grants program. The Assembly Hall will be part of a sports Complex consisting of an Arena sports Field swimming Pool Etc. The Federal government and the province will each contribute to this project while the share of Tho municipality will be s25.224. Manitoba now has 63 projects underway in the context of the Centennial celebrations. The Federal contribution t o the province s Gram is in Centennial Grants and s6.1io in other Grants. The province s share is s235.795.55 in Centennial Grants and in other Grants while the municipalities involved arc contributing s889.422.44. Philip Coutu of 641 Nia Kwa Road St. Boniface who owns the building and funeral Chapel said the building was fully insured. The fire did not cause enough damage to necessitate closing of the funeral Chapel for repairs. Allison joins Jay the former vice chairman of Canada s Board of broadcast governors Carlyle Allison has been appointed editorial and Public affairs director of Jay to Channel 7, Winnipeg. Or. Allison bad been vice chairman of Tho big for the past seven years. Before that he had been editor of the Winnipeg Tribune. He is a native of Winnipeg and a graduate of the University of Manitoba. Or. Allison s new appointment was announced monday by .1. M. Davidson manager of Jay. Or. Davidson also announced the appointment of Al Vic cry As Jay s news director. Or. Vickery had been news editor of Jay since the station went on the air five years ago. Prior to entering broadcasting he had. Been with the Canadian press news service for 14 years. He also had been director of publicity for the Western foot Ball conference. Or. Vic cry is a native of Winnipeg and a journalism graduate of the University of North Dakota. Both in and or. Allison assume their new duties immediately. 30-mile Speed limit approved at Dauphin Dauphin. Man., special Dauphin is to have a 30 mile an hour Speed limit in accordance with the province s desire to have a uniform Speed limit in towns throughout the province. The 25 mile an hour Speed bylaw was repealed unanimously at thursday s Council meeting. The new bylaw also establishes new areas for Stop signs parking meters and yield signs. Beginning nov. The free press will present a new 12-part series. The fashionable Savages taken from the Book by Fairchild editor of women s Wear daily. Or. Fairchild snares his inside View and opinions of the people who inhabit the Paris and new York worlds of fashion in this Anatomy of the creators of fashion and of the fashionable Sav ages.1the goddesses who make up the ins of fashion. Look for the first article in the nov. 27 afternoon edition and nov. 29 morning Edi. Tion of the free press. Coffee 1am bbb Tom an by Gene Telpner there s another local Angle that has cropped up in connection with the now famous blackout in new York and the East coast area. Winnipeg businessman Alex Freeman was on the 10th floor of the Waldorf Astoria hotel in new York when the lights went out. The darkness came just As he was making a phone Call and he dialled the wrong number. A charming female voice answered and they began a lengthy conversation about the Power failure. When he said he was from Winnipeg sh.2 mentioned that she had been in Canada recently to appear on the television show Flashback. Vmay i ask to whom i m or. Freeman finally asked. She was a charming person indeed because by a Freak of the blackout he had become connected with Cornelia Otis Skinner the noted actress. A. M. Hay of 167 Douglas Park Road St. James had an unusual experience last week. By mistake he used his office desk key in the front door of his Home and it opened. He then checked and found the keys to House and office desk wore identical. Yet the office lock and key for his desk at great West life were made by a Chicago firm the House lock and key which Are new were manufactured in Montreal. Keith Armstrong publications supervisor at Grecul West who brought the incident to my attention said the Odds against the same person getting two identical locks made by different companies in two countries Are i quite agree. However sometimes people will find that their car key will fit the ignition lock of another vehicle. In the morning mail dear Gene. Very often letters appear in the paper congratulating the Post office for jobs Well done in delivering letters that carry obscure addresses. But last week our firm mailed a letter to nay Hamerton Ltd., 475 Portage Avenue. It was returned by the Post office with a notation wrong address addressee not known the address should have read 476 instead of 475, but the fact is i could have delivered this letter blindfolded. Don t you think the postman would know that it was located across the Street and have delivered it instead of returning it to us sin Cerely j. dear Telpner. According to the Book or knowledge the first line of the poem in Flanders Fields you quoted is misquoted As the word is blow not grow. The word grow is used in the last verse of the poem. Interested quite a few comments came on the famous poem and Scotty Harper of our staff also said it should be the poppies Scotty once wrote a Story about the poem on the free press editorial Page years ago. By saying the word should be grow As i did Scotty remarks you Are the Lone voice crying in the maybe it s better if i dropped the subject. On the personal Side notes to you Leslie Foster who used to write for our teen Page at one time is now a University student and part time teacher. But she has also teamed up with guitarist Wally Zatylny As a Folk singing duo called those two. Their most recent appearance was at the Nia Kwa motor hotel. Perfect cribbage hand for John thiess 684 Victor Street. A Man from St. Boniface phoned to say he was listening to cow the other Clay. An announcer so he told me said there were no streets Liere named after Louis Riel. Not so there s one in St. Boniface and another in St. Sold the irate caller. The Indian Metis Friendship Centre 376 Donald Street has a project to collect skates and hockey equipment for the children at the split Lake Indian Reserve. Phone Whitehall 2-1914 if you can help or drop things off at the Centre. Kapuskasing ont., is holding a contest to Crown a miss garbage Queen for the person who has the neatest garbage. One Winnipeg woman from Sherburn Street thinks they should have one Here. Someone she Knovs often ties up her garbage with a Bow almost like a gift parcel. All i can say is that i d hate to be a contest judge. A Survey taken among the inmates of Kingston Penitentiary revealed that nine out of 10 said they prefer to listen to almost any kind of music than the beatles. A few even said they preferred silence. The 100 inmates polled ranged in Ages from 18 to 50. Tile social salvation of can Ada in terms of crime is not in the correction1 of the criminal hut in the prevention of crime a. J. Macleod Canada s com missioner of penitentiaries told a provincial corrections con Ference Here saturday. Or. Macleod was speaking at to closing banquet of the two Day conference held in the Royal Alexandra hotel. He said there Are More than 20.000 people in Canadian Pri sons including provincial reformatories and county and municipal jails. If society posed to Correct the criminal it would to necessary to change the criminal s attitude towards society. He will have in learn to control his own selfish desires and respect the rights of his fellow the number of prisoners in penitentiaries was about and prisoners came to the penitentiaries at Tho rate of More than every year. Repeaters forty per cent of these criminals had previously served terms in penitentiaries and another per cent had previously been in provincial jails and reformatories or. Mac Leod said. Every year to open the doors of the penitentiaries to release almost As Many prisoners As we have received during the year so during every 12-month period More than prisoners find themselves at the end of their sentences and return to the free common the important question As far As society is concerned was had prison experience changed those men or were they still criminals the commissioner said that seven of 10 sex prisoners could claim no better than a Grade 7 education and six out of 10 were unemployed when arrested. One thing which criminals had in common was that they All acted out of resentment Hostil i to fear aggressiveness anxiety or guilt. Or. Macleod said he believed those feelings were first generated in the Home the criminal came from. Parental cruelty quoting from or. R. G. E. Richmond senior medical offi cer of the Oakalla prison farm in British Columbia he said that often a child was subjected to open aggression from poverty stricken parents who were perhaps alcoholic promiscuous neurotic or criminal. Violence often became an accepted sym Bol of Normal behaviour to a child. Many Young offenders have been cruelly neglected and viciously treated by their parents some have similar experiences in Foster or. Mcleod said that most delinquency had an essence of hostility no matter what the offence was. The Only Way Canada had tried to Correct these Young offenders was by punishment. But punishment alone has never changed the attitude if a criminal toward society. It has tended Only to accentuate the alternative to punishment alone was a program of training the criminal to live in peace in the free Community said or. Macleod. He said that for almost 100 years Canada had waited for probation services which would substitute for prisons for Pri sons which would Correct and not merely confine and for parole service which would provide correctional supervision and discipline in the Community for the offender after his prison experience institutions should to established on a regional basis in recognition of the problems of geography population communication and ethnic background or. Macleod said. There also had to be a diversity of institutions to meet varying needs in each Region he continued. New centres we Havis under construction or will have under construction within three years reception centres special correctional units maximum medium and minimum Security institutions medical psychiatric centres and Community release centres across the or. Macleod said that new staff training colleges were being built and better training was being Given than had been available in the past. Prison programs were being developed along lines which would assist the inmate to have self control self Reliance and self respect. Brandon Man. Special Western Canada s first producer owned meat packing Plant built by Manitoba Pool elevators at a Cost of was officially opened litre saturday. A smiling Premier Duff Roblin with More than 400 company officials municipal officers and Pool supporters looking on. Snipped a Bright red ribbon and declared open the Plant which is expected to vide an annual income the insignia will be found on fresh beef veal Lamb Mutton smoked meats pickled meats a variety of sausages and lard. Officials expect the main Market for Pool packers products will be Manitoba communications and space is topic the Winnipeg Section of the Institute of electrical and electronics engineers and the electrical Section of the engineering Institute of Canada will hold a joint meeting at . Wednesday. Douglas Linton. Supervisor of engineering training Bell Tele phone company of Canada Belleville ont., will speak on communications and space. The meeting will be held in the Manitoba Telephone system administration building. Portage Avenue and Empress Street. Police capture 3 youths after 100-. Chase three youths in a stolen car Early saturday led fort Garry police on a 40-mile Chase from fare Rise threatened communist Don Currie labor election committee communist Candi Date in the dec. 1, division 3 metro byc Lection claims metro has threatened to raise transit fares and says it should be prevented from doing so. Speaking to a group of supporters or. Currie said that he had led a delegation a year ago to protest against an increase in fares but metro is once More arrogantly trying to impose the increased costs of the transit system on the backs of those least Able to any threatened increase in transit fares should be met with i flood of protest from All sections of the Winnipeg id Morris Man at speeds exceeding 100 Miles per hour before the car came to a halt after striking a fire hydrant on Morris main Street. The three occupants were not seriously injured when the Auto travelling Between 50 and 60 Miles per hour struck the hydrant at about 5 . The three aged is to 17, have been handed Over to juvenile authorities. 1 police said j the car was spotted on Highway 75 by a fort Garry police Cruiser and failed to step when the Cruiser approached it. Instead it sped away Down the Highway and eluded Turci police roadblocks Between Winnipeg and Morris. Police followed at speeds up to 100 Miles per hour but were unable to overtake the car. The Auto had just avoided a fourth Roadblock set up by ramp on morris1 main Street when it collided with the fire hydrant. For Manitoba and Western Saskatchewan livestock producers. This is a declaration of Faith if there Ever was one in the livestock future of our. Premier Koblin said. By exported to he in Ted 1 i i states and offal to the United officially known As Pool Eastern Saskatchewan and Northern Ontario with Carload shipments to q u e b e c and Southern Ontario. Fresh meats mainly pork. Packers the new Plant is on the site of the old bran Don packers Ltd. Packing Plant which burned to the ground in october 1d62, a year after it was forced to close because of bankruptcy. The gleaming new steel and Concrete Structure designed by the Winnipeg architectural firm of Waisman floss and associates sprawls on a 52-acre site in Brandon s North end. Pool packers is a wholly owned subsidiary of Manitoba Pool elevators. Positive any Premier Roblin speaking at a Pool packers luncheon said tie opening is indicating in n most positive Way your Faith in the livestock Manitoba Pool president w. J. Parker said Many problems were involved in building Pool packers but that in the Long run Farmers should get a better Price for their livestock. He warned that Pool packers is intended to make a profit and won t by subsidized by Manitoba Pool elevators Grain operations. The Best Way to make the pack ers turn a profit he said will be for Farmers to use its facilities. Aid. A. D. Run ski represented mayor s. A. Magnacca who was out of the City. At the ribbon cutting Cere kingdom. Future Export opportunities arc being explored in France Venezuela and the British West indies. Merchandising of All fool packers products will by handled by its own sales Force with representatives located in other areas of Canada and the United states. Mony. W. G. Malcom. President of Malcom construction co., Winnipeg which built the Plant presented the keys to Allan h. Waisman of Waisman Jet Pilot found dead the 24-year-old Pilot of an Craf t-33 Jet Trainer which crashed sunday evening preparing to land at Gimli Man., was found dead monday morning by an Craf search party. Of lome r. My thyral of Regina was returning from routine flight to Moose jaw ,1 sask. At about 8 ., when he was about 18 Miles from his aircraft disappeared the radar screen. Overcast and icy weather delayed an air search until first Light monday. Sydn. Cdr. John Howarth. Piloting a Light plane from the Gimli flying saw the crashed aircraft in swampy and sparsely country about two Miles North of the Community of Sandridge. And Ross who in turn presented i my thyral was not a. Them to or Parker Irrice a gradual de from Royal j military College Kingston in associated tied in with the operations of Pool packers arc Pool Render ers and the Pool farm sup ply Centre. Pool Rand Crews. Located North of the Brandon City limits in the Rural Munici Pality of Cornwallis handles All inedible products from Pool packers purchases dead animals from Farmers and tums out a line of animal feed and fertilizer. The farm Supply Centre provides fertilizers equipment seed and twine. Fred Hamilton executive assistant to or. Parker said saturday a total of 156 people Are now employed by Pool packers and its associates. When the Plant reaches full production 200 people would be employed. _ the annual payroll would reach Farmer response to the new Plant has been overwhelming said or. Hamilton. We be been going about a month now and we re processing More animals that we expected we would be doing after a a week ago 750 cattle were slaughtered and hogs. Maximum production was 35 cattle and 200 hogs. _ products to carry the Brand names Peter Piper pantry Pride pastry Pride and Platter 19fi3. Boy Hurt in collision Auto Dennis Saltzl 11. Of 301 Tor onto Street was reported in fair i by Good condition in Misericordia Hospital after being injured in a car pedestrian collision at St. Matthews Avenue and by Verlcy Street sunday evening. It police said the boy suffered a fracture of the Light forearm in the mishap. A they said the Accident occurred at . As the was running South across St. Matthews just cast of the cast crosswalk after alighting from a westbound Auto. They said he collided with an Auto driven cast on St. Matthews by Farold e v a n a 27, of 337 Sharp Boule t Vard St. James. Free press meetings meetings to be held at 8 . Tuesday in the press press building Are Board room executive committee. Camp cock-0 sons clubroom. Free club., of Scotland press Bridge Minim Emmr . Weather tomorrow morning. Birru change in Tumperi Ture. Windt Light this evening South or 15 . Tomorrow. Low tonight Lor Gimli Carman and Winnipeg 20, High to Eider 25. Temperature for the 48-hour period which ended at 6 . Monday Max. Min. Pre. Vancouver 48 40 .13 Calgary 5 Edmonton 31 i to. A Regina 24 i 15 to. Brandon the Pai 23 8 .54 Winnipeg 3. 28 26 to. Fort William 35 30 .18 Kenora 28 f 27 .08 i Max. Min. Pre. Ottawa 30 28 Toronto 42 37 Montreal 29 28 .09 Halifax i. 37-33 Chicago 43 36 Miami. 82 65 lot Angeles 66 Minneapolis 44 new York 51 58 27 45 .12 .07 of j r f special Bullet luncheon Portage of Donald phone 947-0641 i
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