Winnipeg Free Press

Thursday, December 05, 1968

Issue date: Thursday, December 5, 1968
Pages available: 72
Previous edition: Wednesday, December 4, 1968

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  • Location: Winnipeg, Manitoba
  • Pages available: 72
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Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - December 5, 1968, Winnipeg, Manitoba 16 Winnipeg free press thursday december 5, 1968 talks on to Speed up Lakehead Grain drying Ottawa up Lakehead or. Korchinski said the min terminal elevators Are drying j ister promised nov. 27 to look Damp and Tough Western Grain j into the matter. Why the delay Newfoundland tories making presence Felt on a round the clock basis six Days a week and negotiations Are under Way to increase it to seven Days Otto Lang minister without portfolio told the in negotiations with the or. Lang did not reply. Robert e. Mckinley pc Huron asked whether free stored at the Lakehead to require a seven Day operation. 3 Banks robbed in Montreal Montreal up armed commons wednesday. Transportation will be provided replying to Stanley Korchin by the Federal government if ski pc Mackenzie the minister Ontario Grain dryers Are offered said there is enough Grain to Western Farmers. Or. Lang replied that the Quantity of drying equipment is not the major problem. What was required was better co ordination of the use of the present facilities. I he agreed with John Skoberg i nip Moose jaw that there is 1 not. Enough Grain being delivered to the government ele Vator at Moose jaw to require i More than an eight hour Day five Day a week operation. But i arrangements were under Way to move More Grain there. Richard r. Southam pc Mer scooped v a total of is Flo Quappelle Moose Mountain wednesday in three Bank hold whether the government ups one of them marked by has considered acreage pay gunplay and injury of a Security of per acre to help guard j Farmers meet the Cost of drying Offles Giguere 35, of Mont Grain. Real suffered cuts on his hands j or said after he smashed a window to used As a general Imperial Bank of Commerce i non Western Farmers will Harvest fired out of the window As the four men hurried to a waiting car. Police searched the area but failed to catch the men. About 30 minutes earlier three armed and hooded men stole from another Branch of the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce in suburban Laval. Two of the men kept Bank staff and customers at Bay while the third Man vaulted a counter and grabbed Money from a cashier s drawer. The men fled in a car parked near the Bank. The third Holdup occurred at a Branch of the Banque Canad Enne National in the Northeast end of the City. A revolver Wield ing Man stole and fled on foot. It All off the Fields. But Long periods of. Cool wet weather delayed harvesting and a lot of the crop was taken off in Damp and Tough condition. Canadian wheat Board officials fear that As much As bushels of Grain. May be lost if it is not moved to drying facilities in time. Sober mind jailed years for a 30-year-old Man who posed As an Engineer and told a woman he intended marrying her obtained More than s800 from her. Robert Wayne heard serving a two year prison sentence imposed in july for fraud was sentenced to 18 months by magistrate John j. Enns in provincial magistrate s court wednesday. This sentence is to run concurrently. He pleaded guilty to fraudulently obtaining the Money from the woman. He told the magistrate that at that time he was a heavy Drinker. I should have thought this would have taken a pretty sober magistrate Enns said. The More aliens seek patents Washington of Patent applications filed in the United states Patent office in 1967, More than 26.000 about 30 per cent were of foreign origin. By comparison 10 years ago there were filings with some or 19 per cent of foreign origin. By Ken Clark Ottawa up much of the noise you hear from the conservative Back benches in the commons comes from six my s who ended the Liberal strangle hold on Newfoundland in the june 25 election. The noisy six decided to make an Impact on parliament and they Are doing it. Montreal Plant attacked Montreal up fifty angry demonstrators smashed windows with Sticks and stones wednesday at the strike bound lord and co. Steel Plant shortly j after a bomb exploded in front i of the suburban Home of a Plant Foreman. Brandishing pieces of Wood the demonstrators smashed about 20 windows and caused considerable damage inside the building. Then they turned on a watch Man s trailer forced the fright ened guardian to flee and set the vehicle on fire. Police arrested eight persons All alleged to have taken part in the vandalism. They were to be questioned about the bombing and two other similar incidents which have occurred within the last two weeks at Homes of other company officials. The bomb which exploded out Side the Home of Jules Boisvert in suburban Laval damaged the front porch and several win Dows of the Foreman s Home. There were no injuries. Last month police disarmed an eight stick dynamite bomb planted on the premises of the East end steel Plant. Youth to Appeal the lash one of three youths convicted of rape and sentenced oct. 23 to the lash and 15 years imprison ment was sentenced in provincial magistrate s court wednesday on breaking and entering charges. The youth William Loyd Clarke 19, Cormery of 11 Moore Avenue St. Vital who pleaded guilty to two charges of break ing and entering the St. Emile Parish Hall St. Vital was sentenced to two years imprisonment on each charge. The sentences Are to run concurrently with each other and also concurrently with the 15-year sentence. Wednesday s sentence was handed Down by magistrate John j. Enns. Clarke s counsel g. G. Brodsky said later he would be filing an application with the National parole Board Ottawa appealing against the oct. 23 imposition of the lash. Clarke had been sentenced to nine strokes to be administered on three separate occasions. Since 1958, when the National parole act was passed the five Man parole Board has had the authority to nullify impositions of Corporal punishment. All have delivered Maiden speeches. All took part in a caucus debate on the car plan to abandon passenger services on Newfoundland rail lines. All Are Active on parliamentary committees. And All have made several trips Back to Newfoundland to report to the folks at Home. They Are warmed occasionally by expressions of Back Home support for their drive to save the Newfoundland Bullet the legendary passenger train scheduled to be replaced by a bus line. Group s chairman who engineered one of the biggest surprises of the current session. Opposition my s caught the liberals Short handed in the House transport committee whereupon or. Mcgrath pre they Are Walter Carter St. John s West a builder am Brose peddle grand Falls White Bay Labrador a life insurance underwriter Jack Marshall Humber St. George s St. Earbe a druggist Frank seated a motion asking the car Moores Bonavista Trinity to delay its plans to cancel the Conception a businessman and Newfoundland Bullet and it John Lundrigan Gander carried on a vote of 6-5. Or. Mcgrath said the group has to work As a team because they Are so few in number. If each of us went off half cocked and acted As a Prima Donna we would t be very effective in presenting our one congratulatory Telegram read it is refreshing to have a voice that is by design the six work As a team meeting at least once a week usually in the office of James Mcgrath St. John s East to plot ways to Embarrass the Liberal government. It was or. Mcgrath the i the others Are newcomers. Views to the he said in an interview. Hardly a Day goes by that does not see one of the six on his feet in the commons. And frequently More than one even though Only or. Mcgrath had previous parliamentary experience. Twillingate a University pro Fessor. Or. Lundrigan at 29 the youngest of the group is prob ably the most vocal. Associates say he set out to master the House procedure and has succeeded firing off anti government critiques a to every Opportunity. I the others in their 30 s and 40s, tend to be More cautious in varying degrees. Among their More elusive targets is Don Jamieson the minister of defence production and the sole Newfoundland Liberal my. The liberals held All seven seats prior to the june election. Or. Mcgrath used to be sales manager on a Newfoundland television station owned partly by or. Jamieson. The irony of it does not escape him. The Newfoundland six could hardly have taken the soft tack after an election Campaign in which they labelled the Newfoundland Liberal my s the silent seven for not speaking up in the commons. Or. Mcgrath says their conservative colleagues have been tolerant of the Brash and noisy approach of the new boys from Newfoundland. As partial repayment the six threw a banquet for their party s maps from the other three Atlantic provinces and a few from outside. We had a or. Mcgrath says. They Sang such Newfoundland songs As Well rant and Well Roar like True not to men Tion the squid jigging ground without which no Newfoundland party would be com plete. They All joined in with a Little coaching on the or. Mcgrath says. The groundwork for the Newfoundland Impact on the com Mons was Laid at a Post election meeting last August at which they got acquainted and. Set out their priorities and strategy. At their meetings they have their differences. We make it a Point not to hide or. Mcgrath. Says. But we always seem to arrive at a consensus on particular unlike some maps they All pulled up roots and moved their families to Ottawa. This meant 35 new children in the capital. Or. Carter has the most children with eight. Or. Peddle has one. Swedes brought Cabins Washington Sweden s i architectural traditions include the medieval log Cabin a variation of which was introduced in America in 1638 by swedish colonists on the Dela Ware River. Police free student Calgary up William Greig thought he was helping to Stop a robbery but instead found himself under arrest. Greig an 18-year-old High school student was one of 109 persons charged following a police raid on a Stag party Here nov. 26. A police spokesman said the charge of being a Bawdy House found in was withdrawn wednesday after Greig told police he rushed to the building where the raid took place because he thought a Holdup was in pro Gress. Greig who works at a nearby restaurant said he rushed Over to the Friar s Den in Southwest Calgary when he saw a number of men attack the front door breaking in the Glass. He said he found a woman guarding the door with a crowbar struggled with her and found himself under arrest. It was very Brave on his part to Rush in like the police spokesman said but he should have spoken up when he was taken to the police station. Forty one of those charged have been fined each after pleading guilty to charges of being unlawfully in a Bawdy House and being inmates of a Bawdy House. Fifty one have been remanded. Meet the new old seven divorce decrees granted the following decrees of divorce were made absolute in the Manitoba court of Queen s Bench wednesday Linda Astrid Evelyn Kosinuk from Theodore Carroll Kosinuk married at Winnipeg March 24, 1962 Carol Annema Jorie Gimbel from Alfred Adolf Gimbel. Married at St. James aug. 12, 1966 Hobert Ross Framingham from Michelle Joan Framingham married at the Pas Man., june 30, 1962 Eleanor Jessie my vicar from Albert Grant my vicar married at Winnipeg nov. 26, 1966 Gerald Hunter from Mary Ann Hunter mar ried at North Burnaby ., feb. 26, 1949 Alvin Frederick Schmeichel from Donna Gail Schmeichel married at Winnipeg Jan. 6, 1962 James Leslie Woods from Diane Georgette Woods married at Winnipeg aug. 22, 1959. Appeal lost on drugs count Garry Gerald Gafka 20, who was sentenced to four years imprisonment for Possession of hashish heroin and marijuana for trafficking failed wednesday in his Appeal against sentence in the Manitoba court of Appeal. Gafka was sentenced oct. 3 by magistrate John j. Enns in provincial magistrate s court. Grand prix Rye tells it to you straight. Cairo the ancient Egypt trans were probably the first to separate starch from plants. Strips of papyrus cemented together with a starch adhesive have been dated to a period Between 4000 and 3500 Archaeologists have also found. Papyrus sheets that were sized j with starch about 3000 I look through the selection of records shown on this pick out the ones you want and simply dial 783-2112, and shop from the warmth and Comfort of your own Home remember everyone loves music and records make a delightful take or. Whisker s advice now and Call the Bay Winnipeg s Christmas showplace. Everyone loves music so give them the sounds they love to hear records choose from a wide selection at the bay1 now Columbia 1. Incredible by Gary pack Ett and the Union . 4.76 2. Turn around look at me by Ray Connitt and the sing ers. Each 4.76 3. Strauss Waltzes by Andre Kostyc Anetz each 4.76 4. Barbra Streisand Christmas album each 4.76 5. Rowan and Martin s laugh in. Each 5.66 6. Bob Dylan s greatest hits. Each 4.76 7. Funny girl by barbra Strei Sand and Omar Sharif. Each 6.56 8. The graduate by Simon and Carfunkel. Each 5-66 9. Book ends by Simon and Garfunkel each 4.76 to. Johnny Cash s greatest hits. Vol. I. Each j 4.76 11. Ken Griffin s greatest hits. Each 4.76 12. Happy polkas and dreamy Wal tics by Frankie yank Vic. Each 4.76 13. Jimmie Dean s Christmas card. Each 4.76 14. Gentle on my mind by Patti Page. Each 4.76 15. A gift from a Flower to a Garden by Donovan. A. 9.52 16. Peter Paul and Mary late again. Each 4.76 17. Arlo by Aro Guthrie. Each 4.76 18. Petunia Clark s grease of hits. Each 4.76 19. Dean Martin s greatest hits volume ii. Each 4.76 20. Movin with Nancy by Nancy Sinatra. Each 4.76 21. The Hendrix experience. Each 4.76 22. The Mason Williams phonograph record. Each 4.76 23. Hawaii no by Don to and the Aliis. Each 4.76 24. Frank Sinatra s greatest hits. Each 5.66 25. Trini Lopez s cart his. Each 4.76 26. Sammy Davis in s greatest hits. Each 4.76 27. Turn around and look at me by the vogues. Each 4.76 29. Bill Cosby is a very funny fellow right each 4.76 29. The Dean Martin Christ Mas album. Each 4.76 30. Finnian s Rainbow by Fred Astaire and Petula Clark. Each 5.66 while in the Bay s record department visit our tape Centre on the fifth floor. Dial 783-2112, the Bay records Firth floor. Tompane May 1679 Christmas shop tonight and every night Vil Christmas store hours . To . Saturday . To . Dial 783-2112 All departments. Out of town shoppers Call toil free. Ask for Zenith 5-Sho ;