Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 6, 1981, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Cross order farm a big tax headache by Antsy Iii ii Peg r Tab it piling one in come tax torn Orch year is headache enough or most Mike Lawter Ana other american Farmers who till Manitoba Howe have the dubious Honor of mailing tax returns to two National bureaucrat i pay Canadian income tax and income tax and keep it he 1 file in both Lawler said he has an accountant in Canada and one on the american Side prepare separate about 12 years ago Lawler Pur chased 4m acres of land near about to Kilometres South West of from hts Home Here he commutes the International Boundary to his Canadian on other Side of the Lawler said he purchased land in Canada for half the Price of similar property in the provincial legislation passed in 1977 now restricts foreign land owners to a maximum of 20 acres of but Frank Muirhead of the Manitoba agricultural lands Protection Board said his department generally allows transfers within families for those americans who farm both sides of the canadians May also own Farmland in North but not in he Farmers who play the agriculture game on both sides of the Border must learn two sets of in always in joked adding he tries to keep up with the regulations but they change the rates so crops produced on his Canadian Fields must go to Canadian elevators and Are sold through the Canadian wheat harvests from soil i can sell any time Over were an open Lawler its just two separate he Lawter said he has the Toronto do minion Bank in Cartwright deduct 15 per cent from his wheat Board cheques for income he has a separate account in the when asked which Grain marketing system he thought was Lawler said 1 dont think theres much difference except youre always wait ing for Money in wherever the Price is that where i like to see wheat Page 4 strange bedfellows have been sunny today 33 Clear tonight 20 Winnipeg free press july 1981 h vol 109 no Sun rises sets Moon rises sets final delivery 9570550 classified 9562330 second class mail registration number Constitution stand splits nip ranks a photo by Michael Doyle Winnipeg free press Vancouver new democratic party Leader de Broadbent won an other two years at the Helm unopposed but suffered a repudiation for his Constitution stand during the party National convention that ended yester thirty seven per cent of the delegates voted against Broadbent on the constitutional demonstrating the party divided views on the nature of the the vote has fuelled speculation that former nip constitutional critic Lorne Nystrom has made a successful Start on a Long Agenda toward a new Leader ship Nystrom denied it in an inter View with the free the party is also split along the same geographical lines familiar to the progressive conservatives and the lib Alberta and que Bec almost to a Man opposed Broadbent decision to Back prime minister Trudeau constitutional but labor delegates and at lactic Canada favored it was Manitoba and that threw a wrench into the East West Only one of 49 Manitoba delegates opposed Broadbent stand while far More than half the delegation came Down their leaders in both Strong voices were heard arguing the Case for a a centralist prime minister Trudeau also comes out a loser in the Wake of the nip the motion which Broad Bent won 769453 allows him to continue to support Trudeau package for but if the supreme court of Canada rejects then the nip can never again support a unilateral move by parliament to bring Home the 1867 British North America act Over the objections of most of the provinces even with the and cherished Char Ter of rights and Trudeau not Only loses the nip if he see Broadbent Page 4 boo town fever slowly infecting sleepy Mcauley by John Sullivan Winnipeg free press Mcauley townspeople and local politicians near this West Ern Manitoba Hamlet Are overwhelmingly enthusiastic about the Prospect of a Potash mine in their while some temper their enthusiasm with Salty scepticism until the final Deal is the Promise of jobs for the extra income for banners and new business have All but muted concerns about boo town higher taxes and in a Mere swerve in the Asphalt of path about 355 Kilometres West of James Ewing squints at the farm retirement town of 135 with its one grocery store and lumber tiny Post office and Pool elevator and kicks the in not very excited about said who retired six years ago to a Bungalow he bought for after ranging the country on various its not going to be Calgary or Vancou i dont see any big stir of people it might swell it up but i think there who remembers when Macau Ley had two grocery a Pool room and a said the town now has few Young just old gaffers like but most Arent greatly worried by the idea of construction workers descending on the Community pasture 10 Kilometres Northeast of or the higher taxes development May if its the notion that heir aging houses Are suddenly Worth some thing that shocks he there not but they just potential part 1 the provincial government and International minerals and chemical Canada Are about to sign an agreement bringing a Potash mine to Western John Sullivan spent several weeks gathering views on the provinces Potash this is the first part in a a second part is on Page dont know what to they dont want to sell because they dont know what its if they ask maybe next week they could get Down the Henry who farms 60 acres of Hayland and cattle said most townspeople approve of International minerals and chemicals As a half this theres Only one to a he they figure till pick up the town a maybe get us a garage that can fix up car named Mcauley after a local see Potash Page 4 rammed the British offshore Protection vessel has Alderney top Ranis the French fishing trawler lean Hermoz of Boulogne in the North sea yesterday to Stop the trawler from kidnapping an unarmed Royal Navy boarding the trawler was escorted to port and the Crew Liverpool police winning control after two Days of bloody rioting England a lice began regaining control of a Black immigrant area of Liverpool firing tear Gas and charging hundreds of rioters and looters with their night after the second night of Vio Lence in Northwest England chief As Dawn a spokesman for the Merseyside police said they were mov ing Back into the District after being driven out during seven hours of riot we Are breaking them up into manageable said the now that the situation is More under control our priorities have police Are rounding up and arresting marauding bands of loot More than 120 policemen were in the spokesmen bringing their weekend toll to More than most of the population of the District Are West Indian but police said the rioters included White youths As Well As Blacks and it was not a race residents said the violence started when police arrived to investigate rom plaints that youths had been in disc rom lately stoning passing these madmen want to see the blood of policemen splattered across the streets of said one resident who asked not to be i is not race it is Jum vicious hatred of the mobs armed with gasoline rocks and other weapons forced squads of polite equipped with riot Shields and night Sticks to Retreat half a Kilometre Hilt of the area toward the cite the spokesman the spokesman said one buried by rioters was at a night club next elixir Sie ambulances Page 4 five still missing in icy Atlantic Halifax up searchers held on to a Glimmer of Hope Early today that five men still missing from the 32man Crew of the sunken snip Arctic explorer could still be alive in the iceberg prone Atlantic Ocean off the Northern tip of Nineteen survivors were rescued at about noon yesterday after Drifting for two Days in a covered eight bodies were recovered later identities were not released but a survivor said the Jack was not among those search vessels continued the Vigil through the night and air planes were to resume the search at the search area was narrowed to a rectangle roughly 50 by 60 nautical Miles near Cape the northernmost tip of a spokesman for the search and Rescue Centre Here there is some Hope that the five missing men could have launched an other life raft or he if there were no the search would have been Hull ice strengthened Why the seven Earold ice strength ened ship Sank remained the search and Rescue spokesman said there Are no reefs in the immediate area but it is prone to he said a collision with an animal such As a whale could not have sunk the at 990 tons the Arctic explorer was not a Large vessel but she had become Well known As one of the main Canadian vessels in the controversial Newfoundland Seal Hunt each at the time of her sinking she was under hire to carry scientists employed by geophysical service a subsidiary of Texas instruments As they did Survey work under a con tract with British Petroleum the survivors were picked up by the Canadian coast guard ship Grenfell after their raft was spotted by a Cana Dian forces search seven of them remained aboard the Grenfell and the other 12 were flown to Curtis Hospi Tal in for treatment of exposure and Hospital administrator Joe Lawrence said none was in danger and All were in fairly Good shape considering the time they had been in the helplessness survivor John Hoberg of Iii Engineer with the scientific said there was a feeling of helplessness among the raft passengers As they drifted away from shipmates trying desperately to swim to the you Are watching As you Drift away from them and there is no Way you can gel to there was a pretty Good sea run we had trouble getting some of the Guys in the water to the boat and we just drifted away from them too it was a number of them were in the War there were one or two people that nobody can recall so we clout know if they got off the boat or that Doest mean that they didst get out of their i dont the Arctic explorer sailed out of St Anthony Early Friday morning and nearly everyone except the Crew on was Hubert he was awakened two hours later b a loud thud similar to the sound of the Anchor hitting Hull moments the Crew abandoned Loata Roar the Winnipeg Blue bombers had a 2312 Lead Over the Hamilton Tiger cats with four minutes left in the then the tic ats rattled off 21 Quick a a Vallongo United nations Secretary general Kurt Waldheim May face a formidable Challenge from Africa if he tries to win reelection to an unprecedented third five year life on Tho Lino with at least one life hanging in the Hopes Rose today in Belfast that the series of Ira hunger strikes is nearing an t Dorado at Holm Harry the second president of the the University of is preparing to retire after a decade As the institutions chief executive 2 Ann answers opt 1 spurts of sports record 13 Ira Mph j4 6 a lion 19 in 21 55 1 7 34 14
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