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The Winnipeg Tribune from Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada • Page 4

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Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
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4
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THE WINNIPEG TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, NOV. 23, 1938 HEIPEL IDENTIFIED sat calmly between officers in the back seat. One of the officers, not named. had in his possession a pair of socks and pair of gloves picked the room in Gateway hotel, Emerson, where Heipel stayed Monday a and Tuesday of last week. Police will check the articles with clothing that Kaesar was known to with him when he was murdered and robbed.

Confer With Detectives (Continued from Page One) The police car rolled fast over icy roads from Emerson to Winnipeg and directly to Rupert st. station, where it bumped easily into the garage and prisoner climbed Closed, police, out to stretch cold. cramped limbs. and shrug off coats as they walked into the heat of the main part of the station. Heipel was placed in a cell and the R.C.M.P.

officers who him back, with Inspector Anthony, Chief of Police George Smith, and Inspector James Melville conferred in the detective department on next steps to be taken in the vestigation. The line- -up was decided on and R.C.M.P. left for the Portage ave. detachment to assemble their witnesses. At 11 a.m.

they drove 1 back to the station. Woodland Identifies Him Heipel, with 11 men of approximately the same build, was taken into the lineup room and allowed to choose his place in the line. He was cool and serious as he deliberately picked a spot and stepped into it, shouldering up to the men next to him. The witnesses were brought in and those who claimed they could identify Heipel walked up to the line of silent men and placed a hand on his chest. Several of the witnesses did this, Inspector Anthony said at noon--including James Woodland.

A transient, Woodland, rode in from MacGregor to Winnipeg in a car he claims was driven by Heipel- car identified A.S belonging to the murdered Kaesar. Heipel Cheerful Police will not say definitely when Heipel will be taken from Winnipeg to Regina where he stand trial for the murder of 65-year-old farmer, whose slugriddled body found frozen in the brush of a Sintaluta farm bluff Nov. 15, six days after he was last seen alive. The police escort and Heipel stayed in Minneapolis Monday night and all day Tuesday, leaving Porters and train attendants the Great Northern train. in Heipel seemed cheerful, talked with the two policemen quietly and read Minneapolis papers in which his picture was printed.

The inquest into the death of Kaesar. set for today at Sintaluta, adjourned by Dr. R. Cooke, Wolseley district corner, to Nov. 30, to allow R.C.M.P.

time to produce further witnesses. meeting of ex-service men, their wives and widows of ex- rice men will be held Thursday, At 8 p.m., in the Free Press clubrooms. under auspices of the national economic and legislative council of the Canadian War Disability Pensioners' association THE MAN FOR MAYOR CAPABLE -EXPERIENCED -FAIRMINDED HONEYMAN A POLICY backed by KNOWLEDGE. Special Alderman civic D. committees under chairmanship of E.

Honeyman prepared the City's Brief to the Rowell Commission advocating this detailed Reducing Taxes on Homes and properties: (2) Improving City Streets and other services; (3) Restoring Wage (4) Having the Cont of Unemployment Relief and other Social Services assumed by the Dominion government. (5) Obtaining a Share of the Revenues collected in the City by the Provincial government, or obtaining provincial grants for Education, etc. Elect HONEYMAN as Mayor to continue these efforts. DEEDS not WORDS MEETINGS TONIGHT ISAAC BROCK SCHOOL, P. D.

Harris, Chairman. LORD SELKIRK SCHOOL, Frank R. Evans, Chairman. ALD. HONEYMAN will speak at both meetings.

1 To the Citizens of Ward 2: offering myself for re-election to the City Council, Tam presenting this report of my actions in the past and my plans for the future. The important work of the City is done in Committee and does not ordinarily receive much publicity. Personally, my chief work has been in certain special matters, of which the public is not generally aware. I was a member of the Special Committee which negotiated with the Provincial Legislature for temporary financing, out of which developed the Goldenberg Commission. I am a member of a committee of three which has been discussing with the Winnipeg Electric Company the terms of a new transportation franchise.

I initiated the investigation into the unwarranted increase in milk prices and headed the Committee which made a valiant attempt to have it reduced. I am Chairman of the Social Welfare Committee. I am also a member of the following special committees concerned with public Unemployment Relief Committee: the Special Committee on Public assistance, which, after longed study, has produced a useful plan of re-organization; The Rural Rehabilitation Commission; and the Executive Advisory Committee which deals with land settlement. By the work of the last named Committee, some 950 Winnipeg families, representing some 5,000 persons on relief. have been settled.

The work of this Committee has been said to be the most definite contribution being made in Canada in the way of reclamation. We must now proceed to lighten the intolerable burden of taxation. We are rapidly becoming a city of tenants instead of home-owners, which is not healthy. To spend less will not solve the problem. We must press for and get a larger part of revenue now being taken from the Winnipeg tax field by the Provincial Government.

Also the senior Governments must be brought to assume their proper share of the cost of education and of social services which after all are provincial and national rather than community problems. Unemployment must be broken down. It is still the great shadow over Winnipeg because of its fearful cost in money and the social havoc which it creates. A saving to the City of some $265,000.00 which has been effected as at October 31st. 1938, over a comparable period in 1937, without distress to human needs, is still not enough.

I believe that some part of the huge sums which have been spent on material relief should be diverted to finance a housebuilding program--not for persons able to build their own homes but for low-paid and seasonal workers who cannot afford the rental necessary to carry the capital cost of a habitable home. This means subsidization but it also means a wiser use of money which has to be paid in any event and it will create work. Similarly a portion of the money which is being doled out to the unemployed for subsistence would be more wisely spent in a program of rehabilitation of our streets and on a variety of city improvements. I have under consideration a scheme of providing small holdings in the country or suburbs large families on a partly assisted, partly self-supporting basis. The routine and detail work now demanded from an Alderman hamper him from giving consideration to important matters and policies, and while there are objections to the appointment of an autocratic City Manager, remote from responsibility to the electorate, I advocate the appointment of man properly trained in the science of City Government to co-ordinate department work and simplify administration.

The removal of the burdens of overtaxation and Unemployment Relief will enable the City to emerge from its difficulties. Thereafter, the progress which is made will depend on the oldfashioned virtues of thrift, prudence and common-sense. Yours sincerely, GARNET COULTER. Alberta House Is Prorogued EDMONTON, Nov. 23- The Alberta legislature was prorogued Tuesday night by LieutenantGovernor J.

C. Bowen, after he gave assent to eight bills, including the new oil and gas conservation bill which gives the Alberta oil and gas board authority to enforce its orders. The special session, opening exactly a week ago, WAS called specifically to deal with the conservation of oil and gas, It was the seventh session of the eighth legislative assembly elected in August, 1935. oil and other gas bills conserva- passed and receiving assent were A bill authorizing etablichment of branches of the provincial treasury throughout. amending the the province Debt and Adjustment act to require approval of the debt adjustment board to new agreements between debtors and creditors.

Premier Aberhart informed the legislature Tuesday, the services of L. D. Byrne, technical adviser to the Alberta Social Credit board, would be retained Manslaughter Trial Opens In Minnedosa to The Winnipeg Tribune) MINNEDOSA, Nov. 23-Facing a charge of manslaughter, W. H.

B. Miller, of Isabella, appeared Tuesday afternoon before Mr. Justice Adamson in the first case on the docket of the fall assizes here. The case arose out of an accident in which Eileen Isabel Clark, 13-year-old Isabella girl, was killed when a car driven by Miller turned over two miles south of Isabella last April 2 27. The child was one of six other children riding in car.

On opening three the nesses testified, Corporal Bavfeld. Shoal Lake detachment R.C.M.P., who investigated the accident; Charles Harrison, Isabella district farmer who witnessed the accident. and Gordon Heise. of bella district. G.

A. Eakins, K.C.. Minnedosa, is representing the crown and W. G. Fergusson is defending.

Crash Victim Buried WILKIE, Nov. 23-Funeral service for David D. Imrie, Trans-Canada Airlines pilot killed in air liner crash at Regina last Thursday, was held in St. Andrew's Presbyterian church here Tuesday, The Rev. G.

C. Baulch conducted an impressive service describing the pilot's life on the "wings of glory." A massed choir was in attendance. Exceptionally numerous were the floral tributes from the many friends and relatives of Pilot Imrie, including wreaths from many a flying schools and institutions all over Canada. Obituary NICHOLAS WOSKOWSKI Funeral services were held today for Nicholas Woskowski, 63, of 80 Eaton who died Monday at his residence. A service was held in St.

Nicholas church and burial was in the family, plot in Holy Family cemetery, Fedush-Hnatowich funeral service was in charge. Mr. Woskowski was born in the Ukraine and he came to Canada in 1897. For the last 38 years he had been employed in the locomotive sheds of the Canadian Pacific railway. Surviving are, his widow; four sons.

John, Fort Frances; Nicholas, Stephen and Michael, all' of Winnipeg, and three daughters, Mrs. A. Zaslazyniuk, Cleveland; Mrs. N. Bridger, Chicago; Mrs.

K. Russell, Winnipeg. MRS ERNEST MARSH Ingersoll who died Monday in the General hospital, was buried today. A funeral service, conducted by Rev. Nelson Smith, held in St.

Jude's church and burial was in Brookside cemetery. Bardal's were in charge. Born in England, Mrs. Marsh had lived in Winnipeg for the last 31 years. She is curvived by her husband: a son, William, of Winnipeg, and a daughter, Mrs.

L. Simmons. Los Angeles. CYRUS KESTER Cyrus Kester, 76. of 549 Furby who died Saturday, was one of the pioneer mining prospectors in Alaska.

He first went to the northern gold fields in 1898 and made annual trips to Alaska until he retired several years ago. Six years ago he came to Winnipeg from California. His widow and a sister, Laura, of Westchester, survive. Rev Stanley Knowles officiated at the funeral service Tuesday, in Mordue's chapel. Burial was in Mrs.

Ernest, Marsh, 65, of 1127 Brookside cemetery, MADELINE IVEY Madeline Ann Ivey, 16-year-old daughter of Mrs. Harriet Ivey, of 262 St. Anne's Road, died Tuesday at the residence. A funeral service will be held Saturday at. 3.30 p.m.

in Clark-Leatherdale'8 chapel and burial will be in Elmwood tery. ELIZABETH GIBBARD Elizabeth Gibbard. 80. of 389 Queen died Tuesday at her residence. The body is at Mordue's chapel pending completion of funeral arrangements.

MRS. CHARLES TANGHE Mrs. Charles Tanghe, 80, died Tuesday at her residence, 452 Tissot St. Boniface. Thursday, at 10 a.m., a funeral service will be held in Sacred Heart church and burial will be in Sacred Heart cemetery.

Coutu's are in charge. ALEXANDER McDONALD Alexander N. McDonald, 67, of Stonewall, died Tuesday. A private funeral service will be held Friday at 11 a.m. in the residence and a public service at 2.30 p.m.

in First Presoyterian church. Winnipeg. Burial will be in the family plot in Kildonan cemetery. Born in Lower Fort Garry, Mr. McDonald had lived in Manitoba all his life.

For many years he operated a blacksmith business in Winnipeg and later was interested in real estate in Stonewall. His widow survives. Mrs. Alex Kawka, 67, of Poplar Field, died today in St. Boniface hospital.

The Zawidoski Funeral service will forward the body to Poplar Field for burial, Thursday, in the Ukrainian Greek Orthodox cemetery. Surviving are her husband and eight children, Claudia, Victoria, Peter, Marko, Antonia, Daniel, Michael and Nicholas, all at home. HUGH KLAMAN MRS. ALEX KAWKA Hugh Klaman, 68, of the Bell hotel, died today and will be buried Saturday. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m.

in Clark-Leatherdale's chapel and burial will be in Elmwood cemetery. MRS. ELIZABETH DELARONDE Mrs. Elizabeth Delaronde, of Decimal, died Tuesday' in the Winnipeg General hospital. ClarkLeatherdale's are in charge of Arrangements, which have not been completed.

PETER GRYNIEWICK Peter Gryniewick, 46. of 425 Jarvis who died Sunday in St. Boniface hospital, will be buried Saturday. The body will be taken to the family residence Friday at 7 p.m. and funeral services will be held Saturday at 2 p.m.

in Holy Ghost church. Rev. S. Baderski will officiate and burial will be in Brookside cemetery. Zawidoski's are in charge.

Surviving, besides his widow, are two children, Teddy and Cecelia, both at home, his mother in Poland. and brother, Anthony, in California, WILLIAM BARRETT William Barrett, 62, of 277 Vimy Road, died today at his residence. Funeral services will be held Saturday p.m. in Mordue's chapel, following which burial will take place in Brookside cemetery. MRS.

ARTHUR GRANGER Mrs. Arthur Granger, 61, of St. Jean Baptiste, died Tuesday. Born in Eastern Canada, Mrs. Granger had lived in St.

Jear for the last 40 years. Funeral services, ranged by Coutu's, will be held Friday at 10 a.m. in St. Jean church and burial will be in the family plot in the local cemetery, Surviving besides her husband, are three sons, Rev. A.

Granger, Hyachinthe, Alfred, Winnipeg: Joseph, of Morris, and eight PERTUSSIN your cough SOLD IN ALL DRUG STORES HONEYMAN FOR MAYOR Aside from his Knowledge and Experience of Civic Affairs, Bert Honeyman is 'A GOOD daughters, Mrs. Wilfred Auger, Dollar, Mrs. Emile Felion, St. Jean; Mrs. Phillip Parent, St.

Joseph; Antoinette and Berthe, at home; Victorine Marie, Sister Bertheline and Sister Afride, of the Order of the Holy Name of Jesus, of Winnipeg. FRED ANDRUSCHAK Fred Andruschak, 71, of 76 Higgins died Tuesday in St. Boniface hospital and will be buried Thursday. The funeral service de will be held in St. Vladimir and Olga church and burial will be in All Saints' cemetery.

Kerr's are in charge. Mr. Andruschak was born in Poland and had lived 'in Winnipeg for the last 24 years. He is survived by his widow and a daughter. KNOW YOUR Candidate NAMETravers Sweatman BORNPembroke, Ont.

EDUCATEDWinnipeg Public School Winnipeg High School University of Manitoba RELIGIONChurch of England HOBBIESFigure Skating Amateur Photography FATHERWilliam Sweatman BORN Isle of Jersey English Parents MOTHERElizabeth Angus BORN Paisley, Scotland Scottish Parents BROTHERRev. Seymour Sweatman (DECEASED) Married in Winnipeg Home in Winnipeg 2 Sons, 1 Daughter WARD 1 ALDERMAN The stand Morrison has taken regarding adjustments betweer our Superior Governments and Winnipeg as to redistribution of revenues and responsibilities for public services deserves our recognition. This matter is vital to us. Morrison says we can win. Give generously of your first choices to him.

Don't take chances. We need Morrison in Council. Vote. MORRISON, Harry C. Vote Also for MACKENZIE and SARA in the Order of Your Preference WINNIPEG NEEDS COMPETENT ELECT- Candidates Non-Partisan ALDERMEN TRUSTEES ONE WARD SARA MacINNES MORRISON HALLS MACKENZIE WARD TWO COULTER BLACK SMITH MILTON WARD THREE McLEAN SCRABA Use YOUR Vote on FRIDAY to elect men who are not tied to a political party, group or association.

CIVIC ELECTION COMMITTEE 323 MAIN STREET 97 7 051-97 052 That everyone may know! Radio Talk given by TRAVERS SWEATMAN CKY Tuesday, Nov. 22nd now "My last radio humbly await talk before Election your decision" Day, Friday Nov. 25th" Travers Sweatman Much Can Be Done! Men and Women of Winnipeg and point--a sewage and treatment the second plant interceptor; This is the final speech on the radio, in my campaign. point--thirteen sewage treatment plants The single purpose of my speeches has been to tell, This is quotation from his rea clearly and concisely, step by step, my plan to substitute port. He says: expert business administration for the present politically- "You cannot successfully' cope involved administration.

For, I repeat -politics have nothing with the prevailing conditions by whatever do with civic I any short-cut in the way of plant to affairs. assure you my plan is not or devices, cheap to build and cheap a dream! It is the same plan that absolutely made over the to operate." city of Cincinnati. The plan is solid. It has been tested. It Mr.

Lea then repeated the terms is away beyond the experimental stage. And it works! I of the report he had made in 1932. Now. I have never understood ask you to give me a chance to prove that it works. The plan why the scheme propounded by itself is a simple, straightforward, clean-cut plan of business Mr.

Lea was not carried out, administration. It is sound common-sense! Changes were made and Mr. Lea was forced to accept a compromise. Most of you must have read the' sion of civic employee what In fairness to Mr. Lea, I want to mean recent statement of that very able it should mean.

It tell you that he was so worried man, Mr. H. C. Thompson, our City body's relatives, in Neertion clique, by this matter, that he became ill, everyTreasurer. Mr.

Thompson is one of from obtaining jobs in the City and was not' able to personally the ablest city treasurers in Can- Hall. A civic employee should, supervise the work as it developed. ada. We are fortunate to have had Mr. Lea sent a representative to his splendid services all these years.

appointed because of his intrinsic Winnipeg. There was some quesabsolutely without exception; be In that statement, Mr. Thompson not because he to tion about the qualifications of this tells us, January, Winni- merit; happens representative, but, in spite of this peg will have to find one million is for the sake of the doubt, the authorities accepted his be somebody's Uncle Willie. dollars and for this million dollars and for services. It partly there is today no visible revenue.

employee himself, partly The total cost of the plant was This statement bears out all that in, that I want to see good about three million and a quarter. the sake of the department he I have been telling you throughout works conditions for all civic of this, the Provincial Government my campaign. We are facing a working workers do good paid the Dominion paid crisis. It is not an imaginary thing. employees.

believe in I and the city paid The Happy work. I good pay. operIt is a real. And right decision. now, we must believe in promotion as a reward ating cost.

to Winnipeg of this plant make major Justice in is has been over $70.000 a year, and At one time I had great, hopes of for this cost to date, the citizens merit. promotion the Rowell Commission. has no of vital importance, and, of Winnipeg have received no it I elected, I intend to look into the In value. In addition to this, we shall legislative powers but is concerned only with finding facts. I hoped our disturbing rumours have to pay our share of the inof injustice.

Constitution would be redesigned to this regard. I terest. and sinking fund believe much can be on about meet present economic conditions, done under my a million and quarter dollars. CouncilWhat has happened? The Premiers plan. The engineering problems inof Quebec and Ontario have stated important able to obtain volved in a sewage disposal system In matters, every civic their firm objection to any change employee who is not head of have passed from the experimental which would make them give up any satisfaction from the stage into a definite, perfected techThe provinces of New his department, should have the nique.

Effective machinery has any revenue. Brunswick and Alberta have taken right to appeal directly to the been designed, developed and tested. the same stand. So, unless all these Council-over head of the There are now established manude- Premiers change their minds, there partment-over head of the facturers who will guarantee true is at present no reasonable pros- manager himself! Thus, we performance of their machinery. pect.

of any agreement being would make sure that no personal There is no need of any guessreached between the Provinces and friction could prevent the wheels work, or of costly experiments. The the Dominion regarding the amend- from turning smoothly. engineers complained that they ment of our Constitution. Then, regarding unemployment were not given time to investigate Then, where can we get help? and relief. Here are some facts before the plant, was constructed.

Our province already has tremen- about that. In 1932, our unfunded They complained that the joint dous responsibilities. We can hardly or floating debt was nearly twelve committee of aldermen of St. Boniask the Provincial Government for million. After five years--that is, face and Winnipeg forced the pace, additional revenue.

And the Domi- by 1937 this twelve million had and hurried the work, most unduly. nion Government not. start grown into nearly sixteen and The engineers further complained distributing "hand-outs." dare, After all, half million. Now, during that that, instead of being allowed to we, ourselves, are part of the Prov- time, we have spent, in direct re- study the problem, and make the ince and part of the Dominion. We.

lief and on relief projects, almost necessary experiments, as to the ourselves, share in Provincial and eight and one-half million, If you quality of the sewage, they were Dominion tax burdens. We simply subtract million from 7 mil- compelled to spend their time have to help ourselves. I believe lion--you have eight million dol- cocting schemes to force the muniour only way out is to have a com- lars of unfunded debt attributable cipalities of St. James and St. Vital plete reorganization of our whole to other causes.

So, it is obvious into the sanitary district. This was system. that unemployment not a political matter and had nothing In plan, there are two under- the sole cause of our present fin- to do with the engineering job. my lying principles. One is- -to put the ancial troubles.

Well -the plant has completely one-third of the land now owned by small stores. I broken down! The pumps have the city into private hands again. Now about our for the small proved inadequate. Experienced much of land have much sympathy manufacturers submitted tenders It is true that this store-keeper. Competition for busifor the pumps, which were considtoday is like a cow pasture, and it ness is terrific.

For the sake of lower than the tenders that has not yet had sewer and water Winnipeg's future, small stores erably laid It would take a little time were accepted. Why, under such in. should be granted' every possible circumstances, was the lowest to transfer these lands--I imagine chance to develop. No one CAN about five years tai least. But, in foretell when a small store is going tender not accepted? regard to this it is the only to finally develop into a huge store.

capability, experience and fair. land, Surely we entitled to expect practical policy for Winnipeg to It has before. Undoubt- mindedness from adopt. Naturally it will take many edly it will happen again. But- authorities.

The situation arouses happened our municipal and there is no artificial way to the closing of any, small store one's curiosity! It makes one people to fill this land with homes. bring these people here, They will means more unemployment. tical about the purchase of the when there is a good, My whole idea for A great and comminutors which were installed. come only sound, practical reason for coming. prosperous Winnipeg can be sum- These are the machines which But-we attract here by med up in one sentence "I break up the sewage matter into can people want to give to the City of Wincreating an expanding industrial small particles.

Why were two programme-by setting up a sound nipeg the expert business manage- special companies favored in these financial structure--and by adopt- ment that makes for success." To two purchases? Again, the lowest ing sound policies favorable to the do this, we must put an end to tenders were not accepted. And investor. These same cow pastures politics in the City Hall. again, the machines now installed would be ideal places on which to Probably the most glaring. and have proved to be a complete set up new industrial plants.

These daring example 0' inefficiency failure, and have to be thrown out. plants would create the need of and mismanagement is our sewage Why was there no guarantee of new workmen's dwellings, and for disposal plant. performance? No bond put up to sewer, water. light, and all the A year ago last August, this plant protect the city? It is now other conveniences of city's life. There is an element of gamble nt in it.

For instance, the price of wheat might delay us. But Manitobans are not entirely dependent on wheat. In 1937, livestock in Manitoba produced over nine million dollars! Dairy products produced nearly thirteen million! And there are many other diversified crops. Our mineral production for 1937 was nearly sixteen million dollars. And the exploration of that great country north of us, has not yet been scratched.

I am quite aware that these, as yet, are unknown factors. But every new business faces unknown factors. The second principle underlying my suggested new organization is to substitute a business organization for the political organization we now have here. I don't maintain that, overnight we'll all be rich. No plan works miracles.

But many times in my long business experience. I have seen a tottering business, in a condition of apparent collapse, completely made over by a needed change in its business administration. Let failures go! And substitute capable, new administrators! That form of revival of business is not new, but it's smart business. And that alone can inject new hope into the people of Winnipeg. This plan will make the profes- was opened with much ceremony.

And ever since the plant has been operating--not one-tenth of the Winnipeg has been kept out of the river! All summer, people have been swimming in this filthy river, thinking it was free of pollution. Most of us were confident we were through with that trouble! But the way this great work has been carried out is completely shocking. Let me give you a few facts about it. In 1934, an Eastern engineer named Mr. Lea was retained 10 make a report.

The report covered outfall, pumping station, sewage plant and interceptor. Also some work on Mission Street. The estimated cost was, roughly, three million On September 21st, 1934, Mr. Lea made a detailed report. In it, he pointed out.

that in 1931 he had made a preliminary investigation, with the idea of starting work on the plant, in 1932. In this former report, he drew attention to his discovery that Winnipeg was confronted by a particularly difficult problem. It was then-in 1931- that he advised that the city should start with only the first unit of a plant-to be enlarged later, to accommodate a population of half million. The report then went on to discuss two points. The first mated that, to replace these chines with effective machinery, and to replace the defective pumps, the city will have to spend three hundred thousand to five hundred thousand dollars.

This whole ter reeks! You and I paid for that plant. We are entitled to know all the facts. And we may get them yet. This is the last broadcast of my campaign. I am intensely grateful to everyone who has come forward and offered me assistance.

On all sides, warm supporters have sprung up and their enthusiasm has given me courage every step of the way. I offer myself to you for election as your Mayor of Winnipeg. I take this step because I do sincerely want the opportunity to serve you this city, where my home is, and where my heart is, to the very limit of my ability. Before it is too late, I Yantto help revive this city where spent my life. I honestly do want to make my contribution to the city of my children's birth.

And with all my heart, I appeal to you now, to give me my chance. For, if you tell me you want me as your Mayor, I now pledge you my word, I shall not fail; with God's help, to give you the very best leadership that it is in me 10 give. And I am positive that much I can be done. Thank You and Good Night.

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Pages Available:
361,171
Years Available:
1890-1949