The Oshawa Times, 10 Oct 1961, p. 21

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: |against nuclear arms ended a 73-hour picketing of Parliament Hill Monday with 73 seconds of HURT IN BRAWL Russian press attache A.D. | erupted over the passport of Popov, facing camera, talks | 8 Soviet woman tourist who to newsmen after fist fight | police feared was being taken between Dutch police and So- | back to Russia against her viet embassy officials at Am- will, sterdam airport today. Popov | --(AP Wirephoto via radio was hurt in the brawl which | from London) INTERPRETING THE NEWS Party Meeting Hoopla Expected Tower. Friday, organized by the Com- bined Universities Campaign for i the students their non-stop pa- ilurged them to spread the move- 73-Hour Picket For Peace Ends OTTAWA (CP)--Footsore uni-|dents. At times the marchers, versity students protesting accompanied by two guitars, a fife and bongo drums, sang] songs as they circled the Par- liament Hill lawn A favorite] was: Glory, Glory, What a Helluva Way to Die, sung to the tune of John Brown's Body. of silence beneath the Peace About 160 pickets remained at row front. Fisenhower stood firm for a drive to the Rhine on a broad front. Morgan one day found the late Gen, Walter Bedell Smith, Ei- senhower's chief of staff, "white with passion' at his desk. On the desk lay a telephone from which a voice was crackling. "Look, boy," Smith said. '""That's your bloody marshal on the other end of that, I can't talk to him any more. Now you go on." Morgan told Montgomery that unless he did as he was told all Book Hits Marshall's War Record LONDON (AP) -- Field Mar- shal Viscount Montgomery was lucky not to be relieved of his command by Gen. Dweight Eisenhower in-the last months Their placards pr d| "Each test kills," "Let's not bi cremated equal" and "Canad: aciive--not radioactive." Some of the marchers were barefoot and a few had band- ages on their blisters. The round-the - clock demon- stratin was kept going during the three nights by token pick: eis of around 20 persons each, the 11 a.m. finish of ths demon- stration that began at 10 a.m. Nuclear Disarmament Campaign chairman Dmitri Roussopoulos of Montreal told rade had been a success and ment at their own universities of the S d World War, a British general suggests in a new book published this week. Ren. Sir Frederick Morgan, ho was attached to supreme headquarters of the Allied expe- tionary force, tells this story in Peace and War. Montgomery tried to press the Americans into letting the Allied armies advance on a nar- available supplies would be switched from the British to the Americans. "That worked," he says. Morgan concludes that Eisen- hower coud have asked Mont- gomery's immediate relief but, as a diplomat, he saw that such a step would have damaged British-American unity. Two Men Killed In Train Wreckage CANORA, Sask. (CP) -- One 57 - car CNR freight train plowed into the rear of a sec- ond freight loaded with standing in the yards in this rail centre in eastern Saskatchewan Saturday night and minutes la- ter the wreckage was in flames. Two men died and a third was injured. The dead were identified as David E. Low, about 45, the en gineer of the first train and his fireman, Franci s O. Wright, about 32, both of Kamsack, Sask. Twenty freight cars were de- molished. The wreckage was piled at least four cars deep. Then leaking diesel fuel caught fire and flames leaped through the wreckage. It burned through the night. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, October 10, 1961 21 Beating Fatal, Charge Murder TORONTO (CP)--A steeple- jack was charged with murder Saturday after a badly beaten woman died of internal injuries as she was being taken to hos- pital. Lorenzo Hiscock, a 4l-year- old steeplejack, was charged in connection with the death of Marian Taylor, 81, with whom he had been living. . Police said a taxi was called to a downtown rooming house to take the semi - conscious woman to hospital. Mrs. Rena Sharpe, the dead woman's cousin, told police she watched Mrs. Taylor being Thinks Navy Worth More Of Budget LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- The Royal Canadian Navy probably would be the only armed ser- vice to survive a nuclear at. tack, the national president of the Naval Officers' Association said Saturday. Alex Gregory of Saint John, N.B., told a district meeting here that 80 per cent of RCN fleet is dispersed at sea and no doubt will survive. He was critical of the navy's share of the defence budget -- less beaten Thursday night in the rooming house but was told by the assailant she would suffer the same fate if she interfered. and in other countries. He told reporters the 73 hours of picketing, and the 73-second silence, was to commemorate 73,000 atom bomb victims at Hi- roshima in 1945. He said there were some 320 marchers in the largest single picket, on Saturday evening, and estimated that about 804 people at various times took part in the demonstration. The picketing was orderly and without any serious inci- Horsewoman Hurt In Crash TORONTO (CP) -- Gail Ross, 19 - year - old Edmonton girl picked for Canada's interna- tional horse-jumping team after placing first in the trials, lays seriously injured in hospital after a weekend car accident that killed her companion. Miss Ross, slated to represent Canada in her first big event Friday, is reported "improving" following treatment for skull in- juries, a fractured jaw and facial cuts. Lewis Christian Scott, 20, a This week's annual conference lic picture of unity and leader- of Britain's ruling Conservative ship. party promises more Labor-like| Now the serenity has been| hoopla than the Labor party broken by the European Com- produced at its unusually tran-/mon Market, Labor's recovery quil meeting last week and the unpopular policies of| Even a mild disturbance Selwyn Lloyd, chancellor of the among the Conservatives would exchequer complete the switch from a] Opposition to "Britain enter-| year ago when they were con- ing the Common Market will be fidently predicting power 'for directed by Sir Derek Walker- the next decade at least" on the Smith, a former health mini- basis of Labor's bitter inter-|ster, who submitted an amend- party wrangling. ment critical of the official res- But the Labor party demon- olution supporting Comm on] strated last week that it has/Market and only three of them united solidly behind the lead-|give unqualified backing to the ership of Hugh Gaitskell and market plan. that the left-wing element which! But it is probable that Lloyd| had boisterously thrown its will cause the greatest amount| weight around a year ago had of embarrassment since his been brought to heel. plan for boosting Britain's econ- Also, the Conservative hier- omy by means of a "pay pause" archy, since its last conference, and increased taxation are un- has had to bow to protests that|popular in almost all quarters. {his car slewed off the road on |a curve and hit two trees as he polo player and Cornell Univer- sity student, was killed when was driving Miss Ross back to her Toronto Lote. Sunday. Plans for the Canadian eques- trian team to compete in the United States later this , week are being reconsidered Scott, home for the Thanks- giving weekend from university in Ithaca, N.Y., took Miss Ross duck hunting Saturday and then to a dinner party at his home in nearby Markham. Woman Killed Saving Her Son PONTIAC, Mich, (CP) -- A mother of five who ran onto a For as little the conventions are inhibited by | Teachers and civil servants, railroad trestle to hurl her five- t he arrangements committee in particular, have won gen-|year-old son to safety died Sa- which does not permit a free-jeral public sympathy. And|turday when a locomotive struck wheeling debate of the Labor many, including party support- her before she could escape. As ' ers, are against Lloyd's policies her family watched, Mrs. Re- Until this vear, when the|0n the grounds that his scheme|gina Stach, 37, was thrown jor t % rules were revised, it had been dishonored arbitration agree-/feet to her death from the tres- the custom of the Conserva- ments for certain employeesitle over a creck near a park tives to keep their dirty linen and provided labor cam-| where the family was picknick- out of sight and present a pub.|Daigners with new ammunition. ing. YELLOW PACES BuLETIg AMONG THE NEW MODELS BUTLER'S MOTOR TRICYCLE BUILT IN 1885 WAS BELIEVED TO BE THE FIRST ENGLISH VEHICLE POWERED BY AN INTERNAL COMBUSTION No Income Tax | For Gambling OTTAWA (CP) -- Mr. Justice J. C. Cameron of the Exchequer Court has upheld a tax appeal board decision in which it was| ruled that Sarnia hotelkeeper Harry Morden did not have to pay income tax on $13,860 in gambling winnings. In his judgment Mr, Justice Cameron fond there was no evidence that Mr, Morden, dur- ing the years in questi and 1951-52-53 -- conducted a commercial enterprise in rela- tion to his betting activities The revenue department had) appealed against a tax appeal board decision setting aside an| income tax asse nt against| Mr. Morden's winnings. Mr. Justice Cameron found that Mr. Morden "appears to} have been an inveterate ler, placing bets . . . on a var- fety of card games and sport- ing events." However there was no evidence that his operations "amounted to a calling or the carrying on of a business. Agile Jewel Thief Arrested In Nice NICE, France (AP) -- Police said Monday they. have ar rested a 28-year-old man "with the agility of Tarzan" who, they said, has admitted 12 riviera je- wel thefts since 1959. The man, identified as| Jacques Aupetit, took an esti-| mated $50,000 worth of loot from| homes of celebrities in the va- cation area, police said. { IN 1895, THE WINNER OR THE PARIS-BORDEAUX AUTO RACE AVERAGED A DIZZY 15 MILES PER HOUR CANADA SAVINGS BONDS Buy yours nou, by instalments or for cosh, 'of ony bronch of the "Revol THE ROYAL BANK OF. CANADA can own a $100 Canada Savings Bond Saving becomes much simpler -- and pennies add up to dollars automatically -- when you put something aside from every pay the convenient Payroll Savings way! A modest regular instal- ment over a year will bring you a new Canada Bavings Bond -- worth $100.00 plus earned Interest of $4.25. 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