HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1946-09-05, Page 2•
IttiONTY ARRIVES IN CANADA
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Beginning the whirl of activities that will crowd his 17 -day tour of Canada, Field Marshall Viscount
Montgomery met a cheering Halifax on Saturday after he went ashore from the Mauretania (bottom
right) with Maj. -Gen. H. W. Foste,r, C.B.E., D.S.O., GOC Eastern Command, following. Later he in-
spected a guard of honor (top photo) composed of 50 members of the Princess Louise Fusiliers accom-
panied by guard commander Lt. George Halliwell of Halifax. For the ceremony of receiving an honor-
ary degree from Dalhousie University he donned the traditional cap and gown and (bottom left), the
soldier and hero became academician. Seen pre -sent ing him with the honorary LL.d is Dr. A. E. Kerr,
president of Dalhousie.
PEACE CONFERENCE DISCUSSES FINNISH, BALKAN PROBLEMS
'77
Delegates on the Economic Commission for Finland and the Balkans hold their first assembly at the
Luxembourg Palace in Paris. Seats for the Yugoslav delegates are unoccupied. This picture was taken
the day after the second U.S. plane was shot down over Yugoslavia.
QUITE A FEW NEWSPAPERS IN THIS PILE
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The severe shortage of newsprint paper that plagued the nation's newspapers during the war is still
almost as bad as ever, but pulp mills are making frantic efforts to relieve the deficit. Typical of
what's going on is the photo above, showing a hug3 stockpile of paper pulp logs at Hull in the Gatineau
River district of Quebec, being wetted down to lessen fire hazard. Before the war, three out of every
eight newspapers in the world were printed on Canadian paper.
NOW TITO'S COMPLAINING
MONTREALERS SWARM OVER FLAT TOP H.M.C.S. WARRIOR
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Tied up at Laurier Pier in Montreal where she will remain open for inspection for a. few days. The
Royal Canadian Navy's sleek aircraft carrier H.M.C.S. Warrior was visited by thousands of Montrealers.
Part of the ntany interested spectators are seen boa -ling and leaving the vessel in the, above photograph.
Yugoslavia, which the U.S. threatened to bring befo
of disturbing world peace by shooting down un
some charges herself. Three months after U.S.
boats at Vilshofen-on-Danube for allegedly smuggling
has decided that the boats are being held illegally,
as American soldie
re the United Nations Security Council on charges
armed American airmen, hints that she mak make
troops seized these Yugoslav and Hungarian gun -
arms, oil and Nazis out of Germany, Marshall Tito
according to Moscow radio. The gunboats are shown
re stand guard.
OFF SHE FLIES
Sister Maxine, 39 -year-old Benedictine nun, makes her first solo
airplane' flight at St. Paul, Minn. A teacher at Cathedral High
School, S. Cloud, Minn., she learned to fly so that she can teach
aviation classes this fall.
GIs PROTEST YUGOSLAV ACTION
American soldiers march in protest before the Yugoslav Embassy
in Paris, condemning that government for shooting down unarmed
American planes. A member of the Embassy staff, foreground,
argues with gendarme. Tension between Yugoslavia and U.S, eased
somewhat with rel.zate of crew members and passengers of the
tint downed platte,
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