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OVERWHELMED IN RUSH

Speaker At Anti-War Meeting

More Excitement Than Bad Feeling By Telegraph—Press Association AUCKLAND, February 11. In the face of organised though obviously unofficial opposition from about 100 soldiers and sailors, an attempt by Communists and others to repeat their weekly anti-war meeting in Quay Street this afternoon was frustrated, the only speaker who attempted to address a crowd of about 3000 being overwhelmed in a rush in which his banner was torn to shreds. Calico strips from the banner were used by soldiers to decorate their hats. Both the police and soldiers suffered confusions in the rushes and melees that prevented the speeches. Most of the crowd was present to witness trouble rather than to cause it, and as the Communist front was overborne very early in the proceedings, excitement rather than bad feeling distinguished the rushes that were almost invariably aimless, ending as suddenly as they began. Indeed, in several spirited scrimmages in which there appeared to be no “beg pardons,” police, soldiers and sailors jested together as they struggled. These encounters always ended in cheers by dishevelled soldiers and sailors for the police. As much by their good humour and jests as by their weighty and scientifically packed wedges that always split any rush, the police restrained the crowds.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THD19400212.2.36

Bibliographic details

Timaru Herald, Volume CXLVIII, Issue 21576, 12 February 1940, Page 6

Word Count
214

OVERWHELMED IN RUSH Timaru Herald, Volume CXLVIII, Issue 21576, 12 February 1940, Page 6

OVERWHELMED IN RUSH Timaru Herald, Volume CXLVIII, Issue 21576, 12 February 1940, Page 6