LONDON CP - A 29 yearold mother of two believed she was a witch destined to kill everyone in the world especially babies yet doctors failed to certify her as insane Shortly after asking for help at a Buckingham shire police station where she was examined by a doctor but allowed to go Genevieve Parslow snatched a 10week old baby boy from his cot and drowned him in a ditch afterwards stamping on him MILLIONAIRE RECLUSE WANTED TO KILL EVERYONE IN THE WORLD Baby killer was declared sane by doctors Earlier during a long history of mental illness she had tried to poison her own children by giving them cleaning fluid mixed with jam Hearing the case at Reading Crown court Mr Justice Gerald Thesiger expressed horror at the lack of action taken by doc tors and hospital authorities who had come in contact with Mrs Par slow This case is a tragic warning to those people who criticized judges for taking baby snatchers out of circulation in the com community ¬ munity the judge said He sentenced Mrs Par slow to be detained at BARE HAS BEEN THE WORD around Vancouvers English Bay where heat wave has brought sun worshippers into the open Young Clay Bell wasnt the least bit shy about the situation He climbed up on a drinking fountain for liquid relief I HI I I I I I I III t M I- I Trans Alaska pipeline seems certain to pass WASHINGTON - It is all but curtains for any hopes Canada may have had of stopping the trans Alaska pipeline The legislative stage seems set for a speedy start of con construction ¬ struction of the controversial pipeline that would bring oil from Alaskas north slope to the energy hundry rest of the United States Only the House of Rep Representatives ¬ resentatives or the Supreme Court could now stall the 3500000000 project but even that point is far from certain Here in outline are the steps taken Tuesday The Senate voted nearly four to one to give the pipeline the green light It amended a 53year old law which restricted the right-of-way for pipelines crossing public lands to a width of 25 feet But the vote on environ environmental ¬ mental aspects of the project was the tightest of squeezes and this has encouraged con conservationists ¬ servationists to say We are disappointed but we are not finished By a vote of 49 to 48 and a procedural vote of 49 to 49 broken in favor of the pipeline proponents by Vice President Spiro Agnew the Senate approved an amend amendment ¬ ment which states that the trans Alaska pipeline project meets the requirements of the environmental protection act of 1969 Simultaneously the House of Representatives subcom subcommittee ¬ mittee on public lands passed out a bill dove tailing the Senates bill The House com mittee of the interior will decide Wednesday whetherit should consider the House bill immediately If it votes in the affirmative the bill will go to the House floor before Congress recesses Aug 3 Canada objected strenu strenuously ¬ ously to the trans Alaska pipeline on the grounds that it poses a danger to British Columbias coasts Energy Minister David Macdonald said Canada will concentrate on protecting the coast when the trans Alaska pipeline is finally approved The question to be settled Ottawa sources Said is who pays cleanup costs in case of oil spills An Interior Committee staff member who specializes in the pipeline legislation said the chances of the House bill are fifty fifty to be voted before the Aug 3 recess Broadmoor Britains top security jail for mentally deranged prisoners Mrs Parslow had for formerly ¬ merly been a patient at a mental hospital the judge said and while there had become pregnant by another patient Doctors had not allowed her to have a health service abortion he said but for tunately she had arranged for a private abortion Judge Thesiger said he was horrified that doc doctors ¬ tors saw no reason to admit her to hospital again believing she could be treated as an out outpatient ¬ patient It now is apparent to the medical profession ALLMAND TELLS COMMONS that she is mad said the judge Thababy killed by Mrs Parslow was Jonathan Snasdell son of a televi television ¬ sion film editor Jonathan apparently was spirited out of his cot in the early hours and later found dead in a ditch Only a few hours before THE CITIZEN - Wednesday July 18 1973 -5 coming across the Snas Snasdell ¬ dell home Mrs Parslow had begged Aylesbury police for help saying she was a witch thousands of years old When asked if she was fond of her chil children ¬ dren she said No they ought to be like me dead A doctor and mental health worker were called but after consulting two other doctors who knew her the doctor decided it was not necessary to com commit ¬ mit her to hospital She walked free out of the police station because no one had the power to detain her the prosecu prosecution ¬ tion said Oliver Lodge for the Crown said when police arrived to question Mrs Parslow she told them how she had stamped on the baby in the water waterlogged ¬ logged ditch because I have to kill everyone in the world Seized guns were just personal arms OTTAWA CP Firearms seized in a Toronto house appear to be the personal arms of a man arrested in Ireland in connection with a seized weapons shipment Solicitor General Warren Allmand told the Commons Tuesday The five weapons picked up in an RCMP raid last Friday included sub-machine-guns which are restricted weapons under Canadian law John Murphy owner of the house was arrested in Ire Ireland ¬ land July 12 after flying there from Canada Police and troops seized eight cases of arms and ammunition Mon Monday ¬ day from a British freighter that arrived in Dublin Sun Sunday ¬ day night from Montreal Mr Allmand told the House the Toronto weapons are not of the same type as those seized in Dublin in boxes marked machine parts Murphy has been released onbailinlrelandMrAUmand said the man immigrated to Canada from Ireland several years ago The solicitor general said the RCMP have been inves investigating ¬ tigating the case for several weeks in conjunction with foreign police agencies Answering questions from JOHN MURPHY A TORONTO man who emigrated to Canada seven years ago appeared in a Dublin court Tuesday accused of running guns into the Irish Repub Republic ¬ lic Solicitor General Warren Allmand said in Ottawa Tuesday the cache seized in Murphys Toronto home appeared to be personal arms TCDouglasNDP Nanaimo-Cowichan-The Islands Mr Allmand said the number of people respon responsible ¬ sible for the arms shipment through a Montreal firm is not yet known Mr Allmand told reporters later that Murphy is known to be a member of the Commun Communist ¬ ist Party If he is some kind of revolutionary he may have had those arms for many pur purposes ¬ poses he said The Dublin shipment is believed to have been destined for the Irish Repub Republican ¬ lican Army in Northern Ire Ireland ¬ land There are other people that might be involved he Nixon qovt accused said of the shipment There was no hard information yet on the source of the arms The former NDP leader also asked in the Commons about a DC 3 aircraft reported to have crashed off the coast of Newfoundland He asked if it was returning to Canada after carrying arms from Algeria to Shannon Ire land Mr Allmand said he had no knowledge of the inci incident ¬ dent but promised to look into it Mr Douglas said later in an interview he wants to know if there is any indication the plane was gun running and if ther were any passengers aboard when it disappeared last October He had informa information ¬ tion that indicated there were two passengers He said he believes an underground organization is using Canada to ship arms to Ireland Trade Minister Alastair Gillespie told Mr Douglas in the Commons Monday that he would make inquiries into the Dublin arms seizure All imports and exports of arms from Canada are regulated by law Mr Douglas said that if an export permit was issued for the Dublin shipment it should be explained through an inquiry I think weve been very lax about this whole question of arms exports he said Underground groups had become aware of this laxness and were taking advantage of it 220 AN HOUR nf huhinn hnmhinn New minimum wage J I IIUwIIIII un WUIM J III Vj W yj Vj WASHINGTON AP - passed a similar measure WASHINGTON AP -Pentagon disclosure of more than 4t000secretbombingsortiesin Cambodia in 1969 and early 1970 has provoked charges that administration officials deliberately lied to the Senate armed services com committee ¬ mittee Senator Harold Hughes Dem Iowa said Tuesday tell us precisely what hap happened ¬ pened in these bombing ope operations ¬ rations and falsification of reports who ordered them and how they were con conducted ¬ ducted The Pentagon admitted the secret bombing for the first time Monday after former air force major Hal Knight told the committee that he helped that stillclassified reports of carry out secret raids against Indochina air operations fur nished for the committee in 1971 and early 1973 show a long list of zeroes for B 52 bombing in Cambodia for every month up to May 1970 They deliberately lied to the committee Hughes told reporters after the very major campaign was dis disclosed ¬ closed by Pentagon spokes spokesman ¬ man Jerry Friedheim Hughes said Senator Stuart Symington Dem Mo acting chairman of the committee has agreed to call administra administration ¬ tion officials under oath to MEAT LIKE MONEY NASHVILLE Tenn AP The price of meft is so high says Tom McGin nis president of American National Foods that it has as much stealability as cash McGinnis ought to know Thieves evaded an elaborate alarm detection system in Super Save Dis Discount ¬ count Foods a subsidiary of American and made off with 4000 worth of beef loin bacon sausage and other pork products Sir John a mystery in death LOND0NCP Evenin death mystery surrounds Sir John Ellerman the multi millionaire recluse who died Tuesday at the age of 63 His funeral to be held Thursday will be strictly private and a spokesman for the Ellerman Shipping Lines would say only that it will take place in this coun country ¬ try Ellerman reputedly one of Britains richest men had a personal fortune estimated at about 100 million 250 million based on shipping bre brewing ¬ wing real estate and other investments including a big stake in the mass circulation Daily Mirror He is survived by his wife Esther daughter of Clar Clarence ¬ ence de Sola of Montreal There were no children of the marriage Ellermans passion for privacy equalled if not exceeded that of Americas Howard Hughes He spent hun hundreds ¬ dreds of thousands of pounds shutting out the world but was a frugal per sonal spender Rarely photographed his only known statement was I have no statement to make When he married Esther dc Sola in 1933 he drove her away to a small house in the Sussex coast resort of Eastbourno for the hon honeymoon ¬ eymoon Tall lean and a music lover who liked Gilbert and Sullivan Ellerman only other known interest outside business was rodents He became a noted zoologist wrote two books on mammals in collabora collaboration ¬ tion with a British Museum expert and finally produced a solo work on rats entitled Families and Genera of Living Rodents Foryears the Ellermans wintered in South Africa where they owned a home near Cape Town They travelled on Ellerman line ships on which only six or seven hand picked officers were permitted to ii i i i speak to the owner They spent about half the year in England stay staying ¬ ing in a private suite at Londons Dorchester Hotel This was where Ellerman died Tuesday after two heart attacks North Vietnamese san sanctuaries ¬ ctuaries in Cambodia in March and April 1970 He said that he obeyed orders to burn documentary evidence and falsify reports Defence Secretary James R Schlesinger told the com committee ¬ mittee in a letter that the move Tripoli radio reported Tuesday night that thousands of Libyans will head for the Egyptian capital in seized public transport vehicles and on foot to demand the immediate merger of the two countries planned for next September The radio said thousands of Libyans will start the 1550 mile march today from the LibyanTunisian border car carrying ¬ rying a document demanding the merger written in blood They will cross their own country before entering Egypt and expect to reach Cairos Republican Square Monday the 21st anniversary of the overthrow of the Egyp Egyptian ¬ tian monarchy Egypt has been awaiting a response from Khadafy since he returnedto Tripoli July 9 Shakeys Pizza Parlour Part time help wanted No experience necessary Earn while you learn Hours all sorts and kinds Qualifications 1 Must be able to enjoy people of all ages 2 Ability to have fun while you work 3 Sing clap hands whistle if you like Apply in person Monday through Friday between 2 4 pm 975 Central St Next to Gramas Inn bombing missions in Cam Cambodia ¬ bodia were fully authorized and that special security precautions sur surrounded ¬ rounded them because of a sensitive operational and diplomatic situation The United States at the time of the raids was profess professing ¬ ing publicly to be observing the neutrality of the Cambo Cambodian ¬ dian government under Prince Norodom Sihanouk deposed early in 1970 After the Lon Nol group took over the Cambodian gov government ¬ ernment US and South Viet Vietnamese ¬ namese ground troops were sent into Cambodia to clean out North Vietnamese san sanctuaries ¬ ctuaries Proposed mass march opposed by Egyptians CAIRO Reuter Presi President ¬ dent Anwar Sadat of figypt sent an urgent message to President Moammar Khadafy of Libya today urging him to call off a proposed mass march of Libyans on Cairo to demand an immediate mer merger ¬ ger between the two countries The Middle East news agency quoted Sadat as appealing to Khadafy to take a wise and firm decision on the matter and warning him of the risks involved in this after a protracted 18 day visit to Egypt during which he tried to inject greater enthusiasm for a full merger Many Egyptians however have expressed caution at proceeding too quickly and at one stage Khadafy said he would settle for full merger or nothing Political observers in Cairo speculated that this latest move by Libya could spell the end for the time being of unity between the two countries The proposed march and sitin Will justify for many Egyptians the caution they voiced about any quick mer merger ¬ ger with Libya nd The Senate began debate Tuesday on a bill to raise the minimum wage and extend its coverage to seven million workers including domestics and certain government employees The bill as drafted by the Senate labor and public welfare committee would raise the minimum pay of all covered workers to 220 an hour within three years The House last month adding coverage for about six million workers Most of the 47 million workers currently covered by minimum wage would get an increase to 2 from the current 160 an hour sixty days afterenactment and to 220 a year later Workers who came under minimum wagein 1966 would go to 180 from 160 in 60 days to 2 a year later and to 220 in two years INCREDIBLE Thats What This Sale Is Read the Full Page Advertisement in Mondays Citizen and Rush in to Woodwards Boys Wear for a Winter Jacket CORRECTION The Monday July 16th ad of SCHULTZ P0NTIAC BUICK LTD announcing Mr George E Crawfords appointment to the sales staff was mistakenly published with the picture of Mr George Crawford The Citizen apologizes to Mr George E Crawford and Mr George Crawford for the mistaken picture placement and hopes a minimum of in inconvenience ¬ convenience was caused 2nd Mortgage Money you may have forgotten about Laurentide and Union Finance consider home improvement one of many worthwhile reasons for borrowing money If youre a homeowner we can lend you up to 25000 on a 2nd mortgage And we have flexible repayment plans There are no bonuses no finders fees Drop by and talk to us or give us a call Right now While its on your mind LAURENTIDE FINANCIAL CORPORATION LTD UNION FINANCE COMPANY LIMITED Members of the Laurentide Group of Companies 137880 - Fifth Avenue PO Box 1270 562 2404 1 -1257 Fourth Avenue 562 2145