® Che Guardian Covers Prince Edwerd island Like The Dew W. 3. Hencen, Publisher Welles Wed Frank Waker Menageng Ector : - tdtar Published every week dey morning txcep! Sur dey and statutory holidays) af 165 Prince Street. Charlottetown P-E.1. by Thomson Newspapers ind. Grench cffices of Summerside end Sours. : Sepresegted nationa’ly by Thomcn Mewsoepers Advertising Serwees. Tororte 425 Universty ave Empire 38494 Montes! 620. Cathcact Street Uni . Versity 65942 Western Offxe 1030 West George Sereet Varcouve: WA 7037 Membe- Canscan Daily Newspaper Pubiahers and The Canadien =ress The Canadien Press is exchsively entitied to the use for repub Mevtague Alberton Kcation of , wees dapetches in ths. pace cedited to #°or to the Associsted Press o Feuters and sisc *0 the toca! news cubiched heer 48 tight ao repudiicatice cf scecial dispatches here in also reserved Suoscrpticn rete Mot- ove: £0 per week by carner $12.00 2 year by wa! ot rural rowtes and areas Rot serwiced by. carrier : $15.00 0 vee off tslend and UK $2900 cer yeer im US. and elsewhere cutsde BSotsh Com £ - or ith " Not over 7< single cory Member Audit Bureav “The strongest memory is weaker 5 than the weakest ink” _ PAGE 4 FRIDAY. WAY 2% 1965. ReassuringyChange United States marines are being withdrawn from the Dominican Re- public, after the force of circumstan- ces has convinced Washington that it misjudged the nature of the revolt and the true feelings of the people. Washington has also made a neat— and what is regarded by press: com- mentators as a most heartening—re- versal in its attitude to public criti- cism as expressed in academic circles throughout the country + _ Compus criticism is often ill- informed. but not necessarily so. In this case. when it developed into. demonstrations and massive “teach- ins.” the first reaction from the cap- ital was sharp and bitter. Secretary of ‘State Rusk expressed amazement at of Crculahon —sueh“‘gullibility”and-“‘stubborn-dis- regard of plain facts.” McGeorge | Bundy. special presidential adviser | for national security affairs. told 127 | faculty members of Washington Univ- | ersity that “if their letter of protest came to me for grading as a professor of government. I would not be able to gr *t high marks.“ When it became obvious that this | kind of hard line rebuttal only stimu- lated more adverse comment, the ad- ministration abruptly changed its tactics. It encouraged. even helped arrange, a big Washington “t eac h- in.” The other day President Johnson told a group of students that college years were never meant to be “im- | passive or uninvolved or uncommit- ted . . . I do find it reassuring and ness and commitment is stirring among today’s student generation.” The real clincher. however, was provided by Mr. Bundy. himself a — former academician at Harvard. Ex- pressing regret that he was not able to participate in the Washington “teach-in” debate, he observed: “Qpen. 1 discussion between our citizens and their government is the central ner- vous system of our free society.” Mr. Bundy was later dispatched to Santo Domingo where he found that the situation could deteriorate into chaos if the US. insisted on treating the Bosch rebel forces as Commun- ists. As a result, Washington drop- ped General Imbert and gave public backing to a coalition of Dominican leaders. Now it is allowing its marines to be replaced by troops of an inter-American peace force. This is learning diplomacy— the hard way. But the reassuring point about it is that it does indicate an aptitude for profiting by mistakes - that can be turned to good account in e the future. Those New Boundaries Those new electoral boundaries. it - ~{s said. are going to help the Liberals | < more than the Conservatives if they *go into effect before the next general | * election. No exact prediction can. be made until all the maps are in. but | Prof. F. C. Englemann of the Univer- sity of Alberta's political science de- partment has calculated that 54 per cent of the Canadian people are cur- rently represented by Liberal MPs. Redistribution would ‘translate this total into seats, theoretically raising Liberal strength in the Commons to at least 143—a clear majoritv. But according to Peter C. New- man. Ottawa editor of the Toronto Star. Liberal MPs are far from unani- mous in their feelings about an early campaign. They pay lip service to the fieed for modernizing parliamentary representation. but privately they're voicing a strong desire to campaign on existing boundaries so they can benefit once more from the personal political machines they've built up aver the years. They may be wiser than the theorists in feeling that a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush. Under the forthcoming redistribu- “* | tom. Ontario wil! gain three seats, '- Alberta two and British Columbia _ one. Saskatchewan will lose three, Nova Scotia. Quebec and Manitoba one each. Representation commis- sioner Nelson Castonguay expects to | have all the detailed maps at his dis- posal by early fall. An election held on the new system could follow six months later If an election ‘is called this vear on the basis of the existing ridings and a majority government is elect- ed. the new boundaries would not go into effect until the 1969 election. By that time the next dicennial census would only two vears away But there’s a growing opinion in Ottawa, according to Mr. Newman. that it _would be immoral! to hold yet_another (the sixth) election on population representation based on the 1951 census There is no doubt that if the politicians wait until redistribution is complete. the Parliament tnat is con- vened. as a result of the next cam- paign will be drastically different from today’s assembly. In today’s House of Commons nearly two-thirds of the MPs. represent’ more or less rural areas, in the next Parliament at least 60 per cent will be sitting for urban-suburban communities. As Mr. -‘Castonguay emphasizes: “This is not redistribution as we've known it in the past, but the drawing of a new political map for Canada.” — It will transform the balance of power in Canadian politics, and.no one can predict with anv confidence what the end result wiil be. : Timely Correction : According to Hon. Rene Leves- que. minister of natural resources in * the Quebec government, Canada | since the conquest in 1759 has been a colony where certain Anglo-Saxons, whose aim was to safeguard the | to keep out the democracy which was developing below the 45th parallel, have come to enrich themselves. This harsh view of history is quoted in a French language newspaper. the first-class job in setting Mr. Levesque right in the matter—if he wishes to | | be set right. which is problematical. But this is how it comes. out after Le Soleil's editor. Gi Boyer, has taken a hard look at facts. We quote the English trans supplied | by The Canadian Press: -. “Democracy. that is. the begin- nings of parliamentary government, | from English merchants who came | after 1760, but mainly following the arrival of United Empire Loyalists in Canada in 1783 after the American Revolution . . . Far from delaying | democracy, the Anglo-Saxons here | hastened its coming . - - “Nowadays we have perhaps not much to learn from the United States ‘ in the way of democracy. Even ad- mitting the complexity of the racial , problem in the republic to the south. it must be said that democracy is pretty faulty for Negroes. Some southern states” voting laws are open- ly discriminatory to the Negro. No president before Lyndon Johnson had dared or been able to attack these abuses. No such abuses exist in Canada “And Canada. long before the United States. got rid of religious prejudices in choosing its head of government. Cartier, Laurier. St. Laurent long preceded Kennedy. And so. contrary to Mr. Levesque’s view. * Canada can in many ways serve as an example to the democracy that has grown up below the 45th parallel.” A good theme. this. for the Roval Commission on Bilingualism and Bi- culturalism to dig into. EDITORIAL NOTES work saved 263 lives last’ year. ac- cording to Canadian Forces Head- quarters. Aircraft of many types flew 9,000 hours and ships hattled heavy seas to effect scores of Aramatic rescues. The biggest single rescue was the saving of 84 seamen from the broken tanker Amphialos in the At- lantic by the RCN destroyer escort Athabascan West Germany's presents for visit- ing Queen Elizabeth last week rang- ed from a porcelain clock to Beet- hoven records... One proposed gift excluded from the list. however. was a teddy bear intended for one-year- ‘old Prince Edward. newspaper reported the bear was re- jected because its face was not in- telligent enough. The paper said it had been successfully argued that the | young prince “should not be allowed to form a childhood prejudice that | the Germans are a stupid people.” | That's what one would call being real- | ly obsessed about a status symbol. ‘ : < * i- eo British Empire and, while doing so, | Quebec Le Soleil. which also does a _. encouraging that the sense of aware- | sprouted in Canada in 1791. notably | Canadian search and rescue team- A Frankfurt . ge 4 | | NoW,WACTER, A LITTLE i CHORUS CF TIPTeE « ice THROUGH THE TuULIPS..-; OTTAWA REPORT By Patricx Nicholson I described Parliament Building was utter- ly destroyed, as recalled by the only veteran of that occasion who still works around the House of Commons. Jean Desjardins was a_ 13- year old page boy. still in his first month of employment at the time of the fire: in the more | than 49 years , since, he has } worked his way up. as First Page, Chief. Page, Clerk in the Reading Room. until! now he | is Curator of the Reading Room. He told fre how distressed | his family were, when informed that an early victim of the fire was “somebody named Desjar- dins”. Of course they feared that | this was their small son. Then news came through that the victim was Constable Alphonse Desjardins, of the Dominion | Police Force. | . The fire raged. and crackled; — midnight. after | three of conflag-ztion. the bell of the clock in the Peace | Tower crashed to the ground, so the eerie striking in the fla- “mes -ceased. Then came anoth-- er message: somebody named Desjardins was among the fur- ther victims. This brought ang- uish to little Jean’s family, who in their home near the faraway Museum could the glare reflec- ted in the night sky. This time, | they felt sadly sure. the victim was their little son, in his butto- ned knee - breeches and patent- leather pumps. SEVEN PERISH IN FLAMES But again they learned that | the victim who perished was not Jean but Alphonse — this time anenzineer employed %v Public Works Department, who died when a water tank in fell the collapsing building onta his head. Other victims, included a 69 year old MP, Bowman Law of Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, who lit- erally disappeared. Mr. J. B. R. Laplante. Assistant Clerk of the Commons also perished: it is in- teresting to recall that two weeks later there was appointed as his successor in that joba young clerk who rose to be Canada's most famous Clerk of the House. the author of the stand- ard book on Parliamentary Rules: the late Dr. Arthur Beauchesne. A Post Office employee also died, as well as two ladies from Quebec City who were guests of the Sreaker of the Horse In that old Parliament Building. a Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) | TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO (May 28, 1949) Force in Flanders was engaled furiously with Germans in a drive aimed at penetrating southward to join the main French army which pressed a rescue drive from the Somme Lieut -Col. Most Rev. CL Nelligan, DDQ. Bishop of Pem- broke. leaves the Province after a twoday visit. While here ~ he addressed the graduates of St. Dunstan's University at the an- nual commencement exercises held on Monday afternoon. TEN YEARS AGO (May 28, 1955) Mr Larne Robert Moase. son of Mr. and Mrs Fred Moase of Summerside, received the de gree of Bachelor of Arts with honors in History on May 17th at 112th Convocation of Acadia | University. Wolfville. NS. Lorne won the Parsons Family Prize which was given to the student | with the highest averace pro- ceeding to the study of law. Yesterday. Lit. Governor TW L. Prowse unveiled the Prince of Wales Colleze Plaque. honor- | ing the students and former stu- i dents who served in World War 1. Re oot» Fans ” + a sits tlle © é Z 2 saree — =i oe ; - aeaecibabiana Ses + eaten . | Barbiturate | ~ NOTES BY THE WAY P a . S op i : for Christ- ing the young people dance | By Dr_ Theodore R. Van Defies PO * SLES S” wonderful” about them. “Til bet You never | MW. writes: “Derme the —), sorely is and he says if busi- saw amy dancing like that back | holidays I had 2 stramge exper- mess is good mext year he'll sige | in the ‘nineties, eh. uncle?” ience _ regarding barbeturate j”— Guelpe Mercury. ~ | “Once—but the place was raid- peiseuing. This «was mot 2 case i . ed" —Well Street Journal. _ of everdesaze— ; intentional oF - oe hes Seem Bing St Comey ; : sleeping pill for 29 years Afler os seem very short” “They are. “your young man, Ferdinand - my mother’s iliness I had > gay fiaere is leader of the OF’ gays until a very late hour. Has many sleepless nights the doctor caesra “—Torento Stat. not your mother said. something | said I bad fergetten bow to y oct’ tii a | _ te you ‘about this habit of his?” — eo : eae aoe laugh Stor * rai “Yes, father.’ replied the od | Couple of week corkteds, rete. firm. One of cars, bought men haven't altered a bit.” — | ed about two or three hours Iat- where, has such a keen sense of | yy rea! Star. ~ er. and took am aspirin because bumer that it arrived home the | I felt 2 cold coming on 1 col- other day with its sides split ring 1954 $20 billion passed ~ | lapsed when gettimg cut of bed St. Thomas TimesJournal. aoa th canes the next morsing This contins- 2 : retail (ed for several days, during _ 4 minister meeting ® scich businestes im Canada. equal to |-ahich time 1 had so appetite. bers Sex wae Noe ears Day . sb0st $1,000 for every man, wo. | What is your opinion? Needless © 5 Sc asful black eye. put his ™an and child Supermarkets | to say. I have aot. mor will I is as the boy's. head and and smaller food and beveraze ee ee ae | said: “My boy. I pray you-may ‘%ellers got $5.9 billiop. Car deai- "gh drae Chen wo mae canis. | Bever fight again, and that you ers. garages and “service “Sta- = os a | may ever receive another tions got $4.2 So it seems Shat - | ee ec eeee tock wn main Mack eye.” “That's all right.” more than half of what we | Sogo sedatwe” Thee perat og: | auld the bey. “You go home and spend is on stuff to eat and | Mitted to ‘pray over your own kid. I gave drink and ‘a car to bring it home -| Muitted to being bighstireng. stay- to twe of “em.” — Montreal -in.—Port Arthur News-Chron- | img With 2 friend. and feeling 2 ae. ree. rs | The individual used these ¢ap- | ‘ : ’e Nir bl F k mics or ® years vittet = Martin's Nimbie Footwork | verse reactions. It is on. oe ae =< Mcintest ‘ : _ alcohol may - ar- is ; Dave io ota ee ee oe Canadian Press Staff Writer. ; age of all drugs taken was too External Affair-s Mimster successful im having prior cor. — te cousader thes possebdl- Martin. empicying some nimble § sultations with the French au- : * ‘ fectwork, is keeping “one step thorities . a We might continue by savimg si0ad of Quebec in his current In the case of the education thet over the last 3 years this ~qonestic™ foreign problem agreement. Mr Martin dis- | person must have taken this yh. problem has to do «ith cussed the matter with French combination om several @rt@- Quonec’s desire to sezotiaie Foreign Minister Maurice Couve sions. The objection to making a and enter into educational and de Murville and other French diagnosis th a newspaper health Couural agreements with authorities some months be- eplume is.that.we de mot have prooe fore negotiations opened all the facts. These symptoms | The federal government in- Quebec sow wants a cultural : ay : ° smh colaper and foe anpecnn-| mrTuational treaties ‘and that - earlier this month Mr. Martin TULIP TIME IN OTTAWA might ‘collapse and jose appetite “sey Quebec = Paris, agreements had discussions in Paris oa this a : eet Srermmtalocece. | are not binding in international point—before the arrival there ’ a 7 met Comtinae igw unless sanctioned by Ot- of Quebec Cultural Affairs Mini- 3 eat for emotional persess’ Tis m= This ticklish three-way im. MASTER AGREEMENT e ees : ae : = broglio begam last year when Jean Basdevant.- general di- | More About The Great Fire Of 1916 dividual may be hiding some | OCs Oe cmd on ae cdo, rector of cultural affairs for the | BURPING HUSBAND ' cational exchange program be-. F gg ee oacaa maa Recently the special apartment was provided The Speaker was given a large Mrs..C. writes: My husband tueee Quibsr and Fresre The. betting a cull eligi ating Great Fire of 1916, when the for use as the official residence armed chair, placed with its is a nervous fellow and beiches Quebec-Paris agreement and an WTO ian_minister, how- of the Speaker, and they were back against the stage of he-all the time” Could bis aerves Ottswe-Paris exchange of- notes. The Canadian menister.. oew staying with him at the time of auditorium. Members of the be responsible. or is it my SPProving it were signed simu}- t ten this aol tack gaaet the fire. In the rebuilt Parlia- Press Gallery were given chairs meals? tamecusly in Paris and Ottawa a ‘eke ’ : ment Building. the Speaker of on the stage, looking down on REPLY 7 oe ye. "nae te one bs eel Ole the Cemmons has verhans the the 2:sembly. To separate tie Either is 2 possibiity. Your peprReal SANCTION > Mr Basdevant a general or most beautiful suite of offices dignified Speaker from the husband may be a tictim of gall Given Ottawa's claim to be master acreemént between! Ca- Se inky meee ae bladder trouble. indigestion. or the sole tréaty-signins author- nada and France under which ing. but no bedrooms. piece lywood was fixed another intestinal disorder. This . a , ; F BUSINESS AS USUAL the back of his chair. ee ee ee ee Me : : : 'S Martie be able to say that» agreements with Paris in fields The remarkable aftermath of 1 wish I could have kept that the picture. Belching is a habit he had held consultations with where they hold jurisdiction what Prime Minister Sir Rob- shield. it became a veritable and also is associated with air Freach authorities before. Que- Officials say such an agree- : ert Borden termed “that deplo- work of art.” recalls Jean Des gwallowing— beth manilest®- BO has entered détailed neg ment would tend to eliminate rable calamity” was that the jardins. “Drawn on the back tions of mervousmess. ‘tiations with Paris This gives” the bickering between Ottawa following afternoon. while the were such devices as a bloody STOMACH ACID the negotiations an aura of fed- and Quebec which arises every ashes of the building were still key. and the phrase ‘Abandon M. R. writes. What symp ora] sanction im advance time the province wants a new hot. the MPs met as usual at 3 hope all ye who enter here’.” toms show too much and tee pa Stustin nde been | eccerd with. Bresce F p.m. Their new meeting place And that was the fate of the little bydrechleric acid im the i eSeSSse— was the Auditorium in the Vie- noble pile of which Sir Wilfrid system? toria Memorial Museum. And ; identi : REFLY there’ they contineed to meet Clue oe © tee Som Indigestion is the mest com- until the new Parliament Build- ied with our national life since jngtem of beth too little 9 /~ : ing could be opened. Confederation. A and too much. But most individ- rare | gals are unaware of the acid © ° ' . ) Semen of the semach wens Killex kills niore Samoa’s TV System they have peptic uicer. Now snd y thee moruing is sidan Gorecaites wey ee on oe wn weeds than any When school bells ring on Am- of the Equator — because of a ? ; crican Samoa, sounzsters throne. Stsear'-" old native of Righy. cp nwwes’ Receati. other lawn treatment into. open .-.air-fales with shing- Idahe. who believes all Ameri- . sienimg im the quinine! led roofs. and seat themselves cans deserve an equal chance.” gag my left arm asleep. Could i ane cross - legged before television wrote a newspaper editor from you explain the cause” sets Hawaii. | REPLY e “Not one pair of eyes leaves The editor referred to the Am- Pressure om a nerve te the e guarantee it. the screens.” said a visitor erican governor, H. Rex Lee, jog likely cause. It is reasce- The pride of the United tes’ who is determined that Sam-a’s able.te assume that during the island territory in t South development will be for the be 1 few weeks you have chang- Pacific is an educational TV nefit of the Samoans — not for 44 your sleeping posture and system for all 12 grades. It was the enrichment of entrepreneurs 4. lying on the involved arm or inaugurated in September. 1964 from the outside world. assuming some pesitien that Electronic magic may seem out Tourism will be allowed t© creates pressure. of place on a lushly beautiful grow. but not at the risk of turn | HIDDEN GOITER group of islands where people ing Samoa’s handsome, healthy, yrs 1. writes: What is meant wear sarongs and sleep on mats. free spirited veople imto a race i by an inward goiter? But Samoa has scattered vill- of cooks, waiters, busbeys, and REPLY ages and a shortace of teachers. chambermaids. A thyroid gland that enlarges Instructing by TV has proved so = Samoans, through ETV, are @ 2 downward direction and is suitable and successful that heing taught to read and write hidden ‘imward) behind the up some 50 nations. including many their own language, and to che- per part of the breastbone of Africa's emerging countries, ish their Polynesian culture. At TODAYS HEALTH WINT— have asked the United States Go- _ the same time. they are intens- | Smoking aggravates nasal vernment for permission to send ely proud of being Americans. symptoms * observers to study the extraord- A sign in the old Rainmaker (NOTE: All carrespeadeare inary experiment | Hotel at Pago Pago makes main- te Dr. Van Delien should be SIGNALS FROM MT‘ ALAVA |and visitors feel right at home. addreserd te: Dr. Thredere Samoa’s new system. known “American Samoan Lions Club Vas Deller. co Chicage Trib- as ETV. is more advanced than Meets Tuesday at 7 p.m.” ene. Chicage. Wilimeis.) any on the North American con- tinent or elsewhere in the world. The teaching center uses six Of ha k channels, with signais beamed Out t Poc et? $ from 1,600 - foot Mt. Alava over- ef Calgary Herald ~ looking Pago Pago and its” pic- ‘ ture - posteard bay. ; DO YOU WANT to deduct far more closely related te ede- Classroom TV is not only for Your municipal taxes from your cation than is the property 2 per- Samoan children. When their taxable income? son happens te own. school day ends, adults start In Windsor. the Canadian Fe- The convention's second prop- ——— = helen c ae os cr aan ee ae ae c training programs, t palities ought legates thermk mer tare Used as directed. a 6 llex cmusrartest wecat adult vocational classes. All the able to do so. interest om dwellings cught to iran Gil aden ae at — classrooms in Pago Pago, the The idea makes some sense. be deductible fer imcome tax ie am — : chase price inain town of the seved Avseri. | Bat nobody should be fooled purposes. Why? ‘ Can miaae 2" guava’ tee because K ex contains a triple can Samoan islands. and some into thinking it would mean am What of the man whe skimps combmation of components which kill more hard-to-kill | 50 villoge schools are occupied overall reduction in taxation. and saves to pay off his mort- lawn weeds than any other lawn treatment. Even where lfrom early morning until 10 It would not. It merely would gage as quickly as possible? famous 2.4-D has failed. Killex has Provided outstanding p.m. redistribute the tax load. vn Mona flat for ema tehe mteraP sargrsp conmsomy | . . ¢ ‘© compensate thrift? paying interest om Clover. Bedstraw. Black Medick. Heal-all. Ground Es ee ae ae 2 Se mortgages should entitle ome to Knotweed. Shepherd's Purse. and of course Conaioas picked up in nearby Western come - tax revenue, income tax tex privileges, why net tex griv- and Pleiteine sons ssolectarste ‘which bette in. | ruts woud heve t be iaeese-| tages Ser people paying tatarest Kitex is economical. t00. One ounce of Killex to n le 5 ™ s x one Gepeadeat to 182. A prope sé 6 <a S a ee oe ae oe of water weed-treats 250 sa. ft. of lawn. Yet for all its ‘ rey mate would make the Gieady weer eacy wpward Ghee is tas als sell ley cst Socom Tonga Islands to the south . especially from the Reardiess practice cise Gini. ; i Sometimes. Killex is an Eaccational TV is any one | WesG Ciecean asy eas at jorge Tene manionged ee ee pg te ge ah least result in a much higher ses ‘houses frequently financed s, m m gram that is helping Samoa's proportion of income revenue by the state in the first place? Mt's Canadian...it’s quality ion from the ifth century to the Some inte the education pot. ought te heve tax privileges de- mh j the whole. this would be a ied the rest of the home - ewn- Bence of Matters of enormous local 80d thing. Certainly, income is ing populstion. THE SHERWIN WILLIAMS CO. pride, along with ETV, are the ; CANADA LIMITED men. new jet airport, an improved ° ad h hai i - 7 Rarbor at Page Pago. tm ant | HOFt-Circuit For The Chair a | coconut processing plants, al ar 2 | eontainer factory, public _utilit- = : ies. and a modern hotel financ- 4 pili that deals » nearly fatal legend that the death penalty ed_by the Samoans themselves. blow to the death penalty im acts as a deterrest. am arge- “FLAG FLYING HIGHER™ New York State has passed both ment for which there is me sup- Clover Farm Stor Employment has reached 19° houses in the legislature and is porting evidence es ie One ant Someta when ai Reverthetees, Ge Sart Gut Ge : 9 ler for his signature. votes. > 4 hte islanders lived hand fo Sait On Ut an aaa a bill was peserd st of amid the "Across the island” mouth. Their main income came courage Canadian abolitionists. atmosphere of crime sud viel from c ence that pervades New York m copra. — It passed the state Senate bY (iy should provide i “The flag is flying higher and 4 lopsided 47 to nine vote and a _—. more proudly these days over ~ the Assembly by 78 to 67. example enlightened lerrsie : the only US. possession south : tiee whee the capital punish ‘ 6 The bill retains capital punish- mont tesue commstefere the ee Lae int Geka” | Halifax Seed Co. (P-EL.) Ltd FUNFAIR WILL STAY ice officer is killed in the line of ‘ : meter ' 7 cane ix dnt = =. or when convicts a a Snes oe marathem 4 : ‘6. ta at least J \ sentence commit murder Argentma miles long. fae, 7 will remain a permanent attrac- prison or during escape the lee gest swimming rece 72 Queen Street Dial 48313 ‘ ee fair ends. These exceptions remforce Ge regularly erkeduied t ' ? ee eee