Maxims 'ef a Mere Man A: wet! as non etusesddisoretileeb apsuddwis. Covers Prince Edward Island. Like The Dow IIICI I '5 lebiscite To Determine ohool Unit That a plebiscite will be held at . early te to determine ture of lchool Unit No. 1 was nnuncod la the Legislature yes- may by Hon. Keir Clark. Min- ster of Education. The Minister . ads the statement in the course . his speech in the Draft Ad- ress. The questions which will be ask- . on the ballot will be: 1. Do you ant School Unit Number One nken up?...Yes...No...Sec- mi Qusiitlon if the Unit is con- lflIlP(l. money may be voted: (is) s at present by the Trustees with he approval of the Minister of .rliii-ation OR (b) By annual or p('('ial school meeting as provid- fl t'lSell'l1el"E in the Act. Do you 'lSll restoration of annual or t-rial school meetings for the nit nistrict. . .Yes. . . No. . . . ln summing up his reasons for 310 llid: No. 1 Issue llllklnl ihie move. the Minister "The system of the larger unit of school adminisketlon has found great favour elsewhere. not any in this nation. but in the United States of America as well. In this arovince is non was enacted provide or uniform valuations in certain school districts in 1940 Ind subsequently further legisla- tioa providedfor the setting up of larger units of school administ at too in me. What is now known as School Unit No. 1 was formed on December 9th of the same year. "It was hoped that this Unit would serve as a beginning. of the larger unit system in this province and that other districts would follow with the advantages to edu- cation which have been found Continued on Page 15. C01 5 WN. CANADA. I TIUTNAY. IIIIUARY 11. 1056 um: DEAD. 12 INJURED WHEN FIRE SECTION or MONTREAL APARTMENT otooit White Paper Is Tabled UK. Air Defence Said Effective ' By DAVE MASO LONDON (AP)--Britain as "an- effective sir f f against what any potential enemy is at present able to brin against us.” the gov- ernment sad in a white paper w . . Scottish Recl Has Fortune EDl.NBURGH tAPi-"The dark fly of Canimo" will never iaim the fortune in cash she i lying idle in Canadian banks r 10 years. She is dead. And in death she attracted the inclinlit she shunned in life. his hanks scattered through an.-ids drew attention, to her "t-rinesday by publicly announc- 51 plans for transferring the in- l'lllE cash - 5270.000 - to the rink of Canada for safe-keeping iii she wanted it. Inquiries disclosed Mrs. Mar- aret L. Maltland-Tennent. 95.! as buried two weeks ago in. cret beneath the lawn of her, ammo House mansion. four ilcs from here. where she had tell as a recluse for 36 years. i EFT T0 s0N What will become of the niiey? licr will recorried in Edin- tlTl.ZlliS register house and made April. 1945. bequeathed her en- li't7 estate to her 57-year-old son 9l'('lYRl. it cut out her elder son whorl .said to be living in Lol iigeics. . Unticr Scots law. Robert can llll My t-liiim to a quarter of lw iimimiiiic estate such as cash llfl iiii'iiiiiIre. The cash now is lying in Can- iiian banks at Victoria, Van- miior. Toronto. Montreal and ii('lW(' City. llrs. Maitland-Tenncnt became ltivuiii as the "dark lady of t:iiiitnii" after she shut herself nfi from the world following the first World War. Mi outsiders knew exactly why. not st-1 BARRICADED 'llw- llilllsi and grounds of her t.--Me were guarded by barbed ii” ""'"'i'1-'- nadlooked gates and a nick nr flerca dogs. The house hmi iiciihrr telephone nor door- hrl more were no servants. M i--- lrlckcfl up on the grounds "Vii '"iirivaie VFOPCFW. no ad- n: mm. by order." liiu-ii she went out. It usually lira: lll1fl(il'-COVCl' of darkness in l W” atiutimcd with blinds and fl" "Ii in Percival who lived Canadian Cruiser 9uebec At Durban allli IHSAN. iReuters)-The Roy- ! llnlldlun Navy cruiser Quebec allllflll at this South Africa port wincstlay on training cruise. SN-i nt. Edward William Finch- jl'jlfiSl mild a courtesy call on ihjlllll Richard Carte soon after LSN Lliip docked. 4 I Coming Events! ..., G 1 hell i':IfllRl'l)tTrB):l&).Cenu-.l mmny , VOA vernni:1cii;l3:il'd;lIel: 117:3, plmsoolal. "C"”kl"0iE Plrty. New London ”h”"'- "idly evening. Feb. ill. u:DIncc st. Andrew's Hall. Mt. Wm Thursdays Feb. l'I.-C.Y.0, .:or.i.:3'.&":..:.". his -' 1'"- Tkursld evening. .o”3snce Ll Kmmllustioo l..all. Rollie Ile- "D0I't' Auctlse 2.-.-;...'-u-. U0 " hm Us esaouninu cm ''.!--.a as ”""'i IPHVII, Oarioad gred is':a;gi.3"s.i".-.-n N" Gk; 'g II: M. "shuns creases i..':.'i.:r..-is--W-E it'...””"'' -' ' I '" re..- lwith her. She always wore black .large dark marten pelts was 330 use Dies; In Canada clothes and a black veil. Her dlsinherlted son Robert vlalted Cammo House last year but couldn't get past the barbed wire fence and dogs. Five years ago. the treasury brought an action under the ex- change control regulations to re- cover her dollar fortune in North America but the banks refused to surrender the money. Mrs. Maitland-Tennent inherited a fortune from her father who was a sheep farmer in New Zea- land. She married David Bennet Clark. a bank toilet. in 1887. but the marriage was dissolved in 1910 and she again adopted her maiden name. Fur Prices Firm. Bidding Active At Edmonton EDMONTON. (OP) 7- Prices were firm and sales good as a re- sult of active bidding at the mid- winter sale of Edmonton Fur Auc- tion Salee Lid. W j -' ...-. Buyers showed some interest in lynx pelts for the first time in years. About 800 pelts were offer- ed and a top price of 119.25 was bid. Large and medium pelts brought 512 to 315. The price range for large and to :37. highest in two years. Extra large and large light brought :14 :20. , , A total of 110,000 squirrel skins were offered and lots averaged 70 cents with a few selected pelts bringing 90 cents to 81. Extra large and large muskrat brought 81.50 to 31.76 and damag- ed and early caught 60 to 65 cents. A total of 6.000 skins were offered. Extra large and large wild mink sold for 884 to 840 and mediums and smalls went for 821 to I30- Defentls City School Board From Exlravagance Charge. strong criticism of a City Coun- cil member who made a state- ment at the last meeting of the Council. was heard from Dr. W. J, P. Maclltiillan when he rose to speak on the Draft Address in the In stature yesterday afternoon. was referring. he said. to the press of February 15 where one of the Councillors was quot- 'ed as saying "be bad very little, faith in the City School Board in view of the Board's outrageous expenditure in the past." "I have been on the School Board for many ears." said Dr. ing enough money. 0' "."i.””"d my u reepona u -1 lag of the Queen .tEIu'lottO High? School. It was badLv needed and is now a credit to the City." speaker took exception to a release". as he termed it. reg; E E E 3 V night. The RAE striking force to parry raiders at night wasidescrlbed as "better than anyone class in tho world." The white paper. issued follow- ing sharp Labor criticism of Brit- airlit'1s military aircraft program, sa : "The view that the services are equipped with obsolete aircraft dat- ing from the last war is totally in- correct." DEVELOP NEW TYPE! The report said Britain .was "de- veloping new types of bombers. fighters and naval aircraft to deal with the expected future armament of any potential enemy." The newest RAF fig tar. equip- ped with four 30-millimetre cannon, can deliver lo times as much high explosive a second as the Russian MIG fighter. the white paper said. The MiG came into prominence during the Korean War when it was used by Communist Chinese and North Korean pilots. some opposition critics had sin- gled out the Hunter jet fighter plane which was found to stallout when its guns were fired. The white paper referred to "serious development troubles" in the Hunter. but said work is pro- ceeding on the plane and that it compares favorably "with any fighter in the world." SWIFT "DISAPPOINTING" But tests on another jet fighter. 919... 3W."l.-. weft. "il15.!I3Win”98 Reserve Decision On Closing Lines MONCTON (CP) -- The federal the report said. adding that three models. the Mark I. 11. and III, "cannot be brought to an accept- able operatlonal standard." Britain has been in a period be- tween developmeni of aircraft pro- totypes and delivery of fully tested models. On this point. the white paper said: "Development and not productlo is the difficult stage in the suppl of military aircraft. It is bound to be lengthy." The white paper said the next step in buttresaing Britain's air might will be to introduce alr-to- air guided weapons. Production orders have already been placed for one type of guided weapon, the report said. Britain has a guided weapons testing ground in Australia and pending develop- ment of her own models has re- ceived an disclosed quantity from the United states. Cold. Exposure Caused Death of Small Boy posure caused the death of 2Vs- year-old Richard Guibeau. an hu- topsy report stated Wednesday. and the end came officially to the tragedy thaf brought hundreds of nstlghbors out in a search for the to . The autopsy report was made by Dr. Rosario Foutaine. provincial medico-legal expert. The inquest will be held today. Police said a 24-year-old man has been freed of susplcldria Blchardls death. am I The youngsters body was found in snowy wastes on the northern outskirts of the city Tuesday. more than at hours after he he disap- peared from the home of his par- ents. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Guibeau. MONTREAL (CP)-Cold and ax- Y Drew Expected Bock Today In E Commons Seat OTTAWA (CPi - George Drew. declaring himself fit, said Wednesday he is going back today to his Commons job of opposition leader and expectii to be on hand every day from now on. The 60-year-old chief of the Progressive Conservative party. out of action since meningitis hit him last Nov. 1 ll, said to reporters: "I feel as good as I look- a little better. I guess." But he said he expects to take things somewhat easy in the Commons for a while. I Home On Edward Street is Gutted By Fire Last Night Mrs. George I. MacLeod. an aged lady living alone at as Ed- ward street was rendered tempor- arily homeless when a fire which started at 7.15 last evening caused her hurried removal and com- pletedly gutted her residence. Bome of the furniture was saved. Mrs. MacLeod. who is hard of hearing. was not conscious of the fire until much headway had been gained. and then ran into difficulties in dialling the Fire Hall. The operator at central put the call through for her after slight delay. just as a neighbour put in a similar call. Mrs. Macbeod was carried from Voices Strong Criticism Of Railway Application the . "We are dealing with transportation facilities of Province. regardless of what the management of the Canadian Na- tional Railways call us." said l-lon. B. Earle MacDonald. Min- later of Health and Welfare, in commenting on the C.N.R. ap- plication before the Board of Transport Commissioners for an order to authorize the discontinu- once of the present local railway passenger service on its Island division for eight months of the car. A former employee of the Rail- way, Mr. MacDonald expressed strong opposition to the applica- tion in the course of his re- marks on the Draft Address. "We T he maintained. "still one ten Provinces of Canada an... of the a 1 performed ger service on this Division is entirely by mixed trains carrying freight. in effect the passenger service on the lit- land Division. for the past 25 years has been nothing more than a passenger coach or at times two. on the rear of a freight train. Yet people who travelled on the trains were forced to pay the same fare rats in this Pro- vince as they do in other pro- vinces of Canada and us with the slow freight travel speed. why Contlnued on Page ii Col 1 other province. The railway was - -- bullt and is supposed to be main- fhalned as a nervica for iilm” till MacDon if asked. way sp licstlon refer to? cause te applicants admit in Section 1 of the applio i the the present local railway passen board of transport reserved decision here Tuesday on a Canadian National Railway ap- pllcatlon to discontinue operations on a branch line between Pettico- diac and Elgln in Albert county Hearing of a second application to end CNR service between Al- bcrt and Hillsboro resumes today as the board enters its third day of sessions here. The commissioners were told by railway spokesmen that high ex- penses and low revenues were he- hind the request to curtail the oper, ailons. Mlllan. "but I say that the cost of ignorance is higher." He went on to show that there are a mil- lion juveniles brought before the courts in theiUnited States each year. "some may say it couldn't happen here. but let us neglect our schools and our churches and we will soon see how quickly it Continued on Page I Col 4 Dr. w. 1. Lsteorsnnn To Ask Boost In Tariffs On. Fruits And Vegetables M1'AWA(0P)-Thehaadlnceharvsniiifkidt-eel tablesrou Droduits eerllsstbu and LONDON (Reuters)-The gov- ernment a n n o u n c e d Wednes- day that Britain pianl to go ahead with production of a new Comet Jet fleet for its airlines. The Comets will be improved. stronger and safer versions of the pioneer first models which will be scrap- ped. Plans for putting the Comets. the world's first commercially - op- erated iet airliners. into the air a sin were disclosed in the House o Commons by the minister of transport and civil aviation. John Boyd-Carpenter. He predicted that the results of investigations into two crashes last Year which took 66 lives and re- sulted in the Comets being Irounded will "enable the Comet to be strengthened and made safe for future operations." WILL INCREAEE ORDEM He also revealed that British F6FcTt?TFa?nier Fatally Injured WOODSTOCK, N.B. (CPl-A 00- x;'5'0'ld Wt-Io farmer. Samuel Lee c u re. was killed instantly Tues- dly at Lower Wakefield sovm mile; north of Woodstock when PM! bet ' awn: 3:: d dl;':;!'1mln narlied truck var o the truck had stop pyd to render aid to the operator 0 another truck which had over- "'"'M on Illfinery pavement. Mr. McGuire was standing our Mwvafhd truck and was fatally skidded into it. New Comet Fleet Planned Overseas A i r w I which operated the oral ed I now is consideri... increasing its order of the later-version Comet lls and Comet Ills to hi planes. Al- ready the state-run BOAC has on order 12 Comet ill and five Comet Ills. The RAF also has Comet Ils on order for its transport com- mand. Boyd-Carpenter said. Corporation Com eti Seized Romanian Legofion ls Surrendered By LYNN HEINZERLING BERN. Switzerland (AP)-Three militant Romanian anti - Commu- nists abandoned a dramatic occu- pation of the Romanian legatlon late Wednesday under threat of being blasted out. Blee l-y-eyed and unshaven. they surren cred quietly to Swiss authorities. l-lelmcted police. troops and tank officers were on hand to stage an assault across the snow-covered grounds as the three. between 27 and 35 years old. bolstered their pistols and were hustled away in a Swiss patrol wagon to Bernis prison. l The handsome two - storey stone structure they seized from their Communist homeland's diplomats Monday night as a blow against communism reverted to charge d'affaircs Emerlc Stoffel and his staff. Torn up Communist propa- ganda literature littered the floors. otherwise. police said. the damage from the 42-hour occupatl was when All oncoming one all ht g . Continued on Page 2 Col 4 Speech Leaves Question In Air 0 W 0' ....."''--.':... F-3?? E; 5? 3 lit .-5;-is Dulles Rejects Is nouncgl attack on Formosa." Dul- les sa . "Itrls doubtful that this would serve either the non of peace or the cause of freedom." TRACE! EVENTS lie reviewed the events leading to the mutual defence treaty be- an public, Hon. B. Earle Mscbonaid Sub Sighted Off Florida JACKSONWLLE. Fla. (AP) -- Two coast guardsmen Wednesday reported sighting an unidentified submarine off Fort Pierce, Fla.. but navy planes searching the area failed to find it. Capt. C. L. Murphy, public in- formation offlcer at the Key West naval base. said eastern sea frontier headquarters is New York indicated that if the object was a submarh... it was not an American one. The coast guard station at Fort Pierce said two men in a 40-foot boat approached close to the ob- ject and reported "it was defln ltely a submarine." Helen Keller To Meet Churchill LONDON. (Reuters! - Helen Keller. 74-year-old deaf and Mind American educationist will meet Sir Winston Churchill today. she told reporters Wednesday in Lon- don that the Britisb prime minis- ter will receive her in his private room at the House of Commons. Dr. Keller is on s five-month. 40.- 000-mile world tour. the sixth of the burning building by Windsor Brehaut and Earle Stewart is a dosed condition and suffering from shock. She was taken to the Brehaut home next door .and shortly afterward was waited upon by Mr. Gordon MacDonald and Mrs. Evelyn Cudmore represent- ing the Red Cross with an offer of any immediate assistance re- qulred. Further overtures will be made this morning by the Red Cross in this respect. Later Mrs. Macbeod accepted the kind offer of Mr. and Mrs. Sutherland Macbean to accept the hospitality of their home until arrangements could be made for her future. interest On . SLH A. Loans '3--t Slightly OTTAWA. (CP)--Maximum in- forest rate on insured Hans granted under the National ”lous- ing Act will be reduced to all per cent from W: . effective today. Works Minister Winters told the Commons Wednesday that the re- duction also will apply to other types of loans under the act. He said the reduced interest rates will apply only to loan ap- plications approved from this mor- ning on. The drop was in keeping with lower long-term interest rates on government securities. ARMY MUST GO , NORTH BAY. Ont. (CF)-City manager T. A. Frsir was in- structed by city councll Wednes- day to find the quickest way to evict the army from Fort chip- pews barracks. short of open war. defence do art ent rents the that ;- iyeer egotlte ct asked the department to buy the property for 5275.000 or vacate. No reply was received. Rubinstein Death Said Bungled Kidnap Attempt By ARTHUR EVERETT NEW YORK (AP) - Multl-mil- lloneire Serge Rubinstein's sensa- tional murder was a bungled un- derworld kidnap job. the district attorney's office said Wednesday. The killers were reported as good as named. However. assistant district at- torney Alexander Herman said no immediate arrests are in sight. He told reporters: "it now looks like an under- world job. commonly known as a snatch. . .s kidnap for ransom that went wrong.” A thin. pint-sized llmouslne-for- hire driver. Herman scholz, 50. may have provided the key to un- lock the most baffling New York murder mystery in a decade. He. himself. was like a figure out of a wild paperback whodunit. He said he hatched a kidnsp-for- "Airlift Work Maritime Central Airways A mammoth air-lift to take materials into the Arctic for the construction of the eastern sec- tion of Dewline. iDHW. distant early warnlngi. which is to be the furtherent north of three ra- der lines designed for the de- fence of the North American con- tlnent. has been assigned Mari- time Central Airways. her lifetime. The mlterllll and supplies will ands' Surrender U.S. forces helped Nationalist that this "created favorable con- ditions" for the drive to liberate ormoea. "Thus the Chinese Communists have linked the coastal positions Accordingly we shall be alert to subsequent Chinese Communist ac- tions. rejecting for ourselves any initiative of warlike deeds." FOE (IUEIIING ' address, delivered to a dinner of the Foreign Policy As- Cbisa evacuate the Tscbea islands. sla. This upheaval which put Marshal to the defence of Formosa . . . f 8. aft" stature will pettlotlcally put iotusatlcnel communism d- " Thu shakeup among the rulers of Rus- Nlkolsl Bulganin in the pi-einler's was "an elemental personal at power' 'but it might also reflect a "basic policy dif- erenoe" . ear the Russian Camnunlst perv and the soviet mverllnont. The distinction between the party and the votnmaet should be kept in In . "The time may come-I be- lieve it will come-when Russians their national security and the welfare of their people. They will be unwilling to have that so- eurlty and that welfare subordin- atisd Is the worldwide ambitions of . . . an audit be re- activated the historic friendship Iourecuntrieendew Firemen gave the death after the outbreak. At least nine of the injured were taken to hospitals. Most of them were hurt in leaps from up- per floors or in attempting slide down knotted bed sheets and blankets. . Morgue officials said four bodies had been brought there. Two were women and one a man. The sex of the fourth had not been established. i There was no immediate idea-i tlflcation of any of the dead. The nine injured were taken to nearby hospitals. There were re- ports that others had been less seriously hurt and trcnicd in nearby buildings. Some of the injured were hurt in leaps from the third and fourth floors of the four-storcy ' "” Others fell when knotted bed sheets parted as the apartment dwellers tried to slide to safety from the 54-apnrtnient building. All the injured viv-re taken to hospitals. Their condition was not known immediately. JUMPED 1'0 STREET One of the injured was a 64- year-old woman. identified as Mrs. Alfred Desjardins. She was said to have jumped four stories to the street. Others reported injured were: Denise Broulllard. 18; Jean Du- part, 26; Mrs. Lorenzo Broulllard. 50; and Mrs. Walter Bonln, 38. The three - alarm fire brought nearby b0 pieces of equipment and 350 firemen from 22 stations. Extra details of lice were called out. The hull ing is near the centre of the city and on one of the busiest east - west thoroughfares near st. Denis street. It is an old residential area. TRAFFIC DIVERTED vllundreds of persons swarmed to the area. but were kept a block away by police who roped off all streets. Traffic was diverted to .ransom plan a year or two ago. with the 40-year-old Rubinstein as his target. He shared his plans with unidentified mobsters. They were believed to have carried it off without him. although he may have been an advance finger man. Scholr. was held in 525.000 bond as a material witness after Her- man said in court: "We feel his life could be in jeopardy from the underworld." The Russian-born Rubinstein was strangled Jan. 27 in the ornate bedroom of his Fifth avenue man- sion. A butler found his pyjama- clad body truued with cord from a venetian blind and gagged with extra-wide adhesive tape. Blmilsr cord and tape were found in scholz's home in Queens. detec- tives said. Rublnsteln's colorful life as I I- Conilnued on Page 1 Col I ' Assigned To Ibe flown into northern distribu- tion points. New large aircraft have been purchased. some which are four-motored Brlilsh Yoi-ks. The assignment will take two or three years to accomplish. The movement of supplies Ind equipment awaits the comple- tlon of an aerial survey which ll to start in a week or two. The construction I'll til! 11"" lines. of which Dewline is one. wlll require work in a country about which very little is known. that is inhabited only by Eski- mos and where the normal mode of travel is by dog sled. When questioned regarding this alt--lift contract announcement re- cently made in Tomato. officllil of Sas atooa .. SWEEPS MONTREAL. (CP)-Nina persons died Wetheeday night and a dozen or more injured in a fire that need through the upper floors of the four-storey. 52-apertrnent Salaberry apartments on Sherbrooke street out toll more than three hours They said their search of the building, with the fire then well under control. had established the count at nine and they thought no more bodies would be found. side streets. A heavy wet snow was falling ae firemen fought the fire from the m top of the building and a fourth- floor balcony. it was more than an hour after they arrived that they were able to get inside. on the fourth floor. Holes were chopped in the roof and hose lines poured streams into the heart of the fire. SLIDE T0 SAFETY .. Many of the residents of the building escaped by knottlng bed . sheets together and sliding to the ground. Crowds in the street shortly af- ter the fire broke out said they could hear trap ed persons sueaming frantic . Roland Mongraiu. who lives op- posite the apartment building. said he saw a woman fall from the third floor. and about the same time firemen carried an aged woman in the street. As the dead were bro t out. last rites were van by be fire department chap aln. Parliament At A Glance D! THE CANADIAN PRES! Wednesde 3 Works Minister Winters an- nounced maximum lnterest rate on insured loans under NHA will be reduced to We pt cent. effective today. 3- . I-rrldso (CCF-Kootenay West) urged a dominion-provincial C0l1f8l'CIlCO Q ICSOIIICM O&lOl'VI- Rdsources Minister Leeage re- iocted the pro al. sayin the provinces must to such E com - ference. '- Mervyn Johnson (CCF-Kinderr lay) accused A ' ' Minlglg Gardiner of "Joe and mo.- ill "delaying" tlll bawan dam. Senator Waltz Asaltine said pre- mature f t o( wag, bum, arn crops hurt sales of Canadian wheat abroad. Thursday The Commons continues debate on imml iun. gtq pg. sumes the throne speech debate. flE lNC. is ALWAYS BETTERW1 foe Fmpmcs 5 5 TORONTO (GP -Minimum and maximum tom atalres: Dawson Vancouvi .. Edmonton . Cal ary Regina . . . Winnipeg . Toronto .. Ottawa . S152?-B:'.8u32u35.S2 I8IIII82I!i83UB3I8I8g HALIFAX (CP)-The Dominion eastward and la ' ?.'..Z"'s.lli?l3.l"'& 97'3...i'L.'he'."""' y-gyms; -mu, rt:"oiv-.v3lo'-ii.- Fioo weather h for-ecu: i is. Rescued Airmen -3;; or the -"gm--. Loses Right Leg n."'.'.”'..5i.'i'-'..".' l'.'.'i'4'i.".'i1'.-1 WlNNlPEG (CR)-A sad post 1: m script was added Wednesday I: a dramati northern rescue. -cm. riiomu L. Pittmln. to st. John ri , year-old United States Air Force Chaleur: officer found alive Tuesday la a chute h ; ausgg eoowdrlft three deya after a sti-sic-lei bomber uplcdcd as.oco feet er northern saslistcnewae. 3 04 I- ran iii. inn: partof iii-i-ism ”""'"'3 ex arnputa . 1 ha" almn Tbelegwss smashedllrhe ln”m..-.&'.1. blast. Re parlchuted to safely 3., and landed on the broken limb. uteslatamanlcuslcwa. Doctors saI the officer wt h'Inrfsestcdeuu1.u., "surprisingly good eclldt " all It Ill") 5 - 'r -w.-g--:3,--p-q... i i l