BREAD AND WATER
as been considerable in~!§^a^J on expressed in your paper iwT *? ,! y regarding a sentence of' 10 aays bread and water on a conscientious objector who refused on three occasions to carry out a prison reguuon. in my opinion, this is the most numane and sensible punishment r!?. a L C v?i given to any man. and pi ooaoly the most effective. There is no physical inconvenicncc whatever in 10 days on bread and water. u . n ,,°. ne occasion when I was iloer s talking j n le Southern Alns our party lost all their provisions crossing a flooded river and the onlv thin? we saved was the bread. We lived tor over a week on just bread and water and the bread was already three weeks old. We dried our bread over the fire in kerosene tins. and. aitnough we were doing strenuous mountain climbing everv da v. we were, physically, not a bit worse for u - DEER STALKER.
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Auckland Star, Volume LXXIII, Issue 165, 15 July 1942, Page 4
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162BREAD AND WATER Auckland Star, Volume LXXIII, Issue 165, 15 July 1942, Page 4
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