. ( -J V EARS SUES OF JULY 10th, i 1891,
B A d K AGOi i I
^irlvUeg^ to; visitors byi ticket idsued In advance -
iromlscuduBly, they secured . 1 i <
mittee Recorded an appllcatlotiiby thesergear ts and constables fOr an Increase iln ratek of pgy/
th e ihlnutes of the | Watch Com * i * *
from 22 candidates foil the apitolnt- ment of. jNitlsance Inspector for th^ borough ! at a salary nf £65 per annum, ! |
Mr. thomas Davies! w^s sehcted, ■ - !■ * ■ # ., #;. . ., .
Dawsod ita present plans for the- converslon; of .certain , housfa in Giles arid ;Grlmshaw street^ i Into- model lodglng-housesl r! ’
Permisklon was given for Mr. ty. ■
Sehemi lighting
j
englnefers | wlslung to submit a ^ for the Imprbveihent of In thej borough was not
considered The quarterly report of D:‘.|J. J.
l1er- * * I A letter from a firm of eleitrical lOCVUlCU UlCthe’.
TH E OLD S T U P ip PRUSSIANISM; By-
I putting down all Nazi successes-to ahptoior strategy, superior bmin power, they put them down to their super- aburioance of machinery, say mamly tanks. 'Where they come up against . equal or nearlv equal might of mechan-
, he goes forward or back, is mqre afraid \ of'what lies behind than what lies to front of him. In other words, his braveiy is to' part mechanical, It is
' to'greater .Jactjthatj—
• forcto, it is Hobson’s choice,' If he ;fails, he is “for it.”, I
shall.be well
deaths were registered as' against hlrt.ha ! ■ !
In apartments I at Heathom-road and working , as a taper lat the Jubilee Mill, met with a bad accid ent on the! 16th. A wl^eei oyer the size bPxIinoit wOrklngl satlsfactorlly,! he'wak kneeling on the| box for the puiroseiof taking down the, shaft when f he flipped Into | the I bolUhg
Wllliarii Thompson.! a yout!g ;man ___
size, 'both hie legs scalded.'! t ' '
School kermons work preached .by 'the Rey. jR. L. Jones (Rector of Slaldburnj and the Rev. G. Flelden. Collections totalled oyer £50.j The bustoriidry) processloiri took' place; Iri the afternoon from Salford Bridge
S Jaiies* Day t.
■;o the top of.Whalley-road, thence ' *nh !■ I i' J ■ I' ' ■ ■
the chdrch.j: #i!
meetlng” jheld on the|l5th: Those- (aklnk cart were Messrs, Wm. Cross,. George I Coleman, Wirij Luker, ,J. L., Bailey, |A. Dandles, R;. Wooler, and -
te a ; idlst
(Jouricillor A. RoberWiI M M ' j Cricket results: Settle 165 for 5),
|!for lithe Ithe
sed
Itlori ved
they Ithe Itied
Radlriam 127. i thero'e R.G.S. f24. ly-fornied club, .captained by .J. Hacking, 41, a tillage! iXKcaptffined by Cawley) 34. ; Hi-
(Jlltheroe 64 (for 9).r TOalley 66, Dou^ant 32. Ldw'Moor (riew-
Brown,!'SteelOnds, Grindleton, 79 years.
I' ' IL '' ■ '
latLbw Moor Church IVE iSERVICEiS. VITAL WORK !AMONG YOUNG.
1 1 ' • ' I I H J i ■ ' i j '■
afraid of death? Tbure ‘were those who) paid they wei;;'rio,t afraid, because death was Inevitable.. .But wje :needed Something nibre. tham ' We must realise, that death „ie opening oflri dpbr Into, a :j'and higher llto. Confidence came when we sfjudied our. past
was altirae In which lone could look back! lipon the path which God had led one. Why were so many .people
triat, was fffile only
had ibrdalned for all creatures:. It vi^
j.the child’s rightful heritage' How much! did we .’
IRD.
Iwell Ihad
IroW Tthe
rom Egth lev. rase verVi
I was as
fren dom buth
blity n '
Ibuld Ivord the
(ouid ' orie: the:
(dult but
feded,' billH
Ut of: hate.;'
|0 to drbn aris- | t yet
.'arid hvbn
Inlty. Iwlng V -the the
r!and and
iHira pane
old
bas’d llbnly
It
atlbri paolo
Itten [who nary
Tson
[Deaths: Thofhas Smftp, Lower- gato,|lron moulder, 3C
' . » years; Jolm. i || , , ! : ;■ *
:nall.vj'welcomed to
hlslnew.pastor- ''oimt Zion Primitive Meth-
ThriReV. James Jackson |was for-.
Fraser, Medical Officer',of !3ealthu • the ibOrough, showed tliat 53
;. 1: hey catl be “ wiped out" once, or even ■ 'Vice, and still come again. Pwple will . it a much better perspective if tastead
fable in Russia. Always the Russians ,' i-e an enigma—to war as'to politics.
ITLER’S plans for an early quest are not. working to;
time-
CARET LORD, con-
d ince, if you will—this housq painter has been nothing I throughout hls -career at the top but thft tool of thiJse wise old. sijoundrels, the Prussian Junkers. Ger- n an philbsophy | has been ; teaching days'Of
iri point of fact his reaching them was dhe partly to unusual; to unparalleled raumstahees, and partly to the last ord in audacity—cheek and impii-
-ven credit !for superlative, bievemess iri reaching his dazzling heights,(while
leal!equipment, Hitler’s hordes are by no means so superior to their. eiiemieSi aft Is often imagined. If the Nazi rank and'file appear to be better than, other' average fighting, men,- put It do™ not ersonal bravery but to the [le-German .soldier, wh .eth .er
State -worship ever since the Hegel, and Hegel: died in 1931 110 years ago. State worship.
of his ”ifs” and ’’buts.” He defined the State as “ that form of reality to which the individual enjoys his !freedoni, pro vided he recognises, believes | to arid wills, what is! common to the! whole.”. In other woids, if: the Stftte:|belleVes In militarism and ithe goose-step, individual must do the same.- Hegel who
so long as it wi__ __
. 'toold their own until the “ back end.” Then Hitler’s number is up. Hitler’s dreams of a swift success, on the lines of that achieved, against a divided Trance, are proving empty.‘'The Russians know they have everything to p lose t and nothing to gato by Hitler’s
■ all, if I -lived myself under some' totali tarian regime I should probabl# prefer the one I was under, the one! knew, to the one some new comer was offer-
enetration into their country; After
being badly and iStmday
Jtng me.. The Russians under Stalin were never the abject slaves the Huns are .to-day under Hitler. They are at least allowed to think. The Hun must K think aloud lest he be heard by the I'ffistapo. Hitler,' .was hoping' the Iteians would look on him as a llber- ! lor and turn on their masters, 'nstead; they look bn him for what he
j S—a Hun. Eventually it may well be ' he other way round. ’The Nazis may- ,: ; um on Hitler. Stalin, has warned
. against the Russian army as final. They will hold him in the eiid. We all hope so. Meanwhile it is up to us to l Wt Hitler as hard as we can. Myself
, hard enough' In .Gei'many. It is all very well hitttoi France, where is wholly French,
aboilt the almost sacred .character of Cterman, particularly Berlin, soil.' In other language, we do not hit them
.:|must admit I am far from satisfied F:hel world that., it must-' not
isatlsfled if the Russians continue, to morality that matters. !
astounding theory that what the State decides upon is morallty^arid the only Putj otherwise. ai
gave to posterity la
too late Oh the world stageitad which wanted to. run the show.” It semd a double - putpose.
htoal traditions of Old England, those wider and wiser conceptions bf freedom
| It challenged the
behind the German menaiiel to world’s peace that misguided idealism
and order which are based, on 'Christian and ' social
which Hitler nof'proclaims National Socllaism.
ecept Hitler’s prellihtoary successes Germ uhd
teachings, and [it placed the
macy was coirect ;as long as it pafa to remain correct. ; Spe believed, in the
dictory terms,; Stwialism being ftn Inter national, not a national, creed. Hence the Germany 'which came after Hegel was as essentially dangerous, hostile and - blatantly unreliable, ^-day.
’These lare contra to be many is ®-day. Germany’s dlplor
;as Hitler’s ai ]
- But I We are damaging militate objec- tlvek,' it I Is said. Perhaps we are. But if wb smash the German civilian moral in Germany the war is over,land those military objectives to France won’t matter. If the war is going to last until 1951; as well it may as a military going
' Germany, I am all for hitting them to ■Germany. By aiming at Moscow, Hitler is out for a spectacular but mlck and paralysing blow , at the BpViet regime. 1
^ for, there are still ten million to folloyr,
' annihilate, the Russian army before he begins tpycrbw, and when the : present ten trillion are adcounted
:
! ,ii-.«tal. Russia Still' has great distances - . ibehtod Moscow.
: 1-daily newspapera :the other day , was telling us to fo ________________
I Chat is if Stalin sticks it. And presum- “ (bly he will stick it before allowing the One of: our loading
Jazi usurper (o mount his own ped- ................
^:as it goes. I. But the inference this .hewspaper intended to convey was wrong. It was'showing how easily the
'.since to these- days mechanised armies rget all about distarices, annihilate distances. -Quite true as far
' the fact that,there is no parallel'to' thoEft countries! with war operations to i,a land like Russia, it is idle-to speak Of
JNazis overran Holland 'and Belgium, Yugb-Slavia and Greece: . Apart from
and carefully- compared qur present state iwlth the steps jye had taken. , [Such was the course .y?hich God-
....ren whom God bent?, , -\'i(hat of those children Who had
care| for those
jrisLbeeri borri? Where would they he in. say, twenty years” tllme, and what i wprild be j the State of their mihds' or their [hearts?
the desires.
If: was -frightfully ! ticularly solfor those — to Whomithose children wou.d look for. Guidance.. They foulfl direct the-- i little feet-to peace, qr to death'iand. ; desttuctlbni.’ in thebry. tob Churcto |
iLi:iportant, par- now living and
welcomed the children into her told- , at hiptlsnil but whoke business [was it; to look ’after thbm iftefwards? I People seemed always to have pre- I suBled that It was the p'ar/son’s! job.,' That was toot so; it was a job for , theilaity. (Everyone tyho
had.beeni [ baptised arid confirmed had made'. voWs to be faithful to God until j d
e q t h . J '|: -j - j jlsPIRIT COUNTS MOST.;
-Would be entrusted;'with .the spirit- j toah welfare of the jihlldrbn on; the ;
drPamed of the d iy When eyery church would have an .organised: body: of voluntary workers who
The preacher went on [to say he;
.children: and par ntsj. The last'.! gerieratibn knew 1 ttle; about ithe*!
my all week they lieededia holiday.. But the
spirit.needed imore;re-( bre'atlon .than th tody, qrid In:thej ■: ask analysis It was 'toq^solrlt whlcal counted.: Children needed sponMrs, tod Sunday school! teaphWs cpuldj
iribke of;; I t ineant hard hut Very ipcessary work. Hitler had stooped:
reproaclj upon anv[! one of us! ) .,, r r
i !"IT’S A. !ERT!! One: thing we qre asjsured: th a i
...Jer and his vil ato°to bei delivered to the loom,! and shame
Wliich Isithelrdue. and.we oursClv^;.
khall 'haye the ritto soiriethlng to^o with It. —Tif®' prime. Minister.
'! V-'t '
any years'togo h | was! a baby In k mother’s armk Someone had Ikdlrected his steps) God forbid that atoone shbuld: cast. ■ ]thavi
i every:, [possible toll, yet not sq
ohilreh’s baptismal roll, [and who: vkduld keep' in to ich with both: i
' Christian-; gospel, a ad, [tobay there; Were iiinumerable people i who -re-, garded Sunday only as ft : holiday.'. Thmr excuse was'toaf aiter-work- ,
-distances to Holland and Belgium to relation to-distances in Russia. 'While mechanical transport has revolution . ised! warfare as understood- say by
' at tqe other end of Russia as he was at the pthet end of Holland or Belgium. Nothing of- the kind; before he has
.HapOleon, it must pot be taken for granted that Hitler can be'as quickly'
■ iProposition from what- it was to Hol- .jland and Belgium. The Russians copies Napoleon when he tells his
, -on, prOvldWg his armies, oyer huge dis- ! tances, with all their essential needs, i including foodstuffs,'. 'Living on the • icountry in Russia, is ft vastly different
'destroy by fire as, they retire, leaving desolation behind. Hitler, however,
. man armies sprawling all over Russia at Christmas must be as big a prospec
- but he was still to the frozen snows of Russia at Christmas. To have his Ger-
. hisnew order ” than the Russians of: tp-day want Hitler’s. “ ,We think of the' rich soils of the East,” wrote Hitler to: his bible “Mein Kampf,”-for there must' be vfon “a native soil for the German
tive pightmare to Hitler as it actually was to Napoleon. Napoleon, too, had a “new order” up,his sleeve, but the Russians of hift day no more wanted
matlqn.” Apparently Hitler is not satis fied i with the “native soil” he has already occupieij In Prance, Belgium, • Holmd; Norway, Denmark, Poland,
toot do all'the workW: 'J?® l lePds befaugmentffl to p^Pl® WhOj
ad the:strength,[that the Psalm,
, ; that! as it may, Matsuoka has decided for the present to “ wait and see.” -He
- Mussolini now plays on the Axis stage, aiid perhaps he is beginning to wonder whether Japan will be anything more than a call-boy if and when Hitler gets going, with his wefi advertised produc tion! known as the “New Order.” Be
. ’Joined up” with the Axis. He must - be Jvell aware what sort of role
:,may revoke when the next hand of : cards is played. '
; HIT-L^’S PRUSSIANISM. ■ ; otherwise recent German hlstbry. He
'! 5®y£NPtofent of old ideas. There -is new in this Germany of (he
:
j-ntoi Reich, whiph is Hitler’s own It is just a continuation of ana
IRC has. not a single new idea to his. (head, but he is uhrivaliea in his
] » credited with innumerable new ideas.
'-ITHERe is stiU considerable miscon-, .c.eption as to what'Hitler repres- cnte' in the German scheme of thmgSj
' ■
i Hitler .is worth. Japan is no friend of Russia,-:but she would rather have Stalin as a neighbour than Hitler, If Hitler controlled Russia, his land hun ger .might stretch as far as Japanese possessions, add that- would be not quite what Matsuoka expectediwhen he
and Greece. He still hankers for more. Meanwhile the value placed on his pact with; Stalin has caused Japan to begin to lyonder exactly what her pact with
CzechpUIovakla, Bulgaria, Rumania,
.people,; “We are on the eve of great events. They certainly are. But those events may be no more successful than were Napoleon’s. Napoleon wanted the job over by September, as Hitler (Joes,
; finished with his army’s travels he will
expected.relief. And he'hasgot.a,game.
be wanting petrol and repairs from : ! somewhere, unless-he-receives Some un-,
to the comparative sense by hitting them blows at the heart, that Is to
; killed are mostly: Frenchmen. ’The' JVazis do not care two hoots about that.
• ‘Concern, and It can he ended to-morrow
“the:day.” It was named jin 1914. It was named a second time in 1939. We must take care that it is riever named again. Once, these Prussiarl Junkers are put down, this time, th'eM must be kept down, whatever the pihcesft necesr sary to hold I them down. ilThey are a band of outlaws whose proper place is jftil. After-1870 Germany stood watch ing. She could not believe that Jtance abd England; hereditary ! enemies, wpuld" come together. .. But. she reckoned without Queen' Victoria’s w deawake son and heir. King Edward the Seventh. For centuries we had been fighting Prance, and we had:stood, by ana watdhed h®i' defealedjby Ger-
the; enigmas which they been, and which they conttoued ^ eyen after the lasf’war and jin he early stages of the presept. ■ :
niany to 1870. Her statesmen la
! i (l am convinced he will fail. But , even if he succeed?, the Russians, ara not down and out. He must
France which Germany (coijld never claim. Germany has nev* “ nm " herself, but has always heeh.“ruji” by her bosses.! BUt Franqe, what ever else she] lost, preserved ■ her pafUamentajry Institutions. ■
But there vyas one' virtue about
Arid so in the early days'of; thft present century Prance ahd England began to ! c()me together, [while thfe Germans Icioked on, powerless to stop if; What they did was to expedite ft naval pro gramme initiated I by the egregious xir- p tz, which promised to 'rival[that!of Britain, the dominant naval! power; Germany was the great militafy -power ip Europe.! But she was [not content with that." She was ambitious to be nbt inferior to Englatid at sga, ’To
------ -"
-.forbu ‘ that; '
nation concerned be large or small. He has the documents, if !nfeces>ar-y, to prove that the Isle of Mari iniends'to mvade the Fatherland. Arid the curi ous thing is that while all tie world Iftughs, the German people b ilieve it :cause their leader ftayft it is so. I ihlnd the Tirpitz rival fibet idea was
thod tc^day, no matter, whejher the
epough at sea, England would not be , a
positlon.to'oppbto' her aggressive
s : That if Germany was powerful
•uriderstand: us. Even the French were nbver out and oiit pro-BrlHsh, What
designs to Europe. Tij-pltz an bottom believed! that befause 'we Brlllish live ori an island we'are isolationists. Our pfople are proverbially pecbllaf people. Continental people neither!'like us nor
A man can be an advanced Radical or a! Socialist without losing Jilft [religion, Nbt, so on the Continent, where those Inclmbd to revolution are materialists to a man. While Hitler bring j in the good old Ger-man ,God from time to time, he has not !a "grain of Ciristianr ity in his make-up, and the way in which he uses God s name [is suflicient evidence of that fact. Thanks to those good old slaves tlje German Professol-s, moral rights are differently, totei-preted on the I other side of the ^ n n e l,' whether in or outside Gerpiafiy, from what they are here. During the:Boer War the average Euriipe'ah saw only the right of the Boer, Republics to do as they pleased ' with' (he | British' residents. ’The. British- had no, rights, for the siMle reason that tpey were British. The; Bper War:' over, oiir statesmen,: now so astonishihgly out standing when- we compare- them with the Lilliputians who have directed the ship of State since 1920, followed sound strategical, principles, i 'They saw
• also, toed ithe line, vniatever else Hitler
has.aimed at he has alwjays been bent On seeing that Germany was not o isolated
in.the.presenpconfllc't. But he
Britain and France came! together, and when his favourite “•Nlcikl” 'began to see through the Kaiser’s antics, Russia
through those Prussian; Junkerft and t proceeded to niake Britftto! masters- of
he' North'. Sea'] and Meditertan'ean.
all the quislings,! the ; twisters and bounders of Europe with hini, but he is: minus the meij of honour, the men of probity. Look where you will you
verlooked the moral side.' Hft has got
can find only the rascalft supporting Hitler.
rpHE APPEASING THE WOLF [ '
from that of any other race under the sun. VMe thev !are totally devoid of
last war proved the I German race to be of a mentality different
' i 'I ' ■ „
hey are adepts to one kind M Iriven- d tlon, the invention of lies. iBut aft this their
itself, so the Gemians soon or late are defeated-to
10 last this Austrian house painter,, sense to-see that [the. same lie. having stupid PrussianiOT. and from not the ele
How does it come| about;? [ They have bmentary grain of common
lying propaganda'.
P^ple’s ideas iaq their beriection of t the tank, has already demonstrated— eliberate lying | tavariablyT defeats
the capacity for invention In the world of mechanism—they can develop other
.country,-but we have riever sought to create a stereotyned yoUth move ment o t .the Fascist pattern.—The President of the Board of Educa tion. !
be found in.: many parts, of the
THE YOUTH MOVEMENT. ’ - ;■ "Zbuth Service squads are now to
they cannot understand is that we can! be liberal-minded without .being up against religion or'becomtog ityeligious. 0:i the Continerjt a Liberal is and mjst be violently antl-cIericalJ But loig ago we in Britain-learnt to agree to differ on fundamentals Uke [religion.
always
old gag: Does the!hen produce! the egg or the egg produdes the hep ?! Hegel was -well aware that he wftsi serving aPibltious masters; and so: he gave them a [philosophy that [would fit to with ffie designs of a Pbwpr which had arrived
iije State is infallible; whatever It does cpnstltutes morality. Here we havie the
it was, the
the
, .. .. - , - , that is Hegel was a preacher Of He believed lin'
freedom f ' Hitler’s Quick-Step [Plans Go Wrong R U S S IA
CIJTHE ROE rMhred, its
,----------------------- - ™ be disbelieved, .though to the latter'event the mischief ■ lay well have; been done. Example?, lereis'one: Doebbels had a brata
iWill cause the fi npurpose, must not .be
epeated,- or
ot, only will If fall but it ’mt lie to
pursued their aggression-r-even to the case! of, the last victim of attack, Russia—with the result td-day that the neutral world: simply laughs when those “documents”' are' trotted out and wonders why the Germans remain fiuchl simpletons. Ever, since the war began the Nazis have reversed-the records of their own and enemy losses in the: air and were still dotog_ so to the air battles with the R.A.P. over France ' after"hostllitles hegan in Russia,' Apparently they are still fools enoqgh to , belleVe’ that the. same, lie will do for all time. Thw must never have i heard of President Ltacoto’s doc trine': that you cannot; fool all the people all the .tjrae. In 1914 the:Prltish people, who- more- than any other nation on earth,'except ( possibly the Americans. Had “grown out of’’ war, and believed there, ;was no human problem: which,could not be settled amicably round a tabto: gave credit, mistaken .credit, , to the German nation generally ,for possessing like sentl^ ments. Hence the British ,were shocked when the [Germans began the whole sale murder of civiUans at sea through the savagery of their submarine crews, and Brltlfth war mentellty was further developed [by German ruthlessness in Belgium,: and by their use of gas. To day that war mentality survives. Noth ing the , Germans do creates surprise. They are the world’s pariahs, and asi pariahs they will go under, be it soon or be it ilate. -The world cannot survive outlawry, and i unless there be a big changfe to German mentality after this; war is over, more and more people will: come round to my view so often ex-' pressed to this column, that nothtoj can be done with .an butlaw race excepi t to exterminate it or reduce Jts numbers'
to run amok. Do I hate the Germans?! Par from it. I have no time fpr that.
hat it will no longer be to a position
were entitled to sympathy.-. Thev did, not care two• hoots about it.- What s they set out to do was' to exploit the
'They! miist be! either killed or cured, or! clvlllftation Is on its last legs. No soonbr was the last war over .than oiir policy of “appeasement” appeared on the horizon.: We were stiu reluctant to believe that the Germans-were-an accursed , race apart. As they are adepts aq o^plsatlon, jhe^ organised sympathy, - Ihey^ Were not L....... concerned as to - Whether or not they
''' '
most' other nations, and to turn that sympathy to their advantage. And they iwere so weU versed to ,aglish and American sentiment that they succeeded even beyond their wildest dreams. [ HJtler knew he had only to denounce the Treaty of Versailles often enough to have' half - the deluded Westerners .supporting him without question.!He had no serious' complaints about'-Yersallles. ■ To him it was a harp on, which he - played with ■
ympathetic chord running - through
game of! bluff l and it deceived demo cracy’s -leadersi wholesale. . Hitler was not the, only one to profit by'the failure of the Great War victors to frame a: peace .policy." Japah had al- eady seen through; them when she lUt her foot Into Manchuria. 'Miisso!-
dexterity; Only when the strings broke dl^ he cease playing. It was a
itol persuaded, himself that if Japan could'get away with it In Manchuria he could! d(J the same in Ethiopia. And he was right.., AH the Western demo
cracies
difficulties of our- easy-gotog* statesmen. Liberalism failed because the men it was dealing ,with were not internation alists: but nationalists, of the deepest dye, who cared about the interests of no country except
shocked.- . Every year iadded to the to pretend to
diddled us both on the Locarno Treaty ana the Kellogg Pact. , The former ( brought Germany into the League of
Germany, true to her bestial character,
vessel carry tog. 16,000 tons of petrol to, the
Only [last -Week we said “ Pass friend, all’s Well” to
discard Gei-mans
s', .well via
loaded-Vichy North Africa.
League as a promoter of peace became the world’s oy-word. Hitler, sat on It and'made hls plans in the comfortable knowledge that nothing would inddee V it to act. After, the Saar episode the
arent America. The Impotence of the
then, to discanl it. , The latter, oute lawtog. |War, was so much;: to conflict with the League Covenant that it fell into disuetude before ,the ink was dry. Germany renounce' War ? Only until the day arrived when she, could take the world by the throat.. With Hitler in the saddle the sands were running out while a complacent British Gov- eriunent looked helplessly on; One day they,- put their trust to the League of Nations, the next to the good inten tions hi Hitler. But the League had signed its own death warrant by per- mitttog Japan: to walk into Manchuria, and ate'
oest.it! was only ft sickly chUd, p thanks to the cruel desertion off its
Nations I to serve her own ends anci
lacked realism then- aft we lack realism to-day. begun
[That is why we,have not yet to
kid-gloves, ____
their own. ■ We those
did was be considerable
But just a? it (s necessary (6 exter minate or reduce to negligible pro portions a plague of. rats, so ft is with' these criminals who overrun. Europe like rats. ' I ’ !'
size of the intended victim. This He got home to all Its nakedness to the people of Germany and to some ex- tentiithe neutrals also believed it. But similar "(jocuraents” were “discovered'' whenever - and wherever;, the' Nazis
ermany:,; was at least ten times the G r Germany, despite the fact that- THE. PALLADIUM, DUCK STREET,
.nV'aded' ‘: to this war had ' already ^ .“planned” with the ehenl'y to “attack”
tove that the fftot copntry the Nazis
Monday; at 6-0 and 8-15. Tuesday Wedn^y, ThnriMay and Friday : atJ-30. .Saturday at 2-15, 6qi and
8-I5. ii.-'-' . ■ ' ■ , PRISON DRAMA,
Msumes the identity of ft deadicrlmtoai, o to obtain
evlden.pe'on a'desperate gang
lus objective a .thrilltog i series of events tacludes his exposure to the convicts as a hated! “copper,” an attempted prison break; a thrffitog gun battle and the eventual apprehension of the malefactors. : ;i '
Mr a intoor crime., i Before he achieves CHILLY H
Columbia’s ‘‘Behind the Door”(starring Boris Karloff will be shown on Monday. ■The picture, which features Roger.
eralded, as -sensational. stories ever fiim^ ■ is
THRILLS, j one '!of' tlie most
been seemingly deftd for ten years, It takes for its basic theme (he question of “frozen sleep”'[and Karloff is seen as a famous scientist who has prepared an underground ICe-chamber where he and four- other human guinesrplgs haye remained to ft state of suspended animation- for q decade.' Chaniitog upon, the;' underground chamber are Roger I^or, a young doctor who has
t Karloff in the story of a scientist who vSayera, presents e , brought. back to life after he. haft
hind prison Gates,” opened yesterday at the Palladium, featuring Brian Don- levy and Jacqueline; Wells in the lead ing roles. Central figure Is Brian Dqn- th ley.v portraying ah investigator from
HriTDfG a new” high to suspense, Columbia’s startling drama, ” Be
e- attorney general’s office, who f bank-robbers: who are serving time
! ■ i aVe and invented “documents” to' '.'I ■!“. [^*“ **•-*-**-**1 ~ ^ ~i~i~i ~mn.i uijK. THE GRAND, YORK STRUe’D..
[Mpndajf,! Tue^aj*/ Ihrirsday atd 'Friday, 7-30.. Wc^esday and gftt-- grday at 6-0 'and 8-l!>. Math ee Wednesday, 2-30, -Saturday, M5,
romantic tale, of a man andia wonan for whom there Was ntf to-moirow. The
TIMLL we meet AGAIN’’ Shi weeknend is-’ the' 'tv this
POIGNANT: romance. . . .
ground' of-a Pacific luxur story tells of the-shipboaru
dbom makes their brief, time together doubly precious, and although he finds a means to escape -with Ms life), he. gjves up hls chance rather than'leave' her. To reveal further details- of the [ot here would detract from the
but a few ihoni vffio is being brought back to Quentin, to .pay the death penilty. Each guards hls secret jealously, wlsn- togto spare the other pato. ; w ? knowledge of their impending
between a girl who'knows-that shi to live and a |nan San
. enfolded .on the screen.
^ sloJY as it is ^
screened aU next week. In the support- tog cast are Brenda Marshall, Clftude
a X ?lyhn-ta the most glorious smeen
DASHING ERROL FLYNN. *?^WK,“ starring .irrol
dventiure of hls, career, w i l ir^
heaffi about Karloff’S researches, and- his fiancee,-Jo Ann Sayers, It is with the return of the. apparently dead scientist .to life ■ thatl. the . picture gathers its thrilltog and shocktag in tensity, for, Karloff embarks on a grim
series of experiments'. The- action ,cul- miqates to a startling series, of events, too sptoe-chUItag to describe.
transport sabotage.
■ . A . VIVID, all-action stoiy, bristling '
totrolled by a,; young and beautiful girl, by
e story is made specially notewortto by the splendid. p^'ormanees 'given* ■
socialite. Is refused a, job by Fay-Wray, Man^eress of the iFederated Biis Lines r^although Paul Gullfoyle, hia friend Md chauffeur,, is fibredias a driver. The youpg socialite transfers to a rival concern, who is !Secretly . engaged to driving Federated .frorh the road, :sufr plclpus of repeated accldente to her vehicles, -Miss'Wray starts a stogle- haruled tovestigatlpn. The adventures befalling the girl to her perilous quest; the BMlstance lateb given her by Lang, and the' successtfli'conclusion to a romance brings thb film to a; thrilltog conclusion. - ■ [■ ' ■ ' “ ' . - l ” Wildcat Bus,’.’ I which was directed
anroutstftnding supporting basF '': ;■. carles; i Lang,--a young-baiikrupt
tory, and J screen hlay written by Lou Lusty. . It tp an
R.KiO. Radio release,
GE/VS OF THQUmT ELEIEN.TS f OF HAPPINESS
not withm us, t o height of station and worldly grandeur wlll as soon add a-'cubit to a man’s stature, as to his happiness.—Sterne; ■ -
of love and service.—Arthur S. Hardy. If the principles of contentment are
i ;
happiness will follow' as [the shadow comes- with ' t o ' sunshine.—TTyon .Edwards: '
other is comparable to thls.r-Tillotson. y Seek happmess' for .Its own sake, and
Interchange of love, bring to earth a foretaste of heaven. They unite terres trial and celestial joys, and crown thenl with blessings infinite.—Mary Baker Ed4y.
Pure hurntfiilty, friendship, home, the ■. • . ' , AUCTION MART
TUESDAY.—A large ishow of 80 cattle before a good attendance. Best
kinds, £24 to '£35 15s. ; best local and Scotch heifers, £45 to ’' £56' 10s.; others, £22 10s. to £40. For best cattle prices were well maintained,’plainer j klnils showed a slower' trade. The
9 cows, £50 to £58 10$.; i other cows, £38 , to £48; ■ plainer
Hansori, Gt. Harwood awarded prizes for dali-y cattle as follows: L B. Dug-
udges,. G. Geldard, BllHngton,' and A.
dale and Son, Ltd., Bashall Eaves; .2, R. Berry, Waddiiigton;
tlte was “ appeased.”
buried. I Hitler went on- with his un restrained rearmament, for the states men of the democracies, stUl in the clouds, persuaded thernselves that he meant well and. that all would come right for the lamb If the wolf’s appe- otherwlse
eraeiltes settlement was dead and duly and Do You Dread
, WOMEN WHP SUFFER P PIESSLY There i$ not a woman anywjiere; married or
fiingle, rich' or poor, over the age'of fbrty, who is hot pcrturlicd at tlie-thought-of the next few years before her. - 1 - ' Every Iwomanifeara'the miseries that often
•flushes,’ nerve attacks, headaches, back pain® and palpitation give ah unmistakable warning. These; sufferings can be avoided. Dr..
develop at this age. .She fears them all the more fori i c i r uncertainty. Often the first sign -is liever recognised at all—an irritability, of temper, a low*8pirited depression which the patient' does not attribute to its true cause until bodily suffering- in the shape ^of hot
' Thousands of . suffering middle-aged women have found Dr. Williams Pink Pills the means to a new lease of life.' Let this tried and trusted blood-builder give you a helping hand too.' All chemists sell Dr. iWilliams brand' Pink Fills,'. Is, 5d. a box (trlpltvse 3s. Si,), including purchase tax,' .
Williams Pink Pills carry-a; woman in the hiost wonderful way throi^n the’ ordeal ’ of the “ forties" without suffering'or danger. This is because these. pills create rich red blood,'and in this way‘ they impart new strength; new vitali^ and strong nerves.* •
classes of stock. Short-date calvers'£42 to £56; later dates, £36 to £48; for ward geld heifers, £17 to £20 10s.; twinters, £15 to £18 10s.; stirks, £11 to £16 each. '
FRIDAY.-tA lighter show of' all !: ROY HAY PLANS Garden
rots to He stored-for winter use. if hot already sowii, should be done during the next weqk or so. The Ministry of Agriculture’ plan allows for -flye rows,
thinnings for the kitchen. These 1 ^ sowings of ten,escape attacks from the. carrot fly wliicfi is more troublesome In late June. If you have ihcire gfound to spare, carrots are a good crop of which: to grow an extra row or-twO. ■ They can be stored and are '.easily transfiprtable n if you want to give a few to a friend or
one foot apart,, on the part set aside for root vegetables. Sow thinly and use the
ihg a few rows of leeks in your seed bed, or, If you did not sow any seeds, there is still time to order plants.. Place your order now, for local supplies may Socin
eighbour during the winter, j LEEKS.—You will probably: fie .grow-
Planted later to [July on ground where early peas have Ijeen.
o orked in accordance with the Ministry
be exhausted. wIn most gardens and on allotments
f Agrlculture’ft] plan, the leeks, are' (
your own leeks', [to prevent the plante becoming! starved in, t o seed-bed lift them , when, toy are about six inches high.' Plant theto out with a trowel on a spare piece of land until their perma-. nent .quarters are vacated by the peas. Fir . this move, jthree inches between each plant'will be sufficient. See that they are firmly plarited and well Iwatered until the roots have begun to 'grow to their new quartera.
In the meantime, if you have raised ■! '
■ TOMATOES.-xWny new’ gardeners make t o mistake of trying to hasten
THE WORK OF THE WEEK. Carrots.—The main sowing of car
Then give a small dose of a tomato fertilizer.! , Later, as the sUcceedtog
h fitild be given to the plants until,toy ithen; ferti:
;rpwth-of-their tomatoes by a izers too, soon.: No stimu
ave formed their first truss of fralts.:
,,!(Pinch!o.iit to .side shoots as [they appear and tie the main stem to its stSke as’growth proceeds. . ■ .!
trusses set, further applicatioiis miy be green: bpt be guided by the tofttruc 1( provided by t o fertilizer makers.
ions
' oil raised mounds may dry out quic! dy. i :f you
decide.to water any of your
crops, always water thoroughlyf-< ori’t W
:i!Be careful not to'let tomatoeft suffer frilm want of water. Man’ows, too, tenich have been planted out of lots, shbuld . [be- watched carefully and watered I If necessary. Those sow i to t o open may not require waterini,so much aft'the'pot-rafeed plants; but- r&nember that marrows and cucumbers
f E ter ifi dribbles. ’ If time is short, it to ap rringly, 'Come back to next eve ring
a:', better- to water,: say, one row s thiroughly than .'to' water three rows
rid finlM the job.. Draw a little dry 1 over the moistened ground teben 1 have fln||5hed watering. This helps' prevrait rapid evaporation.! (
[EIEADEEIS,'QUERIES. I -
•^You can pifil rhubarb’as long as you lilte, prAvided you. do not weaken the plants [too: much. , The : numbei ■. of. sticks each plant can provide for pul- g arid still leave sufficient fo: its:
■ Vhen should I stop pulltog rhub irb?
Owm pPrpose ot building Itself uf for: nefit, year ' Is limited , You must be guided by the, size !and vigour of Vour plmts but a rough working; rule is tb piill only half as many sucks !as the plant produces. Otherwise' you . may we aken[it for next year.
i i .
“Nobodj” and "Our” Loye Affair.” M ckey j and Jiidy , organise - a fiiiftenl swing . band at. the school and enter Paul WHlteman’s radio colnpet:ti'on. Dtomatic moments include that when they fiild ohe of ■ their palsne ir to
death and use t o band money to hift life.wi
il'SUlt
This Is a great plcture 'v all tastes.
oing our! duty [and doing good. i No ou will not'find it;'
seek.for duty, and ' ■ '! !
Happiness is the legitimate fruitage WHALLEY PICTURES; LAUGHS AND THRILLS
There' is little pleasure In. the world HUNmo for ghosts in a mytteri- d that is sincere and true beside that of
s”nie Ghost Breakers-’’ which Is being
roje of [ a radio gossip , commentator, „ : lovely Paulette (Mdard appears
erits the island, and the castle. SOCIETY DRAMA;
“Vtomen! Without Name" whidh is being shown at. the beginning of next' week. Ine story tells of the heart-breaking experieiiqes' of women who lose their pijde, ahd have to fight agalfist Heavy Is tp i regain their own self-refepect ;er suffering for:earlier indiscretioris.
t Man Drew and Robert Page ihare o honours in ' a stirring drama, %
“STRIKE UP THE BAND ’’ ; i V 'first-class -Metrc^Goidwyn-Mayer
nduction, ‘“Strike Up, the Band,”- is “ attraction -. next -week-end, M ckey
R A T I O I V b o o k s
wish to change your retailer or not. Youcan chooto.any retailer , you like, but it is
best.tojregister your wtole fainily at tlic sam'e ‘ shop. iThere is no need to go to the saine shop for everything. ( ’■
; You will have tb register again this time whether you
save bich
’ new Ration Books and ylour new registrations'start on July 28. i [ . h6w [t6 REGISTER ['.! [.[ '. .]!"!
\ He is v e ^ ehoH\of staff and ha^ not j)e time. ■ MEAT, Yellow Book,.pagfe |3;
': National Registration No., youii Ration , Book serial No;, and the name and ! ; address of yoo^ butcher. ' [ .
! Fill in yoni name and address, yoni
for yoiir child if die chUd has [a green Ration Book,. , I , • [
I NdTE.—Jf'rite a targe C Ion the Ycfloie Mfil eounterfoS ichieh you Jill in
BUHER, MARGARiNril AND COOKING. FATS, ’; [ Ye|Iow Book, page 13. j
On the butler and margarine tjonhler-: foil fill in yonr iiaine'imd nddrras, your
National. Registration No., your Ration Boqk serial No.', and die name , . and address ot yoiir retailer. I
i[ NOTE.—DoriciicrUeonlhe counter- i foil for cooking f<as. You do not have to register •separately fm .cooking fats hut tft^ must be 'houghi from the same ‘shop at your butler and ma^arfne.
[ SUGAR AND preserves. .. Yellow Book, page l l ' |
j NatiohalBegistratiOnNo;,yoiq Ration I Book serial No,,, and the name and i address of yonr ietpfler. ^ .,! '
: Fill m yonr naine and address, yonr
' NOTE.—Do not (register for eugaf and preserves .sepafaldy. Thiy musi be hovght frolnihe time shop. !'.:
Fill in the cmnlerfoils yomself, Da iwt aik Ihe retailer la Jo it for you, \ i
|
’ Fill in yonr name and address^ yonr Nationid Registration 'No, ’ -your , Ration Book serial No., and the name and address of your retailer.
BACON AND HAM, ; Yellow Book, page 13.
i. .,;
The counterfoil marked with a large B i mnst be used. Fill in your,name and , address, yoiir National ■
CHEESE, Main Book, page 25. . Child’s Book, page 23.
Registration •
No., yonr Ration Book serial No., and the name and address of your rctailer, . ■ NOTE.— If you are entitled to the ,' special 8 oss. cheese ration do'
NOT.uso ■ this counterfoil. TakeyourRotienBook. to the Food Office bettcem July 7 anj l9. ,
EGGS. If yon have not ^et'rcgistcred for eggs
Batior. Book. (Page 13, Child's Book,).!
do so at once usipgithe counterfoilon,.- the third spare page—
page Hof the old
DO NOT CUT OUT ANY OF THE COUNTERFOILS.'Take the hook to the'retailers concerned [and they will ctit them but.
; :
Make sure you fill; in the names and addressea of yow NEW retoilers; inside the
front.aiid back coycrt'of , the llain Book,'not yonr present,
retailers if yoh are changing. ■ ;i Fill in the name .and address of your ■ present egg retailer in the blank space just below the bottom line on theuiside .
of the back cover of the Main Book.;
Fin in youi^ pivn Uaiftie and address on the reference leaf—r; top section only (Main[Book, page 3). Fill
in.the date of birth: in the bottoih section, if under 18. Do not cut this page out,:^
TH E M I N I S T R Y ' (OF FOOD, , L O N D O N , S .W . l ' ' I
i ■ You mrist register between July 7 and 15[)'If you have not ( tegist?(|:ed by. July 19, you may not get your rations when your i
Yqn will find counterfoils in both the Main Book, page 25 (page 23 in I ! '; Child’s Book) and in the Yellow Book (pages 12 and 13). ■ ii
CUba,,provides3ob, Hope and Pailette Grddard a great deal of fun,-and a' ; fete shocks. This pair are t o stairs In
ous castle on the'-blacik islaid of
creened, this week-end. Bob playft to h soejety girl, who uhexpecteaiy In
t romance, Wl dcat Bus,” with. Fay )^ y - in the prtoblpal role, comes on
UMcrupulous gangsters, to .sabotaging the -pa^nger transport service con
len wilh'gripping,drama ahd a.turbu--
Thursday- as absorbing - entertainment for every fllmgoerl' Disclosing in col ourful detail the methods emffioy^ bv
Elizabeth. Among England’s'heroCs of [the to e ai-e sea fighters, who preV on
sriritog story of “The'&'a Hawk” is' ^Sland in rthe lusty days of ^ e e n
Crtep, Flora Robson ■ Background - olfthe
{he.Spplsh galleons, stripping tl: their rich booty and bringing it h swell England’s dwindling tre Most daring' and fearless of thes'e ( arivateers is G^eoffrey Thorpe, t o role
'igUor.'is plahptog to attack andlelze :He weakened country. To furtherhis flans he sends one of Ms mbstfable
(hat the Spanish slpp she was on was propelled by several hundred galley' t s laves, I all EtogUdunen. Prom Ithat
iimbassador and hift lovely niece Maria (,q E^larm., Maria [scorns ’Thorpejas a i)irate ,and:a tto f - ito lh e returns Her ■
i fi to England as ambassador. Thorpe >}®
ittMks the ship wMch is bringing the to hefi to d also p'otote out
bound together by mutuaf.uhderstand- [g as well as romahtlc tocltoatldn. In
o e on. Maria and Thorpe are alHes, l (cret conclave with the QuCen,* Thorpe
tonsiderable, gold from' to; Spaniard Panama. Before Maria caiTtom 1-that, the Spaniards have learned
utllnes a -plan whereby he can' salvage
If hls plans, Thorpe sets
saH.forlPan- e o-'-^xhere hq falls into t o handsrof
alley slave until he can te returned to 'ipaln,;fqr trial;by the Inquisition
Spanish, and is Impressed las a
f{jll'has_a tnck or two at hls conimand. ton the slave , sMp arrives in Cadiz, •oipe steals a knife from one of the
-The datmtless' sea - hawk, however,
iy Frarik Woodruff imder the produc- son guidance of (3Hff Reid, is from a
d ja. On t o sMp, Thorpe finds to mg^and^*'
plaimed to a
mrrt OI nenenmen’before he cailr lay- Klard of heiich en
way Ufa uuc ouciiuiBriw peiore tne Que n -bUt
when he gets to her he Is knlghte i for h.s great senlce to. England. ;
meiits fiefore the Queenj -but should pot be mlssedJ ao
beuments he is looking for, which [a^mbled for “Escape,” headed'by oles. [Opposite him! joygiy Nwnia
-ards frees himself and. his men from heir chains, and under cover of flight.. bey daringly capture the “Madfe d1 los, and make a.da^ for tojopen
Shea •«•, herself ft fine actress and « » ^ ’VeWtrfamo^.s for to s K VlHainoUs characterisations.! •
: Altogether “Escape” is a flhn,which “ RED j” COMPOSER,
, teerld i for Service! 'with the Red Army, Hls works Include-the opera “-■Thfe LadyMacbeth 'Of Mzensk,"
The ybung Rii^ian' composer, Dmitri; ShostakoVitch, has volun-
the plot of [which Includes ithree murclers. and a -suicide, and ihe score of which has been dfesbrlbed by] some critics as[ equally excltfiig: A coficert version- of the opera was given at (Queen’s Hall, LondOh, In Marlh, 1936. I .. ! i ; . ;■ - . .
hallfed Shostakovit'ch as the revolu tion’s most brilliant muslcaJ genius.
M(ist soviet, music critics.: have king Lane ; mcturnCTURE BALL.
Mbhdfty, Tuesday, Thursday and Fr flay, 7-30. Wtoesday anfl Sate W y ,
Saturday at,2-15,
.ana. 8-15. Matinee j
FRANK JAMES RIDES ON ,NEW TRIUMPHS. *
- polg iant
stars „are,. George-. Brent and -ft erle Oberonv Set ajatast thebriUiaiitl ackt
TO
ec&culariy across the screen, more i an one movie fan h ^ asked himself
. Jam*,’ new technlcdlour 20th Century. '
picture, ended. ,toe puzzle is now answereq to t o satb faction of all con- M “Tfie teturn of i Prank
Ford) brothers, hut fttok was nowhere ' James
^ealre. -Henry Fcnda is starred in the role of Prank James, while-the cast [features Genei Tierney, (Jackie Cooper and Henry Hull.
; I
ffiatjquestlon. Jesse] it will be iemem- cowardly murdered by to
i^ T happened to Frank James ? I Ever .since “Jesse James” rode
THE RIALTO, BLACKBURN.
Blattaee each day at, 2-30. Conlta- nous Monday to Friday from 6 pm. Last complete shote at: 8 p.m. Saturday, 2-30, 6-0 arid M. : ,
DRAJIA IN THE TROPICSj
” , ate. storred ln^“ Seven Sinneh.”' which is the attraction at: the Rialto, Blackburn, this week-end. i I Pilmeii ', agatot ’t o background of the south >
JOHN WAYNE and Marlene DietricH
he role of a cafe singer, who Is de- : ported from Island after, island becaCse ■ men fight oyer her.! She at last finds
seas It Is a stirring drama of life to a ttropical paradise. , Miss Dietrich has
Fhx production now at the King LanB
POPULAR cdiMEDIANS | CO-STARRED.
■ :bb’ however, and
Ktog.PMHp of Spain, fided by EHzabqth’ft traltorouft (Jhnnl-
portrayed by Flynn. , ,:■ ( [ , jTIie fortunes df England are at d low
which is''screamingly funny.: Hls remarkable make-up[as an old man of slghty and h ls : monologue of t o attrajitions' of hiking creates tre mendous laughter. He is'supported iri this [number by his troupe of very pretty Mkers. ’'^.You ou^t to m'ake certah of that” is arlother fiiniiy item sung byMarwKorris. Thatmous 'Obttt I t o Eight i Masterslngeiirsing “The toat of the drkun” and ‘fSom£ whereto; England:” is, sung by Winkle and Iromer and the entire company. Alto^rto^ ^oir are;, strongly advised is watetlnie' tonic.
ltten ■ Harry Korris, Frank Randle! Dan [Young and Bobby Vincent sing “ Oiir; Sergeant Majoh” '”— - gives'' - ' ' ■ "
a -very ■is’
clever, Mklng irumber Frank Rand "le
showing to .packed houses all over the conntre, ”Escapfe’’j is timelyl.. and . topical fora it ,1s.:a [story of- Nazism,'
A”Goldv . yri-Mayer fihnl which-haft! been . outstanding J attraction (next
eek-end to .•'Escape,”-a Metro-
NAZI PERSllcUTIONS, ] attraction
deplced for what it is, cruel, ruthiess, and fib respecter iof| persons whether women or innocent children. | (Those who saw “ The Mortal Stonri'^ and
shorn -pf alj its. pimp, and power,, and
Four;Sonswill not:need to be told Tim ift, more, the reality
showhlOn tosame thenie!'^^^ s^uggests it is a'story, of a daring and ayamatlo: escape from Germany! of-a ylotunpf Nazi persecution andiaudi- enceft ftre shown the: lengths to! wMoh
macl all tb posal ■ An 'extremely fine - cast hasi been
yiotiifiA' But withal (there is a (stroiE' under-oftrrent of huinour, and roifiance Playsj_its^g_art, triumphiiig
over.toeyll
8° to .persecute! their ] ons of to secret polite and dastardly> weapons, at thftir dls-
famoos comedians Harry Korrls and Prank Randle are t o very essemie of fun and their comical antics and patter t will ikeep^ audienceft in a continuous
first half of next week. Those two
troduclng many fair ous stars- wUl be ,Py .special request during, t o
CiGMEWHERE' iR ENGLAiro,” a: t J topical and splenflld comedy) in-
’
employment at. t o Seven Stoners Cafe ’ on the - American [ island ' of Blnl- 1 Komba. ' A naval lieutenant; BrUce '
htol to give her.up. Here: t o story d takes an unusual twist and there
ramatic climax, j “ , i HOME LIFE!, COMEDY, .
grand Paramount comedy-and Brltm marie at that—wUl be screened all iS t - .week. ‘Quiet'Weddmg’!.4oe&nQt rely
QTARRING Margaret Lockwood and Derek Parr,’ “Quiet Wedcto.l a
merely upon a photographic i reproduc tion If a family circle thrown Into the CMtommy turmoil on the day'before t o .wedding of the youngest daughter. The characters have , been built with'
convlctim ; There are unlimited situ- auonS’ both wise and wltW, In dlalo^e and treatment, and'against: to barikT
that’ CEiiries ijocuiBu uiB prooiem or a
ueUghtful and entertaining of co'medles but also ftn unusually happy and trU6 picture .of 'Englhh. lamUy life.'. The ' story[ WM. adapted (.from t o famcEs play of the same name by Esther Mo- Crackeii, which had -such .a.,triurnphSit ' , amd-[ long run to. ithe ’
iroves to be not only one of the, most
Londoir.:and on tourilretneTroylnceb. t^ Desp(te.[ the .almost’ ceaseieBs' waiJ of
[west Ehalof
weddulg, ’ ■ Ihe production ■ was coin- . pleted withlil the budget andfabsolutelv' t on schedUll.- .The l whole icatt 3rd
o .sirens .and the d ro n ^ f eneito . 'Plahte. durtok , t o
makmg'.of, “Quiet echnJeaWereW; worked unceasingly^
sofdlffltult a time. - PracfloEdlv- all- the- company; Uvfed,:'SO- to 'speak)’ton .ffie
[foreseendelays ;that are • toklay com monplace.'- .[Anthony I A sq u ith ,to direotor, .-was - naturally well pleasiid,
tRobert[Taylor wfiojIs'graduatmiri'frem ogether aftfer the day’s shooting, for ro glamour boy ” i to more serllus
a nin through of the schedule for the foUowtog.-'day.. !“ ' :
- U-BOATS ARE FAIUNG,
chant' shipping -since the Intenise N^I campajgn began in March fill far below, tfie totals aimed-:at In the German programme, says the NavM correspondent ,of the ■ “MancheatS Guardian.” Our carrying, capacity:; ■Is hot being reduced fast enough fpr' their purpose.
, The lossej Inflicted on oUr mer j
: Oiir: anti-submarine', measurfes'
halve.gravely affected the' Qermatt plftns lit the'Atlantic. U-boats alre being 'compelled to work ifarthfer and failtherl afield. This mean extra consumption :pf fuel to reach their hunting-grounds and . to : return,
(even to the bases in'"Westem: (France.'- ■'’ I - •
.: .i : | ■',’.
because, not Only did:-he have his cast and crew ftround him all: day,- but t every night (he Was able! ,fo: get them
hare been almost Impossible’'to pSr-'-. ceed, acqordtog to schedule If, t o arttets, and others , had daily to find- ■ d ttteltiWay',,to the,studios rln face .of the
spot, and it was-only because of this co-Kiperation I .that work wasi
able.lto proceed apftce. i Wheixit Is considered' that .tore are nearly forty 'important speakmg rotes In: ’’ Quiet 'W1ddtog,”iit will bet readily imagined that it 'would
ifficulties, m. trahsport and other tm- '
g ghl.ta an uriusual a id Quiet iWedding”
Whltaey becomesittfatuated'wlth her but hls isuperior officers try to force
- i i . - V-/'?. 1941. O iv S i
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