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The Guardian from London, Greater London, England • 3

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The Guardiani
Location:
London, Greater London, England
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3
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THE MANCHESTER GUARDIAN; FRLDAX. OCTOBER 1, 1943 AIR-RAID DAMAGE IN BERLIN Life among the cannibals of New Guinea FRENCH DEMOCRACY France Is a Democracy. By Louis Levy. Gollancz. Pp.

158. 5s. M. Lew modestly disclaims any pretensions to comparison with M. Andre Siegfried, and his chatty, rambling, not very tough-minded little book is, in one way, very unlike the austere academic studies of M.

Siegfried. But M. Levy is, in another sense, too modest. His political survey of France is, in its way. I comparable, to M.

Siegfried's and it i asserts and asserts plausibly that 1 France has not changed much since CHARIS CROCKETT THE HOUSE IN THE RAIN FOREST Mrs. Crockett is a brilliant anthropologist her study of an unknown tribe in New Guinea is a sound and enduring contribution to anthropology. With 28 illustrations. Ready Thursday. 126 Author of "Indie's Adventure ELAINE SANCEAU PORTUGAL IN QUEST OF PRESTER JOHN The legend of a fabulous Christian priest and king, whose kingdom was believed to lie somewhere in the East, has fascinated European imagination throughout the Middle Ages.

An exciting, colourful tale written with consummate skill. 106 Author of What Matters Most DEMISE ROBINS ESCAPE TO LOVE An absorbing story of the Trevarwill family set against the background of the wild and rugged Cornish coast. Ready Thursday. 8G Author of "Blind Arrows JOY LANGTON SABINA Daily Mail (Philip Page) A novel about the Channel Islands, with fact mingled most skilfully with fiction." Siegfried wrote and, as far as change has been marked, it has been a change to the Left, the spreading of the Republican and Socialist patch of oil over more and more areas, the shrinking of the territory of reaction. This thesis is exemplified again and again in this conducted tour of political France.

The foundations of Republican sentiment and organisation are quite unaltered by the catastrophe all the day-dreaming of English conservative elements is simply day-dreaming. So this little book should be widely read, especially by those intelligent but ill-informed commentators who see France as divided between a dangerously Red urban proletariat and a safe and sound peasantry. There are elements of conflict between town and country in France, but they are not quite what our hankerers after the ancien regime think them to be. M. Levy is a much better current reporter than he is an historian, and his naive party faith enables him to reduce problems to excessively simple terms.

(His account, if so it can be called, of Alsace is a case in point.) But the central part of this book is true and timely. D. W. B. AN INDIVIDUALIST Exploration in the nineteenth cen Books of the Day NEW NOVELS By Harold Brighov.se Braddock's defeat and Colonel Washington are mentioned, but history's saliences are the background to The Forest and the Fort, by Hervey Allen (Heinemann, pp.

310, 10s. Extensively, Salathiel Albine is the hero, intensively Captain Ecuyer, King George's loyal officer though Swiss and republican. Sal marries alter a fashion, but virtually this is a novel without a woman. More may be heard of Sal; in this book he is immature and overshadowed first by his father, excellently discovered by pretended documentation, letters, and a diary, and later by Ecuyer. Mr.

Allen is a poet, bringing a poet's images to his description of the Penn-sylvaman forests. Also, he is a nar-tator with a keen sense of period, notably displayed when Ecuyer rides the whirlwind at Fort Ligomer, quells colonial insubordination, and deals with a Scottish officer, legally correct as a land-grabber, who employs a bland Quaker to sell rifles to Indians. The story tells how Sal as a boy was captured by Indians and by them brougnt up how he escaped, travelled with a missionary, served as batman to Ecuyer during the Indians' siege of Fort Pitt now Pittsburgh, wherefore coal fires in a frontier fort do not surprise, and how he accompanied Ecuyer, wounded but steadfast, on a tour of outpost inspection when a tavern scene vies for favourable mention with Ecuyer's statesmanship. First and last a good yarn, this is a novel politically illuminating. There are three sisters and suggestion seems made in Providence Hall, by Charles Rodda (Hodder and Stoughton, pp.

302, 8s. that this is a novel after Trhekov. True it has, in Cheshire, a country house with a ruined owner, and it has little plot but much good characterisation but essentially it is a discussion novel. It does far more than report topical conversation on current nlTairs. These are real people, not mouthpieces, to whom is added an English-speaking German from a crashed bomber.

Besides, for emotion, there is the girl married to a pilot in Bomber Command and there are, uncommonly well contrived, the emotional effects on an English marriage of the hurricane which swept New England just when Hitler swept into Prague. It has no Captain Shotover, but it has an old butler whose unconscious poetry touches. This novel is warmly recom- HUTCHINSON Cj iPufniAkwil 7.rr? Largest of Book Publishers; Published To-day tury was tending in the direction of opening up Siberia by the Kara Sea route to European shipping and trade It had not gone far when an adventur-! ous Norwegian business man, Jonas Lied, took up the tendency in the years before the last war and ran several expeditions from Europe to the River Yenesei. Nansen went on one of those i voyages (in 1913), but Lied's own interest in the vast and little-known regions he traversed was commercial, not scientific. Because of that, and because the Russian Revolution closed Siberia to his form of exploitation, his story is little known.

Nevertheless, as told now in his autobiography. Return to Happiness, by Jonas Lied (Macmillan. pp. xi 318, it is a good story. He writes well, recapturing with clarity and simplicity a lost age of individualist commercial adventure.

An inHivirfnlic He r. The Latest "BE" Book THE IDLE COUNTRYMAN Illustrated by DENYS WATKINS-PITCHFORD 10s. 6d. Vet The record of a year spent in a remote Midland parish, with occasional excursions, this is one of the most delightful botiks BB has ever written, and it is adorned with some of the artist's loveliest woodcuts. Second impression printing TIME WITH AGIFT OF TEARS CLIFFORD BAX 70s.

6d. net A joy to read intellectual force and a weight of knowledge and experience lyrical and witty a sophisticated historian." Richard Church He has the difficult art of conveying the passage oE time with conviction and pathos has a unity and rhythm which lift it afove the current run of novels." Alan Pryce Jones The Mnriendorf gasworks in Berlin after a recent Bomber Command raid. Two large gasholders have been completely burned out. MISCELLANY SALE OF The Amended SHOP-SOILED GOODS Order and Coupon Values Go As You Please with Verbs The B.C. announcers may be at fault MY FRIEND FLICKA occasionally with their verbs, but at least they err in what was formerly regarded 9s.

vet MARY O'HARA as good company. Gibbon's Decline and Fall has something of a reputation as an English prose model, but there one finds The passage of these mighty armies were rare and perilous events," Traders are reminded that an amending order governing the sale of imperfect and shop-soiled goods came into operation on September 1. The reminder may remove some perplexities which appear to have been created by a case recently heard in one of the local police courts. In this case the Board of Trade took proceedings against a firm lor selling a shop-soiled frock without coupons. The defendant firm was under the impression that it was entitled to sell shop-soiled or old stock at cost price without coupons.

The prosecution submitted that the garment could only be sold "The alliance of the Emperor and the King of Italy are and The conscience of monks and bishops were by C. E. TUNNICLIFFE This charming and moving story of the love of a boy for the horse he had adopted is the best thing I hae read during the past week or two It is a book of grace and distinction. Miss O'Hara's knowledge and love of animals set an authentic stamp of truth on this beautiful book." H. M.

HONG KONG INCIDENT PHYLLIS HARROP Illustrated. 9s. vet Miss Harrop was in Hong Kong during the assault and for a considerable period of the Japanese occupation Then she made a daring and almost miraculous escape. It should be read and it should be remembered." Edward Shanks Not only the truth about Hong Kong's terror, but a great adventure story as well." The Star Compelling this document of the war must be read The Times menaea. None But the Lonely Heart, by Richard Llewellyn (Michael Joseph, pp.

360. 10s. seems written as by a Cockney Damon Runyon. There are choice examples of rhyming slang, but the manner, sustained through a long novel, makes things difficult. Ernie Mutt, too is difficult a pimply-faced youth, idle apprentice, Fun Fair frequenter, whose mother (though he did not know it till the police came) received shop-lifted goods, he drifts into rime too weakly to stir sympathy.

Happily this underworld Arabian -Nights tale has old Henry, humorist, merchant of cigarette-ends, Samaritan, and racy talker less happily it has murder in a sewer, a Chicagoesque gang-master and dance-hall owner in melodramatic triangle with the furl Ada a dance-band conductor, and a conventional police chase by car. How-fver. Ada's compassionate sentiment for Ernie is nicely handled, and the careful rehearsal of a smash-and-grab raid wins marks for plausibility. The storv in novels of occupied Europe becomes standardised. "A German never deserts," therefore if one does desert and his body is found below a cliff he has hvpotheticallv been 7 liailivijr 13 1C- maining in Russia, with Russian citizenship, after the last war he struggled impenitently for years to do business in a business man's purgatory.

It was not till 1931 that he withdrew, defeated, to combine farming in his native Norwegian valley with international aluminium interests in the capitalist world where he was at home. The development of Siberia is proceeding on other lines than his. but justifying, in a way. his youthful imagination. J.

M. BOOKS RECEIVED We have received the following books, From Cambridge University Press ANGLICANISM AND SOUTH INDIA. By Leonard IllWgMJll. Is From James Clarice and Co THE DYNAMIC OF RECONSTRUCTION A Modern Ev.inaeliral Approach to the Problems of To-iay. Hy D.

P. A "5 net. THE REBEL CHURCH. Sermons on Christianity and Social Justice by Representative Preachers In Europe and America 4s fid net INDIA A Plea for Understanding By Dorothy Hosr. a 2s net.

From J. M. Dent and Sons AMERICA AND BRITAIN A 'UTUAL INTRODUCTION By Maurice Colbourne 5s. net From Hearilpv Brothers-FLOWER NURSERY RHYMES By'Ethr' Mary Prlest-mati li (id From Thomas Nelson and Sons STORIES OF GREAT MUSIC By John Hortnn illustrated 3s fid net OPERA TUNES TO REMEMBnJJ By Florence AI. art.

3s 6d net From Oxford ITn1 vprs'tv In the Old Testament can be found such examples as My flesh and my heart aileth and My heart and my flesh crieth and in the New Testament And now abideth faith, hope, and charity." without coupons it the price charged did not exceed 4d. per coupon of its coupon value. Sold in the normal way seven coupons would have had to be Services (Price Control) Act, 1941, or bv a direction made under the Apparel and Textiles Order, 1942. to qualify for the half-coupon rate must be sold at a price not exceeding either (a) one-half of the overriding maximum price appropriate to such a sale or lb) the sum specified for the category under which the goods may be classified, multiplied by the number of coupons which normally would have to be surrendered for the goods Non-utility goods and utility goods for which an overriding maximum price has not been fixed are treated similarly, except that condition a) does not apply. For sales to traders price-limits under b) are reduced bv three-eighths if the seller is a registered trader and bv one-quarter if he is not Onlv second-hand goods can now be sold coupon-free.

The particular sums to be multiplied by the full coupon value of the goods are contained in a schedule, and they varv according to the categories under which the goods are classified. The system works in this way. Take a garment for which in an ordinary sale the buyer must surrender seven coupons and which is classified in the schedule as among those goods for which the sum to be multiplied is 6d. or according to the number of coupons the buyer surrenders. If sold for 3s.

6d. times 6d.) the customer need surrender only one and three-quarter coupons (a quarter of the normal number of coupons). If sold for 7s. (seven times Is.) the number of coupons required from the buyer is three and a half, or half the normal number. Poets, perhaps, may claim a special surrendered for the frock.

Sold coupon- Eyre Spottiswoode tree as shop-soiled its price should have been seven times 4d 2s. 4d. Uncertainty about the present position has arisen in this way. The case was heard three weeks after the amending order became operative, but the prosecution was instituted under the unamended order and related to a sale which took place before the amending order became operative. According to the amending order the conditions under which imperfect and shop-soiled goods may now be sold off at reduced coupon rates is as follows BRITISH ECONOMIC INTERESTS IN THE FAR E-iST Bv.

Ouil. 16s net FAMINE Quaker Work in Russ'n. 1921-3 Bv Mirhael A-quith. 2s net IENTENTE A L'EPREUVE Par Rene Ba'baud Is net THE OXFORD WAR ATLAS Vol It. 1 September.

1941. to 1 January 1943 by Jasper Stcmbrdfte 3s net SHAKESPEARE'S SATIRE By Oscar James Campbell a Is 6d. net From Pendoek Press AIR CADET A Supplementary Manual. By Allred Ken- From Pou'tr-r Axsmvitinn nf f.mat nHi.in- murdered hostaces are seized and, not hvpotheticallv. shot.

In First Harvest, from the French of Vladimir Pozner (Heinemann, pp. 161). 8s. the scene is a small village in Normandv. Under orders the Germans, privily aware that the peasant Huber did in fact desert, act as usual, and the point, well made, is that it is not th French but the German spirit whicp is broken.

It is done, so to speak, in pastel shades ironv nicely indeed and lightlv used Gives distinction to this treatment of a theme sadly conventional. Utility goods for which an overriding maximum price has been fixed either by an order made under the Goods and THE COMMON DISEASES OF POULTRY. Bi James Because they believe that deep in every English' man's mind there is a devotion to the country and an appreciation of the past because with these qualities often go a love and understanding of architecture only waiting to be kindled Batsfords (whose history covers a hundred years) first produced their famous popular series on our towns, villages, cathedrals, parish churches, topography and folk-'lore illustrative of the heritage we are fighting to defend, and of the achievements and potentialities that make it worth defending. B. T.

BATSFORD LTD 15 North Audley Street, London, W.i From Rlcn ana Co-van THE MAGIC WATER. By Barbara Webster. 10s 6d net. LORD WOOLTON Manchester Deputation To-day The Minister ot Food (Lord Woolton) is to receive a deputation to-day from the Manchester Food Control Committee, which has expressed its dissatisfaction with the Minister's decision to reprimand a retail trader instead of revoking his licence to trade, as the committee had recommended. The deputation, will consist of Alderman S.

Woollam (the chairman of the committee). Alderman Wright Robinson (the deputv chairman). Mr. F. A.

Robinson, and Mr. ft. H. Adcock (the Town Clerk of Manchester). R.A.F.

FUND Manchester Short of Its Target Though the last two days have shown a better response by Manchester to the appeal for 250,000 for the R.A.F. Benevolent Fund the city is still considerably short of the "target" and a grea increase of interest will be necessary if tie tribute to the nation's airmen is to be paid in full. The ten-shilling notes and guineas have done much to swell the fund, but the larger amounts have not been as plentiful as was hoped. The readers of publication Our Dogs have made a second contribution of 1,500. the cheaue being handed over at the Manchester Town Hall to Air Vice-Marshal R.

Colhshaw yesterday, and members the Manchester Stock Exchangs have given 1,000, but the success of the appeal will depend on an increase in the number of these larger The fund's shop at II, Cross Street is doing well with its sales of H. R. HARMER PHILATELIC AUCTIONEER AND VALUER. 131-137, New Bond Street, London, W.1. MOW.

end OCTOBER 25 Met 36. 1 P-m A BRITISH EMPIRE SALE Comprtslnsr FIRST DAY The Hale BrltUh Empire Collection. oTlerl by order of Or. John Hale, of Cob ham. Surrey, with Rarities and Selections of Cape of Good Hope, Momserrat, Sierra Lecne.

NlsrU. etc SECONO DAY The Noel Bower Collection ot New South WalM fSvrlney Views), oflrred 07 order of fioel Boner. Esq of Brome. Suffolk a OTHER FORTHCOMING AUCTIONS Oct. and 5 The Carvrr Gnrr) Collection 12 tt 13 The Dunnn Grneral Collection ihe Donalds Collection of Iran 18 Jk 10 Vfxt'rn Foreign Eurrjpen BtJnp CatatoQUet, tcxlh Valunt'on.

3d Lot cnt for inspection Postal ftirfi rcrrie tptaal care licence. Milton in "Paradise Lost" has Hill and valley rings." and in his Song of May Morning Hill and dale doth boast thy blessing Dryden has a line in his Hind and Panther Obliged to laws which Prince and Senate gives and Kipling has his much-discussed line in the Recessional The tumult and the shouting dies One could fill Miscellany with examples from Shakespeare, but one or two must suffice. Full fathom five thy father lies Of his bones are coral made," The venom of such looks have lost their quality," "Twenty shadows which shows like grief itself." and "How oft the sight of means to do ill deeds make ill deeds done Spacious Days An authority on dietetics has been telling us that there is no need to develop the middle-age spread." But are we quite sure that the spread of middle age is a thing which ought to be abolished in the great new world Might it not be argued that a spread within reason mav be rather en asset than a liability It gives, surely, an appearance of finding the world a satisfactory place in which to live, an air of modest comfort, even prosperity. And are we not always proverbially more inclined to trust the plump rather than the meagre man He brings with him something reliable at least in appearance he seems to have a stake, if not in the country, at least in the trade or profession to which he belongs. Then again, if we may judge by appearances, the average middle-aged man who has spread seems generally to have no quarrel with the universe on that score.

The very fact that he can no more take a too active part in games and sports makes it easier for him to embroider retrospect his skill at them in youth. The men who get up on barrels and denounce everything and everybody are generally men perhaps men with a spread are wise enough not to attempt what would draw from the heckler You look pretty comfortable, mate." Lost Island The news that the of the little French Pacific island of Clipperton, an outpost 700 miles south-west of the Mexican coast, has disappeared without trace provides yet another strange chapter in the stormy and tragic h. story of this coral "islet of dissension" First discovered by early Spanish explorers, Clipperton was officially annexed by the French ir. 1858 in spite of strong protests from Mexico. A long series of claims and counter-claims fallowed, and it was not until as recently as 1931 that King Victor Emmanuel of Italy, called in to arbitrate, awarded the asland to France Mexico refused to accept the verdict, and to this day 15 anxious to annex La Isla de la Pas.on.' as they call it On the outbreak of the last war in August, 1914.

Mexico had a 25.000,000 FOR THE RED CROSS Still Widening Needs From our London Staff Lord Iliffe, chairman of the Duke of Gloucester's Red Cross and St John Appeal, said in London yesterday that tht total sum raised for the Red Cross and St. John in the tour years of war was In the first year was raised and in the fourth The remarkable increase in the contributions was largely due to tr.t- repatriated prisoners ut war, mny ot whom said privately and in broadcasts that they owed their lives to the parcels sent out bv the fund. General collections had raised altogether 5.598,000, but the largest i came from thi Penny-a-Week Committee. At the beginning of tnt- war thL' T.U.C. asked all its memoers to give a penny a week and recently afned for a weekly twopence.

The sum ot 3,210.000 from other parts of th Empire was less than contributions of tnt last war, but in this war the Dominions had their own Red Cross societies. They h2d also made gitts in kind and helped in many other wavs. The United States had as in the last war a tremendous lot of help indeed. English-speaking people throughout the uorld hsd rallied to th2 Red Cross. The penny-a-week scheme had made remarkable progress.

Agricultural committees made house-to-house collections ir rural districts, while in towns pennies were paid in factories or at home tu collectors. A Red Cross commission has been appointed to China and a commissioner is going out there. We hope to help our Chinese allies in their seventh vear jVJONEV AND BANKING THE LIBERAL REPORT HAVE YOU READ THIS REPORT OF THE LIBERAL MONEY AND BANKING SUB-COMMITTEE PRICE d. THIS AND ALL OL'R OTHER PUBLICATIONS WILL BE SENT TO YOU FOR AN ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION OF ONE GUINEA. WRITE TO-DAY TO Liberal Publication Department 8 Gayfcre Street, Westminster S.W.

i By the Author of "THE HIDDEN TEACHING BEYOND YOGA" PAUL BRUNTON (PH.D.) EAGERLY AWAITED THE WISDOM OF THE OVERSELF The best that India has to Rive our higher philosophy." The Lite M-thar-iia Mysore. The latent book by this noted savant erudite Indian research worker. 21- THE HIDDEN TEACHING BEYOND YOGA Hidden doctrines revealed that have been in existence in Asia since untraceable epochs, originally intended for an intellectual elite 1.000 sold in one week. 21- THE QUEST OF THE OVERSELF The leading Guide to Yoga. 176 THE INNER REALITY (5th thousand! ecs RIDER 47, Princes Gate, S.W.

7 rVDSPaDfTCD (every IAKE) REPAIRS oddments, but the supply of goods is rapidly dwindling. ALL MAKES SOUGHT HIREO IOLO. EXCHAHCED It was thought in R.A.F. quarters that people might consider the fund un HER FRIEND'S RATION BOOKS Mary Alice Roberts (38), Woodford Gardens, Didsbury. was fined a total of 30 at the Manchester City Police Court yesterday for stealing two food iation books and acquiring food by using them and for stealing a clothing-coupon book and making use of the coupons.

Detective Sergeant Emrys Tnppier said the books belonged to a neighbour, Mrs. Gaskell, and were found hidden in a settee in Robertas room. She had also admitted, said the officer, takin' fiom Mrs. Gaskell" necessary view of the Government's CATLING-HADLEYrtPEWRiTER co. 33.

JOHN ALTON STREET Nr. Albert (quirt. Tolephlne OEA S076 MANCHESTER 1 provisions for disabled or killed on service, and the public has noticed CROSSWORD No. 234 of any Army regiment. This is ex-j r.lained by the fact that the R.A F.

'is tnc youngest of the Services and has had only d. few years in which to create a fund, whereas Army regimental funds are the product of decades of history, The losses among the A.F., too. have i been heavy, and the fund exists to relieve the immediate Fnancial worries of dependents that are not covered by I the Government scheme purse containing and two other t-uij-c-. a Key ana a small sum of money. Mr.

Perch rlpfpnriincr ----j Roberts and Mrs. Gasl-Tell "had been I friends for snmf ware snd iAn i pleaded guilty to what he described as I 1. I 7. 8. 1 10.

I 111. 1 12. i 15" 16. 18. 20.

23. 24. a particularly stupid otlence. She was earning 3 10s. a week at a war had a private income of 3 a week left by her father, and had supplemented ACROSS Father with the far reaching shanks (5-4-4).

Modulation SeeMa troop into the bar (7). Yours, perhaps, before signing (4). Gee Auntie gets pinched (5). Sinks (4). Sidney turns his back on May (6).

Last hope of condemned (8). For brain or muscle (8). Perpendicularity (6). May be drawn with kindly intentions (4). This bone seems misnamed when hurt (5).

No better than nod to sightless quadruped (4). Use evil to be deceptive (7). Studio I relate about (7). Pell-mell (6-7). o.

war. Lord lime said, and to give relp on the same scale as we are now giving Russia that is. as much as we can provide We have a list of the tningS Russia desires, and we will not let the question of monev stand in the way. The society is trying to serve prisoners ot war in the East, as in EuroDe. and ncipss a scheme, which must be worked vith the co-operation of the Japanese, will soon be devised.

At lesst 3.000,000 would be needed. As fighting in Europe developed such a com this with dressmaking. Miss Robert would pay back the money and make iuu restitution she could for the coupons. 2j iJL 'is iii iJ i 1 I j. -r IK! at i I i 1 I i -siai i i Ti i i i i i I i i i R.A.F.

CASUALTIES Squadron Leader J. A. Meade. F.C.. who was born in Calcutta and lived at Olton.

Warwickshire, has been killed in action. His name appears R.A.F. Casualty List No. 290. published to-day, which also reports that Acting Squadron Leader F.

H. Bowden, D.F.C. and bar, is missing, believed killed in action. Squadron Leader Bowden's home is at Plymouth. The list states that 177 have lost their lives, 12 are wounded or injured, and 111 are missing.

Of these 115 are second entries giving later information of casualties published in earlier lists. NEW W.A.A.F. DIRECTOR mission as was set up in North Africa would be needed. SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD NO. 233 garrison of thirteen soldiers on Clipperton and about a score of civilians, but by some tragic oversight no supply ship was sent to the outpost for three years and the entire garrison perished of starvation.

Strangely enough, a few of the women civilians survived and were found foraging for food like wild animals when the United States cruiser Yorktown called there in 1917. But for the Great War in Europe this tragedy of the Pacific would have caused a world-wide sensation. As it is. few are aware of the existence of the island the world forgot" PORTA Ready October 4 Traveller from Tokyo JOHN MORRIS The author, who was lecturer in English Literature at the Imperial University in Tokyo, adviser to the Japanese Foreign Office, and the only Englishman not to be interned, gives for the first time a complete picture of Japan at war. 106 net CRESSET PRESS LTD.

Air Chief Commandant Trefusis Forbes has been posted for special duties overseas involving prolonged absence and is relinquishing directorship of the from October 4. She will be succeeded by Group Officer Lady Welsh, wife of Air Marshal Sir William Welsh. Miss Forbes is going first to Canada to study the activities of its women's division and later to other parts of the Empire and elsewhere. Lady Welsh, Whn nrnmftTftl Air CATHEDRAL SERVICES Bressons mt 5 30 Ho'-7 Coaanraloa: it 9 ta Mstici: Holy Dm tea PrUJij li am BMUns mXr duo Hi: tic Friday. HiSn tad IJtaaj aid 9 30 Dfvotloail D.T lor 10 HoIt Cornl amnion (DltSi): ta- txird BUhop of SUn-chMter: 11 i.n-12 SO Dm.

the Lo-d BJbcD of Blackburn. Branca-. Wsst la flat; Anifctn: of nia-j (Bb. 6eriice of lEtocesslon. 1 25 to 1 50 pjn.

A RMO R5f 1STU.E EZRALEECBSK I DOWN 2. An illuminated one is not floodlit (7). 3 He's a great dog on the Continent (4) 4. Nautical diversion (6) 5. Gait before it becomes an animal (4) 6.

Famous last words (4-3). 7. French masterpiece (4, 7) 8. Occupation of Biblical Simon (6). 9.

Leader of the doughboys (6-5). 13. Result of work (5). 14. How you feel in the dark (5).

17 Duenna's tutelage is partly shrewd (6) 19. Enjoys the flesh-pots (7). 21. Taken from poor if I celebrate (7). 22.

Expose (6). 26. Surface of gingerbread 1(4). 27. Cruel hill .4.

TRAIN CHANGES The following alterations in the L.N.ER. train services will be introduced on Monday 9 50 a-m. London iMaryljrbonei-MaiidbMttT fill rease to can at Gorton arid Till arme Manchester ilondoa Boadl 3 2 pja. 3 30 p-m. Lonrtnn Marrlelxce Mivhratp win at OlHtrnr.

6 15 a-m. will lare at 6 11 a.m. and eaU at AabbuOT- 20 a.m. Mancneater-Doccutet vm call at Eadfield 4 ra. Manchester Oodoo BeacD-SheOeid Sunday train vtll fie retimed to depart 20 djo.

and ran 20 minutes later tbrotxchaot to crarrcct at Penlstona wltb tu 3 S3 pja. LXJS, trata bom Bradford. A PRECAUTION Readers about to change the.r address are advised to apply to the Publisher at least 14 days advance for a REMOVAL FORM, the use of which will assist in ensuring supply at the new address. Without this precaution readers may find the Manchester Guardian is not available. AURLfNlDiSiEl I TOYDOfifBRETON.S A SfSf a fei RUBBERP LAIJ 11) A a 1 15 PACKS BRUT POLA IRAN lASgGAMEBAG CilSGMiOA.H 1 YjSA 8KB II i vwiiiiuauuaiii.

is 47 and served in France with F.A.N.Y. during the last war. She joined the A.T.S. in 1938. transferred to the W.A.A.F.

in September. 1939, and was appointed to the newlv created post of Inspector of the WJVA.F. last Lady Welsh, who is a daughter of Mr. W. R.

Dalzell, of Birkenhead, was married in 1922. The Yorkshire Miners' Association has lodged an appeal in the case of the haulage hand who was fined 10s. three weeks ago at Worksop for alleged violent conduct underground. The other miners came out on strike but returned to work on the understanding that branch officials would consider the auestion of appealing against the conviction..

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