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The Guardian from London, Greater London, England • 6

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The Guardiani
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London, Greater London, England
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6
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6 THE MANCHESTER GUARDIAN, TUESDAY, JULY 9, 1940 Manchester Stage and Screen LOW ON ULSTER AND EIRE MUSIC IN WAR-TIME Halle Society: Subsidy and Extended Programme Ma tmy nnioll Dooms of have been cured! order to do that they had taken a certain amount of risk in giving outside concerts. The loss on these was only 285, while for them the musicians received 2,800, so that the concerts more than justified themselves. It was, he thought, very gratifying that they were able to give no fewer than 42 concerts, quite a normal figure," and next season they hoped to do much better. The resolution was moved by the acting chairman. Mr.

P. M. Oliver, who presided. He said the loss on the season of 714 could not in the circumstances be considered unduly heavy, and was more than counterbalanced by artistic gain. As the society is in the happy position of having accumulated a reserve due to the three preceding successful seasons." said Mr.

Oliver, your committee do not propose to make any call on the guarantors this season, but I would like to add a word of warning that in the event of your committee deciding on the continuation of the concerts any further loss would probably necessitate a call being made next year. It is a risk which, except in the gravest circumstances, should, I think, be gladly accepted by members of the society. To guarantee music in a world such as we know to-day is one of the biggest services to civilisation." Future Concert Programme Discussing the future, he revealed that two tentative suggestions were under consideration one, to repeat the series of twenty Sunday afternoon concerts in the Odeon Theatre the other to hold, in alternate weeks, a series of ten fortnightly Sunday afternoon concerts in the Odeon and a series of ten fortnightly evening concerts in the Free Trade Hall on Thursday, Friday, or Saturday. One of the advantages of The action of the Government in putting a sum believed to be 50.000 at the disposal of the Council for the Encouragement of Music and Art in War-time was described yesterday by Mr. R.

J. Forbes, principal of the Manchester College. of Music, speaking at the forty-first annual meeting of the Halle Concerts Society in the Memorial Hall, Manchester, as the most striking and significant thing which has occurr3d in the history of music in England." The Government had suddenly realised that the best music, brought to the people, could bring refreshment and relief to tired workers and fortitude and stimulation to the flagging spirit. (Applause.) The council, the body which had taken over the original work of the Pilgrim Trust which had given 25,000 for the provision of music in war-time. had given a subsidy up to a limit of 1.000 to the Halle Society for concerts in industrial areas which would otherwise not be reached by the Halle Orchestra.

We are hoping," said Mr. Forbes, "to have at least ten concerts on that basis in the immediate future, before the ordinary Halle season begins. That will increase the employment of the orchestra considerably, and there is no reason to suppose that this subsidy will be the limit of what we may expect. We are hoping that this will be not only merely a war-time measure but the beginning of a new era for music in this country." (The subsidy of 50,000 for music and art is, it is understood, the Government's response to the increase by another 25,000 of the original gift of the Pilgrim Trust from other friends of the arts.) A Good Season Mr. Forbes, who was seconding the adoption of the report and statement of arcounts.

had earlier described the result of the season's work as extremely satisfactory in view of the difficult conditions. It was to be remembered that the committee's duty was not only to provide twenty concerts for the public of Manchester, but that they had the ider responsibility of keeping in existence one of the finest orchestras in Europe, and one which might possibly in a short time be one of the oldest. The only way to keep it in existence was by finding work for its members. In IRISH ARGUMENT arrangement with the Evening In Brief the second proposition was. he said, that on alternate weeks it would enable Sunday concerts to be held in neigh bouring towns where the accommodation for weekday concerts was limited.

The report and statement were approved, and Messrs. R. J. Forbes, C. J.

E. Hall, and R. Ollerenshaw were re-elected members of the executive. Dr. Malcolm Sargent, the conductor, said that war had made people more sensitive to the lovelinesses of life, and the reception music had had was extraordinary.

For courageous conduct in rescuing a two-year-old ohild from a house which was on fire. George Goulding (25), of Ariel Street. Pendleton, and Edward Gregson (33). of Osborne Street, Penaleton. were each awarded 5 by Salford Watch Committee yesterday.

Goulding attempted to enter by the kitchen but was forced back by the heat and flames. Gregson succeeded in entering and rescued the child. The children of the Actors' Orphanage are to be evacuated to Los Angeles as soon as steamship accommodation is available and the usual formalities are completed. At the committee's suggestion, members of the English colony in Hollywood formed a committee with Dame May Whitty as chairman, and it has made the necessary arrangements. To comply with regulations, Douglas Fairbanks, as an American citizen, cabled the American Embassy offering to guarantee that the children should not be a charge on the State during their residence in the United States.

The BBC. is considering the possibility of an alternative to the tick-tock interval signal, which is disliked by many listeners. No decision has yet been reached. Regimental Sergeant Major James Henry Roach (36). R.A was committed for trial by the Yeovil county magistrates on a charge of wilfully murdering his commanding officer.

Major Francis John Felix Graham (35), of Westerham, Kent, by shooting him with a revolver on June 19 at Stoke-under-Ham, near Yeovil. Charged with having attempted to take out of the United Kingdom banknotes to the value of 1,500 without permission of the Treasury, Mrs. Maria Hart, a widow, aged 59, of Albion Gate, Hyde Park, London, was remanded in custody at Liverpool yesterday. For the prosecution it was stated that Mrs. Hart was arrested alter she had made a very determined effort to join a vessel bound for the United States.

by PHYSICIANS' REMEDY Try it once and yoirvill always use it Sold everywhere in tablet Single or powder form 13 3 JJ)ose When sending to anyone with the troops overseas fl merely give us name and gy address and we will despatch post free at 1- and 26. TabUttor Cophoa IlKkurn Powder. riTiifrriTnVnirwuiTO THE GAUMONT This week's programme at the Gaumont includes two sentimental comedies, one British and the other American. In the days of quota quickies one would not have been surprised to find the British contribution cu.qp, incompetent, scraagy-and dull. But as ope hoped, those days are over it must be a malicious fate that has put Tilly of Bloomsbury in the same bill with the latest Lubitsch.

Lubitsch has had better material than the short-story plot of The Shop Around the Corner," but the master excels in making capital out of such limitations, and the way Lubitsch spins out the delicate humours of this film's stock situation is quite masterly. He is greatly assisted by a script that is notable for sheer good writing, whether or not it is trying to be witty, and by a well-assorted team of players led by Hollywood's most intelligent actress, Margaret Sullavan. Joseph Schildkraut, Felix Bressart (of the "Ninotchka" trio), and the up-and-coming William Tracy provide excellent character performances. But Lubitsch himself takes credit for the success of James Stewart as the leading man. For James Stewart is an actor of great but unmanageable talents especially in sentimental pieces, and Lubitsch handles him with a more sensitive restraint than Capra did in "Mr.

Smith." "Westward Ho, 1940," a Ministry of Information short on evacuation, points a timely moral simply and effectively, spite of an obviously sparing budget and somewhat amateurish camera-work. D. S. THE ODEON The Odeon this week has two films of far different kinds. My Little Chickadee," with Mae West and W.

Fields, is one in which a kind of sardonic humour runs riot. The unfortunate thing is that the style of the two principals is so different. Mae West is a delightful caricature of Mae West the satire in her speech and movement, conscious or unconscious, is something more clever than one finds in most such film stars. W. C.

Fields is in a different street; his line is the long-drawn-out rather than thu brief sentence he calls money the elusive," and it needs an audience trained to the cinema and to Americanisms to appreciate him. The combination of the two has its amusing moments, but on the whole this is a painstaking rather than an inspired film. "The Witness Vanishes," with Wendy Barrie and Edmund Lowe, is a story of crime and mystery in Fleet Street There is much more mystery than Fleet Street in it A maniac ex-editor who manages murders and lives behind a fake fireplace in a derelict newspaper office makes good fun, but Fleet Street would hardly leave the matter unsolved for so long. The attraction here is in the suspense engendered and in the number of corpses that appear suddenly behind doors and in cupboards. But this is not credible and certainly not Fleet Street.

C. At the Rochdale Borough Police Court yesterday William Fish (34), a sapper in the Royal Engineers, was remanded in custody until to-morrow week on a charge alleging the murder of Margaret McManus, his mother-in-Jaw. Inspector Abbot said that when charged Fish replied: "I d'd not mean to do anything like that." oar Empire! if THE OPERA HOUSE "Cottage to Let" "Cottage To Let" at the Ooera House this week, is a play which does the admirable service, at the present time, of keep ing me mma off the war itself and vet being relevant enough to use the war and make it exciting. There is nothing wrong in this since we are in the midst of war one can see no reason why we should nor enjoy a play about enemy agents, kidnapping. U-boats, and the defeat of treachery by British sense and courage.

Lonage To Let" is a play which in twenty years' time may be remembered. it not revived, as one of those "spy clays during the last war." Mr. Leslie Banks plays an absent-minded, boyish, and courageous scientist, whose researches are so important that every effort is made to carry him off to Germany. Mr. Alastair Sim is Dimble, who looks an English country gentleman but is really an arch spy.

His manner is really too fulsome for him to be anything but a spy, but nobody on the stage suspects that until much later than the audience. The figure who is typical of war, 1940 is the boy evacuee, played by George Cole, who, in a part clearly cast for boy evacuees all over the country, suspects everybody and has a considerable part in defeating German plans. Scotland Yard also plays a part. Cottage to Let is an exciting play at its best moments it reminds one a little of the thrillers of John Buchan it crystallises, in the part of Mr. Banks, the mingled courage and insouciance of the British.

It is worthy of note that its most horrific moment, a bomb explosion outside the windows of a cottage where Mr. Banks was imprisoned, was greeted with great applause. It was a very loud explosion, and in peace-time would have caused quite a jump. But last night one felt that it was merely the sound everyone was waiting for in order to show contempt and pugnacity. The play should be a success.

M. THE PALACE THEATRE The Palace Theatre makes a bountiful offering this week. There is Evelyn Laye, entertainer of insinuating charm, stylist in lighter songs, and a comedienne with a neatness and certainty of touch that recalls to longer memories Ada Reeve in her prime. Then Norman Long, bluff and genial, seats himself weightily at the piano, but shows ample dexterity of wit to amuse in the manner of Corney Grain and George Grossmith. In addition Naunton Wayne, so very modern and sophisticated, strolls to the footlights to tell stories and do humorous sleight-of-hand tricks.

One liked his conjuring better than some of his jests, and accounted the burlesque illusionist turn which he and Evelyn Laye presented as one of the triumphs of the show. There are two charming displays ot dancing, one given by Drury and Ramond and their troop of assistants and the other by a young Manchester artist, Edna Squire-Brown, whose dance of the doves is a beautiful little episode. Dave and Joe O'Gorman dispense nonsense on familiar lines. Baker, Dove, and Allen give club juggling a novel dress, and the Pavians prove themselves clever young acrobats. F.

A THE HIPPODROME Six saxophones may not make a show, but they can lift it from a good level of entertainment to a better one, and the Tom Katz Saxophone Six do that in the revue We're in the Army Now at the Manchester Hippodrome this week. It may be argued that if saxophones make music the players do not need to perform some amusing by-play, but the modern mood is for instrumental and physical fooling in peculiar alliance, and these six men do it with a sense of rhythm and a feeling for colour which many others miss. They are gaudy and good. The revue is written and produced by Tom Moss, who takes the greatest part of what comedy there is to himself. Much of it is old, but he can twist an old joke and make it funny again.

Any good comedian can imitate Hitler (and Mr. Moss does it better than most), but one was left wondering at the end of the show if he knew how like he looked to Napoleon. Certainly it gave a piquancy to the last scene which was lacking elsewhere. Like other revues We're in the Army Now has not a great deal to justify its title, but it has much enjoyable dancing, some good sketches some good comedy, and a hard-working company. D.

B. THE TATLER Bringing It Home," at the Tatler thi week, is a plain but none the less interest ing record of how Britain's food supplies are secured from overseas. There is ample material for the cinema in the con voying, unloading, and distributing of our necessities the marshalling of the long lines of merchantmen, the watchfulness of the naval men in whose care they are, the rush at the docks caused by the arrival of ships in large groups instead of singly, This film covers the whole ground, but its sea scenes are the best, particularly the shots of a sturdy little tramp manfully trying to keep its place in a none too easy sea and being hailed from a destroyer to try another lump of coal." Robert Benchley appears as a family man bearing an unjust load of suspicion in another of his comedies, and there is a travel film, which would have been better in colour, of Madeira. J. E.

D. P. They serve Old boys and girls trained by THE SHAFTESBURY HOMES "ARETHUS TRAINING SHIP are, in great numbers, serving the Empire in the present struggle. Please send a gift to help train 1,100 poor children to be useful citizens. DONATIONS LEGACIES URGENTLY NEEDED 164, Shaftesbury Avenue, London, W.C.

2. (Founded 1843) PRESIDENT: H.R.H. TBS DUKE OF KENT. K.G. (By 11,600 FOR A NECKLACE Red Cross Sale Mayfair mingled with Hatton Garden when the magnificent diamond collet necklace, one of the 3,000 gifts subscribed by the public to the Red Cross sale at Christie's, was sold for 11,600 yesterday.

The first day's sales totalled 29.000. The necklace, which is composed of 31 large graduated stones, was given anonymously. Bidding began at and the hammer fell less than three minutes after the first bid. The purchaser was Mr. Weisz.

The salerooms were crowded with smartly dressed women, who outnumbered the men. Many had come simply to watch, while a few among them were donors who wished to see how much their offerings brought to the fund. Most of the men were jewel experts and diamond merchants. The sale will last fourteen days and the first two days will be devoted to the sale of a large number of precious stones, jewellery, and gold trinkets which are included in the collection. The sum of 2,500 was paid by Messrs.

Jerwood and Ward for a diamond necklace of 45 graduated stones which were said to have been set in the hilt of Lord Nelson's sword. It was an anonymous gift A diamond and sapphire necklace given by Queen Mary fetched 175, and a similar brooch, the gift of the Princess Royal, sold for 65. A heavy gold bag of fine filigree sent by the Empress of Ethiopia was bought for 150. Other high prices obtained were 610 for a diamond and emerald ring presented by Lord Fairhaven, 330 for an emerald cut unmounted diamond, and 425 for a brooch given by Lady Templemore. RECTOR AND L.D.V.

From our own Reporter Culcheth, Monday. The Rev. EIrington Reed, rector of the West Lancashire parish of New-church, near Culcheth, has complained of his treatment at the hands of the Local Defence Volunteers in his district. He referred publicly on Sunday, when. addressing his parishioners at church, to the outrage committed at his home and protested against rumours to which the incident had given rise.

Mr. Reed complained that two members of the L.D.V.. armed with rifles, pushed their way into Newchurch Rectory on Wednesday night, burst into a small meeting of the mothers' union which was being held there, and arrested him, threatening to shoot if he did not accompany them to the L.D.V. headquarters. At the headquarters he was questioned for a quarter of an hour by L.D.V.

officials and then allowed to go home. One of the people present at the time told a Manchester Guardian reporter to-day that when the meeting was interrupted one of the men said to the rector. I arrest you in the name of the law." At the time the rector's wife was giving instruction in first aid to a group of mothers. The rector was taken away after being threatened with the use of force. No charge was made against Mr.

Reed. It appears that the incident arises out of a request from the L.D.V. for the use of a room in the village school, of which the rector is one of the trustees. ART AND DESIGN Related to Contemporary Life Alderman S. Woollam chairman of the School of Art Sub-committee of the Manchester City Council, conferred diplomas of associateship on successful students of the School of Art yesterday The meeting was held in private on account of the war.

In his address to the students after the presentation Mr. J. M. Holmes, principal of the school, said that the school's responsibility was to equip its students technically and to keep them alert to the possibilities around them. With regard to techrical training, the school could only remain refreshed by constant study of natural forms plants, animals, and the hitman figure and by free daring technical experiment, unshackled as far as possible by conventional examination conditions.

The problem of keeping students alert to present and future possibilities in industrial design was more difficult. Mr. Holmes outlined the means adopted during the past session to keep students in touch with the needs of the industrial world. It was not enough, he said, to accept examination standards and develop individual skill the major problem to-day was how to apply and use that skill in our present civilisation. Above' all.

students must realise that Uieir future work would be done in co-operation with the architects, painters, sculptors, and designers of their own generation, and they must learn to work together on one job. "Do not underestimate the power of ideas in other Melds than that in which you he concluded. Art and design cannot exist if unrelated to con-- -o-prv life." THAT AN ATOGEN NERVE-TONIC FOOD GIVES YOU 58 MORE ENERGY It is one thing to make a claim another to prove it. Every claim made for Sanatogen is scientifically accurate, backed by the THE OPERATIONS IN FRANCE Disastrous Delays From Brigadier General John Charteris, C.M.G., D.S.O. London, Monday.

The semi-official account of the operations in France before the evacuation is not pleasant reading. It is an unfortunate necessity. If it is indeed a necessity, to enter any defence against the obviously unfounded criticism made by M. Baudouin, the Foreign Minister in the Petain Government. Probably no le, British, French, or German, doubted that the British Expedi' tionary Force had fulfilled to the utmost its obligations as an ally in the field.

But confidence is shaken when one reads of blunder aftei blunder committed by the French High Command or by the local French commander of the Allied forces in the Northern area. It is pitiable to read how the precious hours and days were allowed to slip unheeded away in what offered almost the finest opportunity for counter-attack all military history, and then to read of the belated and gallant but doomed attempt by two British divisions against a position held by four times their own strength. We read of how, when at lone last a counter-attack of adequate size was planned and about to be executed, the British Expeditionary Force was diverted to meet another and mare immediate threat, and the record of the attempted offensive closes with the criticism "Too late." German strategy had been superior in every phase. It is sad to find the flower of our Expeditionary Force committed to battle with insecure communications to its vital ports, to find its reserves before the crisis of the great battle reduced to one regiment at the disposal nf General Headquarters, and divisions committed to attack which were bound to be ineffective unless supported by muea iroops. While all this makes nainful rpaHinS- there is another and brighter side.

The B.E.F. itself has obviously acquitted itself with great credit. Even the German communiques had nowhere claimed to have inflicted a serious tactical reverse on it. Sir Douslas Haicr used to sav that unity of purpose was essential to war- lare with an ally, and unity of com mand only useful in so far as it con tnbuted to this. In the Battle of trance unity of command appears tc nave proved a dangerous delusion.

RAID PRECAUTIONS FOR SCHOOLS Revised Instructions New instructions on the precautions to be taken by schools during air raids were issued yesterday by the Board of Education. In the event of bombs dropping without warning near schools, the cnildren should take up the safest positions in the building itself away from windows and if necessary lying on the floor. In no circumstances should they be allowed to leave the school building whether to enter the school shelters or for dispersal to domestic shelters. Authorities are asked to take the necessary precautions to protect school windows from the dangers of flying glass In rural ateas it is not considered that the provision of shelter at schools on the scale applicable to the more vulnerable areas can be justified, except where the school is close to a vital target, such as an R.A.F. station, or in parts of rural districts closely adjacent to built-up areas.

Protection may be improvised in the school building or by the provision of readily accessible shallow trenches, two feet wide and three feet deep. The board raises no objection to the dispersal of the children to reasonably good shelter in houses or other premises near by. but the dispersal to such cover as may be available in open country is not now recommended. KING'S MESSAGE TO CHANNEL ISLANDERS The King, it was learned in London last night, sent a message in the following terms to th-i Bailiffs of Jersey and Guernsey on th2 withdrawal of the armed farces of the Crown from the Channel Islands For strategic reasons it has been found necessary to withdraw the armed forces from the Channel Islands. I deeply regret this necessity, and I wish to assure my people in the islands that in taking this decision my Government have not been unmindful of their position.

It is in their interest that this step should be taken in present circumstances. The long association of the islands with the Crown and the loyal service the people of the islands have rendered to my ancestors and myself are guarantees that the link between us will remain unbroken, and I know that my people in the islands will look forward with the same confidence as I do to the day when the resolute fortitude with which we face our present difficulties will reap the reward of victory. RECENT WILLS Large Bequests to Two Nurses Mr. John Arkcoll, of Foley House, Maid stone, managing director of Charles Arkcoll, wholesale grocers and pro vision merchants, of Maidstone, London, and Croydon, who died on April 24, aged 92 years, left 140,653 (net personalty 119,664) (estate duty 31,7591. His bequests include 20.000 to Mary Elizabeth Cooper.

5,000 to Dorothy Frances Mudie. A and of the residue three-qumrtera to Mar? Elizabeth Cooper, HRC, and one-Qiutrter to Dorothy Frances Mudie. ARBC, lor their kindly and efficient service and attent.on to hlro Mrs. Ellen Heap, of 15. Wick Hall, Hove.

Sussex, and formerly of Bayswater, London, and Worthing, who died on May 3. widow of Stephen Heap, left tu.BBii (net personalty Jt4.07 b) (estate duty She left 4,000 upon trust for her maid May Hattan while ihe shall not have married, or 2.000 upon trust lor her Irom her marriage, and after other bequests the residue or her property bttween Rochdale General Hospital, Worthing Hospital, the Rojal Hospital. Richmond, Surrey, the Solicitors' Benevolent Institution, the Royal Masonic Institution for OlrLs, the Royal Masonic Institution for Boys, the Hoyal Macon ic Institution lor Aged Freemasons and Widows, the Freemasons' Hospital and Nursing Home, and SL Duxutan's Other Wills Craig, Jolvi. of 24. Monteith Road.

G-ltLSgOA. and ol Brcom, Newton Marns (personal estate) 6J.o34 Neale, artnee, of Periderm Is, Brald'ey Road, Bournemouth, formerly principal of A Caj and Co hosiery manufacturers, of Derby met personalty iMO.841) 40.968 Overton, Mrs. Annie Maria, of Hurtmore. Dalkeith Road, Bra ale some Park, Bournemouth net persona.ty 35.712 37.438 Mas son, Arthur, of 54, Salisbury Road. MoseJey, Birmingham partner in the Arm of Davis and Mawson, brassfounders, Aston, and in the Arm of Meakuic and Co Hove Street, Birmingham, metal merchants met personalty 31.965) 37,098 Myers, Alderman Simeon, of 318.

Hesham Road, Morecambe and Heyaham, Lancashire, and formerly of Pudsey. Yorkshire, Freeman and former Mayor ol Pudsey. head of the firm ol Simeon. Myers, and Co topmalcers (net personalty 34,402) 35,332 Hackney, Henry Charles Coutts. of Ridteuood, Wlckham Road, Beckenhsm, Kent, and of 88.

Leadenha.I Street. London. C. (net personalty 29.935 35.261 Butier, Ernest, of Cnrtstleton Mill. Chrtstleton.

Chester, corn merchant, a member of the Chester Rural District Council and chairman of the Rating and Valuation Committee (net personalty 11,353) 24,859 21 YEARS OF SOCIAL SERVICE National Council's Work The National Council of Social Ser vice completes its twenty-first year absorbed in war work which is taking four main forms the citizens' advice bureaux, the organising of the special war-time work the service of youth," keeping a friendly eye on the problems of evacuation, and an unprecedented measure of co-ordination under the spur of war-time demands of all voluntary services. The council's annual report, just issued, reports on the effective work of the Standing Conference of Voluntary Organisations, which, formed on the initiative of the council after the crisis of 1938. took immediate action in September and obtained from the Government a recognition of the prin ciple of the delegating of work to voluntary bodies with Government financial help. The Government has since set ud Lord Rushchffe's advisory committee and an inter-departmental committee to enable the fullest use of the voluntary bodies to be made. Representations from the conference resulted protecting social service premises from commandeering and the maintenance of continuity in work by the addition of full-time social workers above certain ages to the list of reserved occupations.

This was probably the first time unanimous approach to the Government by voluntary associations had ever been made. The number of citizens' advice bureaux is now nearing a thousand, and the authoritative notes issued for their guidance have a circulation of 7,000 copies. In the work of evacuation, special attention." says the report, has been given to questions of personal hygiene and the needs of children under five." Community Centres The war held up the building of new community centres, but the necessity for advising and helping community associations continues. Many of them, in spite of the difficulty of having no proper meeting place, are making an effective contribution to the social life of their neighbourhood under war-time conditions. The record shows that 220 associations are still in existence, only four or five having disappeared.

Rural community council work has continued on approximately pre-war scale. The councils are helping with the food production campaign. There are more than twelve hundred unemployment clubs for either men or women still in active existence, though the great reduction of unemployment has accelerated the tendency for them to become clubs for working people in general. Their value, says the report, "is greater in these times than ever." The Government has provided 50,000 for the council's work for music and the arts. The Pilgrim Trust has given 25.000, and the Carnegie Trust is linking the council's work in this direction with its own new scheme to encourage musical education.

In celebrating its coming-of-age," on which Professor John Hilton broadcast last night, the council recalls that it came into existence in 1919 with the help of a legacy from one who died In the last war Captain E. V. Birchall. reports of research workers and clinicians. PERCENTAGE OF ENERGY REMAINING THE SCHEINER TEST Eminent doctors applied the famous Scheiner Test to a number of indoor workers.

They found that six hours" continuous work left them with only 8 of their norma! energy. After a fortnight's course of Sanatogen the workers were again tested under precisely similar conditions. This time, 66 of energy remained. This proes conclusively that Sanatogen gives you 58 i more energy. 80 70 EfOBE JFTR If you are working 7 days a week you need 'Sanatogen' Nerve-Tonic Food 7 nights a week CtelXlaUrat embank BASATOOKF WftM to 5riaii efcmicafi; mbbu4 bj Gaitai U4-, Too, irrnrtm km of csvk la Iroprhton tt Trxfc Mark..

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