Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Evening Standard from London, Greater London, England • 3

Publication:
Evening Standardi
Location:
London, Greater London, England
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

4 lAj'f' v' -V -V- Iiriff mr 1 i-v r- 1 1 i if- t'3e u- A -5 i -m -vfS -r i utmurf mi-tr I L- S- vgsnahm Evening Standard Monday 0ctober 2 1939 1 i VY i V- 4 cs Mrp Chamberlain at Hostel GERMAN TROOPS FOR WARSAW THEY TELL TRIBUNALS-- IS EM Evening: Standard Reporter I Exempt from internment until further notice I Refugee from Nazi Oppression POLISH GARRISON FOR 4 CONCENTRATION CAMPS German' High Command qommuniqu states that the first German troops entered Warsaw yesterday and that the occupation of the suburb of Praga has been completed The last point of Polish resistance the Hela peninsula has surrender ed uncon-ditionally after an attack by land sea and air forces saysthe communique The garrison consisted of 52 officers including Bear-admiral Urlich Commander of the Polish Navy and 4000 men They were laying down their- arms this afternoon Cease has brought an eerie silence to the battlefields around TTHESE notices were stamped across the passports of many of 50000 enemy aliens after they had been exammed by tribunals' to-day --h Seventy of the 108 tribunals began their sittings Three were at Golden Green Hendon and Hampstead At Clerkenwell Police Court where Mr Walter Hedley the stipendiary magistrate presided over the tribunals one of the first to be exempted was a former Berlin doctor who fled to-Italy in 1937 He said his wife and two children had Warsawt says a German News Agency ipital report from the Polish ca Chamberlain talking to William Howletti aged 71 when she pqid'a visit i to-day to the hostel of the Qlissioh to Seamen in Victoria' Dock-road v' -Jf 1 I been arrested at night by Gestapo officials in Rome during visit 7 Ex-Enemy Wants To Fight For Us: il'i was' given because his m2i A Viennese dress designer leave to live and work here special At Vlochy just outside the city the souxid of German regimental music played in the courtyard of- a of flats has replaced the din of war Brussels radio reports that the Polish garrison of Warsaw has marched out 'of the city in good order in the direction of Pruszkov not far frpm the Polish capital where they are being collected in concentration camps for the time being The men marched iii columns still directed by their own officers and only a few German troops guarded the line of march It is added that the morale of the men is still excellent (British United Press) textile factories work- formerly done He told me that the magistrate took particular trouble not to make him feel he was a foreigner which he greatly appreciated OR 80 pc OF PRODUCTION' PLANS FAIL Evening Standard Reporter T'HE threat of a suspension of the Films Quota Act brought British producers together in London to-day in an attempt to persuade the Board of Trade to keep the Act going Without the Quota Act 80 per The 45-year-old ex-manager of a Vienna weaving factory told the tribunal that he Lord Daughter Lady Joan Isaacs 21-year-old daughter of Lord and Lady Reading' was married to Dr Solly Zuckerman at Caxton Hall register office to-day Dr Zuckerman who was born in Capetown is 35 would like to fight for Britain He had fought for four years for Austria -during the war But when the Nazis came a into power he spent a -month in a Gestapo prison and was then ordered to leave the country 1 Also exempted was a Viennese student who offered to drive an ambulance i fes v' i Sif-V' iV- MANNEQUIN PARADES on Tuesdays' Wednesdays and Thursdays at 11 am and 245 pjn! IN THE FOURTH FLOOR DISPLAY HALL! cent of plains for British film production will have to be explained the chairman Mr George Smith He explained that the meeting had been called because the industry was at the cross-roads Three weeks ago a deputation had waited On Mr Oliver Stanley and were told of a decision to defer the Act which insists that 20 per cent of British films must be distributed and 15 per cent exhibited Mr- Stanley told them that his decision was due to three considerations The first that the staff required for the administration of the Act would be too large (2) that the sending to America of large amounts in dollars would not be allowed and (3) that he had a plan for the British industry by the restriction of imported films Showing British Woollen Frocks American Afternoon Frocks Air Raid Emergency Suits Landwear and Nursewear Including British Red Cross Uniforms SEE THE VALUES I No tickets required Collection of WOULD INWOOLBOUCLE WITH LLAMA THERM LINING! We pointed the disastrous results which would result from the suspension of the said Mr Smith that evils such as blind booking which we have fought against-for a long time would arise again We all remember the state of the industry in 1918 and how it took us ten years to re-establish it" Mr George Elvin on behalf of the Film Industries Council said that laboui was ranged with employers hi a demand that the Act should be kept prestige is in grave he said film supply will be totally Inadequate unless the Act con- tinues to operate or there is other protective He said that studio employees were starving because they could not get war jobs as they were in reserved occupations Their studios were closed because of the threat of suspension of the Act Last July there were 17 films on studio floors To-day there were only two Both these were begun before the outbreak of war The sole reason' for this stagnation was hecause the Government would not declare its policy Captain the Hon Richard Norton said that the restriction of imports would not be enough The Quota Act forced people to make pictures Mr George representing studio owners said if the Act were suspended staffs would be dismissed ot a fecd gAUD THE secveeD Bough PRICE ire These are 1 reai WINTER COATS irt heavy weight wool Boucle with Llama Therm quilting to waist to give the most marvellous warmth The big luxuriously cosy collar is of a fur that will wear and and the coat is' shaped most beautifully by special working at the back Rayon lined throughout Some in Navyv Wine and a few new but chiefly in Black Bust 34 36-38 40 42ins A STRIKING OPPORTUNITY AT You're sure to need a wool Fenwicks have a grand selection for you now! Fashion-right and styled in the loveliest of wools just one sketched in black with neat high neck and swing pleated skirt Also in ice blue cherry burgundy green brown navy 3 sizes 51 Chooie now! Monolulu Wantecl Him 1 i To Wave a Union Jack While being taken to the police station Rass Prince Monolulu 58 the coloured racing tipster waved a Union Jack and insisted that Police-constable Pitt should wave it too refused" said the constable at Marlborough-street to-day where Monolulu was fined 40s for using indecent expressions while addressing a crowd in Hyde Park this wonderful purchase in the Coat Dept Second between 9 am and 530 pm each day Sats 1 EACH BOND ST icoawi moo tiatui nNWICK LTD) 63 NSW BOND STREET Wl Postage Free i WEStem 5432 John Bnrkctf and Compy Ltd Kensington WB a-- -s-'i -4 A 1 4.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Evening Standard
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Evening Standard Archive

Pages Available:
2,377,260
Years Available:
1897-2023