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Daily Mirror from London, London, England • 7

Publication:
Daily Mirrori
Location:
London, London, England
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Friday, September 15, 1944 thinking ahead, some of you are getting anxious about your job prospects. And you'll be interested to know of some advice centres which are being set up to help you. WilkftY FER I vice. Home Ser Ycj.iißE 4 You're want whet Hero duped HHOLLYWOOD appears to be getting back into its stride after a series of not-so-good productions which have let British films get away to a flying start From all parts of the country recently I've had glowing reports of the outstanding success of THE WAY AHEAD," THIS HAPPY BREED," will surprise some of FANNY BY Unless something really sensational pops up before the end of the year, it looks as if This Happy Breed will be the boxoffice hit of 1944. Which is nice for Mr.

Noel Coward. First sign of a Hollywood revival comes with DOUBLE INDEMNITY (Plaza, today), which is a picture with murder mystery told with originality and source. Most of the action hikes place in an insurance office, with Edward G. Robinson, for once on the side of law and order. In his job as clair 3 investigator he does his best to unravel a baffling murder mystery Story is told in the first per- Crossword No.

3351 USELESS ELISTACE z. 3 liA I ill eX 4 r( -4 tiv iii 11 ---f 4 1 I Lumbago You've come to the right doctor, old man. Been a martyr to it myself for years 11111111111111 WINE OEM 11111111111111 111 Mr 65 Mlllllllll4 WINIII 3 IIIII MINIM Killollll MOM 1111111111111111 into crime by scheming woman Ike .10 Character; 6 Dismay; 11, Go off stage; 12, Hoar-frost; 13, Covered with slabs; 14, 's io Attuned; 15, Part of leg; 16 Assaying vess el .15 17, Sweeten; 19, Small drink; 22, Restrict; 24, Sloth; 25, Cask-stopper; 27, Planet; 29, Bay; 31, Commanded; Commanded; 33 With force; 34 Spelte 35, he Fish; 36. Of Shipping; 37 Regularly found; he 38, Snare yid Sell for; 2, .30 Sort of iris; 3, Carillon; om 4, Dejected; 5, Conclude; 15 7, 'Support; 8, Longs an eagerly; 9 Girl; 10, Went hip first; 14, N. Italian town; die 16, Large ruminant; 18.

i Handed; 20, Teacake; 21, Sailor; 23 Potato; 25, es: Spot; 26, Protect; 28, ll i Glossy fabric; 30. Mellow; i 32, European; 34, A Scot: 36. Note of scale. Yesterday's Solution son by Fred Mae Murray, who soon comes into the picture as an ace insurance agent. His troubles begin when he calls at a wealthy home in Los Angeles in connection with car premiums.

He meets a most alluring young lady (Barbara Stanwyck), who soon reveals as much interest in the handsome young salesman as she does in a secret fatal accident policy she proposes to take out for her husband All I need say is that Fred is lured into committing the almost perfect crime; only to find later that he has been duped by a scheming woman. This part is convincingly played by Barbara Stanwyck, who dons a blonde wig and really looks the cold and cair culating murderess the character calls for. An ingenious, cleverly written and well acted melodrama, which teems with suspense and thrills 2,000 WOMEN (Gaumont, and Marble Arch, Sunday). I MAGINE a couple of thousandl women cooped up in a French internment camp. And the excitement when three RAF men bale out close by from a crashing plane.

JANE Naturally, this soon creates a storm of love and hate, of feminine intrigue and selfsacrifice. Not to mention complications from one of the internees who turns out to be a Nazi spy. The dialogue is certainly not in the highbrow class but is piquant and entertaining, and a vivid fisticuff fight between two of the ladies provides a lively spectacle. Of a good all-round cast, Patricia Roe stands out as a young nun who goes to extreme lengths in order to save her lover, the pilot of the crashed plane. Good popular entertainment.

VOICE IN THE WIND (London Pavilion, Today) -1- THOUGHT the brutal Gestapo would be missing this week, but no such luck. They pop up in their usual form in this gloomy drama of a Czech pianist (Francis Lederer) who is sent crazy by their brutality because he played a forbidden national melody. Sigrid Gurie is the sweetheart who shares in his misfortunes, which finish up in a waterside shack in Guadeloupe. Not my idea of a good time Why He Laughed OHN LORRELL is playing a small part in a fight scene in I'LL BE YOUR SWEET- L'AMPI HMO a ooaa aqiflEl uE 11 111 LIM 111 1 10741 FELWEVCO WEILI ENV ES 113 PIEND DOE TO WELL, tT'LL TAKE MORE in .4 THAN A SPOT OF PAINT xv TO PUT OUR OLD CANTEEN :4 11 To RIGHTS, a il Ifilli i L--- i i--T YUS 't i i iiiiii! 'AS BIN A i LESSON TO ME, 7 JANE 111 i 9: 40 011( PACKET EH Lllft 0 .141 THE DAILY MIRROR "Please, all beginning to think about your post-wat want wondering if you'll get the kind of work you the war is over, without a lot of trudging from one place to another. You're writing letters to me about it from your MI lets and from your homes.

You are the ones not affected by the Reinstatement Act, and the ones who never had a decent before getting ready to open the first They'll even make telephon the war. of a great chain of Resettle- calls to arrange appointmen Some of you say the firms you worked for are out ment Advice Centres, which will for you. 'They will tell you ho stretch across the country. to set about starting your ne of business; and you've got to start looking for work. with prospects, as soon as your.

war job finishes. These centres may sometimes life. have some news for you. Within the next few be attached to local Employ- weeks, some of you will be able ment Exchanges. But, in many to go out shopping for jobs." cases, they will be shops, in 4,2 OPPOSE, for instance, Miss I don't mean you can take a main streets, decorated with k-7 V.

of Tadcaster, who's couple of pound notes out of bright paint and good window in the WAAF, goes there after the Post Office savings account displays. 1 and go out and "buy a job. But you can go and discuss In the windows, you'll see plc- she's demobilised. The woman behind the counter will help tures and posters telling about her choose the right work. the kind of work you want in a lobs.

shop where the assistants will Inside the shops there will be be ready with advice and real trained men and women who will listen to your story, and tell Miss V. S. said in her letter: My friend and I in the WAAF feel we cannot go back to our help. civvy jobs. The Ministry of Labour is You what von ought to do.

We were clerks, but we want to make use of our Service training as Radio Telephony operators. How can we do that in peace conditions I That's one of the questions the new Resettlement Centres will be ready to deal with. Here's another from Mrs. A. HEART," and had to be lifted of London, who's worried about six inches off the floor by about her 46-year-old sister.

four men and slung along the She writes: ground at Shepherd's Bush. "My sister is a sewing As usual he was asked to sign machinist and was directed by the usual indemnity form in the Ministry of Labour to a 'ease of accidents, and did so war job. with an amused smile. "It is coming to an end. Apparently he has just been What's going to happen to her Invalided out of the paratroops Will they get her back a peaceand his last drop was a 600 ft.

time job one out of a plane over Sicily They will telling her RES WHIT LEY at the pictures Have you ELL, if you haven't, you meet him in the answers to the seven clues below. Because each is the clue to a word which begins with the letters TOM." And to show you how it works: The answer to the clue The Tom read by learned Bien" would be TOME." Tom on the tiles would be TOMCAT." Get it Tom with a cutting edge. 'YUS. AIR TALLER-WHEN 1 fusr 1 SET ME ON rms ERE PRAM ERIC-00 SYRUP PUMP, SEZ T'MESELF- YOUAPPLY THEJET JEST TN' VERY FINC FER OR THE TH'CAPTINV JUST FOR FUTURE REFERENCE li 1 .0 464' 1 Pild iv REFERENCE- i :7 irA 1 1 C. 221.

li BUT IT'S TAUGHT YES -SO LONG 1 ME SUMMAT ELSE AS YOU STICK Tb THERE'S A TIME FOR BASIC ENGLISH TALK, Too-EH, DI? .1. 0 11 NICE EASY PHRASES 4 1 LIK LOVE You; lilt F'R oNSTANCE i' I I -5 4 i i i i- 4 i i. lit 46 i fe'iN 4 1 11 111111 i i 7 i 2 iliN'T PERI 1(1ER. 7 Fr MR TALLER-THEY 80FE 4, 1 SEEMS TER WORK FIF 4 ORIRIGHT i I i 1 1 i li ii i A 4 Ix 7-- THE BRAZEN 1- 4 I ALWAYS SAID THAT GIRL OF MINE HAD GOT MORE IN 4 HER THAN MET THE EYE! 4 1 2 i A 6 glirkili 4 1 1 ITT A 22.1 met Tom? Tom you can grow in a window-box. Tom that Is really a girl.

the Tom that is a small bird. Tom is a silly idiot. Tom twice over makes a noise. Tom mentioned in sad hymns. ANSWERS queol tuoi 'g 'fiocpuoz oputoi 'z 'T Page 7 Before we have any chance of breaking ourselves of a bad habit, we must be convinced that the reasons for breaking it are far stronger than the reasons for continuing -it.

where to go for one, and how to apply for it through the local exchange. ANYBODY an ex-war worker or an ex-Service man or go to these centres with problems. They needn't all be work problems either. You can also get help about applying for special clothing coupons, and you will be told there about schemes for placing war-disabled workers and Servicemen. If you feel that the Employment Exchange has treated yOU badly, you can go and vrouse at the centres.

Watch out for the Resettlement and Ad vice Centres. They've got the answers to your questions When they open, you can call right away and get ready for the day when the war factory closes ADVERTISERS'. ANNOUNCEMENTS When wind causes pain, when COrla doubles up his little knees in agony, the effective remedy is a teaspoonful or so of Dinneford's Pure Fluid Magnesia. and including Purchase Tax Vth ifPURE FLUID attittilithic :1. i k1; ill.4.11111111!".::':*; MAGNESIA Just Jake wrinirl-THESE A 1 l'.

a 77 fi A 5 iit CARP-HEADED -TN LA- I I ii 5 4 ii 4 MAR VEL LOUS 5 i 7- tu 61 SIMPLE. i i i I WRITE TO i THEIR APPLICAT A ....1 ii: A t. i' A YET SO FF TIV 40 ii 1-1: IA7 :1: ::1:.: 1 6 I JOURNAL RE 111 i kl, VI I 2 74 ZIPP'76, 0 414 DRY --Vaseline HAIR TONIC (inc. Purchase Tax) At present supplies are restricted, and so we can only apologize if your retailer is not always able to meet your demand. 'Vaseline' Soapless Shampoo sd.

a packet (inc. Purchase Tax) CSEBROUGEI MFG. CO. LTD..

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About Daily Mirror Archive

Pages Available:
650,459
Years Available:
1903-1999