QDDUCEUQDOD C‘ --=-<am-:--.- _ _. 3.5.5.; .;..;,£,¢.. . I ‘ -:-:-:-:~¢ UDQL‘ iJ£Q5IdJJJQQQOQCV .- '5 ‘r Eukay. .l " AGE EIGHT (ily PAUL MANNING] NEA Srrvicc Staff Correspondent BLAL 00L, England ~~~ This 4L)‘ 1~ n Anxcric-sn as a Concy Is- land Hm Hui. ‘Ihe- xmlircses say i ‘cllhclzs give you the la!- ; s Sly, {he -Midway . . . Pitchmen . . . Rasslers Skating Rinks . . . Press Agents . . Righto, It's All Very American chumber- ‘ 1d you of s. 180119 yozfve , all of a suzidur you think i 2n‘ Home Davis in "Oi llunmzl rpagon for n1]; mind you of Jnvk and Lou Duds. llswuvcr. lll0l'0'l1 be no end to the mo ,\ uwgut- C11‘; llulllvti seals. ill nurture, u live-av c sjfizifll, except for bathing Because , n hm 110L015, mwrspzpcr, no cc- skuu. 1k. i wm" has done funny things to w. r unrl an . an-lrumcd c l§‘ack1:::~i. It has transferred the ' m» - . Na. l bench resort, into England's tnlnmcnt center. on now being more or plastered seven dzrvs a week, ntghttlmv galcty in the nation's caniml has dropped to nearly zero. So the cream of London's 4000 1154mm “ho l . _l onto Inpll} (‘llliS n rm lwvtcls, um"- l)I'-‘.}\\'0'.‘l‘5S (iv Paris llud o . u i wt n!‘ llzuli<ril Po work have a now out of 4:ic>1:§1;\ Qquj. its}?¢>]:><:\1:\{:-4:~<:>4:u:>l:\4:ifio:'ilj '7'."~?-I‘-I-C-'I'€"DOA€'OD§C"3 . WD-I-DC"? ' t-rss Juliana nf the mun Invasion on her cuuntry, will hQ a gu:st at the White o tho linitcd Slates with a vist to New York. Franklin I). Rnnsr velt wclcumcs :1 (iisltnguisilcd gurst-(frcwn Prin- Prinn-ess Julinn,r.l1o found lnlvcn in Cain. (in after flccing from Ger- llousc for three days, terminating her visit .v- nation's .\'n. 1 host‘ Mrs. Net crian: . ‘Purclm Sccretary Lord Iiaiifax, shown hrra- wiih i; xvifr- and mn. hrs bet-n named Brlfsh ambassador Cnlrrglnn in succeed the latc- Lord bithiann. In Oilzimu. Prime Mlnfstcr Kin; issued this statement: 1 greatly plraflcd tn learn ol the appointment. Ni-xt 1-.» the prime m nlstcr of the fvr hlg rnprvoal ., ,.., "m- m", pmgqsscs l wkle-r or more intlmutp knuxricdgo of the intcrnatkncl sfuatlon. will hrinlg tn ins new mat oi‘ duty n null-div YiPW of tho ncetls of the hrur, gained by I quite qxu-ptixznai experience Qt crmtIiIT-ns ‘n different parts ol tln- world and particularly in Eurnpe sine! h" Mglnnlng l.f the war uml tin lug tho _\r".l‘!4 mnu-clialciy pru-rul ng It. With this praztical outlnolt, 1e i-mnblncu a high purpose and ilirulism: which lhruughlui. u lung public career have characterized is; wouls and acllnns." . . , ....n-....~<~ -~~'-- ....,.,..»-.-Y ».~»;v.s-m--1v1|.-~v.-.~-..~¢»-.--¢v. .- - walnut»: l<1~<=~ g g i § 3 3 i Q ° . 3 3 3 a 3 <2 o § o o o 3 o 5 § § E I E i E I i Bombless Blackpool ...Britain’s Brightest moved to Blackpool, 50 mils north of ‘Liverpool on tho Irish Channel. . Today the little town is Eng- land's brlgbest spot. In one week Beatrice L-ittie and Vic Oliver revived three one- act plays from Noel Coward's "To- night at. 8:30," Robert Donut pre- sented "The Devil's Disciple," Jack Hylton headlined a stage show at the Winter Garden. and the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company started a run. Even the London Philharmonic, with Sir Henry Wood directing, showed up and gave a series o! concerts The key to this bocm is the fact the Blackpool is believed to be the most quiet place in England And it. ls, too, from the standpoint o! bombs actually dropped. There are plenty of alert signals, but seldom a raid. The first night or two spent here I had difficulty sleeping because the town was so normal. No whist- ling bombs. no anti-aircraft pun firing outside the hotel window . . , ."Peace, It's Wonderful." The most impressive; feature about this new British entertainment center, however, is the people. Even the several thousand evacuees from London and the other industrial centers of England have caught on and now everyone walks like they're going some place. though there is no place to go once you've reached Blackpool. The place is strictly a young town, with more clean-cut. boys and girls to the square block than in pcsslbly any other England city today. Those that do not live in Black- pool travel by bus. street car and automobile every night in the week from the surrounding countryside, Plfikinq the three giant be , the ice skating rink. the theaters and motion picture houses. fioliie In talc deitizy weapxYns \V1Z|Chv\I\1|llnlI_V is using caption, According to Nazi-censored man armaments plant. l“HE__Cl~i_ARLOT'I_‘ETOWN . : l Z E E : 2 5 . E z I E z z § z : I I l I : I : I : z z Sailors and soldle ‘They're all very America con- scious, and at the drop of an H will do you s realy good imitation of Jack Benny and Rochester. But, what the future hods for Blnckpoll no one knows Some business men are already talking of forming a motion picture dlcate as port of a plan to turn the town into the Hollywood oi’ in her war on Brit. photo abuvc aim: death in mg-land of Flyhg i | l l continue having o. season like August, 1M0, the big- gest in Blackpool history. A few fear that their [ood luck :10)’ 3rd uyhalght no: with u I89 alpio vol being i! some German bom- sh shipping are pictured nimvc- shows a cumulation of mines and huflyfi 5'- “ Gc" SPORTSMAN FLIER KJLED Mozitreal sportsmen are mourn- oor Vflllium P. "Bill" Sprenger. Twelve were killed and s dolen other! injured in tlllg . . c. . fl . This unusual character photo of IIIIIWQ PNIETWSM. "W" Vhe" he recently arrived in New York on his 90th btrthdliv suggests the rugged character which made the "m"! 9'4"" lmllll one of Po- land's greatest postwar leaders. Ills ieuninc mane l5 nilvercd 5nd his frame is fragile. but he stood erect as he neutered the land where he won his greatest acclaim. declaring he could no Ionlcr strnd "the unbearable atmosphere ol Europe.” He was reported killed in action. His death occurred one day after leading Aircraftman Lewis Dull, brilliant Montreal tennis star, was killed in an accident art London, William Bunch O'Connor, one of Canada‘; recognized experts on the British North America Act and the leful relationship between the do- m nicn and the Jovlnceu, died sud- dcnly in Ottawa, Dec. l6, u he slept. Mr. O'Connor, law officer and parliamentary counncl to the _ o1 n old i i NEWSofthe WQRLD in PICTURES Spot 01w M’ ill» not mil-r Mum in u» maul sun-m, Anthony Eden, bu been named to succeed Lord Halihx as foreign secretary, the post Eden held before the war. He is shown here as in» xvlshcd good luck to an R.C.A.F. pilot Just before tho take-off at an English training field“ tnr c ‘ oi b "‘ in by an - ‘ l...- determined origin’. Phntogrnphlo detection of flaw: ln ltool lllod for national defense Ill be specded up by days. thanks to the world's largest X-rl-y machine-a new l.000.000-voIt giant producing encrxy equal t0 500000.000 w-mn of radium. x-ny new» Ire nude ihmush M" inches of steel in two minutcl- “Ill- 105 IWW "Gill"! l" him" Mlchlne la housed in a Ipecial building at the General Electric ‘esearch luborutorlel in Stlfllillbtlllllv N. Y- AM“ worker "m"! "Y the X-flyvr as u huge turbine cautln; i; lowered throulh "l6 Y”, to be photogrsp‘ ’.. . ‘ ' ‘ ‘ . XI‘ ' . i ljbJdJiln .0".- I I VI IFGOhQQ "nil"-