Daily British Whig (1850), 1 Oct 1926, p. 9

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a ¥ THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG "A. PAGE OF BRITISH NEWS FOR THE READERS OF THE bo a DAILY BRITISH WHIG MOSQUITOES ARE TENNIS VICTORS Clear English Courts By Bloodthitsty Attacks * on Playérs LATE SEASO Removal of Stagnant Water is Best Preven- tive rg Swarms of vicious mosquitoes, with a5 uncommonly painful bite, are mak- ing many jennis courts in the country sompletely unplayable. Cig the South-West Coast of En land, in particular, players are suffe from intolerably itching blisters," Alfred E Moore Hogarth, honorary director of the College of Pestology, "The cold, damp weather in the early part of the season led many peo- ple to believe that this year's mosquito plague would be mild "AS a matter of fact, it simply de- Jayed the breeding and caused those insects which survived to be muc more bloodthirsty than they would have been normally. "On some dourts players have been bitten a score of times in one day, and | the afflicted parts of their body have | become inflamed and swollen." A ventive, declared Moors Hogarth, was for clubs to level their courts and so remove small hollows, which retain water. Mosquitoes breed in stagnant water. ""*Wherever possible," he added, "drain the ground. Then sprinkle it with ordinary powdered rbad":dust or ashes, treated with chemicals in the way I will recommend if club secre- taries cars to write to me." preamps CAN YOU INVEN > subjected to heavy rain; 9, » if roof ing an jnmate for about a week, ever & ANGRY PROTESTS 1EFT£800,BUT DIED ANY OF THESE? Hints to Those Who Have ° Creative Minds In view of the second international exhibition of inventions, which opens at 'the Central Hall, Westminster, on October 13, a booklet entitled "What's wanted," issued by the Institute Patentees, is particulariy opportune. Among the needs of the movement enumerated are the following A method of conveying 'speech dl-| rect and readably to paper; Key that will not lose its identifi. cation; ; Pipe that can be easily and effec- tively cleaned; Electric toaster that will, if pos- sible, cut off the current before the toast begins to burn; Noiseless aeroplane; Aeroplane that can be easily man- aged by a boy or girl; Hatband that does not become dis- colored by white strepks after being Process to eliminate rust; Noiseless gun; and Transmission of speech by light. Altogether there are. nearly 150 needs' classified as 'What's want- ed." So now you inventors . . . « AT POSTIARK ADS British Firms and Sweet: hearts Object to New "-- A . Project The Government's plan to turn everybody's private letters and post- cards inte advertisement hoardings is meeting. with a growing volume of protest from all quarters. J Under the Economy Act) the Post- master-General is empowered to ac- cept advertisements which wlll be in- corporated into the Post Office date stamp and thus appear as part of the rk on all letters passing through the machine. The scheme has been roundly con- demned, both by advertisers and thet" general public, mainly on the ground that a firm that sends its catalogues out by post' may find them stamped with a rival firm's advertisement "Envelopes ysed for the convey- ande of matter through tie post sure- ly are the p rty of the senders,' says one writen "As such they should not be used for any purpose other than the legiti- mate one of stamp cancellation and | postmark, without the sanction of thé | senders.' | "Public Property" predicts a new terror for sweethearts when he writes : -- "With what care the lovesick swain in future will have to choose his time of posting, lest a letfer to his fair fat one should bellow forth: 'Dink more vinegar and grew thin'! ~ INPOOR HOUSE Surprise "Find - During Search of Laborers Trunk : William Hogg, a laborer belonging to Cromarty, who died in Inveresk Poor-house (East Lothian) after be- 800 in bank deposit regeipis. discovery was made by Poor jaw officials on searching a trunk in his lodgings to trace to which parish his funpral should be charged. | | Hockley, stated. | of | to MAJORS TRPIN | _ WIFE'S CLOTHING Masqueraded in West-End Hotel to Win'a Friendly "x . Wager 1 POLICE INTERFERE |Charged With Unlawful | Possession But Secures Dismissal { ~**If-there is anything more extrasr- | dinary thag this man's conduct.it | his explanation of it. This remark was made by the Bow street magistrate (Sir Chartres Biron), { when David Lewes, aged 36, .a com, pany secretary, of Hawksweilchase hasex, was charged with be ing in uniawful possession of woman's | clothing and jewellery ' Lewes 'was _.said by the police to bs { - is Ls major' in the Reserve of Officers. Detective-Sergeant Lynch said he saw the man enter an hotel in South- ampton row dressed as a woman About half ge hour later Lewes lef! {in man's clothing carrying a suitcase | HIS WIFE'S CLOTHING. | Asked what the 'suitcase contained, he replied, "Thegbag and contents, with the exception of a lady's clothing, is mine. I do not know to wham ths | lady's clothing belongs.' ' | Lewes was charged with unlawful | possession of the clothing, but that {morning the man's wife had identified | the clothing as hers Jlewes: 1 am very sorry. for a wager. The detective said highly respectable man The Magistrate: Was the hotel? Detective-Sergeant dressed. as a woman and booked a room at the hotel for the night He {then went out, and during his ab- Lrg the manager ascertained that 1 aid it 1 lewes was a he staying at ch He had he was a man When he returned he was asked to leave the hotel, and as | he was jeaving he was arrested { He toid me, the detective continued, | that in the city at lunch he had met | {a man who offered him a wager that he could not-masquerade as a woman in the West End. His wife was away | on holiday at the time, and knew | i nothing about the masquerade | Mrs. Lewes's father said his son-in-| |law was a man of the highest char-| acter. | The magistrate « {ing that | possession of | borne out by th lischarged him, say- sation of unlawful clothing was not idence the 100 MANY PENNIES | IN CIRCULATION Surplus Aftet the War Has| Caused Much Em- barrassment It was stated in Parllament a few | days ago that no pennies have been | struck at the Royal Mint since 1922. | Inquiries show that this is because | something approaching a glut of pen- | nies has existed since the war, and it has been found necessary for the | Mint authorities to establish a register | to show where large surpluses exist. | It is estimated that the number of | pennies in existence today is so large that if they were distributed among the population of tiie United Kingdon there would be 38 for every man, | woman and child There are big supplies at most of | the banks. At one the estimated value | of bronze coinage, mostly pennies, isi a quarter of a million. Many gas and | tramway companies HAVE Al§0 accunmu- 1 lated large stocks, which they are | finding it difficult to disperse | The. popularity of the penny-in-the | slot machine also caused the Mint to | strike more pennies some Years ago. | At one time it was estimated that about £250,000 worth of pennies were locked up in these machines. | | ELECTRIFY MORE BRITSH RAILWAYS "Third Rail" Will Be Sub-| stituted Also for Over- head System Another great electrification scheme, | cost £8.750,000, is annpuriced hy | the Southern Railway. 1 The plan, work on which is to begin at once, involves: { Gradual sbolition of the overhead | system in favor of the "third" rail} on 127 track miles. - Substitution of electricity' for steam | in a further 105 track miles--a total | of 232 miles. | Completion of London Bridge to Tat- | tenham Corner portion-in time for the, 1928 Deiby meeting. i The lines to be taken in hand 'com. | prise the whole of the old 1. B. and | 8. C. suburban area with a small por- | tiofs of South tern.- RN For a time the "overhead electric system will regnaln, trains will be worked by ths systemi concurrently with, and over\the same track as,! tra¥ns worked or/the third-rail syste Ultimately, however, the overtyad equipment wili be eliminated, an all trains will be worked on the third-| rail system, thus standardizing, for | all three sections of the Southern Rail- | way, the suburban train equipment, | track, ete. THRILLING ESCAPE AT | LEVEL CROSSING A motorist had a thrilling escape at} a level crossing at Wellingborpugh.. | Three motor-cars had crossed in one TRAGIC COINCIDENCE * OF TELEPHONE CALL A man dashed into a Southampton yesterday and asked to be allow- shop a «od to telephone for the ambulance for a man knocked down by a steam 'woman at the counter helped to the, call, and then rushed 'to the , Where she. found that the man was her husband, W. B. i » Iaborer, LIVED TEN YEARS ~~ WITH BROKEN BACK. ah y 551i direction and a lorry in the other, and | were clear of the rails, when a heavy | engine and tender crashed through the | gates. < Colin Croall, of Northampton, was in the act of crossing, but heard the | warning shougs In time. He applied his brakes and managed terpull up his car within two yards of | a passing engine. : i { LEAVES FORTUNE John H. J, Hornsby, of Cuckfield Park, Sussex. a partner In Messes, | Ruston snd Hornsby, engineers, of | Lincoin and Grantham, formerly a | well-known ericketer, playing for MCC. loft £97,700. = He left 10 his wife a life annuity of | £1,200, and,' after various other! bequests, all othér property (over £60,000 "for such charitable 7 , and at t ns Asch i i 2 Re purposes as I shall by codicil direct, and, in} { default of any such directions, as my | broken out in the tal death'" | trustees shall decide. ™ No stich codict! | wefied with the will, | of one family | present mayoress, dpon her husband's ret | grounds of their home in Perton Grove, W | GUNUOONTOBODOROTHINNGA0D | {@ POST OFFICE PEN Q | DID NOT HELP IN | started a few {ag { the | brass balls {tor of Bradwéil.on-Sea, - Essex, eft A REAL FAMILY AFFAIR Ey lv x he The chief civic positions of the town of West Bromwich, Mr. Cottrell the present England, mayor will become deputy mayor. irement will accept the mayoralty. ated her elder datighter Aileen to be mayoress. The picture shows Mr. and olverhampton. LOVER'S EPISODE. nt me to write you dear. If I was you you 10 PIT LADS MEET Owners and Men as Guests| of the Duke of York CLASS SWEPT AWAY Royal Camp Experiment] Proves to Be Great Success o pen , read at during New - caused SOOO OBIBHROGROD SogooRoanoolad COGO0 QUO SOS ISO RRTO0 The Duke of York, of course, can; take no part in the industrial dispute, | which has now entered its 15th week, | but he has invited representatives, of | both sides to his holiday camp near New Romney, which is an expertment in boyhood paychology. A Lancashire "colliery owner and | miners on strike from Northumper- | land, Durham and the Weish valleys | are guests of His Royal Highness, | along with Eton Charterhouse and Dulwich and other pt schoolboys. | When this expeyime was first | years ago was de- | scribed a "hush-hush CAND of | mystery Launched as a rather dar- | ing experiment, its ss in foster. | ing the corporate among boys ts-established, and 4 the public schools industries have bee of a rious Bank Holiday common bond of boyhood At first the you from the idle coalfields and the lads from the Eton playing fields. were a bit s! another, The [ton boy A an introauction was necessary, lad soon found that im Ahe camp anything in the nature a of social or class distinction was swept awn) "The Sign of the Thres Melons™ Is jokes of the Duksls Camp: which is on the site of th Little- stone asrodrome As 1 wed the bursar's office, where thé boys have deposited hundreds of pounds of their | holiday my head bumped st three melons hanging outsid door like 'a pawnbroker's three Crowds of People Hunted With Pokers and, Sticks TRAFFIC HELD UP Boy ° of Thirteen Utilised His Ventriloquial Powers' t it as t ® chite distiict hoaxed by of 13 | Nightly they {for a "ghost," and showered stones and bottles on to roofs of h . The "ghost" Superintendent police, who lad who of an Sheffield haxge been innocent-looking various boy in the have J been searching ouses has now been laid by Hughes, of the city brought inte the station lives near the scene of the ns," and who admitted that the culprit WOn¢ the pit Duke's {he as He apparently possesses ventriloquial gifts. The discovery. followed gcenes in the city the previous night So dense were the crowds waiting {for tha appearanceof the "host' that tramcars were Several times held one of the money, wp While the "ghost" ating usually from four in the morn sefirched every > a has been oper- midnight until police have sures whe cranny, and melons or vegetable r add the ca source of humorous inspira o EXCHANGING VIEWS, {tions I met lads from the Clydeside ship-| When the young p yards, from the Staffordshire potteries. | 1554 by the i from the iron and steel works in South Wales, and the Eton b one of the biggest bath the South Coast 1 as they sauntered exchunging views on industrial wel- fare > an Eton boy learning ali about what it feeis like to go down the mine and the pit lad enthralled by a first handy account of an Eton cricket match, J. 63. Paterson; the camp chief, told me that this Royal experiment had Jed to the hetter understanding among | representatives of the nation's bo FLYING ANTS WON. Br irae 13 | IN GOLF CONTEST hood ip A3 industries are at present || 1 usual Plague Routs Play- encamped The camp ground is a little unsuit- | ers on New Forest Course shie for cricket, so the boys play new | Plagues of flying ants are reported 1 am not they were hut they i are a on color to noises, many which different seemed om direc . \ ractical joker was heels he cofifessed that coming from | 1% parades on | listened to them | along the beach | "throw , and unt. his int iboy was let off with a serious warn ing and old-fashioned games in which the weak have an equal chance of success as the strong he land boat game, | borrowed from the havy. race of centipedes A 'team moves | backwards styaddlewise across a scaf. | fold pole, with a coxswain at the end, | And 1h thie Tashion they trot a8 fast | as they can to the winning post. i Kent. ants settled so thickly faces that they were unable to open | their eyes. Cyclists bad to dismount j and a doctor motoring to an urgent call had to stop &éveral times to Tiear {the ants from his eyes. Pedestrians | were smothered. BEQUEST OF £4.000 FOR HOUSEKEEPER Miss Rose Edith Schreiber, of} Southhill, St. Michael's road, Worth- | érs off the Bramshaw golf fourse in ing, Sussex, who died on July 14 last, | the New Forest. The fairwiys seemed aged R1, seventh daughter of the ats | to be alive, and great difficulty was Rev. Thomas Schreiber, a former Reé- | experienced ' in obtaining sand from | the boxes for teeing, there being to all 3 . | appearances more ants than sand She bequeathed £4000 ufon trust] The insects also settled on the for her nurse-housekeepey, Eilmabeth | players, penetrated their garments, Gray Suthdriand, life. with re-! covering them with stings, until In mainder to her (Mrs. Sutherland's) | desperation they gave up the game children. £ . . Her nieces. Tiida Dywnoley Web, Nita May Schreiber Bloxsome, Con stance Schreiber Bloxsome and Mary | Way, receive 4.000 each, and all other her property to Adrian Hugh Hassard Short, of Trintty rise, Tilse Hil, 8. W. £50,723. for { ants had won re remaining works, in. ings and paintings, of J IW, Waterhouse, RA, who died In 1917. has taken place at Messrs | Christie's. 3 play is suspected in connection | ceteris a Mn The Leatherhesd Parochial Church with four separate fires which have | Council has decided to abandon the port of Dunkirk, the oid spk fing of the Surrey town's nak of = Communist "Letherhead™ -- and adopt the found nn the vicinity. | popular spelling, Fou! charred remains wevspaper beige \ "GHOST HOAX WAS CAUSE FOR ALARM Thousands of people, in the Atter-| who male weird cries | t amazing | his method was to get intd a befiroom | v volee and the | then dash out and join | Promising never to do"it again, the! Bathers at Tankerton, near Whit- | stable, had to leave the water because | upon . their | A swarm of winged ants drpve play- | {and returned to the club-house The | will next year be occupied by three members His wife, Mrs. Grace E. Cottrell, the As woman mayor-elect she has nomin Mrs. Cottrell and Miss Cottrell gn the WOMAN'S DRESSES PUZZLED JUDGE | Thought Two Dozen Modern Frocks Were Mere Handful - UNPAID _ BILL Charitable Witness Consid- ered Some Hats 20 Years Old Justice Rowlatt, considered one greatest experts on the | plications of Income Tax Law, recently | acquired some information about complications of women's dress Before him, Mrs. Bee St. Vincen Farrant, Park place, London, claimed £170 from Mrs. Louisd Hocker, a for. mer proprietress of an hotel in Cure zon street, Mayfair, as dameges for | the alleged loss of articles entrusted to the defendant Mrs. Hocker niéd Habiiity Mrs. Farrant's case was tha stayed at the hotel until March, 1024, { when she had to visit Germany At { that time she could not pay the bill | and left certain luggage with Mrs Hocker, agreeing to pay for the stor- age She was away for 10 m Mr of the com the | | | i de t she 58 heF rerurn had the trunks sent to her. It was then discovered that many valuable articlas were missin, While Mrs, Farrant, a fashic dreased woman, was giving evidence, she-said that one of the missing ar ticles was a bird of pasadise worth £15. BIRD OF PARADISE. "What do do with paradise?' "Wear it,' was '"How on earth can you wear & bird of paradise?' was the next ques tien.---*'On your hat,' repited the wit- | ness Later his lordship propo ! query, "What is a runt and on M 'Farrant giving a demenstrative answer, said, 'Oh, 1 know, it's a bit of laceto run table, Counsel was descr Boxes 'and spoke of two ho trunk, each capable of be whereon the judge | *1 thought 24 tr | handful # Mr. Trapneil, for a bird of you the answe! Jed the were only a the defence, sald the locks; of the contents of the boxes hotel to ar Mrs. Hocke to keep the plaintiff's boxes. and was doubtful about getting the +P r sald she was reluctant she b aid. |" here were 98 hats packed together | in the box 1 have never seen such | eration in my life' she a | speaking charitably, some of the hats | were at least 20 years old."' i" a conglom- dded, 'and, STRANGE QUESTIONS | | PUTTORESCUER suggests a |in parts of Hampshire and NorthiCoyple Saved from Drowning at Bridlington Concerned About Clothes Hearing a ¢Fy 1Hat 4 boat had been {capsized Willlam Stephenson, a Flam borough man, plunged into the sea at | Bridlington and saw three peopis {woman and two men----struggiing {the water. | He swam to the woman and got her to safety: then he plunged in again and saved one of the men. The o! man was hauled up the sea wall by rope. . . | The man Stephenson rescued said {Where can we get {dried ™ : £ Stephenson replied but | shall have to ride i miles to get mine dried." he Woman: "Where's my hat?' {| Wephenson 1 'don't ' know. - Tthankful you are safe' * T in our clothes don rw home five George Lyne, aged 71 Mena! Bridge, has been presented Wb Viscount Peel, First Commissioner | Works, with the medal of the R Victorian Order The will Bart. of Brighton, has been proved al £300,000, on which the estate duty will 1 be about £75.000. i - | ah pr _ INARTYRTOXRAY FAMOUS ARCADE SACRIFICED LEE | FALLS INTO HANDS HELP VICTIMS eT A WE gt FREE nya aT Major John Hall Edwards|F ite PRODErY eof Carried en Despite ol joncan Nowe Great Pain Great'Value AN ARTIST | | 3 | | Painted Sketch by Holding] le re Brush With Leather | . Finger Major ' Jobn Hall-Edwards, the | X-ray pioneer who died in Blrming- | Bam recently, who did more in E lapd than any other man to ext the application of X-ra¥s to the relie of the suffering. and was a victim of the rays with which he worked . fe Burlington Arcade Off Pic cadilly Always Remained in Cavendish Family = Lord Chesham, its presant owner, to ing syndicate, re price and the purpose to which ade is to be devoted are kept strictly sercet for the present The arcade was built in 1519 as & {bazaar by Lord George Cavendish His left hand and arm who was afterwards called to the amputated in Febru House of Lords in the lifetime of his foyr months Ja r he Jost RET father, the Duke of Devonshire, as 7 the other hand 1 Rgriington. About 80 years ago He was then radiograp came into the possession of another Birmingha®h General Hosp branch of the Cavendishes, of which for 20 years, he was ser Lord Chesham i= the Ndad officer to the X-ray depa The arcade is about 200 yards long, A Birmingham .man, and runs from Plooadiily to Burlings toh gardens It is private property, and the gates are closed every eves ing { A uniformed commissionaire is always on duty, and he exercises the {right of the p rietor to exclude un~ jesirable characters It fact that =. were nedical ent Dr Hall-- Hast en- practical of huaiasts study Rontgen THE KING'S SYMPATHY. His experimenta followed, and SP tion that he had dermatitis, ger the WOrK v de Ws fallen he h a Lord sired to keep free of stree : ' An interes s awar fed 908 a | nection of the family with the famous 1 of £120, and ! arcade iz that the commissionalres o duty there are past non+COm~ ned officers of the 10th Hus. yo regiment with which mem. *hesham family have been George Cavendish de- the entrance to his house refuse 18 feature of the cone continue to scle a medallio the Ca of Dr ter t added at * the time of operation) that arm might he saved The he pu f the ( ated SEVERAL OLD FIRMS, Orfe of the commissionaires, Sergt.« , served in the regiment , while In anether in. has followed father as a of the wrcade esent peer was for several officer in the famous y (King Edward's regiment) and was wounded in the war The arcade has beer known. in Service as the '10th Hussars hes Hall-Edw z Ha hope logtor took a § 3 » son an pr en | Art. | Art Gallery he LEATHER FINGER. , | "rom cherished art boyhood an an , and his inte ir ing his later years ate exhibition of long ire asked Mr. Justice Rowlatt. | frocks, | the only damage done was in forcing | Be | ps keeper of the of the jate Sir John Bilaker, | of | sculpture at the | Medicine, Rr. Hall-Ed | sketch which he had inted" by hold {ing his brushes betwee his remain. { ing thumb and a leather finger strap { ped to his knuckle 1906 Sin¢ f X-n Society of wards showed a is e the first symp atitis appeared, nuou | toms of { Dr. Hall fight w 1 "For years,' he said Tecentlyy" known any sleep but t austion { 1 | hs ¥ { 1 it was nece ke narcotics cute was t wt he was s times, obliged to both arms bound above his head in order to ob- BRTAN FIRST: TELEVISION WORK for | Two Licences Issued Regular Transmission of Scenes Two licenses for w fir « granted | taken over Regula | now taking of 200 metres ad off A offi eless telavision have been Televisor of vision ce n's-lane and 2TW '), the ¢ station, Amateurs | hear by een 2 Hq company jal experiment stening ir i 200 metres a dronir An asroplane 11 probably be the fae y Hutchinson, the business dire of Television, 1td., at Motorgrs re © If the listener had a he would see , or whatever eiving visor face mov be transmi the tr ng face trom Lond r int ed are being sent row ference is WAVE This in the world but a certain am being experien length used the first is televisic | DRIVERLESS TRAIN : | CRASHES JNTO FREIGHT i i Two Miles Away A ratlway Accident at a Newcastle | suburban provided a mystery | which has just been solved arching the wreckage of #n elac- ttric train which 4d rig-nto a. g train, breakdown gang was {to find -any trace of the driver, al ] though they worked right through the | night In the morning came the news that lthe man's body had been discovered i two miles up the line | 3% was realized that the electric j train, which was running from Whit. {ley Bay, had travelled this distan { without any. control DRIVER'S FATE i "Its assumed that the | lam Skinper, of Pott | Neweastle-- was looking out sidewindow of the driving soach his head ast { hurled on { ' The co occurred at Manors about 8 quarter castle Central { was overturned, sevaral goods wagons | smashed and two of the coaches of the { electric tram telescoped oe Five peoples were injured, but only £34 they station tty the on' with ren, one of ¥ before the father The averages cost of on July 1, accordin istry of Labor, was 70 per that of July, 1914, compared per cent. a month ago and lgent. a year ago. Body of Engineer Found on Line! an | unabie | a bridge and he was | ving In Eng | v wo of the shops have been held by | the same firms for upwards of a cen fn the neighborhood of has { value of late the increased enormously in A building site in Ox- { ford streét of 20.000 square feet was sold in 1919 for £247,500. A bid of { £140,000 for No. 1 Stratton street, { Piccadilly, the residence of the late | Baroness Burdett-Coutts, with an area of 20,000 square feet, Was res fysed in 1922 o- Part of the Portland estats, belonge« ing to Lord Howard de Walden, was | sold last, our ite avout £3.000,000, { while for.a plot nd a the city a | sum equal to £50 per square foot was | offered in 1922. ANTIQUARIAN HAS - UNEARTHED PRIOKY. Foundation of "Merton Church Revealed After 500 Years After four or five years of excavas {tion work Colonel! H. F. Bidder, D.8, low of the Society of Antiquars is nearing the completion of his voluntary task of unearthing the foun. jations of Merton Priory Church which have been buried for about 500 years '"What we want to do is to lay out { the site as a public park, with the hise« { ve fou tions exposed for all te see." Colonel Bidder sald. "If funds are forthcoming the whole thing can be compieted in a month of ty The treasurer of the fund Is , recelver-general of stminster Abbey, and the Bpeaker 1 House of Commons has become It was in the Chapter House y that one of the first laments sat in the reign church have been at work om have clienred what Jounddtions of a large { not be alle to ses about half the site Abbey Station a site of the high x cluster of nettles the attar some lime ago 1 the skeletons of four priors." Near the ie Answered Groom's Appeal and Gave Famous March on Radio * | A wireless enthusiast, unable 10 are | rangs for an organist to play Mendeise sohn's Wedding March at his wedding, gent an B.0.8, to 2-10 The listener, Work berland) man, us to have the go the program de- proached the organist of ¢ Jewry, London, and asie« play it on the day of the Beptember 7, after the time 1 o'clock. mally the march takes about minutes, but the organist, Lewis Jomes, consented to play the Rapaat, Hit the peried up to abou were installed at he bride end brides and with thet ns of ths well-known inarch dure ing the wedding bredkisst 3 "hia is Che first time in the of British arrangement has been made. MARKS OF CUPID'S groom, stra A professional titiooist in a & r tior in Glasgow, Sheriff was not unocomanen f said it Court lovers. IF BULDERS NOW OVER CENTURY OLD ~ Burlington Arcade has been sold by is sald to owe its origin to the \ welts, heard the * history -broadcaating that such on' their affection for sach other ng thelr ndmes tarioosd on bressts In some cases lovers urtied and had the orgioal Sale retu and covered over by ORTH BROADCAST NOFD AT WEDDING

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