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Wartime House Party: At Mrs. Theodore Wessel's Home in the Country

... Wartime House Party At Mrs. Theodore WesseTs Home in the Country The Hon. Mrs. Ian Lyle and Her Children, Gavin and Lorna Sa/.n, W -I Tfc 'I V o lr CouP/lne Sln, The Duke of Leinster With His Hostess, Mrs. Theodore Wessel The Duke of Leinster in His Caravan ►untcss Cadogan and the Hon. Mrs. Ian Lyle, >rd hurst on's two youngest sisters, with their ildren, are guests of their mother, Mrs. ...

Published: Wednesday 17 February 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 201 | Page: Page 18, 19 | Tags: Graphic  Photographs 

Up and Down the Land

... cmcf. 7^e./aftc( IT is probably the fact that two-thirds of the farmers in the occupied countries are not only working under extreme stress but are receiving little more than a bare subsistence for themselves and their families. Here in England farmers are working under stress-- shortage of labour, shortage of machinery and parts, shortage of fertilisers, and so on. The only glut is of forms ...

Horse and Tractor on the Farm

... DURING the present century, and par ticularly under recent war conditions, the uses of tractors on farms have been very much extended and in some cases, carried to extremes. Mechanised agriculture has made rapid strides, and enthusiastic farmers have endeavoured to run farms, especially where the fields are of considerable size, entirely by tractor work. But thev have found manv diffi culties ...

Future Problems for Private Flyers

... By Our Flying Correspondent TECHNICALLY the future for the private flyer in peace time has never looked brighter; organisationally (if I may use that clumsy word) it looks much less bright. And a real effort will be required if we are to give private flying enough freedom after the war to make it attractive. Designers have now amassed so much experience of all types of aircraft that there is ...

Planned Production Always Pays

... By Our Horticultural Correspondent AT this time it is easier, and probably more profitable, to turn the garden over in the mind than with the spade. We have had over-much heavy rain and those who heeded the oft-repeated advice to get on with the digging last autumn will have all the advantage. Those who were unable to do so, will do well to postpone digging until the soil no longer sticks to ...

International Sports Fellowship

... IN the planning that is now going on for the future, sport has not been forgotten, and a new fellowship has been inaugurated. It is the , with the aim and object to encourage and strengthen inter national friendship and goodwill among friendly pations through the medium of sport, irrespective of class and creed. We cannot pretend that international sporting contests in the past have always ...

Playbill Looks at the Shows: Sleeping Out (Piccadilly)

... Playbill Looks at the Shows Sleeping Out (Piccadilly) WHAT is it that makes a farce funny? Perhaps we had better ask what is it that makes the majority of farces, to me, at least, lamentably un funny. Surely the answer is the noise and the restlessness caused by piling ancient situation on ancient situation, and the almost entire absence of wit. Mr. Walter Ellis's Sleeping Out at the ...

Pedigree Ayrshires at Reading

... THE English Committee of the Ayrshire Cattle Herd Book Society attracted 102 head of pure bred and 31 head of non-pedigree cattle to their Show and Sale at Reading on February 4. The average for seventy-four pedigree lots was /103 11s. yd., but the feature of the Sale was the average for heifers in milk or in calf. Seventeen of these averaged £153 iSs. 4d The cattle were of fair quality, and ...

Cider Making In War Time

... Cider Making In I War Time I By Vernon L. S. Charles THE south-western counties of England, together with Gloucestershire, Here- fordshire, Worcestershire and Mon- mouthshire are noted for their cider orchards in which are found large standard trees of special varieties of cider apples which nearly all originated in the Normandy district of France. The greater part of the cider pro-- clucect ...

Thinking for Victory

... It is quite true that we are dipping into our reserves, but I am not unduly anxious The Prime Minister in the House on February 9, 1943. THE Premier's statement was very timely, not only because it sounded a warning note, but because it may have en- couraged the community to think out for themselves the implications of the coming offensive as it might affect the non-combatant population. ...

THE Vitabeau

... ■Vitabeau -Vitabeau Now for the Civil Defence yy COLD, wet night and on duty. That's the time when you need the comfort and pro tection of this smart but essentially businesslike Vitabeau. In Fawn and Blue Egyptian Cotton Gabardine, lined throughout body and sleeves, with strap .and button windproof wrist cuffs, this is a coaf thaf will keep out wind and weather for years of hard wearing ...

Published: Saturday 20 February 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Advertisement | Words: 105 | Page: Page 31 | Tags: Photographs 

It's That Man Again: Mrs. Handley's Boy and the Itma Company on the Screen

... It's That Man Again Mrs. Handley's Boy and the Itma Company on the Screen To compensate for the loss of Tommy Handley's weekly Itma programme on the air for the next few months, a screen version of the now famous half-hour is to he shown at the re-opened Tivoli in the Strand, and at Marble Arch Pavilion. Nearly all those characters who have endeared themselves to something like twenty ...

Published: Wednesday 17 February 1943
Newspaper: The Tatler
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 276 | Page: Page 7 | Tags: Graphic  Photographs