LATE MESSAGES
LONDON, October 1.
Clara Butt confesses that she is tremendously interested in the talkies, she is shortly appearing in singing. One story has been specially written for her. “I have often gone to the cinema three times daily in Australia and America. Voice production is already sufficiently good for first-class singing in the talkies, which are my new ambition.”
LONDON, October 1.
The RlOl made a successful trial flight over London, the first since the new bag was added.
LONDON, October 1.
A memorial service to Lord Birkenhead will bo held at Westminster Abbey on Monday. It was Lord Birkenhead’s wish that people of all classes, who wished to attend this service, should go with no difficulty. The visitors at Gray’s Inn, where the body is lying in state, are mostly typists and clerks.
BERLIN, October 1
The Leipsig treason case verdict is expected on Friday. The Prosecutor u.sked for confinement in fortress Counsel for the defence maintained that the trial reflected the depression in which the younger army officers faced the possibility of a Socialist Minister for Defence, adding that the soldiers would not be able to fight on behalf of a Socialist who professed no Fatherland. LONDON, October 1. Many allusions about baldness have been dispelled by Dr J. H. Davies, at the conference of the British Guild of Hairdressers, and Wigmakers. Tight hats and wetting the hair are in nowise responsible. Oil and grease are detrimental. The chief causes are worry and nerves. Baldness is more common in towns than country, also among brainworkers than manual. GENEVA, October 1. The convention has reached an agreement on financial assistance to States, which are the victims of aggression. This means a guaranteed loan scheme whereby the State declared to be attacked, or in danger of attack, can, with the League Council’s consent, raise a loan in the markets of the members of the League. The amount and the conditions defining the liability of each guarantor, are clearly limited. The scheme is confined to States carrying out the terms of the Disarmament Convention. I
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Greymouth Evening Star, 2 October 1930, Page 9
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346LATE MESSAGES Greymouth Evening Star, 2 October 1930, Page 9
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