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LOUISE MACK IN RIVERTON.

11l More’s Hall on Friday next (16th inst.), at 3 and 8 o'clock, Miss Louise Mack, the famous war correspondent of the London Times, will give her only recitals entitled “The Old; World in the War, and the New World After the War.” This is not a lecture. Miss Mack describes in thrilling and eloquent language her own personal experiences in the war, as V.A.D., and as war correspondent to the London ‘Times.’ Out there at the front shei met Edith Cavell, a prisoner in Brussels. Everything in the recital is real living, palpitable with life. One of her headlines is “ Has War Smashed Down the Boundaries Between Life ami Death?” No one should miss this rare intellectual treat, which is crammed with comedy and wit as well as pathos. There will be special moving pictures belonging to 1 Miss Mack herself. Miss Mack comes with the reputation of being “ the greatest woman speaker in the World. She attracts great am’ 5 - ences, and her highly modern att. tiule to the New World is exemplified in her headlines “New Marriage, New Manners, the New Attitude, of the World Towards Life After Death.”

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WSTAR19200413.2.7

Bibliographic details

Western Star, 13 April 1920, Page 2

Word Count
196

LOUISE MACK IN RIVERTON. Western Star, 13 April 1920, Page 2

LOUISE MACK IN RIVERTON. Western Star, 13 April 1920, Page 2