Word: hon
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...Manhattan's Metropolitan Opera House this week Rev. Dr. Frank Nathan Daniel Buchman was to hold a great meeting featuring the Hon. Carl J. Hambro, president of the Norwegian Parliament, and other members of the international team of Oxford Groupers who lately worked in Switzerland (TIME, Oct. 14 et ante). And last week Groupers told the Press about one of their most spectacular conversions to date. A textile manufacturer of Rotterdam named Dr. Roessingh, said they, lost his fortune when England went off the gold standard. Turning his talents to invention, he produced an incendiary bomb which military experts...
...usual black robe to the scarlet. One day last week Sir Cyril handed down his most publicized decision since he mounted the King's Bench in 1933-a five-hour opinion on U. S. businessmen and U. S. business methods. But it was not a Red Letter Day. Hon. Mr. Justice Atkinson simply climbed into his velvet breeches, tucked in his jabot, pulled on his everyday wig and his usual black robe...
...have her jewels stolen in a Canadian hotel or Canada's Prime Minister has to call officially in Washington. Last week both occurred. The $7,500 jewels stolen from Princess Maria of Bourbon-Sicily, bride of Prince Juan of Spain, held press attention until the Rt. Hon. William Lyon Mackenzie King actually stood on the White House doormat, ate from the White House dishes, slept in a White House bed. "I thought it would be a pleasant thing," said Mr. King, "to pay a courtesy call upon your President." That was a magnificent understatement. What the new-Canadian Premier...
Lion's Budget. More of a buzzard than a lion in face and figure, the Rt. Hon. Neville Chamberlain, is nonetheless the lion of Britain's general election. With his famed "balanced budget" now a symbol of the National Government's successful stewardship, the beak-nosed and scrawny Chancellor of the Exchequer spoke last week as a complacent treasurer who expects soon to float a $1,000,000,000 British rearmament loan without so much as flurrying the market. "There is not a single small country in Europe," Mr. Chamberlain declared, "which did not breathe a sigh...
This tribute to the Realmleader, tossed off three months ago by the Rt. Hon. Winston Churchill in a potboiling piece for Vincent Astor's Today, went unnoticed by German diplomats in the U. S. last August. When it potboiled up again in London's Strand Magazine (which had bought it from Mr. Churchill, to whom the British rights were released on Sept. 18 by Today), the fat of cherubic "Winnie" was in the fire last week. Reason: Statesman Churchill in the interval has made his peace with British Prime Minister Baldwin and Germans, like everyone else, understood that...