' You and your Landlord,' by A LAWYER
TF you are uncertain of the legal obligations
1 implied in the payment of. rent, of the difference between rent service and rent charge, 01 if your knowledge of the law governing compensation, power of distress, or ejectment as it affects you as a tenant is not all that it might be, here is illumination. This is the second talK in a short series, in which a lawyer, versed in the intricacies of the Kent Restriction Act and the cases that have arisen out. of it, offers authoritative advice that is of great practical value to all who have reason to dislike Quarter-day. Next week the landlord's legal position will -be clarified.
by - WALTER VALE
From ALL SAINTS', MARGARET STREET
By CHRISTOPHER STONE
Directed by Guy DAINES
(From Edinburgh)
News by Commander STEPHEN King-Hall
This listing contains language that some may find offensive.
Captain G. CRAWSHAY : ' Herbaceous
Flowers '
Mr. JAMES AGATE
In Harmony
OUR BILL AGAIN
MARIO DE PIETRO
Mandoline and Banjo Solos
MAMIE SOUTTER and BLAKE ADAMS in Episode IV of An Omnibus Romance'
By DAISY FISHER
Music by HERO DE RANCE
-ROSE PERFECT
'The Girl with the Golden Voice'
HAVER and LEE
The Fun Racketeers
THE B.B.C. THEATRE ORCHESTRA, under the direction of S. KNEALE KELLEY , will play during the programme
Weather Forecast, Second General News Bulletin
(Section C)
(Led by F. WEIST HILL)
Conductor, ADRIAN BOULT
GEORGE FRIDERIC HANDEL , newly-appointed Kapellmeister to George,
Elector of Hanover, was granted leave of absence to visit England in 1710. The brilliant young musician, already famous at the age of twenty-five, was well received in London, achieved fame in a night with his opera Rinaldo, grew to love the city, and vowed to come again. Two years later ho returned, intentionally overstayed his leave, and comfortably forgetting all about his Hanoverian Kapellmeistership , burnt his whole fleet of continental boats and entered the service of Queen Anne. But in a little while, Anne dying, Handel had occasion to recall Hanover; for, of all possible people, the one chosen to succeed the English queen was his later master.
George, Elector of Hanover, came to
London as King George I, in 1714, making it very awkward, one would think, for the truant. Handel appeared unconcerned, however, and placing reliance on his growing reputation, sat tight and waited. So poignant a situation, so tempting a tit-bit, was more than the musical historians of two centuries have been able to resist. Of the incident of The Water Music they have perpetuated so engaging a fiction that until quite recently nobody suspected the existence of the cold fact. But to Newman Flower, the English biographer of Handel, nothing is hidden. The essence of both the fiction and the fact as recorded by him is the subject of a note in the centre column.