Show I Who's News This Week By Delos Wheeler Lovelace j Consolidated A MOST durable ambassador is Sir Samuel John Gurney I now back at 10 Downing Street to tell how he talked turkey to is thin- A i Bit r- r Sir nish with a Samuel Has Plenty tight mouth Of Solid Qualities J X that on occasion has run through the house of commons like the rasp of a he knows his mind and probably that Allied victories had ripened the time to back Franco into a corner One of those who zip between London and New York the way an older generation used to ride the expresses between New York and reports that Hoare loves the pomp and circumstance of public He certainly acts as though he docs when lie togs out in court nis uniform is The i sword that lie wears as an Elder I Brother of Trinity House slants j The blaze of his deco- rations heightens the light of I pleasure in his Sir Samuel is a prodigious i with an infinite capacity for tant detail and his performance in Spain has been satisfactory all I His has helped She writes a weekly pep piece for consular The Hoare though not has been in banking quite some time and there is plenty of money to support an ambassadorial Sir Samuel is I Nazis in according I A to exiled Prime Minister Hubert are slowly starving more than half of Belgium's small Fifty- Nazis Are Starving three per Belgium's cent of H. Declares tween the age of three and he are undernourished speaks on the basis of first-rate He was prime minister before the captivity and the people who remained behind still look upon him as their leader and smuggle information over the Channel A trifle old to fight In this in the last struggle with Germany enlisted as a finished a lieutenant and on in the reserve to become a captain of the That I probably evoked memories he could not It was in the Ardennes that the bloody bat-i ties of the summer of 1914 were futile victories for the Germans they turned out to After peace became one of Brussels' most eminent lawyers and i ultimately was elected to the I A thick man with a square face and I little hair but vast eyebrows and a I heavy he held various portfolios in the cabinet and reached the prime just before the Germans' second He barely escaped their pursuit and with i his wife and seven children went first to then to Spain and by way of Portugal to King fell in the Nazis' hands and first com-i ment was bitterly It i only double talk for Ger- man consumption because he defends his king A FTER an earlier war council called in Washington by the authors of the Atlantic it was rumored that a veteran general had backed Liken f t mi l mm away from To Wellington the Burma offensive In Various Ways jy now tossed to the the hell-for-leather Lord Louis Gossips J said that when any schedule of planes and guns was drawn up the oldster and asked has always gone ahead with the tools at hand and has used these so well he i Is a vice admiral at a superstitious neighbor points out that when he finished Napoleon's generals In the Peninsular was the neighbor Is also on a peninsula and Lord Is The Is by not An elder brother Inherited the title of Marquis of Milford Haven and a nephew holds it is only plain Louis Francis Albert Victor but like also a younger he may be more than marquis in the Until 1914 the family name was It was changed because anti-German sentiment chafed Lord Louis' an English admiral The cousinship with Britain's so often stems from a one of Victoria's daughters The line began a little less than a hundred years ago when a prince of Hesse a Russian countess himself married the fabulously wealthy daughter of a British The remainder of the family consists of two young ano |