Jmuuuy 29.3936 1 ifribute To Late Beloved Monarch Lt. Governor Part- i0||lfll08 mill liturgy is Memorial Service INSPIRING MESSAGE BY or. LLGATE Trinity Church Scene Of Great Demon- stration montlnued from Page 1) John i4: l, 2; Jcb l9: 25, 2'1; Tim. 6: ‘I. and Job l: 21. Psalm 90 was read responsively by Rev. Mr. Raymond and the con- Bfeiltion and the reading wee fol- lowed by the singing of “Now the Labourei-‘s Task Is o'er." The Scripture lesson, 1 Corin- thians 15: 20, 58 was read by His Honor Lieutenant Governor De- Blois and was followed by the ad- drwl. e. tribute to the late King, by Rev. Dr, ‘Legato. The anthem "The Lord Ls My BhflDher-d," was rendered by the choir and was followed with the whllwetlonal sirlging of the hymn. “Nearer My God to Thee." Prayer by Rev. Mr. Raymond and Rev. Mr. Bishop was followed by the singing of “Alleluia" and the Dllyifll of the Dead March con- cluded the service. Among those present in an of. ficial capacity in addition to His Honor Lieutenant. Governor De- BlOll, who was attended by his aides. were the Premier, the Hos. T. L. Campbelhalld members of the government; members of tho judiciary, Chief Justice the Hon. J. A. Matilieson and Mr. Justice A. C. Blunders; Mr] Peter Sinclair, MP; His Worship Mayor Samuel Kennedy, MBE. and members of the City Council, also represent- atives from the millto. and naval officers, ths R.C.M.P. end City Po- lice. the I.0.D.E., the legion Aux- ilifl-Iy. the Queen Mary Needlework Guild, the Canadian Legion, the Sons of England, the orange Q;- dcr, the Boy Scouts and Girl Guides and the 0.6.111‘. The church was appropriately draped in royal purple and black. REV. DR. LEGATITS ADDRESS Following is the text of the ed- drcss by Dr. bcgate: “What passage in all literature could better paint tho scene on which our saddened hearts gaze to- dfiy than those sublime words from Ecclesiastes, “The strong men bow themselves. and those that look out oi the windows are darkened; the sound of the grinding is low, and the daughters of music are brought low; the silver cord ls loosed, and the golden bowl isbroken ‘at the‘ fountain, and the mourners go. about the streets; for mun has gone ‘to his long home, and the spirit he; returned w God who gave it?’ "Nothing in the history o.‘ the present generation could moan more to us than that inexorable sentence "The King is dead." To men, women end children in all ‘parts of the world the passing of our venerated and beloved sovereign represented not alone the breaking of e national tie, but just as much the breaking of a tie of personal affection which had become a fanf- ily tradition and inheritance. It is no forced or feigned garb of grief that we wear today; w, mourn not under the compuslon of any offic- ial proprieties, but under the con- straint oi heart-felt sorrow, and our frame of ready grief needs no other bidding than that. How intimate and personal the bond was that. knit the people t0 the King is seen in many ways. Some seven years ago when His Impressive Service Bommemorates Death 0f King George ii BlSl-IOP ur‘ uI-ITOWN PAYS ‘IRLBUIE Grief Stricken Crowds Throng The Basilica. (Continued from Pogo l) realm mourns over tho lifeless form of one who, for sin-loot six and twenty years, ruled as 80v- erelgn King with such diplomatic tact and ideal fitness that his pess- ing has thrown a Dell of sorrow over many portions of the world beyond the confines of Empire. The crown and sceptm of his earthly rank have already passed to his successor; the grave alone is now his portion on earth. for Kings as well as subjects must bow to Death's inevitable con- quest. Shrouded in the flag be served so well on lend and sea, his honoured remains will be borne by loving hands to their last resting place, to the beet oi muffled drums and the solemn wail of trumpets. Kings from other lands, representatives c! foreign govern- ments that reccgniile no heredit- ary titles or nobility, his own de- voted statesmen and faithful sail- ors and soldiers will march behind that coffin in all the majestic pomp and ceremony which ancient custom has decreed should mark tho burial of departed majesty, but we may be sure that the best and most enduring tribute to King George. the Fifth will be shown by the countless multitudes of his ‘ ved subjects which will’ sil- ently watch that greet procesion, and by those greater multitudes. gathered in many ' churches throughtout the broad expanse of the Empire, to lament, as we do, the loss of one whom they revered He had a definite Prestige in the eyes of all hL; subjects, even of those who profess no love for the Throne. And one o: the most sig- nificant things recorded in con- nection witnthe King's death is that the extreme communiuis in. the City of Melbourne, Australia, are today flying the red flag of Socialism over their headquarters at half mast out of respect for e. great. good man who chanced to be o king . Home And hmlly "Another thing which has drawn us to him is the way in which he forged the link which bound his home life to ours. It is, most of all, the homes of the nation which de- tcrmille the quality of citizenship; and we can never be thankful enough for the wholesome influ- ences of the domestic life of the royal palace upon the homes of his subjects. His 1st,; majesty set aside, to o. large extent, those an- cient ceremonial barriers which iso- late the Throne, and loved to visit you and me at our very firesidee in those Christmu day chats of intimate friendliness, to which none-of us could listen without a‘ lump in the throat and a. tear in the eye. And thus and thus did there flow a stream of gracious in- fluence from the palace of the King to the home of his people which enriched the nation alt its very heart and will not econ pus away. “And, sti‘l further, the Kim's hold upon his people was intensi- fied by the {act tint we knew hlln to be not only a good man. but o Majesty lay close to the gates oi death, the whole nation prayed as fervently for his recovery as we might have done for one of our own circle And His Maya ty's lest crlstmu day broadcast stirred us to concern as we traced the weari- ness of his voice which he so brave- ly strove to ccnczai. A Life oi. Strvlco m Noel Coward's My. "Gavel- cade," you remember how the mother and children stood watch- ing the flmeral procession of Queen Victoria. and when the children asked the artless quertion, "Why did cheque-en die?" ilic mother lwntly answered, “Because she was very old and very tired.’ That is Ireatly what lg stirrill! W!‘ elm‘ tlons today-that simple truth- that the King died because he had Brown old and tiled in the lovinS service 0g hi; people. And so, as W0 meet in God's house today V! 800°‘ tiiy our sorrow. it in not so much of the monarch we are thlnklni. Iifll’ of u». statesmen. but chiefly or the man. lane no tribute that we could m his memory c"! Ilse higher hon that. . "It was his human qilfllm" "m" made him the greet king that he was. um of uu reign extend" cvq- mum“ yen], The Chest We! had 1m. u» world a very “pliable world. Thrones ml. wveluiim broom diierdar, liberty threatened to become licence. And ydi- "m" “h” any». y"; in communion. our ltmplmfinointalned an attitude ef sound some and steadiness which was, at once, the envy and the Id- mirsticn of the whole world. 't‘-~ voracious historian of the lut- truly religious men, And that as- surance has meant more than we can say to the essential character of the Empire over which he ruled, especially in these latter times when a gm; materialism has so much marked the common life. and when spiritual unsettlement so widely przvsils. A faithful church- man, a daily reader of the Bible, a humble-minded Christian who took God into all the events of his lie, public and private in all this he has bequvethsd to us a legacy whose value is very real indeed- Itulcd In Righteousness "We can surely count it one of the greatest Housings that God has cgnferred upon our nation that. our late sovereiiln was ‘s Kins i-hei ruled in righteousness and in the (Qgf of the lard. All 60W}! the course of history k1!!! Ind W995‘ have had certain epithets bestowed th m b gated tehe Cyrest, William the 0on- queror. Richard the Lion-hearted. Victoria the Good, Edward the Peace-maker. I; it too much to think that the Kins we m ">- day wfl] g0 down to pocteriiiyqi: (km-n the Well-beloved! " King is dead! Long live tbe Klnli The British Throne is never for one moment tenantless, and God uueenlimsnewklnsfvrvhvm our h joyflty And 0063i‘ 1W0 an assured. 101' W9 W“ um i" w’ new, in his boyhoods years. and M h “m “pt warmly there. And no proclamation me youna kins may ever make will win our admir- pum. and allegiance more securely than his splendid wordl. "1 Im de- termined to follow my "$1111"! 1M- i cannot nutter to new that l" ' M, fmpflg‘! equiibrlum in l 1e or carious limes was. i0 I largo ‘ofiee. sustained and 0"‘ served by m: dumb Q King ooorso m ‘ welfare of perzonality and and may Pitt-h. , d work u he d b- ztvfrmymliie for the happiness and all cllslu o? my sub- unit" May Gad guide him Bfllhfu "God uvo the l!!!" “'11 Avihorlv- Justification "You know. den: brethren. that Mligion and the State, which you desire to serve to the best of your from God; they are intimately connected by bonds and wlatious which bear Y need not be/reminded that mono: by nature a soclatbeing and um, 1 ayexist us and Mllldly governed. No real society can be conceived without unity, Wit-helli- power. By the effect of unity. millions of uieu divided by places and time, meet in one single “n. ire. and not. and move as if there ability. both proceed "19 Iilmp of God Himself. meme must necmarily whereby we ecu be interests. Dl-ssions, ideas, lliitiilymmlylffiondgkjn‘. min. ‘ .P‘r0v1nce . Pays " IFHE CHARLOTTETDWN GUARDIAN Where WIDNIIDAY. ‘ANUAIY 2O 8. P. Mr-Oliil - EMIII Hill. ‘IN l’. Mr-Alllflll teailonce Heart: Hall. Cenrrenuonal -- Large at- lhe ltentrzl Guardian -_-__ This column ll reserved Ier new: OI W lntoroot but advertising of I newly nflulo may In Inserted n8 G cents n moral strictly pnynblo In udvnnco. LECTURE -wl'l'll lantern-slides, "A Key U0 A11," by P M19380!‘ Abell, P111309 01 W816! UOIICKB Hill fill! Bvellllll. 8.30 p.111. Free to the pub- "Q 14-624 Erinitp mum ennui JWIIOH 1n His own Supreme Auth- wore but one tune. one interest, one life for them. By the effect of Order. the mutual relations of citi- "M Is they no defined by the lows. are maintained with invlol. a?" Nmhrlty; and. u. here and erelin the fluctuating ghldqw o1 ‘051313135593. B01110 evil-doe;- pet; hlmsef to attack recognized rights, the spirit of order which pervades society steps him and brings him t‘, mm”- By the effect. of power citizens dispersed over s vest, ter- m”? "mun illflqliil slid in peace 500N180 they know that guarding them is a presence, whether u. in- dividual or e xroup, which u m. Mvsnized voice and guargnteg o: the 6min“. the permanence and f!“ 11111055? 0i the country. Boc- etv therefore in so far as it pog. sesses these three essential attri- bute! °Y Will-y. order and‘ power, 15 95° ‘iifliillfml 0f intelligence m“ hum“ liberty. Armed force and violence may, 5,1; 51m“, “em '~° Mildly the needs of society, but it is a counterfe effigy that can never endure, and the first fav. curable occasion will be the signal for its destruction. Tbs social needs of mankind can only be full! satisfied and prgpgrly gage. Welded by an authority that i; legitimately conferred and rever. wily respected. and this tempo .1 authority comes primarily from God Who created us with natural aptitudes for society, and Who be. stows upon us a. qualified pgrflcl- o'clock. Fred Murphy. of Monctcn Times. had a better chan report 150.000 people tioe. ority in order that peace may be maintained, justice may flourish and the contentment, happiness “mi Dmsllflflty of the human race may be attained. Civil authority, therefore, is one of the most im- portant of those "best and perfect gifts coming down from the Father of lights" Who gave us intelligence t0 understand the scope and exer- cise of this delegated authority whereby We must work out our earthly problems in harmony with one another. quietly but effectively the able ordeal. Everything know of King George Obedience Ind Bevcrence "On such a solid basis oi obed- ience and reverence for an auth- ority which recognizes the sup- remacy of God over Sovereign and people alike, rests the traditional concept of government in the great Comma lvveaith which comprise the British Empire, andfor us who have been born under its benign sway, it has always been a joy to fulfil the command of our Blessed Lord: "Render to Caesar. the things that are Caesar's, and to God tho things that are God's" (Luke (xx- 25), a doctrine elaborated for us in the first papal encyclical: "Be ye subject to every human creature for God's sake: whether it be to the King as excelling or to gov- ernors as sent by him for the pun- ishment oi evil-doers and for the praise of the good; for so is the will of God that by doing well you may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men; as free and 110i maklngliberty a. cloak for malice. but as servants of God. Honour all men; love the brotherhood; fea-r God; honor the King." (1st Epistle or St. Peter, 2, 18-11). "Down throught the long age-s which have elapsed since those words were penned, ‘systems o! human governments have greatly changed, but in the midst of the vicissitudes which have strewn the course of hisiory with the broken sceptrea of many fallen monarchs. it has suited beet the genius of our people to adhere in almost un- broken loyalty. to c. constitutional form of monarchisl government. and it was no small achievement when he lest spoke to usl hood. Among my papers I and so long shall the splendid example of and in these latter years proud to refer to A King Indeed certainly never made FUNERAL NOTICE-The fun- eral of the late James Brodie is postponed until tomorrow, Thurs- day, awaliting the urivhl b: his son. Service in Zion Church st 1 TAKEN SERIOUSLY ILL-Jrhe mlny friends of we. (Dn), I... s. Doyle will regret to learn that she isoonfinedtoherhomeas the rflult of osudden illness. Her condi- tion llst evening, however, was re- ported as considerably improved. Upon receipt oi the news of their sister's sudden illness, Mrs. Joseph W001i. Miss Ella. Murphy and Mr. ‘Li; Summerside, came to Moncton and are guests oi Mrs. Doyle for a few dsys.-— CAPE TOWN — (0.?) — ‘i119 school year in Cape Colony ended with the year and the newspapers remarked the graduating classes of obtaining employment than for many years. BOMBAY-(CPJ-Roused by the travelled without tickets on one Indian rall- wuy lest year, the authorities are taking measures to stop the prec- a little fired of the stern discipline arid self repression which his ex- alted office entailed. We know how worked, hoped and prayed for the welfare of his people during the anxious years of the Great War. and how he fretted at the long- delayed recovery from that lament- thnt we indicates that he was cmehtially a man cf peace and good-will, and we can easily imagine how the perplexing direction of these recent days musi- have grieved him and filled m: mind with anxiety as he saw the. sinister shadow of war falling ag- ain across the face of Europe. No wonder he seemed a. little weary “During his long reign it was his evident. and heartfelt interest in the common good pf ‘his People that endeared him to all, even inthe most distant portions of the Em- pire, for all realized that he had learned the difficult art to ‘walk with Kings, yet keep the common touch! His constant. message to his people was to preserve the sacred character of the Christian home, as if with plelatial love and in- sight he feared the inroads of an- archy against the God-established thrones of fatherhood and mother- the following quotation from one of his first public utterances: ‘The foundation of the Empire is in the homes oi the people. So long as these homes are simple, pure, and true, so long will the foundations of the British Empire be permanent, Empire be great.’ Homes that are pure, simple and true! A noble doctrine, nobly expressed by a noble King who in his private life set. his -people a just such a Pure, simple and true inn-lily life. He seemed to have emincntiy a faithful undloving husband; em- inently e. most successful father, he was the increasing group of grandchildren who clust- ered around hirn and the Queen. “Such was King George ‘modest kindly, all-accomplished, wise.’ He ‘his high the will of the people, l on the part of the pecielLv during the Phil Mp1s, matching over almost century, it has been our boast to have , Boyer-elem’ towards fence and reverence gprlng spontaneously hearts of from Edward the I‘ the Beloved! How should be to was vullOhShVBfi to us were cousin! cm proverb, and how prolurto folly is the heart. and Mty "Blamed is the late King i0 have steadily increased the prestige of the Crown among the diverse people who are subject to ithfi; proud been ruled by erect whom obed- seemed to the all citizens of our mar- vellous Empire. Victoria tbe Good. aoemaker; Georse grateful we Almighty God that such n succession of noble rulers when so disturbing social movements "any disorder and inllfi‘ M" in other parts of the world ‘Authority shows the man‘ Shy! l" when we realize humim how the paths of roy~ are beset. with spfiflll "W"? we can only repeat of the muss lfe the words of the son of Simon: rich man that is place the lawless perch of Wing's ambitions, nor a vantage-proud for pleasure.’ There was nothing showy or ostentatious in his life, but, as Sallust said 0i Cato: ‘The loss he a sought glory, the more he achieved it.’ At the very outset of his reign he won the undying gratitude of all his Catholic subjects by the stand he took regarding the words of the oath of accession. I-t would be ungracious on our part if we did not bear tribute today to his mem- ory ‘ln this regard. He always knew how to say the right. things at the right moment, and to do splendid acts of public benevolence and thoughtfulness. It is unneces- sary today to review the long suc- cession of simple, but. no less real, triumphs which he achieved with- in the limited field of endeavor al- lowed to a. constitutional monarch under our form of parliamentary government. No more apt or love- lier summary o1 his klngly life could be written then to apply to him the words of Lord Tennyson: "We see him as he moved- found without blemish; he that thlo’ ell this tract of years, could have trensgressed and hath Wearing the white flower of s. not transgressed; and could do evil blameless life Before n thousand piercing libtle- things and hath not done them." (Eeclesiesticus 81-8-10)- Devotion To Duty "Ponibly we seldom consider the which welsh "W11 the universal display of love shown him end his queenly wife on the occasion of his silver jubilee-an he declared. shown to ‘and to the man, God sits upon it." That reunion seemed to me to affection, the throne help him, who simple exp reveal the new and noble soul cl His Majcsy, as if his hurt might he a little wury of his long years his spirit UMWNOIIKOGIIUuM pause w heavy responsibilities the one who sit-s upon the throne of our Empire. It was with s feeling of pathos that nesses In that fierce light which beats upon s. throne And blackens every blot." ‘~ "The immortal soul o! Kins George has already given An ac- count of his earthly stewardship of kingly and imperial authority be- fore the judgment seat of the Kim: oi Kings. We devoutly pray that he is already enjoying the heaven- ly rewards promised to the “good and faithful servants. May God grant, comfort to the bereaved Queen and her family and ii. will be our constant duty may that s plentecus outpouring of wisdom. prudence, justice, and all klngiy virtues may descend upon the new monarch who has assumed the arduous and perilous duties insep- arable from his Mo} " -' BufialServ e1 "AA vlgw of Si. George’: chapel sewing”; y l y, Millions OfBritishSubjedct * i“ have the Inrlsl service for the late King George was held civil M0lRNiNfi . nlsllyincl, (Continued from Plan h‘ Inside the theatre ot lent 1110* persons beard the service. One po- , lineman was hurt. not seriously. h a scuffle that fdluwed Sir Robert ._ entrance through e. side door. betel‘ the major pert of the crowd drift- ed to Parliament Hill where n. bot- tery fired the memorial solute. v ' A chill wind whipped dry snow across the while lawns in front of the bluek-and-purple-dreped centfl. block and despite a bright sun few remained long. Military units of the capital's garrison were drawn up in front of the building, standing with arms reversed during the sal- ute, but their oficerg were forced to order them inside for a while as they became chilled. ' Lord Tweedsmulr and the Prime Minister attended a morning ser- vice at St. Andrews Presbyterian Church before going to the LBBlOIYS memorial. Then bebween 1 p. m. - r lswwztfl <v~s .1 Ottawa, like the s’ Mobservad two minutes silelwc- A Mighty Of Europe Join In Paying Last Respemcywfs HARlllNGlilN I s s u E s STAlfhENl Says Prime Minister Lacked Courtesy In Failing To Reply To Letter. HALIFAX, Jan. 28.-Col. Qordon S. Harrington, former premier of Nova Scotia. who in Halifax on Sun- day announced he was resigning from the employment and social insurance commission, today issued the following statement: “My attention has been drawn to a Canadian Press despatch from Ottawa which either mlsquotes the Prime Minister or calls for a. state- ment from me.- I formally resigned as chief commissioner of the em- ployment antl social insurance corn- missicn in a. letter addressed to the Prime Minister, to whom I was re- quested to report under the Act, on Jan. 21. I waited in Ottawa three days for an acknowledgment to this of Canterbury, his voice tense with emotion, lines of the Church of England: to the ground; earth ashes to ashes, dust to dust; in sure and certain hope of resurrection to eternal life." bravely throughout the service. lng for the lions lining the streets. Some had slept on sidewalks all night with newspapers as blankets. by selling mourning buttons, old newspapers to shield the throngs from the rain and tiny squares of linoleum to protect their feet from the wet pavements. They also oi- gered blocks of wood for the spec- tators to stand on and attain addi- tional height. six pence and up. communication and receiving none returned to Nova Scotic. "On Nov 1, I wrote the Prime Minister pointing out that the work of the commission had been brought to a. virtual standstill by reason of the change of government and re- questing a, statement as to the com- mission's future, in view of the fact that, whether or not the status of the existing commission was in doubt, much preliminary work was required if the government proposed to provide s. system of unemploy- ment insurance. I have yet, to re- ceive a reply to that letter. It was because the Prime Minister denied me the courtesy of a reply to my communications and because I was left with absolutely nothing to do for a. period of over there months I reached the conclusion the govern- ment felt my services were no long- er useful." At Ottawa last night Prime Min- ister King said: "I received a. letter from Col. Harrington stating that he had de- cided to tel-minute his association with the commission. I endeavored to get. in touch with him but. found he had not been in his office since Thursday and had gone to Nova Scotia. I presume he has termina- ted his service." LONDON-(CPJ-The Midland and Westminster Banks distributed five per cent of salary bonuses among their stuffs, totalling nearly $2,000,000 at the nmcxlvronn-At" the Royal ‘v16- torus Hospital, Montreal, on Jan. 2T, 1936, to Ml’. and Mrs. Cyril L. Blackmorc, a. son. (Mrs. Blackmorc was formerly Alice Murchison of Belfast, P. E. I.) Ill MEMURIAM In loving memory of Franklin R. Ford who died January 29, 1985. We are thinking of you today, Thinking of the past. Picturing you in memory Just as we saw you last. You left. behind some broken hearts That loved you so sincere, Who never did or never will Forget you Frankie dear, Inserted by his mother, and brother. memory of on. died Jon.- sisters L-BRS In sweet and lovl Duncan Dumb. Con» nary 20th. 10M. Those who loved you sadly Inlll I A: lgundlwln another your Loved. remember-ell. longed for ol- w I Thou! its of you no always door Time may help the broken hearted Time may make the wound Ion lore Ilut time can never stop the lonllnl For on! loved one lone brfofo. Ill llvllg Wife lull body. ft was drawn by 150 blue- as the "sailor-king." mun/resumes to London. The body was placed in the at 2.14 pm. The Archbishop pronounced the burial “We therefore conunit his body t0 earth, The Queen Mother bore up London was a highway of mourn- procession, with mil- ness Forgotten Hawkers made handsome profits ute. Europe called a truce on her erings for a few brief hours to pay final respects to the Penscopes sold for “Y °5 Gwrge V- behlnd the gun-carriage shopkeepers Reap Harvest Sbopkeepers also reaped a. har- vest. by selling seats and standing room in their show windows. The poorest seats brought two gulneas (about $10.50), Representatives of 47 nations participated in the procession from Westminster Hall, where the mon- arch had. lain in state since Friday Nearly 1,000,000 persons had viewed the body there. ‘There, shoulder to shoulder the representatives of every continent double eagles of lii EUROPE' PAYS TRIBUTE T0 LATE KING Quarrels And Bitter- As Nations Pay Trib- LONDON, Jen. ZiS-Quarrelsome bick- today mem- In the long procession. following which bore ‘the body of Britain's dead sovereign through the streets of London and Windsor, there walked today enemies whom nothing but the death of a. great king could bring together in such numbers. , were polit- ical emotion which has swept the in a generation. The Grand Duke Dmitri, wearing the his imperial Romanoff uniform. strode ahead of - Maxim Litvinoff, the Soviet Com- Ed'1;‘a°nf“,‘}‘§ “$1 “gm °’,‘,,:,:‘,‘,";L‘ missar for Foreign Affairs. ' There rode former Queen Vic- were taken to their graves bore the jackets’ for H“ Majesty w“ known which drove her into exile. King Edward VIII, the visiting sovereigns and representatives fol- lowed on foot through the silent streets. - The body of the King was wrap- ped in a silken shroud and the cof- fin was surmounted with the cor- onation robes, the crown, the sceptre and the orb, and e. floral wreath from Queen Mary. The procession passed along Parliament Street, Whitehall, the Mall, St. James’ Street, Piccadilly to Hyde Perk Corner, then to Marble Arch, along Edgware Road and Cambridge Terrace to the sta- tion. It took more than two hours to reach the station, over the 4 1-2 mile route. Seven caniuges carried Queen Mary and the other royal women mourners. Four coachmen, dressed in red, rode on each carriage. When the procession passed the Cenotaph King Edward saluted smartly in navel fashion, palm in- ward. Six bands and 100 bagpipers bout-g, brother of the duke Otto of Hapsburg. lost their crowns. King Carol l1, tingulshed family, The French Bourbons dors of the republics . (l ' ed defeated German milltarists, held in every WWW ‘wagc an | ‘cfitsemfisfguglifdm fkfeiiggngx eel-lulu King Edward vm and mullet. - 3 his brothers, the Princes of Wind- g _ march m tum‘ sor, came Leopold of the German lN T35 WE“ The procession was forced to halt Duchy o, saxc_cobllrg_Go,_ha g three times’ to snow mbulmces m Zrandson cf Queen Victoria He in the mldwest ilioll-hhlld‘ at‘ E mmovo person‘ who had ‘ammL fought against Grew’ Britain in tended a "llwvilwe °t Mamiobay‘ Greet crowds stood silently, the Great w" W “Moe 1n Winnipeg's spacious. aud- g nu“ with ha“ m the“ eyes‘ u Another sidellght in the itorilun and many were turned} the coffin passed by. King Edward limped slightly as he walked He wore the uniform of an Admiral of the Fleet. In 8t. George's Chapel were more than 2,000 wreaths. They included 500 white pearl carnations from Enlperor Hirohito of Japan and s humble sprig of snowdropu from s schoolboy. An offering oi’ seven-foot red cal-nations from Premier Mussolini lay near a cross of white lilac end daffodils from Emperor Hallo Sel- ase e. LONDON - (C.P.) —,Bergca.tlt John Maidment, known as Boot.- lend Yards ‘ladies’ men" from his unfailing courtesy to women mak- ing complaints, is retiring after 25 years’ service. arrival of the’ dead King. The funeral, George V. Of that group four have N. D. MacLeoln toria Eugenie. of Spain and nearby were the leaders of the revolution Prince Consort Felix of Luxem- dethroned Empress Zlta. oi Austria-Hungary, strode close by the men who now are matching wits over the restor- ation of Zita/s son. the young Arch- In ho far-flung procession went crowned héflrdb end the personal representatives of those who have leader of the reigning Rumanian branch of the House of ‘l-fohenzollern, walked in line with Prince Frederick of Prussia, grandson of the one-time Kaiser who heads the dethroned German branch of the same dis- were were. with the exiled Bragarlzas of Por- tugal, marching among ambassa- which dis- placed the kingdoms over which their lines once held autocratic way. Victorious allied generals wcort- strange and brilliant London pro- cession was the fact that neither Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin nor his cabinet took part in it, al- though virtually cvery government in the world was represented. Cus- tom required that Baldwin and his ministers wait nt. ‘Windsor for the on a scale once common in Europe, brought with it shadows of the tragedies which have befallen nine of the l5 kings and princes who walked behind the bier of Edward VII, father D98 assassinated; the Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria, whose mur- der at Sarajevo touched off the tigers. Great War; King George I of Saskatchewan's Greece, slain by his subjects; the 9mm, H. E. hereditary Prince of Serbia. later my; King Alexander I of Yugoslavia, Raging to who was murdered at. Marseille in Rev. E. B. M. 19:44, and the Grand Duke Michnel- mend Alexendrcvltch. who lost his life at militia and vegans’ ‘centre! ddlfitlg fonso of Spain, lost. their crowns. jhdiciary and comuler corps oath-- suicide of Georgia. Victoria's 060110 V 0f EBI- ended four hours utter those oi, UNDEBTAIEB the hands of the Boishevikl. Manoel, King cf Portugal, died BMBALIII. in exile and twp others, Kaiser chuufiu“! ‘a Wilhelm of Germany and King Al- Nugh "ugh". ‘Hie hereditary Prince 0f the Olin- fhlfi Empire ccmrnitte‘ m“ m ‘ ma m. ninth, of and 1.30 the carillon or the Peace Tower played Chopin's Fllflfiml March and “Abide With Me," King Geprgejg favorite hymn. At 1.30 rest of the country. mglng blizzard in Haufax failed t/o prevent citizens swarm- ing to churches for memorial ser- vices but massing 0! "OOPS in 911° grand parade had to beabandoned. Lieutenant-Governor Covert at- tende da service in St. Paul's Ans- lican Church where royalt/y 0110B worshipped. Militia unite Ind w" veterans attended a. service in the armouries and the memorial salute 4 was fired from Citadel Hill. IN THE MARITIMES. Throughout the Maritime Prov- irices the peace of Sunday prevail»- ed, broken only at sslutlns W!" by the boom of the Iii-M- In ancient Prince Edward Island where Canada's first settlers made their homes Lieutenant-Govern!!!‘ i DeBlols read the scriptures in Charlottetown! Trinity "W"! Church. Seventy Elm! W" fir“ ‘l’ Charlottetown. lieutenant-Governor Machete? attended service at Saint PM! Centenary Church. The cltys sal- ute was fired from a spot overlook- ing the old buryinz smiled <11 i" ’ United Empire loyalists. M0515 REV- J. S. Richardson. A9850!“ Amh‘ bishop of Fredericton. spoke at I memorial service in Christ ChurcT ; Cathedral. - 1K QUEEC ' gung roared thglgarspfrfs! the ancient citadel l g5 French-Comedies! W." when“ f climbed the steep slope in the "W" i; ress. In the time-stained Basilica l- Cardinal Vlileneuve officiated it 0 i rnefnorial service " Lights of the slant we Montreal's flhMi-‘flléllnk a urple 11 B _ geremonies in the metropolis end- E e¢ The "Gros Bmrfdoli. erect be" 1 of century-old None Dame tofiiled~ solemn notes, breakins B 111K 511* “i It my, only in time of nations slums. Mar. A. is _ eulo- ' St. James m]. ) A greet crowd sboodioutslde Christ Qhuygh Anglican Cathedral. 1m‘ _( l], able u, gain admittance as the edi- .5 fice was filled long befMB “W; memorial service beset» The 3m“ t-\ boomed from the W) 05 “he mmm‘ . ma, hauled there by “WW5 l“ v.1 pflflf authorities waived a. long- standing prohibition against mot- orizled traffic. 1N TORONTO m Toronto. Ontario's capital. thousands assembled at dawn in Ma 1e leaf Gardens. slant 59”“ awfia {or 9, service conducted by Most fig“ Del-Wyn T, Owen. P14. $2131.13! illxeeutenant-Govemor Bruce and mpresenta merit were FY9591?‘- fired from Qlfifétzsml legislative b“ - _. _ 1 Ontario at- Prernicr Hcglguxr‘? sot Thomas- his QIYOTVBUCQS were , The salute WM k, beside the ._ G ~nment officials, head-g gdvalgv Llgfliétllflllil-GOVPTIIOI‘ Tllllléiir- : “minded m a body to hl-zfnrdln; r hair-ass by Rev. M. H. M. a ., Rupcrts Land. West chairs ioined ln ii , ‘j _ 5 sci lilraxtllrecatrcspln Mlm1t°ba~ saslmb" , Alberto and British Col-c School children stood in?‘ ‘their class rooms i“ wmmellim", atlve exercise. buy o‘ Calgary at‘: , n. n. Bennett, rorruer prime minister. went to Victoria arena in: deliver a memorial address on In platform with church dignitetl y provincial officials and militia. 1 , Lieutenant-Gov- umnroe and bk minis-t attended a special service in,‘ hear the words Rt Knowles. Lord bends l1 o; qumppelle. My pjgygfl ‘The Post." =, Vancouver‘; thousand: attendee" o giant outdoor service at atanley; Perk where Mayor McGee-s. the; Across the Birait= Observances v cred in homage. BI-lffo;