QUEEN 0F ROSES lege, in California. Thy parade led the pageant on a float | t _ > --v¢-¢__--< -< "SWIM FOR HEALTH" "urn ARMS" cuu, wms s-runntv-r vorzmng 6mm the 3mm m 5w living in the Men m Ummm’ M 1°“ ‘"1 lfrom his coming to the Thmne, and deuce at Iowa Olty. voted Mary, Lou Olden. ll. of Mason City. 11., would most like to ‘v the [b]. thgy have f!!! those "arms." IIAUIII DID III‘! H‘: ,‘they Queen o! t-he Pusadmia tournzn merit of roses ls the title conicr- red upon Norma Christopher. l8. a student at Pnsudt-nn jll'\i'\‘.‘ ~ Kilt‘? rluj. floral liow well shg acquitted harsclf is re- ~.~.:l Yd vealed by her being given. u YEW _. too. tho PFiIICCXs took n rc-al i131! i“ if the classic Now Y~~. .. fumolls tutti ' over the Rose Bowl football gnmc. QUEEN Chosen "swim for health" queen at MTa-tiit" Benoit. l(>\,'(*l_\' L).,;--,, 13ml l: seen with ihr- irnplty .\l" in the ccnl€st {or the 194.7 title. ‘-"0ii “EmpU-‘of the new cinoumst-atncs ttrisLng 1% fun: , m‘ mun U. s. "u" lat, lllfivrl ‘Filer n, m” “an? I “:4 eel-nun. was sentenced to o I 9e in the penltenti- 1mm the” ‘momma w. “an” . and rim Kine .111 vu Prim of received h’. M‘ h“ m“ lmmm: 4 millury v -. nun. 0:531}. ' . By Ann-nun. nurtures. I . | D€M£>OOWO l tcontiirued from Page 2) when tripled. He had srtifiiclqn sur- plus to buy Sandrinchnm. which has since become official visits. She was with them when tihcy made a two-day tour of alrficids in various part: of the ‘Ulntited Kingdom. aaitci she was pros- orvt xvhon Ilia Majesty decorated lAlliod uirtnen tor gallantry. . l She was with Their ltlajesties aln at iiha service at St. Paul's Oaithedral. London, Ln May. 194-3. ‘when the Allied vlohory in North Africa w-as made the mansion for ‘tlirttrlssgivittg Five mouths late-r. the ‘Princt-ss was tmsldc ltti‘ parents when ' inspected n diamond Jubilee parade of the Boys’ Brigade at Wind- ‘sor. A few vreeks before heir of age. she was n momlbeu- o! the royal part-y at the public owning 0i iLondotfs "SflliUc the- Soldicr" Week. ‘ I-icr first. civic tour as mi adult royal parsonage almost coincide-d with her "comma out." ilout-h Wales was the some this time. mnd n-l- tthotrgh the King and Queen wan-t. the prccvcdittgs. it wus something of a test o! her long training, and ntonths ialcr, the responsible dtllil’ .l launching the b12951 5WD W" ' bull: in a British shipyard. llor Royal Highness has now n 1I0l1C\\’0i'llly record of public appear- ances made without the presence of any other adult member of tho Btri- tl-sh Royal Family. Sh: 5a.: been the guort of humour at bit: milios Qt Girl ‘ Guides. and h-rs 590k?" at a 13x33 Young Women's Christian Assocrx- _ ion gathering. Her self-assurance and emire abr sence of any visible nervousness in ‘I public L; helm-g wkle‘y rcmuked uPQfl l and atitnitezi, She faces n big mid‘ tiotrsu tcomlwiete with tniurcphon-es and catnerns) with all the equan- lamiiy of a, naitlonal figtlre 1cm»; 9X- has tthe pleasant manner of her pezletnoed in public speakintz. 5M nlothep at those times. and carries or; the evgjjtj a; successfully. Hcr giro-wing 11st oi‘ public (m- gugemonis vory soon b02111 l0 influ- ‘once feminine fashions. Titough ‘as ‘yeti. she has little sense of chic. amd ma; not. given nttuch ititcliozvtidfl °l style in hm‘ choice-oi (lTPFs, she sitovcs ltromiso rt bllfltrlly‘ tlvVEl-IYD- ll“; 1m‘ Bleytrlsss to clothe; lash- ‘riot-s. She h-M already discarded ii-at‘ heeled simes in favour of nzure at- tractive 0110s. tutu is ncrw diFpiQy- in‘: a. kocn lliiCfCS‘. in httir Slyifi ‘As iwz- everybody rise in Git-ca‘. Britom tlurinzt lltc watr. itrr trltotw oi apparel atttd-iootxvezri" was 1'6- wimioted by ciollzes Illllfllllllg- 5W1 l-she has themfotre had time 0P- Kporttttnity to explore the realms, oi Jnsititm on the scztlo txorttitally done lby British royal ladies, l She has to buy her 0WD: clothes. that sets aside past. of her income {or maintaining her wardrobe. Heir zrnuity i: not large. so far as royal wtipcnds go. In fnof. shv actually rays iiztfio the public purse vr-rl‘ ntuch more than Fhe FBCHVCS fro“ it! Had she been a Prince. she wet“. “ have htad an annual income tt ‘inc-re than 100.000 pounds; being =1 ‘Princess. sihe gels only a inaction oi that. sum. and the balance in- .(lLl‘C(;ily assists the txaliortial ex- lchequetr. l This oddity st-tses from the war her income is derived. Mtaie heirs tso the British Crown raceive no annuity from the Stale. They dc- hive their income rrotn the Duchy oi Cornwall, the estates granted by Vlilliam Conqueror to his oldest my; and earmarked in perpetuity for successive male helm to the Throne. Throughout B-ritish history, these properties have been preseo-vrd in- tact. for that purpose. Whenever there is a Prince 0t Wales. PM‘ Duchy of Cmvwaiil revenues go to hdm. and he receives no other motney from the State. The re- vanufs or the Dukedom, however. ‘cannot legally be handed over to n. hlnoess. and whenever ohm is no male heir to tiho Throne the moneys mm vested in the Sovexvign. Slwrtly after the accession o! o 'uation was reviewed in the llcrhl oomslderattilotxi was given b0 999cm provision; for Rrimesa Elizabeth. I: w“ dgoided that no d/naotic a1- teimtlotzu could be made to the existing statutes ouncmuting Duchy of Comwail revenues. n wu weed. however. to ttw- “ldQ tthe Princess with 6.000 pound g ym from the mom“ vested it ' no; George frmn bite Duchy. It a n: further agreed that the Dulu- iiof Gloucester. by mason o! the Klmter responsibilities now devolv- ing upon him, should have his exist.- ing amuity tnomased. tym tilwt thil increase should similarly come from the profits paid to King George by me Duchy‘. mmher. the bahmce of the Duchy ravewues future to be not lCfllflM tho Ifl- mxitiel plld by this Smile tn KIWI u! the R0011 Family. 1n anon. the Duchy o! CORN!" tn help in providing various my! umiltiu. bimi o! c male heir to tlb ‘rimme- Il and Wells h boon. the Duchy o! Oumnmli revmuo; will b0 ammo quln can llnbthh with twr 6.000 nu and‘ Devmstilm. l IGMIM the Bl Wm!“ the rovmuee he tun the Due | WQ Q%M%QO%O The Lite-Story of li.ll.ll. Princass Elizaboth British Sovereign. was itn Qwmg 1115351! 5nd Oihfll‘ Milli!!!‘ wu no lancer to be wit-l! a WWW of income for a lwifllblfi "1"" Prince of Wales. but. it; profits W911; mt any xM-o will the when another Prince of quest-tulip! the m aims win-at provide Prin- pom!!! n you imluda ore mines in Omn- fsmflmfis Ind hnnnttflth in the sum own- md vary vsiuublu billdhl h Imtlfln. Until ll/lc Ill! a c the wwt um derived W! "about 14,000 mum; n you. but by mllltfltmflt the lmflll F. l. G. B. the foremost private xcsidetioo of the reigning The revenues have omwinued to rise, and tudtay they usually reach an total of more than 110.000 pounds. a At. the W116 a! he: "coming out" the possibility of Pmincecs Elizabeth being oreextexi Princes o! Wales was ggvllflldvfcd. One of m. factors which Cflusftl tht- rejection of tthc idea; was the effect. it would have exerted on the mrruummu re- gurdmg th revenue! of the Duchy estames. A further oolfllluficlm wu that. by conferring that. title upon her. a precedent would have been urea-turd. And. royal precedmts an. things t0 be avoided, since their cileot on future history 681mm b¢ foretold. it wu fixmlly announced’ from Btwkingh-am Pei-ace that t.he| King did no‘. contemvlifite mill’!!! any ultaltge in the style mid title or Her Royal Highness when she attained her eighteenth birthday. In soms other direalons. tno. her] emergence 1mm girlhood has meant little change to her. Between hetr i . public activities. she still cent-miles hc-r education. She still spends sev- clal hours each week in he: Buck-I ingham Palace stucht. m aplrb‘ mam. virtith dream a. him carpet and only a fflv Wtewolmll‘ pictures. 'i'hcre she has her desk, a plain zlhir on which ztzumds a telephone. e each mmtmim; before betlin-I _....g her studies, she meet; her‘ ludy-in-utaitirtg and gives instflkt-t ion; about the correspondence thlt: is to be dealt with. Furthcomlng‘ public engagements may be discuss- v ed. btrt the rest. c! the rrmntlm is, tticon up with advanced educab. ion. Even at. twenty years. a Prin- cess must keep well abrtest. of mod- em knowledge. Princes; Elizabeth's course of ln- ‘ situation is now no longs:- superb‘ vised by Miss Crawford, the gow- cmess who taught hem’ in the past. The 10550115 are set. by her tutor‘ in-chief, a highly distinguished college’ professor. l The correspondent» vthich goes u, her desk coon imrning is sort- ed from the big mail addressed to‘ lit‘! at Buckingham Palace. In sddl- t tion m 1mm from personal friends l she herself usually attends to thoset from charitable organizations in | which shn is directly inttcrcstetl. Ono oi hot‘ sptCldlv concrrns is lt0Sliii al work. part iculrariy for children, Site ls Presicfmt of t-hfl Children‘; League of a hospital lltamed Mic-r her- the Princess Elirxbettli of York Hospital. Shad- well. Her name is appearing more and more frcquontly in the lists of con- tributors to deserving cittarities. I11‘ mady requeztts for fintzmicial support are being addressed to He: Royal Highnc-s; every (lay. Naturally. before she intakes my ‘wwation. diiswet but datnllmcl m- .,u ies are made about, tho organ- zs-iuttlon ootncemed. This ts to sale- guard other prospective oomribut-v ors as well as herself. The arlummoe- illellll. tthat. Royalty has demoted titoney to any cause invariably en- courages other: to do the same. and in point of fact the real value of a. royal subscription gtraamly exceeds the actual sum dotniatted. for that vary reason. Grout oa/re i; themelou-e necessary to unsure that the can» la a worthy one, and‘ -thn.t donations mm pm- twriy employed. Bofnre Putnam Elizabeth vubmrlbes tn any charity baiatn-ce sheets showing exactly how the funds Blre spent atre requested. similar uocomits. relating to chair- "i" Bilpmrted by British Rnyltlty dw-inc the 1m 10o yearn. m methodically filed in tho wyul archives. These too an wmgulmd when royal donations are being um- sidered. In the case o! Primes Biz-shew. the records now being mug pug-l Bflflmifled Ire ithose of ommlnt» tom which received tinaimial sup- povrt from earlier Helms Prcsumpg- lve stncl Heirs Apparent. There are traditions mud custom; to be kept. up in th-la mutter amid Her Boyd illzhncsa ts anxious so mpmuln whom. To fulfil her royal destiny to she best of her ability, l.“ gym-y my, l8 Dlfllniy tthe aim of the cue-time “Little nincesa" who m” reached adult status u a myul pm- ; Pmue. Btu hu mlreuw mung“. ible N001’ of hm- determination: lo seek that high purpobg, Sh; l; assisted by quilt-la inherited from and developed by her pawns. Their Mllebtles halve also always ensured for her a hawy family ltlfo. and with these endeavours has gone a close oomradeshlp befzwton ,. ' Mod daughter. The relationship bet-mm fll; Majesty and his daughter. the Heir- esebotfnnritlshuvvmuiamoro intimate and nxore nffoctiotrfln than has piobahiy even beflon exist- ed between n British Sovereign and his heir. In her study of Sateen-nit. Primes: lili-lzaboth has had the KNIT commit tuldame. and unfit hi: direction she has aim British Constitutional lmv ltn olmtntktlt at fimt ham-d. In these noodles of hlafncw-h-tho- mlllnt. atho display! the sum rmticulotu I-tturtfati to detail I her fgtthct. mil inn a gnu. cap- actty for baking palm to dlaoovd’ the why! ltd wherefore: d tho wflrlm of the Constitution. Bu: Motnition of the mum ramm- nhtmm of her pocitlon is lotto. 111m will be no halt-am! It hand- ing over to itcr any ma. 6min to our ancestors . . . "The Good Old Days". NOW... minutes and hours ago. with spring-filled mattresses. Calories. soil with a modern tlon. several Depression: - and is helped bring about "The Good one in it. IT'S OUR 00th YEAR . needs of our Island People. t Travel was limited to Old Dobbin. ltVages were small and comforts few. Gr up with them. The house was cold chosen few. On the farm, chores we hand — the fields were tilled by horse power and a. lot of sweat . . . I travel (by Airplane) in minutes and hours, w We sit in a. modernly heated house and listen (by Radio) to new: that happened ire, when we feel like it, in modern beds equipped Get up in warm rooms heated in tha modern man- . by science to give us the proper Vitamins and dern automobile. Go to a modern ofllce or work- bone and call our next door rm we ltlrt the day by milk- We ret ner. Sit down to a. breakfast planned We drive to work in a mo shop, well heated and wall lighted. Pick up our telep neighbor or call California in a. few minutes. On the fa lng the cows and separiiting the milk with the least possible effort: by using a modern to our well cultivated fields and till the verything the Easy way. And ing bigger with each genera- milklng machine and separator - we tractor - Yes, we do practically e Science has proven that we are living longer and grow HOLMANS in 1857 started business It. has lived through three major Wars, un still going strong Ninety Years later. New Days" by being ever alert to the needs of their customers . . . “The First. With The Latest" was a slogan adopted, many years ago b; the founder of Holmans. and the same still holds good today. Keeping nbreut of tho times has been our greatest endeavour. We have built up a. grant Island organization dly enter our 90th year feeling confident that we in the past, by giving Reliable Service, Good hings you need for your home and every- , from a small beginning and we prou t will continue to grow in the future as l Value and Guaranteed Satisfaction, in the t and drive . . And we are still young - but old in experience and ON the threshold of our 90th year we pause and look back -- Look back to what some call "The Good Old Days”. But WERE they the-good-olrbdays? LET uu atop for a moment and think what the Horla-and-Buggy Ago meant Hardship and hard work. Everything was done by Lampilght. News reached people every two or three weeks. andpa went to bed with the hens and got: drafty and proper fuel was a luxury for a re done the hard way — cows were milked by Yet, they any Let us consider what Modern Science has done for US here it formerly took days and weeks. NO . . . It's NOT "The Good Old Days" . . . It's “The Good New Days" that YOU, YOU, You and We are enjoying right NOW. in what was called "The Good Old Days‘ der five Sovereign! and pulled through Holman! hat merchandising wisdom making us BETTER titted to cope with the ever c ' R. T. HOLMAN LTD. SUMMIISIDI AND GIABIDTIITOWN PIINCI ILDWAID ISLAND ...We banging V Political mum-luau are novndnya ll III. ll woll u cumin. tntlly permits s British Prince; to man-y nmootvfiaomsha wiiLThomLyn- which Ia Heir Presumptive Ibo m“ be expected to blnum. M lhe lpprolmfl rim birthday. it is inavlobio that wecuhtioxi will will about on! mun-tum upset of 0mg‘ n’: future - her max-mic. ‘I'M; ml!- tcr. however. is one upon which $88M b0 “Mil almost obsolete, md Oonatitutiotn- pond the more mtemifled and time re- hh Ml; shun. Putnam the blqut tribute over paid to ha: was unmmgfunimbtnforitwu mode by pm ‘whoa detachment en- abled an mblalud opinion to be uxpnuvd. "Btu will man n good qubm.” he laid. "Moot wobbly she will mule a flout ._.--_------ CI-OWDED PALESTINE ‘I'd Avll h a modorn city. clam. plenum. and to outward simu- uml mil ma. Thorn the htlllllhl problem in mm acute even than in and. sum the Manchester Gun-d an. Relieves Co v ‘helm ltiouaonoofrlnoztobtm n. wimp monthly, ‘utter carving‘! llama-Mixed Syrup 11o. It?“ w m“ ‘ “n: - ~ bu: ll ouncnl o‘ “£53m. . diam. It ncvur ion; tub. and o no ‘ Thin home minim h»: I! ~ Olllll. n I "It lrrtm mmmstb-Jv" MINI? l 0 rent for l single room-no food or“ service-in BM (PIL) and ‘u muny cases n room ll let twice oven-by day for industry or as an otllco. llill by nl|h'. for living, ptesumnb- ly a further M0 per month. To got vncant pouesllon of a tint. cosh lnythlm! from £200 to £000. 1nd it in understood that the» hardly exllt It prcunt..l-lotel| urn fair, but terribly expensive and very overcrowded. ilmlhr coudltlma exist in the othnr lam tovnu and [enmity throulhout the country. Isn't it about tlmrtho clrvlm! knife was graund and hubby glvm a bras-c i-n the lino of ouior nul Quidsly {DOROTHY 01x wbltfln on nuke a loom every time mopping up tho hlll floor ll oven mantloned: so it saves the war and tour on my nerve: and tompor to do the alters" myself, and let the kids get. their And l third rcuon, thoulh children no not Mother’! llttiu ltei monopoilltlo shout their homu. In even their uhlldron. ‘interfering thtnp. ‘rboy don't oc-operatq. mo ohlidrdn lui that tbvy have any rulponlbliity towards tlulr horn! and that faintly blaorherpu-ttonlbot Mother IIMI the children to 30b0, but the younms any it t-htnulb in their amt my. tin Job. and um the credit for it if it ttmu out right. And that mutual the out! bu m t: and his mun o: rowan 111%! vs- gy 0 (Continued from P130 I) exercise roller nhtini." NQTIQ HONOPOIJIIRI women never live it. themselves. Who on ll because all woman n" they don't want anybody. Mi with that: little m-vu of doinl with tbotr children. ‘may don't mm whip in which ovary number must dv a 01mm. Min mo annals Ind do the odd urn not ponnlttod to orlflnntu n plan a Mother alvuylltopl in and bum ltfclan strum M15 o: Ila-y bu": rut wont for mun; lull the burden of at tbl hull; mull. If M" trh wthtlvo. but lather won't but o maul o ilk» t‘ t Iothil‘ that