mung. iggo‘ g OKAY!!!’ 21 lDWALI-D IS ONLY REAL ENGLISH PRINCE HIS BHDTHEBS ABE ACTUALLY OOMIMONERS flag George’; biography reveals e!- Qects o! recent reortflnizetion of Royal Baily- Ind titular changes - His gujgw take! a. surname and es- tablishes a British 11M - $011118" sons 02 Sovereign. though called 97mm by courtesy. are not even mem- bgg; o! peerage until they receive gqggdqgg at coming-of-aga -- Frank amglom o! question o! ‘ n, i ~___r_-_'i.__ Pale Faces ‘ Jaded Nerves l’ Due To Welt. Watery Blood. Anaemia - impoverished blood — mmu no eioalthily that it is often well advanced before recqgnmed. Fa- qgug and discomfort the earliest manifestations 0f the trouble are gldam taken seriously. Soon the face possum pale; the nerves jaded: the 115:1; palpitates violently after the- flilhtest exertion: the apvemfi be-l descendants in the male line of Ourlim; wvereig“ is “sumy andhowit iachangedby b31110; Princes “Lisabeth" ($0186 interesting hots not gong. ally lmown. about the question of Sllwfisiion to the British throne, are w/ellad by Major o. F. 1.. Kipling 1h this chapter of the first inside story of Kingshlp). B7 Maj!!!‘ C. P‘. L. Kipling (Copyright 1950i It was characteristic o! King George that he did not wait for the end o! the War to rcorganise his own family.‘ On July 18th, 1917, when tho strife was at its bitterast, he took the op- POPl-llnlty to declare himself definitely and plainly as a. British King. dis- sociating his House from its ties with Gonnany. The announcement was made. signed at a meeting of the Privy Council, that:- "We. out of our Royal Will and Au- thority. do hereby declare and an- nounce that as from the date of this Our ..Royal ..Procla.mation ..Our I House End family shall be styled f and know as the. House and. Family of Windsor. and that all the; titles Marquis o! Milford Haven and; Marquis o! Garlsbrooke. ‘Princess’ future to the children of the sovere- ign, and. in the case or grandchild- ren. to those of the male line only - which accounts for the fact that ivhilst the little daughter of the Duke of York is "Princess Eliza- beth", the sons o: Princess Mary are the Masters Lascelles only. This was the outcome of the de- cision of the Select Committee. app- ointed in 1915 from the House of Lords, that the title "Prince" is only legally borne by the eldest son of the Sovereign, who is born "Prince of Scotland" and created by Letters Patent. Prince of Wales. All the other children of the Sov- ereign are actually commoners. and use “Pi-ince" or "Princess" as court- esy titles. although by Royal Warr- ant. the eldest daughter of a reign- created were to be restricted in Mussolini, ‘terestlng one. The King also visited the Pope still. showed his usual case and asked to speak to Brother iThynne. o. member of the congregat- Hon of Christian Brotherhood. who. ias an Irishman. had been given ,charge of the Journalists visiting the ivatlcan. "You have done splendid- ,l_v." said King George, shaking dsancls ivarmli’. and left one of those ‘impressions behind him of human friendliness which are characteristic ,0! him. i A beautiful and moving scene took ‘place at Montecohig Precalcinc. where the King vlsitozl the graves of Italian and British soldiers. killed in the War. After a short speech. he gm” fickle and before you realize it 531d Gmncgmoth" Queen View!“ |"Princess Royal". The sons of the Plaid a chaplet of palms and roses at you are in a. terrible plight. ._M such time. by enriching and gnflying the bloOd Dr. Williams Pink Pills will build ill! i116 "l?" ails and correct the run-down condi- tion. Concerning them Miss Marzflfe! mm. mouth. out. savsr-"I suf- gq-u g, wmplete breakdown. My heart would palpiau on the least exertion. Nothing I lie agreed with me. I start- ad taking Dr. Williams Pink Pills and by the tms X had taken several boxes 1 w“ ready for anything; l had gain- Qa m weight and every distressing gmybm hid left 1116-" you m; get these Pills from ml “us! m median; o; by mail at 5b‘ up“ s bar from The Dr. Williams Modicine Co, Brockville. Ont. who are subjects of these realms.‘ other than female descendants. who' may marry. or may have married.’ l v _ shall bear the said name of Windsor.‘ », “t Wm“ an _ v The Proclamation went on m sayidukedoms on their wming- oi-age. that the King. for himself and hi5 descendants. discontinued the use ofj all "Gérma-fl desreos. styles. disnl- “f” "m “imm- the feeling that the German associ- ation was ended. but also that it the“ of Queen Mam the Duke o; added to. rather than cook away Teck And Prince Alexander of Teckdfrom the dignity of the Royal Fam- taries titles. honors and appelatlons." In consequence of this, the two bro- assumed by peerage patent, the titles o! Marquis of Cambridge. and Earl of Among. with the 5.1mm“ 0g the same time. the Act of King "Cambridge"; and the two cousins oi GBQYEB the King. Prince Louis and Prim! t Alexander of Battenburg. took @111‘ ma" surname of “Mountbatterfl and the b86915- sovereign do not even belong to the peerage - except in the case of the Prince of ivales. who is bom Duke until they receive (RAISES STATUS 0F Tl-IRONE) These changes. ‘needless to say. It “'21s not Only 1y if the high titles of "Prince" and Princess" were more restricted. At raised the status of the and also brought it into intimate relations ivith the hronc. .4 '_. ma" ' 1502101 Hydraulic V . Shed: Absorbers and Spring Coma the foot or the Stone of Rememb- rance. and immediately afterwards a. group of boys and girls. dressed in white. who had been waiting in a ‘corner of the cemetery. came for- l-nvari. carrying little bunches of lflourrs. The King. looking round. saw the children and beckoned to them to Mme forward. They did so. placing their small hunches round the King's wreath. and many of them kneeling its kiss the stone reverently before passing on. One tiny girl. too young to be shy of his Majesty. as he stool there watching. ‘kind. grave face and said confident- ilv. in Italian: "My Daddys name is on this stone." The king. putting his hand under her chin. lifted up the little face and kissed her gently on the cheek. A great step towards the unzty of the Empire was the Wembley Exhib- prolecled features that gala ranlee long R A GUARANTEE of Poa- Iife/ The improved. internal four-what! I . bk; fullymclosecLUprO- t m ma‘; izgmhffnmms cried {gm wacerand dirt by spaci- i @111 bu: accremely vanish a..- all)’ dcismd flu-gs shoal.- u.- tnu: are procmocd 1511”! ‘h: k of lmckbips @668"? dnringlongyeazsofservice. -‘---< lzfschmccaiscicofPondac. for enmplqrhadzmm lscioainchzfiamcwa-csflow radiamis °°fl' dlfllr long, supple Sprillfi 1" Bu“ by leather mvus. And the links of d.‘ Lgvgjqy ghock absorbers bdng solid, absorb evcy bum? The: and other promcced farm-s main: Panda's value not only pa: but enduring. Se: this finfi a: coday. Drive it. Tm it chor- itlon. opened by the King and Queen in April i924. It was the flsrt time éthat a speech from the King was; broadcast. Another incident. show- mg the amazing way in which mod- ern science can bring together the lremotcst parts off the Empire, took place just as King George was shak- ing hands with the four foreman, who raprescntcd the 5500 workmen employed in building the huge ex- hibition. A messenger boy brought His Majesty a large envelope con- taining these words "I have this moment opened the British Empire Exhibition. G. R. I." The King had himself dispatched thxs mass-age one minute and twenty seconds before. and in that space of time it had passed completely round the world, and reached the King again. full circle. ‘ Anxiety. sorrow and 10y were strangely mixed in 1925; on Febru~ ary 17th. a bulletin was issuazl from Buckingham Palace. signed by Stari- ley Hewitt. Milscm Rees and Lord Darvson of Penn, which said: "His Majesty is suffering from bronchitis, due to influenza." There was public consternation. but the an;exty' was somewhat allay- cd ivhen the Queen attended the British Legion Concert at the Albert Hall. at the King's special desire. Progress continued to be fairly sat- isfactory. but the bronchitis extend- ed to the bases of both lungs. and there was uneasiness for a time amongst those who best knew the state of things in the Palace. But the danger passed. although a spring cruise m the Mediterranean was strongly aclviscd by the doctors. and agreed to at last. by the King. al- though with reluctance. The cruise took place in lovely weather. and the Royal yacht visited Naples. Messina. Taorima, Syracuse and Palcrrrso. but in spite of all the beauties or the Mediterranean, in spite of the tact that his health plainly benifited. the King vuas pin- ing for home. and returned towards the end of April. looking well and brown. EVER trolled. Thensnlcischacmgianlade opendm is more eflidmt vmrisgadimdlmd‘ Fwd“ was firs: no incrodnce the full- oughly. Learn about ch: Mourns Owner Sa-vio: P011117- ‘h! mos: complete in the automobile has... and. she-id rw was. 1 . hgdmmmm, which mzk: fche G.M.A.C., Gen- Isuzu! diam. mm om»; or m1 135a‘ w» fir“ Pv- ncypanaeallspends-f” “ ' mm P1“ BIG SIX QIGDUOTOIQIIALIOTOII U’ CANADA, I-IHITKD . QNTIA Ail-lame t? Co. j “DEALERS for PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND summnsma ___v____, ‘raacnusa " mvsiTaar-rax Prince Motors r'r=s""cxuxoi'llivl (Death 0f The Queen Of Heal-H") As usual. his first visit, once back in London. was to Queen Alexandra at Marlborough House. for the de- votion between mother and son re- mained as strong as ever. He and the Queen mother and Queen Mary were often to be found together in the drawing-room at Marlborough House. where were photographs of King George from the dayof his christening to the latest which had becn taken. But Queen Alexandra, was Brewing very frail - old. one could never call her. for age seemed unable to touch that grace and beauty of hers. even to the very end. All through that summer. she was slowly fading. and in November be- gan to sink. The King and Queen were in ‘Norfolk at the time. and on the 18th of the month an urgent message tank them to Sanirinrlc-im Manor without a moment‘: dell-l. .__--__-- Tllllfjfifikljq" F ETFTWHBITARISTKNI very much in awmdance with the [m9 Till-Ne d-l-‘IIIEMBTS 05 m6 Queen ‘$9,113: by the hand, and giving them the general fading 1n "hrd; spoken Imodornising influences at work was s little lator in the same year. on ‘the visit O1 the Kine and Queen to December 11th. g still more demo- Italy in May 1923. King George had. cratising change was made in the ‘always admired styles and titles of the Royal Family. lwhlle sternly criticising some of his ‘ , “Fbyal Hifihness." “Pi-ince" and ‘methods. and the meeting of these the wwd: "George" and “hen ‘he . B"! afie." $119 F-frfrvw Came 10?‘. 0n ‘YT’? Y??? King HY"! l‘:= l"‘"llSfP!‘<. ityvo men. each so immensely power- “am” M h" “m” daughters in ‘ her children were ‘or violence two days later. As she lay dying. she {ful in different manners. was an in- mm- 11115-113! I-Sking for “May? - after kissing them all. c1112 with he; mm gentle rl-Z- then "the Prisoner of Vatican," and nity, leaving a world and an Empn-n “‘ and so. l passed on. thoughtfulness that was the emptier for the loss oi ‘i’ ‘when he stopped on the great stair- one Mm had been very truly a ‘ "Queen of Hearts". but with strength mourned Queen for, as he said to Wherever she is. ice at Sandringham violets with @116 1 Mav." same EUYl-Cflmage his subjects fear Y health. 54-‘5 favorite hlmni should be sun;- Mother were there already, neath her gentlmess. there were many who naaiized “ha! a real and intense grief it was to her son, who had understood her so wcll. He missed and still murt miF-S h“ hold at the time o; her death she will be 132.0117‘. for she made happiness e\‘c‘f.\'?-'l1°"” ' There was a simple mentorn‘. ssfv cross placed by Kin: Gcvrsc on. ills .~+ r11» roman‘. fitment. after the mm“ C! “med P"? _ ““°’-1‘ a : n - . - -_ _ " ‘P11 . coffin ‘vac :1 Y: and‘ “M” C“; “ < 1 ~11"! “Br 51%;“? i? |HAND nsynrmzn truer-s. . ’ ' nations. whie ryr-anaremums all’ nut-s- '1’ Yci-l- ‘F-wfh and hth n darling Mother. from he? and devoted children. Georgie me funeral sevfvlQe at Weztmlnir-I {e7 Abbey was attended bl‘ 1mm“ from all over the ivbrld~ was carried to the used at the funecral= n! Quccn Vi"- toria and King Eflwild~ and m" p" King and other members of thh i C ‘ ‘Roya; Family followed 0n foal. 8P4 =- vith bared heads. in the his“ “T” \ looked up mm his ness of a day which Illa-d‘? mm” "i ' leaclm; tho Sl‘.'!7l"'i himself in a clcar $79“? "m"? “h: the ceremonv- h! P9Y5°“"“" hivbxdfi”: ' ~ all the men of his own Ccn"il""" "‘ i "'" the Grenadier GUGYdS. who l*'"l_ ' co as bearers. shaking each luclrvitl- 111...... _- -_ w..- . . w ThjeiwgBiograp/zy of His Majosty-KING GEORGE V.—-By Major c.1~". L. Kipling and an "11s sil- er medal o.’ the Royal Vzc- to a mend during the Frmzc: “im hm‘ 5° lhai torzan Order. On that day the great .1'!‘-05t d-fi cult thing in. the world is lies ‘=4 for the first time since King Ed- on!" ‘ l‘ .._'\ 1'10"‘ ". murmured volt-d; duly/ix T: r,~f zriltc 2l‘_\illr"~' 1.‘ a, daughter fbnve all for U1» K1112. rtnrc lac W3; : horn i9 the Duke and Duchess "bllzcd t'> Plav a r1." of lnqrtifln r.’ York. and was christened Ellza- which was most :1" both AlPYFI-Tlflra Nlirv - three queen- 1 M. 5"?!" a< ll“ ‘i 2nd of April 1926. kn hwl will twin-l mrkxi: such .1 mental". i! l“ granddaughter is a ‘a-‘Ti to the King and “m” close at hand for the all she 1r. able to w“ “tum l-rizzd and tender and fortitude be- All Eilgiancl .' " ' l" c1‘. part of be year. T793? C11 “rum Alexandra, and VP.P.Y,F,P‘,_F A. . $5.1m: '~" e "nrorc than over than‘ own dur- * "l "7" T”! W“ cs of the Duke and v . u-cc-ld tr-ur. 3“ ~TH§RD IN LIIYE) 1‘“l?“.‘I’l1l'l'_ little rmld- m- ab ‘" “"1"” Zfmiwci: on t WLlSAP-ET And a W2. on is ' lvdv : . one of his lu-vuic- '.~'~":."I1. hold “Ii” rmili f"._ Church. and tlt" ‘rrf "Ito cmnes in the dir- on to tire throne lutc oi surcc nscriptlvni "Tl P we Henry awi 1'15 thlvf-fcxzrsh annzlef- sorrcvvlzq, nncl ‘For alvvriiglw 1T1:- Srwareigrq of ‘ v- vivhci- male cr it'- cv-mire is given to thel‘ TllP 5P i f‘, m v-r.‘ a younger son ln- we little . 11s hcfrfc bfifm before loves It 1: only vhc 1. In ihcsarnc W331i‘. thP son or l u-hn L’; not B"TB"I‘. rj‘ titr- YPl!l'\.!l'l;,‘>$D\'el‘Pl2l’l‘ "HEW Apparent": 'well-vn r- .='.*‘c w» n1“? ‘mambo:- of the Royal mire 111m Tliorrfnrw mr . {_ 131 the GITFCC l i; not artracwvc 1' umptive" since it is 1115 He mus‘ he s1... sumed‘ that he or she "2 to sesthai ‘M z is given .1 m=\""'n'= i maize 111m wcli and h" The coffin Abbey on fir!‘ which had W?" 111v ristcr A. ‘fly-a. f T‘ 11:11? n! nvcr" rhli/i M iv‘ .' -3 f. WP gasp for bramth. your iatili. 11o ;- 11p if] n, nu Majcrty‘? 212.11g demonstrations of to: cone: . faults and the national stomach and 1-0" 5'21 ally the whole corrmun- of the 11);, from and extraordinxili‘ fer. The TabIc sizcum. in spite of cine r193". or b" m" I ~ f " rind ."”r"r\n'r= w-hqch was in- lbm- 1' l.‘.'='.T'.“n1'-. M" JCJllFJ-j. The King expressed C9. felt much better. - . avervoaa." art- . jIozonto, Ont. PAGE NINE y-jgrrapg u-xq-ph vytjhjn ma cirglg of thc Km: so“? r: mrvficc '0 "11.: mm m’ a lwl» =t1.'f. “are 59m shortened to pie ‘The rfhzcn has u: '. var-mi a reminder ‘throug’: 1 peritvj r-f E"-I!."'TlE i‘ < !:‘F= pause tn consider "cm." of swffness must result c "d 1s shaken some hundreds of vary often the 1* hand ha: become ton-Ap- n. after an ordeal o: this bu‘ "w Lms merely used the left ‘nout making any ramrk. .. too, nus reduced to the o; limp helplessness. gives Sturdy ffhilzihcioi‘ smothering spans Couldn't Walk Far Gasped For Breath Mrs. T. W. Roth, Kelowus, B.C., writes :—“For ovcr a yea: I wan troubled with smothering spells, and it was impossible for me to walk, even I short distance, on acmnnt of having t4 "A friend told mo to by which I did. and in a short time I "I can now recommend than: to PriodMcabrrxataHdruggistsa-nd dealers. o.- mailcd direct on receipt o! 3 price by This T. liiilbrlrn '30., 1mm“ "cork from rail-head . . . on 1hr. raw wealth is being carved from the " IFIY or a hundred miles r edges of civilization . . . mighry works are progressing; new wilds; new towns are being built; new water powers harnessed. Men must be fed. Equipment, tools, supplies must come in, to clock-work schedule. By motor mick . . . on Royal Heavy Service Tires . . . ovcr the toughest roads in the world. Royal Heavy Service Tues are built f9?’ = s (u give equally good service for mick 11143-37156,. transport ca frontier loads or ho: ° city pavements. Their massive con- struction and sheer brute sucngzh absorb the shocks of ruts and rocks, the grind of grades, ihe pull of mud, the jars of sudden starts and stops. , And . . . they pile up astounding mileage records, regardless of operat- ing difficulties. Dominion Tire Dealus offer Cansdrs nui- sundin; me values . . . Rmal Masters, the worlds finest; Dnmiw ion Bowls. the besl sundsrd price tires on the market. Endurance. s sturdy medium-priced “y: _ , , produrf: o] 501d and sprvuw; [.1 Dnmvmml Rubber Co. Lxmned. Dominwn Tire Dealer; 11 EALERS l {the Wedding-day o; the King m4 “Tho. Queen fell in i927 and tioei: Majest- calebrated it by a visit W" wd- "M11 We Without P8111 ‘cell o! s2. Pauls Cathedral was mu- to be PBII-‘Ri. and Niictlce 1s m». lwrl-es Palace. Mlle End. Hem ‘ -' ' . "a an Lnformal guiard o! men . Br: sh Legion. to the and the King . ds 111th everj: man there. middle of this ceremony ‘PM! for a moment, .- ""11 and apologised for the delay, ' mat his fmgers he stretched his 33m?- .- of one of the f" ugh» minor ancanvenlences . I w-ondc-r how mgr-q; peo- what an ex- tarest ‘ . re-nubilczn pesplez? Major Kip- answer some new szdelights on / _.'\l . X’... l ' ’<"'.~.‘:y~j'} 1 J‘“A-‘..n.Qlcln0nQn-@-‘A-Q w- .1”..-