PRINCE RUPERT DAILY NEWS Coronation 1953 Coronation 1953 SIX TUESDAY, "JUNE 2, 1953 Radio, Television, Press V'vilalion: To Report Every Phase Cul Down Kvi-nt to ISt-rome One of CenluryV . N.. Create! News Even! for Coverage r i:7(:miK,ni(1(le I o Allrml l l.UOne By'Yorke Henderson On A SDrillff (l.iv im I Oil ., By Brett Oliver One person, a woman. Queen Elizabeth the Second, is oon to become the centre of one of the century' great news events. For just over fivs hours,, the world will pause as a "ritish monarch is crowned Queen of a quarter of the globe. From the moment she appears for her drive to the Abbey till her last hr.pdwave on the balcony of Buckingham Palace, those minutes will belong to the millions. It will be an unforgettable moment in liistoiy, not likely to come again- for many ' ' years. , i h'", 'f mo't than , do,,., .monarchtc watrhed U0I8e V -;SfVN"c?f W Ts tr 4"'m crownfd . in Westminster Abbey. 1he" made muth ol the ey-d, 1 1 year-old, heif , parent to the British TKioe. a fairy talc child Drincr.. ,J 11 - III ?t it ' it- i' iU r it' if i'tii It is right I lien that the most will be made of Ibis hi: I orit-moment of colourful pa.;emitry. hor, wherever they are. English-speaking people will want to have part in it hv seeing, hearing or COKfUHAL ol th Morse ol I 4 htf ; Royal Horse Guards ii lilted lor hii part as tha sovereign'! escort. by reading, the task oil mat oay is Hear for those who will brins a V V" mm late robes and tiny corunn Hut few of them were to ir, her asccud the throne herself! for the royal invitation, ,ear"s coronation hav mir. rored t- chanr.d fa-, ,( ' Manv o: .n lieii Uh .... .... Commonwealth of Nations to the side of a Queen as site accepts her Clown. It will be done on a scale never vet attempted. Out from the fn7 ... :" " " streets of London will flow a tor ird nnw I.. Cer man-made Flags lo Hang 'ERMAN - marie flags will decorate some Loudon buildings during the Coronation. They woe found in Germany in crates marked "Germany for the Germans." Some of the flags are naval signals. "A theatre can put up a 'pay-ing-of f signal when a show is a hit," today said Mr. Alec Godwin, head of a Wapping wholesale firm tiiat bought the flags. "But most purchasers simply want Ihem for decorations." The flags sell by the pound. Usual pi-ice for the all-wool flags is 10s. a pound. Tl'at is about 3s. Hd. a scjuare yard. Some Union Jacks are 30t. by am. iKJIf i .. til rent of woids. wrillen and spoken, lukins; the news to the four corners of the earth. Within 4 1' "JCZmil RVF.t.- the United Kingdom itself, Britons will be able to see and hear the ceremony, as the minutes pass. Kor with television and radio at their ' . ... i 4 - . themselves nod as mrh ,r, barred from stlendiuj. Atcnrrtm. to Court ni(iiettR ihev uouiif If they were present. ,0V crowned heads prc.deiir tr the Britnh sovereiEn. That tl course, could not be allovM t hepfien, so tt.idition hss t0 it that they are not Imim Other monsrehies htm bwn toppled by the westward Ki of ( 'omniunism. And no w m of th roj j guests who wm h, proudly to the Ahivy r JI nl . offlnapv ivcocni'is m B'llain'.s Royal Household Three royal prim-es 'inly w;H return in their own nelu t mine! the Glittering AMjv moov T;m are from WiTti r.uiojie Crown Prince Olav of Norway sml Prince B"rnhmi ol th Netherlands The o'her if Hrtnce Asfa Wos""!!. elile.i of the Unit" ror of Alw sinn. ( Fi-li.-H"-: t 4 "-X? vw W & it? touch, there will not be a home in the land unable to come to London that morning. And in time, there will be few vl o have not teen a ihned record of 'he majestic scene. How is it being done? lto-.v will !0 million people be Informed of, ' lint happens in London on June The answer lies in Hie planning, the organisation and the hard work nidi is being poured into the job f "Covering I lie coronal ion." Tadio is still the greatest me-ilium for informing t lie greatest number of people in the shortest feet view of the conizrecatinn in the Nave and the oiocesMons to and from the Altar. As the crowned Queen and her CORONATION PROCESSION of King George VI in the Royal Stale Coach passing through Admiralty Arch. entourage emerge from thn great building, other TV crews will take up the picture antt carry it through till Her Maiestv turns for Ihe lasl the -it ime task fulls to ilinie from the famous hnlconv of tune. I hi: I'riiuv Bernhaid will reuni- y 4lTi SSftr'pN 1 'nenl the Netherlands tiwn t-- ' ''4'H'.-'- i i cause as Con. nrt he Is not the '. AWt'-f'.1- ! li-nd f the Slate With his ''S'r ?J I ; wife, now Queen lulmna. Iw TSX'm tm ti ummi brought brought romantic romantic ni. note into mtu Ihe pageaiitiy of the 19'i7 Me- PUARDS BEARSKINS being made in London mounted and if sewn on specially constructed -s ii f the British Broadcasting col pora-1 ner nome and disappears from t!or.. lis ioh is to describe eneh jsiglit. moment of the Oueen's drive to j ttinlinental Europe is to view the Abbey, her Coronation there ;t,e Coronation also. Television mid her ti nimplimit tour alons the transmilters leap - frogging the processional : oute back to Buck- iChannel will send the living pio inEliam Palace. tine into homes in France, Bel- To do this, the BHC. working lnlgium. Holland and Western Ger-co-ooeratidn nith nearly all the I many. world's main radio organisations. Proximity makes this possible, v i'.l hove 2.")i commentators nnd The United States, in spile of iLs observers floorlinK the wavelengths tremendous resources, is not to see of tli L-lobe v ilh an on-the-spot !a televised version of 1 lie event till description relayed over lJUO sta-1 more than 13 hours later. At first lion I'1 wa!i ambitiously hoped to have A sma'l, higl.lv-trained team. In- j aircraft acting as relay stations cludm? men tr'om the Common- spaced across, the Atlantic s the in- occasion for "ge could be fed into the colos-1 weal h will cover . , , i. r.iii h lles sal Ameman network. In th is way. Anrsimim'ancI.Uv Vlvut'Si have H ' awa'y K'.' .'- - : SJ. s'.'s ,- A1J " ?; t ; Hi J ... j :i XftJif til' Vie. vill be heaid in - "arts of tee Commonwealth through a v.'.ii'ld- might viewed the Coronation as if they were silting in the Abbey themselves. Though feasible, the project has been rated too costly about f;6 million would be needed and the v"?e link-up. itvO HEAD-DRESSES specially designed by Hartnell the Queen's dressmaker for any color but black. bialii'tis. Ihey had rut short their honeymoon lo be in gallon and giat'dul Britons .sliuwed they appKiiHted Ihe g"luie. Crown Prince Oiav ol NoriMiy with lu Swedi.-h-ixirn wile. Princess M.ul.iu. can come txM'ause his lather. King lluiMm, a htuidy 80, still nis on lii 111 rone. ; . Swcdfis King ,GiWav Atloif, as Cjot.n Prince, is. pi cm 11, iu Ini counliy lal imc. ,:.Ve lieviiij mud hit second son. Prae e tw ill. Ills eliiesl sou, P. iti'-r. Guslar Adolf v u..l n 1917 in an fair flash. Cocece'h n p. ouiive in 1517 was Ciuwn Pi nice Paul. at king, ht nut) d'-eid IP srnil Ini 12-eai-old win. mo jllul it lit tioes. Queen r ieUciiKd wifl pioo aoly accompany lout As Uany" ler ol the ljuke ui Bit' turn irk M in line of suvecasiun In IM '!' i.sh Throne sue vi.d ploW flj M allowed p.uiH Kiu Agtii'J c lemony. 1 ! "! M i . 1 Deniliaik s K,,, . Frcdefik Ju sui ceedi-rt In tne t, irons jiacfl! la-l coionution. riut lie has flv suns and because Liemniirk (lot nut rotogiii.se wfiia.e iji'oMgioB he will mid his tw-)iai-vlil Cousin, prince A set Belgium w3 . icpresrnled by KiiiK u.'upulo t oiuiliei, Prima COailea ol Maud' is. But Uo-oold tins since aodicalcd and tins year toe royal ttouse in Hiueil will send lis lS-)car-ultf un, Pi nice AilK'rl, woo icpresciiU'il Ins nioliier, King Unu-iuuin at tlie ancral of Ling George VI. 1 u ' It Lairruasei S miil!.ui'"0"--ly. loo. nc - ink. of 'he ceremo-.v will he bioadi n ' n iry lne;; iate used by the BBC In its ex'ornal services -I!) -'"-ether, :ncluoinr: su'th nnfnmilia-tonguc as Kuoyu, Vietnamese and Marnihi. Jslaid 'n manv res;iects, hut unequalled in tintidiini: big occasions. '.he BBC is determined lhat the r mm united States is now to receive a li!m taken from the TV ivimcras. it will be rushed aerots the At-l.ir.lic by air and transmitted over loin Canadian and American networks. Most countries overseas, however, have no television services nnd. till newsreel and color riims reach them, the people will have to rely on radio and their newspapers. rews will be spread lunner ana. ever vrr hetore. neiore. in ine nine . ii wider than m Nowada. newspapers are un- fvtor will not in eveiy case onbie to compete against radio in ,tos overseas transmissions H lh( Coeiage of an event like the b.'oadcafi oinct. home will '!- Coronation just as radio U in its fore be recorded for use later, in uri) OVMshllliowe)j by television. th day. For l'.l hours a'ter theljj,,, it isi a ,,., ,,lat most ppopie, lerei iony. the i'LC will I rmismii i Ri,lt;;, i,v nave watched or ediled p.ogiammes ,n hngli cn-, heard an event, still like to read tuinins recordings ol Inc uuy a niot i,oul it jn 1 heir papers. And thai irrafh.e inomenls. lis wie'ie Uio descriptive writer 6 k-TZ -Jitkl comes into his own. Nisin broadcasts overseas i CEREMONIAL SWORDS order! j f'nii -ii8! ii'm iimn t iT twiSt If immTi fi'ifniHiT C"r in inn ifBliiin nil C;""' , totalling 2,000 are put toge-T cXrtZ XXSTZ ROYAL STATE COACH in which the Queen will ride is made ther by firm of noted special-! IneJnJe descriplio.is of the celebra-tiUiis i:i 1-on.ion, inteivit,'. with v. cii-l.iiow 11 visi'ors from many cojnlriei. as -veil uj rccoidiuju u! t)ie moi nin:; ceremony. To auivevo world ti.'oaTicuattng n tills settle, tiie LUC ia bi iding ,(1 ctigincer-i to man I lie SO cum-l.ienlniy point:; which will be eslobli-'ictf ins.iie the Aub"y nnd hiti!' (lie n:iicL':.sioiiai route. The ECONOMY ROBES designed for peers and peeresses lor the 1953 Coronation because of high costs." So an army of writers is gather-inn to cover the Coronation. They are coming (rom every part of the world ne.1. in the 2 hours after Queen Elizabeth's crowning, more v.ords will be cabled from London Ihan ever before in history. Most h'2 overseas newspater.s will have ilicir own eorresonrients working on the spol, -providing an individual description to far-awny read in the style of an ancient roman chariot. ists. - , .r . - - i k'-;itj 5-f- Coaches, Uniforms and Robes Are Being Prepared er:;, reaiure writers, with more time available, will follow up with nenl ly-rouniled articles for plush magadnes at home and abroad. The British press, geared for a supreme effort befitlinK the occa ' ma.inrily ot tliis loam will spend t'oronat'ion eve in a huiliong d-ioiuina Bronricaslinu House. slee-ing on tamp hens so they can be on the joii first, thine in the morn-itil williout hnviiiK to converge litroiigh a ja m-paeked London. 0;.t on t lie M reels, they will be By Dorothy Barklcy , deputing enihlenialic subjects de- Mie postilions' livery is in the! lore handed down from generation suned by Cipriani, the lcadinc roval colors of crimson hlnek imi:i n,.,,...ii. .,, ... .1, tiny wiit either- mantles of any order ol knighthood lo which they sion, will have fresh editions on the " vice ,.r i..,-., ..i. m:v Itching or Parlininent mln-s itivets ot every city almost U , fe '""J" """ I Italian artist ot the day gold. And they w ear powdered j by William IV to replace the reannnsihle tor rnntmllinu over ceiling dress Willi trousers u iUickly as events progress. What of microphones and tmnd''eds . ol , Ke 1.,.Iues wucre uiey u-ve doc. ,t js conslrU(.tcd , 5, , ' f prcservi d fro,,, dual and utotli . - a1,ipn, ,,, hpi,( J . wiiss. velvet jockey caps, cmbroid-' 1 former Tudor slyle. n place ol knee breeches. If be ever the treatment it is given, the story will uncinate inside the Ab since the last low tlu rank of cmi I. Ihey may wear a cliii of slate instead of a Coronalioa haveinh, ,.., h..u. i '. bey nnd in the streets. Selected Two Other louche. The fwo olhercercmonial coaches in Ihe procession ,e those of the coronet, '('hp rititnlH1! of rows of creo jacKeis ana wmie DucKSKin, breeches. Their riding boots have gilt spurs, and they carry gold-mounted wht.le-bono ridinn whips. writers of the most important Iriumphs. is loaded with trophies to commemorate British victories ol war. miles of wire 30 licit the com-nenln.rics :iass smoollily through o the waitinu world. A temporary so'j.il contKsl room just round t!ie corner from the Aiiney will ensure tne woid re cleat, and a second control position in the head verger's room inside the Abbey will conic the coa.hcs, un. forms and robes to be used on June 2. The ceremonial coaches required the most renovation- afler the rav papers nnd news agencies will have seats in the Abbey. The mam erniirie'fi tails on bis robes donates diflerence in rnnk Iwo rows for a hiii on, nnd four for a ilnke Their Lord Mayor of London and the Four walking Men. chosen Horn the Speaker of the House of Commons. On the centre of the roof are lone of Up to a thousand newspapermen will be spread along the proeessiunul route. For those The Mayor's ciii.cn known a-s the coronets, loo, tvivo subtle variations A duke has eight gold straw ages of lime. The Royal Stat.' " "."f" 'f. i .ln.,,"u ooys symboiie Gingerbread Couiti"- is almost HOO beitv ' -,tv-i on li s An earl has help channel the word-picture of ,btini; their reports overseas im- eigol ,-er nails laisid on points 1 he ceremony eorrcctlv into over wrn r.tt.l straw no it y leavrs be. twe 11 t Me points, a viscount 16 too young to attend in VJ'.il when Lnipcior iliiolulo dispatched nn own bi ul tier, Prune Oocliuiu, a tiiocrculusia sullerer, who died tins year. I'riuc Paul, .-l!jint ol Yugoslavia, is ope ol lite luis-lionalile visitors. Biilain at present is ollicia'iy liienilly H h '1 ilo'.s Yugoslavia, the oni Com milni.1l cmlliliy outside Hie lien Curium. Thai friendship ill any case might he endangered if Paul weit asked by Kiilam lo ride in the same procession as Pit Yugoslav C'oiiimunuit delete. Ihe question ol cx-KuH Michael of Kuiiiama raise similar difficulties. Al present Michuel, onetime owner of lif castles in his native country. i living the life of an Ki.glish country suuire on a It" acre estate near the late Bernard Shaw's home at Ayol St. Lawrence, lie was forced to qcit his country, ycl Britain mHiiilainii (liplomnlic relations with Rumania. Perhaps more ti' licyiu Hum , any.ii the slulus of ine Egp-tinn roa fninilv When Ihe provisional Coronation inniti"ll weie dispnlched bv the Koreign Otfice, Egypt's monarchy existed in name, although Ihete were iii.ticalions thai I ha Neguib regime intended - and plana to abolish it. Bill "J" how, on Coronal ion Day. I'J"'" exile In his sun-baked Mediterranean retreat will remeniher how he came to Britain -V""" previously as Crown J""'' Karuuk, accompanied Hv n mother. Queen Naili. M One ruler not 1cpre.sr11t.il, things now stand, Is the Ww l Persia Prime Minister Mossadeq saw to lhat when he vvenj diplomatic relaUons with B"1 over the oil dispute. The Iron Curtain wTZ probably walUnR for iN the Kremlin-were an'""npr, in-!'" it in r,.ui the r Plans, tncriialclv, the Post Olfice is pro-vidinu direct lines to london's central cable office, where ranks of teletype operators will send the despatches beaming round the Globe. sipcr bolls nnd n Imon six -with years old, and weighs Just under four tons. It is so nicknamed because of ils fantastically carved woorlen body and rich gilt rococo ornamentation Ils Interior Is decorated in ciimson velvet and gold upholstery, and it has tassel led seats. Allegoi ical pleluies on the outside Scales of Justice. Faith. Coach, completely rcgilded in 1!K!7, has had its panel paintings cleaned and translerred to new wood, specially proofed uga list woodworm and weather. And the Lord Mayor's coach, in which dry rot and moth were suspected, nab been jvei hauled and repainted.-Ol the three slate coaches in the seas wavelengtt.. The Britisti Posi office has a bic part in the ariiinuemenis. It is providing nearly 400 snurirl eircuils oesides 800 wire exlensjims for microphones nnd hrnd-phoncs. For the KBC. Coronation Da will climay a week-loni rush of no slrawlierrv leovcs 'Ihey are not allowed lo adoi n theli f-oinui'ts Willi iewels or piecioiis stones in Ihey support tne emblem ol slaie the Imperial Crown, the Sceptre, the Sword of Stale and the lusig-nias of KnighthooJ. - Hus Hulihcr 1ire The Queen should have the ust comfortable Coronation ride in history rubber tiie.s have been lilted for the first time to the coach's iron wheel. Because of the coach's Immense weighl over stead of silver balls Radio Pictures " These will be followed nlmost Hope and Charily were painted bv Peeiessis nl the Abln y are wearing robes of slate and perhaps. .immediately hv radio nietores the sneejfit programs costin f.iiii.in the same Italian artist, Cipriani, who was commissioned to ornameni procession the Koyal Stale Coach, the Lord Mayor's Couch and the slaff of the Crown Equerry in the I Royal Mews, match on each sidej of the team. Tl.eir livery is similar to that of 'lie postilions except Hint they wear knee-length coals. Four Royal foolmen walk in pairs on each side of the coach Itself. They wear frock coals, knee orreches and buci.led shoes. The Sovereign's Escort, which precedes the couch, is made up of thee elite corps the Life Guards, Hie Blues, and the Yeomen of the Guard all wearing their centuries, old attire. The Life Guards werg formed originally from Ihe. Cavaliers who wirit into exile with Prince Charles Sluart, later Charles II. and returned with him. Today. Ihey wear white-plumed silver helmet, steel breastplate, red lunie, sold lace alguillettes, white buckskin pantaloons, knee boots, and while buckskin gauntlets. The Blues were part of the Parliamentary Army fighting titai 1 ntiK--a 01 nit; urownco wueen lo reoch countries outside televi "'ii uiim-.il is unsuie 10 draw II tne Koyal Stile Coach, The Ixird Mayor's cont-of-nrms are painted aitiugh almost iS? oiT V LFm ,hh-n"'kjnlf "'- sion-served burope. Films, comprehensive and vivid. on the door, and the Lord Mayorl the youngest. It was completed u eLed in in hilllsell haw nn escort of Pikm,n Idled. One advanlage of this slow pace is flmt all those nn rmiU u.ilt will tive the world the final and mitt complete account of the dav. iid. me r.ora mavors sevcra (if the Honourable Artillery Com-1 BjI sound broadcasting is not th.- nd of the corporation's assignment. The wonder nf television, in ;ts Infancy when Kinc George VI ;v ,s crowned in 19S7. should ensure that an estimated 20.ntKI.0OO people will have a better view than the 1r11ltitu.de lir.ina the streets. The television coverage is to he Vjiidled on p.lmnst the same scale fs the radio . broadcast. Fourteen years previous lo that, and the have ample opportunity in s ih. pany. Queen as she passes by. Speaker s dates from the tune of Queen Anne. ine speakers coach wan once coionets according lo I lieu respective ranks. The coronet of a peeress U similar lo that of a Peer, except il is smaller. In their robes, poercssi's show I heir dillerence in oegiee by a nice dislinclion between tlie number of rows of ermine's tails anil Ihe length of Ihe t ruin. A Duchess, for instance, has a Pvo-yarrl ;lrain and (our rows of ermine's lints, and a hardness only a Ihree-iool train and Iwo rows of ermine's tails. , But for viscountesses hiki bnron-ese who do not possess these tohes. the Queen's dressmaker Norman Harlnell has designed. Now st eels for world-wide distribution will be quick off the mark and behind them will come the polished feature films, most of them in color. Hie Slate Coach of Queen - Anne,; The Royal Coach, now used only ana sne nrovp in It lo her own) colonation. Now II boar. IhpcnnlJ at coronations, this year makes its seventh appearance in a coronation cameras spaced along the route. .1 Arthur Rank. Britain's film of-arms of the Speaker. Last u.sed at King George VI's coronation, it nd Ihree inside the Abbey, will .mogul, is preparing lo make a full- procession, (.eorge lit ordered il lor his coronation in 1761 but it was not completed until a vear niek up nearlv everv moment of lengtn color film and 25 British win De pulled by two brewers horses. Two running foolmen. against the King and the order cameramen working with a new The interior is decorated In rich scarlet velvet on which are embroidered the rose, thislle. shamrock and State Crown. For Edward VII's coronation, Ihe coachman's box was removed because the king thought tha: it prevented the crowds from seeing properly. This meant that all horses had to be postilion-ridden and so they are todav. The coach is drawn by eight Windsor Grevs. (Their name m-nso chosen from draymen's assistants. 'olor svstem have been earmarked 10 produce an hour-long celluloid later when he drove in it to the State opening of Parliament. After this event, the Royal Slable Clerk Hi disband them was never carried out: Their uniform Is blue tunic, will accompany the coach the three hours. The finest commentator in the world could not hone to c-A-nete aeainst the impressions iich will be captured for the television screen. The grentest triumph for TV arises from Ihe Ahbev eciemnny ! j"-ttl; the Queen's approval, special tecorrj. Other carriages, of a smaller, less steel breastplate, white breeches and knee boots The uniform of Elaborate precautions are being wrote in his journal: ' His Majesty went to the House of Peers to 0ien the session in the new State Coach ornate variety, will take members of the Queen's family to the Abbey. Ihe Yeomen of Ihe Guard formed ioKeo 10 ensure mat tne loll . .-1.,.. renson 10 by Henry VII as a personal pro Ittelf kfter enroll deliberations dK'ly of the Coronation cere- was prooao y -- r economy robes costing about ..a Lenth ol the price of a tiaditionsl ribe. 'I'he new robe, of crimson velveteen instead of silk velvet, is ed;ed with white coney in place of the customary ermine. And only six yards, compared with 20 lor - Moscow', tectionhas nnrniy cnangen since delay iciay In aniiu"u, . For The 1110b was exceeding great yet no other accident hapiened but one of the door glasses and the handle Insnired bv Public opinion. Ihe V is maintained in every film iwninn rnmmkiinn in Decern- I made. Ihe reels will be lifted from Tudor limes. Each wears a run, Russia's representative. after what happened to tn mon Phn.nn. IflC POSt mli red gold and black frock, knee r-rime Ministers of the Commonwealth will travel in cars Peers and peeresses, though, will travel to the Abbey by special underground trains. They will then be within walking distance of Ihe Abbey, and so will avoid the ItafPe breeches and buckled, shoes. was Mbe old style, ate required. The 01 me door being broken." Only kings and queen of England may ride in the coach. It has never nian br approved the extension of tele- I'e cameras by executives of the vision to include the Recognition. I'1 companies and out at once the Crowning and the Homaee . sealed canisters. Then, they cardinal parts of the whole Abbey '-dl be taken by car from West-eeremonv. But, lo maintain Ihe imtnistcr Abbey to Buckingham uiar. r , -,,, h,. Inside the Abbey, the Queen has an escort of Genllemn-at-aims. wriue coney collar is pownereu in Ihe same wny willr ermine's tails to donate rank. As. an alternative from the fact that the (oval horses were stabled at Windsor until 19II7). The state harness, worn only by the horses that draw the State Coach wa- made for the Diamond Jubilee celebrations of Quern Victoria in 1SC:7. and cost Uu.000. Each set weighs 130 pounds and was originally cut from a single hide of red Morocco leather. The saddle cloths are of royal blue cloth edged with eold embroider. who accompany her from the doorleonfusion hound to arise if they left London and superstition has it that 11 would tie unlucky for to do so Described as the most superb lo Hie coronel, crintson velveteen through the nave and choir. 1 ne ait travelled by car. disnitv of the occasion. I v screens i-uiaee wnere. in a private room, everywhere will be blank during (l'ie Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. the Anointine, the Communion Fisher, the Lord Chamberlain, the Pravers and the Administration of iKarl of Scarborough, ar.d the Earl carriage ever built, it marks the supreme artistic extravagance of Marshal Tukhachevssy. .... -fore the Coronation .he chill" and cotiW " 7. Shcrt T w - so it was said. ,h Coronation he was , a number of. o.ner - ,, leaders following S I-,fi c trial at wnich he ' St'i, ,,, ',ejj plotting lo assassinate guard was formed fry Jlenry VIII peers wno are , the processions IZB f.stule have teen siiecinlly In 1509 with tha injunction that It and ceramonies In the Abbey wear 'i s"-ned. , should afways consist of "Gentle- robes of state with coronets. Miut so ;he procession, not only an age renowned for its luxury. Money was lavished on it it cost the Sacrament, Marshal, the Duke of Norfolk, l,e uniforms men extracle of noble blood." This there have been relaxations in lr- in the roaches but in hose Inking over 7,000. This- is hardly surpris- ka, f nnnrp hppn morntien Since nil inna M tiro for nfem not lukino nn rows worn DV On account of its great value, J e Besides the camera rocussing on jaciinn toi tn. Koyal Family, will jt. Ii"h Al'ar. two mher in the 'so ih, j fimf developed and 0 of English n p ,t is arnf.i wnn in-carat Their uniform wrocn runny an active part at the Abbey, jn- ,l"n. prnsfnis a 'amr wit ui Abbey will jivj aj 'nniecuca. . tulici " . Uuid. and list vu uunun dumiuies si U:i siapia UvuJd cost X30y ew agji is Uici.- alvud u Uia coalU suta tus atsi vi 1?4. -e