The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, June 29, 1911, Thursday Evening Edition, Image 2

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CORONATION OF KING
IS BRILLIANT SP
George when the cannon at the Tow-
r of London told them that the crown
ihad been placed upon the brows of
their sovereign
Great Throngs fn the Streets
From the earliest hours of the morn
ing the population of London and the
Ihundreds of thousands of visitors had
been moving toward the royal route
from Buckingham Palace to Westmin
ster Abbey As soon as the seats in
the numerous stands were filled gates
were closed that kept out the rabble
and then the throngs tried to crowd In
Ito the streets adjoining the route
From pole to pole throughout the en
tire distance gay colored bunting was
iGtrung and the whole city was stream
ing with flags
Along the Mall and all the way from
he palace to the abbey troops were
standing company upon company
British troops of every shade of color
living symbols of the countries and
peoples over which the new king and
emperor reigns On every side bands
were playing patriotic music and the
Iin of cheering wa continuous and
overwhelming
Procession Fro rathe Palace
As the hour for the coronation ap
proached the waiting thousands Orst
saw the arrival of the gentlemen ap
pointed to act as ushers during the
ceremony These were Jed bjv tae
earl marshal the duke gf s Norfolk
Then the nobility ertied to seats In
tfifcbfoey uegapto come Most of the
peers alPeeresses rode in state
coaches that have been used by their
families for many years These car
riages repainted and regilded were
drawn by four horses apiece Each
was accompanied by outriders and
footmen In gorgeous liveries stood on
the rail behind Each peer as he
passed was greeted with cheers and
often with familiar greetings that set
the crowds off in roars of laughter for
even the solemnity of the occasion
could not restrain the Irreverent hu
liumor of the cockneys
Procession From the Palace
Not all the nobility rode in coaches
however for the king had permitted
jone violation of precedent and given
jpermlssion for the use of automobiles
by those who have discarded horses
jThls was done reluctantly and thero
were not many motors cars In the long
procession of vehicles
The lord mayor and his suite In
jthelr gorgeous robes and regalia were
ithe next to pass toward the Abbey
King and Queen Appear
Now the bells of many churches
pealed out and the people knew the
ECTACLE
Solemn Ceremony Is Performed in Westminster Abbey in
Presence of Distinguished Assemblage Immense
Throng Sees Royal Procession from Bucking
ham Palace
London George V was crowned
king of Great Britain June 23 in West
minster Abbey and the ceremony for
jwhich the empire had been so long
preparing was performed with a bril
liance never surpassed at any previous
coronation in the historic old abbey
jThe gorgeous spectacle was witnessed
by about 7000 distinguished men and
women while massed in the streets
were hundreds of thousands who took
Hip the shout of Long live King
f
wearing low buckled shoes and black
velvet caps Immediately behind them
came the closed carriages of the royal
party every one drawn by splendid
horses gorgeously caparisoned
Through the windows of the great
lumbering state coach the people could
get a glimpse of the king and queen
Following their majesties rode the
household troops and especially picked
military bodies Field Marshal Vis
count Kitchener was at the head of
the headquarters staff as he was at
the coronation of King Edward In
this part of the procession too rode
many Indian princes and maharajahs
and potentates of Englands widely
scattered dominions Their splendid
king of this realm wherefore all you
who are come this day to do your
homage are you willing to do the
same The king meanwhile stood
up by his chair and turned to each
side and the people acclaimed him
with cries of God save King George
Then followed the litany the com
munion service and a short sermon
preached by the archbishop of York
after which the oath was administer
ed to the king by the archbishop of
Canterbury
The Anointing and Coronation
King George now was divested of
his crimson robes by the lord great
chamberlain and seated himself in
the chair of King Edward I which
contains the ancient stone of des
tiny The dean of Westminster
brought from the altar the golden
ampulla and spoon and the arch
bishop anointed him on the head the
breasts and the palms of both hands
and blessed him The king was next
invested with the colobium sindonis
of fine linen and the supertunlca of
cloth of gold his heels were touched
with the golden spurs and the sword
of state was girded upon him after
which the armlll and robe royal of
cloth of gold were put upon him In
turn then his majesty was given the
orb the kings ring the glove and the
two scepters
All was ready now for the supreme
act The archbishop placed St Ed-
King George and Queen Mary
robes glittered with jewels and they
added much to the magnificence of the
parade But the man who next to
the king received the loudest and
warmest applause was Lord Robert
for the people love Bobs and their
affectionate greetings almost made the
grizzled hero of a hundred campaigns
blush
Arrival at tho Abbey
Waiting outside the west d6or of
Westminster Abbey were the archbish
ops of Canterbury and York and a
large number of bishops and when
the king and queen approached they
first entered the church followed Im
mediately by the Prince of Wales and
The King in the Coach of State
king and queen were coming From
the moment their majesties emerged
from Buckingham palace there was a
continuous roar of cheers that accom
panied them all the way to the Abbey
Their approach was heralded by the
kings bargemaster and twelve water
men wearing quaint medieval tunics
knee breeches and stockings all scar
let with the crown and badges em
blazoned In gold on their breasts and
QUEENS MAIDS OF HONOR
Marys Strong Practical Insight Shown
In Choice of the Four Young
Ladles
London Queen Mary displayed evidence
practical insight in the
dence of her
choice of her four coronation maids
of honor the Hon Sybil Brodrick
Venetia Baring Mabel Gye and Katb
rine Villiers
Brodrick is the
The Hon Sybil
daughter of Viscount Mlddleton by
his suite As the monarchs passed in
to the abbey the choir sang an anthem
The first action of the coronation
service the presentation of the king
to the people for recognition Is a sur
vival of ancient Teutonic usage Ac
companied by tie great officers of
state the archbishop of Canterbury
went to each side of the theater in
turn saying Sirs I here present
unto you King George the undoubted
his first marriage with Lady Hilda
Charteris daughter of ihe veteran
Earl of Wemyss her eldest sister Ib
Lady Tweedmouth She is a bright
sensible girl with ideas of her own
about most things and has traveled
a good deal on the continent
The Hon Venetia Baring Is a
dainty Greuze liko lady with great
taste la dress who always wears
something personal and characteristic
She avoids the prevailing fashions
but succeeds in appearing smart and
Individual without being eccentric
wards crown upon the altar and de
livered a short prayer and then sup
ported by the other clergy placed the
crown upon the kings head At that
instant the trumpets sounded the
congregation shouted Long live King
George and the peers and kings of
arms put on their coronets
The inthronlzation was a handsome
part of tho ceremonies The king
was lifted up into his throne by the
archbishops the bishops and certain
poers and all the great officers and
those who bora the swords thd scop
ters and other regalia grouped them
selves about th steps of ths throne
Next tho princes and peers Aid their
homage led by the archbishop of
Canterbury and the prince of Wales
Each of these and the premier duke
marquis earl viscount and baron
kissed the king upon the cheek
The anointing and crowning of
Queen Mary was a short and simple
ceremony Following the example of
Queen Alexandra she was anointed
on the head only She was invested
with the ring was crowned by the
archbishop of York and received the
scepter and the ivory rod with tho
dove
Few Americans in the Abbey
Of all the Americans who have
been attracted to London by the fes
tivities of the coronation season only
a very few were admitted to the
Abbey These included President
Tafts special ambassador John Hays
Hammond and Mrs Hammond Maj
Gen Greely and Rear Admiral Vree
land representing the army and
navy and the latters secretary Am
bassador Whitelaw Reld and Mrs
Reid and the attaches and secretaries
of the embassy Plerpont Morgan and
less than a score of American women
who married English peers
One fact connected with the coro
nation was the subject of some amused
comment This was that King George
who is quite the reyerse of a giant
had selected four of the shortest
knights of the garter to hold the gol
den canopy over him during the
anointing They were the earl of
Cadogan Lord Roberts Lord Elgin
and Lord Rosebery These four peers
were the only ones arrayed in the
gorgeous robes of the order of the
garter
Miss Gye is perhaps the most inter
esting of the maids of honor in so
far as she has had a cosmopolitan ex
perience Her late father was Brit
ish consul at Brest and she was edu
cated in Paris Consequently she
speaks French as idiomatically as la
real Parislenne
The last in the list of maids of hon
or is Miss Katherine Villiers daugh
ter of the late Col the Hon George
Villiers second brother of the earl
of Clarendon who was at one time
military attache at St Petersburg
To apprehend contempt is to have
deserved It already Pierre Loti
Take Garfield Tea to regulate the liver
and overcame constipation
God pays btu not every Saturday
Alphonse Karr
Lewis Single Binder gives the smoker a
rich mellow tasting 5c cigar
You complain of ingratitude were
you not repaid by your pleasure in do
ing good Levis
USE AIXEJTS FOOT EASE
tho Antiseptic ponder to be shaken into tho ihoM
for tired aching feet It takes the stine out of corns
and bnnlons and makes walking a delight Sold
everywhere 25c Itefati substitutes For FRKH
trial package address A S Olmsted Lo Roy NY
Raw
Bore Do you believe oysters havo
brains
Bored Certainly I do since they
know when to shut up
Beautiful Post Cards Free
Bend 2c stamp for Ave samples of our
very best Gold Embossed Birthday Flow
er and Motto Post Cards beautiful colors
and loveliest designs Art Poat Card Club
721 Jackson St Topeka Kan
A Use for the Recall
Knicker What do you know about
the recall
Bocker I believe in It for umpires
Tho Kaiser Likes the Bible
The kaiser is a great reader and
while he tries to keep himself abreast
of current events his favorite book is
the Bible says the London Chronicle
A well thumbed and marked copy Is
always by his bedside When Mr
Roosevelt visited Berlin last year the
kaiser made him a present of a num
ber of books About half of them re
ferred to theology and file others to
military subjects These two classes
indicate the kaisers own preferences
He Got the Pass
I want a pass
Pass Youre not entitled to a
pass You are not an employe
Sorry
No but here the antipass law says
free transportation can be granted to
necessary caretakers of live stock
poultry and fruit Well Im going on
this trip with an aunt thats a hen
theres your poultry a girl thats a
peach theres your fruit and a
nephew thats a mule theres your
live stock Gimme a pass The Way
Bill
WISE BROKER
ft
2em 3nf t
Jiggs That marriage broker was to
get 101 per cent of the girls estate for
arranging a match with a French mar
quis but he did better than that ho
took it all
Wlggs How
Jiggs Married the girl himself
i
Herej an individual among drinks a beverage thatQ I IB
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it fh fairly napa with delicious goodness and refreshing KV rXj
more to it than mere wetness or sweetness its gm mf
IgsjJmKhas full of life Youll enjoy it from the first sip JgW 41
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STfilBPJ to the last drop and afterwards Jm III
m H Tan delicious refreshing Jf m
II WM Bfct THIRST QUENCHING gdpwhc I
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II Ilia nffHfrili COCA CorA co AtJzataC3flfroa KT7nilf
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HAD BEEN SILENT SUFFERER
Subordinate Officer the Recipient of
Hints Intended for His
Superior
A sea captains wife tells this story
of a maiden woman sister of one of
the owners of the ship on which she
Vmce made a long voyage She had
very decided opinions on most mat
ters and she and the captain had
many spirited arguments at the din
ner table
The captains wife a meek submis
sive little soul fearing that in the
heat of argument her husband might
say something to offend their august
passenger was In the habit of kick
ing him on the shins to hint at mod
eration Nevertheless all these re
minders passed unheeded
One day she administered a more
vigorous kick than usual and noticed
an expression of pain flit across the
face of the mate who sat opposite
her
Oh Mr Brown was that your
shin she asked
Yes Mrs Blaikie said the mate
meekly hits been my shin hall the
voyage maam Youths Companion
Willing to Suport Proxy
Albert Tiedemann a freshman of
the University of Pennsylvania was
called upon to vote for officers in a
recent gathering Not being well ac
quainted with the nominees he
thoughtfully hesitated before filling
out his ballot
One of the company left the room
with the explanation that he would
vote by proxy
So will I said Albert and with his
pencil poised above his paper leaned
over to a companion on his right and
asked
Say whats Proxys first name
Be not angry that you cannot make
others as you wish them to be since
you cannot make yourself what you
wish to be Thomas a Kempis
Love is the emblem of eternity it
confounds all notion of time It ef
faces all memory of a beginning all
fear of an end Madame de Stael
Speak kindly to all It lies In Gods
hands whether or no that spoken word
shall be the last you utter to the one
you are addressing
Do not expect a friend to ask of
you anticipate his need Socrates
GRAINS
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For Storing Grain
Tanks of all Kinds
Write for Catalogue
Columbian Steel Tank Co
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Historic Event Celebrated
Australia recently commemorated
the one hundred and forty first anni
versary of Captain Cooks first land
ing It was in 1770 that H M S En
deavor a barque of 370 tons entered
the inlet first called Sting Rays Har
bor but afterwards Botany Bay from
the beauty and variety of the plants
growing about its shore The vessel
remained eight days and before she
left the British flag was hoisted As
is the custom on each recurring anni
versary the flag was again unfurled
upon the spot where it was first dis
played and was saluted by the gun3
of the warships In the harbor
The Old Gag
Miss Lillian B Rowe at an adver
tisement writers dinner in Denver
said of the harem skirt
It will soon be so widely worn that
the old gag perpetrated in theMOs on
men may profitably be revived for
women victims
Some sharper you know will re
vive the gag by advertising In the
Ladies Own
Send 1 and learn how to keep
your harem skirt from becoming
fringed at the bottom
Thousands of dollars will pour in
and to each victim the sharper will
reply
Wear knickers
Intricate Letter
When Bilkins was away from homo
on a long business trip he got a letter
from his wife that still puzzles him
it ended thus
Baby is well and lots brighter than
she used to be Hoping you are the
same I remain your loving wife
Everybodys
A self made man Yes and wor
ships his creator Henry Clapp
Method
Mrs Knicker Will your furniture
go in the new flat
Mrs Bocker It will after
smashed
Its
Good maxims are germs of all good
Srmly impressed on the memory they
nourish the will Jbubert
A short human interest story written by C W Post for the Postum Cereal Co Ltd
ISA BTTT nfh sA ik
To tell you the curious story of how the mind
affects the digestion of food
I refer to the condition the mind is in Just
before at the time or Just following the taking
of food
If he has been properly educated the major
ity have he will help you understand the curious
machinery of digestion
To start you thinking on this interesting
subject I will try to lay out the plan in a general
way and you can then follow into more minute
details
Pawlow pronounce Pavloff a famous Russian Phy
sician and Chemist experimenting on some dogs cut
into the tube leading from the throat to the stomach
They were first nut under chloroform or some other
anaesthetic and the operation was painless They were
kept for months in very good condition
When quite hungry some unappetizing food was
placed before them and although hunger forced them
to eat it was shown by analysis of the contents of the
stomach that little if any of the digestive juices were
found
Then in contrast some raw meat was put where they
couldnt reach it at once and a little time allowed for
the minds of the dogs to anticipate and create an ap
petite When the food was finally given them they de
voured it ravenously and with every evidence of sat
isfaction The food was passed out Into a dish through
the opening before it reached the stomach It was
found to he mixed with Ptyalin the alkaline juice of
the mouth which is Important for the first step in di
gestion Then an analysis was made of the contents of
the stomach into which no food had entered It was
shown that the digestive fluids of stomach were flowing
freely exactly as if the desirable food had entered
This proved that It was not the presence of food
which caused the digestive juices to flow but the flow
was caused entirely and alone as a result of the action
of tho mind from anticipation
One dog continued to eat the fjjpd he liked for over
an hour believing lie was getting it into his stomach
whereas not an ounce went there every particle went
out through the opening and yet all this time the di
gestive juices flowed to the stomach prepared to
quickly digest food in response to the curious order3 of
the mind
Do you pick up the lesson
Unappetizing food that which fails to create mental
anticipation does not cause the necessary digestive
Juices to flow whereas food that Is pleasing to the
sight and hence to the mind will cause the complicated
machinery of the body to prepare in a wonderful way
for its digestion
How natural then to reason that one should sit down
to a meal in a peaceful happy state of mind and start
off the breakfast say with some ripe delicious fruit
then follow with a bowl of crisp lightly browned thin
bits of corn like Post Toasties add a sprinkle of sugar
and some good yellow cream and the attractive appetiz
ing picture cannot escape your eye and will produce the
condition of mind which causes the digestive juices
nature has hidden in mouth and stomach to come forth
and do their work
These digestive juices can be driven back by a mind
oppressed with worry hate anger or dislike of the dis
agreeable appearance of food placed before one
Solid facts that are worthy the attention of anyone
who esteems prime health and human happiness as a
valuable asset in the game of life
Theres a Reason for saying The Memory Lingers when breakfast is
started with POST TOASTIES
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