Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
Why Wrathful Duke
Of Windsor Sued
Author Told By
Glance At Book
By BRUCE CATTON |
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
. ~Just what s there in Geoffiey
Dennis’ book, *“Coronation (Z’om-|
mentary,” that caused the Duke ofl
Windsor to file a libel and injunc
tion suit against the author and
his publishers? |
Dennis, a distinguished Engli_sh‘
novelist, wrote ths DOOK-—or most |
of it—a year or go ago. It WAS
designed as a coronation-timei
specialty, apparently, and it wasi
jargely a review of the history of
Pritish kingship and’ British coro-!
nations, closing with a glowing
tribute to the then king, Edward:“
Vl. |
Just ag the book was finished
Bdward gbdicated and Dehnis ad
ded a fina] chager on the abdi
cation. The bhook appeared, and
the Duke of Windsor promptly sued
both Dennis and the publishing
house of William Heinemann, Ltd.,
for libel, asking also gn injunction
against further publication of the
book.
The book then was withdrawn
from sale in Englana, but the Am
erican edition has been released
by Dodd, Mead & Co.
What is in it to stir the former
king to such wrath?
The Reasons
You need only to read Dennis’
chapter on the awdlcation to find
out,
In it, discussing the reason why
the British public refused to let
P dward retain his throne gnd mar-l
ry the American Wallis Warfield
Simpson, Dennig says:
“She came too far below, she
clashed too crudely, with the na
tion’s idea and ideal, dream and
myth, of feminine royalty. Queen‘
Alexandra, Queen Mary; the ladies
of York Gloucester, Kent—which
ever standard, among these variant
high ones, of English queenship
your own might happen to be, the
new gspirant did not fit it, Ideals
are ideals. Idols must be idols. She
WOULD NOT DO. The come-down
from Queen Mary to Queen Wally
was too steep.”
“Roystering Invaders”
Dennis also takes some pot shots|
at the free spending, heavy drink
ing set of American expatriates ln‘
London with whom, he commains,|
Edward had cast his friendship. S 0 |
there is this paragyraph: i
“The invaders, of course, WC‘I‘O(
not seloved. They were as a rule
no credit to the great country they
had exploited and eeserted, nor to
the one in which they now were
roystering and ruling. . . . They
were cock-a-hoop, and since Ed
ward’s accession were getting in
solent and out-of-hand. There was
but one more world to conquer,
The first woman to it in the an
cient Commons was a devorced
American; why not then also—?"
And this:
_ “England is proud, and mind
ed seeing her throne provide a
music-hall turn for low foreign
newspapers. » . . The country
bitterly resented the other eoun
try’s brazen delighted cheapen
ing of its high possession—the
tabioid press jeering interfering
—and in its anger naturally, if
ungratefully, ignored the correct
and cordial tone of most Ameri
cang and of the good American
journals.” |
And this: {
“Much of those days' exciting
news was evidently based on £a.ct.l
What was not so evidently based]
did also its bit; the rumor and‘
hearsay, frantastic . . . Bspies,
orimes. . . Hitler —<never sur
passed in the rich long history of
scandalmongering, Whether theyl
were wholly true, or wholly un
true, or something in between,
those stories heaped - already
half in revenge — upon the head
of a woman unable to defend her—f
gels sealed finally her face. If such
storles — true or not, no matter
—were in circulation. about you,
you were not fit Lo be Queen of
England.”
Other Things
Even the working class, long
friendly to Edward, consented to
his departure, says Dennis:
“He left hig land with Kkingly
dignity. . . . . We saw him go
with love, and pity, and synical
relief. Was it so neartless of those
South Wales film gudiences, un
employed, entrance half - price,
stonily not to cheer him? He was
a tragic, broken man; but he was
off to the gun and the white snow
« + » and they—"
In one place, Dennis discusses
the common statement that 'Pre-
1t i fi
7310720
NEW AND USED
Small Down Payment
Liberal Trade-ins
No Carrying Charges
We Maintain a Local
Tuning and Repair
Service
DURDEN MUSIC
CO.
DISTRIBUTORS OF WORLD
FAMOUS KIMBALL PIANOS
Babies Are People:
* OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON TELLS
| HOW TO TREAT THEM SO
“Coo-Coo"" Ecstacy Is As Offensive to Tiny
Infants As to Their Elders
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Let-alone friendliness inspires baby to a more cheerful response
than gushy ecstacy.
| National Baby Week, May
' 3-7, creates an opportunity to
“ make people realize that BA
BIES ARE PEOPLE. As the
! first of a series of special ar- !
| ticles that portray babies as
| people rather than simply cun
ning creatures, the Banner
\ Herald presents a discussion
‘ of adult-infant relations by
Olive Roberts Barton, noted l
child training specialist. z
By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON l
Baby Patsy goes to Mrs. Smith's !
with her mother te call. Mrs.
Smith claps her hand as the little
{procession moves up her ‘walk and
beams, “Here her tums.” '
‘She runs out and stoops down |
to the little blue-clad figure. “My, |
my, what a booful coat, Wanta!
tiss—l does. A gweat big one, an’
{a hug.”
Patsy submits to both, but as
soon as she can struggle away,
seeks her mother’'s skirt, and
|stams at Mr. Smith out of ber
{ great blue eyes.
| After the guests are settled, the
ikindly hostess, with the best in
{ tentions in the world, finds things
{ for baby to play “wivv,” as she
‘suys. But each time she addresses
Patsy she changes her tone audl
| distorts her words. |
‘ The denouement comes whenl
the serious-eyed little girl looks
lup at her mtoher and says quite
distinetly, “What makes her act
so funny?” |
{ Adults Are 1l At Ease, Too
The truth is that adults not ac
customed to little children are
afraid of them. They try to stuup‘
te the baby's level, literally and
figuratively . ‘
It is a form of patronizing, and
tchudnnv resent it. Maybe they |
can't talk too plainly (hmnselvm,;
but that's different. When some j
one else tries i, thoy never see
any sense to it. l
All through childhood this goes
on. Parents do it occasionally, but
mostly it is relatives or strangers
| mier Baldwin never would have
ltakm 80 sirong a line with Ed-‘
|ward “unless there were other
things.” He goeg on to say:
’ “Unfortunately, there were,
Things done and said #n his in
, fatuation; his lover's prodigal-
HIY & & o v In moments of res
‘!mvurm- to other sources of (:Our-‘
jage as well. ... v & Papery crul-l
| ously, neo-Kaiserishly, annotat.
1 ed, The affair of the Egytian treaty. 1
‘fNo sound understanding of the
technique or limitations or neces
sary dignity of the office, Irregular
’huurs, irregular habits , . "
| “Deficlency of Pity”
| Yet it ig not only Edward and
| wiscrackers” who come in for Din.
‘nm‘ condemnation. Admitting that
there were “aspects not admirable”
’ahout England’s reaction to the
abdication he says this:
i “There was ‘slander about, as
well as sense; baseness as well ag
‘ht:auty. More smut than even the
‘(lrcunmmm-vg called for; and a
‘ralr amount of deliberate cruel
Hying. Amid such Epglish good na
iture. a definiclency of pity. . . .
‘WHh no un-English sgelf-doubting
(& good, average display of English
| self-content, If whypocrisy not above
;awmge. thick ealm smooth oceans
iof complacency, Complacency,
| COMPLACENCY".
{ HEAVENLY ALARUM
i EVANSVILLE, Ind. — #) —
I’Phe fire alarm clanged at the Cul
ver school, teachers quickly ush.
}ered all pupils out into a driving
rainstorm, and them looked for the
tire,
They found none; learned thad
{a bolt of lightning had set the
{alarm’ system ringitig. The puplle
| were. sent home to dry out,
who are ill at ease with children.
These youngstes like to be met
on their own ground. They don't/
want people talking down to
them.
Recently twe children have vis
ited us on different days. Both
were strangers. One was a baby
of 22 months, the other a little
girl of two and a half. They were
extremely “good.”
In each case I said, “How do
you do?’ politely, and then pro
ceeded to let them alone, except
to hand out some boxes with in
teresting lids I always keep.
When they began to feel a bit
at home and started to explore
the house, I asked their worried
mothers to ‘please let them
alone.” It ‘wasn’t 15 minutes until
they were friends with Mister,
our dog, and toddled over to me
as naturally. as though I had
known them always. They react
ed precisely the same, these two
babies, to the let-alone method.
They Respond to Sincerity
They made the first overtures
toward friendliness, begun to ask
me things and one even let me
tuck her into the chair beside
me. Al this time 1 addressed
scarcely a word to her. I had not
prattled myself into a suspicious
pesition or made her think that I
“acted funny.”
1f we pounce upon little chil
dren and frighten them (or is
disgust the word?.) they learn to
distrust strangers.
When 'we tr ytor talk to olde
children as though they ‘were
morons, instead of making them
feel our equals, we sever all sym
pathetic contact at once.
Sincerety should motivate us.
And once we get that idea fixed
in our minds, we will no longer
bhe afraid of these very normal peo
ple we call “children,” these se
rious-minded little folk who re
gard their world gravely and ex
rect others to do the same.
Next Baby Week Article: Baby
as a Fashion Plate.
Bridge-Groom Arrested |
As An Escaped Lifer
CHATSWORTH, Ga, —(#)— The
brief honeymoon of a young Geor
gia mountain couple was at an
end today following arresy of the
groom, identifed as an escaped life
term convict.
Sheriff B. H. ‘Wilkins said the
groom, listeq as F. M, Mileq. was
arrested Saturday ay his family's
home near here where he and his
18-year-old bride have bene since
their marriage April 19,
Miles, who escaped from the
Paulding county (Dallas chain
gagn several weeks ago, was con
victed, prison records show, {n
April 1935, in the murder of Har
rison Henry in Whitfielg county.
; Former Governor Talmadge coni
muted a death sentence to life im
prisonment,
The sheriff said Murray county
ordinary J. W. Dooly "issued a
' marrviage license to the couple here
without knowing Miles' record.
IN OTHER POCKET?
SAN DIEGO, Calit. — # .
A 3,000-pound street scraper had
disappeared,
It was last seen in the center
of the formep exposition midway
site, April 10.
Since then, the scraper which
requires the servioes of a heavy
duty tractor to mave it, has been
“misplaced, borrowed or stolen
according to a report from the
rireet superintendent's office (o
e a 0
.- News Of The Day In Pictures :-:
Uncle Sam Tanks Up on Mystery
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Jealously guarded by the army are the secrets of its newest double
barreled tanks, pictured here for the first time. Sixty of the mobile
forts, whose armaments. are shrouded in mystery to all except the
tank corps personnel recently were transferred from Fort Benning
to Fort McPherson at Atlanta, Ga.
Smil : 5 Pay
Smiles Greet Steel Pay Boost
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| They read about it in the papers. Theéy discussed it in meetings
i 4 = ot
| and with cach other But when the léng-discussed raise in steel
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| wages actually showed up on the pay-check, it called for rejoic
| ing through the steel-producing arca. Clarence Masters of the
i Republic Steel Corporation at Cleveland surveys his increased
| check with a grin that mirrored the feelings of the 500,000 mer
v
{ who make steel.
-
70 Hurt in Church Floor Crash
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Some of the 70 victims who fell 18 feet into a crypt below the an
cient Mexico City cathedral when the floor ccllapsed are shown
above as rescuers lifted them out. The accident happened when
Archbishop Luis Martinez was being inducted as primate of Mex
ico. Ten were injured seriously. Notice the gold statuettes and
the elaborate decorations of the cathedral.
- . . ,
"0 Workmen D ‘Just J
Coronation Workmen Doing ‘Justice’ to Jobs
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High in the \bove Old Bailey, which houses London's noted central criminal court, these two men
should feel fan fe. for they are literally in the arms of “Justice.” In preparation for the corona
tion of King George VI, officials sent the men aloft to regild the statue. Making sure of his position,
the man at left | \ firm hold on the sword, while the man at right keeps his balance by standing
in one of the scales of ‘Justice’ ge
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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.. Taming the Destructive Colorado Rive:
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With this massive wall of concrete and steel, forming the Buchanan dam northwesf of Ausiin T
the government is building a halter for the life dp.\‘h'uynlg lower Colorado river. . The 10,200-{oot dam
ghown in an upstream view, will create a reservoir for a million acre-feet of water, and will rmit rec.
toration of large areas devastated by flood waters. When the entire reciamation project is completed
there will be three other dams downstream from Buchanan dam to Austin. PWA %nd Bureay of
Reclamation allotments totaling $20,000,000 were available for the work. :
Mexican Primat
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Church dignitaries bowed over
costly vestments to kiss the ring
of Archbishop Luis Martinez as
the above picture was taken of
his induection as primate of
Mexico. The ceremony in Mex
ico Citv was marred by a cathe
dral floor collapse which in
jured 70 watchers.
Flood Wrecks Express Train, Takes Four Lives
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Tragedy rode the flood torrents that dash against the derailed cars of the Chicago-v
the Canadain National Railway. at Ingersoll, Ont. A washout of the roadbed plung
a 10-foot embankment, killing two trainmen and a passenger 'hen a doctor racing
injured passengers was drowned when the tlood swept away his (
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Gray Eagle’s Wings Broken
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Mrs. Tris Speaker adjusts the radio so that her famous husband
can follow the play of the Indians he managed to a world cham
pionship in 1920... The Gray Eagle is in a Cleveland hospital re
covering from frightful injuries incurred in a fall from the second
floor porch of his home. His skull was fractured, both arms were
* broken, and 54 stitches were taken in his face and neck. %
Hooki i ' '
7 . > F
ooking Ride on Hindenburg
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%‘metl”od for making delivery of late mail pouches 10 = o ts by
Cmder%burg in midair has been developed through eXPeii = 4 his
]olonql Udet, German aviation ace, seen as he maneuve ng
plane in position to attach it on the speeding airship. 0
apparatus projects above the wing of the plane and {
hook hanging down from the dirigible.
TUESDAY, | ;