Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 February 1952 — Page 16

PAGE 16

life unto his divine mercy the most excellent monarch, George Britain, Ireland and the British] dominions beyond the seas, King, defender of the Faith and|

Sovereign of the Order of the Garter.

life, health and honor, and worldly happiness, the most hig

monarch, our sovereign Elizabeth 1I, now, by grace of W

and the British dominions beyond the seas, Queen, Defender of the Faith and Sovereign of the Most Noble Order of the Garter. “God save the Queen!”

Transition Proclaimed The transition from death to

one sovereign. to another, was thus proclaimed an accomplished fact. | “God be in my head and in my understanding,” sang the choir. | Thé Archbishop of Canterbury pronounced a benediction. Queen Elizabeth II, in her attire of deep mourning, sprinkied earth over the coffin from a silver bowl. The coffin was lowered info the vault. In a gesture of affection for her widowed mother, Queen Elizabeth, the young sovereign; walked out of the chapel step by step ‘beside her. Under royal ceremony, the Mother Queen should have been a step or two behind her. i The body of King George now lies among those of sovereigns extending back to the Tudor King, Henry VIII. Among them are Charles I, executed by Cromwell, and George III under whose reign America was lost to Britain.

mitted to the great Royal Vault -—s80 sacred that it has never been photographed—on a purple and gold bier that sank into the tomb only a few feet from that

The service was witnessed in hushed silence by some 1500 of the greatest of Britain's royalty, nobility, statesmen and soldiers, and by distinguished foreigners from all over -the world including kings, queens, princesses, presi-! dents, Secretary of State Dean Acheson and Gen. Dwight D., Eisenhower were there. Gen. Eisenhower wore a black band on the sleeve of his Army overcoat. Prime Minister Winston Churchill, in the uniform of lord

leading’ to choir and nearly fell. There was a gasp from those nearby, but he recovered himself

As the bier sank slowly into His the young Queen closed \ |scabbard. her eyes and sprinkled earth upon |

“Let us humbly beseech Al- ily

mighty God to bless with long| The Archbishops of York and Winchester,

h.|high prelates of the Church of most mighty and most excellent England, wore purple and gold lady, robes. But the Dean of Windsor, ithin whose province the chapel

“Most —Noble the vault

all| bury,

God, of Greab Britain, Ireland, lies” He is the pre the Garter, Britain's highest or- carried the King's coffin

der of chivalry.

pthelmets plumes. ~ All the women stalls or pews sat with their veils ‘and orb. up before the body arrived. Saal! There was a pause while Queen | terly cold. Y Elizabeth II, her widowed mother, dropped the black lace veils OVer her sister Princess Margaret, and {the Princess Royal, only sister ME eof Windsor stood pe-lot the King, elimbed slowly into ‘ n DEC hero! er Scots family a horse-drawn carriage immediea} inl Nearby were the ately behind the coffin. All were royal Dukes of Edinburgh, the IP black and heavily veiled. new Queéen’s husband; Gloucester, King George's brother, and Ken his nephew.

Titles Proclaimed

when

Margaret.

King Goes to Grav

Continued From Page One (purple and gold funeral platform mother, Princess Margaret and ‘ where they rested throughout the|the Princess Royal. . @od to take out of this transitory|eceremony. . v Queen Elizabeth II took heriof Kent, Windsor, Yloucester and late most high, most mighty and| position at the coffin, with Queen Edinburgh. T Mother Elizabeth and Princess and solemn. Windsor looked par- mark, Greece, Sweden and Iraq, mense. Children were VI, by the grace of God, of Great Margaret.

Sprinkled E

was in crimson

in combat, the yeoman of guard in medieval costume with and George V to their funerals. A bosun sounded his pipe as

renewed life, from the reign of [their pikes reversed, lowered

gentlemen-at-arms, jackets, blue trousers and golden. tne coffin, draped in the royal e standard, offto the carriage. On { (top glittered the bejeweied im- during the night. The sun dodged |

perial crown and golden sceptre in and { . |procession began, and it was bit-| for the velled and bereaved Queens

topped

the service

their faces.

Near the end of

the Garter King of Arms, George Bellew, proclaimed titles] and honors of the King and the qragropes new Queen, reading from a scroll ranks, pulled the gun carriage which “he unrolled in ceremonial pearing the coffin. | was entrusted with the task since Canterbury, gx horses slipped and fell at the as he closed the service with the giart of Victoria's rites. An adCommitted to Royal Vault [benieaiction, Jesneq on ite tall imiral calmly orderéd the naval , |golden staff which 1s-the Sym r guard to take over the King George's body Was cOm|of his office. He had got up from races, a they have done so at a sickbed to take part in the royal funerals ever since.

| The Duke of Windsor wore the Admiral's uniform for the first time since he abdicated the throne as Fdward VIII in 1936 in favor of his younger brother, then the {Duke of York, to marry AmerIn a car following were Queen joan porn Wallis Warfield SimpMother Elizabeth and Princess cn, The Duke of Windsor | and other members drove later in| the pracession.

procedure.

The Archbishop of

service. After the coffin was lowered the young Queen drove from the chapel to London, accompanied of Henry VIIL by her husband, the Duke of Ed-

inburgh.

The King's coffin

Windsor Station at 1:10 p.m.| (7:10 a.m. Indianapolis time) from London, where it had been | borne in a majestic procession past grieving subjects.

late of the Order of |

in

in the royal

began

|

3

a. While Millions Mourn

| Behind them walked the Dukes

ny ot ® : THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

today the new Queen was claimed Elizabeth II. Up past the Ritz Hotel, the]

‘round ‘the world. Mr. Acheson marched in theiin a half circle, procession -amid’ such prominent (itself.

{Park corner and, swinging wide into the park)

ticularly youthful and made ajthe Presidents of France, Yugo- birds in the branches of trees in

ath

sword rested In

Canter- | the

and gold. {loved.”

|

vast Westminster

and the]

crimson the stately guardsmen

with whit

At 9:31 a. m,

the service, the funeral music of

8ir bands,

laced through

In General's Uniform

arrived at| {the guards.

An estimated 200,000 persons iy,ysers and black coat.

waited in the castle town to receive their King for the last time.

the King's life—as the cortege) winds uphill through the town to| the castle. In London, Big Ben

LINOLEUM TILE

quickly. : had tolled 56 times at intervals of § Special Low First arrival among the mourn-|3 minute each during the funeral Price ers, two hours and 15 minutes|procession. et INSTALL 11 Wore ae wp Bon ie) Y Wa5 = the sun broke through a gray|| YOURSELF ormer King Peter of Yugo-| 5. .5¢ sky only occasionally] SAVE HALF

slavia with his young, pretty n. They sat alone in the ly chapel for a long time. Then there came another exiled King—Michael of Romania with his Queen, Anne. The two Kings gravely shook hands. They kissed each others’ wives on the cheek, then sat side by side in silence. ‘Filled With Leaders “The dark, oak-carved stalls of the Knights of the Garter, above which are suspended the sword and emblem of the knights, were filled with heads of state and royalty. we To the left of the altar sat King Haakon of Norway.

the right sat Queen Juliana of the Netherlands, The other members of royalty were grouped close by. The body of King George was borne into the chapel by the| grenadier guards of the Royal] Household Foot Regiments. The moment for the two minutes’ silence came. The grena- , diers stood statue-like. Then they passed on through the nave and put the coffin on the bier, The imperial crown, its jewels glowing in the soft light, the orb and the scepter with the great Cullinan diamond in its head were taken from the cofin and put on the

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during the solemn, funeral-paced procession through London, More than 50 persons, most of them women, north wind and were taken away iin -ambulances.

fainted In

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Queen Elizabeth II, her young face hidden by a heavy veil, rode behind the King’s coffin in a glass-| windowed closed carriage driven by liverymen in brilliant scarlet. Beside her were her widowed

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A single deep chime from Pig parade were the soldiers of CanBek 9190 Je Douses a oh Sie lata, Rhodesia, West Africa, Cey-| ment at 9: « Mm (3: . m,| oa | |Indianapolis Time) signalled tropes Pakistar, India, South Atnea, |start of the proud and sorrowing owed [farewell of Britain and thevem-regiments |pire to George VI, “the well be- massed bands.

Ten grenadier guards reverently fromi| They moved at the rate of 65

: Hall—where slow paces a minute. With every Standing in the riavé were the George VI had lain in state for(peal of Big Ben as it tolled for © two groups of men sworn to de- three days—to the same po

fend their sovereign, Elizabeth II, gun carriage which had borne the King's the Queen Victoria, King Edward VII|had moved half a block.

lished 56 minutes-—one for each year of |

(3:31 a. m. Int dianapolis Time), the cortege slow[ly moved away along Whitehall ito the muffled roll of drums, the poignant shrill of bagpipes and massed sion. >

A party of 147 sailors, white their

The” Navy

The Duke of Gloucester, Windsor's second brother, was in the khaki uniform of a general in The Duke -of Edinburgh, consort of the new Queen, |was in his naval uniform. The {16-year-old Duke of Kent, nephew {of the King, wore top hat, striped

Behind them, afoot or in cars,

warden of the cinque ports Io Hol Dra ed et Guns at Windsor boomed ge|oame the visiing toyalty and. als, stumbled slightly on the step|times — once for each year in| |

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|slight, elegant figure in the wni-iglavia and Turkey, Field Marshal the park, while the elite of May-|_ form of an admiral of the fleet.|viscount Montgomery and Earl e a gold Mountbatten.

|

‘In the vanguard of thé sad wide windows of the Dorchester Hotel. - |

Go Past Park Past the northeast corner

y Britain's own famous

of the and finally ‘the six | ford St.

[Arch the procession flowed on.| 65 Paces a Minute

.

The State Democratic Commit f§ {tee today fixed June 24 as’ the (C

State Democrats |; | procession moved into Piccadilly] Fix Parley Date

|other representatives of nations and thence west to famed Hyde

|date for the. party's nominating heir faces were palemourners as the Kings of Den-| There the crowgs were im- convention at the Indiana State § perched like pair Grounds.

Previously the committee had §

: t June 10 for the convention at Pg fair waiched from mansions and| onion candidates for. Governor, |

wealthy tourists peered from the U. 8. Senator and other state of-|}&

|fices will be nominated. But the date |several conventions in the city of [that week, preventing sufficient i

the park, Sunday working grounds hotel reservations to accommo- §§ soapbox orators, across date more than 2500 party offi- ’e

and beyond Marble clals.

conflicted

HING - NEW - DIFFERENT

“FRIDAY, FEB. 15, 1952

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The committee also will vote § Good

|Still the slow step, 30 inches to|final adoption of revised party $8 the pace, boot scraping along: the rules and regulations this aftersand spread to prevent - horses noon.

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and men from falling.

Sixty thousana troops, standing life—the processiort|only 45 inches apart, lined the route and helped 11,000 police {keep back the crowds which

Crowds scores deep lined the circuitous three-mile rout e Strained forward as the half-hour

|through the center of London.|long procession approached. |Many had waited as long as 14| The center of all eyes was the

{hours despite a light snowtall| KIng's coffin.

out behind clouds: as the sympathetic murmurs were heard | and Princesses In the glassThe crowds for the most part enclosed ¢arriage immediately bestood silently with bared heads|nind the coffin. as the cortege passed. But one| In other closed carriages bewoman gave a faint shriek and hind the British Queens rode the several others fainted as the pro-| King of Norway, the Queen of cession moved along Whitehall. |The Netherlands, the Queens of From Whitehall, the procession|Denmark and Sweden, and the) moved to the horse guards’ Grand Duchess of Luxembourg.! parade grounds, where tens of In addition to the more promi-| thousands of the privileged had nent mourners, those marching on seats. Then it wound down the foot at the énd of the procession| Pall Mall past a red brick man-jhcjyded Soviet Ambassador | Georgi Zaroubin, the entire diplomatic corps and representatives

Queen Mary Watches | In a window of the mansion 0c tM military forces of 30 na-

stood old Dowager Queen Mary. EVERY GOOD SHOPPER)

Her doctors had decided the] ordeal of the funeral of her son KNOWS that it is just plain might be too much for the 84- commonsense to shop where there year-old Queen and she reluc-jis a good selection! The Indian- | tantly agreed not to take part. |apolis Times has the widest seThe procession turned sharply lection of homes For Sale, over to the right short of Buckinghamitwice as much real estate adver-| Palace and passed St. James's|tising as any other newspaper in

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