Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 20 Dec 1924, p. 9

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rincess Marys Private Chri sten in Party Upset All England » | NEN Rr od Ya With the Villagers All Set for the Big Event ~ #8 the Queen's Rebellious Daughter Defied - gui: All Tradition by Ignoring Both : 0 Parents and : Family, Including Gerald David, the Latest Arrival, Private Christening Created Such a Rumpus, and G o Bubert, the First Born, Is in the ig Arms of His Father, Viscount Lascelles, 3 8 ; GHTIR BE ne : bids : ' Copyright by Keystone View Ov By EILEEN O'RELL. LOMB it 5 tg : The Christening Cake of Master Gerald David Lascelles, Second Grandson . HEN it was announced that the second 1 i oi y He : small son of H. R. H. Princess Mary and ; NA - ; > ; \ the Viscount Lascelles would be chris- Ps Sl + *Muoms for Sue feW their Sisters 2 b6 held back tu: 07 sho Brifidegy the IA oh op re § thelr > J 1 they'd be X dards for women. memory Tr he oi own tened in the little parish churcn at Goldsborough, ' : Mindtes rthermors, Mary spent the first twenty-five church closed in their faces. adjoining the grounds of Goldsborou_: Hall, NT in the chufch---or years of her life under the eagle eye of a mother "The village has been very proud of its nn 2 Ln Ty re otter on We AS RATERS i Elie Te Yorkshire village beamed with pride and delight. Sffeth == 4nd ..Nia2Y :. ves Varealans arts : i age pride and delig and her husband, of rest, Hmong hem he ae SA | tions. "Now we will have the honor of entertainin d 1 ile other English girls were Well, 'at K h, wi other ' together with the Accordingly, Bagh por rf their hair and Cave close by, as well as St. Robert's Cave, an an- the King and Queen, besides witnessing ie- i dbed Countess of bobbing their turesque and histore Seremong. everybody said. Hh Bart and a donning th iid, sophisticated garments that chorite's cell, associated with the story of Eugene a ; f ress duri e Ara.a. | When a great deal of mystery began to be f or two others who have fevolutionised wamen® i It was in this church in March, 1928, that the threwn about the christening, and the date St few rs, M was going about in high g e date was a x happened fo be Dk a and voluminous, ankle length skirts. Hon. Henry Hubert Lascell d several times only to.be postponed in- t bor- collars Sefintialy, everybody was pustled and a little | ; Suctts Hail, whiked Members of the court f remember what grandson of King d d. Cina i) 2 the church by 8 ~ happened when the Vissountess Lascelles returned christened with pp But when word went out, finally, that the te path thro from her wedding trip to Paris. The Queen Archbishop of hfistening | party was moving Joward he church 4 ; DIY Dats and the Hothis loved a he, few frock sha wote, Snap. which as od bY he soclally a private pathway, with neither the King nor 7 short | of skirt. ein : en nor any other member of the royal family Ke infatt wis by ian Pigh-heeled, high-arched boots of SE patent That ch ng party made up-to the villagers on hand, and when villagers, hurrying to the - the di intment they felt when elected church, were halted by a "Private, Keep Out" £24 4 to re! in London for the birth of her first sign on the door, there were murmurs of indig- oT ¢ - Sh barbs rather than to await his coming &t "The jon. - ; ; f . "A princess 18 a princess" they ; > $ i d However, when she appeared in the town " the church is ours and io a 3 a oe N ; last Summer, and it became known that she Ta not even the rector--has a Tl CW igh ; we a was expecting the stork, Goldsborough was over- a "right to order us out of it!" .. Fo F 5 i EN A Jjoyed. 4 > = Chagrined and offended, they de. T / : . "The village will be more interesting than rer a : 'when it becomes the birthplace of a child of clared that Princess Mary had . A snubbed them when she kept her 3 ¢ ; < . : body said. And'one'and all gtrove party private. And this od 3 4 iscountess happy. in the face of the deep affection - iN. : Shortly one of they feel for the infant, born in their ¥ hl L wander affedtion never bestowed g ! the is brother "who first ! a Lascelles Peacock, Hall" perched upon : Neat i Ches! R gaw the . | cornice of the stable, where don, Mine a the terfield House, in Lone | it remained t teen months ago, ond " But when the story of the christ 3 i Jig Omen - day and a night. was came London, and g i y Cp G of Good Fortune Jor considered & good omen by when it/travelled Shrough ghe a F ' pmo the Newest Baby. the townsfolk, wha deciare social circles that revolve ' x ; _ poe d ; ; that the speéacocks have the court, friends of the Li ; Co / EE ay A ! b t fortune 104 Be gs protested that the hurry and pe se ot gd t ak ba \ mothers and children of J secrecy of the ceremony had nothing . ey A, i house' of Lascelles for whatever to do with Goldsborough F P . ot 3 be ; generations. townspeople, grr re Fs ; 4 A Finally a notice was post- "It all started over the baby's 3 ; WA N ed on the outer oo of they cried, "Dear, dear-- ; ' - Golds 1, an there must have been. independent--quite mod. o, _ : : might say--and royal inted Villagers Learned from a Notice Posted i » Goldshorough Hall That the . oe Anticipated Christening Had Already Token Place. ; "foot court tradition and then : antted by In King el hard on her Tights us \ It's never happened be- a mother. e there is plenty of pregedent f re id hen iin ent for © " n of BE § gif { ; \ | i { / | ) all A NZD, N72 72 \) « AN N wr

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