Daily Times-Gazette, 26 Mar 1953, p. 9

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Ono | Canadian Cavalcade to Be Enacted World Countrywomen"s Rally en the Associated Country Women of the World meet in Toronto next summer, one of the big events will be the Canada Day be held in Maple program, fo | Leaf Gardens on Friday, August f 21. And the climax of Canada Day is to be a musical calvacade 5 of the story of Canada and the Canadian people -- "Domonion of Destiny"'--presented by the Feder- { ated Women's Institutes of Can- ada. Over 11,000 rural women from all parts of Canada and the United | States will pour into Toronto by I train and plane, by bus and private attend RIEL SE RR ES i RR car, to the Canada Day ceremonies. For this will be the one day on which the general membership of the Women's In- stitutes, Homemakers' Clubs, Cercles de Fermieres, Home Bureau and similar groups get a chance to attend this great world gathering of rural women from parts of the globe. On the other days of the con- ference, from August 12-23, the sessions at the Royal York Hotel must of necessity be limited to the official delegates, corresponding | members and accredited observers from 25 countries, a total of about 1,000 persons. On Canada Day, in i the large arena, over 12,000 may attend. The plans for Canada Day were announced yesterday by Mrs. Hugh | Summers, president of the Federa- " ted Women's Institutes of Canada, . at the conclusion of a three-day " meeting at the Royal York Hotel | rent, Prime Minister of Canada. | them wearing Then women delegates, many of their native cos- tumes, wil] bring greetings from | every country represented at the I! conference. There will be an ad- dress by Mrs. Raymond Sayre, president of the CWW, and music will be provided by tHe Junior Farmers' Choir of Ontario. The dramatic conclusion to the | dey's program will-be "Dominion of Destiny"--a fast-moving, elab- orately costumed review of the exciting and colorfu] story of Can- | ada and the people who have pion- i: eered, explored and developed i this country from the days of the | Indians to the atomic age. 1 | This will be a spectacle on a large scale, designed for presen- Nothing better to help clear out Quickly -- oly No sleepy" stuff -- fd dulling effect. Used more than 50 years. Equally good for the restlessness and feverishuoss resulting tation in an arena. theatre -- em- ploying a specially designed stage and making use of the floor of the arena itself. The production will take the form of a continuous-action caval- cade, combining the services of a full concert orchestra, a chorus of mixed voices, corps de ballet, solo- ists, a large cast of actors, units of the armed scervices, members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, together with various ani- mals and vehicles and other spe- cial features. This pageant of the Canadian Story is being produced for the Federated Women's Institutes of Canada by Fonger Studios. Pro- duction will be under the direct supervision of O, W. Fonger and Larry McCance, with music di- rected by Samuel Hersenhoren and choreography by Boris Vol- koff. The singing star of the show The performance of the pageant will be repeated the following day, August 22, when it will be open to the general public. Broken Hip Nothing To Woman of 100 TORONTO (CP)--Mrs. Marie Nault has set something of a record at St. Joseph's Hospital. Last Saturday she fell and broke her hip. Sunday she underwent an opera- tion for the placement of a metal plate and nail to hold the ends of the fracture together. Wednesday she was reported making a good recovery from the operation. Doctors sald they be- lieve she has a good chance of walking again. Mrs. Nault is 100 years old. all | is to be Ernest Adams. Shy Princess May Become Heir to Denmark's Throne A flaxen haired, blue eyed girl of 12 who has worn the same dress to school for more than two years very likely will become the second queen in the history of Denmark, the oldest kingdom. As a queen, Princess -Margrethe Alexandrine Thorhildur Ingrid, eld- est daughter of King Frederik IX and Queen Ingrid, would be Marg- rethe II. Queen Margrethe I died in 1412. It is up to the Danish-people to decide if Princess Margrethe ever | Wi will be a queen. The constitution bars it pw, but the Major politi- cal partiés are backing an amend- emtn to change it. To do this, the change first must be approved by parliament, then by a majority of voters in apleb- iscite and then again by a second parliament after a general elec- tion. Denmark will go through this complicated procedure in May and the chances are that it will be thumbs up for Margrethe. The major parties in parliament decided the constitution should be changed because King Frederick has no sons. Margrethe has two royal sisters. There was a general feeling the right of succession should be given to descendants of the ruling monarch in direct line regardless of sex. The heir pre- sumptive has been Prince Knud, the king's brother. GOOD SCHOOL GRADES Margrethe is a typical Danish girl, brought up the same way as any middle class youngster in this country. She attends a private school with hundreds of other daughters of well to do Copenhag- en families. The king and queen encourage her to invite her school friends to the palace to play.' Margrethe's education began in PROMISING CURE PRETORIA, South Africa (CP)-- A drug now being tested here may prove a "wonder cure' for Jep. rosy. The drug, para amino cylic acid, was praised by Lieut. Jack Millar of the United States Navy, attached to the American Leprosy Foundation, PLUS... cose roa Itv---- SERVINGS IN EVERY 8 QT. BAG TUMBLER They said 1 coulbh# be done but-here #42. OW! Flavor & Aroma Freshly Ground Coffee An Inotankt thaté 00% Real Coffee and lastes like H/ d The secret is Instand Chase & Sanborn's new "Natural Flavor" process. _Revolutionary--because now at last you get all the deep, rich color--the true texture --the bold flavor of fine blended coffees roasted to perfection--ready to flood your cup instantly with your kind of coffee. And at a saving of up to 40¢ lb. over regular coffee. Prove it to yourself. Make a potful for the whole family today! you'll make it your regular coffee | kindergarten at Amalienborg castle shortly ater her fifth birthday, April 16, 1945. A dozen other boys and girls, bluebloods and common- ers, attended classes with her. At 7, Margrethe entered the be- ginner's class of Zahie's Girls' school, a fashionable institute in downtown Copehagen. She will get her college degree -- mandatory for all royal children -- from this school when she is 18. Margrethe is doing well at school th above average grades, but she is no wonder child. In one field, however, she is well ahead of her classmates. Like her moth- er and grandmother, she is a na- tural language student. Queen Ing- rid, born a Swedish princess, speaks Danish without the slight- est accent. She has taught Mar- grethe English and Swedish and the young princess speaks both as fluently as Danish. At present she is learning German at school. Next year she will take up French, It is a fair guges Margrethe will grow up to be a tall girl. Her fath- er, King Frederik, is 6 feet 4, and the princess already towers above her playmates. An attractive girl with somewhat irregular features, ) L[R[] the square jaw of the Gluecks- burg family is becoming more pe- dominant as she grows older. When she underwent an eye op- eration at Cpenhagen's Lukas hos- pital, the official bulletin said "a simple eye operation was success- fully performed" but it was an open secret the princess was just a little bit crosseyed. Her eyes are not quiet normal. : Margrethe is a shy girl. Her younger sisters, Bendikte and Anne Marie, love to pose for press phtoographer§ but ti gives Mar- grethe the jitter to have a camera aimed at her. The princess loves animals. Once she surprised the queen by carry- ing a chicken to her room in the royal summer estate of Fredens- borg and keeping the bird there for days. NOT TOLD The fact that she might one day be queen of Denmark was kept a secret from Margrethe as long as possible. The king and queen did not know how to break the news to the emotional girl. One day in May last year Mar- grethe saw a newspaper on the king's desk with a front page story discussing ehanging the constitu- tion to mage it possible for a wom- an to become queen. As all girls would, she asked questions. Palace sources said the king tucked the newspaper away and told his daughter to forget about it. Shortly afterwards the queen took her three daughters on a visit to England. It was there at a British play- ground, while the two younger princesses were having a grand time on a merry go round, that the queen gently told Margrethe that she might someday become Queen Margrethe ITI of Denmark and assume the responsibilities of a ruling monarch. The first Queen Margrethe of Denmark was born in 1353. At 10 years old, she was given in mar- riage by her father, King Valde- mar Atterdag, to Crown Prince Haakon Magnussoen of Sweden. She followed Haakon when he was exiled to Norway. By great diplomatic skill, armed force when necessary and effec- tive use of her family connections, Margrethe did what was never done before or®after: She united Denmark, Norway and Sweden un- der one crown. The Kalmar union, signed by the gets you down, here's the quick way to get relief. Rub in soothing Minard's Liniment. Is it good ? Just try it, you'll see! RHEUMATIC PAIN? INARDS "KING OF PAIN" LINIMENT | S. B. Collis THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE? Thursday, March 26, 1068 @ three nations in 1297, was the spectacular result of her work. The union bound Scandinavian countries, with some interruptions, until 1523, when Swaden went her own way. 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