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Show COLORFUL PARADE i TAKES WILSON 1 TO PALACE : ! ' . ; I President Cheered a He j j Rides by Side of King George. 1 . By AsMClat4 Press. I.ONLMON.- Ic. t The proo.ssion ! ' i,ln which President Wilson traversed j J , the streets of Iondon to Buckingham , , 1 palace today mis a short on. Th.re ; I were intervals of 100 feet bMwwn the 1 .linite. VTrst came a detachment of po- Tice and then a general andnls staff t with the troops of the household cav- ; I i airy four ahreat In khaki with drawn ' ; awordn. Next came the king's carriage. In which I'realilent Wilson sat at the right of King Oeorge. The Puke of f'onnaught aat oppoatte them. Another troop of cavalry followed and then cam the carriage with Queen Mary, with Mra. Wtlaon on the right and pTiiice-a Mary faring them. Then came .a third csxalry tmop and after It the three- remaining carriage of the pro- : ceeion. The cleaming eoate of the outrider scattered along the proceton gave an effective dash of color. The king was 1 dressed In the aervlrs uniform of a . BritJMi fie I d m arhl. M e re malned c o v er ed t h ro 1 1 g bout the ton r n e . pe r -mitting rreicent WlUon to accent the demonstration. Mra. Wileon carried jtarce bouquet of flower and ore ; Mack, tjueen Mary waa dreted tn a dark coatume with a light colored hat. An the proceaaton paaaed through "PhIT Mall." Dowager Queen Alexandra. , Queen Maude of Norway. Princess ; Victoria nd Trince Olaf iinccre-monioualy iinccre-monioualy came out of Marlhoronsn i honwe and atood on the pavement. The crowd fell back. Aa the prealdent a carriage paaaed he leaned forward to 'salute the royal group, who waved a welcome to htm. The aame act of welcome wel-come waa repeated when the , with Queen Mary and Mra. Wilson ! paaaed. by one, and the laughter grew to i climax when Sir VYeoertck t.'owen. ie-matnlng ie-matnlng alone and beating time to the i empty aeata. waa reminded by an attendant at-tendant of hia solitary position; where- upon he alao blew out hia lighta and waa gone. "Toy" symphony la. of courae. only j the Kngliah equivalent for what Haydn called the "Kinder-Symphonfe." and in this simitar burleaque of BTa-grove BTa-grove the diatingulahed performere did indeed bdiave aa eri table children. ; Imagine Meadamea Muriel Foster, i Irene Hcharrer and Myra Heaa aa bub- j blfng nightlngalea, expreaaing them- ' aeivea with the aid of glaaaea of water. ' and ao dlacomfting Sir Alexander i Mackenzte that he had to nrotect him- ' elf fiuiil llieii tun smosiful ffsts under an open umbretia! Or picture ' j Sir Edward Klgar w ith cymbals. Sir : : Frederick Bridge with a rattle, and M. ! ! Molaelwltsch dealing with the triangle 1 ' as if to the manner born.' Then there! ' was a remarkable, cadenxa hy Mr. I j Hsrri- pearth on the tooth comb, about the length of which be and the eon-ductors eon-ductors were obviously at variance, j Some mild surprlae may be excited by ; the use of the word conductor in the plural, hut it is used advlwedly. for i after Mr. Ronald, plr A. C. Maekensle. i ! Plr Frederick Cow en and Mr. Kdward ; rman bad each turned the other' .ut of the conduetor'a dek, the whole t : number wielded the gigantic baton to- , gelher. and directed th laat movement ; la, on man. Mwnwli- the orrheatia ' . ropp from their sears and dsnced a , hornpipe. t should be added that i Mme. AlhanI led the cuckoos, and that ' the string in thia "star' orchestra, j Instead of being the usual profesalonal i company, were well known concert j players, such as .lohn Saundera. Mag Mosael. Daisy Kennedy, May Harrison. Sybil Katnn and Margaret Kalrleas ' among first violins; among the second I Alexander Mackensie, Albert Sam- i I mona, Kdward German. Joaeph Ivlmev j j and Margaret Harrison: while the ! low er atrlngs Included Tork Bowen, Al- I , fred Gibson, Waldo Warner. Warwick j I Evans. W. H. Squire and Beatrice Ifiirrfaon. |