Show c. f to 1 1 t. t f ll LoW La Do Now i e No 0 I Roared the e Haughty Old Duke Duhe of Rutland I t V I When His Volatile Daughter Said at She e P PIs Is 1 c. c S. S S Was Going On the Stage I e 4 I t jf i II S S r 4 S But I 1 Will Will 1 L Lady a d Diana in Replied I O If L 1 i r j J- J And So Queen Mary of i 4 I England Has Inter Inter- h a 1 1 r feTed in the e Family a I IRow v. v rv Row to Say Thou I I I a a Not 0 I Ir r 1 f e l a f I ti S 4 LI r Te 0 I r J t Thc manner In which t. t S I i t l o 4 Her Majesty said I Ito to io Lady Diana Dian a 0 Thou shall halt not not jf J I II i i t I 1 t a would d l t S l I 7 0 0 1 supply an r jj r interesting r g a. a 4 r rL t d chapter i I l o L 1 G GOne Gf I f 0 0 0 f f 1 One o n the Very Charming Profile Poses of Lady Diana Dian Who Vho Has Been Called the the t f 4 1 Y c i I 1 V Most 1 Photographed Woman on Earth po J 1 I l t lt o oB B Frank Dallam j By y I HE who has been described cd at tones times as the th the greatest beauty in London Lo as the Uthe the most moat po popular F Fu ular 5 SHE u woman oman in England as tho the most photographed woman in the world is at it again Only with this difference Formerly it was a case caso of 01 what now has SlID she done This timo time it is a 0 question of 01 what sho she has lIas not done done or or rather what she has not been allowed to do She Sho is Lady Diana Cooper planners daughter of 01 the Duke of 01 Rutland and bride brido of 01 a year of 01 Lt LK off Dull Cooper who by way of 01 waiving his own pedigree is a nephew of 01 the tho late Duke of 01 File Fifo and a CJ cousin n of 01 Prince Arthur of 01 Connaught She who hitherto has always been obeyed ha has at last been told that she do shall n not t this time timo follow her own n caprices in a matter on which she has set her aristocratic heart Naturally to tt one ono knowing know e ing the Lady Diana the tILe identity of 01 who dared to say Bay her lur nay is more important than the tM issue on which they divided So that point shall be bo set et forth first It was Quern Queen Mary herself hersell i l o HE manner in which Her Majesty said to THE 1 the Lady Diana thou not alone would doubtless supply an interesting chapter to the memoirs of either but for the present it must remain unwritten It is left for lor time to divulge when the Queen Queen to to stretch imagination shall imagination shall have bave given to the world her recollections of life at the Court of St. St James or when hen the noted English beauty shall have the diary of her eventful event event- fat ful life sent to the publisher whether Her Majesty Majesty Majesty Maj Maj- esty exercised gentle diplomacy upon her self- self willed wined subject or forbade sternly upon penalty of ot ostracism from court that she surrender her latest ambition or whim as one pleases to regard recard regard re re- re- re gard card it Now for the tho point at odds In this particular instance it must have been something bizarro bizarre tout-a-fait tout on the part of the Lady tady Diana famed as she has become at home and abroad for her unconventional procedures to have brought about intervention on the part o of the Queen undisputed arbiter if not perhaps the leader of British so so- this Lovely Lady Diana had decided to go c on n the stage Understand not to be singer of arias on the concert platform nor a dancer to be billed as may be the titled Devotee of Terpsichore but a areal areal real actress a regular member of the mummers mummer's world ready to take any part the stage manager handed out ready to read comedy lines by Maug Maus- Mausham Maugham ham to give pith to epigrams by Shaw or if 11 needs be filmed as Tess the Sure Shot Pet of ot Bar X Ranch who has to bust broncos or foil the tho lynching party formed for the dispatch of the hero unjustly accused of cattle rustling The good old duke had bad set set his his foot down and said Enid no no as as he probably had done a dozen times before in interviews with his youngest daughter Aa As for Lt Duff Cooper well Cooper well he was only a bus hus band Lady Diana went nent ahead with her plans She was about to sign a contract Certainly tho the figure was attractive a week and the man ager of a theatre in the West End of London had gone so far as to deposit a forfeit with Lady Dianas Diana's bankers What Next Asks Fashionable London n So it was here hero that the Queen stepped in inand inand inand and echoed Kokos Koko's succInct objection Pardon me but there I draw the line possibly not in the original but at any rate in lan Ian language guage guage liage as efficaciously firm and final Lady Diana acquiesced The Tho contract has been destroyed tho money withdrawn from bank and London perhaps the United States as well has lost a star who would play to packed houses every night no matter matter mat mat- ter what the role Small wonder it is that London Society as aa it sips tea and puffs American cigarettes oh ob it docs does you know the know the best imported cigarette in London comes from America and the best English cigarette to be had is is rolled from American to to to- bacco and of course discusses Lady Diana wags its head and says Well what next A news cable fr from m London the other day dayan- dayan announced announced an an- that the Duke of Rutland had but just given his liis is consent to Lady Diana accepting the tho 1 1 I IA A I I 3 4 r t t t. t f- f f rr t. t t t I 1 le o. o w. w J. J otI l J J I I f n A Y v J Jr S-S- S j c v vr r r f r rK I K ti S Yom A I Lady Diana Manners l Leaving St Margarets Margaret's Fashionable Chapel Westminster London as the Bride ride of Lt Duff Cooper D. D S. S 0 O. offer of editorship of ot a new fashion magazine magazino about to be established Another reference was made to the thwarted ambitions of her ladyship in not h having ving been per permitted to take up the profession profession pro pro- of wig and paint grease and the cable frankly said that permission to edit had been advanced by His Grace as a sort of salve Ho He had studied tho the problem from irom all angles and had reached the tho conclusion that writing leaders on what to wear ear and critiques on what one has al already already al al- ready worn was not demeaning as a profession and as a n source of income was not beneath the beneath tho dignity of n a dukes duke's daughter But will Lady Diana consent thus to bo ho mollified Tho The cable news did not say Indeed is there anyone who can Lady Diana in m person Judging from past performances performances perform ances if there is any assuaging from disappointment disappoint disappoint- ment to be had Lady Diana will find it in her own way not at the hand of the duko duke or any other That has bas always been her course and sho she has ever displayed a resiliency of emotion that has been one of her most undeniable personal charms This ability to w react even from deep grief was vividly instanced in an episode of the war war war-a a happy reaction it proved for fOl it was the means by which Lady Diana became a bride brido after sho she had bad led a picturesque C career reer of or breaking hearts henrt after she had capriciously rejected countless offers offers offers of of- fers of power and wealth It presented a strang blending o ol a tender and s sympathetic heart t with haughty will and caused London's high spirited beauty to take on new popularity among her ad Strange to say it was Vas in Chicago that the facts were first brought out The Count l C Case cc Tho medium was tho the 1 case still fresh in the minds of news readers After Americas America's entry into the war Count James a young Italian nobleman with German relations who had married a daughter of oC Louis Swift the tho Chicago packer was examined on a charge of having haying had correspondence with officials of ot the German war office The Tho count established his innocence bythe bytho by bythe the tho way and one of the heavy guns of his defence was that some of his correspondence was Undertaken Undertaken Undertaken Under Under- taken at the request of Lady Diana Manners tho the nature of which was of the tho most intimate de degree rec otc paper fI er r Feature 1020 I She had asked that he be find the whereabouts of a n British officer Maj H. H C. C Johnson of the tho Scots Scots' Grays who had disappeared during the retreat from Mons eons Count was successful in ascertaining that tho the major had been wounded and was a prisoner in the hands of the Germans An hour before he died in in prison a n message was placed in tho the majors major's hands bands through agency of the count rC reading ding Lady Diana Manners sends her best wishes and her kindest thoughts That Lady Diana thought a great deal of tho the major may be bo inferred from a cablegram to himself him him- self submitted by the count at his rus hearing for it said Infinite thanks for endless trouble and sym sym- pathy Shall Shan never forget Later she sho wrote a winsome winsome letter which gives a softened sidelight on the state of mind of this society beauty at this interesting stage of her life My Dear Count I do not know how I shall ever thank you for your trouble and sympathy and great goodness People are wonderful and you arc are among the best It is an awful story and only one in a million England is very black and every heart is very sad but a great many can suffer with more fortitude than if one feels singled out for the calamities There is no one left at tho the front of my friends now They arc are all killed but next week a lot more go and then th the anxiety begins again I go into a hospital tomorrow for three months pr preparatory preparatory para para- tory to trying to get to France with a small staff staR of nurses and ond doctors but it is difficult to manage manage mannge man man- age although such enterprises are arc required in inthe inthe the extreme But money is as scarce as miracles I and that is the foundation of any scheme I am amEO amso EO so frightened in the hospitals I wake wako up in the hospital at night trembling frightened by sights and ness and squalid jobs but it is bettor than knitting socks which every woman you see sec hero here docs does incessantly Isn't my spelling funny Do forgive I never write in inconsequence inconsequence inconsequence consequence but you have been so wonderful I must thank you Yours DIANA MANNERS While working hard in her hospital she met Lt Cooper of the Grenadier Guards a son of Sir Alfred and Lady Agnes Cooper Sir Alfred is best known in England as a physician though his family is one of the tho oldest in the empire Nevertheless Never Nover the tho announcement of her engagement caused used a wide surprise for the Duke Duko of Rutland belongs to one of the group of families in Eng land and who feel there is nothing higher than they in all the tho nation when it comes to the matter of ot tracing ancestry Lady Di Dia became a bride in St. St Margarets Margaret's A S I 0 r Cha Chapel cl Westminster on June Jane 2 1919 and as cording to the dispatches in the American newspapers newspapers news news- papers of tho the next day the ceremony was per performed per Jer formed amid scenes rivalling those attending One description description t the e wedding of Princess Patricia tion goes on to say The wedding gown sown was made of radiant golden gold gold- u en tissues veiled celled with lace with a train tram compos composed of lace from the wedding veils of her grand grandmother brand mother and of the us mother the Duke of Rutland's duchess's duchess mother Tho The bride was attended vj by The royal family was Lady Caroline Paget represented by Dowager Queen Alexandra After the ceremony the wedding party r drone draw to the dukes duke's Arlington street house where there and exhibition o of f wa wading wd aed an was a large largo reception brooch iron from ding I gifts ts including an exquisite the King and Queen Royalty Raises Its Hand Hando has always of George V. V the consort S Shad So o you see interest in Rutland's Rutland s 's mettlesome mettle mettle- had hadan an affectionate exquisite brooch from the daughter an some 31 all King and Queen And that it was as not after after jU straight laced and narroW narrow minded a queens queen's wits wits's prejudices which prompted her to interfere prejudices with b world Lady Dianas Diana's s 's desire to fire the T mis au- the concededly onic talent of which she is tress feared if indeed not It had been thought the throne U when King George assumed of or the strides Queen Mary always a champion of the return attempt a 11 might conventions court when of Queen Victoria days punctilious and when ho but garden implements were not spades this until limbs leaving Caving us men walked upon girls fashions fashion s help an ana anaa ana d through joyous era t to o discover and walk on sunlight that they a few shafts hafts of have bave been walking all an along on legs door to Lady Diana Disna the of stage In the dosing closing from motives of et acted purely the tho Q Queen peen no doubt public Surely she has entered no friendship the professional and seini pro professional protests against of other wen well known performances and nobility aristocracy members of the English have thought of Lady she What may Y all over danced who not only Stuart Richardson whirled York and to New the kingdom but came before the more orb or kneed bare and b footed bare of D more vulgar gaze gazo a 1 probably less and did n t thought in private I cabaret mob she tent of those thoughts to the tho s dignify the target thought of a Io royal al ukase And what the member Queen of an old of Muriel Wilson likewise a olds s a stunts AS feverish i and titled family whose n caused Vitus Vitas of St. St drawing room priestess journal the London society IC end of or columns in m g to which she kept to r too something was loc locked i inight f or the after the castle had been George bed to tonight put been had night an and d all aU the tho children is in the 1 Considering all aU of which one is justified scored y Diana has decisively deduction that Lad Lady JS to The others have be been e n red allowed I over all aU rivals riyals and nd fade ado as th e i ise bloom and thrive or to Woss blossom JJ and ja ia in all in m regal scorn case se might have been had the tho d is 1 Diana a difference whereas v Lady by I V. V V barr barred V of ot having had her P pathway 3 outstretched palm of a n Queen f the tho uplifted and l |