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Show WMLILte! EEVERLY HILLS Well all I know 13 just what I read in the paper3. I just picked up a last Sun- days paper, last j Sunday mind you, and I was surprised to see l'yl jJ: toe things in it that are still j?Q -'-: X hanging on. y'f''' --' i There 'as a lot I ' - - ot comment then I . "'.'. '( about the Van-V Van-V " -3 pi derbilt child, and I V.r :J j there is yet. Can YnX'tfJ 5'0U imaSine the f WrvfJj child coming home from one place to the other and then the bo called subtle questions, "Have a good time clear. You dident have as good time as you do here did you? I bet it feels good to you to be back home dont it?" Why say, the poor kid will be so showered with attentions, one trying try-ing to outdo the other. But the Judge said that was the way, and he knows best. Never dispute the baseball umpire, the movie director, or the Judge. Well here ln last Sundays paper was Japan and disarmament. Its been a week now, and not a thiug has been settled. Japan says we want this, America says you cant have that. England sits there and plays both ends against the middle. When I was in Japan and Manchuria away last summer they all said that Japan was just trying to make an alliance al-liance with England. That is fix so that whatever she, (Japan) might start, they could count that England while not maby actively agreeing to help her, she would at least not help the other side. Like the old Negroes story, if you cant help me for God Sake dont you help that bear. And that case they meant that bear too, that Russian bear, or that Eagle. Well England can tie up with Japan if she wants to. If she thinks she would rather have Japan in her corner cor-ner than us. Well thats any Nations privalege, and this is new signing up time. Everybody is a free lance nosv. and can hustle out and do the best they can in the new Alliances. You will find England using mighty good judgement. She has men that are trained from the cradle up to do nothing only study what to do when a situation arises. Some guy is not a high place there just because ne dug up ?50,000 for the Campaign. He is attending Conferences because be-cause he knows something, not because be-cause he has something. Course the big wedding in England Eng-land wa? big news and the paper .vas full of what was happening. Weil its still full of it. King Carol was pretty sore on account of not receiving an invite. They picked all around him, but muffed him. Well I dont know, but I think that was a sort of dirty dig. He is not a ba'd sort of a fellow from what they al.' say over there in his own Country and he is doing a pretty good job. England has a' great King and Royal Family all the way through, and they know just what they are to do, and they do it, and no more. I imagine that it is the best of systems. It must be for its worked for many years. There is great loyalty, loyal-ty, and great devotion over there, and its never been misstreated by the receivers. There is not a well trained servant in England that knows his place any more than Royalty does in England. They would no more monkey with affaius of State than an English butler would monkey with slang. But Carol he has to double in brass. He has to do the whole thing himself. Well It must be a mess telling who to invite in a situation like that I bet you there has been times when the King and Queen of Eng- j land wishes that the couple had 3f L run off to a Jus- a WjTS Jl ' tice of the Peace f X-and X-and got married WfJ tfiij (t and saved all this trouble and f worry. Either A IjJyLflC that or just in- 0k rf Ty vited everybody, J M and just served ) jp y . a box lunch. ll rfft- Do you know I read what this was going to cost them. It was not less than 100,000. And they (the King and Queen) have to pay it themselves. If it was the Prince of Wales, or the oldest daughter, why the Government would have to pay it, for these third and fourth sons, why they have to get them off themselves. They say they dont like for them to marry a "Commoner," but I bet you they ' wish he had, a wedding to a "Commoner," "Com-moner," why they dont rate very . high in the social order. Then the Commoner has generally got the money, so that helps. But it Is a wonderful match. He seems a fine boy, and her a lovely girl, a fine wholesome type ot girl. Its one of those things where there is lots of money spent, but its distributed all over the Country, and a wedding is a thing that appeals to evrybody. We all heartily approve of it, and i wish them a long and useful lifo. 1934, icVcus'il Syndicate. Inc. |