TORTURE OF PUBLICITY
PRINCE OF WALES GREATEST VICTIM (Rec. October 1, 5.5 p.m.) London, September 30. Mr. A. G. Gardiner, in an article in the “Star,” says: “The Prince’s limitation of public dinners is the first sign of a rebellious spirit, and should command public approval because an infinite vista of banquets must simply be terrifying. The Prince of Wales is the greatest living victim of the torture of publicity. Everywhere he is pursued by limelight and the camera, until lie must ache for the quiet and seclusion cnjoved bv ordinary mortals. He is unable to buy a bat without attracting as much attention as if lie were a giraffe. It is a hard life despite the foolish belief that it is enviable. The cruellest fact of all is that it is a sentence for life.” —Sydney "Sun” Cable.
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Bibliographic details
Dominion, Volume 20, Issue 6, 2 October 1926, Page 9
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139TORTURE OF PUBLICITY Dominion, Volume 20, Issue 6, 2 October 1926, Page 9
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