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SAFETY OF THE DUKE.

EQUERRY’S PRECAUTIONS. LONDON, June 1. It is officially aiinonneed in Paris that aeroplanes have been prohibited from Hying over the Chateau de Cande during the Duke of Windsor’s wedding. The Tours correspondent of the Daily Mirror states that the Duke of Windsor’s equerry, Mr Dudley Norwood, is examining wedding parcels addressed to the Duke, to ensure that he is free from personal danger. STUARTS AND THE KING. ECHO OF THE ABDICATION. LONDON, June 1. “We must deplore the Ba!dwin-Lang combination against ‘the late King,” declared Captain Stuart \\ heatloyCrowe, presiding at the dinner of the Royal Stuart Society. He said it was their duty constitutionally to place the King above any political Or social questions. There was a way out. Parliament could easily have passed an Act allowing a morganatic marriage, which he. considered a secondary consideration to the losing of a King. The matter, in an.y ease, pointed to the weakness of a Parliamentary-made monarch. “MONTS, JUNE 3.” A VALUABLE POSTMARK. TOURS, June 1. A heavy morning mail of parcels and letters was delivered at the Chateau de Cande. There is great aetivitc at flic post office "'hero £IOOO worth of stamps arc ready to he stuck on 25,000 letters for cMlectors in Britain and the United States who are anxious to secure the postmark “Monts, June 3.” Newspapermen are arriving from all over the world.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MS19370602.2.84

Bibliographic details

Manawatu Standard, Volume LVII, Issue 155, 2 June 1937, Page 9

Word Count
230

SAFETY OF THE DUKE. Manawatu Standard, Volume LVII, Issue 155, 2 June 1937, Page 9

SAFETY OF THE DUKE. Manawatu Standard, Volume LVII, Issue 155, 2 June 1937, Page 9