Monday, Jul. 04, 1932
Reno, Grand Rapids, Las Vegas
Why ladies about to be presented to Their Majesties should wait for hours in limousines parked along London's Mall, often jibed at by the proletariat, has long been a puzzling British inconsistency. Last week the matter received decisive attention from the Lord Chamberlain, the Earl of Cromer.
For the first time the limousines wer kept moving briskly, the ladies alighted with record speed, did their waiting inside Buckingham Palace, safe from the jokes and jibes of London's unemployed.
Women from the U. S. presented at Their Majesties' third & fourth (final) Courts of the season last week included one each from Reno, Nev.; Las Vegas, N. Mex.; Somerset, Ky.; Burlingame,
Calif; Grand Rapids. Mich.; Atlanta; Pittsburgh; San Francisco, two each from Chicago and New York; three from Washington, D. C.
Lady Charles Cavendish, long famed as U S. Dancer Adele Astaire, was to have been presented by her new mother-in-law, the Duchess of Devonshire. Pleading acute rheumatism, the Duchess stayed at home. Lady Cavendish was presented by Mabell, Countess of Airlie.
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