_____ ■ _____ AIOW HGoplß Lon KG ST / BUT Queens Work Must Go On (This is the fins) dispatch sn coronation week by the son of British Prime minister Sir Win ston Churchill.) By RANDOLPH CHURCHILL Written For The UNITED PRESS LONDON (VI Most people In timately concerned in the work of the coronation can now relax and have a rest. Not so the queen. For her the ceremony was only the start of one of the busiest months of her . life. Yesterday morning at Bucking ham Palace she was presenting medal* to overseas contingents from the commonwealth. Yesterday afternoon she drove through the streets of northeast London with the Duke of Edinburgh and last night she gave a great state ban quet at Buckingham Palace for all the commonwealth ministers and heads of foreign delegations. Her engagement book is studded with live or six important and ex hunting engagements each day right to the end of July. “I do sympathize with you ma’am in all the anxieties you 'have ait this time.” “Yes,” she replied, half in earnest, half Jokingly, ‘I can har dly get a wink of sleep at night; I’m so excited about the Derby." I DERBY IS SATURDAY The Derby is to be run Saturday and the queen’s horse. Aureole, is thought to have a very good chance of winning. The coronation was part of the queen’s work which she does superbly well and evi dently enjoys. 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It would be a wonderful climax 1 to coronation week if the queen's horse should win on Saturday. The earl Marshal, the Duke of Norfolk, whom .everyone is prais ing for his tireless efficiency, which was so well vindicated on coron ation day. took a day off yester day and spent it in the way he likes most watching a cricket match at Hove between Sussex and the Australians. Among his many and varied positions, which range (from being chief butler to the queen to chairman of the Sussex County council finance committee, the Duke is president of the Sus sex Country Cricket Club. Apart from taking ail the main decisions in the organization of the coronation, the Duke of Norfolk personally conducted all the re hearsals. It was a splendid sight to see him in a Mack morning coat with his earl marshal’s baton in one hand and a hand micro phone in the other walking with measured step in the choir of the Abbey, pausing every now and then to haul the long lead up behind him. He always spoke in calm and level tones “a little more to (f»e right, archhlshop,” *plespe bring the crown Mr. Dean,” “no, that's the wrong crown, please bring the right one.” It has been reported how the fanfare of trumpets which greeted the queen on her arrival at the abbey wa| immediately followed by the entrance, from the four , corners of the theatre where the crowning was to be done, of four housemaids in white coats who brushed away, with their besoms and brooms, with frantic intensity for a couple of minutes, and then retreated to the posts nr comfort stations from which they had em erged. CAREFULLY REHEARSED The congregation roared with laughter at this comical and, as they must have supposed, un-re hearsed anti-climax. In fact, the activities of the four house-maidr ’ had been as carefully rehearsed and timed as the entrance of the queen herself. One of the things which has im pressed foreign visitors to London has been the dignity of the crowds. Though they had waited all night before coronation and were soak ed to the bone, they cheered with immense enthusiasm, but there was never a trace of that hysteria which usually overcomes great crowds in other countries on oc casions of this sort. As one Amer ican put it to me, they realized they were in the presence of his tory. Light & Bright BORDER, Tex. (VI John Sellers, 50, a grocer, awoke to see a man armed with a slingshot crawling across the room. He hit the burglar with a pillow and chased him into the arms of a policeman. At the same time Sellers’ wife and two teen-aged daughters caught the burglar’s accomplice. He was carrying stones for the slingshot. LIGHT AND BRIGHT .. Sue RALEIGH, N. C. Ofl The father of North Carolina State College student Richard P. 1 Denise, of Goldsboro, N. C., made it clear in city Court here yesterday that he can't afford SSO datep for him. Den ise plead guilty to trespass in a panty raid on Meredith College and was fined SSO and costs. (The fa ther asked the judge if his son would be guilty of trespassing if he dated a girl at Meredith. The judge said he would not if he be haved. “It might sound like a stu pid question to you; but I can't af ford SSO a date for him,” the fa ther explained. DAVENPORT, 10. (W lgnance Stachel, 45, a displaced person from *■* DAILT RECORD. DUNS. IMA Benson Hews DAUGHTER IS PORN Mr. and Mira. Robie Dunn of Benson announce the birth of a daughter, Mary Lynn, on Tuesday, June 2, in Oood Hope Hospital, Erwin. Mrs. Dunn Is the former Miss Gladys Neal Johnson of Ben son. BENSON PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Strick land and their guests, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Watkins of Georgia, spent Sunday in Chapel Hill and attended a showing at the More head Planetarium. k Mrs. Roy Medlin and Mrs. Roy Smith spent Tuesday in Raleigh. , Miss Ethel Gaitley of Maxton spent first of the week here and was accompanied home by her sis ter, Miss Pansy Gaitley. who is a member of the Benson School fac ulty. flev. and Mrs. Ivey T. Podle spent Tuesday and Wednesday in Durham where they attended a convocation at Duke School of Re ligion. Miller Patterson and /Ronnie Anderson of Fayetteville Vere vis itors here Monday. lfir. and Mrs. Malcolm Whitting ton were visitors to High Point last week. Mrs. Festus Turlington of Clin ton and Mrs. Jay Woodard of Smithfield spent Tuesday here with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eli 8. Turlington. Mrs. Arthur , Foster and Mre. Will Woodall were visitors to Fay etteville Monday. Diane Denning of Dunn, Route 2 is spending the week with her aunt, Mrs. J. W. Jones on Holmes St. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Woodall, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Allen, Mr. and Mrs. David Earl Allen, and Mr. and Mrs. Almon Bass and their fam ilies spent Wednesday on a picnic at White Lake. Germany, hunted for a place to sleep Wednesday night after the police tossed him out of his cell in the city jail. Officers who fell for Stachel’s story that he was broke, ousted him from the jail when they found $1,023 in hi' wallet. TOPEKA, Kan. (VI Mayor George Schnelibacher disclosed to day the reason overtime parkers haven’t been getting tickets for the ! past several day's-; The city ran 1 1 put of tickets. i • '*<