MAY QUEEN JEAN WARNER 932 Jean Warner, one of the Honour Guards of the year before, was to see a few changes in her entourage. Instead of an Honour Guard of nine, she had one of six, a more manageable number if only during the parade when the guards walk on either side of the royal car. It is to be presumed that the queen came from Hollyburn and the maids of honour from Pauline Johnson, but with a royal party of nine, how was the Guard of Honour divided between the two schools? Another change was the addition of a page - young Norman Jackson. He must have caught the eye of the reporter as his costume was described in detail. He was, said the News, clad in a yellow satin suit of the Louis XIV period, and carrying the Key to the City on a yellow satin pillow. The presence of two) qiieeFi'S necessitated two vehicles, and enabled a nice distinction between the reigning and the non-reigning queen. From somewhere in the West End a carriage was borrowed, for which Shelley's Four-X Bakery provided a team of matched white horses. In this assemblage the reigning queen, Peggy Barker, rode in the parade to Ambleside Park. The Queen-Elect, Jean Warner, rode in a convertible all bestrewed with paper flowers. Both were of course accompanied by their maids of honour. After her crowning. Queen Jean rode away from the park in the carriage, (driven by Mr. Little resplendent in top hat and cutaway coat), while Ret(i;^ri'ng Queen ' Peggy departed in the convertible. Now that there were two queens, it was possible to have each out-going queen crown her successor, and this became the practice. The crown itself was not passed on, indeed the only accoutrement to be used year after year was the Key to the City. This is why it was possible for Queen Peggy Barker to donate her crown to the Society after carefully preserving it for 55 years. The maids of honour in this second year were Jessie Ritz and Kathleen Bernard. Kathleen was better known to her contemporaries as Bubbles and that is how she signed the Parchment Roll. She was to marry James Sinclair, one of her high school teachers, and thus become the wife of one of Canada's more distinguished cabinet ministers. When her daughter Margaret married, she also became mother in law to a prime minister. May El^cX Je.an dJaJme./i, ^uAAounded by \i(Ui GuoAd oX HonouA, fimdy tkz pcuiado, to kmbloAtdd tn 19 32.